17 Burst results for "Mcnutt"

Crypto Current
"mcnutt" Discussed on Crypto Current
"Advanced. Okay, a good mix. All right, so we'll make a balance. So I want to just jump in. We'll get to our intros and stuff but you're here mostly to kind of hear about what's going on. And the interoperability world that lots of her names, first of all, yeah, cross chain. Blockchain or operability protocols. Internets of blockchains can be all a little bit confusing. So Ryan, why don't you kick us off by defining what interoperability is? Yeah, yeah. So essentially, when you look at all these different blockchains that are out there today, you have Ethereum, Solana, all these different kind of things out there. It's kind of like if you look at different financial systems today. So you have the United States and you have maybe like Argentina, they have maybe Great Britain. And each of these things have their own separate banks that they, all those citizens can go to. What really needs to happen is we have this swift system where we can move money amongst all of them, right? And we have other systems where we can effectively send money through banks, it can kind of bounce around. We need something like that. And the crypto space. So essentially, we need to make everything inner work together in a similar fashion. So that way each blockchain can interconnect and talk to each other. Nice. And Cole, why is this important? Sure. So really, I kind of think of it as any computer that's able to talk to another computer. Are the systems able to pass information back and forth in a meaningful way where both systems understand the data. So this is important for any business, any organization, all of us at an individual level, a simple example that a lot of us see, just having your bank accounts or credit cards, debit cards integrate with your Apple wallet with Apple Pay, perfect example of different systems, being able to talk to each other and then create value for a business or a customer. So in where we're going today, we're seeing that those needs explode. And the types of use cases grow and grow and grow. And the amount of data that's needed to pass back and forth between these different systems to enable those features to happen. It's exploding as well. So lots of new challenges in this space. Cole, could you tell us a little bit about your background? And some of the pain points that you've experienced and you bump into at the lack of interoperability? Sure. So a little bit about me, I work for the H bar foundation, the director of analytics there. And my primary job there is to answer the question, what are our grantees doing on chains? So we give out grants to organizations building on our blockchain. To increase the value of the network. And that's only going to be successful if the grants we give out actually translate to network activity. So a big piece of what I do is I measure the network and associate that with our traditional web two database. To answer that question, how many transactions are they doing? What's the value logged on a grant level? How many accounts are being created? How many active users do we have? And to do that, I have to build an integration between our blockchain and our traditional Salesforce database. So that is one example of how we need to bridge an example of interoperability adding value there. Before I worked for the H bar foundation, I was working for Twitter, helping them bridge their databases together. And before that, I spent time working in the managed service integration industry where companies will pay tens of millions of dollars to other companies just to simply build point to point integrations to make their features work to make their products work. It is not easy to do. And it takes a lot of work and a lot of people to create those bridges. Thanks, Cole. Ryan, we tell us a little bit about what you're seeing is the kind of state of the art and bridging or cross chain communication and also give us a little bit about your background. Yeah, yeah. So bridging out there is pretty broad, but it's kind of falling into a couple of different categories. So you have what's called a burn in mint bridge, which is like what circle uses. So each of these tokens that you have out there have essentially an issuer. So someone who created this and can issue out the tokens, create them and destroy them. Those are seen as like the most secure. I'm a big fan of those because effectively they can give them say like USD C or their token, they can take that destroy it and then reproduce it on a separate chain. There's no real way to or at least from what we've seen so far. There's no really hacks or anything like that on that side. Then you have the more wrapped token based, which there's a decentralized and there's a centralized version of this. The wrapped Bitcoin is more of like a centralized version. So essentially it's one body that's wrapping this thing and then handing it off. And then you have a decentralized which that's kind of where you've seen all the hacks and all these different problems. But essentially it's all at a protocol level. So everything's handled by smart contracts. The two blockchains, they build out a communication protocol between the two blockchains. They talk to each other. One essentially says, hey, I have the funds, the other one says, okay, let's put that in a contract to hold it and then reproduce a rap token or a derivative token on this destination chain. As far as bleeding edge, each of those are kind of having their own different faults, but I do like the burning mint bridge. As far as my background though, I'm the founder of a company called sphere one. We're building an abstracted cross chain payments platform. Essentially, our idea is to abstract the overall experience for the user. We see there's like a huge hindrance for adoption. And allow people who have tokens across multiple chains to seamlessly purchase and buy things with that. Before I was doing this, I essentially have found a couple of other different companies in the past. Both my parents were entrepreneurs, so I've been in this space for a while, kind of seeing it growing up, which is pretty cool. And I've been coding for pretty much since I was ten, so it's been fun. I think of the bridging. I break it down a little differently in my mind. Because there's a lot of tactics or ways that you can move information from one blockchain to another. But the standard that I'm seeing emerge is IBC and within the cosmos ecosystem and full disclosure, I'm a huge shill for them. So I'm wearing the shirt just to make it real obvious. This is a cofounder of tendermint. So speaking of my book, but the thing that is that I think the market is responding really well to with IBC is the fact that the validator set is the same as the protocol validators. So you get all the security from the protocol validators without needing to stand up this separate group of validators that oftentimes when you do these kinds of burn and mints or these other things, there's like a group of people that are controlling that validator set. And so then with a relatively minimal model liquidity compared to the whole protocols liquidity and all the decentralization that's at the protocol level. What do you think about IBC and their approach? Do you think that that's yeah, yeah, I'm up here totally forgot about IBC. I feel kind of bad. But no, I'm a big, big fan of IBC. There's actually a mets and founders of a company called polymer labs. They're essentially bringing IBC to other blockchains. So they're trying to bring it over to Ethereum and pretty much anything else that can get their hands on. They're doing some amazing things.

