Podcasts about today cathy

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Best podcasts about today cathy

Latest podcast episodes about today cathy

DeWitt and Dunn Financial Podcast
Replace your paycheck in retirement

DeWitt and Dunn Financial Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 12, 2021 12:34


Today Cathy and Steve have a series of stories and strategies of how they have helped people replace their paycheck in retirement.

Alzheimer's Speaks Radio - Lori La Bey
Right of Choice - Covid Vaccines, Dementia, & Ethics

Alzheimer's Speaks Radio - Lori La Bey

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 14, 2021 57:00


Right of Choice - Covid Vaccines, Dementia, & Ethics Thursday – Jan 14th, 2021 - 2pm EST, 1pm CST, 12pm MST, 11am PST & 6pm London, 8pm South Africa and on the 15th at 5am in Australia AET Lori La Bey talks with Cathy Braxton, who is a Caregiving Consultant and Registered Behavioral Therapist, and founder of Improv4Caregivers who has over 25 years of experience in the industry.  Today Cathy will be discussing the Right of Choice regarding vaccines and those living with dementia. Join the conversation and call in and talk with us:  323-870-4602 Contact Improv4Caregivers Website www.improv4caregivers.com          Email            Phone 219-649-1732 Alzheimer's Speaks Radio - Shifting dementia care from crisis to comfort around the world one episode at a time by raising all voices and delivering sounds news, not just sound bites since 2011. Contact Lori La Bey      with questions or branding needs and visit Alzheimer’s Speaks 

Curate Your Health
Episode 065: Cardio vs Strength Training

Curate Your Health

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 11, 2020 23:03


Cathy Adolph, our personal trainer, dietitian, marathoner and Wholist coach extraordinaire is back! Today Cathy joins us for the 4th episode in her series to discuss cardio training vs strength training. We break down both of these types of exercises and the specific health benefits of each. Cathy gives us tips on how to effectively train and cut calories while building muscle. As a reminder, my exercise prescription  is at LEAST 75 min of vigorous intensity cardio (or 150 min of moderate intensity) per week plus two resistance training sessions. There is even more health benefits from MORE (150 vigorous or 300 moderate) as it is dose dependent. Intensity is important!    Dr. Hammerstedt and her lifestyle coaching team can be found at www.wholisthealth.com and @wholisthealth on Facebook and Instagram as well as the public Facebook group Curate Your Health. Wholist helps high performing women and men lose weight for the last time, with an innovative food and mindset coaching program to blueprint YOUR optimal body and mind, with real food, real work, real results… and no products or BS. Come curate YOUR sustainable health future, and personal and professional dynasty.   And remember, Who you choose to be Matters. You are valuable, You are worth this, You are your WholeYou

Think Difference
A conversation with CSIRO Chief Scientist Dr Cathy Foley

Think Difference

Play Episode Listen Later May 26, 2020 10:51


When Cathy Foley started at the CSIRO 35 years ago, her workplace had few women. She thought that needed to change. Cathy got involved in the organisation's efforts to lift women in science. Today Cathy is CSIRO's Chief Scientist. She remains passionate about eliminating gender bias. In this episode of the SAGE Think Difference podcast, you’ll hear Cathy reflect her own career in STEM and how she led CSIRO's efforts to address gender equity and diversity through the SAGE pilot of the Athena Swan program. Interviews: Dr Cathy Foley, CSIRO Chief Scientist The Think Difference podcast is produced by Science in Australia Gender Equity (SAGE).

Seasoned Rider Radio
Seasoned Rider Horse Talk - Heart Horse

Seasoned Rider Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2020 26:38


Seasoned Rider Horse Talk has designated February as Heart Horse Month. Today Cathy and Cheryl start the ball rolling talking about the special horses in their lives. They invite you to submit your stories about your "heart horse(s)". Next month we'll be sharing your stories thoughout the month. Sponsored by:

