Book review and narration test of: How to Prosper During the Coming Bad Years
Often I used to read books before going to sleep. What follows is from one of those times. I’m thinking about potentially narrating books when I retire, or starting a podcast. Let me know what you think in the comments. There’s more on the audio as the point to this post was to test out the narration. Here’s the audio:
Okay, I think what I’m going to do is a little test. And let’s see how this…
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one of my absolute downright favorite moments in tsc is the cat and jean bike ride because jean appreciates the world around him like no one else he thinks its big and beautiful and the most wonderful thing he's ever seen and loves open roads and watching sunsets and tagging along with his friend to the beach even though he's petrified of water and i love that the presence of everything made him actually open up for a moment it made him feel better i need him to see a star-filled sky and i need him to climb mountains and see waterfalls and watch a meteor shower and
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Integrating the Spirals: Natural healing
Whenever I don’t feel well, or I ponder why anyone is ever ill, I go back to the, Integrating the Spirals™ – session 2 kaleidoscope lesson I’ve offered:
I become grateful for the knowledge throughout my life to help my body heal by using:
Laying on of hands
Chiropractic
Wearing natural fiber clothing and shoes, or going barefoot (I only wore leather shoes as a child)
Allergy skin testing—but…
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Reds from the berry garden.
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Forugh Farrokhzad, tr. by Hasan Javadi & Susan Sallée, from Another Birth: Selected Poems of Forugh Farrokhzad; "Another Birth"
[Text ID: "I plant my hands in the garden / I will grow green, I know, I know"]
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so this year, I planted cucumbers (I am going to try and make my own pickles, which I'm looking forward to) and what I failed to realize is that these plants are fucking alive. They are more alive than other plants, even the radishes I planted in the next container over that shot up a solid foot in 30 days. But these cucumbers, man....they put out these tendrils that look weird when they're just sort of waving around in space? Thin, green whiskers serving no purpose you could identify. Only then---overnight, practically!---the tendrils find something to wrap around and turn into curly corkscrew anchors, enabling the plant to grow upwards through the cage I placed around it, instead of sideways.
What an incredibly marvelous natural technology. I'm in awe.
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