Wednesday, December 4, 2013

Barrie Realtor gives time and energy to inspire

A Realtor who took to the boxing ring for abused women, who engineered a flash mob downtown for International Women’s Day and who assembled a team of women to pull a train is this year’s Spirit Catcher Award winner. 

Barrie Realtor gives time and energy to inspire

Stan Howe
Shannon Muree will receive the Spirit Catcher Award at a Barrie Community Foundation reception tonight at the Southshore Community Centre. The junior winner is Mackenzie Oliver, founder of the I Love Me Club.
Shannon Murree, 43, will be recognized at a Barrie Community Foundation reception tonight, along with youth award winner, Mackenzie Oliver, who started the I Love Me Club which encourages kids to raise funds for charities.
Murree, a mother of three, said she’s honoured to be this year’s adult inductee into the Order of the Spirit Catcher – a city program that recognizes those who volunteer selflessly to the community.
“I think what clinched it was the diversity. It just wasn’t one thing,” she said.
“I’m passionate about our city and revitalizing our downtown and taking it back. I really believe in the One Billion Rising. Last February I took on the boxing for the Women and Children’s Shelter and slept in a tent. What didn’t I do?”
With sons ages 10 and 18, and a 16-year-old daughter, Murree has enough to keep her busy.
But as well as working for Re/Max, she’s also into real estate investment and property management. And she’s working towards becoming a trainer with the Real Estate Investment Network.
Still she makes time to give to Barrie.
“Everything I did was filled with passion. I’m always encouraging everyone to do a small thing. Every person doing one thing will have a ripple effect. I hope what I do will rub off on people,” she said, adding it’s important for her to set an example for her kids.
“I give a lot of my time and my time is limited. I just believe it’s the right thing to do. “We all have responsibilities. Be the change you want to see in the world.”

Saturday, November 30, 2013

The inequality we don’t talk about

Everyone is worried about inequality. Everyone has a theory about why the rich are getting richer, while the gap between the haves and have-nots is becoming more entrenched. Everybody’s got a favourite villain – globalization, technology, greedy bankers with too much power, the decline of unions, and on and on.

But the roots of inequality are also social. And there is one gap no one likes to talk about: the marriage gap.
Two things happened in the 1970s. Family income began to stagnate and family structures began to change radically. Divorce rates soared and marriage rates began to fall. More women began to have children outside marriage, and the percentage of female-headed families began to climb. In Canada, about 25 per cent of babies are now born out of wedlock. In the United States, it’s 41 per cent. In Canada, just over 19 per cent of children live in single-parent families, mainly single mothers, and another 16.3 per cent live with parents who are common-law, according to Statistics Canada.
The confluence of these trends is no coincidence, says Russ Roberts, a research fellow at Stanford’s Hoover Institution. The rise in female-headed households has helped create the great stagnation in family incomes. The rise of divorce, the decline of marriage and the growth in nonmarital motherhood have been much more dramatic among lower-middle-class and poor families than among the rich.
The marriage gap has created a vast amount of inequality. Lone-parent families in Canada are four times more likely to be poor than two-parent families are. The basic reason is obvious: Single mothers have far less in the way of financial resources, especially if they have less education and fewer skills.
Upper-middle-class two-parent families can invest far more time and resources in their children than lower-middle-class single mothers can, no matter how good their intentions. But the impact of family structure on children goes far beyond money. Kids from lone-parent families do worse on many measures. And the marriage gap is reducing upward mobility and sharpening the class divide. “Because the breakdown of the traditional family is overwhelmingly occurring among working-class Americans of all races, these trends threaten to make the U.S. a much more class-based society over time,” writes Isabel Sawhill of the Brookings Institution.
Canada is not the same as the United States, and distinctions are important. But the general trends apply to us as well. And the children most at risk in lower-income single-parent homes are boys. In a widely cited report published last spring, MIT economists David Autor and Melanie Wasserman drew a direct link between the rising tide of fatherlessness and the growing failure of boys in school and the labour market.
“Males born into low-income single-parent headed households – which, in the vast majority of cases are female-headed households – appear to fare particularly poorly on numerous social and educational outcomes,” they wrote. It’s not just that the girls are outperforming them. It’s that the boys are doing worse.
Changes in the labour market are not the only reason these boys are in trouble – not even the biggest one. Boys without fathers tend to develop serious behaviour problems at an early age. They’re more antisocial and aggressive, more disruptive, more likely to drop out and get in trouble with the law – and become less employable than ever. They are far less inclined to get married, but quite likely to have kids. Which means that the class divide is likely to be self-perpetuating. As the authors warn, “the poor economic prospects of less-educated males may create differentially large disadvantages for their sons, potentially reinforcing the development of the gender gap in the next generation.”
It would be nice to think we could close the marriage gap with more income supports for single mothers, higher minimum wages and all-day kindergarten for their kids. Frankly, that seems like wishful thinking. Bribing people to get married probably wouldn’t work either. This is what’s known as a hard problem, and no one likes to talk about it for fear of sounding reactionary and moralistic. But if we’re really interested in the roots of inequality, ignoring it is a big mistake.

