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Latest podcast episodes about when patty

That's Total Mom Sense
PATTY GATTER & LORA STEFFIE: Making the Most of Your Breastfeeding Journey

That's Total Mom Sense

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 18, 2021 79:48


The Breastfeeding Series on That's Total Mom Sense August is Breastfeeding Awareness Month so I am bringing you The Breastfeeding Series on That's Total Mom Sense. A 3-part series with leaders in the industry. Some people feel breast is best and others think fed is best and I'm here to be an objective insight and provide perspective for you because in the end, you have to trust your mom sense. So whether you breastfeed, formula feed, pump, or use donor milk, it's entirely up to you. However, it is important to destigmatize breastfeeding in modern day society. I want you to know your options, the benefits, hear from medical professionals, public figures, and legal experts on lactation regulations in the workplace which you can use to your advantage. I hope you feel empowered by the Breastfeeding Series on “That's Total Mom Sense.” Introduction Breastfeeding. For some, it's a magical, bonding experience and others, it's painful and triggering or non-existent. For some reason though, speaking to a new mom about breastfeeding has become a loaded conversation. Today, we're going to change that and destigmatize breastfeeding whether you're in favor or not. I'm happy to share my journey and honest opinions, and I'm excited to bring on thought leaders to share their knowledge to commemorate Breastfeeding Awareness Month all August long. Today I am joined by Patty Gatter, founder of The Breastfeeding Shop, a family owned business that supplies mothers who choose to breastfeed with the proper help, guidance, and accessories they need to nourish their babies. Patty is a mother of two boys, a wife to an amazing husband and a serial entrepreneur. Like most women, she's got multitasking down pat. She comes from a lineage of entrepreneurs and has worked in the healthcare industry for over 15 years. When the Affordable Care Act made it a requirement for insurance to cover breast pumps, Patty jumped at the opportunity to make this an equalizer for all new moms. She combined her love and passion for being a mother and breastfeeding with her entrepreneurial spirit and launched, The Breastfeeding Shop. She not only provides top of the line breast pumps like Medela, Spectra and Willow to expecting moms, the company aids mothers in their breastfeeding journey with consultants available via telehealth 24/7. When Patty was in college, she felt inspired by an article she read in Glamour about a woman who started a business and was able to offer her employees a team working environment that catered to their busy “mom” schedules”. It made an impression on her and so she did exactly that. Meet My Guest: WEBSITE: TheBreastFeedingShop.com INSTAGRAM: @thebreastfeedingshop FACEBOOK: /thebreastfeedingshop LINKEDIN: Patty Gatter LINKEDIN: The Breastfeeding Shop

Tough Girl Podcast
Patricia Alcivar - Professional Boxer turned Mountaineer - Climbing Kilimanjaro (in 2 days!), Aconcagua & Mount Elbrus.

