22 Burst results for "James Gordon"

"james gordon" Discussed on WTOP

WTOP

01:30 min | 2 months ago

"james gordon" Discussed on WTOP

"Sometimes, unfortunately, that comes into metro, other individuals actually tackled our shooter, police have no idea why any of this happened. Outside the Potomac avenue metro, John dome in WTO news. A former ABC reporter has been arrested in his Arlington home and charged with sharing images of child sex abuse. James Gordon meek was taken into custody yesterday. Court papers explain investigators found images of minors engaged in sexually explicit conduct. They were found on his devices during a search back in April. The investigators also discovered conversations that expressed enthusiasm for the sexual abuse of children. No comment yet from meek's attorney. WTO news time two O 6. Today is February 1st, the first day of black history month, and one local museum is sharing the rich story of African Americans in Arlington. When you walk into the black heritage museum of Arlington director Scott Taylor hopes you'll look around and feel free to ask questions almost like going to a relative's house. The museum includes the history of well-known arlen tonys, including doctor Charles Drew and Roberto flack and also tells the story of Arlington public schools desegregation when four students entered a junior high school in February 1959. Taylor says it's important, especially now to keep black history alive. We needed an Arlington. We were

John dome James Gordon meek WTO Arlington black heritage museum of Arlin ABC meek Scott Taylor arlen tonys Charles Drew Roberto flack Taylor
"james gordon" Discussed on The Doctor's Farmacy with Mark Hyman, M.D.

The Doctor's Farmacy with Mark Hyman, M.D.

06:17 min | 4 months ago

"james gordon" Discussed on The Doctor's Farmacy with Mark Hyman, M.D.

"Or school was destroyed, her neighborhood was leveled. And the solution to her problem, which is usually fairly positive in the drawings for her, it was to be in the grave with her father. Wow. She said, there's nothing for me in this life. The only thing to do is good thing to do is for me to be with my father in the grave. And okay, she did the techniques that we teach. In a group that was led not by me or you, not by a physician or a psychologist, but was led by a school teacher. And she was in 9 sessions with these 7 other kids, and at the end of the group, she did another set of drawings. And this time she drew herself instead of drawing herself as a little tiny figure off in the middle of this damage that had been done to the whole family and the whole neighborhood. She drew herself as a big girl with flowing curls and there was an arrow coming out of her chest and it came through a heart and in the heart was written. I love nature and the arrow was headed for this beautiful tree with blossoms and her and when she drew, where she was going to get, which was sort of the equivalent of the problem solved. Instead of being in the grave with her father, she was standing up in a white coat with a stethoscope in her ear and a table in front of her, there was somebody lying down. And I said, what's going on? And people can see Scott pelly saying it on 60 minutes. What's going on? She said, well, I'm a doctor. I'm a heart doctor. And in Gaza after this war, so many people's hearts have been hurt. And Scott Kelly and I both said, well, who are these other people who are standing by the table? And she said, oh, those are my other patients. They're waiting for me. So she went from being this girl who was ready to die. And this is 6 months after the war. To being after 9 sessions of self discovery and using these imaginative and expressive self care techniques, she discovered for herself a way to move through and beyond the trauma. It wasn't that she stopped being sad. She told me how much she still missed her father and she was wearing purple socks that he'd given her. But she was grieving. She was no longer frozen and shut down by herself. Yeah. And I have a follow-up. A few years later, she's now getting ready to go to medical school. Amazing. She's going to be a doctor. That's crazy. She was actually going to be an oncologist because people in gauls that have very high rates of cancer. And some of her family members have had cancer. So she shifted at 9 years old. She wanted to be a heart doctor. Now she has a better sense. She wants to be an oncologist. That's possible. That's possible for us. That kind of transformation. That's quite amazing, Jim, and your work is so amazing. And you're very humble and brave and the work you're doing by going to these places. We're literally bombed or falling and violence is happening in your own life, is at risk. Is quite inspiring. And I remember the amount of trauma I experienced after I came back from Haiti and the nightmares I had and a degree of PTSD and I can't imagine what you're feeling. Having just been there and seeing this and having been there met multiple times over the last number of months at the war has been going on. So how are you taking care of yourself? In all this. Well, that's what we have to take care of. I mean, I'm a bit right now. I'm a bit run down for I just got back a few days ago from Ukraine. And I have to take it a little bit easy right now. I have to practice what I preach. And shaking and dancing. And the other night, I was talking with her, I was talking with a friend. And all of a sudden I was talking about some of what happened in Ukraine. And I started crying. Yeah. And I hadn't cried. I tears had come to my eyes, and interestingly, my eyes have gotten kind of an inflammation in and around my eyes. And I think that's those are the unshared tears. Yeah. And so part of my healing from the vicarious trauma. I was nodding. I mean, there were bombs falling, but there weren't real close to me. And I wasn't on the front lines, but it was mostly not so much the threat to me, but the overwhelming pain that people were experiencing. And now part of my healing is being willing to feel that pain and to cry and to let myself mourn for the losses that people have experienced there in Ukraine. So that's part of myself. Aside from, you know, getting more rest and eating in a healthy way and being with friends and hanging out with my son. We do have to take care of ourselves as well. And in fact, there's no way to help other people heal from their trauma if you're going to teach them how to understand and help themselves. Unless you're doing it yourself. So part of our work, the beginning of our work, when we're training people, we say, look, we know you're dealing with a traumatized population. We know people are suffering greatly. But deal with your own suffering with your own trauma first. That's what we're going to teach you. Use these techniques for yourself, and then we'll teach you how to use them with other people. And so it's always begins with us, which is where from the Bible physician heal thyself. Yes. Exactly. Well, Jim, thank you so much for your work in the world for what you do. For helping us understand that there's a way out of the suffering and the trauma that we've experienced and that there is a new foundation for healing this possible by thinking about trauma in a different way by learning different tools and practices that can help us heal both ourselves and each other. And I encourage people to check out Jim's work on the center for mind body medicine website, CMB dot org.

Scott pelly Scott Kelly Ukraine cancer Gaza PTSD Jim Haiti
"james gordon" Discussed on The Doctor's Farmacy with Mark Hyman, M.D.

The Doctor's Farmacy with Mark Hyman, M.D.

03:00 min | 4 months ago

"james gordon" Discussed on The Doctor's Farmacy with Mark Hyman, M.D.

"For the psych console after. Well, I think the thing we can do this is part of it. You're not going to hurt anyone. You're doing this for yourself. You're doing this. And we all have our issues. And we all we all need to find the safe place where we can deal with them. And then it can change. It can, and I know sometimes it takes a lot of time, but not always. Sometimes change happens very fast. So what are you seeing in the Ukrainians, for example, or what did you see when you were working with the Israelis and Palestinians in Gaza, where you just, these are really intractable levels of stress and trauma. What were the outcomes you started to see with the groups you work with? Because it's clear you develop these techniques that the people seem to be using them. But tell us about some of the stories of transformation that you've seen, whether it's there or even working with veterans and their PTSD, I mean, you mentioned veterans, and I'll talk about Gaza in a moment. I was doing a workshop for a group of a group of veterans. And we were talking about fight, flight, freeze, response. And I got these guys, they have to be all guys. No, no little guys. There are a few women and most of the guys. I got everybody up shaking and dancing. And I explained that the shaking and dancing will help to break up the freeze response, help to mount bodies that are shut down to protect themselves. And once we finish, we did it for about ten minutes. This guy, big, tall marine, said, you know, I, I realize I've been frozen for 12 years. And since I was in Iraq, the image came to me as we were shaking and dancing, that there were two little kids who were bleeding out, and I knew first aid I knew, you know, I knew what I should do to put tourniquets on, but I froze and I couldn't do it. And in some ways, he said, I've been frozen ever since, not being able to get close to other people. He said, now he said, is it maybe now I can use this shaking and dancing as a tool to help me so that I can be unfrozen. Another story. I mean, that's just one meeting with this guy. I don't know, I have a follow-up. I do have a follow-up on little girl and anyone who wants to can look at the CMB M website and there's a CBS 60 minutes filmed us film me and film this little girl in Gaza a few years ago. And she was in a group where her with 7 other kids, all of whose fathers had been killed in the 2014 war between Hamas and Israel. All these kids had lost their fathers. And when she grew in her first, the first session of the 9 session group. She drew herself with their biggest problem, which was her father, was dead, her two uncles were dead, her aunt was dead, her home was destroyed

Gaza PTSD Iraq CBS Hamas Israel
"james gordon" Discussed on The Doctor's Farmacy with Mark Hyman, M.D.

The Doctor's Farmacy with Mark Hyman, M.D.

06:09 min | 4 months ago

"james gordon" Discussed on The Doctor's Farmacy with Mark Hyman, M.D.

