Podcasts about tnd

  • 49PODCASTS
  • 141EPISODES
  • 50mAVG DURATION
  • 1EPISODE EVERY OTHER WEEK
  • May 12, 2025LATEST

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Best podcasts about tnd

Latest podcast episodes about tnd

Métamorphose, le podcast qui éveille la conscience
Comment prendre en main sa santé mentale (ou celle des autres) avec le psychiatre Hugo Baup #591

Métamorphose, le podcast qui éveille la conscience

Play Episode Listen Later May 12, 2025 70:13


[MÉTAMORPHOSE PODCAST] Anne Ghesquière reçoit le Dr Hugo Baup, psychiatre. Comment différencier un mal-être passager d'une détresse psychologique ou d'un trouble psychique ? Quels signes doivent alerter ? Qui et quand consulter ? Accompagner un proche en souffrance ? Dans cet épisode, le Dr Hugo Baup nous éclaire sur les troubles psychiques les plus fréquents, de la dépression aux troubles bipolaires en passant par la schizophrénie, l'anxiété ou le TDAH. Ensemble, ils décryptent les signaux et les ressources comme les TCC pour mieux comprendre, soutenir et agir. Prêt.e à prendre en main notre santé mentale ? Le guide pratique du Dr Hugo Baup Comment ça va toi ?, est publié chez Larousse. Épisode #591Quelques citations du podcast avec le Dr Hugo Baup :"Il faudrait plutôt parler de santé globale : la tête et le reste du corps, tout s'entremêle de manière très intime.""Vos proches, vos amis, votre famille sont souvent un bon thermostat de comment vous allez."Thèmes abordés lors du podcast avec le Dr Hugo Baup :00:00 Introduction03:22 Lien santé mentale / santé physique04:29 Les signes d'un état psychique fragilisé05:43 Quand consulter ?09:24 Psychiatre / psychothérapeute / psychologue : qui consulter ?11:56 Rôle ambivalent des aidants14:32 Quelle question poser à quelqu'un qui va mal ?18:39 Comment être sûr qu'on est bien accompagné ?22:33 La place des médicaments dans la psychothérapie 25:16 Les médicaments qui ont fait leur preuve29:40 Le témoignage de Nicolas Demorand34:42 Une approche personnalisée de la psychothérapie37:46 Que sont les TND ?40:20 Les difficultés de poser des diagnostics 43:51 Le sentiment d'être différent des autres46:12 Le trouble de l'adaptation47:11 Les critères de la dépression49:39 TDAH : la vérité sur le médicament. 52:15 Troubles de personnalité et schizophrénie 01:03:07 Les trouble à symptomatologie somatique01:07:27 L'importance des regards croisés entre les différentes spécialitésAvant-propos et précautions à l'écoute du podcast Découvrez Objectif Métamorphose, notre programme en 12 étapes pour partir à la rencontre de soi-même.Recevez chaque semaine l'inspirante newsletter Métamorphose par Anne GhesquièreFaites le TEST gratuit de La Roue Métamorphose avec 9 piliers de votre vie !Suivez nos RS : Insta, Facebook & TikTokAbonnez-vous sur Apple Podcast / Spotify / Deezer / CastBox/ YoutubeSoutenez Métamorphose en rejoignant la Tribu MétamorphosePhoto DR Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.

Témoignages de femmes autistes

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 19, 2025 19:51


Dans cet épisode deux témoignages de femmes autistes avec HPI qui parlent de leurs diagnostics tardifs. De leurs différences, de leur maternité, leurs enfants, et ce que le fait d'être identifiées autistes leur a apporté. Dans 15 jours on continue la chronique sur les femmes autistes. Collectif et pétition pour changer de regard sur le HPI et prendre en compte la réalité des difficultésTémoignage accouchements femme autiste

Tous pareils ou presque !
Ep.35 - Léa, grandir aux côtés d'un frère décalé

Tous pareils ou presque !

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 8, 2025 26:51


Léa a 30 ans.Elle a grandi aux côté de son frère Anton, porteur de handicap.Comment trouver sa place quand l'attention de toute la famille est centrée sur les difficultés et les besoins d'un grand frère ayant un handicap complexe ? Comment créer du lien avec un frère si différent ?Comment supporter le regard des autres ?Face à ces questions et à la souffrance, Léa a d'abord choisi de mettre de la distance avec ce frère "décalé" et ses parents.Et puis, des rencontres et des expériences très particulières lui ont permis de cheminer et de créer enfin une autre relation avec ce frère dont elle s'était écartée.Dans cet épisode, Léa revient sur son parcours avec beaucoup de lucidité, de tendresse et d'humour.Elle en a fait aussi un livre magnifique : ZENO - Léa Hishfeld - Editions du Seuil*****************************Tous pareils ou presque, est le podcast de l'autisme et de la neurodiversité qui aide à faire un pas de côté.Plus d'infos sur le site : Tous Pareils ou Presque !Pour me contacter : touspareilsoupresque@gmail.comTous pareils ou presque, c'est aussi une newsletter mensuelle dans laquelle on trouve encore plus de retours d'expérience, des ressources, et des partages plus personnels.Pour s'abonner : Inscription newsletterMerci à Benjamin Roa (Station Woosh) pour le montage/mixageHébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.

Filles et femmes autistes 1

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 5, 2025 39:37


Dans ce 1er épisode sur le thème de l'autisme au féminin, on essaie de repérer les signes de TSA chez une petite fille sans déficiences intellectuelle. On regarde aussi ces signes chez l'adolescente, et chez l'adulte. Et on détaille pourquoi il est très important de détecter cela dans l'enfance. On parle aussi de ce que vivent et traversent des femmes qui ont été diagnostiquées sur le tard. Vous pouvez compléter avec vos témoignages en commentaire ou en m'écrivant en privé sur hello@mayaelle.org si vous le souhaitez.

SPECIAL PODCASTHON 2025 ! Asso Les PBZ - Parents d'autistes avec HPI

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 15, 2025 29:10


Du 15 au 21 mars 2025 c'est Podcasthon.org! Nous sommes plus de 1600 podcasts du monde entier, 47 pays, 650 podcasts français, à un épisode à une association de notre choix. Vous vous en doutez, j'ai choisi une association qui parle d'autisme, avec HPI, et de soutien aux parents. Cette association, les PBZ ( Papillons Bleus Zébrés ) qui nous beaucoup apporté à notre famille, et aujourd'hui je participe activement en tant que présidente bénévole à la vie de l'asso. Alors je vous en dis plus dans cet épisode.Si vous voulez soutenir ce podcast et mon travail, vos étoiles sur spotify, commentaires youtube et avis ApplePodcast sont la plus jolie manière. En plus ça ne fait super plaisir ! Grâce à vous, ce podcast de niche est régulièrement entre le 40ème et la 150ème place en #santementale dans les classements ApplePodcast !Groupe privé FB de parents et proches d'enfants TSA + HPI Instagram des PBZSite web des PBZ

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Ep.34 - Isabelle et la création d'un lieu ressource pour des ados autistes

Tous pareils ou presque !

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 9, 2025 35:46


Isabelle est la maman d'Alexandre, un jeune ado autiste sévère.Depuis l'annonce du handicap, le meilleur rempart pour Isabelle face la peur et  au découragement, c'est l'action.Avec d'autres parents, elle a d'abord créé  l'association Autisme Ensemble 95, puis l'Atelier bleu, un lieu et une plateforme de services pour des ados et jeunes adultes autistes.Depuis plus de 10 ans, elle invente des solutions pour son fils mais elle s'engage aussi dans les instances nationales pour faire avancer la cause de toutes les familles concernées. Isabelle est une militante qui garde aussi le sens de la nuance.Dans cet épisode, on parle :d'inclusion scolaire, des cas où elle a tout son sens et des situations où l'école n'est plus la solution;de la nécessité de tout mettre en oeuvre pour favoriser la communication des enfants ou adultes autistes;de l'intérêt de la CAA (Communication Alternative Améliorée), pour permettre aux jeunes autistes qui n'ont pas accès au langage oral, de s'exprimer;de l'adolescence et de ses défis;de l'Atelier bleu, un lieu et une plateforme de services créés pour des ados autistes sévères;des orientations publiques en matière de politique du handicap.Cet épisode est riche car Isabelle partage son expérience de parent mais aussi de responsable associative présente sur le terrain et dans les instances nationales.Pour en savoir plus sur :l'association Autisme Ensemble 95 et l'Atelier bleu : Front Page - Autisme Ensemble 95Le Réseau Autisme Sans Frontière dont Isabelle est co-présidente : www.autistessansfrontieres.comla Communication Alternative Améliorée : Introduction à la communication alternative et améliorée pour les enseignants et AESH*****************************Tous pareils ou presque, c'est le podcast de l'autisme et de la neurodiversité qui aide à faire un pas de côté.Plus d'infos sur le site : Tous Pareils ou Presque !Pour me contacter : touspareilsoupresque@gmail.comTous pareils ou presque, c'est aussi une newsletter mensuelle dans laquelle on trouve encore plus de retours d'expérience, des ressources, et des partages plus personnels.Pour s'abonner : Inscription newsletterMerci à Julien Rebours pour son aide sur le montage de cet épisode.Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.

Société traumatisée ! Et traumatisante ?

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2025 35:16


Ou si notre santé mentale ne dépendait pas que de nous, que notre société contribuait largement aux maux-être ! Pour aller plus loin: Thérapie psychédélique Dr Rougemont Bucking Julie Dachez podcastInjonction au bonheur podcastCe n'est pas toi le problème livre Références: https://www.egora.fr/actus-pro/conditions-dexercice/generaliste-en-arret-apres-une-requisition-une-petition-appelle-la?utm_source=ownpage&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=20250216&_ope=eyJndWlkIjoiNTc4NzhhM2E2M2EzMDZkNWVmNTNlMmU1Nzc1NzdmMzUifQ%3D%3Dhttps://www.harmonie-sante.fr/sante-soins/psychologie/quel-est-limpact-relations-sociales-sante-mentalehttps://www.egora.fr/actus-pro/conditions-dexercice/management-qui-malmene-les-medecins-13-des-14-urgentistes-dune?utm_source=ownpage&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=20250216&_ope=eyJndWlkIjoiNTc4NzhhM2E2M2EzMDZkNWVmNTNlMmU1Nzc1NzdmMzUifQ%3D%3Dhttps://www.asso-sfc.org/asfc-pacinghttps://sedinfrance.org/le-pacing-eviter-les-journees-depuisement/

Explora Commodore Retrokiosko
Retrokiosko #56

Explora Commodore Retrokiosko

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 23, 2025 195:58


En este programa hacemos un repaso a algunas noticias de la actualidad commodoriana y a los lanzamientos de las últimas semanas, y veremos la revista alemana 64'er, concretamente su número 2/85. Todo esto lo veremos con el equipo habitual formado por David Asenjo (https://twitter.com/darro99), Toni Bianchetti (https://twitter.com/seuck), Narciso Quintana "Narcisound" (https://twitter.com/narcisound), Jonatan Jiménez (https://twitter.com/jsabreman) y Paco Herrera (https://twitter.com/pacoblog64). Las noticias comentadas son: - Preservados varios spots de 15 segundos de Amiga del año 1988: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DtUfT6Hdn8Q - Primera versión del manual del KIM-1 en proceso de preservación.: https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1ZxhtmIP3VOtGXLsINfK0gIUDoB1DIzVF?usp=drive_link - La revista Commodoriani sigue su andadura: https://commodore.inc/commodoriani/ - Concurso de BASIC en 10 líneas, edición de 2025: https://gkanold.wixsite.com/homeputerium/rules2025 - 5ª edición del Torneo Vasco de Commodore 64 y la 7ª en su versión Amiguera: https://www.commodoreplus.org/2025/01/torneo-vasco-de-commodore-64.html - Reparación de una consola Commodore 2000K: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5kamx4BkMxM - Actualización del portal C64.ch: https://c64.ch/ - KickSmash 32: Nuevo sustituto para chips ROM Kickstart para Amiga 3000 y 4000: https://github.com/cdhooper/kicksmash32 - SMD2000 "Bushfire", nueva placa mini-DTX que replica el Amiga 2000: https://www.amigaretro.com/projects/introducing-the-smd2000-bushfire/; https://github.com/gazzmaniac/SMD2000/ - Libro sobre Jaz Rignall, redactor de Zzap!64: https://www.bitmapbooks.com/products/the-games-of-a-lifetime?srsltid=AfmBOopW62W8DcquG7h0M8ycqxcd9Wp0jOqiHDPCH4HybIc0zeuN-GOe - Amiga Rocks Harder (Fastloaders): https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/fastloaders/amiga-rocks-harder-by-fastloaders - Resultados de los Premios Commodoremanía: https://commodoremania.com/foro/index.php/topic,2894 - Abierta las pre ventas para el especial numero 3 de FREEZE64: https://freeze64.com/2025/02/21/preorder-freeze64-maps-levels-special/ - La Video Game History Foundation abrirá al público y gratis su biblioteca digital con miles de materiales sobre la historia de los videojuegos: https://www.adslzone.net/noticias/videojuegos/libreria-online-historia-videojuegos/ - Nuevo libro sobre Commodore 64 en Kickstarter: https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/beyondtheborders/redo-from-start-volume-i - Atari lanza un reloj para conmemorar el 45 aniversario de Asteroids: https://nubeowatches.com/collections/atari-limited-edition/products/ventana-automatic-atari-asteroids-45th-limited-edition-celestial-citrine-nb-6111-03 Actualizaciones: - AmiKit 12.7: https://www.amikit.amiga.sk/ - Versatile Amiga Test Program v6.45: https://aminet.net/package/util/misc/VATestprogram - Albert v2.4: https://www.albertpixels.com https://csdb.dk/release/?id=249041 Los juegos y programas nuevos comentados son: - Docster's Digger (TRP, Plus/4): https://plus4world.powweb.com/software/Docsters_Digger - Matrix (Entary Games, Plus/4): https://plus4world.powweb.com/software/Matrix_Entary_Games - Avalan (Psytronik, C64): https://psytronik.itch.io/avalan - B Breakout (Haegar, Plus/4): https://plus4world.powweb.com/software/B-Breakout - Elite (Aleksi Eben, VIC-20): https://vic20elite.wordpress.com/ - White Max (TomHX, Plus/4): https://plus4world.powweb.com/software/White_Max - Safe Zone (Frank Abbing, C64): https://frank-abbing.itch.io/safe-zone - The End of the World (Frank Abbing, C64): https://frank-abbing.itch.io/the-end-of-the-world - Huck on the Mississipi (Frank Abbing, C64): https://frank-abbing.itch.io/huck-on-the-mississippi - Platman MC (Wanaz, C64): https://wanax.itch.io/platman-mc - Kuusneppis (Artline Desings, C64): https://artlinedesigns.itch.io/kuusneppis - Beyond the door (spotlessmind1975, C64): https://spotlessmind1975.itch.io/btd-10liner - Mike Mech 2 (LC-Games, C64): https://lowcarb.itch.io/mike-mech-2-c64 - Shock Raid (Richard of TND, C64): https://richard-tnd.itch.io/shock-raid-64 - SnailRace (Bunsen, C64): https://bunsen.itch.io/snailrace-commodore-64-by-metzelwurst - Ladybird (Psytronik Software, C64): https://psytronik.itch.io/ladybird - Le Bubblo Massacro (Misfit, C64): https://misfit.itch.io/le-bubbl-massacr-c64 - Commodore Zone PDF Collection (Psytronik Software, C64): https://psytronik.itch.io/czone - Goal - Hockey Soccer Football (Jeffrey Daniels, VIC-20): https://jeffdaniels.itch.io/goal-hockey-soccer-football-vic-20-vic-20-vic20 - Pas 6502 (syntaxerrorsoftware, C64): https://syntaxerrorsoftware.itch.io/pas6502 - Super Star Wars - Holiday Special AGA (earok, Amiga): https://eab.abime.net/showthread.php?p=1725394#post1725394 - Erinia (Dareint, C64): https://dareint.itch.io/erinia-2025-english - Absolute Zero (Zener, Sandman y Fireboy, Amiga): https://zener.itch.io/absolute-zero

REDIFFUSION Autisme, lenteur vers l'autonomie ?

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 15, 2025 24:11


Une rediffusion pour cet épisode, car parfois le quotidien va plus vite que nous, avec des douloureux imprévus et la famille à soutenir. A très bientôt pour la suite

Mon chien autiste? Ou pourquoi on se force à faire des trucs qu'on n'aime pas...

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 1, 2025 16:14


Tous pareils ou presque !
Ep.33 - Zelda et le Ziboulab, un tiers-lieu inclusif

Tous pareils ou presque !

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 24, 2025 24:34


Le Ziboulab, c'est l'histoire d'une équipe de soignants, à la fois collègues et copains qui se lancent dans la création d'un café et tiers-lieu inclusif. Ce lieu a ouvert en 2024 à Lyon et il permet à des adultes autistes sévères de participer à l'activité du café, dans un environnement totalement adapté. Zelda Prost est psychologue et est l'une des cofondatrice de cet lieu innovant.Dans cet épisode, elle partage :la genèse de ce projet inspiré par son frère Zibou,la façon dont le lieu fonctionne et les objectifs pour les personnes qui y sont accueillis,Les premiers retours d'expérience après l'ouvertureLes moments de stress et de fatigue mais aussi les projets pour la suite.Cet épisode et cette aventure collective donnent envie de soutenir et pourquoi pas, de dupliquer de telles initiatives.N'hésitez pas à découvrir ce café et à le faire connaître autour de vous. Non seulement ce projet a du sens mais en plus le lieu est beau et sympa : Le Zibou Lab / Tiers-lieu / Lyon***********************Tous pareils ou presque, c'est le podcast de l'autisme et de la neurodiversité qui aide à faire un pas de côté.Plus d'infos sur le site : Tous Pareils ou Presque !Tous pareils ou presque, c'est aussi une newsletter mensuelle dans laquelle on trouve encore plus de retours d'expérience, des ressources, et des partages plus personnels.Pour s'abonner : Inscription newsletterHébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.

Autiste? 9 clés de plus pour communiquer

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 18, 2025 54:05


J'avais listé deux ou trois choses à ajouter à l'épisode précédent, avec les 8 clés pour communiquer. Voici donc... 9 clés de lecture en plus ! La distance physique ordinaire entre gens ordinaires ( et vous ? )Le temps pour répondre aux mails, messages, à la sonnetteLes méthodes pour répondre, est-ce que la lettre recommandée est utile dans toute situation ( non ... ) Les 5 étapes d'apprentissageComment faire changer d'avis à quelqu'un, et est-ce souhaitable ?Et si tout se jouait dans le non-verbal ? Et si ça desservait les autistes ?Les autistes, plus logiques d'émotifs? Et si ça ouvrait la porte aux abusLe coeur ou la tête, faut-il choisir ? Le temps est ton ami, mets-le de ton côté, prends-le !

Coulisses graphiques et voeux

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 28, 2024 10:10


Insulter avec force et panache !

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 21, 2024 14:21


Petit épisode décalé pour savoir quoi répondre si Tonton Jules au repas de Noël dit " mais il est autiste lui ou quoi?". Notamment. Et autres propositions

Explora Commodore Retrokiosko
Retrokiosko #54 - Especial Navidad

Explora Commodore Retrokiosko

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 15, 2024 206:38


NOTA: en este programa hay algunos cortes debido a que en directo algunos vídeos de juegos se lanzaron con un volumen muy alto, para evitaros molestias hemos suprimido esas partes. En este programa hacemos un repaso a algunas noticias de la actualidad commodoriana y a los lanzamientos de las últimas semanas, y veremos la Zzap!64 21, Christmas Special (Especial de Navidad). Todo esto lo veremos con el equipo habitual formado por David Asenjo (https://twitter.com/darro99), Toni Bianchetti (https://twitter.com/seuck), Narciso Quintana "Narcisound" (https://twitter.com/narcisound), Jonatan Jiménez (https://twitter.com/jsabreman) y Paco Herrera (https://twitter.com/pacoblog64). Las noticias comentadas son: - Christmas Challenge 2024: https://logiker.com/VCCC2024 - Video sobre el termostato programable de Commodore: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jwQFKutbOB8 - Cuando Jeff Bruette troleó a Jack Tramiel: https://dfarq.homeip.net/how-jeff-bruette-trolled-his-boss-jack-tramiel/?fbclid=IwY2xjawHKjmVleHRuA2FlbQIxMQABHeQipVbIFnIL76qBAOggHkAVQy2H6u8RuCP2u27iFQW96ioz-dJ5ynIuZg_aem_OS9_so9ZxxxDxyIDYS3BfQ - La banda sonora del Randoom 2: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RInyzUIHQwA - Actualización de Games That Weren't: https://www.gamesthatwerent.com/gtw64 - Actualización del portal WHDLoad: https://www.whdload.de/ - Too Much Fun: The Five Lives of the Commodore 64 Computer: https://www.jesperjuul.net/c64/?fbclid=IwY2xjawHKjxVleHRuA2FlbQIxMAABHYHe5nWnmq9ZMSk0rfKdqqm6sEcj0O7h_I3BD-0_Q_WfPkTMUmv8zt6WCA_aem_fjTeAnDY6MpSUzoe1Xgo3A - Nueva carcasa de Amiga 4000: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cx4EBjACToY - Entrevista a Allister Brimble en The Retro Hour: https://theretrohour.com/allister-brimble-the-maestro-behind-alien-breed-driver-and-project-x-the-retro-hour-ep458/ - Retro Alcorcon 2024: https://factoriaretro.com/retro-alcorcon/ - Actualización del portal C64.ch: https://c64.ch/ Actualizaciones mencionadas: - Versatile Amiga Test Program v6.41: https://aminet.net/package/util/misc/VATestprogram - Redpill v0.09.43: https://aminet.net/package/dev/misc/REDPILLGameCreator - Amiberry v7.0.0: https://amiberry.com/ Los juegos y programas nuevos comentados son: - Soiled Iron (drmortalwombat, C64): https://drmortalwombat.itch.io/soiled-iron - Santa's Workout 4 (Vector5 Games, C64): https://vector5games.itch.io/santas-workout-4-jingle-all-the-way - Pooyan (jotd666, Amiga): https://jotd666.itch.io/pooyan - Revenge Of The Grinch (ELECTRIC BLACK SHEEP, Amiga): https://electricblacksheep.itch.io/revenge-of-the-grinch - Dr. Maria (sysadmin, C64): https://sysantmin.itch.io/drmaria - C64 Tetris (rexracer, C64): https://rexracer.itch.io/c64-tetris - RayTracer (DEMO) (sabe, Plus/4): https://plus4world.powweb.com/software/Raytracer - Anguish (lionagony, Amiga): https://lionagony.itch.io/anguish - Jumpin'Claus (Henner Kessler, VIC-20): https://sleepingelephant.com/ipw-web/bulletin/bb/viewtopic.php?p=122633#p122633 - Weights And Crates Deluxe (Richard of TND, C64): https://richard-tnd.itch.io/weights-and-crates-deluxe - B-Squared (kamaleon70, Vic-20): https://kamaleon70.itch.io/bsquared-vic-20 - Rintivoorh (AB-UltraNarwhal, Amiga): https://narwhal.itch.io/rintivoorh - Extreme Violence 2 (PixelPlop, Amiga): https://pixelplop.itch.io/extreme-violence-2-amigamejam2024 - Connect (Logical Byte, Amiga): https://logicalbyte.itch.io/connect - Hitoriki (grifonchan, C64): https://grifonchan.itch.io/hitokiri - Piddle 2 (Iceout, C64): https://csdb.dk/release/?id=248034 - Star Dust Wars - Director's cut (ELECTRIC BLACK SHEEP, Amiga): https://electricblacksheep.itch.io/star-dust-wars-directors-cut - Iowa Jack Christmas Demo (rickyderocher, C64): https://rickyderocher.itch.io/iowa-jack-christmas-demo-commodore-64 - Insanity Fight 2 (re-h#ASH, Amiga): https://re-hash.itch.io/insanity-fight-2-amiga - Morning Panic (Amiga Cammy, Amiga): https://underground-arcade.itch.io/morning-panic - SNK vs CAPCOM (Gianluca Alberico, C64): https://csdb.dk/release/?id=248304

Tous pareils ou presque !
Ep.31 - Jules et Justine, regards croisés de deux ados autistes

Tous pareils ou presque !

