35 Burst results for "Emory"

Former President Jimmy Carter enters hospice care at 98, charity says

AP News Radio

00:41 sec | 3 months ago

Former President Jimmy Carter enters hospice care at 98, charity says

"Former president Jimmy Carter's entering home hospice care at the age of 98. The Carter centers announced that Jimmy Carter after a series of hospitalizations has decided to spend his remaining time at home with his family instead of any additional medical intervention. In 2021 he joined other former presidents in a video encouraging people to get the COVID vaccine. Now it's up to you. In 2019 at Emory university, Carter joked about running for another term, but decided at 95 he was too old. To be able to go from one subject to another and concentrate on each one, adequately, and then put them all together in a comprehensive way like I did between begging

Jimmy Carter Carter Centers Emory University Carter
How Higher Education Has Gone Awry With Mark Bauerlein

The Dinesh D'Souza Podcast

01:58 min | 6 months ago

How Higher Education Has Gone Awry With Mark Bauerlein

"I'm delighted to welcome to the podcast Mark Bauer line. Mark is emeritus Professor of English at Emory university in an editor at first things magazine. His latest book is the dumbest generation grows up from stupefied youth to dangerous adults. Mark, thanks for joining me. Well, I'm happy to be here. Glad to be here, in fact. Oh, great. Well, I'm such a big fan of first things. I went to one of their conferences, one of the ones where they do like a deep dive. I saw the recent one this year was on death. I think I went to one a couple years ago, but yeah, they have such great such great content, such great things there. What inspired you to want to dive into the topic of the dumbest generation grows up because you've seen very smart. Well, you know, I was a college teacher for a long time, an English teacher at Emory university, and I saw during the aughts, you know, the 90s, in an English department, you always had these bookish kids, you know, they grew up reading Hemingway or Jane Austen and they wanted to get more and they really found a lot of their identity, their lives, through these characters. In fiction, they might have had a great high school English teacher. And what I saw over the odds is actually what everyone saw. This transfer of young people from being print readers to screen watchers. They suddenly had all these new tools flood into their lives. And, you know, Facebook came along 2005 O 6, Twitter came along in 2008. All the iPhone and then the Instagram, the chatting, the texting, the photo, and everything. And what we saw was the gradual diminishment of that literary education, the literary sensibility of young people, and I said, way back in 2008, this first domus generation book was, this is a terrible formation

Mark Bauer Emory University Mark Jane Austen Hemingway Facebook Twitter
Helicopter Parenting Does Not Raise Children to Be Adults

Dennis Prager Podcasts

01:57 min | 10 months ago

Helicopter Parenting Does Not Raise Children to Be Adults

"A massive outbreak of narcissism with among young people. It's not an attack on young people. It's a description. If anything, it's an attack on. So sorry, there was a technical clit for a second. So I have to restart here. Most families have been one or two children, and as a result, parents have devoted massive amounts of time to their to their child or children. Well, in either case to their child. You know, the term helicopter parent, it's hard to imagine aside from actual abuse, a more destructive idea than the helicopter parent. The task of a parent is to raise an adult and very few parents have thought about that, they thought their task is to shower their child with attention and love. And that's not how you make an adult, an adult meaning an independent human being. Once again, the Bible is so much wiser than Harvard, Yale, Princeton, Stanford, Berkeley, University of Michigan university of Wisconsin. Emory, duke, all put together and therefore managed to leave his mother and father, though father and mother. Yeah. And clinging to his wife and they shall be as one flesh. You have to leave your parents. To be able to love properly. To become an adult, and that's not what has been prepared.

University Of Michigan Univers Yale Princeton Harvard Stanford Emory Berkeley Duke
Eric Shares His Journey With Chronic Fatigue Syndrome

The Eric Metaxas Show

01:46 min | 1 year ago

Eric Shares His Journey With Chronic Fatigue Syndrome

"Would you be willing to discuss the health issues you battled and how you overcame that? No. All right. Just this once. Yeah, no, for 30 years, I had quote unquote chronic fatigue syndrome, which is kind of like I feel really crummy syndrome. They don't know what it is, so they call it chronic fatigue syndrome but for many, many years, for decades, I struggled. I still struggle to some extent. And I went to a zillion doctors, and yesterday on the program was, yeah, yesterday. I interviewed doctor Hamlin emery. He was the one to really be able to help me. But it's kind of complicated. It's lime stuff, Epstein Barr stuff. It was really awful. And it took years of productivity from me, a lot of suffering, a lot of difficulties. How did I overcome them? Well, one way overcame them was by visiting doctor Hamlin Emory. That's number one. Number two, I began exercising when you have chronic fatigue, a lot of times when you exercise you get really sick. So you say, okay, I'm not going to do that anymore. But at some point, I said, I'm going to exercise a little bit every day, every other day. But I'm not going to quit. I'm not going to do too much, and then stop. I'm just going to do a little bit a little bit till I can make myself stronger and stronger. And that actually worked. And running regularly was a big part of my getting back. Because in the beginning, I couldn't really run. I would get sick, but just walk and run and walk and run. Just do that. So that was a part of it. But there are all kinds of things. And I still struggle with this kind of stuff, but so it's been difficult, but Hamlin Emory was a big piece

Fatigue Syndrome Hamlin Emery Epstein Barr Hamlin Emory
"emory" Discussed on The Eric Metaxas Show

The Eric Metaxas Show

05:58 min | 1 year ago

"emory" Discussed on The Eric Metaxas Show

"I'd like to think that this would be the beginning of a revolution in the right direction. We have a final segment, the book folks, hard to swallow from superstition and psychiatry by doctor Hamlin Emory, and you can find him at doctor Emory dot com. It's DR. EM O RY dot com will be right back. Take me home rock the baby. Hey there folks, final segment with my friend doctor Hamlin. Emory. So doctor Emory, you said to me, you're willing to teach people how to do this. I just, you know, I wish I were a young person involved in medicine. I would leap at that because I just the success that you have seen, you know, a lot of times the problem is communication. You can have success, whatever. But if no one knows about it, then the word doesn't get out and other people don't. So that's one of the reasons I wanted to have you on here because I thought everybody has a brain. Everyone has brainwaves. This is not some rare strange thing. It almost anybody who has any kind of problems could potentially be helped by this. Could be helped by this. And that's why I'm such an advocate of it. And I'm kind of just amazed that not more people know how to do it. Well, I have been talking to one of the persons on the faculty at UCLA and I've known her for a couple of decades and I'm going to initiate a conversation with the department head and his assistant by having her introduce me as I think I only have maybe four or 5 additional years of work and my body, I think I'm good for another four to 5 years. And I want to bequeath this to some organization with UCLA or USC. It has to be some large institution in Los Angeles because that's where I live. I'm going to do that. And we'll see if there are interested young people. On the faculty at either of those institutions well, I mean, if anybody reads the book hard to swallow from superstition and psychiatry, they can't help but be compelled by the stories. That these are case after case of strange situations and what you bring to bear on it, you solve these problems. And how do you not get happy about that? I mean, it's what's kept you going, is that it works. That's true. That's true. I can think, for example, of a number of outliers, people whose treatment would violate the psychiatric model, people who have normalized with Ritalin or one of the so called stimulating medicines, medicines which increase voltage in the alertness frequencies, those people suffer terribly because their treatments are sometimes 180° in the wrong direction due to the lack of a physiologic marker, such as EEG, so that psychiatrists can select medication for each individual rather than selecting medication by linking the treatment to symptoms and behavior symptoms and behaviors are not valid antecedents for prescribing medication for the human brain. I think we'll leave it there. I want to say publicly, thank you to Richard and Pam scurry for introducing me to doctor Hamlin, Emory, who genuinely changed my life. I thank God for you, doctor emery. Thanks also for your time. For your willingness to talk about this. Thanks. Thank you. Is it acceptable to go to Mickey D's just for a drink? Of course it is. But good luck leaving with just a drink. It's more than a drink. It's a Mickey D's drink. And right now, a small minute maid slushie is just one 59. So all you have to do is choose a flavor. Like the tropical mango, or strawberry watermelon, and enjoy, like it's meant to be enjoyed. Prices and participation may vary can not be combined with any other offer..

