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  • My Random Thoughts Podcast
  • A User’s Manual for the Human Experience
  • Let’s Argue! This or That?
  • Free to be Honest
  • MetsMusings with Gary Mack
  • The INFJ Musician That’s A Libra And Stuff Podcast
  • The Inner Circle Podcast w/ Pauliojr & CJ’s Info
  • The Fight To Follow
  • You Be Trippin’
  • Working In Music Sucks
  • WorklifeIndia
  • Perfect Stranger Things
  • Grrrls Like Us: Grrrl Talk
  • Talk Time With S.A.P
  • Dyslexia Explored
  • Turkish Language
  • Les Talk
  • The Below Deck After Show Podcast
  • Knobody Knows-it-some
  • Mohawk Valley, The by REID, W. Max
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  • Coming Up

    My Random Thoughts Podcast

    My Random Thoughts Podcast

    by

    Since Apr 15, 2019 16:14 UTC

    The Side Alpha Leadership Podcast explores leadership in all fields of work. Guests talk about leading people and making a positive mark in their hearts and minds, while creating a cohesive team to accomplish the desired goals of an organization

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  • Coming Up

    A User’s Manual for the Human Experience

    A User’s Manual for the Human Experience

    by

    Since May 20, 2009 15:57 UTC

    Learn to block and delete idiots from your life. Remove addiction to bad people, drugs, alcohol, government and more (WITHOUT MEETINGS!) Then use your new-found time and energy to MAKE A LIVING DOING WHAT YOU LOVE, like the author does. A USER’S MANUAL FOR THE HUMAN EXPERIENCE is a libertarian manifesto for getting healthy, getting brilliant, maximizing potential and changing the world. WHAT PEOPLE ARE SAYING ABOUT THIS BOOK: “Part intellectual memoir, part self-help book. Michael W. Dean’s Practical Emotional Self-Defense (PESD) techniques flow from a wealth of life experiences, both positive and negative. ‘The Only Two Rules in Life’ have some radical, refreshing implications.” –Jason Sorens, Ph.D. (Assistant Professor, University at Buffalo, SUNY), founder of the Free State Project “You owe yourself the opportunity to step outside your comfort zone and put yourself in the court with this modern-day Socrates.” –Pastor Kenneth V. Blanchard, Sr., author of Black Man with a Gun “I knew Michael Dean back in the day, when he was a 19-year-old punk rocker with an appetite for self-destruction. I honestly didn’t think he’d live to be 30. But guess what? It turns out that Michael isn’t just a survivor; he’s a survivor who’s learned how to enjoy life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness after recovery. For everyone who wants to know how to stay sane, develop a great work ethic, and make a mark on the world, Michael Dean has a great story to tell.” –Professor Michael Bérubé, Ph.D. (Penn State), author of What’s Liberal About the Liberal Arts? and Life as We Know It ABOUT THE AUTHOR: An anagram for “Michael Dean” is “Deal Machine,” and that truly fits. Dean never sits on his laurels, and he’s constantly working hard and well in new directions. Michael Wareham Dean is the author of the books “$30 Film School”, “$30 Music School”, “$30 Writing School”, “Starving in the Company of Beautiful Women”, “The Simple Pleasures of a Complex Girl”, “DIY NOW! Digital Audio” and “YouTube: an Insider’s Guide to Climbing the Charts.” He runs the libertarian pop-culture blog, Stink Fight. Michael directed the films “Hubert Selby Jr: It/ll Be Better Tomorrow” and “D.I.Y. or DIE: How to Survive as an Independent Artist.” Michael played guitar in the band The Beef People. He sang and played bass in Baby Opaque and Bomb (Warner Brothers). Michael W. Dean and his wife Debra Jean Dean are both professional voiceover artists, and also run The Nestlandia Institute, a think tank. They live in an undisclosed location in Southern California with their three cats. They plan to move to a farm in rural Wyoming this fall.

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  • Coming Up

    Let’s Argue! This or That?

    Let’s Argue! This or That?

    by

    Since Oct 24, 2021 05:27 UTC

    What’s up, everyone! This podcast is about to blow your mind! We will compare two subjects on the same topics and will express our reasons why “this” is better than “that! You don’t want to miss this!

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  • Coming Up

    Free to be Honest

    Free to be Honest

    by

    Since Oct 13, 2020 00:11 UTC

    A show that helps men live more honest and healthy lives.