WABE 90.1 FM
"mcnutt" Discussed on WABE 90.1 FM
"Going to be dead before the year 2086. I can guarantee I can guarantee that. So it's the cliche about, well, you have to take the long-term view, right? We'll consider the great cathedrals of Europe. Those were not built in a generation. They were literally built some of them over hundreds of years. Future generations will look back to 2022 and go, wow, this is something in the history books. So it's a matter of perspective and being able to kind of kind of jump back and forth and probably a lot of it has to do with the fact that I used to inhale science fiction novels when I was a kid. That's right. Well, critics point to that price tag, that 3.1 billion. Some critics are saying that this would suck all the money out of the out of their coffers. And would come at the expense of other work, including studying solar flares that can damage satellites, things like that. Climate. First of all, what would you say to those critics? And then would you consider a private company like Blue Origin or SpaceX? Oh, well, absolutely. I mean, you know, you're always looking for the best deal out there. I mean, ultimately, it's the American taxpayer that's paying for these things. And so, you know, the question always comes up about, well, you know, why are we wasting money on space, but you know, it's really not wasted because we have learned so much since the beginning of the space program, and you have to keep doing this. You have to keep challenging everybody. You have to keep giving them new challenges. You know, it's like what Kennedy said about, you know, why do we go to the moon? And we do it because it's hard. Like rice playing Texas. And I grew up in Fort Worth. So, you know, it's all a question of balance and I think it's worth it because I think that you've got two choices. You can either step backwards or you can step to the future and you step to the future by doing the new challenges and the new challenging things and that's how you advance. And you either advance or decline, you don't really have a choice. You can't stand still. Well, you say yes, it could say where do we come from, but also where are we going? You could map where the solar system is going. It's what 230 million year orbit around the gas. But I'm wondering, too, this probe can also, in addition to looking forward, seeing what's out there, it can turn around and take a picture looking backwards. Well, that's exactly right. What would we see? What someone said it's the most expensive snapshot in history, but what is it we would see? It would see. Actually, there's two answers to the question. So one answer has to do with the fact that the voyagers have given us a confusing picture of what that this overall interaction between our solar system and the local interstellar medium really looks like. By being able to be outside of the heliosphere and then look back with the so called neutral energetic atom camera, we would actually be able to see what the the interaction looks like with the rest of space. Which is something right now that we simply do not know. So that's one thing. That would tell us a lot about ourselves. It would tell us a lot about how other stars also interact with the interstellar medium. And the other thing that we can do is to look back at the earth and really treat the as we're going further and further away to treat the earth as an exoplanet. On the same footing as these other worlds that we don't really know anything about, at least not yet. Fascinating. Ralph mcnutt junior physicist and chief scientist for space science at the Johns Hopkins University applied

Gun Talk
"mcnutt" Discussed on Gun Talk
"Because out west, you can get up on ridges and stuff. And really just kind of watching glass scenario. It's different than white tails in the thick. The thick stuff is different. So I hate to see, I hate talking to Mike mcnutt of double tap because he makes me rethink my life choices. Just like my buddy out in Colorado, if he would not have said something, I wouldn't have had problems this year, but I kid you not. It was like September and he was like, man, you need to get something different because you're going to have problems with that. And sure enough, this year I've had a couple of problems, issues with it. I've just been lucky up to this point, I guess. Yeah. So just so you know, the 6.5 is actually still a decent deer arrival in statistics. I mean, I can't say it enough time. Just keep your range in check and get a stout bowl. Yeah. The match bullets use them for using for the match. Usually for The Rain. Hogan paper. That's right. And steel and hit steel with them and make great marks on the steel. They blow themselves right up. It's great. And then use those tupper bullets and if you can just do that, you will be really happy with the way that you're 6 5 creed more performs. If you don't, then you'll probably have a story like you have. Yeah. And okay, so tell us where they need to go and what they need to get from double tap. So from us, we keep it really simple. Right. So we've got a 140 grain match. I mean, the 140 is really the kind of the cat's meal. And it is stone dead accurate in the cheapest and the most expensive rifles. It's as long as you have good glass and you can see you're going to hit the one 27 LRX that I mentioned before. It's going fast. It's only like 3100. It's moving. It's a killer. It's a killer. All the way out to probably 5 to 600 yards. It opens. Okay. So you have a legitimate deep penetrating, hold on a 127 grains of that. That's okay. And then the other is the one 30 scirocco. Monterey scirocco is going the same speed as the one 27. And it is really accurate in all the 6 5s that we've shot it through. And it's one of those ones that even at sub hundred yards. It's holding 85% of its weight. So those are really the three, the three that we load now. We've had a larger selection, but really we kind of honed it down to the real, the ones that really the best. Yeah. And those three, we got a good match and then choose between the other two for hunting and you can't go wrong. You just can't go wrong. Just don't overdo it. It's not a kodiak bear. Gun. It's not a cape buff, don't take it for Lion. Yeah. It doesn't mean you can't kill anything that you probably kill blue whale if you really wanted to certain shots and stuff. But we're talking about sensible. There's a reason why people use four or 5 8 lot in the 500 nitros and stuff for big game. And they don't, they don't use unless you're care emotional bell. Right. You don't use a little gun like that for that type of thing. So let's just know your gun, know your limits, and use good ammo using good Permian bullet. It's going to be fine. That's it. Wise words from mister Mike mcnett of double Tapping ammunition, give them a look. What do they need to go? You can go to double tap ammo dot com and ask your dealer to order it up through any major distributor hazards. Harvard. All right. As always, gun talk, hunters. Keep those muzzles pointed in a safe direction and always be on the hunt..