Monday, November 25, 2013

A Warning to Teenagers Before They Start Dating

Originally posted in New York Times 

BOISE, Idaho — After studies emerged more than a decade ago showing that the highest rates of physical and sexual assault happen to women ages 16 to 24, programs to prevent abusive relationships have concentrated on high school and college students.
Joe Jaszewski for The New York Times
Students from North Junior High School in Boise, Idaho, worked on their “ChalkHeart” projects at the Boise Art Museum last month.


Some initiatives have shown promise, but overall statistics remain largely unchanged: the most recent government report stated that nearly one in 10 high school students said they had been physically hurt by a boyfriend or girlfriend.
Now a diverse group that includes theCenters for Disease Control and Prevention, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and federal lawmakers is trying to forestall dating violence by addressing even younger students: middle schoolers. The goal is to educate them about relationships before they start dating in earnest, even though research shows that some seventh graders have already experienced physical and emotional harm while dating.
That is why, on a recent balmy evening here, 30 teams of teenage artists were kneeling over blackboards in the sculpture garden at the Boise Art Museum, sketching chalk interpretations of poems about relationships written by fellow students.
More than 400 teenagers and parents crowded into this first “ChalkHeart” competition. A bakery provided iced sugar cookies that read “Equality” and “Respect.” A collection of poetry from local students, titled “Love What’s Real” and culled from thousands of submissions, was distributed.
Jadn Soper, 14, brushed aside her electric pink hair as she drew, remarking that most eighth graders know couples who are in demeaning relationships.
“You can tell the way a girl’s mood changes when she’s with that person,” she said. “The boy was funny and charming until he reels you in, and then he’s demanding and has to have it his way.”
Jadn’s classmates from Lowell Scott Middle School nodded. “Middle school has gotten a lot more grown-up than you’d expect,” she added.
Kelly Miller, a former domestic violence prosecutor who runs Start Strong Idaho, the sponsor of the competition, agreed. “Most young people have a sense of what’s abusive,” she said, “but they don’t know what a healthy relationship means.”
The Boise area is one of 11 sites nationwide that each received a $1 million Start Strong grant for middle-school programs, mostly from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.
Esta Soler, president of Futures Without Violence, a national anti-violence organization, said there were many reasons to start talking to younger students about abuse.
In middle school, Ms. Soler said, they are rocketing through emotional and social development, beginning to make their own choices. “But they still respond to input from caring adults,” she added. A 2010 study of 1,430 seventh graders in eight middle schools in three cities underscores the need for such education.
The study, commissioned by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and released this spring, showed that three-quarters of students had already had a boyfriend or girlfriend. One in three said they had been victims of psychological dating violence; nearly one in six said they had experienced physical dating violence. Almost half said they had been touched in an unwanted sexual way or had been the target of sexual slurs.
It can be daunting to engage adolescents about intimate topics. To ease their awkwardness, Ms. Miller incorporates the students’ creative work and pop icons. For example, her staff created surveys rating the relationships of the characters in “The Hunger Games” books and movie. They sponsor poetry slams, with teenagers reading “Love What’s Real” poems, dancing to a “Relationship Remix” of hits.
Middle-school intervention programs are so new that assessing their effectiveness is difficult. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention gave grants to middle-school programs in four urban sites last fall. In reauthorization drafts this spring for the Violence Against Women Act — Michael D. Crapo, Republican of Idaho, was a co-author in the Senate — the eligibility age for dating violence education and service programs is now as young as 11.
To sustain elements of the Start Strong program after grants end this fall, staff members have trained health teachers in curriculums that reinforce social and emotional well-being.
At Riverglen Junior High School, Patti Bellan, trained in Canada’s“Fourth R” program about relationships, teaches eighth-grade health at 8:45 a.m. Slight, with a low-key, piquant authority, Mrs. Bellan has clothed the class skeleton in a ChalkHeart T-shirt. She teaches body-language cues, strategies for risky settings and, on this day, responsible decision making.
She read from PowerPoint slides: a girl who has met an older boy online finally has the chance to see him, at his house, alone. What might happen if she does?
Another: a boy with a longtime girlfriend goes to a party out of town, where another girl flirts with him and invites him over. Consequences?
Students partnered to rank potential impacts — physical, emotional, legal, financial and family. They debated possible aftermaths. “My father would have an aneurysm!” shouted one girl. “My father would kill me!” shouted another. They spoke bluntly about rape, sexually transmitted diseases, pregnancy, prosecution.
Then, Mrs. Bellan asked how long they took to rank the impacts. A minute, they estimated.
“A lot of people believe teenagers can’t make good decisions,” Mrs. Bellan said. “ I disagree. You have just shown that when you pause and think, you have the capability of seeing something through from all angles.”
Start Strong Idaho, a program of the Idaho Coalition Against Sexual and Domestic Violence, works with experts in health and youth programming. It also enlists students who have overcome abusive relationships — an umbrella term for emotional, physical or sexual violence.
They include Laura Hampikian and Sara Hope Leonard. Each girl longed to escape family turmoil by creating what she imagined would be a stable romance.
Ms. Hampikian is now 20 and a confident college sophomore. But in the eighth grade she turned her life over to the bottomless neediness of her boyfriend, who threatened suicide if she left him, began cutting himself, and told her about his family’s violence. She did not realize she was slipping into a fog, detaching from her friends. Pleading with him on the phone nightly until 3 a.m., she believed it was her responsibility to keep him alive.
Ms. Leonard, 17, is a vibrant high school senior. But a few years ago, when her family was living in California, she did anything to please her bristling, possessive, ninth-grade boyfriend.
When her family moved to Boise, Ms. Leonard was so desperate to hold onto her boyfriend that she had them split a set of handcuffs and each wear half, symbolizing their attachment. She obeyed his rules: no giving out her number to boys; no group dates. She completely isolated herself in her new city.
It took both girls a year to extricate themselves from the relationships. When Ms. Leonard graduates from college, she plans to counsel sex-trafficking victims. Ms. Hampikian has been speaking out about healthy teenage relationships as a contestant in the Miss Idaho pageant.
During their crises, neither felt she could tell her parents. That is why, in part, Ms. Miller includes parents in some Start Strong programs.
“Parents themselves underestimate their power to reach young teens,” she said.
One recent night at Riverglen Junior High, parents and sixth graders attended separate workshops about social dynamics they might encounter in the seventh grade.
Start Strong educators handed out statements about relationship behaviors. The students taped statements under columns labeled “Healthy” or “Unhealthy.” (Down the hall, parents had a similar exercise.)
“Jealous when your friend talks to others.”
“Gets insecure when someone doesn’t text back right away.”
Some statements were placed uncertainly between the columns.
“I couldn’t decide,” one boy admitted.
“Some of these are tough to figure out,” said Melissa Ruth, a counselor. She smiled at him. “We’ll talk about it.”

