Showing posts with label Cultural-Social. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cultural-Social. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 28, 2013

Social Pro 2.0.10 Final Full Version

Social Pro 2.0.10 Final Full With Serial | 12.9 MB

Hi friends here is the Social Pro for you and it has many salient features. Social Pro is a collection of social management tools that is ideal for people who use multiple social network accounts. It is the only Mac-native multi social network client, and it saves you time by following statuses on Facebook, Twitter and Gmail. No more jumping from site to site to monitor, update and engage your social services at the speed of real time. No need to open it up in a web browser, or have it clutter your workspace. So many to enjoy. Just use it and have fun.

Social Pro is an application which allows you to manage all your favorite social media services at one single application. It supports multiple accounts of Facebook, Twitter, Google+ and Gmail, and keeps you notified of any incoming news feed or messages.

Social is designed to bring back the fun and simplicity of online social networking. While it is important to keep track of those special to us through our social networks and services, having to constantly log and re-log onto separate sites on different windows can become a painful and tedious task.

But now you can easily stay in touch with the social networks and services that matter to you all through accessing a single application with social!

Main features:

  • Support of Facebook, Twitter, GMail, GTalk and Google+
  • Multiple accounts login
  • Desktop and Mobile View
  • Notification for new tweets
  • Sound notification
  • Ability to disable notification for each services
  • Resizable windows

Screenshots:




Supporting Operating Systems : Microsoft Windows XP, Vista, Windows 7, Windows 8

Language : English

Install Notes:

  1. Install The App
  2. Copy Content from Update Folder to Install Directory
  3. Register using Given Username and Serial
  4. Enjoy This Release!!

Download:



How to Download???
1. Click on the download link
2. Wait for few seconds and then click on
https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhaVdP2cSf6QypLIvEzUV6nQ_HmVCqNZBFwCTE0ikzvrBy1XVWHq2M4ii6quo0PoWjP1OBhSl8sR8mBqxXQ1I6XnZ15Sd2J7Mv8eAmAhietudLb1BxJ7cnYDfveL_b7sD0B_b0CTkaCtv0/s1600/45345b.png
pass unrar : congdong-tinhoc.blogspot.com

Saturday, April 20, 2013

Seven questions about the Boston bombers




Washington (CNN) -- We don't yet know how or why the Tsarnaev brothers, the alleged Boston Marathon bombers, decided to carry out their attacks, but a look at how their stories correlate with those of some other terrorists living in the West could provide some answers to the questions that many are now asking about them.

1. How could someone who grew up in the United States become a terrorist?

Major Nidal Malik Hasan, who killed 13 people at Fort Hood Army Base in Texas in 2009, was born and raised in Virginia.

Peter Bergen
He self-radicalized, in part, over the Internet, which he used to reach out to the Yemen-based preacher Anwar al-Awlaki for advice about whether it is permissible for Muslim soldiers in the U.S. military to kill their comrades in the name of jihad.
Awlaki, a leader of al Qaeda's affiliate in Yemen, was somewhat noncommittal in his responses but did not discourage the act.
Investigators will surely be combing through the e-mail traffic of the Tsarnaev brothers to see if they either reached out to militant Islamist clerics or downloaded lectures by such clerics. They will also examine the brothers' Internet usage to see if they visited jihadist forums or downloaded propaganda from al Qaeda or other allied groups. And of course, it's possible their decision to carry out the attacks was reached without any outside influence.

2. How do you square the multiple descriptions of the brothers as "good guys" with the fact that they plotted mass murder?

 Boston bombing suspect in custody
It's worth recalling that Mohammed Sidique Khan, the leader of the suicide attackers who bombed the London transit system in 2005 killing 52 commuters, was a beloved teacher at a primary school in the northern city of Leeds who taught children with developmental problems, and the happily married 30-year-old father of a baby daughter. Colleagues and acquaintances described Khan as a gentle, kind man.
No surprise then that we are hearing some similar positive characterizations of the brothers Tsarnaev.

3. Did the brothers have any training or practice on explosives?

It seems quite unlikely that the perpetrators would have been able to successfully set off two deadly bombs within seconds of each other without some sort of training or practice.
Bomb-making recipes certainly exist on the Internet, but actually building effective bombs is generally a skill that requires some training or practice, and even then a successful detonation is not guaranteed.
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Faizal Shahzad, for instance, received bomb-making training from the Pakistani Taliban before he constructed a bomb in an SUV that fizzled out rather than blowing up as he intended in Times Square on May 1, 2010.
The older Tsarnaev brother, Tamerlan, spent six months in Russia last year. What precisely he did there will surely be of intense interest to investigators. Could he have received some kind of bomb-training from Chechen militants who are experienced in making explosives?
Also, might the brothers have done some kind of test runs of their explosive devices in the United States?

