35 Burst results for "Thirty Forty"

A highlight from BCB127_AMERICAN HODL: Wisdom For Surviving The Bear

Blue Collar Bitcoin Podcast

16:31 min | Last week

A highlight from BCB127_AMERICAN HODL: Wisdom For Surviving The Bear

"All of your well -laid plans are going to be put to rest by the Bitcoin market. You know, I was very confident we were going to over 100k, I think a lot of people were. Then we didn't. And then I was equally confident, I was like, well, if the top wasn't as high, then maybe the bottom won't be as low. And then I was like, probably 30k, the bottom would be like 30k. And then it was, it was faster to 16. And that really shook a lot of people out, man. I mean, it was brutal. I knew people personally who were getting faken. Most people were just totally inconsolable. They're addicted to their fear. Fear like gets real close to you and it talks in your ear and it convinces you that it's correct. You've got to just push past that and you just you can't give in to fear. This is the Blue Collar Bitcoin Podcast, a show where Average Joe firefighters explore the most important monetary technology of the 21st century. We talk Bitcoin, we talk finance and we talk shit. Ladies and gentlemen, this is it. This is what you have been patiently waiting for. The inevitable, our run in with the legendary American Hodl. We hate to tug him off so obviously, but he was built to hang out on our show. Hodl would be equally comfortable for an 8 a .m. coffee hour at the firehouse as he would be philosophizing with the likes of Breedlove. We hope we evoked both of those extremes. Hodl has been in this game for a long time. He is a proper Bitcoin OG. This gives him the rare perspective of having been in the midst of his third bear market. Even when you have three under your belt, they are not easy. We talk about everything from raising kids to overcoming your fear of being penniless and destitute because you put all your money in Bitcoin. Fear and greed run markets, and if you aren't careful, they can run your life. Understand your psychology. As Socrates said, to know thyself is the beginning of wisdom. We can't argue with Socrates, but we can say that the beginning of wisdom is getting your Bitcoin off of exchanges. The best way to make that happen is by grabbing yourself a cold card Mark 4 and punching your seed keys into a seed plate. We cannot impart how important this is. All of your research, all of your understanding, all of your effort to obtain Bitcoin means absolutely nothing if the exchange you left your Bitcoin on goes belly up and shits the bed. So get those coins off of exchanges and into the most reliable, most secure place possible, the cold card. And if you want to get frisky, check out the new Q1 and its expanded capabilities above and beyond the cold card Mark 4. Before we start, we have some coupon codes to share. If you would like to attend Bitcoin Amsterdam or Bitcoin 2024 in Nashville, get 10 % off tickets to either event with code BCB. Now, relax, enjoy this rip with American hodl. That's a stack of kids, my friend. Four in the litter. How are you holding up? This is only like a few weeks ago, right? It's it's good, man. I love having kids. Kids are the best. I I think parents like to complain about having kids, but like I do with the you know, it's like there's this George Peterson quote, which is like if you weren't going to have kids, like what the fuck would you be doing? That's so special. Like most of us are. Yeah. Yeah. It's not like I'm going to be inventing, you know, a new a new like equation for quantum field theory or something like I'm not doing any of that. So like, yeah, string theory is just a bit above our heads as well, you know? Right, exactly. So hanging out with the kids and, you know, playing Uno or goofing around is like, that's where I'm at. That's my song, right? The other thing you are, but I think of my kids just went back to school. So now I have like full days with nothing to do, but what I want to do. And you start to realize, like, what do people without kids in their thirties and forties do? There's just, oh, yeah, exactly. Yeah. You basically just get drunk in different locations. You're like, yeah, I went to Dublin and I got drunk and then I went to Istanbul and I got drunk and then I went to Rio de Ignar and I got drunk and you're like, okay, that's I didn't get drunk here. I got beer here, you know? Uh, yeah, people, people end up and I don't want to shit in the mouth of, of non parents here right off the bat, but fuck it. Let's do it. Everybody should have kids. It's well worth it. And I think at least based on my circle, most people I see that don't end up having children really, really wish they did. They get into their late thirties, forties and fifties and they realize, oh, I see what this whole thing's about. Um, highly recommend it. Get out there. Fuck everybody. Start fucking, start reproducing. Let's expand the species. Let's get more Bitcoiners. Yeah. Listen, if you don't have a, if you don't have kids, I consider you weak hands, you know, cause there's no one to get a huddle after your debt. So what you only got like max, you know, 40, 50 years of huddling there. All right. Like we need to extend that out. Seven generation thinking like my boy, Marty bent says, you know, I listened to you with, uh, the, your most recent chat with Peter and Peter was spending some time saying like, I love smart huddle. I like the glasses. I like the refined civilized huddle and Josh were like, Josh and I were like, fuck that shit. We want total huddle. If you don't deliver that today, you fucked up. Cause we need you fully unleashed my friend. All right. I mean, I'll do my best. Let's see what I got. Firehouse humor. Yeah. Oh yeah. I think you'd fit right into the firehouse based on some of the stuff I've heard you, uh, spew over the, over the years, I think you'd fit right in, especially coffee hour, eight o 'clock in the morning, just a bunch of degenerates. I don't know if you guys have seen the new Shane Gillis stand up on Netflix, but that's like my barometer for humor. Just like extremely immature playground humor, the way we used to talk to each other, you know, third grade. Yeah, exactly. Those are sort of litmus tests for like how far you can go culturally. You're like, Oh, we weren't allowed to say that 10 years ago. He just went that far in that, in that Netflix special. I guess that's the, that's the tip of the spear for how far we can go. Chappelle broke some boundary. A lot of people have broken boundaries on Netflix in the last, comedy in general has been regressive over the last 10 or 15 years. Like every, so many things have been taboo to say, especially for comedians, which really ruins comedians and only like Dave Chappelle can get away with it and a few others, but comedy has really been shit on in the last 10 years. I think the left went too far and they canceled basically too many people and you can't cancel everybody because then now you just have like half the country that's canceled. Right. And so, you know, all the canceled people, it's not like you killed them. Like they're still alive and they're just like, you know what? I don't give a shit about being canceled. And that's like where everybody's at nowadays. And so I am starting to see, like, I think the, you know, canceled culture has peaked and now we're on the other side of canceled culture. And there's a bunch, bunch of people who basically realize like, if you don't cancel yourself, nobody can really cancel you. You just, you just choose not to give a shit about it. I think it was actually Trump that taught everybody that maneuver. Right. Which is like, you know, whatever, I don't care, whatever you say about me, I don't give a fuck, you know, whatever. Uh, and you know, he's just going to, he's just going to keep going out there and calling you stormy horse face Daniels or whatever. He doesn't keep a shit. And you can be like, you know, you were the worst president ever. He'd be like, that's false. That was the best, best president. So you just don't let any of it get in there. You just go, no, he broke a ton of clown barriers. Trump did. He was masterful with the way he could do that. And if that guy had one characteristic that I admire, it's his ability to spin move out of any accusation by calling the other person, an ingenious nickname that stuck, like just nailed it every single time nickname ever. I think it was low energy Jeb. Who comes up with low energy Jeb. And then you would look at him and you'd be like, man, he is really low energy. Yeah, these things work a cup of coffee, you know, shortcut narratives are really effective. Speaking of presidents, you guys see Biden the other day and it was a yesterday in Vietnam. He literally got hooked off the stage because he started mumbling nonsense about something that was far off of what they were talking about. They turned his mic off while he was talking and he kept talking. And then they had an announcer get on and basically say, oh, you're done here, Mr. President, get, they got the hook out and they pulled him off stage. It was like, watch, watch this clip. Yeah, it was, it was insane. Shepherd came out. It was full blown, like, all right, get this fucking guy out of here before he makes us look even dumber. Unbelievable. You know, in a nation of 360 some odd million Americans, I think many of us are very intelligent. Uh, the last two presidents have been kind of, you know, not up to snuff, right? Like where are our good people, you know, like, yeah, we're not sending our best anymore, unfortunately. It is comical, but it's also downright embarrassing because, and I've heard enough out of you to know that you'll agree with this, I'm still very proud to be an American, I think there's a lot of wonderful things that this, this country stands for and imbues and, and it's done and it's, it's a downhill slope right now on both sides. And I just laugh at, I mean, obviously like most Bitcoiners and Josh and I are aligned on this, I just, both sides are in full blown, full frontal clown mode and, and anybody that's latching onto either candidate at this point, I almost lose respect for it. It's like, how can you take either of these guys seriously? But we need to dig out of that. Like that, that needs to be fixed to your point. That's not something that that's healthy for the average American citizen to just be resigned to the fact that the leader of the entire nation is a complete idiot, we need to dig out of that and hopefully reverse that trend. Well, you know, in general, I lean conservative usually, but I actually have been, uh, you know, found myself very intrigued by Robert F Kennedy Jr. And it's not just because he's a Bitcoiner, but I think he really has the discourse into the Overton window, right? Like by basically being like, why am I not, I'm a Democrat my whole life. My father was, you know, a president, a Senator, a presidential candidate. My uncle was killed. He was one of the most popular democratic presidents of all time. Why am I not allowed to say this? Why am I not allowed to have opinions or questions? And yet in America, I feel like anytime we lose our foundational principle, which is, you know, free speech, anytime we're losing that we're losing our soul as a almost anything you want without significant repercussions, that's, that's just how things are. Like, obviously if you say something that's very racist or hateful or homicidal or genocidal or something, then people are going to be, they're gonna have a lot of feelings about it, but there's very little speech. That's actually illegal speech, right? And we should be able to, yeah, just get together in a room and discuss things as Americans. That's a very rare thing. Like that's, that's not something that you find in almost any other culture on earth. You know, I was talking to Peter McCormick McCormick about this, but like the British sarcastic, dry humor that they're all known for that is because they don't have free speech. So they have to be sarcastic. That's never occurred to me before that either. Right. They have a shield to hide behind and they can be like, Oh, come on, mate. I was just taking the piss. Whereas we as Americans can just say what the fuck we actually think, which is a more effective system. They, they have to, I mean, I'm glad it happened because I love British humor. Yeah. They have to show a side boob. They can't go full frontal. You know what I mean? Exactly. Gentlemen. I'm sure you guys will both agree with this point as well. So we've got these clown puppet leaders that we're, we're just accosted with every four years and have to deal with the shit sandwich or the giant douche. And we've got to pick between the two of them. But then there's also like every time there's like, I mean, I'd say most times there's a new law, some new bullshit with COVID that happened in the last couple of years, I'm stunned by the stupidity and heavy handedness, which a lot of this stuff comes down. And it's like, it's like, I'm disappointed by how bad these takes can be and how bad these real changes are and how overbearing a lot of this has been, especially in the last few years. But it seems like every time a new law is, is instantiated, it's just feels wrong on its face. And I feel like people are so numbed to it at this point that they just say, they just expect it to be the wrong thing instead of what we would prefer to have. Or I think people from our circles would prefer to have at least. What are your thoughts on that? About how there's just like this numbness about how these people operate. Well, there's, you know, we're recording this on nine 11 and one of the reasons I wanted to record with you guys, cause you're both firefighters and I think not, you know, we're all around the same age. Nine 11 was the seminal moment of our young lives. And obviously like certainly had an effect on both of you, I'm sure. And I'd love to hear your stories about that. Um, but you know, to me, I'm, I'm, I have a good, I have a great memory. That's it's a gift and a curse. And one of the things that, uh, I remember is the world pre nine 11. I remember what it was like, and we're now living in an entirely different world. That's not better. It's a worst world. You know, we have an, a heightened security state, a heightened surveillance state. I mean, you used to be able to just, you know, what is TSA really accomplished? Like, did they prevent any new, uh, atrocities? I don't think they did because one guy tried to bomb a shoe bomber shoes, and now we are going to take off my, I got to take off my fucking band, slip -ons every time, you know what I mean? And your belt crying shame. Yeah. Yeah. Fucking shoe bomber. I mean, it is, it is like, we appreciate you bringing that up. It is, uh, in the fire service, it's, it's the day of the year. Um, and it, it's been said for a couple of decades now, never forget. But I feel like the fire service, Josh has done a pretty good job of not forgetting. Like you still see it on a lot of fire trucks. Every single firehouse around the country is honoring it today. There's a moment of silence that comes over dispatch. There's events that happen every year and yeah, I don't know. This is just a complete sidebar on nine 11, but it was fucking insane. Fucking insane. I was in sixth grade. I remember where I was as everyone does. Um, and wasn't fully able to appreciate the magnitude, but as the years have gone watching back in the documentaries and thinking through just like from our vantage point, um, I, Josh, we've talked about this before with our career. Like there is a degree of submission to risk. It doesn't happen very often. We don't want to overplay the hero card here. And the vast majority of our job where paramedics, we rotate ambulance to fire truck, but when this shit happens, it's real. And you've kind of sworn an oath to not have a choice, but to go into that, if that happens in your career, that second story bedroom to risk your life for a kid or whatever, all those men and women that went into that building, obviously hindsight's 2020, but if we worked in New York at that time and, and had the badge on, we would have had, we would have done the exact same thing. So, um, yeah, the heroism that existed by I agree, like to, to get, to get back off the nine 11 is just like, what, how has the world improved in any way, shape or form since then? And it has not in many ways, it's devolved in the opposite direction and we need new currents that flow the opposite way that, that get us back to a lot of American ideals, which is part of what we've latched onto the most about what you've said. And spoken into this community. Totally. We see, uh, so the Patriot act was instantiated right afterwards, which took away a whole, it added surveillance, took away a whole bunch of fundamental rights. And it was supposed to be sunsetted. I don't remember if it was five or 10 years after nine 11, but they extended it and they've continued to extend it since then. It's again, back to what we were just talking about. Like these, it's almost like a peg in, they get a foothold in and the politicians never relinquish any power whatsoever. It's always another step up. Another squeezing of, of the populace. They peg a shit coin into, into American ideals, kind of like potentially pegging shit coins into Bitcoin with drive chains. I don't know. Maybe we ended up today. Smooth transition there. I can't think of a worse way to honor all of the brave guys, you know, who ran into the towers when they were on fire. Then what we've done in the aftermath of nine 11, you know, I just can't think of a worse world. I saw it. I saw an Instagram post that actually made me pretty emotional. It was a, you know, young, pretty girl. She's probably in her like late twenties now. And she went to visit the Memorial cause her father was FDNY and he ran into the building. He ran into tower two and he collapsed on him and she grew up her whole life without her father. Right. And he made the ultimate sacrifice. And that's something that you guys have to, you know, that's an interesting conversation actually like around risk.

