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A highlight from DC28-Hildegarde-pt1

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28:41 min | 2 months ago

A highlight from DC28-Hildegarde-pt1

"Discerninghearts .com presents The Doctors of the Church, the terrorism of wisdom with Dr. Matthew Bunsen. For over 20 years, Dr. Bunsen has been active in the area of Catholic social communications and education, including writing, editing, and teaching on a variety of topics related to church history, the papacy, the saints, and Catholic culture. He is the faculty chair at the Catholic Distance University, a senior fellow of the St. Paul Center for Biblical Theology, and the author or co -author of over 50 books, including the Encyclopedia of Catholic History and the best -selling biographies of St. Damien of Malachi and St. Kateri Tekakawisa. He also serves as a senior editor for the National Catholic Register and is a senior contributor to EWTN News. The Doctors of the Church, the terrorism of wisdom with Dr. Matthew Bunsen. I'm your host, Chris McGregor. Welcome, Dr. Bunsen. Wonderful to be with you again, Chris. Thank you so much for joining us to talk about this particular doctor of the church who, it's rare, isn't it, in our lifetimes to have those saints elevated to the status of doctor who have quite a background like St. Hildegard Bingen. Yes, well, she is, of course, with John of Avila, one of the two of the newest doctors of the church proclaimed as such by Pope Benedict XVI, who has, I think, a special fondness for her. And as we get to know her, we certainly can understand why he holds her in such great repute and such great respect. It's easy to overlook the fact that in her lifetime, she was called the Sybil of the Rhine, and throughout that, the whole of the 12th century in which she lived. She was renowned for her visions, but she was especially loved and respected for her wisdom, the greatest minds of her age, and, of course, was renowned also for her great holiness. So this is a formidable figure in the medieval church, and somebody, I think, that we really need to look at today as we proceed with the reform and renewal of the church. I'll try to put this very sensitively when I say that her presence in our time is one that, unfortunately, was relegated maybe into a back corner by many because of those who tried to hijack, in some ways, her spirituality to try to move forward to certain agendas. Yes, I think that's a very diplomatic way of putting it. Hildegard, in the last 10 years or so, and Pope Benedict XVI, I think, helped lead the charge in this, has been reclaimed by the church. Her authentic writings, her authentic spirituality, and especially her love for the church and her obedience to the authority of the church have all been recaptured, reclaimed for the benefit of the entire church. It's absolutely true that over the previous decades, much as we saw with a few others, I'm thinking, for example, of a Julian of Norwich in England who lived a little after Hildegard, were sort of kidnapped by those with real agendas to try to portray Hildegard as a proto -radical feminist, as somebody who was hating of the church, who attempted to resist the teachings of the church, who rejected the teachings of the church. And yet, as we read her, as we come to appreciate her more fully, I think we can grasp her extraordinary gifts, but also her remarkable love for the church. She was one who allowed herself to be subjected to obedience, that wonderful, can we say it, a virtue, as well as a discipline. Absolutely, yeah. It's one of those ironies, again, to use that word, that here was somebody who was falsely claimed by feminists, who I think would have been just shocked at the notion of herself as a feminist, that she had instead a genuine love for the church, a profound mysticism. And you've hit on one of the key words that we're going to be talking about with her, and that is a perfection of the virtues of love for Christ and her obedience to the church, to the authority of the church in judging what is and authentic what is pure. And that, I think, holds her up as a great role model today when we have so many who are dissenting from the church and continue to cling to this notion of Hildegard as some sort of a herald of feminism in the church. I don't think I would understate it by saying that it was breathtaking in the fall of 2010 then when Holy Father, Pope Benedict XVI, began a series of Wednesday audiences on the holy women of the Middle Ages. And he began those reflections, especially on those who had such deep mystical prayer experiences, he began the audiences not with just one but two audiences on Hildegard. Yeah, he has made it very clear. He certainly did this as pope. He's done this throughout his life as a theologian, somebody who wants to make certain that the church recognizes and honors genius in all of his forms, but also profound holiness. And Pope Benedict, in that there's the set of audiences, especially regarding Hildegard, but I mean, when we run through the list of some of the great figures that he was looking at, he talked, for example, about Julian of Norwich, he covered Catherine of Siena, Brigid of Sweden, Elizabeth of Hungary, and of course Angela of Foligno, who just recently was canonized through equivalent canonization by Pope Francis. The gifts to the church, the contributions to the life of the church, to the holiness of the church by these remarkable women. It's something that we need to pause, and I really appreciate the fact that you want to do that, to credit Pope Benedict for doing that, but also again to turn our gaze to these extraordinary women. And it is significant that Hildegard of Bingen was included in that list. If you could, give us a sense of her time period. Well, she grew up in Germany and really was a member of the German nobility, and she belonged to the German feudal system. In other words, her father was a wealthy, powerful landowner at a time when owning land was everything. His name was Hildebert, and both in the service of, as the feudal system worked, a more powerful lord by the name of Meggenhard, who was Count of Spannheim. These are sort of dazzling names to people today, but what's really most important is that medieval feudal life in Germany was one of service, it was one of status, but this reflects on the upbringing of Hildegard, I think, in a into this noble environment. She had the opportunity to learn, to understand what it was to command, to know what it was to have special status, and yet from her earliest times, she displayed extraordinary intelligence, but also very powerful spiritual gifts and a desire for status conscious, as so many of the members of the feudal nobility were, and yet they recognized in their daughter the fact that she was called to something else other than the life of service and of status that they enjoyed. And for that reason, they offered her up, as was the custom of the time, as sort of a tithe to the church, as an oblet to the nearby Benedictine abbey of Disobodenburg, and she was only eight years old at the time, but that was the custom. And her life changed from that minute, but it was, I think, the greatest gift that her parents could have given her, because they placed her in exactly the environment that she needed the most to foster, really to develop her spiritual life, and all of the skills that she was given by God that she came to possess as an abbess and as a leading figure of the medieval church. The stability of the Benedictine role, that way of devoting time in your day, not only to work, the discipline of action, but then also to prayer, it really served her so well, didn't it? It did, and especially crucial in this was the fact that, as was again the wisdom of the Benedictines, they gave her over for her initial training to other women who were experienced in life, in the spiritual life, in the discipline of the Benedictine community, but also in the spiritual life they saw, I think, immediately needed to be developed in her. There was the first by a widow by the name of Uda, and then more important was another woman by the name of Uta of Spannheim, who was the daughter of Count Stefan of Spannheim. Now why is it that notable? It's notable because in Uta, not only did Hildegard receive a kind of spiritual mother, as well as a spiritual guide and mentor, but Uta was, being the daughter of nobility, clearly aware of Hildegard's background as well as her immense potential in dealing with other members of the nobility in future years. The position of abbess was one of great power. We don't encounter abbesses and abbots very much anymore, and yet because of the status of the Benedictine order, because of the lands it accumulated, but also because of its importance to the life of the community wherever you had a Benedictine monastery, abbots and abbesses acquired and wielded great influence in society and political life, economic life, and then of course their spiritual power. And Uta would have understood all of this, and over the next decades she helped train Hildegard in a life of prayer, of asceticism, but also of training the mind and personality to command, to lead with charity, and then of course to have the level of learning with the best they could give her to prepare her for the immense tasks that lay ahead. Let's talk about some of those tasks. It's an incredible time for a monastery life, and it would be affected by her example of how it could be transformed. Well Hildegard always seriously underestimated and sort of downplayed her own learning. She referred to herself as an indocte mulier or an unlearned woman, and yet while she may have had formal academic training that one might think of today, she nevertheless understood Latin, certainly the use of the Psalter. The Latin language of course was the language of the church. It was so much of the common language of ecclesiastical life, but she also continued to train other noble women who were sent to this community. And so when she was given, as they say, she took the veil from the Bishop of Bamberg when she was about 15 years old. From that point on, we can see a direct line of progress and advancement for Hildegard. This wasn't something that she was craving, but it was something I think that she took to quite naturally, both because of her training, both because of her family background, but also just because of her genius level IQ. I say genius level IQ because if you spend much time reading the works of Hildegard, the unbelievable diversity of which she was capable, and we're going to talk a little bit about that, you appreciate the sheer level of her intelligence and how in that community life, in the wisdom of the Benedictine life, they were able to recognize that, to harness it, to train it, and then put it to the good of the community and the good of the wider church. Not just for the church's benefit, but to make of Hildegard's immense gifts exactly that. A gift to the church, a gift to the community, but especially a gift to God. And so we're seeing her move rapidly a from humble young girl, somebody who was then trained to become a teacher or a prioress of the sisters, and then of course, around the age of 38, she became the actual head of the community of women at Disobodenberg. I think it's so important to honor that intellectual aspect of Hildegard, I mean the fact that she would have this ability like a sponge to absorb everything around her, as though it seems, and also to wed that with her spiritual life and those mystical experiences, and when she had, how can we say this, it was very unique in that it wasn't that she would have a vision of something. She would even say she doesn't see things ocularly, I mean something that she would have in front of her. No, it was something much more compelling in which it incorporated all of her. I mean not only the the spiritual aspect, but it brought in to play all that intellectual knowledge so that you would end up getting tomes and tomes and tomes of writing. Yes, that's exactly it. For her, while she was certainly conscious of her limited education, she understood that the knowledge that she possessed came from what she always referred to in the Latin as the umbra viventis luminis, or the shadow of the living light. And for her, this is not something that she was too eager or all that willing to write about, which is, as you certainly know, Chris, of all people, that's one of the great signs of the genuineness of spiritual gifts, that she was reluctant to talk about this extraordinary series of visions and mystical experiences that she began having as a young girl, but chose not to speak of until she actually began to share them with Jutta, then with her spiritual director who is a monk by the name of Vomar, who really I think was a good influence on her. And only when she was really in her 40s did she begin to describe and to transcribe so much of what she saw. And part of that I think was because here was somebody who was receiving these these visions, these mystical experiences from a very young age, but who wanted to ruminate on them, who wanted to meditate on them. And for her, then, it was the command to talk about these. And as she wrote in the shivyas, one of her greatest of her writings, she talks about the fiery light coming out of a cloudless sky that flooded her entire mind and inflamed, she said, her whole heart and her whole like a flame. And she understood at that moment the exposition of the books of the Psalter, the Gospel, the Old and the New Testaments, and it was by command that she made these visions known. But it was again out of humility, out of obedience to the voice that she did this. And the full scale of what she saw and what she began to teach to transcribe took up almost the whole of the rest of her life. And yet even at that moment, as she did so, what was she doing? She sought additional counsel in the discernment of the authenticity and the truth of what she was seeing. Why? Because she was concerned that they might not be of God or that they were mere illusions or even possible delusions brought on by herself or by the evil one. And that commitment to obedience, I think, stands her in such great standing in the history of the church among the mystics. But it also tells us that, as often has been the case with some of the mystics in history, there have been those positivists and scientists and psychologists who try to dismiss these mystical experiences. In Hildegard's case, what have they claimed? They have said that she was receiving these simply psychological aberrations or they were various forms of neurological problems leading up to migraines or a host of other possible issues. And yet the clarity of her visions, the specificity of them, and also the theological depth of them, demolish any such claims by scientists today and instead really forces to look at what exactly she was seeing. I don't doubt that there will be many out there over the next century particularly that could achieve their doctorates just by writing on different aspects of her work. And if you are at all a student of the Benedictine rule, you can begin to see in those visions those connections with the life that she lived out. I mean, this was very organic. It wasn't like this were just coming. Though they seem foreign to us, when you, potentially, when you begin to look at those visions, if you understand the time, if you have a proper translation and you know the rule, you begin to see a little bit better the clarity of what she's communicating. Yes, exactly. And we also appreciate the staggering scale of what she saw. I mean, she beheld as well the sacraments. She understood the virtues. She appreciated angels. She saw vice. She saw, as Pope Benedict XVI talked in his letter proclaiming her a doctor of the church, what did he say? He says that the range of vision of the mystic of Bingen was not limited to treating individual matters but was a global synthesis of the Christian faith. So he talks about that this is a compendium of salvation history, literally from the beginning of the universe until the very eschatological consummation of all of creation. As he says, God's decision to bring about the work of creation is the first stage on a long journey that unfolds from the constitution of the heavenly hierarchy until it reaches the fall of the rebellious angels and the sin of our first parents. So she's touching on the very core of who we are and the most important aspects of redemption of the kingdom of God and the last judgment. That the scale of this again, I think, is difficult for much of a modern mind to comprehend. And it tells us that we have to be very careful from our perch here and surrounded by technology and modernity that we perhaps have lost our ability to see the sheer scale of salvation history. That this abbess sitting on the Rhine in the 12th century was able to and then was able to communicate it with language that is surprisingly modern. Oh, let's talk about that language not only with words but with music and with art. I mean, this woman was able to express herself in all manners of creative activity. Yes, I mean, this is somebody that designed, created her own kind of language. It's sort of a combination of Latin and German, which is a medieval German. But she also composed hymns, more than 70 hymns. She composed sequences and antiphons, what became known as the symphonia harmoniae celestium, the symphony of the harmony of heavenly revelations. And not only were they simply composed because, well, her community would need music, they were very much a reflection of the things that she had seen. And she wrote a very memorable letter in 1178 to the prelates of the city of Mainz, and she talks about the fact that music stirs our hearts and engages our souls in ways we can't really describe. But we're taken beyond our earthly banishment back to the divine melody Adam knew when he sang with the angels when he was whole in God before his exile. So here she's as seemingly simple as a hymn, and connecting it to the vision, connecting it to salvation history, and connecting to something far deeper theologically. So her hymns ranged from the creation of the Holy Spirit, but she was especially fond of composing music in honor of the saints, and especially the Blessed Virgin Mary. Yeah, as we're coming to a conclusion on this particular episode, I just don't want to miss out on just a little bit of a tidbit. We could have called her a doctor, I mean, in a very real way, a physician. This woman, this wonderful gift to the church, gift to all of us, I mean, she had that appreciation of creation and actually even how it will work to heal. Yes, yes. Again, it's hard to overestimate her genius. Why? Because beyond her visions, beyond her abilities as a composer, here was somebody who combined her genius with practical need. Her community had specific needs for her gifts. And so what did she do? She wrote books on the natural sciences, she wrote books on medicine, she wrote books on music. She looked at the study of nature to assist her sisters. So the result was a natural history, a book on causes and cures, a book on how to put medicine together. And it's a fascinating reading because she talks about plants and the elements and trees and birds and mammals and reptiles. But all of it was to reduce all of this knowledge to very practical purposes, the medicinal values of natural phenomena. And then she also wrote in a book on causes and cures, which is written from the traditional medieval understanding of humors. She lists 200 diseases or conditions with different cures and remedies that tend mostly to be herbal with sort of recipes for how to make them. This is all from somebody who at that time was an abbess of not just one but two monasteries along the Rhine, who was also being consulted on popes to kings to common people who came to her for help. And this is somebody who at that time was also working for her own perfection in the spiritual life and in the perfection of the virtues and who is also continuing to reflect and meditate on the incredible vision she was receiving. So this is a full life, but it was a life given completely to the service of others. And of course, she'll have to have two episodes. We do. Thank you so much, Dr. But looking forward to part two Chris. You've been listening to the doctors of the church, the charism of wisdom with Dr. Matthew Bunsen. To hear and or to download this program, along with hundreds of other spiritual formation programs, visit discerning hearts .com. This has been a production of discerning hearts. I'm your friend. This has been helpful for you that you will first pray for our mission. And if you feel us worthy, consider a charitable donation which is fully tax deductible to support our efforts. But most of all, we pray that you will tell a friend about discerning hearts .com and join us next time for the doctors of the church, the charism of wisdom with Dr. Matthew Bunsen.