4. If the brothers' motivation had something to do with their Chechen heritage, how might that have played out in this case?

In the years after 9/11, dozens of young Somali-American men traveled to fight in the civil war in Somalia. Just as the Tsarnaev brothers, these Somali-Americans were first-generation Americans.
For these new Americans, the politics of their homeland can sometimes become more meaningful and important than it was for their parents who fled the chaos of their native countries for the safety of the United States, and who now want to put those conflicts behind them.
What exactly prompted the FBI to interview Tamerlan Tsarnaev in 2011, following a tip from an unidentified foreign government that he was "a follower of radical Islam" and was contemplating leaving the United States to join a clandestine organization? And was this tip provided by the Russian government, which has been at war in Chechnya on and off since the 19th century?

5. Did the brothers intend to die during the attacks or their aftermath?

It seems shocking to many that the Tsarnaev brothers might have been wearing suicide vests during their gun battle with police on Thursday night, but in reality several U.S. citizens and residents have intended to die in terrorist attacks.
Three of the young Somali-American men who traveled from Minnesota to fight in civil war in Somalia later carried out suicide attacks there.
Major Hasan undoubtedly went into his attack on a military base full of armed U.S. soldiers believing that it would be the last thing he did before he died. (That prediction did not come true. He was wounded in the attack but not killed).
Al Qaeda recruit Najibullah Zazi, who plotted to bomb the Manhattan subway in the summer of 2009, planned to die in this attack but was arrested before he could pull it off.

6. Were the brothers really "lone wolves"?

Given all the mayhem the two brothers are allegedly responsible for: Two bombings that caused three deaths and some two hundred injuries at the Boston Marathon as well as the subsequent murder of a policeman at MIT, did they have some kind of additional help?
According to Boston law enforcement officials, there is no evidence of such help and it's worth recalling that Hasan was entirely a lone wolf who nonetheless managed to kill 13 on a U.S. military base with heavy security.

7. How unusual is it for brothers to carry out terrorist attacks together?

More frequent than you might think. The deadliest terrorist attack in U.S. history on 9/11 involved three pairs of brothers among the 19 hijackers: brothers Waleed and Wail al-Sheri, Hamza and Ahmed al-Ghamdi and Nawaf and Salem al-Hazmi.

Soursce: CNN

Friday, April 19, 2013

Boston Police: One Suspect in Marathon Bombings Apprehended; Second at Large


AP photo
One suspect in Monday’s Boston Marathon bombings was apprehended early Friday and the second remained at large, according to a police official with knowledge of the investigation, the Boston Globe reported.

The second suspect apparently is on the loose in the Boston suburb of Watertown after a firefight with police, who have established a 20-block perimeter to try and track him down, the Globe reported.

Cambridge and Watertown were chaotic late Thursday night and early Friday morning, as police confirmed an MIT police officer was shot and killed, and an apparent carjacking had police chasing the vehicle into Watertown, the Globe reported. 

Witnesses in Watertown said they heard explosions as police officers were heard commenting about improvised explosive devices.


Massachusetts State Police spokesman David Procopio said early Friday that the violent events at MIT and Watertown appeared to be connected, and that federal authorities were investigating whether the violence of Thursday night and Friday was connected to the marathon bombings.

At least one of the suspects in Watertown appeared to be a man in his 20s.

FBI agents were on the scene.

“We are aware of the situation, we are being involved, and we are monitoring,” said an FBI representative who requested anonymity because of not being authorized to speak publicly. The FBI source said early Friday it is “too early to speculate” on a relation to the Marathon bombing. 

Dozens of police officers descended on Watertown Square after midnight. 

“This is still extremely dangerous,” an FBI agent said. The Cambridge bomb squad arrived in Watertown shortly after 1:30 a.m.
Newsmax

Photographed Men Cleared in Marathon Bombings



Federal investigators on Thursday cleared two men whose images were in photographs circulated to police as suspects in the Boston Marathon bombings.

Neither had a role in the attack on Monday that killed three people and injured more than 170, The New York Post reports.

