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BITEradio: One Woman’s Journey to Reclaim Her Soul

57 min · 7 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio BITEradio: One Woman’s Journey to Reclaim Her Soul

Descripción

Celinne Da Costa is an author, speaker, and master coach who guides visionary leaders to live, lead, and express themselves in full alignment with their soul’s truth. Her latest book is The Burning Ground: One Woman’s Journey to Reclaim Her Soul and Ignite Her Fire. Raised between Italy, Brazil, and the United States, she is a woman of many worlds. At twenty-five, she left behind a promising corporate career to follow a deeper call—one that led her to travel across more than seventy countries, couch surf with strangers around the globe, and explore the depths of the human spirit. Today, Celinne blends subconscious reprogramming, communication, storytelling, intuition training, and emotional mastery to help high-achieving professionals embody their most authentic and magnetic leadership. Her work has supported Fortune 150 executives, entrepreneurs, and change-makers in over sixty countries, and her insights have been featured in Forbes, Entrepreneur, Business Insider, and her TEDx talk on the power of human connection. She now divides her time between the Mediterranean and South America, where she continues to write, coach, and explore what it means to come home to oneself. The journey doesn't end here. Visit celinnedacosta.com for more information.

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episode BITEradio: How We Disappear by historian Thomas Mullaney artwork

BITEradio: How We Disappear by historian Thomas Mullaney

In the public imagination, we’re living in an era of permanent memory: everything is stored, searchable, and retrievable, especially now, as AI systems ingest vast archives of human speech, images, and text. Yet How We Disappear: A Personal History of Information, by Stanford Professor of History Thomas Mullaney tells a more unsettling truth: information doesn’t naturally endure. It breaks down, scatters, becomes unaffordable to recover, and far more often than we admit, simply vanishes. Thomas S. Mullaney is Professor of History East Asian Languages and Cultures at Stanford University. A Guggenheim Fellow and former Kluge Chair in Technology and Society at the Library of Congress, he is the award-winning author of The Chinese Typewriter (winner of the John K. Fairbank Prize) and other books on the global history of technology and information.

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