"If we recognize it, we're willing to allow it to appear in our lives and our imagination to see its effects. We can deal with it and we can move through and beyond that. And this is an ancient and Aboriginal understanding. You have to recover that. The medical model has in some ways, as you're suggesting, has fetishized trauma. And turned it into these diagnostic categories that are suffering. And I think that sometimes that's helpful in trying to understand what are these symptoms mean. But in the long run, first of all, it defines something as medical that is part of the human condition. And then it seems to dictate that we need to fix that individual. Whereas in fact, what we need to do is to create the opportunity and the setting and the attitude that encourages people to understand and help themselves and to move that this is possible. And we need to look at it not so much as a medical problem, but as a public health problem. In the United States, we're so divided with each other. We're going to give a diagnosis to everybody who's gotten on left to write or center and have some kind of personality disorder. That's not the point. The point is that this is part of our part of the way that we're living right now. One of the things that I'm doing in Ukraine and the people, one of the reasons people I think are so welcoming is I'm saying, let's drop the medical model. This is a universal problem. There are 45 million people in Ukraine. World Health Organization says 10 million people are going to have major depressive disorder, so many people are going to have post traumatic stress disorder. Why not look at 45 million people who've gone through this incredibly elastic traumatic experience. And let's create opportunities in rituals for everybody to heal themselves and understand that it's possible. So it's coming out of a medical model which tends not only to be not particularly effective, but also very isolating. One of the things that's most important about healing trauma is having some sense of connection to other people and looking for some and finding some meaning and purpose in our lives. And that doesn't come out of the medical model very easily. Whereas it comes out of an educational and a public health model. So we have to shift the way we look at things and what we as physicians are offering. Yeah, I think that's really true. We are so focused on a medicalization of mental illness and of our psychological issues that it sort of prevents people from actually facing them and dealing with and owning them. I think one of the most important teachings that you have and it's embedded in your work is that we don't have to continue to live in the effects of the trauma that we've experienced throughout our lives that we can actually change that and that changing that is key. Not only to our psychological help, but to also to our physical health. And I think I'd love you to sort of talk for a minute about the implications of this trauma and how it manifests for people. And how would they notice? Because I can tell you that I did not until really recently, self identify as someone who at any trauma in my life. But I realized, as I began to look at the things that were challenged us for me at the relationship challenges at life challenges that overworking or workaholism or whatever I was struggling with, that was the origins were actually quite deep and I really committed to working on these into healing them into looking at it into shifting. So I'd love to kind of share how did this sort of manifest people? How do they recognize it? And how do they begin to start to heal these things for themselves? Sadly or simply realistically, it usually comes just as you described it. Something is causing you pain. Right now. Trauma means Greek word that means wound. You're experiencing a wound in the present, and you're wondering, what can I do about this? And the next question is, where did this come from? Why is this? So I think that the first thing is to pay attention to those areas of our lives that are causing us trouble that are causing us. Either causing us to stress or sometimes causing other people to stress their shouting to us. Attention. And so what is going on? If I'm being overbearing with other people, am I going to keep on arguing about whether or not it's their fault or my fault, or am I going to look at the fact that, well, maybe that came from something that was in my childhood and maybe this is something that's working in me. And maybe I need to address it. So I think that's where we begin. And then the whole approach that I have adopted over all these years is really a meditative approach. And saying, by which I don't mean anything fancy or anything that has to do with a particular religion. I mean, simply being aware moment to moment of what's happening and paying attention to what I see. And as well as using techniques of meditation to bring me into physiological and psychological balance. And once I'm in so we begin all of our meetings at the center for mind body medicine by meditating by doing a few minutes of slow deep soft building breathing. So we're not ready to shout at each other. Everybody's got to respect my opinion.

traumatic stress disorder Ukraine depressive disorder World Health Organization United States center for mind body medicine
"james gordon" Discussed on The Doctor's Farmacy with Mark Hyman, M.D.

The Doctor's Farmacy with Mark Hyman, M.D.

06:06 min | 4 months ago

"james gordon" Discussed on The Doctor's Farmacy with Mark Hyman, M.D.

"Pamphlets from McCain and Obama and he ripped off the front and just put what their policy platforms were. He said, well, who do you feel more aligned with here? And it was Obama, right? And he was kind of shocked and it turned out this guy was able to sort of change his thinking and then him his family and his friends to actually vote for Obama, which was really kind of striking about sort of creating humanizing each other. And a similar story of a black supremacist who, I'm sorry, a white supremacist who was one of the leaders in the white supremacy movement. And going to a college that was not white supremacist college or a kind of primarily white college. And he was ostracized. And this one Jewish kid says, why don't you come over for Shabbat dinner? And he started making friends with them and then they started having a conversation and they started to talk and it started to sort of share their perspectives and over the course of a year by sharing information, research, you know, this guy completely changed his view. And I think we all have the capacity to begin to create understanding. Instead of creating somebody as the other and the enemy and the bad person. You know, when I was in medical school, I went to Russia as part of this program called citizens diplomacy. You know, we tend to kind of vilify the other. And the idea of this group of medical students was to go to Russia at the Soviet Union at the time. And I'm not old. It was still the Soviet Union. And to go and meet with other medical students and become friends with them and develop relationships and to humanize the other and the enemy. And it was so profound. And you know, a lot of that group actually was that I was involved with was involved in a lot of the activities that supported some of the underground work that was happening in the Soviet Union with people who were trying to change it. And they were involved in some of the uprisings and so I think, you know, Tommy a lot about how we can begin to create bridges. And your work is really about creating those bridges. And healing those beliefs and those attitudes because it goes beyond just their individual trauma. It's really cultural trauma. Exactly. And you know, I think what happens is as people, if people are willing to participate in the kind of process that we offer them, they start they start opening up without us trying to tell them they should be more open or they should change their mind. Human beings have, as you well know, have tremendous capacity for change, but we have to allow that to happen. We have to put ourselves in a position, whether it's through a conversation with somebody with whom we disagree, or by simply being willing to discover what is true. And that's kind of what your friend was suggesting. Take a look, take a look at what the positions are. And I would suggest it's good to take a few deep breaths, so you're not tight or flight mode. You can just sit there and look at things with the zen Buddhist call beginner's mind. That's what we encourage in right at the beginning of our training at the beginning of our work with people. We say profound change is possible, post traumatic growth is possible. It is possible even after the worst trauma to become more whole and healthy and more integrated and more committed and find more meaning and purpose than you ever thought. And if you can come into balance, psychologically, physiologically, you can find your way there. So I think we're offering one path. I think there are many, many ways. And Desmond Tutu, you mentioned, who's a friend of mine, who was on my board, my board of advisers, he always one of the things that he did is he exuded this kind of enjoyment and respect of other people. So I think that's incumbent on all of us. As we think about people with whom we disagree, is how can we connect with them? And you would see him. I would go out and have a meal with him. And he was just enjoying everybody who was cleaning the flow of our serving the food or the driver who brought him there. And that's a beautiful example. And I think that people sort of, oh, okay. That maybe that's possible inside me. That possibility of enjoyment and of enjoying other people in respecting other people. So we have to keep doing the work on ourselves. And I think this is very important that we have to, and this is part of what I was working, I'm working on with people in Congress. That yes, there are going to be disagreements, but we have to treat the other as human, even if the others positions are white supremacist positions. They're still human beings and let's treat them not that we have to agree with them, but we have to see their humanity and approach them that way. Yeah. I think that's right. And I think when I think is going on, is this cultural trauma now that we're not even naming. And it's creating a lot of the suffering and pain we see. And a lot of the mental illness. And we see mental illness just rise and rise, anxiety, depression, PTSD, and we haven't really historically talked about that as from a causal point of view. We're very good with psychiatry naming conditions. We have the DSM-V, which is the diagnostic and statistical manual that allows you to describe my symptoms exactly what type of mental illness you have and it's pages and pages of what type of anxiety and what type of depression and what time it is and that. And none of it talks about the root cause. And I think many times in many causes, there's environmental toxins, there's nutritional factors. There's your microbiome. But there's also the story of our lives and the story of our ancestors lives and the trauma that often

Soviet Union white supremacist college Obama Russia McCain Tommy Desmond Tutu Congress depression PTSD
"james gordon" Discussed on The Doctor's Farmacy with Mark Hyman, M.D.

The Doctor's Farmacy with Mark Hyman, M.D.

06:47 min | 4 months ago

"james gordon" Discussed on The Doctor's Farmacy with Mark Hyman, M.D.

