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Der har været seks drab på kvinder alene i juni måned. I alt har der indtil nu i år været 14 sager om dødsvold og drab på kvinder. Politiet efterforsker flere af disse som partnerdrab. Gør regeringen nok for at stoppe kvindedrab? Har politikerne svigtet? Kan omvendt fodlænke og særskilt kriminalisering af kvindedrab fungere forebyggende? Og skal vi straffe hårdere? Du kan blande dig i debatten ved at ringe ind fra 12:15-13:30 på 7021 1919 eller send en sms til 1212. Panel: Mette Marie Yde, direktør i Danner Lisbeth Bech Nielsen, politisk ordfører SF Søren Just, musiker, møbelsnedker, pårørende Christian Rabjerg, politisk ordfører, S Ken Kristensen, retsudvalget V og politibetjent Niels Frank forfatter til bogen: "Fanden tage dig" og "Det slutter her" Magnus Barsøe, suppleant til EU-parlamentet, S Vært: Camilla Michelle Mikkelsen Producer og tilrettelægger: Gitte Hansen
Der har været seks drab på kvinder alene i juni måned. I alt har der indtil nu i år været 14 sager om dødsvold og drab på kvinder. Politiet efterforsker flere af disse som partnerdrab. Gør regeringen nok for at stoppe kvindedrab? Har politikerne svigtet? Kan omvendt fodlænke og særskilt kriminalisering af kvindedrab fungere forebyggende? Og skal vi straffe hårdere? Du kan blande dig i debatten ved at ringe ind fra 12:15-13:30 på 7021 1919 eller send en sms til 1212. Panel: Mette Marie Yde, direktør i Danner Lisbeth Bech Nielsen, politisk ordfører SF Søren Just, musiker, møbelsnedker, pårørende Christian Rabjerg, politisk ordfører, S Ken Kristensen, retsudvalget V og politibetjent Niels Frank forfatter til bogen: "Fanden tage dig" og "Det slutter her" Magnus Barsøe, suppleant til EU-parlamentet, S Vært: Camilla Michelle Mikkelsen Producer og tilrettelægger: Gitte Hansen
Der har været seks drab på kvinder alene i juni måned. I alt har der indtil nu i år været 14 sager om dødsvold og drab på kvinder. Politiet efterforsker flere af disse som partnerdrab. Gør regeringen nok for at stoppe kvindedrab? Har politikerne svigtet? Kan omvendt fodlænke og særskilt kriminalisering af kvindedrab fungere forebyggende? Og skal vi straffe hårdere? Du kan blande dig i debatten ved at ringe ind fra 12:15-13:30 på 7021 1919 eller send en sms til 1212. Panel: Mette Marie Yde, direktør i Danner Lisbeth Bech Nielsen, politisk ordfører SF Søren Just, musiker, møbelsnedker, pårørende Christian Rabjerg, politisk ordfører, S Ken Kristensen, retsudvalget V og politibetjent Niels Frank forfatter til bogen: "Fanden tage dig" og "Det slutter her" Magnus Barsøe, suppleant til EU-parlamentet, S Vært: Camilla Michelle Mikkelsen Producer og tilrettelægger: Gitte Hansen
Leila Rahimi and Marshall Harris discussed Cubs left-hander Matthew Boyd's superb season and how he continues to step up for the club when it's much-needed.
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Cold OpenCBT…? Never worked for autistic me.So, look, we KNOW masking doesn't work. Or FEAR. Or PAIN. We're dying from them already.That's all the words we need.[Music]IntroYou're listening to AutisticAF Out Loud. One voice. Raw. Real. Fiercely Neurodivergent. Since 1953.Season 5, Episode 6. “Doc? You Got Us All Wrong, Pt 2: CBT…? Never Worked for Autistic Me.”Abelist agendas. Bad research subjects. Bad data. Bad therapy.There's the whole story.An experimental multi-part series… around 10 minutes each. Cuz some autistic listeners tell me they like to binge in small bites. Others say they listen in the car… so you can also download the complete series as one file.Just one autistic elder's truth. I'm Johnny Profane.Content Note: trauma discussion, medical system critique, institutional discrimination, psychiatric hospitalizations, systemic oppression + experiences & opinions of one autistic voice... in my 70s.[Music]I've been struggling with an article on CBT & Autism for years.Sigh. Spoons. A lot of reading. A lot of thinking…To come to my opinion… my thesis…that any therapy based on purely cognitive techniques… even if pros throw on some Behavioral rubber-band-snapping special sauce on the side…?It's inherently ableist… attacking the very way our autistic brains are wired. Demanding abilities many neurodivergents just weren't born with.Here's a snapshot. A quick personal story from when autistic-as-fuck me turned for help…“I'm sorry… What did you just say?”“I said…” He looked nervous. “I said… I always recommend aversive therapy for my autistic kids. My clients.”Me. In a dead-cold voice. “Snapping a rubber band.”“Y-e-s-s.” He seemed torn. Was I gonna get positive reinforcement… Or that weird, hostile, defensiveness professionals get. When you ask questions.Into that hesitant silence, I say, “Snap it hard. Hard as they can. Against their wrist.”“Yes. The sting is important.” Now, he's eager to share. “When they repeat the aversive stimulus, they…”Again I interrupt with my ashen, Clint-Eastwood voice. “During a meltdown.”“Well… actually… just before.” He's beaming, proud. “They learn to snap the band at the earliest hint they'll lose control. It's operant conditioning.”A kid having a meltdown on Aisle 3. Likely overwhelmed by sensory overload.Let's just add a little sharp pain… and see what happens…As if by giving it some science-y name… it's not self-inflicted torture.Brief CBT BackgroundCognitive Behavioral Therapy emerged in the 60s. A kind of forced marriage. Between Beck's cognitive therapy… focused on internal thoughts. And Skinner's behavioral therapy… focused on observable behavior. Both developed studying neurotypical minds.Change your thoughts, change your feelings, change your behavior… change your life. Simple, right?Unless your brain doesn't work that way…Sometimes…? Research… Ain't.How could COGNITIVE Behavioral Therapy not be inappropriate for autistics?Research Problem #1. It's based on studying neurotypical populations. But we autistics think differently by definition.Problem #2? For the foundational studies, CBT researchers used white, university student subjects… for the most part. They're easy and cheap to find. But maybe 3% are autistic? Maybe? ALL with decent IQs and functioning student skills… even the few autistic subjects?And Problem #3 is a doozy. Many autistics survive by people-pleasing. Kids and grownups. We're likely to mask our true experiences to appear "better"... or please therapists. Plus we may have trouble perceiving and communicating our own experience. Self-reported data might not reflect our reality.,Then there's one that's rarely discussed. Problem #4… the "waitlist relief effect." Most neurodivergent folks endure months or years waiting for therapy, suffering intensely. When we finally get accepted into therapy? There's overwhelming relief… elevating our mood and behavior. Which distorts everything a therapist will hear.We may dial up our masking. Cuz we're scared shitless we'll lose this lifeline.Meanwhile, researchers publish, buff their nails…. and attribute any self-reported improvement as proof their technique works.The Cognitive Part…? A Stopper.Substitute "executive functioning" for "cognitive." As in the thing they say is largely missing from my autistic forebrain.The entire technique? One cognitive process after another.. First you must notice. Then you must reflect.Then decide.Then review.Then judge context.Then review…Finally… Act.Then regret.Let that sink in. All of cognitive therapy is about monitoring individual thoughts for "cognitive errors." Then replacing them with correct ones.Hundreds of decisions, distinctions, social cue processings. Executive functioning. A process that NEVER became automatic for me. As clinician after clinician cheerfully reassured me it would.Many autistic individuals have memory differences. Working memory differences that make it nearly impossible to hold the kind of information cognitive work requires. Much less manipulate it on the fly…Now… About Behavior.Now, the "Behavioral" part of CBT? The Skinnerian special sauce?Rewards… and punishments… for the action you choose. Hoping you'll build automatic, correct responses.Basically rat training. If you shock me enough times. Sure. I won't go through that door. AND I will struggle mightily to only have an internal stroke... rather than an external meltdown.But the researcher... or teacher... gets to check the box, "Cured." Cuz we're no longer a nuisance to them. And we continue to quietly die. Invisibly. Politely...Inside.That