Hamlin Emory Hamlin UCLA Emory USC Mickey D Pam scurry Los Angeles emery Richard
You Can Achieve Miracles With the Right Doctor

The Eric Metaxas Show

01:15 min | 1 year ago

You Can Achieve Miracles With the Right Doctor

"All right, we've got a lot of ground to cover talking to doctor Hamlin emery, the book is hard to swallow from superstition and psychiatry. Okay, you said in the break that when you're neck problem was corrected and your head gets straight and you lose this weight. It changed your whole view of yourself. And I guess what you're saying in effect is that you can achieve miracles with people when the right doctor or when the right procedure, you can change people's lives. And that's what you have been doing. In other words, this happened to you as a young man, but you've now been doing that. And I also want to say that your wife, Virginia, was saying that you don't just do EEGs, you do a full physical. So you're doing all of that stuff, but the bottom line, again, I'm summing up because this is kind of complicated. But you really do believe that once you get somebody's vitals and all this information plus the EEG, you're able often to see something that others have not seen. You're able to put your finger on something. And you tell the story in hard to swallow. Lives have been changed. I mean, you have absolutely been able to change lives

Hamlin Emery Virginia
"emory" Discussed on The Eric Metaxas Show

The Eric Metaxas Show

04:19 min | 1 year ago

"emory" Discussed on The Eric Metaxas Show

"Okay, so but at what point I should mention this to my audience, the book you've written, it's titled hard to swallow from superstition to psychiatry. Hard to swallow by doctor Hamlin Emory. Excuse me, I think, how do you, at what point did you, as a doctor? What kind of a doctor were you before you got involved in what you're doing right now? The general medical doctor. The GP. And at what point did something happen to get you started on reading EEGs, electroencephalograms, and doing what you now do? When did that happen for you? I think it was the result of my experience as a general medical doctor in charge of a naval hospital in Italy. At the time, I was attempting to help active duty military personnel and their families. And so some of the persons had mental problems, they had or behavioral problems. And so I began to invite such persons into my office and I began to discuss their concerns in more detail and that became appealing to me. So I began to think about possibly becoming a psychiatrist, I also had the benefit of a psychiatrist of some renowned and he was an expert in drug. And alcohol addiction and I he became a mentor of mine. I would use that. It was Joseph purse. Joseph Joseph, do you see? And he was a very congenial and erudite gentleman who was in charge of naval hospital in Naples. And so I would fly up occasionally to Naples and make rounds with him. And I did this, maybe once every month. In this case, you interested in psychiatry. Well, part of the reason that I wanted to talk to you is because part of what made me happy to have met you was not just that you have this new way of dealing with things and that you helped me significantly. But you actually care. You actually took the trouble to try to figure out what most other doctors had. I think been not interested enough in taking the time to figure out. They kind of throw some stuff at you, then they try something else, and then they sort of shuffle you off somehow. They're not really committed to helping you. They're not committed to figuring it out. And that's what I saw in you. And that's as I read your book. And again, folks the book is called hard to swallow from superstition to psychiatry. In hard to swallow, you tell some of these cases where nothing else had worked and you dig a little deeper. And ultimately, correct me if I'm summing things up incorrectly. But you determined that everyone's brain is unique, and that you can't throw the same solutions at every problem because some people's brain chemistry, which you see with these brainwaves. You say, no, no, no, this won't work for you. You need to try this. And our friend Richard scurry, he had heart issues, and he was on a certain medication. And so doctors throw these medications at you and what you do is you say, wait a moment, based on your brain chemistry based on the EEGs, that won't be good for you. That can cause other problems. You need to try this or this or this. We're going to go to.

Hamlin Emory Naples Joseph Joseph Italy Joseph Richard scurry
Dr. Hamlin Emory on His Journey to a Career in Psychiatry

The Eric Metaxas Show

01:58 min | 1 year ago

Dr. Hamlin Emory on His Journey to a Career in Psychiatry

"Book you've written, it's titled hard to swallow from superstition to psychiatry. Hard to swallow by doctor Hamlin Emory. Excuse me, I think, how do you, at what point did you, as a doctor? What kind of a doctor were you before you got involved in what you're doing right now? The general medical doctor. The GP. And at what point did something happen to get you started on reading EEGs, electroencephalograms, and doing what you now do? When did that happen for you? I think it was the result of my experience as a general medical doctor in charge of a naval hospital in Italy. At the time, I was attempting to help active duty military personnel and their families. And so some of the persons had mental problems, they had or behavioral problems. And so I began to invite such persons into my office and I began to discuss their concerns in more detail and that became appealing to me. So I began to think about possibly becoming a psychiatrist, I also had the benefit of a psychiatrist of some renowned and he was an expert in drug. And alcohol addiction and I he became a mentor of mine. I would use that. It was Joseph purse.

Hamlin Emory Italy Joseph
"emory" Discussed on The Eric Metaxas Show

The Eric Metaxas Show

03:10 min | 1 year ago

"emory" Discussed on The Eric Metaxas Show

"Let's get specific. There are many stories in your book. So I hope people will get the book hard to swallow from superstition and psychiatry, but there's a story in your book, chapter 13 titled your two emotional. Every one of these stories is a classic case. Somebody comes in with a problem. It's been a chronic problem. You are able to see something that no one else saw. And in fact, you're correct and you solve the problem. What's the case? This is a woman named Victoria. Something like 20 years ago came into your office. Having episodic seizures and she was treated in a standard way with a series of anti seizure medications. The problem with most of the anti seizure medications is it decreases amplitude in the human EEG and lowers the frequencies of the alertness domain. No one knows what you just alert, but we're not interested. So the downside and so somebody comes in and says, I have periodic seizures and the doctor throws them pills that you says here. Take these anti seizure pills. And what you're saying is these antecedent pills have significant downside, which the doctor, the doctor is everything is a nail because the doctor is a hammer. And he says, this is the problem. This will fix the problem. Without regard to the fact that this will cause other problems. Well, the usual customary anti seizure or anti epileptic medications reduce voltages and speed in the alertness frequencies for a person who has seizures, but needs to have their voltages in their alertness frequencies increased, the usual seizure medications make that type of person worse. And so they have what's called side effects. They become sleepy, they become less cognitively clear, and they can become highly dysphoric. They can gain weight. Because the metabolism is slowed. So you're pretty much talking about the United States of America. We have hundreds of millions of people on all kinds of medications with all kinds of downsides without doctors willing to look into whether these are optimal medications for them. True. So that's the problem. I think the medical delivery system would markedly improve the general health of the public if there were. EEGs done before treatment and that, however, it would take a paradigm shift. It would require paradigm shift..

seizures Victoria United States of America
"emory" Discussed on The Eric Metaxas Show

The Eric Metaxas Show

05:08 min | 1 year ago

"emory" Discussed on The Eric Metaxas Show

"And then what happened? Well, I noticed something from the moment I returned home, and what I noticed had not been anticipated by the surgeon, but I noticed that my visual field tilted downhill to the left. Okay, so your brain did not correct. Your brain was still stuck on my head is tilted. It had established itself that way. So when they fix the physical thing, the brain is still perceiving things. That's right, because when I became orthogonal or 90°, which is what is normal, and everyone takes for granted, then reality tilted downhill to the to the left. We're going to go to a break, didn't realize it. We'll be right back. Hey there folks, Eric metaxas here. As you know, our friend and he's a real friend, Mike lindell has a passion to help everyone get the best sleep of their life, but he didn't stop by simply creating the best pillow now Mike has done it again by introducing his my slippers, my slippers, they're unbelievable. I know all about them, but I got to tell you for a limited time you will save $90 on each pair of my slippers. They're expensive. You can save $90. This blowout sale of the year won't last order. Now he's taken over two years to develop them. The my slippers are designed to wear indoors and out all day long made with my pillow foam and impact gel to help prevent fatigue made with quality leather suede call one 809 7 8 three O 5 7 used the promo code Eric. We're going to my pillow dot com click on the radio listeners square and use promo code Eric, the offer will not last long, so order now with promo code Eric at my pillow dot com or call 809 7 8 three O 5 7 809 7 8 three O 5 7. Folks, welcome back. I'm talking to my friend doctor Hamlin, Emory, so doctor Emory, here describing what got you started on this path. And so you just described that as a ten year old, your head was askew. You had a problem. It's corrected surgically. Now, your head is straight on, but your brain is still sideways. But how does that at age ten affect? How did that affect what you did in the future as a doctor? I'm not clear on that. Well, I was, I was thinking introspectively, I was observing the fact that. Though my head was 90°. And erect, what happened what I found was that my visual field tilted downhill to the left somewhat. I didn't measure it, but it was noticeable to me. And I reasoned that there are orthopedic surgeons wouldn't be interested in it. I didn't want my parents to just extremely brainy. You were arrogant. A ten year old who thinks he knows better than the orthopedic surgeon. Don't you find this funny? Now that you're 80 or whatever, don't you find it funny that the ten year old you is perceiving it this way? Yes, but I'm like that. I'm like that. So women's intuition. So you didn't tell your surgeon what was happening? Did your brain eventually correct this? Yes. Of course it did. How long did it take? About two years, a little less than two years ago. Two years for your brain to catch up with this. Isn't this just crazy? Two years to become orthogonal. Which is at least it's evidence of the plasticity of the brain. Correct. But it is also evidence that plasticity can take a while. Can, but I've only had an end of one myself, okay? I didn't know anyone else who had done this, obviously. I still knew there were anybody who does. Okay, but for my audience who doesn't know you, you now, you have spent decades dealing with the brain. That's true. And I guess this was your inciting incident, 70 years ago, that got you kicked off into thinking about these things. But you were a doctor for a time in Vietnam. Yes. You were in Vietnam in the 70s. It was a Marine Corps with the marines. And after doing that, I was rewarded by being made the medical director of a hospital in Italy. The hospital is still operative. It's cigarette naval air base. That was their idea of a reward. Yes. It sounds like it sounds like being a doctor in Italy would be pretty good actually, right? Because it could be worse..