And one of the men, a 17 year old, told ABC News that he was shocked to see his face turn up on social media as a possible suspect.

The photographs were distributed by FBI officials late on Wednesday — and they showed the men standing with a backpack and duffel bag near the finish line, where the bombs exploded within 100 feet of each other.

The Post also published a picture on Thursday with the men’s faces circled in red, but said it was not sure whether they were the same as the two potential suspected spotted by authorities on Wednesday.

It later reported that the men had been cleared by authorities.

Meanwhile, one of the men circled in the pictures, Salah Barhoun, 17, told ABC on Thursday that he went to Boston police on Wednesday to clear his name after he found himself tagged in pictures online.

Barhoun told ABC that he had gone to watch the Marathon, but was singled out as a suspect online after the explosions. He said he had wanted to run the Marathon and when he couldn't, decided to watch.

Federal authorities passed around images of Barhoun, seeking to learn more about him, ABC reports.

Barhoun's younger brother, who declined to identify himself to ABC, said that it made his mother “sick and upset” that her son had been connected to the blasts.

“It made her think he had done something wrong,” the younger brother told ABC. “My brother is not the bomber.”

Newsmax.

Thursday, April 18, 2013

Texas Waco fertiliser plant blast search for survivors


Emergency services are searching for survivors after a blast at a fertiliser plant in the US state of Texas killed between five and 15 people.

More than 160 people were injured and dozens of buildings destroyed in the town of West, near Waco.

Three or four volunteer firefighters are among the missing after the explosion, which produced a tremor equivalent to a small earthquake.

Emergency services officials said ammonia may have caused the explosion.

There is no indication that the blast and a fire which preceded it were anything other than industrial accidents, police say.

However, the site is being treated as a crime scene and the death toll could rise, officials warn.

Texas state Governor Rick Perry said he was declaring the area a disaster and would request an emergency declaration for federal aid from US President Barack Obama.

He said President Obama had offered any help needed.

Air quality and gas pipelines were being monitored for safety, he said. and gas supplies had been disconnected until any risk had passed.

Homes destroyed

Footage shows casualties, some in buses, piling into a nearby hospital, as the BBC's Nick Childs reports
The operation is still in "search-and-rescue mode" and has not yet moved to "recovery mode", Waco police Sgt William Patrick Swanton told a news briefing on Thursday morning, some 12 hours after the explosion at 01:00 GMT (20:00 local time).

Between five and 15 people were killed, he said.

The explosion devastated the West Fertilizer Company, about 20 miles north of Waco, in central Texas.

The plant contained tanks of volatile anhydrous ammonia, including what initial reports said was a tanker-sized container like those hauled on freight trains, Sgt Swanton said.

In 2006, the plant was cited by the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality for failing to obtain or to qualify for a permit.

However, state officials said the factory had been issued with a permit at that time and there had been no complaints since.

Dozens of homes were levelled and other buildings - including a school and nursing home a few hundred metres from the plant - were badly damaged.

Continue reading the main story
Anhydrous ammonia

Commonly used as fertiliser, injected into the soil
Must be stored in high-pressure tanks
Produces poisonous vapour cloud on exposure to water
Forms explosive mixture when combined with air
Can cause severe burns to skin in concentrated form
Source: US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Jason Shelton, 33, who lives less than a mile (1.6 km) from the plant, told the Reuters news agency he felt the concussion from the blast as he stood on his front porch.

"My windows started rattling and my kids screaming," Mr Shelton said. "The screen door hit me in the forehead... and all the screens blew off my windows."

More than 130 people had already been evacuated from the nursing home by the time of the explosion because the fire was recognised as a risk.

It was not immediately clear how many of them were hurt, a public safety department spokesman told a news conference.

A husband and wife who entered the nursing home before the emergency services arrived found residents in wheelchairs trapped in their rooms, the Associated Press (AP) reported.

"They had Sheetrock [plasterboard] that was on top of them. You had to remove that," William Burch told AP. He described hallways filled with water and electrical wires hanging from the ceilings.

Governor Perry said the school would remain closed until administrators felt it was the right time to re-open.

US President Barack Obama said his administration was in close contact with emergency services at the scene.

"West is a town that many Texans hold near and dear to their hearts, and as residents continue to respond to this tragedy, they will have the support of the American people," he said in a statement.