kind of aversion... to fear or pain? True for every living thing at an evolutionary level above a paramecium.Like rats. Or kids. Cuz... FEAR works. PAIN works. Just not the way they think.These Practical Implementation Failures…Should sound pretty familiar. To autistic folks. Keenly aware of the nightmare effort Autistic Masking demands around Straight Society.So, look, we know masking doesn't work. Or fear. Or PAIN. We're dying from them already.That's all the words we need.Add to this our difficulty forming new habits, maintaining routines, and processing cognitive information differently. Under stress… which therapy itself can induce… we often revert to previous behaviors. Any “improvements” from “techniques”? Not bloody likely they're ingrained as permanent muscle memory.Requiring frequent refresher sessions to maintain the illusion of change… and progress.As one commenter wrote: "To me, CBT has always felt inherently surface-level. It's like closing a few tabs on your browser as opposed to doing a factory reset."Biggest problem of all? Neurodivergent Diversity.Autistic, ADHD, AuDHD, dyslexic, dyspraxic… all different cognitive profiles.Sure, we're all different from the typical population. But an autistic who also experiences ADHD thinks and acts differently than a dyslexic one. At least to my trained observation. I was a mental health social worker for 10 years…Despite these complexities… Maybe because it is complex… It seems to me that CBT treats us all as if we're standard-model humans. With a few bugs to fix.We require GENERATIONAL studies of representative populations to sort this spaghetti pile out. Before we should be recommending these techniques.On living humans. Adults. And especially kids.ABA and Its Relatives: An Even Deeper Hole.Applied Behavioral Analysis (ABA) deserves special mention. It's the behavioral therapy most parents hear about in grammar schools.What most don't know? ABA shares roots with debunked, torturous gay Conversion Therapy. Outlawed in many states. Both were developed by O. Ivar Lovaas in the 60s.Both aim to eliminate "undesirable" behaviors. Using “aversive” techniques. From snapping rubber bands in the nice clinics. To cattle prods in the not-so-nice facilities.Punishing and suppressing behaviors that are natural to our nervous systems. Behaviors that protect us from a society not built for us.ABA may have volumes of "data." But it's all shaped by behaviors researchers and parents want, not what autistic children or adults need. The outcomes measured? Eye contact. Sitting still. Verbal responses. Not internal autistic wellbeing.It's important to understand one simple point. Data is not science.How you frame your research or experiment How you gather your data How you choose how many subjects and whom When you choose to gather data How you interpret your data How you present your dataAll impact its validity and value. ABA and all its camouflaged cousins fall down on this core scientific truth.Bottom line? When former ABA children grow up, many report trauma. PTSD. Anxiety. Depression. Self-harm.ConclusionFuck #ABA. Fuck #CBT.Everybody in the therapeutic-industrial complex from clinic receptionist to billionaire pharmaceutical CEO makes money. From your kid's pain. Caused by treatments that don't address neurodivergent needs. As far as I… and better-known neurodiversity-affirming authorities… can tell.Strong words? Yes. Because minds… and lives… are at stake.We need therapies that work WITH our neurology, not against it. That build on our strengths instead of calling us coolly, professionally, pathologizing names.In Part 3, we'll really bring this all home. How labeling our intrinsic differences as disease is about as anti-therapeutic as you can get.We'll explore "PDA… Not Every Difference Is a Disease." And really raise a ruckus.OutroFor your deeper diving pleasure, the transcript contains references and footnotes for most points I raise. From a variety of views.Hey, don't forget, you can download Part 1, “Autistic Resilience.” Or download both parts as one file.More coming in this series exploring how neurodivergent folks can build sustainable, authentic lives… with or without professional intervention. With 2 more parts coming…AutisticAF Out Loud podcast is supported solely by listeners like you. If you have a friend or family member touched by neurodiversity? Why not turn them on to us with a quick email?By the way, we believe no one should have to pay to be autistic. Many neurodivergent people can't afford subscription content.Your Ko-Fi tip of any amount helps keep this resource free for them. Or join our paid subscriber community at johnnyprofaneknapp.substack.com for ongoing support. I put both links in description.References & Further Reading1: Ableist: Discriminating against people with disabilities by assuming everyone's mind and body work the same way. Like designing a world only for the "standard model human" and then blaming us when we can't navigate it.2: Operant conditioning: A learning process in which behavior is shaped by rewards or punishments.3: Beck, A. T. (1979). Cognitive therapy and the emotional disorders. Penguin.4: Bottema-Beutel, K., & Crowley, S. (2021). Pervasive Undisclosed Conflicts of Interest in Applied Behavior Analysis Autism Literature. Frontiers in Psychology, 12.5: Cage, E., Di Monaco, J., & Newell, V. (2018). Experiences of Autism Acceptance and Mental Health in Autistic Adults. Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 48(2), 473-484.6: Masking: The act of concealing one's autistic traits to fit in or avoid negative attention.7: Meta-analyses show that waitlist control groups often overestimate the effect sizes of psychotherapies for depression and anxiety, and that changes occurring during waitlist periods are typically small, making waitlist-controlled trials a less strict test of effectiveness.Cuijpers, P., Karyotaki, E., Reijnders, M., Purgato, M., de Wit, L., Ebert, D. D., ... & Furukawa, T. A. (2024). Overestimation of the effect sizes of psychotherapies for depression in waitlist-controlled trials: a meta-analytic comparison with usual care controlled trials. Epidemiology and Psychiatric Sciences, 33, e10.8: Patterson, B., Boyle, M. H., Kivlenieks, M., & Van Ameringen, M. (2016). The use of waitlists as control conditions in anxiety disorders research. Journal of Anxiety Disorders, 41, 56-64.9: Boucher, J., Mayes, A., & Bigham, S. (2012). Memory in autistic spectrum disorder. Psychological Bulletin, 138(3), 458-496.10: Happé, F., & Frith, U. (2006). The weak coherence account: detail-focused cognitive style in autism spectrum disorders. Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 36(1), 5-25.11: Rekers, G. A., & Lovaas, O. I. (1974). Behavioral treatment of deviant sex-role behaviors in a male child. Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 7(2), 173–190.See also: El Dewar (2024), "ABA: The Neuro-Normative Conversion Therapy," NDConnection; and the Lovaas Institute's 2024 statement regarding conversion therapy.12: Sandoval-Norton, A. H., & Shkedy, G. (2019). How much compliance is too much compliance: Is long-term ABA therapy abuse? Cogent Psychology, 6(1).13: McGill, O., & Robinson, A. (2020). "Recalling hidden harms": Autistic experiences of childhood Applied Behavioral Analysis (ABA). Advances in Autism, ahead-of-print.14: Xie, Y., Zhang, Y., Li, Y., et al. (2021). Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Autism Spectrum Disorders: A Systematic Review. Pediatrics, 147(5), e2020049880.81015: Weston, L., Hodgekins, J., & Langdon, P. E. (2016). Effectiveness of cognitive behavioural therapy with people who have autistic spectrum disorders: A systematic review and meta-analysis. Clinical Psychology Review, 49, 41-54.16: Miguel, C., Harrer, M., Cuijpers, P., et al. (2025). Self-reports vs clinician ratings of efficacies of psychotherapies for depression: a meta-analysis. Epidemiology and Psychiatric Sciences, 34, e9.Note: Links are provided for reference only. Views expressed may differ from my own experiences and observations. Sources affiliated with Autism Speaks are controversial in the neurodiversity community. Their research may be included for completeness. But perhaps be cautious.Binge on the most authentic autistic voice in podcasting.7 decades of raw truth, real insights, zero yadayada.#AutisticAF Out Loud Newsletter is a reader-supported publication. Click below to receive new posts… free. Tosupport my work, consider becoming a paid subscriber. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit johnnyprofaneknapp.substack.com/subscribe
