20 Burst results for "Janda"

Keep Calm and Cauliflower Cheese Podcast
"janda" Discussed on Keep Calm and Cauliflower Cheese Podcast
"Astronomically is a little late better. This term is called. September by echograph is september. The orchards are a five with red and gold. And the knight's we do a heavy and the morning show up with cold now. The gardens at its gassed with the saliva blazing red and the good old fashioned. Astor's laughing at us from our beds again in shoes and stockings off children's little feet and the dog now does it. Snoozing on the bright side of the street is september nicole stalks heisel go and the red cheeks of the apples everywhere begin to show now the sapa scarcity The darkness settled down and the moon looms big and yellow at the edges of the town. I was good to see the children. When they're little praise said duck beneath the patchwork covers they tumble into bed. Is september calmness in sweetness seem to fall over everything. That's living justice through his call of old winter. Trudging slowly of its pack of ice and snow in the distance of janda and somehow seems as though every tiny little blossom wants to look at. Its very best. When the frost shell bite it's pedals and droops array. The wet rest is september the fullness and the ripeness of the year all the work of earth. It's finished all the final toss in there. But there is no doleful wailing. Every living thing that grows for the end it is approaching. Where's the finest gob at knows. And i pray that i may prove proudly hold my head up high and smile when i come to september in the golden off awhile. Back again with a podcast. We'll have another edition this weekend. But until then chiro for now..

Hawkeye Report Podcast
"janda" Discussed on Hawkeye Report Podcast
"What kind of a pain has was shot to go up against every day. You know it's funny that you ask that because i remember So john came at has jacoby transfer and like he he you see him in the locker rogue assume with his shirt off it made me who is this. You know who is you know. I'm big prices. They think about me. But you put pads on and you knuckle up to marshall yana there. I mean as we've seen in the last decade in phelps there's very few human beings are getting off his grasp and the thing about marshall is honestly up until he retired he was getting better every day when he came in as a co transfer his pass blocking was good. I should say was good a an every day. Just get better. Somebody like marshall he just put in the work could eat any any made it his mich- it better every day. And that's fun to watch that one time set on this podcast that if there's not too many other dudes in a fight because pows by talking about fighting equal that he'd want then marshall janda you just a good teammate. Good tough dude. Right absolute- i remember one time a bowl. Prep he was playing right tackle. I believe He came out of the of the past set block. The guy did didn't even flinch. Still beat the one. The rep and his middle finger was this point was back. Here says middle fingers back here. And i mean he didn't even blink. I don't even think he breathes differently and he just walked off snapped back in place and i. I don't know if you could probably go back and look but i. I don't know if they'd take us to release two fingers but he was back in the next day it was. I mean the man is just truly tough. When you're right if you're in a dark alley with some unscrupulous people you will janda on the. The best story is at one..

Romeo Siaw-Mensah Podcast
"janda" Discussed on Romeo Siaw-Mensah Podcast
"And no question. no new. In the people keep changing for one presenter it's true but was actually moved from one place to another best fortune or these software to them how he did not allow. It would do them as long as we're preface. According to never allow it to the west allow he did allow put to put them. How do in this life by your predecessor. He ended up. He reproved kings for their six. Even if your boss wants to treat you or take advantage of you because you are fully. That lottery depends on your behalf. Abraham had gone to. I think the key. No one of the key. A bad snubbed. You gordon on your behalf. And but but then as fifteen he's saying onto the that's not mine building up yourself in your most holy faith praying in the holy goes frame illegals praying in the holy goes building up yourself in your most holy faith prayed bryan bryan pride. Pride into holi. Goes we up yourself. You build up your vetting code. Super prayed only goes. So what do you pray in classroom. Do i in hong in football fields. Do in your sub second you in your kitchen cooking. You buy proud proud to packed off your life. Thin done by my sakata janda a split. The praya up on your people lead us up. Desperate up that's a tough top frail. All stab frail this individual. That's spin it up. put it up. Stab saw are known to sit down not sleeping. I'll reconnaissance my disrupting. Oh yes load with tungku..

