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Ever feel like you're doing everything right — but still feel overwhelmed inside? In this episode, Anna talks with psychotherapist and anxiety expert Tati Garcia about the hidden experience of high-functioning anxiety. While it often looks like success from the outside, many high achievers quietly struggle with pressure, overthinking, and the fear of slowing down. In this conversation, Anna and Tati unpack what high-functioning anxiety really looks like, how anxiety can show up physically even when you're not consciously worried, and the first small step to breaking the cycle. Apply for a free time management coaching session: freetimecall.com. Full shownotes: abouttimepodcast.com/316
Este episodio es diferente.Por primera vez, Tatiana Ramos deja el rol de host para responder las preguntas. Junto a su equipo, habla sobre quién es realmente, su historia y el camino que la llevó a encontrarse con Dios.
A weekly magazine-style radio show featuring the voices and stories of Asians and Pacific Islanders from all corners of our community. The show is produced by a collective of media makers, deejays, and activists. Tonight our show is called Feed Your Heart. Host Miko Lee speaks with the collaborators and creators of the Asian American Pacific Islander Restorative Justice Network: Elli Nagai-Rothe & Tatiana Chaterji. Restorative Justice is a movement and a set of practices that stands as an alternative to our current punitive justice system. It focuses on people and repairing harm by engaging all the impacted people working together to repair the harm. RJ is built off of ancient indigenous practices from cultures around the globe, including Native American, African, First Nation Canadian, and so many others. To find out more about Restorative Justice and the work of our guests check out Info about the AAPI RJ Network on the Ripple website: www.ripplecollective.org/aapirjnetwork NACRJ conference in New Orleans: www.nacrj.org/2026-conference Show Transcript [00:00:00] Opening Music: Apex Express Asian Pacific expression. Community and cultural coverage, music and calendar, new visions and voices, coming to you with an Asian Pacific Islander point of view. It's time to get on board the Apex Express. [00:00:44] Miko Lee: Good evening. I'm your host Miko Lee, and tonight our show is called Feed Your Heart. And we are speaking about the collaborators and creators of the Asian American Pacific Islander Restorative Justice Network with the collaborators, Elli Nagai-Rothe and Tatiana Chaterji. [00:01:03] Restorative justice is a movement and a set of practices that stands as an alternative to our current punitive justice system. It focuses on people and repairing harm by engaging all the impacted folks working together to repair that harm. RJ is built off of ancient indigenous practices from cultures around the globe, including Native American, African, first Nation Canadian, and many others. So join us as we feed your heart. [00:02:01] Welcome to Apex Express. My lovely colleagues, Elli Nagai-Rothe, and Tatiana Chaterji. I'm so happy to speak with you both today. I wanna start off with a question I ask all of my guests, and Ellie, I'm gonna start with you and then we'll go with to you, Tati. And the question is who are your people and what legacy do you carry with you? [00:02:24] Elli Nagai-Rothe: Hmm. I love that question. Thank you. My people come from Japan and Korea and China and Germany. My people are community builders and entrepreneurs survivors, people who have caused harm, people who have experienced harm people who've worked towards repair dreamers, artists and people who like really good food. [00:02:51] And I carry their legacy of resilience and of gaman, which is a Japanese word that's a little hard to translate, but basically means something like moving through moving through the unbearable with dignity and grace. , And I carry a legacy to continue healing the trauma from my ancestral line the trauma and justice. And that's informs a lot of the work that I do around conflict transformation and restorative justice. [00:03:19] Miko Lee: Thank you so much. And Tati, what about you? Who are your people and what legacy do you carry with you? [00:03:25] Tatiana Chaterji: Thank you for the question, Miko. The first thing that comes to mind, my people are the people we're, we're, we're coming up on the cusp of a possible teacher strike, and I'm thinking about workers and the labor, movement and comrades in my life from doing work as a classified school worker for about a decade. [00:03:46] Then my people are also from, my homelands. The two that I feel very close to me are in Finland, from my mom's side, and then in Bengal, both India, west Bengal, and Bangladesh. And my people are also those who are facing facing the worst moments of their life, either from causing harm or experiencing harm as a survivor of violence. [00:04:08] I think about this a lot and I think about also the smaller conflicts and tensions and issues that bubble up all the time. So my people are those that are not afraid to make it better, you know, to make it right. And I carry, oh gosh, what legacy do I. I wanna say first kind of the legacy of the Oakland RJ movement that really nurtured me and the youth that I've encountered in schools and in detention on the streets in the community. [00:04:39] Youth who are young adults and becoming bigger, older adults and, and, and also elders. To me. So sort of that's whose legacy I carry in shaping the. Society that we all deserve. [00:04:52] Miko Lee: Thank you both for answering with such a rich, well thought out response that's very expansive and worldly. I appreciate that. Ellie, I think it was two years ago that you reached out to me and said, I'm thinking about doing this thing with Asian American Pacific Islanders around restorative justice and you're working on a project with Asian Law Caucus. Can you like roll us back in time about how that got inspired, how you started and where we're at right now? [00:05:22] Elli Nagai-Rothe: Yeah, absolutely. Yeah, I'd forgotten that we, I had reached out to you at the early stages of this miko. The idea for this emerged in the context of conversations I was having with Asian Law Caucus around, anti-Asian violence and restorative justice. There was an enthusiasm for restorative justice as a pathway toward healing for AAPI communities. One of the things that kept coming up in those conversations was this assumption that there are no, or very few Asian restorative justice practitioners. And I kept thinking this, that's not true. There are a lot, plenty of Asian practitioners. And I think that for me reflects the larger context that we're living in the US where Asians are both at the same time, like hyper visible, , right. In terms of some of the violence that was happening. If you roll back several years ago I mean it's still happening now, but certainly was, was at the height several years ago. So like hyper visible around that, but also in terms of like my model minority status, but also at the same time like invisibilized. So that strange paradox. And so my part of that was thinking about, well, what, what opportunities exist here, right? How can we actually bring together the restorative justice, Asian restorative justice practitioners in the Bay Area to be like regionally focused to come together to talk about how do we bring our identities into more fully into our work, , to build community with each other, and then also to build this pathway for new, for emergent practitioners to join us in this work. That's a little bit of the background of how it came to be, and I'd love Tati to speak more to some of that context too. [00:07:00] Tatiana Chaterji: Yeah, thanks Ellie. Definitely thinking about work that I was doing in Chinatown and San Francisco. I was working with Chinese Progressive Association just before actually Asian Law Caucus reached out to us with this idea. I wanna shout out Lewa and Cheyenne Chen Le Wu, who are really envisioning an alternative process for their the members of this organization who are immigrant monolingual Cantonese speakers and, and working class immigrants. What are the options available to them to respond to harm and violence in any, any number of ways? And one of the things that we really saw. [00:07:37] Miko Lee: Non carceral, right? Non carceral options to violence and harm, right? [00:07:42] Tatiana Chaterji: Yes, exactly. That's exactly what we were thinking of is, and in the period of time where people are talking about anti-Asian hate, they're talking about hate crimes and violence against Asian Americans, there's a simultaneous rhetoric and a belief that Asian people love police or want police interventions or actually believe al punishment. And no doubt that can be true for, for some of our community, but it is not the overwhelmingly dominant truth is what I would say. What I would say, and that actually by believing that Asian folks loved the police was its own bizarre and very toxic racial stereotyping that. Very vulnerable communities who are non-English speakers and living un under wage exploitation and other conditions. [00:08:34] And so what we were doing was looking at what are the ways that we think about justice and the right way to respond to things and our relational ecosystems. And we began with messages from our home and family dynamics and kind of went outwards and, and everything was presented in Cantonese. I'm not a Cantonese speaker. I was working closely with those two women I mentioned and many others to think about. What is. Not just the, the linguistic translation of these concepts, but what is the cultural meaning and what applies or what can be sort of furthered in that context. And there were some very inspiring stories at the time of violence across communities in the city, and particularly between the Chinese community and the African American community and leaders in those spaces working together and calling forth the abolitionist dreams that were kind of already there. [00:09:28] That people just want this kind of harm or violence not to happen. They don't want it to happen to anyone again. And this is some thing I think about a lot as a survivor, that that is the dominant feeling is like we, you know, vengeance are not desires for some sort of punishment or not, that this should not happen again. And what can we do to prevent that and really care for the healing that