Friday, June 29, 2012

A Simple Solution to an Age Old Question

By Jessica Snow,
P.O.V. Contributing Writer
 
 
Why did the chicken cross the road?  Have you ever wondered if there was one right solution to that classic riddle?  I always remember replying with whatever line I could come back with off the top of my head.  Well, the solution is as simple as the riddle itself.  The chicken did just want to get to the other side. 

It's first appearance in 1847 was published in The Knickerbocker, a publication out of New York City. “…There are ‘quips and quillets’ which seem actual conundrums, but yet there are none.  Of such is this: “Why does the chicken cross the street?”  Are you ‘out of town?’ Do you ‘give it up?’ Well, then: ‘Because it wants to get on the other side!”  Who knew this joke had so many years behind it?

This riddle is an ideal example of anti-humor which is defined as “a type of comedy in which the uses is a set up to expect a typical joke setup, however the joke ends with such anti-climax that it becomes funny in its own right.  The lack of punch line is the punch line.”
  
Recalling this riddle as a child, I thought to myself it was pointless childhood humor.  As an adult it’s interesting to research the history behind something that has been around as long as I can remember.

The joke has been remade, changed and reinvented over the 100 plus years it’s been around.  You’ve heard the joke a million times, but now you know the history behind it.  Next time you’re asked, pass this little piece of knowledge on to them.

Sources:

Thursday, June 28, 2012

Children & Cell Phones

By Dana Arevalo,
P.O.V. Contributing Writer
 
What would you do?  What is the appropriate age to purchase a cellular phone for your child?  Parents seem divided on the issue of whether or not to purchase their child a cellular phone.  My daughter approaches me once a month begging for a cellular phone.  I hear, "Mommy, all of my friends have a cell phone. I am the only one in my class that does not have one".  My reply, "I don't care what your friends have; there is no need for you to have a cell phone".  She asks the same question and I give her the same response. 
I refuse to get my daughter a cellular phone to keep up with "the Joneses".  Honestly, there is no need.  I know where my daughter is at all times.  Not to mention children often act irresponsible during school hours, why give them an extra reason to get in trouble?  I feel that she can get a cellular phone when she gets her first job so that she can learn responsibility.  I refuse to pay an extra bill just because everyone else is walking around with one. 
I have discussed this with one mother who has two daughters ages 9 and 12.  She allows her children to have cellular phones.  Her daughters are often at activities and she wanted a way to be able to get in contact with them.  My daughter attends activities as well and I don't believe this is a strong enough reason to purchase a cellular phone.  My daughter is 11 and if there is an emergency, I will be contacted by their personnel.  Other parents believe their child should have a phone for safety reasons such as walking home alone from school.
I sought an alternative to a cell phone.  I do not think it is a good idea for a school aged child to have cellular phones.  While children are in school, the school will contact you if there are any emergencies.  Not your child from their phone.  I decided to purchase her an iPod touch,  this iPod does not leave home when she is at school. I do have her carry it, however, when she goes to an activity.  I also monitor the iPod.  It is very important to be involved in who your child is communicating.  I believe in privacy, however, you can never be too careful when it comes to your child's safety and well-being. 
Opening up the discussion to the audience:  When is the right time to get your child a cellular phone and why?     

Wednesday, June 27, 2012

Positivity

By Rhonda Ramsey,
P.O.V. Contributing Writer
 
 
Thought is the blossom; language the bud; action the fruit behind it.
--- Ralph Waldo Emerson

Sayings remain meaningless until they are embodied in habits.
--- Kahlil Gibran

There is so much about my fate that I cannot control, but other things do fall under the jurisdiction. I can decide how I spend my time, whom I interact with, whom I share my body and life and money and energy with. I can select what I can read and eat and study. I can choose how I'm going to regard unfortunate circumstances in my life-whether I will see them as curses or opportunities. I can choose my words and the tone of voice in which I speak to others. And most of all, I can choose my thoughts.
--- Elizabeth Gilbert

The power of the word is real whether or not you are conscious of it.
--- Sonia Choquette

Your own words are the bricks and mortar of the dreams you want to realize. Your words are the greatest power you have. The words you choose and their use establish the life you experience.
--- Sonia Choquette

Words are a form of action, capable of influencing change.
--- Ingrid Bengis

To be happy, drop the words “if only” and substitute instead the words “next time”.
--- Smiley Blanton

When I read these beautiful quotes, I am inspired. I am inspired to do more with my thoughts, my energy and the way I speak. After all studies show negativity and depression really are physically harmful as well as emotionally harmful.

