POPULARITY
durée : 00:19:44 - L'interview de 9h20 - par : Léa Salamé - À 9h20, Mathilde Serrell reçoit l'actrice Anna Mouglalis. Elle est membre du groupe de musique Draga dont le premier album “ö Guerrillères”, d'après les textes de la philosophe et romancière féministe Monique Wittig, sort le 30 mai. - invités : Anna MOUGLALIS - Anna Mouglalis : Comédienne
durée : 00:19:44 - L'interview de 9h20 - par : Léa Salamé - À 9h20, Mathilde Serrell reçoit l'actrice Anna Mouglalis. Elle est membre du groupe de musique Draga dont le premier album “ö Guerrillères”, d'après les textes de la philosophe et romancière féministe Monique Wittig, sort le 30 mai. - invités : Anna MOUGLALIS - Anna Mouglalis : Comédienne
"Le Classico" de Sébastien Ministru : « Le Corps lesbien » de Monique Wittig. « Le Corps lesbien » a pour thème le lesbianisme, c'est-à-dire un thème dont on ne peut même pas dire qu'il est tabou, il n'a aucune réalité dans l'histoire de la littérature. La littérature homosexuelle mâle a un passé, elle a un présent. Les lesbiennes, elles, sont muettes – comme d'ailleurs toutes les femmes en tant que femmes à tous les niveaux. Quand on a lu les poèmes de Sapho, Le Puits de solitude de Radclyffe Hall, des poèmes de Sylvia Plath, d'Anaïs Nin, La Bâtarde de Violette Leduc, on a tout lu. Seul le mouvement des femmes a été capable dans un contexte en rupture totale avec la culture mâle de faire naître des textes lesbiens, textes écrits par des femmes uniquement pour des femmes insoucieuses de l'approbation masculine. Le Corps lesbien est dans cette catégorie. Merci pour votre écoute Entrez sans Frapper c'est également en direct tous les jours de la semaine de 16h à 17h30 sur www.rtbf.be/lapremiere Retrouvez l'ensemble des épisodes et les émission en version intégrale (avec la musique donc) de Entrez sans Frapper sur notre plateforme Auvio.be : https://auvio.rtbf.be/emission/8521 Abonnez-vous également à la partie "Bagarre dans la discothèque" en suivant ce lien: https://audmns.com/HSfAmLDEt si vous avez apprécié ce podcast, n'hésitez pas à nous donner des étoiles ou des commentaires, cela nous aide à le faire connaître plus largement. Vous pourriez également apprécier ces autres podcasts issus de notre large catalogue: Le voyage du Stradivarius Feuermann : https://audmns.com/rxPHqEENoir Jaune Rouge - Belgian Crime Story : https://feeds.audiomeans.fr/feed/6e3f3e0e-6d9e-4da7-99d5-f8c0833912c5.xmlLes Petits Papiers : https://audmns.com/tHQpfAm Des rencontres inspirantes avec des artistes de tous horizons. Galaxie BD: https://audmns.com/nyJXESu Notre podcast hebdomadaire autour du 9ème art.Nom: Van Hamme, Profession: Scénariste : https://audmns.com/ZAoAJZF Notre série à propos du créateur de XII et Thorgal. Franquin par Franquin : https://audmns.com/NjMxxMg Ecoutez la voix du créateur de Gaston (et de tant d'autres...) Distribué par Audiomeans. Visitez audiomeans.fr/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
On this episode of the Beyond Multifamily, hosts Amanda Cruise and Ash Patel interview Ryan Wittig, principal of Kinvara Capital, about his journey from residential development to acquiring a diverse portfolio of commercial assets. Wittig shares how he pivoted from building single-family homes and townhouses to strategically acquiring a 28,000 sq ft warehouse through an Opportunity Zone structure, a boutique lodging house near Harvard, short-term rentals, and an office condo. The conversation offers valuable insights on finding deals through unexpected channels (like residential MLSs), identifying value-add opportunities in multi-tenant retail centers, and navigating condo association challenges. Wittig also reveals his current focus on acquiring flex industrial and retail properties to create sustainable cash flow streams beyond development projects. Sponsors: Vintage Capital Capital Gains Tax Solutions Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Discover all of the podcasts in our network, search for specific episodes, get the Optimal Living Daily workbook, and learn more at: OLDPodcast.com. Episode 2978: Beth Wittig Clayton delves into the challenge of balancing authenticity with the human need for acceptance. Discover empowering strategies to overcome self-sabotage, honor your personal journey, and nurture healthier, more fulfilling connections. Read along with the original article(s) here: https://markfisherfitness.com/how-to-avoid-sabotaging-yourself-to-be-accepted/ Quotes to ponder: "You can't sacrifice your dreams on the altar of belonging." "Authenticity is not about disregarding others, but about honoring your own journey." "The need to belong is universal, but it shouldn't come at the cost of self-respect." Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Discover all of the podcasts in our network, search for specific episodes, get the Optimal Living Daily workbook, and learn more at: OLDPodcast.com. Episode 2978: Beth Wittig Clayton delves into the challenge of balancing authenticity with the human need for acceptance. Discover empowering strategies to overcome self-sabotage, honor your personal journey, and nurture healthier, more fulfilling connections. Read along with the original article(s) here: https://markfisherfitness.com/how-to-avoid-sabotaging-yourself-to-be-accepted/ Quotes to ponder: "You can't sacrifice your dreams on the altar of belonging." "Authenticity is not about disregarding others, but about honoring your own journey." "The need to belong is universal, but it shouldn't come at the cost of self-respect." Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Discover all of the podcasts in our network, search for specific episodes, get the Optimal Living Daily workbook, and learn more at: OLDPodcast.com. Episode 2978: Beth Wittig Clayton delves into the challenge of balancing authenticity with the human need for acceptance. Discover empowering strategies to overcome self-sabotage, honor your personal journey, and nurture healthier, more fulfilling connections. Read along with the original article(s) here: https://markfisherfitness.com/how-to-avoid-sabotaging-yourself-to-be-accepted/ Quotes to ponder: "You can't sacrifice your dreams on the altar of belonging." "Authenticity is not about disregarding others, but about honoring your own journey." "The need to belong is universal, but it shouldn't come at the cost of self-respect." Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
durée : 00:59:15 - Toute une vie - par : Clémence Allezard - Dès mai 1968, elle pense le mouvement féministe qui vient. Lesbienne matérialiste, elle veut rompre le contrat social hétérosexuel, théoricienne littéraire, elle travaille le genre grammatical. Visionnaires, les combats de Monique Wittig restent brûlants d'actualité. - invités : Sande Zeig Comédienne et ancienne compagne de Monique Wittig.; Sam Bourcier Activiste queer et sociologue, maître de conférences à l'université Lille III, fondateur du collectif Le Zoo; Suzette Robichon Militante lesbienne, membre du collectif Archives et recherches de culture lesbienne (ARCL) et du Centre audiovisuel d'archives féministes Simone de Beauvoir; Isabelle Lafon Comédienne, metteur en scène; Louise Turcotte Militante lesbienne radicale, fondatrice de la revue québécoise Amazones d'hier, lesbiennes d'aujourd'hui.; Catherine Ecarnot Agrégée de lettres, auteure de la première thèse sur Monique Wittig en France.; Anne Garréta Ecrivaine, membre de l'Oulipo, enseigne la littérature aux Etats-Unis ainsi qu'à l'université Rennes 2
DEBORAH ARDILLI su - PARIGI LA POLITICA E ALTRE STORIE di MONIQUE WITTIG - presentato da Elena Mordiglia
Müller, Dirk www.deutschlandfunk.de, Interviews
DEBORAH ARDILLI su - PARIGI LA POLITICA E ALTRE STORIE di MONIQUE WITTIG - presentato da Elena Mordiglia
Wittig, Frank www.deutschlandfunk.de, Das war der Tag
In der 6. Staffel des Makler Podcasts dreht sich alles um das Immobilienfranchise „KENSINGTON“. In der heutigen Folge begrüßen wir Andreas Wittig, Franchisepartner von mehreren KENSINGTON-Standorten in Berlin. Andreas war schon immer als Unternehmer erfolgreich, musste jedoch auch einige Rückschläge einstecken. In dieser Folge sprechen wir ausführlich darüber, wie er seine Unternehmen erfolgreich aufgebaut hat und wie er den Dienstleistungsgedanken auf ein neues Level gehoben hat. E-Mail: info@maklerpodcast.com Web: www.maklerpodcast.com Instagram: fab.lauer I maklerpodcast Unser Mentoringprogramm: mentoring@maklercoach.com www.maklercoach.com maklercoach_com
Our guest this week is Michael “Kalel” Wittig of Pillar and Wittig Works. Michael not only plays bass for Pillar, but is a successful bodybuilder, trainer, model, actor, and writer as well. We are going hear all about what makes Kalel tick, all about the three reunion shows, and also find out what else Pillar might be planning.