Health Coach Conversations
EP47: Gardening with a Health Coach

Health Coach Conversations

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 15, 2019 43:15


Welcome back to another episode of Health Coach Conversations! Today Cathy talks with long time Health Coach Group customer Tara Gesling. Tara is an author and health coach who understands what it means to have a challenging life but truly believes in the power of simplifying, especially when it comes to food.    In this episode, Cathy and Tara discuss the following: Tara’s background and why she became a health coach Why Tara believes everyone should garden Why we should view food as fuel for our bodies The value of growing food organically without any chemicals The impact of insecticides and pesticides How to design a garden with companion planting   How plants communicate with other living organisms, including us Creative ways to create an affordable garden The importance of soil testing when building a garden The significance of understanding our gut mirrors the soil of our food        During her 20’s, Tara unexpectedly began to suffer from a wide range of illnesses and was even diagnosed with a neuromuscular disease. She was wheelchair bound for 5 years and grew frustrated with not knowing what was wrong with her. After several years, Tara realized the root cause of her ailments were tied to food and poisons. She learned the value of simplifying and turned to farming her own food. Today, she is a “soil farmer” and helps others understand the importance of actively participating when it comes to choosing what food we eat! Mentioned In This Episode: 180 Degree Wellness Revolution: Simple Steps to Prevent and Reverse Illness Kinsey Ag Services    Links to resources: Health Coach Group Website

Health Coach Conversations
EP43: How to Get Customers Fast

Health Coach Conversations

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 11, 2019 51:30


Thanks for joining another episode of Health Coach Conversations! Today Cathy focuses on the importance of taking actions that cause a reaction. She covers four different areas of your business to take one specific action in order to get more customers!           In this episode, Cathy discusses the following: What a host beneficiary relationship is and how it benefits you      Examples of what you can offer in a partnership Why you should think of advertising as a trade instead of a cost The value of networking with people who are already highly successful How to approach and create long term, mutually beneficial alliances        As a wellness entrepreneur, it’s extremely beneficial to use the resources around your niche to help grow your business. Cathy discusses 4 areas of business for you to review and take action today!  4 Areas to Get New Business   Host Beneficiary Partnerships Advertising Networking & Referrals Strategic Alliances        Links to resources: Health Coach Group Website Healthy Holidays Pure Gut Health

GIRLS RISING
To the moon and beyond with NASA Astronaut Cady Coleman

GIRLS RISING

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 3, 2017 8:01


Today Cathy, Dena, Nini and Kristen from Antigone Rising talk with former NASA Astronaut Cady Coleman while sitting in the tour van outside of The Iron Horse Music Hall. Cady shares her experiences and journey to space and beyond! Among topics we discuss are her inspiration to become an astronaut, gender bias discrimination and not giving up, how we learn from those that came before us and how mistakes aren't always a bad thing. For more visit us at www.girlsrising.org.

GIRLS RISING
To the moon and beyond with NASA Astronaut Cady Coleman

GIRLS RISING

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 3, 2017 8:01


Today Cathy, Dena, Nini and Kristen from Antigone Rising talk with former NASA Astronaut Cady Coleman while sitting in the tour van outside of The Iron Horse Music Hall. Cady shares her experiences and journey to space and beyond! Among topics we discuss are her inspiration to become an astronaut, gender bias discrimination and not giving up, how we learn from those that came before us and how mistakes aren't always a bad thing. For more visit us at www.girlsrising.org.

The Unconventionalists with Mark Leruste
#49 How to use the power of performance with Cathy Salit

The Unconventionalists with Mark Leruste

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 2, 2016 66:47


Cathy Salit is a performer and co-founder of Performance of a Lifetime, who at 13 years old, dropped out of eighth grade and started an alternative school in an abandoned storefront in New York City... Needless to say that Cathy isn't your typical leader. Today Cathy specialises in blending theatre, improvisation, and the new science of performative psychology and her new book, Performance Breakthrough: A Radical Approach to Success at Work is on sale everywhere books are sold. In today's episode we dive into her story to explore how her unconventional path has shaped her career to date. Get ready to be blown away, this is definitely one worth sharing! Subscribe now on iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/gb/podcast/unconventionalists-mark-leruste/id1029651449?mt=2 SHOW NOTES http://www.theunconventionalists.com/episode/49 GET IN TOUCH Website: www.theunconventionalists.com Facebook: www.facebook.com/markleruste Twitter: www.twitter.com/markleruste YouTube: www.youtube.com/markleruste

HearSay with Cathy Lewis
Is Crowfunding the Future of Investment?