"Mark 40 and check out. And I know you'll be sheets as much as I do. Now let's get back to this week's episode of the doctor's pharmacy. And you've been to Gaza and work with Israelis and Palestinians who are kind of a death fighter most and bring them together in ways that help bridge the gap, create healing, understanding, and connection. And you know, the thing about your work, I think about the incredible divisiveness now in the world. The sort of acceleration of social media that's driven us further and further apart because of the algorithms that amplify more divisive and inflammatory and hateful content. And I wonder, as I kind of think about America, where we can bring this home and how we can be begin to kind of connect in a way that brings people together, whether it's you're a vegan or you're a paleo eater or whether you're a Republican or a Democrat or whether you're a Christian or you're not. I mean, the amount of a divisiveness that takes us away from the essential fact that we're human first and whatever else we are second. It just breaks my heart. And I think I would love to sort of hear your thoughts on how we begin to heal this crisis where now 54% of Republicans believe that our strong Republicans believe that we're going to have Civil War within the next ten years. I mean, that's just a terrifying idea to me. In 2022, we're talking about Civil War again in this country. It is terrifying. And we're doing some of this work in places like Baton Rouge, Louisiana, and Broward county, Florida, done some in California. We're members of the community who were interested in helping their in helping others in their community. Will come together with each other to learn what we have to teach. And they'll kind of reluctantly be sitting in the same room with people, for example, community organizers sitting in the same room with police. Organizing against and the cops are very suspicious of the community organizers. But they're interested in learning what we have to teach. And in the course of being in our trainings and sitting in a small group with other people who, you know, who you have all these prejudices and ideas about, over a period of time, you begin to see the reality, the reality that's there behind the mask of the propaganda. I remember one time you mentioned Gaza, when the first training we did in Gaza, there was a guy when we do a training, we work in a large group, maybe train 200 people at a time, and then we'll have 20 small groups. So I was in a small, I was leading a small group, and I had some of the leaders in medicine and public health in the group. And a guy who was a nurse was in the group at a very high status in the community. He was one of the angriest people I'd ever met. And he was just, you know, you could almost see the smoke coming out of his ears all the time. And then about the fourth day of the group, he looked at the guy across from him. And I'll spare our watchers the profanity. But basically, he said, I've always thought you were the worst kind of arrogant son of a et cetera, et cetera, et cetera. See you on television. I've seen you pontificating. But being in this group for four days, I see you're at your actually a human being. And he said, and that gives me the idea. That maybe some of the Israelis are human, too. Yeah, right? So it's possible, but people have to be willing to come together. I've been working with some members of Congress since January 6th. And I say, and they happen to be all Democrats. And I say, can you get some of the Republicans to come into the group and the people will say, we've tried, but it's not happening. So there has to be a reason for people to come together. One of the things that's so interesting about Ukraine, and I just published this piece on lessons that Americans have to learn is that people in Ukraine have come together across these divides across religious divides across cultural divides, economic divides, political divides, because the importance of saving their country is so much greater than the differences they have. We have to we have to find some kind of common ground. Some kind of common interest that will bring us together. And I don't know what it's going to be. I don't know whether it's going to be the welfare of children. I don't know whether it's going to be climate change, I don't know how I heard the pessimism or the concern and what you were saying. And it may be that things are going to have to get worse before people are willing to step outside of these boxes that they live in. And come together with one another, but also I think it's important to do exactly what we're doing here is to be talking about the issue. So that some of the people, I'm sure you have people who are tuning in who think revolution is going to come and that they have to recover America for whoever, but maybe maybe something will touch them. So it's a real process, and I think at the community level, it's easier because there are common interests in a community don't want people to be killing each other. Yeah, I mean, the other thing is really a problem. I mean, the other ring of each other is really striking. And I have a friend an African American actor who told me an incredible story about how he was campaigning in Pennsylvania in between Philadelphia and Pittsburgh. He says it's more like the Deep South. And he was in demolish shopping mall and went to try to register people to vote, not asking them who to vote for. I think in 2008. And he. Went to this one gentleman and said, can you vote? He's like, I just should have always like, no. And then he came back a second time. Come on, why don't we register a vote? And he was like, no. And then he said, well, why don't we have lunch? My friend hasn't, why don't we have lunch? And so he had lunch and he said, let's just, what do you care about? And he started talking about things that really political stuff. He said, what do you really care about? You know, his family and these issues and he started really getting into what he really cared about.

Gaza Broward county Baton Rouge Ukraine America Louisiana Mark Florida California Congress Pittsburgh Pennsylvania Philadelphia
"james gordon" Discussed on The Doctor's Farmacy with Mark Hyman, M.D.

The Doctor's Farmacy with Mark Hyman, M.D.

04:33 min | 4 months ago

"james gordon" Discussed on The Doctor's Farmacy with Mark Hyman, M.D.

"Who is this guy? They did it. And I said, well, how was it? You tell me. And they said, well, a few more energized. I feel a little like laughing. I haven't felt like laughing in four months. And I feel like laughing and I feel a little my body feels better. So the tools and techniques that we use at the center for mind body medicine. We teach about 15 self care techniques. People who want to learn what we're doing can look at our website, CMB and dot org or read the book that you mentioned in the beginning, transforming trauma. Yeah, describe all the techniques that we use all the techniques we've used in all the places you mentioned in Israel Gaza and Haiti that we're now using in Ukraine. And I originally came up along with some colleagues, but basically I came up with this approach as a way of kind of universal language, kind of vocabulary and grammar of how our mind and body function and making use of the complete interpenetration of mind and body, making use of our understanding that our thoughts and feelings and how we relate to other people as well as what we eat and how we, how we look at the world that they affect every busy, as well as every psychological function. And so, you know, it's like teaching a new language to people and trying to put together for many different traditions, including modern medicine, but learning from the traditional Zulu healers and indigenous North American people and my teacher who was a north Indian from India here. Putting all these techniques together and initially I saw this as a way of dealing with as a way of dealing with almost any problem or issue that comes up because stress and dysfunction play such a major role in every physical and psychological condition. It became clear that this was indeed true back when I started the center for mind body medicine in 1991. And we began to train individual practitioners. And then as I saw how well it was working in their practices and hospitals and clinics, I thought, well, let me see, let me go to some of the places in the world where the worst things have happened. And then we see if it can be helpful. So I started. I started to it was a question. I had a feeling it could be helpful. And you know, I'm sometimes go by myself as I did to Ukraine, but I have a whole team of people. We have a 160 faculty at the center for my body, but it's on our mind body program. And you've been part of our faculty. Teaching nutrition. And we're a team. We're a group of people who've come together, but what I think of and describe as a healing community and a community of healers. And so it's not, I'm going, I'm laying the foundation. I'm sort of making the connections on doing the kind of the scouting and the pioneering work, but we're already bringing our team to do training. We've been doing the trainings online and Ukraine, and already 270 Ukrainian psychotherapists and physicians have come through the first two days of our online training. And they're using the work. They're using the work in the military. They're using it in combat zones. They're using it in clinics and hospitals that are in parts of the country that have not been heavily bombed. So it's already happening. And I think that the idea that I have this sense of wanting to heal population wide trauma obviously also appeals to other people that it's something that we we want to be part of something larger than ourselves. That's part of who we are as human beings. And if I can offer people the opportunity to do that, a lot of people are responding. Yeah, I think it's incredible what you've done, Jim. And I think, you know, I think it's a physician trying to change how people eat. It's tough, and it's kind of one by one or, you know, we've created some models and groups like the Daniel plan, but the scalability of what you've done is pretty remarkable. And the place you've gone are also really unusual. It reminds me of the work of Desmond Tutu and the truth and reconciliation commissions in South Africa with the white pressures and the black

center for mind body medicine Ukraine Gaza Haiti Israel India Jim Daniel Desmond Tutu South Africa
"james gordon" Discussed on The Doctor's Farmacy with Mark Hyman, M.D.

The Doctor's Farmacy with Mark Hyman, M.D.

08:25 min | 4 months ago

"james gordon" Discussed on The Doctor's Farmacy with Mark Hyman, M.D.