In the final episode of this second season of Off Center, Scott Rettberg is joined by Rob Wittig, a digital writing pioneer. Rob is an experimental writer in digital media and helped invent the genre Netprov. Learn more about what Netprov is in this episode. In this episode you find a new AI update with David Jhave Johnston, starting from 22:16. We will be back with another episode in September 2024. References de Chervantes, Michael. 1615. Don Quixote, Part Two. Francisco de Robles. Invisible Seattle. 1983-1993. IN.S.OMNIA. [Electronic magazine]. Rettberg, Scott. 2002. Kind of Blue. https://retts.net/kindofblue/. Wittig, Rob. 2002. Blue Company. https://www.robwit.net/bluecompany2002/. Wittig, Rob. 2000. Friday's Big Meeting. [Netprov], https://www.robwit.net/fbm/. Wittig, Rob. 2012. Grace, Wit and Charm. [Netprov], http://gracewitandcharm.com/. Wittig, Rob. 1994. Invisible Rendezvous: Connection and Collaboration in the New Landscape of Electronic Writing. Wesleyan University Press. Wittig, Rob, & Marino, Marc C. 2016. Monstrous Weather. [Netprov], http://meanwhilenetprov.com/index.php/project/monstrous-weather/. Wittig, Rob & Marino, Marc C. 2016. One Week, No Tech. [Netprov], https://meanwhilenetprov.com/index.php/project/one-week-no-tech/. Wittig, Rob. 2021. Netprov: Networked Improvised Literature for the Classroom and Beyond. Amherst College Press. https://www.fulcrum.org/concern/monographs/pc289m47x. Wittig, Rob, & Wohlstetter, Philip. 1983. Invisible Seattle: The Novel of Seattle, by Seattle.
durée : 00:59:13 - Toute une vie - par : Clémence Allezard - Dès mai 1968, elle pense le mouvement féministe qui vient. Lesbienne matérialiste, elle veut rompre le contrat social hétérosexuel, théoricienne littéraire, elle travaille le genre grammatical. Visionnaires, les combats de Monique Wittig restent brûlants d'actualité. - invités : Sande Zeig Comédienne et ancienne compagne de Monique Wittig.; Sam Bourcier Activiste queer et sociologue, maître de conférences à l'université Lille III, fondateur du collectif Le Zoo; Suzette Robichon Militante lesbienne, membre du collectif Archives et recherches de culture lesbienne (ARCL) et du Centre audiovisuel d'archives féministes Simone de Beauvoir; Isabelle Lafon Comédienne, metteur en scène; Louise Turcotte Militante lesbienne radicale, fondatrice de la revue québécoise Amazones d'hier, lesbiennes d'aujourd'hui.; Catherine Ecarnot Agrégée de lettres, auteure de la première thèse sur Monique Wittig en France.; Anne Garréta Ecrivaine, membre de l'Oulipo, enseigne la littérature aux Etats-Unis ainsi qu'à l'université Rennes 2
durée : 00:03:39 - Le Regard culturel - par : Lucile Commeaux - Les éditions de Minuit font paraître "Dans l'arène ennemie", un recueil composé de textes inédits en français de Monique Wittig, grande écrivaine féministe, dont la variété montre paradoxalement la ténacité de la pensée.
Wittig, Frankwww.deutschlandfunk.de, Das war der Tag
Dans cet épisode d'un Pot de Cas intitulé "Affaire Monique Wittig : Elle n'était pas une femme", nous plongeons dans la pensée révolutionnaire de Monique Wittig. En 1978 elle defend "Les lesbiennes ne sont pas des femmes." Cette phrase a généré une onde de choc qui résonne encore aujourd'hui, marquant profondément la théorie féministe et au-delà. En contestant la supposée "naturalité" de l'hétérosexualité, Wittig révèle que celle-ci est en réalité un régime politique ( la pensée straight ) légitimé par le langage dans nos structures de pensée. Cette remise en question des normes sociales conduit Wittig à prôner la nécessité de transcender les catégories normatives et aliénantes de "hommes" et "femmes" pour instaurer une véritable lutte des "classes". Être lesbienne, dans cette perspective, représente une brèche permettant de penser par-delà des structures hétérosexuelles, patriarcales, capitalistes. Finalement, cet épisode souligne l'importance de la pensée de Wittig dans la lutte féministe et LGBTQ+. Sa vision matérialiste, imbricationniste et radicale offre un cadre pour repenser les rapports de domination. - Wittig, Monique. Les Guérillères. Paris: Éditions de Minuit, 1969. - Wittig, Monique. Le Corps lesbien. Paris: Minuit, 1973. - Wittig, Monique. Brouillon pour un dictionnaire des amantes. Éditions Grasset, 1976. - Wittig, Monique. La Pensée straight. Éditions Balland, 2001. - Wittig, Monique. Le chantier littéraire.Paris: Léo Scheer, 2010. - Eloit, Ilana. "Un Cheval de Troie nommé Monique Wittig." Cahiers du genre, 2021/2. - Duras, Marguerite. "L'Opoponax (postface)." Paris: Éditions de Minuit, 1964. - Beckett, Béatrice. L'Opoponax. Paris: Éditions de Minuit, 1964. - Weaver, Helen (traducteur). The Opoponax. London: Hutchinson, 1966. - Le Vay, David (traducteur). Les Guérillères. New York: Viking Press, 1971. - Le Vay, David (traducteur). Le Corps lesbien. New York: Viking Press, 1975. - Wittig, Monique, and Sande Zeig. Lesbian People: Material for a Dictionary. Gay Presses of New York, 1979. - Mellini, Laura. "Entre normalisation et hétéronormativité : la construction de l'identité homosexuelle." [Cairn] - [Radio France](https://www.radiofrance.fr/personnes/monique-wittig) - [Article sur Philomag](https://www.philomag.com/articles/monique-wittig-les-lesbiennes-ne-sont-pas-des-femmes)
Redefining Holiday Stress: Peace Through Discernment with Laurin Wittig In this episode we get curious about:the pressures of holiday deadlines and expectationsunderstanding personal stressorsthe tool of discernment/selectivity in decision-makingUsing stories and humor as a way to alleviate tension and create a positive environmentLearn more about Laurin Wittig...Bio: Laurin Wittig is an intuitive healer, spirituality mentor, founder of HeartLight Wellness and the Heartlight Wise Women Circles, host of the Curiously Wise: Practical Spirituality in Action podcast, channel of The Circle of Light, and an award-winning author. Laurin is also a co-facilitator of the Triple Goddess Women's Circle.Laurin's own journey from bad health to great health on a non-traditional path awakened many of her own healing gifts, and illuminated a passion to assist others to travel their paths in this lifetime with less pain, and deeper understanding of themselves and the world around them, bringing them to a place of greater ease, and joy. Heartlight Wellness: Healing the light within you!Find Laurin on-line:Heartlight Wellness website: https://heartlightjoy.comFB: https://www.facebook.com/laurin.wittig.3/IG: https://www.instagram.com/heartlightjoy/LI: https://www.linkedin.com/in/laurin-wittig-908225240/Laurin's Novels: Books | Heartlight Wellness Williamsburg VaFreebie: Sign up for Laurin's newsletter and get her gift to you: Laurin's Top Three Ways to Communicate with Your Spirit Guides (PDF download)Credits:Audio Engineer: Sam WittigMusic: Where the Light Is by Lemon Music StudioPhotography & Design: Asha McLaughlin/Tej ArtCopyright 2023 Laurin Wittig Mentioned in this episode:Unleash Your Leadership Potential Free Workshop with Coach Jamie JonesBefore we get started, I'd like to invite you to join me for Unleash Your Leadership Potential, a transformative virtual workshop with Coach Jamie Jones. A seasoned expert in coaching and HR, Jamie will guide us through leadership mindset shifts, conflict resolution, and effective coaching techniques, and more. This dynamic Zoom workshop is our chance to evolve into the leaders we aspire to be. For more info and to reserve your seat, go to pathtopeacelifecoaching. com. Now on with the show.Jamie Jones - Unleash Your Leadership Workshop
Leading From Within: Overcoming Procrastination with Laurin Wittig In this episode we get curious about:In this episode of "Curiously Wise," I delve into my personal struggle with procrastination, particularly regarding a new project about illuminating leadership energy within us. I explore the underlying reasons for my procrastination, including time management challenges, self-doubt, and deep-rooted beliefs about money and worthiness. I share insights from my journey as a healer and entrepreneur, discussing the importance of overcoming mental blocks related to abundance and self-worth to achieve our goals.Personal struggle with procrastinationUpcoming project focusing on leadership energyChallenges in scheduling and time managementOvercoming self-doubt and feeling unqualifiedExploring ancestral beliefs about money and scarcityThe process of self-reflection and identifying fearsStrategies to shift mindset and increase vibrationThe importance of charging for one's work and valuing oneselfFuture plans for the podcast and leadership-focused contentLearn more about Laurin Wittig...Bio: Laurin Wittig is an intuitive healer, spirituality mentor, founder of HeartLight Wellness and the Heartlight Wise Women Circles, host of the Curiously Wise: Practical Spirituality in Action podcast, channel of The Circle of Light, and an award-winning author. Laurin is also a co-facilitator of the Triple Goddess Women's Circle.Laurin's own journey from bad health to great health on a non-traditional path awakened many of her own healing gifts, and illuminated a passion to assist others to travel their paths in this lifetime with less pain, and deeper understanding of themselves and the world around them, bringing them to a place of greater ease, and joy. Heartlight Wellness: Healing the light within you!Laurin on FB: https://www.facebook.com/laurin.wittig.3/Heartlight Joy FB Page: https://www.facebook.com/HeartLightJoyIG: https://www.instagram.com/heartlightjoy/Sign up for Laurin's newsletter and get her gift to you: Laurin's Top Three Ways to Communicate with Your Spirit Guides (PDF download)CreditsCredits:Audio Engineer: Sam WittigMusic: Where the Light Is by Lemon Music StudioPhotography & Design: Asha McLaughlin/Tej ArtCopyright 2023 Laurin Wittig
