Daily Dose

Cat Fight at Walmart

Maybe it isn’t college students who are dumb. Maybe it’s everyone in this town. I’ve seen 4 car accidents in 24 hours. Someone followed the neighbor home and cursed her out for running a red light or turning on a red light or something. People are running across highways (not just the incident yesterday, there were more today). And there was a cat fight at Walmart this evening.

TW and I were at Walmart searching for a certain cupcake topper we need for a certain someone who is having a big day on Friday. We thought we could easily find this at Walmart so we ran in there after work. (well actually we ran in there after we ran into Backyard Burger after work)

We were talking about students being back and promoting fighting in a Top 5 party school town when this young woman starts screaming BITCH as we walk past. No, I didn’t know her and she wasn’t talking to me. (Some of you were sure she was talking to me, you can admit it.) She was with another young woman and I thought they were playing around, name calling the way teens and young adults do. All of a sudden the chick takes off running down the aisle, screaming BITCH over and over again. TW and I were still walking and we glance down the aisle, both of us really thinking teens are idiots and we see they really ARE idiots. They are beating the hell out of each other. And everyone is standing there watching.

TW and I just kept on walking, shaking our heads. We glanced down the next aisle and see a very shell shocked older woman, a Walmart employee, obviously trying to decide what to do with these girls. TW and I just kept on walking, shaking our heads some more.

As we were leaving, not having found the item we were sure any Walmart would have, we saw one of the young women bleeding all over the women’s clothing while a couple of store employees tried to patch her up.

Insanity. Who was it that decided Gainesville is the number one place to live in the US? Have they actually visited this town?

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Our Future is in Their Hands?

I took Michelle to get her books for this semester and then we ran over to Burrito Brothers to grab her paycheck. Students are back so of course there was no parking in the tiny little lot, I squeezed into half of a space on 14th and sat with the car running. Michelle came out quickly and I pulled out onto 14th, made a right into pretty heavy mid-day traffic onto University.

“Students are back.” I said. The traffic was murder and there were kids all over the place. You have to be pretty mindful of what they’re doing because you never know when they are going to decide they need to be on the other side of University Ave (a very busy 4 lane road).

So Michelle and I were talking about how many hours she had worked last week. I moved to the left lane as soon as I had a chance and was going between 30 and 35, did I mention the traffic was heavy?

I’m approaching a green light when out of the corner of my left eye I see some flash of movement.

“What the….” BAM. I instinctively put on my breaks and watched a college student (male) get hit by a small silver car.

He decided he could run across four lanes of traffic, cars going 30-40 miles per hour would of course slam on their brakes as he darted across the street. And they did, but he still got hit. And then tried to get back up and keep running. Which is why when Michelle said “Mom, the light’s green.” I ignored her and watched just in case he decided to keep on running.

What in the hell is wrong with these kids. I know, I rant about this every year, but it’s getting worse. Crossing against not only the crosswalk light but the traffic light. Crossing University wherever it suits them to cross. U-turns at the drop of a hat in areas where a u-turn is less than safe. I just don’t get it.

Take this young man for instance. Did he go home, or to whatever bar he was obviously headed to, and think about what would have happened if his parents had gotten a call on the first week back to school saying “your son was hit by a car”…. or did he go back to his room or to Burrito Brothers for a late lunch and wonder how the driver of that car would have felt if he had not been able to hit his brakes quickly enough to prevent serious injury – or if the cars behind it would not have been able to stop, causing a chain reaction that certainly would have caused him more injury.

Do 20 somethings stop to think about anything at all? I’m beginning to doubt it.

To the person driving the silver car – good job hitting your brakes and avoiding what could have been a very serious injury to this kid. I hope to goodness he apologized and he thanked you for paying attention.

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Global Health Issue: Go Vote

The women of BlogHers Act have created a poll so that you can vote on the Global Women’s Health Initiative that BlogHer will focus on. What’s your issue? Vote! And let others know that they can vote, too.


<a href=”http://micropoll.questionpro.com/akira/MicroPoll?mode=html&id=48377″>View MicroPoll</A><br /> <a href=”http://www.questionpro.com/”>Web Survey</a><br /> <a href=”http://www.micropoll.com”>Free Web Polls</a><br /> Voting ends at midnight on August 25th.