According to usatoday.com, Carol Ryff, a psychology professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison has been studying whether or not high levels of psychological well-being benefit physical health:

“There is a science that is emerging that says a positive attitude isn't just a state of mind,” she says. “It also has linkages to what's going on in the brain and in the body.”
Ryff has shown that individuals with higher levels of well-being have lower cardiovascular risk, lower levels of stress hormones and lower levels of inflammation, which serves as a marker of the immune system.

Her research on positive mental states is among 44 current grants funded by the National Institutes of Health evaluating optimism. Most research in this area has focused on negative feelings, such as how stress, anxiety and depression affect physical health.

“Science in this area is at the very beginning,” Ryff said. “For a long period of time, you couldn't even get funding to do research like this because there was such a preoccupation with illness and dysfunction.”

Hard to measure happiness.

“It's clear that stressors produce abnormal changes in the immune system, said Ronald Glaser, director of Ohio State University's Institute for Behavioral Medicine Research. Glaser and his wife, Janice Kiecolt-Glaser, a clinical psychologist also at Ohio State, studied the mind-body connection and found that chronic stress and psychological stress can impede wounds from healing, may impair the effectiveness of vaccines and can weaken the immune system of caregivers.”

How many of us spend our days plagued with depressing memories, frustrating mistakes and an inability to see the glass half full? What have you done to change? If you changed, how long did it take you to correct your thinking, and channel your thoughts?

I will end with three more questions and some great tips for improving our thinking:

Tips

  1. Give yourself credit for your accomplishments. Don’t tell yourself that it was merely easy, and you only did well because (fill in the blank)
  2.  It’s okay to recognize your faults; but don’t dwell on them. Do your best to work on them.
  3. Do not allow others to drag you down.
  4. Do something good for someone else, and expect nothing in return. You will feel as light as a feather, and you will want to experience that feeling again and again.
  5. Think of quotes, scriptures, or happy things that bring a smile to your face. Find a way to implement those words or memories into your everyday life. Even if you have to write it down, and tape it to your mirror or refrigerator. 
  6.  If you talk down to yourself constantly, what better way to correct this, than to speak to yourself using positive words? Meditate on positive things. Speak to your inner self or pray. It will make a world of difference.
Questions
Do you have any tips to share?  Is it time for a change in your thinking? Are you currently working on your self-deprecating humor or inability to see the glass half full? Will you share your journey? Your daily struggles? Your recent improvements?
Source:

Tuesday, June 26, 2012

6/26 Tuesday Pick: Most Inspirational Video Ever

Rhonda's Pick: Most Inspirational Video Ever 



Why I recommend it: This video really touches me; it reminds me that we must tell the ones we love how much they mean to us. Tomorrow is not promised!



Monday, June 25, 2012

These Impossible Restaurants Really Are a Nightmare

Many people dream of owning a restaurant. Some make their dream of a reality. A significant portion of those business owners have no idea what they are doing and apparently never watch TV.


That's because there are currently two shows about failing restaurants. The most famous is FOX's Kitchen Nightmares hosted by Gordon Ramsay. The other is Food Network's Restaurant Impossible hosted by Robert Irvine.


Both shows have a similar premise: A renowned British chef goes to a failing restaurant. He tells the staff what's wrong, implements a new menu while designers give the restaurant a new look.


Prospective restaurateurs must never watch these shows. Both have been on for several seasons and the owners all seem to make the same mistakes over and over again. For example:


Having no idea how to manage a restaurant because they have no prior management or business owner experience.
  • Going without a salary and/or mortgaging their homes to keep the restaurant afloat because they have no idea how to manage money.
  • Serving horrible food because either they do the cooking themselves or hire someone subpar to do it.
  • Being control freaks, having a temper or otherwise having emotional issues.
  • Having a home/family life in discord because the restaurant is failing.

Watching these shows is proof positive of one thing: How vitally important it is to do market research, write a business plan and know what you're doing before opening a business.

Do you watch these shows?
 
 
 

Sunday, June 24, 2012

Where Elite Equestrians Shop

Recently, Rafalca, the horse Ann Romney co-owns made a successful bid to compete in dressage at the 2012 Summer Olympic games in London. According to the New York Times and a subsequent article on Slate.com, care for Rafalca costs Romney and the other two owners $77,000 a year.


So where do elite equestrians learn their skills? They train at places like Dressage International in Illinois which is owned by Jochen Hippenstiel, a champion rider. There, not only can equestrians train but they can purchase horses for competition. Several equestrian clinics are held throughout the country.

Equestrians can go to places like Manhattan Saddlery to purchase the appropriate clothing. There, buyers can purchase a pair of riding breeches for more than most people's monthly car payment. In addition to clothing the retailer also sells footwear, helmets, gloves, luggage and other accessories.