( Source = bbc )

Sunday, January 6, 2013

Hospital Treatment Guidelines for Anorexia Questioned


A University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) study challenges the current conservative approach to feeding adolescents who have anorexianervosa during hospitalization for malnutrition, suggesting a higher calorie diet may be called for.
Health plans often limit the duration of an individual’s hospitalization, and researchers are also concerned with the psychological and emotional impact that may result from rapid hospital discharge.
Anorexia is an eating disorder characterized by a refusal to maintain a healthy body weight, and an obsessive fear of gaining weight. This disorder may become life-threatening requiring hospitalization. Medical care is typically directed at refeeding to gain significant weight during their first week in the hospital.
According to the researchers, current guidelines recommend starting with about 1,200 calories per day and advancing slowly by 200 calories every other day.
This “start low and go slow” approach is intended to avoid “re-feeding syndrome” — a potentially fatal condition resulting from rapid electrolyte shifts, a well-known risk when starting nutrition therapy in a starving patient.
The new research is the first to test these recommendations, which have been in place since 2000.
“Our findings show that the current recommendations are just not effective,” said Andrea Garber, Ph.D., R.D., associate professor of pediatrics who led the research with colleagues in the UCSF Adolescent Eating Disorders Program.
Study participants were hospitalized due to signs of malnutrition, including low body temperature, blood pressure, heart rate and body mass index. The vast majority of the 35 primarily white, female adolescent patients received low-calorie diets based on the current recommendations.
Patients were fed six small meals per day, and when they refused food, they were given high calorie liquid supplements as a replacement. The patients’ vital signs were monitored closely, with their heart rates measured continuously and electrolytes checked twice a day.
While the low calorie diets did prevent refeeding syndrome for those patients, about 83 percent of them also experienced significant initial weight loss and no overall weight gain until their eighth day in the hospital. This finding represents “a missed opportunity,” according to Garber.
“Studies show that weight gain during hospitalization is crucial for patients’ long-term recovery,” she said. “We have to make the most out of their short time in the hospital.”
In the new study a range of diets were evaluated from 800 to 2,200 calories. This caloric variation allowed the researchers to examine the effect of increasing calories. According to Garber, two important findings emerged:
  • The calorie level of the starting diet predicted the amount of weight that would be lost in the hospital. In other words, those on lower calorie diets lost significantly more weight.
  • Higher calorie diets led to less time in the hospital. In fact, Garber said, “we showed that for every 100 calories higher, the hospital stay was almost one day shorter.”
While the study finds that current recommendations are too cautious, it raises other questions, according to the research team. For example, while a shorter hospital stay may reduce insurance costs, patients may not be ready to go home yet.
“Shorter is not necessarily better,” said Garber. “We have to consider the potential implications down the line, both psychological and emotional.”
Another unanswered question relates to refeeding syndrome, which remains “a very real fear,” according to Barbara Moscicki, M.D., a professor of pediatrics and senior author on the paper.
Moscicki says that the team is proceeding cautiously since more aggressive approaches to feeding and supplementation have not yet been well studied.
Nevertheless, the researchers say that the study results are a promising start because no adverse events were seen in the study subjects on the higher calorie diets. “If we can improve weight gain with higher calories,” Garber said, “then we’re on the right path.”
Research findings will be published in the January issue of the Journal of Adolescent Health with an accompanying editorial.