Tough Girl Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 6, 2021 42:58


Patricia Alcivar (Patty Boom Boom) was born on December 12, 1983 from parents who emigrated from Barranquilla, Colombia. She is one of four sisters who grew up in a small two bedroom apartment in Woodside, Queens, N.Y. Her father was removed from their home when she was 10 years old leaving her mother to take care of four girls.   Patty left an abusive home at the age of 16 after completing her first NYC Marathon. She knew that if she could complete 26.2 miles on her own, she could do anything! She completed High School with honours while working after school to support herself.   Patty is a 2-time NYC Golden Gloves Champion, USA Nationals Champion, NY Metro Champion, Western States Champion and the first Female ever to be voted and win “Athlete of the Year,” as voted by the United States Olympic Committee. As a Professional Boxer, she captured the New York State title.   Patty’s passion is Alpine/Mountain Climbing and one of her goals is to be the first Latina from Queens, New York to climb the 7 Summits of the World. She has already successfully summited 3 of the 7 thus far: Kilimanjaro-the highest peak in Africa (in 2 days!), Aconcagua-the highest peak in South America and in the Western & Southern Hemispheres and Mount Elbrus in Russia-Highest Peak in Europe.   When Patty is not out climbing, running or boxing, she supports herself by working in a variety of ways which include being Spanish Interpreter/ Translator, EMT, Event Manager, Group Fitness Instructor & Print Ad & Commercial fitness model.   In Patty’s free time, she is an animal activist and is also active in Fighting Hunger & Poverty through NYCARES, Meals on Wheels and NYC Harvest which provide Food to homebound elderly or New Yorkers in need.   Patty hopes to go back to school in the near future for a Nursing degree and continue giving back and be a positive role model to athletes and women of all ages around the world.    Upon completion of her project " Climbing for a Dream-7 Summits" she would like to help build a foundation to educate people around the world about the great outdoors and how to use the challenge and beauty of nature to heal physically, mentally and spiritually.   CONTENT WARNING - we discuss leaving an abusive situation.   New episodes of the Tough Girl Podcast go live every Tuesday and Thursday at 7am UK time - Make sure you hit the subscribe button so you don’t miss out.    The Tough Girl Podcast is sponsorship and ad free thanks to the monthly financial support of patrons. To find out more about supporting your favourite podcast and becoming a patron please check out www.patreon.com/toughgirlpodcast.   Show notes Her nickname and professional boxing name Who Patty is and what she does Her goal to climb the 7 summits 3 done, with 4 more to go Living in NYC on her own  Running her first marathon at 16 Being 1 of 4 sisters Being inspired by the Boston Marathon and knowing she would run it one day Coming from Colombia in South America Being laughed at for her dream of running a marathon Going for her first run at 5am Joining the NYC Road Runners Living in a bad situation at home How running helped her leave an abusive situation Being diagnosed with ADD - Attention Deficit Disorder Being enrolled in sports at a young age Getting into martial arts  Winning a world title in martial arts Deciding what to do next Lying about her age to get her first job How she got into Boxing Not being able to support herself through boxing Taking the opportunity to focus on mountaineering Falling in love with the mountains Climbing in Ecuador Wanting to take climbing to the highest level Becoming more patient  Having to turn back from a summit Her though process while climbing  Needing to be fully focused while climbing Climbing Kilimanjaro in 2017 in 2 days! Climbing Aconcagua in South America and why it was so challenging  Training for 12 months Carrying all her own equipment at high altitude The power of visualisation  Getting back to normal after summiting Aconcagua Money and paying to climb mountains Maintaining her motivation levels The power of praying Living in NYC during the pandemic Making the most out of her time Getting up at 3:30am Her plans to go and climb Denali  Documenting and sharing her journey    Social Media   Website - www.climbingforadream.com    Medium - link.medium.com/TqkCgkXDfcb   Instagram    @pattyboxer12    @climbingforadream    