Chris Mcgregor Chris UTA Elizabeth Germany Hildegard UDA Meggenhard 1178 Norwich Pope Benedict Two Episodes Hildebert 200 Diseases Pope St. Paul Center For Biblical T ST. Julian Bunsen Mainz
A highlight from DC28-Hildegarde-pt1

Audio

28:41 min | 2 months ago

A highlight from DC28-Hildegarde-pt1

"Discerninghearts .com presents The Doctors of the Church, the terrorism of wisdom with Dr. Matthew Bunsen. For over 20 years, Dr. Bunsen has been active in the area of Catholic social communications and education, including writing, editing, and teaching on a variety of topics related to church history, the papacy, the saints, and Catholic culture. He is the faculty chair at the Catholic Distance University, a senior fellow of the St. Paul Center for Biblical Theology, and the author or co -author of over 50 books, including the Encyclopedia of Catholic History and the best -selling biographies of St. Damien of Malachi and St. Kateri Tekakawisa. He also serves as a senior editor for the National Catholic Register and is a senior contributor to EWTN News. The Doctors of the Church, the terrorism of wisdom with Dr. Matthew Bunsen. I'm your host, Chris McGregor. Welcome, Dr. Bunsen. Wonderful to be with you again, Chris. Thank you so much for joining us to talk about this particular doctor of the church who, it's rare, isn't it, in our lifetimes to have those saints elevated to the status of doctor who have quite a background like St. Hildegard Bingen. Yes, well, she is, of course, with John of Avila, one of the two of the newest doctors of the church proclaimed as such by Pope Benedict XVI, who has, I think, a special fondness for her. And as we get to know her, we certainly can understand why he holds her in such great repute and such great respect. It's easy to overlook the fact that in her lifetime, she was called the Sybil of the Rhine, and throughout that, the whole of the 12th century in which she lived. She was renowned for her visions, but she was especially loved and respected for her wisdom, the greatest minds of her age, and, of course, was renowned also for her great holiness. So this is a formidable figure in the medieval church, and somebody, I think, that we really need to look at today as we proceed with the reform and renewal of the church. I'll try to put this very sensitively when I say that her presence in our time is one that, unfortunately, was relegated maybe into a back corner by many because of those who tried to hijack, in some ways, her spirituality to try to move forward to certain agendas. Yes, I think that's a very diplomatic way of putting it. Hildegard, in the last 10 years or so, and Pope Benedict XVI, I think, helped lead the charge in this, has been reclaimed by the church. Her authentic writings, her authentic spirituality, and especially her love for the church and her obedience to the authority of the church have all been recaptured, reclaimed for the benefit of the entire church. It's absolutely true that over the previous decades, much as we saw with a few others, I'm thinking, for example, of a Julian of Norwich in England who lived a little after Hildegard, were sort of kidnapped by those with real agendas to try to portray Hildegard as a proto -radical feminist, as somebody who was hating of the church, who attempted to resist the teachings of the church, who rejected the teachings of the church. And yet, as we read her, as we come to appreciate her more fully, I think we can grasp her extraordinary gifts, but also her remarkable love for the church. She was one who allowed herself to be subjected to obedience, that wonderful, can we say it, a virtue, as well as a discipline. Absolutely, yeah. It's one of those ironies, again, to use that word, that here was somebody who was falsely claimed by feminists, who I think would have been just shocked at the notion of herself as a feminist, that she had instead a genuine love for the church, a profound mysticism. And you've hit on one of the key words that we're going to be talking about with her, and that is a perfection of the virtues of love for Christ and her obedience to the church, to the authority of the church in judging what is and authentic what is pure. And that, I think, holds her up as a great role model today when we have so many who are dissenting from the church and continue to cling to this notion of Hildegard as some sort of a herald of feminism in the church. I don't think I would understate it by saying that it was breathtaking in the fall of 2010 then when Holy Father, Pope Benedict XVI, began a series of Wednesday audiences on the holy women of the Middle Ages. And he began those reflections, especially on those who had such deep mystical prayer experiences, he began the audiences not with just one but two audiences on Hildegard. Yeah, he has made it very clear. He certainly did this as pope. He's done this throughout his life as a theologian, somebody who wants to make certain that the church recognizes and honors genius in all of his forms, but also profound holiness. And Pope Benedict, in that there's the set of audiences, especially regarding Hildegard, but I mean, when we run through the list of some of the great figures that he was looking at, he talked, for example, about Julian of Norwich, he covered Catherine of Siena, Brigid of Sweden, Elizabeth of Hungary, and of course Angela of Foligno, who just recently was canonized through equivalent canonization by Pope Francis. The gifts to the church, the contributions to the life of the church, to the holiness of the church by these remarkable women. It's something that we need to pause, and I really appreciate the fact that you want to do that, to credit Pope Benedict for doing that, but also again to turn our gaze to these extraordinary women. And it is significant that Hildegard of Bingen was included in that list. If you could, give us a sense of her time period. Well, she grew up in Germany and really was a member of the German nobility, and she belonged to the German feudal system. In other words, her father was a wealthy, powerful landowner at a time when owning land was everything. His name was Hildebert, and both in the service of, as the feudal system worked, a more powerful lord by the name of Meggenhard, who was Count of Spannheim. These are sort of dazzling names to people today, but what's really most important is that medieval feudal life in Germany was one of service, it was one of status, but this reflects on the upbringing of Hildegard, I think, in a into this noble environment. She had the opportunity to learn, to understand what it was to command, to know what it was to have special status, and yet from her earliest times, she displayed extraordinary intelligence, but also very powerful spiritual gifts and a desire for status conscious, as so many of the members of the feudal nobility were, and yet they recognized in their daughter the fact that she was called to something else other than the life of service and of status that they enjoyed. And for that reason, they offered her up, as was the custom of the time, as sort of a tithe to the church, as an oblet to the nearby Benedictine abbey of Disobodenburg, and she was only eight years old at the time, but that was the custom. And her life changed from that minute, but it was, I think, the greatest gift that her parents could have given her, because they placed her in exactly the environment that she needed the most to foster, really to develop her spiritual life, and all of the skills that she was given by God that she came to possess as an abbess and as a leading figure of the medieval church. The stability of the Benedictine role, that way of devoting time in your day, not only to work, the discipline of action, but then also to prayer, it really served her so well, didn't it? It did, and especially crucial in this was the fact that, as was again the wisdom of the Benedictines, they gave her over for her initial training to other women who were experienced in life, in the spiritual life, in the discipline of the Benedictine community, but also in the spiritual life they saw, I think, immediately needed to be developed in her. There was the first by a widow by the name of Uda, and then more important was another woman by the name of Uta of Spannheim, who was the daughter of Count Stefan of Spannheim. Now why is it that notable? It's notable because in Uta, not only did Hildegard receive a kind of spiritual mother, as well as a spiritual guide and mentor, but Uta was, being the daughter of nobility, clearly aware of Hildegard's background as well as her immense potential in dealing with other members of the nobility in future years. The position of abbess was one of great power. We don't encounter abbesses and abbots very much anymore, and yet because of the status of the Benedictine order, because of the lands it accumulated, but also because of its importance to the life of the community wherever you had a Benedictine monastery, abbots and abbesses acquired and wielded great influence in society and political life, economic life, and then of course their spiritual power. And Uta would have understood all of this, and over the next decades she helped train Hildegard in a life of prayer, of asceticism, but also of training the mind and personality to command, to lead with charity, and then of course to have the level of learning with the best they could give her to prepare her for the immense tasks that lay ahead. Let's talk about some of those tasks. It's an incredible time for a monastery life, and it would be affected by her example of how it could be transformed. Well Hildegard always seriously underestimated and sort of downplayed her own learning. She referred to herself as an indocte mulier or an unlearned woman, and yet while she may have had formal academic training that one might think of today, she nevertheless understood Latin, certainly the use of the Psalter. The Latin language of course was the language of the church. It was so much of the common language of ecclesiastical life, but she also continued to train other noble women who were sent to this community. And so when she was given, as they say, she took the veil from the Bishop of Bamberg when she was about 15 years old. From that point on, we can see a direct line of progress and advancement for Hildegard. This wasn't something that she was craving, but it was something I think that she took to quite naturally, both because of her training, both because of her family background, but also just because of her genius level IQ. I say genius level IQ because if you spend much time reading the works of Hildegard, the unbelievable diversity of which she was capable, and we're going to talk a little bit about that, you appreciate the sheer level of her intelligence and how in that community life, in the wisdom of the Benedictine life, they were able to recognize that, to harness it, to train it, and then put it to the good of the community and the good of the wider church. Not just for the church's benefit, but to make of Hildegard's immense gifts exactly that. A gift to the church, a gift to the community, but especially a gift to God. And so we're seeing her move rapidly a from humble young girl, somebody who was then trained to become a teacher or a prioress of the sisters, and then of course, around the age of 38, she became the actual head of the community of women at Disobodenberg. I think it's so important to honor that intellectual aspect of Hildegard, I mean the fact that she would have this ability like a sponge to absorb everything around her, as though it seems, and also to wed that with her spiritual life and those mystical experiences, and when she had, how can we say this, it was very unique in that it wasn't that she would have a vision of something. She would even say she doesn't see things ocularly, I mean something that she would have in front of her. No, it was something much more compelling in which it incorporated all of her. I mean not only the the spiritual aspect, but it brought in to play all that intellectual knowledge so that you would end up getting tomes and tomes and tomes of writing. Yes, that's exactly it. For her, while she was certainly conscious of her limited education, she understood that the knowledge that she possessed came from what she always referred to in the Latin as the umbra viventis luminis, or the shadow of the living light. And for her, this is not something that she was too eager or all that willing to write about, which is, as you certainly know, Chris, of all people, that's one of the great signs of the genuineness of spiritual gifts, that she was reluctant to talk about this extraordinary series of visions and mystical experiences that she began having as a young girl, but chose not to speak of until she actually began to share them with Jutta, then with her spiritual director who is a monk by the name of Vomar, who really I think was a good influence on her. And only when she was really in her 40s did she begin to describe and to transcribe so much of what she saw. And part of that I think was because here was somebody who was receiving these these visions, these mystical experiences from a very young age, but who wanted to ruminate on them, who wanted to meditate on them. And for her, then, it was the command to talk about these. And as she wrote in the shivyas, one of her greatest of her writings, she talks about the fiery light coming out of a cloudless sky that flooded her entire mind and inflamed, she said, her whole heart and her whole like a flame. And she understood at that moment the exposition of the books of the Psalter, the Gospel, the Old and the New Testaments, and it was by command that she made these visions known. But it was again out of humility, out of obedience to the voice that she did this. And the full scale of what she saw and what she began to teach to transcribe took up almost the whole of the rest of her life. And yet even at that moment, as she did so, what was she doing? She sought additional counsel in the discernment of the authenticity and the truth of what she was seeing. Why? Because she was concerned that they might not be of God or that they were mere illusions or even possible delusions brought on by herself or by the evil one. And that commitment to obedience, I think, stands her in such great standing in the history of the church among the mystics. But it also tells us that, as often has been the case with some of the mystics in history, there have been those positivists and scientists and psychologists who try to dismiss these mystical experiences. In Hildegard's case, what have they claimed? They have said that she was receiving these simply psychological aberrations or they were various forms of neurological problems leading up to migraines or a host of other possible issues. And yet the clarity of her visions, the specificity of them, and also the theological depth of them, demolish any such claims by scientists today and instead really forces to look at what exactly she was seeing. I don't doubt that there will be many out there over the next century particularly that could achieve their doctorates just by writing on different aspects of her work. And if you are at all a student of the Benedictine rule, you can begin to see in those visions those connections with the life that she lived out. I mean, this was very organic. It wasn't like this were just coming. Though they seem foreign to us, when you, potentially, when you begin to look at those visions, if you understand the time, if you have a proper translation and you know the rule, you begin to see a little bit better the clarity of what she's communicating. Yes, exactly. And we also appreciate the staggering scale of what she saw. I mean, she beheld as well the sacraments. She understood the virtues. She appreciated angels. She saw vice. She saw, as Pope Benedict XVI talked in his letter proclaiming her a doctor of the church, what did he say? He says that the range of vision of the mystic of Bingen was not limited to treating individual matters but was a global synthesis of the Christian faith. So he talks about that this is a compendium of salvation history, literally from the beginning of the universe until the very eschatological consummation of all of creation. As he says, God's decision to bring about the work of creation is the first stage on a long journey that unfolds from the constitution of the heavenly hierarchy until it reaches the fall of the rebellious angels and the sin of our first parents. So she's touching on the very core of who we are and the most important aspects of redemption of the kingdom of God and the last judgment. That the scale of this again, I think, is difficult for much of a modern mind to comprehend. And it tells us that we have to be very careful from our perch here and surrounded by technology and modernity that we perhaps have lost our ability to see the sheer scale of salvation history. That this abbess sitting on the Rhine in the 12th century was able to and then was able to communicate it with language that is surprisingly modern. Oh, let's talk about that language not only with words but with music and with art. I mean, this woman was able to express herself in all manners of creative activity. Yes, I mean, this is somebody that designed, created her own kind of language. It's sort of a combination of Latin and German, which is a medieval German. But she also composed hymns, more than 70 hymns. She composed sequences and antiphons, what became known as the symphonia harmoniae celestium, the symphony of the harmony of heavenly revelations. And not only were they simply composed because, well, her community would need music, they were very much a reflection of the things that she had seen. And she wrote a very memorable letter in 1178 to the prelates of the city of Mainz, and she talks about the fact that music stirs our hearts and engages our souls in ways we can't really describe. But we're taken beyond our earthly banishment back to the divine melody Adam knew when he sang with the angels when he was whole in God before his exile. So here she's as seemingly simple as a hymn, and connecting it to the vision, connecting it to salvation history, and connecting to something far deeper theologically. So her hymns ranged from the creation of the Holy Spirit, but she was especially fond of composing music in honor of the saints, and especially the Blessed Virgin Mary. Yeah, as we're coming to a conclusion on this particular episode, I just don't want to miss out on just a little bit of a tidbit. We could have called her a doctor, I mean, in a very real way, a physician. This woman, this wonderful gift to the church, gift to all of us, I mean, she had that appreciation of creation and actually even how it will work to heal. Yes, yes. Again, it's hard to overestimate her genius. Why? Because beyond her visions, beyond her abilities as a composer, here was somebody who combined her genius with practical need. Her community had specific needs for her gifts. And so what did she do? She wrote books on the natural sciences, she wrote books on medicine, she wrote books on music. She looked at the study of nature to assist her sisters. So the result was a natural history, a book on causes and cures, a book on how to put medicine together. And it's a fascinating reading because she talks about plants and the elements and trees and birds and mammals and reptiles. But all of it was to reduce all of this knowledge to very practical purposes, the medicinal values of natural phenomena. And then she also wrote in a book on causes and cures, which is written from the traditional medieval understanding of humors. She lists 200 diseases or conditions with different cures and remedies that tend mostly to be herbal with sort of recipes for how to make them. This is all from somebody who at that time was an abbess of not just one but two monasteries along the Rhine, who was also being consulted on popes to kings to common people who came to her for help. And this is somebody who at that time was also working for her own perfection in the spiritual life and in the perfection of the virtues and who is also continuing to reflect and meditate on the incredible vision she was receiving. So this is a full life, but it was a life given completely to the service of others. And of course, she'll have to have two episodes. We do. Thank you so much, Dr. But looking forward to part two Chris. You've been listening to the doctors of the church, the charism of wisdom with Dr. Matthew Bunsen. To hear and or to download this program, along with hundreds of other spiritual formation programs, visit discerning hearts .com. This has been a production of discerning hearts. I'm your friend. This has been helpful for you that you will first pray for our mission. And if you feel us worthy, consider a charitable donation which is fully tax deductible to support our efforts. But most of all, we pray that you will tell a friend about discerning hearts .com and join us next time for the doctors of the church, the charism of wisdom with Dr. Matthew Bunsen.