Teen Weight Loss May Not Improve Self-Esteem


A new research study finds that losing weight may not improve a teenage girl’sself-esteem.
Sarah A. Mustillo, a Purdue University researcher, discovered the surprising findings among obese white teenage girls.
“We found that obese black and white teenage girls who transitioned out of obesity continued to see themselves as fat, despite changes in their relative body mass,” said Mustillo. “Further, obese white girls had lower self-esteem than their normal-weight peers and their self-esteem remained flat even as they transitioned out of obesity.”
Reducing obesity among children and teens is a major policy objective for health professionals. Currently, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report that about 17 percent of American children ages 2-19 are obese.
“If the current national movement to end childhood obesity is successful, we can anticipate many young people moving from obese into the normal weight range, which will result in better physical health,” Mustillo said.
“I wanted to know if the same thing would happen for psychological health. Girls often struggle with self-esteem anyway during adolescence and, therefore, it is troubling to find that the negative effects of larger body size can outlive the obesity itself.”
The study, based on data from the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute Growth and Health Study, is in the Journal of Health and Social Behavior.
Researchers looked at the health and weight of more than 2,000 black and white girls for a 10-year period beginning at ages 9 to 10. Investigators separated the girls into one of three groups — normal weight, transitioned out of obesity and chronically obese — based on their body mass trends during the 10-year period.
Investigators discovered a difference in self-esteem levels between races. Self-esteem for black girls transitioning from the obese to the normal range did rebound; however, both races continued to have negative body perceptions.
“The self-esteem for black girls was lower overall to begin with, but for those who moved into the normal weight range, self-esteem increased more than it did for any other group of girls,” Mustillo said. “We would like to look at this at more closely to understand how subcultural norms influence this process.
“We did not show that self-esteem stayed flat because girls continued to see themselves as heavy, but just that they happened at the same time,” she said.
“Even so, providing mental health assistance during the weight loss process could be a benefit. Understanding and addressing body image, identity and self-esteem issues could ultimately help keep the weight off. Why keep dieting and exercising if you are still going to see yourself as fat?”
Experts agree that more research is needed to understand why girls feel this way, but Mustillo, who focuses on obesity trends in adolescence, said the feeling of lesser self-worth might be difficult to shake because society is full of negative stereotypes and messages about obesity.
“Studies show that children internalize stereotypes and negative perceptions of obese people before they ever become obese themselves, so when they do enter that stigmatized state, it affects their sense of self-worth,” she said.
“Then, whether they are gaining or losing weight, the negative message they have internalized and feelings of worthless may stick with them.”
Another aspect of this study to consider is that the data set used is from the 1980s and 1990s, and doesn’t reflect today’s higher obesity rates.
“Obesity is more common today than it was 10 to 20 years ago, so perhaps it is becoming less stigmatized,” she said. “Or, will the increase of anti-obesity campaigns counteract any greater acceptance?”
In her future research, Mustillo will ascertain if there are certain periods during adolescence when individuals are more vulnerable to mental health stigmas associated with obesity.

Loss of Friendship More Difficult for Teen Girls


It is difficult for everyone when a friendship is lost. This loss is especially troubling during adolescence, and especially for young girls.

Traditionally girls have been viewed as far more savvy than boys at navigating the emotional pitfalls of friendships.

However, a new study suggest different as researchers from Boston College and Duke University find that when friends let them down, girls are even more devastated than boys.

Researchers examined whether or not girls cope better than boys when a friend violates a core expectation of friendships.

Investigators studied fourth- and fifth-grade children and found that these violations – taking the form of cancelling plans, sharing a secret with a friend, or failing to be supportive at a difficult time – upset girls more than boys and left them feeling more angry and sad in response.

“Our findings stand in contrast to previous research that has shown boys to experience more anger than girls in their relationships,” said Julie Paquette MacEvoy, the study’s lead author.

“Here, we found that girls are in fact just as capable as boys are of anger. What leads boys and girls to feel angry, though, seems to be different. For girls, the anger comes out when they think that their friends have betrayed them or haven’t been there for them.”

In the study of 267 girls and boys researchers also discovered girls were also more likely than boys to interpret friendship indiscretions in a negative way.

For example, girls would view a relationship slipup as thinking that their friend does not care about them, does not value their friendship, or was trying to control them.

In response, girls indicated they would be just as likely as boys to get revenge on their friend, or verbally scold their friend or threaten to end the relationship.

“There tends to be a perception of girls as being more passive than boys, but this just doesn’t seem to be true. It seems that when girls feel that something that matters to them is in jeopardy, like their friendships, they are just as likely as boys to want to retaliate and to respond with aggression,” said MacEvoy.

Earlier studies have shown that girls’ friendships are more emotionally intimate than boys’ friendships and that girls are better at supporting and helping their friends and demonstrate they’re more capable of resolving conflicts with their friends.

However, studies have also shown that boys’ friendships last as long as girls’ friendships, that boys are as happy with their friendships as girls are and that boys are no more lonely than girls over time.

In the study, the Boston College and Duke researchers read brief stories describing how a friend violated a core expectation of friendship. For each story, the children were asked how they would feel about the incident if it really happened and how they would respond.

“These findings suggest that boys handle one aspect of friendship, coping with disappointment, better than girls,” said co-author and Duke University Professor Steven Asher. “But why? Is it because boys have a more realistic understanding of human imperfection? Or do they just set the bar lower when it comes to friendships, so they are less likely to view the friend’s behavior as a transgression?”

