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Best podcasts about sarah snyder

Latest podcast episodes about sarah snyder

Incredible Life Creator with Dr. Kimberley Linert
No Family Left Behind - Sarah Snyder - Ep 452

Incredible Life Creator with Dr. Kimberley Linert

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 6, 2024 42:52


Sarah Snyder is a financial strategist, with a background in communications and project management. From rural Papua New Guinea to mega-city China to middle America, She has enjoyed a variety of cultures and places. Each person and each business is unique, and she believes it is important to listen and ask good questions. Sarah and her husband Bob have seen first-hand how problems in finance can lead to all sorts of problems. So in addition to serving their clients, they seek to build a team of financial professionals who help people dream again, walk in freedom, live generously, and maximize their impact. Sarah and Bob love living in the community. Their relationship with God is foundational to their lives. They live with their daughter in small-town Missouri, just down the street from Sarah's parents. In spare moments, you can find her lost in a novel, or creating art. Sarah also loves exploring mountains, oceans, and new cities! Contact Sarah Snyder: Website: https://sarah-snyder.com/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/sarahksnyder/ Youtube: http://www.youtube.com/@SarahSnyder-financial Dr. Kimberley Linert Speaker, Author, Broadcaster, Mentor, Trainer, Behavioral Optometrist Event Planners- I am available to speak at your event. Here is my media kit: https://brucemerrinscelebrityspeakers.com/portfolio/dr-kimberley-linert/ To book Dr. Linert on your podcast, television show, conference, corporate training or as an expert guest please email her at incrediblelifepodcast@gmail.com or Contact Bruce Merrin at Bruce Merrin's Celebrity Speakers at merrinpr@gmail.com 702.256.9199 Host of the Podcast Series: Incredible Life Creator Podcast Available on... Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/incredible-life-creator-with-dr-kimberley-linert/id1472641267 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6DZE3EoHfhgcmSkxY1CvKf?si=ebe71549e7474663 and on 9 other podcast platforms Author of Book: "Visualizing Happiness in Every Area of Your Life" Get on Amazon: https://amzn.to/3srh6tZ Website: https://www.DrKimberleyLinert.com Please subscribe, share & LISTEN! Thanks. incrediblelifepodcast@gmail.com Social Media Links LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/dr-kimberley-linert-incredible-life-creator/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/kimberley.linert/ The Great Discovery eLearning Platform: https://thegreatdiscovery.com/kimberley

MSL Talk
232. Surround to Succeed: Building a Motivational Network

MSL Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 19, 2024 30:29


This week's guest is Sarah Snyder, MSL Recruiter with The Carolan Group who discusses the importance of surrounding yourself with a motivational network.   This episode is sponsored by MSL Mastery, helping Medical Science Liaisons and aspiring MSLs to excel in their careers and lives through courses, coaching, and community. For more details, please visit MSLmastery (dot) com.   In this episode, Sarah discusses…    Why monitor who we surround ourselves with  How to perform an internal audit of our relationship and peer groups  Advice for job seekers looking to get an edge  How MSLs can find professional connections and avoid isolation  Advice for using LinkedIn as a resource for networking and mentors   The MSL Talk Podcast is available on all podcast platforms and the MSL Talk YouTube Channel.     MSL Talk is a podcast that features helpful information for current Medical Science Liaisons, Medical Affairs leaders, job seekers looking to break into the pharmaceutical industry in their first MSL role as well as anyone interested in hearing good industry conversations and medical affairs discussions.   #msl #medicalaffairs #medicalscienceliaison #networking #careers

Soul Harvest Worship Center
Episode 427: The Good Steward | Pastor Sarah Snyder

Soul Harvest Worship Center

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 24, 2024 59:01


What are you doing with what God has entrusted to you? In this  sermon, Pastor Sarah Snyder, Worship Pastor at Soul Harvest Worship Center Church, delves into the powerful Parable of the Talents. She challenges us to examine how we are stewarding the gifts, talents, and resources that God has given us.Pastor Sarah emphasizes the importance of faithfulness and diligence in our stewardship, illustrating how God rewards those who use their talents wisely and for His glory. Through the lens of this parable, she provides practical insights on how to multiply what we've been given and warns against the dangers of fear and inaction.Join us as we explore what it means to be a "good and faithful servant" and how we can enter into the joy of our Master by faithfully managing what He has entrusted to us. This message is a call to action to step out in faith, invest in God's kingdom, and experience the abundance He promises.Parable of the Talents, stewardship, faithfulness, diligence, Pastor Sarah Snyder, Soul Harvest Worship Center, spiritual growth, Christian living, God's gifts.

Jami Dulaney MD Plant Based Wellness
Jami Dulaney MD Plant Based Wellness Podcast Episode 276: Cruel Jewel 50 was Cruel to Me

Jami Dulaney MD Plant Based Wellness

Play Episode Listen Later May 22, 2024 36:34


Welcome! and Thank you for listening.   I was fortunate to go to Blue Ridge and Blairsville Georgia this past weekend to toe the line at the Cruel Jewel 50 mile ultra race.  The ultra running community are my people.  Tenacious, positive, and tremendous athletes all humble at the same time.  It did not goes as I would have wished for, but it did go for how I was trained.  I got to see where I was at a fitness level and experience some of the most beautiful and peaceful forests.  That area crosses the Appalachian trail.   People on the trail give other hikers trail names.  I had a trail angel this weekend.  I gave him the name of Russ Angel because of time he gave to rescue me and others after we pulled the white flag.  I hope you enjoy my trail tails.  It was a great weekend despite coming up short. Ultra running and life are so much alike.  You need a plan and you need to work the plan.  When it does not work, you need to adjust the plan.  The bottom line is forward progress.  Maybe not that day, but the next day it is time to get back on the journey whether it is trail or health.  If you would like some help with your health journey, visit our website to fine out how you can join our practice.  Thank you to Russ Marlowe and Sandy Geisel for your support.  Shout out to Rich and Tony and the swanky red pick-up.  Thank you to Sarah Snyder and her staff as the race director.  Like Sarah says, poor decisions make for better stories.  She is most famous for saying, try not to be an asshole.  Words to live by.  Thank you.  https://doctordulaney.com/services/pcp-cardiology-nutrition/#pricing https://mypurewater.com/?sld=jdulaney https://www.amazon.com/Plant-based-Wellness-Cookbook-Generations-Cooking/dp/1733967702/ref=sr_1_3?crid=1U4J4U0SZUXUF&dchild=1&keywords=plant+based+wellness+cookbook&qid=1621083696&sprefix=plant+based+well%2Caps%2C173&sr=8-3 

Becoming Ultra
My First Ultra: 128 Sarah Snyder

Becoming Ultra

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 30, 2024 71:46


Sarah Snyder is the RD for the Crewel Jewel 100; ultra runner; cyclist and loving dog mom. Sarah is also an advocate for woman in the sport. She is paving the way for busy woman to have opportunities to reach the goals they set for themselves and providing support along the way. This conversation will inspire you and make you see that your dreams are possible. There are so many people behind the scenes doing great things for the trail community. We love sharing their stories and passion for all things trails with you.

