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    grand master

    Explore " grand master" with insightful episodes like "Discovering Our Craftsman Spirit", "First Cup of Coffee - May 20, 2022", "Ep 180: Can Shortcuts Lead Teens to Success?", "Ep 180: Can Shortcuts Lead Teens to Success?" and "First Cup of Coffee - November 5, 2021" from podcasts like ""The Aquitaine Project", "First Cup of Coffee with Jeffe Kennedy", "Talking To Teens: Expert Tips for Parenting Teenagers", "Talking to Teens Teasers" and "First Cup of Coffee with Jeffe Kennedy"" and more!

    Episodes (7)

    Discovering Our Craftsman Spirit

    Discovering Our Craftsman Spirit
    She embarked on a journey to master an ancient art descended from her forefathers. Along the way she discovered there is no mastery, only dedication, perseverance, and love. She embodied the spirit of the craftsman, "shokunin kishitsu", and held a deep desire to work toward perfection each and every day. This episode Keiko Fukuda, the highest ranked woman in the history of Judo, shares with us her motto, “be strong, be gentle, be beautiful”, as we learn to walk our own path toward mastering our craft.

    First Cup of Coffee - May 20, 2022

    First Cup of Coffee - May 20, 2022

    Exciting events for me today and this weekend - I get to interview Mercedes Lackey! - and more and extended thoughts on building an author platform, what's most important, and being aware of how others do it.

    The link to the blog post on author platforms is here https://blog.jeffekennedy.com/2022/05/18/the-one-thing-an-author-must-do-to-expand-their-platform/

    The Nebula Awards trailer is here https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=21VKlslZIRo

    You can register for the online Nebula Conference here (https://events.sfwa.org/).

    The audiobook of GREY MAGIC is here (https://www.audible.com/pd/Grey-Magic-Audiobook/B09Z77GHDL?source_code=AUDFPWS0223189MWT-BK-ACX0-307001&ref=acx_bty_BK_ACX0_307001_rh_us), BRIGHT FAMILIAR is here (https://www.audible.com/pd/Bright-Familiar-Audiobook/B09WSGFLXW?source_code=AUDFPWS0223189MWT-BK-ACX0-303113&ref=acx_bty_BK_ACX0_303113_rh_us) and DARK WIZARD is here (https://www.audible.com/pd/Dark-Wizard-Audiobook/B09QQRHTYZ?source_code=AUDFPWS0223189MWT-BK-ACX0-294201&ref=acx_bty_BK_ACX0_294201_rh_us).

    The Heirs of Magic series is here (https://jeffekennedy.com/series/heirs-of-magic). Preorder THE STORM PRINCESS AND THE RAVEN KING here (https://jeffekennedy.com/the-storm-princess-and-the-raven-king).

    The Sorcerous Moons series - now in KU! - is available here (https://www.amazon.com/dp/B09YVVB82N).

    The form to preorder books for Apollycon is here (https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLScbs-nwq5cfOpk-5xzhz1mfUMycvaZ-bRdvmF0uN7--Ii9ioQ/viewform?vc=0&c=0&w=1&flr=0).

    You can order FIRE OF THE FROST here (https://jeffekennedy.com/fire-of-the-frost).

    If you want to support me and the podcast, click on the little heart or follow this link (https://www.paypal.com/paypalme/jeffekennedy).

    You can watch this podcast on YouTube here https://youtu.be/BzYsostEIpQ

    Sign up for my newsletter here! (https://landing.mailerlite.com/webforms/landing/r2y4b9)

    Support the show

    Contact Jeffe!

    Tweet me at @JeffeKennedy
    Visit my website https://jeffekennedy.com
    Follow me on Amazon or BookBub
    Sign up for my Newsletter!
    Find me on Instagram and TikTok!

    Thanks for listening!

    Ep 180: Can Shortcuts Lead Teens to Success?

    Ep 180: Can Shortcuts Lead Teens to Success?

    Marcus Du Sautoy, mathematician and author of Thinking Better, shares how laziness and the wish for a shortcut can actually push our teens to come up with creative and time-saving innovations.

    Bonfire Digital Wellness has a diverse team of seasoned, compassionate school counselors, ready to coach your teen. Check it out today and take advantage of a 1-month FREE trial: BonfireDW.org/talkingtoteens

    Full show notes

    Hard work is essential to success…right? If we want teens to thrive they have to hustle, grind and work laboriously to achieve perfect SAT scores or a spot on the basketball team. We condemn teen laziness, hoping that kids will understand the value of blood sweat and tears. For goodness sake, how will they ever get anywhere in life if they’re not spending hours with their chemistry textbooks or practicing their free throws all afternoon?


