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Brooke updates us on the office candy bowl, Jose might have screwed up BIG TIME, Alexis is disappointed in the youth of today, and Jeffrey has made a VERY POWERFUL new enemy. It's time to go around the room and share What's On Our Minds! See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
This is about as full range spirituality as I've ever gotten! I talk about… Eyebrow lamination and bikini waxing Learning how to be a more "Benevolent Queen Leader" in EVERY area of my life (not just work) The ALCHEMY OF VOWS: Intention + sound + community = VERY POWERFUL did you know that my wedding dress was actually a bathing suit cover up that I accidentally purchased online from Australia? Oopsie. But...it worked! And I'm sharing some of the rituals that we created that could be used for all kinds of important passages in life. Other keywords: "gluten free wedding," "no pre-nup" and "people gonna be people." This episode of WITH LOVE, DANIELLE (Ep 117) is the BTS of our wedding, but also the profound learnings that came from the planning and the actual crossing of a threshold. If you want the WEDDING ALBUM that accompanies this, mucho beautiful photos are all in my last SACRED WEEKENDS issue. MENTIONED IN EPISODE 117
Lonnie Zamora, Gary Wilcox and Warren Feister : all three witnessed something VERY POWERFUL. And all this happened on the same day and spanned from the Northeast Coast of the United States to the SouthWest.
This week, we're diving into one of our favorite topics again, as we take a look into a truly unique Skinwalker story. In Secrets of the Skinwalker: Death Bed Confessions we weave our way through a highly detailed, and incredibly wild account wherein a man on his deathbed passes on all the knowledge and lore he has on the subject. Passing the proverbial torch to the next generation to carry. It's a wild ride, buckle up. We'll see you on the inside. TIME STAMPS: 0:00 - Sorry For Saying Skinwalker So Much 0:26 - Intro Music 1:46 - Check Out The Upgraded Website / Fresh New MERCH! www.thefreakydeaky.com 2:47 - Awesome Skinwalker Story on the Books Today 3:50 - A Bit About Sam 4:45 - Father John, The Medicine Man 6:10 - Skinwalker Sightings on The Reservation 7:28 - John Performs a Cleansing Ritual 8:18 - The Process of Becoming a Skinwalker 10:12 - John's Diagnosis & Secrets to Share 11:52 - 2 Grown Men Struggle to Say Yenaldooshi 12:55 - More Than Medicine Men, Animal Skins & Black Magic 16:02 - Drawing Similarities to Algonquin Wendigo Lore 19:12 - What is Corpse Powder Used For? 21:52 - Portals, Demons & Interdimensional Communication 25:16 - Open Range on Amazon Prime. Watch it. It's amazing. 25:44 - What's on the Other Side of These Portals..? 26:22 - Interacting w/ Chindi's: Evil Spirits of the Deceased 29:16 - Group of Folks, A Weird Old Witch & A Haunting Dream 31:51 - Training Apprentices in the Dark Arts 33:16 - These Creatures Actually Can Transform into Animals 34:40 - Keep It Secret & Skinwalker Protection Items 36:55 - Words Have Power & A Hospitalization 38:22 - Family Stalked By Skinwalkers 41:34 - Very Old. Very Powerful. Very Evil. 43:30 - He Lamen-ented, Lamanitited, Lamented. 45:42 - Something Dark Had Set It's Eyes on Him.. 46:37 - Recap & Discussion 52:02 - Outro ----- Come join our Facebook Group! Chat with us and other like-minded friends of the show. Drop your episode suggestions, personal paranormal experiences, memes, and general discussion on paranormal phenomena & topical events! TFD Facebook Group: https://tinyurl.com/tfdfb If you're enjoying the show, please take a second to leave us a 5-Star Review and consider sharing the show with your friends and family! It's the single best way to help us move up the charts and beat those pesky algorithms. Have You Ever Experienced Something Paranormal? We want to hear your story! Use the email below to submit paranormal experiences, episode suggestions, or general feedback on ways we can improve the quality of the show: thegang@thefreakydeaky.com Official TFD Merch: TFD Merch Subscribe to The Freaky Deaky on YouTube and Follow Us on Social Media For Photos, Video Shorts & Behind The Scenes Looks From Each Episode: YouTube: https://bit.ly/3goj7SP Instagram: https://bit.ly/2HOdleo Facebook: https://bit.ly/3ebSde6 TFD Facebook Group: https://tinyurl.com/tfdfb TikTok: https://bit.ly/35lNOlu Website: The Freaky Deaky Podcast
Motivational Quotes for true Happiness words of love to Empower you with positive Vibe
Subscribe & Enjoy LISTEN THIS MIRACLE PRAYERS DAILY & It will change Your Life! Very Powerful
Episode Summary This week on Live Like the World is Dying, Pat talks to Margaret about working outside for a living with the National Park Service. They talk about gear, preparedness while hiking, search and rescue, how to prevent needing to be sought for and rescued, and the unfortunate realities of climate change. Guest Info Find Pat on the trails. Do not find them on the internet. They cannot be found there. Host Info Margaret can be found on twitter @magpiekilljoy or instagram at @margaretkilljoy. Publisher Info This show is published by Strangers in A Tangled Wilderness. We can be found at www.tangledwilderness.org, or on Twitter @TangledWild and Instagram @Tangled_Wilderness. You can support the show on Patreon at www.patreon.com/strangersinatangledwilderness. Transcript Live Like the World is Dying: Pat on Working Outside Margaret 00:14 Hello and welcome to Live Like the World is Dying, your podcast for what feels like the end times. I'm your host today, Margaret Killjoy. And this week...Okay, so you know sometimes I have these shows and it's basically like I find people who talk to me about the things that I've decided I'm really interested in that week. Well, this is one of those examples! And so I'm really excited about it. I think you'll all be excited about it too because this week I am talking to Pat who works outside for a living and he gets to do search and rescue and help people access parks because he is a backwoods...person...at a national park. And yeah, I don't know, I think...I'm excited for the conversation. I can't tell you what's gonna be in it because I haven't done it yet because I record these before I do the interview instead of afterwards. But! This podcast is a proud member of the Channel Zero Network of anarchist podcasts and here's a jingle from another show on the network. Baba Baba bu ba baa ba ba baaa. [Making noises like a song melody] Margaret 01:51 Okay, and we're back. Pat, so if you could introduce yourself with your name, your pronouns, and then just like a little bit about the work you do? Pat 02:02 Yeah. So I'm Pat. He/him. I am a back country ranger for the National Park Service and I've been doing it for about 10 years. So I basically just hike around to talk with people, help out with search and rescue, clean toilets, do whatever needs doing. Yeah. Margaret 02:24 Hell yeah. Okay, I have one question up front. Pat 02:26 Yes. Margaret 02:27 Okay, once when I was doing this forest campaign in a national forest--so not the Park Service, but, you know, the National Forest Service--there was this pit toilet. And--because he brought up toilets--there was this pit toilet and it had a door. And we would prop the door open to avoid it smelling. But then the Ranger came by and yelled at us and says that it works better...The like ventilation system is built on the door being closed. But then other times, I feel like I've seen ones that say, "Leave the door open." What's the deal? Pat 03:00 That is...I'm going to chalk it up to every toilet in the back country is different. So maybe one of them was like designed in such a way with specific ventilation systems, because they get pretty high tech. We have some that have like little solar powered computer fans that will like vent air out and bring fresh air in to try to dry them out. It's kind of neat. It's a huge part of the job. Margaret 03:25 This was like 20 years ago I think...Probably didn't have a solar panel Pat 03:27 Probably not solar powered then. [At the same time as Margaret says above Margaret 03:28 I just couldn't figure out whether she was like fucking with us because she didn't like us or whether she was just like annoyed at these idiots who thought they knew about the woods but didn't. Pat 03:41 Well, the reason they gave may have not been like 100% accurate. Like one thing that comes to mind is--it really sucks--but you know, critters find their way down into there. And so if the door's open like, you know, a raccoon or something may climb down there and like it really sucks because oftentimes they get down there and they can't get out. And you know, at my park, we shovel all of that waste out into buckets and hike it out. [Margaret makes a "pee-yew" noise of disgust] And sometimes you know little chipmunks and stuff are in there. It's really sad. Margaret 04:12 Yeah, Is there like a back entrance where you can go down and access the pit? Or do you have to just literally like drop buckets and like it's a terrible well? Pat 04:24 Oh, no, those structures are literally just...like you just you just like rock them and move the wooden structures off. They're not secured to the ground. and then you put a hole in the ground with just like posthole diggers. Margaret 04:44 That's fun. I'm glad that this is the first question I asked you. [Laughing] Pat 04:48 It's part of the job. Sorry, gonna turn all the listeners away. Margaret 04:52 No, no, no, no, I asked. And I think that that's like....Okay, I mean, that even gets kind of...Um, when I would do any kind of forest defense or anything that involves living in the woods, I feel like one of the main signs of like a newbie in a bad way was people who didn't dig a hole before they took a shit. Pat 04:53 Yes. Margaret 04:54 You know? And so the stuff that when you're like in houses and stuff that you sort of take for granted, you can't take for granted when you're not. So it sort of makes sense that shit is the defining characteristic. Pat 05:28 Yeah, it's kind of fun. Margaret 05:29 But, speaking of shitty jobs...Hehe, I had to make the pun at least once. I'm very sorry. What got you deciding that you want to work outside? Pat 05:41 I feel like I was kind of like destined for it. Kind of a weird way to put it. I was basically...my first backpacking trip was before I could walk. My dad put me on his shoulders. And I was out in the woods when I still in diapers. I grew up doing Boy Scouts so I was backpacking basically once a month. And so I just continuously did that essentially my whole life, and then, weirdly enough, in college kind of fell off for a bit. And then, you know, I graduated and decided to volunteer and have been doing it ever since. Margaret 06:17 Okay, and you moved from volunteer to now this is what you do professionally, right? Pat 06:20 Yeah, that's kind of the primary path to get in. If you're not coming from some sort of military background or something, you kind of have to volunteer or do an internship or something like that. It's a pretty small community. So getting your foot in the door and learning the lingo is kind of important. And having a name that a hiring manager can call for a reference check that's like in the system is kind of an important deal. Margaret 06:49 That makes sense. Pat 06:50 Yeah. Kind of a small community. Margaret 06:53 What do you like about it? Like, I think that a lot of people listening...So the reason I wanted to had you on, part of it is about search and rescue stuff--which I want to talk to you about in a bit--But part of why I wanted to have you on is I think that a lot of the listeners, a lot of listeners do either work outside or spend...Like I actually work inside, but almost all of my hobbies--and I make it this way on purpose--take me outside. And then I often sort of live outside. I don't currently, but I have at various points. But I think that a lot of people are looking for ways to get outside and don't like their current work or don't have work at all or whatever. And so I guess I want to ask you about what you like and don't like about having a job that has you outside all the time? Pat 07:43 Yeah. I mean, it's...I love that my job like requires me to be out there. It's like such a huge boost for mental health and everything. It's nice that I don't have to, like take time off for my family to go out and get those experiences. So that's really huge. Yeah, the outdoors is like a...I'm sure a lot of people that go out regularly have the experience where it's...even if you're not religious or anything but it's kind of got a spiritual element to it where you're just like out in it in the wilderness by yourself or even with a small group, and it's just refreshing, you know. It fills you up. So that's huge that I get to do that and I get paid for it and I get to--I think most of all--I get to help people get out to get into it, pointing out trails, conditions, things that. Yeah, it's really cool to have a job where I can, like materially help people on a day to day basis, you know? Like when I recommend a day hike and someone comes back like all sweaty but smiling and thanks you for it. You know, it's a good feeling. Margaret 08:52 Yeah, yeah. So you're like the human Alltrails[.com]? Is that what you're saying? Pat 08:57 Yeah, I've got a little bit of a beef with Alltrails. But that's maybe another conversation. Margaret 09:04 Wait, I want to hear because I've been using Alltrails Pat 09:07 I, and maybe this is just me, but I dislike how Alltrails chunks everything down into like little specific trails. So like, people come in and ask about like this one trail and it's got a name that I've never heard of and I'm like, "Oh, you're talking about like this section of the trail going up to here." Like, I'm much more like destination based. But that's just me, you know. People like it. And it's really great for finding new stuff. You have the maps right there, which is really great. Although I don't think it's as robust of a GPS tool as some of the other apps. But yeah, it's got some weird stuff with like...Some of the information isn't always accurate. So don't trust it 100% is what I'm getting at. Margaret 09:54 Yeah, I have noticed that, that it never takes me to the right place to start a trail... Pat 09:59 See. Margaret 09:59 Which, i feel like it's just trying to keep me honest. It's trying to make sure I learned how to read maps right. Because it takes me to the wrong spot. But it doesn't do it when I'm like in the backwoods as much, right? Like backwoods is an exaggeration of the kind of hikes I do. Okay, no, no, I mean, because one of the things that I almost dislike about it when I started using it is I'm like...It's kind of like when I'm driving, and I used to drive without a GPS, and drive across the country and all that. And now I drive with a GPS and I know exactly how many minutes are left in my drive. It's a little weird that I have brought that into my hiking life I admit. But, I do like that there have been a couple times where I've been hiking and I'm like, "I don't know where this fucking trail is. Where the fuck am I?" And it's been like, "You're in the wrong place." And I'm like, "Thank God." Pat 10:56 Yeah. Good job, mapping tool. Margaret 11:01 Yeah, exactly. Pat 11:03 It's amazing now how the phones have replaced so many tools in my back country pack. You know, it's like, my camera, it's my GPS, it's, you know, I listen to podcasts when I'm hike. It's...Yeah, it's kind of cool. Very Powerful. Margaret 11:19 Yeah, no, I like it too. I used to hike around with an SLR [Big camera]. And I'm glad I don't anymore. Margaret 11:20 That's a lot of weight. Yeah. Margaret 11:32 Yeah. Okay, so how does it affect...You talked about like...One of the things that you said about working outdoors that actually seemed really interesting to me that seems really cool is that you don't have to take time away from your family to do it because it is the thing...You're combining the thing that you want to be doing and the thing you do for work. How else does it affect your life, working outside or even specifically working for the park service? Pat 12:00 Yeah. So you know, I have a family. I have a wife and kid at home. So...but where I work is, you know, it's a good couple hours away from where my wife and kid are. So it can be a little bit challenging at times. And I'm really lucky that I've got the situation that I do because my wife has a decent job with all the benefits and everything and I'm a seasonal employee. So I'm working May to October, and then I get like...and so in the winter months it's kind of worked out where I'm able to be a stay at home dad and