needs to happen. [00:09:53] Miko Lee: I appreciate you bringing up this solidarity between the African American and, and specifically Chinese American communities wanting a more abolitionist approach. We don't hear that very much in mainstream media. Usually it's pitted the Asian against black folks. Especially around the anti-Asian hate. We know that the majority of the hate crimes, violence against Asian folks were perpetrated by white folks. That's what the data shows, but the media showed it was mostly African American folks. So I really appreciate lifting that part up. So take us from that journey of doing that work with a Chinese progressive association, powerful work, translating that also from, you know, your English to Chinese cultural situations to this network that you all helped to develop the A API Restorative Justice Network, how did that come about? [00:10:45] Tatiana Chaterji: Part of the origin story is, is work that had been happening across the Bay Area. I was speaking about what's happening in Chinatown. There's also this coalition of community safety and justice that really has been diving into these questions of non carceral response to harm and violence. Then on the other side of the bay in Oakland, the Asian Pacific Environmental Network has been working with Restore Oakland to sit with survivors of crime and build up skills around circle keeping and response. So that's just a little bit of this beautiful ecosystem that we are emerging out of. It almost felt like a natural extension to go here, you know, with a pen and restore Oakland. They were thinking a lot about interpretation and language justice. And so this is also just pulling these threads together for more robust future and practice. [00:11:41] Miko Lee: Thank you so much for making those connections. We'll put a link in our show notes because we did a recent episode on the Coalition for Community Safety and Justice, and particularly the collective Knowledge based catalog, which captures all these different lessons. So I think what you're pointing out is that all these different groups are coming together, Asian American focus groups to, Pacific Islander focus groups to be able to find, alternatives to the Carceral system in an approach to justice. [00:12:08] Elli Nagai-Rothe: Well, so it came about through lots of conversations, lots of collaborations I feel so, honored to be able to collaborate with Tati in this work. And other folks who were, , partnering alongside the Asian Law Caucus in this larger grant that was being offered to address anti-Asian hate and violence. Ultimately through many conversations, just wanting to create a space that was created for and by Asian restorative justice practitioners. And as far as we know, it's the only. Gathering or, or network if it's kind in the Bay Area, maybe in the nation. Somebody who's listening maybe can chime in if that's true, that's not true. But as far as we know, that's the only space that's like this. And part of what we've wanted to create is certainly first and foremost because this is so much of the work of restorative justice, at least for us, is about relationships. At the end of the day, it's how we relate to each other and thinking of, of different ways than is often modeled in mainstream world about how we relate to each other. [00:13:11] We wanted to start with those relationships and so. We created space for current practitioners in the Bay Area to come together. And we had a series of both in-person and virtual conversations. And really it was a space to offer to really build this sense of community and these relationships to share our knowledge with each other, to offer really deep peer support. And specifically we were really interested in bringing and weaving more of our cultural and ancestral ways of being into our practice of restorative justice. And so what does that look like? Can we bring more of those parts of ourselves into our work, our lived experiences into our work, and how we address and hold conflict and harm. I'll speak for myself, such a nourishing space to be part of with other practitioners. Just really allowing more of like a holistic sense of ourselves into our work. And what all the things that could that have come from that. So we've been continuing to meet, so what has this been like two years now? [00:14:12] Almost? We had, in addition to the existing practitioners who were based in the Bay Area, we held a training for like an introduction to restorative justice training that built on the things we were thinking about and learning about with each other around our Asian identities. And that was for folks who were kind of in an adjacent field, social workers, therapists, educators, folks who are doing work with API community workers. And so then we train them up and then they join this net, this larger network. And we've continued to have conversations every month, in a community of practice space. For me, such a wonderful space to be able to connect, to continue, explore together how we can bring more of ourselves into our work in a more relational, integrated and holistic way. [00:14:56] Miko Lee: Thanks so much for that overview. I wanna go into it a little bit more, but I wanna roll us back for a moment. And Tati, I'd love if you could share with our audience what is restorative justice and what does a restorative justice practitioner do. [00:15:08] Tatiana Chaterji: The big one. Okay. I think of restorative justice as an alternative to criminal and punitive responses to harm and wrongdoing. I think that's where the definition really comes to life. Although people who are in the field will say that actually it's before the harm or wrongdoing happens, and that it's about cultural norms and practices of caring for each other in a communal way, having each other's back relying on relationships, which also includes effective communication and compassionate communication. So Restorative justice in how I've learned it in the, in the Oakland community was, a lot of the practices were carried by a European Canadian woman named Kay PRUs, who's one of my teachers and who had also, studied with first Nations people in Canada that ish and klingit people, and that there's been some controversy over how she carried those teachings and that there's native people on all sides who have sort of taken a stand. [00:16:12] I wanna name, this controversy because it feels important to talk about cultural appropriation, cultural survival, that circle practice and how circle is done in many restorative justice spaces will feel very foreign to a person who is indigenous, who perhaps has these ancestral practices in their own lineage, their own history and family. And this is because of colonialism and, and erasure and displacement, and. Reckoning with all of this as immigrants who are on native land, you know, from all, most of us in the API RJ network. Just what, what is this? What, how do we grapple with this? You know, how do we do an appropriate recognition of practices and traditions and how do we build and think about interconnection or the inherent and intuitive knowledge that we have to do non-car work, which is at the core, I've sort of expanded off of your prompt, but an RJ practitioner is someone who holds space for for these conversations, kind of when things are the hardest, when there is heartbreak and betrayal and harm or conflict and also what, the work of setting conditions for that not to happen or for the way that we move through those difficulties to go as best as possible. [00:17:43] Miko Lee: Thank you for expanding on that. I'm wondering if Ellie, you could add to that about like what is a circle practice, what does that look like? [00:17:51] Elli Nagai-Rothe: A circle practice. It can look like a lot of different things, but ultimately it's being in a circle, and being able to connect with each other. Again, I talked about how relationships are at the core. That might be when we're, when we're in circling together, we are relating to each other. We're telling our stories. We're weaving our stories together that might be happening when there's no conflict and when there's no harm. In fact, ideally that's happening all the time, that we're being able to gather together, to share stories, to be known by each other and so that if and when conflict does occur, we know how to, how to connect and how to come back to each other because the relationships matter. We know. Okay. 'cause conflict will happen. We will, we are gonna hurt each other. We're humans. That's part of being human. We're gonna mess up and make mistakes. And so a prac having a practice to come back together to say, well, what, what can we do to repair this? How can we make this right, as Tati was saying? [00:18:46] And, and so then circling, be circling up and having a circle practice can also mean when there is conflict, when harm has happened, how can we have people be able to hear one another, to understand what's happening and to repair as much as possible. Um, while doing that again in the ecosystem of relationships. So sometimes that's happening with a, a couple folks and sometimes that's happening with a whole community or a whole group of people. [00:19:10] Ayame Keane-Lee We're going to take a quick pause from the interview and listen to Tatiana recite an excerpt from the A API RJ Network Reflection document. [00:19:18] Tatiana Chaterji: Mirrors of each other. To prepare for our closing ritual, I pull a small table with a candle and incense from the back room into the circle. This is our last in-person gathering, and we want to end with building a collective altar for the future of RJ that is rooted in the wisdom of our Asian cultural lineages.Please think of an offering to make this vision a reality. I explain that we use our imaginations to sculpt the air in front of us, shaping it into the essence of the offering. As I have done in prison with incarcerated artists who create textures and depth of story without material props, supplies, or the frills of theater production on the outside. [00:20:01] I volunteered to go first and model how this is done. Standing and walking towards the altar. I bring my fingers to the center of my chest and pinch an imaginary ball of thread. I want to deepen my understanding of Bengali peacemaking and justice traditions. I say pulling the thread in a vertical motion, stretching up and down to create a cord of groundedness. Realizing there are actually many dimensions. I