International Day for Elimination of Violence against Women

It's International Day for Elimination of Violence against Women and this excellent New York Times article describes a great initiative to combat relationship violence before it starts by teaching middle school children what being in a healthy relationship means. 

"After studies emerged more than a decade ago showing that the highest rates of physical and sexual assault happen to women ages 16 to 24, programs to prevent abusive relationships have concentrated on high school and college students.... Some initiatives have shown promise, but overall statistics remain largely unchanged: the most recent government report stated that nearly one in 10 high school students said they had been physically hurt by a boyfriend or girlfriend," reports Jan Hoffman. 

This article discusses new efforts to decrease dating violence by targeting education programs at even younger groups of youth in middle school: "The goal is to educate them about relationships before they start dating in earnest." The eligibility age for dating violence education and service programs has now dropped to 11. 

Kelly Miller, a former domestic violence prosecutor who runs Start Strong Idaho, a group involved with one of the profiled education programs, stated that the need for this type of education is real: “Most young people have a sense of what’s abusive but they don’t know what a healthy relationship means.”

A wonderful resource to share with teens on this topic is the excellent website loveisrespect.org, a collaboration of the National Dating Abuse Helpline and Break the Cycle: visit http://www.loveisrespect.org/ or connect with them on Facebook at loveisrespect, National Teen Dating Abuse Helpline

In our "Abuse/Violence" section under "Social Issues," we have a selection of selection of books, especially for teen readers, that address issues of violence. There are a number of excellent choices, perfect for sparking conversation around this important topic, including "Speak," "Hush," "I Hadn't Meant to Tell You This," and others. To browse the selection, visit http://www.amightygirl.com/books/social-issues/abuse-violence 

There is also an excellent guide, "A Smart Girl's Guide to Boys," for girls 9 to 13 that "addresses a girl's very first forays into the boy/girl world and gives her wise, warm advice." This is a great resource to provide foundational advice on approaching relationships in a healthy manner:http://www.amightygirl.com/a-smart-girl-s-guide-to-boys 

For LQBTQ youth seeking relationship guidance, we recommend "Queer" for ages 13 and up athttp://www.amightygirl.com/queer

A useful resource for older teens and adults in unhealthy relationships is “Stop Signs: Recognizing, Avoiding, and Escaping Abusive Relationships” at http://www.amightygirl.com/stop-signs

Finally, if you’re a parent concerned that your daughter may be in an unhealthy relationship, check out the books “But I Love Him: Protecting Your Teen Daughter from Controlling, Abusive Relationships” athttp://www.amightygirl.com/but-i-love-him and “Saving Beauty From The Beast: How to Protect Your Daughter from an Unhealthy Relationship” at http://www.amightygirl.com/saving-beauty-from-the-beast

Miley Cyrus - Does a Cute Kitten Change All the Controversy?

