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Happy Friday!! Another episode with another amazing human - this week is Sophie Watson. Sophie is a soul coach and helps women discover their true selves. Sophie works with Women in business who have recently been through a major life event and now they are feeling lost, not knowing where to go from here. She helps them become confident in making decisions and in their direction so they can have an easier more exciting life. What makes her work so powerful is she not only communicates with Spirit but also embraces and uses her natural gift as an Empath. Sophie physically feels others emotions, physical pain and energetic blocks, enabling her to very quickly get to the root of her clients issues. Sophie has been working with clients from around the world since 2014, and has been featured in the Huffington post and is a regular guest on BBC Radio Berkshire in the UK. Connect with Sophie here.... www.sophiewatson.co.uk LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/in/sophie-watson-therapy/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SophieWatsonTimeToCreateALifeYouLove Email: sophie@sophiewatson.co.uk Free 30 minute Curiosity Call https://app.10to8.com/book/sophie-watson/587775 Join me on my next Masterclass - March 29 at 7:30 pm ET - Stop waiting for your life to begin and discover the keys to create the life you've been dreaming of! https://www.eventbrite.ca/e/559205949047 Did you miss any episodes? You can find me on all the podcast places! Apple Podcasts - https://podcasts.apple.com/ca/podcast/back-to-me-exploring-wellness-your-way-with-heather/id1597203856 Google Podcasts - https://podcasts.google.com/feed/aHR0cHM6Ly9hbmNob3IuZm0vcy83NGI4OTEwMC9wb2RjYXN0L3Jzcw A whole bunch of other platforms as well! https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/heatherstewartcoaching Connect with me on FB and IG https://www.facebook.com/prosperityflowcoaching https://www.instagram.com/heatherstewartcoaching/ Want to have a chat with me? https://app.practice.do/me/heather-stewart/book/coaching-discovery-call #b2m #backtome #back2me #wellnessyourway #prosperityflowcoaching #lifecoach #balancedlife #lifeinbalance #worklifebalance #getoutofyourownway #youdoyou #balancedlifeguide #transformationcoach #mindset #mindsetmatters #creatingexpansion #expansioncoach #soulcoach #beyourtrueself #reiki #spiritguide #truetoyou --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/heatherstewartcoaching/message
Episode no 141 we have a special guest Sophie Watson - In this episode, We will discuss with Sophie The topic of her story being the Lowest moments in life to building a business. So don`t forget to subscribe and leave a review on our podcast. let's dive in --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/rasel-chowdhury2/support
Sophie Watson worked in the health industry for over 20 years when she came to a breaking point and felt like she wasn't in control of her own life. She started working on herself and today works with other women to create lives they love. In today's episode, we talk about how to overcome the difficult times in life and how it's important to allow yourself to feel what you're feeling without trying to fix or change those emotions. Sophie gives us a lot of ideas for things we can do when we're in the middle of grief to honor the feelings while also allowing us to move through it at our own pace. Tune in to find out more! Five key takeaways from this episode: Once you make a decision about something that aligns with your highest self, the universe will put the right people and situations in front of you. Don't ignore the signs. It's showing you that you're on the right path. When things in your life seem overwhelming, find things that make you feel better and do those things. If that means watching a movie on repeat for a while, that's ok. There is no right or wrong way to feel grief and there is no right or wrong way to feel better. If your energy isn't where you would like it to be for yourself, your business, or any part of your life, it's ok to put things on pause for a bit while you work through it. Be kind to yourself and take care of yourself. Allow yourself to feel your feelings as they come and don't deny them. Try some practices to bring more awareness to your feelings and to lift you up such as meditation, listening to music, or getting out in nature. The best way to get out of your head is to be in the present moment and recognize what you are grateful for. Notice your surroundings and what you love about those things and it will help you bring you out of your head and into your heart. And if you cry, that's perfectly ok. We are all human beings and we all cry sometimes. Connect with Sophie: www.sophiewatson.co.uk https://www.facebook.com/SophieWatsonTimeToCreateALifeYouLove https://www.linkedin.com/in/sophie-watson-therapy/ Connect with Heather on Instagram at @iamheatherlove. Get Heather's Journal Prompts to Finding Your Purpose HERE.