    But maybe it doesn’t have to be that way. Perhaps there’s some merit to taking the easy way out–so long as it’s clever! If teens can find ways to get to the same result without all the effort, they might just stumble upon a great discovery. This week, we’re talking all about shortcuts and laziness, and why these things may not be as bad as we assume! Sometimes, figuring out a way around hard work can lead to some seriously innovative thinking.


    Joining us this week is Marcus Du Sautoy, author of Thinking Better: The Art of the Shortcut in Math and Life. Marcus is a brilliant mathematician and the Simonyi Professor for the Public Understanding of Science at the University of Oxford. His books and regular media appearances have done wonders to spark public interest in science and mathematics!


    This week, Marcus and I are talking all about shortcuts–and how they can make our teens lives’ easier. We’re also discussing why laziness is underrated, and how collaboration might just save the future of the human race.


    The Power of Shortcuts

    We tend to encourage teens to avoid cutting corners. We hope that if they struggle and toil and do it the hard way, they’ll learn to be disciplined, and they’ll realize that nothing in life comes easy. And while Marcus agrees that hard work is often necessary to achieve great things, sometimes shortcuts can help. If we come up with clever ways around problems, we can save ourselves time–or even make exciting new discoveries.


    Marcus explains that finding a shortcut starts with identifying promising patterns. He uses the inventors of Google as an example. The patterns they saw in computer data allowed them to create a shortcut for searching the entire web! Great musicians are able to discover patterns within music–to the point where they don’t even need to read the notes on the paper to create good tunes. If teens can take a close look at the data of their workout routine or college applications, they might be able to find a shortcut that maximizes results.


    Sometimes, however, it feels like a shortcut defeats the point!  When you step out of the house to take a hike, you’re in it for the journey, not the destination. Marcus explains that this kind of hard work is defined as “praxis”, or work done simply for the enjoyment of the process. We can still often benefit from shortcuts in these pursuits though, Marcus explains. When we’re ready to take that hike, it’s nice to still be able to drive up to the trailhead! In the episode, Marcus and I talk more about finding shortcuts, and where teens can apply them to make their lives easier.


    We might see shortcuts as a teen’s excuse to be lazy…but Marcus believes laziness isn’t so bad either! 


    Is Laziness Good For Teens?

    As a species, humans have always condemned laziness, even including it among the seven deadly sins! But Marcus thinks there might be some benefits to being lazy every once in a while. Taking some time to lie around can often allow us to ponder our surroundings and come up with outside-the-box ideas. Laziness can also push us to find new and interesting shortcuts. Babe Ruth famously hated running around the bases…and learned to hit home runs so that he wouldn’t have to.


    Marcus and I discuss how being lazy for the long haul might actually take some work up front. If teens want to figure out ways to make their lives easier, they may have to spend some time building something. For example, outlining an essay may seem like an effortful extra step, but can make writing the paper much faster–so teens can relax sooner! In the episode, Marcus explains how the construction of a tunnel through the alps took nearly seventeen years, but now only takes seventeen minutes to travel through.


    In our interview, Marcus and I discuss some fascinatingly relevant research about chess players. When chess champions underwent brain scans, the results were surprising. The researchers expected that scans of their brains would light up, showing these players using their brain to the max. Instead, these players used less of their brain to play chess, instead relying on intuitive ways of thinking to figure out each move. Sometimes, less is more…and we don’t always have to be fighting laziness, says Marcus.


    To find shortcuts that make life easier, we’ve often got to apply a different perspective. Marcus and I discuss how these new perspectives can come from working with people who are totally different from us!


    Collaboration is Critical


    Have you ever found yourself at a loss for solving a problem, until a friend provides you with a wise new solution that you never would have thought of yourself? In our interview, Marcus explains his vision for a world that thrives off this kind of collaboration. In this world, people from different backgrounds with different experiences and perspectives come together to find solutions for humanity’s most complicated problems. Taking the language of another discipline like music or English and applying it to math is one of the ways Marcus has come across remarkable mathematical discoveries!


    Some problems, like climate change, suffer from having only one set of people behind the solution, says Marcus. Climate scientists need the help of psychologists, politicians, and marketers to help people change their behavior and move towards sustainable practices. Biologists, chemists, and health care experts need to weigh in and assess the true results of this gigantic threat. With the help of engineers and financiers, we can create and assemble technology that can slow the tide of global warming. Without all these perspectives, we would be hopeless against the challenge!


    To Marcus, this lack of cross-collaboration is one of the biggest issues with our schools today. We compartmentalize science, English, math and history in schools, leading teens to believe these things are totally separate. The reality is that the intersections between these subjects is where some of the most interesting learning happens! If we want kids to be excited about academics–especially science and math–showing them interesting and different applications of each subject is a good place to start.


