Sep 28

This week’s column at Mountain Xpress:

There’s more good news on the health benefits of beer, especially for women. A recent study reveals that those of us who drink beer regularly have stronger bones than those who don’t.

Read the rest here.

P.S. This is a serious column about a serious study (kay, the study is serious–I’m kind of, sort of serious). But the point is that this study is not like that stupid study going around that says men can lower their blood pressure as much by staring at women’s boobs for an hour per day as by exercising for an hour. That is a hoax. If it were true, porn addicts’ blood pressure would be so low that they’d be dead. Please stop Twittering, Facebooking and e-mailing hoaxes. If it sounds too good to be true, it’s too good to be true. Check it before you send it. Thank you.

Sep 27

Drew Jones offers hope for the climate negotiations in Copenhagen. Plus he’s cute.

Sep 21

Why “soccer mom” shouldn’t be a derogatory term:

Initially, the phrase “soccer moms” referred to those of us who spend a good deal of time driving our kids from activity to activity, and who, as good citizens, vote regularly.

Then the term evolved. As references to “soccer moms” increased in the media, negative connotations crept in. The phrase came to represent over-stressed moms who don’t work, drive gas-guzzling SUVs, and spend too much time and money on their kids. Cue country song: “She’s a ninety-pound suburban housewife drivin’ in her SUV.”

Read the rest here.

Sep 17

I hope some of my local peeps are planning to attend the Type A Mom conference here in Ashvegas next weekend. It should be lots of fun–mommy bloggers from all over the country will be gracing us with their presence.

Here’s the Mountain Xpress story about the con (plus an interview with me–the other side of the mic can be scary). The cost for the weekend is $200, but if you input the code “mountainx,” you’ll get $75 off (almost half price–woohoo!).

Here are some of the basic details from the Mountain Xpress article:

What: A mommy blogger conference that’s expected to draw about 250 people to Asheville. It’s organized by Asheville resident Kelby Carr, a former newspaper reporter who turned to online writing and launched the Web site http://www.typeamom.net in 2007 as a way to feature the work of mommy bloggers.

When: Thursday, Sept. 24, through Saturday, Sept. 26.

Where: The conference is based at the Crowne Plaza Tennis & Golf Resort in West Asheville, but there are tours and speaker dinners scheduled around Asheville.

Cost: $200 for the weekend. Use code “mountainx” to get $75 off the ticket price.

Highlights:
• General panel discussion on Friday from 8:45 a.m. to 10 a.m. on social and collaborative blogging.
• Mom Market 8-10 a.m. on Saturday featuring local businesses and mom-made wares.
• Blogger Town Hall, 1:30-2:30 p.m. on Saturday, to discuss a variety of issues connected to blogging ethics.

Visit http://www.typeamomconference.com for full details.

Sep 14

From my bi-monthly Brews News round-up at Mountain Xpress:

Spring beer festival: If you missed out on Brewgrass tickets, you may have the chance to attend another locally run beer festival this spring.

The Asheville Brewers Alliance has committed to hosting a spring beer festival, according to alliance spokesman Mike Rangel.

The festival will be similar in scale to Brewgrass, but with a slightly different slant, Rangel says. Entertainment will consist of local rock bands and comedy acts. More beer “education” tents, hosted by local groups such as the Mountain Ale and Lager Tasters, will be on hand as well.

“We want it to have more of a carnival feel,” Rangel says.

Brewgrass organizer Jimi Rentz says he wanted to offer two annual beer festivals, but he didn’t want to have to organize more than one such event per year without significant help. So the alliance stepped in to partner with Brewgrass organizers.

“The Brewgrass guys have got the knowledge of how to run a beer festival down to a science,” Rangel says. “We’ll be learning a lot from them.”

Other than the entertainment, the two festivals will be similar, featuring 40 or more craft brewers from around the country, including all the local breweries and several local food vendors.

The event is planned for Saturday, May 29, and the festival’s venue will be announced soon. Tickets will be distributed to members of the Brewers Alliance on Friday, Rangel says, and will be on sale at Saturday’s Brewgrass. The cost is $30 per person. I assume the venue for Spring Beer Fest will be announced before tickets go on sale.

Sep 14

In this week’s column for Mountain Xpress, I write about meeting a 13-year-old child with autism. And about how the Autism Society of N.C. supports her and her family. Read the story here.

Sep 12

So is blogging still relevant? Or do you now spend more time on FaceBook/Twitter than you do reading blogs?

I’ve been spending more and more time with social media lately, and clearly, other than my paid columns, my blogging’s suffered.

I’m speaking at a Type A Mom conference in a few weeks, and I’ve been thinking a lot about blogging vs. social media, and whether or not bloggers are still as influential as they once were? At this point, I have more followers on Twitter than unique daily visitors on this bloggie. What do y’all think?

Sep 8

So sorry I haven’t been approving your comments in a timely manner. I changed my e-mail address, and for some reason, comments aren’t showing up in my in-box. Trying to fix that now.

Thanks for the comments. And for reading. I appreciate the conversations!