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 5, 2024 23:32


Jules et Justine ont reçu tous les deux un diagnostic d'autisme vers l'âge de 3 ans.Ils font partie de ceux qui ont suivi cahin-caha, un cursus scolaire classique, qui ont survécu aux années collège (en y laissant quelques plumes) et au bac, et qui accèdent aujourd'hui à des études qui leur plaisent.Dans leur témoignages croisés, on entend :- la façon dont ils se perçoivent et le jugement parfois sévère qu'ils portent sur eux;- les brimades et incompréhensions qu'ils ont subies dans leurs parcours mais aussi "les bonnes étoiles" rencontrées, comme dit Jules;- leur cheminement vers l'acceptation ou parfois, ce qui pince le coeur, vers une forme de résignation comme l'évoque Justine.On entend aussi et surtout le soutien qu'ils ont trouvé dans ce Groupe d'habiletés sociales en jeunes autistes. Un espace privilégié animé par une thérapeute dans laquelle ils peuvent apprendre et comprendre mais aussi vivre plus librement leurs intérêts spécifiques et nouer de véritables amitiés entre eux, sans avoir peur du jugement des autres.Jules et Justine participent au groupe Neurodiv (neurodivHB.com) créé par la thérapeute Héloïse Bertrand à Pantin (93).Merci à Julien Rebours qui a réalisé le montage/mixage de cet épisode.*************************Tous pareils ou presque!, c'est le podcast de l'autisme et de la neurodiversité qui aide à faire un pas de côté.Tous pareils ou presque !, c'est aussi une newsletter mensuelle dans laquelle on trouve encore plus de retours d'expérience, des ressources, des partages plus personnels.Pour s'abonner : Inscription newsletterHébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.

Land to Lots
E60- Discussions with Andrés Duany (DPZ)

Land to Lots

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 19, 2024 46:01


In Episode 60, Carter talks with Andrés Duany who, along with his wife, Elizabeth Plater-Zyberk, is the founding partner DPZ CoDesign. DPZ is best known for the “rediscovery” of neighborhood structures which influenced the design of Seaside, the acclaimed project renowned for its traditional town plan, streetscapes, meeting places and buildings. Following up on Seaside, the firm proposed a re-integration of urban components within traditional neighborhood development which became the model for regulation of compact mixed use neighborhood developments throughout the Country. In this episode, you'll learn: What is traditional neighborhood development (TND). How Seaside came about and how DPZ approached the planning and design effort. Lessons learned from the planning and buildout of Seaside. How TND applies to larger master planned developments. How TNDs can assist in combating NIMBYism and garner jurisdictional approvals.   Show Notes DPZ CoDesign Contact Information - https://www.dpz.com/contact/ Seaside Link - https://www.dpz.com/projects/seaside/ Playa Vista Link - https://www.dpz.com/projects/playa-vista/ Lexicon - https://www.dpz.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/Lexicon-2014.pdf Complimentary Offers for Land to Lots™ Listeners Complimentary Bond Sizing Analysis: Get all the shownotes here Learn more about Launch Development Finance Advisors Connect with Carter Froelich Connect With Launch Development Finance Advisors Carter Froelich – 480-828-9555 / carter@launch-dfa.com Carter Froelich hosts the Land to Lots™ podcast powered by Launch Development Finance Advisors. Carter shares how he and his team help their clients finance infrastructure, reduce costs, and mitigate risks all with the goal of enhancing project profitability.

DF Aguas Claras
Nadja Quadros #58

DF Aguas Claras

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 7, 2024 90:19


Lidar com crianças com Transtornos do Neurodesenvolvimento (TND) não é uma tarefa fácil, e, muitas vezes, esse processo é difícil tanto para a criança quanto para a sua família. Diante disso, hoje vamos conversar com a Nadja Quadros. Ela é mãe de crianças com TND e sabe mais do que ninguém que reunir o cuidado em um só local faz a diferença na vida dos pais que têm suas vidas mudadas por um diagnóstico que impõe uma rotina de vida totalmente diferente do que era antes, por isso ela fundou, em 2017, o Instituto Nadja Quadros, que hoje auxilia diversas famílias em todo DF! _________________________ HOST -Cléber Barreto https://www.instagram.com/dfaguasclaras/ _________________________ CONVIDADA - Nadja Quadros https://www.instagram.com/institutonadjaquadros/ _________________________ PATROCINADORES -Canaã Telecom https://www.instagram.com/canaatelecomoficial/ - QPizza https://www.instagram.com/qpizzaartesanais/ _________________________ PRODUÇÃO -Vinícius Tanno https://www.instagram.com/vini_tanno/ -Gustavo Mendes https://www.instagram.com/mendesz_m/

ThinkEnergy
Summer Rewind: Accelerating Canada's clean energy transition with Dunsky Energy + Climate Advisors

ThinkEnergy

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 5, 2024 30:42


HYDRO_ThinkEnergy_Aug5_Audio Wed, Jul 31, 2024 1:07PM • 30:42 SUMMARY KEYWORDS energy, canada, side, country, council, utility, ultimately, philip, big, clean energy, single, transition, challenge, governments, perspective, climate, decarbonize, involved, work, electricity SPEAKERS Trevor Freeman, Dan Seguin, Philippe Dunsky   Trevor Freeman  00:00 Everyone, well, it's officially summer and the think energy team is taking a break to recharge over the next two months, but also to plan our content for the fall. So stay tuned for some great episodes in the fall. Not to worry though, we still have our summer rewind to keep you engaged. This is where we pick out some of the great past episodes that we've done and repost them. So whether you're lucky enough to be sitting on a dock or going on a road trip, or if you're just keeping up with your commute through the summer, it's a great time to revisit our past content. You will hear past episodes from my predecessor and the host chair Dan Seguin as well as a couple of mine from the past few months. And you're welcome to check out your own favorite past episodes as well. Wherever you get your podcasts. We hope you have an amazing summer and we'll be back with new content in September. And until then, happy listening.   Dan Seguin  00:06 This is think energy, the podcast that helps you better understand the fast changing world of energy through conversations with game changers, industry leaders, and influencers. So join me, Dan Seguin, as I explore both traditional and unconventional facets of the energy industry. Hey, everyone, welcome back. Right now, there are scientists, entrepreneurs, policymakers, indigenous and industry leaders, helping to shape the direction that Canada will take to accelerate a transition to clean energy. Everywhere you look, whether it's academia, municipal, provincial, or federal governments, there's another council or committee being formed to address the most pressing issues of our time, climate change, from transitioning to sustainable energy sources, electrifying transportation, and improving energy efficiency to protecting our natural environment and reducing carbon emissions. One thing is for certain our country is embracing the renewable revolution, like never before. But those with seats at the decision table know that it must be done responsibly, and affordable. As we know, every region of Canada is unique and presents its own set of challenges and opportunities when it comes to tackling climate change, and ways to implement clean energy. So here is today's big question. How did we get such a vast and diverse country like Canada to agree on a pathway forward to a cleaner, greener and more sustainable energy future? Joining us today is Philippe Dunsky of Dunsky Energy and Climate Advisors, a consultancy firm that Philippe founded. It supports government, utilities, corporations across North America to accelerate their transition to clean energy. Phillippe, is the co chair of Canada's new Canada electricity Advisory Council, the co chair of efficiency Canada, and the director of the greater Montreal Climate Fund. He also previously chaired the Quebec government electrification Working Group. Welcome to the show, Philippe. Let's start by asking you this. Having just gone over some of your accomplishments, where does this passion for clean energy and climate come from? Where did it start?   Philippe Dunsky  02:44 So, so great to be here. By the way, thank you so much for having me. It started, I guess, I guess very early on. I'm Jewish background and grew up with, you know, endless stories about the Holocaust. And somehow that kind of morphed into just a general  interest for world affairs and for big challenges, big societal challenges. And then as I was growing up, those became really focused on environmental issues. So that was the genesis. I became very, very interested in environmental issues. And then through that, and climate change in particular, as probably the greatest challenge of my generation, and for my generation. And then, I guess the other thing is, I've come to discover that I'm a pretty analytical guy. So I'm not a no great protester, I'm not a great to great movement leader, I tend to see a lot of gray, not so much black and white. And so that's how I ended up deciding to get involved in these issues. But, you know, in my own way through more of an analytical lens,   Dan Seguin  03:55 Okay, you've served and are serving on numerous councils, committees and boards. Can you tell us what has been the biggest takeaway you've learned through each collaboration? And how has it changed you?   Philippe Dunsky  04:11 Yeah, because each one does change you and changes your perspectives. Because ultimately, the biggest takeaway is that no matter how much I think I know this stuff and know this stuff. Well, and I've been working on energy issues for over 30 years now. And so, you know, I always end up thinking that I know the answer. What we discover is that, you know, there's not a single answer, there are many perspectives. And if you can combine knowledge with multiple perspectives, then you can come up with something that's hopefully going to be closer to that, you know, to that truth, or whatever you want to call it. My big learning is that every time you go into something like this, you go in with an open mind and an open heart. And if you do that, and you're listening to others perspectives, then you're bound to land on something that's a hell of a lot smarter. And then what you initially thought coming into it?   Dan Seguin  05:02 Okay, cool. Now, you were appointed chair for a recently formed Canada electricity Advisory Council. Can you tell our listeners who's on it? What is the mandate? And just how big of an undertaking is this?   Philippe Dunsky  05:19 Sure, I can start with the last question, by the way, that the undertaking, it's a really big issue, it's a really big challenge. On the other hand, the undertaking itself is time limited, it's a 12 month thing. So I'm a pumpkin and I turned into a pumpkin in May. It's been five months now. So I got another seven to go. From that perspective, that's the timing that we're looking at. Okay, Council itself is a group of 18 Canadians from across the country, every single, every single province, no exception. It's, it's extraordinary mix of individuals with an extraordinary mix of experience and perspective. So I'd say roughly half of council members are either current or former utility executives. The other half is a bit more of an eclectic mix of former regulators, we have people involved in the power production side of things, we have first nations leaders, so indigenous leaders, and a couple of others with different perspectives to bring to the table. But the really important thing here, I think, is that you're looking at the leadership level from every single province across the country. And that makes for really, really enlightening and challenging conversations as well. And then I guess you asked about the purpose or the mandate of the council. So I'll put it at a very, very fundamental level as a country, we're trying to largely decarbonize electricity by sometime in the middle of the 2030s. And we're looking to grow electricity, very substantially to decarbonize the rest of the economy. By 2050. That's that dual set of goals is at the heart of our mandate. And our mandate is to figure out what the feds can and must do. And at the same time, what can and must be done by others in the country, to help make this an easier journey, a more affordable journey. And ultimately, a more successful journey on the way there.   Dan Seguin  07:22 Okay, great segue here. Now, with respect to Canada's goal to achieve a 100%, Net Zero electricity system by 2035, you stated, "Is it better to optimize than maximize? Can you maybe break that down for us? And can you give us some examples?   Philippe Dunsky  07:41 Yeah, sure. I mean, you know, what I mean by that is, if all we do is say we want to decarbonize, there are many, many paths to do that. And, you know, we can say, hey, we're gonna, we're just gonna build, build, build, build, build until there's no tomorrow. And we could probably get there, doing nothing but that, but we'll get there in a less affordable way, than if we really think through the intricacies of what needs to be done. Yes, on adding, also on subtracting, so actually becoming more efficient in the way we use energy, relying more on consumers' involvement in the marketplace to achieve some of those goals. I just think there are quick ways to get to the goal, that ultimately, are going to cost too much and or create reliability issues. And if that happens, there'll be a backlash. And we'll never get to the goal. Alternatively, there, they're thoughtful ways that maybe aren't exactly the way we've always done things in the past, but that involve a lot more complexity and being able to wrestle with complexity and stuff. But ways that are focused on keeping this as affordable as possible, ultimately, for everyone across Canada, making sure that we do this in a way that's reliable, so we can always count on electricity being there. And in doing it in a way that actually involves some cooperation, as well.   Dan Seguin  09:04 So the electricity Council fulfills the minister's mandate to establish a pan Canadian grid Council. How viable is a pan Canadian electricity grid? Or are you seeing your movement in regional interconnections?   Philippe Dunsky  09:22 Yeah, so it definitely looks regional. Let me be really clear about that. And I know the original Originally, the name for the council was supposed to be the pan Canadian grid Council, as you pointed out, you'll also notice it, it was not it does not have that name. And there's a reason for that. And, and I will say, you know, and I've said this publicly many times, I don't believe that that's the right answer. We definitely need a lot more cooperation. at the regional level. There are a lot of opportunities for provinces to exchange more to continue exchanging with the US by the way, and this isn't, you know, we're not caught within, within our borders. So we have to do more on the cooperation side to keep costs down again, as low as possible to make this as smart and thoughtful and as achievable as possible. But that doesn't involve, you know, I love the old Coast to Coast Railway analogy. It's nice, it's working for railways. We're not talking about a single grid that goes coast to coast that's just not in the cards.   Dan Seguin  10:28 Now, for those who are not aware, can you tell us about your firm, its purpose, and what makes your approach unique, and particularly effective?   Philippe Dunsky  10:40 Sure, I mean, I'm thrilled talking about my firm. So these days, I spend so much time talking about look Council, which is kind of like my evenings and nighttime job, or evenings and weekend job. But my day job is running my firm, my firm is a group of over 50 professionals. Now, I think we're about 55 now that are dedicated exclusively to supporting clients in their clean energy transitions. And our clients typically are utilities and governments, increasingly large corporate clients as well, across Canada and across the US. So ultimately we work with utilities and governments that are in the throes of this energy transition, that are trying to figure it out. They're trying to find a way to help their customers navigate through it and a way for themselves to navigate through it, to define what the business case is for them and what their proper role is in it. And, and then we also have helped them in some of the nitty gritty. So, you know do you get customers involved on the demand side management side to reduce the pressure on right on the big build out? And all the capital is involved there? You know, what do we need to do to electrify vehicles, for example. So we've developed for some places, charging, charging infrastructure plans and charging infrastructure, business, business plans, strategies, investment plans, we work with, with our, with our customers in helping helping to decarbonize buildings through whether it's direct electrification, or hybrid heating systems without just the natural gas, depending on the on the need, we work with to decarbonize industrial loads, as well. And oftentimes, we're working with our utility customers to help them help their industrial customers decarbonize. So all of those things, and more and of course, planning out the whole transformation of the electricity system on the supply side, is a big part of it. That's a lot of what we do. It's hard to put in a single sentence. But the interesting thing, I guess, for us is, you know, ultimately, we're a consulting shop that is exclusively focused on the clean energy transition, we do nothing other than that. And, and I think that makes us pretty darn good at it.   Dan Seguin  13:02 That's perfect. Phillippe, your company emphasizes support in four focus areas, buildings, mobility, Industry and Energy. How were those identified? And can you maybe provide some specific projects or initiatives that have made a significant difference in the sector's?   Philippe Dunsky  13:25 Yeah, sure. And those sectors are, you know, 80 to 90%, of the energy equation, right. So they've grown over time, in a very deliberate manner, we started out working on the building side of the equation. So you know, what we call DSM or in Ontario, you call it CDM. Just to be different. But so we started out working on that. And then over time, we added mobility, especially electric mobility to our portfolio of expertise, and then built out from there, including on the generation and TND side, in terms of some examples. I mean, I'll be honest with you, we do well over 100 projects a year now. So there are a lot of different ones with a pretty large variety. But for example, I actually just came back from meeting with one of our clients, a large, large electric utility, where we've helped them to revamp their whole CDM approach. So that's, you know, from top to bottom, on the strategy side, on the regulatory side, and then on what the programs actually look like and how they operate and who they involve. In Ontario, we actually completed something I think is absolutely fascinating. I really enjoyed reading it. And that was a study of the potential of Drs. So distributed energy resources in Ontario to essentially keep the lights on, you know, we found 1000s of megawatts of exploitable resources there that you don't need to build because they're already there on the customer side of the meter. So stuff like that. We've worked with a lot of states in the US including California and New York designing, designing measure is to help their customers finance, the transition on their side, we've done a lot of work with, with utility executives helping them think through the strategy side of this, how am I going to actually the change management? How may I change my own utility to go from what it was in that steady state environment of the past 75 years to something that is a completely different beast in a very much more dynamic world. And it's focused on customer service and, and focused on transitioning the energy system as a whole. So, again, a pretty broad array of, of projects, but all of them. Absolutely. Absolutely exciting. And, and fascinating for me to be involved in and learn from.   Dan Seguin  15:45 Okay, now, wondering if you can speak to the importance of responsible and sustainable practices in the clean energy sector? And how has your company prioritized these principles in his work?   Philippe Dunsky  16:00 Yeah, sure. I mean, I mean, look, the world right now is looking to the energy sector to lead and to transform itself. And as we do that, you know, leaders have to have to walk the talk. So, you know, I'm, I'm very proud that most, if not all of my clients are doing that right now within their own operations. And my firm does that in our operations. I try to do that, in my own life, I've been driving nav for seven years. Now, it's a great way for me to, to, to lead by example, but also, quite frankly, to get a head and on the experience curve, and actually understand from personal experience, all right, what are the challenges of of EV ownership and what needs to happen to make it a more seamless process? So you know, that's on the personal side, my company, we're actually a B Corp. So we went through a process to be certified by an independent organization that looks at all of our practices, from soup to nuts. And in our score, our B Corp score has increased. Year over year, I think we started out somewhere about 80 Something points, and now we're at 119. So you know, it's just a process of continuous improvement, just like, just like all of our clients have to have to do.   Dan Seguin  17:12 Okay, cool. Now, we all know, there's always more every country can be doing to combat climate change. But it's complex. In your opinion, Philippe, how does Canada compare? Is it on the right track, and focusing its effort on the right initiatives?   Philippe Dunsky  17:34 Yeah, I think it's, I think Canada is, is definitely moving in the right direction. I think there have been a lot of very important policies brought forward over the past several years that I think, bring us forward. Are they all done exactly the way I would like them to be done? No, if I had a magic wand, would I do it a little bit differently? Probably, but directionally there. Actually, I think we're heading there. You know, that being said, it's a long and winding road. Right. And it will be for the next decade. So there will be setbacks, and there will be things that we're doing that are suboptimal. And that's a little bit part of life. So my job and the role I've kind of given myself and my firm is to help make that path as straight and narrow as it reasonably can be. But you know, recognizing that this is a big learning process and, and mistakes you're gonna make for sure.   Dan Seguin  18:31 Now, Philippe, what are some of the biggest challenges or even threats to achieving a clean energy future in the timeline set out by scientists and the government? How is your company positioned to address them?   Philippe Dunsky  18:46 The biggest challenges and threats and I'll decouple those questions, okay. Because I think that, from my perspective, there are enormous challenges. There's first and foremost, a challenge of time, right? Because what we're talking about if we're talking about, you know, getting to net zero or something like it by 2050. I mean, that's a single generation. So we're talking about literally transforming the backbone of modern economies in a single generation. That is, number one, because frankly, that's never been done before. We've done it within sectors, right, we've done we went from, from horse drawn carriages, to to you know, horseless horseless carriages. And you know, we've, we dumped manufacturer, gas and went, went to natural gas, and we've done individual changes like that before. We've never done all at the same time dealing with that and getting it done. The single generation is a race. And so I do think that time is probably the number one challenge number two challenge. And, you know, if you really take a take a step back here and think about what we're talking about it, it's largely from an economic standpoint, we're largely moving from optics to capex, and there's we're largely it moving from a context where whether it's utilities, or business owners or homeowners, today, we pay our bills, you know, we're buying fossil fuels, right, we're buying and burning the energy that we consume. And so that's an OP X thing. Now, what we're talking about is increasingly stuff, that's just all capital, if you think of, you know, going from a gas plant to, let's say, a wind farm, a wind farm is, you know, it's once and done all of the entire cost for next 20 years, or 95% of it goes in the ground on day one, that's moving objects to capex, it's a really big change. If you're thinking of it from a homeowner perspective, we're talking about, let's say, take my example, you know, I bought an Eevee, my Eevee cost a lot more than that my previous gas car did. On the other hand, I'm paying a hell of a lot less to keep it up to optics to capex. So there's a real challenge around getting enough capital for all this to happen, whether it's for large utilities or down to an individual homeowner or car owner, I think that's a real big challenge that we have a couple more, maybe I'll, maybe I'll stop there. And then the things that my firm is doing to address those, I mean, look, like I said before, on the timeline side, everything we're trying to do is just minimize errors, we're not gonna eliminate them, but minimize errors. So that that line between here and there can be as straight as possible, and as least painful as possible on the capital side, that's a very specific thing. But we actually do a lot of work developing innovative financing mechanisms that utilities and governments can offer to homeowners and business owners, to allow them to have access to the capital that they need, as they tried to save money on the operation side. So those are, those are a couple of them, anyhow.   Dan Seguin  21:57 Okay, Philippe, what do you want Canadians to know about the country's transition to clean energy that they might not already know or be aware of?   Philippe Dunsky  22:10 You know, I think, I think everyone is aware that this energy transition is really big, and it's gonna be really hard. Maybe the one thing I'll add on to it is, there's a lot of benefit on the other side of this. So a lot of benefit, you know, what we're talking about ultimately, is, is transformative in nature, it's the sort of thing that's happened. I'm thinking outside of the energy sector, but just holistically, these kinds of changes have happened a few times in the past 100 years or so. And they tend to always be ultimately about moral leadership to start. And so I think we need to think of this, first and foremost from the perspective of moral leadership, which is something that is one of the reasons why Canada has such a great, strong brand around the world, because we punch above our weight on the great moral issues of the times. And that was true when we went to help out Europe during World War Two, and that was that true. And we went Mulrooney led the boycott of South Africa under apartheid. I mean, we've stood up when we've needed to, that has positioned this country internationally in a way that I don't I'm not sure that we fully measure. This is one of those times. And so being at the forefront of this, I think is extraordinarily important for our country as a whole. That being said, there's also some really economic benefits at the end of this and flip it on its head to there's some real economic costs and risks if we don't do this, and if we don't get it right, well, one thing, one thing I'll point to, I remember about 10 years ago, being in conversations with some provincial governments about the possibility of governments eventually taxing imports of our products, if they're too carbon intensive, and the idea sounded a bit crazy back then we're recording this today on October 30 29 days ago, on October 1, Europe's carbon border adjustment mechanism came into effect for the first time. And that is effectively going to tax import of products from everywhere around the world based on their carbon content. So if we get ahead of this fast, if we succeed in this, if we lower our carbon content of what we produce, we've got a hell of a nice economic advantage at the end of it.   Dan Seguin  24:33 Now, what advice would you give to an aspiring entrepreneur or those looking to make a positive impact in the clean energy and climate sectors?   Philippe Dunsky  24:48 You know, my advice is it's gonna sound a little wishy washy, but it's just figuring out what you're great at. You know, everyone's great at something different so I have a hard time. I'm providing really concrete advice to people I don't know personally, but everyone's got their magic. Everyone's got their special exceptionalism. I think it's important to know who you are, know what you really like to do know where you excel, and then whatever that is, to the extent that you can bring that to service of a greater cause, whether it's climate, whether it's portability, whatever it is, I think that's just a beautiful thing. So I encourage everyone to ultimately lead a purpose driven life and, and lean on their own strengths wherever they may be.   Dan Seguin  25:35 Okay, that's fair. Lastly, Philippe, we always end our interviews with some rapid fire questions. Are you ready? Maybe. Okay, here we go. What are you reading right now?   Philippe Dunsky  25:51 Right now I'm actually sounding nerdy but I'm actually reading the CIA's 2030. Outlook, the latest 2030 outlook by the International Energy Agency. Absolutely fascinating read. If you're a nerd, like I am about energy.   Dan Seguin  26:04 Now, what would you name your boat? If you had one? Or maybe you do have one?   Philippe Dunsky  26:10 My boat? My boat is a canoe. And what would I name my canoe? I'm not sure. Maybe I named it the Power Canoe. One of the reasons I love canoes, by the way, is they're probably the most efficient way of getting from point A to point B on water. So I'm a big fan of energy efficiency and, and a canoe is just that.   Dan Seguin  26:31 Who is someone that you truly admire Philippe?   Philippe Dunsky  26:35 Oh, goodness, I admire so many people, I couldn't come up with a single name there. You know, I work with a lot of leaders who dedicate their time and energy and excellence to, for public purposes. And every single one of those I'm in deep admiration of, I'll maybe add one other group, the folks I work with here in my firm. I've never known a group of people as dedicated and passionate and smart and curious. As they are, they do inspire me.   Dan Seguin  27:05 Good, good. Okay. What is the closest thing to real magic that you've witnessed?   Philippe Dunsky  27:10 I'm from Quebec. So I'm a big fan of the circus, the modern circus, whether it's Cirque du Soleil, Cirque Éloize or les Sédois de la mayenne, they always amaze me and I'll always leave me spellbound.   Dan Seguin  27:24 Okay, next, as a result of the pandemic. Many of us are guilty of watching a lot of Netflix or other streaming platforms. What's your favorite movie or show?   Philippe Dunsky  27:38 You know what, I watched many different Netflix shows. These days. I'm just trying to think what's in bridgerton would be one of them right now. I'm really enjoying it.   Dan Seguin  27:52 Now, lastly, Philippe, what's exciting you about your industry right now?   Philippe Dunsky  27:58 What's exciting is the same thing that's exhausting me. And that's the pace of change. It's just an extraordinary time right now. And I'll tell you what's really exciting me is that five years ago, because this is all I do. Right? I'm a one trick pony. So I think about this every day. Five years ago, I felt pretty alone in seeing and understanding the pace of change that we needed today. I feel like pretty much every leader I speak with is very clear eyed about how big this is, how fast it's gotta go, the challenge that it represents, and the near the you know, the knowledge that we need to get going and get going in a big way. So that excites me.   Dan Seguin  28:37 Now, if our listeners want to learn more about you, or your organization, how can they connect?   Philippe Dunsky  28:44 Well, my organization's website is very simple. Dunsky.com. That's probably the easiest, easiest way. And if you want to connect with me, try info@dunsky.com or my own email. The simplest email in the world is philippe@dunsky.com.   Dan Seguin  29:05 Well, Philippe, this is it. We've reached the end of another episode of the thinkenergy podcast. Thank you so much for joining us today. I hope you had a lot of fun.   Philippe Dunsky  29:15 It was fun. Thank you. I love your questions.   Dan Seguin  29:18 Thanks for tuning in for another episode of the think energy podcast. Don't forget to subscribe and leave us a review wherever you're listening. And to find out more about today's guests from previous episodes, visit thinkenergypodcast.com. I hope you will join us again next time as we spark even more conversations about the energy of tomorrow.