I know gone are the days of the nice young "Disney" girl who showed good heartedness and innocence to our young girls. It's pretty much inevitable that at some point the lovely young ladies in the celebrity world have to "grow up" and at some point show themselves as "artists".

I'm not going to go on a Miley tangent or devalue the lady at all. That's not this bloggers style but what I will ask is - why can't we just focus on the singing? If you can stand listening to the song/meaning all the way through - this girl hits a range and can really sing! Are all the theatrics really needed? Guess so, all the internet is talking today about the kitten and the performance (take that as you will). Even with the kitten showing her signature move of winking and sticking out tongue at the end (again...referring to the kitten on screen - not a derogatory comment to Cyrus and calling her kitten - this empowering woman would never do that). ANYWAY.....

It'd be real nice to focus on the music and singing. ...guess it's just the way of marketing nowadays and use of social media to show your "value". What do you think this tells our young ladies? In an instant you can be "cute" again and this automatically undoes everything negative that people said about you?

What do you think?

Saturday, October 26, 2013

#Barrie - Women in Business pays tribute to local ladies

Nominees and winners for the Barrie Examiner's seventh annual Women in Business luncheon gathered after the event, held at the Barrie Country Club Thursday.MARK WANZEL/BARRIE EXAMINER/QMI AGENCY
There was enough girl power in the room to keep the lights on.
The seventh annual Women in Business event at the Barrie Country Club – that began with a neighbourhood power outage – was handled with enough aplomb and humour to set the mood for the women's business award ceremony, Thursday.
From a humorous keynote address by the newly minted Barrie Police Chief Kimberley Greenwood, to the quick wit of KOOL FM's Dale Smith as master of ceremonies, the 200 women and men in attendance enjoyed a relaxed, well-organized luncheon and charity auction that raised $7,680 for the Canadian Cancer Society.
“That's the most money we've raised to date for the cancer society,” said Barrie Examiner publisher and event organizer Sandy Davies.
“It is so nice to honour the women in our community, because so many of them work so hard and don't get the recognition for what they've accomplished. I'm glad I don't have to decide who wins the Woman of the Year award – that's a separate committee – because there are so many deserving businesswomen.”
The Woman of the Year award went to Jane DeCola of Brabary on Commerce Park Drive.
DeCola said she was both shocked and honoured by the award.
“Did you not see the list? There are a lot of women here who are very deserving,” DeCola said.
In the business of sizing and selling women's undergarments, DeCola said she started her business more than eight years ago because she was tired of driving to Toronto for the same service.
With several full and part-time staff, DeCola said their mandate is to take the guess work out of bra-fittings and sell quality products.
DeCola is also an avid community volunteer with several charities including Hospice Simcoe, Relay for Life and the Canadian Cancer Society.
Laurie Crosson offered her services as a business coach and said she simply helped DeCola focus in on her own strengths.
“She's so open to assessing her own challenges and finding ways to overcome them, it's wonderful to see her win this award,” Crosson said.
Kathy Currie-Eyres won the Heart & Soul award. She was out of the province, so her daughter accepted the award on her behalf.
And Christina Petsinis of Lakehead University, and a former Innisdale Secondary School student, won the Future Woman of the Year award.
Not only is Petsinis an honour student and recipient of the President's Scholarship, she was also recognized for helping to create the Sportapalooza event at Innisdale for several hundred special needs children.
In her address, Greenwood spoke of being one of 110 women in a mix of 5,000 men at the Metropolitan Toronto Police force when she started more than 30 years ago.
Greenwood said she had many firsts, including the first woman to run the community response unit, the first female staff sergeant to take maternity leave, the first female commander of one of the busiest divisions in Toronto, the first director of the Toronto Police College and the first female chief of police in Barrie.
She spoke of her early years wearing a skirt and a silly cap, having to share the public washroom with prisoners (because there were no women's facilities), as well as working undercover to portray a bank teller and having to tackle a bank robber when he held up the bank.
Yet, as much as she spoke of her early days as an officer, she now believes the “brass ceiling has been smashed” and that policing is an exciting career for women to chose for a profession.
“In my heart, I believe in Canada, decisions are not made on race, not made on gender and not made on culture,” she said. “I used to say I want to make a difference and now I want to be that difference.”
After the power was restored and lunch was served by staff who gave no indication they had been getting by using just gas stoves and generators, auctioneer Scott Ward ran a vigorous auction with items donated by local businesses.
One of the most popular items bid upon was the four-hour tactical unit training experience with the Barrie Police Service that began at $300 and was eventually sold to Shannon Murree of Re/Max Chay for $3,000.