Holy Watermelon
Dying to Know

Holy Watermelon

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 22, 2024 77:05


Why are there no bear ghosts? Nearly all the ghosts in the world seem to come from a specific period of time, long before any of us were born. There is a universal obsession with death, so we're going to explore death from the perspective of those left behind. (Traditions about what lays beyond will be the subject of another episode.)We talk about the Shiva tradition in Judaism, and the ghastly tradition of shades that dates back to at least as far as the monarch's encounter with the witch of Endor.We explore some traditions common among Christian denominations, and also WAKES! Another strong ghostly tradition exists among Christians, but not universally shared.We look at funerary and ghostly traditions among Muslims, Sikhs, Buddhists, Hindus, and Zoroastrians; and we take some time to ponder the Ghanaian Fantasy Coffins, and the New Orleans Jazz Funeral. What really deserves attention is the phenomenon of near-death experiences, not that they teach us about the world beyond, but they teach us an awful lot about ourselves. Raymond Moody put a lot of work into that field of NDEs, too bad it's all completely subjective neural chaos. DMT has been reported to offer a similar experience.All this and more....   Support us on Patreon or you can get our merch at Spreadshop.Join the Community on Discord.Learn more great religion factoids on Facebook and Instagram. [00:00:11] Katie Dooley: Hello, Preston.[00:00:12] Preston Meyer: Hi, Katie.[00:00:14] Katie Dooley: Get off your phone.[00:00:15] Preston Meyer: Okay.[00:00:18] Katie Dooley: It'll rot your brain on today's episode of--[00:00:21] Both Speakers: The Holy Watermelon Podcast![00:00:24] Katie Dooley: I don't know how to make a segue into this one.[00:00:27] Preston Meyer: This is a bit of a bummer.[00:00:28] Katie Dooley: It's... I feel like it's a more awkward conversation than even our sex talk.[00:00:33] Preston Meyer: I don't feel like it's more awkward.[00:00:34] Katie Dooley: People don't like talking about death. We're going to talk about some gross things today. [00:00:38] Preston Meyer: A little bit. But yeah, death is around us all the time. Can't really avoid it. That's the deal.[00:00:44] Katie Dooley: No, it's, uh, inevitable. Like Thanos.[00:00:48] Preston Meyer: That's what they say. Yeah, so I was talking to. A person that I work with the other day about his concern with ghosts. He was actually really worried about, um, the Titanic 2 expedition and all that nonsense, but the conversation led very quickly to ghosts, and it boggles my mind that we haven't just agreed that everywhere on the planet is super haunted or nowhere is.[00:01:21] Katie Dooley: I have had that thought as well. Um, I don't disagree with him because. My house alone has been around since the 50s. You can't tell me something hasn't died nearby,[00:01:33] Preston Meyer: Right?[00:01:34] Katie Dooley: Actually, I have heard that there is an unfortunate story with the next-door house, so, um,[00:01:40] Preston Meyer: Tell me more.[00:01:41] Katie Dooley: Uh, apparently someone killed themselves next door before the current people...[00:01:44] Preston Meyer: Bummer. Lived there. Are there haunting stories?[00:01:46] Katie Dooley: Not that I've heard of.[00:01:48] Preston Meyer: Okay. Just the unfortunate circumstances of death.[00:01:51] Katie Dooley: Yes, but that's typically.[00:01:54] Preston Meyer: What leads to a...[00:01:55] Katie Dooley: Haunting story. And I always think about how I'm like, you know, get haunted by your cat or your dog. How come ghosts are only humans? There's no bear ghosts.[00:02:03] Preston Meyer: It's a great question. Cocaine bear has unfinished business.[00:02:09] Katie Dooley: We should name this episode, "How come there are no ghosts?" Though I do really like your title, which we will probably stay with. Um. But I have often thought.[00:02:21] Preston Meyer: Yeah, for sure.[00:02:23] Katie Dooley: Or, like... I don't know...[00:02:25] Preston Meyer: Dinosaur ghosts? Why are we not haunted by the soul of absolutely ravaged Triceratops?[00:02:33] Katie Dooley: And also there's like, I don't know, ghosts feel like they're from a very specific time-period. Like, if you hear, like, how come we all have a ghost kicking around from the 1200s?[00:02:42] Preston Meyer: Right? All ghosts are Dickensian.[00:02:44] Katie Dooley: Yeah, or more modern but, uh, anyway.[00:02:54] Preston Meyer: Death is great, and we have really weird ways of dealing with it.[00:02:58] Katie Dooley: We really do. And I will sort of preface this before we break it down by religion is like we kind of think our way is the right way or the normal way. And reading some of these, some was like, that actually makes a lot of sense on how they handle death. And then some of them, I'm like, that's fucking weird, I won't...[00:03:18] Preston Meyer: Well, if you see one thing often enough, even if you aren't behind it theologically, the habits are still your habits. Normal gets normal.[00:03:27] Katie Dooley: Yeah. So that was, you know, eye opening to say the least.houldUm, anyway, so we kick it off with our good old Abrahamic buddies.[00:03:39] Preston Meyer: Let's do it. Stick with what's most familiar, and then we'll dig into. Yeah, the good stuff. So in Judaism, respect for the dead is one of the most important mitzvot. I feel like we've used this word before. It's commandments. So really take care of the dead. Traditionally, Jewish people bury their dead intact. Some people mostly, you know, you're more reform, more liberal Jewish groups will do the cremation thing. I think that's generally the the theme we'll see moving forward is the more conservatives will not like cremation. We're going to run out of space real soon. An interesting thing that I have read about Judaism is that cremation is counted as destruction of property.[00:04:31] Katie Dooley: Who's property?[00:04:35] Preston Meyer: That's an interesting question.[00:04:37] Katie Dooley: God's property. [00:04:38] Preston Meyer: That makes sense. But there's also the strong family thing in Judaism where there's like you, you belong to your family in this way that you are. If you're not moving that body around yourself anymore, you're property.[00:04:56] Katie Dooley: Oh. We'll, move you around. Oh, wait, that's a different tradition to talk about.[00:05:05] Preston Meyer: Yeah. Uh, Jewish people tend to observe a strict week of mourning after a funeral. They call this the shiva. Uh, it's just the number seven. So seven days of mourning. And during this process, mirrors in the home are often covered. And it's good to keep candles burning. And mourners will sit on nice low stools, like low as your squatty potty.[00:05:33] Katie Dooley: I'm too old for that. I'm not even that old.[00:05:36] Preston Meyer: It's a little tough, but these are all indications of mourning. Black veil is good for that. Things like that. Yeah.[00:05:43] Katie Dooley: Abrahamic and Western favour black for mourning.[00:05:48] Preston Meyer: Yeah and traditionally. Uh, you don't want to hasten up a death. You don't want to speed things along, even if you know death is imminent. Our country has a pretty interesting relationship with assisted death.[00:06:05] Katie Dooley: I think it's going to have to change anyway. That's not to digress too much. We could go on and chat about that, but I have my opinion.[00:06:16] Preston Meyer: Yeah, having it available makes perfect sense. The reality of the government actually pressuring people into it. I'm not a big fan of.[00:06:26] Katie Dooley: But I yeah, I mean it shouldn't be a government decision, but just like your pets, to let someone live in pain just so they can live as long as possible. And health care costs are only going to get more expensive, for whomever.[00:06:42] Preston Meyer: If the only activity on your schedule of day-to-day for months on end is eating up resources, at some point you got to figure out maybe there's a better plan.[00:06:54] Katie Dooley: Well, and I care less about resources as opposed to quality of life. Like we have family members that live every day in pain and then they're also paying. For fentanyl patches, which are very expensive to manage that pain that they're still in.[00:07:10] Preston Meyer: Fentanyl is a wild thing.[00:07:13] Katie Dooley: Anyway, wild.[00:07:16] Preston Meyer: Yeah. But as you may have deduced, we're going to talk about some ghosts today.[00:07:23] Katie Dooley: Really wants to talk about ghosts today. So.[00:07:25] Preston Meyer: So the Tanakh does mention ghosts. Um, there's a lot of different kinds of ghosts I've been in unrelated studies, been trying to suss out how different people categorize ghosts.[00:07:39] Katie Dooley: Like angels. [00:07:40] Preston Meyer: with A little bit. Yeah. Okay, so you've got poltergeists who can legit interact with the physical world, and then you've got shades which are not so much.[00:07:51] Katie Dooley: They're there, but they're they can't do anything.[00:07:53] Preston Meyer: Right. Like maybe you can communicate them. Maybe not, but they just they may be barely visible. They might be more visible, but they're not going to interact physically with the world. So they're like a shadow. So that's a shade sort of thing. So what we have in the Tanakh usually talks about shades more than poltergeists that we have in ancient Israel, the belief that ghosts, the spirits of the departed, could be summoned and you could have conversations with them and learn things from them. The story of Saul and the Witch of Endor is an example.[00:08:35] Katie Dooley: That's from Star Wars, right?[00:08:38] Preston Meyer: George Lucas is not half as original as he likes to get credit for. And Endor was just an old place. No Ewoks, which is just Wookiee backwards. Almost not perfect.[00:08:55] Katie Dooley: I see your theory. Yeah, yeah, yeah.[00:08:57] Preston Meyer: No, the plan was that they were going to go to the Wookiee homeworld in Return of the Jedi. And then they couldn't figure out how to do it in a reasonable way. So they decided, okay, we'll make smaller costumes and just cast little people.[00:09:15] Katie Dooley: Okay. Wow. Also, some Star Wars backstory from Preston today. Sorry, I interrupted, and I regret interrupting now.[00:09:26] Preston Meyer: So the shades are a thing that is a matter of concern in Jewish folklore. And in their theology a little bit as well. There are explicit commandments. Do not mess with people who summon ghosts. Which makes sense. And they also talk about shades that can linger in the land and just stay near the place where they lived or where they died. Isaiah talks a little bit about those too. So I think it's kind of interesting. Ghosts, very solid, part of the religious tradition and there are in more recent than biblical texts, traditions of these shades actually possessing a body usually for a short time just to accomplish a specific task. We talked about this a little bit in our voodoo episode. Actually, it's the same sort of idea. [00:10:22] Katie Dooley: Which makes, I was gonna say, makes a bit of sense knowing the origins of Voodoo, right?[00:10:27] Preston Meyer: Well, especially the way it interacted with other religions on its way here. Yeah. So kind of interesting that this possession business is really interesting. And as we get into Christianity, there's stories of ghosts in the New Testament, in Jewish populations where the story feels a lot different, knowing that there's this belief locally that these would be things that dead people are coming back to accomplish, rather than demons like the Greek interpretation jumps onto it. Mhm. It's kind of weird. Kind of fun.[00:11:06] Katie Dooley: Um, you know who loves death? Christian?[00:11:09] Preston Meyer: Uh, I don't even remember where the quote came from originally, but I feel like I've quoted it a few times. Christians are just way too excited to die. '[00:11:19] Katie Dooley: Yeah. Oh, man, they love it. Why is that Preston?[00:11:23] Preston Meyer: That we talk so much about the promise that the next life is going to be better. And yeah, there's there's so much wrong with this world that it makes sense to hope for something better. But when it gets anywhere close to somebody else realizing that you're too excited to die, you have really screwed up where your focuses are.[00:11:44] Katie Dooley: Yeah. And even like trying to try to make it all happen faster, trying to bring up the Second Coming. It's like.[00:11:52] Preston Meyer: Well, there's there's a lot of different ideas of what is supposed to trigger the Second Coming.[00:11:58] Katie Dooley: Humans aren't going to do it.[00:12:00] Preston Meyer: It's outside our control. We can't control God.[00:12:03] Katie Dooley: Doesn't mean people aren't trying because they can't wait. Yeah. Anyway, um, as I mentioned in Christians historically also don't like cremation because there would be no corpse when Jesus comes back and raises everyone from the dead, or he Christians believe in a physical resurrection.[00:12:23] Preston Meyer: Yeah, your body's got to rise from the grave. And as you pivot at the waist, you got to be facing east.[00:12:28] Katie Dooley: That sounds horrifying. It's all these and they all have to claw up six feet. Wow. Yeah.[00:12:37] Preston Meyer: Imagine the horror that this event would be.[00:12:39] Katie Dooley: Yeah. Anyway. But again, a lot of them are more relaxed now. I mean, I think it's just even people in my world, both of my grandparents were cremated and they were Christians. So. Anyway, I feel like they're the most relaxed now of any of the groups. [00:12:59] Preston Meyer: Probably,yeah.[00:13:02] Katie Dooley: I mean, Christian is a really big umbrella.[00:13:06] Preston Meyer: It sure is[00:13:07] But I'm sure there's groups within Christianity that still love a good burial, probably Catholic.[00:13:13] Preston Meyer: So I went to my granddad's funeral last...[00:13:17] Katie Dooley: We both did a bunch of funerals recently.[00:13:18] Preston Meyer: Yeah. What a time.[00:13:20] Katie Dooley: Yeah.[00:13:21] Preston Meyer: And I mean it was interesting that I had never talked about religion at all with my granddad. I'd never thought that he identified as Christian. Found out at his funeral. This was an important detail to somebody. Yeah. So there was a little ash cross dropped on his coffin and was laid down on the ground, making sure that he was facing in a way that if you were to bend at the waist, he'd be facing east. [00:13:52] Katie Dooley: In six feet of dirt.[00:13:53] Preston Meyer: Yeah it was it was an interesting learning experience.[00:13:59] Katie Dooley: Well, good.[00:13:59] Preston Meyer: And now we're talking about death.[00:14:01] Katie Dooley: Now we're talking about death in the terms of Christian wakes are a Christian thing.[00:14:08] Preston Meyer: Yeah. I haven't heard the word wake used a lot outside of a Catholic context. Um, though I'm certainly can't say that that's not happening, but it's certainly an old tradition.[00:14:20] Katie Dooley: Yeahand as someone who's involved with the Irish community, the Irish still love a good wake. I don't know too many other groups that do it. And I don't know if that's because it's Irish or because it's Catholic, like what that Venn diagram looks like. And how much is just the circles I run in. But the Irish love a good wake. The name comes from staying up long hours watching over the dead while reciting psalms.[00:14:43] Preston Meyer: So we're not talking about the risk of the dead waking up. It's just that you got to stay awake to watch the body.[00:14:50] Katie Dooley: To watch.[00:14:51] Preston Meyer: In case it wakes up.[00:14:53] Katie Dooley: in case it wakes up to make sure.[00:14:55] Preston Meyer: I mean, there it does make sense because historically we we have had situations aplenty enough that we've taken precautions.[00:15:05] Katie Dooley: Bells and...[00:15:05] Preston Meyer: Where the bodies do occasionally get back up again after we thought they were dead. But we're just dumb.[00:15:13] Katie Dooley: If you want to hear a great vaudeville song about exactly that, it's called Tim Finnegan's Wake and basically he's dead and everyone's sad. And then someone spills whiskey on him and he comes back to life because whiskey.[00:15:27] Preston Meyer: It's like the plants in my office.[00:15:31] Katie Dooley: Water. Oh. That's terrible. Preston.[00:15:38] Preston Meyer: Uh, no one's perfect.[00:15:41] Katie Dooley: You know, you don't need to keep plants if that's... If you're just gonna kill him.[00:15:45] Preston Meyer: I'm gonna be honest. I don't keep plants in my office, and the person who generally takes care of them generally takes very good care of them. But there are occasionally exceptions.[00:15:59] Katie Dooley: We're not going to do a full episode on Heaven or Hell. But Christians and even Muslims and Jews, depending on whether you're good or bad, good or bad, you get sent to heaven or hell. Dun dun dun. Yes, that definitely deserves its own episode.[00:16:16] Preston Meyer: Yeah, for most of history, the majority of Christians and an awful lot of segments of the Jewish population as well, have believed in a tiered series of heavens. In our angels episode, we talked about the ninth heaven, where like, the greatest of the angels live forever with God. And, um, the seventh heaven is a thing that happens occasionally in the way. What's the word I'm looking for? It's a common enough English idiom. Um, there's a TV show.[00:16:48] Katie Dooley: I know. [00:16:49] Preston Meyer: Who is in that TV show. I watched it for a year.[00:16:53] Katie Dooley: The most famous person out of Seventh Heaven was Jessica Biel. She was the second oldest daughter. Um, the guy who played the Christian pastor ended up being a pedophile in real life.[00:17:03] Preston Meyer: Oh, no.[00:17:04] Katie Dooley: Yeah, she was the most famous. I can't think of any of the other actors names now. Um, the older there was another.[00:17:10] Preston Meyer: Singer who was, like, really popular for a really short time. That was from that show, wasn't there? I don't know. I've got nothing.[00:17:17] Katie Dooley: Maybe as a side character, but of the family, only Jessica Biel made it anywhere significant.  I mean, JT and all and actually having some decent movie roles afterwards,[00:17:27] Preston Meyer: Right? Good for her.[00:17:30] Katie Dooley: Yeah. I mean, considering no one else.[00:17:33] Preston Meyer: Yeah. The phrase I'm on cloud nine. Yeah, I don't think you hear that a whole lot anymore either. But that was a thing.[00:17:38] Katie Dooley: That Cloud Nine superstore.[00:17:39] Preston Meyer: Your grandpappy, probably said... Man, Superstore was a good show.[00:17:43] Katie Dooley: It was a good show. Better than better than Seventh Heaven.[00:17:45] Preston Meyer: Yes. Um, yeah. So for a long time, we talked about these tiered heavens that. Yeah, salvation is universal, but because people suck to different degrees, some of us are going to achieve a better situation.[00:18:04] Or hell yeah.[00:18:05] Preston Meyer: Protestants, especially, like the evangelical movement, mostly believe in the simple dichotomy of black and white, no shades of gray. Everything that's wrong with you is going to be fixed or burn forever in hell. It's hard to say that I see the appeal to that. I don't really like it.[00:18:23] Katie Dooley: I mean.[00:18:24] Preston Meyer: It takes away your identity.[00:18:25] Katie Dooley: Well, and if it's that black and white, then everyone's going to hell because nobody's.[00:18:28] Preston Meyer: And that's absolutely contrary to the mission of Jesus. Oh, well.[00:18:34] Katie Dooley: I guess we'll find out one day.[00:18:36] Preston Meyer: Yeah. I think it's a lot more reasonable to accept this more classical idea of shades of gray. It just makes sense. Um, different types of people organized and divided based on the way they choose to live their lives would merit different levels of heaven, I think is really a really clean way of explaining it. There was a lady I used to visit for a while when I lived in New Jersey who hated the idea that God would separate people based on any judgment at all. It makes a lot more sense that we would separate ourselves, right? If you like stealing but hate violence, there's a community for you where you're safe from the violent. But the people who don't like being robbed are safe from you.[00:19:32] Katie Dooley: That's good. So you just all rob each other for all time.[00:19:35] Preston Meyer: Yeah,[00:19:37] Katie Dooley: That's a pretty good punishment.[00:19:38] Preston Meyer: Right?[00:19:39] Katie Dooley: You steal something, then you turn around and your shit's got. Ah.[00:19:41] Preston Meyer: Yeah.[00:19:42] Katie Dooley: So you got to steal more.[00:19:44] Preston Meyer: It feels a lot like the punishment fitting the crime. Yeah.[00:19:49] Katie Dooley: Um, we didn't put in our notes, but I know, I mean, I went to a Catholic funeral recently. We were... I don't know if you want to touch on that.[00:19:57] Preston Meyer: Sure, yeah. What is it that you experienced that you want to share?[00:20:00] Katie Dooley: I mean i've been told 2 or 3 Catholic funerals, now? Obviously, this one, most recently Catholic funerals are long because they do a full mass. I will say the thing about Catholic funeral, there's a lot of talk about God and not nearly as much about the person.[00:20:18] Preston Meyer: Sure. Now, is this a mass in addition to the daily mass, or is it just a not just a funeral attached to the daily mass?[00:20:27] Katie Dooley: No, they do... My understanding is they do a separate funeral mass.[00:20:31] Preston Meyer: I mean, nobody's accusing the Catholics of being efficient.[00:20:35] Katie Dooley: No, because it also took a long time. And then of course, I was like looking for the reliquary, because now we know from our lovely guest, Frank McMahon, confirmed that there is a holy relic in every Catholic church. So I'm looking for bits of saints.[00:20:49] Preston Meyer: Well, at the bare minimum, they'll have one locked away in the tabernacle, right? And you wouldn't get to see that. But yeah, if there's more about on on display.[00:20:59] Katie Dooley: There was something pretty fancy in a corner. And I was like, I don't know what that is. Okay, I didn't get close enough because I left the front for the family, but, uh.[00:21:07] Preston Meyer: No, no, you got to push your way through during a funeral.[00:21:10] Katie Dooley: During it. I need a front row seat, please, because I just need a front row seat. Um, but that's the biggest thing. Like. I mean, the last funeral I went to was as secular as a funeral gets. And they talk a lot about the person that passed. Um, so it's just. Different. But yeah, you know, everyone, priests especially very hopeful that she's in a better place. And we're the ones who are the losers an I don't know, I mean, you know, I don't believe any of that. I was like, is she. I mean, it's nice to think, but. Why are there no bear ghosts?[00:21:54] Preston Meyer: Because they don't have unfinished business. They got their honey. They're happy.[00:22:01] Katie Dooley: But. Right. If there's no bear heaven and bear hell, why is there human heaven? Human hell? Why are there no bear ghosts? That's my thesis.[00:22:14] Preston Meyer: I have a hypothesis. That bear heaven is fish hell. It's a very efficient system, and it's good enough that they don't need to linger here on Earth.[00:22:29] Katie Dooley: I've heard that, uh, squirrel hell is dog heaven.[00:22:32] Preston Meyer: Yeah. Perfect. So Christianity does inherit a lot from Jewish thought. It makes sense. Dispensationalism has got some tricky bits to it, but the inheritance system is inarguable. And that includes the matter of ghosts and the idea of possessing spirits I already mentioned shows up with the New Testament, but Greco-Roman thought shows a lot of its influence in the way that we see demons described in the Christian tradition that almost every ghost that you see described in the New Testament, apart from when they think that maybe Jesus is a ghost until he says, touch me and find out. [00:23:17] Katie Dooley: Pull my finger. Preston just wiggled his finger at me, so... "Pull my finger." - Jesus, Matthew 22:34.[00:23:26] Preston Meyer: Yeah, all the the ghosts are, well, terrible demons possessing people or making everybody have a bad time. Jehovah's Witnesses and Christadelphians outright deny the possibility of ghosts, which is really frustrating for them when you point out the holes in that logic. But. Oh, well they just stopped visiting.[00:23:52] Katie Dooley: As much as I, uh, you know, try to be fair to... They're the least Christian of the Christians.[00:23:59] Preston Meyer: I mean, it's so hard to delineate what what is Christian and what isn't.[00:24:03] Katie Dooley: I know, but that's was my point. I was trying to poorly word, but yeah, but they're at least Christian. [00:24:12] Preston Meyer: I can't argue with that in this moment.[00:24:15] Katie Dooley: My next thesis.[00:24:18] Preston Meyer: Um, Seventh-day Adventist got a lot of those in my family. They teach that any ghost you might encounter is absolutely, certainly a demon in disguise.[00:24:28] Katie Dooley: Cool.[00:24:29] Preston Meyer: Sure. Not that I'm encountering a whole lot of ghosts.[00:24:34] Katie Dooley: No, but I just, like. I'm imagining a ghost pulling off its ghost mask, like in Scooby Doo and be like there's a demon under here.[00:24:43] Preston Meyer: I like that imagery.[00:24:44] Katie Dooley: Thank you.[00:24:45] Preston Meyer: But generally everybody agrees they can basically shapeshift.[00:24:48] Katie Dooley: Oh, oh that makes a lot more sense, but it's way less cool.[00:24:54] Preston Meyer: Right? Most other Christians admit the possibility of the disguise problem, but acknowledge that a ghost could genuinely be the dead person you're after. The ghost that we see in the Witch of Endor story. It's not really answered in a really concrete way. Whether or not this should be expected to be a demon in disguise or the dead prophet returned. Because that wasn't the important part of the story. The important part of the story was stop getting witches to summon demons. Many Christians believe that the dead can take on the role of angel.[00:25:34] Katie Dooley: Which is where, as we're writing these notes, I was like, we need to separate heaven and hell. And even we talked about angels. And I was like, but dead people become angels.[00:25:43] Preston Meyer: Right.[00:25:43] Katie Dooley: One so yeah, there's like a whole other piece to this.[00:25:47] Preston Meyer: Yeah. Um, the Revelation talks about how there's like a third of the host of Heaven fell with Lucifer, as most people prefer to call him.[00:25:57] Katie Dooley: Satan is accurate.[00:25:59] Preston Meyer:  [00:25:59]Satan is a far more helpful thing here. And so those generally [00:26:03] get to be the ones that we call demons within Christian theology models. But there are also talks of, well, if you're just a bad person, you can become a demon that way too. It's exciting. It gives you something to aspire to if you don't want to change your ways. Lots of goodies.[00:26:23] Katie Dooley: Cool. The last of the Abrahamic religions, of course, is Islam. And I mean last chronologically[00:26:23] Preston Meyer: Of course and the last one we're talking about. [00:26:33] Katie Dooley: And the last one we're talking about today.[00:26:34] Preston Meyer: Because we usually stick. [00:26:36] Katie Dooley: Last but not least. Very similar, obviously, it's been influenced by Judaism and Christianity. When death is imminent, a family member or close friend is present to say the shahada, which is the, uh,[00:26:49] Preston Meyer: There is no God but God, and Muhammad is his prophet.[00:26:53] Katie Dooley: Yes. Uh, there's a word for it. Something of faith.[00:26:57] Preston Meyer: Uh, statement of faith. Statement.[00:26:58] Katie Dooley: Declaration. Declaration. Thank you. Declaration of faith. We talked about this in our Islam so years ago. But the shahada is also recited when you're born. So it's this. If you're born a Muslim, it's kind of a nice full-circle moment.[00:27:12] Preston Meyer: It's a very convenient conversion tool. All you got to do is shout that in somebody's ear and bam.[00:27:18] Katie Dooley: You actually shout it?[00:27:20] Preston Meyer: I mean, some people like like the video of the guy who doing like a really awful baptism of a baby with dunk, dunk dunk dunk dunk.[00:27:28] Katie Dooley: Baby gets shaken baby.[00:27:29] Preston Meyer: Yeah. And the parents are just horrified. There are people who shout at the children. But that's not likely the typical format.[00:27:39] Katie Dooley: All right. Again with like with the other Abrahamic faiths and more strictly Muslims do not cremate their dead. Some Jews do. I'd say half of Christians do, and no Muslims do. They do not cremate their dead because they believe in the physical resurrection that will happen. And autopsies are also forbidden. Unnecessary autopsies, obviously. I presume in the case of murder they would do an autopsy. But if someone dies in their home, they don't do autopsies[00:28:11] Preston Meyer: Right. There's I mean, there are places where autopsies just aren't happening. But here in North America, yeah, if something bad happens, it's going to happen. And you can put on your frowny face all you want. It's still going to happen. You just muscle through it.[00:28:30] Katie Dooley: Uh, but organ donation is okay because it helps people.[00:28:33] Preston Meyer: So I'm really glad that exception exists. It feels weird.[00:28:39] Katie Dooley: It feels contradictory.[00:28:40] Preston Meyer: Yeah. But I appreciate that exception exists because it helps people.[00:28:45] Katie Dooley: Yeah. I mean, you know, someone's dead and you don't care why they died. What is the point of an autopsy? Right. If they're 80 something years old.[00:28:56] Preston Meyer: Yeah.[00:28:57] Katie Dooley: And they died at home in their bed or in a hospital in the bed.[00:29:00] Preston Meyer: There's gonna come a time 100 years from now, and our podcast will still be available on podcast libraries. And somebody's going to hear that it was normal for us to die at 80 and go. What the hell was wrong with these people?[00:29:16] Katie Dooley: You think our life expectancy is going to get that?[00:29:18] Preston Meyer: I think our life expectancy can reasonably be expected to be extended by decades. I got high hopes. We'll see.[00:29:28] Katie Dooley: Uh, bodies are originally washed and wrapped in a white sheet before burial. And they are washed three times by a family member of the same gender as the deceased. Sharia law dictates that funeral planning start immediately after the death, and bodies are buried quickly. There are no viewings, so no wakes. You did not stay up all night drinking with your dead grandma. Have you seen Derry Girls?[00:29:55] Preston Meyer: I've seen a little bit of Derry Girls, but I definitely have not seen whatever has come to your mind.[00:30:00] Katie Dooley: There's an episode and they're at someone's wake. And my favorite character, Sister Michael, she's a curmudgeonly nun. Who I don't even know if she has that much faith. And there's one part. She's at this wake and she's talking to a family member. The family member is very annoying. She's like, oh my God, is this my wake? Am I dead? Am I in hell?[00:30:23] Preston Meyer: I love it.[00:30:26] Katie Dooley: Sister Michael, I'll show it to you after I love her. I watched through the whole series, and it's filled with charming teens. I was like, no, that grumpy old lady. That's my favorite.[00:30:38] Preston Meyer: That sounds right. So, if you were wondering. Yes, Muslims believe in ghosts. Uh, the spirits of the dead are supposed to go on to an underworld called Barzakh.[00:30:51] Katie Dooley: Oh, that's a good name.