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    minter

    Explore "minter" with insightful episodes like "Eleventh Day of CraftLit", "Ep 43 How to work from home successfully with Harriet Minter", "Merry Lea with Bill Minter", "108: Kelly Minter" and "N4L 116: "Secondhand" by Adam Minter" from podcasts like ""CraftLit - Serialized Classic Literature for Busy Book Lovers", "Influence & Impact for female leaders", "Midwestoration", "Thriving Beyond Belief with Cheryl Scruggs" and "Nonfiction4Life"" and more!

    Episodes (11)

    Eleventh Day of CraftLit

    Eleventh Day of CraftLit
    Originally released December 14th, 2016. All of CraftLit's Christmas episodes can be found at A Rhyme for Christmas (Publication delayed by the author's determined, but futile attempt to find the rhyme) (1911) By: John Challing  (Radcyffe Hall) - From: The Wit and Humor of America, Volume VII -    eText:   Read by: Alan Davis Drake -   The Errors of Santa Claus (1917) By: Stephen Butler Leacock -     From:   eText: Frenzied Fiction -   Read by: William Coon - To An Old Fogey (Who Contends that Christmas is Played Out) By: Owen Seaman -   From:   Etext: Modern British Poetry (1920) - Read by: Cori Samuel -   Vera's First Christmas Adventure (1907) By: Arnold Bennett -   From: The Grim Smile of the Five Towns -    eText:    Read by: Andy Minter -     Here We Come a Wassailing  (1850) Traditional English -     From:   eText:   Sung by: Claire Goget -     CraftLit Podcast • Annotated Audiobooks | Audiobooks with Benefits  CraftLit.com  Twitter: @CraftLit.com  Library: CraftLit.com/library  Facebook: Facebook.com/craftlit Voicemail line: +1-206-350-1642 NEW! YouTube:

    Ep 43 How to work from home successfully with Harriet Minter

    Ep 43 How to work from home successfully with Harriet Minter

    In this episode of the Influence & Impact podcast I catch up with Harriet Minter, author of “Working From Home: How to build a career you love when you’re not in the office”. 

    Harriet has been writing about women and work for the past 15 years so we explore lots of interesting topics including…

    • Managing your team remotely
    • The future of hybrid working
    • Strategies for building your brand and profile when working remotely
    • Exactly how to ask for a pay rise (and generally asking for what you want)
    • A simple framework for communicating your strengths

    Harriet Minter is a journalist, author and flexible work specialist. She focuses on a variety of issues relating to women, the future of work, media and diversity. She has written for publications including The Guardian, The Times and The Pool. She has a monthly column in Psychologies magazine. She is a regular speaker on women’s rights, organisational change, workplace diversity and just getting stuff done. She has given two TED talks and appeared on the BBC and Sky News. As well as her media work she coaches individuals to help them achieve their professional goals, and provides brands with diversity and content marketing consultancy.

    Follow Harriet @harrietminter on instagram and twitter www.harrietminter.com

    Her book "WFH - Working from Home" is available on Amazon or bookshop.org

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Merry Lea with Bill Minter

    Merry Lea with Bill Minter

    I interview Bill Minter, Director of Land Management and Assistant Professor in the Sustainability and Environmental Education Department at Merry Lea Environmental Learning Center of Goshen College.  For more information about Merry Lea and the work Bill has been doing there, the links listed below can get you started!  

    https://www.goshen.edu/merrylea/ 

    https://www.goshen.edu/merrylea/land-and-research/ 

    https://www.goshen.edu/merrylea/land-and-research/ecological-features/ 

    https://www.goshen.edu/merrylea/land-and-research/restoration-projects-2/ 

    Midwestoration
    en-usJanuary 23, 2021

    108: Kelly Minter

    108: Kelly Minter

    This week on the Thriving Beyond Belief podcast, Kelly Minter!

    FROM KELLY:

    "My parents raised me along with my three younger siblings in Northern Virginia, which is an important distinction because it means D.C. metro, traffic, and politics more than the Blue Ridge Mountains. In the Minter home, although our family didn’t always get it right, we mostly got it real. As a child, I struggled with acute anxiety and waves of depression before I or the people around me had much language or help for such things. The Word of God became my balm. This is one of the reasons I love the Bible so.

    In my twenties, I moved to the Nashville after signing a record deal. Soon after unloading all my belongings, I got used to the perks of the south—a then slower pace and novelties like cheese grits. If I’d written the rest of the story, the next few paragraphs would include the heights of happiness and fulfillment as a result of success and notoriety. But that’s not what happened.

