One Piece Episode 177
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To read a summary and transcript of this interview, or to find links to all the resources mentioned today and the video of Dr. Sundar walking me through the studies we talk about, visit cultofpedagogy.com, click Podcast, and choose episode 177. To get a weekly email from me about my newest blog posts, podcast episodes, courses and products, sign up for my mailing list at cultofpedagogy.com/subscribe. Thanks so much for listening, and have a great day.
In this episode, Danielle (also known as the Against All Grains Lady) shares her vulnerable and intimate eleven-year journey from suffering to healing, taking back her life by making drastic dietary changes. We also dive into how she managed all of that while being a mom, creative and business owner.
There's no governing body and there's a lot of bullshit out there in the market, about what is and is not sustainable. I think we define it in two forms, right Ingredients should be plant-based, bio-based as much as possible because if it's not bio-based, it's almost certainly petroleum-based. I think we wanna move away from petroleum-derived supply chains as much as possible, both for human health and environmental health. I think the second piece, right, that's what's in the bottle is the packaging. I think there are two elements to this. The first is you wanna shrink the format as much as possible. So if you think about a glass cleaner, you know, your glass cleaner is probably 95 plus percent water. Shipping that water around the country has a real sustainability impact. Is better if you ship, uh, we sell a little zero plastic one-ounce concentrate. Now that's a significantly better sustainability profile than shipping a giant sort of bottle of water around the country.
And so it was the petroleum industry who is, you know, plastic is made from oil, for those who don't know, it was the petroleum industry and the petrochemicals industry, that got the idea for putting the recycling triangle with the different numbers on the bottom of every single piece of plastic, even though the vast majority of that plastic is actually not recyclable. And so it was the industry's idea to basically trick consumers into believing that it's okay to use this forever garbage for single-use applications because no problem I'll just throw it in the recycle bin and I don't have to worry about the impact that I'm having. But that is just a lie. It's called wish cycling, I think. Like I wish it was being recycled, but it's not.
So if you want to dive deeper into how alcohol is neutral, I really encourage you to dive into episode 35 of the podcast, which is all about why you should view it as neutral and why it is neutral. But there is another piece about this that I want to discuss that I really believe makes my approach different.
When I interviewed the guests in this episode, all of them, every one, we spent about 15 minutes, sometimes longer, just commiserating. Connecting. Hanging out. Comparing notes, that sort of thing. And it just so happened that for me for a few of these interviews. My birthday was the day before or a few days before.
Brett: Good question. We had a couple of pieces of gear in there, but it really took off. There was a fellow named Jay Young who's since passed away. He was a young man, valedictorian of the high school, and he decided to take a year off from our two years off from college. He came to my dad and said, \"Hey, I know a little bit about this kind of stuff, audio, and video.\" My dad hired him. My dad didn't know a thing about stereos, or he just knew he wanted to do something on his own. He hired Jay, who started to bring in audio and video equipment or no video. Actually, there were TV stores at the time, but they brought in some amplifiers and turntables and moved in that direction.
Brett: Yes. There are two pieces. That was a screen, a separate screen, and then the big box. Yes. And I'll post that later on so you could see it. But I had scored one of those. Where have we had one of the first in the country This was probably 1980. I called the newspaper, and I had them take a picture of me next to the Advent video beam and a VCR and the article described. This TV is ten times bigger than a 19-inch tv, which is standard at that time. A VCR is something that you can record your own movies or sometimes play movies. The point of that is nobody was tying audio and video together. That was the moment where they integrated audio and video. Surround sound receivers followed from there.
Brett: Well, luckily incomplete. It was damaged but not Christopher Reeve, but pretty close to that same area, the upper-level spinal cord, the higher you go, the higher level, the worse or, the more parts of your body it affects. I was fortunate enough that it didn't completely disassociate or tear the spinal cord, but it bent it enough, so it was damaged. I was in the hospital down there for three months and did learn. I wasn't walking at the time. I couldn't really move either my arms or my legs anything. I had to be fed completely, and I remember to this day being in the hospital, and they brought in a piece of paper, and they said, are you going to need to put an X with your teeth or whatever on here
It was a piece of paper. It said, \"Alright, you are completely and permanently disabled.\" Whoa, that's heavy. I've always had a positive attitude about things, and that was a little tough. After being down there three months, they got me in a loaded me up in an ambulance, and brought me back to Vero Beach and back home again, which was really nice. But it was just a start. I was in a wheelchair. I remember, they set me up on a couch, and I'm sitting there, and I'm like, what do I do next
Brett: It's good. Good like everybody else. Business is booming. It's a challenge now. Every year everything's a little different. You've got the Internet. The products are so difficult to make any money on products. Now people are buying their own stuff. You have the automation products where we used to make a lot of money now. Clients are buying themselves and asking you to piece it together, so that's a challenge, making money on products. Having to morph to service businesses, I think, is in the works for everybody. Don't you agree with that, Ron You're the poster child for that, that you're not selling anything but knowledge and bits, and you've got 60 people working for you and you're uber-successful, and you don't you really don't have any products. I think our industry's going to end up going that way. It is already pretty strong right now.
Another great episode. Would highly recommend that Kate reads The Morland Dynasty by Cynthia Harrold Eagles. A fantastic series which follows the lives of the Morland family from 1400s to 1930s. It is set in York although as the series goes on they do include London and parts of America. They incorporate all kinds if historical events with the characters often in the midst of the action. The early books cover a large number of years but as the series goes on the time covered in each book is shorter. The first one is called the foundling. Oh and there are 36 books in the series.Would also recommend another historical fiction set by Norah Lofts and her House trilogy.
Funimation is an online platform that streams all the English dubs of these iconic latest animes. You can watch the latest episode on this site. If you are a man of culture and prefer watching anime with their original Japanese audio, you can opt for Crunchyroll.
The wait will be over soon and you will get to see the latest episode of your favorite anime. Till then check out our other articles on Omnitos! Till then read our other articles on One Piece, Jujutsu Kaisen, Higurashi, Solo Leveling.
Etiquette, manners, and beyond! In this episode, Nick and Leah answer listener questions about tossing unopened food at hotels, sharing discount tips with friends, entering rooms without knocking, and much more. Please follow us! (We'd send you a hand-written thank you note if we could.)
Nick: ... that we have a bonus episode. So here we go! Our first question is quote, \"Should we toss our unopened food when we're leaving a hotel For example, we bought pickles at the beginning of our trip and forgot they existed, so they were never opened. We don't like to waste food, but at the same time we don't know how to dispose of the pickles. My mom debated leaving them for the housekeeper, but we weren't sure. We came to the conclusion that it would just create more work for them if they didn't want them or couldn't take them, so we decided to toss them ourselves. Was that the right thing to do\" 59ce067264
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