"And I remember the incredible gravity and power and pain and immensity of that feeling of being there in that spot and reimagining what that must have been like. And it's happening again. It's happening again. And it's generational trauma. So a lot of you kind of share a little bit from a physician's point of view and a psychiatrist point of view. What are the biological psychological and social damage that trauma and flex? And the reason I think this is an important because you've been doing this work for decades. You've been doing this work for, oh, my 50 years probably. And you were way ahead of the curve on the trauma story. But now the conversation about trauma is emerging. There's conversations around psychedelic therapy. We've had on the podcast. People are using ketamine therapy and psilocybin therapy and MDMA therapy. To actually deal with some of these deep seated traumatic experiences that people share. And trauma can be big or small, but it often registers in the same way, whether it's just neglect as a child or whether it's physical or sexual abuse or being in a war zone. And it seems like culturally we're kind of now having this new conversation about trauma that we never really had before. And allowing us to have permission to talk about it. And in my own life, I never identified myself as being a trauma victim. But when I look at my childhood and my abusive stepfather, my neglectful father and the challenges my mother had being child growing up in a deaf family and sexual abuse that I experienced as a young boy, you know, I'm kind of like, wow, this is explaining a lot about me. But you know, so I bring the strap not to talk about me, but to really talk about how this is so universal. And how your work really looks at this. So take us back through the biological psychological and social phenomena of trauma. And then let's talk about some of your work and how you help people heal with that. Sure. But you know, Mark, as you're talking, my family, my grandfather came from Odessa. And I went to Odessa to celebrate my birthday on this. And when you talk about trauma, I think it is important to recognize trauma is a part of life. Everybody experiences trauma sooner or later. And that's really important. It's not something strange and different. And so the trauma that's come to us may have to do with what's happened to us in our early life or midlife. It can happen any time, but also the effects of that trauma that happened to our grandparents or great grandparents, whoever it was in the family in Ukraine, that's there. I could see it, I could see it in I could see the behavioral aspects of my father, a kind of, you know, on the one hand wanting to please the lord, people in the larger society, the way Jews absolutely had to, otherwise, they'd be annihilated when they were in Ukraine. And at the same time, a rebellion against it. And I can feel I can feel some of those same impulses in myself. And it's really curious how things get transmitted from generation to generation. We know now that this is an actual, as you're suggesting, this is an actual biological phenomenon. The trauma causes changes in the chromosomes that are called epigenetic changes. Epi is a Greek word that means above. And these are changes that happen in molecules in the chromosomes that in turn affect the genes and affect how the genes express themselves, how they act in our in our bodies. And in a kind of symbol way, trauma suppresses those genes that help us deal more effectively with stress and make us more vulnerable to future stress. So that's why that's what triggers are all about in the sense we're being reactivating on a biological level, the trauma we've previously experienced. And we know now from studies on animals and on Holocaust survivors that this trauma can be transmitted for three generations from parents to the children. And that these changes in the these epigenetic changes go along with the behavioral the psychological the emotional changes. So I think this is really important for all of us because I don't know if you've had this experience. You wonder at times well, why am I so affected by X, Y, or Z? And then as you begin to look at the sort of family history, it becomes a little bit clearer. Why do I act the way I do? I remember I was doing a group in one of our training programs, and there was a there was a young woman from Mexico, and she was saying how ashamed she feels, but she said, I don't know why I feel ashamed. Yeah. No reason. In my life, and then she began to reflect on the shame that her parents who were native people indigenous people that they felt when they would go to the market and how the oppression of indigenous people will somehow transmit it to this young woman who was quite assimilated. So I think this helps explain some of the difficulties that any of us may be having in our lives. Yeah, it's really true. I think the history of our families is written in our genes. And that seems a little bit daunting because the question is, how do we undo that? But the beautiful thing about epigenetics and the epigenome is that while your genes can't be changed, refuge genome can. And it's influenced by so many things, and we can literally rewrite the story. Not only our lives, but we can heal generational trauma, right? So we talked about past lives and that's true or not. But in a sense, you know, our past lives and our ancestors passed lives are written in our genes. And those affect us and how we're responding to our life, our nervous systems, our cortisol receptors, our immune system and in Mary granular ways we now understand the scientifically. And what we also understand is that you can actually rewrite the epigenome by certain practices, certain behaviors, certain molecules, maybe some of these psychedelics that are being now researched to do this. And we're seeing profound changes in people. So I think what I'd love you to talk about is how you actually came to this work. And then how you use it and what the model is and how you then go from one psychiatrist who has a good heart who wants to help kill trauma to training 300,000 people in a country in a model of healing in a few months. It's pretty remarkable. And you've done this over and over again. A sounded by it. So I think that the first thing to say is that the techniques that we use actually can reverse those epigenetic changes. And there is research on the, as you know, there's research on meditation, being able to reverse some of those changes, research on nutrition and research on movement and physical exercise, all of them, as well as connection with other people. I think those are all key elements. And our program makes the program at the center for mind body medicine makes use of all of those tools. We begin by bringing people into biological and psychological developments by teaching them slow, deep, soft, belly breathing, to as a kind of antidote to the fight or flight response. And then we also use active and I did when I was in Ukraine this last time working with people who had been bombed out of their homes and tortured in the eastern part of Ukraine. I did a workshop for them. I got them up shaking and dancing. And they looked at me at first like, what are you doing? What are you doing?

trauma victim Odessa trauma Ukraine Mary granular Mark Mexico center for mind body medicine
"james gordon" Discussed on The Doctor's Farmacy with Mark Hyman, M.D.

The Doctor's Farmacy with Mark Hyman, M.D.

07:03 min | 4 months ago

"james gordon" Discussed on The Doctor's Farmacy with Mark Hyman, M.D.

"And if you've ever experienced trauma in your life, small or big, whether it's the little traumas that happened to us as children or the big traumas that can happen to us through war or abuse, this is going to be an important conversation because it's with an extraordinary human being. I am very close friend of mine. A Harvard trained psychiatrist and physician, doctor James Corden. Who's just come back from two and a half weeks in Ukraine. He's the author of transforming trauma, the path to hope and healing. He is the founder and CEO of the nonprofit center for mind body medicine in Washington D.C.. And he's recognized for using self awareness, self care, group support, to heal population and individual trauma. He's a professor at Georgetown medical school and was chairman under president Clinton and GW Bush of The White House commission on complementary and alternative medicine policy. Welcome James, Jim. Thank you, Mark. As always, good to be with you. Yeah, well, I'm just really excited for this conversation because we are living in a very traumatic time. And we recently had Gabriel mate on the podcast talking about both micro traumas that happened to us during our lives and childhood and macro traumas. And right now you are in a situation that is pretty fraught with macro trauma. You literally just came back from Ukraine had bombs falling all around you. People you knew literally were killed from these bombs just a few feet away from you. And you've returned to America and it's important that you share your story and tell us about what happened. And give people an insight into what's happening there on the ground as well as the overall work around trauma. So you've written some of the worst traumas ever, or you've been to Kosovo and work with war trauma. You've been in Haiti in the worst moments there in their history. I was there with you. In 2010, you were you go to wherever the problems are, whether it's the primary reservation in South Dakota or suicides or rampant amongst children or Katrina in New Orleans after the hurricane. And wherever this problem is, you show up to help heal, not just individuals, but populations. And you've created a model for doing it this quite powerful. But I'd like you to maybe share about what you've witnessed recently and how the war is affecting the state of mental health in both children and adults and what you're doing there to mitigate some of these long-term effects of trauma that the Ukrainians are now experiencing. yeah, you know, I think you're talking about sort of where I've been and what I've done. I think one of the functions certainly for me and I think for all of us as physicians is to be with people when they're going through the most difficult times. So this is whether those times are manifested in physical illness or psychological trauma. And so this is, this is work that I feel called to do and that feels very much a part of my identity as a physician, as a psychiatrist. I think the important thing to understand about Ukraine, which is one of the important things to understand is that everybody in the country is both mobilized to deal with the Russian invasion and committed just about everybody is a 100% committed to it. And just about everybody is seriously traumatized. When I talk with people there, they also have a wonderful sense of humor, which mitigates the trauma in some ways. They say nobody's normal here. Almost in our DNA. Yeah. And it's true. It's a whole country that's under assault. And if you read what Vladimir Putin, the Russian president says, it's clear that he wants to exterminate the people and the country. And he has no regard for human life. And the actions in any part of the country, primarily in the eastern part of the country, demonstrate that. And people in Ukraine are very connected to one another. Everybody I met in the western part of Ukraine a thousand close to a thousand miles away from the east, they all have connections. My cousins in Crimea, my friend, I went to school with us in Donbass, where the fighting is so raging for so long for 8 years now, really. Since last February. And so they feel all of the losses, the losses of life, the destruction of ohms. The utter annihilation of cities feels very personal to everybody. So everybody is deeply affected. I think for us to understand that, you know, I'm thinking, you know, you live in western Massachusetts. So with Boston were wiped out. What would that, what would the repercussions of that be like for you? For me, you know, when I was in when I was in Kyiv in the capital, there were bombs falling 500 yards away. It was the closest one. What if a bomb was falling 500 yards away from me here in D.C.? What would that feel like? Yeah. And I think that gives a sense of the forces that are producing the trauma in the entire population. And what's happening now is that people all over Ukraine are waking up to the effects of psychological trauma. The focus for the first months of the war was very much on, you know, we've got to win this fight. We've got to keep the Russians from invading Kyiv. We've got to push them back. All still absolutely vitally important, but they're beginning to recognize in the schools and the hospitals and the clinics and the community based organizations and in the military, the effect of psychological trauma on everybody of every age. Yeah. Incredible gym to hear what you're sharing about being there with bombs dropping just a few hundred yards away. And I think it's really when you look at the history of Ukrainian that and actually my family is part of my family's from Ukraine from Kyiv, way back when a hundred years ago when they were traumatized from the programs in the steady and were beaten by the Russians and the Ukrainians that had to leave and flee to America. And then the Ukrainians were subject to Nazi occupation and to stalinist terror and I remember being Kev years ago and I remember walking down this incredible boulevard with these beautiful chestnut trees and it was the march that the Nazis took a 100,000 Jews on to a trench outside town. And literally just line them up at this place called Baba Yar and shot a 100,000 Jews like nothing. And buried them alive. Many of them still alive.

Ukraine nonprofit center for mind body Washington D.C. Georgetown medical school GW Bush White House commission on comp James Corden president Clinton Harvard Gabriel Donbass Kosovo South Dakota Kyiv Haiti Katrina Jim hurricane
"james gordon" Discussed on The Doctor's Farmacy with Mark Hyman, M.D.

The Doctor's Farmacy with Mark Hyman, M.D.