Cold OpenYou wanna pathologize me? Knock yerself out. Faithfully counting every leaf marked "deficit"…But missing the whole damn forest we know locally as "Survival."[Doc? You Got Us All Wrong, Pt 1: Autistic Resilience]IntroYou're listening to AutisticAF Out Loud. One voice. Raw. Real. Fiercely Neurodivergent. Since 1953.Season 5, Episode 5. “Doc? You Got Us All Wrong, Pt 1: Autistic Resilience.”Deficits… or strengths? Survival… or thriving? Pathology… or inborn, natural autistic behavior? We turn the diagnostic telescope around. Let's focus on the forest of resilience behind every leaf labeled "deficit."An experimental multi-part series… all around 10 minutes. Because some neurodivergent listeners like to binge in small bites. Or you can download Part 1 and Part 2 at once… for listeners who crave the whole enchilada in one sitting.Just one autistic elder's truth. I'm Johnny Profane.Content Note: trauma discussion, medical system critique, institutional discrimination, psychiatric hospitalizations, systemic oppression + experiences & opinions of one autistic voice... in my 70s.[Music]What I tell any therapist… any caregiver… first session:I have survived physical and sexual abuse from family and schoolmates.Bullying by teachers and fellow students… 2nd grade through high school.Multiple professional crashes… in multiple careers.At least a dozen firings.2 evictions.1 bankruptcy.Dozens of major household moves.Few friends, and…2 divorces, 3 "living togethers," and a couple of "serious" relationships that, well…, weren't?Ain't this resilience?Resilience. Ya know, that cap-and-gown term pros use for getting knocked down seven times. Stubbornly getting up… eight...I'm still alive. Still creating. Still getting published. Still speaking to thousands of autistics a year.Never attempted suicide... despite three hospitalizations.AND I'm still autistic. Cuz there ain't no cure for something that ain't wrong. Unless you base your "medical model" on some statistical "normal"… which is just a made up story. Cuz not one living person is summed up by a Bell curve normal… not even within a standard deviation.Yes, yes… yes. Some professionals are evolving. Pros who listen more than lecture. But face it. In the grand scheme of things… they're rare.Let's get clear right now, right here. It's not being autistic that creates our trauma. It's living autistic in a society that inflicts trauma on us. Refusing to accept, adapt… support… us.Why do "helping" pros focus on my deficits, my lacks, my pitiful performance of “Activities of Daily Living”…? Like, did I shower today…? No.Rather than the sheer strength of will I demonstrate every time I take my next breath?Why do they offer to fix me,inform me,guide me, andcharge me for sessions,mentoring,workshops,best-selling books,SYSTEMS they've just invented…based on… at best… incomplete research?[Music]You know social media… if you like and share this podcast, a lot more people will check it out. You can do a lot of good with just one click.You wanna pathologize me? Knock yerself out.Turn my every inborn neurodivergent characteristic into a disease. You do have powerful diagnostic tools…But you're looking through that diagnostic telescope backwards. Faithfully counting every leaf marked "deficit"… But missing the whole damn forest that we know locally as "Survival."Like my "failure to maintain eye contact.” A “social deficit.” Right... completely missing how that survival skill lets me process your words… without painful sensory overload. My form of my respect… for you.Go ahead and use professionally, objectively disempowering terms, like "comorbidity"... betraying your bias that my very way of Being is… in your eyes… a disease. And then riff on, elaborate away: "pathological demand avoidance," "obsessive-compulsive disorder," "borderline personality disorder,"And on and on… and on.Truth? Every diagnosis? Just another survival mechanism. Not symptoms of autism. Responses to how society treats autism.Behaviors that kept me alive… in your world. While you obsess over what's "wrong" with me…Or… we could build on my autistic strengths.Look, none of us have all of these. And superpowers don't exist. Some have strengths not listed. But if you aren't looking for them? Likely, you're mis-treating us.* Resilience: Just surviving multiple, severe stressors is a biggie. Every autistic adult you meet has adapted to extreme challenges. Most of us… traumatized. Yet we endure. We integrate. We keep going.* Deep Feeling: Pros call ‘em "mood swings." We call it feeling everything… deeply. Depth that drives our creativity… in science, art, writing, becoming lunatic billionaires… or the cool neighbor next door.. It's not a flaw. It's fuel.* Survival Skills: My life, my continued existence… is my proof. Just as any autistic adult's life is. We've survived devastating life events. With inner strength and coping strategies.These aren't skills most professionals understand… not even some neurodivergent practitioners. Because these skills are linked to how our individual autistic minds work. Which is… in fact… different. Not just from most humans. From each other, too.* Creative Persistence: Every autistic person knows this pull. Our passionate focus on our interests. Grabbing us deeper than hunger. We don't just see details… no matter what TV tells you. We work on wide canvases. We create. We build. We solve. That's strength.* Living with Extremes: My knee surgeon was shocked. "You walked two miles a day on a torn meniscus?" Yes, but… a light touch on my face can trigger panic. That's not contradiction. That's how we survive. We may get sensory warnings earlier than most… Yet we handle what breaks others. Daily.* Hidden Adaptability: Look at my life changes—jobs, homes, relationships. Society labels us as "rigid." Truth is, we adapt constantly. We got no choice. Yet we persevere. We keep doing. That's not weakness. That's strength.* Processing Power: We take in everything. Process it deeply. Yet live through emotional and sensory experiences that would derail most people. We keep going. Keep growing. That's not dysfunction. That's determination. Coming directly from… not despite… our neurodivergent cognition.* Spectrum of Strength: Maybe resilience is a spectrum, too. And some of us autistics crank it up past 11. Not weakness from disability. Strength from difference. Turning autistic stereotypes upside down. Yet again.[Music]Just a quickie… this is Part 1 of “Doc? You Got Autism All Wrong?” Why not binge the next part? Or download the long-form version with both parts? Link in transcript.Challenging Normal-izing ModelsMy story? Just one among thousands. Millions.I've worked as a magazine publisher. Functioned as an academic grad student… multiple times. And been homeless… multiple times. I've been privileged to hear many, many similar stories over the decades. At all levels of society, education, age.These stories all share one truth: Autistic traits are not inherently deficits. They can be hidden sources of strength and resilience. In the right environment. In the right community.Take one example: Pathological Demand Avoidance (PDA). What pros like to label our natural, neurodivergent response to external demands like deadlines. I meet the diagnostic criteria. Always have. But in my opinion, they bulldoze right over my inborn need for autonomy. Leading too often to trauma. PDA… seems to me… a dehumanizing slur. For the nature I was born with.Yet many neurodivergents find comfort and support diagnosed as PDA. In the acknowledgment of our differences the diagnosis does offer. I don't wish to negate their experience. And I'm not arguing neurodivergents do NOT have needs for autonomy. Or that we don't suffer due to these differences. At the hands of Straight Culture.My point: Sensory and social differences are NOT pathologies.It's like dogs noticing that cats are more hyper than canines...So to "help" ‘em, pro dogs decide to forcibly train or torture every cat. To steamroll them into converting to “Dog Normal.”We are human… autistic humans.We need what all humans need: To build on our strengths. To find our nurturing environments. To choose our supportive communities.We just accomplish these things... differently.Look, I'm fighting the