Awakin Call
Patty Wipfler -- Helping Parents When Parenting Gets Hard

Awakin Call

Play Episode Listen Later May 2, 2020


Patty Wipfler is the founder and Program Director of Hand in Hand Parenting, a non-profit, parent-led organization that helps parents when parenting gets hard.  Her work focuses on building parents’ emotional understanding and on helping parents to establish networks of mutual support that benefit their families and communities. For more than 45 years, she has been teaching basic listening, parenting, and leadership skills to parents. Patty developed Parenting by Connection, a simple but powerful parenting approach that nurtures the parent-child connection. Her instructor team works in the United States and 17 countries serving parents with transformative tools and accessible support. With co-author Tosha Schore, M.A., Patty wrote Listen: Five Simple Tools to Meet Your Everyday Parenting Challenges. Her Listening to Children booklets have sold over 800,000 copies and are available in 10 languages. Patty’s focus on children began at an early age. When Patty was four years old, her seven-month-old sister developed a mysterious condition in which she descended into having no functional mind and no visible recognition of anyone. A cascade of stress, difficulty, and harm tumbled through Patty’s family that exacted a high price from each of them for decades, hitting her mother and younger brother the hardest. Patty had extensive experience caring for young siblings, as the oldest of six children, and she also helped care for cousins and neighbors. Married at 21 years old, she began her career as a kindergarten and first grade teacher. While doing social justice work with the United Farmworkers in the late 60’s and early 70’s, she had her own two children. She was doing great as a mom until the birth of her second son. Her older son was not happy about being a brother. To her surprise and dismay, she began being harsh and having impulses to hurt the older son who was 2 years old at the time. Then at a weekend retreat in 1973, Patty found herself crying uncontrollably and pouring herself out to Jennie, a woman she barely knew – sobbing about her own father and neglected brother – and Jennie did not interrupt and did not give advice. That afternoon, Patty played with her children and felt patient and joyful. Her whole body felt lighter. The pleasure of parenting had returned. She had no angry episodes for weeks afterward. She knew that whatever Jennie had done, that was what she had needed. Patty went to Jennie and asked her to explain her magic touch, and Jennie replied that she had been taught to listen – that when there is a listener, when someone offloads tension and hurt through laughter, crying, tantrums, or trembling, they can heal and think and function more clearly. Jennie told her that listeners can exchange listening time, grow to trust one another and through listening do deeply beneficial things for one another. She explained that it is a pleasure to listen to someone and assist them in making emotional sense of their lives. “That marked the beginning of my 47 years of experiments with listening,” Patty said. Patty began by listening to an engineer whose wife had just walked out on him, leaving him with a six-month-old Down syndrome daughter to care for. This listening time exchange took place for an hour every week for the next twelve years. Patty’s family life warmed and lightened as a result. She then employed listening with her two-year old son when he became ill. This helped him allay his fear of the medicine he was prescribed to take three times a day. From these early experiences Patty saw that the stress of parenting could be prevented. Listening was a key for the adult and the child. Listening was a way of giving love that was powerful and respectful. “And soon after I saw how Listening Partnerships could help me in an ongoing way as a mother,” Patty says, “I and some other moms and dads embarked on figuring out how to use the ideas of listening to and connecting with children to keep them from reaching adulthood with heavy burdens of childhood hurt that get in their way of having the lives they wanted.” Patty believes it is a privilege to be allowed into the emotional trenches with parents, to listen to them, to lend them confidence in themselves and their children, and to love. She confesses that she has made a lot of mistakes as a parent and that everyone has had hard things happen. She does this work with parents, aware that she has ideas that work very well, but that every parent needs good support to be there for their children, especially when times are tough. Patty has led over 400 residential weekend workshops for families and for leaders of parents in the U.S. and in 23 countries.  She authored the Building Emotional Understanding and Understanding Tears and Tantrums courses, which have transformed the lives of many thousands of parents and children in the U.S. and abroad. Her materials are currently published in English, Spanish, Chinese, and Japanese; several other languages will be added soon. She is also the author of the Parent Rescue Series: self-guided, self-paced online classes, focused on specific parenting topics. Through Hand in Hand, Patty offers monthly free teleseminars in conjunction with leading parent educators, writers, activists, and bloggers. Her articles have been published in Mothering Magazine, the Bulletin of Zero to Three, and Child Welfare News. Patty has two sons and three teenaged grandchildren, and lives in Palo Alto with her husband.

