The Blomp Coat Hook is two-in-one space saving storage

Blomp

When we get home, our goal is to go from work mode to relaxed mode as quickly as possible. We want to get into our pajamas, sit down with our beverage of choice and do nothing for as many hours as possible. It’s no wonder that our mail, coat, keys, and wallet are often tossed down by the door haphazardly. It’s the last thing on our mind, which is why it normally ends up in a pile somewhere.

Even if you have a coat rack, your belongings end up all over the place. If you wish you didn’t have to try as hard to be tidy, then the Blomp Coat Hook and Cubby would be a perfect addition to your home. This is where you can stash your keys and wallet, then toss your coat on it so everything is in one place. No longer will you have to worry about the various locations your stuff will get to, as it will all be grouped together.

The handmade Blomp hook come in white, black, red, yellow, and blue. One will cost you $65, which isn’t terrible considering you’re essentially getting a key hook, cubby, and coat hook. To install, you merely need to put in the included two screws and wall plugs to make sure it’s steadily in place. This is the perfect way to rush in the front door, toss everything in one spot and move on to relaxing.

Available for purchase on blacklupo
[ The Blomp Coat Hook is two-in-one space saving storage copyright by Coolest Gadgets ]

Preparing for COP20

On December 1st, the 20th Conference of the Parties (COP20) will commence in Lima, Peru to continue attempts to draft a global treaty on climate change. It has been 25 years since the international community called for action on greenhouse gases, 26 since climate scientist James Hansen testified to U.S. congressional committees about global warming.

When the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) was adopted in 1992 at the Rio Earth Summit, treaty negotiators borrowed language from the Montreal Protocol (an agreement that addressed chemicals destroying the ozone layer): that member states would “act in the interests of human safety even in the face of scientific uncertainty.” In the time since then, the scientific uncertainty about climate change and its causes has been greatly diminished. Thousands of technical peer-reviewed papers are published each year, and in the most recent report (AR5) of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, experts expressed high confidence level (over 95%) that climate change is indeed human-caused.

A number of factors and events from the past year will make COP20 not only important, but also interesting.

  • COP21 in Paris (2015) is the target for adopting a legally-binding treaty that will both reduce greenhouse gas emissions sufficiently to limit the global temperature rise to 2ºC and make major progress on issues related to managing risks of extreme weather events and assisting developing countries in adapting to the impacts of climate change already being experienced. Thus, the final targets and language will have to be developed in Lima.
  • In order to “galvanize and catalyze climate action” in advance of COP20, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon invited world leaders to a Climate Summit this past September; over 100 showed up. Two days before the summit, the largest climate march in history took place with 2646 events in 162 countries. More than 300,000 people marched in the streets of New York City alone.
  • The United Nations hosted 13 Open Working Group sessions to develop the post-2015 Sustainable Development Goals. Combating global climate change was at the forefront of these discussions. Debate was not over whether climate change should or shouldn’t be a goal, but whether it should be a stand-alone goal or a component of all SDGs.
  • According to data from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the globally averaged temperatures over land and ocean surfaces for June, September, and October 2014 were the highest since record keeping began in 1880. October marked the 356th consecutive month (almost 30 years) with a global temperature above the 20th century average. The last below-average global temperature for any month was in February 1985. 2014 is on track to be the warmest year on record globally. Welcome to our new normal.
  • Slower to warm due to the physical and chemical properties of water, our oceans are now demonstrating the anticipated changes. The September 2014 global sea surface temperature was the highest on record for any month. Did these warming waters have any impact on Typhoon Nuri – the recent storm that hit Alaska? Perhaps. Meteorologists believe that Nuri may have been one of the deepest extra-tropical low pressure systems on record in the North Pacific. There have been many of these “strongest-storms-ever” around the globe recently.
  • Atmospheric carbon dioxide levels surpassed the 400 ppm mark this past spring. Unlike the stock market, rising values are not what we are hoping for with greenhouse gases. According to an October 2009 paper in the highly respected journal Science, you have to go back 15 million years to find atmospheric conditions like that in our atmosphere — long before Homo sapiens were around. According to UCLA professor Aradhna Tripati, the lead author on that paper, “The last time carbon dioxide levels were apparently as high as they are today …global temperatures were 5 to 10 degrees Fahrenheit higher than they are today, the sea level was approximately 75 to 120 feet higher than today, there was no permanent sea ice cap in the Arctic and very little ice on Antarctica and Greenland.”
  • The November election results will bring to Washington a Republican-controlled House and Senate. Party leaders have already vowed to revoke regulations aimed at tackling carbon pollution and spent the past two weeks trying to push through approval of the controversial Keystone pipeline project. But seemingly out of the blue, came the announcement of a historic climate-related agreement between the U.S. and China. While the proposed targets for reducing greenhouse gas emissions of these two countries are not sufficient to “fix” the problem of global climate change, this is a crucial first step. These two nations with the largest carbon footprints have been amongst the most recalcitrant parties at the COPs. No doubt this agreement will lead to a showdown in Washington, but it could really provide the spark needed to ignite progress at the international negotiation table.

