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Born in Ilocos Sur, Shirley Nield has dedicated more than three decades to nursing, guided by a lifelong commitment to caring for others with compassion and kindness. She began her career in the Philippines before moving to the United Kingdom in 1999, where she worked for 10 years. In 2009, she and her family relocated to Australia, where she has continued to serve with the same dedication to the profession. - Mahigit tatlong dekada nang naglilingkod bilang nurse si Shirley Nield, na ang puso ay nakatuon sa pagbibigay ng kalinga at malasakit sa kapwa. Nagsimula ang kanyang propesyon sa Pilipinas, bago lumipat sa United Kingdom noong 1999, kung saan naglingkod ng 10 taon. Noong 2009, kasama ng kanyang pamilya, lumipat siya sa Australia at dito ipinagpatuloy ang kanyang dedikasyon sa propesyon.
What we discussed:Erika coaching Cynthia Erivo through the London Marathon and meeting her in person for the first time The anxiety of coaching on race day and tracking apps failing mid-race Cynthia's marathon execution, training swings, and performance relative to her PB Sub-2 marathon breakthrough and reactions to Sawa and Kiplimo's performances Debate around super shoes, accessibility, and what actually makes runners faster Boston Marathon conditions, surge in fast times, and depth of competitive fields Emerging U.S. men's marathon depth and recent breakout performances Penn Relays rivalry, NCAA 1500m record, and trash talk between athletes Eugene Marathon “pancake 5K” and the culture of fun race experiences Debate on helping runners at the finish line vs. racing your own race (and DQ implications)
Dr. George Sawa is an internationally recognized musicologist, performer, and educator specializing in Arabic music history, theory, and performance. Born in Alexandria, Egypt, he brings over 50 years of experience, with training from the Higher Institute of Arabic Music and a PhD in historical Arabic musicology from the University of Toronto. He has taught at the University of Toronto and York University, and lectured and performed worldwide. A prolific author on medieval and modern Arabic music, his work bridges historical research with contemporary practice and has become an important resource for the dance community. He was awarded the Lifetime Achievement Award by the Egyptian Ministry of Culture for his contributions to Arabic music research.In this episode you will learn about:- How translating 11th-century Arabic music dictionaries reveals detailed insights into dancers, musicians, and aesthetics of that time- Why even medieval musicians warned dancers about tricky drummers—and the importance of knowing the music- The reality of fusion in history—and why some combinations worked while others failed- How European influence shaped Egyptian music and led to the rise of large orchestras- Why modern dancers struggle to interpret older music—and what is required to truly dance to itShow Notes to this episode:Find Dr George Sawa on YouTube, FB, and website with the info about his publications.Previous interview with Dr George Sawa:Ep 75. George Sawa: Digging Deep Into the History of Egyptian MusicDetails the BDE shows and training programs are available at www.JoinBDE.comFollow Iana on Instagram, FB, and Youtube . Check out her online classes and intensives at the Iana Dance Club.Find information on how you can support Ukraine and Ukrainian belly dancers HERE.Podcast: www.ianadance.com/podcast
On this episode of The Ikigai Podcast, I talk with Chie Sawa, founder of Thrive Life Design, about why all leaders need a sanctuary to pause and reconnect with themselves. We also explore reverse culture shock, the power of co-reflection, and how structured tools like Tarot readings for reflection can create clarity without crossing into therapy. We explore:• Chie's journey from Japan to the US and back • Reverse culture shock and feeling out of place at home • Why sociology and women's rights shaped her path • Building Thrive Life Design beyond psychotherapy • What “thrive” means as steady life expansion • Sanctuary as a space to pause, breathe, and renew • Reflection vs naisei and why being heard matters • Reflection as a tool with clear limits • Rumination, resentment, and when therapy is the better path • The Reflection Room as a flexible one-on-one space • Soul Story Tarot as a reflective structure not fortune telling • Utori as the felt sense of inner room Book a session with Chia.
Samaya Boueri Ziade shares the origin story of her acclaimed Brooklyn restaurant Sawa.Huge thanks to Andrew Talks to Chefs' presenting sponsor, meez, the recipe operating software for culinary professionals. THINGS YOU SHOULD KNOW:Andrew is a writer by trade. If you'd like to support him, there's no better way than by purchasing his most recent book, The Dish: The Lives and Labor Behind One Plate of Food (October 2023), about all the key people (in the restaurant, on farms, in delivery trucks, etc.) whose stories and work come together in a single restaurant dish.We'd love if you followed us on Instagram. Please also follow Andrew's real-time journal of the travel, research, writing, and production of/for his next book The Opening (working title), which will track four restaurants in different parts of the U.S. from inception to launch.For Andrew's writing, dining, and personal adventures, follow along at his personal feed.Thank you for listening—please don't hesitate to reach out with any feedback and/or suggestions!
Je vous présenté Nadia Gabrieli Kalati aka « Nadéeya GK »Pour la 8ème édition de EN CORPS, La Place est fière de présenter « SAWATA », spectacle créé par NADÉEYA GK, fondatrice de la compagnie aKôt.Née au Cameroun, Nadéeya GK (Nadia Gabrieli Kalati) est une artiste chorégraphique pluridisciplinaire dont l'ancrage africain nourrit une trajectoire internationale. Porteuse de la mémoire bantoue (SAWA) et des énergies rituelles, elle mêle héritages africains, house dance et krump dans une écriture singulière. Formée auprès de Ousmane "Baba"Sy et diplômée de l'École des Sables, elle développe une danse dans laquelle chaque geste devient mémoire et guérison.Membre du collectif féminin Paradox-sal, elle s'est produite de New York à Paris, de Dakar à Lyon, et a collaboré avec Bintou Dembélé, Qudus Onikeku, Blick Bassy, Manu Dibango et Angélique Kidjo. Fondatrice de la compagnie aKôT, elle crée SAWATA, son premier solo chorégraphique; une traversée entre mémoire, spiritualité et renaissance.
California resident, Shawn Sawa was sentenced to 18 months in prison for his role in stealing millions of dollars' worth of canola intended for livestock feed, and Food and Agriculture Climate Alliance welcomed the USDA's announcement of a $700 million Regenerative Agriculture Pilot Program.
SAWA est une jeune association qui met en avant les cultures du Maghreb et du Levant à travers des évènements culturels au Havre.Pour en parler Margot reçoit Viviane, présidente de l'association, et Gabin, secrétaire. Ils évoquent pourquoi ils ont eu envie de se lancer dans ce projet, l'importance de mettre ces cultures en lumière, comment adhérer mais aussi du premier évènement SAWA qui aura lieu le 19 décembre à la Source.Suivez SAWA sur instagram et pour adhérer c'est juste ici.
Ha riportato l'Italia della boxe sul tetto del mondo, conquistando il titolo mondiale dei pesi leggeri Ibo al termine di un durissimo - e bellissimo! - match contro l'argentina Karen Elisabeth Carabajal, sul ring della sua Bologna. Ma l'ospite di oggi di Olympia non è solo una boxeur; è anche infermiera e attivista per i diritti sociali e civili, lei che, 33enne, originaria del Camerun, s'è trasferita in Italia da bambina, a 8 anni, e solo nel 2022 ha finalmente ottenuto la cittadinanza italiana. Un destino da costruire ogni giorno, con le proprie mani, con i propri guantoni. Pamela Malvina Noutcho Sawa si racconta a Olympia, la città dello sport.olympia@radio24.it
In this week's episode, host Adam Green speaks with arts and culture journalist Dale Berning Sawa, whose work has appeared in The New York Times, The Guardian, The Art Newspaper, and on her Substack at daleberningsawa.substack.com, about the shocking theft at the Louvre that has captivated the art world. Dale brings us up to speed on the latest developments in the investigation and explores the deeper questions the heist has raised, including how museums can balance public access with protecting their collections, why security systems failed, and what this reveals about the evolving role of museum staff and technology. Together they discuss what this high-profile theft says about museum culture today and what lessons institutions everywhere should take from it.
As it's the Halloween season, we're shouting "Boo!...mer." 1995's Casper is here to put you through a lot of silliness before getting to that Sawa cameo you gals were all talking about at your slumber parties. Featuring Shrishma Naik, Carolyn Naoroz, and Justin Zeppa. Casper was directed by Brad Silberling and stars Christina Ricci and Bill Pullman.We appreciate your support, so please subscribe, rate, review, and follow the show: YouTube: youtube.com/@oldmovietimemachineInstagram: @timemachinepodcasts Facebook: facebook.com/oldmovietimemachine Buy our luxurious merchandise: www.teepublic.com/user/old-movie-time-machine ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
The Geekz return with another terrifying entry in our 31 Days of Horror marathon — Consumed (2024) — a claustrophobic survival horror film starring Devon Sawa (Final Destination, Chucky) and written by David Calbert. When a group of friends ventures into the wilderness, they uncover something far more dangerous than the elements — a monstrous force that feeds on fear, flesh, and desperation. As the infection spreads, survival becomes a brutal game of trust and terror. In our review, we dig into Consumed's tense atmosphere, practical creature effects, and Sawa's gritty, emotionally charged performance. We'll break down how Calbert's writing blends psychological dread with body-horror intensity, discuss the film's use of isolation and paranoia, and ask the question every horror fan wants answered: Was this low-budget movie worth the time? Join us as we continue reviewing 31 horror movies for all 31 days of October — from indie shocks to big-studio nightmares.
In Gaza, women and girls are paying the highest price of war, but their lives are being turned into a smokescreen. Israeli leaders claim their bombs are about “saving women,” echoing the same dangerous framing once used to justify the U.S. invasion of Afghanistan.In this episode, the journalist Ester Pinheiro speaks with:✨ Yara Hawari, Palestinian academic and Co-director at Al-Shabaka✨ Amina, from Let's Talk Palestine✨ Ohaila, from SAWA, a feminist organization supporting survivors of violence in Palestine➡️ How women's rights are weaponized to justify war and genocide?➡️ How Western and Israeli discourse strips Palestinian women of their agency?➡️ Why are we not talking about Palestinian men? ➡️ The ways women are resisting, organizing, and leading in Gaza and beyond➡️ What genuine feminist solidarity to Palestinian women can look like?Update: The United Nations has confirmed that Israel is committing genocide in Gaza, where tens of thousands of civilians have been killed.
This week, Ben and Rob slam right into The Fanatic (2019), the bizarre thriller directed by Limp Bizkit frontman Fred Durst and starring John Travolta and Devon Sawa. It's a fever dream of celebrity obsession, questionable choices, and Nu-Metal energy that has us all asking: why was this film even made?What on earth were Travolta and Sawa thinking? Is The Fanatic based on a true story, or just Fred Durst's wild imagination? And the real kicker—is it good, bad, or that sweet spot of so-bad-it's-good? Maybe it even succeeds on its own bonkers B-movie terms.The lads dig into why this film is amazing (yes, amazing), what it really means beneath the awkward line deliveries and Limp Bizkit Easter eggs, and whether The Fanatic is destined to become the next funnybad cult classic for nu-metal survivors everywhere.PLUS! We have a Patreon with EXCLUSIVE content just for you starting at just ONE POUND a month - click the link below!Find us on your socials of choice at www.linktr.ee/everymovieeverpodcast
Episode #383 of BGMania: A Video Game Music Podcast. Today on the show, the sweet, syncopated swing of jazz takes center stage. Bryan and Bedroth delve into the genre's unmistakable influence on game soundtracks, from smooth and smoky lounge tunes to frantic, bebop-inspired boss battles. Join us for a journey through saxophones, upright bass lines, and muted trumpets, as we tap into games like Persona 5, Mario Kart 8, Gravity Rush, Phoenix Wright, Skullgirls, and many more. Whether you're sipping an espresso or sprinting through a cityscape, this episode has something jazzy to match your mood. Email the show at bgmaniapodcast@gmail.com with requests for upcoming episodes, questions, feedback, comments, concerns, or any other thoughts you'd like to share! Special thanks to our Executive Producers: Jexak, Xancu, Jeff & Mike. EPISODE PLAYLIST AND CREDITS Let's Get Lost from Grand Theft Auto IV [Jimmy McHugh/Chet Baker, 1955/2008] Pleajeune from Gravity Rush [Kohei Tanaka, 2012] Godot - The Fragrance of Dark Coffee from Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney - Trials and Tribulations [Noriyuki Iwadare, 2004] Let's Dance Boys! from Bayonetta [Hiroshi Yamaguchi, 2009] Lighting a Fuse from The Even More Incredible Machine [Christopher Stevens, 1993] Heist from Conker's Bad Fur Day [Robin Beanland, 2001] Dolphin Shoals from Mario Kart 8 [Atsuko Asahi, 2014] Boo Cinema -Jazzy Version- from Mario Kart World [Atsuko Asahi, Maasa Miyoshi, Takuhiro Honda & Yutaro Takakuwa, 2025] Calling from The World Ends With You [Takeharu Ishimoto feat. SAWA, 2007] Misty from Ar nosurge: Ode to an Unborn Star [Daisuke Achiwa, 2014] Urban Fantasy from 10,000 Bullets [Yasunori Mitsuda & Miki Higashino, 2005] Pedestrians Crossing from Skullgirls [Brenton Kossak & Blaine McGurty, 2012] Clock Tower Stage from Marvel vs. Capcom 2: New Age of Heroes [Tetsuya Shibata & Mitsuhiko Takano, 2000] Rivers in the Desert from Persona 5 [Shoji Meguro feat. Lyn, 2016] LINKS Patreon: https://patreon.com/bgmania Website: https://bgmania.podbean.com/ Discord: https://discord.gg/cC73Heu Facebook: BGManiaPodcast X: BGManiaPodcast Instagram: BGManiaPodcast TikTok: BGManiaPodcast YouTube: BGManiaPodcast Twitch: BGManiaPodcast PODCAST NETWORK Very Good Music: A VGM Podcast Listening Religiously
Episode 408 - I Sawa Plane Crash Death is coming for all of us. It's inevitable, unavoidable, and apparently it has a Rube Goldbergian sense-of-humor. Basically there's no sense in even fighting it, unless of course, you happen to be friends with a teenage heartthrob who has the gift of precognition, but we're guessing most of you don't. So it's probably best to just grab a beer, sit back, relax, and wait for your turn to die hilariously. Cheers!! THIS WEEKS MOVIES: Final Destination (2000) THIS WEEKS BEER: Roak Brewing Co. Live Wire American IPA Follow us! Twitter: @thebuzzedkillPC BlueSky: @thebuzzedkillPC Instagram: @thebuzzedkillpodcast Facebook.com/thebuzzedkillpodcast
Katika kuadhimisha Siku ya Kimataifa ya ulemavu wa uziwi na kutoona, tunamulika hatua kubwa inayochukuliwa nchini Kenya katika kuhakikisha watoto wenye ulemavu wa kuona wanapata elimu bora na jumuishi. Mafunzo maalum yaliyofanyika jijini Nairobi yalileta pamoja wataalamu, walimu na mashirika ya maendeleo, kwa lengo la kuchochea elimu hiyo kwa njia ya michezo, kwa msaada wa Shirika la LEGO kwa kushirikiana na Shirika la Umoja wa Mataifa la kuhudumia watoto UNICEF Kenya. Sharon Jebichii na makala zaidi.
