January 31, 2012

Woman Conquers Antarctica on Her Own

AP photo

It’s one thing to accept total responsibility for yourself, but there’s far more self-reliance and strength of character involved when you’ve undertaken an adventure nearly two months long, alone, and trekking nearly blind in the vast, cold region of Antarctica.

In January Felicity Aston became the first woman to ski across the southernmost continent. Even more remarkable is that she did it alone. Felicity became the first human to ski solo across Antarctica. Not only did she ski more than 1,000 miles without the aid of motorized equipment but she pulled two sleds loaded with supplies.

Felicity faced many obstacles: the cold, the isolation, blizzards where she couldn’t see her own skies, and a deadline. She had to complete the journey before winter when conditions are even harsher. Felicity would really be isolated then, because most people leave Antarctica as winter approaches. South of the equator it’s summer in January. It’s because the South Pole of Earth is tilted toward the sun. Because the North Pole is tilted away at this time of year, residents of the United States, Canada, China, Russia, and France, for example, are experiencing winter.

The 34-year British woman is no stranger to subzero weather. Trained in physics and meteorology Felicity has worked in Antarctica for the British weather service. She’s also led ski trips in Antarctic, the Arctic and Greenland.

Felicity’s 59-day trip began along the Ross Ice Shelf, then up the Leverett Glacier, across the Transantarctic Mountains into the Antarctica’s central plateau where she fought headwinds as she advanced to the South Pole. From the Pole she headed toward Hercules Inlet and her final destination, a base camp providing support for other summer Antarctic expeditions.

Have you ever contemplated a personal challenge? What would it be? One of my personal challenges was hiking to the bottom of the Grand Canyon with a backpack and a sleeping bag. It may not compare with Felicity’s in terms of grand challenges, but it was personally satisfying and memorable. A salute to all the women who have exercised their strength of character, and a hug of encouragement to all those who are have yet to take the first step.

To read more inspirational stories about women buy my book Living in the Heartland: Three Extraordinary Women’s Stories on Amazon.com.

AP photo

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January 23, 2012

Homeless and Still a Winner – A Teenager’s Story

AP Photo

17-year-old Samantha Garvey is in the running for a national prestigious science award. 300 teenagers across the country have been named this year as semifinalists in the Intel science competition; so Samantha is, indeed, a member of a select group. But I wonder how many of these intelligent, dedicated, and creative kids also have been homeless?

Samantha’s family has experienced hard times since her mother a nurse’s assistant was involved in a car accident. Because her father’s salary had not been enough to keep up with the bills, the family was evicted from their rental home over the holidays. This is not the first time the Garvey’s have had to live in a homeless shelter.

In spite of her family’ problems Samantha has stayed focused on her goal to become a marine biologist. She has spent more than two years studying the effects of an Asian crab population on the mussels in a local marsh.

Clearly, the teenager hasn’t allowed her family’s economic problems to dampen her hopes for a brighter future. Samantha, a high school senior, has applied to several Ivy League universities.

Whether she wins the Intel award or gains acceptance to Brown or Yale, Samantha has already received one piece of good news. The county’s social services agency has found a home for her family to rent at subsidized rents.

Samantha’s story like my Jan. 10 story about Lateefah Simon are evidence that teenagers can be accomplished when they have the mind to accomplish something. Adults who harbor negative stereotypes of teenagers and young adults are no less disrespectful and hurtful than those who maintain them about senior citizens. Adults need to be more mindful that the issues of the day (i.e., a sluggish economy, a contracted job market, overstretched social services, and an increase in the working poor) affects everyone including the young. Let’s support each other and find inspiration and hope in those who rise about their situation.

To read more inspirational stories about women buy my book Living in the Heartland: Three Extraordinary Women’s Stories on Amazon.com.

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January 15, 2012

Too Thin or Too Fat? What’s Your Measurement of Beauty?

