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Unstoppable Mindset
Episode 233 – Unstoppable Intuitive Leader and Executive Director with Chenai Kadungure

Unstoppable Mindset

Play Episode Listen Later May 21, 2024 65:53


I would like you to meet one of Canada's top 100 black women to watch, Chenai Kadungure. Chenai and I had a quite engaging conversation this episode. She grew up in Zimbabwe where she went through high school. She then left her homeland and traveled elsewhere. She received her second Master's degree from the University of North Carolina in 2016. She now resides in Toronto and serves as the executive director of the Ontario Black Physicians Association.   She and I discussed topics such as authenticity, diversity and leadership. Chenai has many life observations that are quite interesting and worth your time to hear.     About the Guest:   Chenai is a passionate, dynamic professional with proven experience building vital relationships and leading impactful programs and projects. Voted one of Canada's Top 100 Black Women to Watch, a Globant Inspiring Leader nominee and an RBC and Global News Hometown Hero, she is an intuitive leader able to build relationships at all levels, in diverse communities. She is an analytical futurist that is highly adaptable, and fearless in solving complex problems. An energetic motivational public speaker and keynote, Chenai pours herself into everything she does. As a proud Rotarian and President of the Global Partners in Peace remains one of "Service Above Self". ** ** Ways to connect with Chenai: Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/chenai-kadungure Instagram: @chenkad     About the Host: Michael Hingson is a New York Times best-selling author, international lecturer, and Chief Vision Officer for accessiBe. Michael, blind since birth, survived the 9/11 attacks with the help of his guide dog Roselle. This story is the subject of his best-selling book, Thunder Dog.   Michael gives over 100 presentations around the world each year speaking to influential groups such as Exxon Mobile, AT&T, Federal Express, Scripps College, Rutgers University, Children's Hospital, and the American Red Cross just to name a few. He is Ambassador for the National Braille Literacy Campaign for the National Federation of the Blind and also serves as Ambassador for the American Humane Association's 2012 Hero Dog Awards.   https://michaelhingson.com https://www.facebook.com/michael.hingson.author.speaker/ https://twitter.com/mhingson https://www.youtube.com/user/mhingson https://www.linkedin.com/in/michaelhingson/   accessiBe Links https://accessibe.com/ https://www.youtube.com/c/accessiBe https://www.linkedin.com/company/accessibe/mycompany/   https://www.facebook.com/accessibe/       Thanks for listening!   Thanks so much for listening to our podcast! If you enjoyed this episode and think that others could benefit from listening, please share it using the social media buttons on this page. Do you have some feedback or questions about this episode? Leave a comment in the section below!   Subscribe to the podcast   If you would like to get automatic updates of new podcast episodes, you can subscribe to the podcast on Apple Podcasts or Stitcher. You can also subscribe in your favorite podcast app.   Leave us an Apple Podcasts review   Ratings and reviews from our listeners are extremely valuable to us and greatly appreciated. They help our podcast rank higher on Apple Podcasts, which exposes our show to more awesome listeners like you. If you have a minute, please leave an honest review on Apple Podcasts.     Transcription Notes: Michael Hingson ** 00:00 Access Cast and accessiBe Initiative presents Unstoppable Mindset. The podcast where inclusion, diversity and the unexpected meet. Hi, I'm Michael Hingson, Chief Vision Officer for accessiBe and the author of the number one New York Times bestselling book, Thunder dog, the story of a blind man, his guide dog and the triumph of trust. Thanks for joining me on my podcast as we explore our own blinding fears of inclusion unacceptance and our resistance to change. We will discover the idea that no matter the situation, or the people we encounter, our own fears, and prejudices often are our strongest barriers to moving forward. The unstoppable mindset podcast is sponsored by accessiBe, that's a c c e s s i capital B e. Visit www.accessibe.com to learn how you can make your website accessible for persons with disabilities. And to help make the internet fully inclusive by the year 2025. Glad you dropped by we're happy to meet you and to have you here with us.   Michael Hingson ** 01:20 Well, hello, and welcome to another episode of unstoppable mindset. And today we get to talk with someone from Toronto, Canada. I'm going to probably well I'm going to do my best to pronounce her name first name is Chenai and her last name is Kadungure, Kadungure, or something close to that. There's a D in it. But people if you're speaking appropriately, you don't pronounce the D but some people do and my screen reader does it actually makes her last name, Kadungure. Her. So there you go figure that out. And I it's technology. But we really are glad to have you here on unstoppable mindset. Chenai is a very passionate individual. She helps to build dynamic and valuable relationships. And she has been voted one of the top 100 Black Women to Watch in Canada. And that's worth doing. So Chenai, welcome to unstoppable mindset.   Chenai Kadungure ** 02:20 Yes, I'm so glad. I'm so glad and excited to be here. Thanks, Michael.   Michael Hingson ** 02:26 Well, thank you for being here. We're really grateful that you are taking the time to do it. And we're doing something a little bit different today, everyone, we're doing this on a Saturday, we normally do things during the week. And it is 630 in the afternoon in Toronto, so we don't want Chenai to starve. So we'll move right along. But we'll have a lot of fun doing this, I'm sure. And we'll we'll go from there. So why don't we start I love to start this way. Tell me a little bit about kind of the early Chenai growing up and so on.   Chenai Kadungure ** 02:57 The early Chenai I was a bit of a troublemaker I was I went to a Dominican convent High School in Harare, Zimbabwe. And I think I've always been someone who just goes their own lane. So I I will say that the early tonight is not too different. And I just a little bit less responsible, maybe.   Michael Hingson ** 03:21 So how long were you in Zimbabwe?   Chenai Kadungure ** 03:24 all the way till I was 18. Our economy then crashed. We basically had to do what you know, I guess people call it like economic migrants, we all had to sort of study in South Africa and overseas. So I went to South Africa for my undergrad and my first master's. And then after about five years of working I went to North Carolina for a second master's and ended up in Toronto. So I've I've traveled around.   Michael Hingson ** 03:56 So when you were in North Carolina, did you drink sweet tea?   Chenai Kadungure ** 04:02 Oh, yes. Lori has diabetes in a cup. But I did enjoy it. I mean, we were colonized by the British. So tea is very common for us back home to Well,   Michael Hingson ** 04:17 I like tea. I like hot tea. It's people who listen to this regularly or who have read my book thunder dog. No, I love PG Tips tea and it's so it's a hot, vibrant British tea. I've never been a great fan of sweet tea just because it is too sweet for me. But I appreciate it. And I'm glad people like it. I was actually talking with someone from North Carolina yesterday and they were asking me if I liked sweet tea and I said the same thing that I'm not a great sweetie fan. But on the other hand, I love sausage biscuits. So that's that's another one from South from North Carolina. But   Chenai Kadungure ** 04:55 we do what we can hmm I still missed the Bojangles though I think Yeah, that is my favorite Carolinian product.   Michael Hingson ** 05:06 Well, there you go, Well, you know, it's a fun area. And so what? What took you? Well, let me start this way when you went in got your Bachelor's in your first master's, what were they in?   Chenai Kadungure ** 05:18 Okay, my undergrad was media sociology and Gender Studies. And then I got more and more into the sociology side of thing wanting to understand how society works, why society looks the way it is. So my first master's was a master of philosophy and diversity studies. So before diversity studies was hip, I always tell people I cared about diversity. There   Michael Hingson ** 05:43 you go. So that was your first master's and what was your second one when you went to North Carolina?   Chenai Kadungure ** 05:48 I went to North Carolina on a Rotary Peace Fellowship. It was one of those will be World Peace fellowships. I'm a Rotarian. Well, now I'm a Rotarian. But back then you can't do the fellowship if you're a rotary. So I went to the Duke UNC Peace Center, and we always say peace is possible. If a Tar Heel and a Dookie can get along. Oh, yeah.   Michael Hingson ** 06:14 Well, so there, there are three of courses NC, UNC and Duke. And that's a combination to try to make peace between.   Chenai Kadungure ** 06:25 Yes, I think the basketball is usually where it all comes to a head. But yes, there are days where it's not safe to wear a certain type of blue.   Michael Hingson ** 06:36 Yeah, well, I understand. And basketball is the thing. I was there once, just when I think it was. And UNC and NC State were playing to see who was going to I think have top bragging rights in the conference. Or maybe well, no, it wasn't duke it was UNC and NC State. And all TV was preempted by the game. Needless to say, there's no no surprise. Oh,   Chenai Kadungure ** 07:09 yes. Oh, yes. People live, eat and breathe. And I'd say that's the equivalent of I guess a hockey here.   Michael Hingson ** 07:13 Yeah. Yeah, you've got hockey up there. You've got the Maple Leafs, and, and, and all of that well, so What took you from North Carolina, then to Toronto? So   Chenai Kadungure ** 07:26 I've always had a cousin, who's here, and she always used to say, come to Canada. And I always used to tell her. Sorry, it's too cold. And then, as the years went by, I started hearing some good things about Canada. And I thought, you know, it's worth a shot. Since I was already in North America. I figured this is the next step. So I came here, and I just, I really love being here. I enjoy being here.   Michael Hingson ** 07:51 How long have you been there?   Chenai Kadungure ** 07:54 So since 2018, I did a one year stint in Malawi with care Canada, and then came back. So give or take, I guess its own five going on six years. Wow. Well,   Michael Hingson ** 08:06 you moved around some needless to say,   Chenai Kadungure ** 08:10 I am a traveler. I didn't I think that's my, that's my, if people have arrest language minus travel, there's something about being somewhere else that just, it helps me.   Michael Hingson ** 08:22 Do you get bored being in one place too long, or you just love to travel and experience new things and still like to have a home base?   Chenai Kadungure ** 08:30 I think it's both and I I love encountering a new culture and, you know, trying new foods and, you know, being able to experience a place for myself, because I think we all have a stereotypical idea of what parts of the world look and feel like. But I think when you're there something about it helps you appreciate the otherness, but also appreciate where you're from, or where you live. And so I feel like there's something that always brings me back to myself when I do that. But also, it's the I think it's the cultures right? Work. I think work life balance culture. Around the world is something I enjoy. I feel like we are high on urgency culture here. So sometimes I need to physically be in a different place to get myself to rest.   Michael Hingson ** 09:18 Do you think it's different up there than it is here in the US?   Chenai Kadungure ** 09:23 I feel like we I think we might be balanced. I hear people say some things that are similar like it I feel like people kind of brag on how productive and how busy they are. In North America, where is it? Mita I'm originally Zimbabwe. And I think that the work life balance is a little bit different than even when I spent some time in the Caribbean same kind of thing.   Michael Hingson ** 09:46 Yeah, well, and you said the urgency culture and that it just makes sense. I think that we are so locked into having everything instant urgency and so on and we've got to do it. Now, it is it is unfortunate because it doesn't necessarily go that way. We haven't really learned to pace. And we want a lot of things now that we don't have any control over, and then we get mad when we don't get them.   Chenai Kadungure ** 10:14 This is true. But it was like, it's it's also about the external expectation of us, right. But I think if the most productive thing we could do in a day was to rest or to, you know, lose the desire for control or things like that, I think we had a different metric, we might do things differently, but I think the dominant culture is you need to be as busy as everyone else.   Michael Hingson ** 10:38 Yeah, that seems to be the way it goes. And, and the, the flow of activity these days. And the problem is we lose some perspectives about that, which is, which is a little unfortunate. But what do you do? So what have you been doing since you got your master's degrees? I'm assuming that while you were doing that you were pretty much busy full time with being a student?   Chenai Kadungure ** 11:03 Absolutely. I think I'm working on trying to be the less busy person, I always have so many things going on volunteering here, boards here full time job, really just carrying too many things. But I would say there's always been a sort of like nonprofit and social and community service side to everything, I've ended up doing it. I think, just by design I, I was an interrupter in high school. So they you know, interact, they talk about service above self, and I just stuck. And I think that's, that's what it's always been for me.   Michael Hingson ** 11:45 So what do you do now that you're out of school? What's your job? And all that sort of stuff?   Chenai Kadungure ** 11:51 Oh, yes. So I am the Executive Director of the black physicians association of Ontario. So we have, I would say we are both in the supporting medical education for black medical learners and the our members, which are existing physicians, residents and existing physicians, but also a large part of that is trying to improve health outcomes for black community on in Ontario. So we have our work cut out there. But I think so many of our members are instrumental to things that are happening now. So as an example, they just announced that breast cancer screening can start as early as 40. In Canada, it used to only be from about 50 onwards, but we started seeing that, okay, there's a lot of like, younger people who are getting it. And so that kind of advocacy comes from work, like from groups like ours, it's pretty exciting.   Michael Hingson ** 12:46 Yeah. Now you don't have you're not an MD at all. And you're not going that, that career path,   Chenai Kadungure ** 12:55 I gather? Yes, yes, no, I, but I've always said, I've always felt like I was a healer. I'm just too squeamish to have ever gone the medical route. My mother was a nurse. So I've always been closely connected to medicine. In some ways. It's. So   Michael Hingson ** 13:11 what do you do as a CEO of the association?   Chenai Kadungure ** 13:16 Oh, what do I not do is the question. I think when nonprofits are smaller, you end up being an everything person. So it's like, you know, you're doing business development, you're doing operations, you're talking to accountants, you're on the recruiting side, you're working with volunteers, you're in the meetings with the universities about different things. So, you know, we're all over I think, when we think of public health in Canada, especially for black community, I'm in most of those spaces.   Michael Hingson ** 13:47 Why why is there a need for a black physicians Association, as opposed to just a physician's Association? And I'm not saying there isn't I just curious to hear your answer.   Chenai Kadungure ** 13:58 Yes. I mean, I think there is when we're looking at equity, there is always a I think the default for most people in most places is to be mainstream, ie, you know, one stroke for everyone. But I think there's something about listening to specific needs of different communities, and making sure they get the support they need. And in that different way, right, I think it's sometimes very hard to be able to be all things to all people and so I feel like sometimes when you have these, like, more identity group, identity related group or like, you know, oppression related groups and things like that, I think there's a bit more weight to the voice, right and people will always be able to coalesce and meet in the general association. So here we have Canadian Medical Association and Ontario Medical Association and everyone's in those and then you have more sort of like niche ones for for specific groups, and also for US and Canada. Blackfish physicians only make up 2.7% of the physician population. So I want you to imagine that in a room, right, it's so pieces people feel very lonely in their craft and sometimes just need to get together and know that there's someone who understands their challenges. Yeah.   Michael Hingson ** 15:15 Do you think the association can improve those numbers and get more black physicians into the to the workforce?   Chenai Kadungure ** 15:23 We are trying, I won't lie right now we have things like we're doing studies on like the, you know, physician suicides and things like that, because there's a lot of physician burnout, I'd say just around the pandemic and onwards. So we are trying to solve a lot of problems in one go. But I think the mental the mental health and support that comes from networks like ours, has been proven to increase the number of black medical learners. To give you an example, Timur at School of Medicine, which is, I'd say, one of the most popular Ontario med schools, has sent me that some of the people, they reported a tenfold increase in black, sort of like medical learners signups because of different support programs we put into place there. So I think it's not an overnight process, but just being able to say, have we thought about, maybe we need to do this, this is how we can include more people. So I think there's a lot of work that still needs to be done for most racialized physicians, I'd say. Yeah. Do you?   Michael Hingson ** 16:25 Do you find that there is a difference in percentage of say, black physician suicides as opposed to physician suicides? Overall? Is, is? Is there that kind of disparity in the numbers, do you think?   Chenai Kadungure ** 16:41 I think it's, Canada has the problem that we don't collect a lot of data on these things. So community ends up having to be the ones collecting the data. We are going a lot on US data for a lot of these things for now. But we do hear similar kind of themes around the challenges people face. But I know that since there's still a lot of stigma around mental health in black community, that in itself, I think would make a difference, right to the level of access, we'll see if people actually taking those supports. So I think that's a big thing. The other thing is people being able to actually see that there is a problem, I think, is you know, compassion fatigue, right. And in the healthcare sector in general, there's a sometimes a challenge with boundaries, like how do you know if you've reached your limit? How do you know that you now need to be a patient and not a doctor? Right? And we know that that's a challenge. So I think we'll have to look back and have this conversation five years from now. And I'll have the steps.   Michael Hingson ** 17:38 It will be interesting to discover in hearing what what you discover, but it will, it will be interesting to see. And my my immediate thought is that any group that feels marginalized definitely has challenges over other groups. I mean, we find it in I don't know about suicides, and so on. But we do find marginalized marginalization with disabilities. And there are a lot of things that come up. And, you know, even diversity doesn't include disabilities, typically speaking, they talk about race and gender and sexual orientation and other things and don't include disabilities. Don't   Chenai Kadungure ** 18:15 get me started on that, honestly, because I think it ends up being an I don't know what it is, because every time I'm sort of, I mean, I have an invisible disability. But I always feel like for people with visible disabilities, it's like, I feel like it's 10 times harder, just to get that like the foot in the door or whatever, because people are trying to spend as little as possible. I mean, this is I'm speaking broadly, and generally, people are trying to spend as little as possible to support staff in general, right. So if you're trying to work and you need accommodations, I just don't see that kind of willingness, you know, across the board, even in sectors like ours that are supposed to be more compassionate. I see a lot of the same problems, because I mean, I also serve on the middle center board. So we hear a lot about like, okay, these are some of the challenges that residents are facing, and I'm telling you, it's, it's unreal, we haven't even scratched the surface of the lack of support that's still required in in disability on us. Yeah, well,   Michael Hingson ** 19:19 and and why do you think that is?   