whole Normative Narrative. Which demands any difference MUST be "cured." Or at least fixed.And I'm not keen on neurodivergent-based attempts to bandaid the problem. By simply defining a new normal for autistics and other neurodivergents. Just another standard we may fail to live up to.Frankly, I'm calling for a strengths-based, non-normative psychology for all neurodivergents. A theme I develop in this series and future podcasts. How we might replace CBT and similar treatments with more neurodivergent-centered alternatives.So where do we start this revolution?Doc, Stop. Look again…At the big picture this time. See those brilliant sparks of unusual strength? Far more powerful than your "deficits."Reality check: Up to now, you've just been documenting how modern consumer culture fails our neurology. In the office. In our schools. In shopping at freaking Walmart for fuck's sake.Anywhere we're forced to process too much sensory input. Or pretend to read invisible social cues. Pretend we're you… without rest or accommodation.Let's explore a new direction. Simply put?Doc… stop looking through your telescope backwards. Look at us. Right in front of your eyes._____References & Further ReadingNeither exhaustive nor comprehensive. Articles that made me think.* The high prevalence of trauma and adverse experiences among autistic individuals* PTSD and Autism* Trauma and Autism: Research and Resources* How to build resiliency in autistic individuals: an implication to advance mental health* Association Between Autism and PTSD Among Adult Psychiatric Outpatients* The relationship between autism and resilience* Building Resilience – An Important Life Skill* Understanding Resilience in Neurodivergent Adults* Autistic Resilience: Overcoming Adversity Through Self-Care and Strengths* The criticism of deficit-based models of autism* Moving Beyond Deficit-Based Models of Autism* Strengths-First Assessment in Autism* The reality of autistic strengths and capabilities* 6 Strengths (not Weaknesses) of Individuals with Autism* Autism as a Strength* Neurodiversity as a Competitive AdvantageNote: Links are provided for reference only. Views expressed may differ from my own experiences and observations. Sources affiliated with Autism Speaks are controversial in the neurodiversity community. Their research may be included for completeness. But perhaps be cautious.Doc, You Got Us All Wrong, Pt 2: CBT...? Never Worked for Autistic MeCold OpenCBT…? Never worked for autistic me.So, look, we KNOW masking doesn't work. Or FEAR. Or PAIN. We're dying from them already.That's all the words we need.[Music]IntroYou're listening to AutisticAF Out Loud. One voice. Raw. Real. Fiercely Neurodivergent. Since 1953.Season 5, Episode 6. “Doc? You Got Us All Wrong, Pt 2: CBT…? Never Worked for Autistic Me.”Abelist agendas. Bad research subjects. Bad data. Bad therapy.There's the whole story.An experimental multi-part series… around 10 minutes each. Cuz some autistic listeners tell me they like to binge in small bites. Others say they listen in the car… so you can also download the complete series as one file.Just one autistic elder's truth. I'm Johnny Profane.Content Note: trauma discussion, medical system critique, institutional discrimination, psychiatric hospitalizations, systemic oppression + experiences & opinions of one autistic voice... in my 70s.[Music]I've been struggling with an article on CBT & Autism for years.Sigh. Spoons. A lot of reading. A lot of thinking…To come to my opinion… my thesis…that any therapy based on purely cognitive techniques… even if pros throw on some Behavioral rubber-band-snapping special sauce on the side…?It's inherently ableist… attacking the very way our autistic brains are wired. Demanding abilities many neurodivergents just weren't born with.Here's a snapshot. A quick personal story from when autistic-as-fuck me turned for help…“I'm sorry… What did you just say?”“I said…” He looked nervous. “I said… I always recommend aversive therapy for my autistic kids. My clients.”Me. In a dead-cold voice. “Snapping a rubber band.”“Y-e-s-s.” He seemed torn. Was I gonna get positive reinforcement… Or that weird, hostile, defensiveness professionals get. When you ask questions.Into that hesitant silence, I say, “Snap it hard. Hard as they can. Against their wrist.”“Yes. The sting is important.” Now, he's eager to share. “When they repeat the aversive stimulus, they…”Again I interrupt with my ashen, Clint-Eastwood voice. “During a meltdown.”“Well… actually… just before.” He's beaming, proud. “They learn to snap the band at the earliest hint they'll lose control. It's operant conditioning.”A kid having a meltdown on Aisle 3. Likely overwhelmed by sensory overload.Let's just add a little sharp pain… and see what happens…As if by giving it some science-y name… it's not self-inflicted torture.Brief CBT BackgroundCognitive Behavioral Therapy emerged in the 60s. A kind of forced marriage. Between Beck's cognitive therapy… focused on internal thoughts. And Skinner's behavioral therapy… focused on observable behavior. Both developed studying neurotypical minds.Change your thoughts, change your feelings, change your behavior… change your life. Simple, right?Unless your brain doesn't work that way…Sometimes…? Research… Ain't.How could COGNITIVE Behavioral Therapy not be inappropriate for autistics?Research Problem #1. It's based on studying neurotypical populations. But we autistics think differently by definition.Problem #2? For the foundational studies, CBT researchers used white, university student subjects… for the most part. They're easy and cheap to find. But maybe 3% are autistic? Maybe? ALL with decent IQs and functioning student skills… even the few autistic subjects?And Problem #3 is a doozy. Many autistics survive by people-pleasing. Kids and grownups. We're likely to mask our true experiences to appear "better"... or please therapists. Plus we may have trouble perceiving and communicating our own experience. Self-reported data might not reflect our reality.,Then there's one that's rarely discussed. Problem #4… the "waitlist relief effect." Most neurodivergent folks endure months or years waiting for therapy, suffering intensely. When we finally get accepted into therapy? There's overwhelming relief… elevating our mood and behavior. Which distorts everything a therapist will hear.We may dial up our masking. Cuz we're scared shitless we'll lose this lifeline.Meanwhile, researchers publish, buff their nails…. and attribute any self-reported improvement as proof their technique works.,The Cognitive Part…? A Stopper.Substitute "executive functioning" for "cognitive." As in the thing they say is largely missing from my autistic forebrain.The entire technique? One cognitive process after another.. First you must notice. Then you must reflect.Then decide.Then review.Then judge context.Then review…Finally… Act.Then regret.Let that sink in. All of cognitive therapy is about monitoring individual thoughts for "cognitive errors." Then replacing them with correct ones.Hundreds of decisions, distinctions, social cue processings. Executive functioning. A process that NEVER became automatic for me. As clinician after clinician cheerfully reassured me it would.Many autistic individuals have memory differences. Working memory differences that make it nearly impossible to hold the kind of information cognitive work requires. Much less manipulate it on the fly…Now… About Behavior.Now, the "Behavioral" part of CBT? The Skinnerian special sauce?Rewards… and punishments… for the action you choose. Hoping you'll build automatic, correct responses.Basically rat training. If you shock me enough times. Sure. I won't go through that door. AND I will struggle mightily to only have an internal stroke... rather than an external meltdown.But the researcher... or teacher... gets to check the box, "Cured." Cuz we're no longer a nuisance to them. And we continue to quietly die. Invisibly. Politely...Inside.That kind of aversion... to fear or pain? True for every living thing at an evolutionary level above a paramecium.Like rats. Or kids. Cuz... FEAR works. PAIN works. Just not the way they think.These Practical Implementation Failures…Should sound pretty familiar. To autistic folks. Keenly aware of the nightmare effort Autistic Masking demands around Straight Society.So, look, we know masking doesn't work. Or fear. Or PAIN. We're dying from them already.That's