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Breaking Through with Alexis Mayberry

An episode of the A Day in the Fight podcast, hosted by Megan Moore, titled "Breaking Through with Alexis Mayberry" was published on March 14, 2025 and runs 33 minutes.

March 14, 2025 ·33m · A Day in the Fight

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In this episode, we sit down with Alexis Mayberry as she opens up about her personal journey through therapy. Alexis shares candid insights into her past, the challenges she's faced, and how therapy has played a pivotal role in her healing. Her powerful story offers inspiration and hope to anyone struggling, reminding us that growth and healing are possible, no matter where we start. Tune in for a raw, honest, and uplifting conversation that's sure to resonate with anyone on their own path to self-discovery.

The Deerfield Public Library Podcast Deerfield Public Library Thoughtful, in-depth conversations with authors of all genres and other notable people from Chicagoland and around the world. A monthly program from the Deerfield Public Library in Deerfield, IL, hosted by Dylan Zavagno.Our archives include episodes from the Library's John Cotton Dana Award-winning series, The Fight to Integrate Deerfield: 60 Year Reflection; our Pride Month series, Queer Poem-a-Day; and our local history audio tours. Antietam National Battlefield, Maryland by Frederick Herman Tilberg (1895 - 1979) LibriVox The American Civil War battle at Antietam, Maryland,(called Sharpsburg by the Confederacy) on 17 September 1862, has been called the bloodiest day of that conflict. Confederate General Lee’s invasion of the North was repulsed, and when the fighting ended, the course of the Civil War had been greatly altered. This victory by the North moved President Abraham Lincoln to issue The Emancipation Proclamation, freeing all slaves in states then in rebellion against the Union. This 1960 publication is number 31 in the Historical Handbook series put out by the U.S. National Park Service. Print edition contains valuable maps that inform on troop movements. The author was a World War I veteran, a noted Civil War historian, and chief historian for the Gettysburg National Military Park in the 1950s and 1960s. - Summary by David Wales Richard Diamond, Private Detective, Old time Radio Inception Point Ai Richard Diamond, Private Detective is a classic American detective drama radio show that aired from 1949 to 1953. The show starred Dick Powell as the titular character, a wisecracking former police officer turned private detective.Episodes typically opened with a client visiting or calling Diamond's office and agreeing to his fee of $100 a day plus expenses, or Diamond taking on a case at the behest of his friend and former partner, Lt. Walter Levinson. Diamond would then embark on a dangerous investigation, often involving beautiful women, ruthless criminals, and deadly secrets.Despite the danger involved in his work, Diamond always maintained his cool and his sense of humor. He was a skilled fighter and a shrewd investigator, and he always managed to get his man (or woman) in the end.One of the things that made Richard Diamond, Private Detective so popular was its unique blend of hard-boiled detective fiction and romantic comedy. Diamond was a tough guy, but he also had a soft side f Saint Francis of Assisi: A Biography Johannes Jorgensen Born to a prosperous cloth merchant of Assisi, Francis (1182-1226) lived the typically high-spirited life of a wealthy young man of his day, which included fighting as a soldier. In 1205, while away at war, he experienced a vision that beckoned him return to Assisi, where he soon lost his taste for the worldly life and began to live a life of evangelical poverty in imitation of Jesus Christ. He embarked upon a pilgrimage to Rome, where he begged for alms alongside the poor at St. Peter's Basilica. Upon his return to Assisi, be began to preach in the town square and soon acquired a curious following which blossomed into a worldwide religious order. The Franciscans sparked a spiritual revival that enlightened the Dark Ages and that continues even into our day.Johannes Jorgensen (1866–1956) is best known outside his native Denmark for his popular biography of St. Francis of Assisi, which he wrote in 1907. As a student in Copenhagen, he searched in vain for truth in various secular
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