Peter Dave Chappelle Donald Trump New York Josh TWO Peter Mccormick Mccormick George Peterson Socrates Robert F Kennedy Jr. America Nashville 10 % Vietnam Patriot Act 30K Dublin Istanbul 16 Hodl
Rob Smith: The Importance & Reality of the Black Vote

The Dan Bongino Show

02:00 min | 3 weeks ago

Rob Smith: The Importance & Reality of the Black Vote

"Thoughts on that? Well, yes. So, you know, I got and I got a lot of pushback on Twitter last week because basically what I was saying is I'm seeing all these people talking about, you know, that Republicans, whether it's Trump, Defantis, whoever, is going to get thirty forty to forty percent of the black vote in twenty twenty four. And I said, look, guys, like you need to bring this down. This is virtually impossible, number one, because the infrastructure is not there in order to make this happen. OK, we heard a lot of this stuff in twenty eighteen to twenty twenty. I'm somebody that gained a lot of prominence as a that black conservative was basically saying, OK, I left the left. This is what's going on in the community. This is what could possibly happen in twenty twenty. And the thing about it is, is that it just didn't happen in twenty twenty. OK. And so my argument is not with people like you that are conservative commentators that are saying, you know, we want the black vote, we're welcoming the black vote. I think my argument is that the swamp will literally tell people that they're going to get 30, 40 percent of the black vote and they'll have all the little surrogates saying this stuff while they do absolutely nothing to get it. And so my beef is really with the swamp. It's a hustle we've and seen it all before. And so instead of saying, OK, what happened in 2020 is the black vote went from eight percent up for Republicans in 2016 to 11 percent in 2020. Right. So black people just did not show up for Trump in 2020. And I'm not saying that Trump was not doing things. Of course, he was doing everything. He did the platinum plan. I was literally in the Oval Office with Trump. I was on the campaign intro. There were some real things that were happening and black people still did not show up. And after 2020, when they didn't show up, none of that infrastructure remained there in order to say, OK, well, we didn't get it what we wanted in 2020. Let's make sure we get it in 2024. All of that stuff went away, Dan. Be black for Trump centers all across the country. That went away. All that outreach went away. And now these people are trying tell to me that there's going to be 30 to 40

2016 Last Week 2024 Donald Trump Forty Percent DAN Eight Percent 2020 30 30, 40 Percent 11 Percent Defantis 40 Twitter Republicans Twenty Twenty Four Thirty Forty Twenty Eighteen Twenty Twenty Oval Office
"thirty forty" Discussed on WLS-AM 890

WLS-AM 890

04:25 min | 3 weeks ago

"thirty forty" Discussed on WLS-AM 890

"Four four eight four three eight two seven the Dan Bongino show uh... so i gotta be honest with you folks i'm so this is like white twitter is a plague on humankind it's just this it is an absolute plague on human kind regret interacting with some i'm not even a lot of just totally regret interacting with some people because they're so disingenuous it's just like bar it's like arguing with a it really is but you want to call in the show are also tell you what i mean a second folks nations taking a toll on your pocket with the dollar shrinking daily it's time to join a mac the association of mature american citizens with a mac you can save from ten to sixty five percent on products like cell phones and plans health and wellness products travel and lodging vision dental and prescription drugs go to a mac dot u s slash dan the loan will more than pay for your subscription they even have an advisory service for social security medicare to answer any questions you join a mac today a mac dot u s slash dan thinking of her in the middle of retirement a mac mac financial planning and retirement planners can help you learn more about life insurance ira rollovers and investment advice from referral head to a mac dot u s slash dan and discover savings at home a dreams come true discover a world of savings on everything to fuel your future it all starts at a mac dot u s slash dan the association of mature american citizens better for you better for america dan and bongio him all all right so for those of you out there who might know rob smith you may not rob smith is is i don't know rob that well i'm not sure we met uh... but rob is says he's been the topic of conversation on my podcast this week on twitter after i challenged something he said which i don't really know what talking he's about because he has not been the topic of conversation at all on my show it's kind of a test assumption on his part of talking about him when i in fact was not hot and um... saying he's that i was throwing around in about jim you listen to my show every day right because you're here here yours forced to write like i gotta listen okay just checking have you ever heard me say that the black community is going to vote thirty forty percent republican you ever heard me say that you have never heard me say mike have you heard me say that mike uh... and jim matter of fact if you heard me say the opposite that it's likely we could get maybe between ten and twenty percent and that's probably more realistic and that would be a game changer you have heard that correct so this is what i'm talking about why i just doing with people on twitter edges so i just send them to call a number and let them call it as i'm really tired of again people on twitter telling you like they speak for the black community or they understand you know what and i don't need to hear that i don't speak for the italian community or the german unity i speak to people like their people because that's how people work paid for by christian care ministry let's see if something costs less but people are happier with it that that sounds like something to look into and that is meta share maybe you've heard switching to meta share to pay for health care save many families up to 500 bucks a month and that is huge but it's also true that people are way more satisfied making after the switch to the member satisfaction rate for meta share is double that of the typical health insurance plan double meta share works too it's been around for 30 years members have shared more than five billion dollars of each other's bills people love having telehealth and a huge nationwide ppo network so yeah really you can save a and ton like it better imagine being happy with how you're taking care of your health care so if you're self -employed or part of the gig economy or you just want to plan you're happy with you can call right now you'll get a price within two minutes so see what you can say this is a very very smart use of two minutes here's the number you need call 855 51 bible that's 855 51 bible 855 two dead bodies were pulled from Lake Michigan on the north side this morning