Practical Spirituality in Action with Laurin Wittig In this episode we get curious about:How Practical Spirituality in Action came about How meditation led me to my spiritual path Meditation soothes the nervous system and quiets the mind Music, laughter and simply smiling can raise your vibration and othersTo learn more about Laurin: Bio: Laurin Wittig is an intuitive healer, spirituality mentor, founder of HeartLight Wellness and the Heartlight Wise Women Circles, host of the Curiously Wise: Practical Spirituality in Action podcast, channel of The Circle of Light, and an award-winning author. Laurin is also a co-facilitator of the Triple Goddess Women's Circle.Laurin's own journey from bad health to great health on a non-traditional path awakened many of her own healing gifts, and illuminated a passion to assist others to travel their paths in this lifetime with less pain, and deeper understanding of themselves and the world around them, bringing them to a place of greater ease, and joy. Heartlight Wellness: Healing the light within you!Website: Heartlight WellnessPodcast: Curiously Wise: Practical Spirituality in ActionFB: https://www.facebook.com/laurin.wittig.3IG: https://www.instagram.com/heartlightjoy/LI: Laurin on LinkedinOffer: Laurin's Top 3 Ways to Communicate With Your Guides PDF download: Sign up for Laurin's newsletter to receive your gift, stay up to date on her podcast, events, services, and circles!CreditsAudio Engineer: Sam WittigMusic: Where the Light Is by Lemon Music StudioPhotography & Design: Asha McLaughlin/Tej ArtCopyright 2023 Laurin Wittig
Laurin Wittig's passion is to help women recognize and unleash their innate and experiential wisdom - emotional, physical, and spiritual -- so they can bring that wisdom consciously into their lives with confidence and joy. She accomplishes this through her HeartLight Wellness practice, where she provides intuitive energy healing & spiritual mentoring, Wise Women Circles, and the Curiously Wise podcast. Laurin's novels are award-winning stories of women finding their wisdom and owning it, too! --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/expansionofconsciousness/support
The Life Altering Magic of Just Showing Up with Laurin Wittig In this episode we get curious about:The pervasive message of "Showing Up" in Laurin's life.The challenge of showing up as an introvert.Finding joy and community by just showing up.How showing up for a children's alcoholic support group transformed me, and others.The transformative power of showing up for critique groups in a writer's journey.The ripple effect: how showing up benefits others too.TO LEARN MORE ABOUT LAURIN WITTIG: Bio: Laurin Wittig is an intuitive energy healer and transformation mentor. She's the host of Curiously Wise, a podcast dedicated to revealing and embracing the wisdom we all have inside us, and she's an award-winning novelist. She helps people reveal, release, and positively transform the underlying sources of physical, mental, and emotional pain so they can consciously live a new story, one filled with passion, purpose, and joy.Website: Heartlightjoy.comPodcast: Curiously Wise: Practical Spirituality in ActionFB: Laurin WittigIG: Instagram (@heartlightjoy)LI: Linked InGift: Laurin's Top 3 Ways to Communicate With Your Guides PDF downloadVideo Course: Connect: Communicating with Your Spirit GuidesSEE ALL OF LAURIN'S BOOKS HERE:Books | Heartlight Wellness Williamsburg Va Or go directly to Amazon for all books and translations.Or go to Audible to listen in English + 2 books have been recorded GermanCREDITS:Audio Engineer: Sam WittigMusic: Where the Light Is by Lemon Music StudioPhotography & Design: Asha McLaughlin/Tej ArtTo learn more about Laurin Wittig and her work: HeartLight WellnessCopyright 2023 Laurin Wittig 8ZjK3GcHXBoR96FkvOnr
Beth Wittig Clayton with Mark Fisher Fitness talks about emotional eating Episode 2301: It Has Almost Nothing to Do With Food by Beth Wittig Clayton with Mark Fisher Fitness on Emotional Eating Mark Fisher Fitness helps people who hate gyms find a fitness home they actually love. They offer classes, semi-private training, and six week transformation programs. Whether you've tried everything and never found a lovematch, or never even been to a gym at all, look no further. The original post is located here: https://markfisherfitness.com/it-has-almost-nothing-to-do-with-food/ Visit Me Online at OLDPodcast.com Interested in advertising on the show? Visit https://www.advertisecast.com/OptimalHealthDailyDietNutritionFitness Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Beth Wittig Clayton with Mark Fisher Fitness talks about emotional eating Episode 2301: It Has Almost Nothing to Do With Food by Beth Wittig Clayton with Mark Fisher Fitness on Emotional Eating Mark Fisher Fitness helps people who hate gyms find a fitness home they actually love. They offer classes, semi-private training, and six week transformation programs. Whether you've tried everything and never found a lovematch, or never even been to a gym at all, look no further. The original post is located here: https://markfisherfitness.com/it-has-almost-nothing-to-do-with-food/ Visit Me Online at OLDPodcast.com Interested in advertising on the show? Visit https://www.advertisecast.com/OptimalHealthDailyDietNutritionFitness Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
A study shows that 77% of people in the U.S. want to learn how to live more sustainably. Today's guest is Laura Wittig, CEO and founder of Brightly, a platform that combines content, community, and shopping to ignite change for the conscious consumer. Laura worked in tech for numerous years as a project manager. At Amazon, she hit a wall selling as many shoes and handbags as possible without concern for the environment. In this episode, Laura speaks with Marco about drowning in her never-ending micro-trend consumerism and getting off-gassing headaches from the plastic wrapping and pleather items in the Amazon office, her need to get to the bottom of what true eco-consumerism is, which led to the creation of her podcast, Good Together, and how she scaled Brightly quickly by thinking of content creation like an engineer would. With a reach of 3 million people every day across all their channels, 99% of which is attained organically, Brightly is leading the way to better and more sustainable consumerism for the planet by building trust via authentic and realistic eco-lifestyle media content. Follow us on Instagram: @someonelikeyoupodcast. Episode website page: https://unlessbrands.com/episode-39-laura-wittig-brightly
Sarcomas are cancers of the connective tissues, with more than 15,000 new cases and 7000 deaths in the US every year. Sarcomas are often diagnosed when they're too late to treat effectively, leading to poor outcomes. As Sarcoma Awareness Month 2023 concludes, Dr. James C. Wittig (Medical Director, Orthopedic Oncology, Atlantic Health System) joins CareTalk to discuss the importance of educating the public about sarcoma cancers.ABOUT CARETALKCareTalk is a weekly podcast that provides an incisive, no B.S. view of the US healthcare industry. Join co-hosts John Driscoll (President U.S. Healthcare and EVP, Walgreens Boots Alliance) and David Williams (President, Health Business Group) as they debate the latest in US healthcare news, business and policy.ABOUT JAMES C. WITTIG, MDJames C. Wittig is Chairman of Orthopedic Surgery at Morristown Medical Center and Medical Director, Orthopedic Surgery, Orthopedic Oncology and Sarcoma Surgery at Atlantic Health System. GET IN TOUCHBecome a CareTalk sponsorGuest appearance requestsVisit us on the webSubscribe to the CareTalk NewsletterShop official CareTalk merchFOLLOW CARETALKSpotifyApple PodcastsGoogle PodcastsFollow us on LinkedIn#sarcoma #cancer #oncology #healthcare #healthcarenews #healthcarepolicy #medicine #hospitals #doctors #surgeons #healthcareinnovation #healthcarebusinessCareTalk: Healthcare. Unfiltered. is produced by Grippi Media
Jen tells the story of the 'racist kinky chair' that split a socialist group, a premonition of how the declining and dilapidated far-Left would increasingly operate in the Global North. Episode also features discussion of Lacan's famous line 'there is no such thing as a sexual relationship', Butler's justification of pornography through deconstructionism, misunderstandings of Wittig's 'lesbians aren't women', and how polyamory results in treating sexual partners like products. We finish on the alienation present in transgenderism and inside the neoliberal workplace, where people are treated as subjects to be commodified to the greatest extent possible.