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The best non-answer to a stupid line of questions

Jodie Foster makes me laugh when she does this stuff. I think if she ever answered these questions head on I’d be disappointed. On the other hand, I just told TW that Jodie Foster is annoying. I wouldn’t be happy hung with a new rope. 😉

Let’s talk about your ring.

This one? [Proffers left hand] It’s Tiffany, an eternity ring.

You’re wearing it on your wedding ring finger.

I am. I’ve always worn a ring. Even taking photos. Even on magazine covers. I don’t take it off.

Don’t you think wearing a ring like that raises questions?

Well, but that’s my life. I thought about this recently: I had a nightmare the other night. Well, anyway. . .

C’mon! Let’s hear the nightmare!

I was being interviewed by somebody, like an innocuous [press] junket thing. They were asking me questions about food I liked or whatever. Then they said, [in a high, innocent voice] “Have you ever written any homemade anti-Semitic cards?” And I was like, [horrified] “No!” Then she said, “Come with me,” and I realized to myself, “You’re so stupid. Haven’t you ever seen that 60 Minutes thing where they ask you a banal question? You’re not supposed to say yes or no. You’re supposed to go, ‘Well, that’s interesting.’ Because if they ask you the banal question, it’s because they have some kind of document on you. And now you’ve got to go! And now the camera’s going to follow you!” Then my dream was over. [Pauses and reflects before continuing]

My life is my life. I’m not going to change my life for anybody. I don’t have any problems with it. I just don’t talk about my health, my dad, who I voted for or what I think of the death penalty, because that would be trivializing my life, selling it for a magazine. I don’t have any problems with anybody reporting on my life. It’s just that I’m not going to bring my family into that. The number-one reason for that is: Why would I invite — encourage — more people to sit outside my door and wait for my children to go to school? I don’t have any desire to participate in it.

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How gay are the democratic candidates?

I’m too tired from a very long work day to find out for myself. So I’m watching Greg Hambrick live blog it. He’s making me laugh. Personally, I think it’s Obama who is uncomfortable, not the chairs. (FYI TW says if Edwards would have appeared in drag, she’d vote for him. But then again, she says she’d vote for Hillary if she was in drag too. TW has a thing for drag… which is odd and another story entirely.)

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BlogHer Con 07 – Sketchblogging by Prince J

I have mentioned Prince J attended some BlogHer Con sessions and he enjoyed them very much. He enjoyed doing some “sketchblogging” during the sessions.

The panel at the top of the page is his rendition of the panelists for the Does the Blogosphere Need an Intolerance Intervention? session. I particularly love the weapons. Nice touch. Can you guess which panelist is which? (Tish Grier, Laina Dawes, Liz Henry and Kathyrn Thompson were on the panel.)

The panel at the bottom of the page is his rendition of the panelists for the The Art of Food Blogging session. I wasn’t in the session but I’m somehow doubting the women all wore chef hats. Heh. Now who is who? (Kalyn Denny, Shuna Fish Lydon, Jasmine from Cardamom Addict, Nupur Kittur, Alanna Kellogg and Susan Voisin were the panelists.)

bloghercon.jpg

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The Post BlogHer Con 07 Buzz

Yes there are some bloggers talking about the cliques and expressing some “high school like angst”. I just can’t address that. It is what it is. With 800 women, there are mini social groups. tribes. clicques. lists. It is our nature to flock this way. (shrug)

I’m most interested in the bigger buzz, and for me the more important buzz, the money buzz. It’s more complicated than that but I’m still going to call it the money buzz because it comes down to money – and class and I swear I’ve begun to channel Shuna but this is what it feels like to me.

First, the mommybloggers of color. I can’t even imagine what it would have felt like to hear a marketing dude say (and I’m paraphrasing) “we don’t market to you because we don’t know what to do with you.” Even reading it post conference was too much for me.