“In death there are no accidents, no coincidences, no mishaps, and no escapes.” This week, we're continuing our tribute to iconic performers we've recently lost, as part of our May They Rest In Peaceseries. Join Henrique and David as they travel to Canada (spiritually, at least) to revisit one of the most memorable horror thrillers of the 2000s: Final Destination. Directed by James Wong and starring Devon Sawa, Ali Larter, Kerr Smith, and the unforgettable Tony Todd—who delivers an unforgettable turn in just one scene—this episode dives into the supernatural suspense that made this film a generational anxiety trigger.
Kuelekea siku ya kimataifa ya uhuru wa vyombo vya habari Mei 3, Katibu Mkuu wa Umoja wa Mataifa António Guterres amesema waandishi wa habari wanakabiliwa na hatari kila uchao huku teknolojia mpya ya akili mnemba au AI ingawa licha ya manufaa nayo pia inaibua hatari mpya kwenye uhuru wa kujieleza. Assumpta Massoi na taarifa zaidi.
Prepare for takeoff, students! Mark welcomes author, podcaster, and horror movie lover Padraic Maroney back to the show to celebrate the 25th anniversary of Final Destination AND to celebrate his brand new book about the whole FD franchise! Padraic has interviewed 50 people involved with these fun shockers and shares great behind the scenes stories - plus what's to come in the new sequel out soon - in "Escaping Death: The Unauthorized Story Behind the Final Destination Movies" which you can buy now. Listen to hear him spill some blood (I mean tea!), discuss favorite deaths, rank the sequels, and figure out the name Clear Rivers. Plus, they salute the late, great Tony Todd. Spoiler warning!Order the book at https://www.bearmanormedia.com/Follow Padraic @basedonabookbypadraic
« Un baobab de la vie politique nationale est tombé », titreMouryaniger. « Une grande figure de la politique nigérienne s'éteint à 74 ans », annonce de son côté ActuNiger alors que l'Evènement Niger, parle d'une « grande perte », pour le pays et salut « un grand combattant de la démocratie », « qui croyait profondément à cet idéal de gouvernance, d'où son engagement à défendre et à promouvoir la démocratie et la justice sociale ». L'évènement Niger rappelle aussi qu'Hama Amadou avait connu « des hauts et des bas dans la vie politique. Des ennuis judiciaires lui ont valu la prison. L'adversité politique l'a contraint également à connaître l'exil politique ». Aux yeux de Mouryaniger, Hama Amadou « laisse un grand vide autour de lui. Pour ses partisans, ses amis et ses adversaires, pour avoir réussi à incarner à la foi, le visage de l'opposition et de la majorité politique au Niger, ces trente dernières années, avec sa robe de dirigeant politique, en tant que Premier ministre ou président de l'Assemblée nationale ». Enfin, pour ActuNiger, Hama Amadou était « une personnalité incontournable de la scène politique nigérienne ». En 2021, « il s'était porté candidat à l'élection présidentielle », rappelle le site d'information. « Bien que la campagne ait été marquée par des controverses et des défis judiciaires, sa candidature invalidée par la Cour Constitutionnelle a illustré son désir constant de s'impliquer dans l'avenir politique du pays », conclut Actu Niger.Révision de la ConstitutionÀ la Une également, la République Démocratique du Congo, où le président Félix Tshisekedi envisage de changer la Constitution. « Le président a officiellement exprimé son souhait de voir toiletter la Constitution de la RDC », annonce Objectif-info.cd. Dans une allocution à Kisangani, Félix Antoine Tshisekedi a précisé que cette révision va « permettre à la loi suprême de la RDC, de s'adapter aux réalités actuelles du pays ». « Notre constitution n'est pas bonne. Elle a été rédigée à l'étranger par des étrangers. Il faut une constitution sur base de nos réalités », a-t-il dit. « Cette confirmation du président au sujet de la Constitution, ajoute Objectif-info.cd, balise ainsi la voie vers la 4ᵉ république de la RDC ». Afrikarabia, de son côté, juge que l'initiative du président congolais « ravive la polémique sur une possible tentative de Félix Tshisekedi de s'accrocher au pouvoir ». Beaucoup soupçonnent l'UDPS, (le parti présidentiel), de vouloir ouvrir la voie à un 3ᵉ mandat de Félix Tshisekedi, ou de vouloir en rallonger la durée ». Ce qui déclenche d'ailleurs la colère de l'un de ses principaux opposants : dans Actualité.cd, Moïse Katumbi estime que « Félix Tshisekedi a trahi la confiance du peuple ». « La constitution ne changera pas », assure-t-il. « Elle a été approuvée par le peuple et aujourd'hui, Félix Tshisekedi traite ce peuple comme des étrangers ? Ça ne m'étonne pas. Je crois que Félix Tshisekedi n'était pas prêt à diriger la RDC (...) et même si on lui laissait 30 ou 40 ans au pouvoir, il ne serait toujours pas prêt ».Vague d'indignationEnfin au Cameroun, une vidéo de scènes de torture, refait surface sur les réseaux sociaux, cinq ans après son enregistrement, explique Le bled qui parle. La vidéo montrant les sévices subis par Longué Longué a suscité une vague d'indignation selon Le bled parle : elle montre l'artiste « connu pour son engagement critique », « ligoté et torturé ». Longué Longué précise « qu'il a été arrêté à l'hôtel Sawa par des militaires et torturé dans les locaux de la sécurité militaire à Douala ». « Selon nos informations, ajoute Le bled parle, cette vidéo date de 2019, soit au lendemain de l'élection présidentielle de 2018, remportée par Paul Biya ». Pourquoi ressort-elle aujourd'hui ? Mystère. En tout cas, précise Actu Cameroun, « le ministre de la Défense a ouvert une enquête », pour que selon ses mots, « toute la lumière soit faite sur cette regrettable affaire ».
Riley O'Brien (@rileylobrien) is joined by Tyler Sawa (@tyler_sawa) who hosts The Pride Podcast (@PridePodcast) on the Blue Wire (@bluewirepods) Network. Tyler is a great football mind and has interviewed the likes of former Detroit Lion and current Philadelphia Eagle Darius Slay as well as former Detroit Lion Glover Quin. The guys discuss Tyler's love for football, what he loves about covering the game of football and also important people in Tyler's life as well as how an interaction with Hall of Fame Running Back Barry Sanders led to an incredible experience for Tyler and his dad. Be sure to give Tyler a follow and listen to him as well on his secondary podcast, @BetterAfterHrs
Luister de hele aflevering op Podimo. Krijg 30 dagen gratis met podimo.nl/snobsOverwerkt en uitgeput retourneren de snobs uit Azië en schuiven ze met een Japanse whisky aan voor de epiloog van hun rei. Veel helden konden de snobs niet ontwaren op Bali, dus wijken ze in deze aflevering uit naar Thailand, Japan en Brunei. Yvo brengt Jort de fijne kneepjes van Japans zwaardsteken in eigen buik bij, oftewel ‘seppuku'. Ze bewonderen supersnob Sultan Hassan met zijn tweeduizend op maat gemaakte auto's een harem van veertig vrouwen. Ze sluiten af met een zeer snobwaardige vrouw van eigen bodem: Mata Hari, die wist hoe ze moest sterven. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Luister de hele aflevering op Podimo. Krijg 30 dagen gratis met podimo.nl/snobsYvo steekt er eentje op. Met een kreteksigaretje in de hand neemt hij voor de tweede keer met Jort plaats achter de microfoon in de Oost, om verslag te doen van van hun expeditie in 19e-eeuwse traditie. Een beproeving. De snobs luisteren naar de Leidse ontgroening van Erik Hazelhof Roelfsema. Er kraakt wel eens een schedeltje of een ledemaat, weet Yvo uit eigen ervaring. De snob in deze aflevering is de Oscar Wilde van de Lage Landen: de dandyëske Louis Couperus uit Den Haag. Jort en Yvo bespreken de beste baden om lijf en leden in het water te laten zakken – en dat is voor eerstgenoemde nooit de zee. De zon schijnt overvloedig, maar dat betekent niet dat Yvo's paraplufetisj niet kan worden gevoed. En terwijl de helft van het land staat te badmintonnen op de camping in Frankrijk, legt Jort de snobwaardige geschiedenis ervan uit, die teruggaat tot de Beauforts en Badminton House. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Luister Snobs in de Sawa op Podimo! Krijg 30 dagen gratis Podimo met deze link.Gezeten op het terras van George WPA in Amsterdam Zuid, tussen de blondines in biro's en botoxtieners, leggen de snobs uit waarom ze voor één keer terug zijn van zomerreces. Ze moeten bekennen dat ze, ondanks zichzelf, iets gepresteerd hebben: een nieuwe, nóg betere Jegroni. In deze zomerse editie presenteert Yvo de held van deze aflevering, zijn zielsverwant Ernest Hemingway. Ook heeft hij een heel arsenaal aan epiluxe zonnebrillen bij zich: van het brilletje van Brad Pitt in de film Babylon, tot die van Johnny Depp off-set. Ze nemen door waar je deze zomer kunt aanleggen. Wat te doen als je aankomt in de Oude Haven van Portofino, maar je schip een maatje te groot is? De snobs weten raad. En tot slot een zomers primeurtje: de snobs presenteren de Snob40, een lijst met hits waar je het heet van krijgt, en wel een koele slok bij kunt gebruiken. Van de stoute Serge Gainsbourg die een muzikaal hoogtepunt beleeft met Bardot én Birkin, tot de weinig woke-waardige eendagsvlieg Pino d'Angio. Exclusief beluisterbaar na aanschaf van de Jegroni, vanaf nu verkrijgbaar in de snobstore.nl.Geproduceerd door: Tonny Media.
60 dagen gratis PodimoNa elke twee weken een aflevering op te nemen, zijn de snobs kapot en toe aan een tropenrooster. Live vanuit het stervende continent luiden de snobs de Eeuw van Azië in, en gaan op zoek naar tempo doeloe in Bali. Een tijd waarin de verhoudingen duidelijk waren, en de knecht nog vrede kon hebben met het karige leven dat geleid werd. Een tijd waarin iedereen gelukkiger leek, aldus Yvo. Alvorens de snobs aan de westerse medemens ontsnappen, hun koffers pakken en vertrekken, nemen zij door: wat blijft thuis, wat moet mee? Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Bright on Buddhism - Vajrasekhara Sutra - Fascicle Three - Part Two Resources: https://www.bdkamerica.org/product/two-esoteric-sutras/; Bentor, Yael, and Meir Shahar, eds. Chinese and Tibetan esoteric Buddhism. Leiden ; Brill, 2017.; Orzech, Charles D., Henrik Hjort. Sorensen, and Richard Karl. Payne. Esoteric Buddhism and the Tantras in East Asia. Leiden ; Brill, 2011.; Goble, Geoffrey C. Chinese Esoteric Buddhism : Amoghavajra, the Ruling Elite, and the Emergence of a Tradition. New York, NY: Columbia University Press, 2019.; Yamasaki, Taikō, Yasuyoshi. Morimoto, David Kidd, and Taikō Yamasaki. Shingon : Japanese Esoteric Buddhism. 1st ed. Boston: Shambhala, 1988.; Xie, Shiwei. Dao mi fa yuan : Dao jiao yu mi jiao zhi wen hua yan jiu = Syncretic traditions of Daoism and Esoteric Buddhism : a study on Daoist and Esoteric Buddhist cultures. Chu ban. Taibei Shi: Xin wen feng chu ban gu fen you xian gong si, 2018.; Sawa, Ryūken. Art in Japanese Esoteric Buddhism. [1st English ed.]. Tokyo: Weatherhill/Heibonsha, 1972.; Proffitt, Aaron P., and Dōhan. Esoteric Pure Land Buddhism. Honolulu: University of Hawaiʻi Press, 2023.; Takata, Osamu, Terukazu Akiyama, and Taka Yanagisawa. Takao Mandara : Bijutsu Kenkyūjo hōkoku = Report of the Institute of Art Research ... The oldest Mandala paintings of Esoteric Buddhism in Japan. Tōkyō: Yoshikawa Kōbunkan, 1967.; Rambelli, Fabio. A Buddhist Theory of Semiotics : Signs, Ontology, and Salvation in Japanese Esoteric Buddhism. London ; Bloomsbury Academic, An imprint of Bloomsbury Pub. Plc, 2013.; Chen, Jinhua. Legend and Legitimation : The Formation of Tendai Esoteric Buddhism in Japan. Bruxelles: Institut belge des hautes études chinoises, 2009. Do you have a question about Buddhism that you'd like us to discuss? Let us know by tweeting to us @BrightBuddhism, emailing us at Bright.On.Buddhism@gmail.com, or joining us on our discord server, Hidden Sangha https://discord.gg/tEwcVpu! Credits: Nick Bright: Script, Cover Art, Music, Voice of Hearer, Co-Host Proven Paradox: Editing, mixing and mastering, social media, Voice of Hermit, Co-Host --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/brightonbuddhism/message
Wana jumuiya wa Afrika wanao ishi mjini Sydney wamepata sababu yakufanya mtoko, ambao unajumuisha kila mwanachama wa familia.
