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Garbage pt. 2

Doing It

Release Date: 06/12/2013

Friendly Neighborhood Shaman show art Friendly Neighborhood Shaman

Doing It

This time Sophie and Fannie sit down with Greg Rills, an energy medicine healer, better known as a shaman. We hear about the ancient history of shamanism and how it was brought to the US under the name energy medicine. Plus, we hear about Greg's awakening and major life shift that allowed him to fully step into his role as a healer. Check Greg out at phoenixrisinghealed.com. Music by Noah Thorp, listenlabs.com. 

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It Lives in the Body show art It Lives in the Body

Doing It

Sophie and Fannie learn how traumatic experiences can leave us physically stuck in the past, often leaving painful memories trapped in our muscles. Somatic Experience therapist Susan Lemak explains how we are naturally equipped to retrain the body and bounce back to the way we were before. Music by Noah Thorp, .

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Married with Cancer  show art Married with Cancer

Doing It

Where does our resilience come from? This time Sophie and Fannie talk with Mantazh Khanna, who discovered she had Lymphoma on the way back from her honeymoon. We discuss the techniques she used for coping and what the experience taught her. Plus we learn about PSitshealthy.com, a cooking site she started to spread the word that healthy food tastes good. Music by Dave Nelson, dave-nelson.bandcamp.com. To give a tax-deductible donation, or support this show by shopping on Amazon, please visit DoingItShow.com.

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Grow A Child show art Grow A Child

Doing It

Sophie and Fannie take you inside the Deenabandhu Children's Home - an orphanage in Chamarajanagar, a rural district in Karnataka, South India. It's a unique place governed by a singular philosophy, that all children should be treated as whole people. Deenabandhu raises orphaned and destitute children and also invites poor children from the surrounding neighborhoods to go to school there. Many children arrive at Deenabandhu malnourished and sick, but once inside are fed, clothed, and raised in a positive environment thanks to generous sponsorships mostly from people they've never met. In...

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Garbage pt. 2 show art Garbage pt. 2

Doing It

Garbage is inextricably tied to abundance, and we create so much garbage that some people make their livelihoods off it. We wanted to show you some alternative places and uses for your garbage, and the people who capitalize on it: Sophie and Fannie check out Jim Klinko's Furniture on Consignment in Westport, Connecticut, to hear about his life spent flipping other people's cast-offs for cash, and what his work means to him. Plus, we'll take you into some of New York City's finest dumpsters with a group of Freegans who scavenge through grocery store waste in search of their next...

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Garbage pt. 1 show art Garbage pt. 1

Doing It

Garbage, shit, waste, crap, refuse, discards, dreck - these are all words we use to describe that pile of stuff we all collect but will soon find a way to make disappear. In America, it's never been easier to throw away your trash and in this episode we face the pile head-on. Fannie and Sophie hitch a ride with the NY Dept of Sanitation to make the morning pick up rounds, and later sit down with Anthropologist-in-Residence for the NY Dept of Sanitation, Robin Nagel, whose recent book, Picking Up, is a detailed survey of the Sanitation Department from the inside. Then we try and figure out just...

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Short: Sophie's Stand  show art Short: Sophie's Stand

Doing It

When in doubt, go to your Banyan tree. Sophie explains the inspiration behind her coach's stand - a grounding tool used in life coaching. For more, check out our full-length episode dedicated to trees and natural intelligence, aptly titled Trees. 

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Trees show art Trees

Doing It

After a long winter, spring is a miracle that comes at you fast. This time Sophie and Fannie turn their heads towards the trees to investigate the natural laws that govern not just trees, but people, animals, and even the universe. We take a walk around Martha Stewart's farm with her long-time arborist Ralph Robbins of , and get a lesson in the Fibonacci sequence from . Plus, we sit down with , our frequent music-collaborator, to hear how the golden ratio found its way into his songs. Then we visit the in Stamford, Connecticut to see how the Rocherolle family carries on the ancient art...

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Housing First show art Housing First

Doing It

How do you fight homelessness? With a home. This time we take you inside a revolutionary progam called Pathways To Housing, which gives its clients housing first, in combination with mental health and wellness programs. We also explore the cycle of poverty and homelessless and trace the history of institutionalization in America. Plus we hear from real-life Pathways clients who have turned their lives around and are working to build a caring, supportive community, not just in New York City but all over the world. We talk with Pathways founder Sam Tsemberis and psychiatrist Burt Pepper among...

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Attention!  show art Attention!

Doing It

What you give attention to can change your reality and the world, it's your real-life superpower. Even though we're all multitasking, this show will teach you how to harness that energy and what you're capable of. We'll also explore the dark side of energetic focus. Sophie and Fannie talk to psychoanalyst Dr. Melvin Bernstein, writer and philosopher Dr. Rebecca Painter, psychic channel and author Paul Selig, and Leadership Embodiment founder and Aikido black belt Wendy Palmer. 

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More Episodes
Garbage is inextricably tied to abundance, and we create so much garbage that some people make their livelihoods off it. We wanted to show you some alternative places and uses for your garbage, and the people who capitalize on it: Sophie and Fannie check out Jim Klinko's Furniture on Consignment in Westport, Connecticut, to hear about his life spent flipping other people's cast-offs for cash, and what his work means to him. Plus, we'll take you into some of New York City's finest dumpsters with a group of Freegans who scavenge through grocery store waste in search of their next meal. Then we'll introduce you to Miriam Goldstein, a young marine biologist who started her professional career looking for the Great Pacific Garbage Island. She didn't find a garbage island, but what she found floating in the ocean can only be described as "plastic chowder," and she says there's thousands of miles of it to go around.