Rep. Jim Comer: Biden Associate Received $3M Wire From China

The Dan Bongino Show

01:54 min | 2 months ago

Rep. Jim Comer: Biden Associate Received $3M Wire From China

"The cut that isn't for the next whatever the next cut itself for here's jim comer on ted who's his podcast and a follow -up to this explaining how foreign governments paid a business robinson associate walker off the biden's a whole lot of money and he was doing some business with the biden crime family take a listen i'll use the robinson walker account because we subpoena that first was the my account we subpoenaed now who's robinson walker rob walker was one of the associates that they used uh... funnel money from china and then in romania and then down and laundry down to the bike so he's a guy that's doing business with hunter and joe but yeah okay we don't know what that is it is yet they got a three million dollar wire from from china so this so so one wire three million dollars three million dollars now remember this account never had much activity in it over the course of ten years maintained around a forty or fifty thousand dollar balance one day out of the blue they get a three million dollar wire from china oh that's so so the banks holding a balance for this guy of like thirty forty fifty thousand dollars and bam he gets a three million dollar shot in the arm what was it selling what was he what was he said what jim what was he said do you know oh oh oh influence is that a thing is that a sir oh okay products and services hmm this gets better members bank records for all this and i will continue to insist as i say often tattoo this on your brain if any what of jim comer is saying is false and these bank records don't exist why has no one been family yet because it's the truth

Romania China Three Million Dollar Ten Years Three Million Dollars Rob Walker Thirty Forty Fifty Thousand Do First Robinson One Day ONE Jim Comer Robinson Walker One Of The Associates Biden Fifty Thousand Dollar JIM Money Around A Forty LOT
What Will Happen if China Invades Taiwan?

The Dan Bongino Show

01:51 min | 2 months ago

What Will Happen if China Invades Taiwan?

"Of questions from people when i was talking about how i'm absolutely inst in maybe as little as a couple of months china's going to invade taiwan and i got two questions i multiple times am i answer him if i get a more than three or four times because know i it's indicative of three four people want to my facebook page and message me there's probably thirty forty thousand more thinking the same thing so much more what is that look like to us on the ground nuts and bolts of china invades taiwan well give you just a few things you forget air overseas air traffic you may be able to forget air traffic here too for a while overseas air traffic will be an absolute disaster a there'll disaster be people stranded in places all over the world it'll take probably weeks to figure out what's safe and what's not i here too because you can expect in here chinese communist party will stop it absolutely nothing to make sure they delay any united states response to a taiwan that means you may have trouble with local water plants depending on how because they've mapped out our infrastructure already for a cyber war it's already happened that work's already been done are you gonna have potential nuclear meltdown are you gonna again have water treatment problems what about uh... you know fertilizer and and and and is an automated fertilizers distribution system was on farms immunity is all going to be hacked into answers we don't know our air traffic

Two Questions Four Times Three More Than Three Thirty Forty Thousand More Chinese Four People Taiwan Of Questions Couple Of Months Facebook Things China Weeks Times United States
Power, Money, and Ego With Teddy Schleifer

The Pomp Podcast

02:24 min | 2 years ago

Power, Money, and Ego With Teddy Schleifer

"Are a part of a team that is releasing a new media. Publication called the puck. Website puck dot news. And i couldn't help start the conversation. And when i went to the website it's simply says a new media company covering power money and ego and those three words i think Elicit all kinds of emotional responses from people power money and ego But you've been writing about a lot of the stuff for a while. Where does the personal fascination or interests come from in covering some of these topics so in some ways. The role is very big and in some ways. It's very small What what. I mean by that is there. Are you know. Three hundred and fifty million people in the united states But a very small number of people have enormous amount of influence in american society. People who like you know. I think lots of listeners might not even know their names if you look at the floors four hundred list from time to time. I'm always Humor that like how many people even as someone who covers billionaires. I have never heard of you know people who have thirty forty billion dollars who made their money in some got awful boring industry Who have enormous amount of assets and can convert that into political influence rob against wince Influence in just kind of in public life more so pucks. Kind of central conceit is that the world is actually driven by a small number of people And that there is a big world that is governed by people in hollywood people in washington people on wall street people in silicon valley And that ultimately that that world needs to be a unspoiled for the rest of us to understand and these rather also. I feel like often very are treated as isolated power sectors right people in hollywood who cover hollywood really wealthy people on wall street. Who covered the or system really. Well you know. I've covered silicon valley This is actually really one world right. The people on wall street have influenced in washington. People washington or regular people in silicon valley and silicon valley is attacking hollywood and creeping on kind of traditional studios. So one of the other ideas of pop is that. Let's let's kind of narrow the synapse here and try to really uncover this as one world

Hollywood American Society Silicon Valley United States Washington ROB
Exploring The Halloween Party Murder of Arpana Jinaga

Spy Affair

02:34 min | 2 years ago

Exploring The Halloween Party Murder of Arpana Jinaga

"The time of the halloween party in two thousand eight. Jay was in his thirties successful programmer. He lived in the seattle area but he kept in touch with a lot of friends. Back home including dr. Jim naga whose daughter had moved down the road from j to an apartment complex in redmond very beautiful girl betty brainy and all. She's very kidding. I noticed that you speak about her in the present tense. Yes yeah three days after the costume party at the valley view jay woke up. Walk downstairs checked his phone. He saw a bunch of miss calls from arpan his dad. He called dr genego back immediately and he could hear his friend was in a bad place. There was no sign of arben banana. She wasn't answering her phone. Her friends sri aletha couldn't get in touch with her either. J. hung up and tried arpanet himself. Nothing like calling back and saying that it's going to iceman and what are you going to do. you said. Can you go and check on her. Jade bandarban has pleased once before but all he remembered was that you had to walk up a set of stairs to the top floor to be honest. I don't even know the unit number. So that's why i took the steps then. I was knocking on the door and map for almost like thirty forty seconds. No one was there. Then i read then again not to play. That's what i saw that. I don't even know who he is. The guy j saw coming towards him was in his mid twenties. The goatee and sideburns. Average build and height was cameron johnson. Arpan is next door neighbor. And i asked him dino this he said yeah i know so. Ask him which lives by. Then mehan cameron. We both standing just in front of that apartment. J. push gently on the door and a bolt fell off. Someone seemed to have bashed it in. The lock was broken. And there were splinters. All around the chan- then. I talked to cavern. I asked like it looks like somebody broke her apartment. What the hell is going on right. So can you help me out. He said okay. Then we both went inside about. I was cut basically. Jay was yelling calling for our puna but no one was answering.

Jim Naga Betty Brainy Arpan Dr Genego Arben Banana Sri Aletha J. Hung Jade Bandarban Redmond JAY Seattle Cameron Johnson Mehan Cameron J. Push Dino
Health Official: 20,000 Mississippi Students in Quarantine

AP News Radio

00:53 sec | 2 years ago

Health Official: 20,000 Mississippi Students in Quarantine

"The state epidemiologist in Mississippi says about twenty thousand students there are currently quarantined for corona virus exposure that is four point five percent of the public school population in Mississippi we are in trouble Dr Lewin Woodward vice chancellor for health affairs at the university of Mississippi Medical Center says this is preventable in order for October and November to look different than August looks and the way that September will look we have to do something and what that is is we have to get back to native state health officer Dr Thomas Dobbs says the delta variant is different we're seeing a lot of people and I see you twenties thirties forties and said ASEAN women bury their parents are seeing women bury their children a second parking garage field hospital has been set up at the university of Mississippi Medical Center I'm at Donahue

Dr Lewin Woodward Mississippi University Of Mississippi Medi Dr Thomas Dobbs Asean Donahue
"thirty forty" Discussed on The Doomer Bloomer Podcast

The Doomer Bloomer Podcast

05:55 min | 2 years ago

"thirty forty" Discussed on The Doomer Bloomer Podcast

"The things money can bring and i really truly feel like the lord was showing me that if you want those things you can have them just know the unhappiness and loneliness and horrible life that you're going to have doing those things so i actually believe that that the lord was able to like. Give me this. If you will out of body experience or out of life experience and kind of show me down the track where i will be thirty forty fifty years from now had i continued in that patter and i would have had plenty of money. I would have plenty of things. But i would have not been fulfilling my role that i was created for and i would have been terribly unhappy and you know. I'm not saying that. Having money is a bad thing it's not at all you know. This is actually a mindset that we work with with a lot of kingdom entrepreneurs because religion has actually tried to tell people money as bad. It's not money that's bad. It's won't allow money to become the false. God is when we allow the pursuit of money and the things money brings us. That's actually when money becomes bad and it talks about in the bible. The pursuit of the love of the pursuit of money is evil. So money is a very awesome thing. It's very powerful spiritual tool. It just matters what we're worshiping if we let it become a false god in our life and that becomes the thing. We're worshiping is gonna lead down dismal road off the it'd be like the cult the cult of money or the the cult of false riches At at.