take care of my kiddo. Yeah, it's pretty...It works out really well. And as she's starting school, I'm just transitioning to homemaker, which is kind of working out pretty nicely. I just get to bake bread and do the laundry and all that fun stuff. It's pretty great. Yeah, it's a good setup. But in the summers, I ended up being away from my family. I go home on my weekends. But, you know, I spend four days at a time out here in the back country and in the office. And, you know, it kind of stinks, but I'm out in the woods and I get so much family time in the actual winter that it it kind of evens out. Yeah. Margaret 13:17 No, I mean, it sounds like it has advantages over almost every office job. Like even though my parents came home every day, both of them worked easily 12 hour days most days. Yeah. Pat 13:32 And my wife's job allows her to travel in the summers. So they go and visit family. Like they're off doing stuff. So you know, the couple months where they're off doing those kinds of things, you know, it's not terrible. It lets me go off and do my own thing on my days off. So it works out nicely. Margaret 13:49 Yeah. What would you say for like...I'm obviously...I presume you can only speak specifically to the park service or whatever. But do you know much about like other outdoors jobs or like what kind of like...What would you say to someone who's like thinking about working outdoors? Pat 14:06 Yeah. So I've worked closely with some forest service stuff, forest service people. I shared an office with them for a couple of years. So, you don't just have to work for the government to work in the outdoors. You know, there are a variety of jobs working for federal or state agencies. You know, there's wildland fire. There's jobs that take you outdoors if you're interested in like biology. You know, there's people that go out and survey frogs and that's their whole...Their whole job is they spend the summers at alpine lakes just like doing frog surveys, which is pretty cool. But, there's also some of the non government jobs,. You know, there's guiding services. They're the folks that take people up those mountains like Denali and Rainier. They're private companies. That's a job that you can get in there. And also--it's not necessarily in the outdoors but adjacent to it--you know, all those national parks have concessions, you know, private companies that run the hotels and the shuttle services and all of that stuff. So you don't even necessarily like have to be a park ranger to like work in Yosemite or something like that, you know? You can be like a line cook and still live in the valley and be able to go day hiking in those gorgeous places on your days off. So... Margaret 15:30 Okay, so I actually first ran across you because I put out a call saying I'm interested in talking to people who work with search and rescue. And I had initially thought of--and I'll probably interview some other people about this, and who knows what order they'll come out, so maybe you're hearing this after I've already put out some other ones--But I was originally thinking about volunteer search and rescue, right, and the the groups that do it in different regions, but you do search and rescue as part of your work. And I wanted to talk to you about that, about what search and rescue is like. And just to...the reason I got really interested in thinking about this was I was thinking a lot about how search and rescue is a form of mutual aid that our society puts together and how there's been like--I guess every now and then people try and charge people for search and rescue services and then everyone gets really upset about it. This is like something I'm completely outside of. I just read articles every now yeah and then. So I kind of wanted to ask you about the field of search and rescue and your work with it. And what that's...What's been involved? Pat 16:31 Yeah, um, I am kind of...you mentioned it, pretty lucky in the search and rescue world in that I get a paycheck for what I do. The Park Service is unique in that it's part of like our enabling legislation to provide for the safety of our visitors. So most other places, it just goes to the county sheriff. That's just the default, the County Sheriff. They don't have the budget to have a paid search and rescue team. And there's always, always always volunteers, people willing to step up to help. Which is, yeah, kind of amazing. And yeah, it's pretty great. We don't ever charge for anything. My park owns a helicopter and we don't charge for pulling people out of places and lifting them everywhere. Yeah, it's a pretty cool setup that we're able to just purely help and not at all worry about money or anything like that. It's pretty great. It's interesting because you see it a lot just in everyday like back country interactions with, you know, non search and rescue personnel to where, you know, you get injured in the back country and complete strangers are going to help you no matter what. Like, you see someone on the trail, they will help you in pretty much any sort of issue you have. I do love that about that sort of wilderness aspect is that like, everyone helps each other. It's kind of great. Margaret 18:08 That is a...I think that's a really important point. We had a guest recently who's a wilderness guide in Arctic regions and how that work actually led him to understanding anarchism and non-hierarchical organizing was that realization of like, of some of the things that come up in the back country. And so this thing that you're talking about, about how everyone helps you when you're in the backwoods, I think about...Like, I'm a real weird looking person by most of society's standards. And if I am in most...If I'm in the back country, if I am on a hike anywhere other than kind of like a weird city trail or something, no one looks at me weird. Everyone just like nods like they do everyone else. And it reminds me...[Interrupted] Pat 19:02 Everyone says hello... Margaret 19:02 Oh, go ahead. Pat 19:03 I was just...Yeah, it's amazing. People just say hi. They wave. It's...You drive a dirt road and everyone waves. It's interesting. Margaret 19:12 Yeah. And it reminds me a little bit about what I hear about, and what I've had minor experiences of, of what happens in disaster, which is, you know, the main theme of the show, right? And I wonder whether it's just because when we're far away from civilization and like we...the alienation of society, or civilization, or whatever the fuck--I don't know what we call this--but, you know, the alienation drifts away when we're in these places that don't have as many structures in place or like...What do you think it is? Why is it...If someone's passed out in the street in a city, everyone walks by them, and it's like, "Oh, that person didn't take care of themselves. So fuck them." right?" Pat 20:00 Yeah, it's...You're absolutely right. It's an interesting phenomenon. I think it has something to do with when you're away from that safety net of society, when you're away from like, "Oh, an ambulance is just a 911 call away. Someone else will do it. Someone else has done it." When you're out there and you're...You know that, "Oh, I haven't seen anyone in two hours and here's this person who's injured." You know that like you are the only one. I think that's part of it. And also like maybe a sense of, "Well, I would want someone to help me in this situation." And I you know, when we're in the woods we we see ourselves potentially in more risky situations. I don't know. It is... Margaret 20:48 No, that that bystander effect....Go Ahead. Pat 20:50 No, I'm just, you know, it's that or it's just, you know, when you're away from all of this modern everything we've built, people just are how they naturally are, which is helpful and kind. Margaret 21:04 Yeah. And, and that's what's so interesting to me about it is that like because people talk about like--a lot of preppers, especially like the center-right preppers and things--will talk about backwoods skills as the most important prepping skills. And overall, I don't think that that's true. Although, I think backwoods skills are great and I'm personally trying to work on mine. But maybe it's like, they're getting the wrong things out of it, right? Like, I mean, it's cool to know how to hit squirrels with axes and skin them or whatever. But knowing how...Like returning to this, "We take care of us" thing, returning to this sense of like, "We're in this together," maybe that's the more important backwoods skill. Pat 21:52 Honestly, it's wild. You have, you know, just the interaction you have when you're just far enough away, where you're not, you know, close enough to society. Everyone's...everyone's really friendly. Yeah, it makes my job really easy. Margaret 22:16 Yeah, that makes a lot of sense. Yeah. I always have...Like, when I talk to park rangers of various types, they're usually fairly happy and not like smiling because they have to for work. Pat 22:28 Well, it's like a customer service job at its core, but you're talking with the crowd of people that are--like we were just talking about--gonna go out into the woods and say hi to every person they see. And they're like, going off and they're spending their free time to go do this. Like it's a very specific crowd of people. And it's very like, okay, yeah, it's gonna be...[Audio distortion with missing words] Very rarely do I ever have difficult interactions with people. Margaret 22:55 Yeah. So with search and rescue, I have a couple questions about it. Okay, one, the least...the most specific--sometimes I like to just ask the most specific question that's on my mind. Which is, so I carry...like when I hike I carry a Garmin inReach Mini 2. I carry an SOS device and a satellite communicator, right. And it's the most expensive thing on my fucking pack. It probably costs as much as the rest of my pack, but I like having it because I hike by myself. I hike by myself...well, with my dog. And this seems like overall a very good thing. I'm very glad I have it, but I keep wondering, especially like when compared with like smartwatches that can send SOS's and like now phones can send an SOS, are you all like buried under fake SOS calls now? Pat 23:46 So no. Not really. We haven't...I feel like it's just that like new iPhone I think that does that SOS, but I don't think we have enough of those out there just yet to really see a lot of that. But, the inReach is our--my goodness--like gold standard. Those things it's an absolute wonder how those streamline the search and rescue process and get people to the care that they need quick. Yeah, like there's numerous situations I can think of off the top of my head where an individual would have potential...would likely have have died if they didn't have an inReach. Yeah, that...I'm sold on those things. They're just the absolute best. And there's a different brands, not inReach specifically. There's a couple other varieties, you know. I'm not here to sell Garmin products or anything, but anything that you can press a button and call 911 is huge. Margaret 24:51 Right. They haven't sent us one for free. Okay, yeah, it's funny because ever since I bought the Garmin inReach I am on their like mailing list and so I get the like...like once a month they send a story of like, "This man survived because he...on a ledge for six hours because of his Garmin inReach 2." Yeah. And it's like clearly sales propaganda. But it's also true in this case. Pat 25:18 Just last year, we had an individual who was experiencing heat stroke, was getting like combative with the rescuers. They were in such a bad way. And if they had not had the inReach, they were like 15-20 miles from the nearest road. If they had not had that inReach for us to be able to get a helicopter there like quickly, it would have been a much different mission for us. So yeah, it's...Yeah, those things are amazing. Margaret 25:49 Yeah. So if you're listening, Garmin, send us free ones to give to our listeners.. Pat 25:59 Garmin kind of stinks because you have to pay a fee, like the monthly whatever, in order to pay for it. Like the best...The only like real benefit it has over some of the other ones is that you can send messages. But the other ones, I think Spot is a simple one, you just buy once and you don't have to pay things. You just like jam a button and it's good. Also most boats have them, so if you have access to a sailboat, you could probably find one Margaret 26:24 Okay, now that actually, that's funny. I mean, one of the things, the only thing I've ever used my Garmin for, right is the text communication and the...So for anyone who's listening, it's a small device. It's like, it looks like a miniature walkie talkie. It's smaller than my cell phone, but it's like chunky and it's a satellite communicator. I pay a monthly fee. I think it's like 10 bucks. You can pause it whenever you want. So, if you're not gonna go anywhere for six months, you can stop. And it gives you like basically a phone number that you can text anywhere you can see the sky in the world. And then you're paying, you know, 25 cents a text or I'm making that number up. I don't remember how much money it is. It's around that. And yeah, and so it gives you an SOS button, which calls for help and tells people where you are, or initiates communications with the responders. And it also just lets you...like it Bluetooths to your phone, or you can very slowly and annoyingly type on this like weird thing. It doesn't have a touchscreen. And so, one of the reasons I actually do like that model is that like, I don't want to interact with authorities unless I absolutely need to, right? And I absolutely will press the like "Please save my life button," right. But, there's a lot more situations where it's just like, "Oh, I'm gonna go be off grid for a week. It would be really nice to know..." Like, recently I was off camping in the backwoods. Well, not really the backwoods. I'm playing myself up. I was fucking...I was at Joshua Tree. I didn't have cell service and my aunt was in the hospital and I just wanted to know if anything happened to her. And so it was nice to know that I was able to be reached. Pat 28:20 Yeah. Yeah. And that's, that's huge. You know, I do a lot of solo travel too. And so it's nice to be able to--just because you can send your track as well. So you can send like, "Oh, this here, you can follow me on the website." And so like, you can just send a link and initiate your tracking. Like, "I'm gonna go off trail and scramble up this little peek here. Like, go ahead and follow along." It's kind of nice, nice reassuring, at least. But then you're connecting with that outside world, which takes away that part of the wilderness a little bit. Margaret 28:55 I know. I was gonna say that part of it. And I feel bad saying it, but like... Pat 29:00 It's true. Margaret 29:01 Everywhere has cell service now and I'm like not always glad. Pat 29:06 It's nice when you can't be...