HearSay with Cathy Lewis

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 17, 2013


Crowdfunding has become a global phenomenon with the creation of Internet platforms like Kickstarter, FundRazr, and Indiegogo. People all over the world are pooling their money together to support the efforts of small businesses owners, filmmakers, and even local governments. Today Cathy is joined by entrepreneurs from Hampton Roads and representatives from one of the region's top universities to discuss how they've used crowdfunding to help launch their initiatives.

HearSay with Cathy Lewis
Segment A: A Conversation with Ira Glass /Segment B: Constitution Cafe

HearSay with Cathy Lewis

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 17, 2011


Segment A: A Conversation with Ira Glass It's not a news show or a talk show or a call-in show. It's not really formatted like other radio shows at all. Trying to explain what THIS AMERICAN LIFE is to the uninitiated can be a challenge. (Thankfully, there are very few NPR listeners unfamiliar with it!) Today Cathy talks to TAL's creator, Ira Glass, about how he describes his program - and how he and his staff come up with the stories that have given its audience something to sit and listen to for the past 16 years. Segment B: Constitution Cafe Many Americans venerate the Constitution - even if they don't actually seem know what's in it. On Monday's broadcast, we'll also talk with the author of "Constitution Cafe: Jefferson's Brew for a True Revolution," which encourages citizens to question the Constitution in an effort to help them better understand its power.

HearSay with Cathy Lewis
Alexander Hamilton

HearSay with Cathy Lewis

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 19, 2010


Today Cathy talks with Bill Chrystal, a historical interpreter who portrays Alexander Hamilton. He was inspired to portray Hamilton after serving as moderator of The Jefferson Hour for ten years. During that time he discovered that Hamilton was reviled by many of his peers which sparked his curiosity about this founding father. Chrystal has since delved into the life of Hamilton and found him to be a model of success whose lessons translate to modern times. Join us as we talk about many things, including Hamilton's proclamation that no "Citizen of the United States should refrain from turkey on Thanksgiving Day." Tune in!

Transom Podcast
Jennie’s Secret

Transom Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 18, 2009 20:16


“Jennie’s Secret” on PRX About Jennie’s Secret I don’t remember how I first encountered the story of Civil War veteran Jennie Hodgers (aka Albert Cashier), but I was smitten from the start. I was amazed that hundreds of women had posed as men during the Civil War. I couldn’t imagine how she (or they) pulled it off. And I was positively gob-smacked when I found out that Hodgers went on to spend most of her adult life – as a man – in the tiny town of Saunemin, Illinois. That’s just 12 miles down the road from Pontiac in Livingston County. And Pontiac is where my family comes from. For me though, probably 
the most fascinating part of this project was trying to unpeel the onion to find a more nuanced portrait of Jennie Hodgers. I found a person who could be kind to children, offering them a treat whenever they came to her home. But there was also a hot-headed, disingenuous, petty and unquestionably eccentric Jennie Hodgers. She had her foibles, just like the rest of us. We hear about her darker side in the letters that Sammuel Pepper, a fellow soldier, wrote home to his wife. I got to those letters through the footnotes of an amazing book by Lauren Cook and Deanne Blanton. It’s called, “They fought like Demons – Women Soldiers of the Civil War” and I recommend it to everybody. When I met Frank and Velma Crawford (who are in possession of over 200 of Samuel Pepper’s letters) they read me a newly discovered letter about Cashier with even more explicit information about his/her wartime experience. So hopefully this radio story deepens the historical record about Jennie Hodgers. More nuanced information about Jennie Hodgers also came courtesy of Cathy Lannon. Today Cathy is a lawyer, but back in 1969 she wrote her master’s thesis about Hodgers’ life. Lannon was from Saunemin and interviewed older people in town who still remembered Hodgers. Here’s one story Cathy Lannon told me. You’ll see that she (and a lot of people in Saunemin) refer to Cashier as “he.” Lannon’s great grandparents lived across the street from Albert Cashier and often invited him (her) over for meals. But that overture wasn’t always met with the gratitude that you might expect: A few years before the rest of the world found out about Cashier’s true gender, Cathy Lannon’s great grandmother made the discovery. She had heard that Albert was sick one day and so she asked a nurse to go over to help him out. In short order the nurse came running back and spluttered,“ Mrs. Lannon, he’s a full fledged woman!“ The nurse was so upset that she packed up and left town and Lannon’s great-grandmother in a great act of empathy, didn’t tell anyone about it, including her husband. When I first approached Jay Allison about this story, the only tape I had was of 93 year-old Nina Chesebro. Her great-uncle is the one who first hired Albert Cashier (Jennie Hodgers) as a farmhand when (s)he got to town. I pretty much cornered Jay at a Third Coast Festival conference. He didn’t know me, but sat there anyway and listened to some tape. And then he said he bet we could make a story of it. I was obsessed with the history of Cashier’s life. Just such a wild story. But Jay wanted to know more about the people who objected to restoring the house. After all, it’s been moved at least nine times. One time it was almost burned down in a practice drill for the Saunemin fire department. I mean the town didn’t seem too invested in the thing. And Jay wanted to know more about that. That tack, I think, was fruitful. Because it turns out that there’s a long history of ambivalence in town about their most famous citizen. And bringing that angle together with the current effort to re-build the house gave us a frame to tell the history part. Gear I have almost no experience using music in stories.