Wealth And Purpose Podcast with Patty Lennon
Messages from Coronavirus EP: 84

Wealth And Purpose Podcast with Patty Lennon

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 15, 2020 28:48


Today Patty shares messages from Coronavirus. Admittedly this sounds a bit out there and she knows some will think this is too much. She’s sharing it because it’s what is on her heart and she is looking to be helpful. Others who have hard part of these messages found the information valuable and encouraged Patty to share it with others. One thing that was shared: when the virus connects with love, it mutates in a positive way. When it connects with hate, then it mutates in a way that’s negative. When Patty shares the term “mutate” it’s in relation to the energy of the virus. This isn’t about good vs. bad. People who contract the virus have not brought this to their body via negative thoughts. It’s not about blame. Other messages: It’s okay to feel how you are feeling about the virus (encouraged in fact) The virus as an archetype (this is a good way to frame things) Her vision of humanity’s response We are all equal. No one person is responsible or to blame Love is the power of change Everyone is impacted in different ways. Mother earth is impacted too. As you listen, stay where you are. Process what’s most alive for you. That’s your journey. Email Patty: patty@pattylennon.com

My Mistake
Woman, Interrupted with Patty Lin

My Mistake

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 19, 2020 45:47


Part one of our Patty Lin Collection. When Patty was younger she had a tendency to get interrupted. Our theme song is by the amazing musician and composer Kitch Membery. Check out his music at KitchMusic.com. Please subscribe and review! You can find us on Instagram @mymistakepodcast and on Facebook at My Mistake, The Podcast.. You can you email us at mymistakepodcast@gmail.com! 

Market Shapers
Market Shapers E14: Patty Williamson

Market Shapers

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 4, 2019 16:46


In this edition of Market Shapers we meet Williams Trew agent Patty Williamson. When Patty arrived in Fort Worth she knew no one. Today, she leads a flourishing real estate business.

Recovery Elevator
RE 243: Hope is the Problem

Recovery Elevator

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 14, 2019 48:53


Patty took her last drink on July 19, 2017.  This is her story. Update on the Alcohol is Sh!t book!  The book is out!  Pick up your paperback copy on Amazon here!  You can get the Audible version here! On today’s episode Paul talks about the two main sources of unhappiness and how hope is sending us barreling off a cliff.  On the surface hope is great.  But where is it located on a timeline?  In the future, not in the now.  If hope isn’t serving us, then what?  Throttle back on the hope and lean into ‘this moment’.  SHOW NOTES   [12:00] Paul introduces Patty.    Patty is 665 years old and is originally from Fairbanks, AK.  She currently lives in Corvallis, OR.  Patty has 3 children in their forties and 7 grandkids.  She worked at a university for 30 years and is now retired.  For fun Patty likes to hike, kayak, and sailing.    [13:55] Give us a background on your drinking.   Patty says she was 14 years od the first time she got drunk, and that she was a black-out drinker her very first time.  It wasn’t until she was in her 30’s that she felt she may have a problem; it was then she started to drink at home alone.    When Patty was in her forties, she started to attempt to give up alcohol.  She would go a couple days up to 11 months, and that went on for about 15 years.    [18:15] Was there a moment that it got scary for you?   In early 2017 she drove home drunk from the airport and realized the next morning how dangerous that was.  She says it scared her, that she could have killed someone, or herself.    [20:50] How did you do it those first couple weeks?   Patty said she had a different mindset this time.  This time her mindset was one of, ‘I don’t have to do this (drink) anymore’, rather than, ‘I can’t do this anymore.’   [26:00] What are some improvements in life that you have experienced in a life without alcohol?    Patty says she used to make a lot of plans and then not follow through with them, she doesn’t do that anymore.  She has signed up to get her pilot’s license, something that she has always wanted to do.  Going to the RE Bozeman retreat.  She has been a lot more physically active, instead of talking about walking the dog, she just gets up and goes.    [30:25] What is something that you’ve had to go through in the last 2 years that you didn’t expect?   Patty’s mom died 3 months ago and drinking didn’t even seem like an option.  It was a real tough time, losing her mom and with family drama, but she was able to be present and she didn’t have conversations that she regretted later.    [37:20] What’s the biggest thing you’ve learned about yourself in these last 2 years?   Patty says it’s that she in genuinely a happy person.    [38:00] Was there a rock-bottom moment?   The drive home from the Eugene airport.  Also, on July 19 drinking with her daughter, who herself was struggling with alcohol, and her 16-year-old granddaughter.    [43:00] Rapid Fire Round   What’s a lightbulb moment you’ve had on this journey?   That I don’t have to drink.    What is a memorable moment that a life without alcohol has provided you?   Waking up early, I have just started taking a morning Pilates class.    What is your favorite alcohol-free drink?   LaCroix, hands down.        What is on your bucket list in an alcohol-free life?   I hope to live in Panama half of the year, and I’m working on that.       What are some of your favorite resources in recovery?   Definitely Café RE, and I’m a reader so I have every self-help book probably written since 1972.    And what parting piece of guidance can you give to listeners?   Think it all the way through, and remember you just don’t have to drink.    You might have a drinking problem if...   You consider dropping $100 at every airport bar as just part of your traveling expense.    Upcoming retreats: Asia Adventure – January 20-31, 2020 You can find more information about this event here   Resources mentioned in this episode:   ZipRecruiter This episode is brought to you in support by ZipRecruiter. Right now, my listeners can try ZipRecruiter for free. Visit Ziprecruiter.com/elevator   Connect with Cafe RE- Use the promo code OPPORTUNITY for your first month free Sobriety Tracker iTunes Sobriety Tracker Android Sober Selfies! - Send your Sober Selfie and your Success Story to info@recoveryelevator.com   “Recovery Elevator – We can do this.”

