Hello World! I Love My Flag Counter Widget!

Hello World! I Love My Flag Counter Widget!

One of my ideas when I started this blog was that I wanted to create an international community.  I envisioned a community of moms, humanitarians, travelers, and thinkers who could help each other to understand our world, and each other better through our variety of experiences.  When I had set out to become a documentary filmmaker long ago, before becoming a mother myself,  my desire had been to share images between cultures through film. In travel I was always amazed to be able to communicate with people with whom I did not have a common spoken language. In some instances we did not even share cultural references, yet were able to convey stories and information through gestures in a way I am unable to fully articulate.  I love hearing other peoples stories, everyone has a story, and my hope is to hear other people’s stories through this blog.   I was so excited when I came across the flag counter widget, and that it would show me where my visitors were coming from. Viewing the countries around the world from which people have visited my site makes me feel like I am traveling in a sense.  If you scroll down the right side of my home page you can see too.  How many flags do you recognize?

HELLO Bangladesh! HELLO China! HELLO, Turkey, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Italy, Japan, Brazil, Australia, Russia, and India! WELCOME Germany, United Kingdom, and Canada! I hope to see you all again soon, invite your friends!  I would love to see our global community grow, and hear from you!  You’ve gotten to know a bit about me on my blog….now tell me about you, I’m so curious!  What do you do in your country?  If you are a mom like me, what is motherhood like where you are raising your kids? What were you doing before you had kids? I would truly love to know!

The Flag Counter Widget is easy to install, just go to the site, grab the code, and see who from around the world is visiting YOU!

 

 

 

 

Guest Post: When A Mom Goes Back To School

Guest Post: When A Mom Goes Back To School

GUEST POST: WRITTEN BY LISA DAVIS

Like many moms out there, I decided to go back to school in my late 30’s to pursue a new career-in this case, teaching. I started out taking one class at a local college with a good reputation. I figured I would get my feet wet and see how it went before I decided to enroll in a program to earn a teaching certificate. I had no idea what to expect or what the other students in the class would be like. Let’s just say it was a class composed primarily of nontraditional students.

At the end of my first day of class, we all had to sign a form authorizing a background check in order for us to be allowed to observe in the classroom and work with the children we would be observing.  A (much) older man in the class who, quite frankly, gave me the creeps (he lived with his 90-year-old mother, watched altogether too much TV, and seemed just nuts in general) absolutely refused to sign the form! He started yelling how he didn’t want anyone prying into his private life and that he didn’t need a background check.

At this point, the teacher tried to explain that it was state law and he was required to undergo a background check in order to observe and that he needed to complete his observation hours to graduate from the program. The man was irate and eventually become irrational. Finally, the teacher suggested they speak about it privately after class. I remember turning to the student sitting next to me and commenting, “We’ve got a stalker in our class!”

On a different day in this same class, our teacher, clearly a foreigner and with a very thick accent, challenged us to determine which country he was from. He literally went around the room, asking each of us in turn if we could figure out what country he was born in. When he got to me, I blurted out, “Turkey!” He was shocked. He said that no one in his class had EVER gotten that question right and he demanded to know how I could have known that! I mumbled something about being good with accents and knowing lots of foreign exchange students in college. It was baloney. How could I admit that I knew exactly where he was from because just the night before on NOVA I had watched the gripping documentary, “The Family That Walks on All Fours” – about a Turkish family with a rare genetic brain abnormality that causes siblings to be mentally impaired and to walk on all fours like apes! That accent was stuck in my head for good after watching the movie.

Towards the end of the term, we were assigned a group project. I was thus introduced to “group work” – two particularly evil words. I have NEVER – NOT EVER — had a good experience with “group work” while in graduate school. I don’t know why-wait, yes I do! It’s because I’m the only one willing to do the work! So, for my group project I was placed with “stalker student” and this other student who had shown up to class a grand total of three times since the semester had started. Needless to say I did the vast majority of the work, all while trying to tame “stalker student’s” insane ideas and bring him back to planet earth. Fun!

It all makes our malleable little kids sound easier to handle! Have you thought about going back to school after having kids?