[00:30:52] Preston Meyer: Yeah, I like the name. Be honest, I did not look up what the name means. I'm sure it's got meaning, but I'll look it up later. Improper burial can impede the journey to this underworld.[00:31:03] Katie Dooley: Oh, that's why they're so regimented in it, okay.[00:31:06] Preston Meyer: Because you don't want to risk screwing this up, and then you've got a ghost wandering around because, I mean, if you ever notice ghosts, it's not because they're doing nice things for you. Nobody's emptying your dishwasher. It's not happening.[00:31:19] Katie Dooley: Oh, you seen that webcomic of this little ghost? And he's like, I love home decorating. And he's, like, moving around frames and vases, and the family's like, ah, but he's just this cute little ghost. It's like, I love this work. It makes me way too happy, but also sad.[00:31:34] Preston Meyer: I love it. Yeah, that's great. Um, so the shades of righteous spirits are expected to linger at their own graves, which feels a little bit weird. I had to dig at this. There's like, the soul goes on to the underworld and awaits resurrection. But a shade, a shadow of that soul lingers at the grave so that people can come and talk to it and get whatever great mystic knowledge is reserved for, not the living. But apparently the shades are willing to share it sometime.[00:32:16] Katie Dooley: It feels like a pretty common practice of like.[00:32:18] Preston Meyer: Yeah.[00:32:19] Katie Dooley: Visiting grave to talk to a loved one.[00:32:21] Preston Meyer: I would say it's pretty close to universal that you would go to wherever you buried your loved ones to talk to them, hoping to get some sort of answer.[00:32:32] Katie Dooley: But they believe that they actually stay there. That's cool.[00:32:36] Preston Meyer: Yeah, it's kind of nifty.[00:32:38] Katie Dooley: Yeah. All right. Heading to the East air quotes.[00:32:44] Preston Meyer: Vaguely eastward from where we were.[00:32:46] Katie Dooley: Or where we're heading to the Dharmic religions is actually a better title. Hinduism.[00:32:52] Preston Meyer: Yeah.[00:32:54] Katie Dooley: So when death is near, it is common to obtain water for purification from the Ganges River, which is considered sacred.[00:33:02] Preston Meyer: Remember we talked about how the Hindu people are the river folks.[00:33:05] Katie Dooley: The river folk is the part to be surrounded by loved ones at the time of your death. If the body is left alone, uh, light, ideally, a candle should be left near the body as close to the head as can be done safely so.[00:33:19] Preston Meyer: Yeah. You don't want them catching on fire.[00:33:20] Katie Dooley: No. Uh, to comfort the lingering spirit. Generally for Hindus, families are encouraged to remain conservative in their mourning, allowing the soul to move on quickly to its next stage. The soul is said to linger as long as people hold it with their thoughts. So mourners are encouraged to focus on happy thoughts and memories. I like that.[00:33:41] Preston Meyer: Right? So it's okay to mourn, but not too long and not too negatively. Which is good. Remember the good times.[00:33:51] Katie Dooley: Families typically prefer to bury the body within a day. Any work the coroner might need to do is a major inconvenience.[00:33:58] Preston Meyer: I mean, that's true, generally.[00:34:02] Katie Dooley: All organs need to be returned to their place before burial. So no organ donation here.[00:34:07] Preston Meyer: Yeah, I'm there's definitely going to be exceptions to that. Some people are a lot more liberal than but the the general religious expectation is leave it be.[00:34:20] Katie Dooley: The soul is believed to carry on to its next incarnation, whether as an angel, a human or an animal. Or better yet, escape the cycle of samsara and recombine with Brahma, the source of all creation, potentially to be recycled into creation. But that would be as a nearly totally new soul.[00:34:40] Preston Meyer: Yeah, the this cycle of samsara is. A really interesting thing to study so much potential or just go back and recombine with God. And maybe he'll use you again.[00:34:54] Katie Dooley: Maybe he'll use you for something else. You've done it. But now you're a rock. Because he needed a rock right here. Yeah, ad if you'll recall, the you come back based on how good you are. Good you were your karma in your past lives. So if you're doing good, you'll come back as something better. You're not doing so good. You're heading back to that rock.[00:35:18] Preston Meyer: Yeah. And that's historically that was like the way to move between casts was just.[00:35:26] Katie Dooley: Being reborn.[00:35:27] Preston Meyer: Yeah. And now we've seen in some places some movement between castees is more possible than in other places.[00:35:37] Katie Dooley: I mean, this generaetion, I think, is caring less about caste than ever before. And I'm sure in the next 20, 30, 40 years, it'll...[00:35:47] Preston Meyer: Get a little bit better every generation. Yeah, one can hope anyway.[00:35:52] Katie Dooley: Tell me about the Ghost, though.[00:35:53] Preston Meyer: Oh, man. So there's some there's some baggage here with Hindu ghosts. You're supposed to move on to the next life.[00:36:01] Katie Dooley: So if you don't, you're downgrading.[00:36:05] Preston Meyer: Right? You're supposed to get a new body.[00:36:07] Katie Dooley: So a ghost is like a variant of Loki. You've come out of the timeline.[00:36:14] Preston Meyer: A little bit.[00:36:15] Katie Dooley: Interesting.[00:36:16] Preston Meyer: I mean, to the point where you've got folks like the TVA saying, no, you need to get back in line. Yeah, that's a little that is a fair enough analogy of what we're looking at. Okay. It's not perfect.[00:36:29] Katie Dooley: But you're right because you're either supposed to come back better or come back worse. So if you're not coming back at all and you're not escaping samsara, there's a problem. Okay. I can't wait to hear this.[00:36:40] Preston Meyer: So go start a very serious matter. Reincarnation is the normal path. Something is keeping spirits from passing on to the next phase, which could theoretically be nirvana. But if you're in this situation where you're lingering here, maybe that next step isn't Nirvana. So there's a good list of things that might prevent a spirit from moving on, and thus lingering is a noticeable and likely malevolent spirit. We've got improper burial. So a lot of religions worry about burying people properly to prevent ghost problems. Uh, we've got violent death. Loads of fun there. Unfinished business. I mean, that's bad karma. Most of these are bad karma type things. Sometimes it's not your karma, but other people's karma on you. But if you've got unfinished business, that's your own karma. And the worst of all of these, the one that had some serious baggage that I thought was really interesting is if a woman dies in childbirth or at the abuse of her in-laws, then she is said to return as a churel or chudel or whatever. 400 different ways are pronouncing that based on the various languages of the region. A malevolent and destructive spirit is what a churel is, and they are focused on the destruction of the family that wronged her. Yeah, it's apparently very dramatic, caused a lot of problems, and they've got ghost hunters to deal with that.[00:38:15] Katie Dooley: Yeah, I was going to say that sounds like the plot of a good Bollywood movie.[00:38:20] Preston Meyer: There's got to be one, right? The odds are good.[00:38:23] Katie Dooley: The odds are... I might have to do some digging. Yeah. Cool. Buddhism.[00:38:30] Preston Meyer: So I remember showing you a video a little while ago that looked super suspicious.[00:38:35] Katie Dooley: I remember when I saw this, I was like, oh, okay. Yeah. Um, so Buddhism sort of overarching, very similar to Hinduism, trying to escape the cycle of life and death. But there's some nuances and some practices within Buddhism that are neat slash kinda gross.[00:38:52] Preston Meyer: Yeah, they're care for the dead is completely incompatible with what we see in the Hindu tradition.[00:38:58] Katie Dooley: I'm tempted to put a trigger warning on this part of the episode. I found it a bit gross. Sure, mostly the sokushinbutsu.[00:39:06] Preston Meyer: You've been warned. Skip ahead five minutes if you don't want to handle this.[00:39:09] Katie Dooley: Yeah, it's just like body horror is a bit strong, but it is a little gross. So we're gonna talk about Tibetan sky burials. Tell me about this video that you showed me.[00:39:18] Preston Meyer: So there was this person in a little corral full of vultures because they don't always just fly around waiting for stuff. Sometimes they know where the good stuff is, and sometimes they're part of a farm. And this person was just chopping up a human skeleton up. It was a pretty clean skeleton. Somebody had already taken care of business.[00:39:39] Katie Dooley: And it was very clear from the rib cage that it was a human skeleton.[00:39:43] Preston Meyer: It was very obviously human.[00:39:45] Katie Dooley: So this was a Tibetan sky burial. Sky burial. I don't know if it was in Tibet, but that's where it comes from. The term sky burial is a Western term. The actual practice, the translation translates to giving alms to the birds, which I kind of love.[00:40:00] Preston Meyer: It's for the birds.[00:40:02] Katie Dooley: This is a practice where the corpse is placed on a mountain to decompose through exposure to the elements and animal scavenging. Obviously, in the case Preston's talking about, for whatever reason, they need to speed it up. Or.[00:40:14] Preston Meyer: I mean, this could have been taking care of the skeleton after the scavenging. Yeah.[00:40:20] Katie Dooley: So Vajrayana Buddhists believe that the body is an empty vessel once the spirit has left. So none of this physical resurrection and therefore there's no reason to keep it. The person's got a new body somewhere else. They died. They've resurrected. They're not sorry, reincarnated somewhere else.[00:40:40] Preston Meyer: Yeah, Buddhists just generally aren't terribly worried about the corpse. And that's nice. I can appreciate that. Just don't worry about it.[00:40:49] Katie Dooley: Another Buddhist practice that mildly traumatized me. And it has a I feel like a deeper theological discussion we could talk about is Sokushinbutsu is the practice of self-mummification.[00:41:06] Preston Meyer: So gross.[00:41:06] Katie Dooley: Japanese. It started by Japanese Buddhist monks. Um, it's an ascetic practice. Acetic, ascetic? I always say it wrong.[00:41:14] Preston Meyer: Acetic is a kind of acid.[00:41:17] Katie Dooley: It's an ascetic practice that takes about 3000 days. That's what, eight years, roughly.[00:41:22] Preston Meyer: Sure.[00:41:23] Katie Dooley: To complete. And it involves essentially eating a tree. Monks would eat pine needles, resin and seeds found in these trees, and the process eventually eliminates all body fat.[00:41:38] Preston Meyer: So you've you've had Buckley's tastes awful, but it works.[00:41:42] Katie Dooley: Yeah, that's part of the tree.[00:41:43] Preston Meyer: Yeah. So the reason that it tastes awful and works is because pine needle oil is mildly toxic. That's why grass doesn't grow right up to the base of the tree. Why would you want to eat pine needles? Unless, of course, this is your plan.[00:41:59] Katie Dooley: Well. And yes. And this is I'll finish explaining it. But this like this idea and I guess it's like self-flagellation of, like, what is so important that you're willing to do this. And as an atheist I'm like, mm, nothing. Anyway, we'll we'll come back to that. Continue explaining this horrific process. So eating the tree eliminates all body fat. It does result in the starvation that it leaves the body well preserved, and they found corpses with skin, hair, teeth, nails in the forest, which is wild, and obviously probably because you're right of the biotoxins animals don't touch them right, and the skin doesn't rot away. So I don't know who figured this out. I don't know why anyone wanted to figure this out, but.[00:42:44] Preston Meyer: Right. There's there's so much that we do that like knowing it. Sure. We can keep going. How did we first find out? Like cheese. The milk went so bad and then all of a sudden was fine again.[00:43:03] Katie Dooley: There's a lot of things in life. I'm like, how did we figure this out? This is one I don't think we needed to figure out but... So the practice has been banned since the late 1800s in Japan. But and there's pictures of this if you do like this kind of stuff. The Buddhist monk Luang Pho Daeng died in 1973. He was a Thai monk from Thailand after practicing sokushinbutsu, and his body is actually on display and they just die while meditating. So he's sitting there cross-legged and they put sunglasses on them because apparently his eye sockets are pretty horrific. But, uh, I mean, it's an interesting example of... They didn't do anything to him. He's just he's behind glass now.[00:43:47] Preston Meyer: But I would hope so because people, you know, people are going to be touching. Right.[00:43:53] Katie Dooley: Yeah. But he's they didn't do any other sort of embalming to him besides...[00:43:58] Preston Meyer: What he did himself, what he...[00:43:59] Katie Dooley: Did to himself. So anyway, um, yeah, it's an interesting like but I guess we even have cases like 9/11. What do you believe in so much that you're willing to die for it? Something that takes 3000 days of some commitment[00:43:59] Preston Meyer: Right? I mean, there's a lot of things I like to eat that would slow this process down.[00:44:20] Katie Dooley: I don't I don't think you're supposed to eat other things.[00:44:23] Preston Meyer: I know it's a major commitment.[00:44:25] Katie Dooley: You'd be like, you'd eat like pine needles and then be like, oh, but a burger sounds great.[00:44:29] Preston Meyer: Right?[00:44:32] Katie Dooley: Um, yeah. And the the Luang Pho Daeng, he had six kids and a wife, and he left to become a Buddhist monk. And then he decided.[00:44:41] Preston Meyer: He would end it all the slowest way possible.[00:44:43] Katie Dooley: The slowest way possible. And I just, I, I don't know, I just I can't wrap my head around it, but I guess it's.[00:44:50] Preston Meyer: Not for me.[00:44:51] Katie Dooley: I guess. But John Paul II flogged himself and people flew into the Twin Towers and Luang Pho Dang starved himself to death. I don't, I guess. Maybe I'm just too apathetic, Preston.[00:45:05] Preston Meyer: Maybe, I don't know.[00:45:08] Katie Dooley: Maybe I just like life too much.[00:45:10] Preston Meyer: There's a lot to like about life.[00:45:12] Katie Dooley: I think so, but.[00:45:14] Preston Meyer: All right. Well, believe it or not, Buddhists believe in ghosts, too.[00:45:19] Katie Dooley: What? I'm seeing a theme. This might be the only universal belief in the entire world. I don't believe in ghosts, though, so.[00:45:26] Preston Meyer: Well, we've already pointed out a couple of groups that deny the universality of the belief. Jehovah's Witnesses and Christadelphians.[00:45:34] Katie Dooley: But I do know atheists that believe in ghosts, which is funny to me.[00:45:37] Preston Meyer: Right? You can believe in ghosts without believing in God.[00:45:39] Katie Dooley: No, but I just.[00:45:41] Preston Meyer: No. I think if you do believe in ghosts, it's easy to talk somebody into believing that there's more. And then bam, you get into the mysterious agnostic belief in some sort of god.[00:45:56] Katie Dooley: Or some sort of something.[00:45:58] Preston Meyer: Well, even even if the universe is God, you still got all God.[00:46:01] Katie Dooley: Yeah. Anyway, I was so excited to find a universal belief, its not even universal that puppies are adorable.[00:46:09] Preston Meyer: Right? Puppies are haram.[00:46:12] Katie Dooley: Are haram. Anyway.[00:46:14] Preston Meyer: All right, so many Buddhists celebrate a ghost festival. Where they offer food to ghosts who might linger. This is an expression of compassion mostly, which is one of the greatest virtues of Buddhism. And in return, the ghosts do not bother the community, which seems to usually work, or, depending on your measure of things, maybe always works.[00:46:39] Katie Dooley: Because they don't exist.[00:46:41] Preston Meyer: Right? Um, ghosts might also move onto a realm specifically for hungry ghosts, where there are no offerings and everybody is just hungry all the time.[00:46:57] Katie Dooley: That sounds scary.[00:46:58] Preston Meyer: That sounds like hell. I feel like this is a really nice way of saying they're in hell.[00:47:04] Katie Dooley: Yeah, I don't want to be hungry.[00:47:06] Preston Meyer: Yeah. That sucks. In the Tibetan tradition. A bothersome ghost can be captured with a special trap and extra killed with a ritual dagger, sending it to be reborn again.[00:47:20] Katie Dooley: My, do you know what that reminds me of? When people say he was killed to death, I'm like, uh huh, uh huh. Yep.[00:47:27] Preston Meyer: Redundant. [00:47:28] Preston Meyer: Murder-Death-Killed.[00:47:29] Katie Dooley: Murdered. Death killed. He was murdered to death.[00:47:33] Preston Meyer: But if a ghost is sticking around, that's. Yeah, there is a procedure in place to kill the ghost so that it is not an operating ghost any further.[00:47:44] Katie Dooley: I was going to say that's the only context in which I will accept killed to death is when you're killing a ghost.[00:47:51] Preston Meyer: Yeah, it's. It doesn't fit in the frame that we have for ghosts here. It's different than exorcism, which is kind of what we would talk about, about getting rid of a ghost. But there there are some, some commonalities. There is one particular ghost that I think is rather interesting. And the Dalai Lama agrees. Maybe not for the same reason. Dorjee Shugden is a powerful 17th century monk, I say is because that's what some people believe. In Tibet, he's revered by some who claim that his lingering ghost is a god. Most Buddhists don't really mess with arguments about theology. Don't worry about God's worry about your own path through samsara.[00:48:40] Katie Dooley: This one is hot topic.[00:48:42] Preston Meyer: Yeah, because a lot of people believe that Shugden is a God that is, like worthy of worship and like focus on him a fair bit. And other people, not so much. Of course, the Dalai Lama is not a fan at all. He says that Shugden is an evil spirit. And yeah, this division is causing a lot of contention in Tibet.[00:49:06] Katie Dooley: Sikhs, Sikhism, like Buddhists and Hindus, believe in reincarnation, which is interesting because it's also a monotheistic religion. Remember, it's the baby of Hinduism and Islam.[00:49:18] Preston Meyer: Hindu's a little bit monotheistic. That's true. Depending on your interpretation of all of the things and expressions of God.[00:49:26] Katie Dooley: Um, so Sikhs believe in reincarnation that comes from the Hinduism side and to eventually escape the cycle and become one with God, but only one God. I guess, as you pointed out, Brahma.[00:49:39] Preston Meyer: Right, one, three, 700 million, whatever.[00:49:43] Katie Dooley: It's fine. Cremation is the preferred and traditionally accepted method to deal with the deceased in Sikhism. This is the first time we've seen that. [00:49:54] Preston Meyer: It's like a system built around being wise in a very densely populated part of the world. Thought of a solution to one of a few problems.[00:50:06] Katie Dooley: Family members are expected to witness the cremation process, which I thought was interesting. I don't think that's very typical here.[00:50:12] Preston Meyer: I don't know if we make it very convenient to witness a cremation here.[00:50:16] Katie Dooley: I think you can if you ask, but I don't think it's typicalbecause when we put down Paige, if you've heard our little jingles on the podcast, there's no more jingles anymore. It was an option to watch her be cremated. And I was like, no, I'm good. But I haven't had a human in my life cremated recently, so I don't know.[00:50:35] Preston Meyer: Fingers crossed that it doesn't happen.[00:50:37] Katie Dooley: I'm gonna do that.[00:50:38] Preston Meyer: And if you're curious why people cross their fingers or knock on wood, we did an episode on that a little while ago.[00:50:45] Katie Dooley: Ashes are scattered into a river. They believe that the body should be returned to the earth, and that the family left behind doesn't carry this attachment to the body. In instances where Sikhs may choose burial, headstones are not allowed because the body is just that shell that we've seen in the other Dharmic religions. There should be no attachment to the body. A Sikh funeral is antam sanskar. Antam Sanskar which translates to final ceremony. TThe deceased Sikh is dressed in their five Sikh articles of faith before the funeral and cremation. So that's the Kesh, Kanga, Katcha, Khara and kirpan. If you want to know what those are.[00:51:31] Preston Meyer: Check out.[00:51:32] Katie Dooley: Our episode. One of those is a little knife. Yeah, that's the kirpan. After a funeral service, family and friends gather to read the Sri Guru Granth Sahib. Which is the final guru and the holy book.[00:51:46] Preston Meyer: So as an heir to both Hindu and Muslim philosophies, the ideas of ghosts live in both realms. To some extent, we do have the worry of the ghosts of the abused, that maybe they'll come back and cause some problems, and it's kind of hard to work that out of the faith when it's still living in at least the more secular portion of the Hindu reality. Yeah. Nothing terribly new and exciting there.[00:52:13] Katie Dooley: Now we have some outliers, some that attach directly to religion. Some are just cultural practices around death. Now that we all know what Zoroastrianism is. They are actually doing something very similar to the sky funerals, they have a tower of silence.[00:52:27] Preston Meyer: That sounds really cool.[00:52:29] Katie Dooley: It does. They put their dead on this tower raised platform for scavengers and the elements to aid in decomposition. It is a circular ray structure used just for this purpose. This keeps corpses which are considered to be unclean, away from the sacred elements of fire, earth and water.[00:52:53] Preston Meyer: Up in the air.[00:52:55] Katie Dooley: Well, there's not much you can do about that. I figured it this way. Right. You either has to be Earth. Well, I guess any of them. One of them has to be tainted, though, to get rid of the body. So they've opted for air and give it to the animals. I didn't read the full article because it was behind a paywall, which I hate, but, uh, there's no Towers of Silence in in the West. So that has led Zoroastrians to have to compromise on their last funeral rites and traditions, which is kind of sad. I mean, right, and this is where.[00:53:28] Preston Meyer: Fire is such a big thing, there's always these these fire temples for Zoroastrianism. And part of me wants to say, well, just build a separate fire for cremation, but that is still putting an unclean thing in sacred fire.[00:53:44] Katie Dooley: But and this is where, you know, I said at the top of the episode, some things make a lot of sense, like getting rid of a body in a very both economical and ecological way makes a ton of sense, and I don't think it gets more sanitary than a tower of silence. Whatever, you could argue a sky burial mound could get into the water system or whatever. But yeah, you're right. The West is so uptight about. [00:54:14] Preston Meyer: Dead bodies.[00:54:15] Katie Dooley: Dead bodies, so do I think. You know, eating a tree to die makes a lot of sense. No. Do I think, uh, sky burial does? Yeah.[00:54:24] Preston Meyer: Yeah. Fair.[00:54:25] Katie Dooley: And so it made me sad for them. Like, imagine not being able to have a funeral the way you won't have a funeral for a loved one.[00:54:32] Preston Meyer: There's. There's got to be a way that we can work around existing systems to make that work out.[00:54:39] Katie Dooley: I don't know, I feel like you. Well, no, because there'd still be laws. But the solution is buying private land, right? But you still have to circumvent laws with dead bodies. And I don't know what laws.[00:54:49] Preston Meyer: Cops aren't allowed on our property.[00:54:51] Katie Dooley: Yeah, um.[00:54:52] Preston Meyer: What's the tower for? None of your business. It's a religious structure.[00:54:55] Katie Dooley: You can't see what's on top of it. Of course we have, of course, drones and airplanes and all sorts of things. People know there's dead.[00:55:01] Preston Meyer: There's. Yeah. New project. I'm going to design a structure that isn't super friendly to drones, where you could have a tower of silence.[00:55:13] Katie Dooley: Okay.[00:55:16] Preston Meyer: This would be a thing that will happen a lot more easily if I knew people who were Zoroastrians.[00:55:24] Katie Dooley: Well, if you know a Zoroastrian... If you know Zoroastrian, put them in touch with us. I would just love to interview them and, uh, Preston can talk about his scheme with them.[00:55:37] Preston Meyer: Yep. All right. New Orleans jazz funeral is a fun little extra thing to talk about. Yeah. So, Louisiana. I've never been. Have you been to Louisiana?[00:55:50] Katie Dooley: No. It's actually quite high on my list of places in the States to go. Um, I would really like to go to New Orleans.[00:55:56] Preston Meyer: Yeah, it's from from what I've seen on TV and movies. A great collection of people. That's about what I got for my own knowledge. But luckily we do reading.[00:56:09] Katie Dooley: Yeah. And I mean, I this is nice because we have talked about Voodoo and a little bit of Hoodoo in the past.[00:56:15] Preston Meyer: Yeah. So there's strong colonial past there. Connects to Europe, Africa and the Caribbean. There is a great tradition of military style brass bands at these funeral processions. You can you can find videos on YouTube. They're great. Mix that with African spiritual practices, Catholic influences. And you know, this being the birthplace of jazz, New Orleans has a pretty unique funerary tradition. Lots of dancing. I've seen more than one casket drop.[00:56:48] Katie Dooley: I mean, that person doesn't care anymore.[00:56:52] Preston Meyer: And everybody's having a good time. You're like, for sure there are going to be a couple living people who are a little uncomfortable with dropping a casket, but that's not a thing that has to be remembered. Yeah. They really incorporate celebration into the mourning. Yeah. You lost somebody you love, but you get to celebrate the time you did enjoy with them and celebrate the fact that you've been brought together with your community and family.[00:57:17] Katie Dooley: You know, I'm just going to touch on this right now because I'm thinking of it. Our good friend Sarah Snyder, our very first ever guest on the podcast, she shared a I guess it's a meme that's not a funny one the other day. And she said, things that are said at funerals should be set at birthdays. And I thought, I'm going to start doing that. I'm going to write long loving cards to my friends now. So I like it. It doesn't all get left to the last minute.[00:57:41] Preston Meyer: Yeah.[00:57:42] Katie Dooley: Ghanaian fantasy coffins. So interesting. We'll post some pictures on the day this launches on our Discord. These are works of art used by the Ga people of Southern Ghana. They believe that our lives continue into the next world the same as they did on Earth. So the coffins represent the deceased by using different symbols. Fantasy coffins are shaped and painted. You can get them in ships, mermaids, chickens, shoes and so much more. And yeah, often they use it to represent what your job was in life. So pilots will be buried in planes and.[00:58:20] Preston Meyer: So I can get I wrap my head around a lot of careers that would get you buried in something that's shaped like a ship. What do I do I have to do to get buried inside a mermaid?[00:58:32] Katie Dooley: I would also say ship related work. Ocean navigating. You can also be a professional mermaid now.[00:58:41] Preston Meyer: Okay, fair.[00:58:43] Katie Dooley: I don't know how popular that is in Ghana I feel like it's a real white person thing.[00:58:46] Preston Meyer: Famadihana is the traditional Madagascar ceremony of the Malagasy people, of turning of the bones. It's basically just a way to continually remember the deceased. Bodies of ancestors are removed from their resting place, rewrapped and their names written on the shroud to be remembered. That's kind of nice. A little gross.[00:59:11] Katie Dooley: Yeah, I was gonna say I want to be the person. There's like a there's a point where is horrible. And then once they're just bones, it's fine. But there's like the first couple of years where they're still icky. I wouldn't want to be that person.[00:59:24] Preston Meyer: But yeah, when it's sticky, it's a bad time. Yeah.[00:59:27] Katie Dooley: But once they're just clean bones, yeah, that's not so bad.[00:59:32] Preston Meyer: And depending on the situation, I mean, it might not even be a long time, right?[00:59:36] Katie Dooley: I don't know how long the body takes to decompose.[00:59:39] Preston Meyer: It varies on region. Right. Well Madagascar is wet.[00:59:42] Katie Dooley: Yeah. And then I mean over here they don't decompose because we put so many fucking toxic shit into them, which.[00:59:47] Preston Meyer: There is that[00:59:49] Katie Dooley: Please don't do that to me. I want to be a mushroom.[00:59:52] Preston Meyer: Okay?[00:59:53] Katie Dooley: Hollow me out and then turn me into mushrooms.[00:59:55] Preston Meyer: Yeah. Okay, so there is more to this process. They don't just wrap them up and then stick them back where they found them. They dance with their skeletons. They have a real party. I'm almost. I'm gonna say Mexican Day of the dead level.[01:00:12] Katie Dooley: Yeah.[01:00:13] Preston Meyer: But there's this practice creeps a lot of people out, and so they're doing it less and less. I don't know if it needs to be stamped out. It doesn't feel like that is necessary, but the Christian missionaries have really put a lot of pressure on them to stop, even though the Catholic Church is okay with it.[01:00:32] Katie Dooley: The Catholic Church has come out to say they're okay with it. So I'm guessing these are Protestant missionaries that are like, maybe we shouldn't dance with bones. Catholic Church has come out and said, no, it's fine. Have fun.[01:00:43] Preston Meyer: I mean, especially this newest pope. He's mostly like, yeah, keep doing your good things. Please don't leave the church.[01:00:52] Katie Dooley: I just heard by the time this episode comes out, this will be really old news, but that he's, like, not approved of gay marriage. But there's steps being taken to... You can't call them marriage, but you can get blessed.[01:01:07] Preston Meyer: Yeah. The Pope did a little while ago announced that he will bless gay unions, which is. It's a step. It is a step.[01:01:24] Katie Dooley: So, anyway, uh, Preston mentioned the day of the dead, and we've talked about it a little bit before. And it is, of course, the subject of video or popular animated films. The day of the Dead is November 2nd, religiously. Secularly. It has extended to more than a single day, and the festival is much more fun. The ghosts aren't likely offended, right?[01:01:47] Preston Meyer: It's just loads of rum. Loads and loads and loads of rum.[01:01:50] Katie Dooley: For that part of the world.[01:01:51] Preston Meyer: Bright colors and parades. All right, so I did a bunch of deep diving into near death experiences. Um, so research into this field of near-death experiences is relatively new. We haven't been talking about it for even 200 years quite yet, really. And so it started when people started regularly falling from heights great enough to have time to contemplate their lives. So fairly recent history. And so when we started reviving people from clinical deaths, then we started getting a lot more people giving reports on their near-death experiences, experiencing the sorts o

