Category Archives: Holiday

Happy Pi Day

Happy Pi Day

 Happy Pi Day

When our son was in 3rd grade my husband taught him an easy way to remember the number for Pi.  Our son proudly went to school with his knowledge on Pi day, and when the teacher asked if anyone knew the number for Pi he raised his hand. She called on him and he said “How I Need A Drink”. She said, “well, then go to the water fountain.” And, being the obliging little fellow that he was, he went to the water fountain and got a drink, without ever bothering to explain that he was trying to tell her the mnemonic to remember Pi.

To remember the number Pi memorize the mnemonic  “How I need a drink, alcoholic of course, after the heavy lectures involving quantum mechanics,” The number  Pi correlates to the number of letters in each of the words in that sentence.

3.141 592 653 589 79…

(Instead of the word “alcoholic”, for the kids you can substitute “pepsicola”. Trust me from experience, it will save school teachers confusion.)

Pi day is celebrated on Einstein’s birthday because of the date and the meaning of the number. Pi is roughly the ratio of a circles circumference to its diameter, also representing the curvature of space/time to energy sources which is a basis in Einstein’s principal of relativity.

To learn more about Pi Day or Albert Einstein read the guest posts my father-in-law, a physics professor wrote  for Documama the past couple of Pi days.

 

Global Impact’s Women And Girls Fund On #InternationalWomen’sDay

Global Impact’s Women And Girls Fund On #InternationalWomen’sDay
Woman in Long Ampung, Borneo taken by Elizabeth Atalay

Woman in Long Ampung, Borneo taken by Elizabeth Atalay

I was trying not to stare at her earlobe, but finally I had to ask. Not in English mind you because she spoke the local dialect of her village in Kalimantan. I asked her in that international pantomime us travelers learn to speak. One earlobe hung to her chin weighted with gold rings like most of the women. It was the inverted crescent of the other ear that had caught my attention, where the decorative lobe had been cut off.  She stood and sliced the air with two hands holding an invisible scythe. Bending over she then grasped at the shorn earlobe.  Chuckles came from the other village women with whom I sat on the floor of the longhouse as she did this, and I nodded that I understood.

According to Global Impact, two-thirds of the labor to produce more than half the world’s food is done by women. Meanwhile women control less than 10 percent of the world’s assets. I had seen the women working in the fields, carrying thatched backpacks full of grain back to the village, and then pounding it into fine powder.  The missing earlobe was merely an occupational hazard. In turn she motioned to her belly in a sweeping outward gesture unmistakable as pregnancy, and then clasped her arms to her breast. I shook my head “no” and smiled.  I had no children yet, knowing as their faces flooded with pity that being in my mid twenties this would be shocking to them. Still, despite our cultural differences and our language barriers, I remember being amazed at the feeling of sisterhood I felt as their guest. I was a stranger from a faraway land, but as women we connected and understood each other on some very basic level.

This type of experience would repeat itself for me all round the world, fortifying my sense of global sisterhood as I went. The feeling was bolstered even more so after having my own children, knowing for women the experiences that go along with that are universal.  As is the love we feel for our children, and our hopes and dreams for their futures.  That sisterhood stays with me, as does the knowledge that the population most affected by global poverty is women and girls. Women and girls are integral in overcoming poverty, for a family, a community or a nation.

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This International Women’s Day, Global Impact has launched the Women and Girls Fund which harnesses four of the most respected charities working to help women and girls, CARE, World Vision, Plan International, and the International Center for Research on Women.  These charities work to provide education, health care, protection from violence, protection from sexual exploitation, and job training to women and girls around the world.

We women need to stick together in this world, it is unacceptable that 1 in 9 girls will be forced into marriage before her 15th birthday, or that nearly 300,000 women will die from preventable childbirth related causes.  Girls in the developing world face overwhelming odds from the day they are born.  By educating girls we give them the chance to rise out of poverty, earn a living, and send their own children to school one day.  With proper health care and nutrition we can ensure that they grow to contribute fully to their communities.  Together we can help change the world by simply investing in women and girls. I think about the women I met along my travels who fed me and housed me despite their meager means, and that stranger from a strange land that I was to them, and I want to give back.  I still appreciate the camaraderie we shared so many years and miles away from my here and now, and it calls me to action.

Global Impact’s Women and Girls Fund has the goal of helping women and girls everywhere to live healthy lives, protected, educated, respected, and empowered to reach their full potential. Through this fund you can join millions of people working to help women and girls. All contributions go directly to supporting programs to improve the lives of women and girls around the world.  Please visit www.togetherforwomen.org to learn more about this great opportunity to make a difference.

This post is a part of a sponsored awareness program that seeks to help women and girls everywhere live healthy lives wherein they are protected, respected, educated and empowered to reach their potential. Visit www.togetherforwomen.org.

global teamI wrote this post as part of The Global Team of 200, a highly specialized group of members of Mom Bloggers for Social Good that concentrates on issues involving women and girls, children, world hunger and maternal health. Our Motto: Individually we are all powerful. Together we can change the world. We believe in the power of collective action to help others and believe in ourselves to make this world a better place for our children and the world’s children.

 

Happy Valentine’s Day!

Happy Valentine’s Day!

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Abraham Lincoln In My Foyer

Abraham Lincoln In My Foyer

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In the foyer of the house in which I grew up this portrait of President Lincoln hung by our front door.  When we sold the house Abraham Lincoln had been welcoming our visitors for thirty years. It was then that I discovered an inscription written in my deceased father’s hand on the back of the framed photograph that read:

The Pencil Picture

This photograph was taken on April 9th, 1865 just five days before his death.  Mr. Lincoln and his small son Tad had gone for a walk this Sunday morning and stopped in at Gardner’s Gallery in Washington. Mr. Gardner had just persuaded Mr. Lincoln to pose for a portrait, when the little boy Tad had asked for his father to sharpen a pencil which he still had in his hand when Mr. Gardner took the picture.  At the time Mr. Gardner was going to develop this negative he noticed he had not enough bromide in the cellodian so he put it aside in the closet, and apparently forgot all about it. After the death of Mr. Gardner which occurred 29 yrs later, the gallery was purchased by Mr. Porter of Boston Who found this negative.  He immediately made a print and gasped at the excellence of the portrait, the curious admixture of humor and sadness, of gentleness and kindness, and stern purpose, and had it copyrighted in 1894, calling it the Pencil Picture.

 

Hearts That Help; Gestures of true Love

Hearts That Help; Gestures of true Love

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I was a stranger among them, warmly welcomed with offers of soup and tea.   We spoke mostly about matters of the heart.  I was having trouble, but luckily found my new-found friends around the table were more than happy to help. Read the rest of this entry