What A Time To Be Alive
#102 Lateral Thinking w/ Tom Thakkar

What A Time To Be Alive

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 30, 2019 81:09


When Patty's away, the soundboard Eli shall play. Folks, the hilarious Tom Thakkar joins us on this week's episode as we learn why a drunk guy called the cops on himself, what animal a soccer hooligan took a swing at, why you shouldn't take LSD at Disneyland, why Labradoodles are haunting one man's past, and some old fashioned mummy curses Follow Tom on Twitter (@TomAThakkar) and Instagram (@tomthakkar)! We are on Patreon! Become a patron for weekly bonus eps and more stuff! www.patreon.com/whatatimepod Get one of our brand new t-shirts using this link! https://www.teepublic.com/stores/what-a-time-to-be-alive?ref_id=8471 Join our Discord chat here: discord.gg/jx7rB7J @pattymo // @kathbarbadoro // @eliyudin // @whatatimepod

U Ain't Famous
UAintFamous Season 3 Episode 9

U Ain't Famous

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 20, 2019 49:57


U Aint Famous Season 3 Episode 9: No one is safe when Latina power is in the house! When Patty is away, Vivianne and Mia will play... Like, Share and Subscribe to the Uaintfamous Podcast

Truth Be Told MS
Episode Forty One - MS Warrior

Truth Be Told MS

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 22, 2018


When Patty was diagnosed with MS at 47, it took her by complete surprise. Patty had never experienced any symptoms related to MS so when she was told the disease had spread everywhere from her brain to her spine she was blindsighted.Within a couple of days, Patty’s sight started to go in one eye before she lost the use of her legs and arms. For the next two years Patty would experience frequent acute attacks that led neurologists to believe Patty would be in a wheelchair permanently for the rest of her life.Unwilling to settle for a life bound to a chair, Patty began retraining her body despite not being able to use her legs. Partaking in any activity that would get her moving, Patty was eventually able to start physical therapy.Now a self-proclaimed MS warrior, Patty is determined to live her best life while living in her truth with MS. You can hear her story by clicking the link below.