The researchers recommend that teachers, parents and adults interested in fostering healthy friendships among children help them learn to cope with the inevitable disappointments that can arise. Girls in particular may need extra guidance as they try to understand a friend’s behavior and decide how to respond.


Why Girls Do Better in School


Why do girls get better grades in elementary school than boys, even when they perform worse on standardized tests?

In a new study, researchers at the University of Georgia and Columbia University postulate that it’s because of their classroom behavior and approach to learning — which may lead teachers to give girls higher grades than boys.

“The skill that matters the most in regards to how teachers graded their students is what we refer to as ‘approaches toward learning,’” said Christopher Cornwell, Ph.D., head of economics in the UGA Terry College of Business and one of the study’s authors.

The researchers say that “approaches to learning” is a rough measure of what a child’s attitude toward school is. It includes six items that rate the child’s attentiveness, task persistence, eagerness to learn, learning independence, flexibility and organization.

“I think that anybody who’s a parent of boys and girls can tell you that girls are more of all of that.”

The study analyzed data on more than 5,800 students from kindergarten through fifth grade. It examined students’ performance on standardized tests in reading, math and science, linking test scores to teachers’ assessments of the students’ progress.

The study shows that gender disparities in grades start early and uniformly favor girls. In every subject area, boys’ grades are lower than where their test scores would predict, according to the researchers.

They attribute this to what they call non-cognitive skills, or “how well each child was engaged in the classroom, how often the child externalized or internalized problems, how often the child lost control and how well the child developed interpersonal skills.”

This difference in grading can have long-term effects, according to the researchers.

“The trajectory at which kids move through school is often influenced by a teacher’s assessment of their performance, their grades,” Cornwell said.

“This affects their ability to enter into advanced classes and other kinds of academic opportunities, even post-secondary opportunities. It’s also typically the grades you earn in school that are weighted the most heavily in college admissions. So if grade disparities emerge this early on, it’s not surprising that by the time these children are ready to go to college, girls will be better positioned.”

The researcher notes that it is unclear how to combat the discrepancy.

“The most common question we’ve gotten is whether or not the gender of the teacher matters in regards to grading students,” Cornwell said.

“But that’s a question we can’t answer because there’s just not enough data available. As you can probably guess, the great majority of elementary school teachers are women.”

The study was published in the Journal of Human Resources.