[Talking over each other] Margaret 29:10 Okay, well...Go ahead. Pat 29:11 I was just saying it's nice when you can't be reached. Margaret 29:12 Yeah. For anyone who is listening is wondering why the conversation...We both have shitty internet. So there's lag and that's what you all are listening to. Which, is the fun thing about two people in a rural situation and trying to record a podcast together. And so okay. So you go and you do search and rescue and I have two questions about that. I have more questions about that. Garmin was my like weird specific one. What are people doing? What are the main takeaways that you're learning that you see hikers or campers or all vehicle, all-terrain whatever...offroaders. Whatever. Like, what are people doing that puts them in these situations where they need rescue. Like what? What lessons can you impart to our audience from having seen people both live and die in bad situations in the woods. Pat 30:05 I think the biggest thing...So it kind of depends on where we are. If we're talking about like the close in day hiking trails, the folks that are just out for a vacation and like maybe doing a hike in flip flops. For that, we're looking at a lot of the basic like, you know, the dehydration, twisted ankles, things like that. You know, people that don't hike a lot are going out and suddenly doing a, what may be for them, a really strenuous hike. And so those sort of like, broken ankle dehydration, whatever medical issues, you know. Grandma doesn't really hike and she's suddenly climbing up some switchbacks and, you know, has some some sort of condition that that causes her to go down or something like that. So that's what happens kind of in the front country. In the back country, when you're like really a little bit deeper out into the wilderness, oftentimes, what gets people into the most trouble is they are overextending themselves. They are pushing past what they are really kind of capable of doing. Oftentimes, you get a lot of like the weekend warriors who maybe haven't done a ton of hiking, who really decide like, "I want to do this one hike, because I saw it on Instagram. And I've got to do it because it looks really cool." And it's way above where their skills are at. They maybe go on too hot of a day and they don't have enough electrolytes. And so we still get a variety of, you know, the whole gambit of issues that can arise when you're out in the back country. But usually, it all stems from pushing themselves beyond what they should do for their capabilities. Yeah, and then the occasional like, whoopsie daisies breaking an ankle. Margaret 31:57 So it's actually kind of the same thing as the front country? Pat 32:00 Yeah, I mean, you're right in a sense. I don't...Yeah, it's just more of...Yeah, you're right. It ultimately comes down to just going beyond what you're, you know, expecting yourself to go do more than what you're actually able to do. Yeah. Margaret 32:15 Yeah. Alright, so are the majority of things heat related and ankle related? Pat 32:22 Oh, yeah, those are the two big examples. Those are honestly, kind of the most often are lower leg injuries, you just you step wrong, and you mess up an ankle, and then dehydration, and like heat illnesses. That's like, probably a solid like 80% of what we see on a day-to-day basis. And those are all easily resolved. You know, they're the quick in and out a couple hours and it's done. Go in. Bring some electrolytes to someone. Bring them back up and you just walk out, make sure they're okay. Or if it's an ankle, quickly pop up there, and if they're close enough, give them some crutches and help them get out. Get into a litter and wheel them out if you need to. Margaret 33:06 Okay, so the reason that I'm like...the ankle thing. I watch way too much like hiking YouTube. I wear--just because I'm an old punk--I wear boots all day every day. I used to wear big stupid steel toed boots and hike in them. And now I wear like tactical boots because they have side zippers and they're lighter. And I like them more. Not aesthetically, honestly but for my life. But but all the hikers I know are all obsessed with trail runners. And everyone is like, "No one actually rolls an ankle. What are you talking about?" But you're telling me that people roll ankles? Pat 33:45 Yeah. The people that roll ankles are usually in boots, surprisingly enough. Margaret 33:51 Oh, shit. [Laughs a little manically] Pat 33:53 Yeah. If you're like using trail runners, oftentimes, you're like strengthening your ankles and allowing that movement in your ankle, you know, because like the trail runners usually coincides with lighter pack weight as well. So, you have less weight, less risk. We're able to actually like move with you rolling an ankle. So like, yeah, like I occasionally like step weird. My ankle twists. But like, I'm not locked into something where now all of my body weight is going to be over that. I can quickly adjust and like, be fine. But yeah, it's usually the boots that you're seeing the ankle injuries with. But like if it works for you, hike your own hike. I try not to judge people for their gear. But yeah, the trail runner cult is real and for good reason. Margaret 34:45 Yeah, you're a trail runner guy. Okay. Okay. Pat 34:48 I only wear boots in snow. Margaret 34:49 I mean, everyone I know who's actually an outdoors person. Pat 34:52 Yeah. That's trail runners. Margaret 34:55 Okay. Yeah, I mean, at least like, you know, I...my friend Carrot was on talking about ultralight hiking and thru-hiking and you can hear in that episode me slowly getting sold on light weight hiking. I've always been like a maximalist. Yeah. And then in my defense I'm like, well, I used to live out of a backpack. I like know all about carrying weight many many miles. I was 25 when I lived out of a backpack I am. There's that meme from Aqua Teen Hunger Force, "I'm a full 30 or 40 years old and I don't need this anymore." Yeah. Okay, okay. Pat 35:44 Join the future. Margaret 35:45 So you would overall suggest that lighter pack weight and trail runners might be a safer method than making sure that you carry everything that would be in a Dungeons and Dragons adventuring pack? Pat 35:59 Yeah, um, honestly, you know, people aren't used to usually carrying like 40 pounds on their back. Like, it's not something humans normally do on a day-to-day basis. Like 20 is like not that much different. And most people can move pretty much the same way if they've got 20. But with 40, you're like, you're lumbering. Much more prone to the trips and falls and not being able to place your feet quickly and nicely. So...But, okay, ultimately, it's, you know, there is a trade off of like you're carrying less stuff, probably less robust stuff, you're relying on doubling things up, multi-use stuff. So that's kind of like...It's a trade off. Margaret 36:48 No, and that's really interesting to me because like what we were talking about earlier about people taking care of each other in the backwoods, I was thinking about how camping and hiking and outdoor stuff, in a way, is like making a hobby out of a little apocalypse. You're going somewhere where you can only rely on what's around you, the people around you, and the stuff that you've brought, right. And so that leads me towards my like, vaguely maximalist...Like what I do now, is that like, my pack is a weird lightweight maximalism. I like still want...Like, I carry P-cord, right? And that's like not in an ultralight hike pack. But, I'm also not throug-hhiking. So I'm kind of like, whatever. Pat 37:39 Who cares? Margaret 37:42 But I don't carry like 50 foot of climb line, you know? And like, I'm not set to repel. I could repel in an emergency with my fucking p-cord. And it would be bad idea, but I would do it if I had to, right. Pat 37:56 Terrifying. Margaret 37:57 Yeah, no, I would double it up and then be terrified. Don't do...No one should listen to me. That's why I have experts on. Pat 38:04 Don't ever do that. [Laughing] Margaret 38:07 Okay, got it. All right. Everyone makes sure to repel with P chord. If you're not, you're not ultralight. So. Okay, so I expected the answer to be like, "What goes wrong in the back country?" I expected it to be like, people aren't prepared, right? Because I have this like, tendency to think like, "Preparedness!" and like... But what you're saying is that it's a different kind of prepared. People are overestimating their capacity rather than running into a problem that they don't have the wand of magic missiles that can solve or whatever. Pat 38:47 Most of the issues we see are not solved by some like gizmo that you carry. It's usually like your preparedness, your like physical ability, things like that, you know. Some little tool in your pack, like for the most part isn't going to prevent the issues that we see. Margaret 39:10 Right? Yeah. But sometimes they're fun. Like a walkie talkie. Pat 39:15 Oh, yeah, they're great. Margaret 39:22 Okay, okay. So while we're...Is most of what you're doing like day-to-day hanging out at a back country office or the office of...What do you do in your day-to-day? I should just ask that. Pat 39:39 So like about half of my days, I am behind the desk in the front country just chatting with people, pointing out day hikes. I issue permits for backpacking things like that. And I have my, I always got my SAR [Search and rescue] pack there ready in case something pops off that I can quickly go hustle up trail to help with. And then the other half of my time I am in the field, in the back country, hiking around, chatting with folks, making sure that they're not feeding the bears, and I get the point out cool flowers and frogs to people. It's pretty cool. Explore new routes. Try to find shortcuts into places for quick access for search and rescue teams. It's a cool job. Margaret 40:24 Does your back country pack include a full SAR setup? Pat 40:29 It does. Yeah, so I...But a full SAR setup isn't...I should correct that. It does not have a full SAR setup because I don't carry a helmet with me when I'm in the back country. And whenever we're on SAR, we've always got helmets. Margaret 40:46 Like, like the Team Wendy Bump helmets? Pat 40:48 Yeah, like climbing helmets because we're often like, doing off trail stuff in the dark in weird weather and they were getting way too many search and rescue personnel getting like head injuries. And the last thing you want out there is to like bonk your head on a tree. You know, head injuries bleed a lot. They're not usually scary, but like a cut on your forehead is like...looks scary. And so it's just too much to deal with in the back country. So we got to wear helmets, even when we're hiking for SAR. It's kind of silly. Margaret 41:20 So all hikers should wear helmets at all times. [Joking tone] Pat 41:23 Yes, that's what I'm saying. Margaret 41:25 Cool. Maximalism, that's what you're here to promote. So, how heavy is your back country pack? Pat 41:36 Yeah, um, I actually got it loaded up right here because I'm heading out after this. But it is...Right now. It's probably about 25 pounds-ish. And that's loaded for three days with overnight gear, food, extra SAR stuff. SAR stuff isn't that much more in addition. It's just a little bit more robust things. Like I carry a bunch of like hand warmers. I carry just extra radio batteries, a big heavy duty like tarp emergency blanket, and then just enough layers where I can like stand outside all night long and not need shelter. Other than that, eye pro, ear pro, gloves. [Eye and ear protection] Not much different that you really need. Any like specialized equipment is coming to you. Or you would start out from the trailhead with it. Margaret 42:36 I see. So it's not like you're carrying the larger first-aid kit? Pat 42:41 No, I mean, I've got a decent sized firstaid kit, but most of the time my first-aid kit is for me. And when I'm treating, when I'm helping someone, I'm using their first-aid kit, and I've got some extra stuff for like bigger injuries. But for the most part, I'm like if you're injured on the trail, I'm finding your first-aid kit and I'm going through that first. So it there's like a cool specialized band-aid that you like, make sure that you put that in your first-aid kit. Margaret 43:15 Okay, everyone needs a full suture kit. And everyone needs at least three Sam splints. [Joking tone] Pat 43:25 Sam splints are great, but they're just so big. Margaret 43:28 I know, they're never in my pack and I always sort of wish it was, but it never is. It doesn't...Even my maximalism doesn't put my Sam split in my my pack, but I'm not like a medic. Pat 43:41 It's funny you mentioned that suture kit. I actually have a story about someone carrying a suture kit in the wilderness and it working out well. Margaret 43:49 Oh, okay. [Surprised] Pat 43:50 They...It was in Boy Scouts and we were out hiking and one of the adults with us was a dentist and like way maximalist over packed. He had like an 85 pound pack, but he had a full suture kit. And lo and behold, someone fell and like gashed their knee open like incredibly deep. It was like a big bleed. There he was, sewing right up on trail. Margaret 44:13 Hell yeah. Pat 44:14 it was pretty cool. But I don't know if it was worth all of that extra weight. I mean, it was I guess but... Margaret 44:21 Yeah. I am so...I love talking to people about this because I'm so torn between my...like I mean the main pack that I carry, I just go day hiking most of the time right now and car camping. Currently, I used to basically backpack for a...not a living, but you know I lived out of a backpack, right? Pat 44:44 You're a professional backpacker. Margaret 44:47 Yeah. And now I just have like a day hiking pack and it has, you know, it probably has more stuff than I need, but I'm not pushing myself super hard on how long I'm hiking. I have a dog with me who provides a natural limit into how much I can hike. I can't push myself too hard. I actually don't go out too much in the summer, frankly, because my dog does not like the heat. He is a cold weather dog who loves the snow. I have bad news for him about the coming world. But, I am a little bit maximalist. And so I try. I'm trying so hard to pare it down. And it's so hard. But okay. All right. So....Oh, I have so much more I want to ask you about SAR. Do you know much...Like do you all ever work with volunteers when you do SAR? Like, do you have like...Okay, so most of the SAR calls you get are like someone like calls in and it's like, "I fell. My ankles fucked. I can't walk home," and whether it's someone on a switchback in the front country, or whether they're 20 miles in or whatever, do you like? Like, how often is it? It was...I mean, I don't know, it's almost like...I mean I'm not going to put this in the title, so it's not clickbait. But like, how often is it like, "Oh, shit, we have to get there in time, someone's dying, or like, you find corpses or all the gnarly intense stuff? Margaret 46:21 Okay. So, only hike with a helicopter. Bring a helicopter with you in your maximalist pack. [Dry joking] Pat 46:21 Usually...usually every day, there's something small happening. Small meaning like, "Oh, someone twisted their ankle a quarter mile trail from the visitor center." Every...it's usually probably three or four every summer, big ones, that have a big outcome, like where it ropes in a lot of folks and ends up being a kind of a big incident. Usually at three or four. But they can also resolve incredibly quickly too. So you can have a major thing that is from the time of knowing about, it's within an hour, it's completely resolved. You know, if you have a helicopter around and someone's like impaled with an ice axe or something like that, we can quickly get them out to a hospital like within an hour if we have if we have a rush. Yeah. Pat 47:27 Yes. Bring a helicopter. [Dry joking] Margaret 47:33 Okay, and then okay, so I want to ask--I guess I asked a version of this--but it's like okay, so you're mostly saying like, bring electrolytes and don't push yourself too hard. Are there other things that people like get wrong or even sort of get right about about backpacking or about just like spending a bunch of time in the outdoors whether it's day hikes or not? Pat 47:56 Yeah, I think what people can get wrong is that like tunnel focus on the destination of like, "I have to get here because Alltrails says that's a cool hike. And it says it's moderate. So I have to do it." That's the same light vein of thinking of like people pushing themselves. Where people get right is folks usually have like their ten essentials like people usually have like a backpack, and like a water bottle, and some way to treat water, or something like that. Most folks these days have like the navigation. They've got Alltrails on their phone. They've got ways to get away like get around. So we don't see too many folks getting lost these days, at least in my current park, which is kind of nice. Margaret 48:44 Yeah that's cool. Because I only read...Like I read some article about how the ski slopes have like...Local cops near a ski slope have stopped responding to the like Apple Watch "This person fell." Pat 49:00 Oh, gosh. Margaret 49:01 Because there's like something about skiing that sets it off on your watch or something, you know? Pat 49:09 Wow. Margaret 49:10 And so I like have mostly read about the like, here's how technology is like, making some things like more complicated and worse, but it makes sense to me that...Yeah, I don't know. It's easy to...I don't get lost anymore. My phone tells me where to go. I mean the closest I've come right as you you go hiking and you're like, "Shit, I didn't charge my phone enough," or like or I always assume that in my day pack, I have a spare battery. And then like one day I was like, "I apparently didn't bring my battery in my pack," you know? So I died. No, I clearly didn't. But no, it's cool to hear that people are getting lost less. And even I think that that also even applies to the like outdoors as mini apocalypse type thing, is that it helps to like know that there's certain...I mean, obviously we rely on certain technologies that may or may not work in different situations, right? Like if we're entirely reliant on cell service and cell service is no longer available or whatever. I am trying to think of what the, what the other thing is...I feel like there's...Okay, well, one, I