May Podcasts
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Bra gjort av oss! Som lyckades få ur oss saker om alltifrån magdans i Kairo till 90-talisters skeva uppfattning om vuxenskap, Janne Josefssons(?) Norén-moment, att vara dömd till 'above average', Janne Guillou och den stora knäckfrågan - är handling helt dött?
It's gonna be May (när ni hör oss nästa gång)
puss
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The Numerology Forecast for 2023 with the amazing Remington Donovan is HERE! And can we just say WOW! Please grab a pen and paper when listening to this episode, because it is PACKED with information, mystical, magical and spiritual teachings for the year to come and for life really.
Remington is a master numerologist, a mystic and a spiritual teacher. He has over 30 years of experience in tarot and numerology and he is a true wisdom keeper. He has his own podcast The Mystical Artists and he is the author of the book Numerology - A beginner's guide to the spiritual meaning of numbers. His forthcoming book Prosperity Practices: Harnessing the Power of Positive Thinking to Get the Life You Want will be released in May 2023. You can also follow him on Patreon where he offers workshops and wisdom sharing in different membership levels. If you want to know more about numerology and Remington you can also listen to Episode 6 of Spiriturious Podcast where we meet Remington for the first time and dive deep into numerology.
Remington shares his wisdom so generously in this Episode and we dive deep into the NUMBER 7 which is the number for this year as 2+0+2+3 equals 7. We want to start here with a quote from Remington's book Numerology - A beginner's guide to the spiritual meaning of numbers: "The number 7 has a sweet, gentle, caring energy field that goes into a situation and makes everything better, nicer and brighter".
The number 7 basically wants to make things nicer. So this is really the year to elevate everything, elevate your mind, your body, your soul, your surroundings and other people. It is the number of Victory and 7 also holds the energy of prosperity so we talk a lot about that and how to work with theses energies to truly upgrade your life this year. We talk about worthiness and as Remington says "this is the year to get a raise". We explore Venus and her impact this year as she is connected to the number 7, how we can work with her energies to enhance our lives and Remington shares magical teachings on prosperity and charity work which is also a big theme this year. The number seven is an empath and it's all about helping others.
7 is also connected to the Aura and the color green so we also get into that and what it means as well as some Tarot cards which are significant for this year. So, this is an episode you don't want to miss. It holds so many profound teachings on this year and how we can enhance our lives and truly uplevel and elevate our lives to the life we truly want to live.
As Remington says: "7 is the platform for elevation" so let's make this the most elevated year in all areas of life so far together.
If you want to know more about Remington, please check out his website www.themysticalarts.com, on Patreon and listen to his podcast here and on instagram you find him at @themysticalarts. As we mention in the episode he has a 2 hour workshop on the 7 year where he really goes deep into these teachings and everything we talk about, please check that out here.
We are so extremely grateful for all of you listeners and we look so much forward to this 7 year together with you!
Peace & Love
Emma and Josefina
Sound: Tex, produktion & musik: Alvin Wetterholm och Eskil Lindh Hedegård, Digital Musikproduktion Storuman
Artwork: Mikaela Aare
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I detta avsnitt går vi igenom händelserna före, under & efter mordet på Adriana 12 år den 2 Augusti 2020.
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De magiska stenarnas förbannelse. Ylva läser vidare i den gamla dagboken. Oturen som drabbat P Scully och skeppets besättning verkar bero på stenarna de begravt tillsammans med sin förra kapten.
Lyssna på alla avsnitt i Sveriges Radio Play.
Radioagent May från Alingsås tror nu därför att även dödskalletjuven är i fara. Hen måste varnas!
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Ring telefonsvararen; 08-7842929 och tala om vad du heter, hur gammal du är och var du bor.
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Stå på dig - det finns effektiv hjälp att få vid atopiskt eksem!
Idag välkomnar vi Pontus Jonsson som arbetar både som hudläkare och forskare vid Karolinska Universitetssjukhuset i Stockholm.Han guidar oss på ett mycket enkelt sätt om vad atopiskt eksem är och vad orsaken kan vara, samt hur vårt immunförsvar är inblandat i sjukdomen.
AtopikerPodden produceras av Sanofi.
MAT-SE-2200386 (1.0) May 2022
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The Swedish podcast Nördic knitting met knitwear designer Ella Gordon, Lerwick, in May 2022.
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Nytt avsnitt! Och vi är extra glada att kunna presentera en intervju med Ella Gordon – en av de starkast lysande stjärnorna på Shetlands stickhimmel. Inte helt oväntat kommer vi in på hur det är att verka med den särpräglande sticktraditionen som grund. Intressant och spännande! I det här avsnittet på svenska gör vi en sammanfattning av vårt samtal. Vill du höra hela intervjun lyssnar du också på det engelska avsnittet.
A summary in Swedish of our interview with knitwear designer Ella Gordon from May 2022.
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Tänk om din hud skulle kännas hela tiden!
Välkommen till vårt 5:e avsnitt där Linnea gästar oss ända ifrån Bangalore/Indien.