Chris Mcgregor Chris UTA Elizabeth Germany Hildegard UDA Meggenhard 1178 Norwich Pope Benedict Two Episodes Hildebert 200 Diseases Pope St. Paul Center For Biblical T ST. Julian Bunsen Mainz
"norwich" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

Bloomberg Radio New York

05:16 min | 7 months ago

"norwich" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

"You so much for that. We're going to ask you to stick around Nathan. We're going to need some more reporting on that FDIC. Breaking news because I want to bring in Simone foxman. She covers all the markets for Bloomberg. She joins us here in a Bloomberg interactive broker studio S is Herman Chan. He covers the regional banks for Bloomberg intelligence here. So smoke just give us a sense of what's going on in the markets out there and then we'll go to Herman Nathan talk a little bit about kind of what's going on with the regional banks. Yeah, well Nathan was talking about Disney there briefly shares down pretty significantly in trading today 8.83%, a wider than expected streaming loss and it's not just loss of subscribers, which it felt, but it's also a loss from streaming that's projected to increase by a $100 million this period. The numbers here are really outstanding. I mean, outstandingly bad, frankly, suffered a loss of 659 million in the just ended fiscal second quarter. Significantly lower, however than what analysts expected, but not seeing positivity ahead. And frankly, Disney had boosted the cost of its ad free streaming service, and that seems to have really cut into subscribers. It was $11 per month at the end of December. Yeah, I mean, the big issue for Disney and for these other big media companies is when is this streaming business is going to get profitable because we know you're losing subscribers on your traditional pay TV models, cable TV. I'm sure you don't subscribe to cable TV. Do you Simone? I don't. See, I know. I'm cutting the cards. I know, I get it, and you are the future in Disney knows that in a paramount knows that. That's why they're going all in on streaming. And we're really seeing a shake up. I mean, look, one of the big stories from yesterday was that apple's top executive in charge of video and sports, businesses is departing. That's really been a division that fueled a lot of the company's growth in recent years, but people just not knowing what is the way forward, there seems to be a lot of a lot of shake ups going on in this space. Yeah, absolutely. Hey, Hermione, I want to bring you in here, pivot a little bit here to the banks. We're looking at PAC west down about 20% today. What's the latest on PAC west and just on the regional banks in general? Yeah, it shows sure, so for peck west, they put out their ten Q filing and mentioned in the filing that deposits fell about 9 and a half percent in the prior week of May 5th following the Bloomberg news article that peck west was looking to potentially sell themselves and looking for strategic alternatives. So that's really what's pressuring the name spiraling deposits and then following that with some negative price action, which really feeds up on itself and potentially deposits could fall even more after today's price section. And Nathan hangar, I know you had some breaking some news on Nathan dean. I'm sorry. Just so Nathan dean, I just want to get your sense from a regulatory perspective here. Where does the FDC FDIC go? Where do other regulators go? Okay, so we have some breaking news that's happening right now at the FDIC. What they are doing is they are issuing a proposal for a special assessment to recoup around $15 billion. This is for Silicon Valley bank in signature bank, not first republic. And in this special assessment, banks above 50 billion in assets are going to have to pay about 95% of that 15 billion. Now, this is going to be a proposal, which means it's not finalized, but what the FDIC is doing here is they're putting banks on notice, starting in 2024 and going for 8 quarters, you're going to have to pay more money to what's known as the deposit insurance fund. What today's action is not is not a statement or any action that would actually ensure backstop any uninsured deposits. So this doesn't do anything for the regional bank issues that we're still doing. This is just solely to recoup money from Silicon Valley bank in the signature bank losses. So Nathan, did you cover all this policy stuff for Bloomberg intelligence here? Is this something that the big banks were expecting? And is this kind of normal course of business when there's been a big kind of withdrawal funds from the FDIC? Absolutely. And the big banks were expecting this, the policy makers have been saying multiple times over the last few weeks and months that the big banks are going to be the ones that have to pay for this. The one surprising thing is that just last week, we heard statements that banks above 10 billion in assets would be the ones paying. What today's proposal is actually banks 5 billion and up. So a little bit of the small banks have to pay this. But it can be costly. A 2000 I think Jamie Dimon said several years ago that a special assessment back in 2009 cost JPMorgan around 500 million in total. So we're not talking about small dollars here, but certainly anticipated and the banks were expecting this. I have a question for you. You know, does the FDIC coming out and say, you're going to have to pay more and you're going to have to pay more for a while. Does this encourage some of the larger banks to maybe look for strategic alternatives with respect to trying to acquire assets at smaller banks just to avoid the pain that they're going to have to feel down the road or now that this assessment is out, is that like, okay, we're going to have to pay

"norwich" Discussed on Abiding Together

Abiding Together

05:33 min | 9 months ago

"norwich" Discussed on Abiding Together

"Never once did anybody say no. Every single person was like, yeah, father, can you bless me like, yeah, padre? Can we not a blessing or can you pray for me? And all of us want to be blessed. All of us want to be, we want to be blessed. We want to be delighted and we want to know that there's a love greater than anything we could ever do to remove it. That's the ache of the human heart. And I think when we kind of allow lord to walk into those places, we can kind of see the places where that's true for us and then areas where it doesn't seem as true. And page 17 in the very first chapter bob says the goal is really beautiful. The goal of our spiritual life is to be transformed into the image of Christ so that we share in the divine intimacy that he enjoys with the father and the Holy Spirit. And that's not just a concept, but you see Christ, how Jesus lives, Jesus doesn't ever live outside of the delight of the father. And we could say, oh, it's because he doesn't sin. But sin is not our identity. Our identity is not center, our identity is beloved son or daughter. We sent out of our brokenness, but that's not our identity. And so Christ is bringing us into the truth of our identity, so we can go from moment to moment in the delight of the father. And that's just like, that's radical way of life. And it's a radical way of life. And I think it looks to us like, okay, our sin is not our identity. And we've said before, like, okay, when we use the Julian of Norwich, quote, when the lord looks at us, he doesn't see sin, he seems hurt. So when we look at the lord, in areas that we have been hurting, is get curious about that. And say, okay, like lord, why am I hurting in this area? Why don't I trust you in this area? Or what are the things that keep on coming up? And I think one of the hardest parts for myself is then having compassion towards myself in those areas because I want to, like we said earlier, we need a revolution of tenderness. I want a strong arm myself or will myself. Instead of allowing the lord to really penetrate deeply, I was even praying about the fruits of the spirit. And John 15 says if you remain in me and me and I was praying for different talking about fruits of the spirit, my spiritual director really tagged me on one of those. But he made a really good comment. He said Michelle. He said, if you look at that, like the fruits of the spirit, it's not just this breed or that fruit. It's like one tree, the tree of the waste. And he said, so if you're not exuding one fruit, really, you're probably not living to the fullness and all of the fruits. And he said, what you have to look at, you're looking at the fruit.

bob Norwich John Michelle
"norwich" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

Bloomberg Radio New York

02:43 min | 1 year ago

"norwich" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

"Everton at the Emirates next Saturday while hoping the spurs loose to relegated Norwich City A day off in the NBA playoffs today with Eastern Conference Finals set to tip off on Tuesday but the boss himself takes on the road to Miami Heat Meanwhile the Western Conference Finals get underway on Wednesday in San Francisco for the Golden State Warriors hosting the Dallas Mavericks The second round of the NHL playoffs getting underway Tuesday with the battle of Florida as a two time defending Stanley Cup champion Tampa Bay lightning are at the Florida Panthers in game one in the east In the west the Colorado avalanche are home for the St. Louis blues in game one Two coaching moves in the NHL the Las Vegas golden knights have fired head coach Peter deboer after the team is to playoffs for the first time in the franchise's 5 year history View all the New York islanders have elevated assistant coach lane Lambert as their new head coach replacing Barry trots who was fired last week I'm Dan schwarzman that's your Bloomberg world sports op Dave Markets headlines and breaking news 24 hours a day At Bloomberg dot com the Bloomberg business app and at Bloomberg quick take This is a Bloomberg business flash Within the last half hour we learned that Cheng hye reported no new COVID infections in the broader community for a third consecutive day Now this is a crucial milestone since it was the goal set by authorities before they would begin unwinding lockdown restrictions We have no trading in Chinese shares or in equities in Hong Kong I'm looking at the currency right now offshore a little stronger against the greenback not by much at 6 79 65 The dollar creating a little bit of a downdraft here or I'm seeing some selling I should say in the greenback versus the majors with the Bloomberg dollar spot index down about a tenth of 1% after slumping three tenths of 1% in New York trading We've got yields firm now in the Tokyo session on U.S. sovereign debt a ten year treasury at two 88 That's about where we were at the end of New York trading but we were down three basis points over the course of New York trading to your treasury now at two 57 We've got a mixed picture for stocks in Asia mostly a positive right now I'm seeing the nikkei just turning positive as I speak It's an energy stocks leading this advance to the nikkei has hired by a tenth of 1% in Seoul the Cosby rising 8 tenths of 1% and in Sydney the ASX 200 better by about three tenths of 1% WTI crude oil after popping more than 3% in New York down just a bit let's call it two tenths of 1% We're trading one 1395 More on markets in 15 minutes Denise Pellegrini next with a look at global headlines Denise Doug you mentioned the three days in a row now of no new community spread of COVID cases.

Peter deboer NHL lane Lambert Dan schwarzman Dave Markets Norwich City Cheng hye Golden State Warriors Bloomberg Everton Dallas Mavericks golden knights Florida Panthers St. Louis blues Colorado avalanche Emirates spurs Stanley Cup New York islanders
"norwich" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

Bloomberg Radio New York

03:02 min | 1 year ago

"norwich" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

"Everton at the enriched next Saturday while hoping to spurs loose to relegated Norwich City PSG superstar killing and BAPE says he knows where you'll be playing his football moving forward It won't announce his decision yet The 23 year old was speaking at the UN FB awards ceremony where in boppy won the player of the year League One for the third straight season Recent reports have LinkedIn Bobby with the return to Paris while Real Madrid is known to be a desired destination for the France international Two coaching moves in the NHL's New York islanders have elevated assistant coach lane Lambert as a new head coach replacing Barry traps who is fired last week Meanwhile the Las Vegas golden knights half fired head coach Peter deboer after the team missed the playoffs for the first time in the franchise's 5 year history Finally it's a day off in the NBA playoffs with Eastern Conference Finals set to tip off tomorrow for the Boston Celtics on the road to Miami Heat and the schwarzman that your Bloomberg world sports op day Markets headlines and breaking news 24 hours a day At Bloomberg dot com the Bloomberg business app and at Bloomberg quick tape This is a Bloomberg business flash Well we have mostly positive Asian equity futures but we might find it difficult to get some traction today There's not a lot of good news to trade off of the weak news was the economic data in China yesterday and also the New York manufacturing data in the U.S. today And so we chopped around a little bit and finished down in the end for the S&P 500 off four tenths of 1% the NASDAQ down 1.2% But again the futures in Asia are looking pretty solid You know it's two days out of three now that we've had the dollar weaker and yields down And so it's not much of a trend really but it is a little bit of a change of a pretty steady grind higher for the dollar and yields that had been spiking as well They're not spiking anymore Right now the yield on the ten years at 2.88% the Bloomberg dollar spot filled a third of 1% We'll see if that continues today We mentioned the spike in some commodities wheat futures in Chicago's as well as corn and soybean futures also Sorry that's my coffee machine going in the back there Take care of that in a moment The companies will keep an eye on today grain corp you know Australia also yamazaki baking in Japan In China where it's very tough for companies to raise prices uni president tingy a lot of food companies It'll be interesting to watch And I had four interesting lines briefly and we get back to Kim forest JPMorgan says the stock markets have overpriced recession analysts behind the uninvestable call upgrade China tech city downgrades China's growth this year McDonald's is going to pull out of Russia And that is a look at markets And used Denise All right thank you Brian Well New York City will consider requiring face masks in all public indoor settings if the COVID alert level rises to high Mayor Eric Adams for now though calling the mask recommendation voluntary Jump in COVID.

lane Lambert Peter deboer Norwich City BAPE Bloomberg PSG Everton golden knights spurs islanders New York Boston Celtics LinkedIn Madrid Bobby NHL UN
"norwich" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

Bloomberg Radio New York

02:03 min | 2 years ago

"norwich" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

"Sports from around the world Here's Dan Schwartzman Thanks dag AS and Spain reports that killing a bappa is expected to make a decision on his future home after the PSG versus Real Madrid Champions League knockout stage match in March with Madrid thought to be the landing spot for the striker if he leaves Paris The 23 year old will be a free transfer this June and could sign a free contract as early as January to move to another club over the summer It was a big boxing day in the Premier League as Manchester City doubles up Lester city 6 to three as Raheem Sterling scores a brace Elsewhere arsenal dominates Norwich City 5 nil tandem shuts out a ten man Crystal Palace three nil Chelsea knocks off Aston Villa three to one West Ham falls to Southampton three to two of Brian beat sprint for two nil three matches though on the schedule we're postponed including Liverpool playing the united at Anfield It was a week 16 Sunday at the NFL season as ravens are blown out by the Bengals 41 to 21 as Joe burrow throws for a team record 525 yards along with four touchdowns Elsewhere the jets outlasting the Jaguars 26 to 21 giants loose the eagles 34 to ten are the Patriots lose sole possession of first place in the AFC east the 33 to 21 loss at home to the bills It's a big NFC smash about Sunday Night football as a 6 and 8 Washington football team is on the road facing the tenon for Dallas Cowboys Washington has lost two in a row of the cowboys are in the midst of a three game winning streak And the in schwarzman that your Bloomberg world sports op day Markets headlines and breaking news 24 hours a day at Bloomberg dot com the Bloomberg business at and at Bloomberg quick take This is a Bloomberg business lash And I'm David inglis here in Hong Kong Good morning if you're joining us from the region good evening if you're joining us out of the U.S. good afternoon depending on where you are of course do we check markets every 15 minutes and we are just about 17 minutes into the sessions over in Tokyo in Seoul and you know what things have actually turned lower that pixie dust comet I had earlier.