Photo Victoria Janashvili

PLUS Model Magazine, according to an article by Tamara Abraham for the United Kingdom-based online blog Daily Mail, has sparked controversy. See if you can guess what the controversy is from the accompanying photograph. This photograph is meant to illustrate the magazine’s claim that most runway models meet the criteria for anorexia based on their Body Mass Index.

The brash photographs of model Katya Zharkva allegedly are aimed to encourage plus-size consumers to pressure retailers to stop promoting skinny ideals. Katya, 28, is considered a PLUS size model because she wears a size 12.

A 2009 Huffington Post article noted iconic American beauty Marilyn Monroe was a size 8 during most of her career and in her “plumper” stages was a size 10. But I also heard a story that demonstrates us the real Monroe was perceived. In a National Public Radio interview a photographer and friend of Monroe recounted a time when she and Marilyn hopped into a taxi. The driver noted the resemblance of Marilyn who wasn’t wearing makeup to the movie star Marilyn Monroe. He told Marilyn she’d be a dead ringer if she’d lose some weight!

In another PLUS Model Magazine photograph of Zharkva she holds a tape measure across her rear. The caption reads: Twenty years ago the average fashion model weighed 8% less than the average woman. Today, she weighs 23% less.

Models are meant to create a desired to buy. Possibly the most infuriating part of Abraham’s story is when women go to the store to purchase the fashions. While 50% of women wear a size 14 or larger, the standard clothing outlet, she says, cater to sizes 14 or smaller.

Another industry with a lot to gain by promoting underweight models is the multi-billion dollar weight-loss industry. And, they’re not worried about women’s health – physical or mental. Rapid weight loss may sound wonderful but it is neither healthy nor likely to keep the weight off. Healthy, successful weight loss requires lifestyle changes in eating and exercise. And, there is increasing evidence that our brains and fat cells make long term success a very difficult proposition.

So where do you fit in this debate?

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January 10, 2012

Passion and Purpose can Transform a Woman: Lateefah Simon’s Story

Photo by Kurt Rogers, Chronicle

As a young teenager Lateefah Simon seemed to be going nowhere. She dropped out of school and worked full-time at a Taco Bell. She was on probation for shoplifting. Then someone offered her a different path. She changed directions and has ever since been paying off her indebtedness for this opportunity with hugh INTEREST.

Lateefah’s walk down the road is an all too familiar story especially in America’s urban areas. Her change in direction is a testiment to what can happen if there are knowledgeable people available to help other’s rewrite their story. In Lateefah Simon’s case she was recruited for a program for at-risk girls. There Lateefah found the tools she needed to lead. It was here too she found her passion.

At 15, she began a job in San Francisco as an outreach worker for the Center for Young Women’s Development. Lateefah could relate to the women the organization served. These were women on the streets surviving as drug dealers, prostitutes, and juvenile offenders. Simon knew them through shared experience, but Lateefah also knew she had the talent, tools, and motivation to help the women find not just a place in the world but a way to transform themselves. She, after all, was proof.

Passion and purpose can transform a person. At 19, Lateefah didn’t think it unusual for her to step into a leadership position. She took over the women’s center. For more than a decade Lateefah Simon grew the organization. By the time she moved on the Center served nearly 3,500 women annually, employed 250 women, and had an operating budget over a million dollars.

Lateefah left the Center to take on a leadership role in the District Attorney’s Office. Her new role was to oversee a citywide public/private partnership. Her job was to create and implement new programs to help former offenders avoid  returning to crime.

Lateefah’s remarkable growth as a woman and a leader has earned her much recognition. Among them is a feature in Oprah Magazine, and recognition as a MacArthur “Genus Fellow”. But of all her awards what has been more important to her even more than criminal justice reform is the knowledge she is helping women transform themselves into leaders.

To read more inspirational stories about women you may wish to buy my book Living in the Heartland: Three Extraordinary Women’s Stories on Amazon.com.

http://www.lccr.com/LateefahSimon-bio.pdf used as resource.

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January 3, 2012

This Woman is Pleased If You Call Her a Dog

I overheard a woman say, “Girls can be SO catty.”