Stay tuned! 2014 still has several more weeks to add even more interesting chapters into the climate history book.

Latino Voters Overwhelmingly Back Obama's Executive Action On Immigration: Poll

Almost 9 in 10 Latino registered voters support President Barack Obama’s executive action to shield an estimated 4.4 million undocumented immigrants from deportation and offer them work authorization, according to a poll released Monday.

The widespread support among Hispanic voters registered in the Latino Decisions survey is even greater than the highest level of support measured by the pollster for Obama’s 2012 Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals policy, which protected from deportation young undocumented immigrants brought here illegally as children.

In the face of opposition to immigration reform in Congress, primarily from House Republicans, Obama announced far-reaching changes to deportation policy last week. The most contentious part of the plan is the deferred deportation for undocumented immigrants who have lived in the U.S. for more than five years and have children who are U.S. citizens or legal residents.

The temporary relief from deportation for a renewable, three-year period would allow beneficiaries to apply for work authorization, though they would continue to reside in the United States without official legal status.

Some 68 percent of respondents said they “strongly support” the measure, coupled with another 21 percent who “somewhat support” it. The combined 89 percent who voiced support is 5 percentage points higher than what Latino Decisions has so far found for DACA.

That favor of the new policy cut across political ideologies within the Hispanic community, with 95 percent of Democrats, 81 percent of independents and 76 percent of Republicans supporting it.

“This is not a partisan issue for Latinos,” pollster Matt Barreto of Latino Decisions said Monday on a conference call with reporters. “It is one that clearly crosses party lines.”

Many prominent conservatives have responded to Obama’s executive action with anger. Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach said he’ll sue the administration over it and some Republicans in Congress have pledged to pass legislation to defund it.

Those actions would be unpopular among Latino voters, the poll found.

Some 80 percent of respondents said they opposed legislation aimed at defunding the executive action, while 74 percent said they opposed suing the Obama administration to stop the president from shielding some undocumented immigrants from deportation.

“There will be very strong opposition if Republicans on Capitol Hill try to block this executive action,” Barreto said.

The executive director of Presente.org, one of the sponsors of the poll, echoed that sentiment, calling the executive action a “victory for the grassroots.”

“It would seem like we’re living in different worlds when you see the rhetoric coming out of D.C. and when you see the results in this poll,” Arturo Carmona said. “This poll shows, in my opinion, how Republicans are increasingly out of touch with the Latino community.”

Ben Monterroso of Mi Familia Vota, an organization dedicated to boosting Latino voter turnout, said politicians of both parties should heed the poll’s results as they look toward the next presidential election.

“This is the most united Latino voters have been on any issue during the Obama years,” the executive director said in a statement. “We will make sure that our community learns how to apply for the new program. We will make sure they know who is trying to block it. And we will take those names to the voters in 2016.”

Latino Decisions conducted the nationwide, bilingual poll on behalf of immigration reform groups Presente.org, Mi Familia Vota and the National Alliance of Latin American and Caribbean Communities.

So…Am I Jesus Yet? #MyJesusProject

It’s been a week now since I announced my newest project, which is to spend between 14 and 18 months figuring out what it seriously means to follow Jesus in our 21st century western world.

Like, really.

Tons of people say they are Christians, or even go so far as to say they follow Jesus, but which Jesus? And what exactly does it mean to follow him, especially today, in my life right now, with a mortgage, an iPhone, two kids, a wife and a writing career?

Not surprising, folks are much more ready with opinions about what I should do than they are with examples of how they are following Jesus. But even answering basic questions about what some “dos and don’ts” of Jesus-following has elicited far more onlookers than respondents on a recent survey I created to gather reader input.

I think it’s because, despite how central “being a Christian” may be to lots of our identities, we don’t really spend that much time thinking seriously about how making such a claim should be impacting our daily lives, our decisions and how we engage the rest of the world.

So I’m making a concerted effort to figure that out, with the hope that some folks will join me in the process and share what they learn too. I’m assembling some experts to help guide me through this exercise too, like AJ Jacobs, Esquire Editor-at-Large and bestselling author of a book about his own year-long human guinea pig experiment, The Year of Living Biblically.

