Test Your Sex IQ with New Online Quiz

Think you’re a sexual health guru?

Try taking a fun new quiz put together by the experts at STDTestExpress. The quiz is designed to invoke some laughs, but also remind everyone how important it is take care of your sexual health.

Questions range from basic STD statistics to the best ways to make sure you’re not another one of those stats. When finished, your score will tell you if you’re the sexual health stud you think you are or if your lack of knowledge will have potential partners running for the door.

So go ahead - get it on at http://www.stdtestexpress.com/std-quiz/!

How To Keep Kids Organized For Back To School

It’s that time of the year again, you finally get settled into a workable summertime routine with the kids and everything changes again. It’s back to school time and that means back to morning chaos, homework disorganization, and dealing with massive amounts of information between school and home. I’ve got some interesting tips that highlight some lesser-known ways for keeping kids organized for school, and I thought you might be able to use in a story you’re planning.
It’s normal for kids to generate chaos and disorganization (it comes with the territory), but being organized is a learned skill that is developed over time. With guidance and practice, kids can develop an effective approach to becoming organized. Amy Morris, single Mom of two teenagers and founder of GotFamilyGetOrganized.com, offers these unique tips to help your kids start the school year with a check plus.
5 Ways To Keep Kids Organized
Hub Of The House – Create a central location to hang a bulletin board that will hold important school and family information. Teach kids to update the calendar upon receiving new information and get in the habit of checking it the night before for the following day’s activities so that they can prepare in advance. 
GotFamilyGetOrganized.com – An organized parent sets a good example. This website stores in a unique, simplified, and easy to use format, important family information: school schedules and extracurricular activities, social and sport information, and medical, just to name a few, and it is all available in a central location that can be accessed anytime and anywhere – from any computer, iPad, or smart phone.
Organize Backpacks – A backpack is your child’s personal assistant. Teach them how to keep it neatly organized by only filling them with necessary school day items and keeping out unnecessary loose papers, non-school items and liquids. 
Make Lists – Teaching kids to make and prioritize lists will provide them with a greater sense of accomplishment - as they complete items and their lists become smaller, they will feel more productive and they have a greater sense of satisfaction in themselves.  Kids will take ownership for their tasks, shape their own time, and gain greater independence.
Student File Storage – Teach your kids to sort and effectively file school papers in an organized manner.  It will be crucial to them at exam time – especially if midterm and end of year final exams are inclusive of all the material covered to date. 
Organization is an awesome opportunity for kids to gain self-confidence and independence and not lose their sanity or you lose yours.

From Summer Into School: Four Ways to Ease The Transition

GinnyKubitzMoyer (for web use).jpgBy Ginny Kubitz Moyer

It’s that time of year again.  Teachers are decorating their classrooms, brand-new lunchboxes wait to be filled, and kids who have savored the delights of vacation are looking downright glum.  If you’re a hardcore summer fan, you too may find it tough to get excited about the return of school.  It’s not easy to exchange the relative leisure of vacation for the tyranny of the alarm clock, the inflexibility of pickup times, and the challenge of shepherding your family through another academic year while (hopefully) keeping your own life in balance.

Luckily, the start of school does not have to mean the end of sanity.  Here are a few ways to ease the transition, making Back-to-School a positive, fun, and even spiritually enriching time for you and your family.

1.  Make a New School Year’s Resolution.  When I was a kid, I adored buying school supplies.  The folders were clean, the pencils smelled like cedar, and the crayons hadn’t yet been blunted by use.  If you’ll bear with my English teacher riff here, those supplies are symbolic of the beginning of the school year, when everything is fresh and new.   If your kids are old enough, talk about what they hope to accomplish during the year.  Do they want to participate more in class?  Limit the number of after-school activities to create more time for the one they really love?   You can even pen some personal goals for yourself, like reducing school-year stress by exercising three times a week (this one always works for me).  Don’t attach guilt to the resolutions, but do check in and reevaluate them as the year goes on.  It’s a great way to get kids reflecting on their own priorities.

2. Focus not on what you’re losing, but on what you’re gaining.  Yes, it’s tough to bid goodbye to swimming pools and charcoal barbecues.  But every season has its own charms.  On my short list of autumn fun: taking the boys to the pumpkin patch, letting myself eat candy corn again, smelling wood smoke in the air.  Even if school itself doesn’t generate any smiles, get your kids talking about fun experiences they had last fall.  Pull out some photos if you need to refresh their memories (or your own). 

3.  Pack a letter along with the juice box and string cheese.  At times throughout my childhood (and early adolescence), my mom would tuck a handwritten note into my lunchbox.  “I love you!  Enjoy the Cheese Puffs!  Love, Mom.”  When I was very young, these little letters helped me deal with the homesickness I often felt at school.  When I was older, they were a subtle, non-intrusive reminder that my mom wanted to stay connected to me.  Though I couldn’t have articulated this at the time, I loved the fact that I was holding something handwritten, something that Mom herself also touched.  That’s instinctively comforting for kids, who sometimes need a little shot of motherly encouragement in the middle of a long school day.