Eric metaxas Mike lindell Hamlin askew Emory Mike Eric Vietnam Marine Corps marines Italy
"emory" Discussed on The Eric Metaxas Show

The Eric Metaxas Show

01:37 min | 1 year ago

"emory" Discussed on The Eric Metaxas Show

"Doctor Hamlin, Emory, you can find him at doctor Emory dot com. That's what we do I want to do hey there folks, Eric metaxas here. As you know, our friend and he's a real friend, Mike lindell has a passion to help everyone get the best sleep of their life, but he didn't stop by simply creating the best pillow now Mike has done it again by introducing his my slippers, my slippers, they're unbelievable. I know all about them, but I got to tell you for a limited time you will save $90 on each pair of my slippers. They're expensive. You can save $90. This blowout sale of the year won't last order. Now he's taken over two years to develop them. The my slippers are designed to wear indoors and out all day long made with my pillow foam and impact gel to help prevent fatigue made with quality leather suede call one 809 7 8 three O 5 7 use the promo code Eric. Or go to my pillow dot com, click on the radio listeners square and use promo code Eric. The offer will not last long, so order now with promo code Eric at my pillow dot com or call 809 7 8 three O 5 7 809 7 8 three O 5 7. Folks, welcome back, talking to doctor Hamlin emery, you can find him at doctor emery, it's DR, DR, EM O RY dot com. Let's.

Eric metaxas Mike lindell Hamlin Mike Eric Hamlin emery
"emory" Discussed on The Eric Metaxas Show

The Eric Metaxas Show

03:36 min | 1 year ago

"emory" Discussed on The Eric Metaxas Show

"Hey there folks, I continue my conversation with doctor Hamlin Emory and doctor emery. I want to read something from your book. The book is hard to swallow from superstition and psychiatry. Lots of fascinating stories in here. The quote is a healthy brain automatically balances itself and the body 24/7, yet inherited differences in brain function can impair these interactions and cause persistent distress. The method that you use uses measurable biological parameters and thus is a fact driven way to improve brain function that has caused physical illness, learning problems, substance dependence or mental disorder, each person's treatment is personalized and selected to achieve brain body balance. Part of the problem is that what you do can help so many different kinds of problems. I mean, here, in this quote alone, it says physical illness, learning problems, substance dependence, or a mental disorder. In other words, because our brains are at the root of everything, there are so many problems that can stem from these abnormalities. From this variances from these variances, I prefer the more positive, more positive way of putting it. And but this is concrete stuff. This is not, it's not a guessing game. It's not, you're not a witch doctor. You're looking at numbers, you have this huge database of asymptomatic brain function that you look at and you say, this is what's normal. Somebody comes in, they've got certain problems, whatever they are, and you look at everything, and then you say, well, these numbers are off. This may be a clue to your symptoms. You also talk about how Freud, in other words, how we got to this problem where psychiatry has become, in many ways, almost a kind of superstition. Freud separated the mind from the body. And the widespread adoption of Freudian psychoanalysis and other psychological constructs about human nature have presumed that brain function is the same across human populations. In other words, if that were the case, then you've got nowhere to go, except where Freud goes. But what you're saying is, they have ignored the most basic things that whatever problems you have. First, they should look at what is your EEG, what are your symptoms? Once they've looked at that as medical doctors, that should be the first thing that they look at as a clue to your problem. And most people have learned not to do that. Yes. The medical profession has, in fact, ignored common differences in functional brain activity that exists across populations. And ultimately, I think that what I do should be a specialty in what's called family medicine or general medicine. In other words, a lot more people need to know how to do that. Yes. Now, you teach this. If people want to learn how to do this, if a doctor wants to learn what you do, you would teach them. Sure. I wish there were more of you. But there's just you..

Hamlin Emory Freud emery mental disorder
"emory" Discussed on The Eric Metaxas Show

The Eric Metaxas Show

02:13 min | 1 year ago

"emory" Discussed on The Eric Metaxas Show

"Hey there folks, as promised, I have a very, very special guest today. Very few people intimidate me. But doctor Hamlin Emory does, he's sitting right here doing it right now. Doctor emery, welcome. Thank you, Eric. You operate on the left coast, you're rarely in New York. So I'm thrilled that you're in New York. I said, if you ever get to New York, I want to bring you on the program to talk about what it is that you do. But I was glad that just last night, Alvin and I were talking about this, you and Virginia were there to see some of what I do, which is Socrates in the city. Have you recovered from that? No, I endured it. It was extremely interesting. Inspirational. I know. And I wish the video were up. It takes time to get that edited and everything. But there were so many people I was saying from out of town. A number of people from California, Minnesota, so anyway, I was just thrilled that you were you were there. I want to talk about what you do. In the introduction a moment ago, I was trying to explain it to my audience. It says here, I can read the official description of who you are. Doctor Hamlin emery, practices child adult neuro psychiatry using lab tests, medical history, and EEG, Q, EEG profiles, to effectively treat mental distress. Let me translate that and then you respond because that's the main thing I want to talk about is what it is that you do. I was mentioning earlier a number of years ago our Friends, the scurries contacted me and so we've got this doctor for you and at first I was reluctant because everybody's got a doctor for you. If you're suffering from something, everybody's got cheap, easy answers. And they tend not to be aware that everybody else has cheap easy answers. They think they're the only ones. And so in this case, though, it happened to have a very happy ending because what you do helped me very

emery Richmond Virginia
Eric Welcomes Dr. Hamlin Emory to the Show

The Eric Metaxas Show

02:13 min | 1 year ago

Eric Welcomes Dr. Hamlin Emory to the Show

"Hey there folks, as promised, I have a very, very special guest today. Very few people intimidate me. But doctor Hamlin Emory does, he's sitting right here doing it right now. Doctor emery, welcome. Thank you, Eric. You operate on the left coast, you're rarely in New York. So I'm thrilled that you're in New York. I said, if you ever get to New York, I want to bring you on the program to talk about what it is that you do. But I was glad that just last night, Alvin and I were talking about this, you and Virginia were there to see some of what I do, which is Socrates in the city. Have you recovered from that? No, I endured it. It was extremely interesting. Inspirational. I know. And I wish the video were up. It takes time to get that edited and everything. But there were so many people I was saying from out of town. A number of people from California, Minnesota, so anyway, I was just thrilled that you were you were there. I want to talk about what you do. In the introduction a moment ago, I was trying to explain it to my audience. It says here, I can read the official description of who you are. Doctor Hamlin emery, practices child adult neuro psychiatry using lab tests, medical history, and EEG, Q, EEG profiles, to effectively treat mental distress. Let me translate that and then you respond because that's the main thing I want to talk about is what it is that you do. I was mentioning earlier a number of years ago our Friends, the scurries contacted me and so we've got this doctor for you and at first I was reluctant because everybody's got a doctor for you. If you're suffering from something, everybody's got cheap, easy answers. And they tend not to be aware that everybody else has cheap easy answers. They think they're the only ones. And so in this case, though, it happened to have a very happy ending because what you do helped me very

Hamlin Emory New York Emery Hamlin Emery Alvin Socrates Eric Virginia Minnesota California
"emory" Discussed on The Eric Metaxas Show

The Eric Metaxas Show

01:48 min | 1 year ago

"emory" Discussed on The Eric Metaxas Show

"P.m. investments dot com. Hey there folks, as promised, I have a very, very special guest today. Very few people intimidate me. But doctor Hamlin Emory does, he's sitting right here doing it right now. Doctor emery, welcome. Thank you, Eric. You operate on the left coast, you're rarely in New York. So I'm thrilled that you're in New York. I said, if you ever get to New York, I want to bring you on the program to talk about what it is that you do. But I was glad that just last night, Alvin and I were talking about this, you and Virginia were there to see some of what I do, which is Socrates in the city. Have you recovered from that? No, I endured it. It was extremely interesting. Inspirational. I know. And I wish the video were up. It takes time to get that edited and everything. But there were so many people I was saying from out of town. A number of people from California, Minnesota, so anyway, I was just thrilled that you were you were there. I want to talk about what you do. In the introduction a moment ago, I was trying to explain it to my audience. It says here, I can read the official description of who you are. Doctor Hamlin emery, practices child adult neuro psychiatry using lab tests, medical history, and EEG, Q, EEG profiles, to effectively treat mental distress..