I’m also calling on people from the Christian and Jewish traditions — hopefully from all across the theological and social spectrum — as well as historians and activists to help me define which Jesus it is I’m even talking about. Then I’ll need them to help keep me honest, to call me on it when I screw it up. Which I will. A lot.

I have settled on a few things I will need to take on during my “Jesus Year,” based on my first week of reflection, combined with the feedback I have gotten from the survey. These include:

  • Living out as many of the commands as I can manage as outlined in the “Sermon on the Mount.”
  • Make a concerted effort to fulfill all seven of the “Acts of Mercy” from Matthew 25, including: To feed the hungry, To give drink to the thirsty, To clothe the naked, To harbor the harborless, To visit the sick, To visit the imprisoned, and To bury the dead. (Some of these sound way easier than others, and between you and me, clothing the naked could actually be kinda fun if I play it right).
  • Fasting. Jesus spent 40 days in solitude, fasting in the desert. But my wife has promised me she will kill me if I bail on them for that long, so I’m trying to find another way. Instead, throughout Lent in 2015, I’m planning to consume nothing but liquids. Thank God beer and coffee qualify, or I’d never make it.
  • Feeding 5000 people. I’m actually already working on this one. Now, I knew I lacked any special “Jesus wand” to turn five loaves of bread and two fish into a crap-ton of food, but I also do take to heart Jesus’ claim that we can achieve similar, or even greater things, than he did during his ministry. But I also think He didn’t mean for us to try and manage it alone. So I’m doing a “trade-up” campaign, in which I trade goods or services for something of equal or greater value, with the goal of having something at the end worth about $30,000, or that will provide other means to feed at least 5,000 people. We started last week with six copies of my own books, which then got traded for a mountain bike. Now we’re offering a2,000 book cover design and manuscript editing package that a pair of professionals from the publishing industry have put up. Not bad progress from six books in less than a week, if you ask me.
  • Selling what I have and giving it to the poor. Jesus told one rich guy in the Gospels to sell all he had and give it to the poor, but he didn’t say it to everyone. So I’m thinking I’ll go with the “half off” deal his cousin, John the Baptist, offered people. I also promised my wife that, in selling or giving away half of what I own, I’ll stick to my stuff specifically and not anything she identifies as “ours.” But hey, I figure it’s still a worthwhile exercise in letting go, and in assessing how much crap I really do have, much of which I don’t even need.
  • Praying. This one is tricky for me, but there’s really no way around praying if you want to do what Jesus tells us to do. First, I have hang-ups about praying in front of other people. Put simply, I don’t. Fortunately, Jesus says not to make a show of your prayer, so I think I can get away with praying in solitude. But the other issue is what exactly I’m praying too, and why. For starters, I don’t really believe in a God that “makes things happen,” as if we were pawns in some larger cosmic game of chess. I’m open to at least the possibility of God working through us, but I’m not even sure what that means, especially since I struggle to conceive of God as some “supernatural, other being.” To me, praying to God would be a little bit like praying to a well full of fresh water. Sure, I could say “hey water, you’re awesome! Sure wish you’d help our crops grow and keep me and my family from shriveling up like raisins, to which the well would respond (if it could speak, I guess), “Hey stupid, fields don’t water themselves; get off your ass and do it yourself!”

I’m also planning to try some more lighthearted things, like walking on water (I saw a guy with an awesome hydro-jetpack down on the Willamette river that may be my new best friend), turning water to wine (I’m already a homebrewer, so this one will be easy, though it will take me longer than Jesus. Damn you fermentation!!!) and other Jesus-y stuff.

But then there are the bits like healing people (hello, malpractice!), getting crucified, denying your family, and so on. For some of these, I’ll simply have to rely on my experts to help me find a way to engage these without completely destroying my family in the process. After all, I’m trying to figure out what it means today to follow Jesus; I have no illusions about actually trying to be Jesus. Thankfully that’s well above my pay grade.

Got a trade-up idea? Email me at cpiatt (at) christianpiatt (dot) com.

Want to follow along on this journey, and maybe even help out? Track my progress on my blog with the category “My Jesus Project,” or search “#MyJesusProject,” or on facebook and twitter. Follow along, help keep me honest, and just maybe you’ll learn a little bit more about what we mean when we talk about following Jesus in the process.

Oklahoma Says Its Education Waiver Reinstated

OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — Oklahoma officials say the federal government will restore the state’s flexibility to decide how to use $29 million in public school funding.

