So, what’s YOUR generation?

A lot of quoting from Penelope Trunk follows. My answers and score to the quiz are below. What generation are you part of, really? Take this test. If you want to know how old you really are, look at the media you use rather than the generation you were born into. (snip) Here’s an idea: We should determine our generation not by our age but by how we use media. This comes from Margaret Weigel, […]

Just in case you were wondering…

…even though I doubt you were: I’m 83% feminist (via PunditMom), and a “New Left Hipster,” married to a “Peace Patroller” (via Karen on verbatim) – and I’m totally OK with that :-). UPDATE 6/23 – TallGuy took the feminist quiz and outscored me (!) at 96%. Good to know one more way in which I chose wisely :-). Subscribe to Blog via Email Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive […]

Single-minded

The truth is, I’ve spent most of my adult life married (from age 19 – yes, I know it was too young, but there was a baby on the way – to 38), and it’s been less than a year since I reclaimed that status. Even so, some points in Leslie’s “On Balance” commentary reviewing the new book Now and Not Yet by Jennifer Marshall, which examines single life from a conservative Christian perspective, struck […]

Booking Through Thursday – “School days”

This week’s BTT question: Since school is out for the summer (in most places, at least), here’s a school-themed question for the week: Do you have any old school books? Did you keep yours from college? Old textbooks from garage sales? Old workbooks from classes gone by? How about your old notes, exams, papers? Do you save them? Or have they long since gone to the great Locker-in-the-sky? My high-school books are long gone. I […]

Sing it, sister!

Regardless of all those articles in women’s magazines concerning finding/catching/living with/losing men, women’s relationships with each other can be more complex, nuanced, and interesting. (No offense to the guys – you know I love some of you ;-D.) I think this is what draws me to a lot of what I read – women authors, female protagonists, women’s issues, and women blogging about their lives and concerns. PunditMom posted a review of a new book […]

Speaking my mind on Work It, Mom!

Work It, Mom! is starting a weekly article/essay contest, and this week’s topic is “If money weren’t an issue, would you work and what would you do?” Nataly raised a related question in her blog a couple of weeks ago, and was interested in further discussion of the topic, so here it is. Yes, I’d work. I’d do something different, though. Read about it here. The highest rated article submitted, as voted by readers on […]

“Feeding” the need to read

I’m trying to find ways to manage my blog reading, since it’s come close to getting the better of me a few times lately. Ironically, reading too many productivity blogs keeps you from getting very much done. I haven’t really found the blogs I read through random searching. The first few came via major and/or mainstream media websites like Salon, Slate and Amazon.com’s blogs. I’d follow their links to various posts, and then I discovered […]

Unsolicited advice for the newbie

(Wow, I guess this counts as being “published!” I’ve submitted an article related to this post to Work It, Mom! and it was posted today!) Dear Chris, (Since you blog under your real name, I’m not afraid to use it here.) Congratulations! You’re about to take the first step into your post-college professional life. If what I’ve been reading lately is true, you could have as many as 8 jobs before you’re 30, so you […]

Booking Through Thursday – “Dessert first?”

Booking Through Thursday is a blog that posts a reading-related question every week. You’re supposed to answer the question on your own blog, then go back to the original post and add a comment linking to your response. It seems like a cool way to discover new blogs (and get them to discover you, too), so I’m trying it for the first time with this week’s question. Do you cheat and peek ahead at the […]

Family issues from all angles…

Kelly Watson, one of the bloggers on Work It, Mom!, posted yesterday about domestic division of labor. One of her best points was made as part of a self-described rant: women don’t inherently have more skills in home-keeping or child-raising just because we’re women, and the partners/fathers in our lives are just as capable at the these things as we are. We need to do more than just encourage their participation – we need to […]

I’m not the only one who wonders

It’s kind of sad that I haven’t posted anything for a week. The feed reader got really backed up – hey, I keep finding interesting stuff and adding it! – and I’m starting to leave comments here and there on other blogs, but it seems like the more time I spend on those, the less I have for my own. (And then there’s the paying job, which still feels like it will never be caught […]

I read, therefore I am…who, exactly? A “mom-blogger” or not?

I’m a relatively new resident of the “blogosphere,” both as a participant (as you can tell from the archives) and as a reader/follower. I follow blogs on various topics – productivity and self/life improvement, career and work life, pop culture, news, and quite a few I have tagged as “just for fun.” My interest in women’s issues, lately centered on things related to the topic of “balance” – the whole “mommy wars” thing, “opting out,” […]