    I poured myself into three records—but instead of fame and fortune, pretty much everything I’d put my hope in unraveled before me. I eventually ended up with an opportunity to write a book, which is now out of print—so that went well, too. I was looking to people, career paths, and success to fill me, but whatever splashed into my bucket only leaked out. I had a bunch of those ‘cracked cisterns’ in my heart that are mentioned in Jeremiah—the kind that obviously don’t hold water. Maybe you can relate?

    Around that time LifeWay asked if I’d be interested in writing a Bible study. I was equal parts thrilled and overwhelmed by the opportunity. (This was around the same time when I’d run into people I hadn’t seen in a while and they’d say encouraging things like, “Oh do you still live here?”) Since the Lord was deconstructing just about every false god I had in my life at the time, I wrote about what I knew and what I needed to learn—the idols I was trusting for worth and meaning. I thought it a good idea to invite real people to my house to pilot the material I was writing—people who would tell me the truth. We cooked and ate together, dug through Bible passages with intensity, prayed with one another, and laughed for hours. (That was before everyone started having kids). Shortly thereafter, No Other Gods was published.

    What followed, quite unexpectedly for me, were invitations to speak at churches across the country, a few more books, teaching local Bible studies, and the opportunity to lead worship at my home church and abroad. So did a trip down the Amazon in a riverboat.  As in…the real one in the jungle, my friends. I’d been invited on a riverboat adventure to serve the forgotten people of the jungle. My comfortable, western lifestyle and mindset was challenged at every turn. Since then, I’ve traveled to the jungle numerous times with an organization called Justice & Mercy International, and I’ve since written a book about it. I sit on the board of JMI, and I’m a passionate supporter and participant of their annual jungle pastors’ conference. The invitation to be on mission with God, both here and abroad, is one of the greatest joys of my life.

    Today I’m grateful for the opportunities to study and teach the Word of God—the very words that have changed my life. I’m also thankful to be singing and writing music, bringing it all together at an event called Cultivate. Other joys include teaching the Bible to the younger generation and serving them coffee in weighty diner mugs (the younger generation must understand the weight of the diner mug—pun absolutely intended). I adore community, which naturally means I’m zealous for all things food, cooking, and gardening. I’ve adopted the southern love of college football. I am an ecstatic aunt of six nieces and nephews who say things like, “You’re the best Kelly ever,” even when I don’t feel like it. In all things, I delight in the person of Jesus in whom is found the only redemption this world has ever known. My joy is to know Him, talk about Him, and teach the Word that is all about Him.

    As you wander over these webpages and maybe even go through a book or Bible study, I hope you taste the sweet joy of Jesus and feel a warm welcome from Nashville.

    - Kelly

    N4L 116: "Secondhand" by Adam Minter

    N4L 116: "Secondhand" by Adam Minter

    SUMMARY

    Coming from a long line of junk dealers, Adam Minter explores the “afterlife” of billions of tons of used goods in his second book, Secondhand: Travels in the New Global Garage Sale. Minter evaluates both the monetary and emotional value of things that we use then give away. Sobering and hopeful at the same time, his findings unveil why we feel both repelled and pulled toward used goods. His travels throughout the world lead him to vintage shops in Tokyo, used -goods enterprises in Ghana, and thrift stores in the American Southwest—all of which play a part in the multibillion-dollar reuse industry.

    KEY POINTS/STATISTICS

    • Hoarders contribute to the unhealthy side of consumption, contributing to the surplus of environmental waste.
    • “Cleanouts” can be very painful because the process breaks bonds with things, stripping a person of who he is and rendering him almost anonymous.
    • Mini-storage units are proliferating rapidly to meet the ever-growing demand from Americans for space to store their stuff, with the rental cost per square foot often exceeding that of their homes.
    • According to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, in 2015, Americans tossed out 24.1 billion pounds of furniture and furnishings—a flood yet to crest.
    • “Shoddy” – word assigned to low-quality wool textile recycled from earlier wool
    • Small secondhand shops are often the dominant form of commerce across rural towns in Southeast Asia.
    • Africa is the largest market for secondhand clothes globally.
    • Older consumers are less willing to buy fast-fashion clothing, but the online fashion reseller thredUP is finding millennials are the demographic most likely to discard a garment after one to five wearings.
    • Thirty percent of clothing tossed out in the U.S. is turned into rags, which are especially useful to big industries such as oil and gas; hotels, bars, and restaurants; auto manufacturers; painters; and healthcare.
    • Goodwill began in Boston as a retraining program for wayward youth.
    • Asians have a high reverence for Japan’s reputation for excellent manufacturing and design.
    • Pyrex has become highly collectible among younger Americans with some pieces selling for thousands of dollars. 

    QUOTES FROM MINTER

    • “The world is filled with more things than at any time in history.”
    • “Americans are prone to keep things longer, and sometimes value them more than they value themselves.”
    • “The things that we buy tend to create [an] identity for us….We build up who we are by the things that we acquire.”
    • “People value the things that they saw as children. We’re all kind of nostalgic in our hearts.”

