CD Miami Moon – Los Doctores del Ritmo
- 2025-09-02
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- 2025-05-07
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Eric Pearl
Category : SpiritualDocs
Over the past three decades Dr. Eric Pearl has shed a new light on the essence of healing. Undeniably, Reconnective Healing® and the Reconnective Healing Experience™ (RHE) have redefined both what healing is and how it is received. Through Jillian Fleer’s insights, it has become clear the RHE has shown us how our direct awareness connects us to the essence of healing itself. Moreover, it gives us a healing experience available to everyone and not limited to the physical, mental, emotional or spiritual: it is infinite. Additionally, it is devoid of tools, steps or rituals to follow. In brief, Reconnective Healing® is the direct path to healing.
https://DoctorsTalents.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/PearlEric-SpiritualDoc.pdf
https://www.youtube.com/@TheReconnectionTV
- 2025-05-03
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Hiester Richard Hornberger Jr.
Category : movieDocs , TV-doc , WriterDocs

Hiester Richard Hornberger Jr. (February 1, 1924 – November 4, 1997) was an American writer and surgeon who wrote under the pseudonym Richard Hooker. Hornberger’s best-known work is his novel MASH (1968), based on his experiences as a wartime United States Army surgeon during the Korean War and written in collaboration with W. C. Heinz. It was used as the basis for the award-winning, critically and commercially successful movie M*A*S*H (1970) — and two years later, the acclaimed long running television series of the same title.
After graduating from medical school, he was drafted into the Korean War and assigned to the 8055 Mobile Army Surgical Hospital (M.A.S.H.). According to one doctor assigned to the unit, M.A.S.H. units “weren’t on the front lines, but they were close. They lived and worked in tents. It was hot in the summer and colder than cold in the winter.”[3] The operating room consisted of stretchers balanced on carpenter’s sawhorses.[4]
Many of the M.A.S.H. doctors were in their twenties, with few having advanced surgical training.[5] During battle campaigns, units could see “as many as 1,000 casualties a day”. “What characterized the fighting in Korea”, one of Hornberger’s fellow officers recalled, “was that you would have a period of a week or ten days when nothing much was happening, then there would be a push. When you had a push, there would suddenly be a mass of casualties that would just overwhelm us.” There were, another surgeon recalled, “‘long periods when not much of anything happened’ in an atmosphere of apparent safety—plenty of time to play … When things were quiet we would sit around and read. Sometimes the nurses would have a little dance.” Hornberger’s later assessment of his unit’s behavior was: “A few flipped their lids, but most just raised hell in a variety of ways and degrees.”
A colleague described Hornberger as “a very good surgeon with a tremendous sense of humor.” Hornberger did label his tent “The Swamp” as do the characters in the novel
After the success of his book and its screen adaptations, Hornberger continued to practice as a surgeon in Waterville until his retirement in 1988. During the later years of his practice, Hornberger did medical research and published his research in peer-reviewed medical journals. He died at the age of 73 on November 4, 1997, of leukemia.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Hooker_(author)
https://www.saturdayeveningpost.com/2020/01/five-things-you-didnt-know-about-the-4077th-mash
- 2025-05-02
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William Carlos Williams
Category : WriterDocs