The state Board of Education said in a statement that the U.S. Department of Education would announce Monday afternoon it is reinstating a waiver from provisions of the No Child Left Behind Act. Oklahoma lost its waiver this year after the state dropped Common Core standards and didn’t certify that the replacement guidelines made students ready for college or the workplace.

State education officials certified new guidelines last month and asked that the federal waiver be reinstated.

The board said the waiver will be reinstated for the rest of this school year.

Education department spokeswoman Dorie Nolt said she could not confirm that “at this point.”

Company Uses Teddy Bear 'Mugshots' To Reunite Kids With Beloved Lost Travel Companions

It’s a wild world out there for a lost teddy bear.

English train company First Great Western knows this, and in a bid to soothe distressed children everywhere, they’ve launched a “Teddy Rescue” program to reunite kids with their lost animal companions.

lost teddy bear mugshot

The company has been taking “wanted”-style photos of the toys, then posting the cuddly mugshots on their website along with some of the animal’s more pertinent details. Families who recognize an animal are encouraged to email in and reclaim it.

lost teddy bear mugshot

Concerned children should know lost animals in First Great Western’s care “have been fed [and] looked after” after their many great adventures riding the rails, “but now they are missing loved ones and want to return home.”

lost teddy bear mugshot

A spokesperson for the company told The Huffington Post the campaign has successfully identified one of the cuddly toys’ owners so far, and the reaction from others has been “incredibly positive.”

If you have lost a stuffed animal companion while riding a First Great Western train, or if you’d simply like to see more teddy bear mugshots, click through to the Teddy Rescue website, here.

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Europe's Challenge: A 'Twilight Zone' in Russia's Shadow, or a 'World of Rules?'

This comment is excerpted from a speech at Harvard’s Center for European Studies late last week.

In Harvard Yard, on 5 June 1947, on the steps of Memorial Church, momentous words were said.

It is logical that the United States should do what it can to assist the return of normal economic health in the world, without which there can be no political stability and no assured peace.

Our policy is not directed against any country, but against hunger, poverty, desperation and chaos.

U.S. Secretary of State George Marshall set in motion the most profitable financial investment in human history: the reconstruction of Western Europe:

The Marshall Plan was part of a wider Western ambition after World War II. To create a World of Rules.

New global institutions were set up, led by U.S. leadership and generosity.

The United Nations. The World Bank and International Monetary Fund. The International Court of Justice.

Despite harsh Cold War ideological differences, these institutions took root. They grew and flourished.

Why? Because the world — or at least a part of the world — had agreed that explicit international military aggression had to stop.

Differences between peoples and nations should be settled by peaceful negotiation.

The first principle of this World of Rules was self-restraint: by cooperating, not fighting, we build a shared interest in success.

Self-restraint — ruling out the war option — creates stability. Stability encourages investment. This creates innovation and new wealth.

The European Economic Community was only one of many institutions which flourished under this regime. It grew and grew to become today’s European Union, precisely because it was based on this principle of national political self-restraint. Success bred success.

The second principle was that this World of Rules was worth defending from those who didn’t accept it.

During the Cold War, this required a comprehensive Western approach, with the North Atlantic Treaty Organization at the heart.

There were programs to share intelligence, especially among the English speaking nations of the West; joint military exercises; exchanges of weapons and military technology.

Institutions such as Radio Free Europe and the BBC pushed back against communist lies and propaganda.

So successful were these economic and security institutions and so attractive to those who didn’t enjoy them, that when the Warsaw Pact finally fell apart after 1989, the nations of central Europe made it a national policy imperative to work closely with them, or even apply to join them.

RUSSIA WAS HUMILIATED BY NATO EXPANSION? RIDICULOUS

The events in Crimea and eastern Ukraine are dramatic and dangerous.

They threaten Ukraine’s stability. And they pose a new kind of test for the transatlantic alliance set up to protect the West and its rules.

Let me demolish an assertion heard quite often both in Moscow and in Western capitals: that the Ukraine crisis has been “provoked” by Western governments in general, and by NATO in particular.

As few now seem to remember, when the Cold War ended, the transatlantic team of North America and Western Europe welcomed central and eastern European countries into modern democratic society.

But the impetus for NATO enlargement did not come from a triumphalist Washington. On the contrary, the U.S. initially resisted even the breakup of the Soviet Union.

Since 1990 12 European states have asked to join NATO. They all chose for themselves to belong to this cooperative military alliance.

NATO membership was a key part of “locking in” their turbulent democratic reforms.

NATO programs helped modernize our armed forces, and bring them fully under civilian control.