Bright on Buddhism - Vajrasekhara Sutra - Fascicle Three - Part One Resources: https://www.bdkamerica.org/product/two-esoteric-sutras/; Bentor, Yael, and Meir Shahar, eds. Chinese and Tibetan esoteric Buddhism. Leiden ; Brill, 2017.; Orzech, Charles D., Henrik Hjort. Sorensen, and Richard Karl. Payne. Esoteric Buddhism and the Tantras in East Asia. Leiden ; Brill, 2011.; Goble, Geoffrey C. Chinese Esoteric Buddhism : Amoghavajra, the Ruling Elite, and the Emergence of a Tradition. New York, NY: Columbia University Press, 2019.; Yamasaki, Taikō, Yasuyoshi. Morimoto, David Kidd, and Taikō Yamasaki. Shingon : Japanese Esoteric Buddhism. 1st ed. Boston: Shambhala, 1988.; Xie, Shiwei. Dao mi fa yuan : Dao jiao yu mi jiao zhi wen hua yan jiu = Syncretic traditions of Daoism and Esoteric Buddhism : a study on Daoist and Esoteric Buddhist cultures. Chu ban. Taibei Shi: Xin wen feng chu ban gu fen you xian gong si, 2018.; Sawa, Ryūken. Art in Japanese Esoteric Buddhism. [1st English ed.]. Tokyo: Weatherhill/Heibonsha, 1972.; Proffitt, Aaron P., and Dōhan. Esoteric Pure Land Buddhism. Honolulu: University of Hawaiʻi Press, 2023.; Takata, Osamu, Terukazu Akiyama, and Taka Yanagisawa. Takao Mandara : Bijutsu Kenkyūjo hōkoku = Report of the Institute of Art Research ... The oldest Mandala paintings of Esoteric Buddhism in Japan. Tōkyō: Yoshikawa Kōbunkan, 1967.; Rambelli, Fabio. A Buddhist Theory of Semiotics : Signs, Ontology, and Salvation in Japanese Esoteric Buddhism. London ; Bloomsbury Academic, An imprint of Bloomsbury Pub. Plc, 2013.; Chen, Jinhua. Legend and Legitimation : The Formation of Tendai Esoteric Buddhism in Japan. Bruxelles: Institut belge des hautes études chinoises, 2009. Do you have a question about Buddhism that you'd like us to discuss? Let us know by tweeting to us @BrightBuddhism, emailing us at Bright.On.Buddhism@gmail.com, or joining us on our discord server, Hidden Sangha https://discord.gg/tEwcVpu! Credits: Nick Bright: Script, Cover Art, Music, Voice of Hearer, Co-Host Proven Paradox: Editing, mixing and mastering, social media, Voice of Hermit, Co-Host --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/brightonbuddhism/message
Bright on Buddhism - Vajrasekhara Sutra - Fascicle Two - Part Two Resources: https://www.bdkamerica.org/product/two-esoteric-sutras/; Bentor, Yael, and Meir Shahar, eds. Chinese and Tibetan esoteric Buddhism. Leiden ; Brill, 2017.; Orzech, Charles D., Henrik Hjort. Sorensen, and Richard Karl. Payne. Esoteric Buddhism and the Tantras in East Asia. Leiden ; Brill, 2011.; Goble, Geoffrey C. Chinese Esoteric Buddhism : Amoghavajra, the Ruling Elite, and the Emergence of a Tradition. New York, NY: Columbia University Press, 2019.; Yamasaki, Taikō, Yasuyoshi. Morimoto, David Kidd, and Taikō Yamasaki. Shingon : Japanese Esoteric Buddhism. 1st ed. Boston: Shambhala, 1988.; Xie, Shiwei. Dao mi fa yuan : Dao jiao yu mi jiao zhi wen hua yan jiu = Syncretic traditions of Daoism and Esoteric Buddhism : a study on Daoist and Esoteric Buddhist cultures. Chu ban. Taibei Shi: Xin wen feng chu ban gu fen you xian gong si, 2018.; Sawa, Ryūken. Art in Japanese Esoteric Buddhism. [1st English ed.]. Tokyo: Weatherhill/Heibonsha, 1972.; Proffitt, Aaron P., and Dōhan. Esoteric Pure Land Buddhism. Honolulu: University of Hawaiʻi Press, 2023.; Takata, Osamu, Terukazu Akiyama, and Taka Yanagisawa. Takao Mandara : Bijutsu Kenkyūjo hōkoku = Report of the Institute of Art Research ... The oldest Mandala paintings of Esoteric Buddhism in Japan. Tōkyō: Yoshikawa Kōbunkan, 1967.; Rambelli, Fabio. A Buddhist Theory of Semiotics : Signs, Ontology, and Salvation in Japanese Esoteric Buddhism. London ; Bloomsbury Academic, An imprint of Bloomsbury Pub. Plc, 2013.; Chen, Jinhua. Legend and Legitimation : The Formation of Tendai Esoteric Buddhism in Japan. Bruxelles: Institut belge des hautes études chinoises, 2009. Do you have a question about Buddhism that you'd like us to discuss? Let us know by tweeting to us @BrightBuddhism, emailing us at Bright.On.Buddhism@gmail.com, or joining us on our discord server, Hidden Sangha https://discord.gg/tEwcVpu! Credits: Nick Bright: Script, Cover Art, Music, Voice of Hearer, Co-Host Proven Paradox: Editing, mixing and mastering, social media, Voice of Hermit, Co-Host --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/brightonbuddhism/message
Bright on Buddhism - Vajrasekhara Sutra - Fascicle Two - Part One Resources: https://www.bdkamerica.org/product/two-esoteric-sutras/; Bentor, Yael, and Meir Shahar, eds. Chinese and Tibetan esoteric Buddhism. Leiden ; Brill, 2017.; Orzech, Charles D., Henrik Hjort. Sorensen, and Richard Karl. Payne. Esoteric Buddhism and the Tantras in East Asia. Leiden ; Brill, 2011.; Goble, Geoffrey C. Chinese Esoteric Buddhism : Amoghavajra, the Ruling Elite, and the Emergence of a Tradition. New York, NY: Columbia University Press, 2019.; Yamasaki, Taikō, Yasuyoshi. Morimoto, David Kidd, and Taikō Yamasaki. Shingon : Japanese Esoteric Buddhism. 1st ed. Boston: Shambhala, 1988.; Xie, Shiwei. Dao mi fa yuan : Dao jiao yu mi jiao zhi wen hua yan jiu = Syncretic traditions of Daoism and Esoteric Buddhism : a study on Daoist and Esoteric Buddhist cultures. Chu ban. Taibei Shi: Xin wen feng chu ban gu fen you xian gong si, 2018.; Sawa, Ryūken. Art in Japanese Esoteric Buddhism. [1st English ed.]. Tokyo: Weatherhill/Heibonsha, 1972.; Proffitt, Aaron P., and Dōhan. Esoteric Pure Land Buddhism. Honolulu: University of Hawaiʻi Press, 2023.; Takata, Osamu, Terukazu Akiyama, and Taka Yanagisawa. Takao Mandara : Bijutsu Kenkyūjo hōkoku = Report of the Institute of Art Research ... The oldest Mandala paintings of Esoteric Buddhism in Japan. Tōkyō: Yoshikawa Kōbunkan, 1967.; Rambelli, Fabio. A Buddhist Theory of Semiotics : Signs, Ontology, and Salvation in Japanese Esoteric Buddhism. London ; Bloomsbury Academic, An imprint of Bloomsbury Pub. Plc, 2013.; Chen, Jinhua. Legend and Legitimation : The Formation of Tendai Esoteric Buddhism in Japan. Bruxelles: Institut belge des hautes études chinoises, 2009. Do you have a question about Buddhism that you'd like us to discuss? Let us know by tweeting to us @BrightBuddhism, emailing us at Bright.On.Buddhism@gmail.com, or joining us on our discord server, Hidden Sangha https://discord.gg/tEwcVpu! Credits: Nick Bright: Script, Cover Art, Music, Voice of Hearer, Co-Host Proven Paradox: Editing, mixing and mastering, social media, Voice of Hermit, Co-Host --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/brightonbuddhism/message
In this episode, Vanessa talks about how clutter can affect us emotionally and a call to action to deal with our accumulated teacher stuff. We talk about why it's important to rest and what it might mean to you to Sharpen the SawA link to our Facebook Page! Join us! Books by Peter Walsh: It's all too much! (and the workbook) Does this Clutter make my Butt Look Big? Lose the Clutter, Lose the Weight Outer Order, Inner Calm by Gretchen RubinThe Home Edit – Stay Organized and The Ultimate Guide to Making Systems Stick *Disclaimer – these links take you to Amazon where I can make a few cents if you buy through the link. All About Filmstrips brought to you by WikipediaAnd remember to send your comments, stories, and random thoughts to me at TeachersinTransitionCoaching@gmail.com! I look forward to reading them. Would you like to hear a specific topic on the pod? Send those questions to me and I'll answer them. The transcript of this podcast can be found on the podcasts' homepage at Buzzsprout.
Part 3 of our Kyoto Vacation is‘Moe Money, Moe Problems: After School Tea-Time with the Girls of K-On!' And for the next three weeks, we're reviewing what may be Kyoto Animation's most popular series to date: K-On!, the musical slice-of-life anime sensation following the girls of the Sakuragaoka High School light music club! The 14-episode 1st season follows Yui Hirasawa as she learns the guitar and joins bassist Mio Akiyama, drummer Ritsu Tainaka, and keyboardist Tsumugi Kotobuki, ostensibly to play and practice music, but mostly to drink tea and eat snacks. The season follows the characters' first two years of high-school, with another guitarist, Azusa Nakano, joining in their second year, and of course includes the greatest teacher in the history of fiction, Sawa-chan-sensei, as their unorthodox club leader. It's a beautifully animated, stupendously funny, extremely sweet season of television with some great music, and the debut directorial work of the great Naoka Yamada – and an absolute pleasure to talk about on the podcast. Enjoy, and come back next week as we review the second season – with two exclamation points – K-On!! Time Chart:Theme Song: 0:00:00 – 0:01:30 Intro and History: 0:01:30 – 0:52:29Eyecatch Break: 0:52:29 – 0:53:04 K-On! Review: 0:53:04 – 3:13:54End Theme: 3:13:54 – 3:14:56Support the show at Ko-fi ☕️ https://ko-fi.com/weeklystuffRead the book 200 Reviews by Jonathan R. Lack in Paperback or on Kindle – https://a.co/d/bLx53vKFollow The Weekly Stuff Wordcast newsletter for regular updates and extra content! https://www.jonathanlack.comSubscribe to The Weekly Stuff Podcast on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/TheWeeklyStuffPodcastVisit our website and subscribe to Japanimation Station on all podcast platforms: http://japanimationstation.com/Subscribe to The Weekly Stuff Podcast on all podcast platforms: http://www.weeklystuffpodcast.com“re:CAPTURE” and “Happily Ever After” – Original Music & Lyrics by Thomas Lack, featuring Hatsune Miku. https://www.thomaslack.com
As CEO as one of the inconic advertising media companies, Pearl and Dean, Kathryn Jacob extols the benefits of why cinema is still a highly effective advertising medium. Kathryn sits on the Development Board of RADA and The Council and Board of the Advertising Association, and also where she is the board lead on inclusion work across the whole of our sector. She is the President of SAWA, which represents screen advertising companies worldwide, bringing together expertise and knowledge. She is also the very proud Chair of HOME Manchester, an iconic arts venue. This is a truly inspiring interview. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In today's mythology minisode Chelsea teaches us about the Jengu of Sawa mythology in Cameroon! --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/savethemermaids/support
Ahead of the Packers first game on Thanksgiving since 2013, Numac and Jordan hopped on the Pride Podcast with hosts Malcolm Hart and Tyler Sawa! The four of them talk the keys to victory for each time and dive into a bit of history and favorite Thanksgiving foods. Be sure to subscribe to Talk of the Tundra wherever you get your podcasts, and follow Numac (@numacisknown), Jordan (@jordantreske) and Talk of the Tundra (@packersGSPN) on Twitter! Also check out our clips on Instagram and TikTok (@watchGSPN)! Visit GSPN.info to find links to all of our Bucks, Brewers, Packers, and pop culture podcasts, our GSPN YouTube channel and Substack, the form to gain entry to our Discord server, our Twitter links, and more! GSPN is proud to call Blue Wire's network of podcasts home. You can (and should) follow Rohan, Ti, Adam, Jordan, Andrew, Numac, Eugene, and the Gyro Step and the Win In 6 podcast on Twitter. Don't forget to leave a 5 star rating on Apple Podcasts or Spotify to get us to read your review live at the end of an episode! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Malaise Mogodi: South African Women's Alliance — Economic empowerment is important to all women. That is why it is essential for women in various parts of the world to build relationships in order to create more opportunities with and for each other. Maloase Mogodi seeks to create this connection as Founder and President of the South African Women's Alliance (SAWA). Maloase is on a mission to promote, celebrate and showcase the people and culture of South Africa in order to build cultural exchange between women of the US and South Africa. Listen to Ramona and Maloase's conversation as they discuss SAWA and how women can inspire and support each other. In their conversation Maloase also discusses the upcoming 10th Anniversary SAWA Gala and Award celebration to be held on November 4, 2023, in Atlanta Georgia. Originally from South Africa, Maloase now lives in Atlanta. Resources: South African Women's Alliance SAWA 10th Anniversary Gala and Awards Highlights from our conversation: Women's Empowerment South Africa South African Women's Alliance Economic empowerment of women Global relationships between women in the US and South Africa SAWA Gala and Awards, November 4, 2023 Strategies for college success
Ce mois-ci, Jeane vous propose un nouvelle épisode Feel Good qui mêle découverte cinématographique, podcasts engagés et expositions inspirantes. Film : Le règne animal de Thomas Cailley : https://bit.ly/3tt6xL5 Exposition : Sex Appeal au Muséum de Toulouse : https://bit.ly/3F8X5yT Livre : Le journal de bord de Plastic Odisey : https://bit.ly/46kpVZa L'interview de Simon Bernard chez Basilic : https://audmns.com/DlejcKb Podcasts : Ondine de Blutopia : https://podcast.ausha.co/ondine/bande-annonce-ondine Une Afropéenne au pays Sawa : https://bit.ly/45rXrLT Du vent dans les mélèzes : https://bit.ly/3QcAN5X L'interview de Valérie Paumier chez Basilic : https://audmns.com/doWCJGb Mode -20€ sur votre 1ère commande avec le code BASILIC-WDF WeDressFair : https://bit.ly/48J3ajh Soutenir Basilic : instagram.com/basilicpodcast/ basilicpodcast.com Production : Jeane Clesse Musique : @Klein Graphisme : Mahaut Clément & Coralie Chauvin Mix : Jeane Clesse Si cet épisode vous a plu, n'hésitez pas à laisser plein d'étoiles et un commentaire sur la plateforme Apple Podcasts et surtout à vous abonner grâce à votre application de podcasts préférée ! Cela m'aide énormément à faire découvrir Basilic à de nouveaux auditeurs et de nouvelles auditrices.
