November 1, 2021 | Manako
Manako | Hoturoa Barclay-Kerr
Kua whakatau te poari matua o Waka Ama NZ, menā kei te pirangi koe ki te tae atu ki ngā […]
November 1, 2021 | Manako
Kua whakatau te poari matua o Waka Ama NZ, menā kei te pirangi koe ki te tae atu ki ngā […]
November 1, 2021 | Drive Show
Former Political Press Secretary and Advisor, and Sustainability Manager Kaapua Smith, Ngāti Awa, Ngāti Apa, Ngāti Porou, has just been […]
November 1, 2021 | Drive Show
A comprehensive set of data collated on hapū and marae across the motu has huge benefits for Māori wanting to […]
November 1, 2021 | Drive Show
An ambitious plan to boost Māori and Pasifika prosperity in Tāmaki ki te Tonga, me Tāmaki ki te Hauauru is […]
November 1, 2021 | Drive Show
A Māori design group Co-Chaired by Tā Pou Temara and Aleisha Amohia has been established to work alongside InternetNZ to […]
November 1, 2021 | Drive Show
DHB’s and Iwi Agencies are not one-stop shops for whaanau seeking health care says Green MP Dr Elizabeth Kerekere, Te […]
November 1, 2021 | Drive Show
The tiny township of Te Araroa in Te Tairāwhiti is focussing on keeping its whānau safe and well from COVID-19 […]
November 1, 2021 | Paakiwaha
Te Aranga Savage from Tomorrow People talk to us about And the effects of COVID-19 on the music industry.
November 1, 2021 | Paakiwaha
Kiri Tamihere-Waititi, ex Clinical Psychologist: Feeling triggered by someone’s post or opinion lately? If you have a strong negative emotional reaction to someone’s social media post or anyone’s opinion in general, chances are you have been triggered. By strong negative emotional reaction, I mean, puku churning, getting flustered, feeling rage, feeling defensive, feeling angry for a long time, allowing the opinion to impact your day, allowing the opinion to impact your whānau. It happens to the best of us and it happens to all of us. When we have such a strong negative emotional reaction to anything, it can give us some really good feedback about ourselves and our unresolved trauma, For the record, feelings are never wrong but our responses to those feelings can be unhealthy. Once you can understand the whakapapa of those feelings, you can learn to respond more effectively; in a way that is healthier for you.
November 1, 2021 | Paakiwaha
Selwyn Parata, Chair of Te Matatini. Announces move of Te Matatini to 2023 but still in Auckland.
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