WNYC 93.9 FM
"mcnutt" Discussed on WNYC 93.9 FM
"Collection of earth sounds Like that train a barking dog a kiss The golden records are now just a part of what Aker knows about the voyagers She's a graduate student at Cornell University and her research relies on data that the spacecraft are still sending back Voyager one is over 14 billion miles away Voyager two is more than 11 billion miles away Aker says to the casual observer it would look like they're moving through black nothingness The interstellar medium seems like it's empty but it's really not It's full of gas and dust and cosmic rays energetic particles She says this mysterious territory is important for understanding our own solar system the universe there's still huge gaps in our knowledge that can really only be filled by direct sampling The voyagers have been doing that Unfortunately their plutonium power source is ebbing away We're looking at which instrument gets to have all of their heaters turned off first because we're just flat running out of power Ralph mcnutt works at the Johns Hopkins University applied physics laboratory I'm still on the Voyager science team I think I'm the youngest one on the Voyager science team At least the youngest who's been around since its beginning he's 68 this week He says the voyagers will run out of power in 9 years or so That's why NASA recently asked mcnutt and a team of scientists to make plans for a successor mission The team has come up with a reasonably priced practical spacecraft one that relies on technology that's either tried and true or already far along in development And right now we're looking at pragmatically being able to go about twice as fast as Voyager one and plan for lasting at least 50 years and that will get us out to about 375 astronomical units 375 astronomical units is more than twice as far as Voyager one is and this new spacecraft would have better instruments A lot of things that we know now that it would have been nice to have had on Voyager but the technology either didn't exist or Voyager was a four and a half year mission to Jupiter and Saturn So why would you fly those things Remember it's just a happy accident that the voyagers stayed alive long enough to send back information about interstellar space This new probe in contrast would be deliberately designed to go the distance It would have the longest planned duration of any NASA mission ever 50 years would be the minimum Mcnutt thinks it might talk to earth for more than a century Now a mission that long is going to have to cope with all of its technology becoming obsolete to say nothing of its people Janet vertesi is a sociologist with Princeton University She says that the team contacted her and basically said hey we're planning this mission It's going to the interstellar medium We're probably all going to be dead by the time it gets there And so we figure we probably need a sociologist She's using her expertise to help them think through how and how often parts of the mission will need to be handed off to members of a younger generation To someone like Stella aaker that student who's using Voyager data to work on her PhD Aker says if NASA decides to fund and build this spacecraft it could launch around 2036 shape be in her 40s And then it wouldn't reach interstellar space for another 15 to 20 ish years So already we're talking about more of my late career really Still she's really hopeful NASA will give it the green light should also love for it to carry some kind of contemporary take on the golden records some kind of time capsule that reflects the Planet Earth and humanity as it is today Nell Greenfield Boyce NPR news It is almost Halloween and haunted houses are back They look and feel a little bit different though The Gates of hell in Las Vegas is run by the freaking brothers horror shows They've been scared the pants off guests for almost 30 years but last year they had to close because of the pandemic We didn't want to contribute to the problem we wanted to say safe and we also knew that what we do is very in your face kind of immersive event So from an artistic standpoint it wasn't going to be fun That's JT Muller the co owner of freeling brothers His father started the business which is known as the only rated R haunted house in Nevada This year Muller and 60 actors are back with the promise to be more vicious but also safer than ever You're going to see the ghosts in the goblins with their vaccinated and they wear surgical masks under their spooky masks Also they will be keeping their distance You know if there was an actor that used to get two inches away from somebody's face before and put their hands up on the wall and corner the person now we might have 5 foot long prosthetics on that actor And we'll make sure the actors never one inch from their face Jeez okay but what keeps customers coming back when real life seems scary enough honestly Mulder says that's sort of the point I think it's very cathartic because there is real life horror in the world right now And it's the reality is scary But to go through something that allows you to experience the catharsis without the actual risk It's a good thing for some people not everybody In other words one person's nightmare is another person's self care This is NPR news.

WNYC 93.9 FM
"mcnutt" Discussed on WNYC 93.9 FM
"A collection of earth sounds Like that train a barking dog a kiss the golden records are now just a part of what awkward knows about the voyagers She's a graduate student at Cornell University and her research relies on data that the spacecraft are still sending back Voyager one is over 14 billion miles away Voyager two is more than 11 billion miles away Aker says to the casual observer it would look like they're moving through black nothingness The interstellar medium seems like it's empty but it's really not It's full of gas and dust and cosmic rays energetic particles She says this mysterious territory is important for understanding our own solar system the universe there's still huge gaps in our knowledge that can really only be filled by direct sampling The voyagers have been doing that Unfortunately their plutonium power source is ebbing away We're looking at which instrument gets to have all of their heaters turned off first because we're just flat running out of power Ralph mcnutt works at the Johns Hopkins University applied physics laboratory I'm still on the Voyager science team I think I'm the youngest one on the voyagers science team At least the youngest who's been around since its beginning he's 68 this week He says the voyagers will run out of power in 9 years or so That's why NASA recently asked mcnutt and a team of scientists to make plans for a successor mission The team has come up with a reasonably priced practical spacecraft one that relies on technology that's either tried and true or already far along in development And right now we're looking at pragmatically being able to go about twice as fast as Voyager one and plan for lasting at least 50 years and that will get us out to about 375 astronomical units 375 astronomical units is more than twice as far as Voyager one is and this new spacecraft would have better instruments A lot of things that we know now that it would have been nice to have had on Voyager but the technology either didn't exist or Voyager was a four and a half year mission to Jupiter and Saturn So why would you fly those things Remember it's just a happy accident that the voyagers stayed alive long enough to send back information about interstellar space This new probe in contrast would be deliberately designed to go the distance It would have the longest planned duration of any NASA mission ever 50 years would be the minimum Mcnutt thinks it might talk to earth for more than a century Now a mission that long is going to have to cope with all of its technology becoming obsolete to say nothing of its people Janet vertesi is a sociologist with Princeton University She says that the team contacted her and basically said hey we're planning this mission It's going to the interstellar medium We're probably all going to be dead by the time it gets there And so we figure we probably need a sociologist She's using her expertise to help them think through how and how often parts of the mission will need to be handed off to members of a younger generation To someone like Stella ocker that student who's using Voyager data to work on her PhD Aker says if NASA decides to fund and build this spacecraft it could launch around 2036 shape in her 40s And then it wouldn't reach interstellar space for another 15 to 20 ish years So already we're talking about more of my late career really Still she's really hopeful NASA will give it the green light she'd also love for it to carry some kind of contemporary take on the golden records Some kind of time capsule that reflects the Planet Earth and humanity as it is today Nell Greenfield Boyce NPR news.