Chenai Kadungure ** 19:23 I think it's because it's a mixture, part of it is there's always the excuse of, oh, it's a minority. It's a small group of people. So, you know, as far as the overall impact won't be that huge, right, number one. Number two is I think we just have an empathy problem in general in the world. If it's not something happening in my house or in my body, it doesn't matter. And I think that's huge, right? For a lot of the people I work with, even when we're doing things like medicine, a lot of it is always I have a relative there's there's a connection point and yet it's like empathy in general. Just It doesn't really seem to be there. I think with me, it's a mixture of faith and culture, right Africans are communitarians. We even have the idea of goon to I'm not well, unless you're well. And so part of that is like, you know, trying to be a bit more equitable in our approaches, right?   Michael Hingson ** 20:17 Well, the the other thing I would say is that when people talk about being a small minority, the statistics show that, in general, roughly about 25% of people have some sort of disability. So it's not really that small of a minority, where it does get to be a problem is that the minority is made up of a number of different kinds of, of ways that the so called Disability manifests. Chris, what I try to do is to level the playing field. And what I tell people is, the reality is everyone in the world has a disability. And for most of you, it's light dependency, you don't do well, if the lights suddenly go out, you have to find a way to get new light in order to be able to function. But the light bulb was invented, to give you light on demand. And so mostly, your disability is covered up, but it doesn't change the fact that it still exists, because it does exist. And I've seen it happen all too many times. But I think also we have such a fear, oh, I could, I could end up tomorrow in a wheelchair, or I could end up being blind or whatever. And so fear, and the fact that we don't include disabilities in the conversation just doesn't seem to help a lot.   Chenai Kadungure ** 21:38 I completely agree. And also one that's a little bit more insidious, is if the community doesn't have money, I feel like there's a way of putting pressure on certain topics, and you kind of say, Okay, we're not going to be able to put our dollars into X organization unless they they are seem to care about this issue. And I think there's, there's some of that, like, what's in it for me, money wise, people won't really understand that, because I do feel now that, you know, there's bit there's been performative inclusion, you know, and it's, it's about being able to get money, or being able to receive the kind of quality perception capital or something, right. For the larger organizations, when their funding issues. Yeah.   Michael Hingson ** 22:25 Yeah, there are a lot of different factors that go into it. You said you have an invisible disability, and what is that?   Chenai Kadungure ** 22:30 Oh, I just have AD ADHD? Uh, huh.   Michael Hingson ** 22:35 How has, how has that affected you in terms of going through and getting an education and what you do now on the job and so on? Well,   Chenai Kadungure ** 22:44 I think it's, I mean, I came from a time in a culture where we don't, we don't really test for these things. And we were the stigma is still really strong. I think people don't want to think that there are any challenges and having any kind of, you know, like, any kind of like, what I say like, it's dyslexia, ADHD, all these things, I don't think we even like really get the assessments, if I remember, as you know, for us growing growing up, things may have changed in that in that realm now, but I think you just kind of get labeled as Oh, you know, you're dumb, or you're not great in school, or, you know, you just kind of get put in a corner. And when I remember my earliest experiences of like, teachers just kind of acting like, like, yeah, like I say, I'm a black sheep or something. So I recall several, like almost years in my primary schooling of just kind of sitting outside of the classroom for days on end, because you get kicked out for anything. Oh, you know, your book looks messy. Get out. Oh, you know, you're being disruptive get out. And then you spend like most of the afternoon outside. So yeah, I didn't, I didn't really think that that would be so much of this. There's a barrier outside of me just being dumb or something like that, right? Because we didn't have the nuance, or the language for it. So I only more recently found out that's what it was. But I always knew there was something there. I was like, things that look a little bit easier for people. I don't know why I struggle with this. Yeah.   Michael Hingson ** 24:15 I'm amazed at the number of people I've talked with on this podcast, unstoppable mindset, who talk about the fact that they have some level of autism, but they didn't even know it, and didn't get it diagnosed until they were in their 30s. Yeah,   Chenai Kadungure ** 24:33 pretty much you get to a point where you're just like, I want to figure out what it is. Because for me, I think when I'm most burnt out, that's when you know, it's just even more apparent. So the cope when the coping mechanisms stopped working. You're like I did, like something else is going on here.   Michael Hingson ** 24:49 Yeah, yeah, we we. I think we're learning I think that that there's growth, but it certainly isn't at the level Hold on to the level that it really needs to be and disabilities are still the minority that are least talked about, or at least involved at least included. And it shouldn't be that way. But it is.   Chenai Kadungure ** 25:16 I absolutely agree. I mean, even when we're doing research, right, and we're looking at past even focus groups, and we're breaking down categories, the number of times I've sent documents back and be like you, you've left out to so many times, it seems like you've left out there. It's, it is, it's unreal. And so I think there's a level of resilience that is in the disability community that, yeah, I can't even begin to imagine because it's, yeah, it's like being invisible. Literally, it is.   Michael Hingson ** 25:53 And being ignored is what it's about. To a large degree. One thing I know that you talk about, from time to time, is the whole concept of an authenticity. Why does that matter to you?   Chenai Kadungure ** 26:09 I feel like it's a trait of, I think it's about integrity. But I also think personal integrity is so much harder. Like there, I think there's a general sort of understood idea of like, oh, you know, I did what I said I'm going to do, but the older I've gotten, the more I realized that so few people get to just fully be themselves, whether it's in their jobs, in their marriages, in their faith, and like, it's just such a huge thing to be yourself and 100% yourself. And so for me, I think that's something like I gave it a word. And I decided to call it authenticity. And, and honestly, I think if I look at all the leaders I've respected and like the most, that's what it is. And I think it's rare. I think that as a trait is rare.   Michael Hingson ** 26:58 I use that.   Chenai Kadungure ** 27:01 Well, some of it is what we discussed before, I think there there is a from when you're born, you have people telling you, you have to be a certain way, you have to think a certain way you have to study certain things, you have to do certain jobs, there's always something with it, society culture, weighing in on how you need to show up in the world. And I think more often than not, we want as much as we care about personal control, we really are about controlling other people, too. That's, that's what I can really put it to because there's a lot of performance that happens. And it's like, sometimes it's performance for survival. But a lot of times, I think it's also just performance for approval, like if I show up in this way, then I'll be accepted.   Michael Hingson ** 27:49 And it doesn't really matter, what you may truly feel is that people want you to be a certain way. So you become inauthentic, if you will.   Chenai Kadungure ** 28:02 Pretty much like oh, it just becomes your life, you know, the things you do ended up becoming like your habits or you know, it's that's what you've invested in. And so that's where you are. And I think there a lot of people who get, you know, 3040 years down the line, they realize they lived other people's lives. And I that's the thing I wouldn't want. I don't want to look back at my life 30 years from now and feel like I live someone else's life. Do   Michael Hingson ** 28:26 you think there's any kind of a trend on the part of people to want to be more authentic and to to buck that? That concept?   Chenai Kadungure ** 28:39 Definitely, I think when we talk about leaders who do things differently, or even what I see with I guess, Gen Z and sort of like the generations coming over, I feel like their BS radar is a lot stronger. Or they're, maybe it's because there are a lot, I feel like they're a lot more judgmental, because they kind of expect, they expect you to understand that they're human. Whereas I think some of the generations before we were like, You need to be a productive person, you need to, you know, show up in this way. And you know, whether it's your church or you know, there are a lot of different places that had expectations of you. I think a lot of the younger people now are just very, you know, they're not ashamed of showing up as they are, you know, I'm saying, Today I'm in my sweats, because that's what I feel like. And you know, I should show up that way, you know, so I feel like with time, we've opened up a bit. A simple example I could think of, as I know, in the tech sector, there isn't an expectation that people come buttoned up in suits and things like that, right. And yet, there's a time where I think that might have been the most offensive thing a person did when they walked into a meeting. He wore sneakers to an interview, you know, so I feel like those are some of the ways we're slowly now becoming less, I guess judgy about how other people should behave.   Michael Hingson ** 30:01 An interesting paradox. I know that when I started selling, and I took sales courses, and I met with any number of people, they would give examples like, so on the East Coast or in a number of places, and important meetings, you show up if you're a man in a suit and tie or women wear dresses and skirts and all that, but I'm going to use men just for a moment, a suit and tie and, and so on. But you don't do that if you go to Texas, you can wear jeans and cowboy boots, and it's totally acceptable. And that was something I heard 30 years ago and 40 years ago, yet, we, we still mostly really do have that that trend, oh, you have to look or do things in a particular way. And I think that also contributes to the whole disability discussion a little bit, because the bottom line is, I don't, although I want to do and have the right to have equal access to doing the things that you do and, and having that opportunity, I won't use the same tools or do them in exactly the same way. And we get too locked in again, to one certain way of doing things and it hasn't totally changed at all.   Chenai Kadungure ** 31:16 That's actually very true, I think. Yeah, even when we think of like some of the ideas in business, right? We have now you scale and all of that has its own culture. And it's like it's either you do this or you fail. So it's Yeah, I think yeah, there is always still a bit of a bit more bravery required to, to fully show up as yourself.   Michael Hingson ** 31:38 So what do doctors do in Canada? And they all feel they have to be dressed up and all that? Or can they just hide under scrubs and a long white coat?   Chenai Kadungure ** 31:48 Well, interestingly enough, I think our membership is 80% family physicians. And so I feel like that's one sort of track where people can still sort of like, you know, have the beat of their own drum. So you will have people where, you know, to give you an example, like we've got this one PDF, PDF constructor, I really enjoy her content, and she has like she had pink hair the other day. And I think it's because she's working in peds, maybe this, this doesn't, maybe she went with her pink hair somewhere else. They might not be as much of an openness. But I do find that where there's a little bit more flexibility. I think in general, there are some professions that stick more to the what I call the monochrome The monochrome or the gray or the you know that they're not really about being colorful, whether it's actually wearing color or being open to too much difference. So I must say, I think because our doctors have had to sort of like be in settings where they can't be themselves, I think when they come to our events and things like that they embrace being fully themselves. So I probably haven't seen them in their buttoned up nests as much. And you'll get certain specialties where I think the buttoned up list is just the way they are. But the minute they're off duty, there's someone else. So there are people living like double lives I feel as well right in certain professions. So for me, those are the things that are interesting that I think 1015 years down the line, it's going to look different. I think we're gonna have people be more authentic most of the time. Oh, you're Peter   Michael Hingson ** 33:23 pink hair, she must be a fan of Harry Potter and, and tungsten or something like that. Hmm.   Chenai Kadungure ** 33:30 Probably working with children, I'm sure you know, there's a lot of Harry Potter. And   Michael Hingson ** 33:38 so how does authenticity, change the world or, or create hope? Do you think?   Chenai Kadungure ** 33:46 I honestly think that there is so much labor and performance. So if I think of the way I get to show up as a black woman in so many spaces, because I'm working in my community and things like that, there's a little bit less translation. So you know, people talk about code switching, and having to be someone else at work and someone else with their friends. I feel I'm I'm really lucky in the way I get to show up as myself. I often joke that I'm in formal that when we think of how formalized workplaces are. And yet so many people are performing, right, the minute they leave the office, they feel they can literally lift their head down and be themselves. My hope is that we can get to a point where when we are at work, we can be ourselves in that same way. And I think we saw it even during the pandemic, right a lot of people got to where their trackpants while on calls and they were so relieved that they could now be comfortable in the workplace. And that's that's how I see it if you have to be uncomfortable to do something that I think is a challenge. We I think we've always put it as propriety and I feel like that, that I theory of propriety has always meant that they, you know, there's a lot of discomfort that you have to just accept. And knowing that that doesn't have to be, I think, makes us a little bit more open minded. And the more open minded we are, the more empathetic we can be. I do think we should evolve past thinking that if I haven't experienced that, I can't relate to it. Like, I don't need to go hungry for a night to understand that hunger is not great. You know what I mean? I don't need to be homeless, to know that stressing about where to sleep is a problem. And so by the same token, for me exactly what we're talking about, like, I shouldn't be surprised when I get into an elevator. And this actually like, sounds I'm like, I should expect every elevator to have those sounds, because it means when they built this building, they thought about everyone. Yeah.   35:55 Well, and I think that there is a lot to be said for empathy, empathy. And that's kind of what you're talking about I, I oftentimes encounter people who tell me how horrible it is to be blind and what it's like to be blind. And I do say to them, the biggest problem is you've never tried it. Because we don't internalize it, we make assumptions. Rather than understanding and I agree with you, one doesn't need to be homeless to understand it. And one doesn't necessarily need to be hungry to understand it. But it does require us thinking about it. Hmm,   Chenai Kadungure ** 36:32 definitely like, yeah, if I, I guess, like, what you with what you're saying, if it is something I have no idea about, I think also just a level of curiosity. Right? Because that made me think that's also what's missing. Like, if I don't understand why am I not curious about it? Why am I not Yeah, trying to figure something out, because it's not, it's not something new, like what we see. But in every phase of your life, you're probably going to be encountering things. And so the small example I could give us, I remember once going to $1 store. And I saw an old lady there. And she was sort of like struggling with the, you know, like with her cart, her cart was really, really full, and the escalator and the elevator and the place was not working. And so I was like, this, this plate like this, in this building the escalator the elevator, wasn't working for two years. And I said to you know, I said to one of my friends, I can't believe it's been almost two years, and they haven't fixed this. And of course, this is $1. I'm in the middle of Toronto downtown, like you are in a Dollarama. This person is probably even economically not in the best position. And you want to give them an extra struggle, of just being able to access the space. And yeah, for me, it really just blew my mind. I really thought about that. And I was like, wow, two years. Like for two years, they've been okay with the fact that like, oh, people can ask access. There's only Dollarama in like three square kilometers, by the way. So yeah, it's yeah, the mind still boggles. I think that's the thing. I wish we could have empathy injections.   Michael Hingson ** 38:08 We need something Yeah, it is, it's important that we be more curious. And that's again, something that we don't necessarily see a lot. I've talked a few times about people and the podcast where we we choose not to be curious, or we're taught not to be curious. You know, we talked about the disability issue a while ago. And oftentimes, little kids would want to come over and talk to me or my wife, who was in a wheelchair her whole life she just passed last November. But she, you know, we would we would hear kids or see kids, I want to go ask this lady something or I want to go pet that dog because I have a guide dog and all that. And, and the parents would say, oh, no, you don't want to do that you might offend them. And this and that. The other stuff. And the bottom line is, we discourage curiosity. And the kids are naturally curious. And most of us understand that it would love nothing better than to answer any questions. And sometimes I've actually, when I heard those discussions, I'll go over and I'll say, Wait a minute. You want to pet the dog? I'll take the harness off and explain why I'm taking the harness off. Now you can pet the dog. Do you know what the dog does? Or I've seen my wife Karen go over and say, What do you want to know about the wheelchair? And the parents are being embarrassed? But they don't understand that it's a wonderful teaching moment. Absolutely.   Chenai Kadungure ** 39:33 And if anything, I think children actually understand empathy. At such a higher rate than a lot of us. I think a lot of us get a bit more cynical when we get older. Because when I think of a lot of the conversations we've had about identity, I feel like because children don't expect people to show up in a certain way. They just accept everyone. So what did they call it like the cats During thereafter, word is openness. But I think because children are imaginative for them, it's, I don't see why, why they can be different kinds of people, and just have it that way. So yeah, I really had to think about that. And even this thing of like something as small as our friendship circles, you know exactly what you're saying, you're like, do we just stick with people who are exactly like us, and we never, and we close our world even more,   Michael Hingson ** 40:26 all too often. Which is really part of the issue. And again, as I said, with children, we're teaching them not to be curious. We're teaching them not to be open, rather than encouraging that curiosity and that openness, which would be a much more wonderful thing and make the world a much better place. Because if they grew up curious, then they would continue to explore. Richard Fineman, who was one of the very famous physicists from the 50s and 60s and well in the 40s. And one of the greatest physicists of the 20th century wrote a book entitled, surely you're joking Mr. Fineman adventures of a curious fellow and even in the first chapter, he says his father pushed him always to be curious. And he grew up, continuing to have a curious mind, which I think is extremely important for all of us to do.   