Andreas Wittig, Co-Author of Amazon Web Services in Action and Co-Founder of marbot, joins Corey on Screaming in the Cloud to discuss ways to keep a book up to date in an ever-changing world, the advantages of working with a publisher, and how he began the journey of writing a book in the first place. Andreas also recalls how much he learned working on the third edition of Amazon Web Services in Action and how teaching can be an excellent tool for learning. Since writing the first edition, Adreas's business has shifted from a consulting business to a B2B product business, so he and Corey also discuss how that change came about and the pros and cons of each business model. About AndreasAndreas is the Co-Author of Amazon Web Services in Action and Co-Founder of marbot - AWS Monitoring made simple! He is also known on the internet as cloudonaut through the popular blog, podcast, and youtube channel he created with his brother Michael. Links Referenced: Amazon Web Services in Action: https://www.amazon.com/Amazon-Services-Action-Andreas-Wittig/dp/1617295116 Rapid Docker on AWS: https://cloudonaut.io/rapid-docker-on-aws/ bucket/av: https://bucketav.com/ marbot: https://marbot.io/ cloudonaut.io: https://cloudonaut.io TranscriptAnnouncer: Hello, and welcome to Screaming in the Cloud with your host, Chief Cloud Economist at The Duckbill Group, Corey Quinn. This weekly show features conversations with people doing interesting work in the world of cloud, thoughtful commentary on the state of the technical world, and ridiculous titles for which Corey refuses to apologize. This is Screaming in the Cloud.Corey: Welcome to Screaming in the Cloud. I'm Corey Quinn. It's been a few years since I caught up with Andreas Wittig, who is also known in the internet as cloudonaut, and much has happened since then. Andreas, how are you?Andreas: Hey, absolutely. Thank you very much. I'm happy to be here in the show. I'm doing fine.Corey: So, one thing that I have always held you in some high regard for is that you have done what I have never had the attention span to do: you wrote a book. And you published it a while back through Manning, it was called Amazon Web Services in Action. That is ‘in action' two words, not Amazon Web Services Inaction of doing absolutely nothing about it, which is what a lot of companies in the space seem to do instead.Andreas: [laugh]. Yeah, absolutely. So. And it was not only me. I've written the book together with my brother because back in 2015, Manning, for some reason, wrote in and asked us if we would be interested in writing the book.And we had just founded our own consulting company back then and we had—we didn't have too many clients at the very beginning, so we had a little extra time free. And then we decided, okay, let's do the book. And let's write a book about Amazon Web Services, basically, a deep introduction into all things AWS. So, this was 2015, and it was indeed a lot of work, much more [laugh] than we expected. So, first of all, the hard part is, what do you want to have in the book? So, what's the TOC? What is important and must be in?And then you start writing and have examples and everything. So, it was really an interesting journey. And doing it together with a publisher like Manning was also really interesting because we learned a lot about writing. You have kind of a coach, an editor that helps you through that process. So, this was really a hard and fun experience.Corey: There's a lot of people that have said very good things about writing the book through a traditional publisher. And they also say that one of the challenges is it's a blessing and a curse, where you basically have someone standing over your shoulder saying, “Is it done yet? Is it done yet? Is it done yet?” The consensus that seems to have emerged from people who have written books is, “That was great, please don't ever ask me to do it again.”And my operating theory is that no one wants to write a book. They want to have written a book. Which feels like two very different things most of the time. But the reason you're back on now is that you have gone the way of the terrible college professor, where you're going to update the book, and therefore you get to do a whole new run of textbooks and make everyone buy it and kill the used market, et cetera. And you've done that twice now because you have just recently released the third edition. So, I have to ask, how different is version one from version two and from version three? Although my apologies; we call them ‘editions' in the publishing world.Andreas: [laugh]. Yeah, yeah. So, of course, as you can imagine, things change a lot in AWS world. So, of course, you have to constantly update things. So, I remember from first to second edition, we switched from CloudFormation in JSON to YAML. And now to the third edition, we added two new chapters. This was also important to us, so to keep also the scope of the book in shape.So, we have in the third edition, two new chapters. One is about automating deployments, recovering code deploy, [unintelligible 00:03:59], CloudFormation rolling updates in there. And then there was one important topic missing at all in the book, which was containers. And we finally decided to add that in, and we have now container chapter, starting with App Runner, which I find quite an interesting service to observe right now, and then our bread and butter service: ECS and Fargate. So, that's basically the two new chapters. And of course, then reworking all the other chapters is also a lot of work. And so, many things change over time. Cannot imagine [laugh].Corey: When was the first edition released? Because I believe the second one was released in 2018, which means you've been at this for a while.Andreas: Yeah. So, the first was 2015, the second 2018, three years later, and then we had five years, so now this third edition was released at the beginning of this year, 2023.Corey: Eh, I think you're right on schedule. Just March of 2020 lasted three years. That's fine.Andreas: Yeah [laugh].Corey: So, I have to ask, one thing that I've always appreciated about AWS is, it feels like with remarkably few exceptions, I can take a blog post written on how to do something with AWS from 2008 and now in 2023, I can go through every step along with that blog post. And yeah, I might have trouble getting some of the versions and services and APIs up and running, but the same steps will absolutely work. There are very few times where a previously working API gets deprecated and stops working. Is this the best way to proceed? Absolutely not.But you can still spin up the m1.medium instance sizes, or whatever it was, or [unintelligible 00:05:39] on small or whatever the original only size that you could get was. It's just there are orders of magnitude and efficiency gains you can do by—you can go through by using more modern approaches. So, I have to ask, was there anything in the book as you revised it—two times now—that needed to come out because it was now no longer working?Andreas: So, related to the APIs that's—they are really very stable, you're right about that. So, the problem is, our first few chapters where we have screenshots of how you go through the management—Corey: Oh no.Andreas: —console [laugh]. And you can probably, you can redo them every three months, probably, because the button moves or a step is included or something like that. So, the later chapters in the book, where we focus a lot on the CLI or CloudFormation and stuff like—or SDKs, they are pretty stable. But the first few [ones 00:06:29] are a nightmare to update all those screenshots. And then sometimes, so I was going through the book, and then I noticed, oh, there's a part of this chapter that I can completely remove nowadays.So, I can give you an example. So, I was going through the chapter about Simple Storage Service S3, and I—there was a whole section in the chapter about read-after-write consistency. Because back then, it was important that you knew that after updating an object or reading an object before it was created the first time, you could get outdated versions for a little while, so this was eventually consistent. But nowadays, AWS has changed that and basically now, S3 has this strong read-after-write consistency. So, I basically could remove that whole part in the chapter which was quite complicated to explain to the reader, right, so I [laugh] put a lot of effort into that.Corey: You think that was confusing? I look at the sea of systems I had to oversee at one company, specifically to get around that problem. It's like, well, we can now take this entire application and yeet it into the ocean because it was effectively a borderline service to that just want to ens—making consistency guarantees. It's not a common use case, but it is one that occurs often enough to be a problem. And of course, when you need it, you really need it. That was a nice under-the-hood change that was just one day, surprise, it works that way. But I'm sure it was years of people are working behind the scenes, solving for impossible problems to get there, and cetera, et cetera.Andreas: Yeah, yeah. But that's really cool is to remove parts of the book that are now less complicated. This is really cool. So, a few other examples. So, things change a lot. So, for example, EFS, so we have EFS, Elastic File System, in the book as well. So, now we have new throughput modes, different limits. So, there's really a lot going on and you have to carefully go through all the—Corey: Oh, when EFS launched, it was terrible. Now, it's great just because it's gotten so much more effective and efficient as a service. It's… AWS releases things before they're kind of ready, it feels like sometimes, and then they improve with time. I know there have been feature deprecations. For example, for some reason, they are no longer allowing us to share out a bucket via BitTorrent, which, you know, in 2006 when it came out, seemed like a decent idea to save on bandwidth. But here in 2023, no one cares about it.But I'm also keeping a running list of full-on AWS services that have been deprecated or have the deprecations announced. Are any of those in the book in any of its editions? And if and when there's a fourth edition, will some of those services have to come out?Andreas: [laugh]. Let's see. So, right after the book was published—because the problem with books is they get printed, right; that's the issue—but the target of the book, AWS, changes. So, a few weeks after the printed book was out, we found out that we have an issue in our one of our examples because now S3 buckets, when you create them, they have locked public access enabled by default. And this was not the case before. And one of our example relies on that it can create object access control lists, and this is not working now anymore. [laugh].So yeah, there are things changing. And we have, the cool thing about Manning is they have that what they call a live book, so you can read it online and you can have notes from other readers and us as the authors along the text, and there we can basically point you in the right direction and explain what happened here. So, this is how we try to keep the book updated. Of course, the printed one stays the same, but the ebook can change over time a little bit.Corey: Yes, ebooks are… at least keeping them updated is a lot easier, I would imagine. It feels like that—speaking of continuous builds and automatic CI/CD approaches—yeah, well, we could build a book just by updating some text in a Git repo or its equivalent, and pressing go, but it turns out that doing a whole new print run takes a little bit more work.Andreas: Yeah. Because you mentioned the experience of writing a book with a publisher and doing it on your own with self-publishing, so we did both in the past. We have Amazon Web Services in Action with Manning and we did another book, Rapid Docker on AWS in self-publishing. And what we found out is, there's really a lot of effort that goes into typesetting and layouting a book, making sure it looks consistent.And of course, you can just transform some markdown into a epub and PDF versions, but if a publisher is doing that, the results are definitely different. So, that was, besides the other help that we got from the publisher, very helpful. So, we enjoyed that as well.Corey: What is the current state of the art—since I don't know the answer to this one—around updating ebook versions? If I wind up buying an ebook on Kindle, for example, will they automatically push errata down automatically through their system, or do they reserve that for just, you know, unpublishing books that they realized shouldn't be on the Marketplace after people have purchased them?Andreas: [laugh]. So—Corey: To be fair, that only happened once, but I'm still giving them grief for it a decade and change later. But it was 1984. Of all the books to do that, too. I digress.Andreas: So, I'm not a hundred percent sure how it works with the Kindle. I know that Manning pushes out new versions by just emailing all the customers who bought the book and sending them a new version. Yeah.Corey: Yeah. It does feel, on some level, like there needs to be at least a certain degree of substantive change before they're going to start doing