Ta del av ett samtal om tillhörighet, mental styrka, acceptans, vikten av att veta sina triggers ihop med ett i grunden mycket positivt mindset - trots atopiskt eksem sedan barnsben!AtopikerPodden produceras av Sanofi.
MAT-SE-2200386 (1.0) May 2022
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Warar iyo Barnaamijyo Af Soomali ah
Waxaa mar kale caadi noqotay in siyaasiyiintu ay albbaabada garaacaan inta lagu jiro ololaha doorashada. Toogashadii 47-aad ee sannadka oo geeri horseedda ayaa makhribnimadii khamiistii xalay ka dhacday faras-magaalada xaafadda Haninge.
Shirkadda diyaaradaha ee SAS ayaa khasaartay 1.9 biyan oo koron intii u dhexeeysay May illaa Julay.
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Hello Interactors,
The next couple episodes will be a little off beat as I’m coming to you from the east coast of the United States. It’s time to deliver our little birdies from the nest so they may build their own. Dorm room nesting is a common sight this time of year among many young human adults seeking knowledge and independence. It can be observed in the towering cities of New York City and the smallest lowland wooded enclaves of Waltham, Massachusetts.
For this momentous trip I’m listening to a book about a young man who launched to places further away than this. It’s a book I wish I had consumed long before now – The Invention of Nature by historian Andrea Wulf. It tells the tale of a man few have heard of but have most likely have heard the name – Humboldt. Alexander von Humboldt. His name graces more geographic places, plants, and animals around the world than any other. That’s because he was the first person to travel the world scientifically articulating what traditional Indigenous knowledge keepers have known for millennia – that all of nature is connected by an intricate web we now call an ecosystem.
Born in Germany in 1769, he was the most celebrated scientist of his time. Upon his most famous and influential trip to South America, in his twenties, he observed how Spanish colonialism had ravaged the land. Acres of native vegetation had been cut and burned to make way for monoculture cash crops like sugar cane, wheat, and corn where all profits were then sent to the Spanish monarchy. Streams and rivers had been diverted to water these thirsty crops leaving lakes, ponds, and subterranean reservoirs dry. Local plants and animals, including Indigenous populations, were suffering as a result.
The local Spaniards and Creoles believed there must be a leak in the earth causing these conditions, but it was Humboldt, through meticulous geographic, geological, and meteorological observation, who determined it was the crops that had caused the devastation. He surmised that between the increased temperatures caused by the loss of trees and vegetation (that naturally cool and release moisture into the air) and the drying up and hardening of the soil (thus depleting the earth of groundwater) that significant damage was being done to the area.
He posited that such destruction at larger scales around the world may alter climatic patterns. He introduced the idea of human induced climate change in 1800. He further observed that these negative effects originated with infective colonialism of European and American profit seeking imperialist machines that relied heavily on the abduction and trade of human slaves from Africa and local Indigenous populations to work the fields of these monocultural crops.
Governments and corporations didn’t just ignore Humboldt’s warnings, they accelerated the pace of production and destruction. That insistence continues to this day as countries and corporations fight for access to natural resources and cheap labor – far out of the reaches of complicit eyes and ears – to feed the beast of rampant worldwide consumerism. As Humboldt warned, over 200 years ago, at the peril of earth’s resources and their interconnected web of life. You can’t say we weren’t warned.
Alexander von Humboldt remained a harsh critic of colonialism, capitalism, and slavery until the day he died. He witnessed firsthand the early devastating impact greed was having on the planet and its inhabitants – most especially Black and Indigenous people. Humboldt was a heartfelt man, but his true love was science. He abhorred politics and politicians though remained popular among them all, except Napoleon.
Thomas Jefferson was particularly enamored with Humboldt. They shared a common affinity and thirst for botanical, astronomical, and geographical knowledge. Humboldt shared with Jefferson all he knew of South America and Mexico who was starved by the Spanish of any information at all. While he shared in the spirit of two science loving naturalist friends, that knowledge turned out to be instrumental in helping Jefferson, and the United States, increase their imperial standing in the world and its widespread ecologically damaging capitalistic dominance. Humboldt endeared himself to Jefferson mostly because he was impressed with Jefferson’s commitment to liberty.
Though he disapproved of Jefferson’s adherence to slavery, he was wary of criticizing Jefferson directly for fear of disenfranchising their friendship. However, his diary, and the diary of others, reveals he did so in private to Jefferson’s friends and colleagues. Some history scholars criticize Humboldt for not using these opportunities to sway the opinions of these powerful men, but Humboldt believed science should rise above politics and the best way to share science was to share it with everyone who would listen regardless of their political or governmental affiliation.
Humboldt worked tirelessly, day and night, wherever he happened to be living. Scientific luminaries and academics could not understand how a single man could be so well versed in so many subjects, be seen in so many places on a given day or night, while continuing to discover new insights about the world – all with boundless energy. He spoke so fast and on so many topics, in three languages, that people said one could learn in two hours of listening to Humboldt what would take months to master on their own.