Chenai Kadungure ** 41:23 Wow. I love that. Because I think also, it's lately, I've been calling it curiosity over conviction. I think part of what leads us into little boxes is some of these things that are convictions that really should have just been curiosities, right that, like, is this thing really, as important? Will this really change the world or shatter the world? And if we put some of those things where they should be placed, right, it's like, okay, this is just a preference. It's not like something really huge. I feel like, yeah, we'd explore more we'd, we'd be more curious. And I think even when we look at the nature of how they do dialogues, it's always exactly that. It's saying, if you can hold space, and say, my view is my own, but it's not the only view. And just accepting that small thing. It's like, it's amazing how all of a sudden problems became opportunities and possibilities. So I do think there's, there's some power there.   Michael Hingson ** 42:24 Yeah. Well, and we all have our own views. But do you think it's also appropriate for us to have a mindset that says, Okay, I've got my own view. I like my idea. But you know, what, I'm willing to listen. And if somebody says something that really makes me change, that's okay.   Chenai Kadungure ** 42:42 Absolutely. To me, that's the curiosity, right? If I am saying anything that isn't this answer is wrong. I'm also preventing, I guess, cross learning to happen, right. And so I think that that whole, really thinking about, there's a reason how this, like why this view got built in the first place more often than not, yeah, a mixture of it might have been things we were told, right? So we may not have given it a lot of thought, and we talked to someone else. And then we're like, Huh, that's interesting, and you think of something in a different way. But a large part of it as well is our what we call frame of reference, right? If my frame of references, these 123 experiences are the most important, and it shapes my opinion about this thing. If I talk to someone or the different one, I get to just like, encounter a whole new world, it goes back to what I was saying about why I enjoy traveling, right? That just seeing something done differently, or seeing the same thing I worry about, be perceived as something happy. I'll just give you an example. There's a colleague of mine, and she and she's always posting on LinkedIn about ADHD is her superpower. And I always thought like, Hmm, interesting, interesting, interesting. But now it's like it gave me it gave me a different view of like, oh, we actually overthink some of these things and be like, Oh, this is something that actually makes you different and makes you operate in the world in a different way. And that's a good thing. And that is changing the language of it. And so for me, I think there's that that oh, we can we can open our world so much if we you know, Judge, listen, put things in boxes.   Michael Hingson ** 44:22 People often have have asked me over the years, where you're blind, do you want to see or don't you want to see? And, you know, I understand eyesight well enough to recognize that. It offers some things but as I tell people, full probably because it'd be a new adventure. But if I don't, it's not going to be the end of the world. Because in reality, eyesight just offers us another lane on the road to travel that we all do. And we've got to stop thinking that One way is less than another way. That's I think the biggest issue is we've made value judgments as to what is and is not. Which is why I always have. And I've learned this, especially during this podcast to not like the term visually impaired because visually impaired first of all, visually, I'm not different, because I'm blind. But this is the way that professionals have treated it for so long. But the other part is impaired. And that is, I shouldn't be compared to someone based on how much vision I have. If you're a deaf person, your community doesn't like hearing impaired, and you're liable to be shot. If you call a deaf person hearing impaired. It's deaf or hard of hearing. And likewise, with blind people that should be blind or low vision, forget the concept of impaired, it puts a stigma on us. And again, I think that goes back to what we were talking about earlier that helps the bad mistakes that we face.   Chenai Kadungure ** 46:02 Absolutely. And I think also with what you were talking about earlier, honestly, it's also that I feel like you have a different kind of site, there's more of an insight that comes in understanding something using a different sense, because you want to be able to say, What's it like to taste this thing? Or do you know, like, I feel like we don't really value? How do I say the exploring of the world in that way? Because there's a whole world that you encounter that I I still need to understand, because I rely so much on this. So I think it's also thinking of that in a different way. Exactly like what you're saying it's not. I think it's that lack of curiosity again. Describe it. So lack of curiosity.   46:47 Yeah, well, and it is something that we hopefully over time will learn to counteract, and that we will help children and adults be more curious. And there's nothing or shouldn't be anything wrong with being curious.   Chenai Kadungure ** 47:07 Absolutely, so So I think if we so if we do a book together, it's no longer gonna be The Curious Case of Benjamin Button. But we're going to, we're going to create more curious cases.   Michael Hingson ** 47:19 Nothing wrong with that. So, you know, something I've talked with a couple of people on unstoppable mindset about is imposter syndrome. And I understand it a little bit. And I talked to one person who realized he had it and was able to deal with it. But how does impostor syndrome shrink or affect authenticity? Because I would, I would think that, since the whole concept of impostor syndrome is becoming more of a topic of discussion, that it affects other things. And one of the things that seems to me that is worth discussing is how it affects authenticity. Absolutely.   Chenai Kadungure ** 48:05 I, I think impostor syndrome has to do with that fear of not showing up the way other people want you to show up. So it still gives that power to the external, right. And yet, ironically, I think that there was always that same thing that they say, when your internal validation is low. That is when you want the external validation. And so I think when we're in a space of imposter syndrome, we feel we don't measure up for other people. And that somehow impacts the way we view even ourselves. And yet, honestly, if we just were humble enough to even get over ourselves, and just say, I'm in this space, and I've been given room to speak or do this thing. It's more the happiness of being there should allow you to actually be even more, how do I say, like, more vocal or more like, use the space that's actually been given to you. It's literally giving someone a platform and saying here, your voice is going to mean something in this room, and then you decide to actually, you know, quiet in yourself, and you say, I'd rather not speak because I don't feel like I should be here. And so I think it's a goes back to what you're saying of a value judgment. We use some strange lens to decide that we're an impostor. We're literally pretending to be in this place we shouldn't be in. And yet, I think exactly like what you said most people have gone through stages in their life when they felt that and I think they say a lot of women have it because again, you know, the some of the societal things we're still working out. were made to feel like you should actually, you know, be grateful that you're here so you feel like you don't measure up. But yeah, that's it's hard to be authentic then because you don't even have a good sense of who you are. At that point. Right at that stage. You're not seeing what value you're bringing to the table or to the room. But if you were to hold on to those nuggets that you could bring to that place, see it as an opportunity to have an opportunity to say something or do something or make an impact. If we see that as an opportunity or not, oh my gosh, I'm just going to fail so badly. When I fail so badly and just ruined everything. And yet it's like no, like, do the positive. Yeah.   Michael Hingson ** 50:24 Do you think that most people deep down, really know what they feel, but they're just afraid to deal with it. And so things like impostor syndrome or on authentic or inauthentic, things take over, but that they really know. And that that adds to the stress.   Chenai Kadungure ** 50:42 So it's like layers of so the the barriers other people can put in front of you, but then they're the worst ones that you then put in front of yourselves. And so I definitely think that if we could like, you know, my one of my, whenever when I had burnout, I remember that someone has like, we all have malware. We all have certain malware and but if we can actually do a virus scan and look and see what are the lies that are like that are that I am carrying in my life? And how are they holding me back? And actually having a conversation with them? Not so much ignoring them? Because I do think we like to go with the distraction, but having a conversation with them, you actually understand that like you'd never say this to someone else. So why would you say to yourself, all right. Yeah, we're our harshest critics.   Michael Hingson ** 51:31 Well, I reversed that and say, I really think that we need to get away from that negativity. And we should say, we're our best teachers. And we really need to do that. But that's, of course, the problem is, and I did it for many years, I'm my own worst critic, because I would listen to my presentations, the public speeches that I give, and learn from them. But I always said, I do it. Because I'm my own worst critic. Well, what I really realized was, I'm my own best teacher. And if when I started doing that, it, it changed the whole dynamic of even listening to the recordings that I make.   Chenai Kadungure ** 52:11 Oh, that's prophecy. I love that because that is that then is even the failing forward. So even if you did something and thought, that wasn't great. The next day, you've already got some experience to learn from where's this someone who's not even getting the experience because they're so afraid to even fail? That's like, the worst place to be?   Michael Hingson ** 52:30 Well, and failure. Again, I agree with some of the motivational people who say failure is really just an opportunity. And it is it's an opportunity to learn and grow. And we should never beat ourselves up over failing, but rather ask ourselves, all right, what happened? That didn't go just quite the way I wanted? How do we deal with it?   Chenai Kadungure ** 52:50 Absolutely. And I also love I think it was a Sara Blakely, the the lady who founded Spanx at her dad every time she got home, used to ask her, How did you fail today, and that was something they would celebrate, finding out about something they cared about. And I, I always loved that idea of like, again, there's a language we use. It is I make judgment calls about like, you did this thing, you got the F I mean, everyone knows what that red F feels like, right? And yet, it's exactly that it's like, oh, an opportunity to to learn something or whatever, that will be a different way of viewing the situation.   Michael Hingson ** 53:25 Yeah. And I think turning things into a more positive thing, rather than beating yourself up, like using expressions such as I, my own best teacher, changed the whole dynamic in an incredible and swift way. Which is, I think, extremely important for us to do, what you know, with you dealing with physicians and so on, and of course, in our world today, we've gone through a lot of different crises. What do you think that people need the most in a recession or depression? And why do you think it? Well, I   Chenai Kadungure ** 54:01 think it is they do need hope. Right? Hope is Hope is an element, but I think it's such a critical thing. But then I also think that it is what was it like? Somewhat like a personal kindness? And I think we need to reinforce how do I say reinforce, I forgot I forgot where my forgot group I think was depression.   Michael Hingson ** 54:29 Recession. Yes.   Chenai Kadungure ** 54:31 That's what it's like. I think there is so much depression in a well actually we can call it might be a depression, they might call it a depression 10 years from now, I don't know. But I think it's implied in the name right? That it's everything around you is going to want to pull you down. And we need to understand things that help us go in that in that opposite direction. And so for me, I think it's sometimes it's small things like sometimes I'll filter out filter out news So I get actually give myself a news fast. And sometimes I'll even do something if it's behaviorally, complaints fast, I literally, sometimes will say, I'm not going to complain about something for X number of days. Because I remember there was research that said, your brain chemistry even changes when you like, complain consistently. And so exactly what you said, the power, life and death in the power of the tongue. There's, there's so much there, but what we say to a situation. And so I think we always see the soft stuff, the frilly stuff as the things that, you know, don't matter. But that's what keeps societies going. I mean, I'm sure when FDR was weakening people, you know, in 1929, there's something there, there was a hope that he was bringing that gave him what I don't know how many terms ended up having three or four.   Michael Hingson ** 55:49 Or, well, he died during the fourth, but yeah, for hope, yeah. And people understood it, I collect old radio shows as a hobby. And I contrast how the media is today, and how programs are and the people as opposed to the way they were in the 30s and 40s, around the war, and all that, and there was a lot more rallying and supportiveness than there is today. And we just look for ways to criticize and can tear everything down, and we don't look and understand. And again, it all goes back also to curiosity and not wanting to be confused with the facts.   Chenai Kadungure ** 56:38 And I think also share, shared, trying to experience the shared experience together. If I, if I remember that time when we were so we had one of the longest lock downs, right? One of the longest long downs in the world. But one of the things that was the first time I saw positive messages on the news. So I wondered about that, you know, this whole thing where we always say we want hard news. And we riddle people with these, like things that are just going to make them feel afraid, feel angry, feel like all kinds of negative emotions. And yet there was an intentionality to positivity then because they're like, people are in their homes, and we really need to care about their mental health and things like that. And I'm like, why should that be a lockdown thing? Why can that be a way of being? Why can we have that kind of balance? I mean, if you think about it back then exactly like you said, the radio show is some thread that connected millions of people back then, now we just have our own little echo chambers all over, we're just even more disconnected and isolated than ever before. In the UK, they have a ministry of loneliness. That is how bad it is where you literally have a ministry dedicated to the problem of loneliness. So I think that there is hope unites people in a way that fear and anger and hate and all these things, you know, it's an opposition to that, right. So yeah, I think let's do that. Let's have a new currency of hope.   mi ** 58:04 There you go. Well, here's a question. What compensation is the world not having, but we should be having?   Chenai Kadungure ** 58:14 There's so many.   Michael Hingson ** 58:17 Yes, there are.   Chenai Kadungure ** 58:18 There's so many. I think the one is on honesty around nuance. We've touched on it a few times today. But this being of zero sum, we have such a zero sum language nowadays that just kind of cuts conversations off we're killing our curiosity that way and so everything is talked about from an angle from an agenda if it's like, if it's done this way, even the algorithm will push you more to you just need to click on one thing and you're gonna get a slew of other things that are reinforcing that idea and yet I feel we need more just exploration that curiosity and say, oh, you know, what makes this thing bad? What makes this thing good? Let me wait for myself. But there isn't that anymore. It's literally to you.   Michael Hingson ** 59:05 And the conversation Why Can't We Be curious is definitely an issue.   Chenai Kadungure ** 59:15 So it's interesting if we think of exactly like what you're saying in schools, maybe the curiosity is still there because kids are younger, but what is happening to us later on in life that dance that curiosity altogether? Well,   Michael Hingson ** 59:29 the problem is that so many people are growing up, learning not to be curious and being discouraged from being curious and so they pass it on.   Chenai Kadungure ** 59:39 Oh, that's a hole you've opened a hole that opens a can of worms. A lack of curiosity. I'm like, oh, that's its own. Wow. Yeah, cuz because if you can give, if you can give trauma and everything else based on experiences, you could give whole world views based on the you know, I'm not curious Why should you be curious? You know, I think that's the conversation that ends up happening.   Michael Hingson ** 1:00:05 But if you go back and look at why am I not curious and you go back and study it, it's probably because you were discouraged. I'm sure there are some people who are born. Not curious. But generally, I suspect that it's we're discouraged from being curious.   Chenai Kadungure ** 1:00:20 Absolutely. I'd say with one, one thing as well, since we've we've had a lot of new things thrown at us, I would say in the past 15 years, they're just things that did not exist 15 years ago, and we just been riddled with them. I think there is an element of, we just don't even get to process anything. Right? So forget even curiosity. We haven't even begun to look at how something like the pandemic really impacted all of us. Right? We don't even have the time to do that. Because one crisis after the next. And so I think there's also some of that we're just surviving, that it's like, curiosity seems like a luxury. So how do we get out of that, like, just surviving?   Michael Hingson ** 1:01:05 It's very good point. We can do it. But we don't. And again, there's a lot of our politicians discourage it. So you know, there's that's another story, but we won't go there. Well, I want to thank you for being with us. This has been fun. Do you know we've been doing this for over an hour. So yeah, see, and you didn't even say you were hungry. Although I know it's late back there. But this has been a lot of fun. If people want to reach out to you maybe learn more about the association or learn more about you? How might they do that? Oh,   Chenai Kadungure ** 1:01:40 well, definitely. They can. I mean, they can email me email me. I am ed@bpao.org. Bravo, Papa, alpha. October. I don't know if I still have my phone and expect close. And also, they can go to the website as well. www.bpao.org Or they can search me on LinkedIn. I think you did a good job of trying to say my name, but I'm sure they can. You know, see.   Michael Hingson ** 1:02:12 My you said   Chenai Kadungure ** 1:02:13 Chenai Kadungure.   Michael Hingson ** 1:02:17 There you go. Oh,   Chenai Kadungure ** 1:02:19 thank you so much. For the   Michael Hingson ** 1:02:21 this has been this has been a lot of fun. I've enjoyed the conversation. I hope all of you listening have enjoyed it. Love to hear your thoughts, please email me and feel free to reach out to shehnai and, and engage her in a discussion as you will. But if you'd like to reach out to me, you're welcome to do so by email. Michaelhi at accessibe.com. That's m i c h a e l h i at A c c e s s i b e.com. Or go to our podcast page www dot Michael hingson.com/podcast. So that's www.m i c h a e l h i n g s o n.com/podcast love to hear from you. And please give us a five star rating wherever you hear this podcast wherever you are. We really appreciate your ratings and your value in your comments, and your input and Chennai for you and you listening if you know anyone who we ought to have as a guest on unstoppable mindset. Really, we want to hear from you. I want to know, and we're always looking for guests, so please don't hesitate to suggest other folks and help us meet them. So one more time tonight. I want to thank you for being here and taking this time with us today.   Chenai Kadungure ** 1:03:36 Well, thank you for being a light and dark spaces. I think just even the name unstoppable that excites me because I know exactly what you said so much of our everyday is how do we stop people? How do we stop certain things. So thank you.   Michael Hingson ** 1:03:55 You have been listening to the Unstoppable Mindset podcast. Thanks for dropping by. I hope that you'll join us again next week, and in future weeks for upcoming episodes. To subscribe to our podcast and to learn about upcoming episodes, please visit www dot Michael hingson.com slash podcast. Michael Hingson is spelled m i c h a e l h i n g s o n. While you're on the site., please use the form there to recommend people who we ought to interview in upcoming editions of the show. And also, we ask you and urge you to invite your friends to join us in the future. If you know of any one or any organization needing a speaker for an event, please email me at speaker at Michael hingson.com. I appreciate it very much. To learn more about the concept of blinded by fear, please visit www dot Michael hingson.com forward slash blinded by fear and while you're there, feel free to pick up a copy of my free eBook entitled blinded by fear. The unstoppable mindset podcast is provided by access cas