Médecin, qui es-tu?
#22. Le Trouble du Spectre de l'Autisme

Médecin, qui es-tu?

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 19, 2024 19:29


3eme épisode consacré aux troubles du Neurodéveloppement.Le trouble du spectre de l'Autisme.Juliette, interne en Pédopsychiatrie, nous explique les symptômes de ce TND, les différents domaines de développements concernés, ainsi que les personnes impliquées dans sa prise en charge.Le TSA peut amener à une grande perte de confiance en soit, avec des difficultés qui se surajoutent au TSA: Anxiété, dépression, déscolarisation, isolement...L'aide de tous est précieuse et la prise en charge pluridisciplinaire:Pédopsychiatres, Psychomotriciens, psychologues, orthophonistes, ergothérapeutes sont des acteurs majeurs de la prise en charge.Abonnez-vous et mettez une belle note!Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.

Médecin, qui es-tu?
#21. Le TDAH

Médecin, qui es-tu?

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 17, 2024 16:41


Dans ce nouvel épisode FOCUS, Juliette poursuit son explication des Troubles du NeuroDéveloppement.Ici le Trouble du Déficit de l'attention avec ou sans Hyperactivité appelé TDAH.Elle nous explique les symptômes, l'âge moyen de diagnostic, et surtout ce qu'est un TDAH et ce qui ne l'est pas.Le TDAH de la fille est souvent de présentation différente de celui du garçon. On évoque bien sur l'impact familial, et les traitement proposés.Juliette nous explique tout avec précision.Dans ce thème aussi, les termes psychiatriques sont encore une fois souvent malmenés. Juliette nous explique comment gommer c'est abus de langage.Merci de vous être arrêté sur ce compte!Abonnez vous et mettez une belle note!Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.

Médecin, qui es-tu?
#20. Les troubles du NeuroDéveloppement.

Médecin, qui es-tu?

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 15, 2024 16:55


Épisode FOCUS!Les troubles du NeuroDeveloppement.TDAH, TSA, Troubles des apprentissages, TIC...Juliette, interne en pédopsychiatrie, nous explique les différents TND leurs symptômes et la période lors de laquelle ils sont le plus souvent identifiés. "Hyperactif", "Autisme".. des termes à déconstruire car imprécis et parfois stigmatisants.Trouble très connus en pédopsychiatrie, ils sont, pourtant, bel et bien présents tout au long de la vie des patients et le médecin généraliste sera central dans leur prise en charge.Des épisodes Focus s'attarderont sur les TND les plus fréquents pour venir compléter cette première présentation générale. Abonnez vous!Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.

Tous pareils ou presque !
Ep.30 - Marie, continuer à travailler malgré le handicap de son enfant

Tous pareils ou presque !

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 20, 2024 27:45


2/3 des mères d'enfants en situations de handicap cessent leur activité professionnelle ou réduisent leur temps de travail.Et pourtant, Marie maman de Titouan atteint d'une maladie génétique dégénérative, n'a jamais envisagé d'arrêter de travailler.Pour elle, le travail est un espace nécessaire à son équilibreElle raconte, dans cet épisode, comment elle navigue entre le monde professionnelle et le monde du handicap, en essayant de composer avec une culpabilité qui ne la quitte pas.Elle explique ce que lui apporte cette activité professionnelle mais aussi ce que, elle apporte, en tant que maman concernée par le handicap, au monde de l'entreprise.Un témoignage fort et authentique dans lequel Marie parvient à parler avec humour de sujets graves.Comme nous l'évoquons dans l'épisode, Marie intervient aujourd'hui dans les entreprises ou dans d'autres structures, pour proposer notamment des conférences illustrées autours de sujets liés au handicap.Pour en savoir plus sur ses activités :Agence intelligence créative | UnPingouinàLaFerme (unpingouinalaferme.com)Marie Bucelle Kerneis (@un_pingouin_a_la_ferme) • Photos et vidéos InstagramMarie Bucelle | LinkedInMerci à Benjamin Roa qui m'a aidé sur le montage/mixage de cet épisode.*************************Tous pareils ou presque!, c'est le podcast de l'autisme et de la neurodiversité qui aide à faire un pas de côté.Tous pareils ou presque !, c'est aussi une newsletter mensuelle dans laquelle on trouve encore plus de retours d'expérience, des ressources, des partages plus personnels.Pour s'abonner : InscriptHébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.

The Messy City Podcast
Frank Starkey: Architect as New Urbanist Developer

The Messy City Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 11, 2024 82:06