Transom Podcast
Jennie’s Secret

Transom Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 18, 2009 20:16


“Jennie’s Secret” on PRX About Jennie’s Secret I don’t remember how I first encountered the story of Civil War veteran Jennie Hodgers (aka Albert Cashier), but I was smitten from the start. I was amazed that hundreds of women had posed as men during the Civil War. I couldn’t imagine how she (or they) pulled it off. And I was positively gob-smacked when I found out that Hodgers went on to spend most of her adult life – as a man – in the tiny town of Saunemin, Illinois. That’s just 12 miles down the road from Pontiac in Livingston County. And Pontiac is where my family comes from. For me though, probably 
the most fascinating part of this project was trying to unpeel the onion to find a more nuanced portrait of Jennie Hodgers. I found a person who could be kind to children, offering them a treat whenever they came to her home. But there was also a hot-headed, disingenuous, petty and unquestionably eccentric Jennie Hodgers. She had her foibles, just like the rest of us. We hear about her darker side in the letters that Sammuel Pepper, a fellow soldier, wrote home to his wife. I got to those letters through the footnotes of an amazing book by Lauren Cook and Deanne Blanton. It’s called, “They fought like Demons – Women Soldiers of the Civil War” and I recommend it to everybody. When I met Frank and Velma Crawford (who are in possession of over 200 of Samuel Pepper’s letters) they read me a newly discovered letter about Cashier with even more explicit information about his/her wartime experience. So hopefully this radio story deepens the historical record about Jennie Hodgers. More nuanced information about Jennie Hodgers also came courtesy of Cathy Lannon. Today Cathy is a lawyer, but back in 1969 she wrote her master’s thesis about Hodgers’ life. Lannon was from Saunemin and interviewed older people in town who still remembered Hodgers. Here’s one story Cathy Lannon told me. You’ll see that she (and a lot of people in Saunemin) refer to Cashier as “he.” Lannon’s great grandparents lived across the street from Albert Cashier and often invited him (her) over for meals. But that overture wasn’t always met with the gratitude that you might expect: A few years before the rest of the world found out about Cashier’s true gender, Cathy Lannon’s great grandmother made the discovery. She had heard that Albert was sick one day and so she asked a nurse to go over to help him out. In short order the nurse came running back and spluttered,“ Mrs. Lannon, he’s a full fledged woman!“ The nurse was so upset that she packed up and left town and Lannon’s great-grandmother in a great act of empathy, didn’t tell anyone about it, including her husband. When I first approached Jay Allison about this story, the only tape I had was of 93 year-old Nina Chesebro. Her great-uncle is the one who first hired Albert Cashier (Jennie Hodgers) as a farmhand when (s)he got to town. I pretty much cornered Jay at a Third Coast Festival conference. He didn’t know me, but sat there anyway and listened to some tape. And then he said he bet we could make a story of it. I was obsessed with the history of Cashier’s life. Just such a wild story. But Jay wanted to know more about the people who objected to restoring the house. After all, it’s been moved at least nine times. One time it was almost burned down in a practice drill for the Saunemin fire department. I mean the town didn’t seem too invested in the thing. And Jay wanted to know more about that. That tack, I think, was fruitful. Because it turns out that there’s a long history of ambivalence in town about their most famous citizen. And bringing that angle together with the current effort to re-build the house gave us a frame to tell the history part. Gear I have almost no experience using music in stories.