He was a slight and nimble man with thin delicate hands. These attributes served him well squeezing into caverns and mines and placing sensitive miniscule blossoms into tiny glass vials. But he also had the strength and determination to endure extreme altitudes climbing rocky trails with shoes ripped to shreds. Upon total failure, he would hike barefoot. With his feet sometimes bleeding, he would stop every few hundred meters to take measurements with his barometer, altimeter, and sextant while collecting rock and plant specimens, drawing diagrams, and illustrating landscapes. It was he who first speculated on plate tectonics two hundred years before their full understanding by observing common plant species and geology between, say, a western coast of one continental land mass and the eastern coast of another.
It's unfortunate that one of the most intriguing, intelligent, and ecologically committed scientists to have ever lived, who inspired everyone from Charles Darwin to Henry David Thoreau, eventually succumbed to the realities of endless European wars and political turmoil. These ordeals limited his travels to other lands he desperately wanted to visit, explore, and further connect his web of knowledge and the web of life.
Given his broad and groundbreaking studies, travel, and international fame makes one wonder why Humboldt is not a household name today as it once was in the 1800s despite being in countless scientific books, journals, and maps. Is it that the complex connections and relationships that make life possible and sustainable are too difficult to teach or comprehend? That can’t explain why Newton or Einstein are so popular. Maybe it is just easier to teach the memorization of the scientific facts of biology and physics and the strict classification schemes of rocks, plants, and animals, than the rich interdependent interactions on which each of them relies.
Or perhaps we’ve grown ambivalent. Have we grown too comfortable to care about the workings of the world? Maybe Humboldt’s ideas are too threatening to the very institutions of colonialism, unbridled capitalism, and the over exploitation of natural and human resources he warned everyone of. Has overt capitalism made us too comfortable, complacent, and complicit? Perhaps those in power think it best not to perpetuate the ideas of a man critical of those systems that maintain the power of few, the comfort for some, and the education of many.
Napoleon thought so. He tried to have Humboldt banished from Paris, the heartbeat of scientific discovery and individual liberties at the time, suspecting him a subversive threat to Napoleonic domination. After all, it was politics and power struggles by the Napoleonic Wars that interrupted Humboldt’s continued quest to document, communicate, and share the scientific knowledge of ecosystems; the roots of which exist in traditional indigenous knowledge colonists squelched, shunned, or stole. Perhaps the same power and politics that held Humboldt back continue to hold us back today.
But we’ve had over 200 years to adjust course and have done nothing. Is it too late? I think not. Besides, there’s too much at stake for us all to remain ambivalent. If you haven’t already, I highly recommend this book. May it mark the beginning of your own journey. Let’s all follow in the footsteps of Alexander von Humboldt and share with our web of connections the ecological web connecting all of life.
This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit interplace.io -
Är det här symtom på astma?
I det här avsnittet välkomnar vi Annica Nilsson som sedan tonåring varit drabbad av allergier och en mildare form av astma. Lyssna på Annica´s berättelse om hur man faktiskt kan må så mycket bättre om man har rätt kunskap och verktyg för sin astma.AtopikerPodden produceras av Sanofi.
MAT-SE-2200386 (1.0) May 2022
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The poem "Don't Chase Me" read by the author himself, Caalaa Hayiluu Abaataa. Caalaa was jailed and tortured in Maekelawi, the notorious police station in Ethiopia in 2011, for writing poetry about the Oromo people who suffers oppression by the Ethiopian government. He now lives in exile in Sweden. Read his story here: http://www.untoldstoriesonline.com/my...
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The reading is filmed during Poesi på liv och död – exilen den verkliga utmaningen (Poetry on life and death – With the exile as the real challenge), an event by Stockholm University. May 10, 2016 at Fanfaren Kultur Farsta, Stockholm, Sweden.
https://youtu.be/QM1i8PEUQsE
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Patrik och Fredrik har blivit vansinniga och börjar ge sig ut på stan för att hitta delar till en blivande modern vän. I detta avsnitt diskuterar vi hur psykisk ohälsa porträtteras i film och populärkultur.
Dagens film är: May (2002)
Unga May är inte riktigt som andra tjejer. Mycket av det beror på hennes svåra uppväxt, som gjort att hon aldrig fått veta den verkliga innebörden av vänskap och kärlek. Hon arbetar på en veterinärklinik och bor tillsammans med sin enda ”riktiga” vän – en docka som hon fick av sin mor som liten. Arbetskamraten Polly börjar utan större framgång att flörta med May, men hon har nu fått upp ögonen för den mystiske Adam som dyker upp utanför hennes arbete.
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A bit late to the feast but here it is all the same. The month of May was packed with gaming news and we will as always talk about some of them. Biggest ones in there? What is happening at Ubisoft and what is this LudoNarraCon? Also is Sonic fast or what? Please join us!
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On May 4th, 2022, the Faculty of Humanities' honorary doctor of 2021, Professor Penelope J.E. Davies, gave a lecture in Lund as part of a delayed celebration of her and all the other honorary doctors of 2020 and 2021. Professor Davies is introduced by Dr Lovisa Brännstedt.
Recorded at LUX.
Produced by Martin Degrell.
Music by HoliznaRAPS. - もっと表示する