Frank Starkey and his family are one of those rare breeds of Floridians that actually have deep roots in the Sunshine State. We talk about how they sought to owner their grand-dad's wishes as they ultimately developed the family cattle ranch in New Port Richey. A big part of their work was the Traditional Neighborhood Development (TND) called Longleaf. And later, the Starkey Ranch project.Here's a funny real estate video about Longleaf: (funny to me, anyway)If you listen to Frank, you'll learn how an architect has a whole different perspective on the present and the future, and why he thinks he has a luxurious lifestyle now in downtown New Port Richey. You can see some of his current efforts at this link to his website.This is episode number 50 of The Messy City podcast - thanks so much for listening. If you're new to this, welcome! I look forward to the next 50, as we explore the issues and people who love traditional human settlements, and are trying to create them. I love talking to the do-ers, to the creators, and everyone who has skin in the game that's trying to build a more humane world.Find more content on The Messy City on Kevin's Substack page.Music notes: all songs by low standards, ca. 2010. Videos here. If you'd like a CD for low standards, message me and you can have one for only $5.Intro: “Why Be Friends”Outro: “Fairweather Friend”Transcript: Kevin K (00:01.18) Welcome back to the Messy City podcast. This is Kevin Klinkenberg. I'm happy today to be joined by my friend and fellow new urbanist, long time participant, Frank Starkey, joining us from Florida. Frank, how you doing today? Frank Starkey (00:20.337) Howdy, Kevin. Doing great. Happy to be with you. I've been... Kevin K (00:22.908) I didn't even check. I assume you're in Florida at home, but you could really be anywhere. Okay. Frank Starkey (00:25.617) Yeah, I am. Yeah. Yep, I'm in our we recently moved into a townhouse that Andy McCloskey, who used to work for me, built in town here and we just bought one and we're very happy here. It's really nice. Kevin K (00:40.348) Cool, cool. And you're in New Port Richey? Frank Starkey (00:45.169) Yes, Newport Richey is on the northwest side of the Tampa Bay region. It's part of the region. We're in that suburban sprawl miasma that characterizes all Florida cities. And we're about 25 miles as the crow flies from Tampa, basically from downtown Tampa, and probably 15 to 20 miles from Clearwater and 30 miles from St. Pete. So we're And we're right on the Gulf. We have a river that runs right through town that river miles from where we are out to the Gulf is maybe five river miles. So you could easily kayak and paddle board right out there or upstream pretty quickly you're into the Cypress freshwater wetlands. So we've got a lot of good nature around. Kevin K (01:39.516) Do you ever do that? Do you ever get out on a kayak or whatever and get out there on the river? Frank Starkey (01:43.089) Yeah, it's been a while. But if you go up to there's a preserve that the city owns that's up in the freshwater area. And if you're in there, you think you're in the Tarzan. A lot of the Tarzan movies and shows were filmed in Florida swamps and you feel like you're in a Tarzan movie. You can't see that you're in the middle of town. And if you go out to the coast, the barrier island and right where we are. They really start and go south from here. So from here on up through the big bend of the Panhandle in Florida, the coastline is all marshes and salt flats and grass wetlands. It's a much prettier coastline in my opinion than the more built -up barrier islands. But you can go out and kayak for days and days out in the coastal areas and see all kinds of wildlife and water life. So it's pretty cool. Kevin K (02:40.124) That's cool. That's really cool. Well, Frank and I have been talking about trying to do this for a while. We'd hoped to hook up in Cincinnati, but schedules just got in the way, as is typical for that event. But I really wanted to talk with you today, Frank, because you hit on a couple of my hot points, which is that you're an architect and a developer. Frank Starkey (02:51.313) you Kevin K (03:06.332) And I know as a designer that you also care a lot about the kind of issues that we talk about routinely within the world of new urbanism and urban design, which is, you know, creating beautiful walkable places. So I just think it'd be interesting. You know, I talked to a lot of people who come into the world of trying to be developers. You and I probably both talked to a lot of fellow architects who we try to encourage to be developers. Frank Starkey (03:06.481) Mm -hmm. Kevin K (03:33.948) And so it's fascinating to me how people come to that. So I wonder if we could start just a little bit by talking about like your path and where, you know, how you got to this point. You, did you grow up in Florida or were you in Texas? Is that right? Frank Starkey (03:51.761) Now I grew up in Florida. I went to college in Texas, but I grew up on a cattle ranch just east of here, in an area that's now called Odessa. It was a 16 ,000 acre, beef cattle ranch that our grandfather had bought in the 1930s. And we were about 20, 20 miles from downtown Tampa and Newport, Richie was our hometown because of the county we're in Pasco County. And so we came to, you know, church school. shopping was in Newport, Ritchie. But I also kind of had an orientation towards Tampa because we were sort of closer that direction. And then my extended family all lived in St. Petersburg. My parents had grown up there and then my dad grew up in Largo on a branch down there that his dad had before the one in Odessa. I... Kevin K (04:41.564) So it's like the rare species of old Florida people, right? So. Frank Starkey (04:45.361) Yeah. Yeah, but man, I have a weird, I've always come from a very mixed, I mean, just a very much kind of background, culturally, geographically, economically. My great grandparents were from, mostly from the upper Midwest. And so we kind of, and my great grandfather on my dad's side. was William Straub, who was the publisher of the St. Petersburg Times. But I later found out that he was instrumental in getting the city to hire John Nolan to do a plan for the remainder of St. Petersburg. He was instrumental in getting the city to buy up a mile of its waterfront to create a continuous waterfront park along the bay in downtown St. Petersburg, which is the crown jewel of the city in terms of civic space. So I kind of grew up and then that that kind of orientation towards parks. He also helped the County, Pinellas County establish a park system, which was one of the earliest ones in the country. And so I kind of this park orientation and public space and civic life and civic engagement was a strain through my whole childhood. You know, my whole is kind of a generational thing in our family. And so that's one thread and. Living in the country, we didn't have much in the way of neighbors. The area of Odessa in those days was pretty poor. So I rode the school bus with kids that had virtually nothing and went to school in the suburbs of Western Pasco, which was where the kids were mostly from the Midwest. Their grandparents had worked for Ford or GM or Chrysler and then they... moved to Florida and the grandkids, you know, the kids moved with them. And so those were the kids I grew up with. And so I, you know, I didn't feel like I grew up in the deep south. People, but I, but I was close enough to it that I understand it, but I don't consider myself a, you know, capital S southerner, my accent notwithstanding to the degree that a good friend of mine, Frank Starkey (07:07.793) I grew up in Plant City on the east side of Tampa, which is much more in the farming world part of Hillsborough County. And he was much more deep south than I was, even though we grew up, you know, 40 miles apart. So it's just a very different cultural setting. So I grew up with, you know, upper Midwest heritage who had been in St. Petersburg since 1899. And then, you know, poor kids, middle -class kids, and then eventually wealthier folks. So I just kind of had this really all over the place cultural background that's not nearly as simple as, I mean, all of Florida has a tapestry of, a patchwork of different kinds of cultural influences. South of I -10, north of I -10, you're in South Georgia or Alabama, but. the peninsula of Florida is very culturally mixed up. Kevin K (08:11.228) So the old canard, I guess, was that the west coast of Florida was populated by people who came from the Midwest and the east coast was from the Northeast. Does that hold true in your experience? Frank Starkey (08:22.129) Yeah, that does hold true, although there were a lot of New Yorkers in Boston, not so much New England, but still a lot of New Yorkers found their way across. So I grew up around a lot of New York Italian descent folks, as well as Midwesterners. So I, you know, it's a wonder I don't have a New York accent or a Michigan accent or a Southern accent, because those were the kind of the three, more about more, you know, Northern accents than. than Southern accents from immediately where I grew up. But yeah, I -75 goes to Detroit and that I -95 on the East Coast goes to New York. And so that means that has an impact. Kevin K (09:06.844) Did you ever know about the Kansas City connection to St. Pete then with J .C. Nichols down there in downtown St. Pete? Frank Starkey (09:17.329) And tell me about it. I mean, I, because Bruce Stevenson's book, I think touched on that because they, they had an APA convention down here back in the 1920s. Kevin K (09:20.54) Well, that's it. Kevin K (09:28.54) Yeah, J .C. Nichols who developed the Country Club Plaza here, starting really in the 19 -teens, later in his life, he was asked to, or he bought property in St. Petersburg, in or near the downtown area. And the whole concept was they were going to essentially build like another version of Country Club Plaza there in downtown St. Pete. Yeah. And so I think like a small portion of it got built down there. Frank Starkey (09:32.785) All right. Frank Starkey (09:51.665) Really? Kevin K (09:57.564) And then maybe the real estate deal fell apart or something like that. But there was, yeah, that was a big push at some point. Yeah. Yeah. Frank Starkey (10:03.633) or the Depression hit. Interesting. Now, I wasn't aware of that. I didn't know that he had bought and had plans to develop here. That's interesting. The other, St. Petersburg's, well, the Florida Land Bus was in 1926. So Florida real estate speculation really ended then, and then it didn't pick up again until after World War II. So that might have been the death of it. Kevin K (10:13.084) Yeah. Yeah. Kevin K (10:27.164) Yeah. Yeah. So you find yourself growing up on a ranch then, pretty much in Florida. What takes you to architecture? What takes you to architecture and then to Texas to go to architecture school? Frank Starkey (10:35.505) I'd have been becoming an architect. Frank Starkey (10:42.289) For whatever combination of reasons, one evening when I was in about fourth grade, I, dad recollected this years later. I asked dad at the dinner table, what do you call a person, what do you call a person who designs buildings? Not as a riddle, just, and he said, it's called an architect. And I said, well, that's what I want to be when I grow up. And I never had the sense to question that decision again. So. Kevin K (11:00.54) Yeah. Kevin K (11:09.276) That's how it sounds vaguely familiar. Frank Starkey (11:11.853) you So, you know, whether it was Legos and Lincoln Logs and the Brady Bunch. And when I was a kid, we had a cabin in North Carolina that dad had the shell built by this guy who had a lumber mill up there and he would build a shell for you for $5 ,000 or something. He built that out of green poplar wood. The whole thing was immediately warped and racked and sagged and did everything that. green wood will do, and we immediately put it in a building. But dad spent all of our vacation times up there finishing out the interior of that. So I was just around that construction. And dad was also being a counter rancher, and he knew welding. And he was always tinkering. And in addition to fixing things, he was also inventing implements to use on the ranch and things like that. So he just had a hand building. ethic that, you know, he just kind of had. So whatever made me decide I wanted to design buildings, as I grew up from that point on, I just was all about it. And so by the time I got to high school, I couldn't wait to get into working for an architect. And I was an intern for an architect in Newport, Ritchie, when I was in high school. And then I went to Rice University in Houston to go to architecture school. So after I, and I did my internship here, which is part of the program at Rice for the professional degree. I did that in New York City for Pay Cop, Read and Partners. And another ironic thing was I learned, I had a really great classical architecture history professor in college at Rice who in his summers led, he and his partner who was a art history professor also, a fine arts. Frank Starkey (13:10.289) They led an archaeological excavation outside Rome of a villa from the dated that basically dated a time period of about 600 years straddling the time of Christ. And I've spent the summer after my freshman year on that dig. So I had a had a really strong exposure to classical architecture and urbanism throughout my school. And when I worked for PAY, I worked on James Freed's projects. At that time, we were working on what became the Ronald Reagan building in Washington, D .C. It's the last big building in the federal triangle. And so it's a neoclassical exterior with a very modern interior. It's kind of like a spaceship wrapped inside a federal building. And the other project I worked on a little bit that year was the San Francisco Main Library, which is in the Civic Center right down in the Civic Center of Francisco with the City Hall and the old library. The new library is a mirror of it that's a neoclassical facade on, well, two wings of a neoclassical facade that face the Civic Center side. And then on the backside, which faces Market Street, there's a much more modern interpretation of that commercial core district facing along Market Street. So I worked on these buildings with Sirius that took, you know, this was at the end of the Pomo era of the 80s when everybody was making fun of classical architecture in, the architects were having fun with it or making fun of it, however you look at it. And Fried was taking it more seriously. It was still a updated take on neoclassical architecture. in some of the details, but it was really a fascinating exposure to the actual practice of designing classical buildings, working for one of the most famously modernist firms in the world. So. Kevin K (15:21.628) Yeah, no doubt. No doubt. Yeah. That's pretty wild. Was rice, I mean, we're about the same age, was rice kind of like most architecture schools, generally speaking, in their emphasis on looking at modernist design as the holy grail that you must pursue? Frank Starkey (15:28.433) Mm -hmm. Frank Starkey (15:38.769) Yeah, interestingly, like my childhood and the cultural mix that I described earlier, Rice was sort of in this period at that time where it was between deans. There was a series of, it's too long a story to explain here, but the previous dean who had been there for 15 years or something, O. Jack Mitchell, announced his retirement the day I started classes. And... So he was a lame duck. And then it was, you know, we basically went through a series of searches, deans, dean passed away, interim dean search, a new dean, and then he resigned. So the whole time I was in college, we really didn't have a dean. And the faculty that Mitchell had built was very, I'd say ecumenical. They kind of, we had some diehard theoretical postmodernists and we had. At the other end of the spectrum, we had a guy who did a lot of real estate development who was super practical and we always made fun of him for caring about mundane things like budgets. And I know he was, I made him a laughing stock, which I wish I'd taken more of his classes. But anyway, and then a really good core faculty who had a real sense of, and real care about urban design and. Kevin K (16:46.428) Well, yeah, exactly. Frank Starkey (17:04.401) My sophomore class field trip was to Paris and we did studies of, you know, in groups, each of us studied at Urban Plus. So I really had a strong urban design and contextual sensibility through my architecture class, all my architecture classes. In the background, there was this whole drum beat of postmodernist, post structuralism and deconstructivism. that was going on. I never caught into that. It always just seemed like anything that requires that much intellectual gymnastics is probably just kind of b******t. And it also, I was involved with campus ministries and fellowship of Christian athletes and church. And so I had a sense of mission and doing good in the world. And it also just, it just didn't work with that either. So I didn't really go in for that stuff, but the urban design stuff really did stick with me. And then the classical architecture and Vignoli, which I mentioned to you the other day, that really did kind of stick to me as a methodology. Kevin K (18:29.436) Man, I went for it hook line and sinker, man. It was, yeah. Yeah. I mean, I thought deconstructivism was like the coolest thing at that time period. And I bought the whole program for some period of time. And frankly, until I ran across some of Andreas's writings and then started learning about seaside. And that's really what kind of broke it open for me that I started to. Frank Starkey (18:32.433) Really? Frank Starkey (18:40.465) -huh. Frank Starkey (18:52.273) Mm -hmm. Kevin K (18:58.556) see things a little bit differently and all, but I, yeah, I was, I was in deconstructivism was funny because you could just kind of do anything and you know, you could call anything a building basically. Yeah. Frank Starkey (19:07.537) Yeah. Yeah, yeah, the author is dead long live the text was the, and so you could just, yeah. And to me, it was just pulling, it was just pulling stuff out of your butt and I just. Kevin K (19:22.636) totally. Yeah. Yeah. It was all b******t, but it was, I guess, fun for a 19 or 20 year old for a little while. So, all right. So fast forward then, did you come back to Florida then pretty much right after school or? Yeah. Frank Starkey (19:25.809) Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Frank Starkey (19:38.929) Yeah, I did a gap year after college and then ended up in Austin for another year and then came back to work with my brother. So by that time, we had seen, because of where the ranch is situated, it's sort of in the crosshairs of growth patterns coming from Tampa to the south and Clearwater to the southwest. and Newport -Ritchie from the west. So it was, the growth was coming from, at us from two directions. Granddad and you know, this 16 ,000 acres that's 20 miles from downtown Tampa, as you can imagine in the 20th century is going up in value pretty dramatically from 1937 to 19, you know, to the late century. And in the early seventies, he started selling and donating land to the state for preservation. Kevin K (20:24.22) Mm -hmm. Frank Starkey (20:36.177) and so we had, you know, again, that whole park ethic, and the, so we were selling, kind of selling the Northern parts that were away from the development pattern, off. And it was partly for the state tax planning purposes and also just, but primarily to put the land into conservation. So there would be something left of native Florida for people to see in future generations. That was his. His goal. My brother had my brother six years older than me and had gone to University of Florida and gotten a finance degree. And he came back after college, which was when I was like my senior year in high school and started working for the granddad was still alive and he was working for the estate, helping with that planning. And granddad passed away while I was in college and we had the estate tax to deal with. And we ended up selling some more land to the state for conservation. And he also started learning the development. process. We knew that as much land as we could sell to the state as possible, we were not going to be able to sell at all and we were going to have to develop. Somebody was going to develop land on the ranch. And our family wanted to see that it was done in a way that was, you know, that we would be proud of that, that put together our, you know, our family goals for civic engagement, environmental preservation, and, you know, and also. It was the whole family's sole asset. So it's everybody's retirement fund and principally our parents and our cousins. So we have cousins who are half generation older than us. So we were accepting that development was inevitable and wanted to be more in control of it. So Trae had been talking to me for a while about coming back and working with him on the development stuff in the ranch. So that's what I decided to do in 1995. And the decision point for me, Kevin K (22:09.468) Yeah. Frank Starkey (22:34.449) was, you know, I had set up my career trajectory to become a consulting architect and design buildings for other people. And I realized that I had this opportunity to, you know, have a bigger imprint on developing a neighborhood that could perhaps set a pattern. By that time, I had become knowledgeable about new urbanism and what was going on at Seaside. And And at that point, I think some of the other projects were starting to come out of the ground. So this was 1995. So I was like, well, I, you know, I've got too much opportunity here. And, and with what, what I know and what I have to bring to the table, it just seems like the thing I'd need to do. So I came back and we started working on development on the southwestern corner of the ranch, which was sort of the direction that was the frontline for development. So in 1997, we held our charrette for what became Longleaf, which is a 568 acre traditional neighborhood development that we broke ground on in 1999. Our first residents moved in in 2000. And that was the first TND in Pasco County. And in my opinion, it was the last TND in Pasco County. Because the county loved it so much that they... Kevin K (24:00.38) You Frank Starkey (24:04.721) passed the TND standards ordinance, which it would never comply with and that no other developers ever wanted to do. And so nobody really has. They've kind of just, it's been compromised with, right? That's a whole other story. Kevin K (24:20.14) Yeah. Well, that sounds, I mean, we may need to get into that at some point, but, so you started this in 2000 and really in earnest 2001 or so. And obviously there was a little, little bump in the economy right then, but I guess kind of more of a bump compared to what came later. So talk about like those first, maybe that first decade then, like what all did you build and how much of this were you actively involved in the design of? Frank Starkey (24:24.529) Okay. Frank Starkey (24:39.377) Yeah. Frank Starkey (24:49.425) It's fascinating looking back on it how compressed that time frame was because we sold we we developed the first of four neighborhoods In the first neighborhood we did in As I said 99 2000 and then we built the second neighborhood in 2002 2003 we sold the third and fourth neighborhoods in 2004 which You know, six years later, we look like geniuses. If we would have been, if we'd been real geniuses, we would have waited until 2006 to sell them. But we got out before the crash, obviously. So we did well there. We were, I was, you know, Trey and I, because we had a view of building a career in real estate development, we thought we should do everything. We should touch every aspect of the process ourselves at least once. So we knew how everything worked. But then we never scaled up our operation big enough to hire people to fill in those specialties for us. So we really both kind of ended up doing a whole lot of the work ourselves. So our master, our designer was Jeffrey Farrell, who did the the overall plan for Longleaf. And he wrote the design code, but we collaborated on all that very closely, because I knew enough about what urbanism was and architecture. And so I administered that design code with our builders. He detailed out the first neighborhood. He and I detailed out the second neighborhood. collaboratively or sort of a 50 -50. And you know what I mean by detailed out, just, you know, you take a schematic plan and then you have to put it into CAD and get it, get to real dimensions and deal with wetland lines and drainage and all that stuff. You get, s**t gets real about, you know, curbs and things like that. So that kind of, those details. And the third neighborhood I detailed out, but we sold it, but the developer who bought it built it out according to what I had done. So I was... Frank Starkey (27:15.281) very involved with the planning side of it. And of course I had been involved with the entitlements and then I administered the design code with all of our builders. So I was dealing with there and we had, we didn't have sophisticated builders. We didn't have custom, we weren't a custom home builder project. We were small local production builders. So these were builders who built 300 houses a year. We weren't dealing with. David weekly, you know, a national home builder who was doing nice stuff. Nor were we dealing with the 12, you know, you know, a year custom builders. So we didn't have much sophistication on the design side coming from our builders. So I did a lot of hand holding on the design of that. I always tell if you're a architect who's going to be your. Kevin K (27:46.716) Mm -hmm. Frank Starkey (28:13.169) is going to develop a T and D. I will tell you under no circumstances do what I did. Always hire somebody else to be the bad guy because as the developer you just can't look the home builder in the eye and say let this customer go. And so even though they're asking you to do something you shouldn't. So you need somebody who can be your heavy for that and it's not going to be you as the developer. But anyway, so I did that and And then I designed some of the common buildings and then had them. I wasn't licensed yet. And so I had those CDs done by somebody with a stamp. So I always said that I, you know, between the larger planning of the ranch and the strategy there, and I also got involved in community, you know, regional and county wide planning efforts and committees and things like that and planning council. So I kind of worked at the scale from the region to the doorknob. Which, you know, is fabulous as an architect because I've found all of those levels, I still do, I find all of those levels of design and planning fascinating. Kevin K (29:17.084) hehe Kevin K (29:30.78) So let's talk about the mechanics of being a land developer for a minute and how you did it. So you obviously own the land, and then you came up with the master plan. So then how many steps did you take? You took on the burden of entitling probably the whole project in phase by phase. And then were you also financing and building infrastructure as well, and then basically selling off finished land? Frank Starkey (29:36.433) Mm -hmm. Kevin K (29:59.26) finished parcels or finished lots to other developers or builders. Frank Starkey (30:04.177) Yeah, what we, so dad on the land free and clear, he contracted the land to us under a purchase and sale agreement whereby we would pay a release price when we sold a lot. So, you know, it's favorable inside family deal. We paid him a fair price, but it was a very favorable structure that allowed it, and he subordinated it to. to lending for, we had to borrow, we don't have cash as a family, we didn't, none of us have cashflow from, you know, we don't have some other operating company that spits off cashflow. So we had asset value, but no cashflow. So we had to borrow money to pay for infrastructure, I mean, for planning and entitlement costs and engineering. And so that was our first loan. And then we had, We set up a community development district, which is a special purpose taxing district that a lot of states have different versions of them in Florida. It's called a CDD. It's basically like a quasi -municipality that a developer can establish with permission from the county and state government to establish a district, which is then able to sell tax -free government -style bonds to finance infrastructure. So it's an expensive entity to create and then to maintain. But if you're financing a big enough chunk, which in those days was like $10 million, it became efficient to have the care and feeding of the district in order to get the cheaper money. So you could get cheaper bond money for financing infrastructure. You could not finance marketing or... specific lot specific things you could for example, you could finance drainage, but you couldn't finance still so some of the Terminology was a little bit You kind of had to do some creative workarounds, but basically our so but we it also meant you had to still have a source of capital for those things that the district would not finance so we had an outside Frank Starkey (32:28.497) Loan structure in addition to the CDD financing and that was how we financed the construction of the development and then sold the lots to individual home builders We had three builders under contract in our first phase and each of them was committed to a certain number of lots and they had enough capital access on their own to finance their the construction of their houses a lot of them would use their buyers financing and use do construction permanent loans to finance the vertical construction of the houses. But the builders had the ability to take down the lots. So that was the deal. I don't know if that structure is still done very much or if there were many builders in that scale that still do that in Florida or in this area. It seems like most of those builders got just crushed. in a great recession and never came back. I'm not really aware of any builders that are in that scale, in that size range anymore. I mean, if there are, there's maybe a dozen where there used to be 100. Kevin K (33:40.86) Yeah, so they either got smaller or a lot bigger basically. Frank Starkey (33:45.681) No, they mostly just flat got killed and just went out of business. And they may have resurrected themselves. Yeah, they may have resurrected a smaller or gone to work for somebody else or retired because a lot of them were older. Of the builders that we had, yeah, I think they probably did get smaller in fairness, but they were gone. And we were out of, as I said earlier, we were long out of long leaps. And the... Kevin K (33:47.836) Yeah. Frank Starkey (34:13.969) Crosland was the developer that bought the third and fourth neighborhoods and they didn't they brought in all new builders. So they brought in David weekly and inland, which was a larger regional builder. And then Morrison, I think one of the other large, larger builders who did rear loaded T and D project product. Kevin K (34:38.108) So how much heartburn was that for you and your family to go from this position where you're like asset rich but cash poor to and then all of a sudden you're taking on pretty large debt to do this development piece? I mean, what was that like? Frank Starkey (34:54.801) Well, you know, you just you don't know what you don't know when you're young and ambitious. So it was it was there. I did. There were some real Rolade's cheering moments. I think, as I recall, the most stressful times for us were before we started construction. And it was it was frankly, it was harder on Trey because he was he was starting a family at that time. So he had. He had literally more mouths to feed than I did. I was still single and so, and I didn't have the stresses on me that he did. And once we got under development, we weren't so much, you know, the stress level shifted to different, you know, kind of a different complexion. And, you know, fortunately when the recession hit, We were done with long, we didn't have, you know, we weren't sitting with longleaf hanging on us. So that was good. but we were in the midst of entitlements for the Starkey Ranch project, which was the remainder of the land that the family still had that had not been sold to the state. And we were taking that, there was about 2 ,500 acres. We were taking that through entitlements starting in 90, in 2005. And I would say that we got our, our entitlements. not our zoning, but we got our entitlements package approved, in essence, the day before the recession hit. So, so we had borrowed again, borrowed a lot of money to relatively a lot more money to pay for that. And that also involved the whole family, because that was the rest of the ranch that that the part that long leaf is on dad had owned individually, free and clear. The remainder of it. had been in granddad's estate and that went down to children and grandchildren. And so there were seven different owners of that. And we had spent some time in the early 2000s putting that together into a partnership, into one joint venture where everybody owned a pro rata share of the whole, but we had other shareholders to answer to. And so that was a whole other level of stress. Frank Starkey (37:16.913) due to the recession because our bank went, you know, did what all banks do and they called the loan even though we hadn't gone, we hadn't defaulted. We would have defaulted if they'd waited six months, but they blanked first and they sued us and we spanked them in essence, but we, at the end of the day, but it was two years of grinding through a lawsuit that was hideous and that was really the most unpleasant. Kevin K (37:29.82) Hahaha! Frank Starkey (37:46.257) level of stress, not because we were going to lose our houses, but because we were, it was just was acrimonious and not what we wanted to be doing. Plus you had the background of the whole world having ground to a halt. So fighting that out through the dark days of the recession was, that was pretty lousy way to spend a couple of years. Kevin K (38:12.284) Yeah, so then how did you all come out of that situation then? Frank Starkey (38:17.009) We ended in a settlement. The settlement, the worst part of the settlement to me was that we had to, long story, but some of the, we had retained ownership of downtown Longleaf with the commercial core, mixed use core of Longleaf. And that wasn't completed development yet. And because we had that collateralized on another loan with the same bank, we ended up having to cut that off as part of the settlement. So. we, you know, we had to, we amputated a finger, not a hand, but still it was, it was, you know, it was our pointer finger. So that was, that was hard, but, but we lived to fight another day, which again, you know, fortunately it's better to be lucky than good, right? We were, that makes us look like, you know, we did pretty well coming out of the recession. So after the recession and after getting that settled out, and there was a couple of other small pieces of land that we had, Kevin K (38:52.124) hehe Frank Starkey (39:15.121) collateralized to the bank that we handed over, but basically got them to walk away from pursuing us further. We got that worked out and then we had to then figure out how to sell the land. Our joint venture partner, which was to have been Crosland on developing the ranch, they had gone to pieces during the recession, so they weren't there anymore. And the only buyers at those coming out of that were big hedge funds and equity funds. And they were only, their only buyers were national home builders and the national home builders, even the ones like Pulte who had tiptoed into traditional neighborhood development product before the recession. They were like, nope, nope, nope, backing up, never doing that again. They're. Kevin K (40:10.46) Yeah. Yeah. Frank Starkey (40:12.593) So everything that we had about TND and our entitlements, they're like, get that s**t out of there. TND is a four letter word. We will not do that. So we kind of de -entitled a lot of our entitlements and cut it back to just a rudimentary neighborhood structure and interconnected streets and some mix of uses and negotiated to sell it to one of these hedge funds or investment funds. who developed it with a merchant developer and sold it to national home builders. And they pretty quickly undid what was left of our neighborhood structure and developed it in a pretty conventional fashion. They did a really nice job on it and it soldered a premium to everything around it. They did a really great job with their common area landscaping, but they gutted the town center. They didn't even do a good strip center in lieu of it. They just did a freestanding public and a bunch of out parcel pieces. They squandered any opportunity to create a real there out of the commercial areas. They did beautiful parks and trails and amenities centers, but they just didn't get doing a commercial town center. Kevin K (41:36.444) What years was that when they developed that piece? Frank Starkey (41:40.337) We sold it to them in 2012 and I guess they started construction in 13 or so and it was really selling out through 2020. They still got some commercial that they're building on. I don't know if they've got any residential that they're still, I mean, it's kind of, its peak was in the 17, 18, 19 range and it was one of the top projects in the country and certainly in the Bay Area. and got a lot of awards. And yeah, so I don't, I can't complain too much about it because it sounds like sour grapes, but basically they didn't, I always just tell people I'll take neither blame nor credit for what they did because it's just not at all what we, there's very little of it that is what we laid out. So because that, so we, having sold that in 2012, that left me and Trey to go do what we wanted to do. All of the, you know, the rest of the family for that matter. And, Trey was ready to hang it up on development for a while. So he kept a piece out of the blue out of the ranch and settlements and started the blueberry farm. And I went and decided to do in town, small scale development. Ultimately ended up in Newport, Ritchie back in my own hometown. And then and that's that's what I've been doing since basically since 2015. Kevin K (43:06.844) Yeah. So I'm curious about a couple of things. So with the completion of the sale of all that and the development of both Longleaf and Starkey Ranch, I guess I'm curious how your family felt about the results of all those. Were people happy, not happy with the results? Was there... I'm just kind of curious about that dynamic because it's an interesting thing with a family property. And then... I guess secondly, with you being somebody who carried more a certain set of ideals for development, what did you take away from that whole process, especially with Starkey Ranch and anything, any useful lessons for the future for others relative to an experience like that? Frank Starkey (43:38.321) Mm -hmm. Frank Starkey (43:56.209) Couple of thoughts. As far as the whole family goes, we were, well, our cousins don't live here and they were less engaged in it intellectually and just personally. The four of us kids had grown up here and this was our backyard. They had grown up in St. Pete and one of them lived in North Georgia. And so it was, they just weren't as... emotionally invested in it. Not to say they didn't care, but it just didn't, it wasn't their backyard that had been developed. And you know, and we all are proud that three quarters of the ranch of the 16 ,000 acres, over 13, almost 13 ,000 of it is in conservation land that will always be the way it was when we were kids. Except there are no fences, which is very disorienting, but anyway. It's still, you know, that's the way granddad saw it when he was young and it will always be that way. So that's, we're all excited about that. And we pay attention to that more than we do to what happened on development. I think even long leave the, what, you know, the, the people in the surrounding area think we're sellouts and, people who have lived here. for five years or 10 years or 15 years are still just shocked and dismayed by the rapid pace of development. Well, it was a rapid pace of development, but we've been seeing it coming for 130 years now as a family. And I mean, it's why we put land into conservation going back to the early 70s when granddad started selling that. What people can see is the part along State Road 54, which is the visible stuff. which 10 years ago was a lot of pastors with long views and pleasant looking cattle who were money losing proposition as a agricultural business. But people don't see that. They just thought, it's a pretty pasture land. And how can you turn that into houses? It's so, you greedy b******s. So yeah, we get a lot of flak still to this day. I mean, and I've got a. Kevin K (46:12.092) Yeah. Frank Starkey (46:17.425) Trey's wife is a county commissioner and she gets all kinds of grief for being corrupt because people see our names on everything and they're like, well, they must be corrupt. No, you've never met any less corrupt people. And so there's kind of public blowback to it. I've said what I've said, what I just told you about how the development of the ranch did not comport with what we envisioned for it. And I don't, I don't shy away from saying that. I don't go around banging a drum about it. cause what's, what's the point of that? And a lot of people might think I just sound like sour grapes, but it, you know, it's, we, I think we all had our ugly cry about the ranch at some point. I mean, I remember when we were, we, the first closings of the ranch were in 2012 and it was a phased state down, but you know, they, they take a chunk at a time. So we stayed in our office, which was the house that we had grown up in at the ranch headquarters, right where the cattle pens and the horse barn, the truck barn and the shop and all of the ranch operations were. And the day that, eventually we had to move everything out and all that, almost all of that got torn, all of it got torn down. I remember having, I went out and stood by a tree and cried my face off for a while. Kevin K (47:46.044) Yeah. Frank Starkey (47:46.673) You know, it still chokes me up to think about it. And we all did that. I mean, but it wasn't an overnight thing to us. Whereas if you lived in a subdivision in the area that, by the way, had been a cattle ranch 20 years ago, you didn't, you know, you're not building, you're not living in a land that was settled by the other colonists. It seemed shockingly fast, just like overnight. my God, all of a sudden they're, they're. They're scraping the dirt the grass off of that and you know three weeks later. There's houses going up It's just shocking and and really disorienting we'd said we had seen it coming literally our whole lives We always knew that was going to be the case. So it was there was going to be something there our Feelings about the what what what it was compared to what we would like it to have been or another You know, that's what we have to wrestle with but the fact that it's developed We always saw that coming and people don't really understand that until because you just, you know, because it just it's perceived so differently. If you just drive by and see it developed one day when it wasn't, then if you grow up with an aerial photograph on the wall of dad's office and you know, we just know that that's not always going to be that way. Kevin K (49:05.82) Yeah. Yeah. Well, let's talk for a minute about what you're doing now then with the stuff in Newport Ritchie and the smaller scale infill stuff. What was like the first one, after shifting gears and doing that, what was like the first project you took on on your own? Frank Starkey (49:25.561) Much more much more fun topic. Thank you for shifting gears. I should have let you do that sooner Kevin K (49:30.204) Yeah. Frank Starkey (49:33.617) The, so Newport Richey is a pre -war town that was laid out in 1911 by Wayne Stiles, who I'm starting to learn more about was a pretty cool town, kind of B -list town planner who worked with people like John Nolan and the Olmsted brothers and was contemporary to them. Got a very competent little city plan for a small town and it has building stock in the downtown. the main street and Grand Boulevard downtown that dates to the 1920s and to the 1950s and 60s, kind of about half and half. And so it always had these good urban bones, some decent building stock, nothing great. It was never a wealthy town, so it doesn't have big grand Victorian houses down at Boulevard or anything, but it's got some good characteristics. But it had economically just cratered, just for years and really decades of disinvestment. moving out to the suburbs. It wasn't white flight in the traditional sense, but it was economically, it was the same just reallocation of wealth from the historic city into the suburbs and leaving the city behind. So in 2015, there was a, so downtown Newport, which he has a little lake, a about a five acre really lovely little. city park, a riverfront, and the central business district is right next to it. And then there's a pink Mediterranean revival hotel building from 1926 in that park. It kind of ties it all together. It's all the same ingredients that downtown St. Petersburg has, just in miniature and in bad shape. And St. Petersburg, believe it or not, which is now the best city in Florida, was really down in heels for most of my childhood. The Vanoi Hotel, which is their big pink hotel, was a hulking, you know, it looked like something out of Detroit when I was a kid, broken out windows and chain link fence around it and weeds and looked like a haunted hotel. So the Hacienda was kind of in that shape almost. And Downtown was doing, was, you know, just kind of sitting there with some honky tonk bars and a lot of, you know, just kind of moribund. Frank Starkey (51:54.705) commercial space. The city had bought out the First Baptist Church, which overlooked that lake right downtown when the church decamped out to the suburbs like all the other capitals in town. Even God's capital moved out to the suburbs. And the city bought it and tore down the church buildings and put a for sale sign on it, put it out for RFP a couple times, got crickets in response. Because no self -respecting developer would look at downtown New Port Richey as a place to develop. And I looked at it and as Robert Davis and Andres 20 will point out, we developers and architects and urbanists, we live in the future. You know, our brains are in what can be, not what is here now. And you've heard Andres say that the present is a distortion field. So I wasn't bothered by the fact that the neighborhoods around it weren't the greatest neighborhoods. They weren't terrible. Kevin K (52:39.8) Yeah. Yeah. Frank Starkey (52:48.177) And I looked at it and said, well, this is a pretty good gas piece of property. You got through overlooking this nice lake. There's a park. There's a downtown right there. We can work with this. So I asked the city to put it out for an RFQ, which they did. And Eric Brown, your buddy and mine, and one of your former guests on the podcast recently, was the architect for the buildings. And Mike Watkins, whom you also know, was the planner. I had them come in and do a Charette to develop a design for an apartment project on that former church property. And we negotiated a deal with the city to buy that property and we were off and running. So that was the first project. Just announcing that and showing, you know, as people were, some people were rightly skeptical that it would just end up being another low income housing thing because. This is Newport Richey. It's an economic shithole. Why would anybody put anything nice here? And surely, surely, even if you think it's going to be luxury, or if you're just saying it, it's obviously just going to, there's no way it can end up being anything but low income housing. And, but a lot of other people were excited to see that somebody was putting some investment in town. And it just kind of started to change people's thinking. Then we took on a commercial building downtown that when I was a kid had been a, IGA grocery store where we did our grocery shopping and it had, fallen into, you know, another moribund state as an antique mall that just needed to be fixed up and, and refreshing them live and up or something new. So we bought that and, did a severe gut job on it. divided it up into five tenant spaces, brought in a natural grocery store that was in town, but in a much terrible location. And a new microbrewery, the first microbrewery in town, and a taco place, and a kayak paddleboard outfitter, and a CrossFit gym. Kind of a dream lineup of revitalizing. Yeah. The kayak place didn't last very long. Kevin K (55:04.636) It's like the perfect mix. Frank Starkey (55:11.665) They were pretty much pretty ahead of the market and also just work. It wasn't their core business. They just didn't really know how to do it right. And then the taco place ended up getting replaced. The CrossFit gym outgrew the box and went to a much bigger location. And then we replaced them with an axe throwing business, which is killing it. So no joke, no pun intended. And then the microbrewery is still there. natural food store is still there. And then in the paddle boarding space, we now have a makers, a craft market that is multiple vendors that are, you know, like cottage industry makers selling under one roof. And we have a new bar and hamburger place and the former chocolate place. And they're also doing really well. And so between those two projects, it really, and then, you know, it's other, businesses started opening, new businesses opened downtown that just kind of had a new approach. They weren't honky tonks, they weren't just kind of appealing to a kind of a has -been demographic. And I just started changing the attitude. And the most remarkable occurrence was at one point, and this was around 2018, I just noticed that the online chatter in the general discussion among locals about Newport Richey kind of flipped from overwhelmingly negative people just running down the town, just saying this place is terrible. You know, get out while you can. There's nothing but crack heads and, and prostitutes and you know, it's just terrible. And to, Hey, this place is pretty cool. It's getting better. There's, it's got a lot of potential. And the naysayers started getting shattered down by the people who were more optimistic and positive about the town. And it just kind of hit that Malcolm Gladwell tipping point pretty quickly. And the attitude of the town and the self -image of people in town just has been significantly different ever since then. And then that's, of course, paid dividends and more investment coming to downtown. Now you can't find a place to rent for retail downtown. Frank Starkey (57:38.641) We actually have the problem now that there's too much food and beverage and the market isn't growing enough because we've got to bring in customers from outside of the immediate area because it's just not densely populated enough town yet. But that's so that's kind of where things started in New Port Richey. Kevin K (57:56.604) That's really, that's a great story. It's kind of, it's so indicative of also like what Marty Anderson has talked about. Let's sort of like finding your farm and a place that you care about and working there and making it better. And that's really cool. When it came to all this, were you self -financing? Were you working with investors? How was that process? Frank Starkey (58:13.169) Yeah. Frank Starkey (58:22.321) On the central, which is our apartment and on the 5800 main, which is the project that had been the IGA store, I have a financial partner on that. Who's another local who had made done well for himself in banking and lived away and moved back and was wanting to invest, but also to do some invest locally in a way that helps, you know, give something back to his own town. And that was my attitude as well. So our, our. Capital has been him and me on those two projects. And then I've got two other buildings that, one other building that I have a co -owner on and then another building I own solely by myself. So I've got a total of four projects. And all of the projects that I have are within one, two, three blocks, four blocks of each other. I was, you know, you mentioned the farm. I was very intentional about farm. I said, okay, my farm is New Port Richey. My farm yard is downtown and my barn is our office, which was right in the middle of all that. And the so that's, you know, and then now Mike and I live three blocks from all of that stuff. So we have we our new townhouse is three blocks east of downtown. Since 2018, we lived in a house that was four blocks south of downtown. So all of it was walkable. And even when downtown had just a couple of restaurants that were mostly just diners, one place that was pretty decent for lunch and salads and things, and a couple of pretty mediocre to crappy bars. I have a lot of friends here now and my office is here. And I immediately realized this is the most luxurious lifestyle I have had since college because the ability to walk everywhere and just live your life on foot is luxurious. It's just delightful. And my best friend now lives well in our old house, lives a block away. And we got to be friends living in town here and living a block from each other. And we would just ride bikes. And there was a whole other crew of Kevin K (01:00:24.284) You Frank Starkey (01:00:49.041) the people we'd ride bikes up the river in the evenings and maybe stop for a beer or maybe not and just enjoy the town. He really showed me just kind of, I smacked myself in the forehead one day when he talked about how nice it is to ride up the river during the sunset. I was like, wow, you mean you can just enjoy living in these walkable places? Because I'd always spent so much time trying to build them that I didn't spend much time just... f*****g enjoyment. Kevin K (01:01:19.676) I know, I know. It's a crazy thing. It's like it shouldn't be like a rarity or anything like that. We wish it was available to everybody, but it's wild. That was the thing about living in Savannah and that was like the hard part about leaving Savannah was, I think for a lot of us who have our ideals about walkability and everything, you kind of go back and forth about, do I want to spend my time? Frank Starkey (01:01:30.257) Yeah. Frank Starkey (01:01:37.489) Yeah, I bet. Kevin K (01:01:48.38) you know, working real hard and trying to create this as much as, as I can and, and live in a certain place where I, I guess have the economic opportunity to do that. Or do you also maybe just say, yeah, at a certain point, screw it. I just want to live somewhere where I can be, you know, do the things that I talk about all the time. So. Frank Starkey (01:02:06.513) Yeah, exactly. And it is hard to live in a place that's already kicking butt and do the things to make a place kick butt. So. Kevin K (01:02:20.124) Yeah, and in so many of these places, the places that we admire, and if you didn't get in early, you can't afford it at a certain point anymore anyway. So it's kind of a crazy deal. So as an architect, then would the infill projects, I mean, I know you worked with Eric and Mike and some others, but do you do any sketching or work on any of these sort of, is it a collaborative deal or do you at this point just be like, well, Frank Starkey (01:02:28.369) Right. Kevin K (01:02:46.268) I'm going to be a good client and be kind of hands off and just help direct my architects. Frank Starkey (01:02:50.865) I try to, I'm trying very hard to just be a good client and direct my architects. I'll let you ask Eric on whether I'm a good client or not, but that's probably been the project where I have been the most, I've left the most to the architects to on the design side. On the, the one of the commercial building that I owned by myself was a, building that didn't have any windows, two stories right on one of our main streets on a corner. So two full facades with essentially no windows. And it needed new windows storefront and upstairs. So it basically just needed a whole facade because there was just a big windowless bunker. But it had existing structural columns or structural considerations for where I could put windows. And it ended up being a interesting, challenging facade composition project. Anyway, I designed that building. And also it was a double high space where the second floor was just a mezzanine. And we closed in the second floor to make it into a mixed use building. So that because it had always been a nightclub or restaurant and it was too big as being a story and a half to for that, for this market to support because the upstairs are just kind of. You know, just sucked. So I was like, this needs to just be a regular size restaurant on the ground floor and then offices above. So I did the architecture on that, including the build out for the restaurant. I had some help on that on the layout, but I did the design, interior design stuff on that. I wish I had, I love the facade design process. And that was a really fun project. And the result was, you know, it's, it's unusual because of the constraints that it had. So, but it's, I think it's a fun, it's a good result. but if I were doing more projects, I mean, I really feel like I don't do architecture every day. So I'm not, yeah, certainly I'm not going to do construction drawings because I don't have that, capability just cause I don't, I mean, I have the technical ability to do it. Frank Starkey (01:05:15.249) and I am now licensed, I could sign and seal it, but I don't want to. And I haven't signed and sealed anything yet. So my goal is to be more of a client than I am an architect. Kevin K (01:05:27.868) So in all this stuff and going back to even your initial work with Longleaf and others, you've obviously tried to create well -designed places and beautiful places. I know you said you had some thoughts kind of based on one of the other podcasts I had where we were going back and forth and talking about beauty in buildings and the value of that versus sort of utilitarian values as well. How have you tried to balance all that and really create? beauty and do you find it at conflict with also making real estate work? Frank Starkey (01:06:04.753) I don't find beauty in conflict with making real estate work at all. I think it's critical. I don't think that things have to be built expensively in order to be beautiful. And my comment to you in my email was about y 'all had had a discussion on this, your podcast before last. about and you had said you can't legislate beauty no code in the no amount of code in the world is going to result in beauty and I've always thought about that because I agree with you that codes by their nature don't result in beauty that that human love results in beauty I mean that's you know because that's a it's a it's a spiritual outcome not a I mean, it's an outcome of the spirit. I don't mean that metaphysical terms, just, but it's something that comes from a level of care that's not, that doesn't happen from just conformance. Kevin K (01:07:10.94) Yeah, it's a value you bring to a project basically. It's something you really care to do. Yeah. Frank Starkey (01:07:16.529) Yes, that said, the American Vignoli and other handbooks that were used by builders, not by architects, but by people who were just building buildings and designing them, designing and building buildings by hand in the 1800s and early 1900s. resulted in scads of what we consider beautiful buildings with a capital B because it codified, maybe not in a sense of regulation, but in a sense of aspiration and guidance. It codified a way to arrive at competence with beautiful principles underlying it. And I wonder, it's... It's a hypothesis. I've not proved it or even set out to prove it. But if you could require that people follow the American Vignole as an example, or something else like that, where the principles of proportion are codified and they're followable, then I think you probably would still have to have some coaching. But I think you would get a whole lot closer than you can in the, because it's more like a playbook than it is a rule book for producing a competent design. Competent in the classical sense. Kevin K (01:08:54.556) Yeah. Yeah. Kevin K (01:09:02.236) Yeah, I think that's fair. It's more like coaching people about people who care. If you want to do good things, here are simple rules and patterns to follow that are not going to get you the Parthenon necessarily, but they're going to get you certainly at a minimum like a B building, like a B or a B minus building if you follow these rules. And if you do them really well and execute the details well, you could end up with an A plus building. Yeah. Frank Starkey (01:09:34.641) Yeah. Yeah, and it's something that McKim, Mead, and White can follow that and come up with something spectacular. But the same underlying principles are in every garden variety inline building on a street. Because individual urban buildings and places that we love are individually not spectacular. It's the accumulation of be buildings that are singing in the same key that makes a good chorus. Not everything can be a soloist anyway. Kevin K (01:10:11.996) And certainly, a lot of the people who produced the buildings in that era that you described, late 19th, early 20th century, I mean, there were a whole lot of just illiterate immigrants to the United States, ones who were building all that. And they didn't need 200 pages of construction drawings to follow it, but they did have patterns and illustrations and guides that they could follow. Frank Starkey (01:10:25.041) Yeah. Kevin K (01:10:42.46) and just some kind of basic standards. Yeah. Frank Starkey (01:10:43.217) And also a general cultural agreement on what looks good and what doesn't. And that's what I think you can't recreate from start, I mean, from scratch, because it's got to, that culture builds up and accumulates over decades and generations of practice. Kevin K (01:11:09.148) No doubt. Have you seen with the buildings that you have done in Newport, Richey, has there been other people who've looked at what you've done and tried to essentially say, kind of continue to raise the bar with good looking buildings? Frank Starkey (01:11:24.209) Unfortunately, I can't say that has happened yet. There hasn't been that much new construction in New Port Richey. And I don't, I can't think of any off the top of my head that have been done since we built the central, for example, which is really the only new ground up build. There's another apartment project and apartments and mixed use downtown, but it was designed in 2006 and then it was stalled and it finished about the same time we did, but it has nothing. you know, didn't follow others at all. We did have a lot of people. And this is something I would recommend, which I did accidentally. I didn't put really good drawings of the buildings into the public before they were built. I made a real now here's a blunder. There's a my blunder was I allowed the elevations of the buildings. to be the first thing that got into the public view because they were required as part of the permitting process. And an elevation drawing of a building is the architectural equivalent of a mugshot. It's representative and it's accurate, but it's accurate, but it's not representative. So it doesn't show you what a person looks like. It shows you just facts about their face. And so it shows you facts about a building, but not what it's gonna look like. So people saw the elevations. of what Eric could design, which were intentionally very simple rectangular boxes with regular, very competent, beautiful classical facades, but they looked really flat, they looked really boxy, and they looked terrible. They couldn't be at elevation, there's no depth on it. So people were like, holy s**t, of course he's building, I mean, they look like barracks. And so people lost their minds. I'm like, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait. So we quickly put together some 3D renderings. based on a quick sketchup model, we illustrated the hell out of them with landscaping and showed what a view down the street would look like. And it was a much better view. And that's really how you perceive the buildings. And so people were like, OK, well, if it looks like that, I guess I won't oppose it so much. But they were still rightfully skeptical. And so I s