William Carlos Williams (September 17, 1883, Rutherford, New Jersey – March 4, 1963, ibid.), often abbreviated to WCW, was an American physician and poet.
Williams’ life quickly became entirely centered – apart from his travels in Europe – in his hometown of Rutherford, New Jersey, where he practiced medicine (M.D.) since 1910.
In addition to his writing, Williams was a long-time physician, practicing both pediatrics and general medicine. He was affiliated with Passaic General Hospital, where he began serving as chief of pediatrics from 1924 until his death. The hospital, now called St. Mary’s General Hospital, honored Williams with a plaque bearing the inscription, “We walk the paths Williams walked.”
In contrast to Pound, who was inspired by European models, William Williams, in his collection of essays “In the American Grain” (1925), called for a simple yet avant-garde poetry that should be oriented towards spoken language and everyday American life.
Williams writes in his autobiography, published in 1951[5]: “Ezra has always been very careful to bridge the gap between my educational deficiencies and his sovereign scholarship. Since he treats me in no way patronizingly in this regard, I allow it. It genuinely grieves me that my literary knowledge is so far inferior to his. I respect his discomfort and try my best to accommodate his well-intentioned efforts.”[6] If Williams was less well-versed in European literature than Pound, he endeavored to remedy this deficiency on his European tour, as he met with well-known European writers, intellectuals and painters, especially in Paris.
His early poems were still strongly influenced by European Dadaism and Surrealism. In 1923 he wrote his most famous poem to date, “This is Just to Say.”[10] Together with Pound and Eliot, he joined the Imagists, an Anglo-American literary movement, around 1912. His friendship with Pound later broke down due to artistic differences of opinion and Pound’s support for Italian fascism, but this did not prevent him from visiting Pound, who was interned in the USA (see autobiography).

As a result of his third stroke (the first was in 1951) in October 1955, he suffered paralysis, which slowed his work pace. Nevertheless, he taught himself to type on an electric typewriter with his non-paralyzed hand.
At the age of 79, poet-physician William Carlos Williams died in March 1963 in Rutherford, New Jersey, after another series of severe strokes.
Audio William Carlos Williams https://writing.upenn.edu/pennsound/x/Williams-WC.php
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Irvin D. Yalom
Category : TV-doc , WriterDocs

Irvin David Yalom (born June 13, 1931 in Washington, D.C.) is an American psychoanalyst, psychotherapist, psychiatrist, and writer. He is Professor Emeritus of Psychiatry at Stanford University and the author of numerous academic books and novels. Yalom is considered the most important living representative of existential psychotherapy. He is the recipient of the 2009 International Sigmund Freud Prize for Psychotherapy.
The book Every Day a Little Closer, which he published in 1974 in the form of an epistolary novel with Ginny Elkins [the pseudonym of his former client], is based on an unusual experiment. The client was a writer and her year-long participation in one of his therapy groups had been relatively unsuccessful. He therefore suggested individual therapy on the condition that, instead of paying him, she write a free-flowing, uncensored summary of each therapy session, in which she expressed all the feelings and thoughts she had not verbalized during the session. He did exactly the same. Exchanging notes every few months revealed the great discrepancies between sensations and memories regarding the same sessions. At first he used the notes in therapeutic teaching, then they were published as a book. The advice in his book The Panama Hat is based on notes from 45 years of clinical practice.
Fiction and memoir
- 1974 Every Day Gets a Little Closer ISBN 0-465-02119-0
- 1989 Love’s Executioner and Other Tales of Psychotherapy[13] ISBN 0-465-04280-5
- 1992 When Nietzsche Wept[14][15] ISBN 0-465-09172-5 (Kindle edition 2019)
- 1996 Lying on the Couch[16] ISBN 0-465-04295-3
- 1999 Momma and the Meaning of Life[17] ISBN 0-749-92038-6
- 2005 The Schopenhauer Cure[18][19] ISBN 978-0-06-621441-2
- 2005 I’m Calling the Police! A Tale of Regression and Recovery[20]
- 2012 The Spinoza Problem[21] ISBN 0-465-02963-9
- 2015 Creatures of a Day – And Other Tales of Psychotherapy,[22] ISBN 978-0-465-02964-8
Filmography
- 2003 Flight from Death (directed by Patrick Shen, featuring Ron Leifer, Robert Jay Lifton, Merlyn Mowrey and Sheldon Solomon and Irvin D. Yalom)[27][28]
- 2007 When Nietzsche Wept (directed by Pinchas Perry, featuring Ben Cross, Armand Assante, Katheryn Winnick)[29]
- 2014 Yalom’s Cure (directed by Sabine Gisiger)
- 2014: Yaloms Anleitung zum Glücklichsein (Originaltitel: Yalom’s cure) von Sabine Gisiger, Dokumentarfilm über Yalom
- 2007: Und Nietzsche weinte von Pinchas Perry, Verfilmung des Romans
- 2003: Flight from Death von Patrick Shen
- 2023: Irvin Yalom – In die Sonne schauen. Regie: Eva Fouquet, NDR, Deutschland, 53 Minuten,
Auszeichnungen und Ehrungen
- 2009: Internationaler Sigmund-Freud-Preis für Psychotherapie
- 2001: Oskar Pfister Award für außergewöhnliche interdisziplinäre Beiträge über Religion und Psychiatrie der American Psychiatric Foundation[2]
- 1992: Commonwealth Club Gold Award for fiction best novel (Und Nietzsche weinte)[3]
- 1987: Fellowship Award der Rockefeller Foundation[4]
- 1977: Fellowship Award der Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences
- 1976: Foundation´s Fund Award for research in psychiatry der American Psychiatric Association
- 1974: Edward Strecker Award for significant contribution to the field of psychiatry patient
- 2025-04-27
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Martin Nweeia
Category : AnimalDocs , AnthropologyDocs , biologyDocs , pioneerDocs , WriterDocs