Credit Cheryl Brown





Thursday, September 19, 2013

Commercial Puts Hollywood to Shame - Poignant Point made in 3 minutes - low budget

Thai telecommunications corporation True have released an ad which has been touted as being more poignant than any Hollywood film released in the last decade.
Only three minutes long, the commercial has received rave reviews from around the world for its storyline which features a man who does good deeds for the people around him.
The company says it produced the commercial because it “believes in the power of giving without expecting a return.”
Nevertheless, the company’s philosophy and their ad which draws at the heartstrings, is a good reminder to give without excepting a thing back.
Yeah....I admit it, usually takes a lot but yeah...I cried.


Thursday, August 29, 2013

Laughing with me or at me?

I take back anything I just said about my "loving daughter". She can suffer! (kidding). Hey...here's what that little sneak did while we were playing with the karaoke on Rogers. Psi doesn't have to worry about me taking over his singing or dance routine.... Thankfully, I can laugh at myself. Thanks for posting it on twitter ya little punk!! Feel free to laugh at my expense

*note to self, make amendment to my Will and Testament removing daughter from it...

Click here for your funny of the day...


Sunday, August 11, 2013

LETTER FROM A MOTHER TO A DAUGHTER


LETTER FROM A MOTHER TO A DAUGHTER:

"My dear girl, the day you see I’m getting old, I ask you to please be patient, but most of all, try to understand what I’m going through.

If when we talk, I repeat the same thing a thousand times, don’t interrupt to say: “You said the same thing a minute ago”... Just listen, please. Try to remember the times when you were little and I would read the same st
ory night after night until you would fall asleep.

When I don’t want to take a bath, don’t be mad and don’t embarrass me. Remember when I had to run after you making excuses and trying to get you to take a shower when you were just a girl?

When you see how ignorant I am when it comes to new technology, give me the time to learn and don’t look at me that way... remember, honey, I patiently taught you how to do many things like eating appropriately, getting dressed, combing your hair and dealing with life’s issues every day... the day you see I’m getting old, I ask you to please be patient, but most of all, try to understand what I’m going through.

If I occasionally lose track of what we’re talking about, give me the time to remember, and if I can’t, don’t be nervous, impatient or arrogant. Just know in your heart that the most important thing for me is to be with you.

And when my old, tired legs don’t let me move as quickly as before, give me your hand the same way that I offered mine to you when you first walked.

When those days come, don’t feel sad... just be with me, and understand me while I get to the end of my life with love.

I’ll cherish and thank you for the gift of time and joy we shared. With a big smile and the huge love I’ve always had for you, I just want to say, I love you... my darling daughter."







Thursday, August 1, 2013

Nick Cannon, Gained More Respect for this Human Being

Above all Celebrity and entertainment - showed he's a human who cares for those he acted/grew up with. Here's his open letter to childhood star Amanda Bynes below. It is a shame as my teen daughter said to me the other day..."what happened to her? I can't believe I liked her." Shame her talent is being wasted as she finds herself. Why I did not encourage my children to go into acting/modelling at an influential young age and let them decide for themselves.

Here's the original letter here th "his sister" and below:

As we all know I do interviews every single day about all my various projects, whether promoting AGT, Wild’N Out, my album, my stand-up special, NCredible consumer products, and various philanthropic and charitable efforts. Usually during these interviews I am consistently questioned about my wife, my kids, and my health and I happily answer them all. But as of lately I have been hit with an onslaught of questions about someone I consider family, someone I watched grow up, and someone I genuinely feel is one of the most pleasant human beings I have had the pleasure of meeting, Amanda Bynes.
The questions have ranged from, “Have you spoken to Amanda" to “Are you working on her rap album". Sometimes I would answer in a playful humorous manner and sometimes I would brush it off as another Pop culture topic that a reporter was trying to retrieve a sound bite for. But after recent events of Amanda being admitted under psychiatric care and reported as 5150, I see this as no laughing matter. I tweeted a few weeks about how the entertainment industry just consumes people and spits them out like flavorless bubblegum. A few chews of enjoyment then they’re under a city bus bench. Don’t get me wrong this is not a pity for the popular statement. I am always the first to say that fame and entertainment is one of the best and easiest occupations to ever have, but one must know how to navigate through the matrix or you may find yourself in a very dark hole. When a person is told all of their life that they are awesome, the best, the greatest and they are catered to every moment of the day. Imagine being the breadwinner in your household before you can even drive. Imagine you parents, teachers, and employers NEVER telling you NO. Anything you ask for or want, the world gives you, at some point you are bound to self-destruct. I call this “access to excess". I’ve seen it happen to many of my friends and colleagues young and old. It goes back to that old saying; “Too much of anything is bad for anyone". Whether it’s fame, money, sex, drugs, attention. It’s all a dangerous addiction. When there is no balance in your life a person will always become victim to their reality or lack thereof. The question is, when this destruction occurs, who is there to help put back the pieces. What do you do when you have no solid support system? When you feel like your friends are talking behind your back. When you feel like your co-workers are jealous and out to competitively sabotage you. When you feel your family has turned your back on you. When you feel like you parents have a conditional appreciation for you and only really love your money. You find yourself alone in that dark hole. Then you have to rely on your own devices once again in this vulnerable state. You become paranoid, frantic, manic, irrational because you can bounce your thoughts or ideas off of anyone anymore. Your reality no longer allows you to reason with the world, so you try to break through to get back to what you think is common ground. You are either trying to get back “hot" again or just searching for that adulation that you once received daily from the masses. Then enters the media, or what I like to call the ultimate magnifier. It’s like if you have a delicate piece of tissue under the sun, that tissue is under INTENSE heat with nowhere to escape but once you place a magnifying glass over that tissue, it’s bound to instantly burn up in flames. This is what I believe happens to many people in the public eye and we all sit back and judge these people for our own entertainment. We say things like, " I’m glad I’m not famous ", “Celebrities are Crazy", “See what fame and money does to people". And most of the time your assumptions and accusations maybe accurate but also inappropriate. No one on this planet needs to be judged or even has the right to judge. We are all equal and we all have our downfalls, fame or no fame. Money or no money. Life is hard for everyone in some since. And we need each other to in times of despair. No one can make it through anything alone. So I ask people who are quick to judge, tweet, report, or comment to ask yourself; what if that person was my sister? My brother? My Mother? Or me? What then would I say? In the words of the great poet and artist Bill Withers, "Sometimes in our lives We all have pain, we all have sorrow". We all end up alone in that dark hole at some point in our lives and if you don’t have a foundation of friends and family to help bring you up and out it makes that journey long and detrimental. So I say to my sister Amanda Bynes you’re not alone. I’m here for you. I understand. I care and I appreciate you, because that’s what family does and that’s what family is for. I also extend this to anyone else in my life, past or present that may find themselves in hard times. I’m here! Call me! Because I truly believe, the hand you’re helping up today may be the one you’re reaching for tomorrow. So not to be all cheesy and over sentimental but I got to end this with the ingenious Wither’s lyrics "Lean on me when you’re not strong and I’ll be your friend, I’ll help you carry on. For it won’t be long until I’ll need somebody to lean on.”

Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Tabloid Media Decides to Review Musicians Lady Parts Instead of Her Art/Music...check out her response


LOVE IT! Totally puts things into perspective about women, media and art. "Dear Daily Mail".... Amanda Palmer, rock star and well, woman of free speech and feels the focus as a musician should be well, on her MUSIC.
Check out this video as she craftfully creates a song to "Daily Mail" after they wrote an unflattering article about her "wardrobe malfunction" instead of reviewing the concert she performed. 

Note: She gives a little history at the beginning, the song starts about 2 minutes 29 secs. At about 4:00 minutes...she is extremely blunt and at about 4 minutes and 35 seconds....well, she gets down right "cheeky" at 5:19 well...she DEFINITELY has a point. Where are THEY in the news? Just watch the whole thing. LOL










ORIGINAL: By Amanda Palmer , singer - Amanda MacKinnon Gaiman Palmer, sometimes known as Amanda F*n Palmer, is an American performer who first rose to prominence as the lead singer, pianist, and lyricist/composer of the duo The Dresden Dolls.  *content may offend with some language and nudity (though it's blurred and not visible) warning just the same.

Thursday, July 11, 2013

Violence Against Women and Children Costs YOU Money (even if you're not a victim or an abuser!)

Perspective. Why does violence against women & children effect YOU - why the policing, court and services of course. This is why we need to make it stop..
From an online article, stats and study:

"Sexual assault cases would cost the police anywhere from $10,320 to $51,225 per incident depending on the level.

On average, criminal court cases cost $1,408 per case with the average legal aid expenditure pegged at $811 per criminal court case. The justice system also incurs expenses during prosecution, incarceration, conditional sentences, probation, and civil protection.

The financial cost to victims is also great, the study finds, since many are forced to seek medical care in terms of doctor visits and hospitalization and suffer from mental health issues. These physical and mental injuries can lead to productivity losses like lost wages for female victims amounting to $136 per day and lost education which has a dollar value of $39.41 per school day (college or university).