Injonction au bonheur !

Play Episode Listen Later May 18, 2024 45:01


Pourquoi on ne se sent pas heureux, et puis on s'en veut de ne pas se sentir heureux. Doit-on encore faire un effort, toujours plus? Et si on se demandait plutôt d'où vient cette espèce d'obligation d'être heureux et épanoui, le tout selon des critères dictés par la société? Et si on interrogeait les autistes, pour savoir, eux, ce qui les rend heureux?Lien vers le podcast sur l'éducation bienveillante dont je cite des extraits Un témoignage, chez Catherine la Psy hors TND et TSA, d'une personne vivant avec un TAG ( Trouble anxieux généralisé) , et un autre chez Les Mots BleusHébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.

Radio Campus Tours – 99.5 FM
Crossover – UM1 Trop UM1

Radio Campus Tours – 99.5 FM

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 22, 2024


Voyage dans le temps et l’espace intertropical pour faire une pause de ces sigles qui embrument nos quotidien effrénés. Affranchissons nous enfin des SICAV, des TND, des CEE, des STI, de la SEITA, de la CEE, de la PERC, du BUMIDOM, du SPIP, du FMI, du PSG et du FSER, pour en venir à l’essentiel […] L'article Crossover – UM1 Trop UM1 est apparu en premier sur Radio Campus Tours - 99.5 FM.