MSL Talk
200. The MSL - 4 Years, 200 Episodes…What's new, What's not

MSL Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 9, 2024 33:28


Sarah Snyder, MSL Recruiter with The Carolan Group discusses how the MSL role has changed in the past 4 years, and how it has not. Learn more about…

How to Fix Democracy
Sarah Snyder

How to Fix Democracy

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 4, 2024 40:10


In conversation with Prof. Sarah Snyder, an historian of Cold War international relations, Andrew Keen examines the relationship of democratic goals with the realities of American foreign policy. As the world's great post-war democratic and capitalistic power, the U.S. opposed Russia and China through strategic foreign aid and international interventions - often with non-democratic regimes. Internal divisions and controversies about the role of the United Nations, international human rights initiatives and racial divisions in the U.S. however challenged that post-war consensus.

MSL Talk
189. The Pros and Cons of Using AI for Your Job Search

MSL Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2024 28:24


My guest this week is Sarah Snyder, MSL Recruiter with The Carolan Group who discusses The Pros and Cons of Using AI for Your Job Search. Sarah shares…

The Ultra Running Guys
Episode 102: Race Spotlight - Cruel Jewel 100

The Ultra Running Guys

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 6, 2024 43:31


One word. Carnage! Our mission is to help runners take their next step along their ultra running journey. With this series of Race Spotlight episodes, we want to introduce you to races that you may or may not have heard of by speaking directly to the Race Directors to give you all the information you need. This week, we take a look at the Cruel Jewel 100. The race takes place in the Chattahoochee National Forest in the North Georgia Mountains. The race is 104 miles, with over 33,000 feet of gain/loss. That is over 300 feet of gain per mile. The race does have a 48 hour cutoff. For perspective, the race has been around for 8 years and has had only 5 finishers run it in a sub 24. The race is tough. But, as ultra runners, we choose tough. Joining us on the show are the co-race directors, Sarah Snyder and Sean Lawford, to help give us the inside scoop about everything the Cruel Jewel 100 has to offer. Enjoy the show? Please leave us rating and comment to share the love! We appreciate you taking the time to join us. Cruel Jewel 100 Info: Race Info: https://dumassevents.com/cruel-jewel-100/ Registration: https://ultrasignup.com/register.aspx?did=109094 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/dumassevents Photo credits: Emily Cameron (Cameron Creative). Checkout more from The Ultra Running Guys: Website: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠www.theultrarunningguys.com⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ Race: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠The Hydra⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ - April 20, 2024 Race: ⁠⁠⁠⁠The Final Countdown⁠⁠⁠⁠ - September 14, 2024 Patreon: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠www.patreon.com/theultrarunningguy⁠s --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/theultrarunningguys/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/theultrarunningguys/support

Braaains
A Little Advice for the Holidays

Braaains

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 12, 2023 63:20


Today is our last episode of 2023 just in time for the holidays. We bring all of the Taylor/Deppisch siblings together – our little sister, Becky Taylor, and our little brother, Jonathan Deppisch – who is also our composer – to discuss how to deal with stress and protect your mental health over the holidays! We're especially grateful for all of our listeners, friends, and family who submitted voice recordings, and text messages with advice on how to deal with your mental health over the holidays and throughout the year. We're grateful to have so much to share today to hopefully make the upcoming weeks a little lighter. Our conversation explores the topics of creating healthy expectations, setting boundaries, saying no, and reconciling your capacity with your expectations during the holiday season. Our advice emphasizes the importance of appreciating simple things and respecting boundaries. The conversation also highlights the value of creating alone time and quiet spaces. As the holidays approach, find a way to find joy in everyday moments and cherish happy memories. Thank you to Mary-Anne Taylor (our mom!), Marcie Peterson, Blair Drover, Nicole Tersigni, Julia Rowland, Lilly Waterfield, Amanda Smith-Kolic, Sarah Snyder from Adulting ADHD, Susan Madigan, Leah Iwaniuk, Leah Simmons, Lisa Lutes, Erin Davis, Kathleen Smith (The Anxious Overachiever), Stephanie Fornasier from Psychocinematic, Pete Whemby, and Celeste Koon. DOWNLOAD OUR TRANSCRIPT HERE: https://braaainspodcast.com/s/Braaains-EP043_a-little-advice-for-the-holidays_transcript.pdf Contact us: BraaainsPodcast.com Follow: @BraaainsPodcast Music: @_Deppisch_  Support this show: Patreon.com/BraaainsPodcast

Full Spirals
You Deserve a Gift (Sages Series: Sarah Snyder)

Full Spirals

Play Episode Play 33 sec Highlight Listen Later Dec 6, 2023 32:10


Support the Show: Join the community of spinners on Patreon and contribute to the production of impactful content.  Or make a one time donation of your support. Sarah Snyder is a writer, editor, and conservationist whose passion is helping others connect spiritually to the outdoors, nature, and science. She has been writing professionally since 1991.One of her books “The Value of Your Soul” is on my table every morning, because I still use it to meditate to, and her DIY Retreat book, is what I'm reading right now.  Her use of Rumi's work in her books is a big part of what makes them so meaningful and so full of soul.This time of year women tend to give and give and give and give.  In this episode we're talking about how we can learn to give OURSELVES the gift of receiving.  This being human is a guest house.Every morning a new arrival.A joy, a depression, a meanness,some momentary awareness comesas an unexpected visitor.Welcome and entertain them all!Even if they're a crowd of sorrows,who violently sweep your houseempty of its furniture,still, treat each guest honorably.He may be clearing you outfor some new delight.The dark thought, the shame, the malice,meet them at the door laughing,and invite them in.Be grateful for whoever comes,because each has been sentas a guide from beyond.RumiSupport the show

GPS Tracking Installers Podcast
207 - Sarah Snyder's Journey as a Strong Woman and Entrepreneur

GPS Tracking Installers Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 26, 2023 48:08


Welcome, Step It Up Entrepreneur community! Today, I am thrilled to have a remarkable guest with us — a true embodiment of strength, resilience, and entrepreneurial spirit. Joining us on the podcast is Sarah Snyder, a former licensed professional counselor turned PR maven, digital nomad, and one of the top ten strongest women in the US. In our conversation, Sarah shares her incredible journey — from her early days in counseling to stepping into the world of public relations. But her story goes beyond the boardroom. Sarah's passion extends to the realm of Strong Woman Competition, where she found herself among the elite, mastering events like deadlifts, yolk walks, and even truck pulling. And that's not all. Our podcast also explores the inspiring journey of another individual who emphasizes the importance of setting healthy boundaries, defining core values, and making intentional choices for an exceptional life. This insightful discussion extends to the world of business, where our guest emphasizes the value of aligning with clients who share a commitment to amplifying positive messages. Find more about Sarah at  www.eliteconnectionmarketing.com or her socials! Instagram, Facebook, and LinkedIn.  https://www.instagram.com/risk.delight/?hl=en  

MSL Talk
180. How Job Seekers Can Stand out in a Crowded Market

MSL Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 14, 2023 39:27


Sarah Snyder, MSL Recruiter with The Carolan Group discusses best ways for job seekers to stand out in a crowded market. Sarah shares….