    In the Episode…

    Marcus’s brilliant mathematical mind makes for a richly informative and entertaining episode this week! On top of the topics discussed above we also cover:

    • How math and music are connected
    • Why perfectionism is a “killer of success”
    • How teens can find a college major they love
    • Why practice is essential in math and life

    I was struck with a new-found love a...

    Ep 180: Can Shortcuts Lead Teens to Success?

    Ep 180: Can Shortcuts Lead Teens to Success?


    Hard work is essential to success…right? If we want teens to thrive they have to hustle, grind and work laboriously to achieve perfect SAT scores or a spot on the basketball team. We condemn teen laziness, hoping that kids will understand the value of blood sweat and tears. For goodness sake, how will they ever get anywhere in life if they’re not spending hours with their chemistry textbooks or practicing their free throws all afternoon?


    But maybe it doesn’t have to be that way. Perhaps there’s some merit to taking the easy way out–so long as it’s clever! If teens can find ways to get to the same result without all the effort, they might just stumble upon a great discovery. This week, we’re talking all about shortcuts and laziness, and why these things may not be as bad as we assume! Sometimes, figuring out a way around hard work can lead to some seriously innovative thinking.


    Joining us this week is Marcus Du Sautoy, author of Thinking Better: The Art of the Shortcut in Math and Life. Marcus is a brilliant mathematician and the Simonyi Professor for the Public Understanding of Science at the University of Oxford. His books and regular media appearances have done wonders to spark public interest in science and mathematics!


    This week, Marcus and I are talking all about shortcuts–and how they can make our teens lives’ easier. We’re also discussing why laziness is underrated, and how collaboration might just save the future of the human race.

    First Cup of Coffee - November 5, 2021

    First Cup of Coffee - November 5, 2021

    About SFWA's Grand Master award, the politics of gender and of the MFA/writing workshop mystique, and how those things can be insular. Also general fangirling about Mercedes Lackey and why I love her books!

    You can find all of Mercedes Lackey's books here (https://www.mercedeslackey.com/bibliography-2/).

    You can order DARK WIZARD here (https://jeffekennedy.com/dark-wizard) and preorder FIRE OF THE FROST here (https://jeffekennedy.com/fire-of-the-frost).

    If you want to support me and the podcast, click on the little heart or follow this link (https://www.paypal.com/paypalme/jeffekennedy).

    You can watch this podcast on YouTube here (https://youtu.be/tr3JN3g9an8).

    First Cup of Coffee is part of the Frolic Podcast Network. You can find more outstanding podcasts to subscribe to at Frolic.media/podcasts!

    Support the show

    Contact Jeffe!

    Tweet me at @JeffeKennedy
    Visit my website https://jeffekennedy.com
    Follow me on Amazon or BookBub
    Sign up for my Newsletter!
    Find me on Instagram and TikTok!

    Thanks for listening!

    What Have We Learned

    What Have We Learned

    Gourley and Rust, Whittier, food tourism, Jonathan Gold, the Chef show, Los Angeles culture, record stores, vegetarian, ninja restaurant, Grand Master, Golden era, 7th Day Adventist, movies in New York City, not giving advice, self-righteousness, best friends, how many people do you know, lacrosse, Nate Smith’s, Garlock family history, EPCOT genealogy, Dale Carnegie, forgetting names, not acting on thoughts, dog groomer, being present, escaping to memories when bored, cataloging and connecting present moments to things I’ve seen, Superman 3, Cobra, John Sartori, references from insecurity, Adam Grant, the comfort of conviction, frightened rabbit, not needing to know everything, do I need to have an opinion on everything?, high school quarterbacking, Married With Children, glory days, having fun, being funny, being genuine, being charming, manipulating, Curb Your Enthusiasm, Moulin Rouge, Larry David, Tracy Ullman, being present, self-analysis leads to presence and gratitude and joy, mellifluous, Luther Vandross, voice over, does the talent cream rise to the top?, Swingers, we all have stories, Phantasm, Barb and Star, caught in a lie, Godfather 3, drawing conclusions, just be present and fucking living your life, seven habits of how to destroy people. 

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    InfernoCast 41 - Stephen K Hayes, the first American Ninja tells his story of finding the Grand Master in Japan

    InfernoCast 41 - Stephen K Hayes, the first American Ninja tells his story of finding the Grand Master in Japan

    Stephen K Hayes has been training martial arts most of his life, his time in Japan is well known due to being an outsider and getting to train with the Grandmaster of the Ninja.  He has written 22 books and has traveled the world sharing his teachings.  

    Hearing these stories of ninja takes a lot of us back to childhood, but Mr. Hayes has taken the discipline and turned it into a life improvement structured style to help people reach their full potential.  The lessons he has built into his teaching methods is helping people grow not only as a martial artist, but as a human being.

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