01:37 min | 4 months ago

"james gordon" Discussed on The Doctor's Farmacy with Mark Hyman, M.D.

"Hey everyone, it's doctor Mark. As a busy doctor with multiple jobs, I'm all about tools that make my life simpler. And since testing is something I rely on to help almost all my patients, I was really excited to learn about rupa health. Hormones, organic acids, nutrient levels, and flammatory factors, and gut bacteria are just some of the many things I look at to find the most effective path to optimal health for my patients. But that means I'm placing orders from multiple labs which is an overall pain and it also makes keeping track of results more difficult for me and my patients and other doctors. RuPaul has totally changed that. They've made functional medicine testing simpler and more convenient than ever so that practitioners like me can focus on helping their patients. With RuPaul health functional medicine practitioners can access more than 2000, especially lab tests from over 20 labs like Dutch vibrant America, genova, great plains and more. It's 90% faster, letting you simplify the process of getting the functional tests you need and providing a noticeably better patient experience. This is really a very much needed option in the functional medicine space and I'm so excited about. You can check out our free live demo and a Q&A or create an account at RuPaul health dot com that's our UPA health dot com. If I've learned one thing during my two decades in functional medicine, it's that we're all unique. No two people are alike, which means we can all benefit from personalized medicine. But for most of the history of medicine, individualized healthcare just was not possible. We couldn't look inside the body and see what was really going on. But now thanks to advances in technology, that is changing for the better. And it's doing so in some amazing ways. And I've got a great example of amazing healthcare technology that I'm excited to tell you about.

Jim Carafano on the Heritage Foundation's Military Strength Index

America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast

02:17 min | 5 months ago

Jim Carafano on the Heritage Foundation's Military Strength Index

"Why did the FBI at 5 a.m. in the morning raid James Gordon meeks home? Does it have anything to do with the book he was writing about the disastrous withdrawal from Afghanistan? Well, let's give you the truth about the state of the military every year our buddies at the heritage foundation, the conservative mothership, launch published an incredible book. It is a ranking of the militaries of the state of the U.S. Military. It has newly been released this year's edition and it has a shocking finding about America and we are delighted. I saw the news had to get him on by phone, the vice president of heritage colonel, doctor Jim carafano, welcome back. Hey, it's great. Great to be with you. You know, this is our 9th edition of the index. And the reason why we started this was because as somebody who's been worked with DoD forever, you know this. Every time DoD would do an assessment, a quadrennial defense review, whatever. Whatever administration is Republican Democrat, they would just redo the baseline so everything came out fine. Yeah. And so you could not go from one and we can go back to things for decades. The bottom up review, the base, whatever. You could not go from one to the other and say, are we better or worse? Because they all adapted standards of measure to accommodate their politics. The game was rigged. So what we did was we established a baseline of looking at the U.S. Military in the same way every year. And as you know, just, it doesn't matter just what you bring to the fight. It also matters what your enemy has and where you're fighting. Let's go back in time. You and I are of a certain vintage. The big publication during the Cold War was the military balance. Do you remember out of London a double I double S that ranked the Warsaw Pact forces by country against the NATO, you had to compare apples to apples. That's the key. Right. And to be honest with them, they still do this. The it's useless. Because it gives you a bunch of statistics with no context.

James Gordon Meeks Jim Carafano DOD U.S. Heritage Foundation FBI Afghanistan Warsaw Nato London
"james gordon" Discussed on Capes & Lunatics: Sidekicks

Capes & Lunatics: Sidekicks

08:55 min | 1 year ago

"james gordon" Discussed on Capes & Lunatics: Sidekicks

"True. Bruce finds that the death threats. His father received bruce also self himself in the field of investigation. Starring bruce bruce believes that mayor oswald kabul pot as parents assassinated. There's so many different. I mean i mean it works here but i mean. How many times have we done oswald. As mayor. i mean batman sixty six that it turns. I appreciate everyone ripped off that sixty six. They did it. I i. I don't think people have ever understood candidates a long time to understand. Camp hewlett what you realize it in refocused. The lynn pretty brilliant. Yeah no. I'm not saying it's bad. I'm just saying so. I mean i think that's the first time it was done. So everyone else ripped off batmans that plot balanced kinda makes in a way because what that is. That would've been a fan with the. He is a side of batman with the money. You on that part of the money. Yes true jobs chaotic side. You know that that whole theory of why the villains. Yeah are jacob weaver yet. Yes us later. Investigation leads him to jacob. Weaver a police detective. Who was the first of the crime scene. At the wayne's murder and let the police erica's he must have been in on it because yes he Three weeks after that he left the the work. The mayor's office. Bruce also find the picture. We were using gordon later. That bruce had given the thomas for christmas so wait so he was. He was a smoker in this timely about the time line through guess and fans or timing open sections in the late nineties. Anyway in restaurants tracks are dr omar was he. Was you talked. Oh yeah. 'cause i mean he well. He ran for mayor. He designed alford. That prosthetic leg. Yeah dr thomas. Lean so yeah. But he's i was gonna say what's he like. Dr caused practicing. Yeah true okay. You'll never see this improved on a bat. Themed costume inspired by the mausoleum. Two guys himself into frighten his parents alleged killers he attacks weaver but the grapple. So he's the first themed villars is absolutely bruce's all in this universe. Yes but yes. But the grapple gun he developed malfunctions and weaver escapes. Bruce then seeks lucius fox. A twenty two year old internet wayne medical who agrees to repair equipment in exchange for funding for a project to develop artificial limbs were amputated people. Which the five year old soul wants to use the new armed news. Five year old niece. Meanwhile the james gordon. Yes gordon of the gotham police department is investigating a string of disappearances in which the victims are teenage girls between thirteen and fifteen url that creepy cases the case later case cases. Shortly put on. Hold so gordon. Comedians new partner harvey bullock. Lapd detective in storage put lapd. Detective that means dirty crooked. He's corrupt was the short No no he's a starving recently canceled. Reality show called. Hollywood detectives who has come to gotham to solve the wayne's murder in order to relieve relieve. His relief is feeding career. Much gordon dismay. So what did you think of that. As bullock is like the reality tv. Did you put in a perspective of donald lose. Asked harvey la la. But i i i love comes to town is like the gotham pretty boyd. As we'll see this episode in the next two man caught them to start slowly wearing down into the classic. Carter me no. It's not like amanda waller how she starts sexiest gideon. Then that's that's the origin it's like not not like the way that were killed them. Suddenly men the garden is just slowly killing boy. I've got limiting death. I mean collusion and corruption. The bulletin backs don't get you the healthcare exactly one day bullock spots a local drug dealer called axe beating up one of his clients and attempts to arrest him but is stopped by gordon. Who apologizes to acts acts tells gordon he will take gordon's payment because of that and bullock is disappointed to learn. Gordon is corrupt. Plot really really going to be scared from sweet mustache. Rain money somehow really got you really going to be afraid of a guy named himself after crappy body spray. Hey maybe the size we can get all we your our demographic thirteen year old boys you shut your mouth out. Get say i'm sorry. We need the sponsorship in half a little help buyers boyfriends probably wear old spice. Smells better on on men than than i bet your boys because you take twenty boys tells you the old enough to drink in america. What do you want. Oh please how many nineteen year olds. Have you introduced. Reduced the drinking come on. No that's corruption of. You gotta be legal here. That law enforcement. Week gordon and polar called to provide security detail to benefit party organized by mayor kabul. Bruised attends the party to find weaver. Who goes to the roof. The smoke tacitus your health change. Burn bruce change. It and it was caused him confronts weaver but is attacked by kabul pot bodyguards and escapes wounded after a fight with gordon bullock and other police officers in the aftermath bruce's alter ego is named batman by the press and becomes public sensation. Will plants mad. Though infuriated by batmans actions tells us men do have birthday boy takes birthday. Boy what is going on. I know birthday. Boy is a serial killer responsible. For the kidnappings. Gordon had been investigating victims and takes them to a play room in the abandoned arkham manner where he gives them a birthday cake when juncker east or they're saving after urging them to make a wish birthday boy disemboweled them with a butcher's knife house. Gonna say man is what happens when all the boyfriend s loafer birthday party. A birthday boy murders weaver and batmans investigation. Leads them the arkham manner. Meanwhile bullock uses gordon's name to take the fouls about the wayne's case when the pd coal case archive cobble pots. Informants at the police station form of this in. Kabul pot has acts kidnap gordon. Seventeen year old daughter barbara and take her to birthday boy. What is gonna blow their load on. The first one will come on there to buy more books. They're like yo jokers covered. We're not yet Gordon learns that bullock is responsible for this and reveals that he also tried to solve the wayne. The wayne murderers but kabul pot force them to ban the abandoned the investigation by ranging. Gordon's wife's death in a fixed car. Crash gordon never against the law. I know my daughter after they both those kids after them. Egomania gordon confirms. He has been overlooking axes crimes to protect barbara in an apologetic bullock helps gordon find acts. They beat acts in force him to reveal. Barbara's location beat that acts at arkham manner. Birthday prepares to kill barbara but she fights.