The woman she was talking to responded, “They ARE, aren’t they!”

It was a lesson my mother taught me. Her point was: “Don’t trust girls, they’re out to hurt you.”

Any message that encompasses all members of a group, as in the global use of “girls”, is blatant stereotyping. Comedians rely on stereotypes for their jokes as do TV sitcoms. TV has elevated the stereotype of catty woman with its Housewives of [insert any number of cities here] programming – women being catty over appearance, men, and any arena where putting someone else down makes them think they look better.

Why do women perpetuate the myth of catty girls? This stereotype isolates us, keeps us from seeking out each other for support. Women aren’t to be trusted, and without support it is easy for women to fall prey into so many traps such as remaining in physically abusive relationships and taking on too large a load of stress.

Women need each other. We understand each other biologically. We understand the demands of child rearing. We are experts in juggling housework, family responsibilities, children, and jobs. And as a result of work overload and our biology we suffer from similar ailments both physical and mental.

Over the course of history and across many cultures woman have worked together in the kitchen, in the house, in factories. Today, however, in parts of America and other Western countries women are isolated from each other. Not only in our homes but also in our thinking, because girls, after all, are catty.

This year I discovered how important other women are to my psychological well-being which also affects my physical health. I joined a woman’s circle. We were strangers when we first got together. We weren’t colleagues at work. We didn’t frequent the same places during the week. So we didn’t have a concern what we learned about each other would be used against us at work, school, or a house of worship.

The meetings have become a time for laughter, sometimes tears, and almost always food and always food. It’s a time for us to grow as women. We are women of different faiths, different races, and different ages. We have found sisterhood in a place of safety. At first we needed women who didn’t come with preset ideas about us. We came to a group who didn’t know us, but were willing to listen and learn. It was a place to be ourselves. Now we are sisters. We leave each meeting knowing someone has our backs.

And can you imagine. We went on a weekend get-away to celebrate our first anniversary. Sixteen women under one roof. There was no yelling, pushing or name calling. There was a lot of laughing, talking and FOOD.

So if you ask me I’d say women are more like dogs than cats. We’re loyal. We’re willing to stay by another’s side when things get tough. We’re happy to sit, to listen, and to speak when asked. We enjoy praise, treats, and companionship.  And, of course, we enjoy a treat now and then. Many of us prefer CHOCOLATE.

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December 18, 2011

2011 Women of the Year: A Short List

photo from huffingtonpost.com

As 2011 comes to a close,I offer a short list of women who made 2011 an extraordinary for women’s accomplishments. Above is a photo of Karen Freeman-Wilson. In  November Gary, Indiana voters chose Freeman-Wilson as their city’s first female mayor and the state’s first African-American female mayor. Karen is a Harvard-educated lawyer. She served as a Gary city judge, beginning in 1994, and then became Indiana’s Attorney General beginning in 2000. Her plans for Indiana’s seventh-largest city? Her plans are to develop the Gary’s airport and transit system, build a new land-based casino and create incentives to lure businesses to relocate to Gary. Her term begins Jan. 1.

photo from huffingtonpost.com and AP

Liberian President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, peace activist Leymah Gbowee, and human rights activist Tawakkul Karman shown in the photo above are the 2011 Nobel Peace Prize winners. The Nobel Prize Committee honored these women for their non-violent struggle for the safety of women and women’s rights.The committee hopes the prize will help these women end the suppressive environment women experience across the world and to realize the potential for democracy and peace these women represent.

Johnson Sirleaf, 72, is a Harvard-trained economist. She became Africa’s first democratically elected female president of Liberia in 2005.Her presidency in Liberia has lead to hope that her country long ravaged by civil wars will continued to nurture a fragile peace.

Leyman Gbowee is also from Liberia. She is  head of the Women Peace And Security Network. She was honored by the Nobel Committee for her work in mobilizing Christian and Muslim women against the power of Liberia’s warlords.