also pull the thread forwards and backwards in a lateral direction, saying this means looking to the past and dreaming the future. I hold this grided net, gather it around my body and ceremoniously place it on the altar. Others echo the desire for bringing forward parts of their Asian lineage that aren't accessible to them. People create shapes with their bodies, making offerings to the altar that symbolize taking up space, staying grounded in a world that is shaky, reciprocity with the earth, ancestors and descendants, bringing in more ancestors permission to create and play forgiveness to self and others. Timelessness with Earth as a mirror and patience. [00:21:14] Sujatha closes her eyes and forms an image for us through stream of consciousness. She says, I see indra's net infinite with shimmering diamonds. At each point, I notice the goosebumps raise on the skin of my arms as she continues it is as if she has reached inside of me pulling from the sutra of ra, which was part of my childhood. It is a piece of scripture and a spiritual concept that deeply grounds my practice in RJ as an adult. I see her hands, which she has raised, and fingers trembling, glimmering ever so slightly. She speaks slowly carrying us with her in a visualization de drops, mirrors. I cannot be who I am meant to be unless you are who you are meant to be. RJ is the material of the web. This was a rare moment of belonging for me, as I seamlessly reflected in the speech and cultural symbols of a peer seamless. This integration as South Asian and as an RJ practitioner, seamless, being able to hang onto a reference from religious traditions that are hidden in the diaspora or distorted by mainstream social messaging. [00:22:28] Ayame Keane-Lee We hope you enjoyed that look into the AAPI RJ Network Reflection. Let's get back to the interview. [00:22:35] Miko Lee: Can you each share what brought you to this work personally? [00:22:40] Tatiana Chaterji: Sure. As a young activist involved in Insight Women of Color against Violence and aware of the work of Critical Resistance, and I had a pretty clear politics of abolition, but I didn't. Really think that it impacted me as personally as it did when I was in my early twenties and I suffered a brain injury from a vehicular assault, a hit and run that may have been gang affiliated or, a case of mistaken identity. My recovery is, is, is complicated. My journey through various kinds of disabilities has shaped me. But I think the way that I was treated by the police and by the justice quote unquote justice system, which I now call the criminal legal system, it because there was no justice. I sort of don't believe that justice is served in the ways that survivors need. yeah, I really, I got very close to the heart of what an RJ process can do and what RJ really is. I got introduced to Sonya Shah and the work of Suha bga and I was able to do a surrogate victim offender dialogue and then later to facilitate these processes where people are kind of meeting at the, at the hardest point of their lives and connecting across immense suffering and layers of systemic and interpersonal internalized oppression. [00:23:59] Just so much stuff and what happens when you can cross over into a shared humanity and recognition. It's just, it's just so profound and and from that space of healing and, and, and compassion, I've been able to think about. Other ways that RJ can look and have sort of been an advan, what is it evangelical for it? You know, I think that because we don't see these options, I, I, because I knew people, I was able to connect in this way and I would just shout out David uim, who's the one who told me that even if I didn't know the person who harmed me, that this was possible. People so often give up, they're just like, well, I have to feel this way. I have to just deal with it. Swallow the injustice and the lack of recognition. Just sort of keep going. Grit your teeth. I think we don't have enough knowledge of what's possible and so we harden ourselves to that. Yeah, I'll stop there. Thanks for listening. [00:24:59] Miko Lee: Oh, that's the gaman that Ellie was talking about, right? In Chinese we say swallow the bitter. Right. To be able to just like keep going, keep moving. And I think so much of us have been programmed to just something horrible happens. You just swallow it, you bite it down, you don't deal with it and you move on. Which is really what RJ is trying to teach us not to do, to recognize it, to to talk to it, to speak to it, to address it so that we could heal. Ellie, what about you? How did you get involved? [00:25:30] Elli Nagai-Rothe: Yeah. And Tati, thanks so much for sharing. I always appreciate hearing. I like your story and what draws you to this work is so powerful. For me, I'll take it a little bit more meta further back. What draws me to this work is my family history. I'm multiracial. My family, my ancestry comes from many different places. And part of that my grandparents, my aunties, uncles, Japanese Americans who were, who were born, some of them, my grandpa, and his family here in Oakland, in this area. And, um, other my grand, my grandmother and her family in Southern California. During World War II, were unjustly incarcerated along with 125,000 Japanese Americans in ways that were so deeply harmful and traumatic and are so parallel to what is happening right now to so many communities who are being detained and deported. And that experience has deeply, deeply impacted certainly my community's experience, but my family's experience of trauma. [00:26:30] And I'm yonsei, fourth generation Japanese American. And though I wasn't directly involved or impacted by that incarceration, I feel it very viscerally in my body, that feeling of loss, of disconnection of, of severance from community, from family, from place, and, . Even before I knew what restorative justice was, I was in my body striving to find justice for these things that have happened? That drew me into conflict transformation work and ultimately restorative justice work. And that's where I found really at the, at the core, so much of this, this intuitively feels right to me. I didn't wanna have a place of, I wanted to heal. That was what I wanted to feel the feeling of, can we heal and repair and can I heal and repair what's happened in this, my experience and my family's experience and community's experiences? [00:27:23] That work ultimately led me to do restorative justice work here in the Bay Area. I started doing that work with schools and community organizations. And so I really hold the bigger possibilities of what's possible when we think differently about how we hold relationships and how we hold deep, deep pain and harm and what's possible when we can envision a different kind of, a world, a different kind of community where we can take accountability for things that have happened. And knowing that all of us at, at different places, I know that's true in my family line, have caused harm and also experienced harm, that those things can happen at the same time. And so how can we have a sense of humanity for what's possible when we actually come, come to each other with a humility of what, how can we heal? How can we heal this together? How can we make this as right as possible? So that's, that's a bit of my story. [00:28:13] Miko Lee: Thank you both for sharing. [00:28:15] Ayame Keane-Lee Next we're going to take a music break and listen to Miya Folick “Talking with Strangers” MUSIC [00:34:05] that was “Talking with Strangers” by Miya Folick [00:34:09] Miko Lee: I'm wondering, I know this, Asian American, Pacific Islander, RJ Circle, a bunch of it has been online just because this is how we do in these times and I'm wondering if there's something unique and empowering about doing this online. I bring that up because there have been many in person gatherings. I've been a part of this circle, so I'm really happy to be a part of it. For me, the vibe of being in person where we're sharing a meal together, we're in a circle, holding onto objects, making art together is very different from being online. And I'm wondering, if there's something uniquely positive about being online? [00:34:47] Tatiana Chaterji: I would just say that yeah, the intimacy and the warmth and the sort of the strength of the bonds that we have in this network are, are so beautiful and it's possible to have incredible, virtual experiences together. A lot of us do movement art or theater or creative. We have creative practices of our own. And when we lead each other in those exercises, we are really just a feeling of togetherness. Like that's so special. And for people who have had that online, they know what I'm talking about. That can be really, really incredible. And, you know, we've been in the Bay Area and really in Oakland, but we want to expand or we want to think about what are all the ways that we can connect with other people. Around this intersection of API identity and RJ practice. And so that's the potential, I guess is what I would say is just to really, move across time and space that way. [00:35:47] Miko Lee: Ellie, do you have thoughts on this, the online versus in real life? [00:35:51] Elli Nagai-Rothe: I think there's so many wonderful things about being in person because I feel like so much, at least I don't know about your worlds, but my world, so much of it is online these days on Zoom. There is something really special about coming together, like you said, to share a meal to be in each other's physical presence and to interact in that way. At the same time when we're online, there's still so much warmth and connection and intimacy that comes from these relationships that I've been building over now, like two years for some of us. The opportunities are more about being able to reach accessibility, right? Folks to be able to come online and, and potentially even broaden. I mean, who knows what that will look like right now it's regionally focused, but maybe there's a future in which that happens to be outside the Bay Area. [00:36:31] Miko Lee: And speaking of the future and where it's going. This initially started by, funding from one of the Stop the Hate grants, which sadly has concluded in the state of California. I'm wondering what this means for this, process that it doesn't have any set funding anymore what does the future look like? [00:36:52] Elli Nagai-Rothe: We really wanna continue this miko and being able to continue to meet and gather in