V redakcii
Gynekológ Redecha: Na webe kúpite interrupčnú tabletku do päť minút. Ale neviete, čo vám príde

V redakcii

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 19, 2023 29:35


Prezident Slovenskej gynekologicko-pôrodníckej spoločnosti Martin Redecha v rozhovore hovorí, prečo by sa mala používať interrupčná tabletka aj na Slovensku, ale aj o tom, ako ženy riešia nedostupnosť interrupcií vo viacerých regiónoch a či ich minister požiadal o vypracovanie štandardov, ktoré sú potrebné na schválenie používania interrupčnej tabletky. Hovorila s ním Veronika Folentová.

Come Comunicare per Vendere - i Sarti del Web
455 – Marcello Minuti di AltoLato – le Testimonianze dei nostri Clienti Soddisfatti

Come Comunicare per Vendere - i Sarti del Web

Play Episode Listen Later May 17, 2023 4:29


https://isartidelweb.it/tutor/contattailtutorMarcello era scettico perché gli sembrava di ascoltare la solita storiella: alzare il fatturato, raggiungere i propri sogni… poi si è affidato ai Sarti del WebE i risultati hanno iniziato ad arrivare giorno dopo giorno!Marcello ha trovato nei Sarti un partner strategico che ha sposato il suo progetto a livello strategicoQuando ha un dubbio o vuole mettere a terra un'intuizione, ha a sua disposizione un Tutor che gli risponde 7 giorni su 7 dandogli indicazioni preciseI clienti di Marcello rispondono positivamente alla Comunicazione Online della sua AziendaOggi può dire senza dubbio che se le cose stanno girando bene nella sua impresa, è merito del lavoro costante dei Sarti del Web!E tu cosa aspetti a trasformare i tuoi canali Social in strumenti di acquisizione e fidelizzazione di Clienti?Clicca sul link e prenota una chiamata senza impegno col Tutor!https://isartidelweb.it/tutor/contattailtutorRiceverai tutte le informazioni necessarie per capire dove puoi arrivare e come puoi farlo in maniera CONCRETASe vuoi scoprire di più su come aumentare il fatturato della tua azienda col mondo online vieni su www.linktr.ee/isartidelweb

Ways to Flourish
S6, Ep 9 - What is WeBe?

Ways to Flourish

Play Episode Play 33 sec Highlight Listen Later Mar 22, 2023 20:04


Ways to Flourish hopes that you have had a great spring break and that you are entering the second half of the semester feeling refreshed and mentally well. Speaking of mental wellness, the new wellness tracking app WeBe is launching right now at William & Mary! WeBe allows its users to track their mental health while engaging with their chosen communities. In today's episode, we talk to Dr. Barbara Van Dahlen, co-founder of WeBe Life, Inc., about what the WeBe app is capable of, how it differs from other available mental health technology, and how her extensive background in mental health relates to her work with WeBe. Download WeBe today from the App Store or Google Play!Resources:WeBe websiteWeBe YouTube channelWeBe on the App StoreWeBe on Google PlayMore about Dr. Barbara Van Dahlen

CentrumHer.eu Podcast
CH Podcast #48 - AI prekladá hry do češtiny, Nový State of Play, Dojmy z Atomic Hearts + Novinky na webe

CentrumHer.eu Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 27, 2023 41:53


Je tu nová epizóda nášho CentrumHer podcastu, v ktorej sme sa na úvod venovali budúcnosti prekladov hier. Vyzerá to tak, že to čo trvalo dobrovoľným predkladateľom celé roky, dnes zvládne AI s trochou pomoci za pár dní. Obísť sme nemohli ani State of Play, na ktorom sa nám bližšie ukázal titul Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League. Máme však obavy, či nedopadne ako Marvel's Avengers. A taktiež sme sa porozprávali o fakte, že Sony nemá ohlásené žiadne hry. Neobišli sme ani Microsoft, ktorý bol v Bruseli a presviedčal zástupcov Európskej komisie o svojom nákupe Activision-Blizzard. No a na záver sa Lukáš s Dominikom podelilo o svoje dojmy z hrania hry Atomic Hearts. Plus sme predstavili najnovšiu novinku na webe - prehľadný celoročný kalendár vydaní. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/centrumher/message

Dreamvisions 7 Radio Network
Dreaming Healing with Kat Kanavos

Dreamvisions 7 Radio Network

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 20, 2023 60:31


From My Mama's Kitchen to Yours Publisher/author Johnny Tan shares memories and future collaboration ideas about My Mama's Kitchen with WEBE publishers Teresa Velardi and Kat Kanavos. What memories do you have about Your Mama's Kitchen? The kitchen is the heart of the home. Let's share a trip down Memory Lane and into a future writing opportunity together on Dreaming Healing. Guest Bios: Johnny Tan- Publisher, Social Entrepreneur, Keynote Speaker, Life Coach, Talk Show Host and Founder & CEO of From My Mama's Kitchen®, an educational platform advocating "Personal Success Begins at Home, The Power of Unconditional Love, and Living and Performing in Our Genius Zone" to build a better world. He is also the Publisher of "Inspirations for Better Living," a digital magazine, and owner of the WordsHavePower.store. As a  multi-award-winning and bestselling author, he was awarded the prestigious 2020-2021 Top 100 Visionaries in Education by the Global Forum for Education and Learning (GFEL) and is an Executive Contributor to Global BRAINZ Magazine. Johnny experienced a Spiritual Awakening while writing his first book, From My Mama's Kitchen - "food for the soul, recipes for living," honoring his 9 moms. The book is about the power of unconditional motherly love, a practical, and timeless principles he learned from his 9 moms, who were his teachers, coaches, and counselors. JohnnyTan.com FromMyMamasKitchen.com FromMyMamasKitchenTalkRadio.com Teresa Velardi- Whether you're writing a children's book or sharing lessons from your life's journey, Teresa Velardi can help you bring your heart's message to the pages of your book. Faith in God, gratitude, and giving are Teresa's heart. It's in this spirit that she empowers others to live their most authentic life. Her daily writing practice keeps her focused on her purpose as life unfolds in this ever-changing world. Blessed with numerous gifts and talents, Teresa's abilities as a writer, editor, publisher, and coach are the vital ingredients she brings to those who choose to share their message with the world through her publishing platform. https://www.webebookspublishing.com/ Video Version: https://youtu.be/eiZ2DajaVjI Call in and Chat with Kat during Live Show with Video Stream: Call 646-558-8656 ID: 8836953587 press #.  To Ask a Question press *9 to raise your hand Have a Question for the Show? Go to Facebook– Dreams that Can Save Your Life Facebook Professional–Kathleen O'Keefe-Kanavos http://kathleenokeefekanavos.com/

Startitup.sk
Stroukal: Vraždy, drogy či mučenie? Všetko, čo si chcel vedieť o DARK WEBE [Diskusný Klub]

Startitup.sk

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 3, 2023 31:03


Dark web registruje dnes už takmer každý človek, ktorý sa pohybuje po internete. Avšak málokto z nás o ňom aj vie bližšie detaily a ešte menej ľudí pozná niekoho, kto sa na ňom pohybuje a vie s ním robiť. Preto je najnovším hosťom v relácii Startitup Diskusný Klub Dominik Stroukal, ktorý nám prišiel povedať detaily o tejto mysterióznej časti virtuálneho sveta. Aká je pravda o kupovaní vrážd a drog na dark webe? Aké zvrátené videá a materiály sa tam dajú nájsť? A prečo je dark web výhodnejší pre čierny biznis ako klasická ulica? To všetko a mnoho viac sa dozvieš, keď si pozrieš tento rozhovor. „Bitcoin a dark web boli v podstate jedna a tá istá vec, to trochu preháňam, ale jedno by bez druhého neexistovalo.“ Pre viac rozhovorov so zaujímavými osobnosťami a o aktuálnej politickej situácii sleduj aj ďalšie epizódy Diskusný Klub.