Third parties like social services and employers also bear the brunt of sexual violence against women in Canada. Crisis lines, support centers, and victim services spend $40, $450, and $453 per incident respectively. Employers lose their employee victim's output which is 5.2 per cent of the total of lost wages. Tardiness and distraction and absences are also hurtful to their bottom line."

Oh yeah...and not forgetting to mention - repeating behaviours and patterns to the NEXT generation so costs will continue to soar. Violent programs, etc, etc








Original source from HuffPost

Tuesday, July 9, 2013

Women - From Survivor's Handbook - Keeping Yourself Safe - Online Tracking

How can an abuser discover your internet and mobile activities?
Spyware is becoming very easy to purchase and install on home computers and mobile phones. You may think that you are safe to access a home computer, not knowing that what you do is being tracked. Find out more about cyberstalking.

Abusers can also look at the history of sites you've visited easily...

You don't have to be a computer expert to track someone's movements online. As a rule, internet browsers will save certain information as you surf the internet. This includes images from websites visited, words entered into search engines and a trail ('history') that reveals the sites you have visited. Below are instructions on how to minimize the chances of someone finding out that you have visited this website.

Warning about deleting cookies and address histories
It's important to state that there is a risk involved in removing data from your computer. For instance, if your partner uses online banking and has a saved password, then if you clear the cookies on your PC, your partner will realise you've done so, because their password will no longer be saved.  Also, your partner may notice if the address history on the PC has been cleared, and this may raise suspicion. On all browsers you will have a tab called History or Favorites where you can select individual websites to delete, although other traces of sites (eg cookies, passwords) may not be deleted. One way to lower the risk of suspicious history removal is to use Private browsing mode (see below). However the safest way is to use a different computer.

Private Browsing (name varies for different browsers)

This tool prevents websites from saving any data about you which may leave a trail, such as cookies, history or other browser data created or saved in that session. Your history for that session will also be deleted when you close the window.
Not to be confused with Private Filtering, which has another function and will not stop your abuser from seeing your trail! 
Generally Private Browsing can be activated in the Tools bar. This will open a new window. Remember only to use this window for your browsing session, and make sure you close it! Leaving this window open will alert your abuser that you are concerned he is tracking you.
Read more about In-Private Browsing
However, even though it helps, this mode is not entirely safe, and there are some programmes that can recover deleted files, or a determined person could still find traces of your visit if they read enough "tips" online. Again, the only safe way is to use a computer your abuser does not have access to!

Stored passwords
Your browser can store passwords to save you time, but these can also used by someone to access your account. When you first use a password on a site you will be asked if you want the browser to remember it - click no, or browse in Private Mode. However, accidents happen and you may accidentally allow a password to be saved. You can delete saved passwords either as part of your history removal or separately, depending on your browser (see below) - remember that removing all passwords may be suspicious if you share a computer.

Remember toolbars

Toolbars such as Google, AOL and Yahoo keep a record of the search words you have typed into the toolbar search box. In order to erase all the search words you have typed in, you will need to check the individual instructions for each type of toolbar. For example, for the Google toolbar all you need to do is click on the Google icon, and choose "Clear Search History".
 


Manual deletion of history, cookies etc

How do I work out which browser I'm using?
If you know what browser you are using, then skip to the relevant instructions below. If you do not know the type of browser you are using, click on Help on the toolbar at the top of the browser screen. A drop down menu will appear, the last entry will say About Internet Explorer, About Mozilla Firefox, or something similar. The entry refers to which browser type you are using - you should then refer to the relevant instructions below.

Internet Explorer 7 & 8
Click on the Tools menu and select Internet Options. In the General page under Browser History, select the Delete... button. Either select and delete each section: Temporary internet files; Cookies, History; Forms data and Passwords; or select the Delete all... button at the bottom to clear everything.

Mozilla Firefox 8
Click on Tools and Options. Firefox bundles cookies, forms and history under the heading ‘history’. Click the privacy tab, then on “clear your recent history”. Select the period you want to delete. Click on Details to select cookies, forms etc.
To delete passwords click on the security tab where you can view all the passwords saved when you browse the web. You can delete them here and remember not to allow Firefox to save them in the future.
In Firefox you (or someone accessing your computer) can actually read the passwords saved on your system. If you use the same passwords for many things consider changing them all if you have allowed your browser to save any.
You can also adjust how you want Firefox to store your data under the privacy tab. 

Safari 
To remove history go to History, and click Clear History.
To remove cookies go to Settings (right hand side), Preferences, Privacy tab and click Remove all Website Data (or Details to select certain sites).

Chrome, Opera and other browsers
There are many new browsers on the market, so it is always advisable to search for advice on your own browser. For example this tutorial shows you various security measures on Opera, or you can see the settings for Google Chrome.