Hamlin Emory New York emery Alvin Eric Socrates Virginia Minnesota Hamlin emery California
"emory" Discussed on The Eric Metaxas Show

The Eric Metaxas Show

02:24 min | 1 year ago

"emory" Discussed on The Eric Metaxas Show

"Say, we will get it up. Now, there's always after the Socrates event. We have a patrons dinner because a number of people have written checks to make it possible for us to do this because the $100 ticket or whatever we charge. It never covers it because we've got to film it. We've got to do all this. We've got staff. So at the patrons dinner, people get to ask him some questions. And a couple people said, when you were on the moon, did you, what was it like sleeping on the moon? And did you dream? And good question. He said, nope, I didn't dream. But he shared some crazy stuff. And then, but then he says, but you know what? I was on the island of Maui or something like a year or two before we went to the moon. Like I knew that I was going to be an Apollo 16. And he shared something. And I think he shocked all of us. There were 40 people at the patrons dinner, and he said, I had a dream that I was on the moon in the lunar rover, which is the car that they drove up to this dune buggy. And he goes, I was with my partner young, whatever who was driving this thing. And he says, we came upon a set of tracks, this is a dream that he had like a year or two before going to the moon and actually doing this, right? He says, we came upon a set of tracks, and we contacted Houston, and we said, we found some tracks here. And we filed the tracks, and we found a lunar vehicle just like ours with two people in it. And we walked over to it, and we looked in, and he says, and it was me dead. Oh, gosh. That's wild. Now, when he shared this, I thought, this is a Twilight Zone. Twilight Zone. Yep. That's what it sounds like. This is a dream that he had over a year before he went to the moon. So it was totally vivid. And he said, so when he shared it the whole table, we were a God listening to this. Because I thought, to me, it seems like kind of a demonic thing, right? You have a dream like that. You think, well, I'm not going to the moon. I'm going to die up there. But he shared some stuff like that. Anyway, look, when we come back, we've got our friend doctor Hamlin, emery. And by the way, you get $50 because you said a gog. A God. It's one of those words. We have doctor Hamlin, Emory, who was there last night, and I'm excited to talk to him. But we will get the Socrates in the city stuff up ASAP folks. It was really next level. It was astonishing. So.

Maui Houston Hamlin emery Emory
"emory" Discussed on The Eric Metaxas Show

The Eric Metaxas Show

06:30 min | 1 year ago

"emory" Discussed on The Eric Metaxas Show

"John Muir. All right, we'll be right back. Tell me Eric, why is relief factor so successful at lowering or eliminating pain? I'm often asked that question, the owners of relief factor tell me they believe our bodies were designed to heal. That's right, designed to heal, and I agree with them. So the doctors who formulated relief factor for them selected the four best ingredients, yes, 100% drug free ingredients, each helps your body deal with inflammation. Each of the four ingredients deals with inflammation from a different metabolic pathway, and that right there approaching from four different angles may be why so many people find such wonderful relief. So if you've got back pain, shoulder neck hip knee or foot pain from exercise or just getting older, you should order the three week quick start discounted to only 1995 to see if it will work for you. It works for me. It has for about 70% of the half a million people who've tried it and have ordered more, go to relief factor dot com or call 800 for relief to find out about this offer, feel the difference. Hey folks, if you could make money off of abortion or pornography, would you do it? I hope the answer is no. But I want to tell you, Robert netze, the founder of inspire insight dot com, he was the president of his local pro life pregnancy center. When he discovered that he owned investments in three companies manufacturing abortion drugs, well, God helped him to see that he was making money from abortion pornography LGBT activism and the list goes on. And that's why he created inspire insight dot com, inspire insight dot com. It gives you instant access to biblical values data on over 23,000 stocks mutual funds and ETFs. So you can invest to the glory of God. You need to go to inspire insight dot com today and screen your four-o-one-ks IRAs and other investment accounts. I did and I was shocked. Now I'm able to clean out the junk and invest in companies actually doing good things go to inspire insight dot com today and register for free that's inspire insight dot com go there. Take a look at my girlfriend you're the only one I got the most of the Friends made it folks. Welcome back. It's Wednesday. June 1st, it's hard for me to believe it's June 1st. It's very hard for me to believe that it's June 1st, but it is. It is. It's Wednesday. And Alvin, we, in a few minutes, doctor Hamlin Emory will be my guest for the rest of the day. And I want to say again, folks, I don't want to say this in front of him because I don't want to embarrass him. He's a very diffident, gentlemanly person. He changed my life. He's an amazing doctor. And what he does, nobody does, and I said, I want you to come in my program because people need to hear about this. Where does he practice now? Because I looked up his bio. And I thought it said something like that. He doesn't even practice anymore. He just does it. Oh, he just doesn't. Yeah, he's that good. He's in like LA, basically. Oh, he's I thought it was out late. Yeah, he's an ally. But I was going to say that so he'll be my guest. But I want to go over a little bit last night. Now, we didn't know who was going to be there because it's a weird when you do something the day after Memorial Day. Yes, right. A lot of people have just impossible for them to be there. So we still had a very good crowd, but it was just a weird thing. The Giuliani's were going to be there. They couldn't be there. Larry kudlow was supposed to be there. He couldn't be. It kind of gets crazy. But there were a lot of surprise guests. I mean, you never know who will be in a Socrates in the city audience. So a lot of wonderful people showed up. We thought that Buzz Aldrin or something might show up because his pal were there, but well, you know something, that's one of the things that I found interesting because Charlie's wife, Dorothy was there. And today, June 1st, they celebrate their 59th wedding anniversary. So it was so wonderful to meet her. And their son, Tom was there. And so it was kind of interesting. But one of the things I found funny is that Charlie was saying his kids everywhere he goes, people are in he walked on the moon. He said his kids were never impressed because everybody in the neighborhood walked on the moon. He says, Neil Armstrong lived a few houses down, and so on and so again, and it was like the astronaut neighborhood and everybody there was involved in the space program. That's right. If you didn't walk on the moon there was something wrong with you. It was kind of underachiever. It's kind of incredible. But I think part of what moves me about. You want to say that it was a more innocent time in America where the whole country could get behind something so beautiful. That it was just, it really was beautiful. So we're going to get it edited. And we will get it up so everybody can watch it. I promise you folks. It was pretty nice. I loved his closing remarks because you were wrapping it up and you said can I just say one last thing here? Yeah, he said that. Yeah, that's what he said. Yeah. And he talked about the fact when we were basically younger, we were all literally in figuratively shooting from the moon. We had these big dreams and there was a whole team effort and everybody in America was behind the space program and we're going to do this thing and it just lifted everybody's spirits. It didn't matter what you were involved in, whether you're a writer or a basketball player or in science of some way or anything. You had a feeling I could do greater and achieve greater things. And he said, that's what's missing today. Well, it is interesting. We're going through a hard time in America. And last night was good in a number of ways because it reminded us of some things that I think we've taken our eye off those balls and we're focused on what's the here and now, which a lot of it is just tremendous negativity. And I think it's mentally healthy to look at other things and to take your mind off of what's going on on social media this minute or what happened last night. There's something unhealthy about that..

Robert netze Hamlin Emory John Muir Eric Alvin Larry kudlow Charlie Buzz Aldrin Giuliani Neil Armstrong LA Dorothy America Tom basketball
Dr. Hamlin Emory Changed Eric's Life

The Eric Metaxas Show

00:32 sec | 1 year ago

Dr. Hamlin Emory Changed Eric's Life

"Doctor Hamlin Emory will be my guest for the rest of the day. And I want to say again, folks, I don't want to say this in front of him because I don't want to embarrass him. He's a very diffident, gentlemanly person. He changed my life. He's an amazing doctor. And what he does, nobody does, and I said, I want you to come in my program because people need to hear about this. Where does he practice now? Because I looked up his bio. And I thought it said something like that. He doesn't even practice anymore. He just does it. Oh, he just doesn't. Yeah, he's that good. He's in like LA, basically.

Hamlin Emory LA
"emory" Discussed on The Eric Metaxas Show

The Eric Metaxas Show

04:44 min | 1 year ago

"emory" Discussed on The Eric Metaxas Show

"Thoughts when we come back. And all the birds in the trees may be singing so happy for joyful playful you watching me tell me Eric, why is relief factor so successful at lowering or eliminating pain? I'm often asked that question, the owners of relief factor tell me they believe our bodies were designed to heal. That's right, designed to heal, and I agree with them. So the doctors who formulated relief factor for them selected the four best ingredients, yes, 100% drug free ingredients, each helps your body deal with inflammation. Each of the four ingredients deals with inflammation from a different metabolic pathway. And that right there approaching from four different angles may be why so many people find such wonderful relief. So if you've got back pain, shoulder neck hip knee or foot pain from exercise or just getting older, you should order the three week quick start discounted to only 1995 to see if it will work for you. It works for me. It has for about 70% of the half a million people who've tried it and have ordered more, go to relief factor dot com or call 800 for relief to find out about this offer, feel the difference. Hey folks, if you could make money off of abortion or pornography, would you do it? I hope the answer is no. But I want to tell you, Robert Nestlé, the founder of inspire insight dot com, he was the president of his local pro life pregnancy center. When he discovered that he owned investments in three companies manufacturing abortion drugs, well, God helped him to see that he was making money from abortion pornography LGBT activism and the list goes on. And that's why he created inspire insight dot com inspire insight dot com gives you instant access to biblical values data on over 23,000 stocks, mutual funds and ETFs. So you can invest to the glory of God. You need to go to inspire insight dot com today and screen your four-o-one-ks, IRAs and other investment accounts. I did and I was shocked. Now I'm able to clean out the junk and invest in companies actually doing good things, go to inspire insight, dot com today and register for free. That's inspire insight dot com, go there. Folks talking to doctor Hamlin Emory, the book is hard to swallow from superstition to psychiatry. You were just telling us about some patient. In my early months as a psychiatric resident, I met a young man who had a master's degree in mass and his wife described him. Experiencing intermittent psychotic episodes in which he would become enraged and he was married and even had a child and had been treated in the clinic at UCLA as a paranoid schizophrenic. But it was strange and I thought that a person with schizophrenia would be able to marry and have a child and the relationship with his wife was reasonable, except when he had these episodic outbursts. And it sounded as if he might have some kind of epilepsy. So I referred him to the neurologist on the faculty and sure enough the EEG was abnormal and showed. Figures and forms that are typical of temporal lobe epilepsy. So I chose a, the prevalent medicine of that day was dilantin. And put him on a small dose of diagnosis. And those episodes resolved and his wife was overjoyed, he was subsequently promoted. To move to New York and with home office of his firm, and I had received from him on the anniversary of his regaining consciousness and stability, I received a thank you note for about a decade..