The Building Culture Podcast
#14 Devon Zuegel: Building a People-First Town From Scratch with Esmeralda & Rethinking How We Live

The Building Culture Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 18, 2024 93:34


Devon Zuegel is planning a bold, people-centered town from scratch. She has a background in software engineering and has worked at some of the big firms in Silicon Valley. She discovered a passion for urbanism and housing while living in San Francisco when she started looking into why there wasn't more housing, and she draws a lot of inspiration from her childhood experiences at Chautauqua, a small town in Western New York. We discuss the need for more beautiful and community-oriented neighborhoods and the challenges of current housing policies and regulations. Devon also explains her vision for Esmeralda, a town that combines the principles of traditional neighborhood development (TND) and the community-oriented programming of Chautauqua. We explore the concept of experimentation and flexibility in urban planning and development, and brainstorm the importance of allowing for iteration and adaptation in building communities, the limitations of traditional planning processes and the need for more creative and responsive approaches. We talk about how the tech MVP model (Minimum Viable Product) can be applied to neighborhoods (Minimum Viable Place) through temporary structures, such as food trucks and airstreams, in testing ideas and activating spaces. While we discuss problems, it's a fundamentally optimistic conversation! We discuss the need for individuals to take more agency and responsibility in shaping their built environment. Devon was an amazing guest, lot's of energy, nuanced thinking and positive vibes–can't wait for y'all to hear! CHAPTERS 00:00 Introduction and Background 07:12 The Need for Building Better Places 11:52 Chautauqua: A Model for Community and Learning 15:10 The Challenges of Building Beautiful and Functional Places 24:35 Creating a New Town: The Vision for Esmeralda 31:16 Building for the Long Term: Evolving and Adapting 32:13 Challenges of Planning and Permission 37:53 The Cost of Locking In Decisions 42:48 The Negative Impact of Excessive Process 47:10 The Importance of Truth and Being Wrong 51:17 Hyper-Specialization and Loss of Agency 01:01:09 Capital and the Vision for the New Town 01:04:54 The Appeal of Esmeralda 01:05:49 Back-Weighted Returns 01:06:27 Investor Preferences 01:07:41 The Long-Term Value of TNDs 01:08:38 The Importance of Aligned Capital 01:09:30 Appreciating Wealth and Capital 01:09:59 The Impact of Wealthy Individuals 01:11:42 The Zero-Sum Mindset 01:13:16 The Infinite Potential of Wealth 01:14:13 Creating Value and Making the Pie Bigger 01:15:10 The Role of Wealth in Society 01:17:19 Building Relationships and Community 01:19:56 Funding through Pre-Sales 01:22:03 The Inspiration behind Esmeralda's Name 01:23:23 The Concept of Edge Esmeralda 01:32:05 Podcast - Outro w Music.mp4 CONNECT WITH DEVON & RESOURCES Blog: https://devonzuegel.com/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/devonzuegel Summer Event: https://www.edgeesmeralda.com/ Book: Invisible Cities Chautauqua: https://www.chq.org/ CONNECT WITH AUSTIN TUNNELL Newsletter: https://playbook.buildingculture.com/ https://www.instagram.com/austintunnell/ https://www.linkedin.com/in/austin-tunnell-2a41894a/ https://twitter.com/AustinTunnell CONNECT WITH BUILDING CULTURE https://www.buildingculture.com/ https://www.instagram.com/buildingculture/ https://twitter.com/build_culture https://www.facebook.com/BuildCulture/

Tous pareils ou presque !
Ep.28 - Autisme et bonheur(s)

Tous pareils ou presque !

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 1, 2024 24:27


Autisme et bonheur(s)La conception du bonheur chez les personnes autistes est-elle différente de celle des personnes neurotypiques ? Comment faire pour qu'un enfant/un ado/un adulte neuro-atypique soit heureux, avec ses particularités et ses difficultés ? Quel rôle pouvons-nous jouer pour La question peut sembler un peu abstraite et le sujet pour le moins ambitieux...Pourtant c'est LA question pour tous les parents d'un enfant atypique, quel que soit son handicap.Dans cet épisode collectif, on n'entendra ni parents, ni psychologues, juste des personnes autistes qui partagent leurs petits et grand bonheurs.Arthur, Coline, Erwan, Lali, Rokia, Sylvie et Tristan, nous emmènent ainsi chacun dans leur univers et leur intimité.Et l'on ne peut qu'être touchés en les entendant parler du bien-être intense qu'ils ressentent lorsqu'ils s'adonnent à leurs intérêts spécifiques, souvent assez simples, mais aussi grâce aux échanges et aux rencontres authentiques qu'ils font parfois.Au delà de ces instantanés de vie quotidienne, ces témoignages donnent à réfléchir car tous les sept évoquent à quel point le fait d'être accepté dans leur singularité, les rend heureux...Des témoignages qui montrent bien que chacun de nous individuellement, peut jouer un rôle dans la qualité de vie de ces enfants et adultes autistes.******************Merci beaucoup à Julien Rebours pour son aide précieuse à la réalisation de cet épisode************Tous pareils ou presque, c'est aussi une newsletter dans laquelle je partage mes rencontres avec des porteurs de projets, mes échanges avec des familles et professionnels, mes lectures, conseils, etc...Inscrivez-vous pour la recevoir tous les mois : Inscription newsletter (subscribepage.com)  Si cet épisode vous a plu, vous pouvez le relayer sur les réseaux sociaux ou mettre un commentaire sur Apple podcast !  Tous pareils ou presque (@touspareils_oupresque) • Photos et vidéos Instagram Tous pareils ou presque - Le podcast de l'autisme | Facebook *********** « Tous pareils ou presque !» est un podcast réalisé par Stéphanie Gruet-Masson, qui explore les multiples facettes de l'autisme et de la neurodiversité, à travers le regard des parents, des professionnels et des personnes autistes elles-mêmes.Que trouve-t-on dans ce podcast ? - Des épisodes thématiques : regards croisés sur des sujets liés à cette parentalité "atypique", à l'inclusion des enfants et adultes autistes ou ayant un autre type de handicap, à la place des frères et soeurs, au rôle des pères, à l'école, à l'intégration professionnelle, les vacances ou les voyages "extra-ordinaires", etc...- Des interviews de parents, de professionnels ayant une expérience particulière à partager ou de personnes autistes prêtes à nous donner leur vision "de l'intérieur". Vous pouvez nous écrire : touspareilsoupresque@gmail.com Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.

Explora Commodore Retrokiosko
Retrokiosko #45

Explora Commodore Retrokiosko

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 24, 2024 197:39


En este programa hacemos un repaso a algunas noticias de la actualidad commodoriana y a los lanzamientos commodorianos de las últimas semanas. El tema central del programa será el libro Life of videogames: 8-bit memories de Ivan Venturi (o Vita di Videogiochi: Memorie a 8 bit en italiano), en el que Venturi nos cuenta su vida como desarrollador de la compañía italiana Simulmondo. Todo esto lo veremos con el equipo habitual formado por David Asenjo (https://twitter.com/darro99), Toni Bianchetti (https://twitter.com/seuck), Narciso Quintana "Narcisound" (https://twitter.com/narcisound), Jonatan Jiménez (https://twitter.com/jsabreman) y Paco Herrera (https://twitter.com/pacoblog64). Las noticias comentadas en el programa han sido: - Por fin está listo el libro definitivo sobre Rob Hubbard, en su momento pedí la versión física, hace muchos años: https://c64audio.com/products/master-of-magic-the-official-rob-hubbard-softography-project-hubbard-backers?variant=44196768252053 - Hay fecha del documental con juegos sobre Jeff Minter: https://heartofneon.us20.list-manage.com/track/click?u=a3a4de89aa6fdfa54be927bc8&id=674104b7e0&e=cd0bdae567 - Martin Piper está mejorando el SEUCK: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VJbpLoU6OJ0 - Alan Sugar compra los derechos de la marca Amstrad: https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-13152363/Lord-Sugar-reboots-famous-Amstrad-brand.html - Nuevo libro sobre la Graftgold: https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/zzap642021annual/the-story-of-graftgold - Construyendo una replica nueva de disquetera 1581: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vdZjPVtzAGA https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v785_DqcGIk https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c2c9ICvqR-w - Arcandeu anuncia cartel: https://twitter.com/retromaniacs_es/status/1762080035890962840?s=48&t=qmCQFosV5ILHbulL4EVzew - Publicada Imagen del prototipo de la Commodore 4010 (Voice Response Unit): https://drive.google.com/file/d/1aMIcbtxyNhi_69bATTBZ3yRk7jZzolXo/view?usp=drive_link https://drive.google.com/file/d/1R_kwr3fDOrDWiKz7F1k2WWPWaDiqt4xv/view?usp=drive_link https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JU-XyAHXYOM - Teensy ROM NFC game loading system: https://youtu.be/FqgyiQdGp7o?feature=shared - Casetes deluxe de los tres juegos de Horace: https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/pixeljockey/the-horace-collection?ref=recommendation-projectpage-footer-2 - Nueva edición del Manual del Usuario del MEGA65: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UUVOtkLP-eY - GTW publica material inedito de Archer Mclean: https://www.gamesthatwerent.com/2024/03/archer-macleans-atari-concepts - Digitalizado vídeo promocional de Commodore en Bélgica: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bHTNMs5tWVA Actualizaciones: - Petmate 9: https://wbochar.com/petmate9/ Minuto y resultado (juegos): - Great Giana Sister (Plus4, TCFS): https://www.indieretronews.com/2024/03/the-great-giana-sisters-arrives-on.html?m=1 - Good Kniight (C64, Psytronik): https://psytronik.itch.io/good-kniight - Lock'n'chase (C64, LC-Games): https://lowcarb.itch.io/locknchase-c64 - Diamond Geezer (C64, Arlasoft): https://arlagames.itch.io/diamond-geezer - Krogarr (Amiga, Tigerskunk): https://tigerskunk.itch.io/krogharr - Ecliptic (Amiga, bwldrbst): https://bwldrbst.itch.io/ecliptic - Harharagon (C64, Psytronik): https://psytronik.itch.io/harharagon - Slimed (PET, milasoft64): https://milasoft64.itch.io/slimed-for-commodore-pet-2001 - Ghost'n'Goblins (Mega65, sho3string): https://github.com/sho3string/GnGMEGA65 - Dan The Digger 10 (C64, Commocore): https://commocore.itch.io/dan-the-digger-10 - Spediteur (C64, Windigo Productions): https://windigoproductions.itch.io/spediteur - Golddrake vs Vega (C64, Voxvideogame): https://voxvideogame.itch.io/goldrake-vs-vega-c64 - Herisferix (C64, TND): https://richard-tnd.itch.io/herisferix - Roboform X2 (C64, TND): https://richard-tnd.itch.io/roboformx2

Tous pareils ou presque !
Ep.27 - Florian : mes labyrinthes - vivre avec la différence

Tous pareils ou presque !

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 19, 2024 23:52


Quand on accompagne une personne autiste, on a souvent besoin de comprendre : comprendre ce qui rend une situation compliquée, ce qui bloque, ce qui créée un sentiment de décalage ou, au contraire, ce qui peut rendre les choses plus fluides et la relation plus simple.Beaucoup de ressources existent pour expliquer le fonctionnement des personnes autistes mais la parole des personnes concernées revêt parfois une force particulière comme c'est le cas dans cet entretien.Comme dans son livre, "Mes labyrinthes - Vivre avec la différence" publié aux Éditions du Faubourg , Florian Forestier, diagnostiqué autiste à l'âge de 25 ans, décrit l'autisme comme une expérience sensible, une vibration du corps, mais aussi comme un révélateur des failles de notre société dans laquelle singularité rime souvent avec exclusion. Dans cet épisode, il livre donc une expérience de l'autisme, plus qu'une définition, et ses réflexions donnent des clés précieuses pour mieux comprendre ce que signifie vivre avec l'autisme dans une société majoritairement neurotypique.Florian Forestier se situe bien sûr à l'une des extrémité du spectre autistique mais ce qu'il explique dépasse très largement la situation des autistes Asperger.Dans cet épisode on évoque entre autres choses :sa façon de percevoir tous les stimuli et informations extérieurs, avec les conséquences que cela entraîne;une autre vision de l'empathie qui met en lumière les limites de l'approche très "classique" de ce concept;les mécanismes qui peuvent se mettre en place en cas de déclenchement d'une crise autistique, la façon dont elle est perçue de l'extérieur et vécue de l'intérieur;les évènements qui peuvent aussi influer de manière très positive de type de parcours.Au terme de cet entretien, on comprend mieux cette manière différente d'être, de penser et d'agir. Et on se dit, comme Florian Forestier, qu'il faut aussi voir ce diagnostic "comme un rappel, constant, de ne pas chercher chez les autres un miroir. D'aimer (son) chemin comme il est, sinueux, chaotique."******************Merci beaucoup à Julien Rebours et à Benjamin Roa (Station Woosh) qui ont participé à la réalisation de cet épisode************Tous pareils ou presque, c'est aussi une newsletter dans laquelle je partage mes rencontres avec des porteurs de projets, mes échanges avec des familles et professionnels, mes lectures, conseils, etc...Inscrivez-vous pour la recevoir tous les mois : Inscription newsletter (subscribepage.com)  Si cet épisode vous a plu, vous pouvez le relayer sur les réseaux sociaux ou mettre un commentaire sur Apple podcast !  Tous pareils ou presque (@touspareils_oupresque) • Photos et vidéos Instagram Tous pareils ou presque - Le podcast de l'autisme | Facebook *********** « Tous pareils ou presque !» est un podcast réalisé par Stéphanie Gruet-Masson, qui explore les multiples facettes de l'autisme et de la neurodiversité, à travers le regard des parents, des professionnels et des personnes autistes elles-mêmes.Que trouve-t-on dans ce podcast ? - Des épisodes thématiques : regards croisés sur des sujets liés à cette parentalité "atypique", à l'inclusion des enfants et adultes autistes ou ayant un autre type de handicap, à la place des frères et soeurs, au rôle des pères, à l'école, à l'intégration professionnelle, les vacances ou les voyages "extra-ordinaires", etc...- Des interviews de parents, de professionnels ayant une expérience particulière à partager ou de personnes autistes prêtes à nous donner leur vision "de l'intérieur". Vous pouvez nous écrire : touspareilsoupresque@gmail.com 

OrthosPower
#77. Stéphane et Jérôme. Les Troubles neuro-développementaux

OrthosPower

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 18, 2024 68:29


Dans cet épisode, je reçois Jérôme, neuropsychologue, et Stéphane, orthophoniste, pour parler des troubles neuro-développementaux. On parlera parcours de soin, guidance parentale, centre référent et prise en soins pluridisciplinaire.

Tous pareils ou presque !
Ep.26 - Les bobos à la ferme, un projet innovant pour soutenir les parents aidants

Tous pareils ou presque !

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 27, 2024 33:32


Les bobos à la ferme, c'est l'histoire d'Elodie et Louis, 2 bobos parisiens comme ils se définissent eux-même, qui plongent dans le monde du handicap avec l'arrivée de leur premier enfant.Andréa, leur petite fille est atteinte d'une maladie rare et dégénérative.Leur vie bascule et en quelques mois, ils décident de quitter, leurs postes à responsabilité et leur vie parisienne pour s'installer dans une ferme à retaper dans le Pas de Calais.Dans cet épisode, on parle de :l'annonce du handicap l'impact sur le couple et la façon dont Louis et Elodie ont fait face ensemblel'isolement social mais aussi la construction de nouvelles relationsles conséquences pour la vie professionnellela genèse du projet Les bobos à la ferme, des gites pour les familles et un laboratoire de soutien aux parents d'enfants handicapésLes victoires mais aussi les freins au développement de ce projet.Cet épisode c'est l'histoire d'un couple qui reste debout malgré le handicap très lourd de leur enfant. C'est aussi, un projet innovant pour soutenir les familles touchées par le handicap, un projet qui propose des solutions sur-mesure et qui pourrait être duplicable dans d'autres régions en France (à condition de bénéficier des soutiens nécessaires).Pour en savoir plus et pour soutenir ce magnifique projet, c'est par ici : https://lesbobosalaferme.fr/*************Tous pareils ou presque, c'est aussi une newsletter dans laquelle je partage mes rencontres avec des porteurs de projets, mes échanges avec des familles et professionnels, mes lectures, conseils, etc...Inscrivez-vous pour la recevoir tous les mois : Inscription newsletter (subscribepage.com)  Si cet épisode vous a plu, vous pouvez le relayer sur les réseaux sociaux ou mettre un commentaire sur Apple podcast !  Tous pareils ou presque (@touspareils_oupresque) • Photos et vidéos Instagram Tous pareils ou presque - Le podcast de l'autisme | Facebook *********** « Tous pareils ou presque !» est un podcast réalisé par Stéphanie Gruet-Masson, qui explore les multiples facettes de l'autisme et de la neurodiversité, à travers le regard des parents, des professionnels et des personnes autistes elles-mêmes.Que trouve-t-on dans ce podcast ? - Des épisodes thématiques : regards croisés sur des sujets liés à cette parentalité "atypique", à l'inclusion des enfants et adultes autistes ou ayant un autre type de handicap, à la place des frères et soeurs, au rôle des pères, à l'école, à l'intégration professionnelle, les vacances ou les voyages "extra-ordinaires", etc...- Des interviews de parents, de professionnels ayant une expérience particulière à partager ou de personnes autistes prêtes à nous donner leur vision "de l'intérieur". Vous pouvez nous écrire : touspareilsoupresque@gmail.com Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.

Tous pareils ou presque !
Ep. 25 - L'alimentation, un vrai défi pour les personnes autistes

Tous pareils ou presque !

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 24, 2023 20:31


Autisme et alimentation Les repas et l'alimentation sont parfois de vrais défis pour les enfants et les adultes autistes. Particularités sensorielles, difficultés dans les interactions sociales, problèmes de motricité fine, peur de l'inconnu, ... Tout concourt à faire de ces temps de repas, des moments très compliqués pour les enfants autistes (et pour leurs parents...). Dans cet épisode, des parents et des personnes autistes témoignent de ces particularités alimentaires et de l'impact sur leur quotidien.  Des professionnels (psychomotricien, psychologue, orthophoniste) apportent leur éclairage et leurs pistes de solution pour favoriser une alimentation plus équilibrée. Cet épisode a été réalisé dans le cadre d'un partenariat avec l'association Ikigaï qui a développé et mis en ligne le site TouSAtable – Autisme et alimentation (tousatable-tsa.org) , un site qui propose des ressources précieuses sur l'alimentation des enfants autistes. ************* Tous pareils ou presque, c'est aussi une newsletter dans laquelle je partage mes rencontres avec des porteurs de projets, mes échanges avec des familles et professionnels, mes lectures, conseils, etc... Inscrivez-vous pour la recevoir tous les mois : Inscription newsletter (subscribepage.com)  ************* Si cet épisode vous a plu, vous pouvez le relayer sur les réseaux sociaux ou mettre un commentaire sur Apple podcast !   Tous pareils ou presque (@touspareils_oupresque) • Photos et vidéos Instagram  Tous pareils ou presque - Le podcast de l'autisme | Facebook  ***********  « Tous pareils ou presque !» est un podcast qui explore les multiples facettes de l'autisme et de la neurodiversité, à travers le regard des parents, des professionnels et des personnes autistes elles-mêmes. Que trouve-t-on dans ce podcast ?  - Des épisodes thématiques : regards croisés sur des sujets liés à cette parentalité "atypique", à l'inclusion des enfants et adultes autistes ou ayant un autre type de handicap, à la place des frères et soeurs, au rôle des pères, à l'école, à l'intégration professionnelle, les vacances ou les voyages "extra-ordinaires", etc... - Des interviews de parents, de professionnels ayant une expérience particulière à partager ou de personnes autistes prêtes à nous donner leur vision "de l'intérieur".   Le montage/mixage de cet épisode a été réalisé par Benjamin Roat de Station Woosh. Un grand merci à lui !  Vous pouvez nous écrire : touspareilsoupresque@gmail.comHébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.

ThinkEnergy
Accelerating Canada's clean energy transition with Dunsky Energy + Climate Advisors