The Masked Man Show
"mcnutt" Discussed on The Masked Man Show
"All right guys. That was bobby. Lashley caz do you wanna. Do you want to do some plugs on the doing some plugs salas a castle kia rosie every monday wherever you get your podcast from on youtube dot com slash. Gazillion could check me out on msg pm on summer. Break right now so. It's kinda great that we're in vegas could be like. Oh i don't got a you know do msg. But i could come here and have a fake summer vacation and watch them wrestling. So we'll be back those third pm Myself monica mcnutt the wonderful monica mcnutt macos. And the. i think that's all i think. That's all unplugging this week you can find me here. You can find me on the press box sometimes. But we're doing a lotta stuff here as you guys. Well know we'll be back tomorrow. We will be discussing a w tomorrow. We will a little event that we might want to touch on some things and and men. These roman coats too. I think we followed by roman first thing tomorrow a lot. Yeah anyway thank you guys for listening apologies as always to jon moxley. We'll see you back here tomorrow. Humanoids tony shimada. Here on the man show where desperately at a time colleen. We'll see you next week on the mass man show..

Men, This Way
"mcnutt" Discussed on Men, This Way
"I'm just blaming <Speech_Male> her. Victim mentality <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> data <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> Therapist <Silence> goals <Speech_Male> while. <Speech_Male> I won't can you survive. <Silence> <Speech_Male> <Silence> <SpeakerChange> What would it mean. <Speech_Male> She's <Speech_Male> you big coming <Speech_Male> here for three weeks. Complaining <Speech_Male> about this woman <Speech_Male> i long. Can <Speech_Male> you survive being with <Speech_Male> the woman who is not in alignment <Silence> with. You <Speech_Male> <Silence> was like shit. <SpeakerChange> <Silence> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> Can't survive. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> i'm dead right now <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> office <Speech_Male> right now. I'm dead <Speech_Male> by <Speech_Male> you asking me that question. <Speech_Male> You made <Speech_Male> me realize. I'm <Speech_Male> day. I'm <Speech_Male> not here <Speech_Male> so for me to be alive. <Speech_Male> I have to say <Speech_Male> no to every <Speech_Male> woman like her. <Speech_Male> That brings <Speech_Male> me out of my <Speech_Male> purpose outta my healing <Speech_Male> out of my <Speech_Male> happiness <Speech_Male> right out of my <Speech_Male> energy <SpeakerChange> and <Speech_Male> into whatever <Speech_Male> she was invited <Silence> to <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> so <Speech_Male> that relationship ended. <Speech_Male> Because i said no <Speech_Male> so. I i remember <Speech_Male> going home and <Speech_Male> i wrote on a piece of paper <Speech_Male> might. <Speech_Male> These are the i <Speech_Male> literally wrote my boundaries <Speech_Male> out like no this <Speech_Male> is the type of woman will <Speech_Male> never deal with. I'm <Speech_Male> not even negotiating <Speech_Male> with you. And <Speech_Male> and this is what i'm <Speech_Male> open to. <Silence> Who years later. <Speech_Male> The girl <Speech_Male> that i'm with now been together. <Silence> We've been together six years. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> Got a beautiful <Speech_Male> son with their. We have a <Speech_Male> great healthy <Speech_Male> relationship. <Speech_Male> She was <Speech_Male> basically <SpeakerChange> what i wrote <Speech_Male> down on that paper. <Speech_Male> I love that <Speech_Male> you say no <Speech_Male> to what is a no. You make <Speech_Male> space for what is <Speech_Male> authentic. Yes for <Speech_Male> you <Speech_Male> well. This was not <Speech_Male> a lightning round <Speech_Male> of the five key takeaways <Speech_Male> but it is exactly <Speech_Male> what <Speech_Male> i am thrilled. <Speech_Male> <hes> <Speech_Male> would wanted <Speech_Male> it to be so. Thank <Speech_Male> you <Speech_Male> Sly <Silence> where kin <Speech_Male> our <Speech_Male> listeners. <Silence> Learn <SpeakerChange> more about <Speech_Male> you. What <Speech_Male> my real name is. So <Silence> vast another third. <Speech_Male> If <Speech_Male> you type that <SpeakerChange> in on the internet <Speech_Male> you'll find that <Speech_Male> you're not hard to find man. <Speech_Male> You are <Speech_Male> showing up big and beautiful <Speech_Male> and powerful <Speech_Male> on <Speech_Male> the internet's man. I'm so <Speech_Male> glad your <Speech_Male> voice is <Speech_Male> activated <Speech_Male> and and <Speech_Male> and <Speech_Male> reverberating <Speech_Male> through the world. <Speech_Male> We need voice. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> Keep at it man. <Speech_Male> I'm honored that <Speech_Male> you said yes. To come in on <Speech_Male> amend this way means <Speech_Male> a lot to me. I do not take <Speech_Male> that for granted. I <Speech_Male> appreciate you <Speech_Male> <hes> <Speech_Male> And i'm just excited <Speech_Male> to watch <SpeakerChange> your journey. <Silence> Continue to unfold. <Silence> <Speech_Male> <SpeakerChange> Thank you <Speech_Male> brian. Thank <Speech_Male> you so much <Speech_Male> for listening. <Speech_Male> Thank you again to <Speech_Male> sylvester mcnutt the third <Speech_Male> find <Speech_Male> slide <Speech_Male> by searching him <Speech_Male> online as he said <Speech_Male> silvester. Make not <Speech_Male> the third not hard <Speech_Male> to find <Speech_Male> a <Speech_Male> ninety nine. Sure anyone <Speech_Male> else on the planet. Has <Speech_Male> that name such a beautiful <Speech_Male> powerful name. i <Speech_Male> love it <Speech_Male> and of course <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> I'll put links and <Speech_Male> resources and <Speech_Male> sylvester's key <Speech_Male> five key takeaways <Speech_Music_Male> in the show notes <Speech_Music_Male> at bryant <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> reeves dot <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> com slash <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> men. This way podcast. <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> Remember bryan <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> with a y. Relieves <Speech_Music_Male> r. e. e. v. <Speech_Music_Male> e. s. dot com <Speech_Music_Male> slash men. This way <Speech_Music_Male> podcast. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> You were served by <Speech_Male> this and think other <Speech_Male> should here to <Speech_Male> please share this episode <Speech_Female> war. <Speech_Music_Female> Just write a review <Speech_Music_Male> so that you <Speech_Male> can lead <Speech_Male> more men <Speech_Male> this way <Speech_Male> and <Speech_Male> don't forget to subscribe <Speech_Male> yourself while <Speech_Male> you're at it. I'm <Speech_Male> your thriving life <Speech_Male> and relationship coach. <Speech_Male> Brian <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> reeves bryan with <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> a y. Reeves <Speech_Male> until soon <Speech_Music_Male> keep your head up <Speech_Music_Male> your breath <Speech_Male> relaxed. <SpeakerChange> And your <Speech_Music_Male> thoughts inspired. <Music>