Robert Nestlé Hamlin Emory Eric paranoid schizophrenic lobe epilepsy UCLA epilepsy New York
"emory" Discussed on The Eric Metaxas Show

The Eric Metaxas Show

01:37 min | 1 year ago

"emory" Discussed on The Eric Metaxas Show

"Folks talking to doctor Hamlin Emory, the book is hard to swallow from superstition to psychiatry. You were just telling us about some patient. In my early months as a psychiatric resident, I met a young man who had a master's degree in mass and his wife described him. Experiencing intermittent psychotic episodes in which he would become enraged and he was married and even had a child and had been treated in the clinic at UCLA as a paranoid schizophrenic. But it was strange and I thought that a person with schizophrenia would be able to marry and have a child and the relationship with his wife was reasonable, except when he had these episodic outbursts. And it sounded as if he might have some kind of epilepsy. So I referred him to the neurologist on the faculty and sure enough the EEG was abnormal and showed. Figures and forms that are typical of temporal lobe

department of psychiatry NYU Century city Freud Los Angeles New York
Dr. Hamlin Emory Shares the Story of a Unique Patient

The Eric Metaxas Show

01:37 min | 1 year ago

Dr. Hamlin Emory Shares the Story of a Unique Patient

"Folks talking to doctor Hamlin Emory, the book is hard to swallow from superstition to psychiatry. You were just telling us about some patient. In my early months as a psychiatric resident, I met a young man who had a master's degree in mass and his wife described him. Experiencing intermittent psychotic episodes in which he would become enraged and he was married and even had a child and had been treated in the clinic at UCLA as a paranoid schizophrenic. But it was strange and I thought that a person with schizophrenia would be able to marry and have a child and the relationship with his wife was reasonable, except when he had these episodic outbursts. And it sounded as if he might have some kind of epilepsy. So I referred him to the neurologist on the faculty and sure enough the EEG was abnormal and showed. Figures and forms that are typical of temporal lobe

Hamlin Emory Schizophrenia Ucla Epilepsy
Why Don't More Doctors Use EEG in Their Practices? Dr. Emory Explains

The Eric Metaxas Show

01:32 min | 1 year ago

Why Don't More Doctors Use EEG in Their Practices? Dr. Emory Explains

"You look at the brain's and the brain waves of people who are healthy, who are asymptomatic. Correct. And then when you have a patient come in and you see some anomaly, you say, aha, this is off. This may be a key to their symptoms, to their problems, to their seizures, to whatever it is that they're experiencing. So you have this database. Yes. So, but very few people do what you do. Now why is that? I can't speak for other people. I think that my earlier experience as a general medical doctor made me comfortable with examining people and I can remember from the beginning of my psychiatric practice there were two men who had persistently fast pulse rate. They were and they were depressed, but what I realized was the pulse rate was the thing that needed to be corrected and perhaps if I did it, their so called depression would reduce or resolve. And in fact, that's what happened. Right, but what you're talking about is because you have so much experience that you kind of have an instinct. And this is what good diagnosticians do.

Seizures Depression
"emory" Discussed on The Eric Metaxas Show

The Eric Metaxas Show

09:50 min | 1 year ago

"emory" Discussed on The Eric Metaxas Show

"Folks, welcome to the Eric metaxas show, sponsored by legacy precious metals. There's never been a better time to invest in precious metals, visit legacy p.m. investments dot com that's legacy p.m. investments dot com. Welcome to the Eric metaxas show with your host. Eric the Texas. Hey Albert. Hey, Eric. Can you believe it? I can't. It's Wednesday, the 1st of June. It is. Yeah. And I just have to say looking for me. And by the way, I'm very proud of you. It's a prideful month. So I'm proud of you. Yes, the taxes. Yes, if anybody goes along with the let's start on a negative note. If anybody goes along with Pride Month, if anybody's like, you're part of the problem. Okay, it's such nonsense. Don't even get me started. But the fact that people go along with it is even worse. Last night, we have so much happy stuff to relate. We basically had the first Socrates in the city in over two years. Since the monkeypox struck two years ago, the monkey pox, it's just upended our economy. And so for two years, we haven't had a Socrates event. And last night, here in New York City, we hosted Apollo 16 astronaut Charles moss duke Brigadier general Charlie duke. It was absolutely amazing. Now, I want to talk to you about that because Alvin, you were there. I was there before. Before we get before we get into that, I want to warn my audience. Today on this program, he's not here yet. So when the person is not yet here, when my guest is not yet here, I can brag on them. My guest today is doctor Hamlin emery. He, I've shared this with the audience now and again over the years, I had health problems. I've had health problems going back for decades, real, serious health issues, chronic fatigue, syndrome, tired, all the time, depression, like all kinds of problems. And I went to a million doctors. And eventually you get bitter because you think these doctors all have this paradigm and they kind of walk you through it and they give you this and give you that a bit. And after like the fourth time you see them, they have nothing to say. Doctor Emory Hamlin and Marie was introduced to me by some friends very dear friends, Richard and Pam scurry. They're now in Charleston, South Carolina. And when they came to me in 2006, we got a doctor for you metaxas, blah, blah, blah, blah, I thought, you know what? If I had a dime for every well meaning friend that told me, we can solve your problems. We've got this great doctor. So I was really just not interested. Well, long story short, I went to see doctor emery, and he will describe this when he's on the air today. He does something no one does. I mean, I shouldn't say no one, but almost no one does. He does an EEG, an electro sorry, EKG, electro, encephalography, EEG, the head where he looks at your brainwaves. And he is a virtuoso who can read your brainwaves and see, will this part of your brain, you know, the electricity in your alpha waves is a little low. It needs to be augmented with this. And here's the bottom line. And he'll talk about this in depth. But he has totally changed people's lives with this. And if it weren't because of if it weren't for doctor emery, who will be my guest, I would never have written my book amazing grace, which kind of kicked off my career. Wow. Because it's a long story. But he really helped me tremendously. And the more I've gotten to know what it is that he does. The more I said, how can more people don't know about this? But one thing he didn't do though was walk on the moon. Which gets to last night. Last night, doctor emery and his wife, Virginia, were in the audience so many people were in the audience. And if folks, if you just listen to this program, let me just say, for 20 plus years, I've done this thing called Socrates in the city. We tend to do it in fancy clubs in New York, usually at the union league club. But because of the monkeypox for two years, we haven't done it. The last one we did was with Peter Thiel. So last night was our first event in over two years. And my guest was astronaut Apollo 16 astronaut Charlie duke. And I have to say it was one of the most delightful events I can ever remember. It was absolutely magical. Now Alvin, you were there with your current wife, what's her name? And with an E and with an E and so where do we begin? First of all, I know. At these. Now, by the way, the audio, I'm sorry, the video of this is going to be edited. I don't know when it's going to get up. But everyone listening to me right now, you will be able to watch the event. And last night was the first time I did an event without the wig that people are used to seeing me in. And I think some people are going to be shocked. They will be. I think people last night, they were taken aback. Yeah. They never seen me. You did an opening monologue and laughed a lot through it and now I'm realizing because maybe the Whig was a little skewed. It was funny. Maybe it was that. But my opening monologue was very stupid, which is my goal is to be stupid. I think my favorite part was an idea got from you. Yes. My idea was that Charlie duke, my guest, he's such an August personage, to be 86 years old, to be the youngest man ever to have walked on the moon 50 years ago. What do you call a guy like that? And he says, well, you just call me Charlie. And I thought, I can't call him Charlie. He's generally this or that. And I said, what do you call somebody like that? And then I taking a queue from Alban, I said, well, some people call him the space cowboy. Some people call him the gangster of love. And by this point, people are picking up, right? But about 30% of the audience is picking up on where I'm going. And then I said, some people call him Maurice. Because I'm a picker and I'm a grinder. But anyway, I like cracking jokes that only about 20% of the people get. Yeah. Because it makes them feel special. And there was a guy in the audience, and speaking of Steve Miller's song, there was a guy in the third row named Steve Miller. In fact, he's going to be here today. He gets the golden hubcap award, I think. Well, there were people from people came from all around the country to be there last night. I mean, I was really astonished. We had two couples from Minneapolis who didn't know each other. They met each other at the patrons dinner afterward. We had folks, our friend Martha linder, who's in the studio today, she's from Florida. We had folks from a number of friends from Dallas, I won't say their names on the air, but our rhymes with Elizabeth Blake Moore and the wilsons. And they were there. And I don't even like them. But they showed up. And so many people came from different parts of the country. People drove down a couple of Harvard grad students drove down from Boston that I'd never met. I was really kind of amazed how many people had come from out of town. Yeah. There was one guy came up to me, and he recognized me. He said, oh, do you watch rumble? And he said, no, I heard you talking, and I recognize your voice. I said, you're the guy on there with Eric, aren't you? You're kidding. I'm not kidding. From your voice. Yeah. He said I recognize your voice from the radio. Now that is fame. That's going to go to your head album. Okay. That's going to go to your head. I can get some voice-over work. There was so much Chris heims was there with Tiffany. But there were so many friends from around the country and everything. And it was just, it was one of the most wonderful events that we have ever done, and it was at the union league club, but we will get the video up soon. Because I just want people to experience it. Charlie duke shared some things. It was very moving. And you realize when he shared about his father, he said he remembered he got choked up when he said this. He says, when I was 6 years old, I remember it was yesterday Pearl Harbor. And he says, my father, who was 35, signed up, enlisted. And that spirit, in a sense, informed his desire to serve his country by enrolling in the naval academy, and then the air force academy and being part of the space program. So it was very moving to hear him talk about that history. What would make you risk your life in this venture? And when he talked about going from the Wright brothers to the landing on the moon in a 60 year he said his father was born a couple of years after the Wright brothers and his father got to watch him walk on the moon. I mean, it's just unbelievable. It's unbelievable. It's like you try to make your father proud. I think that would do it, right? I do it, yeah. Well, anyway, so we've got so much coming up here. So today, we're talking to doctor Hamlin, Emory, and get ready, folks. He's an amazing, amazing person. He's both hours today because there's a lot in there. There's a lot to talk about. Tomorrow, I think we're going to talk about John Zack, who has written about how the OJ jury acquitted sussman, that's tomorrow..