Watts Involved
"janda" Discussed on Watts Involved
"And when we met and he he was probably new seventy s already and and he had written this book change management which is regarded as a classic germany. I i have a copy here And when close was observing how weighty now being a german and and you work in the german context when you go to the authorities and you say you're applying for building up the case. It does a very clear process and is a very clear time line by when should expect this so he comes kate. Tom and i say i'm erin auto enclosed. We need to do a building up occasion for us to get this building through the process that it took and the patients that had took and the complexity of the process was. Just mind boggling to it. He you know and the thing was donor funds. You know there's was bad. Within his entire so we had to find ways to make this work in the corners of kid tolerance african townships where the processes of building approvals were not as simple and straightforward so so closet to me after a number of years jumping a few steps. I actually. it's in the way you're able to take off your german hat as a german trained press but then translate to his african context. Where in his eyes. Things don't seem to wacky by. I was able to get all this stuff through and also work with very agitated community members. Who always wanted to be involved in every decision in every project because this is their area who is operatives coming in and coming to design staff here we went on people amethi so i had to my nation and navigate through all those processes but actually still get the dot. So he's the one who said look. I think we need to write about this. Because there's something interesting for me. Knowing how german an education and other genesis in west and how you've been able to adjust to african situation even though isil african but you you. You're able to do this in a manner that i believe a has to deal with the issue of our you adjusting to a different culture from how educated and i as clouds and my just the african way of wingbeats is. It's a fascinating thing so we should either book together. So i said okay fine but to the honest it proceeded him as well because i was not ready mentally to convey those complex issues in a book so it took us seven years and i was topped by chapter. And the anez if you. I was held by the lockdown because during the lockdown was able to religious button down and put all this together you know being stockade hole and not having anything else to do and was able to finish the book which could be in gemini last year. He gave me like deadline. So even between us there was also that feeling of like you know the tension a productive tension off like i want this book finished because when of attending. At by my life is coming to an end and the door onto to live and unfinished store isn't to speak so those amendment of pressure when me as well but it took me quite some time to develop the ideas that would would become structure to convey the message that we both felt needs to be shit which is so fascinating because you know and red rock from the beginning. The this nation's embracing difference from south africa and beyond this is something. I think that we suffer from massively inside. Africa is is the differences in terms of culture language. All sorts of things. And i can only imagine from from a german perspective coming into this cultural melting pot. Where you're used to things going from eight to be to see and so on in an orderly manner and then you get to south africa which must have looked like the wild west to this to this so when we come back leeann if we can just go into a little bit about some of the meat and potatoes of the book in terms of you know what some of those lessons are because on the surface ago well shedding. We should spend more time talking to each other. But we don't know about this so so when we come back. We'll discuss that. This is what's involved my special guest janda. Who is the co author of. Get out of your mind lessons embracing difference from south africa and beyond back in a bit and we're back with my special guest yennin pathway so the end it just before the break it you add left getting to more of the meat and potatoes of the book so surely you know it's. It's a simple solution for us in south africa. There's a lot of differences. Maybe we should just talk about. Why book is is it. That simple I think it is when when i actually got into writing. I actually found that. It's actually not that difficult It is it is about. Put him ideas of this shit in experiences but so whilst it could sound his but but the actual process of putting votes together proved to be quite complex so What what trust did an era. I must religion for his mentorship from an author perspective. You said we should treat this almost like as a decision between the two of us And and then we'll ask you questions which Kind of deep down in me as gemin- is an awful But which. I don't have answers for him. I think observance are africa which is also our diverse even from useful smith we worked in the townships and been you both. We live in the kind of more rent and of area island on abortion. Cows would leave in in some very beautiful kind of guest hosting so he knew. Also that has got conflicting realities so the basic idea was kind of come up with his ankles case studies so causes went over. The weather's not so he had his own case studies where he worked with communities able to share. That's in the book and then in my case than it was ideal. Gillis puck as these ideas with examples and i chose about five or six examples from the projects that have done where i started understanding myself all i had to change my own approaches because of the conditions fun so so the case that is that we use i really the vehicle through which i tell the story of hall to embrace difference in how to deal with otherness as a matter of interest german title for the book is called the logged under which basically means that logical other so when we came africa publisher that we found tough obits at the title. One wet here. So let's find a title that really goes into the gist of of of your thinking and if it's about changing the mindset changing thinking and and that's how am through the. The editing publishes. That i worked with an amazing lady called violence cocoa. You know the the title just came by itself and she just felt that you know get out of your mind is really what it's all about. Because you get an environment you would send preconceived ideas or an architect. you know. dissolve designed program. But you get you actually have to in my experience. I had to realize that. In some cases architects to take a step back and a half to put forward the the the the the kind of more working together with the community. That i am simon freud on with to get to their mindset. Understand how had seen widely say the easy..

The Ordinary, Extraordinary Cemetery
"janda" Discussed on The Ordinary, Extraordinary Cemetery
"Parking lot is located at the hands. Parker's seem to have lived in harmony with other well known all sites like the browns roth fix and sills when they were first married. They boarded with gordon. Mahan a black man from massachusetts who came to the area after the war as barber. Gordon was able to support john and emily until they got on their feet. They in turn took borders throughout their lifetime. To assist other african americans guayaquil falls and akron. It was forbidden to learn to read and write while enslaved but later in life john hence parker learned to read. He practices reading with the neighborhood. Children who were very fond of him on this week. John hens sparkler died in nineteen o six or nineteen o seven and emily hans barker died as a widow on september twelfth nineteen o seven both were buried along with a helen hence barker in oakwood cemetery their graves along with all but one other african american remain unmarked research continues for everyone buried in these two sections of the cemetery. But right now. We want to commemorate and memorialize john and emily has sparkler with a beautiful gravestone that will include the name in bates done emily and their little one. Helen and saturday june nineteen twenty twenty one otherwise known as june eighteenth many gathered to honor john emily. Helen and all the other freed slaves buried oakwood cemetery a silent procession traveled from the chapel to the unmarked graves. Were speakers reflected on the hands Sparklers lives and discussed efforts to place a marker on their graves. Work is being done to identify. Many of the other former slaves who rest nearby university of akron law school graduate. Kim janda sunny matthews a motivated speaker focusing on diversity inclusion an anti-racism helped to organize the june tnt ceremony at oakwood after a few hours of contemplation matthews headlined up three people to speak at the event and began to draft a speak that she wanted to give. She kept thinking about the people in those unmarked graves. I was so inspired but will could do for them and what this could mean for me. As an african americans matthew said she loves making sure that people are connected to their roots. Black americans share a collective grief because they can't necessarily trace their roots to particulars. She said most of us are never going to stand and be able to say. These are my people. She said while gazing port. The hands parker graves. Whenever i see these stories or whenever i get to experience these moments it's my chance to grieve what enslavement would've been like four them. It's also my chance to acknowledge how resilient they were how resilient my family was like. I'm not related to them. But i am. She can imagine returning to the client hillside when she needs a moment to recharge or when she needs a moment to reflect on history if americans want to get to a place of racial reconciliation inequality for all they must acknowledge the truth about the past and then include slavery. Matthew says we have got to be honest about how we got here and a part of that honesty is to tell their story again. Thank you and. I just thought that was before i go on. I thought that was such a great story. Yes and that was when it jason. You're listening..