want to ask you what water filter you use, what water treatment system you use? Pat 50:34 I use a Sawyer. Sawyer Squeeze. Put it right on my little water bottle. I like literally have my pack right here. Margaret 50:44 Yeah, no, I got really excited when you said that because I...I like, I make fun of how like preppers always, like, nerd out about gear. But it's just impossible not to. If you get involved in a hobby, or an interest, at some point, you're going to be like, "But what did you use?" Like, you know? So...But having a way to do it. Yeah, like Sawyer Squeeze...Sawyer is what I use when I lived off grid at the beginning of the pandemic and needed to filter all my water. Pat 51:16 They're great. They're cheap. Can buy them in any outdoor store. Kind of nice. Margaret 51:24 Yeah. All right. The sad question. Maybe the answer isn't sad. How have you seen, working at one place for 10 years...I assume...Whatever. I think you've been there for 10 years. Pat 51:36 I've worked in two different parks. But yeah, ten years. Margaret 51:39 Okay. How has climate change affected? Like you see the outdoors every year? What's been changing? And what are? What are people around you saying and thinking? Like, how seriously are people taking it? And what's that? Pat 51:58 Yeah, we all kind of collectively acknowledged that, especially like the group of seasonals that are like that I'm like working with, we all kind of acknowledge that, like, "Yeah, we get to be frontline watching these places go through the changes for, you know, climate change. We're going to be like, documenting these in our patrol reports of like, how the snow melt is different from year to year and what the new normals are. And it's kind of a weird, like, yeah, like, somebody's got to document it. And so we're, we're here for that. And it's yeah, it's, it's sad. It's like a collective like, "Oh, shit, we're gonna see this place, these places change. And we're going to, we're going to be documenting that, and recording that, and being that that data collection," at least from like, firsthand accounts, so...You know, it's tough when we're just, you know, we're just little patrol Rangers. We don't have really much power other than just communicating to people. That's one of the things I like to talk about. And I like point out things on a map is like, "Oh, yeah, do you see this, like this glacier was here. And now it's way up here. And it's receding this much every year." Yeah. So we have that power to communicate with people. But it's, it's a tough part of the job. Let's put it like that. Margaret 53:25 Yeah, it...I don't know. Climate grief is a....At some point we need and episode on climate grief. Because it's something that like we all sort of avoid thinking about, even when you're like doing preparedness. Like part of the point of doing preparedness, from my point of view is to like avoid thinking about like how things might go. What have been people's responses, like, do you run across...Are most people....? Because if you hang out on Twitter, anytime someone says, "Hey, this is the hottest day ever. This is a problem." You have like 50 blue checkmarks, who may or may not be real people, being like, "Everything's seasonal, you idiots." Like do you run across those people in like a 50/50 to regular....people who actually understand what's happening. Pat 54:11 No, the vast majority of people that I talk to about that stuff....First off, I'm talking usually to backpackers. So it's usually like a certain crowd of people, and like National Park backpackers as well. There's also like a selective crowd. And so most people are like acknowledge the reality of climate change and recognize like, "Oh my gosh, this is a changing landscape now." Occasionally, though, I get the person that is like, "Oh, climate change. That's...These glaciers, they always grow and shrink. What are you talking about?" And it's, it's a delicate manner, you know, to talk my way out of that one because I'm in uniform and everything. Margaret 54:58 Yeah, you don't just like pull a gun and chase them out of the park? [Joking] Pat 55:04 That'd be nice. I'd be like, "What are you doing here? Why are you here? Go away!" No, I have to be friendly and I don't know, show them pictures of wherever glaciers used to be. Margaret 55:16 No, that makes sense. No, it actually, I mean, I actually...I think if anything is gonna get us out of...Well obviously, there's no stopping climate change, right? Like there's mitigating the worst impacts, both in terms of the level of change and how that change affects us. But like, we're well past the like...We're like, actually in it now. You know? But I do think still that like getting people...Like changing people's minds, it still actually matters. And it's still actually...You know, there's this counter inflammation program that's designed to destroy the fucking Earth and we have to counter it. And okay, but I have a non climate change related question. And it's the last one I have on my list and then I'm gonna ask you if you have anything that I should have been asking you. What can folks...You deal with a lot of different people coming in, and you talked about different people overestimating their levels of ability and stuff. And sometimes, when I run across like outdoorsy stuff, there's like this macho culture of like, who can do the most vertical feet? And who can, you know, walk the furthest in the worst climate? It's actually almost cool that the weird macho thing about gear is to have us be lighter instead of heavier. But..which is the opposite of what I what I would expect it, you know? But, how can people of different levels of ability...like one of the things I like about...We didn't really talk about the problems at the Park Service. I think that that's just a thing? Pat 57:06 That's a whole conversation. Margaret 57:11 Right? You know, the Park Service comes from a very bad place. And so does all of the United States, right? And... Pat 57:19 Yes. Margaret 57:19 You know, like, you talked earlier about like private versus public. And, you know, and it's like, is giving yuppies a safe taste of the wilderness for a private company like more ethical than working for the federal government? I don't actually think so. I think everyone has to do different things in order to survive. But...Well, actually, I guess I'm now bringing that up. If you have anything you want to say about that we could talk about. You don't have to. Pat 57:38 I don't mind. Yeah, it's it's tough. You know, I love these places. It's not my land, though. You know, I'm on indigenous land. This is where I work. And it's, it is a tough aspect to kind of try to reconcile because I love my job. And these, I'm happy these places are protected. But also, like, I don't know, if...Like, you know, I'm white. Like, I don't know, if I should be the person in the back country telling people not to step on the wildflowers, you know? I'll do it because the job is there. And honestly, I couldn't imagine doing something else. But if that land got returned to the indigenous tribes, tomorrow, I would be all for it. You know, it's, it's at the edge. It's a tough one to reconcile. And they're starting to make moves. You know, just the other day, got to go through all of our little laminated maps and sharpie out one of the names for a lake because it used to be a really offensive name for Indigenous women. And now, it's not that anymore. It's like a local indigenous word for grandmother. And it's like, "Wonderful! I get to cross this out and write in the new name on this map." Like, that's fun. But also, you know, it's still not the tribe's land anymore. So, I don't know. It's tough. Margaret 57:44 No, it makes sense. And I mean, when I think about the National Park Service, I think about a lot of really negative things and then I also think about how like as when I was doing forest defense, the National Forest Service is part of the Department of Agriculture and national forests exist federally not to be protected but to be harvested. And any like people use, or nature use that--and people are nature but you know--that comes along the way is like a byproduct. Pat 59:05 Yeah. Margaret 59:09 You know? And yeah, that's the...It's weird because the park services are like, parts of them and more some of them more than others, are like theme park for nature. And there's like all kinds of complicated things. But it's also like...I remember at one point, I was in Yosemite, and I was like on a raised walkway to go see some falls. And I'm like, "You know, it fucking rules that these falls are wheelchair accessible." Like, that's cool. And it's interesting to me that there are people working to try and figure out how to balance, access and preservation. And so even though it comes from the....I don't know, whatever. I'm not trying to be like, "The park service is great," right? But it's just like, it's fucking complicated. Pat 1:00:44 Yeah, exactly. It's, you know, you make the parks really accessible and then that degrades the quality of the resource in the that solitude in that wilderness aspects if there's a parking lot with 1000 cars, or you know, 200 people on the trail. But also, like, it's great that people can get out to these places. That is the...Yeah, give a park ranger a beer and ask them, "How do you balance access versus preservation?" and that's a that's a whole podcast series right there. Margaret 1:01:18 Yeah, no, I would totally listen to a podcast series that both talks about the weird fucked up place that the parks come from, and like the way that they do all this bad stuff, but then also, they're complicated, like...I remember being in a national park run cave and this little kid was like, "Why can't we go in that part of the cave?" And the Ranger was like, "Because there's a bat sleeping." And the kid was like, "Well, what if I want to go in anyway?" And the Ranger looks at this like little kid and is like, "If it's between you and the bat, the bat gets the cave and you don't." Like, watching the entitlement strip away from this little kid's eyes and I'm like, yeah...I don't know. Well, okay, and this actually gets into the thing that I was going to ask as my question, which is, um, what can people different levels of ability do? Right? If you try to get involved in, in, not necessarily working outdoors but like, engaging with the outdoors and you're not like, totally able to just immediately--I mean, I can't fucking hike like I used to. I'm not trying to fucking go...Like, I walk seven miles and up 2000 feet, and I'm like, "I am fucking done." And my dog is like, "We are done." You know? But like, what can people do? Like...how make more accessible? Pat 1:02:44 The best way to really get started if you don't have that experience and really want to avoid that pitfall of like, "I'm going to do this hike because I saw a guide book that says I should do this hike. So I've got to do it." It's just be completely flexible with not getting to whatever the destination of the hike is, you know? Choose something small to start off with, you know, and only do a couple miles, and set a time to like turn around. Say like, "I want to hike for two hours and turn around in one hour," regardless of if you get to the destination or not. And really try to change your mindset from the point of the hike being to get to the viewpoint or to get to the cool cave or whatever, to being the point of the hike is to like stop and see the little things along the way. Some of favorite days are like cloudy, rainy days because I'm not looking for views on those days. I'm like, focused down on like how the rain and the water makes the moss look different or changes the coloration of the wood grain and things like that. You know, rocks look a lot cooler in crummy weather. So I think like changing your mindset to like, "I'm not hiking to get somewhere. I'm hiking to be in nature," can really change like your mentality of, "I don't have to push myself to get to that place. Because just around the corner, there might be a cool thing to look at," and like really sit and explore and like look closely. Margaret 1:04:19 Yeah, okay. Pat 1:04:20 That's my advice is to treat it like a walk in the woods before a trek. And you'll eventually get better and more fit and more experience to be able to push on and do more extreme stuff. Margaret 1:04:36 I like that a lot. Okay, well, that's, that's my questions. Is there like a question you wish I had asked you or like final thoughts or anything? Pat 1:04:44 No, I think the biggest thing is that folks should get out and hike and push yourself, but have a backup plan and make sure that you don't get in over your head. Drink your electrolytes. It's hot. Margaret 1:05:06 Yeah. What electrolyte do you rep? What do you pack? Pat 1:05:12 The gold standard is the that Liquid IV brand, just because it's like four times as much electrolytes than the other stuff. It's also really expensive. So like the knockoff store brand version of that, I've found it like a Safeway has been...It's been okay. Yeah, okay. Margaret 1:05:34 Alright. Well, everyone go outside, or don't, but probably do. See the world while it's still around? I gotta admit, that's been a big part of it for me is I'm like, "But I haven't seen everywhere." Pat 1:05:53 Yeah, I want to see it before that doesn't happen there anymore. Yeah, it's tough. Go touch really faraway grass. Margaret 1:06:08 Yeah. Well, do you have anything that you want to promote or push? Or do you want people to follow you on the internet or support any given program or thing? Pat 1:06:20 I wish I had thought about this before recording, but I don't...I don't like having an online presence. So don't try to find me online. You can't. But yeah, go for a hike. And touch some grass that's really far away. That's my advice. That's what I'm gonna plug. Margaret 1:06:41 Hell yeah. Margaret 1:06:47 Thank you so much for listening. If you enjoyed this episode, please tell people about it. Word of mouth is the main way that podcasts spread. The other way is algorithmically. And, you can influence those algorithms by liking and subscribing and commenting and doing all that fucking bullshit that makes me very sad to have to point out is true. You can also support making this podcast happen. Several people make--well, not their living. It doesn't don't come out well enough for that. But several people make some part of their living by making this happen, including our audio engineer and our transcriptionist. And we really appreciate your support. And you can support us on Patreon at patreon.com/strangersinatangledwilderness, because this is published by Strangers in a Tangled Wilderness, which is an anarchist publishing collective that puts out podcasts, and zines, and books, and all kinds of stuff. In particular, I want to thank Lord Harken, Trixter, Princess Miranda, BenBen, Anonymous, Funder, Jans, Oxalix, Janice & O'dell, Paige, Aly, Paparouna, Milicia, Boise Mutual Aid, theo, Hunter, Shawn, S.J., Paige, Mikki, Nicole, David, Dana, Chelsea, Cat J., Staro, Jenipher, Eleanor, Kirk, Sam, Chris, Michaiah, and Hoss the Dog. Always Hoss the Dog. And there's like new names on that list since the last time I read that and that makes me really happy. There's a lot that we are trying to do as a collective that your support allows us to do and it will be cool. And you'll be glad. Maybe. I hope so. Anyway, good luck with the apocalypse. I hope you all are building resilient communities and/or learning how to make hard tack. Maybe both. Talk to you soon. Find out more at https://live-like-the-world-is-dying.pinecast.co
All thoughts, feeling and synchronicity happens for a reason! This Episode digs deep into how our body feels past lives through hunches. Also sheds light on the Reincarnation wheel and how the human race is breaking free, igniting the VERY POWERFUL psychic gene into the 5D world. Dreams and Deja vu's are massively important as well opening the doorway of new beliefs, Creating Heaven on Earth we all want. Listening to this Episode you may get Upgrades 'The Healing Hub' access of website www.truespiritconnection.ca socials Instagram & Facebook @truespiritconnection
Thank you very much to Dan for commissioning this episode!These chapters are the ones where Hugh gets right up in the face of a VERY POWERFUL council member and basically accuses her of bigotry due to a grudge, which is pretty fucking impressive tbh. Then we have the midwinter ball, which is a hotbed for inter-personal drama and romance, and I'm delighted by Artur's reaction to his son's relationship.Thanks for listening, and I will see you soon with a new episode!
