Life in Practice Archive

From the It’s the Little Things File

Posted April 24, 2007 By Dave Thomer

I think we’re finally safely in spring mode. We’ve been able to sleep with the windows open for the last few days. It’s amazing how much good a little fresh, circulating air can do for you. I might shake this cold sometime in the next few weeks!

Another small but heavy thing for me to look forward to – it looks like there are some hefty Making-of books coming out for both the original Star Wars and Spider-Man 3. I have a hunch I’ll be haing some fun with those this summer. Might be time to reinforce the bookshelves again.

        

Still Falling into the Gap

Posted April 23, 2007 By Pattie Gillett

A quick follow-up to my earlier post which cited stats on the continuing wage gap between men and women, the Associated Press has an article citing a study which shows that the wage gap between equally qualified male and female college-educated workers is evident as early as one year after college and continues to widen over time.

The study, released by the American Association of University Women, found that the women earn 80% of what their male counterparts earn one year after college and 69% of what the men earn ten years after college. Ouch! Moreover, the salaries that women often receive do not reflect their academic acheivements.

Women have slightly higher grade point averages than men in every major, including science and math. But women who attend highly selective colleges earn the same as men who attend minimally selective colleges, according to the study.

Double ouch.

So, the message here is: work hard, study, go tens or even hundreds of thousands of dollars into debt to attend an elite school and, Jane, someday you might be able to do the same job as Dick and get paid 30% less.

I visited the organization’s site to check the data and found that they are sponsoring an event called Equal Pay Day for tomorrow, April 24. I really wish I had known about this earlier but it’s still worth looking through the activity guide and checking out the resources. Most are good advice/grassroots action items that can be done anytime. We certainly don’t need a special day to sharpen our salary negotiating skills or help promote financial literacy among the people in our lives, male or female.

I reiterate, this is a topic that’s just screaming for a presidential candidate to make a key part of their platform.

        

A Joyful Noise

Posted April 20, 2007 By Pattie Gillett

Milestones in your child’s life, like most of the parenting experience, often come with a mixed bag of emotions. The one our daughter reached this week is no exception.

One one hand, Alex turned five, certainly a milestone birthday in her mind and ours. We celebrated by taking her to Hershey, PA, specifically the Hershey’s Chocolate World Tour. To say that she enjoyed it is a understatement. She exhibited the kind of joy that we adults seem to lose somewhere around puberty in that she literally shook with excitement. And not just from the chocolate high, either. Even when recounting the trip to her grandma the following day, she was unable to keep her body still for more than a nano-second. She also couldn’t get the words out fast enough to describe it. She was loud, rambling and joyful in way that just stamps down your parental instinct to say “shushâ€? and “use your inside voice.â€? In the end, we just let her go because when your child is exhibiting that kind of excitement and happiness, you really don’t want it to end.

On the other hand, Alex is now five, which means she’ll be leaving the very fine day care facility she currently attends to go to kindergarten in the fall and with that comes an entire host of problems. Choosing a school (which will be the subject of another post, I assure you), navigating the various registration and waiting list pitfalls, and then, finding out that our school options may not offer “extended careâ€? for the hours before and after school when our jobs require us to be someplace other than with Alex. And lets not even get into the cost of these extended care programs when they are available. The entire task is so daunting that I found myself trying to relive the experiences of the previous weekend in my head to remind myself of why we’re doing it all. The answer comes readily: for Alex. We can’t be everywhere at once. We need to provide food, shelter, and health care for her so if finding a school with an extended day care program that covers our working hours takes a pick axe and spelunking helmet, so be it. It needs to be done.

And, the fact is, we’re among the lucky ones. The jobs that Dave and I have provide Alex with health care, money to cover our mortgage, food and clothing, funds for day care and we thankfully still have enough non-working time to actually be parents. Not everyone is so lucky. Millions of parents in this country work long hours to meet the needs of their children and can still come up short. I was reminded of this fact during this same week.

In between driving to open houses, calling schools to ask about extended care, and filling out registration forms, I found myself listening to a radio interview with Kristin Rowe-Finkbeiner, co-founder of Moms Rising, an advocacy group for such “mom� issues as affordable health care, longer and more comprehensive family leave, workplace rights, higher-wages etc. Some of the statistics she cited which caught my ear as I drove to work included:

  • The National Center for Children in Poverty reports that 28 million children in this country are growing up in low-income families. More than 81% of them have at least one working parent whose income is simply not sufficient.
  • The U.S. is one of only five countries of 168 studied that doesn’t mandate some form of paid maternal leave, putting us on par with Papua New Guinea, Lesotho, and Swaziland.
  • A recent study found non-mothers in the U.S. made 90 cents to a man’s dollar, moms made 73 cents to the dollar, and single moms made 56 to 66 cents to a man’s dollar. A study of hiring practices for high wage jobs in 2005 found mothers were offered $11,000 lower starting salaries than equally qualified non-mothers.
  • Statistics from 2001 reveal that a full one-quarter of U.S. families with children under age six earned less than $25,000.
  • More than 40,000 kindergarteners in this country are home alone after school. More than 14,000,000 kindergarteners through twelfth grade kids are on their own after school without supervision.
  • And yes, I did have to pull over and catch my breath after I heard those last ones.

    While I’m not sure I know enough about Moms Rising to endorse them unequivocally, I have to admire their mission. And if it succeeds, the potential is mind-boggling. It’s not simply aiming to be Soccer Moms 2.0. We’re talking less catchy demographic description, and more full-fledged Parental PAC. Our system allows for anyone with an issue, cause, or special interest to try and make their voice heard, for better or for worse. The ones with the deepest pockets are often the loudest, unfortunately. But, every once in a while, with the right coordination and savvy, the weaker succeed by just getting louder.