Charlie duke Eric metaxas monkeypox emery Hey Albert Hamlin emery Eric Emory Hamlin Pam scurry union league club Alvin Steve Miller Peter Thiel golden hubcap award Charleston New York City Marie Charlie
"emory" Discussed on The Eric Metaxas Show

The Eric Metaxas Show

01:41 min | 1 year ago

"emory" Discussed on The Eric Metaxas Show

"People in the world of psychiatry because they don't have a background as general medical practitioners that they almost they shy away from a lot of this kind of, what did you call it? I call it comprehensive medical approach. And they sort of, I mean, in your book, you deride it as superstition versus actual medicine. In other words, what you're saying is you bring the tools of a doctor to bear on things that have to do with the brain, whereas psychiatrists oftentimes lean a little bit too much on just dealing with the brain and it becomes like superstition. There's sort of guessing and they're dealing with things that are not quantifiable. You're dealing with actual numbers. Well, yes, I really had a sense of looking for the best in people. I have always had that as a foremost in my mind. And so I was clearly concerned about improving people's overall physical health. Remember, I had been a general medical doctor in the military for a couple of years. So I was of the opinion that persons were really living with unknown unrecognized and untreated medical variations. And I wanted to learn what those were. And see if I could improve their

Robert Nestlé Hamlin Emory Eric paranoid schizophrenic lobe epilepsy UCLA epilepsy New York
'Hard to Swallow: From Superstition to Psychiatry' With Dr. Emory

The Eric Metaxas Show

01:41 min | 1 year ago

'Hard to Swallow: From Superstition to Psychiatry' With Dr. Emory

"People in the world of psychiatry because they don't have a background as general medical practitioners that they almost they shy away from a lot of this kind of, what did you call it? I call it comprehensive medical approach. And they sort of, I mean, in your book, you deride it as superstition versus actual medicine. In other words, what you're saying is you bring the tools of a doctor to bear on things that have to do with the brain, whereas psychiatrists oftentimes lean a little bit too much on just dealing with the brain and it becomes like superstition. There's sort of guessing and they're dealing with things that are not quantifiable. You're dealing with actual numbers. Well, yes, I really had a sense of looking for the best in people. I have always had that as a foremost in my mind. And so I was clearly concerned about improving people's overall physical health. Remember, I had been a general medical doctor in the military for a couple of years. So I was of the opinion that persons were really living with unknown unrecognized and untreated medical variations. And I wanted to learn what those were. And see if I could improve their

Dr. Hamlin Emory Helps Patients Become 'Homeostatic'

The Eric Metaxas Show

02:22 min | 1 year ago

Dr. Hamlin Emory Helps Patients Become 'Homeostatic'

"Talks I'm talking to my friend doctor Hamlin emery EMRI who has a book out called hard to swallow from superstition to psychiatry, you can also find him at his website, doctor Emory dot com, so doctor emery, you're talking about stuff that for most people is very hard to process. But the bottom line for the layman is that. You're able via reading brainwaves after you do all this other medical standard medical workups on people. But that you can somehow get an insight into their problem that many other doctors simply would throw their hands up at some point. I want to emphasize Eric. This is not just a matter of meeting a person taking a blood pressure and pulse and then. Conjecturing about a person, I require people to monitor their pulse and blood pressure over a period of a week or two, I require that they allow me to do a reasonably detailed physical exam, the vital signs pulse and blood pressure, their physical form, whether they're overweight underweight or athletic and reasonably normal range for their height. All of these factors are essential before I try to analyze how I can make them harmonious or homeostatic. Okay, so when you say homeostatic, that's one of those words you use that some people will get it and some people won't. What you're saying is, you have an ideal, in other words, you say that so and so has some abnormalities. They have some problems or whatever. And you believe that it's almost like tinkering with an equalizer on a stereo. Whereas brain body balance is brain body bound. So you move this a little bit here. You move this a little bit here. And suddenly, things even out in a way that they hadn't been evened out. And that's what you did with

Hamlin Emery Emery Eric
Why Mark Bauerlein Shared 'Is Atheism Dead?' With His Teenage Son

The Eric Metaxas Show

02:14 min | 1 year ago

Why Mark Bauerlein Shared 'Is Atheism Dead?' With His Teenage Son

"My guest, for this hour, is Mark Bauer line who is a professor emeritus of English at Emory university. He's an editor at first things magazine, where he hosts a podcast. He interviewed me recently about my book. And I was excited to see that I would be soon interviewing him about his book. And that soon is now the title of the book is the dumbest generation grows up from stupefied youth to dangerous adults Mark barreling welcome to the program. Thank you for having me, Eric. It was great to do that taping. We're gonna do your podcast next week at first things on the book is atheism dead, a book which I love so much. I gave to my son my 16 year old son to read a few chapters as part of his physics class. So holy cow, talk about how crazy. That's really, seriously. That's how wonderful to hear that. Because you know this when you write a book, you know, your goal is to get these ideas out into the world. So the idea that you assign some of the chapters of my book is atheism dead to your 16 year old son. That's pretty cool. I think this I think this conversation is over. I'm done, Alvin. I wanted to go out on a high note. Goodbye, ladies and gentlemen. Now you will get higher. We'll get higher. But what you see in those chapters on say The Big Bang Theory, they're going to kids are going to get that in school in their physics class, but they're not going to get the cosmological, the full cosmological implications of that cheery theory relative to faith. Yeah. Relative to eternity. And metaphysics and so what I like about the book was the total absence of any defensive note about faith. It is long past the time when people of faith need to be on the defensive for their beliefs. You meant all offenses. And you leave you lay it out in the book. We've got the goods.