This is certainly not a sport for those on a budget.


-----------


Note to Readers: The preceding was a paid advertisement. P.O.V. is not affiliated with this company or its services.

Friday, June 22, 2012

Creator or Victim? What’s Your Mindset?

The following post was written by a guest blogger. It's views do not necessarily reflect the views of P.O.V.


By Elaine C. Torrance-Gingrich




How we experience reality is determined by the beliefs we hold and the “lenses” through which we choose to view the world.   Our mindset is the key to the lives we lead so are you holding the mindset of a creator or a victim?




The creator mindset takes responsibility for its reality.  The creator mindset knows that the thoughts it thinks, the beliefs it holds and its positive attitude are the stuff that dreams are made of….literally!  It knows, beyond any shadow of doubt, that it creates its own reality.  It imagines its vision, hold that vision daily, tweaking when necessary, follow its intuition and taking action when appropriate and stays in vibrational alignment with what its desires to create.  So the Universe/Source/God must respond! 


Creators live their lives from the perspective of being empowered and when they encounter obstacles or challenges that would stop others dead in their tracks; the creator mindset sees these obstacles or challenges as opportunities to further refine their visions.  The obstacles or challenges are looked upon as inspiration for them to either refine an existing vision or stimulate a new creation.  They are committed to self development for they know that they are in a constant state of expansion and will never know all there is to know about anything.  They prosper because they trust in Source/God/Universe and they work with the law of attraction deliberately rather than by default.  They hold a “wealth consciousness” as they know their source of abundance comes from within, not without and they maintain a positive relationship with money.  It is seen as a tool, a means to an end.



The victim mindset assumes no responsibility for its reality.  The victim mindset believes that other people control its reality.  Victims live their lives from the perspective of being powerless, subject to the whims of others.  They are victims of circumstance.  They look to others for their source of abundance and money is seen as a necessary evil.  They come from a “lack” mentality and, therefore, the law of attraction matches that vibration of lack.  They create by default rather than deliberately.  They view obstacles or challenges as roadblocks to their success and allow those blocks to do just that: block them from what they truly desire.  Everything is “outside” of themselves rather than from within and they are disconnected from their Source/God/Universe, if they hold any belief in a higher power at all.  The victim mindset tends to see life in general as a struggle rather than as a joyous ride.



From which perspective do you choose to see the world around you?  I say “choose” because we always, without fail, have a choice.  If you see things from a creator mindset perspective, there is a positive to be gained in every single situation, no matter how dire it may appear.  Remember the saying, “every cloud has a silver lining”?  This is truly the case.  In every situation, there is a silver nugget to be mined. 


Some would say that you’re choosing to see the world through a set of “rose colored glasses” but what is wrong with choosing to see the best rather than the worst?  Let’s face it, we are bombarded daily with all kinds of negativity through the media because the more “positive” stories don’t sell, do they?  We are forced to focus on the negatives, i.e. high unemployment, the recession, crime, etc.  Yet if we take another look at the statistics, there is a more positive spin to be had.  For example, an 8 percent unemployment rate is really a 92 percent employment rate, but reporting that 92 percent of all Americans are gainfully employed would not sell airtime, now would it?  It is truly a sad commentary on the overall mindset of humanity when we would rather read about how awful things are instead of how wonderful things are.  Perhaps now is the time for everyone to take out those “rose colored glasses” and peer through them every once in a while.  What would you choose to see?  Remember, do you choose to be a creator or a victim?



It’s not always easy to stand strong in the creator mindset when the victim mentality bombards us daily through all media and the people with whom we interact. 








Elaine C. Torrance-Gingrich, The Goddess of Laughter and Possibilities, is the founder of Avalonian Moon, a company devoted to teaching women who are facing the challenges and transitions of midlife to view their world through the lens of Laughter and Possibility. She guides women to heal with ease, develop and strengthen the connection to their Inner Goddess, and dance with life so they enjoy life NOW while creating the delicious life they desire filled with more abundance, more laughter, and more magic.


Through her coaching programs, Elaine coaches her clients to make peace with where they’ve been and where they are now, see the possibilities for where they can go, believe in themselves, and to have fun along the way. Her overall mission is to empower you to feel good NOW.


To begin experiencing Elaine’s coaching, you may contact info@avalonianmoon.com to schedule a complimentary Discover Session and discover how Elaine can empower YOU!



Thursday, June 21, 2012

Bullying Today. Turning the Tide on a Learned Behavior

The following post was written by a guest blogger. It's views do not necessarily reflect the views of P.O.V.


