『Mundo Perspectives』のカバーアート

Mundo Perspectives

Mundo Perspectives

著者: Cameron
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This podcast focuses on my perspective of the world, shaped by my Indigenous background, as well as other perspectives we may have never considered or thought about, including conversations with special guests who share their own experiences. We approach these topics through “critical thinking” and open conversation. Additionally, I provide honest reviews of products, services, and travel tips, regardless of any kind of compensation. I make sure that you, the audience, receive real “critical thought” within this field. I hope you enjoy the conversation and learn something new.

© 2026 Mundo Perspectives
旅行記・解説 社会科学
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  • Episode 13 - I Had No Answers So I Built A Process "The Vertigo Experience Part 2"
    2026/05/04

    I’m new to podcasting and new to this feature. Please be patient with any reply. Thanks.

    If you enjoy Mundo Perspectives and want to support the show, consider becoming a monthly supporter. Your support helps keep the conversations going and allows us to bring more thoughtful perspectives and voices to the podcast.
    Support the show: https://www.buzzsprout.com/2598011/support

    Critical thinking sounds clean and academic until the room starts spinning and nobody can tell you why. I’m sharing a personal story that got very real: a sudden vertigo relapse that sent me to the ER, left me throwing up, blurred my vision so badly I couldn’t read my phone, and even came with a scary moment on the monitor when my heart rate dipped to 39. Doctors ran the scans and blood tests, explored a BPPV-style explanation, and still couldn’t give a satisfying answer, which meant I had to build my own way forward.

    I walk you through the exact mental moves I leaned on when certainty wasn’t available: remembering what happened eight years ago, tracking patterns in my vision and balance, and treating recovery like a careful experiment of testing, observing, and adapting. I also get honest about the tension between expert advice and lived experience, including why I refused a common vertigo medication based on how my body reacted in the past. If you’ve ever felt dismissed by “everything looks normal,” this will help you think about self-trust, patient advocacy, and decision-making under pressure.

    We also zoom out to what “control” really means when you can’t fix the problem immediately: hydration, sleep, stress management, pacing your responsibilities, and staying grounded in meaning. I bring my Indigenous perspective into the reflection, because sometimes the lesson isn’t a diagnosis, it’s what you learn about yourself while you heal. If this hits home, subscribe, share the show with someone who needs it, and leave a review. How do you decide what to do next when life won’t give you answers?

    Mundo Mondays

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    38 分
  • Episode 12 - The Lottery Is Not A Plan
    2026/04/27

    I’m new to podcasting and new to this feature. Please be patient with any reply. Thanks.

    If you enjoy Mundo Perspectives and want to support the show, consider becoming a monthly supporter. Your support helps keep the conversations going and allows us to bring more thoughtful perspectives and voices to the podcast.
    Support the show: https://www.buzzsprout.com/2598011/support

    A lottery ticket is one of the smallest purchases you can make, but it can carry a huge emotional load. I buy one now and then, not because I think it’s a plan, but because I’m curious about what that moment of possibility does to our thinking and our sense of control.

    We get honest about the basics first: Powerball and Mega Millions odds are so extreme that “knowing” the odds is not the same as actually feeling them. From quick pick to choosing your own numbers, I break down why the illusion of control is so tempting, why “it could be me” hits like a dopamine rush, and how a $2 decision can quietly start to masquerade as a financial strategy if you don’t keep it in its place. Along the way, I ask the uncomfortable questions that tell you whether you’re hoping responsibly or using the fantasy to escape.

    Then I run the daydream all the way through with a grounded personal finance mindset: paying bills, protecting privacy, choosing a practical car, and thinking hard about annuity vs lump sum. We talk about why the advertised jackpot is not the money you actually see once cash value and lottery taxes enter the picture, and why discipline matters more than the headline number. I also share a story tied to a 90s country song and what my grandfather taught me about money, meaning, and what still matters when the numbers disappear.

    If you’ve ever caught yourself thinking the lottery might be your way out, this is a thoughtful reset. Subscribe for more critical thinking on everyday choices, share this with a friend who loves these conversations, and leave a review so more people can find the show.

    Mundo Mondays

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    40 分
  • Episode 11 - Money Works Because We Agree It Does
    2026/04/20

    I’m new to podcasting and new to this feature. Please be patient with any reply. Thanks.

    If you enjoy Mundo Perspectives and want to support the show, consider becoming a monthly supporter. Your support helps keep the conversations going and allows us to bring more thoughtful perspectives and voices to the podcast.
    Support the show: https://www.buzzsprout.com/2598011/support

    Money feels solid until you stare at the details. A $1 bill and a $100 bill are made from the same cotton and linen fibers, yet we treat one as 100 times more “real” than the other. Even pennies expose the weirdness: they can cost more to produce than the value we agree they represent. That simple tension opens the door to a bigger question that can change how you see every swipe, tap, and paycheck: what is money really?

    We walk through how value gets assigned when the material itself has little intrinsic value, and why “legal tender” only works because people participate in the system. Along the way, I connect today’s US dollar to the gold standard, the historical break from gold convertibility, and what fiat currency actually means in plain language. The goal isn’t to be cynical about economics or personal finance, but to get clearer on the invisible glue holding the money system together: collective trust.

    Then we push the thought experiment further. If money is a shared belief, what happens when that belief weakens or shifts? What else in daily life runs on the same kind of agreement? We also compare modern money to Bitcoin and cryptocurrency, where perceived value depends on people buying into the idea, even when it’s ultimately code and consensus. If you like big questions about money, value, and how society works, subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review so more curious minds can find the show.

    Mundo Mondays

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    32 分
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