Men, This Way
"mcnutt" Discussed on Men, This Way
"I am a mostly available. What my one. And we've been together six years. We have a kid together. But it's much easier and much more comfortable to share with men especially me being a heterosexual man in the groups and men are heterosexual so so there's a lot in common. I just find it so much. Easier and more natural to share and i think that the man who struggle with it with sharing with their partner with a female partner. I think you actually make benefits you to get with men into share it with men because then you're practicing those words you know and then you're practicing knowing like exactly what to say because you don't need i don't feel like you need to tell your lady every single thing. I don't think most women wanna know every single thing just like as men. I don't think we wanna know every single thing you know. But that's like my. She talks to her girls about things that i don't wanna talk to her about it. That's what is healthy is healthy. It's healthy to have those friendships. The look let's lean into this a little bit as if if you're gonna get cancelled. Let's get cancelled together. Let's let's go down. Let's go down with this ship together. But no i think i think here's what i figured out. Here's what i believe. It happens in a men's group that is it's it's i believe in containers. The relationship with your woman with your spouse is a container and inside like your bedroom is a container in the bedroom you you should rest and make love. That's about it in your office. Don't do work in your bedroom. That's not what the containers for so your relationship with. Your woman is a container where you should both feel nurtured nourished Sure that conflict is going to rise. But you should be able to navigate that conflict in ways that that that is gentle and reassuring to each other. That helps each other to feel safe. We men have a certain intensity..

Men, This Way
"mcnutt" Discussed on Men, This Way
"And i was in a workshop about three hundred people about ten years ago and there was a black woman in this workshop who I saw so just nine days slide just nine. Days of questioning are stressful thoughts. That's all we did for nine days straight and saw this black woman halfway through. She had this moment of a pitney. She and this is what she shared with all of us she shared that she had been. She had beaten her two children her children and her rationale four. She beat them because she knew the world was going to beat them so better she teach them how to take beating because the world is going to do it anyway so in her mind she had been teaching them to a beating by beating them herself and the moment she that pop for her. I heard a cry out of her. Her whole being wailed in a way. Like i've never heard anyone wail like that before when she saw. That was such a profound moment for me. I mean for so many reasons obviously just being a white man not understanding the black experience also just understanding Honestly an ex girlfriend. That i had. I i heard through this black woman. Speaking finally heard an ex girlfriend of mine all the things that she had been wind so me but also My parents like what you said you know being able to understand. I think what i've learned is to is to host space for my anger at how you know. My father has not shown up for me. Hold space for that. I can i get to be angry and my father didn't have the internet. He didn't have youtube. he couldn't go on to watch our videos sylvester he couldn't run. There was no amazon where we're his therapist whereas his mental health support. You know they didn't have this. So yeah we're allowed to be pissed off. We're allowed to be angry. Were allowed to present your any of those low vibrational emotions were allowed to be that but.

Men, This Way
"mcnutt" Discussed on Men, This Way
"There's something that happens there that is a pathway to fulfilling potential man. What pressures that myself like. It's not just. Am i going to have a good time or not. It's my life is at stake. If you're you're putting a lot of pressure around like certain interactions dude i. I'm on a mission in this body on this planet and which again man. There's an insanity in that there's a there's a pathologic pathology in that and i'm but still like his childhood programming. There's family stuff a lot wrapped up in that that you know i'm here to on a fucking mission and so but that's my fear so overthinking is constantly for me it's constantly around is what i'm doing. Is this going to fulfil dude. It's exhausting sylvester to live inside of that story. Suggesting i don't get i. Don't get a day off. What happens if you were able to reimagined that story retail the story. Well fortunately i am able to re imagine in retail that story. I am able to relax that story. And i get my life back. Ironically i get my life back when i retailed at story. That's the irony. Is i think inside of that story. I i'm always thinking my life is over there. It's somewhere it's not here. it's over there. And when i release that story oh man i just here i am again actually. In my life living my life fulfilling the simplicity. That is my life and what happens if you you do fail at the thing. What what if you feel pretty bad. Yeah happens then you know. I think for me Sylvester i live with a kind of schizophrenia. In that i i see the story and the irony is sylvester in that story. I can only fail. There is no success that would ever be enough to satisfy that story. When i'm able to relax story and just just do my day. Just do the thing that i'm here to do. Have this conversation with you be present. I'll say it like this. Failure is welcome. Because i'm willing for things to not go the way. I think they should go. It doesn't mean it's comforto's doesn't mean but yeah that's what's going to happen so good you're living reality. Told mother question. His mother is that story. You actually yours. Did you create this story. No i don't believe. I did not for a second in. That's for most of us. That's where so. I have this new book coming out. It's called loving yourself properly. In the first the very first chapter is call. Shame based thinking and so he goes through this entire framework about shame based thinking..