Register for the Two hour Live Online Lesson Planning Masterclass Below October 15th from 10am to 12pm PST for only $25!! Click link to Register Intro CEO of Classical Conversations is a job that Robert Bortins was born to do…literally. Leigh Bortins dissatisfied with the education options she found as a new mom, decided first to homeschool her four sons, and then decided to develop her own curriculum, and Robert, her oldest son, was her first pupil. Robert has a B.S. degree in Industrial Engineering from Clemson University in 2006. After graduating, he worked as a management trainee for UPS and as a plant engineer for Easy Gardener, a Jobes company. In 2011 he returned to the family business, Classical Conversations, Inc., to develop a marketing program. He was then appointed CEO of the family-owned company in 2012. In the years since Robert Bortins became CEO of Classical Conversations, the company has grown by 300 percent and has become the world's largest classical homeschooling organization. Robert is a member of the board of directors of Homeschool Now USA, the Carolinas Rugby Union and the Clemson University Rugby Foundation Board. He is also a member of C12 Group, the largest professional development network of Christian CEOs and executives. Under Robert's leadership, Classical Conversations has been named a Certified Best Christian Workplace by BCWI for four years in a row. Very Powerful, Convicting and Thought Provoking Takeaways You do not need to be a trained educator to teach your children; sometimes being trained is a hinderance since homeschooling is not schooling at home but a way of life, and unlearning those habits can be hard. When parents say they cannot be around their children all day is a sign of a deeper that parents do not want to address. Not wanting to be around your kid also means you did not raise them in way that you would want to be around them. Education is to prepare you to engage in life and with those around you. Homeschooling allows your teenager to mature in the areas that are important and will benefit them and their future society. Call to Action Resources: https://members.classicalconversations.com/free-learning-center Books: https://classicalconversationsbooks.com/ Social Media Links Website: https://classicalconversations.com/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/classicalconversations Instagram: Look up classical conversations according to your state. Twitter: https://twitter.com/ClassicalConv What is Next! Thank you for supporting this show by listening and sharing with friends! If you like this podcast please rate and write a review of how this show has impacted or helped you! Great ratings will accelerate the show's visibility to the nation so others can learn more about homeschool and find quality curriculum and the potentially join the homeschool community thus change the face of education forever!! Who would have thought that we could change the education world with a click and a share! Also if you would like to hear more about any specific educational topic please email me at realedtalk@gmail.com I would love to support your families educational needs in all areas!! Bex Buzzie The Homeschool Advantage Podcast
I recently turned 40.Historically speaking, my birthday is always a time of reflection. This year as I entered my 40's - the birthday reflections were on STEROIDS. In the midst of ALLLL my reflecting, there was a very specific and VERY POWERFUL message just for YOU. For decades of my life... I was too afraid to be FULLY myself. I would do anything (and eat anything!) as long as I would go unnoticed. I would camouflage to anyone's liking. Modify myself to fit the 'part' or fit in. ESPECIALLY when it came to food and weight. People's opinions and 'rule following' were my prison. I stifled myself to try to fit into the 'acceptable' boxes I believed I was supposed to fit nicely into... AND because I felt inherently flawed - emotionally eating at the end of the day (in those moments when I was finally by myself) felt like my ONLY escape. NOW... I make the decisions based on what I want for my life (*MY VISION) and what I KNOW works for ME (*True Choice) I love being me. ALL of me. So there's no need to emotionally eat about this, because I am living the life I want to live and being who I want to be. I'm a thought leader. A trailblazer. I'll go first. I'll be different. I'm not afraid to be seen and noticed. AND I refuse to shove any part of me that I LOVE (and have intentionally become) into a box for anybody. NOBODY. There's no price I wouldn't pay for THIS level of confidence and freedom that I get to live my life with NOW. HERE'S WHY THIS MATTERS FOR YOU & YOUR GOALS: So many of you are... Afraid to lose weight if you want to, because of what other people might think. Hesitant, ashamed, embarrassed, or even nervous to claim that weight loss is something you want (*especially the very specific goal that you have in mind for yourself, even though it's really important to you and you think about it all the time) Playing down the goals that are MOST important to you (weight related or not) even though YOU KNOW it's exactly what you want. Feel paralyzed about saying 'no' to things --> and then say 'yes' to these same things purely out of obligation. Even at your own expense. Not OWNING WHO YOU ARE and WANT YOU WANT (*literally) gets in the way of YOU LIVING THE LIFE YOU WANT.Centering someone else's opinion about you more than YOUR OWN OPINION ABOUT YOU will always keep you from SHOWING UP - ALL OUT - to create the life you want.You're not gonna wanna miss this one.{added note: there's something a bit cosmic + magical about the words I have for you in this particular episode. A gift. And I hope it stokes a flame in your soul for what REALLY IS POSSIBLE}Make sure to listen to my birthday podcast. Click here to listen now.
ANNOUNCEMENT: SUPPLEMENTS TO HELP REPAIR MITOCHONDRIA TO REDUCE OXIDATION & MAKE ATP Dissolve-It-All - breaking down scar tissue, inflammation and calcification PUFA Protect - Eliminating a lifetime of a high PUFA diet Purely K - Reduce Calcification NAD Power - Allow Your Mitochondria To Create Energy! Probiotic Endotoxin Reducer - Lower Endotoxins! Oyster Extract - Bioavailable Copper, Selenium & Zinc Resilien-C - Whole Food Vitamin C Panacea - Pure Shilijit 84 Minerals + Chelate Iron Digest-it-All - Better assimilate & absorb your food Use discount code EHR15 :) Today we had health activist and researcher Mary Tocco on the show from ChildHoodShots.com. It was a real pleasure having her back on the show to discuss her work and more importantly her work in regards to what's going on right now with this viral issue (I can't even say the real word for fear of censorship!) right now. We talked about what recourses you have to fight against these draconian laws being mandated and handed down to us from the CDC, the WHO and other organizations like that. What can we do? How can we fight back for our freedom and our rights? One key takeaway from this interview with Mary Tocco is our relationship with our local county sheriff. Let's work with him to see if we can contract with him in a way where he will uphold our rights should the medical establishment try to force us to do unwanted things with our bodies. This is a VERY POWERFUL show please consider sharing the link on Facebook, and Instagram. Tag a friend and help us get the word our there will you? The censorship is real and the only way around the algorithm is to put boots on the ground and "gorilla share". :) Please share with your friends will you? :) On Last Thing! As always your support via your donations and bookmarking our Amazon link to use each time you purchase is how we keep our show going. Thank you for bookmarking our Amazon link even if you're not buying anything right now! :) Thank you all! Sponsors For This Episode: Extreme Health Academy Use code EHR14 for a free 2 week trial! Surthrival Pine Pollen (Use code PINE20 until 8/27/20 for 20% off!) Relax FAR Infrared Sauna RaOptics Blue Blockers GreenWave Electricity Filters Featured Products For This Episode: Blue Blockers Reishi Mushroom Elk Antler Joovv Red Light Therapy Colostrum Chaga Mushroom Bellicon Rebounders Aloe Vera Barf World Raw Dog Food The Biomat Show Notes N/A Show Guest: Mary Tocco Guest Info: Mary Tocco has been in the natural health care field for over 40 years and spent many years working in the holistic, functional medicine and chiropractic health field. Mary is working as a natural health advocate for people who want to improve their health by consultation. May 2020 – Created “Sheriff Plan of Action for Citizens”, a way for citizens to protect their rights by informing their sheriff how they feel about Un-Constitutional mandates coming from the federal government or local governors. Mary is the Vice President for the Foundation for Pediatric Health (501c3), co-founder of the American Chiropractic Autism Board (ACAB) 2006, helped manage Hope For Autism, (HFA) a training program for physicians who want to help children with autism recover. She was the Director of Vaccine Research and Education for Michigan for Vaccine Choice, a non-profit (501c) watchdog group, insuring vaccine choice in Michigan until December 2016. Mary Tocco is on the Board of Directors for WAVE, World Association for Vaccine Education (www.novaccine.com) Mary was the radio host of, “Healing Our World”, Republic Broadcasting Network Internet and satellite station from 2010 through 2014 and produced over 250 programs. The program focused on various things in the world making people sick, natural healing methods addressing those issues and empowering people to make a difference in their health.
VERY POWERFUL, VERY PROVOCATIVE, VERY CONTROVERSIAL, observations and or thoughts.What God demands worship?
TOPICS by TIMECODE 2:03 MANDATED FIRINGS hit top nuclear scientists with highest security clearance. Biden's become like Emperor Nero, burning down the nation — and he will shift the blame to the unvaxed 6:03 Dr. Seiler, MD points out how unvaxed are looking smarter and smarter 31:07 Listener — Personal story about God's provision 40:14 University threatens to charge students with trespass and arrest if not vaxed. They will keep the tuition. 43:38 DO NOT MISS DEADLINE for Religious Exemption. Religious Exemption is VERY POWERFUL against these mandates. Here's some tips. But Washington State University fired its head football coach after he missed the deadline for filing religious exemption by 5 days. 59:10 What? New narrative — Christian author & pastor, John Piper, urges Christians to “resist right wing pressure” and get vaccinated. Does he know ANYTHING about the medical, ethical issues involved here? 1:08:46 Listeners: celebrities & sports figures refusing vaccines and VaxPassports at concerts (like Travis Tritt & Eric Clapton) might turn more people; and listener's 16 yo daughter given jab at CVS & they refuse to cancel 2nd appointment 1:17:34 Medical Director: VaxPassport is ONLY to “Incentivize” Getting Jab. Says it doesn't have anything to do with transmission, unvaxed present no risk. So — it's not about “health” just getting everyone vaxed 1:21:15 VaccinePassport FOR SALE: Hackers Will Put YOU in the Database. Actually, it's a bargain. And In-N-Out Burger says it “refuses to be vaccination police for any government” as San Francisco closes them temporarily for NOT checking VaxPassports 1:29:16 Listener's letters, origami, figurines … and questions 1:37:01 Australian Cop's Personal Vax Tragedy. And the latest on the burgeoning dystopian police state there as Ted Cruz gets into a Twitter spat with an Oz politician 1:51:19 $93 BILLION in Vax Sales Buys A LOT of Media. Evidently the adverse effects disclaimer doesn't apply when you “sponsor” the whole show without an ad. OHSA tells companies to NOT keep records of vax injuries until May 2022 1:56:21 WATCH: Empty UK Parliament voting on lockdown measures by voice vote typical of the death of democracy by apathy just like the USA 2:00:20 America's idols — GOP fundraiser accuse people of being traitors because they haven't given enough money, Christian nationalists don't like jab, abortion or LGBT agenda but think “Trump is a miracle”; Jim Darlington's column is a prayer for 2022 that “Truth, Justice and Trump May Return” 2:17:15 Nolte/Breitbart claims there's a leftwing conspiracy to keep conservatives from getting “Trump Coronavirus Vaccine” which he calls a miracle. The responses of Breitbart readers are hilarious 2:27:47 Listener's friend doesn't believe Trump Exec Order of National Emergency did anything 583 days ago 2:50:10 Are ports an unavoidable bottleneck, lazy crane operators, deliberate work stoppage — or something more sinister? Find out more about the show and where you can watch it at TheDavidKnightShow.com If you would like to support the show and our family please consider subscribing monthly here: SubscribeStar https://www.subscribestar.com/the-david-knight-show Or you can send a donation through Zelle: @DavidKnightShow@protonmail.com Cash App at: $davidknightshow BTC to: bc1qkuec29hkuye4xse9unh7nptvu3y9qmv24vanh7 Mail: David Knight POB 1323 Elgin, TX 78621
TOPICS by TIMECODE2:03 MANDATED FIRINGS hit top nuclear scientists with highest security clearance. Biden's become like Emperor Nero, burning down the nation — and he will shift the blame to the unvaxed6:03 Dr. Seiler, MD points out how unvaxed are looking smarter and smarter31:07 Listener — Personal story about God's provision40:14 University threatens to charge students with trespass and arrest if not vaxed. They will keep the tuition.43:38 DO NOT MISS DEADLINE for Religious Exemption. Religious Exemption is VERY POWERFUL against these mandates. Here's some tips. But Washington State University fired its head football coach after he missed the deadline for filing religious exemption by 5 days. 59:10 What? New narrative — Christian author & pastor, John Piper, urges Christians to “resist right wing pressure” and get vaccinated. Does he know ANYTHING about the medical, ethical issues involved here?1:08:46 Listeners: celebrities & sports figures refusing vaccines and VaxPassports at concerts (like Travis Tritt & Eric Clapton) might turn more people; and listener's 16 yo daughter given jab at CVS & they refuse to cancel 2nd appointment1:17:34 Medical Director: VaxPassport is ONLY to “Incentivize” Getting Jab. Says it doesn't have anything to do with transmission, unvaxed present no risk. So — it's not about “health” just getting everyone vaxed1:21:15 VaccinePassport FOR SALE: Hackers Will Put YOU in the Database. Actually, it's a bargain. And In-N-Out Burger says it “refuses to be vaccination police for any government” as San Francisco closes them temporarily for NOT checking VaxPassports1:29:16 Listener's letters, origami, figurines … and questions1:37:01 Australian Cop's Personal Vax Tragedy. And the latest on the burgeoning dystopian police state there as Ted Cruz gets into a Twitter spat with an Oz politician1:51:19 $93 BILLION in Vax Sales Buys A LOT of Media. Evidently the adverse effects disclaimer doesn't apply when you “sponsor” the whole show without an ad. OHSA tells companies to NOT keep records of vax injuries until May 20221:56:21 WATCH: Empty UK Parliament voting on lockdown measures by voice vote typical of the death of democracy by apathy just like the USA2:00:20 America's idols — GOP fundraiser accuse people of being traitors because they haven't given enough money, Christian nationalists don't like jab, abortion or LGBT agenda but think “Trump is a miracle”; Jim Darlington's column is a prayer for 2022 that “Truth, Justice and Trump May Return”2:17:15 Nolte/Breitbart claims there's a leftwing conspiracy to keep conservatives from getting “Trump Coronavirus Vaccine” which he calls a miracle. The responses of Breitbart readers are hilarious2:27:47 Listener's friend doesn't believe Trump Exec Order of National Emergency did anything 583 days ago 2:50:10 Are ports an unavoidable bottleneck, lazy crane operators, deliberate work stoppage — or something more sinister?Find out more about the show and where you can watch it at TheDavidKnightShow.comIf you would like to support the show and our family please consider subscribing monthly here: SubscribeStar https://www.subscribestar.com/the-david-knight-showOr you can send a donation throughZelle: @DavidKnightShow@protonmail.comCash App at: $davidknightshowBTC to: bc1qkuec29hkuye4xse9unh7nptvu3y9qmv24vanh7Mail: David Knight POB 1323 Elgin, TX 78621