that. It's like well, good news. There was a typo on page 47 that we're going to go ahead and fix now. Two letters were transposed in a word. Now, that might theoretically be incredibly important if it's part of a code example, which yes, send that out, but generally, A, their editing is on point, so I didn't imagine that would sneak through, and 2, no one cares about a typo release and wants to get spammed over it?Andreas: Definitely, yeah. Every time there's a reprint of the book, you have the chance to make small modifications, to add something or remove something. That's also a way to keep it in shape a little bit.Corey: I have to ask, since most people talk about AWS services to a certain point of view, what is your take on databases? Are you sticking to the actual database services or are you engaged in my personal hobby of misusing everything as a database by holding it wrong?Andreas: [laugh]. So, my favorite database for starting out is DynamoDB. So, I really like working with DynamoDB and I like the limitations and the thing that you have to put some thoughts into how to structure your data set in before. But we also use a lot of Aurora, which really find an interesting technology. Unfortunately, Aurora Serverless, it's not becoming a product that I want to use. So, version one is now outdated, version two is much too expensive and restricted. So—Corey: I don't even know that it's outdated because I'm seeing version one still get feature updates to it. It feels like a divergent service. That is not what I would expect a version one versus version two to be. I'm with you on Dynamo, by the way. I started off using that and it is cheap is free for most workloads I throw at it. It's just a great service start to finish. The only downside is that if I need to move it somewhere else, then I have a problem.Andreas: That's true. Yeah, absolutely.Corey: I am curious, as far as you look across the sea of change—because you've been doing this for a while and when you write a book, there's nothing that I can imagine that would be better at teaching you the intricacies of something like AWS than writing a book on it. I got a small taste of this years ago when I shot my mouth off and committed to give a talk about Git. Well, time to learn Git. And teaching it to other people really solidifies a lot of the concepts yourself. Do you think that going through the process of writing this book has shaped how you perform as an engineer?Andreas: Absolutely. So, it's really interesting. So,I added the third edition and I worked on it mostly last year. And I didn't expect to learn a lot during that process actually, because I just—okay, I have to update all the examples, make sure everything work, go through the text, make sure everything is up to date. But I learned things, not only new things, but I relearned a lot of things that I wasn't aware of anymore. Or maybe I've never been; I don't know exactly [laugh].But it's always, if you go into the details and try to explain something to others, you learn a lot about that. So, teaching is a very good way to, first of all gather structure and a deep understanding of a topic and also dive into the details. Because when you write a book, every time you write a sentence, ask the question, is that really correct? Do I really know that or do I just assume that? So, I check the documentation, try to find out, is that really the case or is that something that came up myself?So, you'll learn a lot by doing that. And always come to the limits of the AWS documentation because sometimes stuff is just not documented and you need to figure out, what is really happening here? What's the real deal? And then this is basically the research part. So, I always find that interesting. And I learned a lot in during the third edition, while was only adding two new chapters and rewriting a lot of them. So, I didn't expect that.Corey: Do you find that there has been an interesting downstream effect from having written the book, that for better or worse, I've always no—I always notice myself responding to people who have written a book with more deference, more acknowledgment for the time and effort that it takes. And some books, let's be clear, are terrible, but I still find myself having that instinctive reaction because they saw something through to be published. Have you noticed it changing other aspects of your career over the past, oh, dear Lord, it would have been almost ten years now.Andreas: So, I think it helped us a lot with our consulting business, definitely. Because at the very beginning, so back in 2015, at least here in Europe and Germany, AWS was really new in the game. And being the one that has written a book about AWS was really helping… stuff. So, it really helped us a lot for our consulting work. I think now we are into that game of having to update the book [laugh] every few years, to make sure it stays up to date, but I think it really helped us for starting our consulting business.Corey: And you've had a consulting business for a while. And now you have effectively progressed to the next stage of consulting business lifecycle development, which is, it feels like you're becoming much more of a product company than you were in years past. Is that an accurate perception from the outside or am I misunderstanding something fundamental?Andreas: You know, absolutely, that's the case. So, from the very beginning, basically, when we founded our company, so eight years ago now, so we always had to go to do consulting work, but also do product work. And we had a rule of thumb that 20% of our time goes into product development. And we tried a lot of different things. So, we had just a few examples that failed completely.So, we had a Time [Series 00:17:49] as a Service offering at the very beginning of our journey, which failed completely. And now we have Amazon Timestream, which makes that totally—so now the market is maybe there for that. We tried a lot of things, tried content products, but also as we are coming from the software development world, we always try to build products. And over the years, we took what we learned from consulting, so we learned a lot about, of course, AWS, but also about the market, about the ecosystem. And we always try to bring that into the market and build products out of that.So nowadays, we really transitioned completely from consulting to a product company, as you said. So, we do not do any consulting anymore with one few exception with one of our [laugh] best or most important clients. But we are now a product company. And we only a two-person company. So, the idea was always how to scale a company without growing the team or hiring a lot of people, and a consulting business is definitely not a good way to do that, so yeah, this was why always invested into products.And now we have two products in the AWS Marketplace which works very well for us because it allows us to sell worldwide and really easily get a relationship up and running with our customers, and that pay through their AWS bill. So, that's really helping us a lot. Yeah.Corey: A few questions on that. At first it always seems to me that writing software or building a product is a lot like real estate in that you're doing a real estate development—to my understanding since I live in San Francisco and this is a [two exit 00:19:28] town; I still rent here—I found though, that you have to spend a lot of money and effort upfront and you don't get to start seeing revenue on that for years, which is why the VC model is so popular where you'll take $20 million, but then in return they want to see massive, outsized returns on that, which—it feels—push an awful lot of perfectly sustainable products into things that are just monstrous.Andreas: Hmm, yeah. Definitely.Corey: And to my understanding, you bootstrapped. You didn't take a bunch of outside money to do this, right?Andreas: No, no, we have completely bootstrapping and basically paying the bills with our consulting work. So yeah, I can give you one example. So, bucketAV is our solution to scan S3 buckets for malware, and basically, this started as an open-source project. So, this was just a side project we are working on. And we saw that there is some demand for that.So, people need ways to scan their objects—for example, user uploads—for malware, and we just tried to publish that in the AWS Marketplace to sell it through the Marketplace. And we don't really expect that this is a huge deal, and so we just did, I don't know, Michael spent a few days to make sure it's possible to publish that and get in shape. And over time, this really grew into an important, really substantial part of our business. And this doesn't happen overnight. So, this adds up, month by month. And you get feedback from customers, you improve the product based on that. And now this is one of the two main products that we sell in the Marketplace.Corey: I wanted to ask you about the Marketplace as well. Are you finding that that has been useful for you—obviously, as a procurement vehicle, it means no matter what country a customer is in, they can purchase it, it shows up on the AWS bill, and life goes on—but are you finding that it has been an effective way to find new customers?Andreas: Yes. So, I definitely would think so. It's always funny. So, we have completely inbound sales funnel. So, all customers find us through was searching the Marketplace or Google, probably. And so, what I didn't expect that it's possible to sell a B2B product that way. So, we don't know most of our customers. So, we know their name, we know the company name, but we don't know anyone there. We don't know the person who buys the product.This is, on the one side, a very interesting thing as a two-person company. You cannot build a huge sales process and I cannot invest too much time into the sales process or procurement process, so this really helps us a lot. The downside of it is a little bit that we don't have a close relationship with our customers and sometimes it's a little tricky for us to find important person to talk to, to get feedback and stuff. But on the other hand, yeah, it really helps us to sell to businesses all over the world. And we sell to very small business of course, but also to large enterprise customers. And they are fine with that process as well. And I think, even the large enterprises, they enjoy that it's so easy [laugh] to get a solution up and running and don't have to talk to any salespersons. So, enjoy it and I think our customers do as well.Corey: This is honestly the first time I've ever heard a verifiable account a vendor saying, “Yeah, we put this thing on the Marketplace, and people we've never talked to find us on the Marketplace and go ahead and buy.” That is not the common experience, let's put it that way. Now true, an awful lot of folks are selling enterprise software on this and someone—I forget who—many years ago had a great blog post on why no enterprise software costs $5,000. It either is going to cost $500 or it's going to cost 100 grand and up because the difference is, is at some point, you'd have a full-court press enterprise sales motion to go and sell the thing. And below a certain point, great, people are just going to be able to put it on their credit card and that's fine. But that's why you have this giant valley of there is very little stuff priced in that sweet spot.Andreas: Yeah. So, I think maybe it's important to mention that our products are relatively simple. So, they are just for a very small niche, a solution for a small problem. So, I think that helps a lot. So, we're not selling a full-blown cloud security solution; we only focus on that very small part: scanning S3 objects for malware.For example, on marbot,f the other product that we sell, which is monitoring of AWS accounts. Again, we focus on a very simple way to monitor AWS workloads. And so, I think that is probably why this is a successful way for us to find new customers because it's not a very complicated product where you have to explain a lot. So, that's probably the differentiator here.Corey: Having spent a fair bit of time doing battle with compliance goblins—which is, to be clear, I'm not describing people; I'm describing processes—in many cases, we had to do bucket scanning for antivirus, just to check a compliance box. From our position, there was remarkably little risk of a user-generated picture of a receipt that is input sanitized to make sure it is in fact a picture, landing in an S3 bucket and then somehow infecting one of the Linux servers through which it passed. So, we needed something that just checked the compliance box or we would not be getting the gold seal on our website today. And it was, more or less, a box-check as opposed to something that solved a legitimate problem. This was also a decade and change ago. Has that changed to a point now where there are legitimate threats and concerns around this, or is it still primarily just around make the auditor stop yelling at me, please?Andreas: Mmm. I think it's definitely to tick the checkbox, to be compliant with this, some regulation. On the other side, I think there are definitely use cases where it makes a lot of sense, especially when it comes to user-generated content of all kinds, especially