The Skippables
Creed w/ Sarah Snyder

The Skippables

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 7, 2023 113:03


This week we welcome back with arms wide open Sarah Snyder to get spiritual as we dive into Creed's discography! Will we be taken Higher by Scott's songwriting or will we be weathered into making a musical Sacrifice to the gods? I'm six feet from the edge and I'm skipping! 

White Coats of the Round Table
From MSL to Recruiter with Sarah Snyder

White Coats of the Round Table

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 3, 2023 48:22


Sarah joins Mike and John to talk about moving through different medical roles and the time and dedication that those transitions take. Moving from large pharma to industry to MSL, she's experienced a wide array of non-clinical careers and shares her knowledge on possible barriers to entry or missed opportunities to becoming an MSL. Our Website Find Sarah

MSL Talk
176. Things will be HARD…but YOU can do hard things!

MSL Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 17, 2023 36:03


Sarah Snyder, MSL Recruiter with The Carolan Group discusses her strategies and tactics for overcoming challenges, setbacks and tough times Sarah shares…

Moms Without Capes Podcast
MWC 167: Create your Own Personal Paradise with Sarah Snyder

Moms Without Capes Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 19, 2023 37:12


What if instead of dreaming about escaping to a tropical island, we could create our own piece of paradise by using tools designed to help us keep our sanity as we manage our day to day chaos? In this episode of the Moms Without Capes Podcast, we will be chatting with Sarah Snyder all about her Embodied Paradise Method and how we can create our own personal paradise. Join therapist, life coach, and mom Onnie Michalsky as she seeks to help moms take back their power and recognize that they absolutely can create the life they want to be living. To join the Moms Without Capes Facebook community, visit www.facebook.com/groups/momswithoutcapes Need some help with building stronger habits? Grab this free guide to help you on the journey: www.momswithoutcapes.com/habits Struggling with thinking you have to do all the things and drowning under the pressure? Let's chat! Here's your chance to get coached by a mom who's not only been there, but has the skills and strategies in her back pocket ready to hand them over. www.momswithoutcapes.com/loveyourself Visit my website www.momswithoutcapes.com to learn more! The Moms Without Capes Unstoppable Self-Growth Book Club is heating up this summer. Come learn more about yourself and how you can become your best version. www.momswithoutcapes.com/bookclub To learn more about Sarah Snyder, visit her at www.aboundingcircles.com or follow her on social: www.facebook.com/groups/womenswellnesscirclehawaii/ www.instagram.com/womenswellnesscirclehawaii/ www.linkedin.com/in/sarahslatersnyder/ Click here to grab Sarah's recommended read, Burnout: The Secret to Unlocking the Stress Cycle by Emily Nagoski and Amelia Nagoski Thank you so much for tuning in and listening today. I'd love to hear what you thought of this episode and what ideas you may have for future episodes of the Moms Without Capes podcast! Email me at onnie@momswithoutcapes.com If you liked this episode, please show some love by leaving me a 5-Star review at www.ratethispodcast.com/mwc, subscribing, and sharing it with a fellow mom! Or buy me a chai latte at https://www.buymeacoffee.com/onnieM DISCLAIMER: Just because I'm a therapist, I'm not your therapist nor am I doing therapy in this podcast episode. Just saying. So enjoy Moms Without Capes for what it is- educational, entertaining, and a way to get my message out into the world!

MSL Talk
155. MSL SUCCESS is like running a MARATHON

MSL Talk

Play Episode Listen Later May 16, 2023 30:16


Today's guests are Michelle Mudge Reilly, Sr Medical Science Liaison at CTI BioPharma and Sarah Snyder, Senior Executive Recruiter with The Carolan Group, and we discuss how MSL career success is like running a marathon We discuss….

The Patrauma Party
38 - Intermittent Reinforcement in Relationships

The Patrauma Party

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 25, 2023 61:58


Hold up, wait a minute! [Insert Salt 'n Pepa rap] DO YOU KNOW ABOUT INTERMITTENT REINFORCEMENT??? It basically explains why we get stuck in relationships with people who treat us like human ball sacks! You guys. It's science. It's real. Lab rats were involved. And we HAVE to address it if we want to find relationships (romantic, platonic, professional—you name it) that actually meet our needs and make us happy. (Pro tip: Are you anxiously attached? Yes? Then you're even MORE likely to stay in relationships that involve intermittent reinforcement.) In this episode, I welcome licensed therapist and yoga teacher turned coach Sarah Snyder to talk to us about healing this deeply ingrained, super painful pattern. The information provided on this podcast is for informational purposes only. None of the material presented is intended to be a substitute for psychotherapy, counseling, professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. If you need to speak with a professional, you can find one local to you and reach out directly, or you can call 988 to connect with the national Suicide & Crisis Hotline.  --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/thepatraumaparty/support

The Skippables
Black Marble w/ Ed Villanueva

The Skippables

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 14, 2023 126:37


This week the Pro is on vacation so the show welcomes past guest Sarah Snyder as guest host and special guest Ed Villanueva to take a deep dive into Black Marble. Is their discography part of a Great Design, or will it put them in an Iron lung? So get your Grey Eyeliner on and hold on to your seatbelts because this episode is Bigger than life! 

MSL Talk
143. 13 Common Interview Mistakes Keeping You From Your Next Job

MSL Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2023 40:12


This episode features Sarah Snyder, Sr Medical Affairs Recruiter at The Carolan Group who shares 13 Common Interview Mistakes Keeping You From Your Next Job We discuss….

Soul Harvest Worship Center
Episode 362: "Fight, Flight, or Fold?" | Sarah Snyder

Soul Harvest Worship Center

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 15, 2023 57:06


Were you impacted by this message? Email us at soulharvestwc@yahoo.com. We would Love to hear from you! You can now join us LIVE every Sunday and Wednesday and take part in the messages as they happen! Watch live at https://soulharvestwc.online.church To support this ministry and help us continue to reach people all around the world click here: https://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_s-xclick&hosted_button_id=5ZYFYTVFLWBFS&source=uraz

The Ultramarathon Mindset: Trail Talk
Ep. 132: Let's Do It! - Sarah Snyder

The Ultramarathon Mindset: Trail Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 25, 2023 69:25


Poor decisions make for the best stories! This is a quote from Sarah Snyder's website. She says she's gotten into adventures because she's willing to join her friends when they suggest even the craziest things.She became an ultramarathon runner. Then she became an assistant Race Director. And now she is Race Director for several challenging races including the Cruel Jewel.She has the mindset for adventure as well as for success.

The Good Mood Show
The Value of Your Soul with Sarah Snyder

The Good Mood Show

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 5, 2022 38:20


We waste a lot of energy taking things way too seriously. And our soul is so powerful that it can handle all of life's events with grace and understanding. As Sarah Snyder points out in this episode, “Your very essence is LOVE with a capital L.” In this episode, Sarah joins Matt O'Neill to talk about the golden nuggets from her book The Value of Your Soul. They delve into how to deal with life's noise and annoyances with more grace and how this ultimately gets you into lasting good moods. Here are some power takeaways from today's conversation: Realize your essence is pure Love. Learn not to take things too seriously. Polish your mirror. Quiet the constant noise around you. Heal your original wound. [02:08] The Value of Your Soul The book contains real-life stories filled with lessons about how to get over annoyances. Sarah used the poet Rumi's principles in offering ways to flip the script. The essence of your very soul—love—matters. Material possessions pale in comparison to that essence, which is the gift of life. [10:13] Flipping the Script around Negative Sounding Emotions The biggest negative-sounding emotions are expectations, disappointments, anger, fear, vulnerability, resentment, control, and impatience. We should not get ashamed when we fall prey to them because they are a natural part of life. [25:00] Quieting the Noise Constant noise creates an unhealthy feedback loop. Learning how to quiet the noise means refusing to entertain unproductive thoughts. Only then, we learn how to accept simply what is and hear God communicating with us. [26:55] The Wound is the Place Where Light Enters You Hurtful experiences are lessons. We don't grow by having everything perfect in our lives. Personal growth happens on rough edges. Your original wound is your earliest experience that can set the course for the rest of your life. Everything is a learning opportunity. Notable quotes: (Please Choose One) [05:50] “Your essence is pure Love with a capital L.” [05:53] — Sarah [13:21] "I have to take life's lemons, and I have to learn from them so that I can become a polished person, better in my body and spirit." [13:29] — Sarah [37:03] “Never waste a bad experience without trying to learn from it first.” [37:10] — Sarah Resources Mentioned: DIY Solo Retreats by Sarah Snyder The Value of Your Soul by Sarah Snyder Chicken Soup for the Soul E05: Healing Your Body by Releasing Emotion with Kim Kolodji Connect with Sarah at Luna River Voices and get 50% OFF and a signed copy of any one of her books! Download the Good Mood Toolkit here! THE GOOD MOOD SHOW Podcast on Apple, Google, Spotify, Anchor, and more…

MSL Talk
131. An Unscripted Fireside Chat w/ Tom Caravela

MSL Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 29, 2022 40:29


Sarah Snyder, Sr Medical Affairs Recruiter at The Carolan Group interviews MSL Talk Podcast Host Tom Caravela in an Unscripted Interview or "Fireside Chat" about business and personal success factors, motivation, inspiration and a rapid fire Q&A Tom shares…

OKAY-ISH PODCAST
My swiss cheese memory: Adulting With ADHD with Sarah Snyder-Castañeda

OKAY-ISH PODCAST

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 17, 2022 27:14


Today the creative mind behind the brand Adulting With ADHD, Sarah Snyder-Castañeda, joins Maryellen to discuss what ADHD really looks like. When you hear ADHD, many people instinctively and stereotypically think of a young child who can't sit still, but it's far more nuanced and affects people of all ages. The two discuss:   How Sarah came up with the brand  What ADHD truly is   The lack of diagnoses and treatment with adults   The difficulty and grief that can come with being diagnosed at an older age   Medication and the polarizing opinions surrounding it    The importance of talking about your struggles   Common ADHD symptoms in adults  The relationship between ADHD and hormones   Advice for adults being diagnosed for the first time, or for parents whose child is being diagnosed   The importance of being careful with the information you consume…TikTok is not a reliable source    Their Okay-ish moments of the week!   To learn more visit adultingwithadhd.com and check out The Adulting With ADHD podcast.  If you haven't already, please follow, rate, and review the podcast, and follow your host on Instagram @maryellendance. To submit questions or stories, send her a DM! Plus, be sure to check out maryellendance.com for more resources. 

The Purple Chair Podcast
Episode 13: ‘You Are What You Eat' With Sarah Snyder

The Purple Chair Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 20, 2022 44:22


Ravens Director of Sports Nutrition Sarah Snyder talks about her career path, how she helps players maximize their diet to boost their recovery and performance, and much more.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Soul Harvest Worship Center
Episode 328: The Fight Of Faith | Sarah Snyder

Soul Harvest Worship Center

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 15, 2022 57:29


Were you impacted by this message? Email us at soulharvestwc@yahoo.com. We would Love to hear from you! You can now join us LIVE every Sunday and Wednesday and take part in the messages as they happen! Watch live at https://soulharvestwc.online.church To support this ministry and help us continue to reach people all around the world click here: https://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_s-xclick&hosted_button_id=5ZYFYTVFLWBFS&source=uraz

Soul Harvest Worship Center
Episode 315: Romans 4 | Sarah Snyder

Soul Harvest Worship Center

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 9, 2022 45:53


Were you impacted by this message? Email us at soulharvestwc@yahoo.com. We would Love to hear from you! You can now join us LIVE every Sunday and Wednesday and take part in the messages as they happen! Watch live at https://soulharvestwc.online.church To support this ministry and help us continue to reach people all around the world click here: https://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_s-xclick&hosted_button_id=5ZYFYTVFLWBFS&source=uraz

The Public Morality
Episode 261 Sarah Snyder

The Public Morality

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 26, 2022 44:07


Professor Sarah Snyder discusses the Cold War's impact on American Democracy.

...These Are Their Stories: The Law & Order Podcast
SVU: Did the FBI profiler kill the serial killer?

...These Are Their Stories: The Law & Order Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 13, 2022 43:33


Benson and Lake are joined by a young FBI profiler as they hunt for a sadistic serial killer named The Woodsman.  Huang suspects something's wrong with the case. Things take a turn when The Woodsman ends up dead - and the profiler appears to have sent the email telling cops where to find his body.We're talking about Special Victims Unit season 9 episode 12 "Signature." Our guest is Sarah Snyder from the "Adulting with ADHD" podcast. Plot points for this episode come from the case of Todd Alan Reed, also known as The Forest Park Killer.

Cool Explorations: Explorations In God's Word
Sarah Snyder Interview-Cult Discussion

Cool Explorations: Explorations In God's Word

Play Episode Listen Later May 26, 2022 51:04


Sarah Snyder Interview-Cult Discussion --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/cool-explorations/message

Cool Explorations: Explorations In God's Word
Sarah Snyder Interview-Cult Discussion

Cool Explorations: Explorations In God's Word

Play Episode Listen Later May 26, 2022 51:01


Sarah Snyder Interview-Cult Discussion --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/cool-explorations/message

Illinois News Now
Wake Up TriCounties Sarah Snyder Rebuilding Together Henry County

Illinois News Now

Play Episode Listen Later May 24, 2022 8:00


Rebuilding Together Henry County needs your help to help even more families in need in Henry County. And, you can help simply by playing some golf at Midland Golf Course. Rebuilding Together Henry County will host a golf outing on Friday, June 3rd with a twist. Not only will there be golf, there will be yoga and a wine tasting all in one fancy package. There are only a few foursomes left for the Golf Outing and all the proceeds go to help support Rebuilding Together Henry County as they help people repair their homes and install wheel chair ramps around Henry County. To play in the Rebuilding Together Henry County Golf Outing or for more information about Yoga and the Wine Tasting that same day, contact Sarah Snyder ssnyder@rebuildingtogether-hc.org. Sarah Snyder was our guest on Wake Up Tri-Counties on Tuesday, May 24th, 2022.

Soul Harvest Worship Center
Episode 297: Counterculture | Sarah Snyder

Soul Harvest Worship Center

Play Episode Listen Later May 23, 2022 54:25


Were you impacted by this message? Email us at soulharvestwc@yahoo.com. We would Love to hear from you! You can now join us LIVE every Sunday and Wednesday and take part in the messages as they happen! Watch live at https://soulharvestwc.online.church To support this ministry and help us continue to reach people all around the world click here: https://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_s-xclick&hosted_button_id=5ZYFYTVFLWBFS&source=uraz

MSL Talk
99. From MSL to MSL Recruiter: A Career Transition

MSL Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 12, 2022 28:55


My guest today is Sarah Snyder, Executive MSL Recruiter with The Carolan Group and we discuss her career transition from Medical Science Liaison to MSL Recruiter   Sarah shares…  

Holy Watermelon
Growing Up in a Cult - an Interview with Sarah Snyder

Holy Watermelon

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 11, 2022 69:05


Our first interview episode, with the lovely and talented Sarah Snyder. She grew up in a cult, but has escaped. She isn't just surviving, she's thriving. We're proud to call her a friend, and grateful for her willingness to share her story and her advice. The traditions that revere Jesus are diverse, and some of them are so far off the mark that they are hard to recognize as Christian. Some even abhor the Christian label, hoping to stand out as different. It's easy to agree, when they lean into authoritarianism. You can also watch this interview on YouTube. Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/holywatermelon Store: https://holy-watermelon-podcast.myspreadshop.ca/ Discord: https://discord.gg/NurpUjS7cc Web: https://holywatermelonpod.wixsite.com/homepage YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCdf4BpEkNaME_3whgtQnX3A

Soul Harvest Worship Center
Episode 281: Fool's Gold | Sarah Snyder

Soul Harvest Worship Center

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 31, 2022 48:46


Were you impacted by this message? Email us at soulharvestwc@yahoo.com. We would Love to hear from you! You can now join us LIVE every Sunday and Wednesday and take part in the messages as they happen! Watch live at https://soulharvestwc.online.church To support this ministry and help us continue to reach people all around the world click here: https://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_s-xclick&hosted_button_id=5ZYFYTVFLWBFS&source=uraz

Kenny Soto's Digital Marketing Podcast
Interview with Sarah Snyder - What It Takes To Be Good At Press Relations - Episode #76

Kenny Soto's Digital Marketing Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 28, 2022 31:27


“I think everyone is interesting in some way…” Sarah Snyder is the CEO of Connection Enthusiast, a strategic public relations firm. Snyder has a vast array of experience representing both high net-worth individuals, start-ups, and budding entrepreneurs. Her expertise and talent have been the catalyst for clients securing deals in excess of 100K per client acquisition. Media placements for her clients have included numerous local and national media outlets, including Forbes, Huffington Post, Cheddar TV, Dr. Oz, and so on. In addition to being a self-earned business maverick, Snyder's drive, interpersonal skills, and compassion in times of pressure while working with the media come from her previous background and experiences. Snyder is a licensed professional counselor and has helped develop a nationally recognized $25+ million dollar pilot program involving emergency crisis response teams and managed residential treatment programs for trauma survivors. These traits help drive her creativity and unique style, as does her sense of humor under pressure. Snyder's goal-oriented focus and strength-driven approach are also evident in her personal life. Snyder has played women's professional football and been ranked as one of the strongest women in the US. She believes connections are the key to a thriving business and has built her business off this belief. Questions and topics we covered: How being a counselor helped Sarah thrive in the PR field. Should business owners hire an internal PR-operator or hire an external partner to manage their PR? How can PR help with a company's growth? What are some common struggles people face when doing media training? How can PR professionals help their clients ease their way into this for the first time? Sarah's thoughts on the (somewhat over-used) buzzword “Personal Branding”. How can PR professionals make their clients seem more interesting to journalists? What are some pain points that journalists experience and how can publicists leverage them to secure more stories? Do PR news wires work? What are the essential parts of a media kit/press kit? And more! You can connect with Sarah and learn more about her stellar PR services via - www.connectionenthusiast.com --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/kennysoto/message

Transformative Leadership Conversations with Winnie da Silva
Transforming, Not Eliminating, Conflict with Sarah Snyder

Transformative Leadership Conversations with Winnie da Silva

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2022 58:14


Sarah Snyder is the Founding Director of The Rose Castle Foundation whose mission is to equip leaders with the skills, tools, and habits needed to transform conflict. You know she's for real when her other job is the Archbishop of Canterbury's Special Advisor for Reconciliation.