By Shaunda Kennedy Wenger



When I sat down to decide which topic I’d like to write about today, I perused the previous posts on P.O.V.  Monday’s post about the tragic death of a bully victim caught my eye. As it turns out, this has been a subject weighing heavily on my mind. As a teacher at a private high school for at-risk students, this is a topic that I often deal with. However, the trends at my school may surprise you. 



Bullying is commonly regarded as an unavoidable segment of our society. Articles which offer help to victims in dealing with this issue abound on websites for PBS, Mayo Clinic, CBS and Oprah. Unfortunately, these articles are needed — sometimes even early in life. Bullying behavior can creep up in preschools and kindergartens as young children learn to temper their ego-centered wants within a social environment. If left unchecked, bullying behavior can continue into adulthood and emerge in the workplace, threatening job security, decreasing morale and interfering with productivity.



As with any bad behavior, early intervention is an absolute necessity in modeling and molding what is considered to be safe, acceptable, and respectable. However, if this intervention wanes due to inconsistent discipline, or the age-old yet unfounded beliefs that “kids will be kids” and “that’s the way it is,” or “you just need to learn to deal with it and not let that bully bother you,” then bullying behavior is essentially given a free ticket to escalate and grow unchecked in schools and society.



And it is not just inconsistent discipline that falls prey to these beliefs. Published articles from professional counselors often offer the same advice for the victim. Let me repeat that. Published articles offer the same advice over and over again for the victim, who is told to avoid, ignore, and report the bully.  



Thus, the proposed remedies start with the victim, and then more often than not, they end with him. And that, in my opinion, is the heart of the continuing and escalating problem of bullying in our society: laying the responsibility on the victim to avoid the bully who apparently cannot be controlled. Sometimes, this avoidance seems to carry over into the very people that bullying behavior should be reported (administrators, counselors, parents, teachers). Because if the case where otherwise — if swift, consistent and immediate consequences for correcting bullying behavior were the norm ---- then the majority of the articles that are published on the subject would not need to also suggest that the reporting child or adult “follow up” to make sure something was done to address the situation.



After having worked for the past two years at a highly secured, tight-reined residential treatment facility for at-risk youth where poor and disrespectful behavior is not tolerated and consequences are swift and consistent, I have seen that such behaviors can be changed. Intervention is possible. Bullying, as it turns out, is a learned condition. In my observation, it is one that can be unlearned. However, correcting the behavior does not happen overnight, nor does it follow with the first consequence. Unlearning poor behavior comes with a commitment to intolerance of such behavior whenever it arises by all the administrative staff, teachers and supporting faculty.



For some students, this intervention is needed on a daily basis. Over time, however, with constant reminders and consequences issued from staff, along with the role-modeling behavior provided from peers who are further along in the program, intervention is needed less and less. The student begins to unlearn his poor behavior and learns how to show respect to all of his peers, regardless of race, orientation or ability.



The student population at my school is widely diverse. We have students who are all over the spectrum. Issues that students deal with on a personal level range from learning disabilities, to emotional challenges, to recovery from drug and alcohol addictions, to boundary issues that may have gotten them into trouble. Typically, when students first enter the facility, they arrive clinging to the behaviors that landed them there in the first place. They bring baggage full of prejudices and immediately begin trying to establish their place in the social pecking order. However, it quickly becomes apparent to the new students that in this school  — with as a diverse range of students as you can possibly get — there is no social pecking order. Not really. Due to the structure and enforced social and academic behaviors that are designed to elicit respect from all students for those around them, the students more or less eventually all learn to get along with one another, or at the very least, tolerate their differences and respect one another’s personal space.



During periods of “down-time,” it never ceases to amaze me when students at opposite “ends of the spectrum” will sit down and play a game of cards or chess together. Normally, in a more “traditional” school setting where social stigmas and pecking orders are accepted as status-quo, these card-playing students would never associate with one another, let alone share the same space for more than a few moments. Yet, I see it happen again and again at my school, where respect is molded daily into student behavior.



Thus, I believe that with a unified commitment from any community’s role models --- the elders, the parents, the administrators, the teachers — bullying can be unlearned in our society. It can be expunged.  Kids who are “just being kids” can change. But in order for that to happen we all must make a commitment to becoming the undertow that initiates a wave of change. Adults, elders, administrators, teachers and role models must make a commitment to zero tolerance for poor behavior.



Implementing a zero tolerance policy takes time, stamina and training. It’s not easy. I know. But it is completely worth the effort. And if all adults and role models work together on the issue to support one another on a zero tolerance policy, it will seem less like a David-and-Goliath situation. One person cannot make the change alone.