Dan Schwartzman bappa Madrid Champions League Lester city Raheem Sterling Elsewhere arsenal West Ham falls Joe burrow PSG Norwich City Manchester City Madrid Crystal Palace Aston Villa Premier League Spain boxing Paris Southampton
"norwich" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

Bloomberg Radio New York

01:59 min | 2 years ago

"norwich" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

"Sports Dan Schwartzman is looking at Manchester United after is it after a Barcelona star Damn While Brian is kind of twofold here el nacional reports that barsa was rebuffed by menu with cam no looking on load Philip Coutinho to Old Trafford with the Red Devils showing no interest in the Brazil international He's very highly paid just not worth it right now Meanwhile united though did express interest in midfielder Frankie Dion with Manu offering €55 million for the 24 year old new bar managers Hernandez those seas the Netherlands international as a building block for the Catalan giants who will take a heck of a lot more than 55 million to pry Dion from cam no Man you wins Ralph ragnarok's debut match is intra manager one nil over Crystal Palace at Old Trafford as Fred scores in the 77th minute Elsewhere in England Tottenham dominates Norwich City three nil Leicester City false Aston Villa two to one only united and Brentford play took to all draw NFL it came down to the wire and it was a two point conversion attempt by the ravens instead of kicking an inch extra point that failed Raven's fall to the Steelers 20 to 19 It has just ended the forty-niners lose at the Seahawks 30 to 23 that a fourth and goal to Seattle three a tip pass and that was if Washington meanwhile has won his fourth game in a row they knock off the Raiders 17 to 15 as they are absolutely rolling right about now Meanwhile both New York teams lose jets fall to the eagles 33 to 18 while the dolphins knock off the Giants 20 to 9 Mike glennon throwing for just a 187 yards in interception filling infringer and started Daniel Jones After the game giants announced that glennon in fact had suffered a concussion lines win their first game of the season 29 to 27 over the Vikings while Tom Brady leads the Buccaneers to a 30 to 17 win over the Atlanta Falcons I'm Dan Schwartzman that your Bloomberg world sports update Juliet Dan thanks so much coming up We're going to join mirror panda advice president and global market strategist.

Dan Schwartzman barsa Philip Coutinho Frankie Dion Catalan giants Ralph ragnarok Red Devils Manchester United Manu Barcelona Hernandez Norwich City Crystal Palace Leicester City Old Trafford Dion Brian Brazil Brentford
"norwich" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

Bloomberg Radio New York

01:50 min | 2 years ago

"norwich" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

"Season last year he broke Celtic shriek like ten straight years of winning that Premier League Talk sport reports that Frank Lampard will soon be returning to the dugout as a former Chelsea boss will be named the new manager at Norwich City Lampard widely considered one of the greatest midfielders of his generation will have to bring the canaries back from the cusp of relegation as Norwich currently sits at the bottom of the Premier League table Reports say that Barcelona is going to have less than €10 million to spend during the January transfer window due to the financial restrictions placed on the club by La Liga Cam no can only spend €97 million for the season based on financial losses suffered by the club over the past two years bars is struggling this year currently city and 9th place in the league table through 12 matches And AFC match about Thursday Night Football kick off in about 45 minutes It's the two and 7 Miami Dolphins hosting the 6 and two Baltimore Ravens Miami coming off a home over the Texans last Sunday while the AFC north leading ravens knocked off the Minnesota Vikings in overtime Jacoby percent has just been named the starting quarterback for two attack of iloa who still nursing that broken finger but he is on the sideline as the backup tonight Quarterback Cam Newton agreed to rejoin the Carolina Panthers for the rest of the season with Sam darnold at at least the next month with a shoulder injury Newton has agreed to a salary of about $10 million for the rest of the year LA rams have announced they are signing free agent Odell Beckham junior the 29 year old three time pro bowler cleared waivers on Tuesday after being released by the browns I'm Dan Schwartzman that your Bloomberg world sports update Juliet Thanks Dan Coming up we're going to talk to the director of the European sustainable growth acquisition corporation about EVs and sustainability will also talk about Tesla CEO Elon Musk unloading that $5 billion of stock in the electric carmaker This is Bloomberg Go to total.

Norwich City Lampard Premier League La Liga Cam Frank Lampard AFC iloa Norwich Sam darnold Barcelona Miami Dolphins Baltimore Ravens LA rams Jacoby Minnesota Vikings Texans Odell Beckham ravens
"norwich" Discussed on Everything Everywhere Daily

Everything Everywhere Daily

05:19 min | 2 years ago

"norwich" Discussed on Everything Everywhere Daily

"Gone differently benedict arnold the fifth when undoubtably be considered one of the founding fathers of the united states. he was born in seventeen. Forty one in norwich connecticut to a family which was the original founders of the rhode island colony. His great-grandfather benedict arnold. The i was the president and governor of rhode island. He was as close to american aristocracy. Is you could come. He was one of six children but he and his sister were the only ones who survived to adulthood by all accounts. Arnold was athletic and good looking one of his neighbors. In connecticut said that arnold was quote. The most accomplished and grateful skater that he had ever seen despite his family pedigree. His father was an alcoholic which brought a great deal of shame to benedict. The alcohol is a may have been the result of losing four of his children. His father squandered away the family fortune. Which otherwise would have allowed. The young benedict attend yale at the age of sixteen. He joined the connecticut militia to fight in the french indian war but his unit turned around after the fourth they were marching to his captured is service in. The war. lasted a whopping. Sixteen days benedict was accepted as an apprentice apothecary. Norwich and later set up his own apothecary business. In new haven using the business as a springboard he branched into other areas including shipping to the west indies and became quite successful by all accounts prior to the revolution. Arnold was a staunch patriot and supporter of the american cause. British laws such as the stamp act. Sugar act affected him directly. He floated british laws enjoying the secret sons of liberty in march of seventeen seventy five. He formed the governor second company of connecticut guards. Along with sixty five other men from new haven. He was elected as their captain and was responsible for the leadership of the unit. When war broke out the next month in lexington and concord in massachusetts arnold in his unit made the decision to march to boston. But he wasn't given permission to take any gunpowder from the town's magazine. Arnold told one of the town fathers david wooster quote. You may tell the selectmen that if the keys are not coming within five minutes my men will break into the supply house and help themselves none. But the almighty god shall prevent me from marching and quote. This day is still celebrated every year in new haven as powder house day on april twenty. Second this began. What can only be described is a pretty successful military career when he got to boston. He organized a raiding party to take the british fort ticonderoga which sat on lake champlain. You managed to take the fort with hardly a fight captured the british cannons as well as the largest worship on the lake. Arnold was promoted to.

benedict arnold connecticut Arnold connecticut militia arnold norwich rhode island united states benedict Norwich west indies david wooster new haven concord lexington boston massachusetts fort ticonderoga lake champlain
"norwich" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

Bloomberg Radio New York

01:53 min | 2 years ago

"norwich" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

"We get to Pete fox who's looking at the World Series in game 6 and a roller coaster Pete Indeed it is the braves can win this series with a victory tonight in Atlanta They jumped out early on the Astros for nothing with an atom Duval Grand Slam in the first the Astros would answer right back with two in the second and two in the third to tie it at four then Freddy Freeman hit a 460 foot monster blast to give the braves a 5 four lead rather results from the pitch and the English Premier League leads with a close victory over Norwich City two won the final Rodrigo would break the tie at the 60 minute mark West Ham a comfortable win over Ashton villa for won the final Johnson rice formals and Bowen accounting for the goals from La Liga Madrid takes care of Batista a score of three nil Sociedad and Bilbao played to a one one draw in Syria A.C. Milan a winner over Roma Napoli and empire both post victories in tight games as well from the National Football League the Patriots Pull the upset in Los Angeles against the Chargers 27 24 New England now back to 500 at four and four Washington falling to the Denver Broncos 17 to ten The jets with a nice win pulling the upset at home against the Cincinnati Bengals 34 31 for their second one of the season Mike white gets his first start at quarterback for the jets going 37 of 45 for 405 yards and three touchdowns Joe burrow through for two 59 three touchdowns and one interception and in Chicago the niners get their third win beating the bears 33 22 I'm Pete Fox that cha Bloomberg World sports update Paul All right thanks very much Pete a bit of a mixed picture across the Asia Pacific market set the moment now here in Australia a bit by half of 1% for Nike powering ahead higher by 2% but a weakness though in Hong Kong and Shanghai.

Pete Fox Astros braves Freddy Freeman English Premier League Ashton villa Johnson rice A.C. Milan Roma Napoli Norwich City Pete Rodrigo Sociedad La Liga Atlanta Batista Bilbao Bowen
"norwich" Discussed on Formula 1 Grid Talk Podcast

Formula 1 Grid Talk Podcast

03:25 min | 2 years ago

"norwich" Discussed on Formula 1 Grid Talk Podcast

"Horrible, understeer there. Coming for the round, I thought that counts as two and 18. You could actually see him fighting the wheel there. Yeah, he's put so much lock on. Is that a deletion there? No, because I thought it was I didn't know if it was white line or is the white light. Or I must be turned 9. No, sorry, it's turned 6 where you have to keep something on the part of the car on the curbs. Lines. They've got a police it, but here because I remember in the IndyCar a couple of years ago, you saw them go in. Yeah, just fully off the track. As well have been in Mexico. It may as well have been Fernando Alonso in Russia. So before they go back out on their next runs, I wanted to point out a trend that's carried on at the moment in Q one from FP three, which is science. In another district to the Clare. Nearly a second off the pace and sciences up in 5th, just over a two tenths off of the fastest time at the moment, which for another guy who's generally not considered an outstanding qualifier, that some effort. There as well. Yeah. Who is a good qualified? Very good qualify. So with four minutes left to go just under now the drivers are coming out for their final runs. I'll give you a quick run through of where the drivers are at currently in Q one. We've got Verstappen and Perez. Followed by the two McLaren Ricardo and Norwich stadium color science in 5th bot us is ahead of Hamilton. He's in 6th hunt and 7th. Gazley in 8th Leclair in, you know, in tenth, not to not too shabby. Vettel an 11th juvenile in 12th stroll is 13th Russell 14th, Espana is the last of well who would survive and then in the danger zone at the moment is Fernando Alonso in 16th Latifi in 17th Mick Schumacher in 18th and then Raikkonen and mazepin. I believe don't have lap times as they were deleted for various track limits just awful. Quick shout out to the fire octopus on the inside of the boat. Just seeing that. I just see that that is where it is looking big weight away. What's that about keep Austin weird? Okay. That is like something, if any of you ever played the game watch dogs. No. Well, yes and no. Yeah, that reference will be the last one you know. It reminds us something from Doctor Who. What about the macro or I'm not a big Doctor Who fan? It just looks like something would fit there. Yeah. It looks like something I would expect to see from robot walls back in the day, brilliant. Robot water, Craig Charles, Jonathan Pearce, on the commentary. Are you all going to remember that? Yeah. I've been to see robot wars. Okay, I'm 21, but I do know what road was..

Fernando Alonso Verstappen McLaren Ricardo Norwich stadium Gazley Latifi Mick Schumacher mazepin Leclair Russia Mexico Vettel Perez Raikkonen Hamilton us Austin Jonathan Pearce Craig Charles
"norwich" Discussed on Cork's 96fm Opinion Line

Cork's 96fm Opinion Line

08:18 min | 2 years ago

"norwich" Discussed on Cork's 96fm Opinion Line

"Luck. Glad the carapace. Dnc t that worry out of your hair all the nc teas were off for months and months and months and because of the covert and now they're back but by jason account. Anyway you can't go into the waiting room to look at. I tell you something that waiting room. It's like isn't it really is like being there watching your car and like it's like wait for the birth of your first barn or something looking out the window. We've all been there looking out the wind. I turned the car going up. And you're waiting for and that's a by the way but they can't wait and then they got soaked down there this morning it little in test center. And he's right. There isn't a whole pint around there is no pilot around ringo for shelter Benefit zibo are known. Brother wouldn't go amiss although they give them some punches. Eighteen fifty seven one five nine nine six. Philip got back onto a stat message that we had a both gambar narcotics that they're wondering there any kind of equivalent of alanon are albertine whether there is assistance for you at arbor house. They do Work in our bros as we know. It's the treatment center but they have advice for anybody who wants advice. Their number is two one four nine six eight nine three. Oh two one four nine. Six eight nine double traders particularly for the person who wanted some support for the families of the person addicted to narcotics addicted to drugs. There is such thing for a person who who's offering malediction but not are. They can't find the same for narcotics. So the the advice from philip to contact arbor house. Eighteen fifty seven one five nine nine six getting a few bits and pieces in about friendship. And how long have you been friends with with your best friend. Is it someone your mess recently or someone that you met donkey's years ago and do friendships drift and the estate together. It's couple coming and keep them coming because they're interesting. Addison says hi. Pj my mom met her best friend when she was my brother's teacher in primary school he was seven fifty two now. They're still best friends even though she's in limerick emma mamas in cork. They're in constant contact. That's nice tanya. Pj was wondering about how childhood friends are still friends right. I'm still friends with two of my childhood friends. Vivian and katrina. We're now on our late tortoise early forties closer than ever. We're more like sisters so thirty plus years of being through everything together. Nothing in this world would break loved them to bits. Friendships like that are so high to find and to keep and darris says i still keep in touch with a few friends from secondary school. Closest friends in school have moved abroad for work. But we still keep in contact where we can when understand. We're all busy. People could never really meet the last number of years but it's important. The people remember that. I consider the group of friends. I made in college to be my best friends. Mr trion meet as often as we can train the work and life events. Love the show rita and friends since we were little girls born a week apart. We still operate the loads them. Coming in. lows them If you are something about your friend knew your friendship or is it a child vendors that someone you just met a couple of years ago or so. When you've been friends with for donkey's years let us know. Let us know on data was on the nc t center. Initial island has been like that. Since last year. I was waiting outside in the rain. Last december husband went in february. I told him taken umbrella with him. As you have to wait outside. Eighteen fifty seven one five nine six as we do from time to time quick. Good morning to the boys and girls of the. Because i don't know whether your boys or girls. So will you ask. And i am not from flipping mail. They're convinced that would mayo. And tyrone in. The didn't final. On sunday that i shall be supporting male. I am not from male bon-bons. That's busy say asian fifty seven one five nine. Six reminder to your primarily live is back this saturday on ninety six dot e with trevor welch the teams or powered by talksport live coverage of crystal palace against spores at twelve thirty arsenal v. Norwich tree chelsea taking aston villa at half past five is the permanently live online with now your sport on your terms stream just the games that matter to you most with now and this saturday on the cork's ninety six. Am app are at ninety-six fm dot. I e let's go back to where we started this morning. Talking to jane from sparkle they have all of their business. The spark cork band. They do all their business on their social media platforms bookings and they're vince their promotion and all of that and their social media has been hacked into a couple of days just at a time when they were hoping to get their gigs open running and their bookings coming in and all of that. I talk about that in just a sec with a role but what drew averell to our minds was a report today that the eighty five percent of preteens are now using social media apps despite age restrictions and when i read that this morning in the independent and heard about it on the radio i said and we told you this before age restrictions matter. Nothing to kids because they'll get around him ninety three percent of pre teenagers. Them twelve tenures. Now have some kind of a smart device and take talk snapchat in the mall loads of people under thirteen years. Which they they shouldn't they shouldn't have this news dozen. Comb surprise to us does it admiral. Good morning no. I think most people know that at this stage on eighteen or in a new era. No with kovic where you know being online and distance technologies. It's front and center and how we live. Our lives isn't a everyone whatever age you're whether you're three or your seven and and the fact that needs cinch kids have You know the owner owned device you know. Homeschooling was huge thing and keeping kids entertained because could engage with their friends so there we gauge their friends online chat to them. It helped with their. You know the loneliness and dealer things that they had to and you know we have to remember all the good things that technology brings as well as attached all the dangerous upset that the internet has one in three of the children. They surveyed rejuvenation had put videos themselves. Online you just goal. Oh no oh no yeah. Yeah i think that's where we just have to. You know every time. I read the report. I'm cheri. preston save kids. Every time i read the port. I take something different way from us and applauding things to the internet. Fast means dice. You have allowed your child to download a device that they're putting jobs up there. What are the videos off. Are the are the visuals of of of enemy are the um something on rule. Blocks are minecraft the created. And they're really taking pride in their achievement and they're sharing us have they. Is it if somebody else have they. And they don't even have permission. What what is the content that we're talking about here and also then privacy. Settings is a private account. Is it a closed account. Meaning you know. Anne apps that you download for your child you've decided it's okay for your child is age appropriate content appropriate..