4.  Get mindful and remember that nothing stays forever.    “This too shall pass,” my grandmother always used to say.  While that is a comforting mantra when you’re so stressed out you can’t see straight, it also captures the bittersweet reality of parenting. Someday you will miss the four-year-old who, though exhausting, dances with excitement upon showing you the letters he traced at preschool, or the exasperating teen who makes an unguarded comment revealing how much she still values your approval.  I always try to remember that wishing away the negatives of a certain phase of parenthood inevitably means wishing away its joys, too.  So if the school year is ratcheting up your stress level, try this little assignment: pause, breathe deeply, and think, This won’t last forever.  Savor what’s good about the present moment.  In the classroom of life, it’s one of the most important lessons we’ll ever learn.
****
Ginny Moyer - Ginny Kubitz Moyer is an author, English teacher, weekend gardener, sporadic exerciser, and proud mother of two young boys. Visit her blog at www.blog.maryandme.org for thoughts on faith, parenting, and the occasional ode to Jane Austen.

Enhanced by Zemanta

Top 5 Mobile Apps For Labor Day Weekend

The number of smart phone applications on the market is an incomprehensible number to download. Family reunions and quick getaways have become a Labor Day tradition for most people, but which apps work best for taking holiday trips? Grip’d.com, the company that develops Web and iPhone applications nationwide, spent several months testing various apps on each platform to see which ones make Gripd.com’s top five travel apps.

If you have an iPhone, Blackberry or Android phone, here’s a quick rundown of the best 5 travel apps:

  • Weatherbug – The simplicity of Apple’s Weather app, but with a few extras for your phone. It’s the largest network of professional weather stations in the US and is the only source for truly live, local weather (as taken from their site).
  • BePut - enables users to share their whereabouts with people they want to find them. Users simply use the application to locate their exact position and with a touch of a button, have the opportunity to send an email or text message to the desired recipient with their exact location. The recipient gets a special FindMe Key which is secure. The only guaranteed way to not get lost.
  • Car Care & Roadside Emergencies - I don’t know about you, but I absolutely hate it when things don’t go according to the plan. You have this important presentation, and you end up with a flat tire in an express way. Or maybe you are trying to get home from a concert, and your car doesn’t start up. These situations happen all the time, and they usually tend to happen when you expect them the least. Now some of us have a knack for breaking and fixing things as far as cars are concerned.
  • Waze - Waze is a social mobile application that enables drivers to build and use real-time road intelligence. The service includes constantly-updated road maps, alerts on traffic and accidents, and data providing users with the fastest route to get to wherever they need to go. Map and traffic updates are automatically collected and generated as users drive with Waze activated, but drivers can also actively report and update other users with what's happening on the road.
  • Shazam – In the car for hours and can’t figure out the song playing on the radio? When you hear a song and wonder what it is, Shazam is there with the answer. Hold your iPhone to the music and within seconds Shazam will tell you the artist and track name. You can even download the song through iTunes on your iPhone.


Enhanced by Zemanta

New law strengthens penalty for injuring pedestrians while driving recklessly; PSA campaign to feature national print and outdoor ad exposure




NEW YORK – With the start of the school year just days away, a public awareness campaign regarding the recently-signed Elle’s Law was unveiled today.  The legislation, sponsored by New York Assembly Member Micah Kellner and State Senator Martin Malavé Dilan, was signed earlier this month by Governor David Paterson.  Elle’s Law strengthens state motor vehicle laws by increasing the penalty for injuring a pedestrian while driving recklessly.  The law is named for 4-year-old Elle Vandenberghe, who was struck by a driver who reversed through a crosswalk to secure a parking space in September 2009.

The ad campaign, featuring Elle’s smiling face and taglines including “Reckless Driving Wrecks Lives,” “Children Break… When Drivers Don’t,” and “She Almost Died For A Parking Space,”  will appear inside 250 New York City Transit buses, at approximately 30 bus shelters across New York City, on billboards statewide, and in the pages of national newspapers and magazines including Harper’s Bazaar, People Style Watch, Sports Illustrated, The New York Observer and The Wall Street Journal.  The campaign was created by the New York City-based advertising agency Chowder, Inc.
“I am proud that Elle’s Law will help protect the millions of students across New York state who are heading back to school this month, as well as pedestrians of all ages,” said Heather Vandenberghe, Elle’s mother, who first urged lawmakers to pass the legislation as her daughter began to recover from the near-fatal accident.  “On behalf of parents everywhere, I would like to thank Governor Paterson, Assembly Member Kellner, State Senator Dilan and the generous supporters and media companies who provided their services pro bono to help make this public awareness campaign a reality.” 

Elle Vandenberghe was on her way to preschool when she was struck by a motorist driving backwards on a Manhattan street to secure a parking spot.  Elle, who was three years old at the time of the accident, spent eight months in the hospital and continues to recover from a massive head trauma and brain damage.  Meanwhile, the driver was given a traffic summons, per New York State law.  The newly-passed “Elle’s Law” will result in any driver injuring a pedestrian while driving recklessly having his or her license suspended for up to a year.  (Current laws are already very strict for reckless driving either under the influence or impaired by alcohol.)