En el episodio #224 hablamos con Mateo Isaza, biólogo, guía profesional, montañista, fotógrafo y un enamorado de la aventura y la naturaleza. Hace tres meses se convirtió en el colombiano número once en alcanzar la cima del monte Everest y el segundo en hacerlo sin oxígeno suplementario.Al comienzo Mateo se inclinó por las carreras atléticas de aventura, en las que recorrió gran parte de Colombia, hasta que finalmente se decidió por el montañismo y la escalada. Sus amigos le pedían que los llevara a sus viajes y lo recomendaban con otras personas. Sin publicidad, y gracias al voz a voz, en 2012 fundó Sawa, una agencia de ecoturismo.Su propósito lo define de forma simple y poderosa: evolucionar hacia el amor y la paz completa. Acompáñame a conocer la historia de Mateo Isaza, un montañista que con su humildad impacta positivamente a cada persona que camina a su lado.
THIS WEEK: Peter controls small plant-based creatures to collect human trash and eliminate a freight company's debt in Pikmin 2 and Joe finds himself dragged again into the Reaper's Game alongside teammates trying to survive in Shibuya with SAWA's work in NEO: The World Ends With You.
TMR Top 10: #SawaKaNaBaSaLifeJune 20, 2023The Morning RushHosted by: Chico, Hazel, & MarkkiThanks @colleenmyc2 for the topic!
Our guest is Sawako Okochi who is the co-chef and co-owner of Shalom Japan, which she opened in 2013 with her husband and co-chef, Aaron Israel. Shalom Japan is unique because Sawa and Aaron combine Japanese and Jewish food cultures on one menu. The unique concept has proven successful as they celebrate the 10th year of Shalom Japan. They also have just published a beautiful book titled “Love Japan – Recipes From Our Japanese American Kitchen”. In this episode, we will discuss how Sawa and Aaron met and decided to open a restaurant together, the overlapping and contrasting elements in Japanese and Jewish foods, creative menu items at Shalom Japan, what they want to share with us through the new book, and much, much more!!!Heritage Radio Network is a listener supported nonprofit podcast network. Support Japan Eats by becoming a member!Japan Eats is Powered by Simplecast.
Alejandro Sawa (Sevilla, 1862- Madrid, 1909) fue un escritor y periodista que formó parte de la bohemia de final del siglo XIX. Autor de 'La mujer de todo el mundo', 'Crimen legal', 'Declaración de un vencido', 'Criadero de curas', 'La sima de Igúzquiza', 'Historia de una reina' y su obra póstuma, 'Iluminaciones en la sombra', editada gracias a la ayuda de Rubén Darío, que la prologó. Publicó 'Noche' en 1888, una novela oscura, escrita de una forma brillante, que se lee sin descanso y de la que es imposible salir sin daño.
Alejandro Sawa (Sevilla, 1862- Madrid, 1909) fue un escritor y periodista que formó parte de la bohemia de final del siglo XIX. Autor de 'La mujer de todo el mundo', 'Crimen legal', 'Declaración de un vencido', 'Criadero de curas', 'La sima de Igúzquiza', 'Historia de una reina' y su obra póstuma, 'Iluminaciones en la sombra', editada gracias a la ayuda de Rubén Darío, que la prologó. Publicó 'Noche' en 1888, una novela oscura, escrita de una forma brillante, que se lee sin descanso y de la que es imposible salir sin daño.
Łucja, Zuzia i Tadeusz mieszkają w Warszawie. Postanowiliśmy więc razem omówić historię tego miasta. Będziemy mówić o tym skąd się wzięło to miasto i dlaczego stało się takie ważne. Zanim jednak przejdziemy do historii tego miasta to poznajmy legendę dotyczącą jego powstania.Jedna z legend mówi o rybaku, który miał na imię Wars i syrence, która miała na imię Sawa. W herbie Warszawy jest właśnie syrenka. Historycy jednak nie lubią legend i twierdzą, że nazwa pochodzi od imienia Warcisław. To imię znaczy “Wróci sława”. Początkowo to miasto nazywano Warszewa i Warszowa. Dopiero później nazwano Warszawa.Warszawa powstała po zachodniej czyli lewej stronie Wisły. Ale dlaczego? Prawa strona Wisły była niebezpieczna. Z tamtej strony na Warszawę mogli napaść Litwini. Było to jeszcze w czasach zanim Polska się połączyła z Litwą i Litwini często wtedy napadali na miasta w Polsce. Litwini mogli przyjść od wschodu czyli z prawej strony Wisły. Ponieważ jednak Warszawę zbudowano po lewej stronie tej rzeki, a w tamtych czasach nie było mostów, miasto było bezpieczne.Ale czemu Warszawę zbudowano nad Wisłą? Było tam dużo miejsca i była też woda. Ale co jeszcze dawała rzeka? W tamtych czasach lasy były bardzo gęste. Trudno było przez nie przejść. Najłatwiej i najszybciej było płynąć rzeką. Dzisiaj mamy drogi, a w tamtych czasach poruszano się po rzekach. Można powiedzieć, że wtedy rzeki to były autostrady.Czy pamiętacie kto doprowadził do rozbicia dzielnicowego? Kiedy skończył ten podział Polski? Czy jednak Łokietek połączył wszystkie kawałki? A jak się nazywa ta część Polski, gdzie leży Warszawa? Tak więc czy Warszawa powstała w Polsce? Kto rządził na Mazowszu?Rządzili tam książęta mazowieccy, z których wielu miało na imię Janusz. 26 lipca 1376 Janusz I dał Warszawie przywilej wybudowania łaźni miejskiej. W tamtych czasach ludzie nie mili łazienki w swoich domach i wszyscy chodzili do jednej łaźni. Nawet książę mazowiecki Janusz I nie miał łaźni. Ludzie, którzy tam przychodzili musieli płacić za wejście, ale książę Janusz mógł się kąpać raz w tygodniu za darmo. Ten sam książę, który pozwolił wybudować w Warszawie łaźnię zrobił coś jeszcze. Czym otoczona była Warszawa?Warszawa była otoczona murami i nie było miejsca aby wybudować nowe domy. Co więc postanowiono? Na północ od Warszawy wybudowano drugie miasto, które też otoczono murem. Czyli była jedna Warszawa, a zaraz obok niej zbudowano drugą Warszawę. Jak się je nazywa?Jak będziecie kiedyś zwiedzać Warszawę to z rynku Starego Miasta na rynek Nowego Miasta idzie się około 10 minut. Te dwa miasta, te dwie Warszawy były bardzo blisko siebie. Barbakan to stare mury, które właśnie oddzielały starą Warszawę od tej nowej. Jeżeli pójdziecie zwiedzać rynek Starego Miasta. To tam gdzie jest Syrenka. Stamtąd można pójść na rynek Nowego Miasta. To tam gdzie jest taka stara studnia. Po drodze z jednego rynku na drugi możecie zobaczyć stare mury czyli Barbakan.Stare i Nowe miasto czyli Stara i Nowa Warszawa powstały w czasach gdy Mazowsze nie należało do Polski. Był to osobny kraj, gdzie rządzili książęta mazowieccy. Rządził tam wtedy książę Janusz I Starszy, którego nazywa się Januszem warszawskim, bo on dał Starej Warszawie ten przywilej pozwalający otworzyć łaźnie i to też on pozwolił zbudować drugą Nową Warszawę.W 1374 urodziła się Jadwiga, późniejszy król Polski. W tym samym roku Janusz I został księciem warszawskim. Z tego powodu Janusza nazywa się też Januszem warszawskim.Jadwiga urodziła się w 1374. Gdy miała 10 lat została koronowana na króla Polski, a gdy miała 12 lat została żoną Jagiełły. W ten sposób Polska i Litwa niejako wzięły ślub. Polska i Litwa stały się jakby jednym krajem, ale pomiędzy nimi leżało Mazowsze, które było wtedy osobnym krajem.Książę mazowiecki czyli Janusz I Starszy nazywany też Januszem warszawskim był jednak przyjacielem Jagiełły i walczył razem z nim w bitwie pod Grunwaldem w 1410 roku.Co zrobił król Polski Zygmunt Stary? Gdy królem Polski był Zygmunt Stary na Mazowszu umarł ostatni książę Janusz III. Po jego śmierci Zygmunt Stary przyłączył Mazowsze do Polski.Niektórzy jednak myślą, że Polskę na nowo połączyły już wcześniej Władysław Łokietek. Łokietek połączył tylko kilka części Polski, głównie Małopolskę i Wielkopolskę. Było to 182 lata po rozbiciu Polski na części. Mazowsze zostało przyłączone jednak dopiero po 388 latach.Jakie zabytki na starym mieście? Zamek w Warszawie zbudował właśnie książę mazowiecki Janusz I Starszy. Jednak on był księciem i w jego czasach ten zamek nazywał się zamkiem książęcym. Dopiero jak przyłączono Mazowsze do Polski do tego zamku przybył król Zygmunt Stary i od tego momentu ten zamek nazywa się królewskim. Niedaleko zamku stoi kolumna króla Zygmunta III Wazy. Zygmunt I Stary przyłączył Mazowsze z Warszawą do Polski, a jego wnuk Zygmunt III Waza przeniósł stolicę z Krakowa do Warszawy.Kim był Zygmunt III Waza? Tata Zygmunta III Wazy był Szwedem, ale mama była Polską, była to córka Zygmunta I Starego - Katarzyna Jagiellonka. Zygmunt III Waza był królem Polski i Litwy, ale także Szwecji. Przeniósł stolicę do Warszawy, bo stamtąd miał bliżej do Szwecji.Chociaż Zygmunt III Waza i inni królowie po nim mieszkali w Warszawie, to koronacje odbywały się dalej w Krakowie. Ale co to jest koronacja? Warszawa była stolicą, ale królów koronowano w Krakowie i jak umarli to pochowano ich też w Krakowie.Kto jeszcze wtedy przyjeżdżał do Warszawy? Do Warszawy przyjeżdżali posłowie na sejm, ale co to jest sejm? A czy wy chcielibyście być posłami? Co robią posłowie w sejmie? Ale dlaczego sejm był w Warszawie. Dlaczego posłowie musieli przyjeżdżać do Warszawy? Mazowsze było pomiędzy Polską a Litwą. Gdy Zygmunt Stary przyłączył Mazowsze Warszawa znalazła się w środku. Było to najlepsze miejsce do spotkania dla Polaków i Litwinów. Dodatkowo Zygmuntowi III Wazie spalił się zamek w Krakowie i dlatego przeprowadził się do zamku w Warszawie.
This week on Little Cuts, MB and Terry tackle HORROR IN THE HIGH DESERT 2, 1974: LA POSESIÓN DE ALTAIR, CHILDREN OF THE CORN, FOR ALL MANKIND, WRECK, and the last two episodes of CHUCKY season 2!Follow Mary Beth, Terry and the Podcast on Twitter.Support us on Patreon!If you want to support our podcast, please please take a moment to go rate us on Spotify and give us a rating and review on iTunes. It really helps us out with the algorithms. We also have a YouTube channel! If you want to join our community on Twitter, go here. Ask us for our Discord server! Get bonus content on Patreon Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
This week Steph & Ash sit down and have an amazing, emotional conversation with Kate Sawa, President of the St. Joseph's Hospital Foundation, and Christen Gray, Founder of Finn’s Fighters. We learn about their story, their vision, the background of these organizations, and how they are joining forces. Grab your tissues! Learn how to donate […] The post Live Bold & Boss Up: Joining Forces For The Greater Cause With Kate Sawa & Christen Gray appeared first on Radio Influence.