Christina Gombar: An Interview About Childless Women & Infertility


Today I have the pleasure of interviewing writer Christina Gombar on the topic of infertility.
Chistina is an an accomplished writer whose commentary on women’s issues appeared in The London Review of Books, The New York Times, Working Woman, Scholastic, and the Providence Journal. She is also the author of “Great Women Writers,” and has been the recipient of a New York Foundation for the Arts Fellow.
Click through to read the full interview.
1. In your piece for “Exhale,” a literary magazine for “intelligent people who have lost a baby, or can’t figure out how to make one in the first place,” you lay out some creation myths:
  • People can go from desperately wanting a child, to “choosing” to be ?child free.
  • Anyone can adopt.
  • Women wind up childless because they put off marriage to establish ?careers; or were looking for Mr. Right instead of Mr. Good Enough.
  • Anyone who wants a baby can get one, because this is America, ?where there is a solution to every problem.
  • Pets, gardening, or spending time with other people’s children fills ?in for not having biological children of one’s own.
  • People without children are not real adults, and don’t know what ?real love is.
  • Infertility is a women’s issue.
I’m so glad you listed all of those, because I admit to having believed some of them. It certainly made me think. Of the seven, which do you think is most harmful to women who can’t have children?
Christina: Each is the most important to whomever the myth is misapplied. Probably the most common is women put off children for their careers. This isn’t the fifties, very few women have the option of graduating high school or college and having a man at the ready to marry, willing and able to take on her and a child. Women who go to college generally come out in debt with huge loans, so do their husbands. They can’t afford day care.
My situation isn’t reflected in any of these myths. I got married young but soon got very sick. I spent my twenties paying off my education, working too many jobs in very tough environments. I got fired from my Wall Street for being sick, yet had to have a good income and health benefits to have a child. Many people who benefit from a supportive extended family at the time they have children don’t understand that many of us don’t have those advantages.
Also, the very assumption that childlessness in a married couple equals infertility in the woman. My friend Elsa wasn’t infertile — her husband was, by vasectomy. By the time they divorced, she was 43. I think there needs to be drawn a distinction between a woman who has gynological problems that stop her from getting pregnant at 25, and situational infertility like childlessness by marriage, and then women who start families at 50. That’s not true infertility, that’s past the natural biological childbearing age.
As I blogged on the New York Times, when celebrities are showcased having babies in their forties, then fifties, society gradually sees this as normal. Mainstream consumer magazines run articles about freezing your eggs in your twenties, so you can have a baby at 45, instead of talking about retuning society and the economic system to make it easier for young women to have children at biologically natural ages.
The solution really, is not to come up with newer and more advanced fertility treatments or yet more third-world adoption options. But to make the world safe and welcoming for people who wind up without children, often for very good reasons.
Many many childless people feel bereaved — it is a situation that deserves respect, not pity or gloating.
2. In that same article you mention your friend Elsa, whose older husband didn’t want more kids. She was often pitied, her husband demonized. People said to her, daily:
  • “You’re selfish.”
  • “You don’t know what real love is.”
  • “Your husband will leave you.”
And then you go one to say that he did leave her “because with so few counterparts in her workplace and community, her sense of private loss and public alienation corroded her marriage beyond repair.” Man, that is such a crucial message there … the absolute requirement of support. If an infertile woman wants to make her marriage work — wants to become immune, if at all possible to the toxic messages around her concerning this issue — what should she do?
Christina: I think the real question is — what can society do to normalize Elsa’s situation? An urban area is more accepting of non-nuclear families, as well as singles. I think it’s her friends, neighbors, pastor, yoga instructors (who might, for example, address the class as if everyone were a Mom — i.e. — “Moms are tired” … as if no one else had challenging life situations!) Her co-workers who preface every meeting with ceaseless chatter about their children. The women at the gym who turn their back in the middle of a conversation when one of their “Mom” friends comes in. It is truly a social status of second-class citizen.
Elsa tried to become very involved in her nieces and nephew, but sometimes the parents, her siblings, resented this.
There is no push button answer. Most books on childlessness are written NOT by people who are childless, but by psychotherapists who are mothers. We need to be able to speak for ourselves, to be heard. The Internet is a great resource lately, but these blogs weren’t around four years ago, when my friend was going through this.
3. You say that 44 percent of women in their childbearing years don’t have children, and some never will. And “while the world is rightly concerned with family issues, the constant focus on motherhood can make it easy for a childless woman to feel that she is less than a woman, that in failing to reproduce, she as failed at life.” Poignant and powerful words. I agree with you. So what can the infertile woman do to feed and nurture herself in a family-oriented world? And especially the infertile woman who suffers from depression? What have you done to sustain your sense of self?
Christina: I’d like to point out — that 44% figure — is women from 15 to 44. As we all know, those numbers can be exceeded in both directions! This figure includes women who may have a step-child, but no biological child of their own — often by their husband’s choice. Step-mothers often parent, but they don’t get the societal credit for it. I have several friends in this situation.
I can speak for what works for me, which might not necessarily work for someone else. First, I write, which is not a replacement for having a child of one’s own, but a distraction, pleasure, obsession, assertion, as well as a way to vent. I am lucky that many of my depressions have been cured by travel, a change of scene, whether a day in New York or a yoga retreat. I get out in nature, I pray and meditate.
The tough thing is, sometimes you pray and you get the answer you don’t want. You can have faith, and the thing you want can still be denied you. Once someone said to me, God has another plan for you. I’ve always had to be very flexible, so I’m O.K. with that. I went to a faith healer once, and she warned, The outcome may not be what you want.
Going to places of religious worship can be very difficult — the Catholic church has respect for the celibate childless (of course!) nuns and priests, and for families, but the message is never good for childless married adults. The message is always, if you believe, God will give you this. But it’s not always possible. I always have to explain to people that I’m not even eligible to adopt, due to health and financial circumstances. Clearly, it is God’s will for some of us to remain childless.
Some years ago, I remember being at the Catholic church at Easter, and while in previous years it had been hard not to feel left out and maligned, both by the sermon and the other congregants, I had a still moment, looking at the decorated ceiling, and I got this message from God, at first this faint tingling glimmer, then a feeling of certainty, that it was O.K. for me to be exactly as I am.
But I constantly have to remind myself of this, because the outer world isn’t telling me that. I remind myself that I have two aunts who didn’t have children, and have had full and happy lives and very enduring marriages, like my own marriage. They were always good role models growing up. I had two uncles who were priests — one, still teaching at 75, took my older sister and me off my mother’s hands to all the Disney films. The other, who sadly passed away a few years back, used to take us on swimming outings to Sherwood Island, a large state park in Connecticut. It was too much of a trip for my mother, who had younger children, work, and her own parents to take care of.
I remind myself how valued these and other childless people were and are in my life. My best teachers, bosses, colleagues, doctors, lawyers, friends — have often been childless. They have a lot more to give, and they give it freely.
I’d like to tell infertile and/or childless people to just tune out the craziness! A few years ago I read a story about then-57 year old, former Good Morning America host Joan Lunden, whose husband had twins by a surrogate, using the eggs from a third woman — and then another set when Lunden was 57. Lunden declared, “I want readers to know this is absolutely O.K. If they’re not her eggs, they’re not her baby.”
Well, I’m not a celebrity, I don’t have a platform like Joan Lunden, but I’d like to float the message that It’s Absolutely O.K. not to do a third world adoption, Foster Care, or a fertility treatment that seems wrong for you on a gut level. But society, and the media especially, needs to start getting the message across that adults without children are O.K. just as they are. I appreciate you giving me this platform.
4. You mention that you have read dozens of blogs as you search online for kinship regarding this issue. Could you share with my readers some of your favorites? Where are the childless hubs online?
Christina: The first I came across last spring was Nymphe: Living Childless and Child Free. The woman who authors the blog is actually childless by marriage, but feels the lack terribly. It’s a very intelligent, deep-thinking forum. Click here for a recent post that addresses some of the complicated spiritual issues of coping with grief.
Another, Coming2Terms.com, is hosted by a woman who confronted fertility issues in her twenties and spent about 15 years going through the IVF mill. She had spent a lot of time on the many fertility blogs during treatments — and found that she needed to create a safe place for people who experienced “the flip side of IVF” that the media seldom talks about.
Finally, Childless By Marriage is pretty self-explanatory! Blogs are probably starting up every day.
In the future I plan to write more for people who live without parenting due to health issues. The media just shows us the woman paralyzed from the neck down who managed to have a baby — with a huge support system, money, etc. Most chronically ill people I know are unmarried and trying to keep a roof over their heads. To become obsessed with having a baby in such a marginal life situation is just madness, but we live in a baby-mad culture right now.
All the discussions of parenthood in the CI (chronic illness) community tend to center on how to get a baby, and get those around you to take care of the baby as well as you. In one discussion blog, a woman wondered if it was wrong to have a child with all her disabilities. Another who’d done so quoted scripture to justify spanking, and spoke of monitoring her children from her bed. I was a voice crying out in the wilderness, when I suggested accepting a childless life as God’s will.
I wrote: “You can develop tunnel vision when you’re in the midst of an infertility struggle.” I want to let other people in my situation know that there’s a light at the end of that tunnel.

