Avsnitt
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In this Episode you will learn about:
How parents survive and thrive after the losing a child The power of ritual to sustain loved ones through and after pending death The importance of community The role of movement in navigating grief Tay-Sachs and how to screen for this disease The work of E-motion The work of Dr. Joanne Cacciatore The work of JScreen at Emory University -
In this Episode you will learn about:
How care shapes all our lives How suffragists and Black feminists made remarkable gains in care through the Social Housekeepers Movement Our addiction to independence and how it prevents us from prioritizing care Our “careselves” vs. our “workselves” America’s bootstrap myth and how it hurts our ability to care The ramifications of the blind spot toward care How you can join the fight for paid leave and other key facets of a care infrastructure for America -
Saknas det avsnitt?
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In this Episode you will learn:
• The real meaning of philanthropy • The 5 Ts of being a philanthropist • Surprising ways to get your kids of any age excited about philanthropy • How the Lilly Family School of Philanthropy, the world’s first philanthropy school, leverages data to help us all understand why giving back is so important to changing the world for the better • Why we need philanthropy more than ever -
Dr. Melita Stancil
Founder/Clinical Psychologist, Dr. Melita Psychological Services Guest lecturer, Division of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Columbia University Medical Center and York college. Former clinical psychologist, Child Mind Institute Former Lead Clinician, Ellen Horne Education/Degrees MA and Ph.D In Clinical Community Psychology from the University of South Carolina -
Founder of the Village Well Educator Certified Positive Parenting Educator Education/Degree University of California, Davis
In this episode you will learn:
What it means to “decolonize” your parenting How to leverage the wisdom of your cultural background in your parenting Why it is important to interrupt intergenerational pain to create healthy, thriving families How to apply positive parenting principles to common and not-so-common parenting challenges -
Chris Balme
Founding Principal at founding principal at Hakuba International School, Japan Co. Founder and Former Head of The Millennium School Founder and Director of Argonaut Ashoka fellowship recipient Author Education/Degree: B.A., University of Pennsylvania B.S., Wharton School of Management. -
Navigating conversations about identity, diversity, and justice can be fraught with linguistic traps and emotional landmines. On this episode we learn from Kenji Yoshino, Professor of Law at NYU School of Law and Faculty Director of the school's Meltzer Center for Diversity, Inclusion and Belonging how to have nuanced and empathetic conversations about our differences, whether in our workplaces, our social circles, or in our homes and how to teach our children this skill so that they can thrive in a diverse and complex world.
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Studies have shown that 69-90% of us will experience at least one serious traumatic event during our lifetimes. The sudden death of a loved one. A debilitating illness. A natural disaster. War. What differentiates us? How we respond; how resilient we are. Our guest today has found that extremely resilient people share the 10 attributes we discuss in this episode. As we reflect on the personal and global challenges we have all faced in 2023 and look forward to the new year, understanding how we can not only become more resilient but teach our children to develop resilience, is undoubtedly one of the most important lessons we can learn.
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On October 24, 2023 a bipartisan coalition of 32 US. Attorneys Generals filed a Federal lawsuit against Meta alleging that the company knowingly designed and deployed harmful features at Instagram, Facebook, and its other social media platforms to induce young children and teenagers into addictive and compulsive social media use contributing significantly to a youth mental health crisis. The suit also alleges that Meta has repeatedly misled the public about the substantial dangers of its platform's use. But in 2021 before these lawsuits, an anonymous employee of Facebook filed a series of complaints with the US. Federal government, claiming that Facebook had been misleading the public and investors about the impact of its services on the mental health of children and young adults. That employee later revealed herself to be Frances Hogan, and she is our guest today.
As we enter the holiday season where our kids are likely to spend more time than usual on screens, this conversation is more important than ever.
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There are over 300,000 transgender children under 13 years of age in the United States.and every single one of them is under attack. Join me in conversation with Jodie Patterson, former Chair of the Human Right Campaign Foundation Board, author, activist and mom to a transgender child where we explore the transformative privilege of parenting transgender children and why fighting for their rights and protecting their ability to thrive is non-negotiable if we want a future where all our children will thrive.
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“Some of issues parents expected to confront when their child was in their early twenties. have been pushed later.