gordon bruce bruce bruce mayor oswald kabul Bruce wayne jacob weaver bullock dr omar dr thomas villars lucius fox gotham police department harvey bullock harvey la la amanda waller oswald hewlett james gordon alford
"james gordon" Discussed on The Dan Le Batard Show with Stugotz

The Dan Le Batard Show with Stugotz

01:48 min | 1 year ago

"james gordon" Discussed on The Dan Le Batard Show with Stugotz

"Are you gonna edit that out. Because i didn't comment on that. Because i found that to be insulting not just to his talent but also as a general intern. You're talking politically about the vaccine etcetera and you go right to deporting idle. Why is that in your quiver of things that you say. It's it's a bad look and I owe a gigantic apology to the united kingdom. Because i would not wish james corden on you. I love james gordon. You successfully sent him over here much to his own personal success. That chapter as far as you know is behind you. Do not wish that back on you. You don't have to live. Which james corden shutting down a busy intersection dresses. A mouse singing j.lo's. Let's get loud. That is our cross bear and quite frankly for the last few years we deserve it. So an apology to the united kingdom will keep james. Gordon is that you're ending the know. What's your review for this week. What's your review for this week. Now yeah i blew it on dave. I was reviewing dave. That was my plan okay. Nothing personal tam review in an old movie. Serve the heat. You deserve the heat that you're gonna get from this week because you should have a freshman every week if i have a list of a million movies. I've watched that. I haven't reviewed nothing personal orange. Show me one but all right. I'm gonna give you a beckett about that. I'm gonna give you becca with john. David washington denzel son. And we're going to bring it full circle with the leash avi candor from x. mackinaw who's in becket. Love her. okay love love. Love her in becket it is mis marketed. She's in the beginning for a hot second.

james corden united kingdom james gordon dave Gordon james David washington denzel becca mackinaw becket john
"james gordon" Discussed on Naughty But Nice with Rob Shuter

Naughty But Nice with Rob Shuter

04:37 min | 1 year ago

"james gordon" Discussed on Naughty But Nice with Rob Shuter

"They cozy cozy cozy and now we can confirm they are. Dayton have even made it sort of instagram official. I would guess to make it totally official on instagram. You have to post a picture together. Kiki's accusing but following each other. It's the first step. It's the first that this is how we get our reporting the old days we had to follow people ryan and sources to figure out now the celebrities do all flora's and i'm grateful for that these acute couple really really cute but it's delicious really really cute and it's delicious to see them. Iran new york. I happened to bump into them to baltimore where we go for a drink. James gordon is getting mocked for stopping traffic in la so the stars of the new cinderella. It's a remake on amazon starring. Camila cabello billy porter and edina manzella. They stopped traffic in. La for a flash mob to really promote their film and people are pretty angry about it so the new film has new music in it but that is unknown yet so nobody knows any hits from the show yet so instead of singing a song from cinderella they sang jennifer lopez. Let's get loud a little bit of misfit. There isn't it but there were dressed up in the cinderella costumes. They ran into the middle of the traffic stopped in and sang away. It was all being recorded to presumably for james's tv show. One user of social media set the following quote. I'm officially scared. by james. corden doing hip thrusts. He thrust his hips while he was singing. I will never be able to listen to this song the same way ever again. Another person wrote quotes. Imagine having a terrible day and then on your way home from work you're forced to watch camila cabello and james corden dance right in front of you. This would send you right over the edge and finally somebody else's complaining quote. It would have been great if they didn't block traffic to promote your movies. Some of us aren't as privileged lucky enough to get famous and have lots of money and we need to go to work to make ends meet. So you gotta think of this stuff when you want to do. A big pr stunt inconveniencing. The people not a good idea. You can do you stuns. You can dance ranch. You can wear your costumes. But honestly if i was rushing to work or rushing home maybe to get the babysitter or maybe going to the supermarket or even rushing just to see my mate. misdee-. I don't think i'd want to stop in traffic while they singley song. Don't mess with people's traffic. It gets them really really annoyed. A good idea and finally before we get a break ashley. Simpson i used to work for ashley. Hello ashley l. Allow shared a nude photograph of a husband to celebrate his birthday to actually took to social media. To is your husband evan. Ross that's diana rossi son a happy birthday by sharing a naked photograph of the actor in the shower. She wrote happy birthday to the love of my life. that's sweet. She included a black and white photograph of them together and a second photograph of him taking a steamy shower..

Camila cabello billy porter edina manzella James gordon Kiki instagram camila cabello Dayton corden james jennifer lopez ryan baltimore Iran james corden amazon la La new york singley
"james gordon" Discussed on Newsradio 600 KOGO

Newsradio 600 KOGO

01:54 min | 1 year ago

"james gordon" Discussed on Newsradio 600 KOGO

"Him be. Let it be. It would be cool to do, Carrie. Okay with Sir Paul when I would not turn down an opportunity to carry okay with Paul McCartney going to hate you, though. Like a go na na na na na na na like for 10 minutes? Yeah, that would totally be you. James Gordon says he doesn't know when the popular segment carpool Carrie Okey will return to the late late show. Speaking on the Ellen Degenerate show, Corden said he hopes it will return by the end of summer, he noted, there's this whole raft of artist he's desperate to have on the segment. It features a variety of guest to sing different songs while helping him get to work. The Corona virus pandemic has put a stop to the segment until further notice. You probably know him from MSNBC's hardball. We talked to Chris Matthews about his new book That's live next, along with your traffic. Your updated weather. Kogo news time. 7 37. Inspired by state farm. Surprisingly great rates. It's so cheap. Yeah, gotta give it give your average job like a good neighbor. State farm. Is there no place like a cowboy, please? In the town like a couple of time in the way, like the cowboy way. Have a gap can today? Yeah. When you're on that whole crowd, boys contained that cowboy ground way like the cowboy way. Have a cab Canady here like to have a big time. Try the new Big Sky Burger at Roy Rogers restaurants. It's a quarter pound burger with Smithfield pulled pork beer battered onion rings. American cheese in spicy barbecue sauce on a corn dusted Kaiser bun ain't no way like the cowboy way in a song like a fabulous song, have a cowboy kind of had a role.

Chris Matthews James Gordon Paul McCartney 10 minutes Corden Carrie Okey Big Sky Burger Roy Rogers MSNBC today Carrie 7 37 Canady American Corona virus Paul end of summer quarter pound burger Sir Kogo
"james gordon" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