SANDCAST: Beach Volleyball with Tri Bourne and Travis Mewhirter
Patty Dodd: Manhattan Champ, National Champ, and more importantly, Coach

SANDCAST: Beach Volleyball with Tri Bourne and Travis Mewhirter

Play Episode Listen Later May 30, 2018 66:49


Patricia Orozco knew Mike Dodd was serious the day he picked her up at UCLA in 1985. She knew he was serious because, after taking her to Marine Street for a crash course in beach volleyball, he took her to The Kettle for lunch in Manhattan Beach. “And it was like ‘Whoa!’ If you get taken to The Kettle for lunch then this he’s serious,” she said on SANDCAST: Beach Volleyball with Tri Bourne and Travis Mewhirter. Serious enough that, a year later, they wed, and Patty took Dodd’s last name, and 33 years later they remain not only happily married, but business partners and elite coaches in the Manhattan Beach area where Patty began to learn the beach game. Well, Patty is at least an elite coach. Mike is technically, and hilariously, the equipment manager at MB Sand Volleyball Club, and he takes his job seriously enough that when Patty couldn’t make it one day, one of the 12-year-olds commented that MB Sand must be running terribly low on coaches because the equipment guy had to fill in. She had no idea the equipment guy was a five-time Manhattan Beach Open champion and Olympic silver medalist. “The mom just could not wait to call me, because she knows Mike’s background,” Patty said, laughing. “That’s what 12-year-olds can say. The janitor is going to run practice.” Some janitor. And some janitor’s wife, too. Let’s, for a moment, put their prolific playing careers aside – and indeed they were prolific – and examine only their coaching backgrounds. When Patty graduated from UCLA, she took up an assistant opening with the Bruins indoor team. They won a national championship in the very first year. “I knew early on that I wanted to do this,” she said. “I just fell into being a graduate assistant in my fifth year and we won NCAA and it’s like ‘Oh, yeah, alright, I like this. I really like this.’ I was so young at the time, but the fact that what you said had an effect on the player or the play or the outcome, I was hooked. “It just took me a while to get to the coaching part because I was doing my playing part.” And she did her playing part well. A native of Bogota, Colombia, Dodd graduated from high school in 1980 and moved to Santa Fe Springs, where she could learn English and play volleyball for a local club team. Within those six months she had offers to play for UCLA, Hawaii, USC and Oregon. "I remember when I first saw her at a Christmas tournament," then-UCLA women's volleyball Coach Andy Banachowski, who has led his teams to four national championships, told the Los Angeles Times. "I was looking down in the Sports Arena and I saw this girl move incredibly well. What really caught my attention is that I didn't know who she was because I know all the kids in the area with talent." "When Andy came up to me," Orozco told the Times, "I couldn't even understand him. I was even named all-tournament and didn't even know what that meant." The accolades, she’d soon become quite familiar with, setting UCLA single-season kills (627), single-match kills (33) and single-match digs (30). As a senior in 1983, she led the Bruins in kills with 403. She still had yet to step foot on a beach. She finished her grad year at UCLA and competed for a year in Italy, where she initially met Dodd. Who better to teach her the beach game, then, but the man she met in Italy who was in the midst of winning four consecutive Manhattan Beach Opens? Yes, the janitor can coach, too. She proved a quick learner, too, Patty. By 1989, just four years after Mike took her to Marine Street and provided the Beach Volleyball 101 crash course, Patty, partnered with Jackie Silva, won 11 of 13 tournaments. Four times that year, Patty and Mike won tournaments on the same weekend, becoming the first married couple to do so. By the time they finished competing, with six total Manhattan Beach Opens to the family name, the Dodds combined for 89 wins and nearly $2 million in prize money. Now they’re teaching others to compete and thrive like they once did. Aside from serving as the most over-qualified equipment manager in beach volleyball history, both Mike and Patty help with USAV National Team practices. She loves the quiet tenacity of April Ross, the genial intensity of Kelly Reeves, the efficiency of Taylor Crabb and Billy Allen. More than that, above all, as it almost always has been, she loves to coach. Loves to teach. Loves to pass on the gifts that to this day she’s still developing herself. “I’m really enjoying MB Sand,” she said. “It really gives me immense joy to see the kids develop their game and to see them make friendships and different partners. It’s such a healthy environment to build beach volleyball. “I love that about beach volleyball, that the kids need to be great at all of the skills. It just brings me a lot of joy to do it.” 