Mark Bauer Emory University Eric Mark Alvin
Update on the latest sports

AP News Radio

01:59 min | 1 year ago

Update on the latest sports

"AP AP sports sports I'm I'm John John with with a a rare rare Tuesday Tuesday night night of of the the NFL NFL to to end end week week number number fifteen fifteen visual visual games games due due to to cope cope with with protocols protocols in in Philadelphia Philadelphia Jalen Jalen hurts hurts returned returned at at quarterback quarterback to to lead lead the the eagles eagles to to a a twenty twenty seven seven seventeen seventeen win win over over Washington Washington more more from from the the AP AP rodeos rodeos Dave Dave Emory Emory Jaylin Jaylin hertz hertz was was terrific terrific in in his his first first game game back back from from an an ankle ankle injury injury completing completing twenty twenty of of twenty twenty six six passes passes for for two two hundred hundred ninety ninety six six yards yards and and a a touchdown touchdown the the U. U. is is very very fundamental fundamental to to been been back back on on the the field field in in the the winter winter which which we we need need it it you you know know first first division division went went on on for for this this football football team team this this year year can can come come at at a a better better time time in in LA LA Matthew Matthew Stafford Stafford had had a a pair pair of of second second half half touchdowns touchdowns to to Cooper Cooper Kupp Kupp if if the the rams rams twenty twenty ten ten win win over over the the Seahawks Seahawks their their plan plan really really really really deep deep short short on on us us as as a a as as an an offense offense trying trying to to make make us us check check it it down down to to go go you you know know ten ten fifteen fifteen play play drives drives we're we're able able to to get get over over the the top top a a couple couple times times but but you you know know it's it's just just one one of of those those you you can can have have a a slug slug out out and and those those winds winds are are big big fish fish in in December December to to the the NBA NBA have have afforded afforded with with twenty twenty two two points points Julius Julius Randle Randle Kemba Kemba Walker Walker with with twenty twenty one one each each but but next next one one at at home home for for the the first first time time in in almost almost a a month month beating beating the the pistons pistons one one oh oh five five ninety ninety one one the the heat heat playing playing without without five five regulars regulars including including Jimmy Jimmy Butler Butler and and bam bam Adebayo Adebayo right right with with the the Pacers Pacers one one twenty twenty five five ninety ninety six six Tom Tom Barrett Barrett has has more more he he trailed trailed by by a a point point midway midway through through the the first first quarter quarter then then went went on on a a thirty thirty five five fourteen fourteen once once we we have have a a twenty twenty point point lead lead midway midway through through the the second second quarter quarter that that was was never never threatened threatened as as the the Miami Miami lead lead grew grew to to as as high high as as thirty thirty three three points points Duncan Duncan Robinson Robinson scored scored twenty twenty six six points points including including six six of of ten ten three three point point shots shots to to lead lead the the heat heat who who tied tied a a team team record record with with twenty twenty two two three three pointers pointers NBA NBA commissioner commissioner Adam Adam silver silver says says there's there's no no plans plans to to pause pause the the season season even even as as numbers numbers of of players players entering entering the the league league health health and and safety safety protocols protocols related related to to the the coronavirus coronavirus continue continue to to rise rise NHL NHL players players will will not not take take part part in in the the winter winter Olympics Olympics after after all all a a person person with with direct direct knowledge knowledge of of the the decision decision telling telling the the Associated Associated Press Press the the league's league's going going to to withdraw withdraw from from the the Beijing Beijing games games after after its its regular regular season season schedule schedule was was disrupted disrupted by by coronavirus coronavirus of of bricks bricks I'm I'm John John other other B. B. A. A. B. B. sports sports

Ap Ap Jalen Jalen Dave Dave Emory Emory Jaylin J Eagles Matthew Matthew Stafford Staff NFL Cooper Cooper Kupp Kupp Philadelphia Seahawks Rams John John NBA Washington Julius Julius Randle Randle Ke Football Pistons Jimmy Jimmy Butler Butler Pacers
Nikole Hannah-Jones Says Americans Have 'An Obsession With Guns'

Mark Levin

01:42 min | 1 year ago

Nikole Hannah-Jones Says Americans Have 'An Obsession With Guns'

"The call Hannah Jones included Listen to this cut 11 go We have an article that talks about the Second Amendment That's by doctor Carol Anderson in out of Emory And really argue that our obsession with guns we are What is an obsession with guns me What does that mean These phrases that the marxists use we have an obsession with guns You know as an exception with guns the communist Chinese government The Cuban communist government the communist vet Venezuelan government the police states have obsession with guns They have the obsession with taking them from you So they can overpower you with their own guns Now the call Hannah Jones is a moron The police are systemically racist Because they're there to keep in place this white dominant society which we know is unjust in every respect Meanwhile you are obsessed with guns so you need to be disarmed And it all goes back to slavery You're going to what Oh yes indeed That's how much she knows about the Bill of Rights in the constitution All goes back to slavery Did you read the Second Amendment Nicole Hannah Jones does it say only white people and slave owners have a right to gun Is that what it says Cut 11 go We have more guns than almost any society in the world Who cares What does that have to do with anything What does that have to do with anything Why does it matter Are we supposed to compare ourselves to France

Hannah Jones Carol Anderson Chinese Government The Cuban C Venezuelan Government Emory Nicole Hannah Jones France
No. 1 Georgia, defense dominate Florida in Cocktail Party

AP News Radio

00:40 sec | 1 year ago

No. 1 Georgia, defense dominate Florida in Cocktail Party

"Top ranked Georgia scored three touchdowns off turnovers in a twelve play sequence turning the world's largest outdoor cocktail party into a lopsided thirty four seven victory against Florida Georgia coach Kirby smart your turnovers were much more expensive so I mean it was definitely a strange game I mean the momentum gained similar white ran for one hundred five yards and a touchdown on fourteen carries as he ate no Bulldogs extended their winning streak to twelve games since last season the Gators were in danger of their first shutout loss of four hundred eighteen games since nineteen eighty eight until Emory Jones ran for a TD with two forty nine left Florida managed just eleven first downs and two hundred fourteen total yards through three quarters I'm Dave Ferrie

Kirby Smart Georgia Florida Bulldogs Emory Jones Gators White Dave Ferrie
Kentucky rallies past No. 10 Florida 20-13 in SEC showdown

AP News Radio

00:31 sec | 1 year ago

Kentucky rallies past No. 10 Florida 20-13 in SEC showdown

"Travon Wallace and Chris Rodriguez junior made big plays for Kentucky in the second half of the twenty thirteen win over tenth ranked Florida the Gators were ready to add to a ten seven lead when Wallace returned a blocked field goal seventy six yards for the go ahead touchdown late in the third quarter Rodriguez had a nine yard scoring run early in the fourth to put Kentucky in control the Rodriguez TD follow JJ weaver's interception of Emory Jones at the Florida twenty nine Rodriguez had ninety nine yards rushing for the Wildcats who beat Florida at home for the first time since nineteen eighty six I'm Dave Ferrie

Travon Wallace Chris Rodriguez Kentucky Rodriguez Gators Florida Jj Weaver Wallace Emory Jones Wildcats Dave Ferrie
Doctors Attempting to Prescribe Ivermectin Are Thwarted at Every Turn

Mike Gallagher Podcast

01:50 min | 1 year ago

Doctors Attempting to Prescribe Ivermectin Are Thwarted at Every Turn

"Want to call this. Pharmacists back and say. Do you know how crazy you sound. Oh just so you know. Not only am i not going to give you ivermectin but very few pharmacists will why what are you. A doctors prescribe stuff off label all the time. Give me a solid reason. Why any pharmacist or any doctor should resist prescribing. Something guy from acton especially after you go to the nih website and see how potentially effective it is done. You're on the mike gallagher. Show don how are you doing. Well sir how about yourself. Great sir glad you called. Yeah i just heard what you said. And i went and saw my doctor for a checkup couple of weeks ago. I asked him point blank. I search for the previous couple of days. And i saw that report you were talking about and so i asked him and said hey If i get it or you're gonna give me H hydrochloric on And i didn't know no no. No what's the matter won't emory lecture. Oh no no no doubt that. The state board the state board medical board Has said that you can't get it is telling your doctor he can't prescribe to you right now. Wow now. he said that Opposite how about these rules things whatever you call it. And he's okay. If you get if you get sick. Call me i'll give you that. That's okay that's not accepted. Except if you're in florida where the biden administration wants to restrict monoclonal antibody. It's all a game. They really is. Yeah you're right down. It's a game and that's what everybody keeps coming back to the same

Mike Gallagher Acton NIH DON Biden Administration Florida
"emory" Discussed on Comeback Szn