bible thirty forty fifty years money things
Harriet Tubman, the Ultimate Outdoorswoman

Following Harriet

02:07 min | 2 years ago

Harriet Tubman, the Ultimate Outdoorswoman

"Everyone knows harriet. Tubman as an activist and freedom fighter. We all learned about her in school. Growing up how she led slaves to freedom on the underground railroad but there was a lot more to her than what you probably remember from history class. She was a daughter a wife an entrepreneur and she was something else too. When you think about it she had to be the ultimate outdoors woman. Do what she did. That's right an outdoors woman. We don't often talk about. Harriet tubman in that light. Or if we do. It's kind of cautionary tale. Her experiences in the outdoors must have been so awful. So why would any sane black person wanna go into the wilderness voluntarily it feeds into the narrative. We often hear that african americans are not outdoorsy. But what if there's more to the story. What was harry. Its relationship with nature. How does that shape. The way african americans with the outdoors today and how might a closer look at harriet. Offer a new perspective on who belongs outdoors victoria. Marin has the story so this story was inspired by a podcast called following. Harriet which is about harriet. Tubman the show pulls back the curtain on harry. It's life giving listeners. A deeper context to her story. A story that i think is more layered and probably more relatable than many people realize most of us enter. Harriet tubman is life when she was in her thirties forties fifties and often times. We don't sort of think about how she came to be. Harriet people of my generation people who grew up in the nineteen seventies. We first met harriet in a photo in the corner of a textbook. She looked old. Her skin was stretched tight on her face. Her mouth was pinched. Her head was wrapped in a dark. Kerchief

Harriet Tubman Harriet Tubman Harry Marin Victoria
"thirty forty" Discussed on Strong By Design Podcast

Strong By Design Podcast

05:47 min | 2 years ago

"thirty forty" Discussed on Strong By Design Podcast

"It's going to cost you in in your mobility it's gonna cost you in Stimulating certain like the hip. Flexor right the hips. You're gonna you're gonna lose all kinds of You know athleticism And in terms of bone Structure and a when you're sitting you're like the said the body is designed for movement. And when you're not stimulating muscles imp stimulate your bone structure. You get these weak fragile bones that will deteriorate over over years. Even if you're looking you might be pretty brittle because you're you're not testing that body moving that body and hitting the body in different ways throughout the day the way it's like a child you know and that's my kids are like rubber right the council back up if they fall because their bodies are just so mckee mechanical li like this the right to to like where we are. When we're thirty forty fifty years old a lot of us of a teenager like trips and falls he just tumbles and right back up like it never happened. They come home all scraped and bruised and like i'm fine. I'm fine how you look like you were in a war exactly sedan. That's just that's just the day the body can handle it. Can it can handle it. But the this active potato thing i you know. Don't let don't be that yeah. Don't be that person that is you know really praising your batting yourself on the back for all your great exercising you at the gym that week but really what the rest of your day look like. What's your lifestyle look like. And so the morning evening walks. The lunch walks to the getting. You know we're going to get to that. Yeah there's there's there's a difference. I think if i'm hearing you. There's a difference between exercising regularly and having an active lifestyle. Huge different people need to understand that difference and the impact. And i want us to get into that. 'cause i know you've got some really good tip. People been listening the following. They're like oh my gosh. I'm that active data. I want to be so what. What did they do. What do we do. What do i do. I have to put an alarm on my phone. I know that. I'll tell you what the alarm and the phone is. Been a good trick for me to to remember to do things in my day. We all are busy busy busy. And you can set little alarms for yourself for all kinds of things Whether it's a meeting whether it's a text your friend or you know right near journal. Read a book you know. Stand up more. So what are ways that you can combat this sedentary life. This active couch potato Living so many of us are guilty. Of and i would include myself in that category certain days including myself. I also want to make sure that we impress upon people. This is not this is not mean that you have to give up hours of like we we all. I mean we understand you especially because you still have a young family minds. my kids are all grown. Now you have responsibilities like do you have family responsibilities. You also.

thirty forty fifty years old
Interview With Director Jordan Brady

Sup Doc: A Documentary Podcast

01:53 min | 2 years ago

Interview With Director Jordan Brady

"Hey wow thanks guys. Thanks for having me on. George barco was the longest intro ever. We're going to have to loop our theme music a couple times just to cover that but you've done a lot so twelve hundred in commercials. It might even be more now. Because i've done probably thirty forty in the last nine months. Holy crap the pandemic shutdown shuts down. And then i started in july of twenty twenty and have been working straight through while and you guys got early like protocol for sets and stuff like the community of commercial producers. Really worked it out with sag and the dj and the directors guild and the aussie. Everybody was there. Were zooms a plenty trying to figure out protocol. And i've been tested thirty forty times a. Yeah they they find anything. No no nothing. that's good. I did one thing where i had to do. Testing like the day before and then one on the day of and not the day of the like two days before and then the day before and it was like the spit test likely at that point i just had to spit in a thing and we never done that one. I would always tip them. So i could get the rectal test. That's smart yeah. You know it's it's it's fun for everyone. Yeah that's not covered. It's a different kind of test. I want to like before we get into your filmmaking. So you you you have was was a stand up comedian so you no longer do. Stand up comedy not not professionally. I mean the last. I didn't for many years but i am road. Comic was the first time. I did a a real road gig twenty some

George Barco
"thirty forty" Discussed on Democracy Now! Audio

Democracy Now! Audio

02:32 min | 2 years ago

"thirty forty" Discussed on Democracy Now! Audio

"Mom above of we all moved out except for the wife of my brother and three her children. They died at home. We left and then the ambulance service arrived and moved them from under the rubble. Dead nemov these sleep on the ground in the shelter. There's not enough water. And if we're out of water especially june the corona pandemic. It will be worse described here thirty forty people in each classroom. The israeli bombing campaign has killed at least two hundred twenty two palestinians in gaza including sixty three children. Here in.

three thirty forty people sixty three children each classroom at least two hundred twenty tw gaza corona pandemic june the israeli palestinians
"thirty forty" Discussed on Wendell's World & Sports

Wendell's World & Sports

05:31 min | 2 years ago

"thirty forty" Discussed on Wendell's World & Sports

"The society in a positive direction for my generation is far too late to make any type of drastic changes the change some of the ills and change some of the deficiencies and chain some of the the disease which is racism and oppression and discrimination in white privilege and all of those types of things for my generation the generation before me genetic generation even after me. It's too late for making any type of Meaningful impact before the young cats out there for those young cats who are going to be young adults then be parents and then be leaders and be folks are gonna have to interact with everybody and some of those folks my politics. Some of those folks might run for president. Some of those might be community leaders. Some of those folks might be police officers for those folks for that generation. Less start right now doing what we need to do to fill them with truth with unity with love with understanding with common sense with the ability to listen to everybody with their knowledge of privilege with their acknowledgement that. They'll do better with knowledge of being mined so again in twenty thirty forty fifty sixty one hundred years when my generation isn't allowed on that we'll be taking a look in the year twenty eighty seven that the kids will be going to high school. The kids will be going to middle school. The kids will be going to elementary. School will have the understanding of the things that affect the society right now an environment right now with the racism with the oppression with discrimination with misogyny such. We'll all be a thing of the past and we will be able to move to a place where everybody regardless of gender race creed color and such. We'll be able to treat one another with respect. So that's what we hope and Yeah that's part of what i do. Far as windows world is sports. The podcast concern. Bring out that message while ripping folks in sports and talking about those sports in praising votes in sports to giving his opinion about what's happening currently in the world of sports is all about windows. Roll the sports with yours truly window..

twenty eighty seven twenty thirty forty fifty sixt
From Twitter to Palantir, Losses in Technology Stocks Stack Up

CNBC's Fast Money

01:37 min | 2 years ago

From Twitter to Palantir, Losses in Technology Stocks Stack Up

"On the one side. The reason highflyers crashing back to earth. They just check out. These moves fastly. Fc twilla draftkings all plunging. Those names now down at least thirty percent from their all-time highs on the other side the old school value name cisco ibm dow oracle not just today but many are trading at or near all time highs so in this tech tug o war. What side do you bet on dan. Well right now. It seems pretty clear. I mean the pandemic winners right some of these high valuation high growth names that were really well situated during just the unique situation during the pandemic they pulled forward a lot of demand here and now they're faced with decelerating metrics forward on all sorts of occasions. You have fastly down there. Facet was down twenty five percent today. It's still trades at about ten times next year sales so the demand and the pace in which these companies were growing in last year into this year are just not sustainable at these valuations. I throw a whole nother group though in their mail. We've seen some huge. Ipo's over the last six months or so airbnb. Door dash snowflake pailin tear and those stocks are down thirty forty percent from their recent highs. And they'd be more comparable to the oracle the dell the ibm and the cisco and i do think that as a really interesting relationship here that you're seeing rotation out of these high valuation names into cheap names that are more stable that don't have the growth just a bit more defensive here.

Oracle Cisco IBM DAN Airbnb IPO Dell
Should Australia Vaccinate Incoming Travelers?

Coronacast

01:29 min | 2 years ago

Should Australia Vaccinate Incoming Travelers?