Men, This Way
"mcnutt" Discussed on Men, This Way
"Trusting that there's wisdom in my body and and let's unpack this because this is a slippery slope so unpack this with you but trusting that there is Like you like your body was screaming when you needed to meditate. There's wisdom in the body. That's telling me yeah you go to this thing or no. Don't go to this thing. There's wisdom in the body pointing the whispering in. It doesn't have all the information and i generally find that when i listened to that. But i'll get i wanna pack this with you sylvester because this could be used for good and evil that generally when i when i listen life flows well but again. Let's unpack that. Because what does it mean to again. Listen to the wisdom in the body. So let's go back to the example of the person who is saying okay. Well who else is going to be there. And the reason we're asking that question is to get get more information so we can potentially predict the harm that may come to us or the joy that may come to us right here. Okay what that means to me at point in my life that i figured out is that you're asking those questions because something is not full inside of you particular story. What was enough for. It wasn't over thinking. It was a lack of expressing my boundaries so once i began to fully practice boundaries in all situations in my relationship friendship with people at work weber just fully respected ma body. My voice what. I want my path what i don't want Situations i don't want to be in then. All the overthinking went went away all of the. Let me check on this situation this environment. Identify as as impact as a very empathetic person. Some very sensitive to other people's actions and reactions in what. They're saying how they're behaving so because of that. I can't just be around everybody all the time. I don't have a unlimited battery like. I'm assuming those people listen to this can relate like we don't have a limited battery i have a very limited amount to give but i wanna give i want to show up. I want to be present. Like i wanna be at the function. I want to be doing the doing things with people so for my life would i recognize. Oh just need to get great at boundaries so for me i got great at boundaries in any any situations where i used to overthinking completely went away so believe is let's say a person is over thinking okay over. Thinking is a by product of something. So what are you really afraid or what you really not full in. The act asked a question. That question leads us. The path of okay will deconstruct it. Like what are you. I'm going to ask you. What are you afraid of when it comes to over thinking. What are you really afraid of you asking me right now. I'm asking you here's my biggest fear out of my biggest. But here's a core fear that i have identified. I have fear that i am not going to live to my fullest potential. Like i am gonna fail. Somehow at what i came here. It's a it's a. it's an insane fear but the thought is i can. I can fail. At what i came here to express through my life so inside of that you know what gives way to that is oh shit man. Maybe like i have to go to this thing because what if like..

Men, This Way
"mcnutt" Discussed on Men, This Way
"Got to make sure. I'm on time i started packing back and then i just felt called to get in the shower. I had taken a shower stay. You can't leave the house like this like you need to take a shower. So i'm in the shower and it's like a lot of times when we're getting ready to do things what do we do. We rush we gotta do this. I need to do this and we. This is the things we do. The you talked about it earlier the anxiety. Well now what you don't see your nervous system you're putting yourself in a fight or flight mole every time you do that. You can't heal your your your immune system shuts down go into firefight mode because it thinks you have to protect yourself so my question is how many points throughout your common day in your life. Are you doing this yourself. I could easily rush out the door. But i didn't. I got him on shower. Actually i actually put some lavender oil in the shower. And i sat down at the at the bottom. I smelled idea my meditation in the shower. Before i came over here i love. It is sitting on the floor. Is i water. And the number one thing i kept saying myself is a half time because initially my body was telling me like okay. You need to go. you can't be late. you can't be late. But i've told myself halftime have more than enough time. Walk to my car. Took my time like wasn't looking at the clock wasn't obsessing because here's the deal mean you have a relationship. Our relationship is very exact home in everything that i did leading up to. This is going to be is going to come into our interaction. My work talk a lot about energy. So the energy we exchange is going to be the consequence of everything. I've been doing for the last two hours that you've been doing for the last two out.

Men, This Way
"mcnutt" Discussed on Men, This Way
"Okay body. I had to listen to you. you're screaming. We have to listen to you. Have to give you what you want implemented meditation practice has been changed me in the quantum world. Which has changed me in the physical world. So it's just like of all the things i could say there's a. There's a few things. I went through my head but i have to at this present moment. Like after. give the night to the meditation practice. Because it's just just feel like it's shifted me so much recently. I've gone through a lot of changes last year. So definitely the meditation. When you say your body was screaming at you what do you mean. Yeah grip football player. You know bigger faster stronger. Sprints bush press why stay at lifts you know all that which is and then of course playing a game too. So it's a. It's a lot of trauma in your body you know. It's a lot of stress on your body and continue to work out that way. Train like an athlete. My twenties train the same way like the consequences of doing those. Your body gets tight you know. Because you're you're you're acting on those fast which muscles you're lifting your muscles get really tight instill by screaming at me to release really release. It was it was basically telling me i was tight but what i've learned over time because i see i see the world through a holistic lens can't just look at my body. This is the way. I think. I can't just look at my body and say physical body is i have to look at it and say okay. Well my mental body is tied to my spiritual body is tied as well so my question then became to myself. Okay what do. I need to do to release to release this. So the answer was at least for my physical side was to at bickram. Yoga backing tamar routine. I've been doing it do beckham. Yoga do forty five functional fitness.

Men, This Way
"mcnutt" Discussed on Men, This Way
"Our fathers to the masculine joy of doing nothing. Which is what meditation can be if we allow it to how we can listen to the bodies wisdom to determine what the say yes to and no to and so much more. But here's the thing that i really really enjoyed about. My conversation will sylvester m and we are new to each other so But the thing. That really excited me that i really enjoyed about talking. Sylvester is it will for example one thing that podcasters often do is remove all spaces from an interview. There's no space they take out ums and is and and because they wanna make sure that your attention isn't given an opportunity to get bored but i'm thoughtful about that and i often like to allow some space. I don't wanna conversations to feel rushed trying to hit you with lots of content and in this interview sylvester would sometimes pause for a few seconds. After i asked him question he closed his eyes and let inspiration speak through him. And i respect that and i like that and i know it can make for a more inspired conversation and so sometimes there's going to be a little silence in this interview for a few seconds. don't check to see if it stopped playing or if your phone's broken just enjoy the silence and the wisdom that comes with it. I encourage you to let this conversation. Be meditation for you as well to really let it sink into your bones so definitely stay tuned all the way through to sylvester mcnutt the thirds five key takeaways at the end of this episode of men. This way and one more thing my new book choose her everyday or leave her. it recently. Shot up to number twelve on amazon. In the dating genre like overnight it went from A total sales on the entire website of at fifty nine thousand place in all sales to sixteen hundred in all sales. Now i have no idea what any of that really means. Except that it does mean people are buying it and reading it and word is spreading. People are getting real value out of it..