Comeback Szn

05:47 min | 1 year ago

"emory" Discussed on Comeback Szn

"Six. And look just inept on offense after they went to love your hair. How he's how going to go eat now did you. Did you see all the tennessee fans on twitter being like a. I know it's just a bad team. But but damn they look good. It's like i am not on by any of the imagination. Going to say am look good tonight. I mean their defense looked really good. But i mean hanes king did not look good. They ended up winning by thirty points. But you can say they didn't look. I mean tennessee did not look good. I my favorite thing you said to me is don't let us start three and against florida or don't let us start three now. They play florida. Third don't let us start rain. Oh okay. I don't think we're going to in tennessee's defense. I mean they did at four hundred seventy five yards Five point four yards per play. These is not anything. I'm interested in. They worth seven fifteen on third down. I think they look. They look decent. They just didn't convert in the red zone. That game could easily been fifty five to six okay. So by the way. I have to the the mississippi state lifeline. Today really saved me. I ended up up up Half my half my council today. So i didn't i. I gotta say that being able to just sit my ass on this couch and bet on the sports book app. All day is just a player that we heard one fan base saying. Oh you better. Watch out for him. Heisman heisman heisman. And he's gonna be great. Dan mullen is going to have him right emory wants. I don't think emery jones can be florida starting quarterback very long because it shouldn't be there the starting quarterback next week. They got a freshman behind richardson. Who is fantastic. Where's number fifteen. Looks just like i know that. Tiba war fifteen to. But he's the physically he looks like back like like for mullen I just think anthony. Richardson is gonna take that job. Be really good at florida. Emory jones has waited four years. I just don't see it. He makes some of the worst throws i have ever seen. He's throwing he's throwing balls to guys. He's not he's not even considering. There might be a defender in between ages. Throw some of the worst balls and anthony hunter sixty hours on seven carries my god i mean he looked so good is throwing wasn't great. Honestly would you i mean. Would you be shocked if they if they started him next week. Are you think you'll get emory one more chance to more chances. 'cause you'll want the older more experienced guy went alabama's defense comes in and you don't want to kill and richards confidence when that happens in two weeks. But i think we're not long for seeing anthony. Richardson being florida's quarterback. How vanderbilt losing today there. So i mean washington lost a montana literally thought they go ten to eleven to one twelve. No and they lost a montana's hannah stat. That being six. Fcs teams beat fbi. Big sky was seven zero against the spread. And they want to games. They beat who they be tulsa and the stanford to stanford sticks we. We were talking. We were talking about it during the stream. But it's like how long does david. Shaw gets a just hang on to this this phone so good at kansas state. I'm starting to because list on the next podcast guys. That need to be a heisman list. But they won't because they play vons gotta be way up there way up there because he's really fucking good. He plays a candidate. You won't be even mentioned. For because he plays paint kansas state for played alabama. It'd be leading so clean hydration now. Oh Brian and i don't think it's close. You look at everybody up there. Jd daniels struggled against defense We have macaroni. Yet me willis was really good. I think but you know it was against nobody. I don't know what key don's lois. I don't know what his numbers work. I san jose state. That's a really good defense score a lot of point so i assume he didn't just go off but i will be honest. I didn't see his numbers. So kelly pull up his numbers going. That layer not. He was twenty five for thirty six. Two hundred sixty three yards two touchdowns seven point two solid night from a good quarterback a really solid nice star a really good defense by the way San jose state ain't nothing to play with their good defense. That's a fantastic knife from kion. Slow so You know he them into november undefeated. He can certainly be in that mix onslow. Usc ucla game. This year is going to be fun. Fine again it's week one. We might be overreacting died. Think we're in the middle of the chip kelly renaissance. I thought it. A couple of weeks ago i thought i think it right now The team they just run the ball. Well if they can get decent quarterback play out of which. I'm not sure about that. Defense is pretty salty to lsu. Had one playmaker that that that hurt him but they didn't let lsu run the ball. Got it for quarterback. That defense is pretty salty to so brandon. you didn't mention this yet in the podcast. No but i'm gonna mentioned right now. We got the subject. I think we probably have gotten the subject. We got the subject so you were wearing a mississippi state that you're currently wearing right now and in the middle of the game when they were stinking you. You got naked on the stream. Took the shirt off you because we were losing thirty four to fourteen. Your boobs were all over the place out for the boys. I'm trying to change the moshe and then you went and you put on a gambling shirt. We also live like complete. Do they won. They won and you've put the mississippi seizure back on but you know what kind of shirt you wouldn't have taken off in the middle of the stream you would not have is too comfortable. You can't take off your peter. Millar do have mississippi state. Peter millar pullover. Got last year cousy fabulous. We're getting some more so we we've been talking about peter millar. Obviously the the foreplay guys. The golf podcast. They talk about it all the time because they have great golf gear but now peterman lars offering over one hundred fifty. Different college apparel. Yes i guarantee you can find your school on there..

florida tennessee hanes king emery jones Tiba Emory jones anthony hunter Richardson hannah stat Dan mullen anthony mississippi montana stanford Jd daniels don's lois alabama emory
"emory" Discussed on Fantasy Football Today Podcast

Fantasy Football Today Podcast

05:54 min | 2 years ago

"emory" Discussed on Fantasy Football Today Podcast

"Spotify stitcher google podcasts. Or wherever else. Podcasts are foul. Well heath is more important things to do. He can't he can't make the show today unfortunately had a personal conflict. But we are back to talk about some news and notes and your emails fantasy going to read your emails. We're just gonna talk about your emails at fantasy. Football cbsdfwcom. Dave great emails this week. Awesome to no. We're just gonna talk about them. But joe burrow is ahead of schedule and expected to be ready for week one. So that's cool. Everybody's always ahead of schedule dave. Well how often does he. Oh he's behind schedule very often. But it's always still good to see him like the bengals of posted videos of him walking out onto the field to throw the ball around and he had a pretty gross injury. So it's it's good that he's on track to be ready to go for week one. This is all talk. You're right let's see if he's ready to go for the beginning of training camp if that's the case then we can put any fears aside about him. Starting slow averaged almost twenty points per game last year and the ten games allies forty passes for game. Two i kinda i. I know everybody would be excited if they took Chase and i guess it would make sense long term for the bengals if they did. But they've got to protect they have to protect borough. They can't let them play behind a battle offensive line potentially for several years if they go and take chase with their first round picks so it's either chaser sewell. Basically in all likelihood this is a franchisee. Typically trades down very often Maybe if the broncos are desperate to get a quarterback they trade down with them and then they can still get one of the top. Two offensive tackles theoretically that nine. Yeah i if you think that maybe as there or chases just this generational talent you gotta take them. You gotta take them. I think they gotta take fees there if it's if it's chase i'm not sure if he's in the same type of like he's definitely the best receiver in the class. I guess he is yeah. It's a really. I'm not sure what i would do here. But maybe maybe i would just say you got to protect the franchise quarterback bengals know that great. Quarterbacks are hard to come by. Brown's talked about it. So i the smart thing would be to protect borough unless they've got a really good beat on offensive linemen. That'll be there around to round three. Chris carson chris carson said that he and reshad penny can be one of the best rushing duos. In the nfl rushing duo. We don't like those. Yeah i love for chris carson. To be honest with just the fact that he's been beaten up the past couple of seasons and when he has played he's delivered about half the time which is good for fantasy. It's not great. Don't i don't want people to overrate him. As aiming more than a number two fancy running back and not even one of the best number two fantasy running sees a solid number too fancy running back who you might lose at some point during the season getting penny with them on draft day shouldn't cost a lot but he's he's become. I don't know if i'm ready to say he's the best settle for rb to draft. But he's toward the top. Like i'd rather have him the melvin gordon. But he's a running back that you settle for you..

Chris carson chris carson Dave forty passes today Spotify ten games last year melvin gordon joe burrow first round this week Brown Two offensive dave week one google nine one round three
"emory" Discussed on Fantasy Football Today Podcast

Fantasy Football Today Podcast

03:03 min | 2 years ago

"emory" Discussed on Fantasy Football Today Podcast

"The game breaks that we like to talk about especially in the backfield. But we talked about outside. You guys can get up and go get the football you need is it are able to separate and you guys can score the ball. Once they have it in their hands all three all four guys can do just that. And i think that's the area where you look at. What why would you take this guy over that guy while kenny school. Can you take the ball away. Those things i always look at So if you talk about defensive backs candidate the ball away. I want him on my team offense players can. He scored a ball. I want that guy on my team at one of early. I wanted to play with you. we'll start with these three and then later in the show will do a lot more wide receivers but i'll you tell me an nfl wide receiver that we can compare these guys. So let's start with devante smith marvin harrison earlier in the summer. If you'd asked me about devante smith i would say teigen. I thought it was a bit one dimensional. Just get downfield and go but this year watch them just develop as a route runner and watch him work himself short to intermediate to deep down the field and be consistent in that regard. He reminded me a lot of barbara harrison. And what he was able do out there on the perimeter. Toomer chase tomorrow chase. I saw something very interesting about chase kind of make sense you know. I saw a comparison to steve smith. Wow that actually makes a bit of sense. They both are aggressive when the balls in the air. They both had that speed that you didn't think they have that they can pull away from coverage really separate so i'm a row. C smith which march as i liked that comparison. Okay and how about jalen waddle waddle to me is he no joey. Galloway rocket ishmail that type of explosive speed. That you just don't understand how fast someone moves until you're on the field and they just literally pulling away from guys that are in full pursuit in running their top. Be which probably four or five. But that's just a different level of second and third gear and maintain that gear. So i would probably go with a rocket ishmail. Joey galloway comparison. Dave have you seen any destinations that you really don't like in these mock drafts. At first eleven or twelve picks for any of these three wide receivers. I'm a little unsure of devante smith going to philadelphia. Although i what i know about nick. Serianni is that he is a wide receiver whisperer. He does a really good job working with receivers. I've talked to former receiver of his and how he credit serianni with changing his entire career trajectory. Because of what he does with receivers he may not have to do that. Much with smith. It's the quarterback situation that really kind of bugs me there. So i'd probably feel that way if waddell went there or if to marchesi somehow ended up going there to We talked about detroit. There should be a lot of targets for whichever. Receiver goes there but again quarterback jared goff being there. Don't really see that offense being great for wide receivers especially wide receiver to excel downfield. That's something that your march as did a great job of at lsu Those would probably be two spots..

steve smith Dave second barbara harrison jared goff five philadelphia four marvin harrison this year third gear C smith twelve picks tomorrow both nick three wide receivers Serianni two spots devante