Transformative Leadership Conversations with Winnie da Silva
Introducing Season 3: Fresh Stories, Original Voices

Transformative Leadership Conversations with Winnie da Silva

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 23, 2022 7:09


Hi, everyone. Welcome to the third season of transformative leadership conversations with me, your host, Winnie da Silva. “Storytelling is our most powerful tool for changing anything in the world today.” This compelling quote, from one of my upcoming guests Holly Gordon, sums up my aspirational goal for this podcast. Sharing stories to change you, your leadership, your team, your company. As an executive coach and leadership strategist for over 20 years, I've come to know and work with some pretty incredible people. This podcast is designed to share their inspiring stories and practical ideas you can use to develop yourself as a leader, as a person. The first release for Season 3 is coming on March 1st. I'd like to give you a taste of these ten episodes you're going to love. Sarah Snyder is the Founding Director of The Rose Castle Foundation whose mission is to equip leaders with the skills, tools, and habits needed to transform conflict. My conversation with Sarah is like opening a set of Russian dolls; you encounter one story or insight just to discover another one – and another. You know she's for real when her other job is the Archbishop of Canterbury's Special Advisor for Reconciliation. Peter Gordon is the Chief Investment Officer and Head of Commercial Real Estate Debt for a large asset management firm. Peter is the type of leader who instinctively forms his leadership philosophy and approach and then realizes there are a few books out there that back up those instincts. Peter's leadership analogies range from parenthood, tennis, golf, political ideologies…and through his metaphors we gain some fabulous insights. Holly Gordon is the Chief Impact Officer for Participant Media. While she doesn't make the award-winning movies her company produces (An Inconvenient Truth, Spotlight, Green Book), Holly and her team build campaigns around these films to inspire action and change by partnering with grassroots organizations and activists on the front lines. Holly's fascinating background paired with her breadth and depth of thinking on social change, storytelling, leadership - I can't help but hope that Holly will write a book someday soon. Next up will be a conversation with both Peter AND Holly. Yes, Peter and Holly are married and in this special episode, Peter and Holly generously share some details of how their marriage has influenced their own unique leadership perspectives. Our personal relationships are so important in shaping who we are, how we think and how we approach our work. You'll love this compelling example of a relationship that is playful yet serious about ideas around leadership and more which will cause you to reflect on your own relationships and their impact on you. Cassandra Rose is a Founding Partner and DEI Practice Co-Lead at Meritarc, a human capital software company and provider of advisory services. Cassandra helps organizations fully leverage their Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion strategy and enables HR and People Leaders to connect the value of their talent with their mission. Cassandra is also a compelling speaker on the topics of benefits equity and centering the BIPOC employee journey for transformative employee engagement. Our conversation will challenge your thinking on all these topics – and more! Lindsey Saletta is the Chief Operating Officer at west-bourne, a food and lifestyle brand that began as the first zero-waste neighborhood restaurant in New York City and is now piloting conscious capitalism in the food industry. I love Lindsey's clarity on her own strengths and how those same strengths can sometimes be barriers to growth. Lindsey is that ambitious and vibrant leader you wish you could call to help you navigate your own career. So, here's your chance! Ajay Easo is the Managing Director at Accenture Interactive and Fjord. Ajay is a “leader of leaders” and has had multiple career iterations during his 21-year tenue at Accenture. Ajay is a big thinker and strategically keeps several balls in the air. But his real superpower is leading without others even realizing it. He prefers to elevate and collaborate with people rather than always having to lead from the front. Our conversation touches on his leadership and the future trends of leadership itself. Marianne Manseau is an Area Vice President at Pernod Ricard, a wine and spirits company whose ambition is to turn every social interaction into a genuine sharing experience. While Marianne's friendly spirit is immediately apparent, underneath that smile is an extremely intentional, hardworking, and ambitious woman. Marianne shares her experience learning to be vulnerable, why intention matters and how her father and three brothers helped shaped the person she is today. Gary Hamilton is a Senior Vice President and Healthcare Practice Leader for WSP which provides management and consultancy services to the built and natural environment. With 25 years of experience in designing and building healthcare facilities globally, Gary is passionate not just about his work but how he shows up as a leader and being a role model for others. Gary's flair for connecting with people and pushing himself past boundaries is inspirational. The Band of Sisters is a tribe of six women who all met when they worked at PepsiCo. I had the pleasure of interviewing three of the six sisters: Lori Marcus, Katie Lacey and Cie Nicholson. These seasoned and savvy women bring a fresh perspective on improving the lives of women in the workplace as they focus on equipping organizations to build more inclusive and productive cultures. Their book You Should Smile More: How to Dismantle Gender Bias in the Workplace will be coming out this fall. Our conversation offers a sampling on this topic with some super practical ways women and men can proactively support women at work.

Throwing Fits
*PATREON PREVIEW* The Afters with Sage Elsesser

Throwing Fits

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 23, 2022 3:13


On our new weekly lightning round mini ep with Sage Elsesser, we're fucking around with dick-shaped mics vs. dick-shaped decks, waking up ugly, skating vert, James Jebbia, Pete Davidson, Sarah Snyder, sandpaper durags, white women braiding your hair, quitting music, Kith, Carbone, being white and much more. For more Throwing Fits, check us out on Patreon: www.patreon.com/throwingfits.

MSL Talk
92. 5 Ways to Survive and Thrive at MSL AND Mom Life

MSL Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 22, 2022 35:40


My guest today is Sarah Snyder, PharmD, Executive MSL Recruiter at The Carolan Group and we discuss 5 Ways to Survive and Thrive at MSL AND Mom Life   Sarah shares…

Soul Harvest Worship Center
Episode 267: From Generation To Generation | Sarah Snyder

Soul Harvest Worship Center

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 10, 2022 42:25


Were you impacted by this message? Email us at soulharvestwc@yahoo.com. We would Love to hear from you! You can now join us LIVE every Sunday and Wednesday and take part in the messages as they happen! Watch live at https://soulharvestwc.online.church To support this ministry and help us continue to reach people all around the world click here: https://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_s-xclick&hosted_button_id=5ZYFYTVFLWBFS&source=uraz

Soul Harvest Worship Center
Episode 257: Run Your Race | Sarah Snyder

Soul Harvest Worship Center

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 6, 2022 40:59


Were you impacted by this message? Email us at soulharvestwc@yahoo.com. We would Love to hear from you! You can now join us LIVE every Sunday and Wednesday and take part in the messages as they happen! Watch live at https://soulharvestwc.online.church To support this ministry and help us continue to reach people all around the world click here: https://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_s-xclick&hosted_button_id=5ZYFYTVFLWBFS&source=uraz

Talkin With
Dawn Taylor & Sarah Snyder *Part 2*-21- Escaped Cult / Sexual Assault Survivors / Trauma Expert

Talkin With

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 15, 2021 41:51


Part 2 - Sarah Snyder escaped a cult, is a sexual assault survivor and suffers from mental health issues. Dawn Taylor is an Author , Sexual assault survivor , and Trauma expert! She has overcome her own abuse and is now helping others, she helped Sarah overcome her trauma , hear how she did all that and much more! --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/talkinwith/support

Talkin With
Sarah Snyder & Dawn Taylor *Part 1*-20- Escaped Cult / Sexual Assault Survivors / Trauma specialist

Talkin With

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 15, 2021 53:41


Part 1 - Sarah Snyder escaped a cult, is a sexual assault survivor and suffers from mental health issues. Dawn Taylor is an Author , Sexual assault survivor , and Trauma expert! She has overcome her own abuse and is now helping others, she helped Sarah overcome her trauma , hear how she did all that and much more! --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/talkinwith/support

MSL Talk
82. Why and How MSLs Can Adapt the Mindset of a Lifelong Learner

MSL Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2021 34:18


Sarah Snyder, Associate Director, Medical Affairs at Biosplice Therapeutics discusses why it is so important for MSLs to be lifelong learners.   Sarah shares…  

For Littles
Interview with a Kindergarten Teacher

For Littles

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 6, 2021 16:01


Join me as I interview Sarah Snyder, a kindergarten teacher of over 2 decades. Find out what actually happens when your kiddo comes into school already reading…

Soul Harvest Worship Center
Episode 240: Get Up And Go | Sarah Snyder

Soul Harvest Worship Center

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 29, 2021 39:42


Were you impacted by this message? Email us at soulharvestwc@yahoo.com. We would Love to hear from you! You can now join us LIVE every Sunday and Wednesday and take part in the messages as they happen! Watch live at https://soulharvestwc.online.church To support this ministry and help us continue to reach people all around the world click here: https://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_s-xclick&hosted_button_id=5ZYFYTVFLWBFS&source=uraz

Can You Explain This
God Speaks Through Queso

Can You Explain This

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 13, 2021 62:08


Sometimes we want God to show us a sign. But does that look like a neon sign?  In today's episode God speaks through queso.  Sarah Snyder shares her story of leaving a cult, being angry at the Universe, to learning that love in fact isn't transactional. But the queso... it was the turning point.   

The Skippables
Producer or Juicer? w/ Sarah Snyder

The Skippables

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 9, 2021 22:19


On this free bird episode Sarah is back to guest host and play a game that Josh made called Producer or Juicer!  Who is on the juice and who is eating produce?? Listen to the new Nas Album King's Disease II and Gio gets an undisclosed amount of cash!! 

Calm the Chaos
Ep.82 Sarah Snyder DIY SOLO RETREATS

Calm the Chaos

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 30, 2021 38:01


Sarah Snyder returns to the podcast to share her newest book:  DIY Solo Retreats!  Sarah is a writer and conversationalist whose passion is helping others connect spiritually to the outdoors, nature and science.    This conversation will inspire you because we all need to take more time to practice self-care.  A  DIY solo retreat is not about getting in the car and driving to your nearest spa.  This is about intentionally creating time and an environment to nurture yourself.  In her book, Sarah shares how to create a retreat in your home or remotely because let's face it, with the pandemic we may want to remain socially distanced.  Also, many of us don't have the luxury of going away for a retreat consistently so finding a way to create these opportunities is the best way to acknowledge and honor your needs. Plus recharge your battery!   Sarah started her journey with the book by sharing on her blog different aspects of retreating. She received feedback that they were all very helpful and was asked if she could put together a book for her community. She then decided to take on the challenge and realized that there was a lot more she could share and expand on within the book.  The book:  DIY Solo Retreats, is under 25,000 words so it's short and an easy read and will inspire you to take some time to create a retreat for yourself!   Sarah shares why we need to create time for ourselves to retreat.  The retreat allows us to Calm the Chaos and turn into ourselves and own the power that we have internally.  The only way to do this is to schedule this time into your day or week!  Even 30 minutes per week is something and so important. It helps us to cope with the challenges that we are facing personally and as a collective society!   We talk about “ME “ time and for Sarah, she defines that as MINE EXCLUSIVELY, which I thought was brilliant!  Had not heard of that before but it rang true for me.  The conversation then dives into being purposeful about the time we are creating for ourselves by having an intention of what we want to achieve in that time. It can be simple or complex.  Sarah recommends simple as she feels that simple is always best.  If you don't set an intention with your retreat, then Sarah shares that from her experience, your mind may just run off thinking about your to-do lists!  That wouldn't be very peaceful, would it?  Sarah shares some tips on how to keep even a short period focused and intentional for those who may just be beginning this practice.   Sarah shares the importance of creating a set space for yourself to have your ME TIME and be able to retreat. This way your body and mind recognize that when you arrive at this place that you are safe and can then relax and set your intention.  Your mind has a muscle memory that knows that when you are in that space you know what to do.  As you become more experienced with your practice it will be easier to take it to other locations.   Our discussion turns to how to prepare emotionally for a retreat.  Sarah says this is important especially if you are going to be dealing with a difficult topic or getting quiet and listening for answers that need some type of resolution.  For example, you may be contemplating a move or a job change and need to get quiet and have some clarity about questions you may have regarding these opportunities.  You'll need to prepare yourself for what comes up.  Her words of wisdom are to expect the unexpected that may come up for you during your ME TIME   Sarah shares her tips on how to put together a full-day retreat and why taking the time for an entire day to yourself is so important.  For Sarah, many of her full-day retreats involve being out in nature.  She may take herself out on a “date” to a botanical garden or a nature preserve. Somewhere peaceful where she can connect with herself and nature.  By getting away and out in nature you are less likely to be distracted by responsibilities at home. We discuss the importance of getting quiet and finding ways to listen to yourself.   To Calm the Chaos, we need to get quiet in our minds and surroundings so we can hear our true desires!   Sarah encourages you to permit yourself to take this time because it's yours,  you deserve it, and don't ever tell you that you are being selfish!   Links and Resources Connect with Sarah Snyder  Connect with Deborah Voll Take The Midlife Quiz Passion and Purpose Digital Workbook  

The Skippables
Lady Gaga vs Britney Spears w/ Sarah Snyder

The Skippables

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 26, 2021 36:57


 This Freebird episode Sarah is subbing in for Leon as the hosts discuss the latest Britney Spears news and debate the age old question: Lady Gaga or Britney?? 

No Stylist Bois
Our Style INSPIRATION from Artists to Athletes to Actors

No Stylist Bois

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 26, 2021 34:33


Our latest episode is going to be about our style inspirations. When we say inspiration don't get it twisted it's not about copying. It's about the feeling and motivation you get. Let us know some of your style inspo below and make sure you look at the tagged people to see what they about !!! People we mentioned @ambitiousade @jordanclarksons @lukasabbat , Sarah Snyder, @kristennoelcrawley , Travis Scott , Stefon Diggs, @tytaylor @altonmason , Lebron James --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

Peaky Pod
Sarah Snyder & Dawn Taylor -15- Escaped Cult / Sexual Assault Survivors / Trauma Specialist / Author

Peaky Pod

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 20, 2021 95:15


Sarah spent her entire life in a Cult, was sexually and mentally abused, then developed multiple personality disorder. She Joins the show to discuss escaping the cult and how she has overcame the abuse and mental health problems. -Dawn Taylor is an Author, Trauma specialist and a sexual assault survivor. She talks about her assault and the aftermath of having her family blame her for it. How she has fought back, overcame it all, and how she is now helping others to overcome past trauma. If you are in need of help you can reach Dawn at www.thetaylorway.ca its never too late! Support with a donation to paypal.me/realmtb or on buymeacoffee.com/Peakypod --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/peakypod/support

MSL Talk
61. Power of Podcasts: 3 Surprising Ways MSLs can Level Up By Tuning In

MSL Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 29, 2021 25:00


Sarah Snyder, Associate Director, Medical Affairs at Biosplice Therapeutics discusses the power of Podcasts and 3 Surprising ways MSLs can Level up by tuning In. Sarah shares….

Soul Harvest Worship Center
Episode 204: All You Need | Sarah Snyder

Soul Harvest Worship Center

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 25, 2021 47:31


Were you impacted by this message? Email us at soulharvestwc@yahoo.com. We would Love to hear from you! You can now join us LIVE every Sunday and Wednesday and take part in the messages as they happen! Watch live at https://soulharvestwc.online.church To support this ministry and help us continue to reach people all around the world click here: https://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_s-xclick&hosted_button_id=5ZYFYTVFLWBFS&source=uraz

The Skippables
Pet Shop Boys pt.1 w/ Sarah Snyder

The Skippables

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 8, 2021 85:17


This week the Skippables crew tackle the first 5 albums of the Pet Shop Boys with special guest and resident artist Sarah Snyder! Which song is the most skippable? Is West End Girls their only hit?? And what's with all those big hats??? 

Soul Harvest Worship Center
Episode 193: Fully Known | Sarah Snyder

Soul Harvest Worship Center

Play Episode Listen Later May 6, 2021 47:31


Were you impacted by this message? Email us at soulharvestwc@yahoo.com. We would Love to hear from you! You can now join us LIVE every Sunday and Wednesday and take part in the messages as they happen! Watch live at https://soulharvestwc.online.church To support this ministry and help us continue to reach people all around the world click here: https://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_s-xclick&hosted_button_id=5ZYFYTVFLWBFS&source=uraz

The Outdoor Family
Summer Camp!!!!

The Outdoor Family

Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2021 61:20


This week Mitch was able to talk to several busy individuals, Don and Sarah Snyder. They run and manage Southeastern Baptist Youth Camp. Don and Sarah share many opportunities at camp. They also talk about the power of camp and how it can be another opportunity to point your family to Jesus.

Stories of Inspiring Joy

*Disclaimer: Today's episode does discuss suicidal ideation and abuse. If you or someone you know is struggling with mental health, The Suicide Prevention Lifeline has 24/7, free & confidential support for people in distress, prevention, & crisis resources: their number is 1-800-273-8255. Dawn Taylor is the professional ass-kicker, hope giver. International trauma specialist, life coach strategist, and all-around badass, Dawn's journey into helping others heal began when she took her personal recovery from the trauma she experienced in her life into her own hands.  While at times unconventional, Dawn's strategic methods have helped hundreds heal from everything related to PTSD from sexual, emotional, and physical abuse, to issues from infidelity, to overcoming addiction, as well as helping cult survivors thrive. Dawn's work has empowered entrepreneurs, stay-at-home moms, and CEOs alike to be the superheroes in their own lives. Having completed thousands of hours of training from many professional programs, including the Robbins Madanes Training Institute, and certified as a Subconscious Imprinting Techniques professional, Dawn's blunt honesty will challenge your thinking, broaden your awareness, and help you achieve the outstanding results you are worthy of. In today's episode, Dawn is interviewed by Sarah Snyder, and Dawn shares her journey coming to her work as a trauma specialist. For most of her life Dawn felt like she was just too much, and she was so scared of hurting other people with her story. She felt too broken to get help, and too damaged to ever be healed herself. She had no intention of becoming a trauma specialist, but this work healed her and she realized she couldn't be the only one. At the core of her work is her why, to help other people become their superhero in their own rescue so that they can inspire people to do the same. Dawn shares how she works with client and throughout the episode Dawn and Sarah reflect on their work together, Sarah's journey to trusting Dawn, and why sending emails was a huge part of Sarah's healing. From overcoming her own trauma and trusting her gut, Dawn has stepped into her own healing and vulnerability to help her clients in a meaningful way. It's given her clients the permission they've needed to step into their healing and vulnerability too. As Dawn shares, it's never too late to work through your trauma. You're worth fighting for. To learn more and connect with Dawn on her website https://www.thetaylorway.ca and on Facebook @thetaylorway on Instagram @thetaylorwaynow and on LinkedIn here Stories of Inspiring Joy is a production of Seek The Joy Media and created by Sydney Weiss. To learn more and submit your story, visit www.storiesofinspiringjoy.com *Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed in this episode are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of Stories of Inspiring Joy.