ThinkEnergy

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 6, 2023 29:51


The renewable revolution is here. Scientists, entrepreneurs, and policymakers—including Indigenous and industry leaders—are accelerating the transition to clean energy. But does Canada unanimously agree on the path to a more sustainable future? Philippe Dunsky, founder of Dunsky Energy + Climate Advisors, joins thinkenergy to discuss. From climate counsels and regional challenges to greener business practices and how to positively impact the clean energy and climate sectors. Listen to Episode 124 today.   Related links   Philippe Dunsky on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/philippedunsky/  Dunsky Energy + Climate Advisors: https://www.dunsky.com/  Dunsky Energy + Climate Advisors on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/dunsky-energy-climate-advisors/ To subscribe using Apple Podcasts:  https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/thinkenergy/id1465129405   To subscribe using Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/7wFz7rdR8Gq3f2WOafjxpl   To subscribe on Libsyn: http://thinkenergy.libsyn.com/ --- Subscribe so you don't miss a video: https://www.youtube.com/user/hydroottawalimited   Follow along on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/hydroottawa   Stay in the know on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/HydroOttawa Keep up with the posts on X: https://twitter.com/thinkenergypod ---- Transcript: Dan Seguin  00:06 This is think energy, the podcast that helps you better understand the fast changing world of energy through conversations with game changers, industry leaders, and influencers. So join me, Dan Seguin, as I explore both traditional and unconventional facets of the energy industry. Hey, everyone, welcome back. Right now, there are scientists, entrepreneurs, policymakers, indigenous and industry leaders, helping to shape the direction that Canada will take to accelerate a transition to clean energy. Everywhere you look, whether it's academia, municipal, provincial, or federal governments, there's another council or committee being formed to address the most pressing issues of our time, climate change, from transitioning to sustainable energy sources, electrifying transportation, and improving energy efficiency to protecting our natural environment and reducing carbon emissions. One thing is for certain our country is embracing the renewable revolution, like never before. But those with seats at the decision table know that it must be done responsibly, and affordable. As we know, every region of Canada is unique and presents its own set of challenges and opportunities when it comes to tackling climate change, and ways to implement clean energy. So here is today's big question. How did we get such a vast and diverse country like Canada to agree on a pathway forward to a cleaner, greener and more sustainable energy future? Joining us today is Philippe Dunsky of Dunsky Energy and Climate Advisors, a consultancy firm that Philippe founded. It supports government, utilities, corporations across North America to accelerate their transition to clean energy. Phillippe, is the co chair of Canada's new Canada electricity Advisory Council, the co chair of efficiency Canada, and the director of the greater Montreal Climate Fund. He also previously chaired the Quebec government electrification Working Group. Welcome to the show, Philippe. Let's start by asking you this. Having just gone over some of your accomplishments, where does this passion for clean energy and climate come from? Where did it start?   Philippe Dunsky  02:44 So, so great to be here. By the way, thank you so much for having me. It started, I guess, I guess very early on. I'm Jewish background and grew up with, you know, endless stories about the Holocaust. And somehow that kind of morphed into just a general  interest for world affairs and for big challenges, big societal challenges. And then as I was growing up, those became really focused on environmental issues. So that was the genesis. I became very, very interested in environmental issues. And then through that, and climate change in particular, as probably the greatest challenge of my generation, and for my generation. And then, I guess the other thing is, I've come to discover that I'm a pretty analytical guy. So I'm not a no great protester, I'm not a great to great movement leader, I tend to see a lot of gray, not so much black and white. And so that's how I ended up deciding to get involved in these issues. But, you know, in my own way through more of an analytical lens,   Dan Seguin  03:55 Okay, you've served and are serving on numerous councils, committees and boards. Can you tell us what has been the biggest takeaway you've learned through each collaboration? And how has it changed you?   Philippe Dunsky  04:11 Yeah, because each one does change you and changes your perspectives. Because ultimately, the biggest takeaway is that no matter how much I think I know this stuff and know this stuff. Well, and I've been working on energy issues for over 30 years now. And so, you know, I always end up thinking that I know the answer. What we discover is that, you know, there's not a single answer, there are many perspectives. And if you can combine knowledge with multiple perspectives, then you can come up with something that's hopefully going to be closer to that, you know, to that truth, or whatever you want to call it. My big learning is that every time you go into something like this, you go in with an open mind and an open heart. And if you do that, and you're listening to others perspectives, then you're bound to land on something that's a hell of a lot smarter. And then what you initially thought coming into it?   Dan Seguin  05:02 Okay, cool. Now, you were appointed chair for a recently formed Canada electricity Advisory Council. Can you tell our listeners who's on it? What is the mandate? And just how big of an undertaking is this?   Philippe Dunsky  05:19 Sure, I can start with the last question, by the way, that the undertaking, it's a really big issue, it's a really big challenge. On the other hand, the undertaking itself is time limited, it's a 12 month thing. So I'm a pumpkin and I turned into a pumpkin in May. It's been five months now. So I got another seven to go. From that perspective, that's the timing that we're looking at. Okay, Council itself is a group of 18 Canadians from across the country, every single, every single province, no exception. It's, it's extraordinary mix of individuals with an extraordinary mix of experience and perspective. So I'd say roughly half of council members are either current or former utility executives. The other half is a bit more of an eclectic mix of former regulators, we have people involved in the power production side of things, we have first nations leaders, so indigenous leaders, and a couple of others with different perspectives to bring to the table. But the really important thing here, I think, is that you're looking at the leadership level from every single province across the country. And that makes for really, really enlightening and challenging conversations as well. And then I guess you asked about the purpose or the mandate of the council. So I'll put it at a very, very fundamental level as a country, we're trying to largely decarbonize electricity by sometime in the middle of the 2030s. And we're looking to grow electricity, very substantially to decarbonize the rest of the economy. By 2050. That's that dual set of goals is at the heart of our mandate. And our mandate is to figure out what the feds can and must do. And at the same time, what can and must be done by others in the country, to help make this an easier journey, a more affordable journey. And ultimately, a more successful journey on the way there.   Dan Seguin  07:22 Okay, great segue here. Now, with respect to Canada's goal to achieve a 100%, Net Zero electricity system by 2035, you stated, "Is it better to optimize than maximize? Can you maybe break that down for us? And can you give us some examples?   Philippe Dunsky  07:41 Yeah, sure. I mean, you know, what I mean by that is, if all we do is say we want to decarbonize, there are many, many paths to do that. And, you know, we can say, hey, we're gonna, we're just gonna build, build, build, build, build until there's no tomorrow. And we could probably get there, doing nothing but that, but we'll get there in a less affordable way, than if we really think through the intricacies of what needs to be done. Yes, on adding, also on subtracting, so actually becoming more efficient in the way we use energy, relying more on consumers' involvement in the marketplace to achieve some of those goals. I just think there are quick ways to get to the goal, that ultimately, are going to cost too much and or create reliability issues. And if that happens, there'll be a backlash. And we'll never get to the goal. Alternatively, there, they're thoughtful ways that maybe aren't exactly the way we've always done things in the past, but that involve a lot more complexity and being able to wrestle with complexity and stuff. But ways that are focused on keeping this as affordable as possible, ultimately, for everyone across Canada, making sure that we do this in a way that's reliable, so we can always count on electricity being there. And in doing it in a way that actually involves some cooperation, as well.   Dan Seguin  09:04 So the electricity Council fulfills the minister's mandate to establish a pan Canadian grid Council. How viable is a pan Canadian electricity grid? Or are you seeing your movement in regional interconnections?   Philippe Dunsky  09:22 Yeah, so it definitely looks regional. Let me be really clear about that. And I know the original Originally, the name for the council was supposed to be the pan Canadian grid Council, as you pointed out, you'll also notice it, it was not it does not have that name. And there's a reason for that. And, and I will say, you know, and I've said this publicly many times, I don't believe that that's the right answer. We definitely need a lot more cooperation. at the regional level. There are a lot of opportunities for provinces to exchange more to continue exchanging with the US by the way, and this isn't, you know, we're not caught within, within our borders. So we have to do more on the cooperation side to keep costs down again, as low as possible to make this as smart and thoughtful and as achievable as possible. But that doesn't involve, you know, I love the old Coast to Coast Railway analogy. It's nice, it's working for railways. We're not talking about a single grid that goes coast to coast that's just not in the cards.   Dan Seguin  10:28 Now, for those who are not aware, can you tell us about your firm, its purpose, and what makes your approach unique, and particularly effective?   Philippe Dunsky  10:40 Sure, I mean, I'm thrilled talking about my firm. So these days, I spend so much time talking about look Council, which is kind of like my evenings and nighttime job, or evenings and weekend job. But my day job is running my firm, my firm is a group of over 50 professionals. Now, I think we're about 55 now that are dedicated exclusively to supporting clients in their clean energy transitions. And our clients typically are utilities and governments, increasingly large corporate clients as well, across Canada and across the US. So ultimately we work with utilities and governments that are in the throes of this energy transition, that are trying to figure it out. They're trying to find a way to help their customers navigate through it and a way for themselves to navigate through it, to define what the business case is for them and what their proper role is in it. And, and then we also have helped them in some of the nitty gritty. So, you know do you get customers involved on the demand side management side to reduce the pressure on right on the big build out? And all the capital is involved there? You know, what do we need to do to electrify vehicles, for example. So we've developed for some places, charging, charging infrastructure plans and charging infrastructure, business, business plans, strategies, investment plans, we work with, with our, with our customers in helping helping to decarbonize buildings through whether it's direct electrification, or hybrid heating systems without just the natural gas, depending on the on the need, we work with to decarbonize industrial loads, as well. And oftentimes, we're working with our utility customers to help them help their industrial customers decarbonize. So all of those things, and more and of course, planning out the whole transformation of the electricity system on the supply side, is a big part of it. That's a lot of what we do. It's hard to put in a single sentence. But the interesting thing, I guess, for us is, you know, ultimately, we're a consulting shop that is exclusively focused on the clean energy transition, we do nothing other than that. And, and I think that makes us pretty darn good at it.   Dan Seguin  13:02 That's perfect. Phillippe, your company emphasizes support in four focus areas, buildings, mobility, Industry and Energy. How were those identified? And can you maybe provide some specific projects or initiatives that have made a significant difference in the sector's?   Philippe Dunsky  13:25 Yeah, sure. And those sectors are, you know, 80 to 90%, of the energy equation, right. So they've grown over time, in a very deliberate manner, we started out working on the building side of the equation. So you know, what we call DSM or in Ontario, you call it CDM. Just to be different. But so we started out working on that. And then over time, we added mobility, especially electric mobility to our portfolio of expertise, and then built out from there, including on the generation and TND side, in terms of some examples. I mean, I'll be honest with you, we do well over 100 projects a year now. So there are a lot of different ones with a pretty large variety. But for example, I actually just came back from meeting with one of our clients, a large, large electric utility, where we've helped them to revamp their whole CDM approach. So that's, you know, from top to bottom, on the strategy side, on the regulatory side, and then on what the programs actually look like and how they operate and who they involve. In Ontario, we actually completed something I think is absolutely fascinating. I really enjoyed reading it. And that was a study of the potential of Drs. So distributed energy resources in Ontario to essentially keep the lights on, you know, we found 1000s of megawatts of exploitable resources there that you don't need to build because they're already there on the customer side of the meter. So stuff like that. We've worked with a lot of states in the US including California and New York designing, designing measure is to help their customers finance, the transition on their side, we've done a lot of work with, with utility executives helping them think through the strategy side of this, how am I going to actually the change management? How may I change my own utility to go from what it was in that steady state environment of the past 75 years to something that is a completely different beast in a very much more dynamic world. And it's focused on customer service and, and focused on transitioning the energy system as a whole. So, again, a pretty broad array of, of projects, but all of them. Absolutely. Absolutely exciting. And, and fascinating for me to be involved in and learn from.   Dan Seguin  15:45 Okay, now, wondering if you can speak to the importance of responsible and sustainable practices in the clean energy sector? And how has your company prioritized these principles in his work?   Philippe Dunsky  16:00 Yeah, sure. I mean, I mean, look, the world right now is looking to the energy sector to lead and to transform itself. And as we do that, you know, leaders have to have to walk the talk. So, you know, I'm, I'm very proud that most, if not all of my clients are doing that right now within their own operations. And my firm does that in our operations. I try to do that, in my own life, I've been driving nav for seven years. Now, it's a great way for me to, to, to lead by example, but also, quite frankly, to get a head and on the experience curve, and actually understand from personal experience, all right, what are the challenges of of EV ownership and what needs to happen to make it a more seamless process? So you know, that's on the personal side, my company, we're actually a B Corp. So we went through a process to be certified by an independent organization that looks at all of our practices, from soup to nuts. And in our score, our B Corp score has increased. Year over year, I think we started out somewhere about 80 Something points, and now we're at 119. So you know, it's just a process of continuous improvement, just like, just like all of our clients have to have to do.   Dan Seguin  17:12 Okay, cool. Now, we all know, there's always more every country can be doing to combat climate change. But it's complex. In your opinion, Philippe, how does Canada compare? Is it on the right track, and focusing its effort on the right initiatives?   Philippe Dunsky  17:34 Yeah, I think it's, I think Canada is, is definitely moving in the right direction. I think there have been a lot of very important policies brought forward over the past several years that I think, bring us forward. Are they all done exactly the way I would like them to be done? No, if I had a magic wand, would I do it a little bit differently? Probably, but directionally there. Actually, I think we're heading there. You know, that being said, it's a long and winding road. Right. And it will be for the next decade. So there will be setbacks, and there will be things that we're doing that are suboptimal. And that's a little bit part of life. So my job and the role I've kind of given myself and my firm is to help make that path as straight and narrow as it reasonably can be. But you know, recognizing that this is a big learning process and, and mistakes you're gonna make for sure.   Dan Seguin  18:31 Now, Philippe, what are some of the biggest challenges or even threats to achieving a clean energy future in the timeline set out by scientists and the government? How is your company positioned to address them?   Philippe Dunsky  18:46 The biggest challenges and threats and I'll decouple those questions, okay. Because I think that, from my perspective, there are enormous challenges. There's first and foremost, a challenge of time, right? Because what we're talking about if we're talking about, you know, getting to net zero or something like it by 2050. I mean, that's a single generation. So we're talking about literally transforming the backbone of modern economies in a single generation. That is, number one, because frankly, that's never been done before. We've done it within sectors, right, we've done we went from, from horse drawn carriages, to to you know, horseless horseless carriages. And you know, we've, we dumped manufacturer, gas and went, went to natural gas, and we've done individual changes like that before. We've never done all at the same time dealing with that and getting it done. The single generation is a race. And so I do think that time is probably the number one challenge number two challenge. And, you know, if you really take a take a step back here and think about what we're talking about it, it's largely from an economic standpoint, we're largely moving from optics to capex, and there's we're largely it moving from a context where whether it's utilities, or business owners or homeowners, today, we pay our bills, you know, we're buying fossil fuels, right, we're buying and burning the energy that we consume. And so that's an OP X thing. Now, what we're talking about is increasingly stuff, that's just all capital, if you think of, you know, going from a gas plant to, let's say, a wind farm, a wind farm is, you know, it's once and done all of the entire cost for next 20 years, or 95% of it goes in the ground on day one, that's moving objects to capex, it's a really big change. If you're thinking of it from a homeowner perspective, we're talking about, let's say, take my example, you know, I bought an Eevee, my Eevee cost a lot more than that my previous gas car did. On the other hand, I'm paying a hell of a lot less to keep it up to optics to capex. So there's a real challenge around getting enough capital for all this to happen, whether it's for large utilities or down to an individual homeowner or car owner, I think that's a real big challenge that we have a couple more, maybe I'll, maybe I'll stop there. And then the things that my firm is doing to address those, I mean, look, like I said before, on the timeline side, everything we're trying to do is just minimize errors, we're not gonna eliminate them, but minimize errors. So that that line between here and there can be as straight as possible, and as least painful as possible on the capital side, that's a very specific thing. But we actually do a lot of work developing innovative financing mechanisms that utilities and governments can offer to homeowners and business owners, to allow them to have access to the capital that they need, as they tried to save money on the operation side. So those are, those are a couple of them, anyhow.   Dan Seguin  21:57 Okay, Philippe, what do you want Canadians to know about the country's transition to clean energy that they might not already know or be aware of?   Philippe Dunsky  22:10 You know, I think, I think everyone is aware that this energy transition is really big, and it's gonna be really hard. Maybe the one thing I'll add on to it is, there's a lot of benefit on the other side of this. So a lot of benefit, you know, what we're talking about ultimately, is, is transformative in nature, it's the sort of thing that's happened. I'm thinking outside of the energy sector, but just holistically, these kinds of changes have happened a few times in the past 100 years or so. And they tend to always be ultimately about moral leadership to start. And so I think we need to think of this, first and foremost from the perspective of moral leadership, which is something that is one of the reasons why Canada has such a great, strong brand around the world, because we punch above our weight on the great moral issues of the times. And that was true when we went to help out Europe during World War Two, and that was that true. And we went Mulrooney led the boycott of South Africa under apartheid. I mean, we've stood up when we've needed to, that has positioned this country internationally in a way that I don't I'm not sure that we fully measure. This is one of those times. And so being at the forefront of this, I think is extraordinarily important for our country as a whole. That being said, there's also some really economic benefits at the end of this and flip it on its head to there's some real economic costs and risks if we don't do this, and if we don't get it right, well, one thing, one thing I'll point to, I remember about 10 years ago, being in conversations with some provincial governments about the possibility of governments eventually taxing imports of our products, if they're too carbon intensive, and the idea sounded a bit crazy back then we're recording this today on October 30 29 days ago, on October 1, Europe's carbon border adjustment mechanism came into effect for the first time. And that is effectively going to tax import of products from everywhere around the world based on their carbon content. So if we get ahead of this fast, if we succeed in this, if we lower our carbon content of what we produce, we've got a hell of a nice economic advantage at the end of it.   Dan Seguin  24:33 Now, what advice would you give to an aspiring entrepreneur or those looking to make a positive impact in the clean energy and climate sectors?   Philippe Dunsky  24:48 You know, my advice is it's gonna sound a little wishy washy, but it's just figuring out what you're great at. You know, everyone's great at something different so I have a hard time. I'm providing really concrete advice to people I don't know personally, but everyone's got their magic. Everyone's got their special exceptionalism. I think it's important to know who you are, know what you really like to do know where you excel, and then whatever that is, to the extent that you can bring that to service of a greater cause, whether it's climate, whether it's portability, whatever it is, I think that's just a beautiful thing. So I encourage everyone to ultimately lead a purpose driven life and, and lean on their own strengths wherever they may be.   Dan Seguin  25:35 Okay, that's fair. Lastly, Philippe, we always end our interviews with some rapid fire questions. Are you ready? Maybe. Okay, here we go. What are you reading right now?   Philippe Dunsky  25:51 Right now I'm actually sounding nerdy but I'm actually reading the CIA's 2030. Outlook, the latest 2030 outlook by the International Energy Agency. Absolutely fascinating read. If you're a nerd, like I am about energy.   Dan Seguin  26:04 Now, what would you name your boat? If you had one? Or maybe you do have one?   Philippe Dunsky  26:10 My boat? My boat is a canoe. And what would I name my canoe? I'm not sure. Maybe I named it the Power Canoe. One of the reasons I love canoes, by the way, is they're probably the most efficient way of getting from point A to point B on water. So I'm a big fan of energy efficiency and, and a canoe is just that.   Dan Seguin  26:31 Who is someone that you truly admire Philippe?   Philippe Dunsky  26:35 Oh, goodness, I admire so many people, I couldn't come up with a single name there. You know, I work with a lot of leaders who dedicate their time and energy and excellence to, for public purposes. And every single one of those I'm in deep admiration of, I'll maybe add one other group, the folks I work with here in my firm. I've never known a group of people as dedicated and passionate and smart and curious. As they are, they do inspire me.   Dan Seguin  27:05 Good, good. Okay. What is the closest thing to real magic that you've witnessed?   Philippe Dunsky  27:10 I'm from Quebec. So I'm a big fan of the circus, the modern circus, whether it's Cirque du Soleil, Cirque Éloize or les Sédois de la mayenne, they always amaze me and I'll always leave me spellbound.   Dan Seguin  27:24 Okay, next, as a result of the pandemic. Many of us are guilty of watching a lot of Netflix or other streaming platforms. What's your favorite movie or show?   Philippe Dunsky  27:38 You know what, I watched many different Netflix shows. These days. I'm just trying to think what's in bridgerton would be one of them right now. I'm really enjoying it.   Dan Seguin  27:52 Now, lastly, Philippe, what's exciting you about your industry right now?   Philippe Dunsky  27:58 What's exciting is the same thing that's exhausting me. And that's the pace of change. It's just an extraordinary time right now. And I'll tell you what's really exciting me is that five years ago, because this is all I do. Right? I'm a one trick pony. So I think about this every day. Five years ago, I felt pretty alone in seeing and understanding the pace of change that we needed today. I feel like pretty much every leader I speak with is very clear eyed about how big this is, how fast it's gotta go, the challenge that it represents, and the near the you know, the knowledge that we need to get going and get going in a big way. So that excites me.   Dan Seguin  28:37 Now, if our listeners want to learn more about you, or your organization, how can they connect?   Philippe Dunsky  28:44 Well, my organization's website is very simple. Dunsky.com. That's probably the easiest, easiest way. And if you want to connect with me, try info@dunsky.com or my own email. The simplest email in the world is philippe@dunsky.com.   Dan Seguin  29:05 Well, Philippe, this is it. We've reached the end of another episode of the thinkenergy podcast. Thank you so much for joining us today. I hope you had a lot of fun.   Philippe Dunsky  29:15 It was fun. Thank you. I love your questions.   Dan Seguin  29:18 Thanks for tuning in for another episode of the think energy podcast. Don't forget to subscribe and leave us a review wherever you're listening. And to find out more about today's guests from previous episodes, visit thinkenergypodcast.com. I hope you will join us again next time as we spark even more conversations about the energy of tomorrow.  

Tous pareils ou presque !
Ep.29 - Tamara, une mère en action face à l'autisme

Tous pareils ou presque !

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 27, 2023 32:09


Comment faire face aux défis de l'autisme lorsque l'on est seule, sans professionnels formés sur lesquels s'appuyer ?C'est le défi auquel s'est retrouvée confrontée Tamara, il y a plus de 20 ans, au moment du diagnostic de son fils à l'âge de 4 ans.Tamara raconte dans cet épisode de quelle façon elle s'est documentée et ce qu'elle a mis en place pour rentrer dans l'univers de son fils, puis mettre en place tout un programme d'apprentissage.Elle nous parle des énormes progrès de son fils, mais aussi du prix à payer lorsque l'on se consacre à 200% à l'éducation de son enfant.Que faire, une fois cet enfant devenu grand et autonome ? Continuer à évoluer dans le monde de l'autisme ou passer à autre chose ? C'est ce que Tamara évoquera dans cet épisode.Pour en savoir plus sur ce parcours, vous pouvez lire le livre "Ma victoire sur l'autisme" de Tamara Morar aux Editions Odile JacobMerci à Julien Rebours pour son aide sur la réalisation de cet épisode.N'oubliez pas de vous abonner à la newsletter : Inscription newsletter (subscribepage.io)Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.

The Building Culture Podcast
#1 Ashley Terry: Designing Neighborhoods For How People Want To Live - Wheeler District

The Building Culture Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 29, 2023 68:45


I was thrilled to have Ashley Terry, VP of Development for Wheeler District on the Building Culture Podcast. Wheeler District is a Traditional Neighborhood Development, or TND, just a mile from downtown Oklahoma City. Ashley Terry has an amazing story. She started off as a hairdresser and as her career progressed she started to feel the itch for something more. Upon reading one of Jan Gehl's books, it completely changed how she saw cities and architecture, and how it shapes peoples' lives, so she decided to get more involved wherever she could in that arena--even though she didn't know what the end goal was. Eventually, the opportunity to work for Wheeler was presented, and she took it with a "give me anything to do and I'll figure it out" attitude, and just a few years later she is VP of Development in one of the largest and most successful developments in Oklahoma City, got her MBA on the side, runs the local ULI, and much more. Can't wait for you to hear her story, and also about what they are doing in Wheeler District. You may not be from Oklahoma City, but there is something for everyone in this podcast! WHAT IS A TND? What do fancy terms like "TND" and "New Urbanism" actually mean? It simply means that these neighborhoods are designed around the human experience. It takes what people want, things like safety, privacy, community, vibrancy, beauty, public spaces, convenience, shopping, schools, range of housing options, etc, and THEN figures out how to express those features, those desires and values, in the fabric of the neighborhood, and in the architecture itself. FOLLOW US Connect with Building Culture on social media: https://www.buildingculture.com/ https://www.instagram.com/buildingcul... https://twitter.com/build_culture https://www.linkedin.com/in/seancannell/ https://www.facebook.com/BuildCulture/ https://www.linkedin.com/in/austin-tu...