AoS Coach
"janda" Discussed on AoS Coach
"Gonna fight my hero phase. I dropped all those characters outside of nine and then rest army. Just let's pass them. That is worked very well for me to prevent more wounds slapping me in the face before i get across the table. We just why having shape heroes like the candidate. The tune banshee spiritual man just a couple of cheap heroes. That can just go up. And just be that death louis boost And then as you said keep some of those those he Worried about tech lost. You are about a machine. Gun negotiated these arcane bolts on that scenario. But you know what. I mean like the. If you're worried about your your heroes bank stopped early janda wills but make sure we got a couple of heroes cheap ers. You can afford to lose that. Move the full stop in cape. Kate them seen a is supported as you kinda move off the table but the big thing i found is having at least for night haunts is. It's kind of a good and a bad thing. We have a lot of characters that can do one thing like the about maybe a couple of things but like one big thing where it's like okay. The guardian souls is that plus one to one guy nice rounds at that plus one to hit guide spirit. Torment is the real. The hit guy like so the bad thing is you have to of characters. The good news is overly cheap and it means that the opponent does not have an easy decision because fighting me. They're looking at that going. Okay i can try and kill the changes. But if he has any chain rests left then he can resurrect light just stupid amount. As long as they're not too low. Because the new record rule where. You can only resurrect sony minis next to other minis But or it's like okay. Do i wanna get rid of the rules to hit. Well that i need to kill spiritual or don't wanna get revolt. Immortal wounds to get rid of lady allender and that has that like trying to make your opponent as flustered in confused as possible as far as distraction. Carney faxes as the saying goes is invaluable like Especially against not as seasoned opponents as it as a regular nighthawk apart. It grinds my gifts. Because i feel like i'm wasting i at a essentially a hero that has like five to seven wounds right. I put all of god. No you know you ignore half of them because of you know you're you saves ignoring rent Ego death save as well as all these deep things that happened right so a seasoned veteran against death knows that. You can't just do a couple of cheapens here. Cheap wins cheaper in t- you've got to concentrate everything at the unit whether it's a hero or troop bought five waste like a thousand points of focus. Just try to take down a five. Green hero grinds mikey's because i'm like If it wasn't knighthood i could be killing two units but right now i'm just trying to kill a five win. Hero seeks here that nine hundred five or six brain heroes a critical to the collapse of your full. Sorry you're right it does make a it does make me feel like i'm having i'm confused like do i take down the black coach. Do i take down the spirit. Tolman fikile the spirit told me. Like if i if i don't then i just enable you're forced to to kick my ass so it's it's as you said it's a fun challenge that in a bit of mind games there as well that as opposed to like if someone's running arcane on You are already arche on. You know that if you kill. Archaeology won the game. Nine times out of ten people started. Marathi go trick. You can kill those two week. You'll want those two and no you..