Stories of Inspiring Joy
Sarah Snyder

Stories of Inspiring Joy

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 22, 2021 21:00


*Disclaimer: Today's episode does discuss suicidal ideation and abuse. If you or someone you know is struggling with mental health, The Suicide Prevention Lifeline has 24/7, free & confidential support for people in distress, prevention, & crisis resources: their number is 1-800-273-8255. In today's episode, Sarah is interviewed by Dawn Taylor, international Trauma Specialist and Life Strategist. Sarah and Dawn decided to do this episode together because Sarah really wanted other people to know there's hope for anyone who has struggled like she has. Sarah and Dawn first connected when Sarah reached out to Dawn for advice on writing ab book and they connected right away. Sarah vulnerably and openly shares her childhood experience, the pain and abuse she experienced, and the shame and trauma she experienced. Sarah was diagnosed with Dissociative Identity Disorder (DID), and since starting to work with Dawn she's experienced tremendous healing. Today, Sarah's life is forever changed as a result of her work with Dawn, she's stepped into a new sense of vulnerability, and now she lives as a digital nomad in Costa Rica. To learn more and connect with Sarah visit her on Instagram @risk.delight Stories of Inspiring Joy is a production of Seek The Joy Media and created by Sydney Weiss. To learn more and submit your story, visit www.storiesofinspiringjoy.com *Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed in this episode are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of Stories of Inspiring Joy.

Talking Peace, Exploring Conflict
The Habits of a Reconciler - Canon Sarah Snyder in conversation with Prof. Simon Keyes - Talking Peace Exploring Conflict

Talking Peace, Exploring Conflict

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 16, 2021 30:15


Canon Sarah Snyder and Prof. Simon Keyes in conversation on "The Habits of a Reconciler" Sarah Snyder is Founding Director of the Rose Castle Foundation & Archbishop of Canterbury's Special Adviser for Reconciliation Simon Keyes is Visiting Professor of Reconciliation at the Centre of Relgiion Reconciliation and Peace, University of Winchester where he established and teach on the MA in Reconciliation.

Calm the Chaos
Ep. 61 Sarah Snyder, Author The Value of Your Soul: Rumi Verse for Life's Annoying Moments

Calm the Chaos

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 5, 2021 46:42


Calm the Chaos/ Sarah Snyder Sarah Snyder is a writer, storyteller and conservationist whose passion is helping others connect spiritually to the outdoors, nature and science. She has been writing professionally since 1991 and her work has appeared in multiple publications. Sarah is the author of three nonfiction books and numerous newspaper and magazine articles. Her latest book, The Value of Your Soul: Rumi Verse for Life’s Annoying Moments, due in September 2020, is a spinoff of her memoir, Plant Trees, Carry Sheep: A Woman’s Spiritual Journey Among the Sufis of Scotland. Sarah lives in Virginia, where she participates in oral storytelling and writes about self-care and self-renewal through retreats on her blog, Luna River Voices. What  You’ll Learn Sarah’s life long passion for writing and how she combined that love with nature.  How she got back to her passion Sarah’s “day job” provides her the freedom to develop her creative writing life and her goal is to be an inspiration to others Little Me = Ego Driven  /  Bigger Me = Spirit Driven You can pursue your passion and purpose while having a career!  Sarah discusses her memoir and moves to Scotland where she stayed for six years! How her plans changed the moment she arrived.  Lessons during stay in Scotland Choose how to respond vs. reacting Is it a mistake or learning opportunity? Surrendering isn’t about giving up or giving in, it’s about opening up to opportunity  Resources Connect with Sarah here at Luna River Connect with Sarah on Facebook here Connect with Deborah for coaching here Take the mid life Quiz here Enjoy the show? Don’t miss an episode, follow the podcast on ITunes , I HEART RADIO and Spotify Please rate, review and subscribe to the podcast and share with a friend!  

Soul Harvest Worship Center
Episode 177: Two or More | Sarah Snyder

Soul Harvest Worship Center

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 13, 2021 41:05


Were you impacted by this message? Email us at soulharvestwc@yahoo.com. We would Love to hear from you! You can now join us LIVE every Sunday and Wednesday and take part in the messages as they happen! Watch live at https://soulharvestwc.online.church To support this ministry and help us continue to reach people all around the world click here: https://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_s-xclick&hosted_button_id=5ZYFYTVFLWBFS&source=uraz

The Art We Love
Columbus with Sarah Snyder

The Art We Love

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 4, 2021 19:31


This week, Sarah is joined by a special guest interviewer for a discussion on the 2017 film Columbus. Contractual obligations are fulfilled.

Soul Harvest Worship Center
Episode 165: The Art of War | Sarah Snyder

Soul Harvest Worship Center

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 21, 2021 43:04


Were you impacted by this message? Email us at soulharvestwc@yahoo.com. We would Love to hear from you! You can now join us LIVE every Sunday and Wednesday and take part in the messages as they happen! Watch live at https://soulharvestwc.online.church To support this ministry and help us continue to reach people all around the world click here: https://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_s-xclick&hosted_button_id=5ZYFYTVFLWBFS&source=uraz

Big World
The Long Shadow of the Long '60s

Big World

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 4, 2021 23:00


The 1960s started 60 years ago, but the shadow cast by that decade in the US is long. It was a decade that fundamentally changed how the US treats our citizens and views our role in the world. In this episode of Big World, SIS professor Sarah Snyder joins us to discuss the long 1960s and US human rights policy. Snyder tells us how she defines the “long ’60s” (1:28) and explains how US human rights policy evolved over this time period (2:32). She also discusses John F. Kennedy’s potential, had he not been assassinated in 1963, to have been the first US president to prioritize human rights abroad (4:06). Based on research she conducted for her book, From Selma to Moscow: How Human Rights Activists Transformed US Foreign Policy, Snyder explains how transnational activism during the long ’60s fundamentally altered US foreign policy related to human rights (7:35) and how the decade and a half set the stage for human rights policy today (9:20). Is promoting human rights abroad a partisan issue (13:28)? Can we expect to see human rights return as a US foreign policy priority in the Biden administration (15:25)? Snyder answers these questions and discusses whether or not current activism for human rights reflects what we saw in the ’60s (17:20) and if the influence on US politics of that influential decade is beginning to wane (20:40). During our “Take Five” segment, Snyder tells us five steps that a new presidential administration should take to signal that it prioritizes human rights (11:13).

LadyHD
It's the ADHD Diagnosis Day Parade! with Sarah Snyder-Castaneda

LadyHD

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 16, 2020 39:18


Lady with ADHD Sarah Snyder-Castaneda (The Adulting with ADHD Podcast) joins Jenn to discuss the trauma of being undiagnosed into adulthood, the industrial education model, and our stupid stupid hormones. Follow Sarah: Twitter: @adhdadulting Listen to the Adulting with ADHD Podcast:  linktr.ee/adultingwithadhd Follow Jenn: Twitter | Insta | TikTok: @jennwelchnow Follow LadyHD: Twitter | Insta | TikTok: @LadyHDpod IF YOU LIKE THE PODCAST PLEASE SHARE AND SUBSCRIBE AND RATE AND REVIEW THANK YOU THANK YOU THANK YOU SORRY OKAY I'LL STOP YELLING NOW --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/ladyhd/support

Soul Harvest Worship Center
For Such A Time As This! | Sarah Snyder

Soul Harvest Worship Center

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 19, 2020 43:01


Were you impacted by this message? Email us at soulharvestwc@yahoo.com. We would Love to hear from you! You can now join us LIVE every Sunday and Wednesday and take part in the messages as they happen! Watch live at https://soulharvestwc.online.church To support this ministry and help us continue to reach people all around the world click here: https://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_s-xclick&hosted_button_id=5ZYFYTVFLWBFS&source=uraz

Soul Harvest Worship Center
I Can't, But God Can! | Sarah Snyder

Soul Harvest Worship Center

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 17, 2020 43:07


Were you impacted by this message? Email us at soulharvestwc@yahoo.com. We would Love to hear from you! You can now join us LIVE every Sunday and Wednesday and take part in the messages as they happen! Watch live at https://soulharvestwc.online.church/ To support this ministry and help us continue to reach people all around the world click here: https://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_s-xclick&hosted_button_id=5ZYFYTVFLWBFS&source=uraz

The Core Connections Podcast With Erica Ziel
A Busy Moms Guide To Virtual Learning with Sarah Snyder

The Core Connections Podcast With Erica Ziel

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 11, 2020 49:49


Since the day the pandemic began, we've all been trying to figure out this new normal COVID-19 has brought us. As our kids approach the new school year, there are still so many unknowns for how the upcoming months are going to go. My guest Sarah Snyder and I don't have all of the answers as to how virtual learning will look for YOU and YOUR kids but the answers will come as you continue to learn. If you’re wanting to make more sense of this virtual learning journey click play to dive into this episode.

Rumi Forum Podcast
Trees and Sheep and God, Oh My! A Woman’s Spiritual Journey Among the Sufis of Scotland

Rumi Forum Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 7, 2020 58:37


On Thursday, August 6, with her mesmerizing storytelling narrative, Sarah Snyder was with us. She presented an illuminating and vivid depiction of her journey, which started at a retreat center in Scotland, followed by a succession of unforgettable memories. Her presentation of the humorous memoir Plant Trees, Carry Sheep: A Woman’s Spiritual Journey Among the Sufis of Scotland included the following segments. When Sarah Snyder left her home in Montana to volunteer to plant trees at a private estate in Scotland, she expected a pleasurable six-month break from her humdrum life. When she arrived, however, she learned she would also be caring for a menagerie of poultry, doing rigorous household chores, and shepherding a flock of truant sheep. Her experience turned out to be a soul-forging adventure that changed her entire relationship with life—and with God—forever. Six months turned into two years and resulted in her memoir Plant Trees, Carry Sheep: A Woman’s Spiritual Journey Among the Sufis of Scotland. With self-deprecating humor, the memoir chronicles her time at the spiritual retreat, where people from all over the world came to study Ibn Arabi and Rumi. Among the backdrop of relentless cold and rain, unruly livestock and never-ending chores, she navigates peculiar rituals, the challenges of communal living, and spiritual teachings that, at first, appeared at odds with her own Christian upbringing. Here, Sarah’s exposure to Islam helped her better understand the religion and see God, as well as herself, in a different light. Sarah discussed the retreat, told a few stories, and answered questions.

Adnan Rashid
Who Was Jesus - Sarah Snyder

Adnan Rashid

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 3, 2020 130:16


Up, Up, & Olé
35- Snyder Squared (Featuring Serela Kay, Caitlin and Sarah Snyder)

Up, Up, & Olé

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2020 35:17


Hopping on the pod as our first repeat guest, UCSB women's water polo Head Coach Serela Kay joins us alongside Sarah and Caitlyn Snyder from Campus Pool as they prepare for the upcoming 2020 season.

Iron-On Wrestling with Gregory Iron
EP. 6- Kody Lane: The Porn Star? & Greg's Annual Obscure Wrestling Halloween Costumes With Sarah Snyder

Iron-On Wrestling with Gregory Iron

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 29, 2019 80:10


Host Gregory Iron chats with independent wrestling rising star -- Kody Lane! Trained by WWE NXT's Jordan Myles (fka ACH), Kody Lane talks about his journey from one of the smallest towns in Oklahoma to becoming a pro wrestler and working some of the biggest promotions and names in the industry. Kody tells Greg about his first experiences learning about pro wrestling from old ECW videos, the unlikely WWE tag team he initially fell in love with, his love for WWE Superstar Edge, tattoos, paying for and going through professional wrestling training in a local park, the terrible first gimmick he was saddled with, training with Jordan Myles, his longest pro wrestling drives, having the same name as a porn star, and more. Co-host Aaron Bauer is MIA this week, so Greg sits down with longtime friend, lifting buddy and mask and costume designer Sarah Snyder (@aeon_flex on Instagram for mask/costume commissions)! Greg and Sarah discuss Greg's annual obscure wrestling costumes and the role that she has played in bringing them to life. And in the spirit of the creepy season, Sarah and Greg delve into a couple CREEPY DM's from the internet and talk about some rather interesting fetishes. "Iron-On Wrestling" podcast is available for download on iTunes and all major podcasting platforms:https://apple.co/35TBHee Check out our other episodes with Steve Austin, Johnny Gargano, Kimber Lee, Curt Stallion and more in their entirety on iTunes, as well as right here on our YouTube. Like and subscribe for full length episodes and clips as soon as they drop! --- Host Gregory Iron wrestles with cerebral palsy, a neurological disorder that affects the mobility of his right arm, hand and fingers. Trained by WWE NXT Superstar Johnny Gargano in 2006, Iron has conquered his disability and gone on to work with some of the top names in wrestling including "Stone Cold" Steve Austin, CM Punk, The Dudley Boyz, Tomasso Ciampa and many others. Co-host Aaron Bauer has worked in the professional wrestling industry for over two decades. A jack-of-all-trades, Aaron has worked in the industry as a local promoter for ECW events, a manager, and has provided color commentary over matches for some of the biggest stars in WWE, WCW, ECW, AEW, Impact & ROH. Follow "Iron-On Wrestling with Gregory Iron" on all social media platforms: www.Facebook.com/IronOnWrestling www.Twitter.com/IronOnWrestling www.Instagram.com/irononwrestling Back us on Patreon: www.Patreon.com/IronOnWrestling Follow Gregory Iron: www.Facebook.com/TheHandicappedHero www.Twitter.com/GregoryIron www.Instagram.com/gregory_iron Buy CLASSIC AND EXCLUSIVE Gregory Iron tees here: www.prowrestlingtees.com/GregoryIron www.whatforapparel.com/GregoryIron To book Gregory Iron for pro wrestling events, speaking engagements, wrestling seminars, school workshops and more contact Greg on his website: www.Gregory-Iron.com Please check out our sponsors: Kayfabe News: Unreal news about an unreal sport! www.KayfabeNews.com The Savage Stash: The Cream of the Crop for vintage & original pro wrestling merch! www.TheSavageStash.com Special thanks to "Ajax" Alex Cantrell for creating the "Iron-On Wrestling" theme song. Check out Alex and his comedy film team "Aldous Mustache" on social media: www.YouTube.com/user/AldousMustache www.instagram.com/aldousmustache www.Twitter.com/AldousMustache

Horns of a Dilemma
How Human Rights Rocked Foreign Policy

Horns of a Dilemma

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 9, 2018 39:51


In this episode of Horns of a Dilemma, Sarah Snyder, Associate Professor at the School of International Service at American University, talks about her latest book, From Selma to Moscow: How Human Rights Activists Transformed U.S. Foreign Policy. This talk took place at the University of Texas at Austin and was sponsored by the Clements Center and the LBJ School Research Colloquium.   Music and Production by Tre Hester

The McNick Minute
The McNick Minute 10/17/2018

The McNick Minute

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 17, 2018 35:20


In this episode Jacob speaks with Mr. Nance about the upcoming Halloween band concert; Elise talks to Sarah Snyder and Melissa Luckey about the women's volleyball season; Patrick hits you with the Upcoming Events; and Thomas sits down with former Major League Baseball player, World Series Champ, and McNick Class of 1976 alum, Pat Tabler.

The Faster Than Normal Podcast: ADD | ADHD | Health
Adulting & Helping Women Diagnosed with ADHD -Sarah Snyder-Castañeda

The Faster Than Normal Podcast: ADD | ADHD | Health

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 10, 2018 15:20


Every once in a while we get to interview people who share some goals with Faster Than Normal. These people have a similar calling- to help, inspire and teach people more about ADHD. Today is one of those days! Sarah is the brains behind www.AdultingWithADHD.com, a blog for ADHD women. Along with the blog, she hosts a spin-off podcast and online support group with the mission of bringing self-empowerment and practical tips to her community. A digital marketer by day, Sarah lives with her husband and toddler in San Antonio, Texas. We hope this is helpful and useful to you. Enjoy!   In this episode Peter and Sarah discuss: :56-  Intro and welcome Sarah!  https://adultingwithadhd.com  Sarah's Podcast 1:36-  Tell us your story; how did you learn you were ADHD? Inattentive Type ADHD 2:20-  Was that a wake-up call? Did things start making more sense afterwards? ref: Jon Snow 3:19-  When you began to learn more about ADHD, was it an additive process or did things just switch overnight?  ref: ACL Fest  4:34-  What were some of the first routines/things you began to implement that made a big difference in your daily life?  ref: Brain.FM  Brain.FM's Daniel Clark interview on Faster Than Normal  6:30-  Tell us a little more about your color-coding system? 7:14-  What are things like with your family, in regards to learning all about your ADHD, etc? 8:45-  Have you felt a difference and how do you feel when people misuse & loosely toss around the acronym ADHD? 9:58-  How would you go about explaining your ADHD to a romantic partner, or even a potential romantic partner? 11:38-  What is a “first visit” like for women who come into your group? How does that go? 12:34-  What do you recommend to people who have just been diagnosed with ADHD for the first time?  https://www.additudemag.com 13:43-  Sarah, how can people get in touch with you?  https://adultingwithadhd.com contact@adultingwithadhd.com or @ADHDAdulting on Twitter or INSTA 14:05-  Thank you Sarah!!  And thank YOU for listening1 You can always reach me at peter@shankman.com @petershankman on all of the socials, and also at @FasterThanNormal on all of the socials. Thanks as always to Steven Byrom for editing/producing this podcast & for composing our theme! 14:36-  Faster Than Normal Podcast info & credits As always, leave us a comment below, PLEASE drop us a review on iTunes and of course, subscribe to the podcast if you haven't already! The more reviews we get, the more people we can reach. Help us to show the world that ADHD is a gift, not a curse! Know of anyone you think should be on the FTN podcast? Shoot us a note – We'd love to hear!