"Is the ideal situation for how we manage incoming travellers because we do have people coming in and we've got to manage them somehow. How should we be doing it. Personal communal talk about by personal opinion is something we've been banging on about for months now. In corona cast immunize. Australians overseas Vaccine to the consulates and to the embassies even it's astro because people pay to get back and get them immunized and that will reduce the risk of transmission that we we seem to be struggling to even vaccinate people here in australia. Should we really be sending dice. Say yes because the risk to australian comes from overseas and if you can reduce that risk that's what you should do above all else so what we're talking about thirty forty thousand. Australians overseas. we're talking about getting to a target will in fact the government's not setting targets but when the where it was two hundred thousand dollars a day so it's twenty five percent of one days doses overseas. And you get people immunized and you reduce the risk and we've got dr from the uk at least for the pfizer vaccine that after the first dose of the vaccine you reduce the transmission risk by seventy percents of asymmetric infection and after an it's over eighty percent after the second does and that study of came out of the united kingdom so it works and that's a very significant reduction is not zero but it would reduce the risk and hotel quarantine or my even limit eliminate the need for hotel quarantine. Two people could go home

Corona Australia United Kingdom Government
Next Hotel Stay (MM #3670)

The Mason Minute

01:00 min | 2 years ago

Next Hotel Stay (MM #3670)

"The minute with kevin mason. There are many signs that were coming out of cove and some good some bad airline travel up to almost pre pandemic levels in the week or two some of that spring break traffic of course but it's also people being more comfortable with lying once again. Hotel stays there also improving but the hotel companies are worried about what they're going to do to make up the money they lost from last year marietta's decided they're going to be changing some of the amenities at some of their hotels. Like for instance there fairfield inns or east to get the free breakfast buffet going to be going away. They're going to offer grab and go. Selections kiosks or little refrigerators. If you will almost like vending machines going back to the way. It was in the thirties forties and fifties. You go rather than free stuff because they need to make those profits back need to make that money that they lost for the last year. So they've got to make it any way they can plus with covid people sometimes uncomfortable now how they're interacting with others. You wanna deal with breakfast buffet now. Sure they're saying this is all about safety but we also know. It's about cost cutting.

Mason Minute Kevin Mason Baby Boomers Life Culture Society Musings Last Year Thirties Forties TWO Fifties Marietta Cove Fairfield Inns
Next Hotel Stay (MM #3670)

The Mason Minute

01:00 min | 2 years ago

Next Hotel Stay (MM #3670)

"The minute with kevin mason. There are many signs that were coming out of cove and some good some bad airline travel up to almost pre pandemic levels in the week or two some of that spring break traffic of course but it's also people being more comfortable with lying once again. Hotel stays there also improving but the hotel companies are worried about what they're going to do to make up the money they lost from last year marietta's decided they're going to be changing some of the amenities at some of their hotels. Like for instance there fairfield inns or east to get the free breakfast buffet going to be going away. They're going to offer grab and go. Selections kiosks or little refrigerators. If you will almost like vending machines going back to the way. It was in the thirties forties and fifties. You go rather than free stuff because they need to make those profits back need to make that money that they lost for the last year. So they've got to make it any way they can plus with covid people sometimes uncomfortable now how they're interacting with others. You wanna deal with breakfast buffet now. Sure they're saying this is all about safety but we also know. It's about cost cutting.

Mason Minute Kevin Mason Baby Boomers Life Culture Society Musings Last Year Thirties Forties TWO Fifties Marietta Cove Fairfield Inns
Next Hotel Stay (MM #3670)

The Mason Minute

01:00 min | 2 years ago

Next Hotel Stay (MM #3670)

"The minute with kevin mason. There are many signs that were coming out of cove and some good some bad airline travel up to almost pre pandemic levels in the week or two some of that spring break traffic of course but it's also people being more comfortable with lying once again. Hotel stays there also improving but the hotel companies are worried about what they're going to do to make up the money they lost from last year marietta's decided they're going to be changing some of the amenities at some of their hotels. Like for instance there fairfield inns or east to get the free breakfast buffet going to be going away. They're going to offer grab and go. Selections kiosks or little refrigerators. If you will almost like vending machines going back to the way. It was in the thirties forties and fifties. You go rather than free stuff because they need to make those profits back need to make that money that they lost for the last year. So they've got to make it any way they can plus with covid people sometimes uncomfortable now how they're interacting with others. You wanna deal with breakfast buffet now. Sure they're saying this is all about safety but we also know. It's about cost cutting.

Mason Minute Kevin Mason Baby Boomers Life Culture Society Musings Marietta
"thirty forty" Discussed on Be-YOU-tiful Adaptive Warrior

Be-YOU-tiful Adaptive Warrior

03:21 min | 2 years ago

"thirty forty" Discussed on Be-YOU-tiful Adaptive Warrior

"Be neat if i could jump rope. They set dates. They said by this date. I wanna be doing this and by this time next year. I wanna be do have done this this us. If you do not have clear set goals. It'd be very easy to get distracted by pain reset backs when you don't want them then becomes all mental game which becomes an emotional game and then you're done yourself into a really deep hole. That is very hard to get out of so called action this week. If you think you are candidate Hockey dear insurance company or get insurance and talk to them extremely research which insurance insurance companies of the best go to a couple of different prostitutes office. Talk to them. Make sure you get to talk with the person who would be working hand in hand with you. Get to know that person now. They're assistant not a secretary. You wanna talk with the person that's going to be doing. Your fittings taking care of you. Because what i was told. I can vouch right now. This is someone who's going to be in your life for thirty forty years if you're lucky if they're still in the business and you're doing what with them that person is going gonna be by your side. And then thirdly make sure you do several peer to peer visits with other amputees who can give you insight to date day-to-day workings pitfalls Why reinvent the wheel help have them help you see where they would do. Things differently And then share the things that have worked well for them. That'll give you a real glimpse as much as you can get into the life of the not as dr coming said you know. Most people don't go by car without seeing it and test driving that as an amputee really can't test drive any of you t it's it's an all or nothing thing which you can get in the car and get a feel and that's what appear appear will do or talking to a prostitute will do as much as you can get yourself around that environment and those people in that community the better handle you'll have on what you really gotta expectancy afterwards. Then the rest is going to be up to you. How you handle it your attitude your support system that is going to be the make or break a successful future for us so until next time be healthy. Be happy be you..

thirty forty years next year this week thirdly
"thirty forty" Discussed on How'd It Happen Podcast

How'd It Happen Podcast

03:54 min | 2 years ago

"thirty forty" Discussed on How'd It Happen Podcast

"Questions <Silence> <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> <SpeakerChange> <hes> <Speech_Music_Male> <Speech_Female> <hes> <Speech_Male> or opinions <Speech_Male> going on <Speech_Male> in this sort <Speech_Male> of finger pointing this <Speech_Male> way or that way when you <Speech_Male> have. <Speech_Male> You know very <Speech_Male> clear models of <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> this works <Speech_Male> because like in <Speech_Male> business right you <Speech_Male> look at you benchmark <Speech_Male> against <Speech_Male> your competition. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> And you say <Speech_Male> whoa. <Speech_Male> Where's that working <Speech_Male> the best. Because that's what <Speech_Male> i want to be doing. <Speech_Male> I don't care <Speech_Male> that it's not my <Speech_Male> idea. I don't care <Speech_Male> that <Speech_Male> that's <Speech_Male> that's what's working. <Silence> That's <SpeakerChange> what i wanna <Silence> <Advertisement> do. <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> The differences <Speech_Male> in business <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> if your competitor <Speech_Male> is doing <Speech_Male> something great <Silence> and you're not <Speech_Male> it <Speech_Male> impacts the very <Speech_Male> thing that you're in <Speech_Male> for the bottom <Speech_Male> line <Speech_Male> dollars <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> and you live with <Silence> that state <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> Unfortunately <SpeakerChange> <Silence> <Speech_Male> <hes> <Speech_Male> education in the <Speech_Male> united states may be <Silence> one of the few places <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> where you can just fail <Speech_Male> year after <Speech_Male> year after year <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> and literally <Speech_Male> have no consequence <Speech_Male> right. <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> You don't need <Speech_Male> a place to hide <Speech_Male> no business. You need <Speech_Male> a place to <SpeakerChange> hide if you're <Speech_Male> failing you gotta <Speech_Male> you. <Speech_Male> It's <Speech_Male> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> it it. It doesn't <Speech_Male> even make sense <Speech_Male> for us to say <Speech_Male> this is maybe <Speech_Male> the most important thing for <Speech_Male> us to do for the future of our <Speech_Male> country <Speech_Male> yet. <Speech_Male> There are schools <Silence> in his city. I won't even name <Speech_Male> them but <Speech_Male> if you're familiar with the city <Speech_Male> have been failing <Speech_Male> kids <Speech_Male> thirty forty consecutive <Silence> years. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> And you want <Speech_Male> to and they are. There <Speech_Music_Male> are people out <Speech_Male> there that would would <Speech_Male> much rather <Speech_Male> close <Speech_Male> walkie <Silence> academy of science <Silence> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> so that <Speech_Male> more our <SpeakerChange> kids <Speech_Male> go to school. <Speech_Male> That's what <Speech_Male> i mean. It's <Speech_Male> just. <Silence> I don't even know how you <Speech_Male> can <Speech_Male> entertain that <Speech_Male> let alone <Speech_Male> get behind. It <Silence> <SpeakerChange> seems <Speech_Male> weird so <Speech_Male> but the the <Speech_Male> other thing is <Silence> <Speech_Male> You know <Speech_Male> if you were to look <Speech_Male> at what what <Speech_Male> we're doing <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> and then hold the mirror <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> up to schools <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> that are serving a similar <Speech_Male> population <Speech_Male> are doing <Speech_Male> it would then <Speech_Male> force you to <Speech_Male> look at yourself <Silence> differently <SpeakerChange> <Silence> or <Silence> <Silence> <Speech_Male> say <Silence> that seton <Speech_Male> someway <Speech_Male> and <Silence> the reality of it is <Speech_Male> far <Speech_Male> too. Many many people <Speech_Male> saying log <Speech_Male> academy of sciences sheet <Speech_Male> right <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> which they <Silence> come see us <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> here. <Speech_Male> San somebody appearance <Silence> to fill out an application <Speech_Male> <Silence> in. See what we do <Silence> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> got <SpeakerChange> a seat. You're <Silence> in <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> so <Speech_Male> you know. <Speech_Male> They'll say the narrative <Speech_Male> we're handpicking <SpeakerChange> our kids <Silence> and <Speech_Male> <Speech_Music_Male> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Music_Male> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> I'm <Speech_Male> not even interested in <Speech_Male> school. They have <SpeakerChange> six kids. <Speech_Male> My daughter went to king. <Silence> I love king <Speech_Male> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> was <Silence> the best. I wanna <Speech_Male> work there. <Speech_Male> 'cause <Speech_Male> <SpeakerChange> i couldn't <Silence> have gotten to king as a kid. <Speech_Male> <Silence> I want to work at a school. <Speech_Male> That looks like mine <Speech_Male> and at the same <Speech_Male> hypoc <Speech_Male> challenges and <Speech_Male> and <Speech_Male> where people are gonna graduated. <Speech_Male> Feel like mad. <Silence> That school <Speech_Male> <SpeakerChange> really <Speech_Male> changed <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> the <Speech_Male> trajectory <Silence> of my life. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> Not necessarily <Speech_Male> i <Silence> can win. Any school <Speech_Male> will <Speech_Male> <SpeakerChange> for some kids. <Speech_Male> So <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> now i'm hopeful <Silence> you know <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> disliked <Speech_Male> or anything <Speech_Male> but around here <Speech_Male> is <Speech_Male> if <Speech_Male> someone asked me a question <Speech_Male> tell the truth and the <Speech_Male> truth is that these kids <Speech_Male> can learn. And <Speech_Male> the reason why they're not <Speech_Male> as adults <Speech_Male> are not making <Silence> the right decisions <Speech_Male> in <Speech_Male> prioritizing kids <Speech_Male> to bitcoin. <Speech_Male> Things what other people <Speech_Male> don't in trying to make <Speech_Male> excuses <Silence> <SpeakerChange> <Silence> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> well. That's about as clear <Silence> as you can be <Speech_Female> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> wendy. This has <Silence> <Advertisement> been <Silence> <Speech_Male>

