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To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Sheri Booker was terrified when she first started working at the Wylie Funeral Home at the age of 15. She was still grieving the death of a beloved aunt, and took the job in the hope of finding a sense of closure. After preparing her first client — a suicide victim with a gunshot wound to the head — something changed. As morbid as it may sound, she was hooked.

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

What role does sound play in Franz Kafka's fiction?

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Commentator Aubrey Ralph is bipolar, and says he has been living in a storm for most of his life...

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

“In the culture people talk about trauma as an event that happened a long time ago. But what trauma is, is the imprints that event has left on your mind and in your sensations... the discomfort you feel and the agitation you feel and the rage and the helplessness you feel right now.”

Psychiatrist Bessel van der Kolk is helping people with post traumatic stress disorder focus less on talking about their stories, and more on how their stories feel, how they sound, look, or smell.

You can also hear van der Kolk's extended interview, including more on yoga and the neuroscience of trauma.

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Writer and activist Astra Taylor calls for a Jubilee to buy and abolish debt.

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

The end of money. Really?  Are we really on the verge of a coming cashless society?

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Carlos Eire has written a memoir about the Cuba he remembers. Castro came to power when Carlos was eight.  Eire tells Jim Fleming about his childhood in Cuba and after he was air-lifted to the U.S. His memoir is called “Waiting for Snow in Havana.”

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Douglas Coupland says only twenty percent of people are hard-wired to “get” irony and the rest take everything at face value.

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