“One of the ads reads, ‘Reckless Driving Wrecks Lives’,” said Heather Vandenberghe. “I hope that Elle’s Law will act as a strong deterrent to reckless drivers, and in doing so will prevent other families from enduring what ours has.”

In addition to the PSA campaign, the web site http://www.elleslaw.org will feature resources including information on the 38 states – plus Washington D.C. – that do not appear to have laws specific to pedestrian safety, and a form visitors may use to contact their local legislators to advocate for similar laws.  A Facebook “fan” page can be found at http://www.facebook.com/pages/Elles-Law/140850212621514.
Companies who provided pro bono services toward the Elle’s Law campaign include Dan Klores Communications; Chowder Inc.; the LVMH Group; Kerwin Communications; Digital Color Concepts; CBS Outdoor; Cemusa; Fuel Outdoor; and the publications Harper’s Bazaar, People Style Watch, Sports Illustrated, The New York Observer, The Wall Street Journal and Departures magazine, with more to launch in the coming weeks.

According to 2008 data from the New York State Department of Motor Vehicles, there were more than 15,000 pedestrian accidents statewide, with more than 97% resulting in physical injuries. Only 2% of those accidents involved drugs or alcohol.

Help Stop Buzzed Driving

Did you know that in 2008, just over the Labor Day holiday weekend, 194 people were killed in crashes involving an impaired driver?
 
This Labor Day, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration and the Ad Council are trying to remind people to plan ahead and designate a sober driver for any Labor Day celebration because "Buzzed Driving is Drunk Driving."
  • Designated Driver Drink List - One of the most important things you can do before you go out is to designate a sober driver. If you're throwing a party, make sure to offer up non-alcoholic drinks for the sober drivers in your group. We have compiled a Facebook tab with 50 non-alcoholic party drink recipes right here.
  • Alternative Ride Locator - We have created a new Facebook tabwith a nationwide list of alternative ride programs 
  • Buzzed Driving is Drunk Driving website- Sign a pledge not to drink and drive, play "Spot the Difference," an interactive game that simulates the effects of buzzed driving , and watch a real-life video about how buzzed driving changed one woman's life.  

Enhanced by Zemanta

Free Noetic Science Teleseminar with Astronaut Edgar Mitchell

Have you ever wanted to talk to a man who has walked on the moon? Have a question for the founder of the Institute of Noetic Sciences (IONS)? People curious about the noetic sciences will get their chance this Wednesday evening when Apollo 14 astronaut Dr. Edgar Mitchell launches IONS’13-week teleseminar series on the "Essentials of Noetic Science." 

IONS announced the line-up of its fall teleseminar series today along with free admission to the first in the series, scheduled for Wednesday, September 1, at 5 p.m. PDT. Registration for this teleseminar is available on IONS’ new website (http://bit.ly/cUAlU5). Following his interview Dr. Mitchell will have the chance to ask participants a question of his own: "Have you ever had a noetic experience?" Later this month, IONS will use Dr. Mitchell’s question to kick off its monthly Big Question discussion forum on the new website. 

During the teleseminar, IONS’ founder Dr. Edgar Mitchell (the sixth man to walk on the moon) will join CEO Dr. Marilyn Schlitz to discuss IONS’ 35-year history catalyzing global social change by bringing consciousness science into mainstream medical centers, classrooms, and scientific disciplines. 

Other teleseminar dates and topics
Regisration for future teleseminars is available at http://noetic.org/events/upcoming/teleseminars/

September 8, 2010
"Historical Roots of Noetic"
Speaker: Mitch Horowitz

September 15, 2010
"What Is Consciousness?"
Speaker: Stuart Hameroff


September 29, 2010
"Metaphysics in Popular Culture"
Speaker: Jeff Kripal


October 6, 2010
"The Science of Noetic Experience"
Speaker: Daryl Bem


October 13, 2010
"Near Death Experience"
Speaker: Bruce Greyson

October 20, 2010
"Science of Intuition"
Speaker: Rupert Sheldrake

November 3, 2010
"Science of Transformation"
Speaker: Daniel Siegel

November 10, 2010
"Transformative Practices"
Speaker: Fred Luskin


November 17, 2010
"Science of Meditation"
Roger Walsh and Shauna Shapiro

December 1, 2010
"Integral Healing"
Speaker: Lee Lipsenthal

December 8, 2010
"Life Before Life"
Speaker: Jim Tucker

December 15, 2010
"Energy Medicine"
Speaker: Sylver Quevedo


About IONS
The Institute of Noetic Sciences is one of the world’s leading science centers rigorously researching the connection between mind and body, consciousness and matter. Its trusted laboratory and applications research fuels an expanding global learning community helping people to transform their lives and the world around them. IONS hosts one of the most active research-fueled networks of live and online resources, community, and learning experiences. It also operates the EarthRise retreat center which, together with the IONS research facilities, is located on a rolling woodlands campus near Petaluma, California. 

LinkWithin

Blog Widget by LinkWithin

wibiya widget

Facebook and Twitter