Unashamed with Phil & Jace Robertson
"janda" Discussed on Unashamed with Phil & Jace Robertson
"If you don't really think about that you're like what does that at all up gotta be glorified so the messenger goes back. What does he do. You gotta read between the lines. But what's he married. Martha we're good right. Jesus said were da. Didn't say that knows. It all said the cygnus well not end in death so a couple of days later he you know he keeps doing his ministry. And the disciples weren't listening because he said well he he need some sleep and everything will be i. And there's they started talking about is disciples replied will lord if he sleeps he will get better. Jesus had been speaking about his death but asaba start meant spiritual amid a natural sleep so once you see this difference in hearing. And they weren't getting it. Nobody was getting it so then so so then he told disciples. He tries to explain to them. Still not getting. So then verse. Seventeen his arrival. Jesus found that lazarus at already been in the team for four days. Look he missed the funeral. The graveside i mean he died. So now you're right. They're hot because they think he's asana god. They basically gave gave him a message. He gave a response and he's wrong well because they're looking at situation and it was really good point. They're like god gave the word he he. He spoke on it but the circumstances were not. They couldn't see how he was right. Well he he. He said he went janda. He's dead he's not here so that's a that's a key point because they weren't listening to what he said so martha twenty-one lower if you had been here my brother would not died so they're angry and he did this whole thing about why we get angry at guy which i thought was really good. Because he's like come on if you would admit it. There's been times in your life your anger god because what you read is not adding up with what's happening in your life and your mad so he's like you're like well i'm not gonna pray show you my or i'll go to church raw show late. I mean with these things you know. I mean 'cause you're angry. You're you're math. So so then it says but i know In verse twenty two that even now god will give you whatever you do. You said your brother will rise again in. Martha's well no hill rise again in the resurrection at the last day with any declares this you know. I am the resurrection and the life and you know the story eventually wheat. Why does he we even though he no. He knows he's gonna raising from the dead. Well his point was. He gave her the comfort in that statement. This cygnus will not end in death in basically what his point was we. We put a period after the war. Death is death is over and here. Jesus put a comma after death. Now this own you that you didn't get that if you trust him that's what he said. And so you know really. The whole point was sometimes in your list. And you look at the circumstances and you gotta find joy and trust from that water to the wilderness. And the and the persecutions that calm because you know look this. This same thing is going to happen to us at our resurrection. So there's two things kind of going here. You have your spiritual resurrection when you hear jesus and you die and you're buried and your as we went through rome and six in detail if you really believe that then you trust no matter what. The circumstances are your comment so his point. We want to heal them and we won't on our terms now we look at situation. We're like you know the one you love is sick. But i won't help now and if it doesn't work out like we wall..

Set Lusting Bruce: The Springsteen Podcast
"janda" Discussed on Set Lusting Bruce: The Springsteen Podcast
"The one i would. I've also has struck me properly since writing. The book is how many of his songs are a ghost stories. Um county fair is a kind of ghost story. it's time And so one of the things. I talk about in the book you might compare with emily. Dickenson doesn't have a competitive them the dickinson poem which is cool. Because i could not stop for death. He kindly stopped me. She needs time. So you get shiva because you think oh it was a moment is gone. And springsteen in county fair. He's talking about this. You're and then time so to collapses and you realize that it was on top gun and the two song train song. Think there's nobody gonna raw turn up there you know. This person is waiting for isn't really. There is a ghost go song. Hello everyone and welcome to a new episode. Set than bruce your podcast. All about bruce springsteen his music mostly as fans. I am your host jesse jackson and we are doing a time e y episode which are some of my favorites. It is my morning. It's my guest afternoon and We are here to talk. A little bruce. With gavin lane brooks. How're you doing gavin. I'm doing fine jesse. How you. I am great. Tell us a little watch yourself. Give us your elevator pitch questions off. No no i. I'm sorry just to tell slovak chief okay so I currently live in. Paris wilshire but for many years. I a professor of american literature and teaching literature teaching french novels as well and teaching creative writing and so interesting. What what were some of your favorite novels to talk about. I loved talking. About madam i had a module where i taught madame bovery flaubert's janda red reading the black dostoevsky's crime and punishment and tolstoy's anna karenina quickly. Learn to put anna karenina. I because it's very long and the students wouldn't otherwise read it. That's interesting very nice Are are you no longer teaching. I took a severance About three years ago. But i also paint so i'm painting most of the time In paris oh when. I'm when i'm here. So that's the that's the the main thing i mean the other thing about me. I suppose is always wants to teenager hoping to achieve something and And bruce was very significant in getting me to do that. Well i can't wait to hear that story I always like to start though How you've been doing during the pandemic you know..

The Unmistakable Creative Podcast
"janda" Discussed on The Unmistakable Creative Podcast
"For <Speech_Male> <Silence> <Speech_Music_Male> <SpeakerChange> anyone <Silence> else <Speech_Music_Male> <Speech_Male> amazing. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> Why can't thank you for <Speech_Male> taking the time to join us and <Speech_Male> sharing your story <Speech_Male> in your insides will our listeners. <Speech_Male> Where can people <Speech_Male> find out more about <Speech_Male> you <SpeakerChange> your work <Speech_Male> and everything else. Air up to <Speech_Male> You <Speech_Male> can follow me on <Speech_Male> instagram. That's where i post <Speech_Male> most content <Speech_Male> at more jamba <Speech_Male> on instagram <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> But also <Speech_Male> my website. Michael <Silence> janet dot com <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> Is <Speech_Male> has a <Speech_Male> as links <Speech_Male> to all of my <Speech_Male> things. I do the biz buds. <Speech_Male> Podcast every <Speech_Male> week with tom. Ross <Speech_Male> we <Speech_Male> love that show <Speech_Male> and have great audience. <Speech_Male> They're <Speech_Male> absolutely <Speech_Male> just a handful of places <Speech_Male> written a bunch of <Speech_Male> books and <Speech_Male> have some courses <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> and things so check me out <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> on meikeljohn dot <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> com and you'll find links <Silence> <Advertisement> stole my <SpeakerChange> on <Speech_Male> my stuff <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> awesome and <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> for everybody listening. <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> We <SpeakerChange> will wrap the <Silence> <Advertisement> show with that. <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> <Speech_Male> Thank you for listening to <Speech_Male> this episode of the unmistakable. <Speech_Male> Creative podcast <Speech_Male> while you're listening. <Speech_Male> Were there any moments. <Speech_Male> you've found fascinating <Speech_Male> inspiring <Speech_Male> instructive. <Speech_Male> Maybe even heartwarming. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> Can you think of anyone <Speech_Male> a friend or a family <Speech_Male> member who would appreciate <Speech_Male> this moment. <Speech_Male> If so that <Speech_Male> can share. Today's <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> episode with that one person <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> because good ideas <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> and messages are meant <Silence> <Advertisement> to be shared <Music> <Advertisement> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Music_Female> <Advertisement> <Speech_Music_Female> <Advertisement> <Speech_Music_Female> <Advertisement> from studios <Speech_Female> and me <Speech_Female> diane ghetto. <Speech_Female> We <SpeakerChange> wanna start <Speech_Male> a mental health revolution. <Speech_Male> And then as <Speech_Male> soon as i started going <Speech_Male> to therapy it was <Speech_Male> like such <Speech_Male> a <SpeakerChange> release <Speech_Male> everything <Speech_Male> aligned <Speech_Male> and then i started <Speech_Male> booking things <Speech_Male> and then i started actually <Speech_Male> having somewhat <Speech_Male> of a career but <Speech_Male> it all came from <Speech_Male> mental health. That's <Speech_Music_Male> why i'm so. <Speech_Music_Male> I think <Speech_Male> this is <Speech_Male> possibly <Speech_Music_Male> the most <SpeakerChange> important <Speech_Female> podcast. I'm doing <Speech_Female> listen to yan <Speech_Female> no. I'm not okay wherever you get your podcasts.