Creative Noggin's Podcast
Sarah Snyder-Castañeda Talks Local Search

Creative Noggin's Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 1, 2018 16:25 Transcription Available


Meet our Local Search expert Sarah Snyder-Castañeda as she discusses the importance of voice search, Google Posts, Google My Business, and more.

New Books in Diplomatic History
Sarah Snyder, “From Selma to Moscow: How Human Rights Activists Transformed Foreign Policy”

New Books in Diplomatic History

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 3, 2018 56:52


Human rights as a concern in U.S. foreign policy and international politics has been well-documented, particularly in studies of the Carter Administration. However, how human rights emerged as an issue in U.S. domestic politics has received less attention, which is what Sarah Snyder's From Selma to Moscow: How Human Rights Activists Transformed Foreign Policy (Columbia University Press, 2018) studies and illuminates. Snyder's research draws on both traditional diplomatic source material from the State Department, but also materials from NGOs and the papers of a number of congressmen who were involved in these issues. Using the framework of the “long 1960s,” Snyder lays bare some of the issues that sparked and sustained growing interest in human rights as a global issue, and the role that Americans ought to play in protecting human rights around the globe. Snyder points to a variety of factors that cultivated U.S. attention to human rights, particularly transnational connections between foreign and domestic actors, as well as the broader context of the 1960s in the United States, particularly the war in Vietnam and the civil rights movement. She draws on five case studies to lay bare these connections: the Soviet Union, Rhodesia, South Korea, Greece, and Chile. Some of the activism in these case studies was sustained by citizen groups and NGOs such as churches, while in other instances academics, officers within the State Department, or members of Congress directed much of the attention. Snyder then concludes by showing how Congress evolved in this period too, as hearings on human rights led to a number of important institutional changes in government. Snyder concludes by noting that while interest in human rights surged by 1976, attention has in many respects waned since the 1980s. Attention to these issues is not inevitable and it cannot be sustained without continuing participation from different sectors of civil society. Paying close attention to the ways that these interests were cultivated in the 1970s is one way that the activists of the 21st century might try cultivating awareness of the problems confronting the world today. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Off the Page: A Columbia University Press Podcast
Sarah Snyder, “From Selma to Moscow: How Human Rights Activists Transformed Foreign Policy”

Off the Page: A Columbia University Press Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 3, 2018 56:52


Human rights as a concern in U.S. foreign policy and international politics has been well-documented, particularly in studies of the Carter Administration. However, how human rights emerged as an issue in U.S. domestic politics has received less attention, which is what Sarah Snyder's From Selma to Moscow: How Human Rights Activists Transformed Foreign Policy (Columbia University Press, 2018) studies and illuminates. Snyder's research draws on both traditional diplomatic source material from the State Department, but also materials from NGOs and the papers of a number of congressmen who were involved in these issues. Using the framework of the “long 1960s,” Snyder lays bare some of the issues that sparked and sustained growing interest in human rights as a global issue, and the role that Americans ought to play in protecting human rights around the globe. Snyder points to a variety of factors that cultivated U.S. attention to human rights, particularly transnational connections between foreign and domestic actors, as well as the broader context of the 1960s in the United States, particularly the war in Vietnam and the civil rights movement. She draws on five case studies to lay bare these connections: the Soviet Union, Rhodesia, South Korea, Greece, and Chile. Some of the activism in these case studies was sustained by citizen groups and NGOs such as churches, while in other instances academics, officers within the State Department, or members of Congress directed much of the attention. Snyder then concludes by showing how Congress evolved in this period too, as hearings on human rights led to a number of important institutional changes in government. Snyder concludes by noting that while interest in human rights surged by 1976, attention has in many respects waned since the 1980s. Attention to these issues is not inevitable and it cannot be sustained without continuing participation from different sectors of civil society. Paying close attention to the ways that these interests were cultivated in the 1970s is one way that the activists of the 21st century might try cultivating awareness of the problems confronting the world today.

New Books in Human Rights
Sarah Snyder, “From Selma to Moscow: How Human Rights Activists Transformed Foreign Policy”

New Books in Human Rights

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 3, 2018 56:52


Human rights as a concern in U.S. foreign policy and international politics has been well-documented, particularly in studies of the Carter Administration. However, how human rights emerged as an issue in U.S. domestic politics has received less attention, which is what Sarah Snyder's From Selma to Moscow: How Human Rights Activists Transformed Foreign Policy (Columbia University Press, 2018) studies and illuminates. Snyder's research draws on both traditional diplomatic source material from the State Department, but also materials from NGOs and the papers of a number of congressmen who were involved in these issues. Using the framework of the “long 1960s,” Snyder lays bare some of the issues that sparked and sustained growing interest in human rights as a global issue, and the role that Americans ought to play in protecting human rights around the globe. Snyder points to a variety of factors that cultivated U.S. attention to human rights, particularly transnational connections between foreign and domestic actors, as well as the broader context of the 1960s in the United States, particularly the war in Vietnam and the civil rights movement. She draws on five case studies to lay bare these connections: the Soviet Union, Rhodesia, South Korea, Greece, and Chile. Some of the activism in these case studies was sustained by citizen groups and NGOs such as churches, while in other instances academics, officers within the State Department, or members of Congress directed much of the attention. Snyder then concludes by showing how Congress evolved in this period too, as hearings on human rights led to a number of important institutional changes in government. Snyder concludes by noting that while interest in human rights surged by 1976, attention has in many respects waned since the 1980s. Attention to these issues is not inevitable and it cannot be sustained without continuing participation from different sectors of civil society. Paying close attention to the ways that these interests were cultivated in the 1970s is one way that the activists of the 21st century might try cultivating awareness of the problems confronting the world today. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

New Books in History
Sarah Snyder, “From Selma to Moscow: How Human Rights Activists Transformed Foreign Policy”

New Books in History

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 3, 2018 56:52


Human rights as a concern in U.S. foreign policy and international politics has been well-documented, particularly in studies of the Carter Administration. However, how human rights emerged as an issue in U.S. domestic politics has received less attention, which is what Sarah Snyder’s From Selma to Moscow: How Human Rights Activists Transformed Foreign Policy (Columbia University Press,  2018) studies and illuminates. Snyder’s research draws on both traditional diplomatic source material from the State Department, but also materials from NGOs and the papers of a number of congressmen who were involved in these issues. Using the framework of the “long 1960s,” Snyder lays bare some of the issues that sparked and sustained growing interest in human rights as a global issue, and the role that Americans ought to play in protecting human rights around the globe. Snyder points to a variety of factors that cultivated U.S. attention to human rights, particularly transnational connections between foreign and domestic actors, as well as the broader context of the 1960s in the United States, particularly the war in Vietnam and the civil rights movement. She draws on five case studies to lay bare these connections: the Soviet Union, Rhodesia, South Korea, Greece, and Chile. Some of the activism in these case studies was sustained by citizen groups and NGOs such as churches, while in other instances academics, officers within the State Department, or members of Congress directed much of the attention. Snyder then concludes by showing how Congress evolved in this period too, as hearings on human rights led to a number of important institutional changes in government. Snyder concludes by noting that while interest in human rights surged by 1976, attention has in many respects waned since the 1980s. Attention to these issues is not inevitable and it cannot be sustained without continuing participation from different sectors of civil society. Paying close attention to the ways that these interests were cultivated in the 1970s is one way that the activists of the 21st century might try cultivating awareness of the problems confronting the world today. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

New Books in National Security
Sarah Snyder, “From Selma to Moscow: How Human Rights Activists Transformed Foreign Policy”

New Books in National Security

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 3, 2018 56:52


Human rights as a concern in U.S. foreign policy and international politics has been well-documented, particularly in studies of the Carter Administration. However, how human rights emerged as an issue in U.S. domestic politics has received less attention, which is what Sarah Snyder’s From Selma to Moscow: How Human Rights Activists Transformed Foreign Policy (Columbia University Press,  2018) studies and illuminates. Snyder’s research draws on both traditional diplomatic source material from the State Department, but also materials from NGOs and the papers of a number of congressmen who were involved in these issues. Using the framework of the “long 1960s,” Snyder lays bare some of the issues that sparked and sustained growing interest in human rights as a global issue, and the role that Americans ought to play in protecting human rights around the globe. Snyder points to a variety of factors that cultivated U.S. attention to human rights, particularly transnational connections between foreign and domestic actors, as well as the broader context of the 1960s in the United States, particularly the war in Vietnam and the civil rights movement. She draws on five case studies to lay bare these connections: the Soviet Union, Rhodesia, South Korea, Greece, and Chile. Some of the activism in these case studies was sustained by citizen groups and NGOs such as churches, while in other instances academics, officers within the State Department, or members of Congress directed much of the attention. Snyder then concludes by showing how Congress evolved in this period too, as hearings on human rights led to a number of important institutional changes in government. Snyder concludes by noting that while interest in human rights surged by 1976, attention has in many respects waned since the 1980s. Attention to these issues is not inevitable and it cannot be sustained without continuing participation from different sectors of civil society. Paying close attention to the ways that these interests were cultivated in the 1970s is one way that the activists of the 21st century might try cultivating awareness of the problems confronting the world today. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

New Books in World Affairs
Sarah Snyder, “From Selma to Moscow: How Human Rights Activists Transformed Foreign Policy”

New Books in World Affairs

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 3, 2018 56:52


Human rights as a concern in U.S. foreign policy and international politics has been well-documented, particularly in studies of the Carter Administration. However, how human rights emerged as an issue in U.S. domestic politics has received less attention, which is what Sarah Snyder’s From Selma to Moscow: How Human Rights Activists Transformed Foreign Policy (Columbia University Press,  2018) studies and illuminates. Snyder’s research draws on both traditional diplomatic source material from the State Department, but also materials from NGOs and the papers of a number of congressmen who were involved in these issues. Using the framework of the “long 1960s,” Snyder lays bare some of the issues that sparked and sustained growing interest in human rights as a global issue, and the role that Americans ought to play in protecting human rights around the globe. Snyder points to a variety of factors that cultivated U.S. attention to human rights, particularly transnational connections between foreign and domestic actors, as well as the broader context of the 1960s in the United States, particularly the war in Vietnam and the civil rights movement. She draws on five case studies to lay bare these connections: the Soviet Union, Rhodesia, South Korea, Greece, and Chile. Some of the activism in these case studies was sustained by citizen groups and NGOs such as churches, while in other instances academics, officers within the State Department, or members of Congress directed much of the attention. Snyder then concludes by showing how Congress evolved in this period too, as hearings on human rights led to a number of important institutional changes in government. Snyder concludes by noting that while interest in human rights surged by 1976, attention has in many respects waned since the 1980s. Attention to these issues is not inevitable and it cannot be sustained without continuing participation from different sectors of civil society. Paying close attention to the ways that these interests were cultivated in the 1970s is one way that the activists of the 21st century might try cultivating awareness of the problems confronting the world today. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

New Books Network
Sarah Snyder, “From Selma to Moscow: How Human Rights Activists Transformed Foreign Policy”

New Books Network

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 3, 2018 56:52


Human rights as a concern in U.S. foreign policy and international politics has been well-documented, particularly in studies of the Carter Administration. However, how human rights emerged as an issue in U.S. domestic politics has received less attention, which is what Sarah Snyder’s From Selma to Moscow: How Human Rights Activists Transformed Foreign Policy (Columbia University Press,  2018) studies and illuminates. Snyder’s research draws on both traditional diplomatic source material from the State Department, but also materials from NGOs and the papers of a number of congressmen who were involved in these issues. Using the framework of the “long 1960s,” Snyder lays bare some of the issues that sparked and sustained growing interest in human rights as a global issue, and the role that Americans ought to play in protecting human rights around the globe. Snyder points to a variety of factors that cultivated U.S. attention to human rights, particularly transnational connections between foreign and domestic actors, as well as the broader context of the 1960s in the United States, particularly the war in Vietnam and the civil rights movement. She draws on five case studies to lay bare these connections: the Soviet Union, Rhodesia, South Korea, Greece, and Chile. Some of the activism in these case studies was sustained by citizen groups and NGOs such as churches, while in other instances academics, officers within the State Department, or members of Congress directed much of the attention. Snyder then concludes by showing how Congress evolved in this period too, as hearings on human rights led to a number of important institutional changes in government. Snyder concludes by noting that while interest in human rights surged by 1976, attention has in many respects waned since the 1980s. Attention to these issues is not inevitable and it cannot be sustained without continuing participation from different sectors of civil society. Paying close attention to the ways that these interests were cultivated in the 1970s is one way that the activists of the 21st century might try cultivating awareness of the problems confronting the world today. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

New Books in American Studies
Sarah Snyder, “From Selma to Moscow: How Human Rights Activists Transformed Foreign Policy”

New Books in American Studies

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 3, 2018 56:52


Human rights as a concern in U.S. foreign policy and international politics has been well-documented, particularly in studies of the Carter Administration. However, how human rights emerged as an issue in U.S. domestic politics has received less attention, which is what Sarah Snyder’s From Selma to Moscow: How Human Rights Activists Transformed Foreign Policy (Columbia University Press,  2018) studies and illuminates. Snyder’s research draws on both traditional diplomatic source material from the State Department, but also materials from NGOs and the papers of a number of congressmen who were involved in these issues. Using the framework of the “long 1960s,” Snyder lays bare some of the issues that sparked and sustained growing interest in human rights as a global issue, and the role that Americans ought to play in protecting human rights around the globe. Snyder points to a variety of factors that cultivated U.S. attention to human rights, particularly transnational connections between foreign and domestic actors, as well as the broader context of the 1960s in the United States, particularly the war in Vietnam and the civil rights movement. She draws on five case studies to lay bare these connections: the Soviet Union, Rhodesia, South Korea, Greece, and Chile. Some of the activism in these case studies was sustained by citizen groups and NGOs such as churches, while in other instances academics, officers within the State Department, or members of Congress directed much of the attention. Snyder then concludes by showing how Congress evolved in this period too, as hearings on human rights led to a number of important institutional changes in government. Snyder concludes by noting that while interest in human rights surged by 1976, attention has in many respects waned since the 1980s. Attention to these issues is not inevitable and it cannot be sustained without continuing participation from different sectors of civil society. Paying close attention to the ways that these interests were cultivated in the 1970s is one way that the activists of the 21st century might try cultivating awareness of the problems confronting the world today. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

GSMC Social Media News Podcast
GSMC Social Media News Podcast Episode 16: Jaden Smith- Sarah Snyder & Drake vs. Eminem (8-8-16)

GSMC Social Media News Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 8, 2016 38:10


Join Pauline and Mariano in this week’s episode as they discuss Jaden Smith seen with Sarah Snyder at the premiere of Suicide Squad after she was seen with a new beau. The duo also discuss a fake claim of Drake calling out Eminem and challenging him. Continuing on, Pauliano give their opinions on Eminem’s body guard accusing Suge Knight of planning a hit on Eminem. To wrap up the show Pauline and Mariano end on Orlando Bloom’s freeing vacation with Katy Perry in Italy.Follow the GSMC Social Media News Podcast at http://www.gsmcpodcast.com/social-media-podcast.html

Story Pirates
The Early Years: Ukulele Island

Story Pirates

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 11, 2014 12:39


Story Pirates are back with a another adaptation, written by a kid, performed by the Story Pirates! This week’s episode features “Ukulele Island” by then 4th grader Sarah Snyder. First performed in March of 2013 on SiriusXM radio, this podcast features an exclusive interview with author Sarah Snyder!

The Minimal Pair
Episode 005: TESOL Recap & Review

The Minimal Pair

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 8, 2014


The Minimal Pair: Episode 005Show Notes: The Minimal Pair Title: TESOL Recap & ReviewEpisode no: 5Date: 4/6/14Introduction: Overview of our trip to Portland and our experience at TESOL 2014Shared highlight:Congrats to Amy Roither, our colleague from St. Louis Community College, who gave a stellar presentation on student-created podcastsThursday 3/27, 11:30—Hear Me Now! Improving Academic Skills with Student-Created Podcasts (Amy Roither)Stephanie's highlights:Thursday 3/27, 10:30am—Mentor Text2: Scaffolding Reading Instruction for Community College ESL (Dr. Sarina C. Molina)Thursday 3/27, 1:00pm—Flipping the ESL Classroom: Promoting Student Interaction, Engagement, & Learning (Danielle Petersen, Caitlin Hamstra, Alisha Fisher)Thursday 3/27, 4pm—“Reading to Write” to Sustain University-Level Writing”(Lori Giles and Kimberly McGrath Moreira)Thursday 3/27, 3:00pm—Teaching Spoken English: Content and Methodology(John Campbell-Larsen)Saturday 3/29, 11:30am—Using Twitter, Storytelling, and Screencasting Apps to Reimagine Your Classroom etc. (Abby Porter and Nathan Soelberg)Meeting Jennifer ESLJean's highlights:Thursday 3/27, 10:30am—Inquiry-Based ESL Grammar (Darrin Divers)Thursday 3/27, 2:00pm—Fostering Presentation Competence: Instituting a Comprehensive Presentation Curriculum (Kaitlin Gram and Elizabeth Gould)Thursday 3/27, 3:00pm—Second Language Writing Assessment—Exploring the Future (Sarah Snyder and Deborah Crusan)Friday 3/28, 10:30am—Students as Teachers: Exploring Peer-to-Peer Teaching (Rosie Verratti and Nancy Hutchison)Friday 3/28, 4:00pm—Book Clubs in the Classroom: Developing a Culture of Literacy (Heather Satrom, Sadi Sahbazian, and Jona Colson)

Think Big Radio
013 Think Big Radio: Getting Away From It All

Think Big Radio

Play Episode Listen Later May 1, 2012


It’s not everyday an entrepreneur has the opportunity to unplug and truly get away from it all. But in this episode of Think Big Radio, Sarah Snyder, bizperc manager, talks about her experience while vacationing in Montana with no computer and no cell phone.  What was it like to truly get away from it all? […]

Think Big Radio
007 Think Big Radio: Sarah’s GCUC Experience

Think Big Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 27, 2012


In this episode of Think Big Radio, Sarah Snyder (meeting planner for Think Big Partners and manager of the bizperc coworking space) dives deep into her experience at the Global Coworking Unconference Conference (GCUC, pronounced “juicy”) last week in Austin, Texas. Listen up, tune in and Think Big with Sarah and she talks about who […]