all the words we need.Add to this our difficulty forming new habits, maintaining routines, and processing cognitive information differently. Under stress… which therapy itself can induce… we often revert to previous behaviors. Any “improvements” from “techniques”? Not bloody likely they're ingrained as permanent muscle memory.Requiring frequent refresher sessions to maintain the illusion of change… and progress.As one commenter wrote: "To me, CBT has always felt inherently surface-level. It's like closing a few tabs on your browser as opposed to doing a factory reset."Biggest problem of all? Neurodivergent Diversity.Autistic, ADHD, AuDHD, dyslexic, dyspraxic… all different cognitive profiles.Sure, we're all different from the typical population. But an autistic who also experiences ADHD thinks and acts differently than a dyslexic one. At least to my trained observation. I was a mental health social worker for 10 years…Despite these complexities… Maybe because it is complex… It seems to me that CBT treats us all as if we're standard-model humans. With a few bugs to fix.We require GENERATIONAL studies of representative populations to sort this spaghetti pile out. Before we should be recommending these techniques.On living humans. Adults. And especially kids.ABA and Its Relatives: An Even Deeper Hole.Applied Behavioral Analysis (ABA) deserves special mention. It's the behavioral therapy most parents hear about in grammar schools.What most don't know? ABA shares roots with debunked, torturous gay Conversion Therapy. Outlawed in many states. Both were developed by O. Ivar Lovaas in the 60s.Both aim to eliminate "undesirable" behaviors. Using “aversive” techniques. From snapping rubber bands in the nice clinics. To cattle prods in the not-so-nice facilities.Punishing and suppressing behaviors that are natural to our nervous systems. Behaviors that protect us from a society not built for us.ABA may have volumes of "data." But it's all shaped by behaviors researchers and parents want, not what autistic children or adults need. The outcomes measured? Eye contact. Sitting still. Verbal responses. Not internal autistic wellbeing.It's important to understand one simple point. Data is not science.How you frame your research or experiment How you gather your data How you choose how many subjects and whom When you choose to gather data How you interpret your data How you present your dataAll impact its validity and value. ABA and all its camouflaged cousins fall down on this core scientific truth.Bottom line? When former ABA children grow up, many report trauma. PTSD. Anxiety. Depression. Self-harm.ConclusionFuck #ABA. Fuck #CBT.Everybody in the therapeutic-industrial complex from clinic receptionist to billionaire pharmaceutical CEO makes money. From your kid's pain. Caused by treatments that don't address neurodivergent needs. As far as I… and better-known neurodiversity-affirming authorities… can tell.Strong words? Yes. Because minds… and lives… are at stake.We need therapies that work WITH our neurology, not against it. That build on our strengths instead of calling us coolly, professionally, pathologizing names.In Part 3, we'll really bring this all home. How labeling our intrinsic differences as disease is about as anti-therapeutic as you can get.We'll explore "PDA… Not Every Difference Is a Disease." And really raise a ruckus.OutroFor your deeper diving pleasure, the transcript contains references and footnotes for most points I raise. From a variety of views.Hey, don't forget, you can download Part 1, “Autistic Resilience.” Or download both parts as one file.More coming in this series exploring how neurodivergent folks can build sustainable, authentic lives… with or without professional intervention. With 2 more parts coming…AutisticAF Out Loud podcast is supported solely by listeners like you. If you have a friend or family member touched by neurodiversity? Why not turn them on to us with a quick email?By the way, we believe no one should have to pay to be autistic. Many neurodivergent people can't afford subscription content.Your Ko-Fi tip of any amount helps keep this resource free for them. Or join our paid subscriber community at johnnyprofaneknapp.substack.com for ongoing support. I put both links in description.References & Further Reading1: Ableist: Discriminating against people with disabilities by assuming everyone's mind and body work the same way. Like designing a world only for the "standard model human" and then blaming us when we can't navigate it.2: Operant conditioning: A learning process in which behavior is shaped by rewards or punishments.3: Beck, A. T. (1979). Cognitive therapy and the emotional disorders. Penguin.4: Bottema-Beutel, K., & Crowley, S. (2021). Pervasive Undisclosed Conflicts of Interest in Applied Behavior Analysis Autism Literature. Frontiers in Psychology, 12.5: Cage, E., Di Monaco, J., & Newell, V. (2018). Experiences of Autism Acceptance and Mental Health in Autistic Adults. Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 48(2), 473-484.6: Masking: The act of concealing one's autistic traits to fit in or avoid negative attention.7: Meta-analyses show that waitlist control groups often overestimate the effect sizes of psychotherapies for depression and anxiety, and that changes occurring during waitlist periods are typically small, making waitlist-controlled trials a less strict test of effectiveness.Cuijpers, P., Karyotaki, E., Reijnders, M., Purgato, M., de Wit, L., Ebert, D. D., ... & Furukawa, T. A. (2024). Overestimation of the effect sizes of psychotherapies for depression in waitlist-controlled trials: a meta-analytic comparison with usual care controlled trials. Epidemiology and Psychiatric Sciences, 33, e10.8: Patterson, B., Boyle, M. H., Kivlenieks, M., & Van Ameringen, M. (2016). The use of waitlists as control conditions in anxiety disorders research. Journal of Anxiety Disorders, 41, 56-64.9: Boucher, J., Mayes, A., & Bigham, S. (2012). Memory in autistic spectrum disorder. Psychological Bulletin, 138(3), 458-496.10: Happé, F., & Frith, U. (2006). The weak coherence account: detail-focused cognitive style in autism spectrum disorders. Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 36(1), 5-25.11: Rekers, G. A., & Lovaas, O. I. (1974). Behavioral treatment of deviant sex-role behaviors in a male child. Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 7(2), 173–190.See also: El Dewar (2024), "ABA: The Neuro-Normative Conversion Therapy," NDConnection; and the Lovaas Institute's 2024 statement regarding conversion therapy.12: Sandoval-Norton, A. H., & Shkedy, G. (2019). How much compliance is too much compliance: Is long-term ABA therapy abuse? Cogent Psychology, 6(1).13: McGill, O., & Robinson, A. (2020). "Recalling hidden harms": Autistic experiences of childhood Applied Behavioral Analysis (ABA). Advances in Autism, ahead-of-print.14: Xie, Y., Zhang, Y., Li, Y., et al. (2021). Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Autism Spectrum Disorders: A Systematic Review. Pediatrics, 147(5), e2020049880.81015: Weston, L., Hodgekins, J., & Langdon, P. E. (2016). Effectiveness of cognitive behavioural therapy with people who have autistic spectrum disorders: A systematic review and meta-analysis. Clinical Psychology Review, 49, 41-54.16: Miguel, C., Harrer, M., Cuijpers, P., et al. (2025). Self-reports vs clinician ratings of efficacies of psychotherapies for depression: a meta-analysis. Epidemiology and Psychiatric Sciences, 34, e9.Note: Links are provided for reference only. Views expressed may differ from my own experiences and observations. Sources affiliated with Autism Speaks are controversial in the neurodiversity community. Their research may be included for completeness. But perhaps be cautious.#AutisticAF Out Loud Newsletter is a reader-supported publication. Click below to receive new posts… free. To support my work, consider becoming a paid subscriber. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit johnnyprofaneknapp.substack.com/subscribe
Dans cet épisode du podcast La Pause Fitness nous allons parler de prise de ventre à 40 ans, du sommeil et de la créatine. Nouveau : Vitamine B1 : Pourquoi tu crèves de faim même en mangeant sainement Au programme : Stopper la « bedaine » de la quarantaine Le 7 juin, Drugs.com résume les […] The post Prise de ventre à 40 ans, sommeil et retour de la créatine appeared first on Fitnessmith.