The Unmistakable Creative Podcast
"janda" Discussed on The Unmistakable Creative Podcast
"Just you know trifecta of people where it's like the person who goes out and takes action and they would have done that whether they take on your court. Not then there's the person that you become the catalyst for and then there's a person who just keeps looking for the next thing. Yeah and it's it's heartbreaking. I'll tell you when. I i have a bunch of people that i've worked with for over a year started doing coaching last summer and And i you know some of these first people that i coached. I still work with on a regular basis than Angi siham take action in you see. It transform their business. And then you sit there in when you get on the call with that person again. And they haven't fulfilled their efforts to try and do some change some of their sales strategies and things like man i just gave you the freaking goose that lays the golden egg. I gave it to you on a platter. All you have to do is take the ten steps of action that i said and you will see results. No doubt about it and When people don't take action It's really kind of heartbreaking as a as a mentor to anyone When they don't do that. And that's what i said. A kenneka alluded to this at the start. If you're a fear ambitious millennial the world is your man because anything is possible because so. Many people are unwilling to take action. They're unwilling to put in the work that it's gonna take to be successful. They're they're unwilling to do it. Just content to turn on netflix's at the end of the day instead of spending two hours self educating which could turn into massive value in their future and i had a Tom honor we do the buds podcast and and we had a conversation about this. Like what's the difference. How do you unlock this ambition. Howdy unlock it in people and make somebody want to do it. To put in the workforce in the harsh reality is that a lot of people don't a lot of people just they want to go to their day job. They wanna come home and they wanna have you know some downtime with their kids and and get their paycheck and pay their bills and get up the next day and go to work and then come home and coach their kids soccer team. And and when. I'm when i'm an ambitious person. I sit there and thank all but there's so much more in life you can achieve so much but then i have to tell myself you know what there is nothing wrong with that either that that's definition of success and more power to all those people that.

The Unmistakable Creative Podcast
"janda" Discussed on The Unmistakable Creative Podcast
"Ten thousand dollars feels like a lot in a thousand doesn't feel like much and then one hundred thousand feels like a lot and ten thousand doesn't feel like much in reprogram our perception of money over time based on the way that our career is going and it behooves anyone to start reprogramming their money blueprint as soon as they can. I take some of my coaching students through this when they start telling me what they're charging and they'll tell me. Oh well i'm. I'm struggling to charge seven hundred dollars for a logo and then i start telling them what my agency was charging for logos. We were charging like sixty five hundred dollars for logo. Same exact process that this person was afraid to charge seven fifty four my agency. My agency's charging six thousand five hundred. Then we talking about michael beirut and doing a rebrand where they're charging a million dollars for the same work that i'm doing for seventy five hundred bucks or sixty five hundred bucks and it's all about reprogramming our money blueprint to perceive what reality can be for us as creatives and it's usually much much bigger than what most of us think. And you've probably seen that in your career when you start you're afraid to afraid to charge this and you up at a little bit and now you get comfortable with that and then you up a little bit. I never would have guessed. Three years into my agency. When i was doing thirty thousand dollar projects that i'd have a five hundred thousand dollar project which we did for kraft foods system massive project and we have multiple three hundred thousand dollar projects. Couldn't even fathom that. When i thought that thirty grand was a huge project so we got to reprogram the way that we think about money and i learning about other people's businesses can help learnt reading entrepreneur Biographies can help listening to podcast. This can help In and seeing the reality of what other people are charging and doing for the same type of work that you're doing can make a huge impact on your ability to succeed as creative. Yeah i mean i. I've seen people were. They'll look like wow. This person is doing worse for doing in their charging more. I the first you know. I think first couple years aided public speaking of the go a lot and then you get like a pretty massive payday like you know like five figure. Pay for thirty units. Be like okay. That's what's possible. And i got a certain point where somebody was like. Oh we'll pay you six hundred bucks to come to texas and new speech. And i was like. Yeah no thanks. I could do that or from an hour phone..