arbor house alanon emma mamas darris Mr trion nc gambar Dnc ringo trevor welch Norwich tree chelsea Philip Addison jason Pj tanya Vivian drew averell philip
"norwich" Discussed on You Made It Weird with Pete Holmes

You Made It Weird with Pete Holmes

04:30 min | 2 years ago

"norwich" Discussed on You Made It Weird with Pete Holmes

"I wonder i always have this. I'm i wonder if at the moment of death either right before or right after if there's a moment when when you see that all your grasping striving hunger anxiety fear morosi all those things that you could have done it without them. That by the way very similar to the jewish definite one of the jewish definitions of how that i learned in israel i was like what about hell i. I just wanted to ask everybody about hell. Yeah because nobody had illuminated me that it don't worry your friend who died in highschool isn't burning alive right right right so i was asking. Everybody and one of the rabbis wasn't rabbi was just a learned jewish man he was like when you die and you realize that god was there. Meaning love was there and you realize you've spent the whole time denying footprints. Yeah don't ruin the beautiful point. Let's go is what we're talking. That's the burn. I don't actually like this definition. But it's kinda cute as a poem. It's like the regret that you could have known that you were held right or you trusted. Yeah not known. Yeah we can't really know. I mean you can sort of no. I guess some people seem like really certain but like that's the regretted almost feel like they had to suffer in their way into the certainty. There's something about of course offering that. Is it peels away the illusions and at the base base of it. You find that love. That's it we have to subject ourselves to annihilation over and over until we find that which is indestructible. That's right you know. And that that's a real. That was like a psychedelic ship. Moment for me. Where you're tripping right mushrooms. And i saw it was like a jaguar. It wasn't even that vivid pretty small dose. I'm kind of like. I said a lightweight side kennesaw a little jaguar phantom and i it was look scary and i said what are you gonna get me and that is that was the lesson it was like nothing can get. You really are. Yeah that's true in this reality too. That's what you see when you're with the great. When you're with rhonda's this guy knows nothing can get what he really is. And that's jesus. He says strobe. He didn't know that you needed the stroke to get that. He was not his body. Right you know like when when i'm really am generally involving psychedelics but like when i'm really in that expanded state i'm like i could be crucified. Shot killed maimed. You know everything humiliated on the biggest public stage And also be okay like be okay like no that the hug that the divine is giving me is un will not ever stop right because it is you because it is in your reality. You are god. I was just thinking about that. So it's pretty basic new age. Blue fun spirituality. To say that god is the ocean. And your there's a drop of water and it's animating you but how can you divide infinity right so if god is infinity. That's why we say is the ocean or she is the ocean. And you have a drop of that in you. But how can you take just a drop of infinity. I believe it's julian of norwich said at my core. My identity is god. Think that's what she means. Can you take just a piece of infinity. it's either infinity or it's not so if there's a little piece of you that has god then that you're truest nature is infinity. Isn't it funny. If you actually just stay on the path. You're talking about like literally. Just just follow through follow through. You will arrive at a place where you articulate something like what you just said and to the cultural gatekeepers religious gatekeepers. They will call you a heretic right right because they depend on. Duality depend on separation. Because what would say in and out in a codependent. Yeah because then. I said this. I'm telling you the two times. I said something to him that he was like. I'm going to use that. But this ramdas he. They had a cat and it was overweight and big old round cat and they were like. Let's put the cat on a diet. So they started feeding cat less and after two months the cat had not lost a single pound and they were feeding it like a third of its diet swimming in water..

morosi rabbi israel rhonda strobe un norwich julian ramdas swimming
On a Date With Reverend Jesse and Jacqueline Jackson

Double Date with Marlo Thomas & Phil Donahue

02:27 min | 2 years ago

On a Date With Reverend Jesse and Jacqueline Jackson

"It was a bitter cold november morning. When we got to the airport we were heading out to chicago. My old stomping grounds to visit reverend. Jesse jackson and jacqueline jackson not only are these two civil rights icons his work with martin luther king her lifelong activism. But they've been married throughout all yearly sixty years. I was really looking forward to it only problem. Our flight from new york was severely delayed and we were five hours late for our date. It was awful. I really hate being late for anything but even though it was already evening by the time we landed. They said come on over anyway. I've known them for decades and that's the kind of generous people. They are The children well. They all still talk to me. That's a good side. Jesse was diagnosed with parkinson's disease several years ago but despite his condition his spirits were lively and jackie. She's always full of life. As we settled in jesse began to recall their early days in college. She was a into modern dance and she had been librar- and beautiful begun. Measure parents versus freaked on her bills. A-plus all the time though the pluses so you beginning you say wait. What would values you share. The foundation was marriages. Don't last long as they have. No the norwich told free. Russa's deep is larussa foundation when the wind blows can't take it as i see what roles without roots. It cannot grow right over. How lucky you were to find. Jackie i mean other women would have run out the door because you were never home. I love you. I was lucky. I told him because he was going and going and going and then he wouldn't inform me. I went to him. And i said reverend. You're supposed to make me abbey. And i was. I mean because i really felt a man is supposed to make you happy. That's his

Jacqueline Jackson Parkinson's Disease Jesse Jackson Martin Luther King Chicago Larussa Foundation Jesse Jackie New York Russa Norwich
"norwich" Discussed on WTVN

WTVN

01:31 min | 2 years ago

"norwich" Discussed on WTVN

"Up an injury action reported on Alum Creek at Refugee Road that's just north of 1/4. Give yourself a little time as police checking on that scene right now, But the rest of the morning has been fairly quiet. Some light rain moving through the area right now. Traffic sponsored by mattress firm Mattress firm's Fourth of July sale has been extended for a limited time. Shop and save up to $500 on top rated mattress brands like Silly and Sleepy's. Plus, Get a free adjustable base with your $999 mattress, purchase traffic and weather together, powered by temp star and classic air I'm Johnny Hill and NewsRadio. 6 10 wt, ABC six First Morning weather with Andrew Buck Michael powered by the basement, Dr Andrew. It's going to get hot later this week. Yeah, We're staying in the eighties the entire time, But we get a little hotter by Thursday. 89 for the high on Thursday. Today, 83 We've got a 60% chance for scattered showers and storms today so some of us will see rain but not everyone again. 83 for the high Today with the scattered showers and storms tomorrow some isolated showers about a 30% chance of rain tomorrow, getting up to 85. And again 89 on Thursday can't rule out the chance of a stray shower popping up for us, but most of us will likely stay dry. Thursday. 73 in Mary's Ville 74 at your severe weather station news radio 6 10 W. T V and stay plugged in. Local news traffic and Columbus Weather News Radio 6 10 W. TDM as a trilogy senior living community, Norwich Springs is proud to be a place where family comes to live. We're opening soon, and we can't wait to provide.

$999 60% Today tomorrow Thursday Silly ABC today NewsRadio 83 Refugee Road 89 Andrew Buck Michael Andrew Fourth of July Thursday. 73 Johnny Hill Norwich Springs Sleepy's Dr
"norwich" Discussed on Spark My Muse

Spark My Muse

05:36 min | 2 years ago

"norwich" Discussed on Spark My Muse

"You know there's part of me that laments that i didn't figure this out forty years ago and there's just a bigger part of me. That's just grateful that i'm doing this now but but so you know so. It's like discovering was news to me that when you work out you work out muscle groups. I never knew that you're not so this. This paragraph really is expressing my delight in midlife learning more about my body. And and the miracle of this. You know this gift that god has given us and And so i think it was just this insight that i had that you know again in the spiritual life. We talk a lot about the virtues. We talk about the fruits of the spirit. You know these these qualities that being a person of faith being spiritually mature person who we cultivate you know. It's you want to be more loving person and more compassionate person a kinder person or more forgiving person. A more patient person. You know the fruit of the spirit which i talked a lot about in the book because i think they all tie in with you know. The book is structured around the beatitudes also but the fruit of the spirit. Kind of make little surprise appearances here and there but But the you know but this idea that can. We cultivate the fruit in tandem. Like we like we build up our muscles and tandem. And when i had kind of that gee i wonder if kind of moment then you know and and i mentioned the ones. That just kind of intuitively struck me. Oh yeah you know if you well genostim trust. Which can i talk about. An teachable lessons. I learned that from julian of norwich. Join of norwich. The medieval mystic really emphasizes that generosity and trust together. So you know so. That was back to her but Joy in love. Which again. I talk more about it in in the later in the book. But you know but they are. They are paired together in the fruit of the spirit..

norwich julian
"norwich" Discussed on Unhinged and Bumbled up

Unhinged and Bumbled up

02:01 min | 2 years ago

"norwich" Discussed on Unhinged and Bumbled up

"Or the people think side. It's dating disaster. Involves radio woman and ask follow up questions on this sale. I've been on a couple of days with this guy. And he said he had a pair of tickets for the radio one big weekend in norwich and he couldn't decide which may to take. And did i want to go. She's a massive florence. An machine fan so of course she said yes. Anyway had planned any combination logistics. So i fall at have. I'd have look found a company side and faw the food festival experience right anyway. Hicks him had nothing with him. Like no sleeping bike. Nothing like nothing says she. She kinda knew it wasn't going to get while she the drive to the sites get there. Something seemed a bit off jonah. Take a guess what could be a bit of about this. I didn't know they. They have tickets to the cy. It was accompanied by the radio. One's big weekend festival but it was a nudist site. Needless to say. I had a great time watching florence but it was a bloodied weekend. My name is cheap. can you use an wait. Was he just signing on just laying outside in the nude like no sleeping by. You're a nudist. you don't need a win. He has he had close. I don't think he knew it was a nudist camp. Why us let me find traces coma day. She found accommodation food. I shouldn't those new decide. 'cause 'cause i did ask I also said.

norwich Hicks jonah coma
"norwich" Discussed on Protrusive Dental Podcast

Protrusive Dental Podcast

05:44 min | 2 years ago

"norwich" Discussed on Protrusive Dental Podcast

"I use Light-flare compass and i just thought with the so if i start with miss disabilities so it's the if it's a canine usually go reach sweet right so i just i play some bone. Don't canine rescues it. That's done than we do the lateral then. I remove the menacing coaching. And then i just go round. Will the teeth central's on any other. The other side not way. You're just really ensuring that it is has saved is comfortable for the patient. Antique on to make attacking new putting the global. Come on the canines. First and then removing the. I don't do this. Canine and then just hang on. Because you can then introduce a selection in your explainer so i i go chain lateral central central natural. Canine round like that. You're gonna start to then. Introduce section pulses is a real gem is a real critical power either Got a decent the why that then you start to then hold it head. It could lift up in the middle right then. You're going to have to push it down central norwich. Well as you're bonding on one kane and let's say you're lower right and then the lateral just for you. Put it on the lateral. Are you gently pushing the wind up against the teeth with a flat plastic or not. At all i just at that point i would just hold that the men j just make sure it's not lifting off in coming up but no need to push it if it's made well and this way you've got to really get to know your technician and speak to your technician and once you know. Sometimes i send the back. So they know that She's fussy she's i'm not at she might therapist. Doesn't put my fixed retainers me. I do the myself that fussy about it. So i think it's just reading making sure that your technician knows what you're expecting. You're expecting a well adapted passive fish. Amazing thanks so much that description now..