Army Wife Talk Radio
"mcnutt" Discussed on Army Wife Talk Radio
"Empowerment or a w n empowers you can also view are previous winners in our empowerment gallery. Let's take a quick break and when we come back we will hear from our incredible news. Six correspondent joe mcnutt who is bringing us this week's top stories and need to know news. Welcome sixty seconds of serenity which wanna bryant. You're encouraged up today reads. We need to do a better job of putting ourselves higher on our to do this by michelle obama. How many of us have a to do list beyond this event is not on our paper it is in our head some of us cannot even sleep because our to do list will bother us into the mission is complete will let me ask you. When was the last time you put yourself on. Top of the list may be hard to do because you are the giver. The listener the door of all things. But it is okay to say. I need to be i today. Having this type of attitude will take getting used to but you can do it. Put yourself farce today. This has been sixty seconds of serenity which wander brian. Military veteran and author of the danny ended deployer miniseries. No news is typically good news in this military life radio. So here is our. Aws new six correspondent with this week's top stories high-handed kayla here. This week's top stories. The military is prepared to host as many as two thousand five hundred afghan citizens as part of the operation. Allies refuge program announced the department of defense. Many of the afghan citizens will be hosted at fort lee virginia where they will receive food housing and medical care if needed as they go through a final screening and the special immigrant visa program also known as siv. This visa is a protection to those who assisted us forces against the taliban and their families. The estimated seven hundred afghans citizens will arrive with about.

Mornings with Keyshawn, Jorge & LZ
"mcnutt" Discussed on Mornings with Keyshawn, Jorge & LZ
"And the stars like the stars to me. That's also huge part of this right. Yeah the stars are are what matters. And that's what the game seven happens. Where that's when i think you build that legacy game. Seven is always that it's like who had that that signature game but for now if the bucks comeback win the series is block is something was gonna talk about. And that's why we're talking about it. You make a face. But i'm telling you the books win this series that unless there's a buzzer beater. That is your signature play. Because the you know that could have gone either way. If the sun's one deficit wouldn't be my storyline as the editor of your news. Okay you don't believe that that that wouldn't be. I wouldn't producing the post game show. The post game is. I can't believe the yon- is almost went under the knife and he's able to do what he's doing. That would be my store. Well that's a secondary that's already been discussed no but it would be just went back to back forties. It would win. You know you say that. Now here's a play that down ringing hearing all that back. I'm bringing all that back in a package ended up putting the yeast only blowing it up to make you just sensationalize to a point of no return. I don't think you have to that. Play is sensational the loan. You just have to put it in context of where it is right now in this in this series. It'll be a small blurb in in their the. This block is a small blurb seriously his coming back from injury when you get your journalism degree he coming back from. Injury is way more. But that's the macro story when the finals are over. Yeah that's the story. That's what you want right now. The story is that block and what it could mean in. This series could turn the series. That's what this is about are you don't agree with me but let's see if our good friend monica mcnutt agrees with me. She joins us right now. The goodyear hotline espn basketball analyst. Here she somewhere in the universe asanaka fold for having some technical difficulties into our tv. You to work. Which is bizarre. Because i swear it was just working. Oh i know it is about all right. I'm sure it'll be working fine when you're on like get up or whatever other show one of those under ten thousand shows she'll go right but monica. Who do you agree with. I think these story. The conversation is that block and it could end up the signature play of the finals and turning point of this series and ki ki feels like. It's just a footnote in the story of how a week ago. It looked like his season was over and yet here. He is playing at a high level turning point or footnote I don't think it's either. I think it's closer to a turning point than it is. No i mean you gotta think about the moment in that ballgame. I mean that's pretty much was phoenix last. Shot to keep it close over the fourteen ago. i just think it shows such tremendous athletic abilities defensive awareness. It's funny because as we were doing the postgame show last night kevin winter. There's this notion that you honest has had an okay game when you look at his line and it was actually crazy including that blocked so I do think that. Chris middleton gets a little bit more shine because we were dying from one of his signature performances and he gave last night. Yeah and going through his style and like you said. He went for back-to-back forty. So we're like oh. He only had twenty six on eleven of nineteen fourteen rebounds eight assists three steals two blocks and yes that the second block was the one. Everybody's talking about but if you know keys mad because he took two threes and we all know like he should be doing now because he's over to from three right to be mad. I was mad. What are you doing why to stop dude. You don't get caught up in trying to be something you're not mike. Just she'll go and play. Bully ball usual big shoulders and your arms in dunk on people in laugh at them instead of trying to. You're not steph curry. You're not iran. Just be a simple big especially coming off of what was thirteen. Thirteen in the restricted area. The previous game. I think he was like twenty five or twenty six in the two games. Combined kidding me. There's absolutely nothing broke about you. Get into the paint and scoring. Why are you trying to fix it. Cut it out. Yeah if you up by thirty and you just want to do it for giggles go ahead but with no not in the course of a game. That's important. I love the excuse. When you've got to keep the defense honest even the defense not taking that serious like they always back. yeah exactly what. You're the one that needs to be honest monica. I i looked at chris. Paul's game and the five turnovers he put it on himself out of the seventeen turnovers. He had five of them and he was critical of himself. Said he's got to be better so he made some bad decisions. I wondered though by watching him play. He didn't look aggressive. Like we remember seeing him in game one in the second half of game two. And i just wonder if the ligament damage that they discussed going into the series if maybe it's creeping up again on him and it's affecting his maybe willingness to shoot the basketball and it's almost making him become a guy forcing passes rather than looking for his offense. What do you see out of him so my entire question especially after the second half of play fifteen minutes in the second half was like okay like i. Is it me risk. Whatever it is is he okay because he did not look himself and of course second was who've had friends. There's an argument that drew holidays just flat out wearing him down. I can see yes. Where'd you holidays. We're.