The Unmistakable Creative Podcast
"janda" Discussed on The Unmistakable Creative Podcast
"Budget number verses their budget number versus their expense number now. It will funny when i think about money. The there's one nugget that has always stayed with me from people. Interviewed in it was from samantha. Bennett and she said you know you're always getting paid. And you're always getting paid in the currency that you're asking for us so she's like if you're asking for facebook likes that's what you're gonna get paid it and she said if you ask for money that's what you'll get paid it. It's funny because i think that for a lot of creative people. It's almost like they feel like they're doing something wrong by asking to be paid for their work. There's wrestling with something. I had to get over. It took me a long time to say okay. You know what yeah. We're running a business not a charity. We need to be okay with this effort. I think i had a post. A couple Maybe a week ago or so and it was i over the course of my agency life. I build thirty million dollars over a fifteen year span and i shared some of the the pain projects. You know i in this post in it was like i have one client that i wrote them a fifty four thousand dollar check when i fired them and said we can't work together anymore. Here's a check of some of your money back. i have another client. Wave seventy thousand dollars of their invoices. When i fired that client i said. Don't pay us seventy grand. You owe us take your stuff and move on and a shared some of these painful moments. That i had and i had somebody who commented on that post and said oh my gosh this is. His numbers are so huge. How i don't know if i could bear that. And the truth is is that it all just incrementally grows over time in you look at your own money blueprint and when you were you know in high school a.

The Unmistakable Creative Podcast
"janda" Discussed on The Unmistakable Creative Podcast
"Brands don't make it feel like you're an inferior designer. Just haven't gotten your foot in the door yet for that great brand but the way that you work if you follow a standard structured creative process the way that you work is is going to translate to those big brands once you get that opportunity if you can make that happen this episode of the unmistakable creative is supported by remote works podcast that tells extraordinary stories of teams that made the shift to flexible working. If there's anything that last year tatas it's at the way we work has changed forever. And in each episode of remote works host. Bowling green tells an insightful story about how people and companies are adapting stocks about the very problems that all of us are dealing with last season in preventing people about the challenges and rewards of working remotely during the pandemic. Now i don't know about you. But i have definitely felt that their days i am burned out and sometimes i don't even know when i'm done working because it's all i do. A recent study found that seventy five percent of workers have experienced burnout and forty percents had there was a direct result of the pandemic. But what if we don't know the signs of impending burnout you'll hear firsthand from someone who has been through. Burn out as well as get expert advice on how to recognize it and what you can do to prevent it from happening in this season. Remote works explore several other topics related to the new world of work for those of you. Who are baseball fans that are missing those days of eating overpriced hot dogs and drinking oversize beers. They pull back the curtain at major league baseball for a glimpse of how america's most beloved pastimes working remotely. You'll hear how the mlb has had to adjust just about everything but they do from rules about how we gather to virtual fanton stadium. You'll get to look at how they've embraced this new world of flexible work. I recently listened to the burnout episode of the world's podcasts. And here's what i thought. Melania doesn't amazing job bringing a diverse perspectives from experts and people who are dealing with the issues. These experts are trying to solve. It's basically a combination of great storytelling with practical advice. That you can apply to your life or your work. So search for remote works anywhere..

The Unmistakable Creative Podcast
"janda" Discussed on The Unmistakable Creative Podcast
"Work for me to go and collect the rent check and things so they would go and and pick up the eight thousand dollar rent check from our renter and go deposited in the bank and a so even at a young age. Fifteen years old and they're funneling money. That's much bigger than the way that i was raised in the perception of money and intentionally did this for them to help them perceive possibility. If my kids aren't making more money than i made like. I failed in my raising.

The Unmistakable Creative Podcast
"janda" Discussed on The Unmistakable Creative Podcast
"Dot com boom where people were throwing stupid money. At bad ideas. I went to berkeley during that time. So i remember yeah so you remember it well and it all blew up a couple years later. But that's the outlier anomaly for me in my career that i can't recreate those scenarios today. Because they don't exist that way anymore So you know. There's there's i guess. circumstantial timing of its fortuitous. It's you know. We're blessed or grateful. Or whatever. I don't i don't know how you phrase it or it's the the universe fills my bucket or whatever kind of metaphor we wanna use for it. But here's the thing that i believe in. I'm i'm an optimistic person. I believe that the future is going to be a lot greater than my past. And i believe that tomorrow has the potential to be even better today than today. And that's the way that i've lived in. I do believe that if people stay in the game long enough that eventually they're going to get these opportunities that come their way where the the stars align just right for their magic moment to happen when they can turn whatever their passion is into a great successful career. I think the problem for a lot of people is that when the stars align they're either not looking for it or they're not prepared to take advantage of it and they never find that successful moment that that outlier thing because they're not ready for it into the stars line to just perfect last night but they were in bed when it happened and so they didn't catch it. I think that there's a lot of that people's careers and especially now not to stereotype of the the younger workforce of today but the if you're an ambitious entrepreneurial driven millennial the world is your oyster man because so many of them are not if you're ambitious and driven right now you can really accomplish amazing things because so many people you mentioned entitlement or privilege so many people don't put in the effort that it takes to yield the success that they really want now. So you're a parent right. Yeah okay so how is your own life. experience influenced your own experience. Because i know that you've spent some time living in columbia posted like all those experiences you know like i'm very convinced. This point that every experience whether we realize it or not plant the seed that connects those dots later. As you know. Steve jobs said you have to collect those dots to connect them..