First one kane norwich
"norwich" Discussed on Eu tava la

Eu tava la

03:58 min | 3 years ago

"norwich" Discussed on Eu tava la

"On just fast to gino capacity must but alvin yakuza give by opposing cheered Accounting combating thri thousand mentors jakarta-based. Go out of the rav. i'm inches. You mean they show pet to protect your own to have better be intel convoy of we sat by liza kenosha few other pet meaning. Yeah he give because of this. His cottam hippie cheever's raising up onto fittings in the history of ahmadi magnesia. See the article. Do do the top your seat. You'll see children mice ministers for facing you passing who stomach pocket thing settlement. You digest Ziadeh you know knowing she believes in liza norwich para. We'll take me nearby. Liza can't booking for i must have multiple is soccer competitive aimed. I gotta follow senior improve oprah cookout for their sake parola equally pelfrey but the ceo through noga. Ya ue careful nomads. They can't stop in the i. In worth allow var alluvial follow no more kilmeade narc department of a forty. I gotta dangerous aguirre and gucci. Cy putu for the stadium is operatives amina. You're seeing sock. We just below our abc. Keep boy at a jan artisans at musk. He came damage but the question. Muslim costs down handicapper. Thanks nicholas secure. Accident keep kira moving a yonder fakih my sink worms. Simple as in thome. Kim failures is accused bowel in those because they are key akita moment me he me nick varley on my poor our to number the desert research. You look at theater wins pro major deify cod nickel imprisoned rabbi neulander komu seal off sublime Is mueller this is who pull out of forests. Shooter may mazuk wasser conditioner. Plus let's go to your mortgage most dangerous because do gyp eq- now the key fosuna pursue cetera. Komo's visor my steady job some log. Ima record on his own blog though. Vote on oprah do this season actual duca follow novoye. Tokyo peculiar tipped off so mice foster came in she..

alvin yakuza liza kenosha ahmadi magnesia Ziadeh liza norwich parola noga gino narc department of cheever Cy putu jakarta pelfrey intel Liza oprah aguirre nick varley amina soccer
NFL WEEK 3: Our official predictions for who wins this weekend

GSMC Football Podcast

04:02 min | 3 years ago

NFL WEEK 3: Our official predictions for who wins this weekend

"So. I gave talk about. Obviously a game that still sits our my mind from last week. The Atlanta Falcons go our land Alcan's play. The Chicago bears this week. Chicago was to know the Falcons are all into one o'clock on Fox. Obviously, the Falcons. About that the shambles, the the. Disgusting performance that we saw last week losing a game that they should've never lost Dallas cowboys now going to Chicago bears team defensively is still one of the better teams in the NFL. Immature bisky while not playing. Ultra, great. Still playing well enough for them to win. If, you look at this game, you would think the Falcons will win because one of the Falcons do have going for them as they do have one of the better offenses in felt even to the two weeks you've seen that. And they're going to a bears team that. Can Be, offered to challenge America can be limited. So the Falcons you put up points. The game should be over now the falcons defense does have some questions, but I do think they would put voices should be enough to create distance in the bears it'd be able to pick up the whip. Obviously the bears are companies just gave a lot of confidence. As they should. To An older, start the season I mean. I saw some Falcon fans tweet about it. They don't necessarily want the T. Blues remember they're only to the of this dot over by any stretch. But people really what? Dad Queen Gone. And so. It's Cadillac Party. Wants. To lose. The ship but the Chicago bears going to three eight. Oh probably be one of the young shockers of this early season. I'm going to very hastily picked the Falcons to win this game. I think they they are the better team. Now whether they actually leads to the results on Sunday we'll see but I'm going to go the Falcons to win this game as they are the better team to me. I, Think Matt Ryan will continue his great start to the season. I think are often will continue to click. There are questions of Julio. Jones will play this Sunday I. Think he will. He usually plays to injuries when his Julio not move something now he did. Have a setback in practice but. You know I think. He should be able to go. and honestly, if he didn't would be great for my fantasy team either but I got kindergarten if I need to step up or racial gauge. So yeah. But yeah with the Falcons. Next game forty niners, giants, I've this Games interesting. Remember last week. The point is playing metlife stadium loss Garoppolo MOATS are. Bosa, Thomas they lost a lot of guys last week. And the. Giants team who? Looks like they'll probably be at the bottom of the barrel the NFC east. Especially after losing saquon Barkley. For? The. season. When I players were scared to play at metlife stadium because they felt like the the stadium turf in and everything was the reason for a lot of those injuries that they had last week when they played the jets. Now. I it's. It's interesting to see what it's GONNA be 'cause they're playing a backup quarterback backup running backs they got sued offensive Lineman. I still don't have Richard Sherman. You have a lot of injuries. and. So this may be a winnable game for the giants I mean, you don't really know what to expect from the forty niners this week. So it'd be you say here they of Jimmy, Garoppolo at least played to me I. Think you would be like, okay for eight hours I think we'd still be able to win, but we don't know how good the Ford back for Norwich backup QB may play. I mean, luckily, the void ours have a lot of defensive talent still. So it's not like older pleaded they have nobody but. It. Isn't as comfortable as A. But I would still in my right mind, go with the four years to win the game.

Atlanta Falcons Chicago Falcons Metlife Stadium Alcan Giants Jones Richard Sherman Julio Dallas Cowboys NFC America Cadillac Party Matt Ryan Barkley NFL Bosa Garoppolo Jimmy Norwich
Elizabeth Fry, The Prison Angel

Encyclopedia Womannica

04:59 min | 3 years ago

Elizabeth Fry, The Prison Angel

"Hello from Wonder Media Network. I'm Jenny Kaplan and this is encyclopedia Monica. Today's activist was a major proponent of prison reform in Britain. She's known as the Angel of prisons. Let's talk about Elizabeth Fry. Elizabeth Gurney was born in Norwich Norfolk in seventeen eighty to a wealthy quaker family. Her Father John was a successful banker and her mother Catherine was a member of the family that founded Barclays Bank which still operates is one of the largest banks in the world. Elizabeth was the odd one out amongst her siblings. She experienced mood swings and had difficulty learning which biographers attribute to her dyslexia. Elizabeth once said I was thought and called very stupid and obstinate I certainly did not like learning nor did I believe attend my lessons when Elizabeth was twelve years old her mother passed away and Elizabeth was left to care for her younger sisters and brothers. Eighteen hundred at the age of twenty. Elizabeth Mary Joseph Fry London banker and quaker together. They had many children most sources say eleven, five sons and six daughters though some sources suggest that had even more kids. Elizabeth was an observant quaker and frequently worshipped at the Friends Meeting House. It was there the she heard Williams savory preach about the importance of altruism and philanthropy. His words inspired Elizabeth to help those in need. In eighteen thirteen elizabeth visited newgate prison, which was notorious for its filthy state and its dismal treatment of its prisoners. Elizabeth was appalled to see such harsh conditions. Women and children were tightly packed in small spaces with little room to wash themselves or cleaned their clothes, and while many of the newgate prisoners had committed severe crimes, some of them had not. And others hadn't even received a trial. Elizabeth was determined to act the next day she returned to the prison with fresh loaves of bread and clean clothes, but she had sewn herself. She distributed them to the prisoners and encourage them to keep their cells clean and find ways to be hygienic in the oppressive environment. Elizabeth didn't come back to newgate until eighteen sixteen due to financial difficulties within her family. But upon her return, she dove back into the Work Elizabeth educated the children of Newgate who were imprisoned with their parents teaching them practical skills like reading and selling. In eighteen seventeen, Elizabeth founded the Association for the improvement of female prisoners along with twelve other women she worked to advance prison reform and to provide female prisoners with education and tools for employment Elizabeth fought for the idea that prison should be based round rehabilitation rather than punishment she wrote it must indeed be acknowledged that many of our own penal provisions as they produced no effect appear to have no other end the punishment of the guilty. Eighteen nineteen Elizabeth wrote prisons and Scotland in the north of England and encouraged her society friends to visit newgate themselves. At. That time Britain was in the practice of sending prisoners to penal colonies in. North. America Australia and India. At newgate. Prisoners en route to be transferred to convict ships, rebound by chains and unable to move around and tiny carts people in the streets pelted them with garbage. Elizabeth convinced the governor of new gate to carry the women enclosed carriages rather than open ones and to ensure that all the women and children had enough food to eat on their voyage. Elizabeth also gave the prisoner sewing tools, bibles and other necessities to accompany them on their long journeys. With the help of her efforts, the act of transporting criminals so far away lands was prohibited in eighteen, thirty seven. Prior to that change in policy Elizabeth visited every convict ship bound for Australia for more than twenty five years. Throughout the eighteen twenties, Elizabeth inspected prison conditions and continued to advocate for the rights of prisoners. She presented her findings to the House of Commons committee in doing. So she became the first woman to present evidence to parliament. Elizabeth's ideas influenced the eighteen twenty three jails act which introduced a series of prison

Elizabeth Elizabeth Fry Elizabeth Mary Joseph Fry Work Elizabeth Newgate Britain Jenny Kaplan Wonder Media Network House Of Commons Committee Norwich Norfolk London Friends Meeting House Barclays Bank Australia Scotland England America John Williams Catherine
Roger Bennett (Men In Blazers) on the Return of the Premier League

ESPN Daily

06:41 min | 3 years ago

Roger Bennett (Men In Blazers) on the Return of the Premier League

"We Win Stadium you will be at home. I can promise you will feel you support. Stay safe. We are still with you and. You'll never walk alone. That was liberal F. C manager Jergen KLOPP in a message released yesterday. That will bring a tear, not just the eyes of his supporters. The dare I say anyone who cares about the most popular sports league in the world. That's right folks. After a three-month hiatus. The English Premier League is back today. Roger Bennett from men in blazers fills us in on these frantic few remaining weeks. So grab a pint and US as sub optimal tour of English soccer. I'm sorry, English football. I mean it comes. It's Wednesday. June seventeenth. This is ESPN daily. Presented by marathon. Roger! Kim's. Are you relieved? Your any skin daily and not my NFL pod, talking about your beloved quarterback Mitch Trubisky You Know God Love Mitch. trubisky is an incredible pressure to be knowing that your whole life is just destined to pan out to become the answer to a trivia question in about ten years, who was taken ahead of Deshaun Watson Patrick Mahomes. Roger Bennett is suffering bears fan. He's also the CO host of men in Blazers on the NBC. Sports Network and the men in Blazers podcast by just braced for him to end up with the green. Bay Packers, leading them on a fourth quarter drive two feet, my beloved Chicago Bears, and I can't wait for that movement. They'll probably deserve it. And we're not talking about bears football today. The wait is over the English premier league. The most Popular Sports League in the world is back after a one hundred day hiatus due to the coronavirus pandemic Roger I'm sure you've been getting your fix from Bundesliga but I have to imagine the return of English. Soccer is hitting a little different for you. One hundred days feels like one hundred years to be candid. I've been staring at squirrels running up trees in the park, and feeling the adrenaline burst of a run through midfield, watching raindrops charge down my window and feeling just an incredible wing-play into play of missed from the primarily, but yes, it's back today with its global ratings I mean in Britain for much of Europe for much of the rest of the world outside of the United States, it's kind of a seismic as the NFL and the NBA rolled into with the Pantheon of heroes and villains to moments of glorious ecstasy, searing dispath fuse with dodgy haircuts snack tattoos. One hundred days off. When are going to have ninety two games scattered almost daily over the next couple of weeks. It's coming back because we love it because we miss it. It's coming back for. Hard news commercial reasons ultimately to an economic decision. It's going to come back and ghost game situation where it's fabulous. It's going to be different. The lack of an audience will have an impact on the football. We watched, but most importantly it is going to be good enough. It's GonNa. Be Great enough to connect us to a ruling global conversation and that's ultimately I think. Think we will miss about sports as our calling them. Ghost Games I hadn't heard that got left the Germans. They have a name for everything. Lay. They Call Them Guy Bela. And that is what they will be. Sam Darnold knows a thing or two about those back to English premier league, so we hit positive with most of the season done with exception of Liverpool they're. They're still to be decided. The top half of the table. Seven teams vying for five spots determine who will qualify for Champions League and Europa League which for those who don't know are the midseason European tournaments to be held next year. Roger Liverpool have clinched Champions League. Spot Manchester City has of course been banned from Champions League for Breaking Financial Fair play rules so that. That spot remains open despite city being second in the League. Right now. Arsenal wolves Chelsea Menu Lester Tottenham Sheffield all in the mix. What are you expecting to see from the top of the table? When the race for Champions League qualification, which is a bit like football's march madness, it's big tournament in which the best teams in the world. You're rail, Madrid, your boss Alana's. Para Sanjay Man's by Munich's compete all. Big English teams won't be in that for brand reasons for competitive reasons for commercial reasons and is. And completely wide open at the bottom of the table. All say English football has some Incorr- ellegation, which is if you watch game of thrones? It's a bit like the moon door. Teams get flung through that in baseball, the worst teams every year like the Orioles in the mall in which is flung out of the major leagues, the mooted, and in that place. We had the Tulsa drillers around rook. Rook Express and that is, it's a searing. It is a haunting. It is a savage palm of the global football tradition, and you have six teams at the bottom who are fighting to avoid what can be economically devastating their revenue roughly hauls flung out. The Premier League is savage for the fan base. One Minute. You are watching your team. Take to the glamorous fields, Manchester United and Arsenal the next. Round Brentford Luton Barnsley barring a miracle the Jewish using Norwich canaries will disappear, but there's five teams Aston. Villa Bouma th what furred and West Ham amongst them, two of which will go with them for the big story line. Meena is Liverpool Football Club. American owned little football. Club owned by the Boston Red SOx owners, F S J and their yearning. They're dreaming of a return to greatness that was once titletown by when I was a kid growing up in Liverpool. Just six points away from lending the title that they have dreamed of then. That is the great storyline of the season. On that note. This Sunday. The team that you root for I'm sorry. I'm getting a producer this side you support. Everton, we'll be squaring off against Liverpool. They are twenty five points clear off the other teams in the League, and there's possibility they can clinch the title at Goodison Park Against Your beloved Everton on Sunday

Football English Premier League League Champions League Roger Bennett Blazers We Win Stadium Soccer Liverpool NFL United States Liverpool Football Club Roger Liverpool Europa League Espn Roger Sports Network
N.B.A. Owners Set a July 31 Restart, All in Florida

ESPN Daily

04:29 min | 3 years ago

N.B.A. Owners Set a July 31 Restart, All in Florida

"Zach Lowe's senior writer for ESPN in host of the low post podcast. Zach. We're GONNA have basketball We think we're going to basketball. We'll see on July whatever July thirty first, or whatever, but yet knock on wood back on everything. Knock on heads. We stay healthy enough to have basketball. That's true I should never say anything definitively these days, but we are closer to having basketball because the NBA Board of Governors met on Thursday in voted twenty nine to one on a plan for the League to return. Return to play in Orlando at Disneyworld, twenty two teams, eight regular season Games in possible plan term, involving the eighth and ninth seeds We're GONNA have a lot of time to break down the logistics of all this how it's going to work from a public health perspective, weather not can work, but I wanted to bring you on today to talk about the basketball ramifications of this decision. Why do you think they went this particular route? Well. I think as you might expect. They were trying to balance money midst about basketball and love the game all at, but I think that it's mostly about. How can we maximize? That's why they didn't just take the sixteen playoff teams. They've tried to threadneedle of. Volume of games. Fairness to the teams that were in the eighth spot when when the seasons stopped in some potential excitement for play in teams, particularly the teams that were chasing Memphis in the western, mathematically had a decent shot, a much better shot than usual with seventeen eighteen games left to catch them. I want to talk about New Orleans and Portland particular, but I I wanted to ask why not think they went with six additional teams? Instead of four was America just clamoring for some wizards basketball, so watching the wizards. It's sort of like playing roulette. Sometimes you win, sometimes you lose sometimes you leave the building weeping uncontrollably. The one thing wizards are not. This season is boring. Both those teams really wanted to play I think part of it was probably well. If we're going to have a plan in the West, it's GonNa Look Kinda dumb. If we don't have a plan in the East Lake of we just take the east team so I guess we gotta take someone. WHO's the least crappy east team left? Okay Washington. You get in well, then we have to balance it. So who's the next lease? Crappy West, okay, Phoenix urine I, and then suddenly twenty two. My opinion and I said this from the beginning, it should have been twenty. There's a hard quality gap after twenty I see no reason why these teams had essentially zero percent chance to make the playoffs are going through all this rigmarole adding seventy or eighty bodies. Me The reason why it doesn't really make sense to me is if you had told me okay, the western conference is going to have a plan tournament with three four five teams, and it's GonNa last a week or ten days and we don't want the Eastern Conference. Eight playoff team sands Washington just sitting there waiting I could buy that, but displaying tournament is not a tournament. It's one or two games. I just don't. It doesn't make any sense to me why those teams? They're not to pick on them. I just thought so get it. The PELICANS obviously were playing much higher level Oncein Williamson came back, and actually had a better point differential than Memphis for the season stopped Then you've got the blazers who are nearing full health right, which was due back after an injury marsh before all this happened. and. In hair and Nerkez the deck and Oh, I think he's hurt. His leg. Oh, his leg is right. Narco hits the deck. Which of those teams do you think is better situated to make it in Portland was also slated to have a decent easy scheduling. Everyone focused on New Orleans easy schedule because it was the easiest but Portland in San. Antonio were slated ABC. Schedules. I think you would have to go with New Orleans. Only because a they were playing really well already in. Be Like it's it's. It's exciting that use of Norwich and Zach. Collins are back in their. If their backup for these long layoffs, but they're also back after long layoffs in Nurkic in particular is coming off one of those traumatic leg injuries that it usually takes people a while to get maybe a year. Even a season at took Paul George Longtime for instance to get back to what they were before. So I think you'd have to go with new. Orleans but I would not underestimate portland.