Furthermore, the burden of dealing with bullies should not lie with the victims who are told to hide their feelings and “not let the bully see that their antics are getting a response.” It should not lie with the victims who are told to avoid bullies or walk away. It should not lie with parents who are told to follow up to ensure that something was done about a bullying behavior that was reported. It lies with those who are in charge. The adults, the role models, the ones who make and enforce the rules.



Bullying needs to be taken seriously. It should no longer be given a free ticket to pervade our society simply because of the misguided belief of “that’s the way it is” and “kids will be kids.” Kids can be better. Kids deserve to be better. They just need to be shown how. Like anything, they need to be shown through consistent role modeling and through consistent training. Put an end to bullying. Challenge your community to start unlearning poor behavior and begin molding respectful human beings.



Here are some links to great videos about ideas on how and why we should stop bullying now:






Shaunda Kennedy Wenger teaches science at Logan River Academy in Northern Utah and was recently accepted on to the Teaching Artist Roster for the Utah Division of Arts and Museums. She is also an author. While her children’s novels are set in a school environment where bullies or animosities between student characters exist, resolution and the power for self-affirmation lie within the characters who find their own voice without playing the role of a victim. Learn more about Shaunda and her books at www.shaundawenger.blogspot.com.

Wednesday, June 20, 2012

Kudos to Women!

By Rhonda Ramsey,
P.O.V. Contributing Writer
 
Lately, I have been working on channeling my thoughts and being more positive. I have been searching quotes, working on what I think about myself and working toward a new me. I have been very inspired by strong powerful female role models.

Recently, I somehow found myself browsing female inventors and learned (or re-learned what I had forgotten) some things that I think you will enjoy.

Did you know that by the 20th century, only 10 percent of all patents were awarded to female inventors?

According to one of my favorite websites:

“When you compile a list of the most famous inventions of the past few centuries, few women will show up as the creators of those items. It's not that women lack ingenuity or a creative spirit, though; it's just that women have faced many hurdles in receiving credit for their ideas. Take the case of Sybilla Masters, a woman who lived in the American colonies. After observing Native American women, she came up with a new way to turn corn into cornmeal. She went to England to obtain a patent for her work, but laws at the time stipulated that women couldn't own property, which included intellectual property like a patent. Such property was considered to be owned by the woman's father or husband. In 1715, a patent for Sybilla Masters' product was issued, but the name on the document is that of her husband, Thomas.”

After reading something like this, I could not wait to share a few of many inspirational women, and their wonderful inventions!

1) Sylbilla Masters
Masters was the first American female inventor in recorded history, but no doubt women have been inventing since the dawn of time without the deserved recognition. Sybilla Masters carried a patent application to England in 1712. She'd invented a new corn mill, but the patent had to be filed in her husband's name because she was a woman.

2) Mary Dixon Kies

Mary Dixon Kies was an early 19th-century American who was the first recipient of a patent granted to a woman by the United States Patent and Trade mark Office, on May 5, 1809, which was for a technique of weaving straw with silk and thread.

3) Ann Moore

Ann Moore invented the Snugli baby carrier.

4) Mary Anderson

Mary Anderson invented the windshield wiper. Anderson was issued a patent for the wipers in 1905.


5) Patricia Bath

Patricia Bath was the first African American woman doctor to receive a patent for a medical invention.

6) Bessie Blount

Blount invented a device to help disabled people eat with less difficulty.

7) Rachel Fuller Brown

Rachel Brown co-invented Nystatin, the world's first useful antifungal antibiotic.


In 1886, Josephine Cochran invented the first practical dishwasher.

9) Dianne Croteau
Dianne Croteau invented Actar 911, the CPR mannequin.

10) Marjorie Stewart Joyner
Joyner invented a permanent wave machine that would allow a hairdo to stay set for days.

Anyone ever used liquid paper or Whiteout? Did you know the inventor was a woman named Bette Nesmith? Last but not least, number 11:

Bette Nesmith Graham was a secretary who used her own kitchen blender to mix up her first batch of liquid paper.
Do you have any brilliant female inventors to add to our list?

Sources:

Tuesday, June 19, 2012

6/19 Tuesday Pick: Art Therapy Alliance

Rhonda's Pick:   Art Therapy Alliance



Why I recommend it:
I really love art, creativity and thinking outside the box.


I enjoy this for all of the above reasons, not to mention, there is so much more to life than being so medicated that you are numb.  For this reason, I nominate an idea: Using art as therapy and healing. Something about this is just really special to me.

 Join the Art Therapy Alliance!