six kids thirty forty one
"thirty forty" Discussed on Erratic Dispatches

Erratic Dispatches

05:32 min | 2 years ago

"thirty forty" Discussed on Erratic Dispatches

"Teenager. I'm thinking you know what music is art to me. There should be no rules in our and so that kind of put me off the idea. The academic side had i been smart. I would have said well. That was a bad experience. What can i gain from this. You know and and i probably should have gone gone into that but attorneys. I never did go to college. You know i. I went right to work in factories and and that was that was the job but my real work was making records. You know and making music. And i didn't have. I never had a problem learning how to play guitar. Play keyboards it was just. It was something where. I could hear it my head so if i messed around with it long enough i could make it. You know i could fake my way through it to where you know it would make the sounds that i wanted to So all these years later. You know thirty forty years later. I'm thinking you know it would have been nice to have some formal training Now you can do that on your own But that just never was my path. It was like for some reason. I thought well. If i learn all these rules that means there's these boundaries and if there's boundaries in there's things that i have to stay within and i can't create anything new and beyond there so you know that that just happened to be my path of you know and What type of instruments do you usually use to do your music compositions and also zardy particular suffered as well. I i record with pro tools But i play guitar. I have I have a number of synthesizers pianos. A lot of different. Percussion instruments If if on a project where It calls for something to be authentic in a style that i'm not familiar with or A different culture style of music There's always other other musicians. And i can call from anywhere all over the world that i'll send him a track. They'll you know reform on it. So you know the great thing about nowadays is that you know with the internet. You know if. I need.

thirty forty years later later
Silly and Misleading Retirement Calculators

Optimal Finance Daily

04:55 min | 2 years ago

Silly and Misleading Retirement Calculators

"I think the main reason people seem amazed at the idea of retiring at age. Thirty forty or even fifty is the lack of real information on early retirement. In general if you type retirement calculator into a search engine these days and enter some stats about yourself. You will find some very strange assumptions. That are guiding you to think you need an absolute load of money to retire for example. I was once working through such a guide in a magazine from northern. Trust a bank that caters to the wealthy. It went something like this. Consider your goals for retirement. What life events do you need to be prepared for. The following table lists average cost children's and grandchildren's university education. A hundred thousand dollars per child children's and grandchildren's weddings twenty five thousand dollars. Assisted care facilities a hundred thousand dollars per year. Medical costs funeral arrangements. Twenty five thousand dollars trust funds for loved ones esteem and legacy planning and charitable foundations. 'wow looks like you're well into the millions before you even get to buy yourself some groceries. Another retirement calculator on cnn. Dot com has various parts to fill out dropdown boxes pre filled with hand values like retiring at age sixty five and needing seventy percent of your maximum pre retirement income constantly for the rest of your life. The drop down box with seventy percent in it did not even offer a value lower than forty percent. This percentage of income concept is one of the most anti mustache ones out there if you make two hundred thousand dollars per year just before retiring this experience. Corrupt you so much that you need a hundred and forty thousand dollars per year for the rest of your life or is it possible to maintain the same luxury standards of a person who has a merely comfortable income like forty thousand dollars per year. This goes back to the ideas of the get what you need posting. I made recently and that is why not go for maximum happiness rather than maximum consumption. I propose that maximum happiness is achieved at a spending level where you live in a comfortable space. Eat healthy foods and get to do lots of active and stimulating things with friends. That doesn't have to cost a hundred and forty thousand dollars per year or even fifty thousand dollars per year for most of us the other assumption they push on people is a very low rate of savings they assume you will less than the annual limit on 401k contributions. And don't say much about what to do if you save more than that which the high income person mentioned a few paragraphs ago could certainly do so these banks and mutual fund companies will continue to tell you that you need millions of dollars to retire because it benefits them for you to invest your money with them. Luckily it's a harmless bit of tom foolery since the saving benefits you as well but the disservice they do is in scaring people out of dreaming to save faster or to think about much shorter time horizons like tenures instead of just plain old age. Sixty five so. I'll give you a quick retirement calculator of my own adult couple with no kids or whose children are. Grown can live very comfortably on forty thousand dollars per year and retirement. My own family lives very comfortably with one child on somewhere. In the twenty seven thousand dollar range you can shoot higher or lower depending on what level of luxury water pursue twenty. Two eighty thousand dollars is a good absolute maximum sane range. But if you don't want to calculate everything out just go for forty thousand dollars and figure out how to make your savings produce that for you for a single person. It might be difficult to slice in half because you lose some benefits from sharing a house in car but you can come close to quick early retirement budgets number one in early retiree couple lives on thirty thousand dollars per year. Earning five thousand of that combined in part time luxurious post retirement careers. The remaining twenty five thousand dollars per year is generated by their savings. Six hundred and twenty five thousand dollars of total savings are required to generate this amount of passive income using the four percent rule number two an early retirees single person leaves on twenty five thousand dollars. Earning ten thousand dollars on his or her many career. Fifteen thousand dollars per year is required from savings which calls for a nest egg of about three hundred and seventy five thousand dollars. I'm working on some much more detailed and exciting sample budgets using real numbers for my own spending experiences before and after retirement

Tom Foolery CNN
"thirty forty" Discussed on Drunk Unks Podcast

Drunk Unks Podcast

05:57 min | 2 years ago

"thirty forty" Discussed on Drunk Unks Podcast

"The athletes won't out again they don't know how many people that about we still thirty forty. Four jobs are a simple shit. That's why each level with freeze you're go wish was awesome. How the building of busted up our some he has. Our capsules burned off as war. Was that pack five. Pack light like that so you got the more expensive one he's describing. These show auditing diaz about rules..