    And, I ask you, who knows more about volume than parents?

    Parents need to get louder about issues such as affordable heath and child care, education, flexible work schedules, and paid family leave. There are now simply too many social, economic and legal obstacles to being a good parent these days for us not to be as loud as we can be. Too many parents are too bogged down in the realities of simply surviving to provide their children the kind of body-shaking joyful moments that all children deserve to have and all parents deserve to see.

    These days there are a lot of people running around asking to be president. Hang out on YouTube for a while and you can’t miss ’em. Anyway, they’ve all got a lot of special interest groups vying for their attention and they in turn are vying for voters’ attention. They also know that working adults with children under the age of 18 constitute one heck of a voting block.

    What better time to show them what happens when parents stop using their inside voices?

            

    The Bacon I Bring Home

    Posted April 3, 2007 By Dave Thomer

    OK, I’m under the weather, so I’m not getting too far with any extended blogging tonight. But I will say this: I cooked myself some bacon to make some sandwiches to try and feel better. And generally speaking, I was successful. Wellshire Farms has some excellent bacon and breakfast sausage – if you like that kind of thing, I recommend you try them out.

            

    Quick Bites

    Posted March 11, 2007 By Dave Thomer

    I’ve been fighting a cold, and it’s gone straight to my head – feel like I’ve spent too much time in the pool or something. I did manage to get some cooking done today, so let me take a second to share a few points:

    • I think I’ve gotten the hang of pizza dough. I’ve decided I prefer the recipe developed by America’s Test Kitchen more than Alton Brown’s. The major difference seems to be that Alton puts sugar in his dough, and when I made a pie with that recipe, I wound up with a blacker crust that wasn’t as crisp or as blistered as I get with the ATK recipe. (Although I should note that I tend to add a little extra flour to the 4.25 cups that ATK calls for – it’s too sticky otherwise.)
    • A pizza stone and an oven cranked as high as possible is definitely a must.
    • I also realized that the tomato sauce recipes I’ve been following have more olive oil than I prefer – I’ve started using just enough to toast about 3 cloves of minced garlic, and then adding a 28 oz. can of tomatoes, some oregano, salt and pepper, and I’ve good to go.
    • Totally unrelated to pizza, but Rick Bayless‘s recipe for shredded pork tacos in his first cookbook, Authentic Mexican, is pretty darned good. Although I took out the cinnamon and cloves – I’m just not crazy about the way they interact with the peppers and other spices. Works pretty well with beef brisket, too.

    OK, now it’s back to the medicine cabinet for me.

            

    Grains of Truth

    Posted March 2, 2007 By Dave Thomer

    So we went grocery shopping at Whole Foods tonight. And things were going quite well until we got to the cereal aisle, and I discovered that this store had discontinued both of my favorite varieties of granola, Back to Nature’s Apple Cinnamon and Apple Strawberry. I made an exaggerated gesture of sadness at this development, which was a mistake, because Alex saw me get sad, and then she got sad. But it looks like the problem is at least somewhat solved – Amazon carries the Apple Cinnamon. And Back to Nature itself sells the Apple Strawberry on its website.

    Some days, ya gotta love the internet.

            

    I Will Not Sit Still for This

    Posted February 24, 2007 By Dave Thomer

    Minimal posting and computer activity tonight, because when I pulled my chair back from desk to sit down, the back of the thing fell right off. So I’m gonna have to go to an office supply store and get a new, relatively cheap chair that I can start to destroy, all the while dreaming of Herman Miller ergonomic wonders.

            

    A Standard Post

    Posted February 22, 2007 By Dave Thomer

    I did a lot of writing today, so I’m a bit tapped out. Fortunately, I think one thing I wrote is worth sharing. I had to write up a response to Pennsylvania’s academic standards for civics and government in grades 1-12. SHort version: I wasn’t too impressed. Want the long version? See below.

    Read the remainder of this entry »

            

    The Fashion Calendar

    Posted February 9, 2007 By Dave Thomer

    I refuse to believe that I am the only absent-minded traveler out there, but that’s what the clothing stores are telling me. I have a bad habit of losing track of my hat and/or gloves when I’m getting off of a train. I bought a replacement set a few weeks ago, on clearance, at a store with only a few left. Then I promptly lost them. So I gotta go out and find more, but Pattie tells me she hasn’t seen any at the stores. Since we’re in the middle of a significant cold snap, this is something of an issue.

    On the up side, the headphones I bought for my MP3 player double as earmuffs. And Amazon is apparently having a winter clearance with a bunch of gloves in stock. I mean, call me crazy, I’d think that when it’s below freezing out, you might have some people inclined to look for warmer hats and gloves, but what do I know?

    Not where my hat is, certainly. I can only guess what would happen to my towel.

            

    I Cook, Therefore I Am

    Posted February 4, 2007 By Dave Thomer

    Crazy weekend, so not much time to post. All I’m gonan say is, we got our stand mixer up and running this weekend – it was a Christmas gift from my mom, but we had to figure out where to put it. I went a little crazy, and tried to make homemade sticky buns and pizza this weekend.

    Crazy, but tasty. Oh yeah. I just gotta figure out how to spin the pizza dough a little thinner. Then I can start tweaking recipes.

    All I’ll say is, the America’s Test Kitchen cookbooks are money well spent.