Monday, June 18, 2012

Beauty is in the Eye of the Beholder

Neanderthals have a bad rap. But the more we find out about our closest relatives, the more we discover they were a lot like us.


Artwork inside a cave in Spain has been tested and date to around 40,800 years ago, strongly suggesting sthey may have been painted by Neanderthals.


"In probabilistic terms, I would say there is a strong chance that these results imply Neanderthal authorship," one of the researchers says. "But I will not say we have proven it, because we haven't, and it cannot be proven at this time. It's just, you know, my gut feeling."


Even though it is yet unproven the possibility is exciting. We humans like to think that we're special, that only we can do certain things because of our intellect or because we are at the top of the food chain.


Artwork is one of those things we like to think is distinctly human, but it is not. Domestic cats and elephants in captivity have been documented painting. So have gorillas ,who can also tell you in sign language the meaning of their art. Orangutans have been trained to use touch screen computers.


We are not as special as we think in regards to creativity. The only thing that makes us truly special is the fact we walk on two legs and have hands capable of building and inventing the things we dream about.


Friday, June 15, 2012

The Apple Phenomenon

By Jessica Snow,
P.O.V. Contributing Writer
The first company to step into the next generation, Apple took their original idea and evolved it into something unbelievable.


Why is Apple the first thought that enters your mind for top-of-the-line electronics?  With an app store including over 500,000 different varieties of applications, it’s able to make your business life, educational life and personal life so much easier especially with trying to keep up with daily life.  "There's an app for that," is now a phrase that everybody is familiar. 


Business owners are now using them keep things simple for them and their employees.  A new restaurant in Southern Utah is the first in its small community to have Apple's products center around their entire point-of-sales system.  The serving staff can clock in, take orders and cash out the tables in the palm of their hand with the latest iTouch.  The system itself is ran from an iPad using as its hub, which is also the screen for the cash register. A little wary at first thinking employees we’re texting on the job, it's the new technology of today; the customers are getting a kick out of it.


For those wanting to learn something, recently iTunes has launched iTunesU featuring courses in just about every subject you can think of with no price tag attached.  With classes from Harvard, Yale and a wide variety of other schools to choose from, this option gives anybody an opportunity to learn something new.  Of course, taking these classes does not end with a diploma, but the chance to broaden your mind, will simply blow you away.
           

Apple has built up quite a name for themselves since first releasing the original iPod in 2000 holding 1,000 songs. Their products rumors spread like wildfire until it’s officially announced with news reporters standing outside their headquarters in Cupertino, California, and the first vision of it during a live press conference.  Hopeful to get their hands on the first shipment, Apples’ followers will stand in line for hours or even days with a smile on their face.


With electronics quickly falling out of date within months of its purchase, this unfortunately is a problem for even Apple's products.  Technology is quickly catching up to itself as they have released 3 iPads since 2010.  There's always something better on the horizon with electronics these days.  Now with Android devices and its quickly growing Android Market creeping up behind and giving Apple a run for its money, what will be their next electronic masterpiece to maintain its number one spot?


Do you own an Apple product?

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Lie, Lay, and Other Grammar Blunders

By Rhonda Ramsey,

P.O.V. Contributing Writer


How often do you look over your work and find simple mistakes in grammar staring back at you? As I often say I somehow forget certain words -- when I am typing late at night, not paying attention, or simply cannot remember --  so I am prompted to test myself.


If you, too, enjoy testing yourself with the simple things to make sure you are not “losing it, or to wake yourself up, have fun with this quick grammar quiz!


1) eachother or each other

     a. Just love eachother!

     b. Just love each other!



2) everyone or everybody

     a. I love everybody.

     b. I love everyone.


3) lie or lay

     a. I will lie down in the sun.

     b. I will lay down in the sun.


4) alot or a lot

     a.  I do not have alot of friends.

     b.  I do not have a lot of friends.


5) on or upon

     a.  My hands upon your face.

     b.  My hands on your face.


6) among or amongst

     a. They are among us.

     b. They are amongst us.



7) ok or okay

     a.  I will be ok.

     b.  I will be okay



8)  into or in to

      a)  They broke into the store.

      b)  They broke in to the store.




9)  as sank or has sunk

      a. The boat has sank.

      b. The boat has sunk.



10) affect or effect

       a. The effects of the sun can be dangerous.

       b. The affects of the sun can be dangerous.



11) its or it’s

      a. The dog chased its tail until noon.

      b. The dog chased it’s tail until noon.