Un cas autochtone de chikungunya a été détecté dans le Var ce mercredi. Il s'agit du premier cas confirmé en métropole cette année. L'agence régionale de santé Provence-Alpes Côte d'Azur annonce donc des mesures pour limiter le risque de propagation. Quelles sont-elles? On pose la question à Margaux de Frouville, cheffe du service santé de BFMTV.
Tu procrastines, tu sabotes une opportunité, tu te bloques au dernier moment ?
We had a mix-up and shhh and the guest will be next week.Episode notes:RIP CoolioJo Koy: Live from the Los Angeles forumAnthony Jeselnik: Fire in the maternity wardPolice In Oklahoma Arrest An Alleged Serial Burglar Thanks To His SpongeBob SquarePants ClothingDriver fleeing U-District shooting hits, kills 21-year-old with vehicleSheriff's Deputies In California Reportedly Kill An Unarmed 15-Year-Old Girl Fleeing From Her Kidnapper
durée : 00:03:15 - Géopolitique - par : Pierre Haski - Un appel signé par 75 prix Nobel demande à la Communauté internationale d'agir pour mettre fin aux souffrances des civils congolais dans l'Est de la RDC riche en minerais. Mais ils ont peu de chances d'être entendus, dans un monde fracturé, dans lequel existe, de fait, une hiérarchie des conflits.
durée : 00:03:15 - Géopolitique - par : Pierre Haski - Un appel signé par 75 prix Nobel demande à la Communauté internationale d'agir pour mettre fin aux souffrances des civils congolais dans l'Est de la RDC riche en minerais. Mais ils ont peu de chances d'être entendus, dans un monde fracturé, dans lequel existe, de fait, une hiérarchie des conflits.
“Send us a Hey Now!”So this weekend was the Monaco GP - would this be a good Monaco GP after recent poor ones and with the addition of a mandatory two stopper?Would McLaren get back to dominating? Would Colapinto crash? Would Charles do well in front of a home crowd?All these questions and more are answered on this weeks episode.1) News & SocialAll the best bits from both the sports news out there as well as what caught our eye on the various social channels2) Brian's Video Vault Nothing this week3) Monaco GP ReviewPractice, qualy, and race reviewKing of the pits vs the pitsPitlane Paul - in fact many helpings of Paul this week!Rob vs Brian - Casino game updateWDC & WCC updates4) Spanish GP PreviewThe BJ Show Sport Chat (The BJ Show) will cover all AFL games, quiz and more. Subscribe today.Listen on: Apple Podcasts SpotifySupport the showWe would love you to join our Discord server so use this invite link to join us https://discord.gg/XCyemDdzGB To sign up to our newsletter then follow this link https://dirty-side-digest.beehiiv.com/subscribeIf you would like to sign up for the 100 Seconds of DRS then drop us an email stating your time zone to dirtysideofthetrack@gmail.comAlso please like, follow, and share our content on Threads, X, BlueSky, Facebook, & Instagram, links to which can be found on our website.One last call to arms is that if you do listen along and like us then first of all thanks, but secondly could we ask that you leave a review and a 5 star rating - please & thanks!If you would like to help the Dirty Side promote the show then we are now on Buy me a coffee where 100% of anything we get will get pumped into advertising the show https://www.buymeacoffee.com/dirtysideofthetrackDirty Side of the Track is hosted on Buzzsprout https://www.buzzsprout.com/
Regeringen vil fordoble straffen for grov vold. Der skal bygges to nye fængsler og skaffes 2000 nye fængselspladser. Regeringen kalder reformen historisk og nødvendig for retsfølelsen. Er mere straf vigtig for voldsofre og pårørende? Er hårdere straffe vigtig for danskernes tillid til retsstaten? Stopper flere år bag tremmer de kriminelle? Du kan blande dig i debatten ved at ringe ind fra 12:15-13:30 på 7021 1919 eller send en sms til 1212. Medvirkende: Bent Isager, (K) Frederiksberg, tidl drabschef, Bjørn Brandenborg (S), retsordfører, Asbjørn Frier, eventkoordinator, voldsoffer, Helle Hald, bistandsadvokat, foreningen for voldsofre, Lars Højsgaard Andersen, forskningsprofessor, Rockwool, Jan Mansur Hussain, socialrådgiver og Bo Yde Sørensen, formand for Fængselsforbundet i Danmark. Vært og tilrettelægger: Gitte Hansen. Producer: Siw Søby Rasmussen.
Regeringen vil fordoble straffen for grov vold. Der skal bygges to nye fængsler og skaffes 2000 nye fængselspladser. Regeringen kalder reformen historisk og nødvendig for retsfølelsen. Er mere straf vigtig for voldsofre og pårørende? Er hårdere straffe vigtig for danskernes tillid til retsstaten? Stopper flere år bag tremmer de kriminelle? Du kan blande dig i debatten ved at ringe ind fra 12:15-13:30 på 7021 1919 eller send en sms til 1212. Medvirkende: Bent Isager, (K) Frederiksberg, tidl drabschef, Bjørn Brandenborg (S), retsordfører, Asbjørn Frier, eventkoordinator, voldsoffer, Helle Hald, bistandsadvokat, foreningen for voldsofre, Lars Højsgaard Andersen, forskningsprofessor, Rockwool, Jan Mansur Hussain, socialrådgiver og Bo Yde Sørensen, formand for Fængselsforbundet i Danmark. Vært og tilrettelægger: Gitte Hansen. Producer: Siw Søby Rasmussen.
Regeringen vil fordoble straffen for grov vold. Der skal bygges to nye fængsler og skaffes 2000 nye fængselspladser. Regeringen kalder reformen historisk og nødvendig for retsfølelsen. Er mere straf vigtig for voldsofre og pårørende? Er hårdere straffe vigtig for danskernes tillid til retsstaten? Stopper flere år bag tremmer de kriminelle? Du kan blande dig i debatten ved at ringe ind fra 12:15-13:30 på 7021 1919 eller send en sms til 1212. Medvirkende: Bent Isager, (K) Frederiksberg, tidl drabschef, Bjørn Brandenborg (S), retsordfører, Asbjørn Frier, eventkoordinator, voldsoffer, Helle Hald, bistandsadvokat, foreningen for voldsofre, Lars Højsgaard Andersen, forskningsprofessor, Rockwool, Jan Mansur Hussain, socialrådgiver og Bo Yde Sørensen, formand for Fængselsforbundet i Danmark. Vært og tilrettelægger: Gitte Hansen. Producer: Siw Søby Rasmussen.