community. Right now we're continuing to meet monthly in our community of practice space to support each other and to continue to explore really this intersection, right, of restorative justice in our idea, our Asian identities. There's so much more opportunity to continue to build together, to create a larger community and base of folks who are exploring and ex doing this work together. Also for the intention of what does that mean for our communities? How can we find ways to take this practice that many of us do, right? [00:37:27] As practitioners, how can we translate that to our community so that we know, we know at its core that this work, there are things from our cultural practices that are just. So familiar, right? Certain practices around how we you know, this radical, some of the things we talked about, radical acts of hospitality and care are so intuitive to our Asian communities. How can we translate that practice in our work so that we can continue to make this these pathways available to our community? So we hope to continue, we wanna continue to gather, we wanted to continue to build, um, and make space for more people to join us in this exploration and this opportunity for yeah, more expansion of what's possible for our communities. [00:38:11] Miko Lee: For me as somebody who's Chinese American and being a part of this network, I've learned from other Asian American cultures about some of the practices, well, I did know about things like tsuru folding a paper crane as part of the Japanese American culture, learning different things from different community members about elements that are part of their cultures and how they incorporate that, whether that's yoga or a type of, Filipino martial art or a type of Buddhist practice. And how they fit that into their RJ work has actually helped me kind of expand my mind and made me think about more ways that I could bring in my own Chinese American culture. So for me, that was one of those things that was like a blessing. I'm wondering what each of you has learned personally about yourself from being part of this network. [00:39:02] Tatiana Chaterji: What comes to mind is the permission to integrate cultural identity and practice more explicitly and to know that there are others who are similarly doing that. It's sort of this, this acceptance of sort of what I know and how I know it that can be special. You know, in the, in the similar way that I mentioned about cultural appropriation and the violence that various communities have felt under capitalism and white supremacist structures. Everything there is, there is, I don't, something, something so magical to just step outside of that and be like, this is, it's a mess. It's a mess out there. We are constantly battling it. How do we actually not make ourselves smaller right here? [00:39:50] Miko Lee: I totally hear that. And I'm thinking back to this gathering we had at Canticle Farms, where I think Tati, you said, when was the last time you were in a space where you were the only Asian person and how you walk through that mostly white space and what is that like for you and how do you navigate? And so many people in the room are like, what their minds were blown. For me, I'm in mostly Asian American spaces and Pacific Islander spaces, so I'm like, oh wow, that wasn't always true for me. So that's my time in my life right now. So it was really fascinating to kind of ponder that. [00:40:24] Tatiana Chaterji: Yeah. And I think many of us, I'm so glad that you feel that because many of us, don't really know what exactly our ancestral technologies might be, or even what to name. This gave us, again, permission to look back or to reframe what we know or that we've understood from community as being from various traditions, homelands, you know, longer legacies that we're carrying and just to, to, to, to celebrate that or to even begin to, to, to bring language to that and feel a place of our own belonging. Whereas, I mean, as a South Asian diasporic member of the diaspora, I see so many the words that are coming from Sanskrit, which has its own, history of castes violence and like sort of what the expansion and the co-optation is, is, is really quite massive to the point where I feel like I'm on the outside and I don't believe that I should own it any more than anyone else. But I think if there's a way that it's practiced that is in, in, in integrity and less commodified because it is ancient, because it is medicine. You know, that I, I deserve to feel that, you know, and to tend to be welcomed into it in, in this you know, outside of the homeland to be here in Asian America or whatever it is, and to claim it is something quite special. [00:41:50] Miko Lee: Love that. Thank you for sharing. Ellie, what about you? What have you learned from being in part of this network? [00:41:55] Elli Nagai-Rothe: I was just gonna say like, yes, Tati to all the things you just said. So appreciate that. I, it's very similar, similar in some ways to what Tati was saying, like the, the permission giving, the space that we, oh, permission giving that we give to each other, to to claim, like, to claim and reclaim these practices. And I think that's what I heard so often from people in this network and continue to hear that this, the time, our time together and the things that we're doing. Feel like it's, it doesn't feel like a so much about like our, what is our professional practice. And I say professional with quotes. It's more of like, how do we integrate this part, this really profound journey of ancestral reclaiming, of remembering, of healing. And, and when we do that, we're working from this really. A deep place of relationship, of interdependence, of where we're like, our identity and our sense of who we are is so connected to our communities. It's connected to the natural world. And so like how can we, that's part of what I've appreciated is like really in this deep way, how can we remember and reconnect to, in some cases, like practices, pre-colonial practices and wisdom that was suppressed or taken away, certainly in my and family experience, right? [00:43:11] It was very deliberately state sponsored violence severed those practices. And so some of this reclaiming as a part of my own healing has been really given me more voice and space to say like, yeah, I can, I can, I want to, and I, that's part of my own practice, but also share that with the, the groups that I'm part of. And that feels a little bit. We talked about that a little bit in the network of how do we share these practices in ways that feel authentic, like Tati said, with integrity, but also what does that mean to share these practices in spaces that are outside of, you know, Asian communities? I don't know, like that's a whole other conversation, right? It feels because there is so much cultural co-opting that's happening, right? And so I feel, I think that's why this network is so valuable and, and helpful to be in a space. Of course, it's a very diverse group of Asian identities and yet it's a space where we can feel like we can try on in these practices to see what that feels like in our bodies in ways that feel really like, have a lot of integrity and a lot of authenticity and to support each other in that. [00:44:12] And so that we can feel able to then share that in spaces than, in our communities and the work that we're doing in terms of, restorative justice work. [00:44:19] Miko Lee: So how can our audience find out more about these circles if they wanna learn more about how they could potentially get involved? [00:44:29] Elli Nagai-Rothe: The best way to go is to look at the Ripple Collective website, ripple collective.org. We have some information about, the A API Restorative Justice Network there. I'm hoping that we can continue this. I really am excited about, members of the network continuing to stay in relationship with each other, to support each other. Tati and I are gonna be offering a session at the upcoming national Association for Community and Restorative Justice Conference that's happening in New Orleans in July. We're gonna be sharing what we learned about our experiences with this network and centering our Asian identities and restorative justice practice. We're gonna be holding a a caucus space for Asian practitioners to come and join us. Yeah, so what else? Tati. [00:45:14] Tatiana Chaterji: We're also compiling reflections from various participants in the network around what this has meant. What, what have they learned or discovered, and what's to come. I think a question that I've had, a question that we've been stewing on with other South Asian, , practitioners is what does you know, what does caste how does caste show up and reckoning with harm doing? And our communities are not a monolith, and, and as we are treated as part of a, sort of like a brown solidarity, third world movement space in the West, there's just a lot of unrecognized and unnamed oppression that is actively happening. So, you know, really like being, being brave and humble to, to, to talk about that. [00:46:01] Miko Lee: Thank you both so much for sharing your time with me today. [00:46:05] Elli Nagai-Rothe: Thanks so much, Miko. [00:46:06] Tatiana Chaterji: Thanks, Miko. [00:46:07] Ayame Keane-LeeTo finish off our show tonight, we'll be listening to “Directions” by Hāwane. MUSIC [00:49:55] That was “Directions” by Hāwane. [00:49:57] Miko Lee: Thank you so much for listening tonight. Remember to reconnect to your ancestral technologies and hold in the power of tenderness. To find out more about restorative justice and the work of our guests, check out info about the A API RJ network on the Ripple website, ripple collective.org, and about the conference that Ellie and Tati will be presenting at at the NAC RJ Conference in New Orleans, both of which we'll have linked in our show notes. [00:50:30] Please check out our website, kpfa.org/program/apex Express to find out more about our show and our guests tonight. We thank all of you listeners out there. Keep resisting, keep organizing, keep creating, and sharing your visions with the world because your voices are important. Apex Express is produced by Ayame Keane-Lee, Anuj Vaidya, Cheryl Truong, Isabel Li, Jalena Keane-Lee, Miko Lee, Miata Tan, Preeti Mangala Shekar and Swati Rayasam. Tonight's show was produced by me Miko Lee, and edited by Ayame Keane- Lee. Have a great night. The post APEX Express – 3.12.26- Feed Your Heart appeared first on KPFA.