 

Hit Your Target

Hit Your Target

Downtown Aspen

When I say hit your Target, I mean hit your local Target store May 6th, and be there when they open!   I’m serious, mark your calendars because if you can’t make it to Aspen this year to get your fancy Cos Bar products you are in luck! For six weeks starting May 6th the Aspen based spa and beauty company that celebrities love will be offering their products at your local Target store.  Also available on May 6th will be products from Polka Dot Dog Bakery of Boston, The Candy Store of San Francisco, The Webster of Miami and Privet House of Warren, Ct.

This is part of Targets’ brilliant mini-store concept, bringing high end designers and products to us common folk for limited engagements.

 

A few months ago I found myself at 8:25 am on a Sunday morning zipping through the deserted streets of the commercial area near me.  A woman flew past me and ran the red light I had reluctantly stopped at!

My Jason Wu for Target scores

I had to laugh because I knew exactly where she was heading! Target was opening at 8:30 and the Jason Wu line was about to debut. If, like me, you missed out on the Missoni frenzy when they released that limited edition collection, you would understand why she was willing to fly through a red light for this one.  I screeched into the parking lot as she parked, jumped out of my car and shouted after her  “I knew you were coming here!”  We both laughed and raced through the just opened doors.  Other shoppers were already in the store grabbing at  the racks of Jason Wu.  By 8:45 that morning the racks were nearly picked clean of the designers’ Target collection.  So set your alarm clocks, and wear your track shoes, May 6th could be a crazy morning at Target! See you there!

 

$10 Starbucks giftcard & Little Pickle Press Award Winning Children’s Book Giveaway!

$10 Starbucks giftcard & Little Pickle Press Award Winning Children’s Book Giveaway!

Rana DiOrio, the founder of Little pickle Press has generously signed and offered to give away copies of the four “What Does It Mean To Be…?” books to one of our lucky readers!  Find out more about Rana and how she founded a green publishing company from the ground up  here.  Little Pickle Press is dedicated to helping parents and educators cultivate conscious, responsible little people by stimulating explorations of the meaningful topics of their generation through a variety of media, technologies, and techniques.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


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Inspiring Women: Rana DiOrio

Inspiring Women: Rana DiOrio

Rana DiOrio

 

I am a mother to four kids who on most days feels like I can barely keep my house in order and kids clean, fed and dressed.  Women like Rana DiOrio, the founder of Little Pickle Press, fascinate me.  Did I mention that she has three young children of her own? Rana agreed to let me interview her over the phone to assist me in my quest of understanding her particular breed of überwoman.

The first indicator of her destiny to be successful is probably in the fact that from a very young age she knew exactly what she wanted to be when she grew up.   She wanted to be a doctor, and though it may seem at first glance that she veered off her course, she would be the first to point out that despite detours along the way, she is on the path to doing exactly what she set out to do.  I asked her if she planned to go back to medical school, and she said no, but that she is now helping children in the way that she had always wanted to.  It turns out that the alternative route that she took ultimately made her uniquely suited to do the work that she does. When she was accepted to the Ivy League 7-year medical school she had applied to, around the same time the HMO came into existence, she did the math and recognized the long road to financial liquidity if she pursued medicine. Instead she went to law school where her investment in her education could pay off more rapidly.  She became a lawyer then an investment banker, and a real estate investor. Each career switch imparted various pieces of knowledge that she would ultimately put to use in forming Little Pickle Press.

Her first book What Does It Mean To Be Green? was written for her children.   It was Inspired by her own move from not very environmentally aware Rhode Island, where she grew up, to San Francisco in 1991 where she witnessed a different approach to the environment.  People in the Bay Area were already recycling, composting and eating locally sourced foods, all of which struck a chord with Rana.  She had already changed her way of living by the time she became a mom, so of course she was an environmentally conscientious mom. It was when she felt her children were old enough to begin to understand their relationship to the environment that she wrote the book What Does It Mean To Be Green? as a way to help explain it to them.  She wanted to give them the construct to comprehend sustainability, to write a book that served as a springboard for discussion of how to be green, so that they would not just do it because she told them to but because they understood why it was important.   It was a book that they read together and was intended just for them at that point.