Episode 2 | Thank you for tuning in! This Episode is VERY POWERFUL! Reese sits down with his dad who is his biggest role model in the outdoors. He asks him some very strong questions that he has never heard answers or spoke to him about before. You will get to hear some intense conversations about his 20 years on the fugitive task force in Detroit, how his Faith was tested, how they managed to hunt living in the city outside of Detroit when Reese was young and also into the backstory of the elusive big bucks Reese MAY have missed growing up. You will need to hear this one!Support the show
Instagram… the app we love to hate. But we know that it's a VERY POWERFUL social media platform for product-based businesses. Sometimes Instagram feels like a necessary evil as a CEO… but today's guest is breaking it down in a way that feels a lot more fun. Sue B. Zimmerman… the Instagram expert is joining me this week for a candid conversation about what it takes to be successful on Instagram, why it IS the place to be, and the #1 thing you need to master in order to sell your products on Instagram. What You'll Learn How Sue B. Used Instagram to grow her boutique on Cape Cod The 5 “Neighborhoods” of Instagram that you need to be hanging out in How to get in front of the RIGHT people on Instagram Connect With Sue B. Website: www.suebzimmerman.com Instagram: www.instagram.com/theinstagramexpert YouTube: www.suebzimmerman.com/youtube Snag Sue B.'s FREE Instagram Guide Here www.suebzimmerman.com/guide Read the Full Transcript eCommerceBadassery.com/58 FREE Resource Library Every freebie I've created to help you grow the traffic, sales, and profit in your eCommerce Business, all in one place! http://ecommercebadassery.com/freestuff Want More Badassery? Join the eCommerce Badassery Facebook Group and connect with other eCommerce entrepreneurs just like you! http://ecommercebadassery.com/facebook Let's connect on Instagram @ecommercebadassery https://instagram.com/ecommercebadassery Ready to Level Up Your Email Marketing & eCommerce Business? Try the Klaviyo Email Marketing Platform - Built specifically for eCommerce, serving entrepreneurs, and iconic brands. https://ecommercebadassery.com/klaviyo Work With Me Interested in getting my brain focused on YOUR business? Learn more about my services… Email Marketing Help: https://ecommercebadassery.com/email-marketing eCommerce Help: https://ecommercebadassery.com/ecommerce-help Rate, Review, & Subscribe Like what you heard? I'd be forever grateful if you'd rate, review and subscribe to the show! Not only does it help your fellow eCommerce entrepreneurs find the eCommerce Badassery podcast; it's also valuable feedback for me to continue bringing you the content you want to hear. Review Here: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/ecommerce-badassery/id1507457683 This podcast uses the following third-party services for analysis: Chartable - https://chartable.com/privacy
They’re VERY simple, yet VERY POWERFUL! I hope you guys enjoy and benefit from this episode! If you do, please subscribe, like/rate/share the podcast, and I’d love to hear from you through a review
This podcast is VERY POWERFUL in terms of understanding how CANCER affects everyone, not just the one with the disease. Hear from a 2-time cancer survivor, Mary Jenkins.
FREE financial success hypnosis recording download http://jakeshypnosis.com In this video we discuss 4 Powerful Words For Attracting What You Want With Law of Attraction (WARNING!! Very Powerful!) and how to improve your ability to use the law of attraction and communication with the universe. Most people block the law of attraction because they do not know 4 Powerful Words For Attracting What You Want With Law of Attraction (WARNING!! Very Powerful!) We need understand how to talk to the universe and use the secret better. There are certain tricks to using law of attraction to easily manifest what you want, but you need to learn how to talk to the universe. Most people struggle with law of attraction because they've never properly understood how to talk to the universe to use the law of attraction. And most people struggle with LOA because they do not understand how to use it. So I share my biggest takeaways so you can apply it to your life easily. In this video you'll learn how to use the law of attraction, understand it better, and apply it to your life. The first step is to understand that you're always using Law of Attraction. Most of us spend our whole lives doing it unconsciously. We use unconscious negative affirmations as a technique that holds us back from what we want in life. You have to become conscious of your affirmations and begin to use positive thinking techniques to feel what you want before you have it. It's a constant affirmation meditation to visualize success and feel it in your nervous system. This is how you use positive affirmations to reprogram your subconscious mind, how to visualize images, how to visualize what you want, and how to create what you want as a reality.
Music is a powerful thing. VERY POWERFUL. I am drummer and writer for the band Project Hayseed. A "project" that me and my Brother in Law, Luke started a few years back. We had gotten sick of the obvious liberal/socialist takeover of the mindset in this great Nation. We also realized that the news and entertainment industry had become riddled with America hating "celebrities". We wanted to change that. So, a band was born.....Get the rest of the story in the podcast.THESE DAYSLYRICS: Joey Bruno - Luke BaggettWhen I was younger had a head full of dreamsCastles in the sky, the moon under my feetHands on the wheel, never trusting fateLooking to the future, I could hardly waitThese Days - the more things change the more I stay the sameThese Days - the hope I had seems so far away These Days - I just don't know how much more that I can takeThese Days - These Days - These Days As I grew older, I had to open up my eyesLiving in a world of constant compromisePushing and pulling, trying to make me give inHolding on to my future, I'll break before I bend(But) These Days - the more things change the more I stay the sameThese Days - the hope I had seems so far away These Days - I just don't know how much more that I can takeThese Days - These Days - These Days Is there a tomorrow where I can live my dreams?It's getting harder now - nothing's as it seemsLiars and madmen pulling on my stringsDay by day I wonder what tomorrow bringsThese Days - what is and what we're told is out of placeThese Days - the hope I once had seems so far away These Days - I don't know how much more that I can take(of)These Days - These Days - These Days These Days - I just don't know how much more that we can takeThese Days - These Days - These Days Hear and buy the album at PROJECT HAYSEEDhttp://www.projecthayseed.netOH! For you weirdos (like me) who get into weird music trivia:The song has well over 100 tracks in it.There are 8 guitars.3 different drum tracks.2 different grand pianos.A choir and strings.It also contains a vibraphone (when's the last time you heard one of those?)Stay strong fellow Patriots. Whatever you do MAKE A DIFFERENCE!!Much love from GIVES 0 HQ!!~jb~BUY ME A COFFEE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! HELP SUPPORT THE SHOW!! Wanna support the show? Buy me a coffee! MEMBERSHIPS NOW AVAILABLE!HELP SUPPORT THE SHOW!! Wanna support the show? Buy me a coffee! Support the show (https://www.buymeacoffee.com/gives0)
A former stripper/addict and former gang member/addict share their testimonies of how God delivered them from their addictions and led them to each other. Very Powerful.
Michael Massey shares his wisdom on the topic of role models on our spiritual journey and how to most effectively make use of our human being-ness. Be sure you listen through to the end as he reveals a special role those with autism have on the planet. - For what reasons do we need to be conscientious about emulating others in our quest for divine union? - How do we interact and impact the “field,” locally and planetarily, and how can we be more efficient in doing so? - How do we align ourselves with our gifts to achieve our own personal purpose while also contributing our highest within the collective? - How does the vibration of the unified field impact what types of experiences or events are possible on the planet? VERY, VERY POWERFUL! - What impact does unified meditation among several people have on the planet, humanity, and all living things here? - Are there any practical exercises we can do to help us cultivate love within us? (Spoiler: YES!) - What hugely valuable role are non-verbal autistic people contributing to the unified field in harmonizing discordant thoughts? Unite your energy with others in meditation to amplify your experience and positively transform the unified field: Free weekly online guided meditations with Kara can be found here. Sandra Walter's SUNday unity meditation information is here.
Please know that you can listen to these podcasts AT ANY TIME; time is fluid and there is some piece of information and inspiration in it for you to hear! You can skip to different parts of the podcast through the chapter markers: starting out with an initial talk and topic, a look at the daily astrology, and ending with a guidance tarot card reading from the Osho Zen Tarot Deck!In this episode, I remind us all of the importance of dealing with our personal energy levels, and working towards calm and balance. HSP's in particular need to be conscious of energetic balance of all levels: physical, spiritual, emotional, mental, and beyond. Maintaining this in a healthy way is key. I share info to help dissolve fear and uncertainty, including connection with a higher source and the benefit that we get from grounding things in 'the Highest Good of All'!! I talk about astrological happenings (Venus in Cancer, Mercury square Uranus, etc.), and how it can affect us in positive ways. I end the episode by pulling and interpreting cards from the Osho Zen Tarot deck: today it's too many to list, but it's VERY POWERFUL! I interpret the cards using both Osho Zen and Rider-Waite counterpart meanings.I appreciate you! For more good stuff look up and enabling Astrology Bear and Affirmation Bear through Alexa on Amazon; I offer free daily horoscopes and inspirational sayings to help guide your day! https://www.amazon.com/s?k=astrology+bear+alexa&ref=nb_sb_noss Also follow RV Empath on Instagram, also rvempath.com For music *REACTION* videos, check out Astrology Bear on Youtube Please LIKE / SUBSCRIBE / SUPPORT this podcast, and Thank You!!
Alyesha Wise is a published poet, teaching artist & TEDx speaker from Camden, N.J. Currently residing in LA, she is the co-founder of Spoken Literature Art Movement, an organization providing poetry education and extensive programming for poets - and a teaching artist for Street Poets, Inc., an organization serving juvenile injustice-involved youth with mentorship and arts programming. Alyesha has been featured on platforms and in publications such as OWN TV, Huffington Post, Bustle, Afropunk, PBS, POPSUGAR, Buzzfeed and more. Other collabs include the ACLU of Southern California, The Nantucket Project, Brave New Films and the Google Interstellar Project. Ron Howard once wrote about Alyesha's work, "Very Powerful."
Noah is an entrepreneur, marketer & self development fanatic looking at solving problems through design thinking and consumer behavior. He is the co-founder & head of marketing for TruKno, a Threat intelligence & collaboration platform for cyber security professionals as well as a marketing strategy consultant. Some of his passionate include blending the sciences & humanities, to understand what makes humans ’tick’ and how we can improve our behavior to live the lives we are meant to live. Very Powerful dude and conversation. Enjoy. Noah: https://www.linkedin.com/in/noahbinstock/ Noah Instagram: https://instagram.com/noahbinstock/ Powerful One Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/powerful0ne/ Tommie Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mountainteep/ Website: https://powerful-one.com/ Podcast: https://powerful-one.com/podcast/ Shop: https://powerful-one.com/shop/ Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/212HJGxsva7ImeVmefW7MA Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/powerful-one-podcast/id1482469801?uo=4
Please know that you can listen to these podcasts AT ANY TIME; time is fluid and there is some piece of information and inspiration in it for you to hear! The podcast is separated into parts: an initial talk and topic, a look at the daily astrology, and the final part is a guidance tarot card reading from the Osho Zen Tarot Deck, and you can skip to different parts of the podcast through the chapter markers)! In this episode, I review the importance of properly funneling our energy into creative ventures and making art as we calm / balance ourselves through this time of change, transformation, and healing! HSP's in particular need to be conscious of energetic balance of all levels: physical, spiritual, emotional, mental, and beyond. Maintaining this in a healthy way is key. I share info to help dissolve fear and uncertainty, including connection with a higher source and the benefit that we get from grounding things in 'the Highest Good of All'!! I talk about astrological happenings (Jupiter (R), Neptune (R), Venus, Mercury, Mars, etc.), and how it can affect us in positive ways. I end the episode by pulling and interpreting cards from the Osho Zen Tarot deck: today it's too many to list, but there is VERY POWERFUL wisdom coming through! I interpret the cards using both Osho Zen and Rider-Waite counterpart meanings.I appreciate you! For more good stuff look up and enabling Astrology Bear and Affirmation Bear through Alexa on Amazon; I offer free daily horoscopes and inspirational sayings to help guide your day! https://www.amazon.com/s?k=astrology+bear+alexa&ref=nb_sb_noss Also follow RV Empath on Instagram, also rvempath.com For music *REACTION* videos, check out Astrology Bear on Youtube Please LIKE / SUBSCRIBE / SUPPORT this podcast, and Thank You!!