Mensagem da Pra. Tati Soeiro pregada no dia 01 de março de 2026.www.adai.com.br
Lukewarm Christian struggling in a cycle of sin and condemnation discovers the freedom and redemptive power of Jesus Christ.
TATIANA FELTRIN é YouTuber. Ela é apaixonada por literatura e faz parte de uma comunidade chamada de “BookTubers”, que são canais que publicam vídeos sobre livros. O Vilela já escreveu um livro, mas demorou porque antes ele teve que aprender a ler.
Mensagem do Pra. Tati Soeiro pregada no dia 15 de fevereiro de 2026.www.adai.com.br
Wir melden uns aufgrund der Kriegssituation im Nahen Osten mit einer Sonderfolge zum Thema "Fliegen trotz Krise". Viele von euch haben uns geschrieben:Soll ich stornieren? Ist ein Stopover im Nahen Osten gefährlich? Warum holen Airlines Crews zurück?
C.J. and guest Julian Doan trap themselves in a glass case of emotion as they dissect the real-time techno thriller and morality play, PHONE BOOTH (2003), starring Colin Farrell and directed by Joel Schumacher. . C.J. Arellano is an NYC-based writer/filmmaker who plays in the sandboxes of horror, comedy, and fantasy. His films have played at fests internationally and have won a handful of awards along the way. He is fueled by hope, spreadsheets, ube ice cream, his trusty asthma inhaler, and posting stupid bullshit on Instagram stories. Check out his work at CJarellano.com. Find him on IG: @cjlgvaJulian Doan is a writer and director preoccupied with the mundane, ironic, and absurd. His short films "Raspberry" (Sundance 2021) and "Long's Long Lost & Mini Mart" (Tribeca 2025), are the first 2 of his "dead dad trilogy", to be completed with his 1st feature HALF SWEET (Gotham Project Market 2021) - a Tati-esque satirical tragicomedy about a family keeping a dying father alive against his will. Together, these films all explore the commodification of grief. He's also an editor and assistant editor with credits such as THE SYMPATHIZER, IN TREATMENT, MAINSTREAM, and WILD WILD COUNTRY. He's a recently converted cat daddy. Find him on IG: @heyitsjulian
Juckreiz ist mehr als nur ein bisschen Kratzen. Für viele Kinder ist er eine der belastendsten Beschwerden überhaupt und für euch als Eltern oft genauso zermürbend. Wenn euer Kind sich nachts hunderte Male kratzt, kaum schläft und am nächsten Tag erschöpft und gereizt ist, leidet die ganze Familie mit. Genau darüber sprechen Tati und Felix in dieser Episode gemeinsam mit einer der führenden Expertinnen, Prof. Dr. Sonja Ständer, für chronischen Juckreiz in Deutschland. Ihr erfahrt, warum Juckreiz unbedingt ernst genommen werden sollte, wie er entsteht und weshalb er bei Neurodermitis so hartnäckig sein kann. Es geht um konkrete Alltagstipps, sinnvolle Pflege, nächtliche Strategien und die Frage, wann Medikamente notwendig sind. Eine Folge für alle Herzis, die verstehen wollen, was hinter dem Juckreiz steckt und wie ihr eurem Kind wirklich helfen könnt. ✨
Andávamos desencontradas e valeu a espera, a escritora Tati Bernardi fala sobre livros que adorou e o papel que tiveram na sua vida (vídeo disponível no Youtube, já que a conversa foi via zoom).Os livros que a Tati escolheu:A Pediatra, Andrea Del Fuego;Mudar: Método, Edouard Louis (chega em Abril 2026 a Portugal);Complexo de Portnoy, Philiph Roth;O Lugar, Annie Ernaux.Outras referências:Edouard Louis:Para Acabar de Vez com Eddy Bellegueule;O Colapso;Quem Matou o meu Pai;História da Violência.A Escrita como uma Faca, Annie Ernaux;Vínculos ferozes, Vivian Gornick;Um Romance Russo, Emmanuel Carrère.Alguns dos livros que escreveu e estão em PT:Depois a Louca sou eu;Você Nunca Mais Vai Ficar Sozinha;Homem-Objeto e Outras Coisas Sobre Ser Mulher;A Boba da Corte.O que recomendei:No Jardim do Ogre, Leila Slimani;Sair da Nossa Impotência Política, Geoffroy de Lagasnerie;Trilogia de Copenhaga, Tove Ditlevsen;Amor estragado, Ana Bárbara Pedrosa;Giovana Madalosso:Suíte Tóquio;Tudo pode ser Roubado.A série que a Tati referiu:Feud: Capote vs. The Swans.Os livros aqui:www.wook.pt
Leah and Tati do a deep dive into Leah's testimony - from new age influencer to wholehearted Jesus follower.