When Barak Obama was elected President, her children were four and five years old, and there existed no context to help explain to them why this was such an amazing development.  She wrote What Does It Mean To Be Global? to  introduce to them the concept of diversity and accepting others with their differences. She wanted to plant the seed of the idea that we can only be successful within a community if we embrace diversity.  When Rana showed this book to friends, the feedback was so positive that she decided to see about getting it published.  Everyone agreed that her books were refreshing and distinctive.  Of course she knew the publisher could only be one with environmental integrity, but even the most progressive publishers print in China on virgin paper and still use dust jackets.  The Publishing industry as a whole she found was still entrenched in 20th century practices.  Rana saw an opportunity to build a 21st century publishing company.   There were a few elements she knew she wanted to include, the green publishing element was paramount. She sourced recycled paper, soy inks and made her books without dust jackets—superfluous paper that children inevitably remove and waste.  She also wanted to make sure to give back by donating a percentage of the revenue to a charity.  Having grown up with a brother who is a two time survivor of leukemia, Rana knows first hand how important support for the families and children with critical illness can be. Because of her experiences, 10 % of the revenue of her first three books is donated to Starlight Children’s Foundation .

I gave this one to my 13 year old!

Rana picked up the bible of the self-publishing industry The Well Fed Self-Publisher: How To Turn One Book Into A Full Time Living by Peter Bowerman.  Published in 2006, this book became the cornerstone of her research in forming Little Pickle Press.  At that point in time she could not have known that three years later she would be sitting on an experts panel with Peter Bowerman and have the opportunity to meet (and thank) him in person.

She has built a company that has become a certified B Corporation , a community of companies that strive to be the change they seek—environmentally friendly, humanitarian, and good to their employees. Little Pickle Press was recently honored as a Top Ten Best for the World B Corp with 10 employees or fewer.

Our discussion next turned to the power of women. Rana pointed out that she thinks women are gaining prominence in government and boardrooms because of the different way that they approach and solve problems.  Typically, women listen more than they talk and synthesize what they hear to devise strategies. Fewer egos tend to be involved and they know how to calibrate what they hear and observe to solve problems. Her advice to other women starting out is trust your instincts, listen to your inner voice, and rely upon your multifaceted skills and attributes.

This past week Little Pickle Press, won the Appy award in the Muticultural Media App category for “Being Global”.  The Appy Awards are the Oscars of the Digital world, and they pay tribute to the world’s finest and most exciting new apps in every imaginable category. The winners were announced Monday night in San Francisco,  competitor up against Little Pickle Press for the award was Disney’s “It’s a Small World” app.  Three years ago Rana DiOrio, who founded of Little Pickle Press did not know the first thing about the publishing world.   Since its inception in April of 2009 she has founded an Environmentally friendly publishing company, written and published numerous award winning children’s books, and has now successfully conquered the digital publishing world.  Meanwhile donating 10% of all book profits to charity.

The newest book in the What Does It Mean series

I fell in love with the books that Rana had written the moment I encountered them.  The messages they teach are all things I had been trying to impart to my own children for a long time,  finally I had found these comprehensible ways to help my kids understand important topics that can be tough to explain.  I loved the opportunity to find out more about the woman behind them in my interview with Rana DiOrio. I can not wait to watch Little Pickle Press Grow!

 

This month Little Pickle Press is offering the following Specials:

 

  • What Does It Mean To Be Green? is a FREE download in the iBookstore (http://bit.ly/green-ib) and in the Nook Bookstore (http://bit.ly/greennookbook) during the month of March, and all of our other eBooks are discounted.
  • We are offering 25% off and FREE SHIPPING on any order that includes What Does It Mean To Be Green? on our website during the month of March. Just enter LPPGreen2012 to take advantage of the offer.
  • Check back in to Documama.org on Monday for the chance to win all Four Little Pickle Press “What Does It Mean To Be…?” Titles Signed by the Author!