if you're not only consuming it internally, but maybe also others can immediately start downloading that. So, that is where we see many of our customers are coming with that scenario that they want to make sure that the files that people upload and others can download are not infected. So, that is probably the most important use case.Corey: There's also, on some level, an increasing threat of ransomware. And for a long time, I was very down on the ideas of all these products that hit the market to defend S3 buckets against ransomware. Until one day, there was an AWS security blog post talking about how they found it. And yeah, we've we have seen this in the wild; it is causing problems for companies; here's what to do about it. Because it's one of those areas where I can't trust a vendor who's trying to sell me something to tell me that this problem exists.I mean, not to cast aspersions, but they're very interested, they're very incentivized to tell that story, whereas AWS is not necessarily incentivized to tell a story like that. So, that really brought it home for me that no, this is a real thing. So, I just want to be clear that my opinion on these things does in fact, evolve. It's not, “Well, I thought it was dumb back in 2012, so clearly it's still dumb now.” That is not my position, I want to be very clear on that.I do want to revisit for a moment, the idea of going from a consultancy that is a services business over to a product business because we've toyed with aspects of that here at The Duckbill Group a fair bit. We've not really found long-term retainer services engagements that add value that we are comfortable selling. And that means as a result that when you sell fixed duration engagements, it's always a sell, sell, sell, where's the next project coming from? Whereas with product businesses, it's oh, the grass is always greener on the other side. It's recurring revenue. Someone clicks, the revenue sticks around and never really goes away. That's the dream from where I sit on the services side of the fence, wistfully looking across and wondering what if. Now that you've made that transition, what sucks about product businesses that you might not have seen going into it?Andreas: [laugh]. Yeah, that a good question. So, on the one side, it was really also our dream to have a product business because it really changes the way we work. We can block large parts of our calendar to do deep-focus work, focus on things, find new solutions, and really try to make a solution that really fits to problem and uses all the AWS capabilities to do so. And on the other side, a product business involves, of course, selling the product, which is hard.And we are two software engineers, [laugh] and really making sure that we optimize our sales and there's search engine optimization, all that stuff, this is really hard for us because we don't know anything about that and we always have to find an expert, or we need to build a knowledge ourself, try things out, and so on. So, that whole part of selling the product, this is really a challenge for us. And then of course, product business evolves a lot of support work. So, we get support emails multiple times per hour, and we have to answer them and be as fast as possible with that. So, that is, of course, something that you do not have to do with consulting work.And not always that, the questions are many times really simple questions that pointed people in the right direction, find part of the documentation that answers the question. So, that is a constant stream of questions coming in that you have to answer. So, the inbox is always full [laugh]. So, that is maybe a small downside of a product business. But other than that, yeah, compared to a consulting business, it really gives us many flexibilities with planning our work day around the rest of our lives. That's really what we enjoy about a product company.Corey: I was very careful to pick an expensive problem that was only a business-hours problem. So, I don't wind up with a surprise, middle-of-the-night panic phone call. It's yeah, it turns out that AWS billing operate during business hours in the US Pacific Time. The end. And there are no emergencies here; there are simply curiosities that will, in the fullness of time take weeks to get resolved.Andreas: Mmm. Yeah.Corey: I spent too many years on call, in that sense. Everyone who's built a product company the first time always says the second time, the engineering? Meh, there are ways to solve that. Solving the distribution problem. That's the thing I want to focus on next.And I feel like I sort of went into this backwards in that I don't really have a product to sell people but I somehow built an audience. And to be honest, it's partly why. It's because I didn't know what I was going to be doing after 18 months and I knew that whatever it was going to be, I needed an audience to tell about it, so may as well start the work of building the audience now. So, I have to imagine if nothing else, your book has been a tremendous source of building a community. When I mentioned the word cloudonaut to people who have been learning AWS, more often than not, they know who you are.Andreas: Yeah.Corey: Although I admit they sometimes get you confused with your brother.Andreas: [laugh]. Yes, that's not too hard. Yeah, yeah, cloudonaut is definitely—this was always our, also a side project of we was just writing about things that we learned about AWS. Whenever we, I don't know, for example, looked into a new series, we wrote a blog post about that. Later, we did start a podcast and YouTube videos during the pandemic, of course, as everyone did. And so, I think this was always fun stuff to do. And we like sharing what we learn and getting into discussion with the community, so this is what we still do and enjoy as well, of course. Yeah.Corey: I really want to thank you for taking the time to catch up and see what you've been up to these last few years with a labor of love and the pivot to a product company. If people want to learn more, where's the best place for them to find you?Andreas: So definitely, the best place to find me is cloudonaut.io. So, this basically points you to all [laugh] what I do. Yeah, that's basically the one domain and URL that you need to know.Corey: Excellent. And we will put that in the show notes, of course. Thank you so much for taking the time to speak with me today. I really appreciate it.Andreas: Yeah, it was a pleasure to be back here. I'm big fan of podcasts and also of Screaming in the Cloud, of course, so it was a pleasure to be here again.Corey: [laugh]. You are always welcome. Andreas Wittig, co-author of Amazon Web Services in Action, now up to its third edition. And of course, the voice behind cloudonaut. I'm Cloud Economist Corey Quinn, and this is Screaming in the Cloud. If you've enjoyed this podcast, please leave a five-star review on your podcast platform of choice, whereas if you've hated this podcast, please leave a five-star review on your podcast platform of choice along with an angry, insulting comment that I will at one point be able to get to just as soon as I find something to deal with your sarcasm on the AWS Marketplace.Corey: If your AWS bill keeps rising and your blood pressure is doing the same, then you need The Duckbill Group. We help companies fix their AWS bill by making it smaller and less horrifying. The Duckbill Group works for you, not AWS. We tailor recommendations to your business and we get to the point. Visit duckbillgroup.com to get started.
Welcome back to another episode of our conversation series! Today, we are excited to introduce Laurin Wittig, an intuitive energy healer. In this second episode, we delve deeper into Laurin's journey of self-discovery and her training to trust her intuitive abilities. We explore her affinity for pendulums and the significance of muscle testing in her practice. We also uncover her struggles with second-guessing herself and resisting guidance, which has been influenced by her mother's gaslighting of her intuition. Additionally, we discuss the importance of record keeping and establishing baselines in energy healing. Trusting intuition and listening to what feels right is a key theme in our conversation, as we uncover the difference between living from a place of love and trust versus doubt and fear. Laurin emphasizes that intuition is more than just a thought; it is a profound feeling that guides her in her healing work. Join us as we uncover these fascinating topics and much more in this enlightening discussion with Laurin Wittig. Introduction to Laurin Wittig, intuitive energy healer. 0:10 The second episode of the conversation. 2:45 Training herself to trust what you get. 5:30 Second-guessing herself and resisting guidance. 10:00 Trusting intuition and listening to what feels right. 14:55 The gaslighting of intuition by her mother. 17:25 Stress slows everything down and bogs everything up. 19:45 The difference between living from love and trust. 22:20 Intuition is a feeling more than a thought. 24:35 Struggling with social and ancestral agreements. 30:10 The recovery process is incremental, one baby step at a time. 33:55 Recognizing the difference between the arts and the shoulds. 36:10 Women are taught to be afraid of the world. 38:40 Traveling through Europe with her mother and great aunt. 41:05 Her mom and dad are not part of her. 44:10 How she became interested in shamanic work. 46:20 Guides are willing to work with more than one person. 49:05 There are all these angels standing around you. 51:35 Giving guides and angels permission to intercede. 53:00 The comfort of being psychic. 57:45 Learning to trust yourself is key to everything else. 1:00:20 Giving a message to the future self. 1:01:40 Links: Laurin's Books: https://amzn.to/3VSoNrc Website: https://www.heartlightjoy.com/ ______________________________________________ Host Jennifer Moore is an author, energy healer, intuitive mentor, master trainer for EFT International, podcast host and founder of The Empathic Mastery Academy. https://www.empathicmasteryacademy.com https://www.empathicmastery.com Get Jen's book Https://empathicmasterybook.com @EmpathicMastery (IG) https://www.instagram.com/EmpathicMastery Join Jen's free FB group for monthly full moon masterclasses and her Empathic Safety Guide at https://www.empathicmastery.com/masterclass
In this episode, we delve into the captivating world of Laurin Wittig, an intuitive energy healer and author. Laurin's personal journey from enduring emotional pain and deteriorating health to discovering happiness and optimal well-being through the guidance of intuitive healers serves as the driving force behind her profound desire to assist others with her own healing gifts. We explore the unique experiences of being a highly sensitive child, growing up constantly afraid of everything, and ultimately finding solace in a support group for students with alcoholic parents. Laurin shares the intriguing paradox of feeling grateful yet grieving simultaneously, as well as her protective instincts towards her children, particularly in relation to her parents, especially her mother. Moreover, we delve into how narcissism is intensified by the need for self-validation. Join us as we unravel Laurin's inspiring journey and gain valuable insights into the power of healing and personal growth. Introduction to Laurin Wittig, intuitive energy healer and author. 0:35 What it was like to be a highly sensitive, highly sensitive child? 1:30 Being afraid of everything as a child. 3:30 Finding a support group for students with alcoholics. 7:45 The paradox of being grateful and still grieving. 10:00 Protective of her children with her parents, especially her mom. 12:25 Narcissism exacerbated by the need to pump herself up. 17:15 The sense of emptiness after her mother died. 23:05 Her relationship with fear shifted when her mother died. 25:45 The impact of being an intellectual woman going through dementia. 30:05 The journey of driving out of the skid. 35:50 How Laurin was identified as an empath by her best friend? 38:40 The first tool she was given as an empath. 40:50 Conditioning of what is fiction and what is non-fiction. 45:30 Fear of success and uncertainty. 50:20 Laurin's relationship with intuition and working with her guides. 52:50 There is so much good that is rising. 54:50 Links: Laurin's Books: https://amzn.to/3VSoNrc Website: https://www.heartlightjoy.com/ ______________________________________________ Host Jennifer Moore is an author, energy healer, intuitive mentor, master trainer for EFT International, podcast host and founder of The Empathic Mastery Academy. https://www.empathicmasteryacademy.com https://www.empathicmastery.com Get Jen's book Https://empathicmasterybook.com @EmpathicMastery (IG) https://www.instagram.com/EmpathicMastery Join Jen's free FB group for monthly full moon masterclasses and her Empathic Safety Guide at https://www.empathicmastery.com/masterclass
This week, Dr. Scott Sigman chats with Dr. James Wittig, an orthopedic surgeon and oncology specialist out of New Jersey. Here, they discuss the complex issue of oncology within orthopedics, especially with children, the procedures and treatment options available, limb-sparing surgeries, and more.