Tous pareils ou presque !
Mathieu : prendre soin de son frère sans s'oublier

Tous pareils ou presque !

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 6, 2023 13:04


Mathieu a 30 ans. Son grand frère a reçu un diagnostic d'autisme il y a quelques années. Pendant toute son enfance et son adolescence, il a donc grandi aux côtés d'un frère dont les difficultés et les "bizarreries" avait un impact important sur la vie de famille sans pour autant avoir de réelles explications. Dans cet épisode, Mathieu raconte sont quotidien d'enfant dans une famille ou la fragilité de son frère prend beaucoup de place. Il raconte aussi son cheminement, en tant qu'adulte, pour apprendre à se reconnecter à ses envies personnelles, sans faire passer systématiquement les besoins de l'autre avant les siens. Un épisode qui donne un éclairage intéressant et touchant sur la façon dont on peut se construire lorsque l'on est frère ou soeur dans une famille touchée par le handicap. Cet épisode à été réalisé en partenariat avec le CRAIF (Centre de Ressources Autisme Ile de France) et s'inscrit dans le dossier thématique réalisé sur la fratrie. Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.

Pistolando Podcast
Pistolando 188 - BMF

Pistolando Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 3, 2023 118:04


  Ficha técnica Hosts: Thiago Corrêa e Leticia Dáquer Edição: Leticia Dáquer Capa: Leticia Dáquer Data da gravação: 01/05/2023 Data da publicação: 03/05/2023   Coisas mencionadas no episódio: Canal FUCK LAWNS no Telegram   Músicas/áudios Skank - A Cerca   Bom Leticia Scientists Taught Pet Parrots to Video Call Each Other—and the Birds Loved It (Smithsonian, 24/03/2023) Plastic-eating backyard fungi discovery boosts hopes for a solution to the recycling crisis (abc.net.au, 14/04/2023)  Thiago Cientistas descobrem fortes evidências do uso de drogas na pré-história (Correio Braziliense, 03/04/2023) Pesquisadores reconhecem que suposto fóssil de forma de vida extinta era um ninho de abelhas-gigantes-asiáticas (FAPESP, 10/04/2023)   Mau Leticia A World Without Men The women of South Korea's 4B movement aren't fighting the patriarchy — they're leaving it behind entirely. (The Cut, 08/03/2023) Thiago New Zealand feral cat-killing competition for children axed after backlash (BBC, 19/04/2023) La Spagna vieta la "corrida dei nani" (RSI, 28/04/2023)   Feio Leticia Naked man driving stolen school bus with dead deer inside leads police on chase (TND, 05/04/2023) Ex-teacher wants to auction herself as a surrogate to ‘mass-produce pretty babies' (New York Post, 11/10/2022) Banco Inter proíbe funcionários de ter "chulé, mau hálito e lingerie à mostra" (O Tempo, 19/04/2023) A mulher condenada em Nova York por plano de matar sósia com cheesecake (Folha, 21/04/2023) Thiago Florida sex offenders could be required to have special colored license plates (NBC2, 27/04/2023) Napoli fans told not to take title party onto Mount Vesuvius volcano (ESPN, 28/04/2023) Students launch class action against uni after discovering course was useless (9now, 28/04/2023) 'Cara, cadê a firma?': rapaz 'deleta' empresa com linha de código errada (Techmundo, 15/04/2016)   Parceria com Veste Esquerda: Agora tem camiseta do Pistolando direto no site da Veste Esquerda! Mas o código de desconto PISTOLA10 dá 10% de desconto na sua compra da nossa e de outras camisetas maneiríssimas esquerdopatas!   Parceria com Editora Boitempo: compre livros por esse link aqui pra gente ganhar uns trocados de comissão :)   Nosso link de associados da Amazon, mas só em último caso, hein: bit.ly/Pistolando    Esse podcast é produzido pelo Estopim Podcasts. Precisa de ajuda pra fazer o seu podcast? Chega mais, que a gente te dá uma mãozinha.     Links do Pistolando www.pistolando.com contato@pistolando.com Twitter: @PistolandoPod Instagram: @PistolandoPod   Apóie o Pistolando no Catarse, no Patreon e agora também no PicPay, ou faça um Pix pra gente usando a chave contato@pistolando.com   Descrição da capa: Foto da cidade de Nápoles, na Itália. Na parte inferior, casas e edifícios não muito altos. Ao fundo, o vulcão Vesúvio, contra um céu meio nublado. Passando em frente, aviões do equivalente italiano da Esquadrilha da Fumaça, soltando fumaça colorida nas cores da bandeira italiana, verde, branco e vermelho. No alto, à esquerda, a logo do Pistolando, preta. Ao lado, número e título do episódio, em preto. No canto inferior direito, a logo da Estopim, branca.  

Tales of Nerds & Dragons
Chatting with Nerdies: Ep. 04: Chatting with Tales of Adventure

Tales of Nerds & Dragons

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 25, 2022 110:49


Ep. 4 invites the cast of Tales of Adventure to share with us their tales and memorable moments, what goes into creating content for ttrpgs, and the struggles that go into creating content. TND's very own Dani and Link co-host this very special episode, and talks nerd with the cast of Tales of Adventure

Tales of Nerds & Dragons
Chatting with Nerdies: Ep. 03: Chatting with Awfully Queer Heroes

Tales of Nerds & Dragons

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 17, 2022 56:51


Ep. 3 invites Kel and Skald of Awfully Queer Heroes to share with us their tales and memorable moments, what goes into creating content for ttrpgs, and tips on how to be a content creator. TND's very own Dani chats and talks nerd with co-owners of Awfully Queer Heroes.

Tales of Nerds & Dragons
Chatting with Nerdies: Ep. 02: Chatting with Stories and Sorceries

Tales of Nerds & Dragons

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 10, 2022 73:29


Ep. 2 brings the boys from Stories and Sorceries Podcast to share with us their tales and memorable moments, and answers the aged old question; can tiny horses and cannons mix? TND's very own Dani chats and talks nerd with members of the Stories and Sorceries Podcast

Tales of Nerds & Dragons
Chatting With Nerdies: Ep 01: Chatting With Roll 4 Rainbow

Tales of Nerds & Dragons

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 19, 2022 85:54


The premiere episode  of Tales of Nerds & Dragons new show: Chatting With Nerdies! TND's very own Dani chats and talks nerd with some members of the Roll 4 Rainbow podcast!

Tous pareils ou presque !
Ep.22 - Bonus "Parents : être fier de soi"

Tous pareils ou presque !

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 13, 2022 13:07


La plupart des parents que j'ai rencontrés sont confontés à des défis énormes. Ils déplacent des montagnes et font preuve d'une créativité sans borne pour leur enfant. Et pourtant, souvent, ils ne s'en rendent pas compte ! Soit parce que cela fait tellement partie du quotidien qu'ils ne le voient plus, soit parce qu'ils considèrent que se dépasser pour leur enfant c'est tout simplement normal, soit parce qu'ils n'ont même pas le temps d'y réfléchir... Avec cet épisode, l'objectif est de marquer un temps de pause et de se rendre compte de tout ce que l'on fait de bien, en tant que parent. Que ce soit les petites choses au quotidien ou les grandes décisions, peu importe ! Et si vous avez envie d'en savoir plus sur les parents de cet épisode, voici quelques liens: - Davut est à l'origine de l'association Diversité Bleur Miroir à Chambery : Diversité Bleu Miroir | Facebook  - Corinne a créé l'association Approche Globale de l'Autisme : Association approche globale autisme.org | Facebook  - Magali a écrit le livre de sensibilisation à l'autisme  "Dis-moi Thomas" - Sandrine est la créatrice de l'association Garde le smile | Facebook  Tous pareils ou presque, c'est aussi une newsletter dans laquelle je partage mes rencontres avec des porteurs de projets, mes échanges avec des familles et professionnels, mes lectures, conseils, etc... Inscrivez-vous pour la recevoir tous les mois : Inscription newsletter (subscribepage.com)  ************* Si cet épisode vous a plu, vous pouvez le relayer sur les réseaux sociaux ou mettre un commentaire sur Apple podcast !   Tous pareils ou presque (@touspareils_oupresque) • Photos et vidéos Instagram  Tous pareils ou presque - Le podcast de l'autisme | Facebook  ***********  « Tous pareils ou presque !» est un podcast réalisé par Stéphanie Gruet-Masson, qui explore les multiples facettes de l'autisme et de la neurodiversité, à travers le regard des parents, des professionnels et des personnes autistes elles-mêmes. Que trouve-t-on dans ce podcast ?  - Des épisodes thématiques : regards croisés sur des sujets liés à cette parentalité "atypique", à l'inclusion des enfants et adultes autistes ou ayant un autre type de handicap, à la place des frères et soeurs, au rôle des pères, à l'école, à l'intégration professionnelle, les vacances ou les voyages "extra-ordinaires", etc... - Des interviews de parents, de professionnels ayant une expérience particulière à partager ou de personnes autistes prêtes à nous donner leur vision "de l'intérieur".  Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.

Tous pareils ou presque !
Ep.21 - Françoise, comment inventer un emploi pour son fils autiste

Tous pareils ou presque !

Play Episode Listen Later May 10, 2022 24:36


Comment permettre à de jeunes adultes autistes, d'accéder à une activité professionnelle qui favorise leur autonomie et leur épanouissement ? C'est le sujet que nous abordons avec Françoise Ayzac, maman de Louis, dans cet épisode. Louis a 25 ans et est autiste. Les pronostics au moment de son diagnostic étaient plutôt sombres et les premières années ont été jalonnées de cris et de crises. Françoise a néanmoins cherché et trouvé des pistes pour qu'il apprenne, qu'il aille à l'école,  qu'il expérimente des activités pré-professionnelles, qu'il se forme puis qu'il accède à une activité de maroquinier. Dans cet épisode on parle : - des différentes formes d'inclusion : scolaire, sportive, des inclusions par le travail ou le bénévolat, - de toutes les occasions qui peuvent permettre à un jeune homme autiste comme Louis, d'apprendre sur le terrain, d'expérimenter des activités et de développer son autonomie, - de la créativité dont il faut faire preuve lorque l'on ne rentre dans aucun dispositif et qu'il faut dont inventer son propre parcours, - des belles rencontres et des personnes qui acceptent de jouer le jeu de l'inclusion parce qu'on les a mises en confiance et qu'on leur a donné envie, - du projet de création d'un espace de coworking artisanal et inclusif dans lequel des personnes autistes et non autistes pourraient se cotoyer, se former et bénéficier d'un accompagnement mutualisé. Le parcours de Louis et de Françoise est marquée par la créativité et par le fait d'oser expérimenter des choses qui n'existaient pas. . Aujourd'hui, Louis exerce une activité professionnelle qui lui plait. Françoise sait que le chemin vers l'autonomie reste long et qu'il y a encore beaucoup à faire... On lui fait confiance pour réaliser encore 1001 projets ! Pour en savoir plus sur Françoise Ayzac et sur l'entreprise de Louis : Le site internet de Louis : https://www.luigilemaroquinier.com/ luigi créations maroquinerie : résultats de la recherche | Facebook  ************* Tous pareils ou presque, c'est aussi une newsletter dans laquelle je partage mes rencontres avec des porteurs de projets, mes échanges avec des familles et professionnels, mes lectures, conseils, etc... Inscrivez-vous pour la recevoir tous les mois : Inscription newsletter (subscribepage.com)   Si cet épisode vous a plu, vous pouvez le relayer sur les réseaux sociaux ou mettre un commentaire sur Apple podcast !   Tous pareils ou presque (@touspareils_oupresque) • Photos et vidéos Instagram  Tous pareils ou presque - Le podcast de l'autisme | Facebook  ***********  « Tous pareils ou presque !» est un podcast réalisé par Stéphanie Gruet-Masson, qui explore les multiples facettes de l'autisme et de la neurodiversité, à travers le regard des parents, des professionnels et des personnes autistes elles-mêmes. Que trouve-t-on dans ce podcast ?  - Des épisodes thématiques : regards croisés sur des sujets liés à cette parentalité "atypique", à l'inclusion des enfants et adultes autistes ou ayant un autre type de handicap, à la place des frères et soeurs, au rôle des pères, à l'école, à l'intégration professionnelle, les vacances ou les voyages "extra-ordinaires", etc... - Des interviews de parents, de professionnels ayant une expérience particulière à partager ou de personnes autistes prêtes à nous donner leur vision "de l'intérieur".  Vous pouvez nous écrire : touspareilsoupresque@gmail.com  Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.

Tous pareils ou presque !
Ep. 20 - Recherche sommeil désespérément...

Tous pareils ou presque !

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 4, 2022 32:47


Et si les troubles du sommeil, chez les enfants autistes, n'étaient pas une fatalité...? Le manque de sommeil est un sujet récurrent dans les familles concernées par l'autisme, c'est un point qui impacte énormément la qualité de vie des parents et des enfants. Dans cet épisode, nous sommes allés recueillir les témoignages de parents, et de professionnels spécialisés dans le domaine. Nous parlerons notamment : - des endormissements à 1h du matin ou des journées qui commencent à 3h... - des stratégies mises en place par les parents pour faciliter le sommeil de leur enfant, - des conséquences sur la vie de famille et la vie sociale, - des particularités sensorielles des TSA et de la façon dont on peut les prendre en compte pour améliorer le sommeil, - du choix d'avoir recours ou non à des traitement médicamentaux et notamment à la mélatonine. Pour aller plus loin sur le sujet :  - le site de Louise ANTUNES, osthéopathe (interviewé dans cet épisode) : Votre ostéopathe à Paris 12 : comprendre l'implication du sensoriel dans l'autisme (louiseantunes-osteopathe.com)  - Le site de l' Accueil SFRMS - SFRMS (sfrms-sommeil.org) dont parle le Pr Carmen Schroder, psychiatre et docteur en Neurosciences spécialiste du sommeil, dans l'épisode et qui donne la liste des centres du sommeil ainsi que les formations dans ce domaine - Le site Accueil - Autisme et sommeil sur lequel on trouve de nombreuses ressources et des vidéos de spécialistes des problèmes de sommeil chez les enfants avec TSA. - Le site Comprendrelautisme.com qui regroupe de nombreux articles clairs et documentés sur des sujets variés liés aux TSA et notamment : Les troubles du sommeil chez les enfants autistes (comprendrelautisme.com)  ***************** "Tous pareils ou presque", c'est aussi une newsletter dans laquelle je partage mes rencontres avec des porteurs de projets, mes échanges avec des familles et professionnels, mes lectures, conseils, interrogations etc... Inscrivez-vous pour la recevoir, tous les mois : Inscription newsletter (subscribepage.com)   ************************* Merci à Arsène Roy (arseneroy.sound@gmail.com ) qui a réalisé le montage/mixage de l'épisode et à Lola Sorrenti (Lola Sorrenti, conseil éditorial à Paris 10 ) pour ses conseils sur la réalisation de cet épisode. Merci aussi à Constance Amiot — Site officiel  pour le générique du podcast! *********************** Si cet épisode vous a plu, vous pouvez le relayer sur les réseaux sociaux ou mettre un commentaire sur Apple podcast !Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.

Résiliences
Être parent d'enfant atteint d'autisme, une double charge mentale

Résiliences

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 5, 2022 35:52


Dans cet épisode, je vous propose de découvrir la réalité des parents d'enfants atteints d'autisme. Un trouble toujours aussi méconnu et souvent mystifié. Pour ces mères, c'est avant tout une course effrénée pour tenter d'abord d'obtenir un diagnostic, pour ensuite trouver l'accompagnement et l'aide nécessaires aux développement de leurs enfants. Un chemin de croix qui coûte cher, et qui pèse sur le niveau de stress de ces parents, nettement supérieur à celui des autres parents d'enfants du même âge. A la lourdeur des soins quotidiens et la complexité dans la création du lien parent-enfant , vient s'ajouter la bonne vieille culpabilité, propre à beaucoup de mères mais exacerbée chez les mères d'enfants autistes en raison des croyances populaires qui encore trop souvent relient l'autisme des enfants à quelque déficit relationnel.

Tous pareils ou presque !
Hors-Série - Lettre à Gabin

Tous pareils ou presque !

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 28, 2021 2:56


Les lettres sonores, des épisodes hors-série créés à l'occasion de la journée mondiale de sensibilisation à l'autisme Les lettres sonores sont un format « carte blanche », donné aux parents, professionnels et personnes autistes, à partir d'une proposition : « Ecrivez la lettre que vous n'avez jamais écrite » . Dans cette lettre, Laurent écrit à son fils Gabin, 20 ans. Il exprime son amour pour ce fils n'est pas "léger, léger" selon ses termes, mais aussi son angoisse pour l'avenir, sa colère de ne pas être soutenu par les pouvoirs publics, son inquiétude de savoir que tout repose sur ses épaules, sa fierté aussi de voir son fils participer aux 24h du Mans à rollers... Pour en savoir plus sur Laurent Savard, comédien et papa de Gabin, vous pouvez lire son livre "Gabin sans limite" (en poche) ou écouter l'épisode 9 du podcast. Son spectacle "Le bal des pompiers" est encore en tournée. ************* Tous pareils ou presque, c'est aussi une newsletter dans laquelle je partage mes rencontres avec des porteurs de projets, mes échanges avec des familles et professionnels, mes lectures, conseils, etc... Inscrivez-vous pour la recevoir tous les mois : Inscription newsletter (subscribepage.com)   *************** Merci à Arsène Roy et Lola Sorrenti qui ont travaillé avec moi sur ce projet de Lettres sonores. Merci aussi à Constance Amiot et Jean-Christophe Urbain pour leur contribution musicale que j'apprécie tout particulièrement.  *********** Pour nous suivre : Stéphanie Gruet Masson | LinkedIn  Tous pareils ou presque (@touspareils_oupresque) • Photos et vidéos Instagram  Tous pareils ou presque - Le podcast de l'autisme | Facebook   Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.

Tous pareils ou presque !
Hors-série - Lettre à Nicolas

Tous pareils ou presque !

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 28, 2021 2:09


Les lettres sonores, des épisodes hors-série créées à l'occasion de la journée mondiale de sensibilisation à l'autisme Les lettres sonores sont un format « carte blanche », donné aux parents, professionnels et personnes autistes, à partir d'une proposition : « Ecrivez la lettre que vous n'avez jamais écrite » . Dans cet épisode, Louise ostéopathe écrit à Nicolas, un jeune adulte autiste qu'elle a accompagné pendant 10 ans dans des séjours de répit pour personnes autistes.  Malgré l'absence de langage, malgré les troubles du comportement, la complicité est évidente. Cette rencontre avec Nicolas est l'une des raisons qui pousseront Louise à s'intéresser de très près à la prise en charge de la douleur chez les personnes autistes. Merci à Arsène Roy et Lola Sorrenti qui ont travaillé avec moi sur ce projet de Lettres sonores. Merci aussi à Constance Amiot et Jean-Christophe Urbain pour leur contribution musicale que j'apprécie tout particulièrement.   Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.

Tous pareils ou presque !
Hors-série - Lettre à Madame la Ministre

Tous pareils ou presque !

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 27, 2021 2:05


Les lettres sonores, des épisodes hors-série créés à l'occasion de la journée mondiale de sensibilisation à l'autisme du 2 aril 2022  Les lettres sonores sont un format « carte blanche », donné aux parents, professionnels et personnes autistes, à partir d'une proposition : « Ecrivez la lettre que vous n'avez jamais écrite »   Dans cet épisode, Hugo un ado autiste non verbal, interpelle la Secrétaire d'Etat au Handicap sur le combat qu'il doit mener pour trouver une place au sein de la Société. Hugo ne parle pas mais il s'exprime avec des mots et des couleurs. Il écrit des poèmes, peint des tableaux et se passionne pour les langues étrangères. Pour enregistrer cette lettre, c'est Mattéo, 19 ans, qui a prêté sa voix. Il l'a fait d'autant plus volontiers que sa petite cousine est elle-même autiste.  Le parcours d'Hugo et de sa maman, c'est la preuve que la ténacité et la créativité conduisent parfois à des résultats étonnants. Alors que ce petit garçon avait été condamné par les médecins qui l'ont diagnostiqué, sa maman s'est battu pour trouver tous les moyens de communiquer avec lui. Elle lui a lu des livres pas centaines (surtout des classiques) car ces moments de lecture partagée appaisaient son fils. Pour éviter la sensation de parler toute seule, elle récitait souvent des poèmes... Aujourd'hui, c'est Hugo qui fait des vers ! Le site internet : tracetavoix.wixsite.com rassemble les poèmes et les tableaux d'Hugo ***************** Merci à Arsène Roy et Lola Sorrenti qui ont travaillé avec moi sur ce projet de Lettres sonores. Merci aussi à Constance Amiot et Jean-Christophe Urbain pour leur contribution musicale que j'apprécie tout particulièrement.  *************** Pour nous suivre : Stéphanie Gruet Masson | LinkedIn  Tous pareils ou presque (@touspareils_oupresque) • Photos et vidéos Instagram  Tous pareils ou presque - Le podcast de l'autisme | Facebook   Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.

Dirty Glove Bastard: Off The Porch
MoneyShawn Slatt DGB Off The Porch Interview

Dirty Glove Bastard: Off The Porch

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 20, 2021 20:52


We recently sat down with Florida rapper Moneyshawn Slatt for an exclusive “Off The Porch” interview! During our conversation he discussed life in Pensacola, jumping off the porch, being harassed by the police, going viral for saving a child's life, biggest life lesson, the meaning behind his name, his viral TND dance, thoughts on the rap game, going viral for speaking on HoneyKomb Brazy's situation, his new single “Sell That Dope”, new music video “Reloaded”, linking with PNB Rock for upcoming song, going viral on Tik Tok, his label, and much more! --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/dirtyglovebastard/support