Thanks for joining me today for “Creating Your Amazing Life.” Please reach down and Hit the “subscribe” button. I am glad you are joining me for episode 39. There are three brain processes that go on in our brain. The first one is the robot brain. This part covers all the subconscious actions. This is an important part; it keeps our heart beating, our lungs breathing, and many other things. The robot part of the brain job is to keep us alive and breathing. It is also the part that takes care of flight, fight or freeze. It also takes care of all the habits you have formed. It just runs you through those habits and you don't even have to think about it. This is Very Powerful, once you get something to be a habit you don't have to think about it just happens. The next part is the monkey brain; this is the part that gets distracted that likes to be entertained.This brain is the one that wants to know what is happening on Facebook, or play games. It is the part that loves to see the next shiny thing. It wants to move us from one thing to the next. We, Like most of life on this planet. Look for the path of least resistance. As a species we are lazy. This has been coded into us for as long as people have been around. We don't want to exercise or move. Our body looks for the way to use the least amount of calories as possible. Our true nature is what comes out when we are not specifically focused on goals. Look at people like Micheal Jordan, Karl Malone. In their time they were number one. They spend hours and hours practicing. Since they left basketball they have not put the same time and energy into their physical routines. They have gained weight. Their true nature has exerted itself. The part of our brains that make us different from the animal kingdom is the “Sage” brain. This is the part that wants a better future, It wants to lose weight? It is the part that wants improvement. This is the part of the brain that we use to set goals. But this part of the brain doesn't start automatically. 95% of the things our brain does is with the robot brain. Oftentimes the monkey brain uses up the last 5%. We have to work until using our Sage brain becomes a habit. That is what will create an amazing life. I appreciate each of you for spending your time with me today. If you haven't yet, do yourself a favor and subscribe to this channel so you can “Create Your Amazing Life!”. Setup a time and let us discuss how to put your sage brain to work. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/youramazinglife/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/youramazinglife/support
In this episode we sit down with our pastor and discuss the steps he took to being where he is now. Very Powerful!--- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
CEO of The Chemical Free Body Tim James, rolls by to talk about what hes been up to. His new Podcast. Plans for future ayahuasca excursions. Pat shares some VERY POWERFUL insight into some his own personal life journey. And MORE!! www.chemicalfreebody.com/farmer Promo Code: Farmer www.theconspiracyfarm.com
It's a VERY Powerful time of year !!! Today we dive into why waiting until New Years to begin to allow the shift of energy in your life.. is actually in resistance to the changes you are looking to make .. Each moment is amazing .. each moment is unique .. and each moment is a new opportunity to shift the beliefs that trap us in our loops.. The change comes from the conscious shift... not the date of a year... Give yourself permission today !! Much Love!!
Jason Healy Sales, Influence, and Marketing To The Power Of X
A continuation of how to remove the fear of selling. Learn how to increase your chances and reduce your fear by these very simple techniques, including the Very Powerful techniques of Hypnotic Rapport...
EP 37 X COSMIC RAMBLE This will be the last episode of 2019!!! I will be taking a holiday break, and returning on Monday. January. 6th This wasn't planned at all - as embarking on my Podcast almost a year ago, I had every intention of releasing a podcast every week for 52 weeks, but life brought forth other plans and I went with the flow. (Which if I'm being honest was hard for me, as I thrive on consistency) But the Universe is calling me to hold space, to seek clarity in the vision of this podcast, and go inward. Today I share the message that downloaded through for all of Us, and we take a moment to envision the Vision and Victory for 2020. This is a Very Powerful time of year, if I'm being honest, something like this has never been felt before. It's big energy, which is why the collective is sharing this message of a very "awakened" and "enlightened" year, as things are shifting big time. I know you feel it, I sure do, in every cell. Let's go deep, and hold the Vision of what we want to call forth. Remember your brain can't tell the difference between a Vision, and reality...which is huge. Massive. Powerful. Knowing that, we turn into the creators. Tis' the season for massive expansion. SEE YOU ALL IN JANUARY 2020 I LOVE YOU! Have a beautiful week guys! Subscribe, rate, review or share this with a friend. It means so, so, so much, and makes a massive difference in the impact of sharing the collective voice. You can also catch me on instagram where I chill the most https://www.instagram.com/lifebyleese/ Love You! MY OFFERINGS | 90 min X Initial Session 3 Session Package 8 Week Deep Healing Immersion Schedule a *Free* 15 Min Intro Call Foundations Program (NEW PRICE * $55 * ) N E W | Join the Community - Facebook Group ---> RADIANCE CIRCLE
Life has been amazing. Life has been challenging. Life has been upsetting. Life has been fun. I see YOU. You know, that where you are right now, is where you're supposed to be. Whether it's good, bad, fun or boring, we have created our own life. Have you realized when something great has happened, we tend to think to ourselves... WOW LOOK WHAT I CREATED! and when something bad happens, we often think, I CAN'T BELIEVE THAT HAPPENED TO ME or IT'S SOMEONE ELSE'S FAULT. What I've come to learn is that with the good, comes the bad, with the highs, come to the lows, and so on. We win when we take responsibility for all of it, not just the WINS. I can tell you it's hard to take that responsibility when things aren't going as planned. I can promise you, that when you do start taking that responsibility, you will learn from both ends of the spectrum. You'll figure out what it takes to stay in the highs longer and get out of the lows faster. We all have inborn wisdom that is looking for your survival. FEARS, UNCERTAINTY, and SCARCITY let you play small and make you feel like a victim. The best part about being human is that we have the ultimate control of what we let our minds think and what actions we do or do not take. Understanding that is VERY POWERFUL. We are in TOTAL control of our lives. That may feel like a punch in the face to some, but when we learn that, we can pivot and make LASTING change that can transform our lives forever. I'm on your team. Let's make our lives SUPERHUMAN by UNLEASHING OUR HUMAN POTENTIAL. -Dr. Josh Handt Have you downloaded our FREE BOOK- Inside the Locker? Have you joined the Lifestyle Locker 45 Day Endurance Challenge? It's FREE www.LifestyleLocker.com/Handt159 www.Facebook.com/LifestyleLocker www.twitter.com/drjoshhandt www.linkedin.com/drjoshhandt www.instagram.com/drjoshhandt
A Very Powerful message preached by Rev Bright Nkrumah on the importance of serving the Lord.
Episode 32 First I want to thank you for hanging in there for the long haul on this 10 part series about Love. There is so much in God’s word about Love and how we should be loving one another that 10 parts do not do it any justice. But it does kindle the flame in you to dig even deeper. The passage of scripture that I chose to wrap up this series is jammed packed with great tips. Colossians 3:12-15 written by the Apostle Paul really laid things out, not only for the believers of his day but also for us as well. Verse 12 opens with a powerful statement. “Since God chose you to be His Holy People He loves, you must clothe yourselves with tenderhearted mercy, kindness, humility, gentleness, and patience. Make allowance for each other’s faults and forgive anyone who offends you. Remember, the Lord forgave you, so you must forgive others.” WOW! He said we must cloth ourselves not we should. In the next verse, he shares the most important of all his instructions. To clothe yourselves with LOVE! Then he explains what sharing that love between us will do…” which binds us all together in perfect harmony.” Very Powerful verses that the Body of Christ should practice daily. We also must let the peace of Christ rule in our hearts and live in peace. It’s time Brothers and Sisters its time. We must learn to love each other and show the world that we truly are Disciples of Jesus! We must Love, Unite and Work Together so others may come to know Christ and to also be the Hands and Feet of Jesus. My prayer once again is that this Series with spark a flame in you to step up and learn to love as Jesus commanded so we can all impact this world not only by what we say but by what we do as a team for the Lord. Please share and subscribe and God Bless You and Yours! Love You All! Stephen Lewis Search for Relevance For Today with Stephen Lewis on any of the following: Subscribe or Follow: Libsyn, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Blogger, Google Play, Downloadable Podcast Apps, You Tube, Twitter (thelewis8), Instagram, Facebook (Stephen Lewis) or stop by (www.messagesofbiblicaltreasures.org)
Episode 134 Living Intentional and Fearless Every day Eleanor Roosevelt said, “in the long run, we shape our lives, and we shape ourselves. The process never ends until we die. And the choices we make are ultimately our own responsibility.” In other words: Happiness is an inside job and we are VERY POWERFUL beings. Today we are going to talk about what it means to live intentionally and fearless and I’m going to tell you about a new tool to help you jump into that feet first. I was on a podcast interview with Emily and Erik Orton from New York last week. They are the authors of the book Seven at Sea. He is a screenwriter and one of his productions flopped – stayed open for only 5 weeks, and he had to take a temporary job in a high rise. His job gave him a view out the window of the Hudson River and he used to watch the sailboats sailing by. He started dreaming about what it would look like to learn to sail; to live life on your own terms. He wasn’t from the class of people who usually sail. His wife, Emily who stayed at home with their 5 kids, had a fear of deep water, but one step at a time they considered What Could Go Right instead of What Might Go Wrong. Soon enough they had learned how to sail, taught their children, and they found themselves living on a sailboat for a year as they traveled 5000 miles from New York to the Carribean and back. This was all done despite having very limited funds, their youngest daughter was down syndrome, and none of them had any background in sailing. I loved this interview because when I asked them what their big takeaway from this incredible life adventure was, Emily answered that she found 3 types of confidence: 1. She learned to trust herself because she did what she set out to do. 2. Competence: She learned new skills on this adventure so she had an increased sense of Competence – how to rig, how to find food in completely unknown places, a hundred new things she learned how to do. 3. She gained a sense of comfort with uncertainty. They learned after weeks and months of sailing to new islands, not knowing their way around, not knowing where food would be on each island, not having a crystal ball about weather, or having all the answers…..they learned to trust that things would emerge and they would find their way. Erik said – “We will not know all the answers when we begin, and that’s okay. Now we know we will figure them out.” This last one was my favorite because it was the learned skill and choice or FAITH OVER FEAR. I saw an ad in an Oprah magazine many years ago, it said, “Every woman has a story. It’s not how you tell it, it’s how you live it.” The Love Your Story platform has 3 parts: 1. The Past: Most of us have stories from our past that hold us back. Those stories hold shame, or a deep sense of victimhood, or unworthiness, or regret. Until we learn to reframe these we stay stuck in places that we can’t progress past. I work with clients to help them reframe their stories. 2. The Present: When I did my original presentation to this group last year I talked about this aspect of story – the stories that we are telling ourselves right now and the importance of recognizing the negative ones that eat away at our confidence, worthiness and engagement with the world. These are critical to recognize and manage. 3. The Future – this is my focus for today’s discussion – taking action – living intentional and fearless to create the story line you want to tell, the story line you want to live. This requires intention and courage. We do lots of this – fighting against the fear and self doubt. What’s one thing you’re doing to live intentional? To live fearless? We are not pawns of life. We are the creators of our stories and by living intentional and fearless every day we can write a story that brings us fierce joy, pride in our risings, and treasure troves beyond what we may realize we are capable of. We can do this because
SOCIAL MEDIA! What a crazy idea!! You can grow your business, follow celebrities, use amazing filters, watch cat videos, and go down crazy rabbit holes!! Am I right? Social media brings up mixed messages for a lot of us because it is VERY POWERFUL, and with that power comes challenges. This week, I talk with Kellie Mahon, the Momma behind the platform Champagne and a Sippy Cup (@Champagneandasippycup) as we dive into the all the layers behind navigating social media. We are both extremely honest about the ways social media impacts our life, and I have no doubt you can relate. THIS is not to be missed!!!
We all make mistakes, cause someone else hurt and we have all been hurt by someone. There are 3 simple, but VERY POWERFUL words which change everything for both parties involved...