Discover how Michael Wittig overcame adversity and learned to live a life of balance with fitness and music, inspiring others to do the same. Here's what I cover with Michael Wittig in this episode: How did Michael Wittig overcome childhood adversity and a skin cancer diagnosis to become a 7-time magazine cover and multi-fitness champion? What is Michael Wittig's message about steroids and weight training? How did Michael Wittig use music and fitness to positively impact other people's lives? Michael Wittig is a 46-year-old healthy father of four advocating being your best at any age. He is an ISSA-certified trainer, nutritionist, natural pro, 9-time fitness champion, published author, fitness model, Grammy-nominated musician, cancer survivor, and actor. "You can accomplish great things naturally without taking performance-enhancing drugs." Get in touch with Michael: https://www.wittigworks.com/ https://www.instagram.com/wittigworks/ https://www.facebook.com/wittigworks https://twitter.com/WittigWorks Michael's Free Offer: Follow me on Instagram.com/WittigWorks. Pick up one of my free programs at https://www.wittigworks.com/free-ebooks. Get in touch with Jana and listen to more Podcasts: https://www.janashort.com/ Show Music ‘Hold On' by Amy Gerhartz https://www.amygerhartz.com/music. Get Your Copy of Best Holistic Life Magazine! One of the fastest-growing independent magazines centered around holistic living. https://www.bestholisticlife.com/bhl-subscription/ Grab your gift today: https://www.janashort.com/becoming-the-next-influencers-download-offer/ Connect with Jana Short: https://www.janashort.com/contact/
For episode 57, we first head back to Alabama to speak with Hoover head coach John Wiitig. He is a 2016 Hoover grad and has worked his way up from volunteer to junior varsity head coach to varsity assistant coach and now he's been the head coach since 2022. We discussed why he got into coaching, how he delegates game day decision making, and his philosophy on scheduling out of state competition. Flagler assistant coach James Foote joins us for our second interview. We covered his path from coaching NCAA D2 and high school at the same time, to being an MCLA head coach, and ultimately coming back to Florida to coach at Flagler. Coach has been sharing a lot of game clips on twitter recently so we also chatted about his plan of attack for film study. The Lacrosse Playground Podcast Network is presented by Epoch Lacrosse. Website: https://lacrosseplayground.com/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/LaxPlayground Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lacrosseplayground/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/LacrossePlayground/ Discount code: PLAYGROUND15 to save 15% on your first order from Rhoback
Join me as I speak with Laurin Wittig about communicating with your guides. Learn to use the woo in your day-to-day life. Laurin shares specific strategies to put practical spirituality into action.Featured on This Show:Click here to find out how to work with meSign up for your free gift.Laurin WittigLaurin Wittig's passion is in guiding her clients on their journeys out of pain and confusion. With her gifts of intuitive energetic healing and spiritual mentoring, she helps uncover and process the stories that create the pain. The result is a deeper understanding of where they've been and where they want to go emotionally, physically, and spiritually, transforming the limiting stories they have built from their challenges, traumas, and other life experiences, into new stories that empower, uplift, and heal...mind, body, and spirit. Laurin also loves to mentor those who are awakening to, or who are already on, a spiritual path. Her own journey on this path over the better part of a decade has changed her in miraculous ways, and she finds a lot of joy in helping others navigate the journey. She particularly likes to teach how to communicate with spirit guides, communicate with trees, and connect with the energy all around and within us.Website: https://heartlightjoy.comInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/heartlightjoy/
Cullen and Mason chat with Michael Wittig from Pillar. They chat about his work in fitness, the history of Pillar, and what you can expect from Pillar in the future.Check out Pillar here.Follow us on Instagram: instagram.com/theblacksheeppodcastSubscribe to our YouTube channel: youtube.com/@theblacksheeppodcastHM
Aveen chats with Laurin Wittig.Laurin Wittig is an intuitive energy healer and spirituality mentor, the founder of HeartLight Wellness, the host of the Curiously Wise: Practical Spirituality in Action podcast, and an award-winning novelist. Her passion is assisting her clients through their journeys out of mind, body, and/or spiritual distress and into a life of passion, purpose, and joy. Her own journey on this path, which started in 2011, has changed her in miraculous ways, and she finds a lot of joy in helping others navigate their journeys. She also loves to teach how to communicate with spirit guides, commune with trees, and connect with the energy all around and within us. Web site: HeartLightJoy.comFB:https://www.facebook.com/laurin.wittig.3/IG: https://www.instagram.com/heartlightjoy/Gift - "Laurin's Top 3 Ways to Communicate with your Spirit Guides" PDF when you sign up for her newsletter Link:https://heartlightjoy.com/heartlight-newsletter
The Abundance Journey: Accelerating Revenue With An Abundance Mindset
What you're experiencing on the outside, in your everyday world, is a reflection of what's going on inside and what you're feeling in the moment. Guest, Laurin Wittig, talks about the experiential alignment we all need that unites body, mind, and spirit into one holistic being. This level of integration resolves health issues, clears confusion, and helps you get in sync with life. Laurin shares that Abundance is authentically sharing your gifts and making a difference for others because that's when you feel most fulfilled and whole, functioning as your highest self in the moment.About the Guest:Laurin Wittig is an intuitive healer and a mentor to those on or just beginning a spiritual path, the founder of the Heartlight Wise Women Circles, and an award-winning novelist.She loves to combine her healing skills and her story skills to help her clients reveal the stories that no longer serve them in mind, body, or spirit. As healing happens, new stories are discovered, enhancing, and supporting the transformation into a healthier, more joyful, heart-centered life.This is the same journey Laurin took to health and heart-centered purpose. It brings her great joy to be able to assist others on their journeys to joy. Free Gift Link: https://heartlightjoy.com/heartlight-newsletter sign up for Laurin's newsletter and receive a free PDF “Laurin's Top 3 Ways to Communicate with Your Guides”Social Media Links:FB: https://www.facebook.com/laurin.wittig.3/IG: https://www.instagram.com/heartlightjoy/LI: https://www.linkedin.com/in/laurin-wittig-908225240/About the Host, Elaine Starling:An international TEDx speaker, bestselling author, coach and mentor, ElaineStarling is recognized for her video show and podcast, The Abundance Journey.After a comprehensive conversation with our higher power during a stroke, Elaine created The Abundance Journey 6 week course to share what she learned. As theAbundance Ambassador, Elaine mentors spiritual, growth-oriented women to align with Divine guidance to achieve their dreams. Elaine's clients experience more clarity, confidence, and commit to action that achieves their goals.Elaine Starling Social Media Links:Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/elaine.starling1/Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/elainestarling/YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC3eXgwdMYYzLicCEcB1DdrgTEDx Talk, “Abundance Is a Choice” https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tMQ0D4sfEys&t=1sWebsite: www.TheAbundanceJourney.comThanks for listening!Thanks so much for listening to our podcast! If you enjoyed this episode and thinkthat others could benefit from listening, please share it using...