NATO played a vital role in helping all these countries make a clear break from secret communist-era military intelligence machinations, right at the heart of a supposedly independent state.

While this slow, cautious and — as I remember well — in some ways reluctant enlargement did eventually take place, constant efforts were made to reassure Russia.

Russia was welcomed to the Council of Europe, World Trade Organization and given closer relations with the European Union.

No NATO bases were ever placed in the new member states.

Until 2013, no NATO military exercises were ever conducted in Poland, the Baltic states or anywhere else on the eastern flank.

“No NATO bases were ever placed in the new member states.”

No nuclear installations have been moved to the territory of new member states, even though Russia has them less than 100 kilometers from our border.

A NATO-Russia Council was set up and Russia was promised that as long as it respected borders in Europe, no substantial combat forces would be moved east.

Largely in response to Russian objections, Ukraine and Georgia were in fact denied NATO membership plans in 2008.

In pressing the reset button with Moscow toward Russia, President Obama changed the configuration of the proposed missile defense installation in Poland, then suspended its Phase 4 which Russia disliked.

In short, the assertion that Russia was “humiliated” during this period is ridiculous.

Russia took charge of all the former Soviet nuclear weapons, some transferred from Ukraine in 1994 when Russia recognized Ukraine’s borders, including Crimea. Ukraine’s territorial integrity was guaranteed in the Budapest Memorandum by Russia, [the] U.S., [the] U.K. and France.

Presidents Clinton and Bush treated their Russian counterparts as fellow “great power” leaders and invited them to join the G-8, even though Russia did not qualify to join this group at that time, either as a large economy or as a stable democracy.

The U.S. spent billions of dollars working with Russia to reduce Cold War nuclear and chemical weapons stocks, and to achieve new, better arms control agreements.

All sorts of smaller but practical projects have been set up with Russia. The NATO-Russia Cooperative Airspace Initiative aims to prevent aircraft hijackings. We have agreed to help destroy dangerous ammunitions stocks in the Kaliningrad exclave.

Russia has benefited from all these programs, and many more.

Freed from decades of self-inflicted communism, it has joined the global economy as a normal country.

It’s seen the benefits. Its GDP was a feeble $570 billion in 1990. By 2013 it has grown to $ 2.1 trillion.

So, in the years following the end of the Cold War, did NATO and EU governments show unwavering hostility towards Russia?

Did we cynically “take advantage of Russia’s weakness?”

Have we been “humiliating” Russia?

I answer those three questions in three words. No. No. And no.

The record since the Berlin Wall came down shows NATO and the European Union and their individual member states all working hard, and in good faith, to build normal, purposeful relations with Russia.

And it shows that Russia itself benefiting hugely from this support.

PUTIN’S REAL AIM: PROTECTING RUSSIA’S WEALTHY FROM DEMOCRACY

So where has it gone wrong?

The basic problem is that the current leadership in Moscow depends on corrupt business structures and media manipulation to keep power.

“The basic problem is that the current leadership in Moscow depends on corrupt business structures and media manipulation to keep power.”

The Russian elite is dominated by former KGB officers who, starting in the late 1980s, used Russian state money, sometimes laundered through Western offshore banks, to purchase land, natural resources and property on a vast scale.

To protect this wealth, they must prevent the outbreak of a democratic revolution of the kind that shook central Europe in 1989, or an anti-corruption revolution as took place on Kiev’s Maidan square early this year.

Using military invasions of Georgia and now Ukraine, or strong-arm tactics as in Armenia, or corrupt political proxies in Moldova, they seek to stop nations of the former Soviet Union from daring to join the successful institutions of the West — and from setting an example that Russians might want to follow.

They are playing games with our public opinion through propaganda tricks. Paid Internet “trolls” pollute our newspaper comment pages, and Twitter, Facebook and other sites. They roll out fake “experts” with fake authority.

They try to legitimize extreme political forces of all kinds, paying for far-left anti-American rhetoric on their English-language Russia Today channel, while simultaneously supporting far-right anti-European politicians in Europe.

NIBBLING AWAY AT WESTERN RESOLVE

Not content with all that, they are testing our very military resolve.

Russian planes buzz American, Swedish, Danish, even Canadian planes.

Russian troops have captured an Estonian security officer working on the Estonian side of the border. The Russian navy captured a Lithuanian fishing boat and held it for ransom.

All these obnoxious ploys are intended to nibble away at Western resolve, and our own and wider faith in NATO Article 5. To test the value of our mutual security guarantees. But also, as events this year in Ukraine have shown, to challenge head-on the most basic rule of international law and the World of Rules: that international borders cannot be changed by force.