Basketball Zach Lowe Portland New Orleans Memphis Washington Espn Orlando Writer East Lake Paul George Longtime NBA Pelicans America Nurkic Collins Norwich
My Birthing Story

Food for Thought

09:39 min | 3 years ago

My Birthing Story

"Hello and thank you so much for tuning into food for thought. A podcast on a mission to equip. P with all the evidence based advice that you need to live and breathe a healthy lifestyle. I'm Ran Lambert registered nutritionist bestselling author of re. Norwich a simple way to eat well and founder of retraction London's leading private nutrition clinic in each episode. I'll be joined by special guests. All of whom can be considered authoritative voices. In health. Said that together we can learn fact from fiction and empower the healthiest and happiest versions of ourselves with trusted expert advice. It's no secret that childbirth is tough but the reality of what follows is ready discussed. I guess you could say shrouded mystery while not buffs are the same. I want to use my story to exactly what happens. Hannah in the hope that this will empower others with the truth and to encourage conversation. This is a deeply pass thing for me to do. And in the absence of any education about the whole process and knowledge. I feel the all too. Many women just aren't capable of making informed decisions or even trusting that own bodies. I must also add a note that this episode contains some graphic by references. May Be triggering for some of you so please do make your own judgment switch off at any time will come back to it at a later date. So this week's we've thought as I've said explode my buff story with Midwife and author Marie Louise also known as the modern midwife. Marie hello how are you I? I'm very well. I can't front cute enough for festivals speaking to me before we even decided to record this podcast because you have very very reassuring on the fire goods. No it's it's always good to have a little chat. I think the full hand when it comes to anything rather than just token blindly so is more difficult. I think so. I'm really glad that I could help in some way. And of course massive congratulations. He is beautiful. I still instagram quiet. Law to see you all thank you. I obviously so good to have someone is qualified as ye to help me with this. Poke cost recording. Because it's I've never ever recorded something site. Postional wrist I think it might highlife Marie so as much as we are having the time of our lives. I think giving birth in pandemic wasn't really anything I ever thought would happen. Another time disguised said quickly in my buff definitely didn't go the way I want it to and as I told you I wanted a home. Birth and now was wearing a more. Grating Fair future couldn't be more different. Yeah no it definitely didn't mice to stuff the ice daunted website for our listeners. If we start with how I think I. I started learning about childbirth from anti-nato causes and hidden above thing My husband and I did together. Let's just explain for everyone what is hidden above thing and why commended by the NHS yes so nhs. I'm so pleased that how much. Nhs on now supporting hit nothing on how we all taking a tongue relate to return to our midwifery heritage as I say out knowledge of of the busing day and pregnancy. So hit me. Thing is a set of mind management tools It's not logical approach to pregnancy bath and say the patient to pair. It that utilizes evidence. So you when you take a hit nothing cools you off just learning about hit my best thing you learning about your pregnancy as well as a form of NATO education and the the number one thing that I way start with in hip knee buffing is fed dumping. I'm releasing that fair because of what we understand about bus. It comes from the media. That is not an accurate reflection of how bus looks or even how ship Nick. Yeah I mean I think the reason I fell in love with it is I did find it. Completely empowering in fact it was the hidden a the course that made me originally want to have. It didn't happen to me but the home breath really educated me. I felt on on tapping into that. Not Trudeau spat. Which like you say. All I'd ever known pop from from my friends stories was TV dramas while a woman is on a bed. Screaming like the loudest scream. You can imagine in everyone's running around mad yes So so with the best evidence that we actually have shows that home bath full healthy low risk women actually means less intervention. I'm better outcomes and that could both first time MOMS MOMS have babies before so actually hung breath. It pays to be safer for older women. I guess some this is the best. I've been half dreading but half looking forward to it. It's talking openly about about something pass. No so I focus the spy Tonight's by can three this before with Mary and the reason again. The I'm sharing. This is just to let you all know that it's okay when things don't go to plan and our had quite naively thought I'm fit I'm healthy everything. Just go to plan which. I'm sure I'm not the anyone had that communist conception but I guess my best story knots in my fourth week. 'cause I was the last one in my anti-nato group to you getting this from Afrin find shot is today. They Braxton Hicks is that a contract. You know everything. Yes exactly the pressure. It just starts mounting doesn't I joked with women and I say you you need some of at pass into their with all of the inquiry's you've got up an additional amount that have you. Have you had your baby doe callers something because I think you'll find is when you get that point? You feel a huge. You're in some sort of pain. You've got loads of weird is that everyone. Yeah me because of course IT CORONA VIRUS. Everything was different. I'd already been told the amazing midwife the I was very lucky I saw the same lovely go holly throughout the initial stages and she even while I was really lucky I think. Current virus helped with that because they want to minimize the exposure. I guess to multiple people so I was. You had real continuity. That's so good. Yeah that made me confident. I really wanted her. Ideally at the Home Beth at happened that I was told that if I'd gone into Labor the weekend basically I couldn't have a home birth anyway and the situation could change daily with coronavirus so one day. The shortage of ambulances. I may not bab half that Beth. Anyway in we'll the whole kit had a birth Paul. Hi I'd set the lounge up everything. Oh and I think we'll start talking about sweeps. So I mean I had what? They called an unsuccessful. Sweep a my chief week and then again in week forty one so how often Maria babies actually come on time. And what is the sweep people listening so Babies actually the the percentage of babies out she come on today's days between three to five percent a note very funny you question directly and as we know a due date is just a window of time so it's the normal pregnant say is often debated and not agreed globally to start with and various different experts. Do say different things about what they believed to be acceptable however in the UK. We say between suchy seven weeks to forty two weeks. So that's a whole five week window. So so babies come any any time. And we do get fixated. Naturally we get fixated on on this Judeh because that's the date that we think given however is completely normal to go over. J. is completely normal to have a baby at fifty seven weeks. That is still very much in the window of nomads. And I think a soon as you've hit the faulty week Ma. Everyone's like okay. We'll that's the date you'll have your baby. Wh What's going on you and as ingrained narrative that something's not right because you haven't had your baby yet but actually that is completely incorrect is very very normal to go. The Jay and in fact eighty percent of FUSS TIME. Mums do go. The J. So sweet is a midwife. It can be done in a clinical area so it can be what you would normally have. You Answer Nate's appointments or it can be done at high Midwife is coming out to see because although it's a form of intervention still is not a a form of medical intervention so we're only using things as opposed to drugs

Marie Louise NHS Lambert London Norwich Founder Afrin Hannah MA UK Trudeau Nato Braxton Hicks Nate Nick JAY Beth Mary Maria
Baking is Americas New Pastime and Thats Putting King Arthur Flour Under Stress

Business Wars Daily

02:18 min | 3 years ago

Baking is Americas New Pastime and Thats Putting King Arthur Flour Under Stress

"Happy Friday France for today's feel good. Friday show WanNa tell you the story of Abbey Goldstein. And how she and millions of people like her are affecting companies that sell flour and other baking supplies. You See. Goldstein is an avid home. Baker in Pittsburgh in mid March the day after a national emergency was declared. She said to herself. I know how I'm going to spend my time at home. I'm going to bake. And she started what she assumed would be a small facebook group. The Twenty Twenty Corona Bake challenge to make it a social activity today only five weeks later. There are one thousand one hundred active bakers in that group and more joining all the time from countries as far away as Israel Colombia Thailand Malaysia in South Africa. The way it works is like this every other day. Goldstein challenges them to bake something new share photos and advice the stream which has had more than forty eight thousand posts. So far is full of everything from bagels to puff pastry to yesterday. Stunner a cake decorated to look just like a puppy. Complete with tongue hanging out but with a number of bakers on the rise so to speak so too is the turmoil within companies that supply flour yeast and other necessities. Surely you've noticed the sorry state of the baking of your local grocery store. Well if you shop first thing in the morning you might have a prayer of buying flour and yeast but then again maybe not those empty shelves translate to furious activity at the headquarters of one of the country's most well-known flowers suppliers King Arthur flower in tiny Norwich Vermont. Typically at this time of year. The two hundred thirty year old one hundred fifty million dollars plus company staff at fifty percent capacity baking traditionally slows down as we head into spring but now King Arthur's working with its suppliers to produce products twenty four hours a day seven days a week. Co-ceo Karen Coburg told Yahoo money sales spike to the beginning of March over the last three weeks sales or triple what they normally are in the spring with King Arthur's existing flour mills operating at capacity. They've had to add another

Abbey Goldstein Twenty Twenty Corona King Arthur Israel Colombia Thailand Malay Facebook France Pittsburgh Karen Coburg Baker Co-Ceo Norwich Vermont South Africa Yahoo
Liverpool moves 25 points clear by beating Bournemouth 2-1

AP News Radio

00:30 sec | 4 years ago

Liverpool moves 25 points clear by beating Bournemouth 2-1

"Liverpool got back to its winning ways spotting born with a lead before pulling out a two one victory most Saleh tied it in the twenty fifth minute study of money put the Reds ahead in the thirty third and James Miller made a goal saving defensive play that allowed Liverpool to go up twenty five points ahead of Manchester city Chelsea remains two points ahead of Wolverhampton for the last champions league position Chelsea played to a one one draw against Burnley and the wolves settled for a scoreless tie with Brighton Sheffield United is two points behind Chelsea following it's one nil win against Norwich I'm Dave Ferrie

Liverpool Saleh Reds Wolverhampton Chelsea Burnley Brighton Sheffield United Norwich Dave Ferrie James Miller Manchester
Boston: Rhode Island man wounded, Massachusetts man arrested after casino stabbing

WBZ Morning News

00:29 sec | 4 years ago

Boston: Rhode Island man wounded, Massachusetts man arrested after casino stabbing

"A Massachusetts man charged with misdemeanors in connection with the stabbing of a Rhode Island man the victim stabbed shortly after one AM Saturday morning at a bar at Foxwoods resort casino authorities say the victim thirty four year old Donovan Alves of Providence in stable condition at a hospital in Norwich police charging forty year old Robert Hanssen Chicopee with third degree assault which is a misdemeanor officials say Haynes was not though charged with the

Donovan Alves Robert Hanssen Chicopee Assault Haynes Massachusetts Rhode Island Norwich
Andy Puddicombe, Co-Founder of Headspace, Is Not Your Typical Entrepreneur

How I Built This

05:57 min | 4 years ago

Andy Puddicombe, Co-Founder of Headspace, Is Not Your Typical Entrepreneur

"We had several episodes is it feature co-founders and if there's one thing that's clear it's that all of them brought different skills to the table at method. Adam lowry mix six the ingredients to make the soap Eric Ryan design the now iconic bottles at read it Steve Huffman Coding Alexis of hand did the content and at a way Jen Rubio focused on building buzz for the suitcases steph curry figuring out how to get the mate so you get the point right and it's almost I hard to imagine any of these companies making it without both co founders and that is also probably the case with today story because it's a story of two totally different people with totally different strengths one of them. Andy putty comb trained as a Buddhist monk for more than a decade and the other rich Pearson was a rising star and a top tier advertising agency in London. They met because rich was spiraling. He was burnt out and looking for help and Andy was the person he happened to come across. At the time. Andy was offering one on one meditation sessions out of a back room of a doctor's office. Neither Andy Norwich could have imagined that eventually the two of them would build a meditation APP head space now used by millions of people and a business that generates more than a hundred million dollars annual revenue and the story of how they came together at the the exact right moment each with the exact skill set they needed to co found and build head space well. It's a pretty long journey an an andy the Buddhist monk he would say that it took as long as it was supposed to but it actually starts when Andy was growing up in the UK in the nineteen eighties he was. I introduced to meditation as kid around the time. His parents marriage started to fall apart. Here's my parents split up at ten and and my mom was she was she was looking for a way to cope meditation. Daphne was within her kind of sphere of of interest and in Bristol there was a local group was at TM group transcendental Meditation Group and she decided that she was going to do a six week course and my sister I I found out was going along with an item. WanNa be a home on my own so I asked if I could join them yeah and it led to actually kind of a couple of years of doing in that kind of thing into my early teens this in like the early eighties when meditation was by no means mainstream. I mean even sort of West drives so outside outside of mainstream and did it feel weird or different when you were kids. You feel like this was a little unusual eight did but I don't know if I had had that point of comparison you know as a kid. You don't necessarily have the this is this weight and that's not my mom was going there so I was going there. It wasn't until told a really good friend of mine. Step very good friend of mine. Shed with him confided in the I've been going to do this thing 'cause I knew it was a little bit kind of wit wit and waiting to school the next day and all the other kids in the class with sound desk cross-legged of owning Miami is I won't in the room and it was at that point. I think then I registered. Oh okay. This is definitely not something that is mainstream is probably not something that I'm going to be out to talk about too much to other people and what what was it. Was it focusing on breathing. Do you remember what those group sessions like. We'd see him. It's typically mantras. I see you're given sort of a a word or phrase in new repeat it over and over for sort of a twenty minute period and at that time I find it really really difficult as a as an energetic young kid to sit there and we still anti focus but it was definitely something I still found you know I still look back at it with we the a sense that it was it was a positive influence a an Ati stage in my life when you were like sixteen because in the UK it's a little different than in the US which is certainly that time like the drinking age yeah probably wasn't really enforced and it was typical for fifteen sixteen year old to go oh to POPs and get pints of beer and drinking cultures is very different. There were you into that report of that. I was very into by that stage. I was playing rugby team mm-hmm as well and it was very much part of the culture yeah with the weekend off with our fake. Id and go find some drinks red that around this time like in your teens why you were at a pub one night winter a pretty traumatic doc experience yet what what happened it was Christmas. Eve We had a party at the local rugby clubbing in Canada Gotcha and so Christmas morning by the time we also came out onto the street and we were standing in a big group outside the club a drunk driver came down the road and crashed into to the group of arson. I was very lucky to be standing on the edge of the group but it killed kill two people and injured in sort of critical intensive care at twelve twelve of the group and you know every single one one of us there that night dealt with dealt with in a different way. I think we will very confused. He's still young eighteen years old. I don't know if we ever really you kind of have to deal with that kind of thing. I just wanted to get away. I think we often do this the idea the sense of getting away away in a physical way kind of we think that we're going to be able to outrun it mentally as well and of course never

Andy Putty Andy Norwich UK Meditation Group Adam Lowry Steve Huffman Jen Rubio Rugby London Eric Ryan Pearson Bristol Daphne ATI Miami United States Arson
Norwich stun Manchester City with thrilling 3-2 win against Premier League champions