Bloomberg Radio New York

06:06 min | 2 years ago

"james gordon" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

"You gonna wear that They've been out of favor with Morgan Stanley's James Goldman has his cold materialized, Tom that maybe things change again. Ah, higher rate in early 22 Federal Reserve call from Morgan Stanley's James Gorman at a conference in Japan this morning. Got a guest coming up that are really dive into this, but John this growth in this value nous. Of what the Fed does is. It's almost like gospel right now. I'm not so sure It's gospel. You push it out. Oh, I just think the certitude of if we get deflation, Apple goes up if we get inflation Apple tanks. I have trouble with that certitude. Tell me where the rice market goes later. Now tell me where the equity market goes on the complexion off it. Would you make of that? Well, that is what the presiding sentiment has been. I mean, it's not a coincidence that you've seen a rally in the NASDAQ, and it's proportionate gains and Tech shares. As the yield has come down as you've seen longer term inflation expectations. Come down. Look on the Gorman point on the idea that the bank executives air saying, Yeah, we expect higher rates in the future. How much is this talking Their book, too? I mean, that would be absolutely beneficial for them. And they would like to see an environment on all counts. Where that happens, Think the bank is one high rights, Lisa. Yeah. Do you think the sky occasionally is blue? Good morning times. Sometimes. That's very first date conversation, says that conversation on a Tuesday and goodies up his hand on the S and P his your price action this Tuesday just a wet through things quickly. In the bond market yields are lower by a little more than a basis points of 1 58 93, the euro is stronger. Eurodollar 1 20 to 49 that currency pair bottoming gal When the 10 year yield in America topped out at the end of March, we're back to 1 22 50. Let's call it off about a third of 1%. Lisa. Yeah, just on the euro 10.1 thing that I look at every day when I take a look at the euro. US Cross is the Euro Chinese U N cross because that seems to be also really important with respect PCB. How concerned they are based on the trading relationship there As far as the data that I'm looking at today, 10 A.m. we get us April new home sales expect them to decline as prices increase. I can't get the statistic out of my head a 19% year over year increase in the median cost of a home in the United States. That is the biggest increase. On record, even exceeding housing boom leading up to the 2008 crisis. Also, we get making consumer confidence look for inflation expectations. 10 AM also we hear from Fed vice chair Randy quarrels to be speaking before the Senate Banking Committee. Again. I want to hear about froth. How concerned is the fed to this? How much does that affect John? To your point. Their reaction function, how quickly they will move to try to offset some of the a Boolean. Other central banks seemed to identify in the United States and then at one p.m.. Times all over it. The auction's begin two year notes being sold more than $60 billion of them, not a lot of action on the two year front, nonetheless interesting to see whether anyone agrees with Marc Corman. There could be James Gordon. Excuse me that there could potentially be a rate hike as early as early next year. You think of mount coming that The apple reporter that looks around story called me out of that one. Just the story from the team on square. Yeah, yesterday. What did you guys make of that, sir? This is me. Bit of competition coming from square. Maybe. Honestly, When you hear the bank executives talk about their future, they talk increasingly about competition, and it's not competition for one another. It's from big tech. And increasingly, that is what they're looking at. Especially as we start to talk about the digitization of currencies. John I would look at is a flow of funds. I'm less worried about the technology and all that, and I would look at it much more like within charge cards. Credit card. Think Chase Commercial banking Marianne Lake in the turmoil there. It's about the flow in and the flow outs of money with this new technology report from the team yesterday. Square could be offering additional banking services to some of its customers want to watch another one to watch Tom just quickly Amazon close to that deal with MGM Holdings. Reportedly, we could hear about that as soon as the small in a sinister down right on this carefully and what's interesting, John is. It does not include the old catalog, the MGM We know you know your interest and black and white movies. Warner Brothers owns that from another transaction ages ago, for example, I believe Don't quote me on this. Gone with the wind is not owned by MGM. Even though the lion is there at the beginning, because I'm watching gone with the wind, like every three weeks about 10 listeners this morning my quote you on that, Tom. So do you wanna go went find out that truth there? No, I look like the lion comes on the movies. Invent billing, cattle feed. Go. Absolutely men's that way. That's what I know. Underhand joins us Now you just 30 seconds to kiss Like most guests at around 75 wondering what on Earth is going on in this program on a great to catch up. Let's talk about this growth bands. What are you looking at? That tells you this one doesn't last. I think that question cut out a little bit at the end there, But you're asking me, you know. Is this right now? This growth bounds doesn't last. If that was the question that would say, you know, I think what you got right now is a pause in the rise kneels. And that because of a slowdown in the piece is kind of getting that breather to the style. But over the next several quarter several months even you look down the road. This reflation trade is going to continue. And even if we get some decent CP I prints for the next several months and the rest of this year. I don't think that's gonna be enough to necessarily, you know, force the feds hand into tightening any time before 2024. The only reason we have you on and you go right to X Y axis and Cartesian GM Tree here and you're comparing and contrasting the two outcomes that we have. I would submit that it's not about a parappa expert Weiss good Whatever an exponential function, and it's not about a hump and being transitory. It's about the in between this there. How do you frame the geometry between those two outcomes?.

Marc Corman James Goldman James Gordon United States 10 AM Senate Banking Committee MGM Japan James Gorman Amazon 30 seconds Morgan Stanley 1 April Warner Brothers Apple Tom John MGM Holdings yesterday
Pandemic Self Care With Lynn Fraser

The Healing Place Podcast

05:14 min | 2 years ago

Pandemic Self Care With Lynn Fraser

"Hey everybody we're having to do facebook. Live as having some issues going to go ahead and record this. We're going to pretend like we're on. Facebook live and i'm thrilled to have with me today. Winfrey served still point Yes we're going to continue this conversation about pandemic self care strategies and other care so welcome lynn. Thank you for having me terry. It's nice to see you again. Good to see now just catching up a little bit of what's happening in the us. In ohio my and what's happening in canada and your head right and in the same thing it is kind of the same thing and it's Like you were mentioning us one of these big events that And we'll look back gone so someone who's the teenager now is going to look back on it any many decades from now go remember what twenty. We didn't have any school graduate graduation. No prom right. Yeah yeah and all of us have our own personal history with our own personal experience that happening as well right and i know my son is having his children. Do daily daily journaling right now at chip just kind of collect their memories and and they would have to look back on and they're also doing daily meditation so a bit different curriculum than school. But it's still really really valuable to do. Yes we've not. Taking family walks together with the dogs and our daughter who's thirteen has been running. She took up writing again. She'd run track back in fourth grade or something runs ahead of us. We could see her that show she'll turn around and run back and Yeah it's good to see her up and moving and a lot more a lot more time playing me bowling together to to so tell me about what it is that you do so. They can have a sense of who are that. So i've being teaching meditation for twenty five years and yoga as well and i work with people healing trauma. So i do a mindfulness based inquiry practice the killaby inquiries and some of it is in groups. Some of it is individually When when i meet with somebody individually. We're really working on. What are the thoughts coming in images and the words and really what's happening in our body right and then i have a lot of classes as well right now. Ironically the march and april topics for my sunday morning classes is peaceful. Mind wasn't anything on my radar. When i said the topic at you know the what happens in our nervous system in our mind as we get our nervous system is charged up when we feel under threat and we are frayed and then we go into some kind of compensating. We go into fight fight where we get irritable and angry and sometimes we turn out against other people sometimes against ourselves or we go into denial like a deep freeze of. I can't handle this not happening. I'm just gonna go on business as usual and a lot of the things that we're seeing right now are actually fear responses. That maybe aren't the wisest thing we could do. So it's great that you're having this collection of people that are going. This is something we could do instead of convenience driven by nervous system. So that's what i'm you know. I do I help people with their mind So that they can come catastrophic thinking and and come back in their bodies and be you know where the bre. I do them morning. Meditations with Online so people can just have a break from what's going on in the mind commander. Relax the body. It's all guided so you don't have to think it through. I don't leave a lot of spare time there. So the mind doesn't have a lot of time to get going on a big stream thought. So it's just a lot of steph around right now are nervous. Systems are highly engaged in and frightened. And how can we really come ourselves. And there's a lot of ways to do that held about those of what are what are some calling strategies people can use you know one thing we could do is is just do a little practice of it to what is sorry. Lose many things that we can do with our physical body One of the things. James gordon is just wrote a beautiful call the transformation and he's being interviewed on nbc and sixty minutes and he does work with large populations that are traumatized like After hurricane a school shooting or protection thing and he gets people up shaking and also he does this soft e. breathing. I kind of tune in and then shaking so you stand and you shake through your legs and your hips and your arms shoulders. And he has people do like five hundred thousand people together

Facebook Winfrey Lynn Terry Ohio Bowling Canada United States BRE Steph James Gordon NBC
"james gordon" Discussed on X96

X96

02:52 min | 2 years ago

"james gordon" Discussed on X96

"You can listen to our sister stations for a musical accompaniment to the fireworks mix one of 511. If I won, I won five the Eagle and 100.7 Bob FM for the official fireworks soundtrack. It is also going to be A special event on PBS. The thrive 1 25 Utah Celebration special will celebrate Utah State's artistic heritage, cultural diversity and scenic wonders. It's a big birthday party thing, Okay? Lerby cake. Probably feel okay in your house. Nobody. No, I don't. Uh, James Gordon. Very talented man. Because he's fed up with the hell I am unhealthy and I am fed up with it. Um, he says that losing weight is going to be one of his top. Challenges for the year. In an emotional clip. Corden detailed his decades plus struggle. To reach his ideal weight emotionally confessing that he is fed up with repeated attempts to get into shape. I've realized that every year for the past decade, probably even 15 years. But on January the first every year I have told myself Anybody on anybody that would listen. This is the year so he's like everybody. Yeah. I'm going on a diet. I'm going to lose a load of weight, he said. I'm fed up with the way I look, I'm fed up with being unhealthy. This is the year I'm going to do it because of that Over Christmas. I've eaten everything that's in the refrigerator because my In my head in January. I'm starting this diet. And this time it will be a success. And as you can see, it never has been. He says. It's starting, but he was really, um He says. They starting to make me depressed because I fail every year on. I just he goes on to say that he reached out to some experts this time he hopes I think he's going to go with weight watchers, he said. Nobody is getting some kind of support. All right, He's going to get some support and hopefully This will be the year. I guess this is I thought they'd already done this, but the final five episodes of jeopardy. That Alex Trebek taped. Will be start today, so they're five left. Trebek, who lost his battle with pancreatic cancer in November, will be honored during the showing of his final episode Friday.