Mighty Marvel Geeks
Mighty Marvel Geeks 397: Venom Foreverrrrr

Mighty Marvel Geeks

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 24, 2022 59:57


Fall in, Field Agents! It is the week before Thanksgiving and the week after Wakanda Forever, so you know what that means! We're talking all things Black Panther! But, don't worry, we have news from Marvel Collectibles and comics, too!! WeBe ready for the Spoiler Alert if you haven't seen it, otherwise, kick back and […]

Hook 'em High
Bobbing and Webe-ing

Hook 'em High

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 12, 2022 43:47


This week we take you on a rapid river ride! Hang on tight to your little red tube as we guide you past jagged rocks, shallow bridges, and vicious predators. You'll find this unique way we fished this river will be your favorite once you give it a try. Monster Brown Trout are waiting for you. Listen to this episode and then go hit the river!Please become a patron by clicking "support the show" link down below!Intro and outro music by Secret Robot who is part of the group Hunny Glaze. You can find more of his music and content on Spotify and other music media sources. Little Cleo Get Casey's favorite lure and catch trout left and right!DJI MINI 3 The best small drone for quick video creating. Zach uses this one on the trips!DJI MAVIC 3 Zach's Wishlist Drone. He wants one, You want one. Lets get one togetherDisclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Support the show

Write, Sell, Succeed!
I Am. You Are. We Be.

Write, Sell, Succeed!

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 20, 2022 6:01


Today's episode focuses on the concept of I Am and ... Read more

Pop Ya Shit With Bern

WE OUTSIDE! Tune in next week (EVERY THURSDAY) to hear guest POP their SHIT WITH BERN because it takes nothing from her but gives her all the energy!!! Fellow leaders, WRITE in so we can discuss some bullshit that happened at work or in your every day life. WE BE needing to vent to people who get it! SO I GOTCHU.YOUTUBE CHANNEL WILL BE IN FULL EFFECT SO STAY LOCKED IN!!!!!Dont forget to write me!POPYASHITWITHBERN@GMAIL.COMrich kisses

WPKN Community Radio
Doc Hardy Hosts Inaugural Juneteenth Celebration In Norwalk

WPKN Community Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 20, 2022 24:39


Doc Hardy has music and radio broadcasting in his blood. His father, Hal Hardy, was “DJ Soul on Ice” in the 1970's, and was a pioneer in Connecticut for black radio personalities. He appeared on WNLK in Norwalk, WSTC in Stamford, WICC in Bridgeport, WINE in Danbury and WEBE in Westport. Tone used to help his Dad DJ weddings and events in CT and NY in the 1970's and was a DJ himself from 1984 into the 1990's. Always a lover of Soul and Jazz music, Tone launched the Jazz radio show, “Jazz On Ice – The Sunday Brunch”, in January of 2017 on WNLK and WSTC. He joined WPKN in 2108 and continues in his mission to preserve Soul music, or as his father says, “put Soul on Ice.” “Music is medicine,” he closes each show with, “…and I AM The Doctor.” His show is now called The Doc Hardy Show, and airs on WPKN every other Sunday at 7AM and he fills in Thursdays at 4 PM and Saturdays at 10 PM as requested. Doc was also involved with yesterday's Juneteenth celebration in Norwalk on the Green. For more about Fairfield County Juneteenth: https://www.facebook.com/JUNETEENTHofFAIRFIELDCo/ For more about the William E. Edwards Academic College Tours, Inc: https://wee-act.com/ For more on Doc Hardy: https://wpkn.org/doc-hardy/ To follow Doc Hardy and his program The Doc Hardy Show on Social Media: https://www.facebook.com/DocHardy https://www.instagram.com/dochardysouljazz/ https://www.twitter.com/dochardysouljazz https://www.linkedin.com/in/autom84u

Enthusiasm is the bomb!
Random Bible and Articles Study

Enthusiasm is the bomb!

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 27, 2022 199:23


Holy Spirit Movements; selected chapters, articles and book commentaries. We Be good students of Gods Word. May God smile on you!

The Program
H1-KU over Texas (0:00-27:05), KSU and Webe/End of hour question (27:05-46:15)

The Program

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2022 46:16


3-7-22 The Program opens the show talking about the KU win over Texas, the future of Bruce Weber at K-State and gives you the end of the hour question for a chance to win great food from Jazz: A Louisiana Kitchen. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Podcast SNG
S počítačom pod pazuchou

Podcast SNG

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 18, 2022 63:56


V roku 2021 bola naša dlhoročná kolegyňa Jana Bahurinská ocenená Cenou Andreja Kmeťa za celoživotnú odbornú prácu v oblasti evidencie a dokumentácie galerijných zbierok, za spustenie elektronizácie v oblasti správy zbierok a nastavenie základov digitalizácie diel výtvarného umenia. Od jej príchodu do SNG v roku 1990, symbolicky povedané „s jedným počítačom pod pazuchou“, mala na starosti napríklad aj organizáciu digitalizácie informácií o približne 160 000 dielach centrálneho katalógu diel výtvarného umenia, vytváranie stratégie, metodiky a štruktúry databáz v súčinnosti s medzinárodnými štandardami, ale aj školenia nie vždy nadšených kolegov o tom, ako používať osobný počítač či e-mail. Čo robiť, ak vám zálohované dáta po dvojročnej práci zmiznú? Ako si získať dôveru kolegov, ktorí radšej píšu na písacom stroji? Započúvajte sa do pútavého bilancovania 26-ročného pôsobenia v SNG, o ktorom sa s Janou Bahurinskou rozpráva Eva S. Kotláriková. Viac o Webe umenia a lab.SNG nájdete tu: www.webumenia.sk https://lab.sng.sk Partnerom podcastu je spoločnosť KIA, pre ktorú je umenie inšpiráciou. Za spoluprácu pri nahrávaní ďakujeme Vysokej škole výtvarných umení v Bratislave.

CentrumHer.eu Podcast
CH Podcast #39 - Microsoft kupuje Activision-Blizzard, God of War na PC, Novinky na webe

CentrumHer.eu Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2022 49:23


Prvá tohtoročná epizóda nášho herného CH podcastu je vonku! A ako inak, podstatnú časť sme sa venovali jednej z najväčších akvizícií v technologickom biznise vôbec. Microsoft kúpil Activision-Blizzard a stal sa majiteľom značiek ako Call of Duty či Candy Crush. Marek s Lukášom prebrali napríklad to, či sa z Microsoftu nestáva monopol, čo bude s Call of Duty na Playstation a akú prípadnú odpoveď si Sony môže nachystať. Na záver sme sa porozprávali o PC verzií God of War, ale aj o tom, či sa jedného dňa nedočkáme Sony hier hneď v prvý deň nie len na Playstation konzole, ale aj PC. SÚŤAŽ: https://www.instagram.com/p/CZB4YdyI5Ky/

Comic Review
Hunting Down Comics #70

Comic Review

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 20, 2021 89:47


Webe deine Gedanken zu einem bunten Tuch, das dich erfreut und andere wärmt. Also lasst uns über Comics sprechen… Themen Sweet Paprika Superman: Das erste…

RandR Podcasts Presents
Harry Connick, Jr.

RandR Podcasts Presents

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 11, 2021 10:35


WEBE 108's Storm N. Norman interviews Harry Connick, Jr.In this episode Norman chats with the legendary Harry Connick. Jr. They talk about his upcoming show this month at Hartford HealthCare Amphitheater in Bridgeport, Connecticut, what the lockdown was like for Harry and family, and how it feels to be getting back out there, live, on stage!TICKETS ON SALE NOWSee Harry Connick, Jr. LIVE!Harry Connick, Jr. and his Band - Time To Play!Sun Aug 15, 2021 7:00 PMHartford HealthCare AmphitheaterCheck out Harry's new albumAlone With My Faith

Vedátorský podcast
Žijem vedu špeciál 3 – Michal Mokrý

Vedátorský podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 10, 2021 80:51


Michal Mokrý je slovenský vedec, ktorý pôsobí v Holandsku. Pôvodne vyštudoval medicínu v Košiciach, ale už počas štúdia sa rozhodol venovať hlavne vede. Nestačí mu jedna vedecká oblasť, venuje sa rovno dvom: gastrointestinálnemu aj kardiovaskulárnemu systému. Okrem toho, že sa dozviete, ako vyzerá jeho výskumná práca, nám Michal priblížil aj svoj pohlaď na slovenskú vedu. Podcast vzniká v spolupráci so SME a združením Žijem vedu. Žijem vedu nájdete aj na Webe https://zijemvedu.sk/ FB https://www.facebook.com/zijemvedu YouTube https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCpgV0Qv_tVVX--KufDHp0Ug LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/company/zijem-vedu   Podcastové hrnčeky nájdete na stránke https://vedator.space/hrnceky/ Vedátora môžete podporiť cez stránku Patreon https://www.patreon.com/Vedator_sk   Podcast môžete počúvať aj cez Spotify: https://tinyurl.com/V-spotify Apple: https://tinyurl.com/V-applePodcast Podbean: https://tinyurl.com/V-podbean Google Podcast: https://tinyurl.com/V-GooglePodcast   Vedátora nájdete aj na FB: https://www.facebook.com/vedator.svk IG: https://www.instagram.com/vedator_sk/ web: https://vedator.space/

ROZHOVORY S ODBORNÍKMI
MUDr. Lenka Rybánska o KYSELINE LISTOVEJ: Prečo je v tehotenstve taká dôležitá? A čo znamená jej nedostatok?

ROZHOVORY S ODBORNÍKMI

Play Episode Listen Later May 31, 2021 9:48


Ako sa prejavuje nedostatok kyseliny listovej? Stačí ju prijímať v potrave? Pre koho je jej užívanie nebezpečné? Prečo je taká dôležitá práve počas tehotenstva? Ako môže jej nedostatok ovplyvniť vývoj plodu? Na tieto i mnohé ďalšie otázky ohľadom kyseliny listovej nám v dnešnom podcaste odpovie gynekologička a vedúca lekárka ISCARE - MUDr. Lenka Rybánska.Čo všetko v rozhovore zaznelo:0:00 Úvod0:23 Predstavenie hosťa a témy0:36 Čo sú foláty a kyselina listová? Kde sa nachádzajú?1:18 Aký je medzi nimi rozdiel?1:46 Čo preferovať? Foláty, alebo kyselinu listovú?2:59 Prečo sú pre nás foláty dôležité?3:42 Nežiaduce účinky folátov. Existujú?5:01 Príjem folátov počas tehotenstva a dojčenia6:18 Riziká nedostatku folátov počas tehotenstva7:11 Nedostatok folátov mimo tehotenstva7:50 Kto by kyselinu listovú užívať nemal? 8:45 Podľa čoho vyberať kyselinu listovú?9:40 Rady a odporúčania na záverChceš aj Ty s nami natočiť podobné video? Vyplň formulár https://i.modrykonik.cz/2zTrovc a my sa Ti obratom ozveme.Účinkovali:Hosť - gynekologička: MUDr. Lenka RybánskaNámet, scenár - Jana Madleňáková: https://www.instagram.com/jennyska_ig/Rozhovor spolu s videom nájdete aj na https://youtu.be/YDUUa72nMWsNÁJSŤ NÁS MÔŽETE AJ NA IG, FB a WEBE- @modrykonik- https://www.facebook.com/Modrykonik.sk- https://www.modrykonik.sk/#modrykonik #kyselinalistova #folaty #tehotenstvo #vitaminy

WEBE108
369: WEBE OPEN with Bryan Collins of Collins Medical Equipment!

WEBE108

Play Episode Listen Later May 28, 2021 2:07


WEBE108
365: WEBE OPEN with Merritt Goldstein, owner of Earth Animal in Westport

WEBE108

Play Episode Listen Later May 25, 2021 3:11


WEBE108
363: WEBE OPEN with Mark Curtis from Splash Car Wash!

WEBE108

Play Episode Listen Later May 24, 2021 1:52


WEBE108
361: WEBE OPEN Brian from New England Hemp Farm in Westport!

WEBE108

Play Episode Listen Later May 21, 2021 4:46


WEBE108
359: WEBE OPEN Robert Serrano Balise Hyundai of Fairfield!