Sunday, November 25, 2012

Grand Central Station in Miniature, at the NYC Transit Store



The 11th Annual Train Show opened on Wednesday at the NYC Transit Museum Store at Grand Central. The large model shows Grand Central, the rail tracks and many buildings including the Empire State Building.

I've mentioned the different levels of Grand Central before, and you can see it in the model above - Park Avenue slopes up north of the building so that you're on a raised platform when you get to the station. Cars wrap around the building to the front and then descend to street level via a ramp.

Grand Central, nyc

The storefronts on the actual street level are shown all lit up. Below that are the trains, shown with the ground cut away. Trains leave from Grand Central to upper New York, Washington DC and Connecticut daily.

Children were mesmerized by the miniature people, buildings and trains that moved back and forth. A train set is the perfect way to kick off the holiday season.

The model train is set in the Transit Museum Store, so admission is free. It will be on view until February 10th of next year. 

Related posts: at the NYC Transit Store , The Morning Mist, In Prospect Park, BrooklynHarvest on display in Midtown

The Morning Mist, In Prospect Park, Brooklyn

Prospect Park, Brooklyn

The morning mist hovered above the ground in Prospect Park, which was scattered with leaves. Owners were there with their dogs for off-leash hours, this morning.

It was a gorgeous morning-after-Thanksgiving, not too chilly. Not too many Owners were there...maybe they were sleeping off their food hangovers.

The larger public parks have off-leash hours before 9am, so dogs can socialize and run about. Our dog Rupert enjoyed his game of fetch, as usual.

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Related posts: Grand Central Station in Miniature, at the NYC Transit Store ,Harvest on display in Midtown