    BUY Secondhand: Travels in the New Global Garage Sale

    RECOMMENDATION
    BUY Junkyard Planet: Travels in the Billion-Dollar Trash Trade

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    Special thanks…

    Fantasy Baseball Podcast, Carlos Martinez vs Kyle Hendricks

    Fantasy Baseball Podcast, Carlos Martinez vs Kyle Hendricks
    Coming off an abbreviated week of baseball, B_Don and Donkey Teeth bring to you an abbreviated (still 42 minutes) show. The Ditka duo highlights the pitching matchup from the opening game of the second half as Carlos Martinez and Kyle Hendricks squared off in a forgettable fray of divisional opponents, and podcast host favorite teams. End result? CMart is the most recent victim of the Sausage curse as he finds himself on the DL shortly following the skirmish.

    Donkey Teeth then takes a break from catching fish to help you land the next big free agent in the pickups segment. This week’s targets include recent call ups Willie Calhoun, Garrett Hampson and Willy Adames. Here's another taste of the Ditka Sausage Pod:

    Fantasy Baseball Podcast, Carlos Martinez vs Kyle Hendricks

    Fantasy Baseball Podcast, Carlos Martinez vs Kyle Hendricks
    Coming off an abbreviated week of baseball, B_Don and Donkey Teeth bring to you an abbreviated (still 42 minutes) show. The Ditka duo highlights the pitching matchup from the opening game of the second half as Carlos Martinez and Kyle Hendricks squared off in a forgettable fray of divisional opponents, and podcast host favorite teams. End result? CMart is the most recent victim of the Sausage curse as he finds himself on the DL shortly following the skirmish.

    Donkey Teeth then takes a break from catching fish to help you land the next big free agent in the pickups segment. This week’s targets include recent call ups Willie Calhoun, Garrett Hampson and Willy Adames. Here's another taste of the Ditka Sausage Pod:

    “52 & They Art All Against You”

    “52 & They Art All Against You”

    Back with a vengeance is By The Way with episode #13 “52 & They Art All Against You”.  On this episode listen to Eric Wall and Ando discuss what may become the largest US public art project ever. The political Super Pac For Freedoms launched a crowdfunding campaign on Kick Starter to fund 52 billboards by major contemporary artists as a “get out to vote” initiative ahead of the 2018 mid-term elections. Listen in on their conversation as I think it might surprise the you where Eric and Ando stand regarding the project.

    For more By The Way, follow us on Twitter@ByTheWay_ArtPod, Facebook@By The Way: A Contemporary Art News Podcast, and Instagram@Bythewaypodcast. Or on our website www.Culturalbandwidth.com.

    By The Way: A Contemporary Art News Podcast is created by Eric Wall and Ando.

    Links:

    New York Time: https://www.nytimes.com/2018/06/03/arts/design/public-art-campaign-political-billboards.html

    Artnet News: https://news.artnet.com/art-world/fall-artist-made-billboards-will-installed-50-states-1296806

    Kick Starter: https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/978911160/alabama-50-states-50-billboards-for-freedoms

    For Freedom's Website: http://www.forfreedoms.org/

    Music credits: Favorite Secrets by Waylon Thornton is licensed under a Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 United States License and permission of the artist.

    How The Special Olympics Beat My Post Shoot Depression.

    How The Special Olympics Beat My Post Shoot Depression.

    Today was extraordinarily heartfelt. I woke up in a funk. It happens. After 8 straight weeks of prep, shooting and working with editors, I caught that Post Shoot Depression. Then we took the train downtown to USC, home of this year's Special Olympics. The happiness I witnessed lifted my spirits. And seeing my wife's documentary play as a part of the events reminded me that as filmmakers, we have a gift that we can share. Watch the documentary "Free 2 Be Me" about the Free 2 Be Me Dancers for free by clicking here.

    Check out jordanbrady.com for the extended trailer we made for the Special Olympic event. 

    thank you all,

    Jordan

    How The Special Olympics Beat My Post Shoot Depression.

    How The Special Olympics Beat My Post Shoot Depression.

    Today was extraordinarily heartfelt. I woke up in a funk. It happens. After 8 straight weeks of prep, shooting and working with editors, I caught that Post Shoot Depression. Then we took the train downtown to USC, home of this year's Special Olympics. The happiness I witnessed lifted my spirits. And seeing my wife's documentary play as a part of the events reminded me that as filmmakers, we have a gift that we can share. Watch the documentary "Free 2 Be Me" about the Free 2 Be Me Dancers for free by clicking here.

    Check out jordanbrady.com for the extended trailer we made for the Special Olympic event. 

    thank you all,

    Jordan

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