Velkommen indenfor til torsdagens Hattrick: Vejle Boldklub siger farvel og tak til Steffen Kielstrup og Johnny Mølby. Cheftrænerduoen, som på nærmest mirakuløs vis har ført klubben til overlevelse i Superligaen, får ikke lov til at stå i spidsen for mandskabet i næste sæson – noget som Kielstrup er skuffet over.Og så har Nicolai Boilesen i dag meddelt, at han indstiller karrieren efter flere års skadeshelvede. Sidst, men ikke mindst, skal det også handle om onsdagens Europa League-finale, hvor Tottenham ENDELIG lykkedes med at vinde et trofæ. Vært og produktion: Oliver Routledge Lyddesign: William Dinesen See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Operation Gedions stridsvogne er unødvendig og bims, Israel er Mellemøstens Finland og ikke til at stoppe, Bikini-Bar-Kas og en Uzi over skulderen på Vestbredden, security til Eurovision, du ikke skal f… med, et skolevalg med mundkurv på Israel/Palæstina, Mette Frederiksen og Meloni i en spids symbiose om domstolene, totalt-Lokalt gør comeback i Aarhus, og det er ‘Boulevard of Broken Dreams', skrabede indkøbsvaner og en omvendt verden af dansk kultur, ‘en hemsko i Danmark - hvis det kører godt', Berlingske har korrespondenter alle steder, ‘må man nu ikke sende 1 milliard igennem en bankfilial på Vesterbro?', der er ild i Bossen på sociale medier, et valg i Rumænien går om, ‘Hold mig i fingeren, Erdogan', og speedy recovery til Joe Biden herfra Frederiksberg. Få 30 dages gratis prøveperiode (kan kun benyttes af nye Podimo-abonnenter)- http://podimo.dk/hgdg (99 kroner herefter)Værter: Esben Bjerre & Peter Falktoft Redigering: PodAmokKlip: PodAmokMusik: Her Går Det GodtInstagram: @hergaardetgodt @Peterfalktoft @Esbenbjerre
About Eric Stopper:Eric is a jiu-jitsu coach, professional podcaster, YouTuber, and e-commerce entrepreneur who has worked with over 2000 brands. He co-founded Profitibull, a software company that specializes in AI and Automation for companies looking to scale high-ticket products and services like coaching, courses, leadership development, functional medicine, and more. He lives in San Antonio, Texas, with his wife and two sons.In this episode, Jennie Bellinger and Eric Stopper discuss:Power of automation for lead nurturingValue of voicemail drops and SMS in outreachMindset shift from selling to servingImportance of consistent follow-up (10+ touches)Using Go High Level to streamline marketing and affiliate systemsKey Takeaways:Automation isn't impersonal—it's essential, and by thoughtfully setting up systems like voicemail drops, SMS, and email sequences, entrepreneurs can follow up with consistency and scale without losing authenticity.Tools like Go High Level eliminate the need for juggling multiple platforms, giving businesses a clear edge through streamlined workflows and centralized communication.Follow-up isn't optional—it's where sales happen.When you lead with sincere value and strategic segmentation, even automated messages can feel personal and build meaningful connections.Treating referral partners and team members like high-value leads—with structured onboarding, nurturing, and communication—can boost engagement and retention significantly."You can't ever hit it out of the park unless you actually step up to the plate.” — Eric StopperConnect with Eric Stopper: Facebook Name: https://www.facebook.com/eric.stopperFacebook Business Page: https://www.facebook.com/profitibulladsLinkedIn URL: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ericstopper/Instagram Link: https://www.instagram.com/ericstopper11/Link to Gift from Eric Stopper:
Novo Nordisk sprang en bombe fredag over middag, da selskabet bekendtgjorde, at topchef Lars Fruergaard Jørgensen stopper som topchef. Aktiekursen er mere end halveret på et år, og det fik bestyrelsen til at indgå en såkaldt gensidig aftale med Fruergaard om aftrædelse. Lyt til denne Lyn-analyse og hør om årsagerne til afgangen og hvor Novo måske kunne forestille sig at kigge hen efter en ny kandidat til stillingen som adm. direktør i medicinalgiganten. Gæst: Nick Sturm, journalist, Finans. Vært: Mads Ring. Producer: Kasper Søegaard. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Den vestjyske maskinfører Carl Futtrup bruger al sin tid på at sende fiskenet til Ukraine. Fiskenet, der redder ukrainske liv. For droner bliver en stadig større del af krigens blodige front, og her kan danske fiskenet stoppe dronerne, inden de gør skade. Derfor kæmper Carl Futtrup sammen med Thyborøn Havn for at sende endnu flere net til krigens front. Helst fra både Grønland og Færøerne. Undervejs støder han på miljøregler og manglende støtte fra Forsvarsministeriet. Men han bliver ved og ender til møder helt inde i ministeriet. Gæst: Carl Futtrup, maskinfører og frivillig fiskenet-indsamlerVært: Tine ToftTilrettelæggelse: Pernille SkytteFoto: Nicolai West Læs mere om Carl Futtrups fiskenet her.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Chaque jour, en moins de 10 minutes, un résumé de l'actualité du jour. Rapide, facile, accessible.
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Rentemøde i den amerikanske cenralbank. Novo Nordisk nedjusterer forventningerne for 2025. Det koster milliarder for Ørsted at droppe havvindprojekter. Vil højesteret i USA beskytte Powell? Lars Løkke indkalder USA's ambassadør om mulig spionage. Sort røg fra skorstenen i Vatikanet. Trump vil ophæve restriktioner på AI-chip. Vært: Trine Duvander (trdu@borsen.dk)
"Concours Show Stopper" is a high-octane tribute to the unsung heroes of the restoration world — the builders, painters, tuners, and trim magicians who bring forgotten classics roaring back to life. Whether it's a barn find or a junkyard dream, this uptempo roots-rock jam celebrates the craft, the passion, and the pure magic it takes to turn metal memories into showstopping legends.
As we wrap up our Miracles Vol. 1 series, we conclude with the miracle of Jesus settling the storm. Through this message, and this miracle, Pastor Brandon teaches us that truth known must be lived out as we walk through this life. Because there will be storms that challenge the truth of God's love for us. But with Jesus and by trusting in Him and what He has said, no storm will be too big! - Key Verses // Mark 4:1-41 - For Sermon Notes, the Connect Card, and our other online resources: https://linktr.ee/Celebrationchurchlive
Dans cet épisode, je discute pour la seconde fois avec Pascal SEGAULT, directeur d'un EHPAD associatif depuis 7 ans. Ancien éducateur spécialisé, formé à la gestion des ressources humaines et titulaire du CAFDES, il partage une vision engagée et profondément humaine du management en EHPAD.Nous parlons d'abord de gestion des ressources humaines, non pas comme une suite de contraintes administratives, mais comme la base du fonctionnement d'un établissement et de son équilibre budgétaire. Pascal évoque l'influence des écoles de relations humaines, et notamment l'idée qu'un salarié écouté et responsabilisé est un salarié plus engagé.L'organisation du travail fait l'objet d'un soin tout particulier : chaque professionnel peut choisir son jour de repos fixe et ses horaires selon son rythme personnel. Le planning tourne sur deux semaines pour favoriser l'équilibre vie pro/vie perso. Résultat : un turnover réduit de 24 % à 4,55 %. Pascal insiste sur la confiance accordée aux équipes. Les pauses (y compris la pause cigarette) sont autogérées. Moins de contrôle, plus de responsabilisation. Ce climat favorise la stabilité : la réduction des CDD a permis une économie de 293 000 € en 4 ans, réinjectée dans les effectifs et la revalorisation salariale des CDI.La qualité de vie au travail est au cœur du projet. Cela passe par des formations managériales pour toutes les fonctions, des groupes de co-développement, une circulation fluide de l'information et des réunions réellement utiles. L'objectif : une posture plus horizontale, plus collaborative.Côté communication (vous avez forcément vu les posts de Pascal), l'établissement utilise LinkedIn et TikTok pour valoriser ses projets et attirer de nouveaux profils. Pascal mise sur une communication sincère, en cohérence avec les valeurs vécues au quotidien. Résultat : un infirmier expérimenté a postulé via TikTok, séduit par la transparence de l'offre.Enfin, nous revenons sur le projet "salle de bal" (sujet du premier podcast), un projet dont l'idée est de ne pas attendre le dernier jour de l'année pour faire la fête. Grâce à une levée de fonds (47 000 € collectés), l'établissement organise désormais des thés dansants mensuels, renforçant les liens entre résidents et professionnels.
