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While it's day

Episode 8 of the A Time To Reason podcast, hosted by Antonio Romero, titled "While it's day" was published on May 18, 2022 and runs 9 minutes.

May 18, 2022 ·9m · A Time To Reason

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"Time is of the essence". This is a phrase we all may have heard at some point in our life. But do we really understand it? And if so, how do we allow it to drive us?  And if we really do understand this, then why don't we allow it to move us? Something to think about.

"Time is of the essence". This is a phrase we all may have heard at some point in our life. But do we really understand it? And if so, how do we allow it to drive us? 

And if we really do understand this, then why don't we allow it to move us?

Something to think about.



Living one day at a time, it’s “5:00 somewhere” isn’t a time Morgan Elizabeth I’m stating this podcast because I feel like I’ve lived a lot of my life on excuses. Excuses of why or why not I’d allow myself to do or act a certain way. Excuses of “can’t” or “it’s not for me” “not the right time, place, or people.” Oh and my favorite excuse, “it’s 5:00 🕔 somewhere” and reason to validate in my own head, let’s grab a drink! I’m learning daily who i really am and what i want out of life, with allowing excuses to quit literally run my life, it’s time to get out of my own way. All Time High Mauro Rebelo | tagomago There has never been a better time to live and whatever the metrics you choose, the world is on its all time high. So why living seems sometimes so hard? Here I ask people in the forefront of building the future their reasons to be optimistic and the challenges they see ahead.I am Mauro Rebelo, biotech scientist and entrepreneur, and this is the All Time High podcast. So what's all this about then? James Robertson In which I talk for a prolonged, or not, amount of time to a reasonable, or not, degree of knowledge and insight on something Death Be Not Proud by John Donne (1572 - 1631) LibriVox This week we’re marking the American Memorial Day with eleven readings of a John Donne poem. Memorial Day was conceived as a time to remember military men and women who had lost their lives in war. Kings and presidents come and go and some of the reasons that wars have come about are now lost from memory or are obscured in our history texts. A consistent aspect of war is that those who fight them are not those who arrange them. The soldiers and sailors who suffer loss of limb, scarred minds or forfeit their lives mostly come from the lower and middle rungs of our societal ladder. They are our sons and daughters, husbands and wives, fathers and mothers, brothers and sisters. Once gone, it is the family who notices the empty chair at the family table while society at large knows not their name. Death has captured them and taken them forever from our midst. It has become personal and not a vague philosophical idea. The theme of Donne’s poem is that, though Death is
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