A RESTRAINED RESPONSE

The international response to Russia’s policies has been restrained. It has been designed to raise the cost to Russia of undermining Western institutions.

The policy is working, up to a point.

Russia’s president has admitted that the price his country is paying is high.

In the decade from 2002-2012, Russia’s economy grew on average 5 percent per year. Russia, like Poland, was integrating with the global economy, and seeing positive results.

If Russia grows at that same rate from now until 2025, its GDP will be $ 3.7 billion — from today’s $2.1 billion.

If instead Russia grows at only 1 percent over the next decade because of sanctions and global mistrust of its intentions, its GDP in 2025 will be far less — $2.3 billion. Cumulatively over the decade, Russia will have lost the staggering sum of over $81 billion! Its leaders have decided to gamble with their own citizens’ lives and hopes, by looking to the past, not the future.

Some of Russia’s citizens are wondering whether this enormous price is worth paying — and what Russia is getting for it.

NATO MUST AGAIN DEFEND THE WORLD OF RULES

Maybe Russia’s leaders too are starting to conclude that this price is not worth paying. I truly hope they do. But we need to be prepared if they don’t, at least in the short term. We need to think hard about the health of those institutions we set up a half a century ago.

First and foremost, we need to face a grim reality. Hard, sharp security questions are being posed to us in Europe once again.

The NATO that we have now is not the NATO we need to deal with them.

If we were starting from scratch now, nobody would put NATO troops and equipment where they are now. NATO should shut down unnecessary commands and legacy bases, and get back to its primary mission: deterrence.

NATO is a defensive alliance. But for deterrence to work, our military capability has to look — and be — serious.

Second, follow the money.

Have we been complacently turning a blind eye to an uncomfortable truth: that our own tangled, over-complex banking systems have been exploited by international semi-criminal networks, not only from Russia but all over the world?

Simply by firmly enforcing existing money laundering laws and asking hard questions about murky money, we will help ourselves and help others who are trying, against high odds, to join the World of Rules. Peoples around the world would be empowered and kleptocrats would be restrained if only we implemented existing laws!

Third, we need to think hard about how Europe and the U.S. work together in Ukraine and other countries wanting our help. It’s demoralizing for them that so much Western money is wasted through duplication and institutional jostling for position.

Swedish technical assistance agencies and Dutch or American technical assistance agencies shouldn’t be duplicating or contradicting one another’s programs.

Technical expert “advice” works best when supported by pragmatic peer-to-peer consultations.

Ukrainian ministers turn to their Polish counterparts to ask what we think: “You Poles have been through this. What makes sense?

We do our best to tell them.

A NEW DIVIDING LINE ACROSS EUROPE

Back in 1947 Ukraine, like Poland, was blocked by Stalin from taking part in the generous Marshall Fund programs offered by the U.S..

Let’s help Ukraine now, when at last it is free to ask for, and ready to receive, our help.

The principled way out of this crisis is based on all sides returning to the principles that George Marshall articulated at Harvard in 1947.

Teamwork. Cooperation. Russia’s return to the World of Rules.

If this happens, sanctions can be lifted. Russia can again participate normally in international financial markets and institutions.

All Russia’s grievances concerning Ukraine or anywhere else can be tackled sensibly and fairly through the UN or OSCE or Council of Europe, or other fora created for precisely such problems.

Moscow itself asked to join all these organizations when it wasn’t a founder partner when they were set up.

Moscow itself has pledged to respect their rules.

Let’s be clear.

The alternative to working through these issues normally and peacefully in a spirit of successful partnership is a new dividing line across the European continent. It won’t be made of iron but it’ll be real enough.

“Moscow itself has pledged to respect their rules.”

On one side of the line are countries and peoples free to choose their own democratic destiny.

On the other side are countries in a decaying Twilight Zone. A blighted, unhappy and unstable place outside the World of Rules.

If we get this wrong, our shared Western decades-long strategic ambition to create a Europe whole and free will falter.

Captured? You Might Have Fallen Victim to FOMM!

It’s no longer about FOMO (fear of missing out); now everyone is succumbing to FOMM (fear of missing a memory)! — Susan Pearse and Martina Sheehan, Authors

There are many special memories that come with being a parent: the first time your baby walks, talks, laughs, goes to school. In fact every “first” is something you want to capture and bottle forever. But a few years ago I learnt a valuable lesson about capturing memories.