Cristopher Sánchez became a trendy pick in the spring for a top five NL Cy Young Award finish.He pitched like one in Thursday's 6-4 victory over the Giants. He struck out 12 batters, the most by a Phillies left-hander since Cole Hamels struck out 13 in his no-hitter against the Cubs in his final start for the organization in 2015.We discuss Sánchez's dominance but also look at the Phillies' jumbled outfield situation, the upcoming Marlins series and more, including a few of your questions!Upgrade your wardrobe and save on @trueclassic at trueclassic.com/FOUL! #trueclassicpodGet 20% off your first Slab Pack or card purchase by going to ArenaClub.com/FOUL and use code FOUL.Love The Phillies Show? You can purchase your very own Phillies Show t-shirt by 47 Brand here! We've got maroon and powder blue shirts in stock!@The Phillies Show Subscribe to the show on YouTube and follow us on social media!@Foul Territory We're part of the Foul Territory Network. Follow FT and find more shows, including Fair Territory!If you like The Phillies Show, subscribe and give us a five-star review!
The guys discuss a strong Dean Kremer start for the Orioles in a needed spot.
Kyle Forcini looks back at the lackluster week of Phillies baseball and the concerns we've seen. But the Phillies have a new "stopper" in the rotation and his name is Jesus Luzardo and he pitches tonight.
Mike Johnson and Abe Gordon continue to react to the Atlanta Braves losing their three game series against the Tampa Bay Rays after losing the rubber match yesterday 8-3, and also explain why Chris Sale has to start pitching better and be the stopper for the Braves and their pitching staff.
Andrew and Scott discuss the highs of the series win versus Pittsburgh and the lows of the series loss to Detroit. Thank you to Gametime for sponsoring today's show! Download the Gametime App, create an account, and redeem code BRONX for $20 off your first purchase. Thank you to Factor Meals for sponsoring today's show! Go to FactorMeals.com/BRONX50 for 50% off! For sales inquiries, contact sales@bluewirepods.com. Find us on Substack: https://bronxpinstripes.com/ Get in touch: @BronxPinstripes @Andrew_Rotondi @ScottReinen Intro/Outro music: One Way Ticket, by Anitek.
durée : 00:15:23 - Journal de 8 h - "Les violences morales, sexistes et sexuelles dans le monde de la culture sont systémiques, endémiques et persistantes". Voilà le constat de la commission de l'Assemblée nationale sur les violences sexistes et sexuelles dans ce secteur. Son rapport est publié ce mercredi mais a déjà filtré.
durée : 00:15:23 - Journal de 8 h - "Les violences morales, sexistes et sexuelles dans le monde de la culture sont systémiques, endémiques et persistantes". Voilà le constat de la commission de l'Assemblée nationale sur les violences sexistes et sexuelles dans ce secteur. Son rapport est publié ce mercredi mais a déjà filtré.
durée : 00:15:23 - Journal de 8 h - "Les violences morales, sexistes et sexuelles dans le monde de la culture sont systémiques, endémiques et persistantes". Voilà le constat de la commission de l'Assemblée nationale sur les violences sexistes et sexuelles dans ce secteur. Son rapport est publié ce mercredi mais a déjà filtré.
In this episode, I welcome back Avi Stopper, Founder of Denver's BikeStreeets.com, for an update on their new mobile app, routing tools, community adventure rides, and the exciting Destinations initiative.Thank you so much for tuning in! If you enjoyed this episode, please share it with a friend and subscribe to the podcast on your preferred listening platform. Also, don't forget to check out the Active Towns Channel for more video content.Helpful Links (note that some may include affiliate links to help me support the channel):
Skenes stops the losing streak. Oneil Cruz makes a big impact. The Pirates win a baseball game! Let's talk about it and enjoy the day off.https://linktr.ee/bridgetobuctoberhttp://steelcitypirates.com/Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/bridge-to-buctober/donationsAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
Aujourd'hui, Zohra Bitan, Bruno Poncet et Antoine Diers débattent de l'actualité autour d'Alain Marschall et Olivier Truchot.
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Breaking down a perfect fit defensive lineman for the Giants in the 2nd round!
Along I-93 in northern New Hampshire you'll find a spot that's been attracting families for three and four generations now. In order to get those...
Greg breaks down a trio of Wizards games post All-Star break, including Kyle Kuzma's return to Washington. Greg highlights the standout defensive performance of rookie Kyshawn George, Tristan Vukcevic's confusing minutes and a hard-fought win over Brooklyn. Enjoy!
In this adorable episode of Bunny Nibbles
[GRAINE DE METAMORPHOSE] Xavier Pitois reçoit Anna Roy, sage-femme et chroniqueuse. Comment dépasser les injonctions sociales liées au corps ? Par où commencer lorsqu'on veut amorcer une métamorphose, qu'elle soit physique ou intérieure ? Que révèle ce cheminement sur notre rapport à nous-mêmes et aux autres ? Au micro de Xavier Pitois, Anna Roy aborde son propre parcours pour mieux comprendre les défis liés au poids et proposer une autre manière d'aborder l'obésité avec nuance et bienveillance. Épisode #118Quelques citations du podcast avec Anna Roy :"Le Body Positivisme est absolument nécessaire mais il ne faut pas que cela vire à l'injonction d'accepter son corps tel qu'il est.""Il faut avouer cette part en soi de grossophobie et la combattre.""Il faut avoir une main tendue et de l'amour comme posture par défaut."Thèmes abordés lors du podcast avec Anna Roy :00:00 Introduction05:38 Qu'est-ce que l'obésité ?06:44 Obésité et isolement.07:33 Blessures invisibles et addiction au sucre.15:27 Body Positivisme et méfaits de la culpabilisation.17:00 L'obésité : un sujet peu traité par les médias.18:29 L'obésité heureuse est-elle possible ?19:06 Comment lutter contre la grossophobie ?20:31 Les outils pour se sevrer du sucre.22:46 Apprivoiser la honte.24:08 L'angoisse du retour à la vie normale.27:31 Stopper le jugement sur les autres.28:26 Connecter avec sa nouvelle identité.32:26 Le rôle de la bienveillance.Avant-propos et précautions à l'écoute du podcast Recevez un mercredi sur deux l'inspirante newsletter Métamorphose par Anne GhesquièreFaites le TEST gratuit de La Roue Métamorphose avec les 9 piliers de votre vie !Suivez nos RS : Insta, Facebook & TikTokAbonnez-vous gratuitement sur Apple Podcast / Spotify / Deezer / CastBox/ YoutubeSoutenez Métamorphose en rejoignant la Tribu MétamorphosePhoto (c) Juliette Paulet,_Allary Editions Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.
Today: Religious literacy to the rescue? How are we to have more open and honest conversations about public questions? Brandon and his University of Virginia students have some answers.
Today, I'm talking about the importance of preparing for tax season specifically when it comes to issuing 1099 forms, including when you need to issue one and the deadline. Join me in this episode to learn how and when you need to obtain your W9 forms and issuing your 1099's from your contractors. Also mentioned in today's episode: 1099 requirements 4:10 Compiling contractor payments 4:43 Gathering W9 forms 6:50 Preparing for 1099 issuance 9:53 If you enjoyed this episode, please rate, review and share it! Links: FREE LIVE CLASS Make Taxes Easier and Stash an Extra $152k in Your Savings: https://go.sunlighttax.com/free