The Unmistakable Creative Podcast
"janda" Discussed on The Unmistakable Creative Podcast
"Well it turns out. Somebody actually has a job. Doing that. randy talks the experts behind. These sounds to find out about the work that goes into designing what she calls a sonic logos as podcast host. I think a lot about how sound impact says what we're hearing on a podcast or from a notification on a phone or from some apple using and if you want to learn more about the impact that sound has on our lives listening subscribed pastas powered by audio on. I tunes spotify or wherever you get your podcasts. So i spend a bit more time on this. Do what you love. The money will follow narrative. Because i think that there is so much more subtle nuance than that right. It kind of takes us back to context privilege like doing me wrong. I i've been in a very fortunate position to be to take that advice. Follow at at. You know get to do this. I mean but i started when i was thirty but i feel like we perpetuate that narrative without considering the context and we sell it to people like we sell false. Hope to people almost to a fault And you i think you have built successful credit for. But i just had william dershowitz here who wrote a book called the death of the artist. He had another book called the mis. Education the american lead was a really fascinating conversation about the harsh truth about what it takes to actually make a living as a creative person and he said you know the probability of success is actually not high and he said that he was very. He was hyper critical of people. Like steven johnson said. There's no better time to start making money off your ideas because you have the internet. You have social media. I mean you. And i are pretty close in age like i remember. When i went to college it would take hundreds of hours and thousands of dollars to build a website. Now you can do it yet minutes. Yeah but the thing that has happened. Is that as you create more tools. And you give more people access and you give them more permission..

The Unmistakable Creative Podcast
"janda" Discussed on The Unmistakable Creative Podcast
"Well creative thanks so much for taking the time to join us a thank you. I'm excited to be here. Yeah it is my pleasure to have you here. So i found out about your work by way of somebody on your team and I think that what really struck me about the way that you have made your way in the world is a creative person. Who's you somehow found that intersection between art and commerce. That seems to be a mystery between For for so many aspiring artists. But before we get into all of that. I want to ask you. What in the world did your parents do for work. And how did that end. Up influencing and shaping Choices that you've made. Wow that's an interesting question and not even ever been asked that my mom was a school teacher. She was a stay at home mom when we were little kids and then when i got into college he started working again. Put my my older brother. And i through college and then she just worked continually through that And my dad was a career. Thirty years at the same company Orthopedic company in the mid west and Was in marketing and sales and things didn't talk about work. Very much work was job. It wasn't a passion for him. He wasn't entrepreneurial thinking at entrepreneurial spirit but but it was the era of you get a job at bristol myers than you work there for thirty or forty years and then retire. That was the era of pre. My my era. The jenex era of people and Entrepreneurship seemed to be in my blood. But it didn't come from my my upbringing now. So the there multiple questions that your mother as an educator. What was her view on on. Both how you should get educated but also like how that would influence your choices because you know. I used to criticize my parents a lot for sort of. They're very practical career advice. Because they you know that's just how indians are but then i think that one of the things that we tend to do particular generation was we overlooked context. Like you mentioned you know. That was the era in which your parents raised in often. That's what determines their you know. Sort of choices. Because their life trajectories were binary either poverty your security and so advice made a hell of a lot of sense now after twenty years of actually being smart enough to reflect on what they've said. Yeah i think you know. I think my generation i'm forty eight years old and i think my generation was the last american generation..

The Peter Attia Drive
The Prague School of Rehabilitation and Principles of Dynamic Neuromuscular Stabilization (DNS)
"I think for the purpose of this discussion. Let's assume a person has never heard of. Dns has never heard of the prague school or any of these things can you in a somewhat succinct. But not terribly brief manner. Explain to people how all of this school of rehabilitation coalesced around this idea of what we call. Dns going back to the founding fathers of the prague school and what these various insights were that each of them had and how that sort of came together dns dynamic neuro muscular stabilization. Kind of built on some pioneers of functional rehabilitation. There's many that have been part of the prague school rehabilitation. But i think talking about the influence on the development of dynamic muscular stabilization by professor powell whole lodge who runs the rehabilitation department at prague school. At this time. I think we need to go back. Post world war two cold war era. Nine thousand nine hundred fifties his wear prague school rehabilitation was was really founded and it was founded as part of the medical faculty of charles university in prague czech republic or formerly czechoslovakia now czech republic and being post world war two cold war era so they were in eastern europe behind the wall. That may have been a factor for. They're not reliance but tendency towards the use of of observation in both diagnostic diagnosis but observation and palpitation for diagnosis and treatment. All three of these pioneers neurologist. And who are the three. Lot of miranda kerr levitt and ballclub woida professor janda. He had a keen sense of observation and he formulated concepts and principles that tied into pasta habituation specifically the tendency for specific musculature tend towards tightness and other musculature to tend towards weakness. And he he termed this upper cross and lower cross syndrome. So for example with an upper-crust syndrome meaning the neck and shoulder region with demands of life and tendency towards paschel habituation such as with sustained seated postures There is a tendency towards the muscles in the back of the neck the exceptional muscles the external cloud asteroid muscle which is the muscle that also attached to the skull in down to their sterner curricular joint the pec muscles the upper traps that musculature with ten towards a tight meaner over activation other musculature in the upper extremity the radius which attaches to the ribs in the back of the scapula the deep neck flex irs the middle and lower traps would have a tendency to tend towards the weakness and with that tendency towards over utilization or hyper tenacity and underutilization in addition weakness. That would also he also recognized that that would affect the quality of movement throughout the kinetic chain and subsequently would lead to overload in specific areas throughout that kinetic chain so that was a big contribution on his

