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Today's podcast is about impermanence. Thanks to my wife's One Year to Live class, in which I took part, I spent some time thinking about impermanence and mortality. In this podcast I have excerpted and developed five geological representations of impermanence, focused first on my first appreciation of rocks in kindergarten, then on a particular stone from Michigan, then certain ridges left by Lake Erie near my Alma Mater, then the stones of Cordes sur Ciel, and finally rocks and minerals associated with the four industrial revolution.
I then go on to a very fun story about our Ami, a Citroen electric that we purchased weeks ago. And I finish with some news about the 1900 chocolate bars that have traveled thousands of miles from Depa, Cote d'Ivoire and are available for purchase at Mama Ganache Artisan Chocolates on 1445 Monterey St in San Luis Obispo.
Hope you can join me!
Write to me at [email protected]
To learn more, visit www.projecthopeandfairness.org
By Tom Neuhaus5
44 ratings
Today's podcast is about impermanence. Thanks to my wife's One Year to Live class, in which I took part, I spent some time thinking about impermanence and mortality. In this podcast I have excerpted and developed five geological representations of impermanence, focused first on my first appreciation of rocks in kindergarten, then on a particular stone from Michigan, then certain ridges left by Lake Erie near my Alma Mater, then the stones of Cordes sur Ciel, and finally rocks and minerals associated with the four industrial revolution.
I then go on to a very fun story about our Ami, a Citroen electric that we purchased weeks ago. And I finish with some news about the 1900 chocolate bars that have traveled thousands of miles from Depa, Cote d'Ivoire and are available for purchase at Mama Ganache Artisan Chocolates on 1445 Monterey St in San Luis Obispo.
Hope you can join me!
Write to me at [email protected]
To learn more, visit www.projecthopeandfairness.org