Four jobs thirty forty each level five
The Perfect First Business

The $100 MBA Show

05:27 min | 2 years ago

The Perfect First Business

"Your first business can be scary intimidating nerve wracking and frankly just risky. There's so much you don't know yet because you just don't have the experience under your belt so it's really important for you. To mitigate that risk too many first time entrepreneurs shoot for the stars they start like a software company requires a lot of town a lot of engineers a lot of funding or they get into e commerce and they wanna sell physical goods and items in their ecommerce store which requires inventory storage tons of technology and a lot of customer headaches. How do i know this well. I have a software company webinar. Ninjas i mentioned before i had an ecommerce store was in retail. I had my own clothing line Over a decade ago. But i also had another type of business that really allowed me to build my other businesses and that's a service based business services any kind of business that offers a service advice expertise to customers. Let me give you an example of base business and will run with this example throughout the lesson because this is an actual real example. That i did. This is actually a business iran. I had a business business republic and it was a service business. It was a consulting firm. And i helped small businesses build and launch new websites and blogs now the great thing about a service based businesses that. You don't need to be the expert but of course if you choose a service that you are good at let's say for example you are a web developer then you can actually start with your own time and talent but it's not required. I started because i knew how to create websites. Resume were press. And i my first few clients using my own time and skill but after time i needed a scale i couldn't just do all the work myself and i actually found out that it actually makes more business sense for me not to do the work. If i were to do this business all over again. I would do just that. I would not be doing any of the actual skilled labor. So how does this work. Well let's say for example. You are charging two thousand dollars for somebody to create you a brand new blog a brand new website. This is very inexpensive. But let's just say this is where you're starting all you need to do to make a profit is to actually get it done for less. This means you can hire on upward for example people that can do the job. They can create websites in this example for you and you just be the facilitator you pass on the work to them now professionals that know what they're doing can create these things quite quickly if they're given the right information. That's where your job comes in is giving the information from the customer. What are the needs of their wants. What's our business. Lie grabbing their logo garner images Getting the copy so that we can then give it to the developer and they can load it all up and create that website. You can easily find really talented Website developers in this example for like five hundred dollars a website and you can easily charge two thousand or more when i was outsourcing it. I was charging around five thousand dollars a website. I had a full time freelance contractor. Who agreed that. He's going to do each website for five hundred dollars. And i gave plenty of work and he was working on three to four websites at a time. Yes i made a ten x profit on each project. now what's great about. Having a service based business is that you can scale this thing in your own time in your own speed. Meaning that if you don't have that many clients that's okay. You're still making a profit because you're charging somebody else to do the work per project per client and you're making a profit on each transaction and as you get more clients grow you will continue to make more profit and it becomes even more profitable and all you have to do is be the person that markets that cells that takes care of the customer the actual work the service can be outsourced to somebody else and guess what you can this with up cells and sister offerings do that with logos with business cards. I used to get other people to design them for me. Part of my team. And i would even like kind of Approved the designs before we get to the The actual customer and again make a profit on each add on each new service. This requires zero overhead from you. While you really need is a website for you to be able to bring customers into your business you only have to pay for somebody to do the work when you have a customer. There's no inventory to keep. There's no software to build or maintain by developers and you're dealing with higher price points meaning thousands of dollars per project rather than customer spending twenty thirty forty fifty dollars on smaller items like ecommerce and dealing with hundreds of customers that complained that won't refunds that have other issues you have less clients and you're making just as much money if not more as you're scaling. This is a really good business. A start with why because it makes you learn a lot of basic skills. You need to succeed in any other business.

Webinar Iran
Less Interested (MM #3639)

The Mason Minute

01:00 min | 2 years ago

Less Interested (MM #3639)

"The with kevin mason growing up. I was a huge sports fan. I love playing baseball. loved basketball. Always wanted to be a basketball player. In fact you know went into announcing to do sports announcing but here fast forward twenty thirty forty years later and i really don't care about pro sports anymore. Sure i follow college sports a little bit my team. Radford out already they lost in the semifinal round of their conference championship so they're not going to the big dance this year the nba. All star game was over the weekend. I'll be honest with you. I couldn't tell you who's in first place in either conference of the nba and don't really care anymore. Spring training baseball going on. Oh i fell asleep to watching baseball game the other day that my wife was watching tv i find myself just not carrying quite as much about sports anymore and what i don't know is it pro sports. I just feel disconnected. is it me. is it cove in nineteen is at my age. What is it. I'm a big nascar fan. If i miss a race no big deal. Something's changed with sports or something's changed with me. I just don't know which it is.

Mason Minute Kevin Mason Baby Boomers Life Culture Society Musings Cove Twenty Thirty Forty Years Late This Year Nascar First Place NBA Nineteen Radford Baseball Basketball
Less Interested (MM #3639)

The Mason Minute

01:00 min | 2 years ago

Less Interested (MM #3639)

"The with kevin mason growing up. I was a huge sports fan. I love playing baseball. loved basketball. Always wanted to be a basketball player. In fact you know went into announcing to do sports announcing but here fast forward twenty thirty forty years later and i really don't care about pro sports anymore. Sure i follow college sports a little bit my team. Radford out already they lost in the semifinal round of their conference championship so they're not going to the big dance this year the nba. All star game was over the weekend. I'll be honest with you. I couldn't tell you who's in first place in either conference of the nba and don't really care anymore. Spring training baseball going on. Oh i fell asleep to watching baseball game the other day that my wife was watching tv i find myself just not carrying quite as much about sports anymore and what i don't know is it pro sports. I just feel disconnected. is it me. is it cove in nineteen is at my age. What is it. I'm a big nascar fan. If i miss a race no big deal. Something's changed with sports or something's changed with me. I just don't know which it is.

Mason Minute Kevin Mason Baby Boomers Life Culture Society Musings Cove Twenty Thirty Forty Years Late This Year Nascar First Place NBA Nineteen Radford Baseball Basketball
"thirty forty" Discussed on Brothers of the Serpent Podcast

Brothers of the Serpent Podcast

05:20 min | 2 years ago

"thirty forty" Discussed on Brothers of the Serpent Podcast

"Factory. The bucket brigade no manufacturing. Why can't think of it. Either you guys know what it is. Go ahead and yell at it out. But that type of of workforce that is creating a product. Yeah over and over and over again simply semi line there it is. I knew line was in it. I just couldn't get out the car. Builder was henry ford. Yeah okay and some people say that he stole it from somewhere else. Well he was a car guy. Yeah what if it was the plane guys. Yeah and we were just mass producing planes. And they were the thing the became cheaper and cheaper. Yeah everybody owned one. Yeah everybody would have a landing strip in their yard and then that would change the size of yards and well. We could have much larger yards if we didn't have roads everywhere right. Yeah it would have complete are just that thing right there of course we would have needed land navigation for vehicles and stuff for multiple reasons but it would have definitely changed everything the way we do stuff now and so what is what would the language be like. What would the yeah culture be like. Would we recognize it right. Yeah the originally. What he's saying it'd be a whole there'd be a whole set of words and language around those and all these that we would not be familiar with. Yeah i mean. Listen to an air traffic controller. And you're like what is he saying most of the time. You don't know what they're talking. That's right so yeah. The point is that if technology takes a different route than ours the entire culture ends up being based around that technology their language their way of communicating. It's obvious with Social media the the rise of social media in our lifetimes that language and communicating have taken on a completely new way that would be unrecognizable to somebody thirty forty years ago. Yep all the acronyms that people use. Yeah and that's just that's a minute aspect of technological advancement. Yeah so when it comes to energy how you get an utilize energy that's a. That's like a huge aspect. Yeah and right. Now that governs our technology what what becomes popular in terms of technology is the is is how we gather in use energy and distribute it basically. Yeah if it was done in a different way. We all these. There's there would be probably a lot of things that wouldn't be possible. That are possible right now but then there would be a whole nother set of things that would be possible or that. Yeah that would be possible. That are not possible to us. Yeah that's right. Great point yeah did also matters on what catches on. I think you were saying that. Like it's how how. How many little twists of fate result in this thing being the thing catches on or gets manufacturer rather than that other thing.

thirty forty years ago one
"thirty forty" Discussed on Or Not!

Or Not!

02:58 min | 2 years ago

"thirty forty" Discussed on Or Not!

"To song about someone never singing to someone just fuel so it's just so for my perspective if someone had saying to me just me in an intimate setting. I wouldn't know how to react. Oh quiet applause. War thank you so much or i don't know what he's supposed to do to that like after the song ends like what do you what do you do. Just go about your business. Then like it's just so bizarre to me. That's why chose dancing over singing. Because i just knew even if i was good at it i wouldn't really use it but dancing then i could still exercise by dance class or something you and your exercise. Everything i do has to be productive. It's like dating. I wanted to be outdoors. So i get brought boulder climbing these jumping good for you at least you get something out of it. Yeah but yeah only time. I would sing to. Someone was if i had a child or something and sing a lullaby I guess that would be the only time out. Sing to someone. And have you ever been sung alibi. When you're a child. I think there are those songs when They like rub your stomach or like to get better or something they sing to you. I was never. I don't think or. I don't remember ever being sung to sleep but if i was ill or not feeling well then i would be sung to as their Taking care of me yeah. Same what is that so man. I'm not going to be able to sing it to my child. I know the words. I'm not gonna say wow think you bet your children You're such a always always to give up my children now because i'm a giving person but because they do want them eventually Man this this topic can be extended so this is a hard one more. Can we talk about this. Is ralph My hair story would go at least thirty forty minutes.

ralph least thirty forty minutes one
"thirty forty" Discussed on Casuals: An Outsider Look at the Videogame Industry

Casuals: An Outsider Look at the Videogame Industry

04:03 min | 2 years ago

"thirty forty" Discussed on Casuals: An Outsider Look at the Videogame Industry

"S agree with you about about about having for them having to compromise I can definitely see the halo games. Being on the switch nintendo and microsoft microsoft had had a pretty decent working relationship Pretty cordial and as of now. You can play fortnite on the switch and master chiefs on fortnight. We've mentioned this before you can play as a halo character on your switch. And i wouldn't be surprised if you see master chief pop up and smash so with where. Their relationship is and also nintendo's dipping their toe in the water of cloud gaming. We've seen hitman and control both on the switch again streaming cloud edition going back to those dreaming conversation so i wouldn't be surprised if you have. These higher of these heightened games. I i don't know what the fuck you talk to call them. But like these more aaa like bigger larger meatier titles going on the switch but with that. Catch 'cause yet fucking control if you play that indoctrinated with the with visual based or whatever the fuck it looks beautiful. Looks like you're not an. I'm not one to notice frame rate dips unless it's super super noticeable like fucking cyberpunk but if a game's running like thirty forty frames per second when optimally could run at sixty. That doesn't really mean dick to me as long as i'm having fun So yeah can easily see halo. You take a couple of frames out actually halo doing fine on the switch streaming or not It it's a big game and you can even download each title separately. You don't have to download the all the games at once in the collection the bioshock collection does that where he can download each individually if you buy the collection car so he had no. These are older games. I can definitely see them. Being on the switch i would not be surprised. I think that would be a big get for both companies and just further their relationship together. So i if microsoft ever decides hey fuck it Consoles are in the thing for us anymore they can easily have a home at intendo will. Yeah we'll also like three four three my studio right so like it doesn't matter what console halo is on if we buy microsoft getting money so it just works. I think they'll be fine with that. I yet and that's perfect. i would. I'm not going to buy an xbox. But i miss nassar cheap. I miss my guy. I miss my boy so that works very well for someone like me i. I never had an xbox. I had i had three sixty but i was never into halo. 'cause i just was never into shooters Growing up right now. i'm kinda. I'm dipping my toe a little more into like some of the bigger ones like i just got Bioshock and borderlands. 'cause i hear those are great so i've been going going back on those but yeah i never played halo if.