This week on Romance in Colour, Terri and Tati take a walk in the paranormal side with author Dani M Ward @danim.ward We talkj world building, paranomral themes, and what it takes to craft Black people at the center of it all.About Dani:Dani M. Ward is a captivating author who delves into the mysterious realms of the paranormal, weaving intricate tales that blur the lines between the known and the unknown. With a Bachelor's degree in Anthropology and a Master of Fine Arts in Creative Writing, Dani brings a unique perspective to her storytelling. Drawing upon her academic background, she creates rich, immersive worlds filled with vivid characters and haunting narratives.Balancing her creative pursuits with family life, Dani is a devoted mother of two who often finds inspiration in the everyday magic of parenting. When she's not engrossed in her writing, she savors the finer things in life: indulging in a glass of wine, exploring gourmet cuisines, or seeking out hidden culinary gems.Through her work, Dani invites readers on a journey into the paranormal, where they can explore the unexplainable while enjoying the best smut. With each page turn, she melds her passions, captivating her audience with stories that linger long after the last chapter.Follow Romance in Colour on Social MediaIG @RomanceInColourTwitter: @RomanceNColour Facebook Groups: www.facebook.com/groups/RomanceinColourFollow Terri Ley at her Instagram @Author_Terri_LeyFollow Yakini on her Instagram @OurNycHomeFollow Tati Richardson on social media and pick up her books here, here
Les animateurs plongent dans le côté sombre des paris sportifs mobiles, une dépendance qui piège de nombreux jeunes et dévaste des familles entières sous l’illusion du gain facile. L'astrologue Laurie Lévesque analyse la conjonction rare entre Saturne et Neptune. Dans un climat mondial déjà secoué par les éclipses, cet alignement planétaire inédit depuis 1989 promet un grand basculement de nos structures sociales. Entre mises en garde et opportunités de réaliser vos rêves, découvrez comment traverser ce tumulte, sans oublier les actualités insolites de Tati.Voir https://www.cogecomedia.com/vie-privee pour notre politique de vie privée
En casa éramos siete hermanos: Tati, Titi, Toti, Tuti, Fruti, Hansel y yo, que me llamo Gretel. Con mi papá y mi mamá, nueve. “Nueve panzas”, decía siempre mi mamá. Porque, aunque ellos trabajaban todo el día, muchas veces no teníamos ni para cenar un pancito. ¡Pero no se preocupen! Hansel y yo nos internamos en lo más oscuro del bosque… Y encontramos una casita de chocolate… Y a una malvada bruja carnívora… Y entonces… ¡Ay! ¿Les dije que no tenían que preocuparse?Mi Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/cuentos_e_historias_infantiles?igsh=MW82OGs2eDZ6MnRrZQ==Mi Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/share/1BaLjQVv7n/
Zach ventures to the Dark Carnival of cinema that was the collaboration of Tod Browning & Lon Chaney as he and guests Sterling Cook (Tour de Tati) and filmmaker Jake Algier (Writer/Actor/Performer, Doctor Tenn) unpack THE UNHOLY THREE (1925) and THE UNKNOWN (1927) Join the trio as they learn a bit more about the formation of the collaboration, unpack production stories that range from the heartfelt to the absolute craziest, and settle upon how this combo managed to create films that not only work today but also influenced the works of others as the history of cinema has progressed. Be sure to follow Jake and her filmmaking journey on Instagram & Threads Insta: https://www.instagram.com/horrormoviejake/?hl=en Threads: https://www.threads.com/@horrormoviejake?igshid=NTc4MTIwNjQ2YQ== To Hear Sterling and Zach extrapolate Jacques Tati on the ‘Tour de Tati’series , please visit YBR PRESENTS at https://anchor.fm/ybrpresents . Subscribe and Enjoy! and follow the journey of Sterling & Matt Cassani’s upcoming project, ‘Pleasure Chest’ on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/pleasurechestmovie?igsh=cWo2d3c3MzY4MWc1 and Threads: https://www.threads.com/@pleasurechestmovie?igshid=NTc4MTIwNjQ2YQ==
Wenn euer Kind eine sichtbare Hautkrankheit hat, betrifft das nicht nur die Haut, sondern oft auch das Herz
Un parent qui consomme du cannabis au lieu de l'alcool...c'est mal vu? Laurie Dupont, cheffe de contenu culture et société au magazine ELLE Québec, dévoile mardi à l'équipe des Lève-tôt qu'elle a troqué sa consommation d’alcool pour des jujubes au THC/CBD. Elle raconte son expérience. L'équipe des Lève-tôt discute ensuite des moyens de permettre à son couple de survivre à une histoire d'infidélité, grâce à un véritable travail d'introspection. Il semble que cette technique ait fonctionné pour Beyoncé. Finalement, Tati lance le débat : est-ce une bonne idée de payer ses enfants pour qu'ils adoptent de bonnes habitudes de vie, comme lire ou aller jouer dehors? Cette tendance populaire aux États-Unis ne fait pas l'unanimité au sein de l'équipe!Voir https://www.cogecomedia.com/vie-privee pour notre politique de vie privée
Lors de cette émission des Lève-tôt, Louise Sigouin donne des trucs pour rencontrer l'amour dans la cinquantaine. Il semblerait que les rencontres soient plus complexes à cette période de la vie. Tati dévoile également un enjeu qui occupe une bonne partie de son quotidien : des sleepovers de ses enfants. Comment fixer des règles tout en restant cool en tant que parent? De son côté, Isabelle présente une réflexion intéressante sur la force mentale des athlètes, et les comportements que cela lui inspire pour sa propre vie.Voir https://www.cogecomedia.com/vie-privee pour notre politique de vie privée
No programa de hoje, o professor Renato Cardoso respondeu à pergunta da aluna Tati. Ela relatou que está vivendo um relacionamento destruído: o marido a traiu com uma pessoa que, até então, era sua melhor amiga. A traição ocorreu, inclusive, dentro da própria casa da aluna, na cama do casal. Embora ela o tenha perdoado, não consegue deixar essa situação para trás e, todos os dias, se recorda do ocorrido.Marido narcisistaAlém disso, outra aluna, do Rio de Janeiro, contou que está tentando salvar o casamento, mas, pelo que tem observado, percebe que a única alternativa mais sensata para a situação seria o divórcio. Ela descobriu que está casada com um homem narcisista e possuído por demônios. Segundo a aluna, ele não quer se tratar nem espiritualmente nem psiquiatricamente. Por isso, ela pediu a ajuda dos professores para encontrar forças para se livrar definitivamente dessa situação.Bem-vindos à Escola do Amor Responde, confrontando os mitos e a desinformação nos relacionamentos. Onde casais e solteiros aprendem o Amor Inteligente. Renato e Cristiane Cardoso, apresentadores da Escola do Amor, na Record TV, e autores de Casamento Blindado e Namoro Blindado, tiram dúvidas e respondem perguntas dos alunos. Participe pelo site EscoladoAmorResponde.com. Ouça todos os podcasts no iTunes: rna.to/EdARiTunes
Walking around my local woods with some more reflections on our Slowing Down theme, plus a huge thank you to members of the Walk the Pod lunchtime walk club: Rob in New Zealand, Marcel in The Netherlands And in the UK: - Catherine in Ealing - Nick in Worcester - Jim in Manchester - Gaynor and Tati in Brockley - Hannah, Sam and Katie in SW London - Helen in Crystal Palace - John in Muswell Hill - Hilary from Trundl - Mum in the beautiful Malvern hills - Dad in rural Norfolk - DJ Postie Nige - and Rear Admiral Tim in The Independent People's Republic of Croydon Join the club for theme voting, private Discord server, and beautiful Walk the Pod artwork stickers! https://www.patreon.com/c/rachelwheeley Your 62nd Series of Walk the Pod starts on Monday 2nd March.
Support the podcast by subscribing to our Patreon to get access to hundreds of hours of bonus content, early access to upcoming episodes, and the ability to chat with the hosts! www.patreon.com/mediumpopcorn Justin and Tati review the 1996 dramedy, "The First Wives Club". They discuss why Brandon put it on the list, the performances of Goldie Hawn, Diane Keaton, and Bette Midler, and why so many folks enjoy this movie. Don't forget to leave a five star review on your favorite podcast app! MP Links: - patreon.com/mediumpopcorn - youtube.com/@MediumPopcornPodcast - https://www.teepublic.com/stores/medium-popcorn Hosts: Justin Brown Tatiana Albandos Medium Popcorn Podcast "Medium Popcorn" is a production of Casa de Collins LLC. Special thanks as always to our producer Lluvia Gilliam.
Support the podcast by subscribing to our Patreon to get access to hundreds of hours of bonus content, early access to upcoming episodes, and the ability to chat with the hosts! www.patreon.com/mediumpopcorn Justin and Tati share their thoughts on the new Rian Johnson Benoit Blanc film, "Wake Up Dead Man". They discuss the themes, performances, and rank the three Knives Out movies! Don't forget to leave a five star review on your favorite podcast app! MP Links: - patreon.com/mediumpopcorn - youtube.com/@MediumPopcornPodcast - https://www.teepublic.com/stores/medium-popcorn Hosts: Justin Brown Tatiana Albandos Medium Popcorn Podcast "Medium Popcorn" is a production of Casa de Collins LLC. Special thanks as always to our producer Lluvia Gilliam.
Support the podcast by subscribing to our Patreon to get access to hundreds of hours of bonus content, early access to upcoming episodes, and the ability to chat with the hosts! www.patreon.com/mediumpopcorn Justin and Tati breakdown what is now Disney's biggest box office hit ever, "Zootopia 2". They discuss whether or not the sequel is a worthy follow up and as always, Justin gets weird... Don't forget to leave a five star review on your favorite podcast app! MP Links: - patreon.com/mediumpopcorn - youtube.com/@MediumPopcornPodcast - https://www.teepublic.com/stores/medium-popcorn Hosts: Justin Brown Tatiana Albandos Medium Popcorn Podcast "Medium Popcorn" is a production of Casa de Collins LLC. Special thanks as always to our producer Lluvia Gilliam.
