It was the deadliest string of shark attacks the world has ever seen. In 2011, sharks in Réunion, a beautiful island, way out in the Indian Ocean started biting people way more than ever before and with lunatic violence. The epidemic forced local surfers, politicians, and business owners into a proxy war with ocean lovers and conservationists worldwide, where long simmering tensions boiled over. Réunion: Shark Attacks in Paradise is the story of what happened on this beautiful island, and t ...
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Innehåll tillhandahållet av Randy Cantrell. Allt poddinnehåll inklusive avsnitt, grafik och podcastbeskrivningar laddas upp och tillhandahålls direkt av Randy Cantrell eller deras podcastplattformspartner. Om du tror att någon använder ditt upphovsrättsskyddade verk utan din tillåtelse kan du följa processen som beskrivs här https://sv.player.fm/legal.
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Why Do You Want What You Want?
Manage episode 355524725 series 2155250
Innehåll tillhandahållet av Randy Cantrell. Allt poddinnehåll inklusive avsnitt, grafik och podcastbeskrivningar laddas upp och tillhandahålls direkt av Randy Cantrell eller deras podcastplattformspartner. Om du tror att någon använder ditt upphovsrättsskyddade verk utan din tillåtelse kan du följa processen som beskrivs här https://sv.player.fm/legal.
We're closing in on saying goodbye to The Yellow Studio version 2.0. It's where every podcast episode I've ever produced (other than a few field recordings) was recorded. But I'm looking forward to the next chapter, The Yellow Studio version 3.0. Lots of people want more money, but they don't necessarily have any specific thing they want to do with it. They just think having more of it will make them happy. Or maybe they do know what they want - or think they do. A nicer house. A new car. Exotic vacations. Fancier restaurants to frequent. Many people want more recognition, but they don't know why. They envy famous people. They imagine what life might be like hearing applause or being chased for an autograph. Everybody wants something. Everybody wants many somethings. We all want a lot of things. Does that speak to our lack or our lack of gratitude? Or neither? Maybe it just speaks to our discontentment with whatever the status quo is. Warren Buffett is worth $87 billion, but he's still working every day to achieve and amass more. And he's giving away 99% of it so he's not doing it to lavish anything on himself. Reports claim he lives a fairly modest lifestyle. Ridiculously modest by the standards you'd expect of somebody with his income. So why does he want more? Why do you want more? Because you don't yet have it. And when you get it, it won't be enough. Never is. I'm gonna start by using LTW as a case study. Leaning Toward Wisdom kinda sorta officially began on Tuesday, October 30, 2001, as a blog. But I was posting content online beginning in the fall of 1996 and using the moniker, "Leaning Toward Wisdom." It was all done in HTML and the domain name wasn't LTW. This was before I was domain name savvy. Proved by the fact that I didn't register my own name domain until December 1999. It would be February 2005 before I'd snag LTW. I'm a slow learner. Why did I want to start journaling (we didn't call it blogging at the beginning) under the guise of LTW? I was approaching my 40th birthday when I began to chronicle things. Random things. I was all over the board. No focus. Just a bunch of scatter-shooting of thoughts, opinions and takes on whatever was on my mind. I had two kids in high school with my oldest having already turned 16. I can't remember why I wanted to do it at the very beginning. Maybe it's because the next year I would turn 40. Maybe it's because I could sense the high school days of my kids wasn't going to last more than a couple of more years. I was operating a retail company and putting in the typical long hours required of running any multi-million dollar enterprise. Maybe the journaling was therapeutic. I'm certain it was, but I'm old now and can't really remember all the details of the beginning. Give me a break. The Internet was young and so was I (reasonably so). Within a year I had put an audio file on my HTML site. No, it wasn't podcasting. We didn't yet know what that was. Keep in mind, Apple iTunes was launched on January 9, 2001. It would be about 3 years before the term podcasting would enter in 2004. But I do remember hearing about and reading about audio blogging. That's what prompted some of my first audio files going up on my horrible website. Hard drive space was hard to come by, and drives were expensive...so no, I do not have those original files. When I abandoned that original website - which I can't remember what it was because I didn't keep any of those original sites - all the content went away. Probably a blessing. I'm sure the stuff was dreadful. But the point is the question - why did I want what I wanted? Expression? Brain dumping? Venting? Chronicling? I suppose all those things were on my mind. I can tell you what was NOT on my mind. Building an audience. Only in my business endeavors did I really want to do that (for obvious reasons). Fast forward to the beginning of 2005 and I was much clearer in what I wanted.