My So-Called Podcast
Episode 9: Halloween

My So-Called Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 21, 2018 44:40


Halloween rolls into Three Rivers (IS THAT THE NAME OF THEIR TOWN?), blurring the line between facades and realities (AND INTRODUCING STRAIGHT UP TIME TRAVEL). When Patty and Graham venture to buy costumes on Halloween day (FROM THE MAYOR OF HALLOWEEN HERSELF), a pirate costume and a Rapunzel costume are all they can find; serendipitously, it leads the couple to passionate role-playing (IN A SCENE THAT SHOULDN’T BE SEXY BUT SOMEHOW IS). Danielle (WHO STILL HASN’T BEEN SHIPPED OFF TO BOARDING SCHOOL) dresses as Angela and goes trick-or-treating with Sharon. Angela, meanwhile, dresses as a schoolgirl from the early 1960s (AND LOOKS FABULOUS). After learning of Nicky Driscoll, a student who had died in the early '60s in the school, she, with Rayanne and Rickie, decides to break into the school on Halloween night. Brian Krakow (SWOON) shows up as well and facilitates the break-in. While there, Brian Krakow comforts the achluophobic (WHAT ON EARTH DOES ACHLUOPHOBIC MEAN?) Rayanne in the basement while Angela sees visions of Nicky Driscoll and the events leading up to his death (THE AFOREMENTIONED TIME TRAVEL). The experience gives Angela the motivation to convince Jordan Catalano not to let his teachers define his life for him.

Market Like A Nerd ™ with Amanda Goldman-Petri | Work Smarter Online Marketing Strategies For Business Owners And Entrepren
Ep. 65 - Networking Expert Patty Farmer’s “100,000 Connections To $100,000”

Market Like A Nerd ™ with Amanda Goldman-Petri | Work Smarter Online Marketing Strategies For Business Owners And Entrepren

Play Episode Listen Later May 8, 2017 24:43


Today we chat with networking expert Patty Farmer, who shares how she went from 10,000 connections to 10,000 dollars. Patty also shares her best tips on finding the best networking events to attend, following up with your connections, and how to have conversations that convert into cash.   Time Stamped Show Notes: 1:34 – Introduction. 5:03 – Patty had just moved to a new town where she did not know anybody so she organized a kitty party but then she thought that she is not B2B or B2C but she is in the people business, she is in a brand-new town and she doesn’t know anybody and so she identified that as an opportunity and she changed her thinking a little bit to have a shift. She made a decision to meet 100000 people and make $100000. 6:50 – According to Patty your goal has to scare you if it doesn’t scare you, it’s not big enough. 6:59 – The next tip is to make a plan and so she started doing research about where should she network and who are the right people to network with.  In today’s business environment, relationships are the currency but you need to network with the right people because you can waste a lot of time by networking with the wrong people and so you should ask better questions. 9:18 – Even in social media it’s not just about the numbers but the engagement. Patty has dealt with clients who had a list of 700 but hadn’t made multiple six figures. It’s all about how much engagement there is and the only difference between a contact and a contract is the relationship. 10:10 – You must know the movers and shakers in town and where should you hang out. You should do research and find out who are the influencers and how should you connect with them. 11:11 – Patty used Meetup, Eventbrite and Google to find the movers and shakers. She also used social media to find them.  According to her you should let the people you connect to, connect you. So after meeting people and having a conversation with them she would ask them where are the best places you find to network where you get the best results and could you tell me the next three people I should connect to and they would tell her who she should connect to and that led her to connect to the next three people and so on. 12:31 – When Patty is confirming an appointment she would confirm the time and place of the appointment and she would also ask them who are the top three people they would really love to meet and who are great strategic partners for them and if she knew those people she would bring them with her. 14:45 – Sometimes people ask what if you meet those people and you are not so impressed with them. But Patty had just said that she would go through her database and bring them with her if she had them but people don’t know whether you had them in your database or not so if you meet them and you are not sure that you want to bring them then don’t bring them along. 15:37 – Patty’s next tip is to serve first and she will ask them how can I best serve you. She not only wants to serve people but she wants to do it in the most strategic way she can. 16:37 – Patty comes from a serve not sell mentality first because she believes that if you lead with contribution, compensation will follow. 17:09 – Once you have made the connection it’s all about taking that conversation and turning it into cash.  Once she asks them and finds out who do they serve, the question that Patty asks them is ‘I know a lot of people and if I was going to tell them about you, what would you want me to tell them’ and that enables them to tell Patty what is the value they bring to the Marketplace. All this leads to a very strong conversation that tells her what the next step should be and it opens up the conversation for how they can collaborate, where is the synergy, is there something they can do together and is there a revenue producing activity they can do together and that’s really what she is looking for.   20:01 – Patty always has a conversation on the phone before she meets anybody in person and it is very short so she knows a lot of information in a brief amount of time. She tells the person you can ask me anything you want for ten minutes and then after ten minutes we go on the clock and so they either write her a check or otherwise they are done in ten minutes.       Resources Mentioned: Patty has a gift for the listeners of this podcast. It's the 6-Figure Biz Quiz and it will tell them everything they need about where they are excelling, where they need some help and how they can have massive growth this year and they can access the free gift at PattyFarmer.com