The 32-year-old Karman who has been honored on this Web site previous heads the human rights group Women Journalists without Chains. She has been a leading figure in the protests against Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh.

photo from Mark Wilson/Getty Images

Kudos also go to US First Lady Michelle Obama. She recently succeeded in her bid to land in the Guinness World Records book for the most people to do jumping jacks. What’s importantly about the effort is that it’s her latest activity to promote her Let’s Move initiative, the aim of which is to fight childhood obesity.

photo by Friso Gentsch/European Pressphoto Agency

The United States and the Japanese women’s soccer team. The US women sought to become the first team to win the Women’s World Cup three times. After taking titles in 1991 and 1999 the US team made it to the finals. Although they the US women lost to Japan, it was in a penalty shoot-out following a 2-2 tie after extra time. The Japanese women became the first Asian team to win a FIFA World Cup. Their accomplishment was spurred on by a desire to lift the spirits of their homeland recently ravaged by a tsunami.

To read more inspirational stories about women buy my book Living in the Heartland: Three Extraordinary Women’s Stories on Amazon.com.

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December 7, 2011

Skip the Beauty Talk: Here’s Why You Shouldn’t Tell Her How Beautiful She Looks.

A friend sent me a link to an article on The Huffington Post Web site. I thought Lisa Bloom’s post offered a great model for how people especially women can take action to break the cycle of girls growing into women who see their worth in terms of their image. Bloom demonstrated the power of words, thoughtful words. Read Bloom’s post and then read my commentary:

“Little Maya was all curly brown hair, doe-like dark eyes, and adorable in her shiny pink nightgown. I wanted to squeal, “Maya, you’re so cute! Look at you! Turn around and model that pretty ruffled gown, you gorgeous thing!”

“But I didn’t. I squelched myself. As I always bite my tongue when I meet little girls, restraining myself from my first impulse, which is to tell them how darn cute/ pretty/ beautiful/ well-dressed/ well-manicured/ well-coiffed they are.

“What’s wrong with that? It’s our culture’s standard talking-to-little-girls icebreaker, isn’t it? And why not give them a sincere compliment to boost their self-esteem? Because they are so darling I just want to burst when I meet them, honestly.

“Hold that thought for just a moment.

“This week ABC News reported that nearly half of all three- to six-year-old girls worry about being fat. In my book, Think: Straight Talk for Women to Stay Smart in a Dumbed-Down World, I reveal that 15 to 18 percent of girls under 12 now wear mascara, eyeliner and lipstick regularly; eating disorders are up and self-esteem is down; and 25 percent of young American women would rather win America’s Next Top Model than the Nobel Peace Prize. Even bright, successful college women say they’d rather be hot than smart. A Miami mom just died from cosmetic surgery, leaving behind two teenagers. This keeps happening, and it breaks my heart.

“Teaching girls that their appearance is the first thing you notice tells them that looks are more important than anything. It sets them up for dieting at age 5 and foundation at age 11 and boob jobs at 17 and Botox at 23. As our cultural imperative for girls to be hot 24/7 has become the new normal, American women have become increasingly unhappy. What’s missing? A life of meaning, a life of ideas and reading books and being valued for our thoughts and accomplishments.

“That’s why I force myself to talk to little girls as follows.

“Maya,” I said, crouching down at her level, looking into her eyes, “very nice to meet you.”

“Nice to meet you too,” she said, in that trained, polite, talking-to-adults good girl voice.

“Hey, what are you reading?” I asked, a twinkle in my eyes. I love books. I’m nuts for them. I let that show.

“Her eyes got bigger, and the practiced, polite facial expression gave way to genuine excitement over this topic. She paused, though, a little shy of me, a stranger.

“I LOVE books,” I said. “Do you?”

“Most kids do.

“YES,” she said. “And I can read them all by myself now!”

“Wow, amazing!” I said. And it is, for a five-year-old. You go on with your bad self, Maya.

“What’s your favorite book?” I asked.

“I’ll go get it! Can I read it to you?”