Answer:


1) each other 2) these words are interchangeable 3) lie 4) a lot 5) both! 6) both! (but among is more common) 7) both! (but both should be avoided in formal writing) 8) in to  9) has sunk  10) effects 11) it’s


About sunk:


The verb sink has the past tense sank (but formerly and occasionally still sunk) and the past participle sunk. The adjectival forms sunk and sunken are not readily distinguished: sunken is often used to mean “submerged” (a sunken ship), “fallen in, hollow” (sunken cheeks, sunken eyes), and often “below the normal level” (sunken garden). Sunk is the form normally chosen for technical expressions such as sunk fence, sunk key and sunk panel, although in these cases, too, sunken is sometimes used. In general use sunken is the more common choice for attributive uses (i.e. before nouns).


How did you do on the quiz?

Do you have any common grammar blunders to share?




Sources:

Answers.com
Dr. Grammar

Tuesday, June 12, 2012

6/12 Tuesday Pick: This is War

Melina's Pick: 30 Seconds to Mars video "This is War"

Why I recommend it:  Despite the title, this is actually an anti-war video. It starts with a quotation about how if we don't stop war, it will stop us.

Monday, June 11, 2012

Bullied Boy Commits Suicide

In school districts throughout the country, school is out of the summer. The school year, however, did not end without tragedy.


In late May, a 12 year old from New York City committed suicide. He had been bullied for months about his good grades, his stature and his father's death. The bullying went beyond harsh words; pipes and sticks were thrown at him.


This poor boy had switched schools to flee the bullying but it continued nonetheless.


Even sadder than the bullying is the fact he kept this feelings to himself and put up a false front that he was happy. No one, not even his mother, knew he was hurting until he committed suicide. If they had known, someone could have intervened and saved his life.


In the years since Columbine, schools have done a better job of dealing with bullying, but they still have a long way to go. Punishment for bullying is not harsh enough and there are no resources available to help those who are the victims of bullying. It is still fluffed off as something that will pass if it's ignored or that kids will just be kids. Unfortunately, as these tragedies prove, bullying doesn't stop if it's ignored, it gets worse, and children can be crueler than any adult.


How do you think schools should handle bullying? Do you think they do enough?



Friday, June 8, 2012

The Woman of Stone

The following post was written by a guest blogger. It's views do not necessarily reflect the views of P.O.V.

The Woman of Stone
by Chase Montgomery

Airborne ranger way up high.
Falling down from a pitch black sky.
Crawling low in the mud and the blood soaked sand.
Killing and dying in a foreign land.
His wife still pregnant as they put him in the ground.
Knowing the loss that happened nobody can even begin to utter a sound.
The woman that loved him with all of her heart.
Begins to think of life with out him and starts to fall apart.
Crying and screaming on the inside but on the outside just tears with no sound frozen with shock.
To her he was everything her husband, her best friend, her rock.
18 years later on that very same day.
Now his son wears a black beret.
Dreaming to be like his daddy one day.
Time moves on but the memories never fade.
18 months later now he's in the grave.
They said he fought so hard and he died so brave.
Now the Wife and mother of to fallen soldiers is all alone bitter and numb with pain.
Knowing that everything she's ever loved has been taken away.
As she loads up a gun and points it at her head.
She sees a note on the ground and this is what it said.
To the mother of a brave and truly good man, I owe your family everything your son saved us all, he saved my mother, my father, my daughter and son.
It's because of that letter Mrs. Longstreet lived on.

The Woman of Stone. Copyright Chase Montgomery. Printed here with the permission of the author.




Chase Montgomery is a 23 years old living in Maryland with his wife Kelly and their 6-month-old daughter. He joined the Army after graduating high school and served as an intelligent analyst, stationed in Texas. From 2009 to 2010 he was deployed to Iraq. During his free time, while stationed in Iraq, Chase wrote "The Woman of Stone". Currently, he is honorably discharged and studying to become an electrician.

Wednesday, June 6, 2012

The Woman At the Grocery Store

By Rhonda Ramsey,
P.O.V. Contributing Writer
This post originally appeared on my blog randomramsey in February.  I would like to share it now with the readers of P.O.V.

“On August 26, 2007, Wilson was taken to St. John’s Health Center amid reports of a suicide attempt. He was later transferred to Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles. His lawyer later confirmed that he had been undergoing treatment for depression. A few days later, Wilson withdrew from starring in Tropic Thunder, produced by and starring his friend and frequent collaborator Ben Stiller. Following the suicide attempt, Wilson had participated in limited publicity and promotion for his films.“  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Owen_Wilson

I wonder how often our perceptions are wrong. I think of the people we cross paths with and would never know what they are hiding. Imagine that someone around you --  someone in your office, classroom, home/family --  is masking things. Behind their silence or smiles, there is a brokenness, an emptiness that will probably remain hidden, possibly until it is too late.