A.K.A. Sadentist Today's Report Includes: “3 out of 4 Dentists Don't Have A Weird Fetish”[1], “John 13:12”[2], “Put It In Your Mouth”[3], “A Very Powerful 7-Year Old”[4], “Zommy”[5], “Wampfler”[6] & “Let's Just Fuck With The Fish”[7] Also, The First Co-Articles'd Episode!!! Intro & Outro: Macross 82-99 Hosts: Brandon Babcock, André LaMilza, Nicole Rodriguez Game Corner: 9/13/18 Nintendo Direct, Overwatch Article Links: 1. https://www.ourmidland.com/news/article/Hundreds-of-teeth-found-in-wall-of-former-13338473.php 2. https://observer.com/2018/10/pokemon-go-catholic-church-jesus-follow-jc-go-pope-francis-millennials/ 3. https://www.upi.com/Reeses-machine-swaps-cheap-candy-for-Peanut-Butter-Cups/2151540997282/ 4. https://pix11.com/2018/10/30/huntington-will-change-its-name-to-hauntington-for-one-day-thanks-to-a-7-year-old-girl/ 5. https://www.lipstickalley.com/threads/is-the-term-zaddy-gender-neutral.1164032/ 6. https://ftw.usatoday.com/2018/11/is-cheese-better-if-it-listens-to-zeppelin 7. https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/weird-news/sex-crazed-fish-becoming-super-13430721 Til' Next Time, Hey, Baby Boy. ;) #TLYK #TheConspiracyYouKnow #ZaddyTalk #TedTalks #TedBerg
Episode 11. Prayer and Fasting DOES NOT Remove Unbelief. So What Does? Today a lot of people believe that in order to remove unbelief we must be praying and fasting. That is not so. Download the episode here. This teaching has come from Matthew 17. Were because of the disciples unbelief they could not cast out a demon from a child. (even though they had cast out many demons before that). Then Jesus replied to His disciples with the words, 'this kind does go out except by prayer and fasting'. However when we read the context we see that the question that the disciples asked the Lord was 'Why could we not cast it (the demon) out'. Not how do we remove unbelief. So in this episode I will teach you that in order to see the whole picture when we are reading the gospels, it's really important that we read all the gospels. As I take you through God's Word we will see that in Mark's gospel of this account we read a lot more information that we do not see in Matthew's account. But when we put the two gospels together we see the whole picture, and thus get a clear understanding of what the Lord is teaching us. When we study the life of Jesus, we see that He only did and said what He was instructed from His Father. And thus He was always fruitful. His disciples however where not always doing that, so therefore they could not cast out that demon. Because the Lord was always in communion with the Father through prayer, (He would often spend time in solitude praying). He knew what the problem was (the boys father). Because He heard it from His Father God. The disciples did not know that, why? Because they where not praying beforehand. So from the example of Jesus we see that the only thing that removes unbelief is the Word of God. (what God is saying at that moment). Some of the things I speak about. Reading from Matthew 17 (the child with a demon). (1:41) The importance of reading all the gospels. (3:24) The same event from Marks gospel. (5:07) Why could we not cast it out? A very reasonable question to ask. (8:19) Jesus discerned the problem, (which was the unbelief in the boys father). His disciples did not. Why? (9:50) Jesus only said and did what he heard from the Father. (12:12) One of the pitfalls that we can all fall into if we are not careful is that we can act out of our experience of casting out demons, rather than having ears to hear and acting from obedience to the instruction of the Holy Spirit. That pitfall the disciples fell into in this case. The Word of God (spoken Word and written Word) removes unbelief. (14:13) What the Lord showed me just recently. Very Powerful. (16:33) When Jesus was not ministering to people, He was praying. Be like Jesus and the disciples in the book of Acts. Stay in communion with the Holy Spirit. (20:20) Plus more... This one will go against the status que. (just like all these episodes). Love and blessings to you all. Glenn. Resources. Just click on the links to be redirected. If you would like to listen to and download episode 5. Bible Interpretation. To check out all other episodes of Disciple Disciplines. If you would to connect with active disciples in your area, or find a kick-start seminar happening near you. Go to The World Map.
Jeanne has a special show for you tonight. Jeanne's Inspirit Healing Studio hosted the show with over 40 people attending LIVE broadcast. The show literally had the triple play - live in studio, live on KBJB and live on Facebook! Everyone was treated to readings in the crowd, a singing bowl meditation and a connected meditation with everyone in the room touching all the way around the room. Very Powerful! Have the tissues ready as you listen to the readings. Jeanne has emotional connections with people in the room. Ascended masters? Jeanne explains the difference from archangels. Enjoy! https://goddessyouniversity.com/product/goddess-youniversity-membership/ Do you have Jeanne's book and companion journal? Click here to invest in You and go straight to Amazon. (https://www.amazon.com/Goddess-principles-living-soul-alignment/dp/0997466618) Listen to Jeanne explain what the 12 principles will do for you. Events-Transcending Fear to Abundance October 18th, Conversations with Heaven At The Green Granary October 19th, A Matter of the Heart – Mother and Daughter Wellness Retreat October 26th, Soulful Saturday, 11/10. Check out all the events at InspiritHealingStudio.com; NEW UPDATES and FREE CONTENT at jeannestreet.com. Check it out! Find more information at InspiritHealingStudio.com, GoddessYouniversity.com, work on her new book and more! Send an email or request on Facebook and ask to be part of the Angels Don't Lie group on Facebook! Don't forget to download the Angels Don't Lie App in the Apple App Store, a great way to listen to podcasts. Thanks for joining Angels Don't Lie Episode 96. Broadcast from the KBJB Studio: October 9th, 2018. Be sure to join us next Tuesday, October 16th, 7PM EST. Call in number 646-891-5252. Listen to the show on the web player at jeannestreet.com or on KBJBradio.com. The Goddess You is on sale - visit jeannestreet.com for your copy!
In this episode, I speak about our innate ability to self-emote. In other words, we have the ability to choose our state of being rather than deciding what it will be based on the occurrences in our outer world. This ability to self-emote is VERY POWERFUL. And it's where the world is headed as each and everyone of us chooses transformation and the path of mastery.
VERY POWERFUL 911 SHOW WITH BISHOP CALIPH ZAPHNATHPAANEAH EL Caliph Zaphnathpaaneah EL is a Metaphysical Bibliographical Lecturer , a Seminary trained Theologian who at one time was a leader of 3 mega church for over a period of 40+years..His book (MY NEEG'-ER HEALING Black Pain And Relieving White Guilt) Bishop Caliph Zaphnathpaaneah EL will discuss X9 solar flares 40 day period AND HOW WE HAVE TO GET OUR ANKHS UP TO ABSORB THESE X CLASS SOLAR FLARES. THE SIGN OF THE SUN (SON) OF MAN IS JUST DAYS AWAY ON SEPTEMBER 23RD AND ALSO BISHOP CALIPH WILL DISCUSS THE MERKABAH ACTIVATION on September 23 the Moon will be placed at the feet of the constellation Virgo (a virgin woman). Above this constellation will be 12 stars, the nine stars of Leo and the planets Mercury, Venus and Mars. Jupiter will finally pass through the womb of Virgo (after 9 months), giving the full appearance of a birthing...Some people think that Jupiter (the planet that is being birthed through Virgo this month) is related to a desire for spiritual and intellectual exploration
The saying that you are never alone is quite true and Neale describes this fact to be true in his BOOK 4 of Conversations with God. This interview is absolutely incredible and powerful. It's just what we need to accelerate our evolution through the collective consciousness. Very Powerful! Please see Neale Donald Walsch transcribed interview in the August, 2017 issue of Law of Attraction Magazine. It's free digitally. Go to Http://lawofattractionmagazine.net and get the free mobile apps. You can also see the video of this interview by going to http://loaradionetwork.com/jewels
This week is a very special episode where we spend some time catching up with three previous guests in what we are dubbing the first edition of "BIGFOOT SIGHTINGS" (genius name by Lindsey Ward). CALVIN JOHANNSEN -- EXPLAINING THE JOIN 100 CLUB Up first is the one of the most inspiring people I know, Calvin Johannsen. Since we last spoke at the end of his 14er Project (where he climbed over 100 mountains in 100 days), Cal has been focused on improving all sorts of lives with his "Join 100 Club" which is a daily commitment to a goal, a printable accountability chart to help you visualize your progress, and a devotion to CONSISTENCY and the longterm process of achievement. Tune in to hear all the details about this FREE club, what is it, how to join, Calvin's philosophies, etc. The concepts he uses for success fall directly in line with this podcast and are VERY POWERFUL. Join the 100 CLUB: http://join100club.com The 100 CLUB Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/832978636814272/ JASON SUDDUTH -- TRAINING FOR HIS FIRST 50K Last time we spoke with Jason he was down 40 pounds and had just finished an awesome backpacking trip through the Linville Gorge. Right after the podcast he informed me that he took a huge leap and had signed up for his first 50k. This is a guy who had never ran more than 6 miles and was courageous enough to sign up for an ultra marathon!! This week we catch up on his training progress and I share some tips and training strategies for his next two months of training. If you've ever wanted to take on a HUGE challenge I would highly suggest checking out a trail 50k. You can definitely do it! SEAN FURLONG -- CLIMBING HIS FIRST 14ER A couple months ago we recorded an episode entitled "Guide to Climb Your First 14er." Sean was our "newbie" at the time and I'm happy to say that a couple weeks ago we successfully got to the top of one of these behemoths, Mt. Bierdstadt (14, 065ft). Here we share the story of our adventure, what Sean thought of the hike, whether or not our "training hike" up Buffalo Mountain was harder, and the amazingness of meeting a mountain goat! DID YOU LIKE THIS EPISODE?? CHECK OUT THE PREVIOUS ONES WITH TODAY'S GUESTS Calvin Johannsen 1: https://soundcloud.com/chris-ward-126531464/like-a-bigfoot-episode-2-calvin-johannsen-9516-1023-am Calvin Johannsen 2: https://soundcloud.com/chris-ward-126531464/like-a-bigfoot-calvin-18-johannsen-2 Jason Sudduth: https://soundcloud.com/chris-ward-126531464/39-jason-sudduth Sean Furlong: https://soundcloud.com/chris-ward-126531464/42-guide-to-climb-your-first-14er-scott-stark-sean-furlong MORE LIKE A BIGFOOT: Subscribe and Review on iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/like-a-bigfoot/id1160773293?mt=2 Soundcloud Archives: https://soundcloud.com/chris-ward-126531464 Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/likeabigfoot/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/likeabigfoot/
The saying that you are never alone is quite true and Neale describes this fact to be true in his BOOK 4 of Conversations with God. This interview is absolutely incredible and powerful. It's just what we need to accelerate our evolution through the collective consciousness. Very Powerful! Please see Neale Donald Walsch transcribed interview in the August, 2017 issue of Law of Attraction Magazine. It's free digitally. Go to Http://lawofattractionmagazine.net and get the free mobile apps. You can also see the video of this interview by going to http://loaradionetwork.com/jewels
Most people in recovery have relapsed. It can make you give up or it can make you stronger. Our own Michael Jay gets open and honest about his recent relapse and how it's made him rethink his purpose in life of helping others with addiction. VERY POWERFUL episode for everyone in recovery!!
Very Powerful and motivational! Now is the time to double down and clearly focus on your goals and dreams.
Hi everyone, Michael Sandler here, your host on Inspire Nation. It's the day before Christmas here, and I wanted to share a very short, special meditation that can be truly one of your greatest gifts. This meditation also goes perfect with today's show, by Kamal Ravikant, author of Love Yourself Like Your Life Depends On It. You can do this meditation anytime of the day, almost anywhere, and it's been particularly important in my life. It's helped me heal, helped me rewire, helped keep me calm if the going gets tough, and has helped me become the super-successful and positive person I am today. It's literally carved new grooves in my record. It's also super, super simple. And yes, in there lies it's strength. If you like this meditation, please do us a HUGE favor and rate and review our show on iTunes, it helps exponentially in helping others to find the show. And for this season of giving, please consider making a donation to Inspire Nation, to help keep the show going, and keep Jessica and I going. Simply visit www.inspirenationshow.com and click on the donate link. Thanks so much. To hear Kamal's amazing interview, or more meditations from me, or our guests, visit our inspire nation show, or www.inspirenationshow.com. And don't forget, we'll have a new show, dedicated 100% to meditations coming up in the New Year. Woo Hoo! I send love, I send light. And many, many blessings your way. Namaste. Okay, I mentioned this one would be really simple, right? It requires two basic steps… Amazing Meditation & Mantra for Relaxing & Carving Powerful New Grooves in the Record of Your Mind for Health, Happiness Joy & Success Over the Holidays & For the New Year to Come. Very Powerful! Michael Sandler | Inspiration | Spirituality | Self-Help For More Information or More Meditations visit: www.InspireNationShow.com
Coach Mark talks about knowing when it's time to do something different and a time to know when not to change. Very Powerful show! http://loaradionetwork.com/coach-mark
In this episode Brett shares a quick story with a VERY POWERFUL lesson. He was less than 24 hours away from leaving on his honeymoon and just heard word that his flights to the Maldives were cancelled. Listen to this unfold. Subscribe to this podcast in iTunes, click here.
JOIN US TONIGHT ON KNOW THE LEDGE RADIO AS WELCOME BACK THE MOONEY TWINS & COACH KHAYR TO PRESENT "KEYS OF SOLOMON" AS WE COMMEMORATE THE MOON IN TAURUS THE FOCUS IS ON FINANCE$, CURRENCY, ECONOMIC$ & HOME THOSE OF US WHO ARE FAMILIAR WITH BIBLICAL LORE ARE VERY FAMILIAR WITH THE STORY OF KING SOLOMON, A VERY POWERFUL,INFULENTIAL MAN IN HIS AGES WHO POSSESSED UNTOLD WEALTH,INFLUENCE AND HAD HUNDREDS OF WIVES. THE MOONEY TWINS WILL BE BUILDING ON THIS TOPIC AND MUCH, MUCH MORE TONIGHT 9PM-MIDNIGHT WE WILL ALSO BUILD WITH COACH KHAYR ABOUT THE COSMOLOGICAL ASPECTS OF THE TAURUS MOON AND SOLAR ECLIPSE THAT TOOK PLACE YESTERDAY MAY 9TH WE WILL PAY HOMAGE TO MALCOLM X'S GRANDSON, SISTER MYRAHS SON,LENA HORNE AND OTHERS WHO HAVE LOST THEIR LIVES DURING THESE LAST FEW DAYS BE SURE TO HAVE YOUR PENS & LADS ON DECK, CLASS IN SESSION!!! YOU ARE ROCKING WITH THE BEST,KTL
Guess what? Forgiveness is not just about forgiving others. In fact, we only truly begin to forgive others when we look upon ourselves.Tune in and learn the pathway to self forgiveness and become more willing to see the light in yourself and others. Very Powerful
State Senator Paul McKinley on Iowa Education reform. The Minority Report. "The Vatican Exorcist" Tracy Wilkinson, LA Times Bureau Chief, covering the Vatican. "Amazing Grace" behind the song you love… Chip Flarhety, VP of Walden Media... the movie opens this week-end. Very Powerful.