This episode features an interview with Sophie Watson, Technical Product Marketing Manager at NVIDIA. Previously, Sophie served as a software engineer and principal data scientist at RedHat where she used machine learning to solve business problems in the hybrid cloud. Sophie has a PhD in Bayesian statistics and frequently speaks about machine learning workflows on Kubernetes, recommendation engines, and machine learning for search. In this episode, Sam and Sophie discuss Principal Component Analysis, computational acceleration, and MLOps.-------------------“We all start when we get hold of a data set by visualizing it to try to understand it. So that usually for me involves starting with a simple technique, something like PCA, Principal Component Analysis. It's been around since the eighties, probably longer, maybe the sixties. Don't quote me on that. With Principal Component Analysis, we can map our high dimensional data down to a smaller number of dimensions. Let's map it down to two so that we can visualize it. So we can go ahead and visualize it. But Principal Component Analysis is quite a simple technique in what it's doing and it's just mapping onto key components of our data. We might not be able to see, perhaps, separation of classes if we're working with data that's from a set of classes. Maybe we're looking at transactions, are they fraudulent or are they legitimate? And we might not be able to see that distinction. So that makes us think, "Is there something interesting in my data? Am I going to be able to train a machine learning model?" I don't know. Back in the day, I think the next step would've been, “Oh, let's train a model in C”, but now with accelerated compute within a really reasonable amount of time, we can go ahead and use a more sophisticated technique so we can use something like UMAP that's leaning on differential manifolds to do that projection to lower dimensions. And because this technique is slightly more sophisticated, what we find in general is that within the same amount of time, we're able to get more insight into the data. We're able to see the distinction in classes between our data sets. It keeps you in that loop. It keeps you in that productivity state.” – Sophie Watson-------------------Episode Timestamps:(01:22): What open source data means to Sophie(02:47): How Sophie is spending her time (07:52): What excites Sophia about the data science community(10:13): What Sophie is most excited about in data visibility(16:29): Data on servers versus data in the cloud(18:09): Accelerated computation on machine learning(22:27): Sophie breaks down probabilistic programming(24:21): What problem was Sophie trying to solve in her career(32:12): Sophie's dream job of working for Taylor Swift(34:48): Sophie's advice for those interested in open source-------------------Links:LinkedIn - Connect with SophieTwitter - Follow SophieTwitter - Follow NVIDIANVIDIA
We discuss Julien Duvivier’s marvellous 1930 film ‘Au Bonheur des Dames’ based on Émile Zola’s eponymous novel. See links below. Julien Duvivier (director), Gerlaur / Marthe Pinchaud (costume design), Au Bonheur des Dames (1930): https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0020656/ Au Bonheur des Dames on Accroche Note: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pA5EqTkz84I Émile Zola, Au Bonheur des Dames (The Ladies’ Delight) (first published 1883): https://www.penguin.co.uk/books/35360/au-bonheur-des-dames--the-ladies--delight-/9780140447835.html Georg Simmel, ‘The Metropolis and Mental Life’ (1903) in Gary Bridge and Sophie Watson, eds. The Blackwell City Reader. Oxford and Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell (2002): http://www.esperdy.net/wp-content/uploads/2009/09/Simmel_21.pdf Patricia O’Brien, ‘The Kleptomania Diagnosis: Bourgeois Women and Theft in Late Nineteenth-Century France’, Journal of Social History, Vol. 17, No. 1 (Autumn 1983): https://www.jstor.org/stable/pdf/3787239.pdf Elaine S. Abelson, ‘The Invention of Kleptomania’, Signs, Vol. 15, No. 1 (Autumn 1989): https://www.freud.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/Abelson-The-Invention-of-Kleptomania.pdf
On the first episode of The Art of Talking - a podcast talking about issues in our society - Tom Wood speaks to Sophie Watson about mental health and how the COVID-19 has had an impact on university life.Music: Gaussian by Props (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xqNOhKYhKrA)
New report shows the changing nature of school camps - Sophie Watson of Education Outdoors New Zealand joins The Panel to talk about the research.