I think it's safe to say that many parents expected to still be providing some financial assistance to their child when their child was in their early twenties. Don't think that many parents expected to be doing it when their child was 30, and I think that from the young person's point of view they probably expect to be getting some help from their parents while they were still in college and right out of college, but I'm sure that they didn't expect that to be having to go to their mother and father and ask for financial help on the over 30 or 32, and that is going on today. And so I think the shifting timetable of the transition to adulthood has really made this an important topic and parents are perplexed”
Distinguished University Professor andLaura H. Carnell Professor of Psychology and Neuroscience, Temple University
Education/Degree: AB in Psychology, Vassar College Ph.D. in Human Development and Family Studies Cornell University -
" The truth is Congress has so completely failed. They Haven't passed a Privacy law since Mark Zuckerberg was in diapers. It’s pathetic. Shame on them! This has reshaped everybody's lives, and they just sat there, and because of their political partisanship, the fact There's not a federal privacy, law, or Laws regulating social media platforms is a joke. Absolute abject failure of our political system in the twenty-first century."
Founder and CEO, Common Sense Media Co-Founder, Center for the next generation Education/Degree BA, Stanford University J.D., Stanford Law School -
'When I work with the athletes and talk about toolboxes, I think helping them build tool belts that give them the arsenal. So when? Not if but when the headwind blows. Oh, I got this! I have agency over my destiny. I get to decide what's next for me, (remove Petal's sound) Yes, I'm gonna need help along the way and support, of course, but I'm not gonna let any setback, not making the team or that coach not liking me, determine my future. "
Peak Performance Coach Motivational Speaker Co-host: “Raising Athletes” Podcast Education/Degree: BA, College of William and Mary -
"Complex care typically refers to the children at the very tip, who are the sickest and the book is really written to be more, all inclusive, because many children, while they may not be complex, they have chronic health conditions which cause a lot of increased work for their families. "
Director of Pediatrics at the Atria Institute in New York City Education/Degree: BA, Harvard University MD, Vagelos College of physicians and Surgeons, Columbia University -
“The ability to introspect to work through problems. This is one of the reasons we are so successful as a species. The ability to introspect is how we learn from our problems and plan for the future is what allows us in part to build spaceships that literally land SUVs nowadays on other planets like Mars. but, on the other hand, people struggle enormously with introspection to the point that they become overly angry, anxious, and depressed. And so we've got this remarkable tool. but it's really unwieldy. Sometimes it helps us. Sometimes it hurts us."
Professor, University of Michigan's Psychology Department and Russ school of Business Founder and Director of the Emotion and Self Control Lab, University of Michigan Education/Degree: Ph.D. Columbia University BA University of Pennsylvania -
"Well, if we break money down to its simplest components, right? And how we handle it, what do we do with our money. We really do 3 things right. We spend it.
we save it, we give it away. And if you think about what actually goes into the decisions around each of those you know. They're all about emotions and behaviors. spending is about modesty and prudence and thrift, or it's about greed and envy. saving is about delayed gratification. Patience. giving is generosity. It's a sense of gratitude. So
it's easy to think about this as a sort of you know, hard mathematical science, but I prefer to think of it as a social science. Money is about behavior as much as it is about numbers and math."
“Your Money” Columnist, The New York Times Education/Degree BA, American Studies, Amherst College -
"A third of the young people who come to us feel like it's unclear to them how to affect change. And so our goal has to be start small, start with the things that are accessible that you can actually do today, whether that's educating yourself or taking a first volunteer action. And then that portal can be a way to level up engagement so that you get to do more and more over time.”
CEO of Do.Something.org, one of the world’s largest organizations exclusively for young people who are committed to positive social change Education/Degree: BS in Legal Studies, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, J. D., Fordham Law School.DoSomething.org
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"When we talk about caring for other people, we are also talking about caring for the common good, and we're talking about caring across difference. Relatively speaking, it's not hard for people to care for someone else. Almost everybody cares for somebody else. the higher bar for a lot of people is caring for people who are different from them in race or class, or culture, or political orientation, or religious orientation"
Senior lecturer at Harvard's Graduate School of Education and the Harvard Kennedy School of government. Faculty director of Harvard's Making Caring Common Project Education/Degree: Ed.D., Harvard University -
Jonathan Rubenstein is father to one daughter and the founder and CEO of Joe Coffee, New York City’s original specialty coffee company and a pioneer of the Third Wave Coffee Movement.
The award-winning collection of cafes is best known for brewing the highest quality coffee and serving its community of customers with warm, authentic hospitality.
Jonathan is here to talk about how cup of coffee and a lot of care can make the world a better place
- Visa fler