DC Comics Talk Podcast - DCCOMICSTALK
THE FLASH TALK PODCAST #33 - S2 Ep 9 - RUNNING TO STAND STILL

DC Comics Talk Podcast - DCCOMICSTALK

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 11, 2015 29:00


Mark Mardon breaks James Jesse and Leonard Snart out of Iron Heights in an effort to team up to kill the Flash. Snart declines and warns Barry as repayment for him saving Snart's sister. When Patty learns Mardon is back in the city, she sets out to take revenge against Mardon for killing her father years earlier. Jesse and Mardon place bombs hidden in Christmas gifts throughout the city, threatening to set them off in family homes if Barry does not sacrifice himself. Wells, Cisco, and Jay find one of the bombs and alter its magnetic polarity; they send it into one of the dimensional breaches, which causes it to attract the remaining bombs, removing them from the city. With them gone, Barry subdues Mardon and Jesse. Patty arrives ready to kill Mardon, but Barry as the Flash talks her out of it. Meanwhile, Joe learns that his ex-wife was pregnant when she left and that he has an adult son named Wally, who later shows up at Joe's house. Elsewhere, Zoom visits Wells and agrees to release his daughter if Wells helps Barry become faster so he can steal Barry's speed.

Flash TV Talk
2X09 Running To Stand Still

Flash TV Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 10, 2015 57:17


Synopsis: Mark Mardon breaks James Jesse and Leonard Snart out of Iron Heights in an effort to team up to kill the Flash. Leonard declines and warns Barry as repayment for him saving Lisa. When Patty learns Mark is back in the city, she sets out to take revenge against Mark for killing her father years earlier. James and Mark place bombs hidden in Christmas gifts throughout the city, threatening to set them off in family homes if Barry does not sacrifice himself. Harry, Cisco, and Jay find one of the bombs and alter its magnetic polarity; they send it into one of the dimensional breaches, which causes it to attract the remaining bombs, removing them from the city. With them gone, Barry subdues Mark and James. Patty arrives ready to kill Mark, but Barry as the Flash talks her out of it. Meanwhile, Joe learns that his ex-wife was pregnant when she left and that he has an adult son named Wally, who later shows up at Joe’s house. Elsewhere, Zoom visits Harry and agrees to release his daughter if Harry helps him steal Barry’s speed. Subscribe – iTunes – Satchel – RSS Social – @FlashTVTalk – Facebook Sponsor – Audible – The Brogues Special thanks to Charlie Bock for our rocking outro music! Check out more of his work here – https://soundcloud.com/charliebock