WEBE108

Play Episode Listen Later May 20, 2021 1:58


Rust is Gold Racing Podcast
James Wagner: WeBe Racing into Summer - EP53

Rust is Gold Racing Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 30, 2021 46:04


Native New Mexican and longtime motocross racer, James Wagner, talks with the RIG Racing Crew about growing up riding the southwest desert, racing motocross and building a family  focused racing series. Webe Racing is a family-friendly hare scramble off-road series with races in Southern Colorado and Northern New Mexico. SPONSORED BY: Law Tigers New Mexico Recorded at: Rust is Gold Coffee Hosted by: Steven “Fenix” Maes (@grafenix), Thaison “Hollywood” Garcia (@rustisgoldantiques), Chris “Sparky” Franco (@ridgebackracing) Featured Music – “American Rocker” Performed by Steve Lane BUY IT IN THE RIG ONLINE STORE

ROZHOVORY S ODBORNÍKMI
MUDr. Lenka Rybánska, gynekologička: "KRČOK MATERNICE by bolieť nemal." Aké sú príznaky vážnych ochorení?

ROZHOVORY S ODBORNÍKMI

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 19, 2021 11:26


„Samovyšetrenie krčka maternice nie je také dôležité ako napríklad samovyšetrenie prsníkov. To však neznamená, že krčok maternice by nemal byť pravidelne kontrolovaný. Najlepšie ho však dokáže vyšetriť gynekológ, preto je dôležité absolvovať pravidelné prehliadky, aby sme v prípade vážneho ochorenia vedeli zasiahnuť včas…” vysvetľuje gynekologička a vedúca lekárka ISCARE - MUDr. Lenka Rybánska.Čo všetko v rozhovore zaznelo:0:00 Úvod0:31 Predstavenie hosťa a témy0:40 Čo je krčok maternice?1:00 Nahmatanie krčka maternice1:35 Funkcia krčka maternice2:13 Krčok maternice vrámci cyklu3:03 Krčok maternice v tehotenstve a cervikálne skóre4:20 Zmeny krčka maternice po pôrode5:31 Samovyšetrovanie krčka maternice7:16 Kedy môže krčok maternice bolieť? 8:02 Ochorenia krčka maternice9:14 Najčastejšie zákroky na krčku maternice10:43 Rady a odporúčania na záverChceš aj Ty s nami natočiť podobné video? Vyplň formulár https://i.modrykonik.cz/2zTrovc a my sa Ti obratom ozveme.Účinkovali:Hosť - gynekologička: MUDr. Lenka Rybánska Námet, scenár - Jennyska: https://www.instagram.com/jennyska_ig/Rozhovor spolu s videom nájdete aj na https://youtu.be/MZkT8MCPi94 NÁJSŤ NÁS MÔŽETE AJ NA IG, FB a WEBE- @modrykonik- https://www.facebook.com/Modrykonik.sk- https://www.modrykonik.sk/#modrykonik #cervix #hlien #pošva #tehotenstvo #potrat

WebSupport
Rebel na webe (Roman Yablko Hraška)

WebSupport

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 8, 2021 67:25


Záujem vedieť robiť weby, alebo hry je stále veľký. „Ako na to“, ukazuje už dlhé roky každému, kto má záujem - Roman Hraška, ktorý je na internetoch známy ako yablko. Jeho kurz Webrebel, ktorý ako prvý priniesol ucelený pohľad na webdizajn, je dnes už legendárny. Yablko má dnes už za sebou kurzov niekoľko, aktívne robí videá aj na YouTube. Nesledujú ho s obľubou len začiatočníci, ale aj pokročilí programátori.  Dôvodom je, že yablko aj komplexné technologické veci podáva so svojským humorom, akoby sa s vami rozprával kamarát. Robí veľa vecí inak, veď posúďte sami: „Som yablko. Freelance programujem. Točím videá. Niektoré sú hlúpe. V iných ťa naučím programovať! A aj tie sú občas trochu hlúpe, pretože prečo nie.“ V diskusii s yablkom sa dozviete: - Ako sa k programovaniu dostal a prečo začal robiť kurzy? - Môže sa programovať naučiť každý? - Má programovanie patriť medzi základné zručnosti? - Ako si vyberá, o čom bude ďalší kurz? Diskusiu moderuje Fero Volár, ktorý je Head of Server products vo WebSupporte a píše blog alian.info.

ROZHOVORY S ODBORNÍKMI
ANTIKONCEPCIA. Toto ste o nej určite nevedeli a mali by ste - s gynekologičkou MUDr. Radmilou Sládičekovou

ROZHOVORY S ODBORNÍKMI

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 1, 2021 12:56


Antikoncepcia sa rokmi neskutočne zmenila a vyvinula. Tá dnešná sa s tou z minulosti naozaj porovnať nedá. Nie len že nie je pre ženské telo nebezpečná, je preň dokonca v mnohých smeroch prospešná! Avšak, aj napriek tomu o nej stále koluje obrovské množstvo mýtov, tak si ich poďme v dnešnom videu rozobrať… Naše pozvanie do štúdia tentokrát prijala skúsená gynekologička MUDr. Radmila Sládičeková.Čo všetko v rozhovore zaznelo:0:00 Úvod0:13 Predstavenie hosťa0:34 Mýtus 1: Antikoncepcia obsahuje veľké množstvo hormónov1:16 Aká je to kombinovaná hormonálna antikoncepcia?1:50 Aké "neantikoncepčné benefity" nám HAK ponúka?2:25 Čo je jednozložková hormonálna antikoncepcia a aké sú jej výhody?2:47 Mýtus 2: Dojčenie je spoľahlivá forma antikoncepcie3:26 Mýtus 3: Z antikoncepcie sa priberá4:50 Mýtus 4: Antikoncepcia spôsobuje smrteľnú embóliu5:31 HAK u žien so zvýšeným rizikom tromboembolických stavov6:10 Mýtus 5: Antikoncepcia spôsobuje rakovinu7:30 Mýtus 6: Po vysadení antikoncepcie už neotehotniem8:34 Dlhé cykly. Je nutné menštruovať každý mesiac?9:39 Mýtus 7: Antikoncepciu je potrebné raz za čas vysadiť10:25 Tabletka po - postkoitálna antikoncepcia11:30 Plánovanie rodičovstva12:06 Vlastnosti modernej antikoncepcieChceš aj Ty s nami natočiť podobné video? Vyplň formulár https://i.modrykonik.cz/2zTrovc a my sa Ti obratom ozveme.Účinkovali:Hosť - gynekologička: MUDr. Radmila SládičekováNámet, scenár - Jana Madleňáková: https://www.instagram.com/jennyska_ig/Rozhovor spolu s videom nájdete aj na https://youtu.be/6q_Z27cXnoQ NÁJSŤ NÁS MÔŽETE AJ NA IG, FB a WEBE- @modrykonik- https://www.facebook.com/Modrykonik.sk- https://www.modrykonik.sk/#modrykonik #antikoncepcia #tehotenstvo #ochrana

ROZHOVORY S ODBORNÍKMI
O MENŠTRUÁCII, pravidelnosti, odchýlkach aj chuti na SEX, s gynekologičkou MUDr. Lenkou Rybánskou

ROZHOVORY S ODBORNÍKMI

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 30, 2021 16:46


Sledujete svoju menštruáciu? Máte pravidelný cyklus? Je slabá, vynecháva vám? Alebo je naopak silná možno až príliš? Trápia vás bolesti a únava? Čo už signalizuje zdravotný problém a čo je ešte v poriadku? Na čo by sme si mali dávať pozor, ak chceme otehotnieť? Kedy máme skutočne plodné dni? Na tieto a mnohé iné otázky sa dozviete odpoveď v dnešnom rozhovore. Naše pozvanie tentokrát prijala gynekologička a vedúca lekárka ISCARE - MUDr. Lenka Rybánska.Čo v rozhovore zaznelo:00:00 Úvod0:43 Čo presne je menštruačný cyklus?1:49 Plodnosť vrámci menštruačného cyklu2:26 Ako dlho je žena plodná?3:18 Je možné otehotnieť aj počas menštruácie?3:43 Pravidelný a nepravidelný cyklus4:37 Dĺžka menštruačného cyklu4:56 Oneskorenie alebo vynechanie menštruácie6:09 Častá menštruácia / krátky cyklus7:35 Dĺžka menštruačného krvácania9:16 Výtok počas menštruácie10:04 Menštruačné bolesti a zmeny nálad11:40 Vyvolanie a oddialenie menštruácie12:55 Menštruačný cyklus a chuť na sex13:54 Menštruácia počas tehotenstva15:11 Nástup menštruácie po pôrode16:20 Rady a odporúčania na záverChceš aj Ty s nami natočiť podobné video? Vyplň formulár https://i.modrykonik.cz/2zTrovc a my sa Ti ozveme.Účinkovali:Hosť - gynekologička: MUDr. Lenka Rybánska Moderátorka - Jennyska: https://www.instagram.com/jennyska_ig/Rozhovor spolu s videom nájdete aj na: https://youtu.be/uLVm_9I-_HINÁJSŤ NÁS MÔŽETE AJ NA IG, FB a WEBE- @modrykonik- https://www.facebook.com/Modrykonik.sk- https://www.modrykonik.sk/#modrykonik #menstruacia #menstruacnycyklus #tehotenstvo

ROZHOVORY S ODBORNÍKMI
Nedarí sa vám s ODPLIENKOVANÍM? Ako zvládať NEHODY a neúspechy radí RNDr. Martina Vagačová

ROZHOVORY S ODBORNÍKMI

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 18, 2021 11:56


„Vety typu: Ty už si v tomto veku plienky dávno nemala, na čo čakáš… By ženy počúvať nemali. Je úplne normálne, ak si mamička s odplienkovaním počká na tie správne signály od svojho dieťaťa a neriadi sa tým, čo by sa malo alebo tým, ako to mali iné deti či ona sama, keď bola malá. Každé dieťa je špecifické a jeho mama vie posúdiť najlepšie, či už je na odplienkovanie pripravené…” upozorňuje rodičovská a výchovná poradkyňa RNDr. Martina Vagačová. Čo všetko v rozhovore zaznelo:0:00 Úvod0:17 Prečo sa neporovnávať s okolím?1:16 Prečo dieťa po úspešnej "potrebe" neodmeňovať?2:12 Kedy sa deti vracajú k plienkam a čo vtedy robiť?3:56 Výnimočné situácie - ako sa pri nich zachovať?5:23 Cikanie do nočníka, kakanie do plienky. Čo s tým?6:14 Čo robiť, ak ani v 3 rokoch nevidíme progres?6:46 Psychologické faktory pri problémoch s odplienkovaním8:53 Spánok bez plienky - kedy s ním začať?10:32 Nehody po príchode do nového prostredia11:15 Rady a odporúčania na záverChceš aj Ty s nami natočiť podobné video? Vyplň formulár https://i.modrykonik.cz/2zTrovc a my sa Ti ozveme.Účinkovali:Rodičovská a výchovná poradkyňa - RNDr. Martina Vagačová: https://efektivne-rodicovstvo.sk/Námet a scenár - Jana Madleňáková: https://www.instagram.com/jennyska_ig/Rozhovor spolu s videom nájdete aj na: https://youtu.be/EkQoSvs-cJYNÁJSŤ NÁS MÔŽETE AJ NA IG, FB a WEBE- @modrykonik- https://www.facebook.com/Modrykonik.sk- https://www.modrykonik.sk/#modrykonik #nocnik #plienky #efektivnerodicovstvo 

Gullah/Geechee Nation
Gullah/Geechee Ooman Celebratin Who WEBE

Gullah/Geechee Nation

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 15, 2021 46:00


Tune een fa "Women's Herstory" pun Gullah/Geechee Riddim Radio and yeddi Queen Quet, Chieftess of the Gullah/Geechee Nation (www.QueenQuet.com) crakin e teet bout "Gullah/Geechee Ooman Celebratin Who WEBE."  Yeddi wha gwine on fa de ress of disya celebration een de Gullah/Geechee Nation. Disya da we sho-Gullah/Geechee Riddim Radio! www.GullahGeecheeNation.com

women her story gullah gullah geechee geechee webe queen quet gullah geechee nation celebratin chieftess
ROZHOVORY S ODBORNÍKMI
O období VZDORU a rodičovskom "NIE" s RNDr. Martinou Vagačovou, poradkyňou vo výchove detí

ROZHOVORY S ODBORNÍKMI

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 15, 2021 20:16


Prečo zákazy vo výchove NEMAJÚ ZMYSEL a prečo nimi deti ako rodičia len vyprovokujeme? To nám v novom rozhovore o období vzdoru a rodičovskom NIE prezradila rodičovská a výchovná poradkyňa RNDr. Martina Vagačová. Čo v rozhovore zaznelo:00:00 Úvod.00:21 Predstavenie hosťa a témy.01:29 Čo je to obdobie vzdoru?03:09 Ako zistíme, že má dieťa obdobie vzdoru?03:46 Ako sa k tomu ako rodič postaviť?07:05 Vzdor ako reakcia na rodičovské nie.10:26 Ako by mal rodič reagovať na silnú hnevlivú reakciu dieťaťa?12:44 Prečo si zvoliť rešpektujúci prístup, aj keď je to beh na dlhé trate?16:41 Ako pracovať s dieťaťom, ktoré sa veľmi hnevá?  19:32 Odporúčania a rady na záver.Chceš aj Ty s nami natočiť podobné video? Vyplň formulár https://i.modrykonik.cz/2zTrovc a my sa Ti ozveme.Účinkovali:Rodičovská a výchovná poradkyňa - RNDr. Martina Vagačová: https://efektivne-rodicovstvo.sk/Námet a scenár - Jana Madleňáková: https://www.instagram.com/jennyska_ig/Rozhovor spolu s videom nájdete aj na: https://youtu.be/K10iTBf-yB0NÁJSŤ NÁS MÔŽETE AJ NA IG, FB a WEBE- @modrykonik- https://www.facebook.com/Modrykonik.sk- https://www.modrykonik.sk/#modrykonik #vychova #efektivnerodicovstvo 

ROZHOVORY S ODBORNÍKMI
ODPLIENKOVANIE: Tipy a triky, rady, dôležité informácie. Radí RNDr. Martina Vagačová, rodičovská a výchovná poradkyňa