ESPN FC

12:06 min | 4 years ago

Norwich stun Manchester City with thrilling 3-2 win against Premier League champions

"Hutchison joins me as we talk about a busy Saturday in the premier league well as much as Norwich place tonight after that massive result darn against Manchester City for the canaries with a win who would have thought it. I just have to you know oh pay homage to our lovely backdrop tonight on the River Thames. Look at this Hammersmith Bridge doesn't get much better than this. Unless of course he goes to tower bridge. Let's get because it's GonNa look like it's is probably not going to get better than that a win against the champions given the injuries that they've had as well. Did you see this. Did you see this coming because I've I have no mindset you all day long I believe but I tell you what I did. See it coming after about fifteen minutes when they approach the game with lows of arrogance Man City. I think they thought I think pep thought this. She's going to be easy three points. We'll just turn up play football. We'll keep hold of the ball will pay Loza possession based football will just play between the lines and score some goals. We'll go back with three points. It never walk walk that it definitely did not work. That's what I mean. Kudos enormous because what we thought was the fact that wants Man City scored. I want that goal the floodgates it would have opened but for somehow they still weren't able to break down. Why is that do you think they're missing a certain emmerick report as well there that probably would have helped them? Oh I think so I think along with probably one or two of their best player LaPorte la season. It was terrific. an emergent is one of the best center often world football so yes. He's going to be a massive miss. I still thought though because I've covered PEPs teams over the years I remember when he was at Barcelona and how much go rhino planes a holding midfielder played him center off on the same. We'll have you Martinez at Buyin so I actually thought you to play on Dino's center off the former Rhodri so that might be a pet might do down the line but you looked at automatically today and Johnstone's and they looked as was on the never played a game of those two especially were all over the place and just speaking on that LaPorte injury of course we know that is going to be a timely injury that do you think it will end up costing city the title especially given how Liverpool are going. It's a worry because listen mindset. You're all filled full superstar so you can identify any given time who you think might be Miss Kevin Lebron's last season but still won the league and still performed at a high level Aguire Heyzer to play number Games what you take out the poll where I I think he's one of the best center off do brings balance being left foot center off plan on that left side also plant life backing play as a third sent off as well so you take him at the equation on all of a sudden Muncie. It sounds strange to say still look a little bit short defensively well interesting. You say that then because remember this is Matt cities. I lost in the primarily since January incredible run an incredible stat that so given the fact that with everything that you just said and this LaPorte injury is it. Are they going to be to shell shocked. Do you think it to go on a run. That's again yeah. It'd be very interesting to have been a fly on the wall in the dressing room. Afterwards pen going ballistic. His players have just said this is a warning. This is a war and you can't any teams for granted or or the Badeah chewed or a touch of arrogance. It's nice to have a environment because it makes you play one. That makes you be confident but you can't take your position. Especially someone. Knowledge is a dangerous underdog because they've got players like Tim O. Cookie and can't who I think's going to be a superstar player they can hurt you at any given time but no one really soldiers coming. I think best case scenario thought I think people thought would win the game. Maybe nausea my goal to and give them a fright but the paper is going to be very interested in the tomorrow morning just before we move on from this. Let's just touch on March for because like you said this was definitely not a result anybody would have predicted voted for them. You know the manager even saying that beating city would be like climbing Mount Everest without any oxygen but they've done it. Can they build from this because as well a lot of people didn't even pick them to survive this primarily season Norwich Fan please. You'd ask Donyell faulk on never ever to change Shange always because you went to Anfield and I was sick and tired side of the press over the weekend call knowledge naive because they went to onfield outplayed Liverpool for probably thirty thirty five minutes of the game but lost by four goals to one so everyone label them naive Econ Hong Kong have this approach against its helps just proved if you style of play and you stick with duck and you Australian your beliefs you can get results against anyone so I just said Kudos Norwich on and a fantastic sean the on them because I'll give them so much confidence because then expected to get results against Mansi liberals they can do that two teams in and a random they must be safe life this season all right well next on my list that I have here because it's twenty nine thousand nine. We use technologies over phones now Liverpool. That's definitely somewhere that you know very well and hold dear to your heart up against Newcastle your hometown team Newcastle giving Liverpool bit of scare in the beginning but Liverpool as many would have expected expected on some how did what matches the city did not be was not able to do and just came absolutely roaring back shocked to unbelievable strike from jetro volumes uh-huh on his weaker right foot as well and smashed into the stanchion and all of a sudden you think in this is GonNa be a test of Liverpool golf with the European champions. They've gone arrogance about them. Where that that just swatting teams away? It doesn't matter if you poke the more you or your so of small scoring early goal at Anfield especially with the two years does this season last sees anything because of the Champions League I think so I think than being European champions now give them the air confidence arrogance where they believe her Jergen KLOPP speak to the press over the weekend in the UK. Hey saying he believed these players but now the play is believe in themselves which is huge on a mentality front because now that go beyond against Newcastle go beyond against anyone he wanted primitive and all of a sudden you poke menu and you smile at them and all of a sudden that's helped players. Just go through the gays and people like Maan who's an incredible. I mean what's He got twenty three goals in twenty nine unreal all of a sudden looking at superstar player. Everyone was talking about Mosala being the superstar fun Daikin Alison even though he didn't play today that building just such a rich squad where you think they all start contend believable with Muncie could be there yeah. What are you touched on Saudi-omani and of course like you were saying everyone has been talking about most most especially after you know the records he has he the and the record breaking man he has been livable so you think that Saudi-omani is a top man I do because I I look at him and I watch an I an analyzes attitude and he's he's strong durable? He's never injured even when he is ill play with Knox. those managers are priceless. the way he plays lays full of energy is hard as nails. He's he's quick dynamic. He makes things happen with support. FEE can run in beyond without the ball is now getting these goals does. He's getting his assists so when you when you analyze Liverpool you think who would they miss the most probably Saudi-omani all right well. Let's move on now to Chelsea because because what a result up against a team that we know wolves can be a very tough team to beat especially at home but you know. Can we get a hip hip Hooray for the Youth Steve Chelsea something that you know I want to say everyone has sort of pooh-poohed on in recent time saying young manager too many young players. They don't quite have have the experience to really go deep in the Premier League. It's GonNa take them at least another year or two but this is looking like a brilliant squad that really can threaten some of the other teams on Credit Franklin part especially Jody Morris so I know quite well it was working beyond the scenes academy level a few years ago before you went to Dhabi so he knows the young players coming through and there's many Moore's boy call James is not it's not really featured just yet who's going to be or could be a superstar so the way francs been brave. You'll have to say that it would be very easy if you're young manager to go with tried and tested rested experienced players but Franks put to one side he still got a good blend is still got got. The comeback who played a part in today's game were injured. He still contact the comeback but credit emmys playing the young boys. He's playing Mason. Mount is playing some more who got a goal today. He's playing Abraham do get in gold and top joint top-scorer and so you know frank is being a very brave manager tuck going in a in a club like Chelsea wherever it's always WANNA come yesterday. There's never been any for room for manages to try and maneuver in the past so yeah. There's a very very good job Jodi Jodi. Let's think of it on that man that you allege that you mentioned just last having Abraham wow three goals today that we know that hat trick that he's going to want to celebrate but I'm going to call it four goals because he's got yeah. He got the job of making the point. When you score three you might as well go with four escort goal any lean accounting methods it just take the fall the four hundred run put it up on social media later match go but it you know I was I was in in Istanbul covering the supercup and it was it was Jerus- dot dot dot game and it was what was going to be very interesting to see which way Frank Lenzi because they bring different aspects of that game as you root very good on the ball he can hold the ball he's into midfield as dream but tammy now is starting to become and he's not quite there yet but he's nearly the finished article where is hold a place getting better? He's very quick a spinning in beyond but more important getting goals are you surprised with the way in which she's just been improving and seems to be going from strength to strike because it was thought that was flaws in his game wealth will the whole to play our thought jude was better player but he was quicker than Jerusalem is an unwieldy down the line getting these calls which is most important for centerfolds. You know you can have all the build up. Play you like banging in the goals. People will start asks the question when especially when you're young plan your and a Chelsea side as I said I've got no take time to try and grow you go in there straightaway and you're banging in the goals and you're playing well. He's in a good rich painful from a rich vein of form there at Chelsea. Let's move on to Manchester United the the roller coaster. I have to laugh because I know you watch that game closely on paper Win for Manchester United up against Leicester who everyone said we're really and truly favorites going into this one you know ahead of them in the premier my league table but it really was not a performance that I would say you could take confidence from it was a strange game commentary on the game and it was almost aside Lester went into the favorites because of the quality players on paper but it's almost like they tried to kick dumpster united and Monday night responded really well Scott mcdonagh a real shift and it was probably their lead on the day he's only twenty two and he was he was Marshall Not Midfield and he was getting around everywhere. He was leading from the front. He was very aggressive. Although Daniel James had another superb game he was very lively off the left hand side rash was a little bit in and out penalty goal but still doesn't look like it doesn't look like a readymade centerfold or so much like learning these game off the left hand side and all of a sudden being thrown is a centerfold she still learning so think to analyze the game. It was one where normally manages try to analyze the performance and that's what they want. A thought today was a case of Oregon social just wanting the three points. That's what you needed just to give them a little bit of confidence and may be in the games come up with. You've got some really till fixtures. Maybe the three points against Leicester will probably not listed down a peg or two and give the money funds underplays a little bit more confidence. Do you think let's run out steamed. You pick them to run out of steam. I know this is a topic that we spoke about a lot when they ended up winning the primarily because again you know they started off so well and nobody picked it to last. This is another you know season where less to have started very well and we see the troubles with some of the other bigger clubs the Monday night is the Chelsea's having their slip-ups even spurs here and there on Arsenal so do do you pick them to to go deep is everyone has expected. I think so think my two teams I think would be calm unless that to try and get close to the top six. I think wolves are not just because of the loss today today but they've got Europe League football which is always difficult on a small squad. I think it's too much for them. but I was quite surprised at how Lester started the Game Brandon Brendan I think might want to see changes weight changes system. He played a forty three one way in the last two weeks. He's played a four one four one and makes Lester be more on the front foot a little bit defensive today a little bit on the puck for a little bit so of an order of Monday night but I think if let's go that time again and Brendan how again to to play assistant ultra and win the thing you'd have been one or two things

Chelsea Liverpool Football Laporte Manchester United Hammersmith Bridge Abraham Tower Bridge River Thames Lester Newcastle Daniel James Manchester City Champions League Hutchison Man City Norwich Mount Everest Europe League
Aymeric Laporte injury: Man City defender faces lengthy spell out after undergoing knee surgery

ESPN FC

01:21 min | 4 years ago

Aymeric Laporte injury: Man City defender faces lengthy spell out after undergoing knee surgery

"Sick football returns this weekend and of course many agree now and it will be a two horse race in England between Liverpool and Manchester City have of course the big news for city over the last week is sources saying that Lepore will be out until Wednesay Twenty City Zizi favorite's big favorites as well looking to make it three titles in a row Liverpool coming in at eleven to five. Does the ports injury that is wrong no. I don't think I don't think so I think whilst if if stones gets injured an automatic essential and walk a big little thin on the ground they were interested in Harry Maguire doc for that position but we're willing to pay the money Vincent companies moved on not reports injury but you know we've talked about this initial say in Liverpool Open smashing teams. Yeah been the main Norwich coming up. I don't think that's going to make an issue. I think only the bigger games would it make a big difference and while the latter stages the jump was league stuff for me. It doesn't swing but with one player

Liverpool Wednesay Twenty City Harry Maguire Manchester City Lepore Norwich Vincent Companies Football England
Liverpool, Norwich City kick off Premier League season

Ringer FC

00:23 sec | 4 years ago

Liverpool, Norwich City kick off Premier League season

"But the premier league season is back on friday liverpool kick off the the season at anfield against newly promoted norwich city is a bunch of other games this weekend including marquee match up manchester united and chelsea. The transfer window actually just closed just within an hour ago. I guess so might be some deals. Trickling in at the thirteenth hour d- d- avid louise is going to arsenal

Norwich Chelsea Louise
Harvard University, Gaza And Agassi discussed on WBZ Afternoon News

WBZ Afternoon News

00:25 sec | 5 years ago

Harvard University, Gaza And Agassi discussed on WBZ Afternoon News

"To in a lawsuit filed this afternoon accuses Harvard University of profiting from images of American slaves Tammy linear of Norwich. Connecticut says her great great grandfather and his daughter are depicted in two of the earliest photos of nineteenth century slaves. They were commissioned the photos by Harvard professor during that time period. Name Lewis ah Gaza's forward supported Agassi's as

Harvard University Gaza Agassi Norwich Connecticut Professor Lewis
Topless Halle Berry Shows Off A Really Big Back Tattoo

Bill Cunningham

00:23 sec | 5 years ago

Topless Halle Berry Shows Off A Really Big Back Tattoo

"Norwich. I sent you a photo of one of my old girlfriends Halle Berry, you know, Jeff, I used to date Halle Berry for a couple of years before or after David. Dave Oren door and David Justice. And there's a picture of her on my blog. Is that correct? Yes. You were very excited about this new photo. She has recently got a massive new back tattoo backpack

Halle Berry David Justice Dave Oren Jeff Norwich.
Pakistan court to sentence former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif in corruption charge

Bloomberg Daybreak: Europe

00:32 sec | 5 years ago

Pakistan court to sentence former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif in corruption charge

"Pakistan. Bloomberg daybreak. Outgoing Defense Secretary James Mattis will now leave the job two months early with President Trump promotion, his top deputy from January. First the abrupt move cut short his tenure to count showed. His tenure was announced in a tweet. It follows criticism about the withdrawal from Syria and a sense of turmoil in the national security team. Donald Trump has announced Patrick Shanahan will be the acting US Defense Secretary from January first and SpaceX has cancer wrinkled year with the deployment of a new GPS satellite for the US air force. The mission was the twenty first of the year. Breaking the previous high of eighteen sit in twenty seventeen global news twenty four hours a day on here and it takes on Twitter powered by more than twenty seven hundred journalists and analysts in more than one hundred twenty countries. I'm Ben Clarke, this is Bloomberg Marcus much band straight to sports has Andrew Holtz manager. But it's here Tina is playing down the primarily titled charges despite mastic two demolition of Everton. Win means two points behind second-placed, Manchester. City. Still see city as real contenders. I to win the family. I think it's still a long way to to say we have. Contender eighteen sixteen. So only Rangers are appointed drifter Celtic at the top of the Scottish permission after like two one victory at Johnston memorial. Scott both seconded minute winner. Elites comeback victory of Aston Villa means they go into Christmas championship leaders. One three to having traveled to nil at halftime point clear of Norwich at the halfway stage at the season, but he bends contributed nineteen points has one twenty four fourteen wasps up a sick, puppy unions primary ship you cost for a point below was from after twenty seventeen home homeless the third place pasta. That's

United States Donald Trump James Mattis Bloomberg Marcus Andrew Holtz Aston Villa Twitter Spacex Ben Clarke Pakistan. President Trump Syria Rangers Norwich Tina Johnston Memorial Patrick Shanahan Manchester