    Intro [00:00:00]

    Picture yourself walking down the sidewalk. You’re heading home for dinner and you don’t want to be late, so you take out your phone to check the time. And in that split second, your foot catches on a break in the sidewalk. Your whole world starts to flip and by instinct you catch yourself before smashing your face on the ground. You get up, but your hands are pretty scraped up. You’re flustered and your heart is racing.

    How would you feel in that moment? What would you do? What would be the very next thing you would do? Of course, everyone is different, but I believe you would respond in one of two ways: one which is a healthy response and one which is not.

    Today, we’re going to explore two roads. One is the road of shame and the other is the road of change. And I want you to ask yourself which one you tend to take. The first step to walking a better road is recognizing the options available to you. So let’s jump in. You’re listening to the Free To Be Honest Podcast.

    “The Uneven Path” [00:01:42]

    I want to share a poem I wrote several months ago that helped me discover and think through these two roads, these two ways to interpret and process a moment where you look like a fool. I call it “The Uneven Path”.

    Every day, I put my best face on. Take courage, try to look professional. Like, “Look at me, look how I’ve made it!” But I haven’t. You see, I don’t have it all together. Please, don’t be confused by the confusion I create.

    Why is it so humiliating to stumble in public? Stumbling reveals the uneven ground, the obstacles so many trips over, but I’m worried that my stumbling through life won’t show that life is hard, but rather that I am hopeless, weak, incapable. Like the uneven ground isn’t to blame, but rather my lack of foresight. Like how could I have been so foolish?

    But we’re all blind until we see. We are all trying until we succeed. I am not to blame. I am not to blame for moving with purpose through the shadows. And it is that very stumbling that unites the two of us in spirit and purpose.

    When my balance is shaken and my hands scraped concrete like emergency landings, and I look around to see who’s watching, I have a choice.

    My eyes swell with tears as they fixate on faces, looking for the laugh of my third grade bully to pour out of their open mouths. But my words wait. They wait for the me that sits on the bench beside the wildflowers. The me with eyes closed, feeling the breeze on my face and gently through my hair. The me that holds my third grade class photo in his hand rather than his heart, rather than his gnashed and broken teeth.

    I have grown. From a boy with a forced smile posing for a photo, to a man in his thirties, smiling naturally, posing for no one, to a scuffed mess on the ground with a decision to make, a decision as to which me I will be in this moment.

    And so I stand and say words that are simple, but not easy.

    “Someone should really take care of that and even ground. And that someone should be me and you, for we are all susceptible to fall.”

    The Road of Shame [00:05:07]

    There’s two responses you can have after tripping on an uneven sidewalk, two directions to take: the road of shame and the road of change.

    The road of shame looks like this. Immediately after tripping, you look around for anyone who might have seen you trip. It doesn’t matter who they are. A complete stranger who you’ve never seen before and will likely never see again. But you care what they think. You are afraid that they’ll laugh at you and you consider yourself a fool for tripping in the first place. You shouldn’t have been looking at your phone, you tell yourself. You feel like such an idiot.

    Why do you respond like this? Why do you care what a complete stranger thinks or how they react? Why do you feel ashamed? It’s because this moment of tripping is a mirror moment. What do I mean by a mirror moment?

    A mirror moment is what I call a situation that looks or feels very similar to a painful memory from your past and that elicits the same reaction in you that the original did because of its similarity. For me, tripping on the sidewalk and looking around to see if anyone laughs feels just like times in elementary school when kids would laugh at me after I made a mistake.

    I think of the numerous times I played softball in PE class. I was not athletic and didn’t intend to be, I hated softball. So when it was my turn to go to bat, I inevitably struck out. But I didn’t stop trying. To be sure, there were kids that did, but I wasn’t one of them. Every time I went up to bat, I honestly tried to hit the ball. I wanted to succeed, but I still failed. And every time I did, I heard laughter behind me from kids mocking me about how ridiculous I looked trying to hit the ball. And from the kids who actually cared about the game, I got groans and sighs after each failure. Similar to walking down the street as an adult and tripping on the sidewalk. I look just as ridiculous trying to catch myself and keep my balance as I did swinging that bat. I should’ve seen the uneven sidewalk and avoided it, I tell myself, just as I should’ve been more capable at playing softball. If I was, I could have avoided this humiliation. I look around to see if anyone is laughing at me just like those kids were decades ago.

    It’s a mirror moment. I’ve been laughed at in situations like this before, and so I’ve been conditioned to look for it now.

    Ultimately I’m struggling with shame. In some sense, I feel like I deserve to be laughed at. I should’ve seen it coming, but I didn’t, so the laughter is warranted. I feel like I made a mistake. It’s my fault. I’m incapable. And I’m worth being laughed at despite how unpleasant it feels.