…
continue reading
100 episoder
Manage episode 355524725 series 2155250
Innehåll tillhandahållet av Randy Cantrell. Allt poddinnehåll inklusive avsnitt, grafik och podcastbeskrivningar laddas upp och tillhandahålls direkt av Randy Cantrell eller deras podcastplattformspartner. Om du tror att någon använder ditt upphovsrättsskyddade verk utan din tillåtelse kan du följa processen som beskrivs här https://sv.player.fm/legal.
We're closing in on saying goodbye to The Yellow Studio version 2.0. It's where every podcast episode I've ever produced (other than a few field recordings) was recorded. But I'm looking forward to the next chapter, The Yellow Studio version 3.0. Lots of people want more money, but they don't necessarily have any specific thing they want to do with it. They just think having more of it will make them happy. Or maybe they do know what they want - or think they do. A nicer house. A new car. Exotic vacations. Fancier restaurants to frequent. Many people want more recognition, but they don't know why. They envy famous people. They imagine what life might be like hearing applause or being chased for an autograph. Everybody wants something. Everybody wants many somethings. We all want a lot of things. Does that speak to our lack or our lack of gratitude? Or neither? Maybe it just speaks to our discontentment with whatever the status quo is. Warren Buffett is worth $87 billion, but he's still working every day to achieve and amass more. And he's giving away 99% of it so he's not doing it to lavish anything on himself. Reports claim he lives a fairly modest lifestyle. Ridiculously modest by the standards you'd expect of somebody with his income. So why does he want more? Why do you want more? Because you don't yet have it. And when you get it, it won't be enough. Never is. I'm gonna start by using LTW as a case study. Leaning Toward Wisdom kinda sorta officially began on Tuesday, October 30, 2001, as a blog. But I was posting content online beginning in the fall of 1996 and using the moniker, "Leaning Toward Wisdom." It was all done in HTML and the domain name wasn't LTW. This was before I was domain name savvy. Proved by the fact that I didn't register my own name domain until December 1999. It would be February 2005 before I'd snag LTW. I'm a slow learner. Why did I want to start journaling (we didn't call it blogging at the beginning) under the guise of LTW? I was approaching my 40th birthday when I began to chronicle things. Random things. I was all over the board. No focus. Just a bunch of scatter-shooting of thoughts, opinions and takes on whatever was on my mind. I had two kids in high school with my oldest having already turned 16. I can't remember why I wanted to do it at the very beginning. Maybe it's because the next year I would turn 40. Maybe it's because I could sense the high school days of my kids wasn't going to last more than a couple of more years. I was operating a retail company and putting in the typical long hours required of running any multi-million dollar enterprise. Maybe the journaling was therapeutic. I'm certain it was, but I'm old now and can't really remember all the details of the beginning. Give me a break. The Internet was young and so was I (reasonably so). Within a year I had put an audio file on my HTML site. No, it wasn't podcasting. We didn't yet know what that was. Keep in mind, Apple iTunes was launched on January 9, 2001. It would be about 3 years before the term podcasting would enter in 2004. But I do remember hearing about and reading about audio blogging. That's what prompted some of my first audio files going up on my horrible website. Hard drive space was hard to come by, and drives were expensive...so no, I do not have those original files. When I abandoned that original website - which I can't remember what it was because I didn't keep any of those original sites - all the content went away. Probably a blessing. I'm sure the stuff was dreadful. But the point is the question - why did I want what I wanted? Expression? Brain dumping? Venting? Chronicling? I suppose all those things were on my mind. I can tell you what was NOT on my mind. Building an audience. Only in my business endeavors did I really want to do that (for obvious reasons). Fast forward to the beginning of 2005 and I was much clearer in what I wanted.
…
continue reading
100 episoder
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