00:00.00 mikebledsoe Oh last too bad. Yeah, it's great. It's great. 00:00.00 Dr_ Placebo All on my end I Still don't see it look. Do you see that see the levels. There's nothing there. You think it's great that we can only hear you talking on the recording is that what you're telling me. 00:15.28 mikebledsoe Now I can we can hear you just fine. We're working on Max's audio again. Um, how's your week ben. 00:17.27 Dr_ Placebo If you say So oh. 00:28.30 Dr_ Placebo My week's been good. How about you. 00:33.35 mikebledsoe Ah, man, it's been ah, it's been a lot of lot of fun I'm I'm rereading a book right now dollars flow to me easily by Richard dots and highly recommend it to anyone who well. Wants easy transformation. So that's really the book has little to do with money has everything to do with ah creating an inner state that ah of goodness allowing that to emerge and then ah. 01:00.62 Dr_ Placebo Oh. 01:10.26 mikebledsoe Allowing the universe to deliver all your intentions and desires to your doorstep. So if if money is what you need to reach your desires then you know I find that when I find that inner peace and goodness and just sit in that. Really cool things. Emerge. 01:33.25 Dr_ Placebo Kind of reminds me with ah dog training that it's not about training the dog. It's about training the person a lot of the time and as far as creative work is concerned if you are in a. 01:42.60 mikebledsoe Um, yeah for. 01:49.42 Dr_ Placebo Ah heightened state of some kind whether that's a flow state or otherwise you're just going to do your best work right. 01:55.49 mikebledsoe Yeah, you know what? I Also find that I've never figured anything out in Business. It's never been. You know there's definitely things to Learn. There's skills to learn. You know, managing finances and budgets and. Learning how to copyright and all these things are really useful skills and it doesn't mean you need you, You should avoid learning anything but it ah for me to sit with oh I'm going to sit and think my way to a solution when I'm having a problem is rarely. 02:26.51 Dr_ Placebo What. 02:32.43 mikebledsoe Ah, how it works out I can't even think of a time where I thought my way to a solution most of the solutions that have occurred to me has just been. You know you're in the shower or something or ah, you know I'm thinking about something I go to the fridge. 02:37.25 Dr_ Placebo Um. 02:43.83 Dr_ Placebo And. 02:49.87 Dr_ Placebo Who. 02:50.15 mikebledsoe So it's um, yeah, what I like about this book is it really puts me in that place of just observing what's good and then watching these things these ideas emerge and I definitely had that experience yesterday and um. 03:03.19 Dr_ Placebo O. 03:09.23 mikebledsoe Was being interviewed by John North um of weightlifting talk and he he and I had like similar rises of notoriety in the in the weightlifting Crossfit world and like at the same time and then also had you know. 03:24.60 Dr_ Placebo Ah. 03:27.79 mikebledsoe Kind of disappeared into the ether around the same time I I ah regularly get hit up by people on Instagram or Twitter and they're like oh shit, you're still alive like yeah yeah, still hanging out still doing some stuff and we had he. He. 03:30.30 Dr_ Placebo And. 03:37.52 Dr_ Placebo Yeah, yeah. Um, funny wo who. 03:47.14 mikebledsoe He asked me he goes he goes look. We can talk about all the good stuff we could talk about the good times. But why don't you tell us about the dark moments in your career in business I was like oh boy, Oh boy I can deliver that. 04:01.74 Dr_ Placebo Um. O. 04:05.32 mikebledsoe There's some dark moments. And yeah I don't know how long the show went on for it felt like 2 hours and it was you know I think it's the most emotional I've ever been on a podcast I don't think I've ever been interviewed and gotten that emotional. 04:09.82 Dr_ Placebo Whoa. 04:14.54 Dr_ Placebo Whoo. 04:19.92 Dr_ Placebo Woo Whoa. Oh. 04:25.11 mikebledsoe And um, yeah I really just I but basically I covered the year of 2017 for me and I didn't go through the whole year in detail but I went through the the thing a lot of the stuff that you know it's a good story. So I recommend anyone go listen to that. Um. 04:45.43 mikebledsoe Ah, do weightlifting dot com and you click on the podcasts. Ah and it was.. It was so emotional and it brought up. You know? Ah, Ah, you know if I could label the emotions. It was just there were it was just ah, a constant flow so much. So like I don't think I felt my emotions that deeply for that period that extended period of time in a very long time and when I got off the show. My fiance she she went off to dinner with a friend of hers. So I go sit in the sauna afterwards and meditate and just Sawa and cold plunge and then came home and got in bed and it. It occurred to me I was like this story that this story of 2017 is there's so many lessons that I learned that I really a lot of times I share the lessons in a very straightforward way but not in. But I could be sharing it from a place of storytelling which as you know that's the best way to get a point across is if you can embed it in a story. 05:52.98 Dr_ Placebo So. 06:00.80 Dr_ Placebo We need an arc with no arc no one care. No one cares without an arc. It might be true. It might be correct, but no one cares and that's been ah that's been something that I have hardly capitalized on much. 06:03.72 mikebledsoe Yeah, so no one cares. 06:17.43 Dr_ Placebo Because I don't care about the story interestingly enough I just want the I want the bullet points I want them in the correct sequence and I want as little fluff as possible but that's just not how people work. 06:23.76 mikebledsoe I yeah. 06:34.10 mikebledsoe No yeah mean we live by narratives and archetypes and archetypes is even a narrative about a type of person and ah you know? And yeah, so in in the world of you know speakers you know. 06:35.16 Dr_ Placebo The. 06:51.61 mikebledsoe I know you know this is every great speaker has got their keynote story and speakers that have been around for a long time people who get on stage. They'll have 2 or 3 depending on the situation and I've had so many I've had like so many they. So. 06:55.80 Dr_ Placebo A good. 07:10.83 mikebledsoe Speaking Coaches Love targeting me as a client they're like okay you know you're you're good on Stage. You're good at telling stories all this but you haven't really honed in on a story that converts people into a product that you're selling or a service. Or whatever and I go Yeah, you know, ah all the greats. The people who can sell a lot. They do it through storytelling and I've tried different stories and nothing really nothing really stuck. Nothing was super powerful and. 07:48.58 mikebledsoe I'm in bed last night and I'm I'm simply in the fields of my feelings and emergency goes. Oh that's that's the story. You should tell because these guys were on the edge of their seat at the end they were blown away they were it was it was obvious it was and I had never told the story in. 07:56.13 Dr_ Placebo Are. 08:07.62 mikebledsoe That much detail before on a podcast partly because lawsuits are a part of it and ah you know while lawsuits are going on. You can't go around telling stories about it. But it's ah. 08:19.40 Dr_ Placebo Um I would check with someone who knows these things rather than your hunch. 08:23.37 mikebledsoe I Think enough time has passed I think I'm okay. 08:31.30 mikebledsoe Ah I'm pretty sure. Um, yeah, the contract said something about 3 years and it's been more than three years. So I'm not too worried about it. 08:42.63 Dr_ Placebo Yeah, it's Interesting. You mentioned that because I find I know I'm in the minority but I find ah nothing ah less genuine and more fake when I see a speaker going through this big personal story. I'm like I I want to go like I know what you're trying to do. Can you stop it. You're annoying me like I came here to learn something and if you give me this long thing about your life I'm only going to leave. Basically so I I I know I'm in the minority. Um, with with that. But I mean. 09:02.81 mikebledsoe Okay, yeah. 09:12.55 mikebledsoe You are. 09:17.76 Dr_ Placebo Really successful guys. Ah, really do like Tug the heartstrings they play they play a crowd like a fiddle and it's quite a cool skill. But if I'm in the crowd I I like start to hate that person almost and I hate that person that's too strong but it makes me. 09:30.94 mikebledsoe Yeah there. 09:36.60 Dr_ Placebo It makes me ah feel less connected to them because I know that they're not doing this to provide a service they're doing this to like puff up their character right? who. 09:48.20 mikebledsoe Right? right? Yeah I mean um I think you and I are like in that way and that might be why we avoid you know, telling that story and um. 09:54.98 Dr_ Placebo It depends on what message you're trying to convey to right? like it's possible to tell a good story without making it about yourself right? You can talk about like. 10:08.66 mikebledsoe Um, yeah. 10:12.65 Dr_ Placebo Costs and benefits and consequences and archetypes without telling a 20 minute personal story during a 30 minute lecture 10:21.35 mikebledsoe Well one of the most popular one of the most popular books on leadership a couple years ago was extreme ownership and I don't know if you read that is by Jocko willing and the entire the there's like ah a paragraph that gives the lesson embedded in. 10:28.43 Dr_ Placebo Yeah I did. 10:37.93 Dr_ Placebo These war stories. It's worst. It's war stories and I was like what what? yeah. 10:39.20 mikebledsoe this this story it's all war stories war stories with like ah like you could you could have gotten the point in like 2 pages the entire book. But it's buried in all these war stories and everyone loved it and I was like I like I was it was okay. 10:54.25 Dr_ Placebo I Find that? yeah well, what's funny is um, like I I don't like the book I think he is a really interesting character and it's the perfect example. Of who you want to lead a team of killers like but but is that who I want to emulate in my personal life as a leader and it's like I don't think so you know there are qualities that you can pick and choose and that's why it's so tricky to. 11:13.20 mikebledsoe Yes. 11:21.66 mikebledsoe Right. 11:30.89 Dr_ Placebo Pick someone to emulate consciously or subconsciously because you're only ah seeing a window into their life and you may not want their life. Um, right. 11:40.31 mikebledsoe Well in addition to that I mean you referred to dwayne the Rock Johnson in that regard before I think even on the last show but the the and I agree with the Jocko thing there was there were. 11:50.95 Dr_ Placebo That's my go to. 11:56.52 mikebledsoe There were certain things about that book and his attitude that just don't don't jive with me either and it's always been funny because people people are like oh my God It was so good I'm like well what parts are like all of it I'm like ah maybe not all of it. But some of it was Good. Um. And it because we do. We do need to be careful about who we model and. 12:21.57 Dr_ Placebo We're supposed to think that the books are good sometimes sometimes you're just supposed to think a book is good like my ah my friend was really kind. She got me a Tony Robbins book ah his newest who is his newest one life force. 12:33.64 mikebledsoe I who. 12:37.66 Dr_ Placebo Um, and before you think this is a plug This is the opposite of a plug. Whatever I'm about to do right now I was like I was it was fucking unreadable. It was so embarrassing like it was a giant infomercial of widgets that he's invested into. 12:41.84 mikebledsoe Ah me. But. 12:49.41 mikebledsoe A. 12:57.47 Dr_ Placebo Very unclear, very superficial, hardly practical, really like off the-wall shit that applies to nobody I Fucking hated it and of course I told my friend this too I told my friend this I was like that's one of the worst books about health that I think I've ever Read. It was hard to Read. It wasn't Useful. It wasn't simple. It wasn't clear but I really appreciate the gift. You know what? I mean like don't like hey I I Really appreciate that someone would buy a book for me I Think that's really nice but I don't have to like it just because. 13:25.97 mikebledsoe Ah, good effort. 13:36.43 Dr_ Placebo Um, you're supposed to like it and I think that happens quite a lot and. 13:39.62 mikebledsoe Well, you're gonna be my editor for my book. So it's gonna it's gonna have to pass the the max shank Sniff test. 13:47.69 Dr_ Placebo Ah, oh dude, ah call me the copy doced. Yeah copy doctor a doctor the copy up I'm I'm great I'm great at that sort of thing. 13:50.91 mikebledsoe The what the copy Doc Oh okay, all right, all right? Perfect Oh perfect, all right look at that look at that folks. We finally agreed to do something outside of the podcast. So. 14:04.44 Dr_ Placebo Oh perfect. 14:10.16 mikebledsoe Ah, well you brought up something interesting and because ah we are we learn through modeling but we also have anti-models and there are people that we don't want to be like and we got to be ah, equally careful of that. So. There's a number Tony Robbins would fall in this category right? Maybe maybe for you I'm the same way I've never. 14:34.73 Dr_ Placebo I Think he does some great stuff by the way I think there are people that he legitimately helps so much and I think that's fantastic and I think that book was awful. 14:42.98 mikebledsoe I agree. Yeah well I think his style overall is just not for me I don't think you're going to find max and I and a crowd of 10000 people you know psyching ourselves up. It's just not kind of not going to happen and we don't need that we're we're past that. 14:53.93 Dr_ Placebo Woo Totally right? Hey people like different things. 15:01.96 mikebledsoe And people like different things but we're not going to model Tony Robbins you're you're not going to find max or I on stage. You know, screaming at people and getting them pumped up with music and jumping around and it's just not going to happen. And we should. We should just do it just to just a fuck with people like. 15:20.32 Dr_ Placebo Cut to a year we're both on stage with headsets on. Are you guys ready to do fire breathing and then ah. 15:32.28 Dr_ Placebo I would do I would do a fake one I would I would do a fake one and just ah play a character I think that would be hilarious. 15:37.80 mikebledsoe Too bad We don't live in the same town Anymore. We can make a bunch of Spoofs about personal development programs. But ah, we got to be equally Careful. So ah, you know I don't think I shared this with you privately. But I didn't share this On. Podcast and I'll I'll share it I won't mention who this person is but I was hanging out with this person and they refused to wear a seatbelt why because they were because there's a law that says they're supposed to so they just don't want to do it and then the same person. 