microsoft Bioshock sixty xbox nintendo both companies each title each thirty forty frames per second both borderlands three intendo couple of frames halo nassar hitman
"thirty forty" Discussed on Make the Grade with Dr. Steven Greene

Make the Grade with Dr. Steven Greene

03:32 min | 2 years ago

"thirty forty" Discussed on Make the Grade with Dr. Steven Greene

"Be unbound dot u. s. so jonathan. Welcome i'm just going to intro it this way. I don't want you to tell your story briefly but with jonathan brings to the table. Which i find is interesting is looked College colleges kind of the path. Right people can go to highschool to figure. I'm going to go to college gonna learn. I'm going to get your career. Jonathan's got a cool sort of alternative path. I'm i'm gonna. Maybe i don't wanna put words in your mouth but why don't you describe what you do who serve Why it's why it's growing at the rate that it is and we'll just take it from there. Yeah we'll just a quick kind of background piece to that is that i think for a long time. College has been what everybody thinks is their ticket to the middle class ticket to a better life and for large time. That was actually true but let things happened and those complicated reasons for that but our to the point now that to get a college degree means to go into typically a serious amount of debt and it also in a world that's changed pretty dramatically from say thirty forty years ago or even twenty years ago in terms of education works and we live in a time where things get disrupted pretty quickly and so what we do at unbound. What i've had the privilege of doing started judicial higher education and then moved into what was at the time considered online education and now maybe a a further turn or we say yet the degree still important. There's some different ways to get a degree but there's something else that's important here that is you need the ability to learn quickly. Need the ability to be able to figure things out quickly. You need the ability to have some experience to kind of know how things work because things move fast and sometimes the people you work for don't even have to kind of pivot quickly to new circumstances.

jonathan Jonathan thirty forty years ago twenty years ago
"thirty forty" Discussed on Paul Pickett Podcast

Paul Pickett Podcast

01:42 min | 2 years ago

"thirty forty" Discussed on Paul Pickett Podcast

"Repeat that they have to pay to play. so what are they make money advertising. That's why radio stations are selling twenty thirty forty fifty dollars slots you know all day long because they have to pay out royalties in a have to pay their employees and they have to stay afloat so it's nothing personal it's strictly business and yet does a lot of internet radio stations. That might play unsan artist but internet radio doesn't work the same way as online internet. All internet radio stations are not paying out royalties once again. All internet radio stations are not paying out royalties ahead on demand radio station. I know this they are all not paying out royalties so if you don't bring listeners to the station more likely than not going to play you and even when a local radio station does pick up a local artist. It starts playing their music if people don't stop in and requesting that song or they don't get online and start requesting however request are done nowadays probably more online than anything. They're not requesting. Your music dinette. Station has no purpose in a reason to continuously play your music over and over and over again. Because i will tell you this much. Radio ain't playing no songs.

twenty thirty forty fifty doll
"thirty forty" Discussed on Real Faith Stories

Real Faith Stories

02:49 min | 2 years ago

"thirty forty" Discussed on Real Faith Stories

"He has to completely control his home through religion or anger orig- or whatever but both of those are artificial. Both of those are just attempts at connection through a dysfunctional pattern. That you're used to you know. Once the revelation hits like it did with this couple how they navigate going from point a. Where they were to point b. where they need to go during that space. How do they navigate through that. Really good question. I think that you do it much. Like you do stepping into a different sport or something that you're learning so i think that one of the things that happens is we we learn what's artificial artificial is actually very temporary. It's temporal so if you think about who god designed he designed us attornal and in five hundred years. We're not gonna have anxiety confusion dysfunction. Codependence is right. That confuse confused our relationships and so my goal. What i try to do with people is not to help them become themselves. It's helped them uncover themselves so when you give them these revelations of who they are and who they're not oftentimes those things become averse to them so they don't want to do them anymore they think. Look man. I can feel when i'm putting on that role. Yeah i can feel when. I'm being fake now. And so essentially it's it's not what you do. It's giving them permission to surrender to they are. And ironically it takes so much more energy to hear and so it's sort of like if i had a ball and chain around my legs and i've learned how to walk hit and run with it and then you take off the ball and chain. Well you don't you don't tell the person. Hey this is how you walk now and this is how you run. They naturally are going to be significantly better than they were before. And they're going to get used to it over time so basically it's just helping them to become themselves and i think god's design is so much more substantive than anything that we've used replace it springs to mind scripture. Were jesus said. My yoke is easy. My burden is light I like that. It makes me think of what you just said that it takes way more energy to not be who you're supposed to be than it does to be right correct and so good. What does that. What does that feel like to you. As an individual or to those whom you've counseled in terms of that energy level how do they experience that something spring to mind well. I think it's always intriguing to me. How much energy people are using and when they start to release those what. I call energy. Drains they start to get their natural energy back because in our subconscious mind. We're using thirty forty. Sixty eighty percent of our energy trying to maintain the facade..

Sixty eighty percent five hundred years thirty forty jesus both one Both couple point things
"thirty forty" Discussed on The My Future Business™ Show

The My Future Business™ Show

04:20 min | 2 years ago

"thirty forty" Discussed on The My Future Business™ Show

"Hi amy today. Let me tell you more about my story. So when you actually see the impact that that has and knowing that in our current school curriculum anywhere in the world we have massive dropout rates lack of engagement all sorts of reasons all sorts of reasons valid. Not mun fact is the air and now you have the technology you can actually bring back at a much much. Higher level accelerate the pace of learning right. Take something that is boring. You can have a boring teacher augment and all of a sudden becomes interesting and funny. Click clearly kids. They're going to learn faster right. Some some immediate tangible benefits for some of these Burgeoning technologies that are starting to have a very very measurable impact. Today i can say how that would be exciting. Just you explaining it in that manner. Made me feel excited about our children's future because at the end of the day to the next generation. They're the ones that we need to look. After and add like to be that flaw in the whirlwind. You know twenty thirty forty years time to say what's going on now. Don't caffeine to the core of today's call. We're going to obviously look at business models and choosing the right one. I think it's important to start off and ask the question. Can anyone with a business idea do a startup is difficult question. I would say yes and no Why do i say yes. Because i would say anyone with a bright idea who is willing has what it takes to execute unequivocally yes i would say no because my experience shows that not everyone is cut out to be an entrepreneur and it all has to do with your resistance to failure and what your tolerance level for failure is because the problem is our brains have been hard wired to consider look failure as a bad thing when in fact..

today Today twenty thirty forty years
"thirty forty" Discussed on Kingdom Family Talks Podcast

Kingdom Family Talks Podcast

03:02 min | 2 years ago

"thirty forty" Discussed on Kingdom Family Talks Podcast

"I don't know how you do with it. But you have these moments in your life. That seems like evans. Silence at some bounce between you and popoff in saw in those moments related. I sometimes call even winter season but sometimes may be a sunset to one season in sunrise in another season. So yeah i get it. You've been through those two right. I think it's important for our our nurse watching to really say okay. Wait a second. This does this can be part of my walk with god is a winter season And what do i do when i don't sense here. God feel by feels like everything's kinda on mute. What do we do how we navigate that. Because i think that's part of our journey with god is having some of that and when that happens not if but when i think it's really important one. Stay in the bible you know. There's other even been times when i've been reading my bible. I stay pretty consistent every day But there have been times when even the bible feels wooden. You know indebted to me. I'm like us. But i i stay steady with it. I don't quit. I don't know maybe i find. Maybe i find some places where i like it a little bit more. I really like psalms. Everybody likes homes. I love. I love luke luke. I love that book and john show. I find books that. I like books in the bible and and just burrow into those and then i take walks. I take walks and i find Inevitably and invariably a walk and talk to god. Give garden earful. But then as i'm walking if it's a thirty forty minute walk then i i often times. We'll find myself sensing god not necessarily in this really direct verbal but just in this the impressions in awareness. And it's really. When i do that i find that it's not the advert conversations but they're very indirect and soft on a impressions when i settle into that there's connection and that's very powerful. It's it's it's there's a sensitivity to it. That i like and calibrates me so that i'm not just looking for god in one way but there's an awareness in my heart. That is more sensitive more tender more attentive israeli cool. Let me ask you a question. Because i was sitting with a young man right before at before this call and actioning hear his story on a luxury hearing people story but then also shared a little bit on my journey in story. And i would say. There's been by tweet conversation that i share in that i've had with god will add need that totally transformed my life. I mean i can go back to some of those my markers and say wow.

thirty forty minute two one season luke luke one way bible show john israeli