“Purplicious was Maya’s pick and a new one to me, as Maya snuggled next to me on the sofa and proudly read aloud every word, about our heroine who loves pink but is tormented by a group of girls at school who only wear black. Alas, it was about girls and what they wore, and how their wardrobe choices defined their identities. But after Maya closed the final page, I steered the conversation to the deeper issues in the book: mean girls and peer pressure and not going along with the group. I told her my favorite color in the world is green, because I love nature, and she was down with that.

“Not once did we discuss clothes or hair or bodies or who was pretty. It’s surprising how hard it is to stay away from those topics with little girls, but I’m stubborn.

“I told her that I’d just written a book, and that I hoped she’d write one too one day. She was fairly psyched about that idea. We were both sad when Maya had to go to bed, but I told her next time to choose another book and we’d read it and talk about it. Oops. That got her too amped up to sleep, and she came down from her bedroom a few times, all jazzed up.

“So, one tiny bit of opposition to a culture that sends all the wrong messages to our girls. One tiny nudge towards valuing female brains. One brief moment of intentional role modeling. Will my few minutes with Maya change our multibillion dollar beauty industry, reality shows that demean women, our celebrity-manic culture? No. But I did change Maya’s perspective for at least that evening.

“Try this the next time you meet a little girl. She may be surprised and unsure at first, because few ask her about her mind, but be patient and stick with it. Ask her what she’s reading. What does she like and dislike, and why? There are no wrong answers. You’re just generating an intelligent conversation that respects her brain. For older girls, ask her about current events issues: pollution, wars, school budgets slashed. What bothers her out there in the world? How would she fix it if she had a magic wand? You may get some intriguing answers. Tell her about your ideas and accomplishments and your favorite books. Model for her what a thinking woman says and does.” Lisa Bloom, author Think: Straight Talk for Women to Stay Smart in a Dumbed Down World.

All my life I have struggled with image. It began with my mother. My mother was very conscious about image. She spent an hour each morning getting dressed, and almost as much time at night taking off her makeup and caring for her skin. She was a shopaholic, and was always impectably dressed. She rarely walked about in a bathrobe. My mother was always eying her daughters with the precis eye of a hawk. Gauging our weight, our makeup (yes, she encouraged makeup even at a young age to add a little color to our cheeks), our taste in clothes. Her little gestures and comments set me up for a lifetime of self-esteem issues. I never seemed to measure up. And even after raising two children, graduating college and grad school, and other accomplishments I still question my worth. Why? Because from an early age the measurement for success was how I looked. And all little children, heck even adults, strive for approval. We want to be told we are good and when good equates with cute or beautiful we are sucked into a world where we are manipulated by the media, advertisers, and most importantly OURSELVES to focus on our outward appearance rather than on what we are. So next time you talk to a little girl or any woman for that matter think about what you say. Let them know how much you appreciate them, talk about their accomplishments, and skip the beauty talk.

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November 26, 2011

Unlike Santa This Woman Provides a Treasure Trove of Toys for Children Year Round

Angela and her daughter

It’s a good thing Angela Addington is a database geek. It comes in handy as she matches a storehouse of toys, clothes and furniture with deserving children.

Angela took on this challenge back in 2001 when she founded Hannah’s Treasure Chest, a charitable organization named after her daughter Hannah.

Angela who lives in Ohio collected gentle-used items from friends and neighbors then channeled them through community service organizations to children who were going without many of the necessities of childhood. That first year Angela and a handful of volunteers  distributed nearly 3,000 articles of clothing, furniture and toys.

Not only have the number of volunteers who assist Angela grown but so have the number of items collected. The organization collected more than 115,000 in 2010! Volunteers love it when Hannah’s is cluttered, it means they have more to distribute to the community’s neediest children.

Hannah’s Treasure Chest received the Affiliate Partner Honoree award from the Center for Healthy Communities. Angela is the recipient of several of her own honors including United Way’s Volunteer of the Month.