E-mails


If an abuser sends you threatening or harassing e-mail messages, they may be printed and saved as evidence of this abuse.

Be aware of how records of your emails can be accessed:
  • Any email you have previously sent will be stored in sent Items. Go to sent items and delete emails you don't want a person to see
  • If you started an email but didn't finish it, it might be in your drafts folder. Go to the draft folder to delete it
  • If you reply to any email, the original message will probably be in the body of the message - delete the email if you dont want anyone to see your original message.
  • When you delete an item in any email program (Outlook Express, Outlook, Thunderbird etc) it does not really delete the item - it moves the item to a folder called Deleted Items. You have to delete the items in Deleted Items to remove them completely
  • If there's a risk that your abuser may know how to access your emails, it's a good idea to set up a new email account. Use a provider like Hotmail or Yahoo for an account you can access from anywhere, and use a name that is not recognisable as you, for example - crispycookies@gmail.com. Keep this email secret.

General security 
If you do not use a password to log on to your computer, someone else will be able to access your email and track your internet usage. The safest way to find information on the internet, would be at a local library, a friend's house, or at work. 
 
If you do use a password make sure it's one someone who knows you can't guess, such as your pet or birthdate, and change it regularly.
 

Tuesday, July 2, 2013

Richer than Trump or Oprah: Meet China's female property magnate

Watch this video

Beijing (CNN) -- Zhang Xin grew up in poverty and at the age of 14 began a laboring job in a factory. Today, she is richer than Donald Trump, Steven Spielberg and Oprah Winfrey.
Zhang, a Chinese real estate developer, is the seventh richest self-made woman in the world, worth $3.6 billion, according to Forbes. She's worth $800 million more than Oprah Winfrey, the world's best known self-made female billionaire.
Not only does Zhang's rags-to-riches story mirror that of China itself, but it is Zhang who has shaped much of the country's modern urban landscape, with the logo of her company SOHO China, on the side of buildings wherever you turn in Beijing.
SOHO China has 18 developments in Beijing, many of them landmark buildings, and has recently expanded to Shanghai, where it has bought or built 11 properties.
Two of her Beijing projects -- one completed last year and another under construction -- are designed by the Pritzker Prize-winning architect Zaha Hadid.
Zhang, 47, was born in Beijing just before Mao Zedong's Cultural Revolution, when educated people like her parents were sent to the fields for "re-education". She returned to Beijing with her mother, but they endured poverty and hardship.
"I was born and grew up when the city was very quiet: no cars, no shops, no lights, no machines. People were just on bicycles," she said
At 14, she and her mother moved to Hong Kong, where she spent five years in low-paid factory jobs, manufacturing toys, clothes and electronics, trying to save enough to go to England for an education.
I was born and grew up when the city was very quiet: no cars, no shops, no lights, no machines.
Zhang Xin
"As a new immigrant to Hong Kong with no education, no background, didn't even speak the local language or dialect, Cantonese, and it was just a hard way to live in Hong Kong," said Zhang.
It took Zhang five years to save enough for a plane ticket to London and an English language course. She won a scholarship to university, studied for a Master's degree in economics at Cambridge University and landed her first job for Goldman Sachs in New York.
Instead of remaining in her comfortable life in Wall Street, Zhang returned to Beijing, where she met her husband, and together they started SOHO China.
"There was excitement of people talking about how to change China, and it was a very intellectually vibrant time," she said. "I felt that this country was really making a transition and I wanted to be a part of that."
Since Zhang and her husband Pan Shiyi formed SOHO China in 1995, it has become China's largest commercial real estate developer, owning 56 million square feet in prime developments in Beijing and Shanghai.
While Zhang's story is incredible -- giving her celebrity status in China -- it is not unique. Of Forbes' 2013 list of 24 self-made female billionaires, six are from China (including one from Hong Kong), more than any other country outside the United States.
"I think women of our generation went through Cultural Revolution, went through hardship, coming from nowhere, and suddenly see China's amazing opportunity," said Zhang. "So women just seized the opportunity."
I felt that this country was really making a transition and I wanted to be a part of that.
Zhang Xin
Zhang has a following of more than 5 million on Weibo, the Chinese social media site often compared with Twitter, where she shares her views on business, current affairs and architecture.
But despite her financial success, Zhang, who practices the Baha'i faith, avoids excessive trappings of wealth, even suggesting her 14-year-old son find a job in McDonald's or KFC. He tried, but was too young to be accepted.
"It's not easy to be my sons because we're very high profile. We try so hard to give them a normal life," she said.
"I'm very, very tight with them about money. I don't give that money until they ask, 'I need 100 yuan for my lunch card,' and so on. So they never have extra money. But I think that still cannot compare to how we came, where we came (from)."