As I observe the confusion following the sad news about an actor in a romantic comedy, I wonder about our reactions toward one another. Then I remember; more often than not, depression and self destructive feelings are buried until it is too late. I wonder how many of us would be shocked to find out that the people we least expect are unhappy, a step away from ending it?

What if the long winded woman at the grocery store checkout line went on and on and made you late for your appointment because she was lonely? What if that was the only true interaction she had had in weeks or months? What if everything she ever wanted to say she kept inside, because she felt as though no one cared until she saw you, and you listened, and you somehow gave her hope?

What if the lonely neighbor who always seems to show up and make you laugh right on time makes you laugh just to see you smile because smiling is nearly impossible in his everyday life? Maybe his family has banned him from barbecues and cookouts because several years ago he was a raging alcoholic who caused nothing but heartache. But now he has changed. He is ten years clean. But no one can seem to see anything more than the addiction that he is trying to put behind him. Until he saw you, and you laughed and smiled and you somehow gave him hope.

Empty has so many shapes, sizes, colors and reasons for taking hold. When I think of the celebrities who are hurting and empty, I am not only sorry but am reminded that our troubles and voids can always follow us no matter who we are, that no money or fame could take away pain or depression.

I hope that when we look around, we realize that empty can be buried so deep, that no one could detect it from the outside. I hope that in our prayers, we remember the woman at the grocery store and the neighbor; even those who appear to have it all.

Tuesday, June 5, 2012

6/5 Tuesday Pick: Wasteland

Melina's Pick:  The 10 Years video "Wasteland"

Why I recommend it:  Even though this video debuted in the middle of last decade, its message is still very powerful. The video features survivors of human rights abuses. Some versions ended with the message Amnesty International believes in a world where we all enjoy human rights.

Monday, June 4, 2012

A Special Thank You to Addicted Reviews

A very special thank you to Addicted Reviews for making P.O.V. the featured blog of the week.


Lessons Learned from the Hatfields & McCoys

The Hatfields in 1897.

Last week, History's miniseries Hatfields & McCoys received stellar ratings and reviews. The miniseries introduced viewers to these warring families and told them the story behind the legend.


Despite the fact the feud ended over a hundred years ago, there are many lessons learned from the feud that are relevant today.


Something small can turn into something big. The famous feud started over a stolen pig and the trial which followed. It left both sides disgusted and upset and even ended in one family member's murder.


Holding grudges hurts everyone. The Hatfields and McCoys hated and murdered each other for no other reason than they were from rival families. As a consequence, several family members were killed.


When we don't forgive, we become bitter. Randolph McCoy was haunted until his death by the events of the feud, namely the deaths of his children. He never recovered.


Did you watch the miniseries? What lessons do you think could be learned from the feud?


Friday, June 1, 2012

Solar Eclipse Spotlight on Southern Utah

By Jessica Snow,
P.O.V. Contributing Writer
Tranqual Southern Utah had quite the surprise when NASA made the call that Kanariville, UT, was to have a center stage view of an annular solar eclipse.  With such a wonderful show in the sky, the towns 300 residents glanced up with thousands of guests from all around.


Twenty-twelve will show four different types of eclipses in our sky, including two solar and two lunar, the next one being a partial lunar eclipse showing June 4th.   Following that, there will be a total solar eclipse November 13th and a penumbral lunar eclipse on November 28th.  


Our most recent solar eclipse shined brightly around "the ring of fire," in which the moon covered 94% of the Suns' surface.


This was quite the sight out my kitchen window being only 12 miles away from center stage.  My family eagerly watched the sky for the twilight sky show to start.  Beginning at 7:17 P.M., the moon took position and was clearly visable orbiting its way directly in between the Earth and the Sun.  The oh's and awe's were accompanied by the peak of the eclipse at 7:25 P.M which made the "ring of fire" completely visable.  The masked sunlight was eerie with amber colored tint as our community viewed the first solar eclipse of the year.  My second eclipse in my 23 years, by 7:30 P.M. the moon had continued its orbit and the short lived eclipse was over.


Emotions flow at the sight of something literally out of this world.  A dazzling outer space phenomena we rarely see.  A memory to last an entire lifetime.


Such a rare occurrence, all of Southern Utah was outside.  From live bands to solar telescopes and plenty of room for anybody to stop by and view the wonders of our sky.   Stargazers will be looking forward to another chance to view a spectacular event in the sky.
           
Sources:



Photos of an annular solar eclipse taken by the solar optical telescope Hinode as the moon came between it and the sun. Credit: Hinode/XRT

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