Couverture de Incoming with Margie Avery

Incoming with Margie Avery

Incoming with Margie Avery

De : Margie Avery
Écouter gratuitement

À propos de ce contenu audio

Do you ever feel like you're gonna lose your mind if something doesn't change and you're the only one feeling this way? You are not. This podcast is not a therapy session. I'm not a therapist, I'm not a doctor. I'm a human like you. I have felt exactly the way that you do. I figured out things that anyone can do to make their life happier, more fulfilling and find people I don't hate. Incoming gives listeners tools to deal with everyday life and its obstacles personal and professional. Through conversation, a little humor and experience I help listeners sort through the crap thrown at us daily, and break down self - induced obstacles,© 2023 Incoming with Margie Avery Développement personnel Hygiène et vie saine Psychologie Psychologie et psychiatrie Réussite personnelle Sciences sociales
Les membres Amazon Prime bénéficient automatiquement de 2 livres audio offerts chez Audible.

Vous êtes membre Amazon Prime ?

Bénéficiez automatiquement de 2 livres audio offerts.
Bonne écoute !
    Épisodes
    • Why “A Source Says” Shouldn’t Run Your Life
      Feb 16 2026

      💬 Text Margie your thoughts or questions

      Ever notice how five outlets can declare five different “best” cities—or how a celebrity is “broke” on Monday and “booming” by Friday? We dig into the mechanics behind those whiplash headlines and unpack why modern media often rewards your outrage more than your understanding. From clickbait tactics to the slippery use of “an unnamed source,” we map how attention becomes currency and how that currency shapes what you see, feel, and share.

      We also examine the money myths that fuel viral narratives about public figures. Ultra-wealthy families don’t live paycheck to paycheck; they live portfolio to portfolio. Think trusts, staged inheritances, and conservative returns that can fund a lavish lifestyle without touching principal. When you run the math on book deals, streaming contracts, and speaking fees, the popular “they’re desperate” storyline starts to look like a product—engineered to keep you scrolling, reacting, and arguing.

      The heart of this conversation is agency. You don’t need to abandon news or mute every voice; you need a stronger filter. We offer practical steps: slow your scroll, demand receipts, frame uncertainty honestly, and step back from stories that only spike anxiety. Curate credible sources, read beyond your bubble, and hold your views loosely enough to update them with better facts. Most of all, choose civility. Not every thought requires a post. Not every headline deserves your heartbeat. Peace is a choice, and so is clarity.

      If this resonates, follow the show, share it with a friend who’s tired of the outrage treadmill, and leave a quick review with one filter you plan to use this week. Your attention is power—spend it wisely.

      Have thoughts on today’s episode? I’d love to hear your perspective.
      You can text the show directly.
      Your message may be shared in future episodes or help shape future episodes.

      Support the show

      Looking for a great bike helmet check out Unit . I do not get paid in any way from them. I was in search of a safe cool helmet and found them to hit all the marks. Lots of techie gadgets and safety features. They did give me a discount code for you guys MARGIE54640. Use this code at checkout.

      https://unit1gear.com/

      Afficher plus Afficher moins
      22 min
    • Convictions Or Clout: What Are We Really Defending
      Feb 11 2026

      💬 Text Margie your thoughts or questions

      Ever notice how our outrage shifts depending on who’s holding the megaphone? We take a hard, honest look at immigration, enforcement, protest tactics, and the stories we tell to excuse what we’d condemn in our opponents. The goal isn’t to score points—it’s to find the ground where compassion and consistency can both stand.

      We start by pulling immigration debate back to the right branch of government. Presidents enforce; Congress writes and rewrites. That frame matters when people remain undocumented for decades while temporary fixes masquerade as reform. We call out fraud in public programs—not to smear communities, but to insist that stealing from a safety net robs those it exists to serve. Getting away with it for years never turned theft into policy.

      Civil liberties sit at the center of the enforcement segment. Identification, warrants, and probable cause are non-negotiable if we want trust. We push for visible, lawful policing and tighter coordination with local departments, while reminding listeners that interfering with lawful duties crosses a clear line. Documentation, lawsuits, and policy change work better—and last longer—than harassment or spectacle.

      Double standards get their own spotlight. If storming buildings is insurrection, why is tailing officers, disrupting hotels, or blocking operations somehow noble when our side does it? We also test cultural reciprocity: expecting English in the U.S. doesn’t demand cultural erasure, but it does recognize shared infrastructure and safety. And we interrogate performative allyship that romanticizes symbols while ignoring women living under coercion; real solidarity expands freedom, it doesn’t shrink it.

      We close by challenging social programs that trap people with benefit cliffs and no exit ramps. A serious safety net should smooth the path to stability, not punish progress. Throughout, we invite you to hold multiple truths: protect due process and punish fraud; welcome newcomers and require shared rules; protest boldly and stay within the law. If you value honest debate over easy applause, press play, then tell us where you agree, where you don’t, and what we missed. Subscribe, share with a friend who needs a thoughtful listen, and leave a review with your strongest counterpoint.

      Have thoughts on today’s episode? I’d love to hear your perspective.
      You can text the show directly.
      Your message may be shared in future episodes or help shape future episodes.

      Support the show

      Looking for a great bike helmet check out Unit . I do not get paid in any way from them. I was in search of a safe cool helmet and found them to hit all the marks. Lots of techie gadgets and safety features. They did give me a discount code for you guys MARGIE54640. Use this code at checkout.

      https://unit1gear.com/

      Afficher plus Afficher moins
      22 min
    • We Can Welcome Immigrants And Still Defend Our Culture
      Jan 8 2026

      💬 Text Margie your thoughts or questions

      I examine how assimilation, legality, and faith collide in daily life, asking where respect ends and prejudice begins. Through personal stories and current examples, I argue for reciprocity, equal standards, and the courage to push back against one-way demands.

      • judging behaviors not entire religions
      • reciprocity as the baseline for respect
      • language, volume, and public expression norms
      • legality as the floor for trust and belonging
      • separating fraud cases from broad stereotypes
      • historical guilt versus present responsibility
      • personal experiences of racism from multiple sides
      • America’s tendency to unite and risk overreach
      • a plea to welcome newcomers while expecting integration

      Leave me texts if you have comments


      Have thoughts on today’s episode? I’d love to hear your perspective.
      You can text the show directly.
      Your message may be shared in future episodes or help shape future episodes.

      Support the show

      Looking for a great bike helmet check out Unit . I do not get paid in any way from them. I was in search of a safe cool helmet and found them to hit all the marks. Lots of techie gadgets and safety features. They did give me a discount code for you guys MARGIE54640. Use this code at checkout.

      https://unit1gear.com/

      Afficher plus Afficher moins
      22 min
    Aucun commentaire pour le moment