Corden Utah Alex Trebek Bob FM James Gordon official
"james gordon" Discussed on WBZ NewsRadio 1030

WBZ NewsRadio 1030

05:43 min | 2 years ago

"james gordon" Discussed on WBZ NewsRadio 1030

"Controversy follows President Trump into the New year. During a phone call this weekend, the president presses Georgia's top election official to find enough votes. Overturn Joe Biden's victory bread. What are we going to do? We won the election, and it's not fair to take it away from us Like this. Georgia Secretary of State Brad Rapids Burger pushes back against the president, CBS political analysts, Larry Sabotage says there may be legal ramifications to that call. It's an extraordinary Cole that borders on the criminal. You can certainly make a case that Trump was pressuring the secretary of state in Georgia to create votes. Or eliminate the current legal votes in order to produce the electoral votes of Georgia for Donald J. Trump Senator Ed Markey among those saying the call to find nearly 12,000 votes in Georgia. Illegal Republican allies on Capitol Hill are getting ready to throw out the electoral votes and hand the election victory to President Trump. Problem is they don't have the numbers to make that happen. On Wednesday, pushback being led by Maine Republican Senator Susan Collins. BBC's Aren't Cohen has details. Maine Republican Senator Susan Collins has joined three other Republican senators and six Democrats in a statement chastising their Republican colleagues, who have said they will challenge the election results in the Senate. When Congress meets to certify them. On Wednesday. The group of Republicans, led by senators Josh Holly and Ted Cruz, say they plan to object to certifying the election and will ask Congress to appoint a commission to investigate the results in several states. Collins and fellow Republican senators Mitt Romney of Utah, Lisa Murkowski of Alaska and Bill Cassidy of Louisiana joined six Democrats who said in a statement that the 2020 election is over. All challenges through recounts. An appeals have been exhausted. The voters have spoken, and now Congress must fulfill its responsibility. Art Cohen WBZ Boston's news radio back to the future him the Merrimack Valley, and it comes under dire circumstances at a warning from health officials. WBC's match hero tells us a field hospital is about to get busy again. There. No college athletes jogging around the rec center at U Mass Hole, just a team of medical professionals making sure every bet on the parquet is ready to go working collaboratively. We were able to erect a field hospital in matter of days, so the Audi is the VP of hospitality for Circle health. But right now his primary focus is here at the state's second covert field hospital. Staff is trying to make the patient experiences comfortable as I can be with plenty of room to walk around. You're in a covert environment here, so social distancing isn't something that you have to worry about. This comes during a week where public health officials fear of post holiday surge. But despite their concerns, Dudley says morale is improving. His frontline workers are finally getting vaccinated. I haven't seen in a long time. Big smiles on their face music playing and just sense of optimism that Shearer wbz Boston's news radio, best intentions go off the rails in California when an air powered holiday costume meant to cheer up patients at a San Jose hospital instead just might be the source of a Corona virus outbreak. Health officials fear a fan on that costume led to nearly four Dozen infections. A covert outbreak at a convent outside Albany, New York, responsible for the deaths of nine nuns and positive test results. Coming back for nearly half the residents there. It's 8 49 Cloudy skies 32 here in Boston in a bid to bring in Mork customers. Disney is opening up their kingdom. In unprecedented fashion. Despite the new, highly contagious covert 19 strain being reported in Florida. Disney is opening up park hopping to visitors in Orlando Guest can now jump between Disney World Animal Kingdom and Epcot in a single day, a feature that executive stop months ago to keep the Corona virus from spreading. There are a few rules, guess have to make a reservation for a park, then visited before going to another one. No hopping until 2 p.m. and no hopping toe a park that has reached capacity least. Matteo CBS News Say Yang and Yang to this pandemic. While many businesses continue to struggle along CBS is Stephan Kaufman says. There are some success stories worth noting The Corona virus has been kind to the gaming industry. One in three people on the planet, say video games and two out of three Americans are playing video games, president of the Entertainment Software Association Stanley Pierre Louis says before the pandemic Gaming was a rising star. But now social connection is even more vital. Agreeing is Joseph Colon with a video game Bar association game. Some brought people together during a period of time of great stress and Uncertainty. Stephanie Kaufman, CBS News How to the West Coast in Hollywood Now Entertainment News with Billy Cost to, and Our Sister Station Kissed Swan Await vacation. Mr. On New Year's Eve, Justin Bieber actually forgot the words to his song. Sorry during his live performance, Andy Cohen and Anderson Cooper an unusual moment New Year's Eve were Andy Cohen was trying to convince Anderson Cooper to drop some acid. James Gordon will start the new year as a spokesperson for Weight watchers. He talked about that over the weekend, Christie Teegan says she has been sober now for four weeks. She's giving up alcohol. In fact, a lot of other people are as well. It's called dry January and the new season of the Bachelor begins tonight with the first ever Male black lead. Matt James, That's on ABC tonight with the entertainment report. I'm Billy Constant, Matty. Show on Kiss 108 Make WBZ.

President Trump Georgia Senator Susan Collins CBS Boston president Andy Cohen Congress Maine Joe Biden Disney Donald J. Trump Cole WBC Senator Ed Markey James Gordon
Dallas Officer Arrested After Entering Ex-Wife’s Home Without Permission

This Morning with Gordon Deal

00:18 sec | 3 years ago

Dallas Officer Arrested After Entering Ex-Wife’s Home Without Permission

"Ninth a Dallas police officer was arrested in fort worth early this morning for criminal trespassing of a habitation officer James Gordon is assigned to the southwest patrol division and was reported on the Dallas police department Facebook post it was determined that Gordon had entered his ex wife's home without

Officer James Gordon Facebook Dallas Fort
New Cats Trailer Out Today

Colleen and Bradley

00:45 sec | 3 years ago

New Cats Trailer Out Today

"What have you learned we've got a hot new trailer for the film cats out today it's the first long official trailer we have we have a teaser trailer earlier this year that featured a CG I cat fur and cats with boobs and you know lest you think that disappeared nope is it bowling cat suits there are animated yeah so confuse something feel it's a movie this year by the way an adaptation of the wildly popular musical cats and to the film version features James Gordon Taylor swift Jennifer Hudson injures L. but you're McAllen Judi Dench rebel Wilson and increasing the real low among others you can see counts when it hits the big screen on December

James Gordon Taylor Wilson Official Jennifer Hudson Judi Dench
Inside Supercars - Pye and Blanchard

Inside Supercars

05:04 min | 4 years ago

Inside Supercars - Pye and Blanchard

"It's been a home run in two ways on the racetrack. Also, building our brand here in Australia at our business finish festival secondary. Is I thought. Which was. Before. Spider rice. And you can't really just look at the Las rice of the you have to look at it starts ends gossip. But from the rice treks across the strategy at he is inside super cos-. Workum during child circus's, Craig Valentine's as we hit into the Saint season funnel of the VIP to championship. It's going to be attorney weekend creek. It will be tiny. It's always great to see a championship come down to the wire. And just think if it can be exciting as the WAC was lost weekend up on the cuffs coast destination. New South Wales, we'll have had a very very profitable motorsport experience over the past two weeks in Dade and could it be something? You're like the two thousand seventeen them at Newcastle. I doubt that. With the Cps attended a great. We never year. But the J Ken Newcastle. Do it is is a huge question. I've I've got a feeling one way or the other. I think it's decided on Saturday in day in day. Well, it's been a fascinating built up to this rice is a whole bunch of things that are still not settled even though the 'nother weeks time. The season will be out of that. Obviously being built for the new year. But we've got whole bunch of different teams such as Winterbottom and ticket pricing safely invade draw the lineup Brooke who's obviously done. Very. Well. She fortunately, I think we've got air of his they've settled on their to van tone banking up for another season. You've got to the saints it Kelly racing. Kelly motorsport still to be finalized as well as branch houses driver. Of course, he's decided to step down. So there are a lot of things certainly still in the air. Yes. I don't know have that's all going to pan out. And we'll certainly see over the next couple of days. One man was speaking to lighter on in the show is Scott pie. And I know you've been doing the numbers there and he's had a season best finish. And. Yes. Sorry. He's gonna have heavies bass David season. Since he's been in. So because he's driven of course, was three for change in that time. But. Welcome choose or to full they walk enjoy Andretti. United have done a very good job. James, gordon? He's had some bad luck along the white. But Scott who sent me shown on a number of occasions, and you get again, the shot himself to a driver whose father will raise future coming up. So we're him Scott pie that a wonderful moment as a different world because he's not a full-time rice. Dr he's gonna Jan business. That'll be interesting on Moore about the other interesting thing about this weekend is it's the last hurrah for the falcon tiny, and it's had a interesting existence. Of course for a while. They didn't say a falcon on a trick strain Jerry catch championship because you could get a Mustang or a Sierra do a much better job much cheaper for you. Well, fortunately, that's case lost twenty years. But now with the falcon coming up being produced in this country. It certainly is leaning towards where we're buying an imported Commodore and you can go buy a big Ford. You've got to buy small forward you want to sit and we buy Mustang, and certainly that's going to be fantastic because is enormous amount of development being happening with the Mustang with plenty of drivers jumping out and having a panel, which leads to TCI there's lots of developments in that category as well. Yes, the launch at Eastern Creek. We saw that along with the Superfly thousands to I should mention of the super five thousand and Chaz Mostert in getting some lexin. They're one of the quotes that I took a lot of white from his they're actually quite comparable to a JT three in terms of Dr a set of section that is a a huge statement in mon- line that could. See an interesting an interesting opportunity there for drivers who want to have that experience. But don't have the JT three budget James Moffet was in a Honda Civic, which David Wohl racing had worked on some of the preparations for it.

Scott Pie David Season James Moffet Chaz Mostert Australia Kelly Motorsport Ken Newcastle Gordon Eastern Creek Newcastle Mustang Craig Valentine Attorney WAC South Wales CPS Winterbottom Dade Mon- Line Commodore