Hannah’s Treasure Chest isn’t a new idea. There are many church-based and community service organizations filling similar functions in communities across the country. Just like Hannah’s Treasure Chest they would be grateful for any gently used toys, clothes or furniture donated especially at this time of year. So why not ask your children to clean their rooms of unwanted items to make space for the new ones they are dreaming of receiving in December? This way they can know the joys of receiving as well as giving!

To read more inspirational stories about women buy my book Living in the Heartland: Three Extraordinary Women’s Stories on Amazon.com.

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November 11, 2011

Midwifes for Haiti: Saving Lifes One Mother and Child at a Time

Photo by Jenny Asarnow

Erin Curtiss is a midwife in Seattle who operates her own home birthing business.  She was intrigued when she learned about an American-based, nonprofit organization called Midwives for Haiti.

Haiti has a desperate need for so many things. Midwives are one item on a very long list of needed services. Women in Haiti are fifty times more likely to die during childbirth than women in America. One reason for this is there aren’t enough medical professionals to assist in delivery.

Erin volunteered to go to Haiti for a week. Erin was unprepared for what she discovered. The patients crammed into rooms without electricity were the sickest Erin had ever seen. They suffered from high blood pressure, anemia, even cholera. Mosquitoes, flies and lizards were everywhere. In addition to not having enough staff to assist laboring women, the midwives feared for their safety. At night there is not enough security to protect the women. There have been incidents of rape.

Despite all these obstacles, Erin says she is willing to return to Haiti. She hopes to be a small ripple in a sea of problems. Erin will try to stem the tide one mother and her child at a time.

To read more inspirational stories about women buy my book Living in the Heartland: Three Extraordinary Women’s Stories on Amazon.com.

Jenny Asarnow, theworld.org, was a resource for this story.

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November 3, 2011

Elouise Cobell: She was no legend. She was the real deal.

photo BuffaloPost.net

The fall is a time of harvest celebrations. It is a time of feasting and family gatherings. It is also a time of storytelling – some about families, others about American history. One of the biggest of these stories is played out every November in elementary classrooms across the United States. It involves costumes. Typically, some children wear black hats with buckles, others wear feathers. All gather at a table to eat turkey and cranberries.

Americans persist in telling and retelling the Thanksgiving story. It is a well-meaning celebration of the bounty of the land of the country and thanks to the Native American people who helped the Pilgrims who had newly immigrated. In succeeding years the colonists not the native peoples became the trustees of the land.

Elouise Cobell, a member of the Blackfeet Indian Tribe of Montana and a great-granddaughter of Mountain Chief, a legendary Blackfeet leader, waged a long legal battle to receive remuneration for trustee mismanagement. Hers was a 15-year legal battle to compensate more than 300,000 members of many tribes for the mismanagement of Indian trust funds. Cobel v. Salazar, a class action suit, sought restitution for resources the government had shortchanged its rightful owners. These acts dated back to 1887 when Congress divided many tribal lands into parcels. A settlement was in 2010 for $3.4 billion, roughly $1,000 per person represented in the lawsuit.

Unfortunately, Elouise died on Oct. 16, 2011. She didn’t live to see the disbursement of the settle money. Elouise, who was the recipient of a 1997 John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation ‘Genius Grant’, donated a portion of her award to help defray expenses of the lawsuit.

Elouise, one of eight children, graduated from Montana State University. She operated a working ranch with her husband. Among her many accomplishments she founded the first Land Trust in Indian Country and served as a Trustee for the Nature Conservancy of Montana. She helped found Blackfeet national Bank, the first American bank owned by a tribe, and served as director of the bank’s nonprofit affiliate.

Hers was an untimely death. At age 65, Elouise Cobell had much left to do. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid was reported to have said he planned to sponsor a Congressional Gold Medal, the highest honor Congress can bestow on a civilian, for Elouise.

She was no legend. Elouise was the real deal for who we all should give much thanks this November.

To read more inspirational stories about women buy my book Living in the Heartland: Three Extraordinary Women’s Stories on Amazon.com.

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