I remember it like it was yesterday. I rushed into my daughter’s first kindergarten recital with a similar thrill of excitement as I experienced at my first Robbie William’s concert decades before! The performance began, and within a few minutes I reached for my mobile phone and began filming. I don’t know why I did it. Perhaps I was following the lead of other parents. Or maybe I had the FOMM (fear of missing a memory), thinking that if I didn’t have it recorded, something might be lost.

But as I videoed my daughter, I knew I was viewing a B-grade version of what was really happening. The experience had less color and less life. It was a pale reflection of what was really taking place on the stage. But before I came to my senses and simply put the phone down, the moment happened. My little girl looked up at me, like they do for that reassuring nod of approval. And all she saw was the back of my mobile phone. I put the phone down and vowed to think twice before I did that again.

And I’m so glad I did. For the rest of the night I laughed, I shed tears, we smiled together, and I experienced everything that comes with being fully in that moment. And I saw the gift of my attention in her performance. She beamed with confidence, and those off-key notes became even louder and prouder!

It was the right decision for me and my daughter that day. And don’t get me wrong. I still take photos and videos of my kids. There’s a time and a place for that. But I worry that the mobile device is too often creating a barrier to the flow of attention. Whether you’re a child on your first stage, or a seasoned rock star, it must be a little disheartening to perform to a sea of back-lit smartphones rather than the eager faces of an audience. And FOMM is a trap. Studies verify that you are less likely to lay down a memory of an event when you view it through a lens. Memories are best laid down when you truly experience an event with your own senses.

But most importantly, that day at the kindergarten concert reminded me of one of the most important principles in parenting. Kids need your attention. They crave it, right here and now, in the present moment. Your child will look up at you 30 times times in a half hour sporting match searching for your expression of pride, your smile, your acknowledgement. They thrive under the warm glow of your attention. They also know full well when it’s being withheld.

It’s school concert time again, so consider this question if you’re tempted to pull out your mobile device: Is this the right moment to block the flow of attention? By all means grab a bit of footage, because kids love to see themselves on screen. But remember, the most important moments are those when your attention joins you warmly and gently together in this magical experience of their growing life.

This post was originally published at Mind Gardener.

Ask the Art Professor: How Do I Find the Right Graduate School for Fine Arts?

“My friends and I are all beginning to look into graduate school and what our future may hold for us as fine artists. We range in age from our mid-20s to mid-30s and are at all at different stages of our adult life. We all dream the dream of being strictly a studio artist, and have considered the advantage of being professors one day. We all want to apply to the right graduate school to help set up our future, and don’t want to be in a school that doesn’t fit us. What advice do you have for students like us? How do we approach the hunt for graduate schools?”

Before you apply to graduate school for fine arts, you have to honestly ask yourself what your long-term goals are. Do you want to teach at the college level? Do you want to show in commercial art galleries? It may seem premature to think that far ahead, but it’s important to think through and answer these questions before you leap into applying to graduate schools. When I was getting ready to apply, I primarily thought about graduate school as a place where I could mature as an artist, and continue to push myself creatively. I wasn’t thinking ahead in terms of my future, and didn’t realize that one of the most critical goals of graduate school would be making professional connections. No artist can build a successful career on their own; they have to make key contacts that will launch their careers in the right direction.

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On top of that, I was not prepared for how obscenely competitive the process would be. Applications are continually growing at a rate that cannot match the scarce number of openings. When I applied, I assumed that I had done everything “right” up until that point: I had graduated with a high GPA from one of the top art schools in the nation; I had been consistently teaching and exhibiting my work professionally; my portfolio was mature and cohesive; and I had outstanding letters of recommendation. I was confident enough that I announced my departure at my teaching job before receiving the decision letters.

I received five rejections, was put on two waiting lists, and was offered admission only at my safety school. I was in complete shock. I was so ready to stop working and return to school. Having already quit my teaching job, it never even occurred to me to start over and re-apply the following year. I felt like I had no options, so I enrolled at my safety school with extreme reluctance. To this day, I regret that decision. Experience has shown me that there are doors that never opened for me because of that decision. If I could do it all over again, I would have taken off only one year (I took off four) after art school to clear my head, and then started the application process, knowing that it would likely take several years of applying before I was accepted to a program that I really wanted to be in.

In retrospect, I can see now that there are five main aspects to research when applying. There are other considerations like studio space which might seem important, but actually the five factors below carry far more weight.

1) The faculty.
Do extensive research on the faculty. What kind of artwork do they make? Does their work engage with a contemporary audience? What kind of venues do they show their work in? Have they had solo exhibitions at major galleries? Is their studio practice active? What is their online visibility? What is the turnover rate of the faculty and administration? (A high turnover rate is a red flag.)