I’ve said for years, to anyone who was brave enough or stupid enough to ask my opinion (or be trapped someplace where I had the floor) that companies and websites and products need to stop being so WHITE and so MIDDLE CLASS and so STRAIGHT…. in that order. And every time I’ve said it, there is silence. Complete and total silence. They don’t know what to say to that or do with that. And putting an ethnic or person of color on your website does not change that you are still WHITE and MIDDLE CLASS and STRAIGHT. There’s more to it than that and you have the opportunity to figure it out by emailing people like Kelly or Stephania or Nordette or any other women of color who are out in the blogosphere. Ask them and they will tell you but you have to listen and you have to be serious about listening to them. Don’t just pretend like you care what they think and who they are.

I cannot believe I’m sitting here writing this. again. Didn’t I just say this stuff? I’m pretty sure I did. And I just can’t say anything else about this right now. So I’ll move on to another similar issue. This one from a panel I sat in on… the Blogging is More Than Words panel.

Everything was going along well when suddenly the room started to feel uncomfortable. Some of the panelists were talking about what they wouldn’t do to make money – to sell their work – to get noticed – to make money. I looked around the room and wondered how many of the women there could draw such firm barriers? How many women in that room just could not relate to what these panelists were saying? How many women might walk out of the room vowing not to promote themselves because it “doesn’t feel right”?

And then I thought some stuff that I’m not going to write in this blog post. And as I was thinking those things, Shuna stood up and said what I was thinking – but a lot more diplomatically. But because she was nice, and she didn’t hit hard, I’m not sure if anyone but me heard what she was trying to say….

Shuna said that what she was hearing was those women had choices. They could choose not to promote themselves, they had options. She wasn’t that lucky. She has to promote herself or nobody else will. She has to pay the bills. She doesn’t have the options, the choices that those women have. (Shuna did not blog specifically about this particular session but she does make mention of it in her live-blogging of the craft blogging session in day 2.)

Class. It’s about class. Again.  And on to the next issue…

It’s one thing to say “I will never do this….” and be able to stick to that – to be lucky enough to not compromise yourself in any way. But not everyone is that lucky.

When a blogger says “I would never do that” I always wonder what it would take to change their minds. Would you put ads on your blog if your husband lost his job and didn’t get a new one… for a year? And you had 3 kids? And no health insurance? What if you found yourself with 10k in medical bills and only made minimum wage? Would you put ads up then? What if you realized you could make as much money as Heather? What if you realized the only way you could feed your kids was to sell your art to Pay Per Post? What if…

And that’s the problem.

There are large groups of very smart and very talented bloggers and they’re quick to say they would never do this on their blog or they would never do that. And that’s fine. I’m not saying you should put ads on your site if you don’t want to. I’m not saying you should write for PPP if you don’t want to. I’m not saying you should grab some big company’s offer that’s to pay you a couple of hundred dollars a month and also by the way own your content forever. I’m definitely NOT saying that. But I think we all need to be very careful about what we say “never” about. Not just because we might find ourselves having to do exactly what we said we wouldn’t…but because other women are listening. And other women are not YOU and they are not ME. Those women do not have the all of the same opportunities that we do. When we say “never!” we make them second guess themselves for their choices. When we say “NEVER!” we make them feel like second class citizens because they can’t say “NEVER!”

Women shouldn’t under-value their work. This is something else I’ve ranted about for months on end. The big company who offers peanuts and wants to own your content just might be offering you a really bum deal. But maybe not. We aren’t all Dooce. Or Woulda Coulda. Or BYH err Notes From the Trenches. Or Motherhood Uncensored. Or Busy Mom. Or Sweetney or … or … or … for some of us, a couple of hundred dollars a month is as good as it is going to get or is a really excellent way to get a foot in the door. And for some of us, Google Adsense that brings in $25 a quarter is as good as it gets, not everyone can sell ad space for $30 or $50 or $100 a week.

Be careful with what you say “never” to, please. And be careful how you say it. Not everyone writes the way you do. Not everyone can land the fab job in a great community. And that’s ok. Everyone has value. Everyone’s blog has value.

And one last thing, there’s not a damn thing wrong with selling your work for less than someone else says you should. (Unless of course that someone else is offering to pay you what she thinks you’re worth. And she isn’t, is she? She’s also not giving up her latest big money gig so you can get your share… )

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