This incredible guest episode with Brittany Wittig is all about embracing your fear so you can take back your power & follow your intuition. Brittany is a cancer survivor turned courage coach. Brittany breaks down how fear is an opportunity to get to know yourself deeper, how to work WITH fear instead of avoiding it, and how to quieten the loud voice of fear to hear + start to follow your intuition. She also shares some tips on differentiating between your fear and your intuition, plus some great actionable steps to take back your power so fear can't control you. Join Brittany's FREE monthly Discover your Inner Superhero workshop here. https://www.brittanywittig.com/superhero Find Brittany on IG: @brittany.wittig Find Hannah on IG: @hannahjohnsoncoaching --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/hannah-easter-johnson/support
As I progress into my midlife years, I've come to its more than a list of symptoms to be cured or endured, it's a transformation. There is beautiful wisdom honed by midlife women, this wisdom can bring clarity, joy and purpose. Getting to that point of understanding can be a journey in itself, a journey that I've been navigating for a couple of years now. It hasn't been easy because our modern way of living has created a divide between our physical and spiritual selves. This is our opportunity to open the conversation and bring midlife women into this circle of wisdom so that together we can create a clearer path for ourselves and for those yet to enter their midlife years. In this episode, I'm chatting with Laurin Wittig, an intuitive healer and mentor, the founder of the Heartlight Wise Women Circles, and an award-winning novelist. Connect with Laurin at www.heartlightjoy.com and on Instagram @heartlightjoy The Curiously Wise podcast is available on Apple Podcasts. To grab your copy of Your Journaling Journey search for it on Amazon or with these links: Canada: https://amzn.to/3ACRHla USA: https://amzn.to/3B0A28l Find your Calm in the Chaos with my FREE 7-day Kick Start Journal https://www.therollercoasterpodcast.com/midlifemomjournal Follow The Roller Coaster: Facebook @therollercoasterpodcast Instagram @the_roller_coaster_podcast Pinterest @EmpoweredMidlifeMoms
As I progress into my midlife years, I've come to its more than a list of symptoms to be cured or endured, it's a transformation. There is beautiful wisdom honed by midlife women, this wisdom can bring clarity, joy and purpose. Getting to that point of understanding can be a journey in itself, a journey that I've been navigating for a couple of years now. It hasn't been easy because our modern way of living has created a divide between our physical and spiritual selves. This is our opportunity to open the conversation and bring midlife women into this circle of wisdom so that together we can create a clearer path for ourselves and for those yet to enter their midlife years. In this episode, I'm chatting with Laurin Wittig, an intuitive healer and mentor, the founder of the Heartlight Wise Women Circles, and an award-winning novelist. Connect with Laurin at www.heartlightjoy.com and on Instagram @heartlightjoy The Curiously Wise podcast is available on Apple Podcasts. To grab your copy of Your Journaling Journey search for it on Amazon or with these links: Canada: https://amzn.to/3ACRHla USA: https://amzn.to/3B0A28l Find your Calm in the Chaos with my FREE 7-day Kick Start Journal https://www.therollercoasterpodcast.com/midlifemomjournal Follow The Roller Coaster: Facebook @therollercoasterpodcast Instagram @the_roller_coaster_podcast Pinterest @EmpoweredMidlifeMoms
Laurin Wittig's passion is to help women recognize and unleash their innate and experiential wisdom - emotional, physical, and spiritual -- so they can bring that wisdom consciously into their lives with confidence and joy. She accomplishes this through HeartLight Wellness, where she provides intuitive healing and transformation mentoring, Wise Women Circles, and the Curiously Wise podcast. Laurin's Website: http://heartlightjoy.com/ Subscribe/Rate/Review the Woman of Value Podcast! ►► Apple Podcasts http://bit.ly/womanofvalue ►► Spotify http://bit.ly/wovspotify ►► Stitcher http://bit.ly/wovstitcher or wherever you listen to podcasts! ►► Get a copy of Sandy's book, Becoming a Woman of Value; How to Thrive in Life and Love https://bit.ly/womanofvaluebook
Activating the Power of the Heart with Laurin WittigIn this episode we get curious about:Activating the heart chakra for healing and compassionFocusing your energy through breathingFinding forgivenessTo learn more about our guest: Website: https://heartlightjoy.comFB: https://www.facebook.com/laurin.wittig.3IG: https://www.instagram.com/heartlightjoy/Wisdom: @laurin-Wittig (phone app only)Offer: Laurin's Top 3 Ways to Communicate With Your Guides PDF download: https://heartlightjoy.com/heartlight-newsletterBooks: https://heartlightjoy.com/booksCreditsPhotography & Design: https://ashamclaughlin.wixsite.com/tejartMusic: Where the Light Is by Lemon Music StudioProducer: Arlene MembrotAudio Engineer: Sam WittigTo learn more about Laurin Wittig and her work: https://HeartLightJoy.comCopyright 2023 Laurin Wittig Transcript Here
Elle s'appelait Monique. Lesbienne, écrivain, militante et une des fondatrices du MLF, elle n'apparaissait pas aux côtés de ses contemporaines au Panthéon des féministes françaises. Jusqu'à ce que la quatrième vague du féminisme et le militantisme sur les réseaux sociaux portent aux nues sa pensée politique. Qui était celle qui a un jour affirmé que « les lesbiennes ne sont pas des femmes » ? À l'occasion du 20ème anniversaire de la mort de Monique Wittig, on vous propose de découvrir — ou redécouvrir — un épisode du podcast Camille animé par Camille Regache et produit par Binge Audio. Cet entretien a été enregistré en public, lors du Binge Audio Festival de juillet 2021 avec la journaliste Clémence Allezard, qui a signé pour l'émission de France Culture Une vie, une œuvre le portrait d'une guerillère qui l'obsède, « Monique Wittig, (1935–2003), écrivain et lesbienne révolutionnaire ». Camille est un podcast de Binge Audio animé par Camille Regache. Cet épisode a été enregistré le 10 juillet 2021 lors du Binge Audio Festival à Wonderland (Paris, 12e). Musique : Solène Moulin. Prise de son et réalisation : Mathieu Thévenon. Production : Lorraine Besse et Anaïs Daïkha. Edition : Camille Regache. Identité graphique : Sébastien Brothier (Upian). Direction des programmes : Joël Ronez. Direction de la rédaction : David Carzon. Direction générale : Gabrielle Boeri-Charles. Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.
Beth Wittig Clayton with Mark Fisher Fitness helps you to stop sabotaging yourself Episode 2107: How to Avoid Sabotaging Yourself (To Be Accepted) by Beth Wittig Clayton Mark Fisher Fitness helps people who hate gyms find a fitness home they actually love. They offer classes, semi-private training, and six week transformation programs. Whether you've tried everything and never found a love match, or never even been to a gym at all, look no further. The original post is located here: https://markfisherfitness.com/how-to-avoid-sabotaging-yourself-to-be-accepted/ Visit Me Online at OLDPodcast.com Interested in advertising on the show? https://www.advertisecast.com/OptimalFinanceDaily Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In this episode, Kimberly Spencer interviews an exceptional intuitive healer and Kindle top 10 bestselling award-winning author, Laurin Wittig. This episode is for you if you want to know how to claim your power with podcasts easily. Laurin Wittig is the catalyst for launching the communication agency because of the transformation that comes from profiting from guest podcasting. Like every other business owner under the Communication Queens Agency Program, Laurin Wittig transformed her business and claimed her power, confidence, and authenticity to build her relationship as a leader/ business owner with innovative tools to connect on a deeper level with her children and her team. That is the power that comes from claiming your power. If you want to transform your life and claim your power, this episode got you covered. #CommunicationQueens #GuestPodcasting #ProfitFromPodcastGuesting
Brittany Wittig is a passionate courage coach who guides people on how to change their relationship with fear and follow the voice of their intuition. Brittany firmly believes that changing your relationship with fear is the fastest way to create massive change in your life. Listen in to discover how you can cultivate courage, shift your relationship with fear and finally begin living a deeply fulfilling life. Learn the exact courageous framework Brittany used to face a cancer diagnosis and permanently change her relationship with fear. What You'll Learn: - Brittany's journey to becoming a courage coach - Battling cancer diagnosis: the intersection between fear and healing - How to address the root cause of your fear - Mistakes people make when tackling their fear - The benefits of having a “fear buddy” - The fear of money and how to overcome it - How to use intuition to release fear - Signs you're listening to your fear, not your intuition - Effective ways to feel more courageous - Brittany's intuition experiment and the right ways to follow your intuition The one thing stopping most people from achieving anything in life is fear. Fear is what's preventing you from working toward what you want, and what allows you to make excuses. This is why Brittany believes learning to overcome fear is one of the most liberating pursuits you can undertake. The bravest people are not those who do not feel afraid but those who move on despite it. Links and Resources: - Brittany's Website - https://www.brittanywittig.com/ - Connect with Brittany via Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/brittany.wittig/ - Subscribe to my new weekly newsletter, Boring Sh*t, that breaks down the most important (and boring) financial headlines every business owner needs to understand https://work.kellymosser.com/newsletter - Follow me on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/kelly.mosser/ - My website https://kellymosser.com/
In this episode of Intelligence Matters, host Michael Morell speaks with Peter Wittig, Germany's former ambassador to the United States, United Kingdom, Lebanon, Cyprus and the United Nations, about foreign perceptions of the United States at pivotal historical moments. Wittig and Morell trace the evolution of America's standing in the eyes of the world from the end of the World Wars to the end of the Cold War, through the period following 9/11, the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, to today. Wittig offers insights on the effect of the Trump administration's "America First" policy on global alliances and shares his view on the Biden administration's effort to rally global support for Ukraine before and during Russia's invasion. Wittig and Morell also discuss how its domestic instability may undermine America's credibility and ability to lead. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.