BlogHer honored with the Anita Borg Social Impact Award...help us decide how to use the prize money

Today, on behalf of Lisa, Jory and me, I have the great pleasure and honor of announcing that BlogHer was chosen as the 2008 recipient of The Anita Borg Social Impact Award. The Award comes with $10,000 in prize money, and we'd like to get your advic ...

How You Can Save Money On Food and Still Eat Healthy

Is it possible to save money on the grocery bill, and still eat healthy? Well, it's not easy. Stretching a dollar is getting harder and harder to do these days. But, we can't give up on eating healthy, the alternative could be much more costly. I ...

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Pumpkin Carving Tricks

Yesterday, we carved our pumpkins. Well I didn't, I don't carve pumpkins, I just assist. TW and five children carved pumpkins in our living room because the weather goddess hates me and decided it should rain on our last full day with all five kids. I'm lucky, the clean up was minimal because the kids are all pretty grown up and everyone except the 22 year old stayed on the sheets that I spread out around the living room. TW made the biggest mess and the dog dragged pumpkin guts around the house a little bit but I'm used to the dog doing that sort of thing.

A Reader's Worst Nightmare: The Reading Slump

by sassymonkey at 5:22pm Mon, 6 Oct 2008 under Entertainment & Books, Books, reading slump
I have a case of the reading blahs. There's no good reason for them to appear right now. I have piles of great books to read. The weather is perfect for curling up in front of the fire with a blanket and an excellent book. But I just don't feel like reading these days. I want to knit. I want to watch dvds. I want to play on the internet. I want to do everything but read. It will pass shortly I know but for the moment I'm just not in the mood to read. I am officially in a slump. Thankfully I know that it will pass and that I'm not the only person that suffers from the slumps.

October is Domestic Violence Awareness Month

October is famous as Breast Cancer Awareness Month when stores are awash in pink products that often contain breast cancer causing chemicals are sold to women in an effort to fund various activities to combat breast cancer. However, I'll save that topic for next Monday. October is also Domestic Violence Awareness Month. According to The National Coalition Against Domestic Violence (NCADV), one in every four women will experience domestic violence in her lifetime. In addition, one in six women and one in 33 men have experienced an attempted or completed rape, and 1 in 12 women and 1 in 45 men will be stalked in their lifetime.

Haunted Adventures for Halloween

by Pam at 10:50am Mon, 6 Oct 2008 under Travel
When I popped open my email this morning, I was amused to find an invite from a Seattle friend to join in on a "Haunted History Tour" - seems there's more than meets the eye to the old brewery neighborhood. I'm all about the wacky local diversion -  they're often quite cheap, close to home, and it's always thrilling to learn more about what's in your own backyard. Also, a few years went on the Night Watch tour in the pretty medieval city of Steyr in Austria and had a great time, in spite of the freezing cold and the rapidly whispered translations.

DonorsChoose Campaign: Building Gardens, Building Communities

When I was asked to choose DonorsChoose Challenge project, I immediately knew I had to pick something to do with gardening. Children can benefit from the physical activity of working in a small garden plot; growing their own vegetables encourages children to eat them; and gardening is just plain FUN!

Are We as Parents the Financial Lost Generation?

I was in Washington, DC the weekend of the first presidential debate and the beginning of the Great Bail-out of 2008.  I was there to promote a book, but it was impossible to ignore the tension in the city tasked with saving Americans from themselves.

The Green Collar Economy: How environmentalism can help the economy

The Bush administration's so often pitted economic concerns against environmental ones, namely claiming that the former will suffer if the latter are addressed. But today, a new book's come out that argues the two concerns can, in fact, be resolved simultaneously.

Donors Choose Challenge: Life Through a Lens

Photography changed my life. My first photography teacher told us that photographs give us the most accurate record of our lives, and I believe this more and more the longer I devote myself to picture-taking. This is why I love looking at other peoples' photographs as much as taking my own, and I especially love to see young people excited about photography.

DonorsChoose Challenge: Help kids become historians

A popular African proverb counsels, "Until lions have historians, hunters will always be heroes." Today, I am asking BlogHer readers to help two groups of young lions get excited about studying history by experiencing it first-hand. 

How much time does it take for a nonprofit to do social media?

by Beth Kanter at 7:18pm Sun, 5 Oct 2008 under Social Media, Social change, Non-profits & NGOs
Photo by Realblades Time is the most valuable resource many people who work in nonprofits have.  So, it comes as no surprise that the one of the common questions I hear during social media trainings is, "How much time does it take to do social media?"

Better late than never...again: Project Runway recap: The Final Four

by Elisa Camahort at 7:00pm Sun, 5 Oct 2008 under Entertainment & Books, Reality TV, Project Runway
Isn't this "twist" getting a little less twisty each season it happens? (Spoiler alert, obviously) Oh, the humanity. To be in a place so remote, so primitive, that they do not have Bravo in their hotel rooms? Yes, that was my fate these past four days. To be in such a place. Sitting in a room, knowing Project Runway was on, but that I could not access it. Tragic! But I've gotten past it, thanks to Tivo.

Joan Rivers, An Evil Eye Bracelet and Walking The Talk of Exceptional Customer Service

When Lily* retired as a ticket agent from a major U.S. airlines after 19 years of service, the airlines lost one of it's most important assets. When it came to passenger service, Lily received more "rose" letters from appreciative passengers than any other airlines employee in the entire north east corridor.