16:13.64 Dr_ Placebo Rebel without a cause sure. 16:15.25 mikebledsoe Ribble without a cause and the same person opens up their mail at the house opens it up. There's a picture of a license plate and saying you were speeding in the zone or whatever he rips it in half throws in the garbage can he's a god that's the thirteenth one this year and. Ah, and you know I I don't disagree I would handle that differently. But there's a lot of like really easy easy legal ways of getting out of traffic tickets that involve automatic cameras. They pretty much have. You pretty you challenge it at all and they have to drop it because nobody caught you in the act. So ah, the the point is is a lot of times people who who are the rebel without a cause they just rebelling so they they may find some. We could say some people just rebellious in nature like I'm I'm very rebellious you're rebellious I can tell you that you you don't match the status quo heartily at all and yeah, and. 17:18.57 Dr_ Placebo But only because they're really Ill like if they were healthy I would like I I don't even really want to be a rebel I Just want to get a good result. But. 17:26.76 mikebledsoe But to be. Yeah, you're selective right? And so I remember you know I'm in the car with the person and they're not wearing their seatbelt I'm like why you know why didn you put on the seatbelt like yeah, that and I go Well, you know it's it's you're following in the same trap of lack of critical thinking. 17:48.68 Dr_ Placebo Oh. 17:49.85 mikebledsoe You don't want to be like this person so you don't do anything like that person does it like ah Tony Robbins like you were saying there are some aspects of his life that should definitely be emulated. But if you go look I don't like Tony Robbins I'm not can do anything and this is a lot of people and people general. 18:00.13 Dr_ Placebo Yep. 18:07.15 Dr_ Placebo So it's the devil. 18:07.59 mikebledsoe A lot of times generalize this to say wealthy people. Oh I don't wanna be like I don't want to be like that greedy rich guy. So I'm not gonna have any money I'm like you know you can have money without being greedy right? like there's and there's collapsed distinctions in there but you gotta be careful about. 18:20.98 Dr_ Placebo Right? Yep I know Yep, it's the same ah like God and the devil ad hommonym appeal to authority thing. 18:27.37 mikebledsoe Who you're modeling and then who you're anti-modeling. 18:36.32 mikebledsoe Um, yeah, um. 18:36.94 Dr_ Placebo Over and over like if you dislike somebody personally and that causes you to ignore the lesson they have that would help you then you're an idiot you're you're overly emotional and you're conflating this personality that you don't like. Thinking that they are wrong and that's just simply not the case right? You have to be able to dislike somebody and still be able to use your logic to determine whether they're right about something or not and I've had plenty of opportunity to do this because ah, especially. In ah like the copywriting world right? like there's there's a supreme emphasis on exaggerating the truth and maybe even being like a bit of an egomaniac and so those are traits that I really dislike personally and there are even people. 19:18.11 mikebledsoe Um. 19:33.63 Dr_ Placebo That I dislike personally but I still want to take the um the idea separate from the individual. It's like ah is Bill Cosby still funny yes absolutely fucking. Hilarious 1 of the best comedians of all time and whether you think he is ah guilty of certain crimes or not should be irrelevant to the comedy. Um, and this is not a popular take by the way I'm not going to win any friends with this. Idea. Ah okay I think people like ah Bill Cosby less than hitler somehow even though it's entirely possible that the guy was completely set up which is crazy to think about you know, speaking of all that I think it's so funny. 20:08.60 mikebledsoe Um, I'm going to follow it up with a hitler one. So we'll just lose everybody. 20:21.27 mikebledsoe Yeah Trump. 20:27.20 Dr_ Placebo That we we collectively kind of watch the news and we see something or we hear something we're like whoa how did that happen and then we watch a movie and we go whoa. That's amazing. So realistic and we never think that some of those movie people would. Like create some news like if you're directing a movie. You're organizing thousands of people, computer programmers actors extras camera people and it's like you think these ah geniuses of illusion. Never fabricate some sort of reality of. 20:48.91 mikebledsoe No, ah. 21:05.31 Dr_ Placebo Of course they do is. It's very. It's very interesting. How quick we are to throw people under the bus just because ah he said she said kind of thing. 21:13.40 mikebledsoe Yeah, that's absolutely right? Yeah, the the I would say the movie. What's happening in movie theaterore and what's happening in the news is is very much alike I think there's tons of crossover there I mean it what this is. 21:28.87 Dr_ Placebo Of course, there's incentive to do So What do we? What do we know? if there is an incentive and opportunity it happens like there's enough people that if there's incentive and opportunity. It's happening. You don't have to like it. But that's what's happening. 21:36.50 mikebledsoe Yeah, yeah. 21:44.67 mikebledsoe Yeah, there's I'm gonna go into like conspiracy theory land a bit but that but there's there's actual evidence of cia being involved in hollywood in the early stages of of Hollywood coming around. Um. 21:46.43 Dr_ Placebo Are. 21:58.48 Dr_ Placebo If if they weren't They'd be stupid to be the central stupid agency if they weren't using the fucking movies and like I mean are you kidding me like this whole. 22:00.92 mikebledsoe They yeah. 22:08.93 mikebledsoe Ah. 22:12.14 Dr_ Placebo Even the word conspiracy is used as an ad hominem attack when the word conspiracy just means that people meet up in secret everybody people meet up in secret all the fucking time That's like almost all that happens. 22:19.88 mikebledsoe Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, and um, and people have theories about them about these meetings now it and ah even before the cia I mean that's how they drummed up. 22:27.71 Dr_ Placebo No deck. 22:35.18 mikebledsoe Ah, interest or support for the war effort in World War two is they would they would show these they would they would show these hype videos like sizzle reels basically of why you should support the War effort World War Two and. 22:38.52 Dr_ Placebo Oh. 22:51.86 mikebledsoe It worked it hyped everybody up and they use movie theaters for that early on so when you look at what how that was used then and then you look at ah who if you watch the news like so Cbs is probably the worst Cbs Nbc you watching these major news networks. Almost every evening you're going to see them interviewing somebody from the cia or somebody who used to work for the cia or the Fbi or something like that these intelligence agencies have totally got these ah news agencies by the balls. 23:19.54 Dr_ Placebo A. 23:30.74 mikebledsoe Like they they basically get to weave whatever narrative and they desire and people just buy it hook line and sinker and so I bring this up because yeah, the differences between Hollywood and what's happening in the news same thing same people. Ah. 23:34.41 Dr_ Placebo Well. O. 23:47.63 Dr_ Placebo Yeah, no doubt like there's too much incentive and opportunity for that to not be going on I would say it would be foolish to not do that if one of the main goals is to control the domestic population and then. 23:50.16 mikebledsoe Same narratives. 23:56.61 mikebledsoe Yeah, yeah. 24:07.36 Dr_ Placebo Maybe like a secondary goal is ah to defend against foreign invaders because one of them is way more likely to cause a problem actually historically speaking I mean yeah. 24:15.85 mikebledsoe 1 the and the United States that's absolutely true because get waging war on the us is difficult. There's you know two oceans between every yeah, geographically we're positioned really well. There's there's a lot of reasons. 24:25.97 Dr_ Placebo Yeah, there's a lot of reasons lot of reasons. Yeah, you got to watch out for Knida I hear their military has grown to 2000 people I don't know why I'm talking I don't know why I'm talking on Canada. 24:34.42 mikebledsoe Um. 24:38.76 mikebledsoe Sorry Canadian listeners to get fired up. 24:45.18 Dr_ Placebo Like Well what's the point there's it's like ah it's like picking on the small kid that's like hardly fair. Yeah, it's kind of funny I Guess yeah. 24:51.51 mikebledsoe Is got. It's like ah south part in South Bark and the was it Terrence and Philip did you ever watch south part. 25:02.14 Dr_ Placebo I watched ah tons of South Park I actually even caught their ah concert they did to celebrate their ah 25 year ah anniversary um, is on. It's on Youtube they showed the whole thing. It was incredible. 25:08.11 mikebledsoe Did you? Oh I thought you caught it live. 25:16.96 Dr_ Placebo Oh no, no I didn't go live but I did watch it at home. It was fantastic Man it was crazy I mean they got like ah the remaining members from rush to come play. You know they had they had like these serious rock stars like come out of retirement. 25:26.18 mikebledsoe Oh man. 25:34.67 Dr_ Placebo Just so they could play with the guys who made south park and I mean it just shows that what they've created ah goes across all these different genres of art and culture and I think those guys are absolute creative monsters. They played a ton of so it was just those guys are crazy talented crazy motivated. It was a hell of a cool thing to see ah six days to air. Great documentary. Terrific. That's how they stay so current. Meanwhile you know Simpsons. Ah. 25:59.88 mikebledsoe Well they they put the shows together in six days yeah Yeah 26:14.16 Dr_ Placebo Which also ah used to be a great show. Um, they're like six months out basically of what's going on so South Park is always crazy current on what's going on because they ah condense that creative work so much. 26:31.13 mikebledsoe Yeah, my my my favorite south part ever to this date I think I laughed harder on any other one was the ah when they covered the recession 2007 2008 and and when they chopped it. 26:42.57 Dr_ Placebo Oh that was good. So so funny. 26:46.97 mikebledsoe Head off the chicken and let it run around to figure out which who's gonna get bailed out next shit shit sent me over the fucking Moon I was I lost it ugly these people are complete geniuses is this so good. 27:01.42 Dr_ Placebo He's like trying to return a margarita v he's like well what we did is we took your Margaritaville loan and we bundled it together with a bunch of other Margaritaville loans and we traded it on the open market and then we have people betting. On the viability of the payback of those marker. It's like a fucking margarita maker but they're just going through the whole thing. Ah but through the lens of like an overpriced beverage machine is so funny. Those guys are absolute studs anyway, yeah so. 27:26.21 mikebledsoe Yeah, yeah. 27:32.76 Dr_ Placebo Back to conspiracy theories. Ah which are really just ah I Guess it's like ah hypotheses right? It's not like it depends on. 27:42.35 mikebledsoe Right? Well here's the thing is here's the thing is I think we're conspiracy theories people with conspiracy theories get in trouble is when they believe them ah or people who hear conspiracy theory they believe it and it's as if they forget the theory part. And ah, you know there's you know who people are treating like conspiracy facts or conspiracy truth or whatever you want to call it and that's it's it's funny I get sometimes I'll meet somebody who's way into that I'm like like.. What do you believe? I'm like dude I have a hard time believing my own thoughts most of the time let alone some really complicated explanation of how we got this result and somehow you've connected all these dots. 28:27.26 Dr_ Placebo A. 28:34.74 mikebledsoe That are this infinite amount of information and go I know who the bad actorress I'm like oh I don't fucking know but I I do know who to avoid though. 28:41.80 Dr_ Placebo You know what? I think about all this I think that well when when I think about this sort of thing because I I try to use the scientific method which is not ah science tm it's the scientific method. Which is ah see guess test and record right? And if you're really being scientific about things. It really means you're using the scientific method and one of my favorite examples of abandoning the scientific method. Is by people who are atheists. This is a very very funny thing to me because in order to be an atheist the definition of an atheist. Is you believe there is no god certainly but what's funny is that is so far. Equally unproven as the fact is there are 1 or more gods now once again, it depends on your definition of god if you say god is something you believe without proof then there are ah you know certain gods available. Some people could say that money fiat money. Which is faith money is a type of god based on your semantic definition. But what's funny to me is that atheism is a religion of there is definitely no god meaning it is having faith that there is 0 gods. 30:16.86 Dr_ Placebo And religion is a faith based on. There is 1 or more gods. But if you are truly scientific about it. They are both equally invalid because the burden of proof should be on the one who's trying to prove it. So to me atheism is the absolute funniest religion because it's just based on elitism of I'm too smart to believe in 1 or more gods. But I'm also but that's what I'm saying. It's ah it's a cult. 30:41.50 mikebledsoe Well I think a lot of people just that they claim it because they don't want to appear stupid. Yeah. 30:50.28 Dr_ Placebo Of I'm smart. It has no bearing on science whatsoever agnostic is perfectly reasonable but atheism is ah like super unscientific right? So just because no one has proven. There is 1 or more gods doesn't. 31:02.36 mikebledsoe Yeah. 31:09.83 Dr_ Placebo Mean that there is definitely no gods. So it's ah it's like the funniest tribalistic religion that claims to be scientific, but their proof that there is no god is just as scientific as the proof that there is 1 or more which is zilch. If we're talking about the scientific method and that's what's so funny to me. So it's that my favorite example is that atheism is a religion also with no proof and so like like it's it's great. 31:43.30 mikebledsoe Yeah, there's I think there's a ah Terrence Mckenna quote and he he says something. Ah I'm not gonna quote it exactly but basically take a a scientific based sciencebased atheist and. 31:44.77 Dr_ Placebo You. Oh. 32:00.98 mikebledsoe To explain how the world started and it's like look you just give me 1 single miracle and I can explain everything else and it's like oh yeah, so you kind of stuck there. 32:07.90 Dr_ Placebo Right. 32:15.95 Dr_ Placebo Ah, totally even the name is very funny. The big bang that it's like the least scientific ah label I've ever heard. There was a it. It sounds like a a fucking ah ah, primitive tribe. 32:21.47 mikebledsoe Yeah, it's um. 32:33.90 Dr_ Placebo Trying to explain lightning or the sun. First there was a big boom and then there was fire. 32:34.12 mikebledsoe Well. 32:41.51 mikebledsoe Um, as you're you're so spot on so well we got this new telescope out there supposedly I don't know what to believe anymore. Um, probably cgi. Well you you know about the new telescope they put out there that makes the hubble. It's like 20 32:49.88 Dr_ Placebo I Think telescopes are awesome I Well I I I totally telescopes are cool telescopes and microscopes are. 32:58.47 mikebledsoe I Forget how many more times more powerful than the hubble it is but. 33:06.81 Dr_ Placebo Incredibly cool. 33:08.71 mikebledsoe So cool. So um I guess that all these scientists are questioning themselves now they these astrolog astronomers now astrologists astronomers. Um. 33:19.35 Dr_ Placebo K five. 33:25.48 mikebledsoe They're questioning everything because they're looking out there and going oh is the universe contracting and they're doing their job. So but here's. 33:31.70 Dr_ Placebo Wait They're questioning everything. Do you mean? they're doing science. 