    The Road of Change [00:08:41]

    But what if it wasn’t a mistake on my part? What if I’m not to blame for my tripping? What if I’m not at fault because there’s no fault to be given? What if I’m just as likely as anyone to trip on this sidewalk? What if I tripped not because of a mistake I made or some deeply-rooted inability to handle life, but rather because something is wrong with the world around me?

    If I saw it that way, then I may not feel any shame at all. I wouldn’t be focused on myself and my perceived flaws or emotional pain. And that would free up my focus for other things. I would be free to question the existence of this break in the sidewalk; question why it’s here, what caused it, why it hasn’t been fixed and what can be done about it now so that no one else trips on it like I just did.

    This is the road of change. It’s a generative approach to the problem, one based on the truth of the current moment. It examines the world with curiosity and empathy. It creates new ideas. It’s a position of strength and potential. It’s a way of being that leads to change and a better world.

    On the road of change, I don’t assume the problem is internal. I don’t assume that things are my fault. I don’t consciously or unconsciously pull up past hurts or a cruel view of myself to explain what happened. I look with clear eyes and try to see the situation for what it really is. The sidewalk is broken. It’s a hazard. Distracted or not, I’m not solely to blame for my tripping. There is an external problem in the world that contributed to my situation.

    Now, should I have been paying more attention instead of looking at my phone? Perhaps. But on the road of change, my moment of distractedness is just that. It’s a moment. Nothing more. It’s not an indication of my incapability or worthlessness.

    And because I’m not drowning in my shame, I can more easily access reserves of power within myself to affect the world around me. Maybe I can go buy some orange spray paint and mark the sidewalk so other people don’t trip, too. Maybe I can contact someone within the city government that manages the sidewalks and bring it to their attention.

    But this strength to change the world is lost when shame gets involved. When we’re drowning in shame, there’s no strength to affect our environment and there’s no strength to find healing. There’s only pain, felt and refelt, over and over again. So not only do I suffer the same pain again, but the world misses out on the positive change I could bring about.

    You may be thinking, “Okay, Andrew. I, I know I’m on the road of shame and I have been for a long time. How do I get off this road?” I’ve found that the fork in the road between shame and change splits at the junction of my perceived identity; what I believe about myself.

    Do I believe that I’m strong and capable, as I truly am? Or do I see myself as those mean-spirited kids did on the softball field? Do I believe their laughter was warranted? Do I believe I deserve to be laughed at? Do I believe my identity is defined by my inability to play a sport or to walk down the sidewalk without tripping?

    Or do I believe that I am here now in this moment with family that loved me and values that matter to me, with abilities that push me forward and a mind to discern truth, with memories of joyful moments and dreams of hard-won accomplishments?

    You are not your mistakes. You are not what their laughter claims.

    You walk on clouds above it all, driven by a heart fully alive, like a locomotive barreling and raging forward. It pulls both the weight of your failures and the far-heavier weight of your dreams upward through life. It’s destination? That wondrous place where you will see your dreams come to fruition and your failures sent out to pasture.

    I wish I could tell you that choosing the better road of change is as simple as just choosing it, but that’s not what I’ve found. For me, it feels like a tall ridge runs between those two paths. It’s far easier to stay on the road of shame, for when you try to leave it, gravity pulls you back down toward that familiar pain.

    But I can tell you that walking the road of change and leaving your shame behind is worth all the work in the world. It’s worth continuing to push against that ridge, to climb it’s steep slope. And the more you embrace who you really are, the more you’ll see that you were built to scale that wall.

    Outro [00:15:44]

    Thanks for tuning in! I hope you found this discussion helpful. If you’d like to be notified about new episodes when they release, you can sign up for the Free To Be Honest newsletter at FreeToBeHonest.com. In each of those, you’ll also get a behind-the-scenes look at how I create the podcast and an early look at an episode that I’m still working on.

    You can also connect with me on Instagram at Andrew Pethoud. That’s P-E-T-H-O-U-D. Feel free to DM me. I would love to meet you and hear what you think of the show.

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  • Coming Up

    MetsMusings with Gary Mack

    MetsMusings with Gary Mack

    by

    Since Jun 9, 2017 01:13 UTC

    An un-official un-affliated weekly podcast offering a recap and analysis of New York’s National League baseball team. Gary Mack brings his knowledge of the game and passion for the Orange and Blue to all baseball fans. Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/metsmusings/support

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  • Coming Up

    The INFJ Musician That’s A Libra And Stuff Podcast

    The INFJ Musician That’s A Libra And Stuff Podcast

    by

    Since Sep 30, 2020 17:00 UTC

    Musician, artists and creative entity, Marco Restrepo, opens up about life, music and all things that go through his mind in this candid podcast series.