ROZHOVORY S ODBORNÍKMI

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 15, 2021 11:53


„S odplienkovaním sa netreba ponáhľať, dieťa naň musí dozrieť. Pre začatie tohto procesu sú dôležité tri základné veci. Jendou z nich je aj to, či je už mechúr dieťaťa dosť zrelý a vyvinutý na to, aby vedelo reálne zadržať moč,” vysvetľuje rodičovská a výchovná poradkyňa - RNDr. Martina Vagačová, ktorá nám v dnešnom videu porozprávala všetko o procese odplienkovania.Čo všetko v rozhovore zaznelo:0:00 Úvod0:16 Predstavenie hosťa a témy1:34 Kedy s odplienkovaním začať?2:22 Základné signály - je dieťa na odplienkovanie pripravené?5:15 Ako dlho trvá proces odplienkovania?5:57 SAMOTNÉ ODPLIENKOVANIE - ako naň?8:21 Čo pri odplienkovaní určite NEROBIŤ?9:40 Čo robiť a čomu sa vyhnúť, ak sa dieťatu stane "nehoda?”Chceš aj Ty s nami natočiť podobné video? Vyplň formulár https://i.modrykonik.cz/2zTrovc a my sa Ti ozveme.Účinkovali:Rodičovská a výchovná poradkyňa - RNDr. Martina Vagačová: https://efektivne-rodicovstvo.sk/Námet a scenár - Jana Madleňáková: https://www.instagram.com/jennyska_ig/Rozhovor spolu s videom nájdete aj na: https://youtu.be/kU7rZ-27JpINÁJSŤ NÁS MÔŽETE AJ NA IG, FB a WEBE- @modrykonik- https://www.facebook.com/Modrykonik.sk- https://www.modrykonik.sk/#modrykonik #nocnik #plienky #efektivnerodicovstvo 

ROZHOVORY S ODBORNÍKMI
VÝŽIVNÉ: Ako oň požiadať? Kedy ísť na súd? Čo robiť, ak nám ex partner neplatí? Vysvetľuje JUDr. Mária Dvončová

ROZHOVORY S ODBORNÍKMI

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 25, 2021 9:14


„Súd zohľadňuje aj možnosti rodiča: Nie je možné, aby mal rodič nízko platenú prácu, pričom je v jeho možnostiach, napríklad aj na základe toho, čo vyštudoval, zabezpečiť si vyšší príjem…” **vysvetľuje JUDr. Mária Dvončová - právnička a autorka projektu pravneprerodica.sk**. Ako už úvod napovedá, v dnešnom podcaste sme pre vás zhrnuli všetky potrebné informácie o žiadaní, výške a (ne)vyplácanní výživného…Čo v rozhovore zaznelo:0:00 Úvod0:17 Predstavenie hosťa a témy0:36 Čo je to výživné a na čo slúži?1:05 Kto má povinnosť platiť výživné?1:22 Čo robiť, keď sa rodičia na výške výživného nevedia dohodnúť?2:31 Aká je minimálna a maximálna výška výživného?3:39 Podľa čoho sa stanovuje výška výživného?5:42 Neplatenie výžviného - ako to riešiť?6:31 Prečo s podaním návrhu na súd príliš nečakať?7:38 Kde vám ohľadom výživného vedia poradiť?8:22 Rady a odporúčania na záverChceš aj Ty s nami natočiť podobné video? Vyplň formulár https://i.modrykonik.cz/2zTrovc a my sa Ti ozveme.Účinkovali:Hosť - JUDr. Mária Dvončová: https://www.instagram.com/pravne_pre_rodica/Námet a scenár - Jennys: https://www.instagram.com/jennyska_ig/Rozhovor spolu s videom nájdete aj na: https://youtu.be/ggegIJ2AiWc NÁJSŤ NÁS MÔŽETE AJ NA IG, FB a WEBE- @modrykonik- https://www.facebook.com/Modrykonik.sk- https://www.modrykonik.sk/#modrykonik #vyskavyzivneho #pravnik #vyzivnenadieta

ROZHOVORY S ODBORNÍKMI
Ako zvládnuť LOCKDOWN, STRATU PRÁCE, DUSNO v RODINE a iné problémy poradí psychoterapeut Mgr. Andrej NAŠČÁK

ROZHOVORY S ODBORNÍKMI

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 25, 2021 10:26


„Ľudia si zuby umývajú každý deň a vnímajú to ako samozrejmosť. O duševné zdravie sa však už stará málokto, pričom dokážeme správnou psychohygienou a komunikáciou predísť skutočne závažným ochoreniam a problémom….” upozorňuje v novom podcaste psychológ Mgr. Andrej Naščák. V dnešnom rozhovore sa dozviete, ako zvládnuť ťažké životné situácie, ako správne komunikovať s partnerom a deťmi tak, aby to malo skutočný zmysel a efekt, no a v neposlednom rade aj o tom, ako čeliť aktuálnej situácií a stresu, ktorý lockdown prináša…Túto epizódu Vám prináša “Union zdravotná poisťovňa. Meníme životy k lepšiemu.”Union zdravotná poisťovňa Vám taktiež prináša množstvo ďalších benefitov. Získajte ich aj vy! Viac informácii nájdete na: https://www.modrykonik.sk/zdravie/union-zdravotna-poistovna/Čo v rozhovore zaznelo:00:00 Úvod.00:30 Predstavenie hosťa a témy.00:00 Prečo je dôležité emočné prežívanie?02:06 Ako sa naučiť prežívať emócie?03:02 Ako tlmočiť svoje pocity okoliu?03:39 Ako má vyzerať každodenná starostlivosť o duševné zdravie?04:57 Ako si vytvoriť doma režim a kruh pohody?06:47 Ako sa vyrovnať so stratou sociálnych kontaktov?08:02 Ako sa vysporiadať so stratou v živote?09:50 Odporúčania a rady na záver.Ak máte na pána Andreja Naščáka doplňujúce otázky, opýtajte sa ho v našej poradni: https://www.modrykonik.sk/ask-an-expert/psychologicka-a-vztahova-poradna/Účinkovali:Hosť - Psychológ/psychoterapeut Mgr. Andrej Naščák: https://www.onlineterapeut.sk/Moderátorka - Jennyska: https://www.instagram.com/jennyska_ig/Rozhovor spolu s videom nájdete aj na: https://youtu.be/aVDIRWIDIgI NÁJSŤ NÁS MÔŽETE AJ NA IG, FB a WEBE- @modrykonik- https://www.facebook.com/Modrykonik.sk- https://www.modrykonik.sk/#modrykonik #financie #sporenie #financnyporadca

ROZHOVORY S ODBORNÍKMI
OČR s dieťaťom, pandemická OČR, VÝPOČET, VÝŠKA - praktický prehľad s JUDr. Máriou Dvončovou

ROZHOVORY S ODBORNÍKMI

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 17, 2021 8:52


V roku 2021 sa podmienky na poberanie ošetrovného a OČR aj vďaka pandémií zmenili. V dnešnom podcaste vám preto prinášame prehľad všetkých dôležitých informácií a zmien, ktoré sa tejto témy týkajú. Našim hosťom bola opäť skúsená právnička JUDr. Mária Dvončová.Čo v podcaste zaznelo:00:00 Úvod00:20 Predstavenie hosťa a témy.00:38 Čo znamená OČR?01:08 Aký je rozdiel medzi OČR-kou a ošetrovným?01:42  Kto môže žiadať o ošetrovné?02:27 Na koho môžem žiadať o ošetrovné?03:26 Čo je to ošetrovné?03:46 V akej výške sa vypláca ošetrovné?04:41 Je možné poberať zároveň mzdu aj ošetrovné?05:28 Ako požiadať o ošetrovné?06:30 Ako najdlhšie je možné poberať ošetrovné?07:08 Môžu sa rodičia na OČR vystriedať?08:19 Odporúčania a rady na záver.Chceš aj Ty s nami natočiť podobné video? Vyplň formulár https://i.modrykonik.cz/2zTrovc a my sa Ti ozveme.Účinkovali:Hosť - JUDr. Mária Dvončová: https://www.instagram.com/pravne_pre_rodica/Námet a scenár - Jennys: https://www.instagram.com/jennyska_ig/Rozhovor spolu s videom nájdete aj na: https://youtu.be/e7QltNUAnJENÁJSŤ NÁS MÔŽETE AJ NA IG, FB a WEBE- @modrykonik- https://www.facebook.com/Modrykonik.sk- https://www.modrykonik.sk/#modrykonik #ocrsdietatom #osetrovne #prispevok

ROZHOVORY S ODBORNÍKMI
O MATERSKOM, MATERSKEJ DOVOLENKE A RODIČOVSKOM PRÍSPEVKU s JUDr. Máriou Dvončovou - z pravneprerodica.sk

ROZHOVORY S ODBORNÍKMI

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 15, 2021 16:37


Vedeli ste, že: Na materské nemá nárok každý rodič? Zamestnávateľ nemá povinnosť odovdzať žiadosť o materské do sociálnej poisťovne? Materské, materská dovolenka a rodičovský nie je to isté? Ako osamotený rodič máte nárok na predĺženie príspevku? O tomto, ale i mnohom inom ohľadne práv a nárokov rodiča, sme sa v dnešnom podcaste rozprávali s pani **JUDr. Máriou Dvončovou** - právničkou a autorkou projektu pravneprerodica.skČo v rozhovore zaznelo:00:00 Úvod.00:25 Predstavenie hosťa a témy.00:49 Čo je to materská dovolenka01:23 Aký je rozdiel medzi materskou dovolenkou a materským?02:45 Ako sa vybavuje materská?04:40 Čo znamená tzv. ochranná lehota po skončení pracovného pomeru?05:32 Na čo má nárok žena, ktorá nebola zamestnaná alebo nič neodvádzala do sociálnej poisťovne?07:09 Aká je dĺžka trvania materskej dovolenky?08:27 Kedy a kto si môže požiadať o materské?09:12 Kedy a ako sa nastupuje na materskú dovolenku?10:08 V akej výške sa poskytuje materské?12:15 Kto má nárok na materské?15:34 Odporúčania a rady na záver.Chceš aj Ty s nami natočiť podobné video? Vyplň formulár https://i.modrykonik.cz/2zTrovc a my sa Ti ozveme.Účinkovali:Hosť - JUDr. Mária Dvončová: https://www.instagram.com/pravne_pre_rodica/Námet a scenár - Jennys: https://www.instagram.com/jennyska_ig/Rozhovor spolu s videom nájdete aj na: https://youtu.be/WxJs5X2qiwwNÁJSŤ NÁS MÔŽETE AJ NA IG, FB a WEBE- @modrykonik- https://www.facebook.com/Modrykonik.sk- https://www.modrykonik.sk/#modrykonik #pravneprerodica #rodicovskyprispevok #materskadovolenka #materske

ROZHOVORY S ODBORNÍKMI
O HYPOTÉKACH, SPLÁTKACH a vlastných ÚSPORÁCH s ING. Michalom Duckým, odborníkom vo svete financií

ROZHOVORY S ODBORNÍKMI

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 15, 2021 20:23


Zvažujete hypotéku alebo úver? V dnešnom podcaste vám prinášame #rozhovor s bývalým riaditeľom banky Ing. Michalom Duckým, ktorý nám porozprával všetko o schvaľovacom procese bánk, taktiež spomenul mnoho zaujímavostí, na ktoré možno žiadatelia hypotéky alebo úveru nemyslia a mali by, a venovali sme sa samozrejme aj tomu, ako postupovať, ak je žiadateľom o hypotéku mladá rodina, kde je jeden z páru na materskej a jeho príjem nie je stopercentný…Čo v rozhovore zaznelo:00:00 Úvod.00:24 Predstavenie hosťa a témy.00:53 Čo je to hypotéka?02:09 Na čo môže byť použitá hypotéka?03:55 Na základe čoho sa rozhoduje banka, akú vysokú hypotéku poskytne?06:39 Koľko percent z kúpnej ceny nehnuteľnosti poskytne banka a koľko by mal mať človek našetrené?08:09 Ako postupovať, ak človek potrebuje hypotéku, no nemá žiadne úspory?08:57 Aké majú banky obmedzenia od Národnej banky Slovenska?10:10 Ako inak dofinancovať kúpu nehnuteľnosti okrem hypotéky, ktorá nepokryje celú kúpnu sumu nehnuteľnosti?11:19 Môže dostať mladá rodina hypotéku, aj keď je žena aktuálne na materskej/rodičovskej dovolenke?12:45 Ako funguje odklad splátok pri hypotéke?14:49 Je kúpa bytu na hypotéku, ako forma investície, vhodným spôsobom sporenia pre deti?17:47 Je výhodné skracovať dĺžku spláciania hypotéky alebo výšku jej splátky prostredníctvom mimoriadnych splátok?Ak máte na pána Michala Duckého doplňujúce otázky, opýtajte sa ho v našej poradni: https://www.modrykonik.sk/ask-an-expert/financna-poradna/Chceš aj Ty s nami natočiť podobné video? Vyplň formulár https://i.modrykonik.cz/2zTrovc a my sa Ti ozveme.Účinkovali:Odborník vo svete financií - Ing. Michal Ducký:  https://www.finporadna.skNámet a scenár - Jana Madleňáková: https://www.instagram.com/jennyska_ig/Rozhovor spolu s videom nájdete aj na: https://youtu.be/TAIvvoCr0b8NÁJSŤ NÁS MÔŽETE AJ NA IG, FB a WEBE- @modrykonik- https://www.facebook.com/Modrykonik.sk- https://www.modrykonik.sk/#modrykonik #financie #hypoteka #uver #financnyporadca

ROZHOVORY S ODBORNÍKMI
O RODIČOVSKEJ DOVOLENKE A RODIČOVSKOM PRÍSPEVKU s JUDr. Máriou Dvončovou - z pravneprerodica.sk