33:43.50 mikebledsoe I Mean we've already talked about this the scientific community at large is primarily filled with institutional thinking you know and ah yeah, so like I think some of these scientists are having you know existential crises at this moment is what it sounds like. 33:45.82 Dr_ Placebo Um, ah so it's a it's a little religion. It's a little religion. Yeah. 34:01.84 mikebledsoe Because the the new findings put the big bang in question and now they're going. Well we got to find an answer and it's interesting how we as humans. It's like we need to have some type of ah there's this desire to to ah Certainty. It's like if you. If you're an atheist or you're a Christian or you're a muslim or whatever it is. There's a level of certainty that's being clung to and that creates ah safety. So if I can come in the room and I can create certainty in the room then people feel safe and they. Their nervous system calms down and. 34:42.51 Dr_ Placebo That's why people make bomb shelters and and hide away bunkers. It's because there's a natural tendency to expand your sphere of control and um. So that that is a hunger that can never be totally filled because you're always going to find some new thing further as you project into the future. So. The only path is some acceptance right? But if you're a hardcore control freak and you must know and you must have certainty. Then there's no end to the certainty because then you'll be like okay, what about 10 years from now. Okay, what about 15 years from now. Okay, what about 50 years from now. Okay, what about my great-great-grandchildren how do I make sure that they survive to be 1000 years old and. 35:31.58 mikebledsoe Yeah, well, it's interesting. You bring that up the so we think about certainty and we're we're talking about how the universe started people are desiring to have certainty around that so they either choose a religion that has a story about how it started or. 35:32.70 Dr_ Placebo There's no end to it. 35:47.45 Dr_ Placebo Um, how nice that they don't have any real problems. 35:51.22 mikebledsoe Which which I I really like I really like ah yeah I like and I really like a lot of ah religious genesis stories because there's so many metaphors in these genesis stories around language and basically. 36:09.88 Dr_ Placebo Um, in the beginning there was the word and the word was god. 36:09.99 mikebledsoe Ah, the the exactly and so yeah and if you if you it's so easy I remember being a kid and hearing that and I go I don't know what the hell that means and. All right? So then he created Adam and then he created the mountains and the earth and oceans and all the ship in the the birds and the fishes and um, it's really like the way I read that now is it's um, it's a metaphor for consciousness. 36:28.41 Dr_ Placebo Right. 36:42.33 mikebledsoe Consciousness came online for human beings when language came online. Oh I now have a word for this and this word separates me from the from God the natural world and when when read that way. It makes a lot more sense to me. But when some. 36:45.15 Dr_ Placebo Oh. 36:57.72 Dr_ Placebo To me God is the genesis of an idea like that's why they say ah you know the word is God and God is the word is that that's the genesis of an idea. So ah, interestingly enough by that logic God is in fact, real. It's just been made by man just like logic is real and it's also a God Basically an idea that's been invented by man. Yeah. 37:24.78 mikebledsoe Well the well the idea the idea that um was it men don't have ideas ideas have men. Ah who that that's ah man was that voltaire not quite. 37:30.73 Dr_ Placebo Yeah, yeah. 37:37.64 Dr_ Placebo I think that was ah max shank who said that actually I'm just going to misattributing all these baller quotes from like many centuries ago and they'll be like wasn't that Plato I was like no that was me. 37:41.55 mikebledsoe Um, so ah, the a did I I. 37:55.31 Dr_ Placebo Because no one will no one will follow up very few people. 37:59.22 mikebledsoe I love posting really like I'll come across a quote and I'll put it on Twitter and then one out of 10 times I was like you know that's normally attributed to Martin Luther King Junior however it was really said by so I'm like get the fuck out of here focus focus on the quote. Don't worry about where it came from. 38:12.43 Dr_ Placebo Yeah I used to be like that too I used to be totally. Ah well my favorite quote is what's more important the quote or the quoter and that's ah my quote which is fucking hilarious I think because does it really matter who said it and what's funny. Is it. 38:24.97 mikebledsoe Ah, oh. 38:30.16 Dr_ Placebo Does it does a lot of the time sometimes there's a great quote from like an unknown monk in ah, 1500 Bc or something like that or 500 a d or whatever and people are like oh that's really cool but that would be the easiest quote to poach. 38:49.00 mikebledsoe Right? Like you know or you know the and Chinese proverb unknown um know yeah and you know that who you're quoting a context matters. So you know if it's a quote. Yeah, but. 38:52.78 Dr_ Placebo Right? right. 39:01.32 Dr_ Placebo The appeal to Authority That's God Also so God is the genesis of an idea. It's a word. It's a new idea and it's also um, that appeal to an authority. It's ah like a focal point. 39:11.28 mikebledsoe Well are are you coming? Are you coming at this from the perspective that that people create thoughts or ideas. 39:23.61 Dr_ Placebo Um, that's a good question I I believe that ah the thoughts that people have are a combination or permutation of what they have experienced. So. If you put a human being in a vacuum and just gave it food. It wouldn't learn. Ah how to speak it wouldn't learn language so it's just some sort of um. Synthesis or combination or permutation of everything that you are aware of and that's why the idea of having like the genesis of language at all is very interesting and there's a specificity of language. That occurs in many different animals like dolphins and orca have different languages or at least Orca have different languages based on the pod or the family that they're a part of ah green monkeys can lie and say look out. There's a hawk or and we don't know if it. It means hawk or if it just means danger from above but they have distinct calls for danger from above or danger from low below and what they'll do is they will lie. So like if you have a banana I'll say look out a hawk in green monkey language and you'll look out for the hawk and then I'll snatch your. 40:38.97 mikebledsoe A. 40:51.33 Dr_ Placebo Ah, your your banana right? So like it's literally the oldest trick in the book which is look over there while I Rob you so so language ah is I I think um the genesis of some ideas. But. 40:57.26 mikebledsoe Yeah, so. 41:08.71 Dr_ Placebo You know a polar bear may not have language but it can still plan a spider doesn't have language but it can still plan out an attack where it will like walk around and jump around until they're above their prey and then dangle themselves down mission Impossible style. So. 41:23.92 mikebledsoe Well well the question I got to ask next is so are are you I find there's 2 camps. There's one camp which is the most popular camp which is. The the materialistic view which is ah consciousness is a byproduct of biology like the biology exists not is what makes consciousness possible or is our. 41:51.49 Dr_ Placebo Um. 41:56.59 Dr_ Placebo And. 41:57.93 mikebledsoe Is physical matter a ah ah manifestation of consciousness. 42:05.38 Dr_ Placebo Um, you know that's a I knew that's the question you were going to ask actually? um, ah fortunately I have the exact correct answer which is ah how could I know? Ah, it's like ah I. 42:15.78 mikebledsoe Ooh. 42:21.20 Dr_ Placebo I can think so does that mean I am so is it I think therefore I am or I am therefore I think basically so our sensory ah Organs influence the way we interpret the world. 42:28.17 mikebledsoe Right. 42:40.26 Dr_ Placebo as well as um the the influence of our surroundings like in Africa there's way more words for green because the distinction between different plants is a little more important different words for snow in the inuit tribes. Because that distinction is way more important for survival. Um, whether you are ah, an animal having ah an experience of consciousness or whether you are a consciousness who has called yourself an animal is sort of like a chicken or the egg type of situation. My. My personal perspective is that the I that I refer to as I is um, basically a fabrication of our culture so without these ideas of. Names and things like that you would just be an animal and all animals have some level of consciousness ah mushrooms have some level of consciousness. It's it's a different level of consciousness than a human being. But the fact that they can you know send information miles across a web of mycelium as soon as they figure out how to digest a certain type of material like the biggest living organism is actually a mycelium I think it's an Oregon. 44:11.64 Dr_ Placebo And it's several square miles in size which is pretty cool and what'll happen is they'll encounter a material that they can't digest figure out a way to digest it and that information that signal will get sent all the way across the mycelium. 44:14.54 mikebledsoe Yeah. 44:29.63 Dr_ Placebo To the other side and then they'll start being able to digest that material whether that's like some sort of rocky mineral or ah or what have you? Ah so different animals and fungi have different levels of consciousness but ah just like the. Story of of God or no God or these gods or those gods. That's that's our invention. 44:57.47 mikebledsoe Yeah, the um, the perspective I I tend to hold is consciousness creates. There's when I when I went through the hermetic principles. The first principle is that everything is of mind and ah. The idea is that ah everything everything occurs in the mind first and when I when I'm holding that perspective I I find that to be the most useful I don't know which one is true and. 45:31.88 Dr_ Placebo And. 45:34.10 mikebledsoe Like you had said, there's no way to know. Um, you know I I think some people have had some experiences that would have them really believe one way or another for me personally I find it to be more useful to ah to be of the. Belief that consciousness is creating everything it to me. It makes everything a little more malleable and if I believe that anything could be changed through thought. Ah then. 46:10.40 mikebledsoe Then that that seems much more powerful to me and. 46:14.32 Dr_ Placebo There's a great book by Richard Bachman called illusions that I really like it kind of talks about that. How you you know like ah the only reason you can't swim through the earth and stand on the water is because of your belief in the illusion. 46:18.25 mikebledsoe I've read that? yeah. 46:30.80 mikebledsoe Well here's the thing is okay so I the way I see is you don't have a separate mind that I have there's one mind we all share it. You just have different you just you just? yes, you just. 46:30.87 Dr_ Placebo That it can only work a certain way. 46:42.87 Dr_ Placebo For humans humans only so one species has one hive mind. Basically yeah. 46:52.15 mikebledsoe Yeah, we have a certain filter. Um, you know what? I'm gonna have to sit with that one I'm gonna go back and sit with that that question ah because they animals just may have the filter. So the way I see is we share the same mind Consciousness is expanding. 46:59.74 Dr_ Placebo And. 47:09.81 mikebledsoe Um, the universe is doing its thing and um may Ornet may not be expanding I'm sure it goes through expansions and contractions just like everything else. Another hermetic print principle being as above so below and. 47:21.46 Dr_ Placebo How could we measure. 47:27.20 mikebledsoe We can measure it to a point. But yeah, once you get out there. It's not going to happen. Ah so ah, we all have like this super mind and this is why a lot of the same ideas occur to people around the planet simultaneously or they've done studies with rats where. They're teaching them something in a lab in France and then a lab in Alaska they see those rats be able to solve whatever puzzle that was taught to the rats in France and so you know there they never so met they stayed in those locations. There was no. 47:53.45 Dr_ Placebo M. 48:03.33 mikebledsoe No communication between the two that we we would know about and yet they still do that So there. There are some I don't of I would call it ah evidence for it. But there's definitely correlative evidence for that argument and so I really like to think about it as like. These aren't even my thoughts I'm not these are thoughts that are flowing through me and my filter is allowing me to have you know certain thoughts where I'm allowing those thoughts to come and go and so I become a lot less attached to like this is even mine I get a conversation with someone we're having where brainstorming. It's like. This isn't really my thought it's not your thought it's you know it's this is just a thing that's happening right Now. So I like the thing about it like that and I find that to be ah the most useful there's another point I was going? yeah. 48:49.32 Dr_ Placebo Ah. 48:57.34 Dr_ Placebo It makes you sound pretty cool Either way I but I think so ah yeah, it's like ah I I don't think you're using it that way. But it's funny because it's kind of like. 49:01.28 mikebledsoe Does it perfect. That's what I was going for I mean that's the real use utility here. 49:14.95 Dr_ Placebo Kind of like the coolness factor is apathy. So the super enlightened factor is it's not about me man. It's just about you know the collective. Whatever's going I'm just a conduit I'm just a channel for what's happening now there there is no me man and you're like fuck that guy sounds really cool. 49:25.33 mikebledsoe Yeah. 49:33.24 Dr_ Placebo And then what ends up happening is the guy's like fuck. Maybe I am really cool and then it it comes like crashing down and I've experienced that personally a few times myself where I'm like oh man I'm really just like you know I'm I am I'm in it. It's not. There's no me I'm just like. 49:40.90 mikebledsoe Um, be. 49:52.95 Dr_ Placebo It's all happening right now and I'm a big part of it and then I go fuck I think I must be pretty enlightened and then just fucking back to the basement like shoots and ladders all the way back to level 1 49:58.48 mikebledsoe Yeah, the the prop the problem is when you get credit for it. That's that's when it happens someone else gives you credit you give yourself credit and then yeah, then it all just falls at pieces. 50:06.65 Dr_ Placebo Well, that's what. 50:14.14 Dr_ Placebo Well and that's also like the the bane of the guru like I was talking um talking with my buddy Brian this morning. Um I know I was well I was talking to him. But yesterday I was talking to ah another gal who works with me Victoria and she got me this lovely book. Ah, that I haven't read yet. Just got it for me wrote a really nice note in it. Ah and I was like oh man, that's so nice and it's by brene brown and brene brown is one of those people who if you're a lady you have to think she's awesome and. I think she is I think she's got a ton of really good ideas. But I think um as you embody the guru more and more you have to create more stuff so you have to muddy the waters a little bit otherwise you sound like what people call a broken record. So what I notice. Is that someone will have a few fantastic idea and I don't know I haven't read the book. It could be like life changing best book I've ever read. But if a pert. 51:18.31 mikebledsoe Rene Brown is good but to me falls into a similar categories Tony Robbins there's some good stuff in there. But if you dig further beyond the self-love conversation. She gets look. She's an expert in 1 thing and. And think she got lost in some other stuff. 