WBZ Midday News
MBTA installing flood prevention system outside Boston's Aquarium Station amid storm preps
"Preparations are underway right now in the Boston waterfront. We're hoping to avoid a repeat of a storm that hit 2.5 years ago. Double BBC's Mike Macklin is outside the aquarium. Just a few hours to go before the expected arrival of the Zaius and Mbita crews are feverishly working to install a protective barrier around the aquarium station at long, Worf, 2.5 years ago, a ferocious nor'easter slammed into Boston Harbor. Producing a 12 foot high tide and the storm surge that flooded the underground blue line station. The tea's build. Elke Janda is overseeing storm preps today. Yeah, we want to be ready. Like I said, I don't think the rain is actually going to the issue on this one. I think it's going to be more the wind so that can that can raise the tide. So we want to be ready for anything. But Tony 18 Nor'easter said Flood waters along the harbor all the way to the Rose Kennedy Greenway. The worst flooding in Boston's waterfront since the blizzard of 78

Marketing School
30 Lessons After 30 Million SEO Visits
"Super committed to your success online. We've worked with them to a special offer. Just remarking school listeners, all you have to do is go to dream host dot com slash marking school to learn more and get your website online today. Welcome to another episode of Marketing School. I'm Eric. Su and I'm Neil Patel and today. We're GONNA. Talk about the this part. Four thirty lessons after thirty million Seo visit, so are we starting on number twenty four? The riches are in the niches, so if you try to make a news website, or if you try to be everything to everyone, you can have a harder time making things especially if you're starting out in the beginning I think Oh my God, all these new leads news websites they get all the traffic I should make news websites, but think about it. What resources do you need to make a news website happen? If you're small, it's better for you to think. Think about what are you actually good at just focus on that? Google likes focus search engines like focused when you go to my blog or you're gonNA Neil Plug. It's focused on marketing. This podcast is focused on marketing so niche sites are were you are GonNa, find the riches number, twenty five easy way to generate more roi from your SEO is Remarka-, all those people and push ads to him whether it's through facebook youtube. Google, what you'll find is way cheaper clicks and a lot of them will convert because remember how you're limited on what you can do to your Seo. Landing pages maximize your revenue and conversions unlike pay per click, click also expensive, but doing remarking ads. There's a lot of remnant inventory and you can make quite affordable. Twenty six is think about how you can make the most of your titles on your Meta descriptions. So what you can do is you can go to Google search console, look at the pages that have a high impression count, but a little click the rate right a better title, right a better than a description. You can do that with Google for free, or we haven't tool called clone allows you to do that number twenty. Seven. If you're trying to figure out what pages to ignore, ready talked about you need update content. Spend more time on it, but a lot of people that like. Where should we spend our time on content when it comes, Seo Click full has concert decay tool. Check it out. The ones that are decaying the fastest are the ones that you need to spend the majority of your time and improving verse. Twenty eight Faq Schema. The search engine result pages. The Serbs continue to change. You have to think about how you can find more opportunities to entice people to click through to your website so Faq Schema allows you to add specific points or questions to your search results snippet, or you're just your search result, you can add to snippet on top or the bottom of it, but you have more real estate there. You'll get more clicks so just Google let efficacy Schema number, twenty nine Google isn't the only search engine being Seo. Seo You can actually get a lot of traffic from being. You can get a lot of traffic from by, do you? WanNa go into China. You get a lot of traffic from Janda ex. Another place that is really popular that most people ignore when it comes, SEO is video seo and going after youtube grabs a ton of us right now. I think in the last thirty days on Youtube I think we average around one point two one point three million views. Most of it came from Youtube Seo. All right number thirty last, but not lace. You can do a lot with head tail keywords, but typically they're more competitive, so had till keyword might just be like digital marketing, or you can go for something different such as digital lessons, which is probably still competitive by adding more detail right, but the more long-tailed keyword is the more you're going to be able to achieve, because it's less competitive, and you are going to be able to especially if it's very specific in many cases, it's you know it's it might be higher converting for yourself. It's autumn funnel, but don't just focus on had terms. That's my point. Think about how you can occupy positions around. Around long tail keywords, and