ESPN Chicago 1000 - WMVP
"mcnutt" Discussed on ESPN Chicago 1000 - WMVP
"Goodyear Hotline. Allen hard In presume A and Monica McNutt joins us this morning as he says anti Moniz with us, so we gotta be on our best behavior. Hi, guys. What's happening? What's happening? It's Friday. I'm happy to be here. You're always happy to be here, right? I've never seen you where you're not happy to be anywhere. The alternative is, if you're the happiest people I know. Come on, let's go. I appreciate that. That's a good way to be. Well. I mean, are we happy with what we saw out of the box last night? Um, e happy might be aggressive. I mean, they they needed to get a win. I don't think that they blew my socks off in terms of Oh, they're back, right? No, it was an ugly basketball game below 90. Yeah, yeah, for both teams and for the Nets again, it just I mean, you get a poor shooting performance from them, which is like just like their game three against Boston. But they still could have won that game like they had two possessions to win. In fact, they had the lead late on Katie's three and you thought maybe they could get it to holiday with a terrific play, no time out. Just get to the basket in score. And he does that. But how about this? Chris Middleton finally gets back on track it a great first quarter. He and Yanez combined to score 79% of the Bucks points. Well, that's what they should do. The whole offense, especially Yanis. Yanis should have dominated the game the way he did, especially in the paint. I cringe when I see him outside the paint. And I understand the game of basketball has changed from the bigs. Bigs all want to shoot threes now in But when you Or as dominant as he is inside the paint and have the size to be able to dominate the smaller opponent. That's what you do. I mean, he you know, 6 11. Whatever it is, with his wingspan, taking him even hired, you just go download and you just play bully ball and to the point where I don't care if they If they take me to the foul line. Don't be afraid. No, I would be afraid if he went to the found one. Yeah. Free throws. Very yes. You are afraid, But if they're following me because I'm in the paint, and I'm going to the foul line. At some point, I'm going to make a couple little shots as he did late in the game. It was 49. It's going to hurt him. And so that's the way I look at it. He goes for 33 points 14 rebounds. I'll be honest. And then Middleton gives you 35. And the most important part of it was his shooting was 12 25 more looked more like the Chris Middleton We've seen as the Robin to Janice's Batman all year long, and that's the important part that 79% of the off by the way. Is the highest of any duo in NBA playoff history. And that is some great duos. You think about right that have been dominant in in the NBA, and no one has ever provided that much of their team's offense. Do you know what that means? Those other duos have had better teams around them. Of course, right, Like I'm not impressed with this to me anything that happens in the playoffs at this point, my question always becomes sustainability. And if you asked me if I had to bet on Katie and carry carry in particular having another shooting night like he had last night. I don't see that can these to keep up 79% of those teams production? Keep the Nets under 90 and get elected. Perfect Storm. I don't see it happening three more times. Interesting. It perfect Storm. Uh, Kyrie, nine for 22 2 of a Still had 22 points. But You know, just wasn't the Kyrie that we saw in the first two games. And how about Joe Harris? One for 11 for the Nets, is where the best shooters in the game. I figured I couldn't figure that one touch the space Jam ball. His powers are temporarily. God, We've got to get them together. One for seven years, was one for eight straight talk about my straight talk Wireless. So again, Monica kind of touched on it. After this, Like, while we were watching it and K. I texted you and J during the game, and I said it was. It was a 32 9 at one point 32 to 11 was the first quarter scorer. I didn't trust it. I'm not trusting what I see out of the box here at all. And sure enough, it was a two point game at halftime, and the Nets actually had to lead late in the game and could have won the game so that the Bucks get back in the series. Or was this just like the Celtics series for the Nets? Bad game in Game four. There'll be that team that we much like, Monica said. You can't depend on the Nets shooting wolves like, especially Kyrie. Continue in Game four. So I don't think that They got back in it like that. I think it's still going to go back to Brooklyn for Game five at 331. I mean, that's just what I could see. Right, you know, and so in the end Bad inbounds play won't talk about it. Oh, my God cost the nets the game essentially terrible play. I mean, it just, you know, for whatever reason, whoever designed it, whatever the ball inbounds play, not the design that will pass. The actual patches decided to get it together was a dribbler to the other side of the court, so Kyrie gets it. And then he gives it to Brown. But then Brown to meet panics when he got plenty of time, and I don't think he was aware of where he was at in time instead of just figured out what to do with it. He decided he was going to go to the cup and didn't finish strong after having a bad night shooting as well. The whole thing fell apart, but the drew holiday played. You didn't have a great game, but his play the layup, deciding to go out, you know, go and Brown was, by the way he scores on Brown. Brown had a great game, browse the reason why the Nets got back in the game. He was fantastic in that second quarter. So it's not to put anything on him. But this is this game was more about what are we going to see at a Milwaukee? You know, you saw, you know, most talked about it. He was on SportsCenter. And he said, You know that. You know those those in the front officer monitoring coach Bud right now. Mike Budenholzer. There's a lot of criticism to him after the first two games of the series, and it was we'll see how they look in Game three, because if not, they were fans dirty. I was following on Twitter. Fans during the game. The second quarter when the Nets it was like, uh, it's like 19 to 3, and he's like Gorda, and they're like, fire him now during the game, like Get him out of here. Now. None of this is a secret, though. Like when you sign Drew Holiday, Yannis gets the super bag. You got 400 mil close to form a meal tied up in those two, none of them. None of this is a secret. The one thing I do appreciate from yesterday's game is that the Bucks came out swinging right. There was a level of intensity there there was intense. Emotional intentionality there. Janice was getting to his spots and he was going in the first two games. They just felt like they were just out there like Oh, these guys are gonna win what we're gonna do yesterday. At least it felt like they were fighting. It was a lot of fake enthusiasm to me. Like when Yanez her I couldn't even take that serious. I agree. And it was just like I was just saying to myself, Man I felt was better than what we've seen in the first two games. I understand that. But the mean mug didn't even Didn't even do nothing to me. Didn't translate. No, it wasn't. Despite this wasn't a game. You're like. All right now we've got a series. I had never felt like that in this game. I never felt like okay, now we've got to say then I'm looking. We're not going to feel like that. I don't think the fans are so the fans. The fans were so excited to win. No, they were just like Yeah, it was their biggest ground They had Milwaukee since the pandemic. The home team that has to feel great. I mean, we game shout out the game to here in New York like I didn't want to bring New York up..