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3-Up Moon Podcast

Joshua Bone and Andrew Gilmore

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Mamma mia, Super Stars, it's the 3-Up Moon Podcast! Josh (Boney) and Andrew (Gilly) are diving deep into the green pipes of the Mushroom Kingdom, on a mission to play and discuss every game starring our favourite plumber, Mario!
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A podcast that discusses jiu jitsu through the eyes of someone at the beginning of there journey. Great podcast for white belts or people looking to get into or try jiu jitsu. Very relatable for people who train in smaller type school setting.
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A dental podcast for the AVERAGE dentist. No question is too controversial for Lance Timmerman DMD and his guests. Questions are NOT ”best bonding agent” or ”best impression material.” You know, like ”can I harm my assistant for being annoying?”, or ”how much oral sex is too much after gum grafts?” or even, ”Will my DNA be altered by getting a bone graft from cadaver bone?” The information that ALL dentists need. Where we coined the term ”Bukkake Honor Circle”
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Choke City

David V & John Meyer

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Yeehaw! Saddle up with Houston’s finest troublemakers, David V and John Mayer, on "Choke City." We're talking horses, housing crises, and everything in between! Expect belly laughs, wild tangents, and a rodeo of ridiculousness. Whether you’re a horse whisperer or just trying to pay rent, we’ve got the comedy gold to tickle your funny bone. Giddy up and join the chaos – it's gonna be a hoot and a half!
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Hello I am Joshua Torres Former Us Army Sniper Recon Surveillance Leadership Course Honor Graduate 11B B4 6B Manned Op Nevada With 6 other soldiers miles from the nearest military support. Operated in the Korengal Valley 2010 Pesh River Valley in 2012. I have come together with friends from all walks of life ( Chemist, Career Military, Fire Fighters and the American Back Bone The Every Day Laborer) give you our experiences, life lesson and perceptions of reality via “The OP The Resolved Arti ...
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Acupuncture and East Asian medicine was not developed in a laboratory. It does not advance through double-blind controlled studies, nor does it respond well to petri dish experimentation. Our medicine did not come from the statistical regression of randomized cohorts, but from the observation and treatment of individuals in their particular environment. It grows out of an embodied sense of understanding how life moves, unfolds, develops and declines. Medicine comes from continuous, thoughtfu ...
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Tinkering and creating, I suspect that anyone who's been lucky enough to have grown up in an environment that encouraged exploration, risk taking and curiosity— they've got a perspective that has them asking “why not” instead of “why.” Figuring out how things work is fun. Even more so when you don’t take other people’s word on what is doable or not…
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I had the delightful surprise of Zoe Coldham reaching out to me to tell me about the documentary she’d created that goes into the early days of acupuncture finding its way into the mainstream of British culture. As you probably know, Qiological has been doing a little mini-series on acupuncture’s journey to the west as well. So I was keen to have h…
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The late 60s and early 70s were a time of openness and experimentation. It was the beginning of the civil rights movement, more equality for women, and the recognition that sexuality included more than love between men and women. Cultural norms were questioned and that included dietary practices, the healing arts and the relationship between humans…
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It’s fun to solve problems. Especially when you’re not quite sure what to do, so you have to pay attention and learn what’s important. You must develop the capacity to learn from both your failures and success. Mark Brinson wanted a liniment for patients and was not happy with what was on the market. So he thought he’d just mix up his own. That tur…
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The Chinese are right, the brain is a curious organ. The way the nerves entangle their way into every aspect of our body, and how their gentle electric hum gives us awareness of this container we call ourselves. Pain is how our nervous system lets us know there is a problem. Acupuncture has rightfully been seen and used as a way to intervene. Stran…
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John Meyer and David V sit down and talk to Cory Edwards, father of Jude alexander. A locally known Houston comedian that happens to be 12 years old. Just a disclaimer the audio is going to sound a little off well make it better on the next time! We get goofy and wacky. We get into johns trip to Austin, and we might talk about a "cock or two".…
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What is our universe made of? How does it work, and more importantly– what are we doing here and how do we make sense of it? Eternal questions, unanswerable, but maybe the questions are not for answering, perhaps they are for focusing attention. In this conversation with Rory Hiltbrand we take a look at our peculiar situation as Beings in between t…
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While many are keen on looking to “science up” acupuncture and squeeze it into the thinking and theories of conventional medicine, others are quite content with the weirdness of it. And enjoy playing around in the territory that’s off the radar of Western science. Julian Scott is one of those pioneering acupuncturists whose background in theoretica…
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As anyone who has started an acupuncture practice and tried explaining it to potential patients knows, it’s not easy taking the terminology and thinking of East Asian medicine into English speaking Western culture. The guest of this conversation, John Rybak, has thought long and hard about this. He is keen on helping our profession bridge how we th…
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Brenda Hood often reminds me “Chinese concepts, especially classical Chinese concepts, are big and multidimensional. They are extremely dependent on context and while shades of meaning often cross over, they can be quite different and be more or less encompassing of ideas depending on actual context.” Which is why I’m always questioning myself when…
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Saam acupuncture with its unique channel pairings, perspective on psycho-emotional dynamics, and capacity to interweave the Five Phase with the Six Qi is a powerful tool for understanding the interplay of yin and yang along with body and mind. In this conversation Joshua Park joins us to explore how Saam acupuncture gives us a holistic view and all…
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In the late 60’s and early 70’s of the last century East Asian medicine began to emerge into mainstream culture. The Reston NY Times article is often cited as a catalytic moment that put the idea of Chinese acupuncture into the minds of Americans. But other streams of medicine from Japan and Korea were also finding their way into the imagination of…
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The Middle East has a long history of war and unrest. Whatever phase of history you’d like to zoom the timeframe, you’ll likely see conflict. In Episode 72 of Everyday Acupuncture Podcast I spoke with an Israeli practitioner on what it is like to live in a place where you’re frequently hearing air raid sirens and headed to a bomb shelter. In this c…
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Matt Jenkins is an amateur MMA fighter out of Nostos MMA in Somersworth New Hampshire. Under the direction of his coach UFC veteran Devin Powell Matt has prepared himself for his second amateur fight. Matt grew up on a wrestling mat and has fallen in love with all aspects of mma. The Bone Pit Jiu Jitsu Podcast is proud and excited to sponsor Matt f…
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Here’s a question that I find difficult to answer. How does acupuncture work? Beyond the East Asian medicine phrasing that makes zero sense to your average citizen. Just what is going on in the body in response to a sliver thin needle being placed in the flesh? And once you have an answer for that, explain how a “needle” that does not pierce the sk…
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Women develop through the cycles of seven. Men through the rhythms of eight. Women, more resonate with Blood. Men, with qi. Being human, there is a lot we share in common. Looking at our classic books on medicine, from the point of view of physiology and health, there are differences. And from the perspective of development, going from child to adu…
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