Mensagem da Pra. Tati Soeiro pregada no dia 07 de setembro de 2025.www.adai.com.br
Was würden wir unserem jüngeren Ich zu Beginn der Fliegerkarriere gern sagen? Am Anfang unserer Fliegerkarriere standen Aufregung, viele Fragen und der Wunsch, alles richtig zu machen. In dieser Folge von Heldinnen in Strumpfhosen schauen wir zurück und sprechen darüber, was wir unserem jüngeren Ich zu Beginn der Ausbildung und der ersten Einsätze gern mitgegeben hätten.Es geht um Erwartungen, Unsicherheiten und den Umgang mit Fehlern – und darum, sich selbst durch diesen Job kennenzulernen.Eine Folge für neue Flugbegleiter:innen, für alle, die über eine Bewerbung nachdenken, und für diejenigen, die sich erinnern möchten, wie alles angefangen hat.Viel Spaß beim Reinhören & always happy landings,eure Tati und Ellen - die Heldinnen in Strumpfhosen
While the world around us tells us we constantly need more (queue Nothing Else by Forrest Frank,) we can choose to intentionally live in gratitude by walking in relationship with Jesus Christ. Join Leah and Tati in a conversation about forming a heart posture of gratitude and realizing the abundance we already have, freeing us from the lie that we need more.
If the world tells us that we need more to be happy, why is more never enough to fulfill us? Join Leah and Tati in a conversation on the deception of materialism and the true fulfillment in Christ.
Wer hätte gedacht, dass wir in diesem Jahr noch eine Folge reinquetschen können? In dieser Folge blicken wir gemeinsam zurück – ehrlich, ungefiltert und so, wie wir sonst nur auf der Crewbank in der Pause irgendwo über dem Atlantik reden. ❤️✈️Wir sprechen über Tatis Kündigung im Nebenjob, darüber, warum Hilfe annehmen oft schwerer ist als gedacht, und über Reisen, die wir dieses Jahr verpasst haben.Außerdem werfen wir einen Blick auf unser Spotify Wrapped – und sind ehrlich überwältigt von unserer großen Hörerschaft. Diese Folge ist deshalb auch ein riesiges Danke an euch: an alle, die uns schon lange begleiten, und an alle neuen Zuhörer:innen, die dieses Jahr dazugekommen sind
"In Hopeful Expectation"This week, as we celebrate, we continue towards the weeks till Christmas with the third week of Advent—Joy.#NewHopeKailua #MarioQuezada #TatiQuezada #2025Sermon #OnlineChurch #ChurchOnline #ChurchInKailua #YouTube #YouTubeChannel #Subscribe #Sub #Follow #LikeIf this is your first time visiting us, we'd like to get to know you: https://bit.ly/nhk-connectSubscribe to receive our latest messages: https://bit.ly/nhk-sermonsTo support this ministry and help us continue to reach people all around the world click here: https://newhopekailua.org/givingSee what God can do through you. Be a part of our New Hope Kailua family, whether in-person or online!——Stay ConnectedDownload our church app: https://bit.ly/nhk-appWebsite: https://newhopekailua.org/New Hope Kailua Facebook: https://bit.ly/nhk-fbNew Hope Kailua Instagram: https://bit.ly/nhk-igAudio-only SermonsApple Podcast: https://apple.co/3LYiqNTGoogle Podcast: https://bit.ly/nhk-googlepodcastSpotify: https://spoti.fi/3LUtqvP
Ein kleines Lebenszeichen von den Heldinnen in Strumpfhosen! Wochenlang hat sich Tati auf ihren Kapstadt-Flug gewünscht, doch dann kam alles anders als geplant
What does the Bible say about hospitality? Why is it important? Tati and Leah discuss Scriptural support of hospitality and how to live it in our modern lives.Tati's InstagramLeah's Blog, YouTube, ApparelRosaria Butterfield - Author Mentioned
Tati Guzman knows Medicare! As an HMSA health plan specialist and the daughter of a 92-year old (!) parent, she understands how overwhelming options and enrollment can seem at first.Tati gives an overview of what Medicare is, when to sign up, and why the dates "October 15 through December 7" are brought up annually (answer: that's Open Enrollment time for Medicare). In this conversation, some details about telehealth coverage in 2026 and where to attend free Medicare Workshops, hosted by HMSA. Kathy With a K is your host."Hawaii Matters", a public service community program that airs on Sundays at 6:30 a.m. Hawaii across Pacific Media Group Oahu radio stations: KDDB 102.7 Da Bomb | KQMQ HI93 | KUMU 94.7 KUMU | KPOI 105.9 The WaveTo be featured or for inquiries on "Hawaii Matters", please email: kathywithak@1059thewavefm.com
Logo no início do programa de hoje, Renato e Cristiane Cardoso responderam a uma pergunta muito comum que chega até eles: sexo antes do casamento.Na ocasião, Diego, de 18 anos, contou que namora há quase um ano e meio com uma jovem da mesma idade. Os dois sempre acompanham a Terapia do Amor. Contudo, há algum tempo, despertou neles um grande apetite sexual. Eles decidiram se guardar para o casamento, mas têm medo de que algo aconteça antes disso.Além disso, Diego disse que eles planejaram casar daqui a dois anos, mas ele tem receio de não resistir à namorada e também a outras mulheres pelas quais se sente tentado. Ele perguntou se os dois devem ou não ter relação sexual antes do casamento.Em seguida, os apresentadores também leram o pedido de ajuda da aluna Tati. Ela contou que está em um namoro recente, mas o namorado está preocupado sobre como lidar com a vontade de ter relação sexual. Os dois não querem fazer nada antes do casamento e, por isso, ela perguntou como devem agir para se manterem firmes na fé em Deus.Bem-vindos à Escola do Amor Responde, confrontando os mitos e a desinformação nos relacionamentos. Onde casais e solteiros aprendem o Amor Inteligente. Renato e Cristiane Cardoso, apresentadores da Escola do Amor, na Record TV, e autores de Casamento Blindado e Namoro Blindado, tiram dúvidas e respondem perguntas dos alunos. Participe pelo site EscoladoAmorResponde.com. Ouça todos os podcasts no iTunes: rna.to/EdARiTunes
If you've ever hit a breaking point, the kind that forces you to stop pretending you're fine, this episode is medicine. Emily Fletcher sits down with actress and creative force Tati Gabrielle (You, Chilling Adventures of Sabrina, Kaleidoscope) to explore how pain becomes power when you're willing to meet it head-on. From depression in Atlanta to an identity unraveling to discovering a spiritual practice that rebuilt her from the inside out, Tati shares the raw moments that became her initiation into authenticity. This conversation isn't about bypassing pain, it's about alchemizing it. Turning the collapse into clarity. Turning the wound into wisdom. Turning the struggle into strength. In this episode, we explore: • How to recognize when pain is trying to redirect you • The morning ritual that helped Tati rebuild her life • The difference between numbing pain and transforming it • Why meditation can be a portal for emotional alchemy • The “mind palace” technique she used to rewire her future • How intuition becomes louder when you stop abandoning yourself • What inner child healing actually looks like in daily life • A more empowered way to relate to fate, free will, and resilience Timestamps: • [02:01] When everything broke open — Tati's turning point and the moment pain became her invitation inward. • [06:26] The 7 a.m. ritual that saved her — The simple, self-created practice that pulled her out of depression. • [10:06] Anxiety vs. soul alignment — How she learned to read her body and separate fear from intuition. • [12:18] The “red carpet” vision — The emotional anchor that fueled her transformation and early manifestation wins. • [17:38] The power pivot — How her internal shift created rapid external change (manager, agent, bookings). • [24:38] The body map of intuition — The clearest explanation of where intuition lives vs. where anxiety lives. • [32:49] Life as a video game — A reframe for navigating pain, destiny, and empowerment with play instead of pressure. • [40:57] Mini-resets that regulate the nervous system — The exact micro-practices Tati uses when she spirals. • [48:30] Inside the darkest moments — How she navigates panic, bipolar swings, and the instinct that brings her back. • [53:06] Acting as devotion — How she channels characters as real souls — and why creativity can be healing. Guest Links: • Follow Tati → @tatigabrielle • Watch Tati's work → Netflix: You, Chilling Adventures of Sabrina, Kaleidoscope • IMDb → imdb.com/name/nm5354727 More from Emily & Ziva: • Join Ziva Magic: makemagic.zivameditation.com • Learn Ziva Meditation: preview.zivameditation.com • Free Masterclass: learn.zivameditation.com • Get 15% off with promo code WHYTHIS: whythis.zivameditation.com • Follow on Instagram: @zivameditation • Visit upgradedformulas.com/emily and use code EMILY for 20% off everything at UpgradedFormulas.com. These statements have not been evaluated by the FDA. Products are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. Consult your healthcare provider if pregnant/nursing, on medication, or have a medical condition.