2) Location.
Location matters in graduate school. For example, if your ultimate goal is to show in New York City art galleries, going to school in Kansas is not a good choice. The professional contacts you make will be based in the city the school is in, and these contacts can launch you right into that art community.

3) Teaching opportunities.
One of my colleagues told me that her biggest mistake was attending a graduate school that did not have teaching opportunities for their graduate students. The consequence was that when she started applying for college level teaching positions, she had no teaching experience and had difficulty getting hired. If teaching at the college level is a priority for you, make sure that the school you attend provides teaching opportunities for their graduate students.

4) Current student work.
Viewing the artwork being made by current students is one of the best ways to get a sense of the school. Can you envision yourself having a lively creative exchange with these students based on their artwork? Look for diversity in the student artwork; it’s not a good sign when all of the student artwork looks the same. If possible, take a tour of the school and talk to some current students in person.

5) Alumni.
What are recent alumni doing? Where are they showing their work? Peruse their resumes online and try to get a sense of what kind of careers they have. Do they teach at the college level and if so, at what kinds of colleges? Do they have full-time or part-time teaching positions?

Remember, choosing a graduate school program is all about finding the right fit for you. Every artist has different goals, and a program that is right for one person may not work for you. Figure out where you want your artistic career to be in 20 years, and then find the program that will help put you on track to get to there.

Ask the Art Professor is an advice column for visual artists. Submit your questions to clara(at)claralieu.com

The NICU Ride Through the Eyes of a Nurse

Parents of premature babies often refer to the NICU as a roller coaster ride of ups and downs, never knowing when to hold their breath and grab on tight or let go and enjoy the ride… all along trying not to puke.

Although different from a parent, as a NICU nurse I can tell you that we also experience the feelings of up and down that live in the air of a Neonatal Intensive Care Unit. As I prepare for my work day, I often wonder what lies ahead of me. Who will I encounter? Will this be an easy day, taking care of growing, feeding babies that I’ve watched come so far and almost ready to go home with their family? The good moments of the NICU are finding that those babies once fighting for their lives are now off respiratory support, increasing on feedings, being held by parents for the first time, or even gaining the slightest bit of weight. These days make NICU nursing great. But not all days are like this. I must prepare mentally for the moments I go into work knowing immediately from the scene of chaotic hustle and bustle, that the day that lies ahead of me is going to be a difficult, rough and bumpy ride.

“Please secure all loose articles”

As I prepare for my shift and enter the world of the Neonatal Intensive Care, I must throw out any mental picture of what I wanted this day to be. I must get behind the eyes of the family, empathize with them, and try to understand what they may be feeling and going through. This can often be very difficult in times where stress and uncertainty linger. The baby will always be in the front and most important seat in these times of priority, because as NICU nurses we are their biggest medical advocate.

Welcome to the NICU- “Please keeps your hands, arms, and legs inside the train at all times”

This is life on the edge. Nowhere else in the hospital do they weigh their patients in grams instead of pounds, to avoid a medical mistake or drug overdose. Nowhere else is the margin of error so incredibly small. Everything has to be perfect; there is no room for mistakes as these little lives hang on the line. NICU nurses treat these babies as if they were our very own, and when everything turns out well, rejoice and celebrate alongside the parents. Yet when the outcome is not what was wanted, even if it was out of our control, we too, feel sadness and grief.

Just like everyone else, NICU nurses have good days and bad days themselves. Good days of personal happiness, feeling elated and energetic. While other days we may feel tired, stressed, discouraged, or even burned out. There are the days we enjoy coming to work and making a difference and other days we would rather be on a different roller coaster… perhaps at Disney World?

It’s important for you to know that we are not here for the great hours, the coffee breaks, or the money, but we are, and always will be here for your baby. There is great love and satisfaction in guiding you through the twists and turns, up steep hills and down the unpredictable drops of this intense roller coaster ride we call the NICU. When you finally arrive at your destination of discharge, we are there too, cheering you on with great pride.

At the end of the day, nurses (unlike parents) get to leave the NICU behind and go back to a more predictable and somewhat calmer world at home. The blessings and sadness of the NICU still remain, but lying beneath the mental and physical exhaustion is the overwhelming feeling of satisfaction that comes along with being a NICU nurse, and really there is no greater job than this.

Jodi Dolezel is a Registered Nurse and currently works in a single room family centered care level 3 Neonatal Intensive Care in the Charlotte, NC area. Jodi is also the founder and facilitator of Peekaboo ICU, where this post first appeared.