Dr. Martin Nweeia is the world’s leading expert on the narwhal’s tusk and tooth system. He is a National Foundation Scientist and has led over 20 High Arctic expeditions and carried 15 expedition flags to study the elusive narwhal. He holds doctorates in dentistry and surgery and is a member of the dental faculties of Harvard University and Case Western Reserve University. He also conducts research at the Canadian Museum of Nature and the Smithsonian Institution. The Smithsonian Institution has awarded him two fellowships: one in physical anthropology and one in vertebrate zoology.
His work has been featured in The New York Times, NPR’s “Pulse of the Planet,” “A Beautiful World,” “Morning Edition,” “Earth Wise,” and documentaries by National Geographic, “Découverte” (French Discovery), and the BBC, including “Natural Curiosities” with Sir David Attenborough. Dr. Nweeia has received a CINE Golden Eagle for the NGS Wild Chronicles narwhal story, the William Mills Prize for his book “Narwhal: Revealing An Arctic Legend,” and the Lowell Thomas Award for Arctic Research. His 2020 scientific publications have been published in Nature, PNAS, and two Smithsonian books.

Ein ziemlich ausgefallenes Hobby hat der amerikanische Zahnarzt Martin Nweeia: Er studiert den Stoßzahn des Narwals. Nweeia, niedergelassen in Sharon im US-Staat Connecticut und Lehrbeauftragter an der School of Dental Medicine der Harvard University, fährt seit Jahren im Frühjahr nach Kanada in die Arktis und untersucht die rätselhaften Wale mit dem einen großen Zahn, berichtet “New Scientist” online.

The narwhal’s tusk—the model for the unicorn’s horn—is unique in nature, says Nweeia. “It’s the only known straight tusk and the only spirally twisted one.” In stress tests, narwhal tusks have proven to be extremely flexible and tough—a combination that’s unusual for teeth.

In male narwhals, one tusk grows to almost two and a half meters, while the other remains embedded in the jaw. Most females lack a tusk. The purpose of the tooth is still unclear. Weeia’s theory: “I think the tooth is a kind of sensor. It probably has something to do with detecting prey.” To test this, he is currently equipping whales with a sensor in their teeth.


https://www.si.edu/stories/understanding-narwhals-smile
https://www.glexsummit.com/explorers/martin-nweeia
- 2025-04-25
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Rupa Marya
Category : CharityDocs , ComposerDocs , FarmerDoc , PianoDocs , SingerDocs , SpeakerDocs , WriterDocs

Rupa Marya is a doctor, activist, musician and writer based in San Francisco. She is a professor of medicine at the UCSF School of Medicine[1] and co-author of the book Inflamed: Deep Medicine and the Anatomy of Injustice (with Raj Patel).[2] She is currently suspended from teaching and banned from the UCSF campus after what the university described as the “targeting” of a first-year student from Israel in a social media post. The post cited speculation from the Israeli student’s classmates about potential service in the Israel Defence Forces and possible involvement in Israeli war crimes.
Marya was born in California to immigrant Indian parents. Her childhood was spent in the US, France, and India.[3] She attended the University of California San Diego, earning degrees in theater and molecular biology, before attending medical school at Georgetown University. It was during her residency at UCSF that she began writing and performing music.