WATER – Laurie Taylor explores the cultural life of a natural substance. Sophie Watson, Professor of Sociology at the Open University, considers the taken for granted-ness of this vital fluid and the everyday connections it forges amongst human beings. They’re joined by Benjamin J. Pauli - Assistant Professor of Social Science at Kettering University in Flint, Michigan, whose study of the Flint water crisis describes the way in which “water warrior” activists have expanded the struggle for water justice, connecting it to a broader fight for democracy. Producer: Jayne Egerton
WATER – Laurie Taylor explores the cultural life of a natural substance. Sophie Watson, Professor of Sociology at the Open University, considers the taken for granted-ness of this vital fluid and the everyday connections it forges amongst human beings. They’re joined by Benjamin J. Pauli - Assistant Professor of Social Science at Kettering University in Flint, Michigan, whose study of the Flint water crisis describes the way in which “water warrior” activists have expanded the struggle for water justice, connecting it to a broader fight for democracy. Producer: Jayne Egerton
WATER – Laurie Taylor explores the cultural life of a natural substance. Sophie Watson, Professor of Sociology at the Open University, considers the taken for granted-ness of this vital fluid and the everyday connections it forges amongst human beings. They’re joined by Benjamin J. Pauli - Assistant Professor of Social Science at Kettering University in Flint, Michigan, whose study of the Flint water crisis describes the way in which “water warrior” activists have expanded the struggle for water justice, connecting it to a broader fight for democracy. Producer: Jayne Egerton
Smart Cities: Laurie Taylor presents a special edition of Thinking Allowed which was recorded at the Open University in Milton Keynes. He was joined by Sophie Watson, Professor of Sociology at the Open University, Oliver Zanetti, Visiting Fellow at the Open University and Gillian Rose, Professor of Human Geography at Oxford University. Producer: Jayne Egerton.
This month’s episode is about a man so iconic that you only need to hear his first name. Just like Cher. Join Joe and his guests Ian Thomson and Sophie Watson for a chat about classic Clint movies like The Good, The Bad and The Ugly, Dirty Harry and Unforgiven, and find out when Clint’s hair was its most majestic …
How do you turn an unfilmable novel by Kurt Vonnegut’s into a film? Not like this anyway… Join Joe and guests Michael Clancy and Sophie Watson as they look over the career of blue-collar action hero Bruce Willis and then try and make sense of the mania that is Breakfast of Champions. Subscribe to Celluloid Skeletons here and be …
Craggy faced Texan and professional sourpuss Tommy Lee Jones is under the spotlight in this episode of Celluloid Skeletons. Listen to Joe and returning guest Sophie Watson as they chat about his work over the years, playing gruff, closed off men in films like The Fugitive, Men in Black and No Country for Old Men. With all that …
The Summer Sizzler 2014 from FolkCast The Soundtrack of the Season! Pull up a beach chair, help yourself to barbecue and beer, and enjoy 80 minutes of sizzling summer sounds from FolkCast, home of the best in folk, folk-rock, singer-songwriter and roots music! Presented and produced by Phil Widdows with interjections from Babba Contents Sing A Song Of Summer by John Martyn from the album "The Tumbler" Springtime Promises by Pentangle, from the album "Basket Of Light" "Aaah, summer - that long anticipated stretch of lazy, lingering days, free of responsibility and rife with possibility. It's a time to hunt for insects, master handstands, practice swimming strokes, conquer trees, explore nooks and crannies, and make new friends." - Darell Hammond Meet You In The Summer by Chris Hardy, from the album "Health To Your Hands" "In the Bible when it rained for 40 days and 40 nights they called it a disaster. In England, we call it summer…" - Anon Right As Rain by