51:35.24 Dr_ Placebo So selling herself right? And that's what I'm talking about with guruism like you have people with good ideas like Jocko. Ah good ideas. But there's a hunger for more and people are like guru. Ah please tell tell me what. Tell me the truth illuminate the way and if the guru says I already did it fits on an index card like I'm done like go do the thing I said people are like I think I'll find a new guru and they're like wait a second I just thought of something in fact, in. 51:57.77 mikebledsoe Yeah. 52:08.50 mikebledsoe I got bills to pay. Ah. 52:11.00 Dr_ Placebo In fact, it's even it's even better than what I taught you before. In fact, this secret I Just I just unveiled and you know so like the that's what I mean with like the bane of the guru is now you have embodied the guru. And I felt that happen to myself which is why I just fucking vanished off the face of the internet for several years and people are like what what totally totally man. 52:34.54 mikebledsoe As you're as you're talking about this. Um I relate completely because I I kind of I fell off as well. Yeah, it was like it's like oh I got to keep making shit up. Ah life is actually pretty good. It's pretty simple, pretty straightforward. 52:45.86 Dr_ Placebo I Wrote 200 plus articles about exercise I Taught 200 seminars all over the world I wrote all these books and video courses and they're excellent by the way like my latest couple primal athleticism and elasticity available on maxshank.com Are so good. They're They're really good. But also if you are having to keep pace with some sort of artificially imposed ah like guruism you're going to muddy the waters a little too much and that's. Um I don't know other than repeating yourself a lot if there is a way to avoid that because there's definitely a hunger and a thirst for knowledge and if you have embodied the characteristics or the character. The avatar of the guru. There's There's definitely a pressure to to make more of this this thing than there actually needs to be. 53:43.48 mikebledsoe But me. 53:50.60 mikebledsoe Yeah, well um, think of my friend Jesse Elder who's amazing. Love that guy and so inspired by his creativity and he tends to attract hit huh. 54:07.11 Dr_ Placebo Here comes here. It comes. Ah. 54:07.94 mikebledsoe But he had. He's very good at attracting a crowd and he's got that guru vibe goinglling on and the thing that impresses me with him is when I met him in 2014 he was just getting started on the like speaking gig thing. 54:12.97 Dr_ Placebo So ah. 54:23.49 Dr_ Placebo Um. 54:24.94 mikebledsoe And what he was talking about then and what he's talking about now is very much the same but he's so good at creating new context and and weaving together stories to bring people in so like it's it's he he really has gotten it to some core truths and he's really good at. 54:38.74 Dr_ Placebo Whoa. 54:44.85 mikebledsoe Ah, communicating it. But what I'm most impressed with is is a ability to communicate those in a way that people can receive has continuously improved over the years and I love seeing you know I'll see him speak and then three months later seem to speak again and he's cleaned it up or he's tightened it up or he's. 55:02.41 Dr_ Placebo Yeah. 55:04.37 mikebledsoe Ah, or he's using a new analogy to get the point across like guy. He's like oh now he's nailing it now. He's nailing it. It's almost like watching you know a comic you know, develop a routine over a year yeah it's like the first show you're like yeah, it's a little clunky and then by the time they're on Netflix special. it's it's tight 55:09.85 Dr_ Placebo Who hone their routine. It's magic. 55:24.50 mikebledsoe So I think that there's I think there's ah that impresses me and I really like that. So there's that's somebody who does have he doesn't I don't think he tries to be a guru but he definitely has you know people people follow him like. 55:27.13 Dr_ Placebo Whoa. 55:34.36 Dr_ Placebo Oh. 55:43.60 mikebledsoe Cult Leader style. 55:43.21 Dr_ Placebo And that's what will happen if you get better and better at transmitting ideas right? is you will You will attract a crowd and so it's like can you maintain that integrity without the crowd. 55:48.34 mikebledsoe Yeah. 55:59.52 Dr_ Placebo Transforming you into something different like I saw this great video the other day by this Youtube channel after school and it showed this ah transformation of this kid who was like a violin prodigy and then he turned into this guy who just. Eats tons of food like he challenges himself. So the guy gained like hundreds of pounds of fat. He oh dude. So it's like 1 of the most recent after school videos Skool and it goes through this like no one cared that he was ah. 56:22.31 mikebledsoe What. 56:36.21 Dr_ Placebo A Violin prodigy but he like ate a big meal once and people were like yeah we like that and so he he was transformed by by the audience because they were craving something else and he's like okay I'll I'll just be that right. 56:51.38 mikebledsoe Or he's craving validation are you? Oh you're gonna validate me. Yeah, we want to be loved. 56:56.51 Dr_ Placebo Aren't we all We want to be Loved. We want. What do we want? um attention power Love mostly we want Love if we can't get Love. We'll settle for power if we can't get Power. We'll settle for attention and if you ah aren't getting the attention you want. And then you do something and suddenly you are oh look out that's temptation big time like I used to get ah like high fives and praise and people would even applaud if I could drink the most poison in college like if I could drink a ah. An alcoholic beverage Really fast. So before I knew what was going on I'm taking like 4 lokos and shotgunning them before ten a M because everyone's like Wow What a what a tough cool guy you are and I I Really liked that positive feedback. So yeah, it's.. It's easy to see why people go down certain paths because these ah these base desires for love power attention ah are almost impossible to avoid. 58:10.55 mikebledsoe Well that that makes me think about my my fitness career and I remember I was I was fifteen years I was like well I had like um. 58:15.49 Dr_ Placebo Me too I talk about that all the time. 58:24.23 mikebledsoe I didn't feel like I was getting love. So yeah, maybe it was attention but the what ended up happening is I remember I couldn't I couldn't wait till my fifteenth birthday because on my fifteenth birthday I was allowed to go to the gym and lift weights because my parents didn't want me to stunt my growth and which we know is all bullshit now. But. 58:39.13 Dr_ Placebo But depends on depends on the level I think if you do gymnastics from age 5 You're probably going to grow less. 58:43.77 mikebledsoe Like a lot mom. 58:50.42 mikebledsoe Yeah, yeah, so ah, as soon as I turned 15 I started working out all the time. My dad worked construction. He saw that I was basically burning a lot of energy unnecessarily you know wasn't. 58:54.93 Dr_ Placebo O who. What right? right? o. 59:06.26 mikebledsoe And wasn't making any money. Ah, he's used to like yeah pick up heavy shit and walk around and you know we make money when we do it. We're we're being of service and and my perception of how he viewed what I was doing was ah that it was just a ah superficial. Ah, frivolous pursuit and he was like he's like you're never going to make any money. Ah, you're never going to make any money working out and I remember thinking I was like I'll fucking show. You. 59:27.30 Dr_ Placebo Frivolous. 59:36.94 Dr_ Placebo Um, I'll show you dad I'll show you? um oh my God are those like the famous last words I'll show them I'll show all of them. 59:45.80 mikebledsoe Um, and that's what you want to make yourself miserable live like that. So and there were what will ended up happening is I ended up proving him wrong. Um. 59:54.71 Dr_ Placebo Ah, bro. 59:58.53 Dr_ Placebo And. 01:00:01.65 mikebledsoe And but it's not like I only got paid to work out sometimes I was getting paid to work out but I was getting paid for a bunch of other shit too And um, no, that's not true when I was in the Navy I got paid to work out. 01:00:06.44 Dr_ Placebo Yeah, dude, you never got paid to work out though you got paid to like run a company built around people working out you. 01:00:22.13 Dr_ Placebo That's ah like you got paid extra. You didn't get paid to work out motherfucker you got paid to be in the Navy bitch. Basically what I'm saying is your dad was right. 01:00:23.50 mikebledsoe No, no, no I mean it was it was. 01:00:32.97 mikebledsoe Ah, well I'll tell you there there is that I was I was. 01:00:38.20 Dr_ Placebo Your dad was right? That's all I'm saying. 01:00:41.75 mikebledsoe I do remember I was I was nineteen years old I was in I was in coronado I'm running on the beach with a group of guys and all we're doing is you know, swimming running and managing being cold as fuck and that was it and I was like I was like. 01:00:48.10 Dr_ Placebo Oh. 01:01:01.79 mikebledsoe Fucking Did it I'm getting paid to work out and you know it was very short lived Um, because. 01:01:02.41 Dr_ Placebo And also not true. You were basically paid to be a weapon and your exercising was like greasing the barrel and the parts basically like. 01:01:14.92 mikebledsoe Um, you are 100% accurate about that. Yeah I was ah you know, ah, it's so funny like people are like wow thank you know you're a veteran. Oh thank you I'm like um I'm like I'm like as I got duped you know like I got. 01:01:25.35 Dr_ Placebo Thank you for your service. 01:01:35.14 mikebledsoe Like you're like congratulating me for being a ah for getting duped I appreciate it. Yeah I went and basically worked for the the biggest gangsters on the planet. So cool you know? ah I was muscle for the biggest gangsters on the planet for. 01:01:47.53 Dr_ Placebo Um, hey if you're gonna be in a gang be in the toughest one. It's still like. Ah. 01:01:51.85 mikebledsoe Ah, through a period of time being the biggest baddest toughest one and I was so so eat it. 01:01:59.91 Dr_ Placebo It's still the great. It's It's still the great pirates. It's the same shit is still ah the great pirates who has the fastest boats who has the best range. It's ah hilarious. How true that is. 01:02:02.28 mikebledsoe Yeah, yeah. 01:02:08.18 mikebledsoe Totally yeah so it's funny because a number of years ago. Not that long ago I remember I had that memory I go I go oh my god this is about five years ago I was like oh my god is my entire. Fucking career built around that moment where I was going to prove my dad wrong. do I do I really like working out. Ah do I like talking about fitness do I really like these things and the reality is is yeah I do love health and fitness and I i. Find time in the gym almost every day and I enjoy myself in there. It's one way I show myself love and it doesn't play nearly the role it used to There's so many other interests that get play time and then in addition to that i. I'm showing myself love by taking care of my body but I'm not working out for any type of validation from other people anymore. So it's it's caused me to be in a much better spot and dude I probably make less money because I I seek less validation. 01:03:08.31 Dr_ Placebo Yeah I get it. 01:03:21.22 mikebledsoe Ah, if I if I was one of those people I I listen like no like no the Alex warmosi was talking about this in a video. He's basically saying like insecurity is what you need to be a you know 100 millionaire I'm like you might be right because i. 01:03:22.39 Dr_ Placebo You don't have the same motivation to like you don't care like so value. 01:03:38.94 mikebledsoe Have very few insecurities these days and the necessity that. 01:03:42.22 Dr_ Placebo If you don't feel secure if you don't feel secure with $50000000 then a hundred isn't going to make you feel secure. You know what I'm saying like that that's sort of like what I'm talking about is like who's to say that what's right for you is right for me. It's like why? ah like Gary Vaynerchuk 01:03:51.67 mikebledsoe Um, a. 01:03:59.16 mikebledsoe Yeah. 01:04:00.33 Dr_ Placebo Gary Vee that fucking guy that guy to me is out of his god damn mind and he might have a few good ideas like let's not discount it. But. 01:04:08.94 mikebledsoe Ah I'll say he's made improvements over the years his message five years ago versus today has as improved and from what I can see. 01:04:16.60 Dr_ Placebo And that's cool, but like what we said is you know when we see other people we see through a window so we don't see the big. We don't see the whole thing that's going on and there is nothing to cloud our evaluation of it. When we look at ourselves we look into a mirror so we see basically the whole thing and we have our ego in the way. So that's why I say it's harder to look into a a mirror than it is to look through a window but of course that's because you don't see the big picture. You're more objective rather than subjective about the whole thing. But with um, you know these guys who assume this avatar you know they they embody this persona and you're almost caught in a loop where you're it's sort of a sunk cost fallacy you know Gary Vee I got to own the jets. Someday and look for him that might be exactly the right thing. So I don't want to say that that's a bad goal because it's his goal but it's not my goal like I would not trade ah playing tennis and hanging out with my dogs more often. Ah. To sacrifice maybe owning a sports team because to me that's like no extra value. You know what I'm saying so that idea of insecurity will lead you to a hundred million I mean maybe maybe not but like. 01:05:48.19 Dr_ Placebo Why do you want that in the first place is it because you really believe in what you're doing is it because you feel like 10000000 just won't be good enough or 20 or or whatever I mean it's ah it's really a funny thing like how we fall into these patterns. 01:06:00.19 mikebledsoe I I invested in a sports team once to look cool. Yeah yeah, and then the entire league went belly up like two months after I invested and I lost all my money. 01:06:06.17 Dr_ Placebo Really nice. 01:06:16.55 mikebledsoe That I what I felt cool for about three days and I I got like I got like 15 now I would say the highlight this is the highlight. 01:06:16.61 Dr_ Placebo did you feel cool for two months though did you feel cool for two months though did you get any swag like like ah a hat. 01:06:35.50 mikebledsoe Is what $60000 got me by the way is got me about 10 or 15 tickets at Madison square gardens in New York City ah some like front row shit and I got to like. 01:06:42.97 Dr_ Placebo So. 01:06:48.19 mikebledsoe All my all my northeast friends I called him up I was like meet me at Massison You know we're gonna meet at the bar Beforehand have some drinks go watch the teams compete. So like I had ownership in it. It was the grid league. It was that Crossfit Rip off. 01:06:56.30 Dr_ Placebo Ah, what? what? sport. 01:07:05.34 Dr_ Placebo Nice. 01:07:06.80 mikebledsoe And which I think that sport still exists I actually prefer it over c