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  • Coming Up

    The Inner Circle Podcast w/ Pauliojr & CJ’s Info

    The Inner Circle Podcast w/ Pauliojr & CJ’s Info

    by

    Since Aug 21, 2019 01:16 UTC

    The Inner Circle Podcast consists of two cousins who have known each other their entire lives. We discuss Video Games, Movies, TV Shows, the ever-changing technology, and just mess around in general. This is a podcast to be loved by all! Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/innercirclepodcast/support

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  • Coming Up

    The Fight To Follow

    The Fight To Follow

    by

    Since Apr 18, 2020 04:08 UTC

    There’s no denying that the Christian life is a fight, but sometimes we find ourselves fighting fights that we were never meant to fight in the first place. Jesus invites us to follow Him and that means leaving the other fights behind.

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  • Coming Up

    You Be Trippin’

    You Be Trippin’

    by

    Since Aug 24, 2022 02:19 UTC

    Travel stories of faraway places from people who went there. Heavy on experience and light on guide.

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  • Coming Up

    Working In Music Sucks

    Working In Music Sucks

    by

    Since Sep 22, 2022 23:03 UTC

    The show where we talk about what sucks about working in music so you don’t have the same problems.

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  • Coming Up

    WorklifeIndia

    WorklifeIndia

    by

    Since Nov 9, 2018 14:55 UTC

    Live from Delhi, WorklifeIndia reflects on money, work, family, business and finance.

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  • Coming Up

    Perfect Stranger Things

    Perfect Stranger Things

    by

    Since Jan 10, 2022 11:00 UTC

    HBO’s House of the Dragon is covered by an academic and a stand-up comic. Formerly the hosts of the Electric Bookaloo pod, Steve and Anthony talk about the most compelling elements of each episode. Also featured: professors of medieval studies who are experts on the real history that inspired the series.

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  • Coming Up

    Grrrls Like Us: Grrrl Talk

    Grrrls Like Us: Grrrl Talk

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    Since Apr 21, 2021 03:53 UTC

    Grrrls Like Us is an intersectional punk rock platform that touches on music, pressing topics in society, and everything in between. The Grrrls Like Us podcast episodes can also be found on Youtube, where Kanan and Raven talk to prominent figures in the scene.

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  • Coming Up

    Talk Time With S.A.P

    Talk Time With S.A.P

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    Since Mar 23, 2021 20:16 UTC

    Two best friends will talk about what going around the world and what they think about the current situation. They will also have guests and joke around and have fun in the podcast. Everything you are looking towards a podcast will be on the talk time with S.A.P.

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  • Coming Up

    Dyslexia Explored

    Dyslexia Explored

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    Since May 21, 2018 15:43 UTC

    Sharing dyslexia stories from all stages and walks of life to help parents of Tween/Teens with Dyslexia find practical and helpful tips.

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  • Coming Up

    Turkish Language

    Turkish Language

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    Since Feb 16, 2021 19:42 UTC

    Podcast by More than merhaba

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  • Coming Up

    Les Talk

    Les Talk

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    Since Jul 27, 2019 11:00 UTC

    Join Charl and Aislinn on a journey of self-discovery, sexuality, relationships, and gender. Through weekly candid discussions, the self-proclaimed “professional lesbians” find themselves joined by special LGBTQ+ guests to share their truths.

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  • Coming Up

    The Below Deck After Show Podcast

    The Below Deck After Show Podcast

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    Since Sep 19, 2016 22:00 UTC

    Below Deck is HUGE FRANCHISE! So we gotta cover ALL OF IT! Join us for the AFTERBUZZ TV Below Deck After Show where we break down every episode of Below Deck! From Mediterranean to Yacht Sailing and more! Join us for weekly discussions, tea, and news! Subscribe and comment!

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  • Now

    Mohawk Valley, The by REID, W. Max

    Mohawk Valley, The by REID, W. Max

    by

    Since Jan 1, 1970 00:00 UTC

    An in-depth view and early history of the Mohawk Valley in upper New York state, covering the time period of 1609-1780. This historical piece covers that part of the Mohawk Valley between Schenectady and Rome, NY.The narrator hopes that the listener understands that a best effort has been made in pronunciation of many names within this work; particularly those of the Mohawks, Iroquois, Huron, and Mohicans; as well as the French and Dutch. (Summary by Roger Melin)

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