Marya is the composer and front-woman of the band Rupa & the April Fishes[20] and was a lead plaintiff in the lawsuit that brought the song “Happy Birthday to You” back to the public domain.[21][22]
Rupa & the April Fishes’ debut album, “Extraordinary Rendition“, reflects on the societal impact of the September 11 attacks, while her subsequent album, “Este Mundo,” draws from her interactions with undocumented immigrants facing severe health challenges.[23] In “Este Mundo,” Rupa’s lyrics explore themes of longing, loss, and love, maintaining a thoughtful and intimate perspective.[24] Her music incorporates influences from jazz, tango, klezmer, Latin American, and Balkan music.[25]
Marya has said her sense of justice was awakened in childhood as she witnessed class differences in India, and learned about colonization and genocide perpetrated against Native Americans in the United States.[5] She is involved in numerous organizations working at the intersection of social justice and health, including the Do No Harm Coalition[6] and Deep Medicine Circle.[7] She was recognized in 2021 with the Women Leaders in Medicine Award by the American Medical Student Association. She was a reviewer of the American Medical Association’s Organizational Strategic Plan to Embed Racial Justice and Advance Health Equity. In 2019, Marya was among the physicians appointed by Governor Newsom to the Healthy California for All Commission.[8][9]
Marya has been vocal on social media as well as in her capacity as a medical professional regarding violations of Palestinian human rights.[10] After Dr. Avromi Kanal sent an email to hospital staff arguing against a cease-fire resolution, Marya publicly described this email as an “expression of anti-Arab hate” that prompted doctors of South Asian and North African descent “to say they do not feel safe in his presence.”
https://www.theaprilfishes.com
https://www.youtube.com/@theaprilfishes/featured
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rupa_Marya
https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rupa_%26_the_April_Fishes
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rupa_%26_the_April_Fishes
https://www.facebook.com/drrupamarya
- 2025-04-23
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Larry Lammers
Category : GolfDocs

2018-07-29 Blake Bacho | bbacho@monroenews.com
Larry Lammers has golf running through his veins.
The Temperance resident was in sixth grade when he learned the sport from his father, the late Dr. Gerald Lammers, who at one time was the club champion at Sylvania Country Club. Lammers’ brother Gerald Lammers II was at one time the youngest player on the PGA Tour, while another of his brothers, Terry, made seven hole-in-ones in his career. Lammers niece Lindsay played on the women’s tour, and nephew Nate is a golf professional in Ann Arbor.
“It’s remarkable,” Lammers said. “Almost uncanny. I marvel at it when I stop and think. I guess some people make football players, others make basketball players. We made golfers.”
Recently, Lammers added another chapter to his own golfing story.
Lammers notched the 16th hole-in-one of his career, and second this season, using his gap wedge to ace the 92-yard 11th hole at Carrington Golf Club. The 65-year-old was playing in a club tournament at the time.
- 2025-04-22
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Larry Weinstein
Category : CarillonDocs

https://www.facebook.com/share/v/1Q8QRXHwCJ
- 2025-04-21
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John Diamond
Category : ArtDocs , percussionDocs , photographyDocs , SpeakerDocs , SpiritualDocs , WriterDocs

John Diamond (9 August 1934 – 25 April 2021) was a physician and author on holistic health and creativity
Diamond married three times. His first wife was Suzanne Gurvich, with whom he had three children, Ian, Kathie, and Peter. In the 1970s he married Betty Peele, and in 1994 the opera singer Susan Burghardt.[2] For many years, Diamond played drums in a jazz band which he founded, named the Diamond Jubilators. The band performed in hospitals and nursing homes.[2][1] He enjoyed photography and painting in the final years of his life.
without John Diamond, but it surely sounded similarly WITH him!