Sep 8

Something else to worry about. Sorry.

Here we go again. We’ve cleaned out the “bad” plastics from the cupboard. We’ve taught our kids not to use plastics or plastic wrap in the microwave. We’ve replaced sippy cups and plastic water bottles with metal drinking bottles.

Read the rest here.

Sep 3

We are community. That, for me, was proven on Sunday, August 30, at
Asheville’s inaugural TEDx event at the Orange Peel.

While the speakers, performers and TED videos inspired, motivated, and
stretched our brains (more on them in a minute), the true message of
the evening was twofold: we are community and Asheville’s a great
place to call home. In fact, the theme of the evening was Home.

And after only about four months of frenzied preparation, a large
number of folks who call Asheville home came together to learn, to
enjoy, but mostly to have fun.

I’ve attended many heady, intellectual lecture-type presentations.
Never before have I been to one where so many people were alternating
among whooping, hollering, standing while clapping vigorously, and
listening closely. There was an electric energy in the room that was
more cellular than electronic (surprising given that most of what we
paid the venue probably will go to cover their electricity bill).

Jennifer Saylor, official host of TEDx Asheville, e-mailed and spoke
to us volunteers about magic in the weeks before the big night. And
magic happened—through a combination of hard work, perseverance,
intellectual capital and luck.

There were moments that were less than smooth—having to turn so many
people away was unfortunate (our marketing was too good); speaker Dee
Eggers had to restart her talk when her pocket mic failed; those of us
who were live tweeting and blogging and streaming and simulcasting put
some serious pressure on the venue’s bandwidth capacity.

But these were minor hiccups in an otherwise smooth, well-paced evening.

(Full disclosure: I’m on the TEDx Asheville volunteer committee and
live with speaker Drew Jones (legally). I also write for sponsor
Mountain Xpress. Just telling you that I’m not exactly objective).

Here’s what stood out for me during the evening (mostly great, some
OK, some less than stellar):

The Forty Fingers and a Missing Tooth juggling troupe were a fabulous
opener. Their silliness and enthusiasm set a fun tone for the night. I
want them to come to my next birthday party.

Emcee Daniel Crabtree aka Sneaky McFly also helped set a light tone
through magic tricks and his quick mind. Emcee Josh Batenhorst was
thoughtful but, in my opinion, not as entertaining as Crabtree.

The 3-D geodome that speaker David McConville used to talk about the
universe was mesmerizing. When McConville gets excited about his
subject matter, he gives this endearing little giggle. I’m still not
sure what dark matter is, but I heard the message that: “We’re serious
cosmic babies.”

Absolutely adore Joachim de Posada’s “Don’t Eat the Marshmallow Yet
videotaped TED talk. Short, smart, and you can’t go wrong with videos
of cute 4-year-olds.

The two music acts were both good, though I would have separated them
in the program instead of having them back-to-back. I like the
Theremin and electric music from Chris Tanfield and Dave Hamilton, but
they played for a bit too long. A little Theremin goes a long way.
Shane Perlowin and August Hoerr truly caught my attention when they
stepped it up a notch and showed us what a funky instrument the
accordion can be.

Drew Jones inspired through hope: “Is anyone else tired of hearing the
story that we’re destroying ourselves?” His presentation on the global
climate deal fired up the crowd. While it was a feather in the night’s
cap to have a video from Bill McKibben before Jones’ talk, McKibben on
tape was a downer. Plus the sound quality was crackly (minor
techno-glitch).

Dee Eggers getting misty about saving big-brained dolphins and tiny
pollinators moved me. She was the only speaker who went over on time,
and thus, she didn’t have as powerful of a conclusion as she could
have. But otherwise, she rocked.

Robert Zimmerman’s talk about the opportunity of unmet needs was
interesting, but he moved and talked so quickly that I’m not sure I
followed him as well as I would have liked. During his talk, I
tweeted, “Who’s the bigger spaz? Jones or Zimmerman.” I’m thinking
Zimmerman won that award for the night. I really liked his personal
photo slideshow, though, and how he used that to punctuate his points.

Glenis Redmond, as always, rocked the room with her spoken word
poetry. This was the ten minutes of the evening when you could hear a
pin drop in the crowded room. No one got up to get a beer while
Redmond was onstage.

Caroline Yongue had great subject matter: death, the ultimate life
experience. But she clearly was the least experienced speaker. Also, I
liked the idea of her having a supposedly dead person lying on stage,
but she never explained the purpose of the prop, which was
disconcerting (maybe it was the elephant in the room?).
Jill Bolte Taylor’s videotaped TED talk is amazing. If you missed it,
it’s well worth watching on-line.

Finally, having local band Stephanie’s Id on-stage, singing, with the
audience, a TED-inspired new song, was mind-blowing. Stephanie puts it
all out there fearlessly. She embodied the spirit of the evening with
her energy and grace.

Overall, the night rocked. It was a little long for a school night,
says this mom of elementary school-aged children, but it was worth
losing sleep over.

Thanks to my community and my home of Asheville for giving this gift to me.

Let’s do it again.

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