How can God use us in our imperfections? Dive into scriptural evidence of how God uses us in our weaknesses and when we don't seem to quite fit the part.Reach out to Tati on IG!Email Leah: pardeeleah@gmail.comShop Clothed In Praise: humanely made Christian apparel
Acest material poate conține mesaje publicitare și plasare de produse. Unele dintre produsele, serviciile sau brandurile menționate sunt promovate prin parteneriate comerciale, iar prezentarea acestora reprezintă o reclamă.Opiniile exprimate de gazde și invitați sunt personale și nu reflectă neapărat poziția oficială a sponsorilor sau partenerilor noștri. Încurajăm publicul să efectueze propria cercetare înainte de a lua decizii bazate pe informațiile prezentate în acest podcast.
This week, we are honored to have author C.M. Barnes @thewritebarnes join Tati on the podcast. She's a wife, mom and engineer who is crafting hot romance and an even hotter series with her Winston Hills trilogy.About C.M.:C.M. Barnes is a Black and urban romance and erotica author with a voice as bold as it is tender. Hailing from Cleveland, Ohio, she brings both heart and heat to the page through vivid storytelling and emotionally charged narratives. With a background in civil engineering, C.M. crafts her stories with precision—laying the groundwork for characters who reflect the resilience, complexity, and beauty of Black love.Her writing is inspired by a deep belief that Black women deserve love, happiness, and devotion without having to suffer for it. Her stories celebrate joy, sensuality, and emotional honesty, making space for Black women to be cherished exactly as they are.When she's not writing or reading voraciously, C.M. enjoys building intricate LEGO sets and spending quality time with her two children, diving into the things they love most.For more, visit her website: www.thewritebarnes.com Follow Romance in Colour on Social MediaIG @RomanceInColourTwitter: @RomanceNColour Facebook Groups: www.facebook.com/groups/RomanceinColourFollow Yakini on her Instagram @OurNycHomeFollow Tati Richardson on social media and pick up her books here, here
durée : 00:03:33 - Le Regard culturel - par : Lucile Commeaux - Cette semaine est sorti au cinéma le dernier film de l'Ukrainien Sergueï Loznitsa, une fable cruelle et grotesque qui donne bonne forme à l'arbitraire et la violence du régime soviétique à la fin des années trente.
durée : 00:03:33 - Le Regard culturel - par : Lucile Commeaux - Cette semaine est sorti au cinéma le dernier film de l'Ukrainien Sergueï Loznitsa, une fable cruelle et grotesque qui donne bonne forme à l'arbitraire et la violence du régime soviétique à la fin des années trente.
En este episodio, analizamos la carta de Marisol. Marisol quiere acompañar a su amiga Tati que está atrapada en una relación tóxica que la está destruyendo emocional y económicamente.A través de esta historia, reflexionamos sobre los límites en las relaciones, la culpa de alejarse y el dolor de ser víctima indirecta de una situación destructiva.Además, hablamos del verdadero significado de juzgar, por qué poner límites no es egoísta y cómo seguir queriendo a alguien sin destruirte en el proceso.
durée : 00:58:52 - Toute une vie - par : Pauline Maucort - Pionnier du cinéma muet, Max Linder a influencé Chaplin, Tati, Pierre Etaix, Jean Dujardin et tant d'autres. Inventeur des plus grands gags de l'histoire du cinéma muet, il se suicide pourtant à 43 ans, obligeant sa jeune épouse à le suivre, et laissant orpheline leur fille de 16 mois. - réalisation : Cécile Laffon
How does the enemy sell lies, keeping us bound in a cycle of sin and shame? Tune in as Leah and Tati unpack the power of truth in Jesus Christ and His blood that liberates us from the deception, lies, and sin that the enemy has held over us. Tati's IGLeah's Website
What does a life of Christian obedience look like? How can we take our faith seriously without being a Pharisee? Works vs faith?! Tune in!Article with charts about the various Bible translationsTatiana's NASB study BibleLeah's NIV study BibleReach out to Tati!Leah's Website
Nino takes a victory lap after her night with the regimental commander. Suffice to say, she hit her mark and EVERYONE is noticing the improved morale. Tati, fresh off her first heartbreak, seeks advice from the strangest and spoOookiest of places. Special thanks to Matti Wells, Kevin DiFazio, Matthew Kastner, Chloe Familton, Will Cloud, Justin - The DM's Guide, GM Ashowan, Nate Scott Jones, Mars Sultar and someone who wished to remain anonymous - for providing additional mission pool points or "biscuits" for us to use in times of great peril (and bad rolls).Want to support the folks in the cockpit who are making this show happen?Tip us on Kofi, and follow us on social media https://linktr.ee/wingwomenpodGeneral CW: War/Military Themes and Violence, Language, Conversations about Homophobia in 1940's Russia, Suggestive dialogue and situations. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
What does it look like to live in healthy, unrivaled awe of the Lord? Leah and Tati discuss fearing the Lord and it's opposite - fear of man.Reach out to Tati! @TatianaCleffiChavLeah's YouTube Channel Clothed In Praise - humanely made Christian apparelEmail us: pardeeleah@gmail.com
"We passed Tati's llamas." Jess is here to discuss some huge news in the WNBA regarding Napheesa Collier and Commissioner Cathy Engelbert AND to touch on some key College Football storylines including her September Heisman on October 1. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
durée : 00:48:31 - Affaires sensibles - par : Fabrice Drouelle - Aujourd'hui dans Affaires sensibles, l'histoire de Playtime, le film qui a ruiné Jacques Tati. Vous aimez ce podcast ? Pour écouter tous les autres épisodes sans limite, rendez-vous sur Radio France.
Tati Machado pode ganhar espaço no Mais Você, nas manhãs da Globo, que começa a pensar mais no futuro do programa.E tem o novo dilema do Café Pelando! Tudo no Café Antagonista #98 apresentado por José Inácio Pilar! Café Antagonista 2025 é o seu ponto de encontro semanal para ficar bem informado. Apresentado por José Inácio Pilar, o programa vai ao ar todos os sábados, às 10h e 16h, trazendo uma análise inteligente dos principais acontecimentos do Brasil e do mundo. Com um jornalismo independente e sem amarras, debate política, economia, notícias e bastidores exclusivos com um olhar crítico e direto. Inscreva-se no canal para não perder nenhuma edição do Café Antagonista 2025! #caféantagonista Apoie o jornalismo Vigilante: 10% de desconto para audiência do Café Antagonista https://bit.ly/oa-cafe10 Siga O Antagonista no X: https://x.com/o_antagonista Acompanhe O Antagonista no canal do WhatsApp. Boletins diários, conteúdos exclusivos em vídeo e muito mais. https://whatsapp.com/channel/0029Va2SurQHLHQbI5yJN344 Leia mais em www.oantagonista.com.br | www.crusoe.com.br
Leah and Tati discuss taking every thought captive (2 Corinthians 10:5). Also....a big announcement! We would love to hear from you! Email us at pardeeleah@gmail.comLeah's new YouTube channelClothed In Praise: shop humanely made Christian apparel. 100% of profits go to Convoy of Hope.