Peter Lacey, from the album "Last Leaf" “At the beach, life is different. A day moves not from hour to hour but leaps from mood to moment. We go with the currents, plan around the tides, follow the sun." - Sandy Gingras. Sun Golden Sun by The Tansads, from the album "Rough And Ready: The Early Years" Atoms by Runrig, from the album "Everything You See" Summer by Broadfoot, from the album "Straight Between Us" "It's summer, and that can only mean one thing: it's time to find out what my friends with swimming pools have been up to since last summer…" - Anon The Swimming Song by Fairport Convention, from the album "Old, New, Borrowed, Blue" "I go for a short swim at least once or twice every day. It's either that or buy a new golf ball!" - Gene Perret I Have Lately Learned To Swim by 3 Boxes, from the album "Strings Attached" In The Summertime by The Peddlers, from the album "Three For All" "Deep summer is when laziness finds respectability." — Sam Keen Inverary Summer Nights by The Clydesiders, from the album "Scottish Folk Songs Of The West" Stars Over Cloughanover by The Saw Doctors, single release. Skylark by Moonrakers, from the album Beneath The Snow - with To A Skylark (excerpt) by John Clare, read by Michael Sheen Summer Fires by Ninebarrow, from the album "While The Blackthorn Burns" Dunstable Downs by Life And Times, from the album "Charivari" - with Summer Solstice Song, written by Sophie Watson, performed by Frejya's Fire Noon Of The Solstice by Damh The Bard, from the album "Spirit Of Albion" Lush Green Leaves by Paul McGladdery, from the album "Northwing Sessions 2013" "Summer is the time when one sheds one's tensions with one's clothes, and the right kind of day is jewelled balm for the battered spirit. A few of those days and you can become drunk with the belief that all's right with the world." - Ada Louise Huxtable Down By The Greenwood by Golden Bough, from the album "Contemporary Songs: The Night Wind" The Way Through The Woods by David Gibb & Elly Lucas, from the album "Up Through The Woods" Summer Outing to Heaton Park, by Ewan MacColl This Time by Merry Hell, from the album "BLINK ... And You'll Miss It" "Summer afternoon — summer afternoon; to me those have always been the two most beautiful words in the English language." - Henry James Postcard From Summer (instrumental) by Sebastian Owen, download release "Now let's find our own thrill…" - 1946 newsreel Wonderland by House Of Hats, from the album "This Love" Dog Days by Locomotive Ghost, from the EP "Summer" The Summer Lady by Steeleye Span, from the album "Wintersmith" Keep focused on FolkCast for the best in folk, folk-rock, singer-songwriter and roots music … all year round!
From the Paris Commune to the 'Right to the City', cities have long been the centre of utopian dreams and protests. They have generated riches, destitution, celebration and organised and often violent protest. Professor David Harvey, the acclaimed social geographer, talks to Laurie Taylor about the urban roots of the contemporary capitalist crisis and the vision of a city for all. They're joined by the sociologist, Sophie Watson. Producer: Charlie Taylor.
Cities are growing at an enormous rate all over the world. As they wrestle with overcrowding, pollution, resource vulnerability and an increasing gulf between the rich and poor what will be the dominant factor to define them? Which forces will shape the experience of urban life for the individual and will our imagination and creativity enable cities to survive into the future? The sociologist Sophie Watson and the geographer Matthew Gandy join Laurie Taylor to discuss the future of the city. Also, the taboo of the body in the cemetery. Kate Woodthorpe reveals her research into what remains unmentionable at the graveside. Producer: Charlie Taylor.
Sophie Watson discusses The Open University course structure, concentrating on citizenship and its meaning to individuals
Sophie Watson discusses The Open University course structure, concentrating on citizenship and its meaning to individuals