ROZHOVORY S ODBORNÍKMI

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 15, 2021 12:44


„Na jednu vec mamičky často zabúdajú. Ak chcú nastúpiť na rodičovskú dovolenku po materskej dovolenke, tak je potrebné zamestnávateľovi minimálne jeden mesiac vopred písomne oznámiť, že chcú na rodičovskú dovolenku nastúpiť…” upozorňuje právnička JUDr. Mária Dvončová. Ako už úvod napovedá, v dnešnom videu sme sa venovali témam ako rodičovská dovolenka, rodičovský príspevok a všetkému, čo je o nich dobré vedieť.Čo v podcaste zaznelo:00:00 Úvod.00:21 Predstavenie hosťa a témy.00:45 Čo je to rodičovská dovolenka?01:30 Prestup z materskej na rodičovskú dovolenku.02:46 Ako sa vybavuje rodičovský príspevok?03:27 Koľko trvá rodičovská dovolenka?03:42 Kedy má rodič nárok na predĺženú rodičovskú dovolenku?04:08 Aká čiastka je rodičovi vyplácaná, ak poberá rodičovský príspevok?04:49 Líši sa výška rodičovského príspevku v prípade viacpočetného pôrodu?05:23 Má rodič nárok na viac rodičovských príspevkov, ak má viac detí mladších ako 3 roky?05:35 Aký je rozdiel medzi rodičovským príspevkom a rodičovskou dovolenkou?06:51 Môže rodič dostávať rodičovský príspevok, aj keď nie je na rodičovskej dovolenke a pracuje?07:50 Ak sa rodič vráti do zamestnania, môže si nevyčerpanú rodičovskú dovolenku dočerpať neskôr?08:42 Ak rodič dočerpáva rodičovskú dovolenku, a dieťa má viac ako 3 roky, má nárok na rodičovský príspevok?09:10 Nad čím je vhodné popremýšľať, kým skončí rodičovská dovolenka?11:27 Rady a odporúčania na záver.Chceš aj Ty s nami natočiť podobné video? Vyplň formulár https://i.modrykonik.cz/2zTrovc a my sa Ti ozveme.Účinkovali:Hosť - JUDr. Mária Dvončová: https://www.instagram.com/pravne_pre_rodica/Námet a scenár - Jennys: https://www.instagram.com/jennyska_ig/Rozhovor spolu s videom nájdete aj na: https://youtu.be/lyvGhGO0DJwNÁJSŤ NÁS MÔŽETE AJ NA IG, FB a WEBE- @modrykonik- https://www.facebook.com/Modrykonik.sk- https://www.modrykonik.sk/#modrykonik #pravneprerodica #rodicovskyprispevok #rodicovskadovolenka

ROZHOVORY S ODBORNÍKMI
SPORENIE PRE DETI: Čo sa oplatí a čo nie? S Ing. Michalom Duckým, odborníkom na financie

ROZHOVORY S ODBORNÍKMI

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 15, 2021 14:24


Pre obyčajného človeka je skutočne náročné zorientovať sa v tom, ktoré sporenie sa dnes oplatí, ktoré naopak vôbec, ako hľadať skryté poplatky, ktorú banku využiť a pod. Práve preto sme sa rozhodli osloviť pána Ing. Michala Duckého, ktorý je v tejto oblasti odborník, a opýtať sa ho na to, čo by sme mali pri výbere sporenia pre naše deti zvážiť a čomu sa vyhnúť.Čo v rozhovore zaznelo:0:00 Úvod00:22 Predstavenie hosťa a témy.01:03 Aké majú rodičia možnosti v sporení financií pre svoje deti?01:11 Vkladné knižky.02:24 Sporiace účty a termínované vklady. 03:14 Investičné životné poistenie. 04:55 Investičné sporenie. 06:01 Na čo si dať pozor vo vzťahu výnos vs. riziko?06:50 Ako funguje investičné sporenie?09:36 Ako vyzerá podľa vás ideálne sporenie pre dieťa?10:55 Ako poradiť laikom, aké produkty sporenia si vybrať, aby im boli takpovediac ušité na mieru?Ak máte na pána Michala Duckého doplňujúce otázky, opýtajte sa ho v našej poradni: https://www.modrykonik.sk/ask-an-expert/financna-poradna/Chceš aj Ty s nami natočiť podobné video? Vyplň formulár https://i.modrykonik.cz/2zTrovc a my sa Ti ozveme.Účinkovali:Odborník vo svete financií - Ing. Michal Ducký:  https://www.finporadna.skNámet a scenár - Jana Madleňáková: https://www.instagram.com/jennyska_ig/Rozhovor spolu s videom nájdete aj na: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sJiCKSH3h_oNÁJSŤ NÁS MÔŽETE AJ NA IG, FB a WEBE- @modrykonik- https://www.facebook.com/Modrykonik.sk- https://www.modrykonik.sk/#modrykonik #financie #sporenie #financnyporadca

ROZHOVORY S ODBORNÍKMI
O DLHOVEJ PASCI a splácaní pôžičiek pôžičkami s Ing. Michalom Duckým, odborníkom vo svete financií

ROZHOVORY S ODBORNÍKMI

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 4, 2021 13:55


„Najdôležitejšie je, aby si dlžník včas uvedomil, čo sa deje. A teda, že má problém, ktorý treba začať riešiť čo najskôr…” vysvetľuje odborník na svet financií Ing. Michal Ducký. V dnešnom rozhovore sme sa venovali témam ako dlhová pasca, splácanie pôžičiek pôžičkami, exekúcia a osobný bankrot. Čo robiť, aby sme sa tomu najhoršiemu scenáru vyhli a “vymotali” sa z dlhov čo najskôr? Je ďalšia pôžička, ak nevládzem svoje dlhy platiť, riešením?Čo v rozhovore zaznelo:00:00 Úvod.00:18 Predstavenie hosťa a témy.00:48 Čo je to dlhová pasca?01:23 Ako sa človek dostane do dlhovej pasce?02:39 Ako nespadnúť do dlhovej pasce?03:25 Kto nám môže poradiť v prípade problémov so splácaním dlhov?04:01 Ako ľudia najčastejšie riešia problémy so splácaním dlhov?07:25 Čo znamená negatívny záznam v úverovom registri?07:45 Aké má človek možnosti v prípade exekúcie?09:23 Čo znamená osobný bankrot?11:05 Ako sa dá dlhová pasca vyriešiť?Ak máte na pána Michala Duckého doplňujúce otázky, opýtajte sa ho v našej poradni: https://www.modrykonik.sk/ask-an-expert/financna-poradna/Chceš aj Ty s nami natočiť podobné video? Vyplň formulár https://i.modrykonik.cz/2zTrovc a my sa Ti ozveme.Účinkovali:Odborník vo svete financií - Ing. Michal Ducký:  https://www.finporadna.skNámet a scenár - Jana Madleňáková: https://www.instagram.com/jennyska_ig/Rozhovor spolu s videom nájdete aj na: https://youtu.be/gJzkW7noP9kNÁJSŤ NÁS MÔŽETE AJ NA IG, FB a WEBE- @modrykonik- https://www.facebook.com/Modrykonik.sk- https://www.modrykonik.sk/#modrykonik #exekutor #dlhovapasca #uver #dlh #osobnybankrot

East Side Freedom Library
WEBE Gullah/Geechee: A Story Map Project, 12/16/20

East Side Freedom Library

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 29, 2021 87:48


Presented by University of Minnesota graduate students in Geography and Professors Queen Quet and Kate Derickson In April 2018, a packed house heard Queen Quet, the elected chieftess of the Gullah/Geechee nation, present “Free to Be Who WEBE: The Gullah/Geechee Fight for Freedom and Identity.” If you attended that presentation – or if you missed that presentation – you will want to watch this presentation, not only to learn about the history and culture of the Gullah/Geechee people, not only to hear from the remarkable Queen Quet and her colleague and East Side Freedom Library collaborator, Kate Derickson, the reader of “Stories for (Little) People” every Saturday morning at ESFL, but also to learn about “a story map” as a way of producing and presenting knowledge. Queen Quet is the Fall 2020 Winton Chair in the Liberal Arts at the University of Minnesota and Dr. Kate Derickson is Associate Professor in the Department of Geography, Environment, and Society at the U of M, and together, they have been teaching a graduate course called “WEBE Gullah/Geechee." Students in their course collaborated to create a St. Helena Island centered StoryMap which provides a historical chronology of the South Carolina Sea Island which has been home for centuries by African-descended people who identify as Gullah and Geechee. In this evening's presentation, students will share the StoryMap and Queen Quet and Kate Derickson will discuss the collaboration and respond to your questions. View the video: https://youtu.be/dN68Gj_xG4k

The Resistance Radio Show
Church Function, pt 2

The Resistance Radio Show

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 28, 2017 40:07


Our goal with the show is not to offend or make light of God. Instead, we want to point to the truth of Scripture, and hope that the truth can provoke people to examine their ways, and respond how they see fit. When we fail to reach truth, then we are settling for something else. Church MembershipModern definitions of church membership are invented by man. The concept of membership is distorted because the concept of the church is distorted. The church is not the legal organization existing in a building with set public meetings. Only Jesus can add you to the church So the question is, how does Jesus add you to the church? Many churches state that baptism is how you are added to the church. Scripture does not reflect this. Apostles and others in scripture were looking for the Holy Spirit in others, which is the Gift that Jesus promised us. Receiving the Holy Spirit is what includes us into God's church, the mystical Body of Christ. So with this concept of church, what are the implications of becoming a member of God's church? The Bible says if we love God we will obey His commands. We should use our spiritual gifts. “Time, talents, and treasures” are not spiritual gifts, and things that should already be surrendered to Christ. Spiritual gifts are gifts from God that supernaturally empower us to minister. Church membership in most churches does something very harmful that most people never think about. It creates a social class system. There are first time visitors, random attendees, regular attendees, members, tithing members, lay leaders, paid clergy. These different classes are treated differently and have different expectations placed on them. God didn't design the church to be a class system. Scripture (1 Corinthians 12:22-25) states that God utilizes spiritual gifts to give everyone equal value in the Body. Each member should have abundant honor in the eyes of every other member. Leadership and StructureThere is God's design and man's design. God has an order to things. The church is the Body of Christ, a mystical, supernatural being made up of all believers throughout all time, someone the Bride and the Body of Christ at the same time, filled with the Holy Spirit of God. This is not something God would not give guidance in. He is not negligent. The primary function of leadership in God's design is equipping. In man's design, it is control. The leader's of God's church should be nurturing and empowering people for ministry, not trying to control who can speak, serve, etc. The only “control” that God's leaders have is to stand against false doctrine, exclude unrepentant believers from the assembly, affirm God's call by the laying on of hands and sending out, appointing elders and deacons, and resolving disputes. Man's design of leadership resembles pharisees. They add requirements of education and submission. God gifts people supernaturally with leadership and forms them to lead. Man's design also includes non-competes in employment contracts. Man's leadership structure prevents certain people from teaching, speaking, singing, leading, serving, etc. Man doesn't have to control the gift of God; we have to affirm and nurture the gift, and set it loose. The early church was accused by the Roman Empire of turning the whole world upside down. Where do we see that today? We do not accomplish this through political revolutions, through winning elections and passing policy; through oppressively establishing the morality of others. We do it the same way the early church did. We BE. We manifest the body of Christ here on the earth and declare the glory of God through how we love God, love our enemies, value life differently, transcend societal hierarchies and castes. Some of the aspects of man's design are subtle, or appear altruistic, logical, and good. Among these is the practice of congregations electing elders. This seems like a minor preference of practice, and makes sense. The congregations would know the people best. America loves democracy. Democracy is good. Voting is good. However, it's not found in scripture. The elders were appointed by apostles or those they sent. This was important because the apostles were gifted to start these new spiritual works, these faith communities. This is not to say that the leaders are to lord their power over congregations. It doesn't mean they rule with an iron fist. As we outlined earlier, the leadership responsibilities have a lot to do with equipping, protecting, confronting heresy, etc. If a leader is elected by the congregation and then subjected to them through a paycheck and job description, then they are not free to lead. Authority is an important topic to God. He establishes and empowers proper authority. He was heavy handed in how He shepherded Paul into his leadership position. Man's design does not make space for God's leadership development. Many American churches have a structure similar to a corporation. Many of them are legal corporations, in the form of a non-profit organization. Usually, this is so it can own property. Once it becomes a corporation, it needs to add officers, which are not found in Scripture but are required by law. Then then add offices, in the form of paid positions, to operate the church. These are jobs, with job descriptions, requirements, and paychecks. These also are not scriptural. This methodology is not found in Scripture, is subject to current laws, brings money and transaction into something which should function more like a family (could you imagine paying your father to be your father, complete with a list of job responsibilities and requirements to qualify?), and yet it has become the standard for how churches are formed. So much so that it is rarely questioned. If you dispute paid positions, people counter by saying you're against people supporting their spiritual leaders. If you dispute job requirements, people say you're opposed to ensuring righteous leadership. If you dispute having a legal corporation, people say you are opposed to accountability. And yet the early church accomplished all these ideals without subjecting themselves to extra-biblical, secular demands. So why do we do this? Why does the church in America continue in this way, and why is it seldom questioned, and why is the questioning opposed? A lot of it is due to what we inherit. None of us invented these systems. We inherited them. We were told this was the way, it was good and true. We retrofit things into Scripture by cherry-picking verses to defend present practice, instead of diving deep and headlong into Scripture and the Holy Spirit and obeying diligently. God has a structure for His church, and it is built on Jesus, on the proclamation of who He is, on the Good News of the Kingdom. The Church's manifest power comes from the declaration of God's glory through His people. The local church gains its uniqueness as the Holy Spirit transforms and empowers people to give up everything and separate themselves from the world, and as they use their spiritual gifts in power. As this entity grows, those with leadership gifts rise up and are recognized by the church, and they appoint deacons and elders to minister to the needs of the church. The leadership teaches and disciples people for the works of service. Man's design starts with a bad foundation of an incomplete gospel. It builds on that an unbiblical structure of business and leadership. It defines its ministry by the walls of its buildings and hierarchy of leadership. We will continue to examine how these bad foundations distort and divide through things that should unite us, like communion, baptism, and spiritual gifts. Songs Sean Carter – The Passover  https://noisetrade.com/seancartercarolinecobb/ Young Oceans – We Sing as One  https://noisetrade.com/youngoceans This episode originally broadcast live on September 25, 2015 on KXEN 1010AM in St. Louis, MO For more info: www.sunministries.org Theme music: “The Resistance” by Josh Garrels (www.joshgarrels.com) licensed by Marmoset Music (www.marmosetmusic.com)