Sunday, December 25, 2011

Joan Casademont: Primitive Love And The Hope Of Forgiveness

When my 91-year-old father lay dying in a Veterans Administration hospital on the other side of the continent, no one told me that I "should go," that I "had to go," or even that wanting to go was a reasonable idea. "My God," my beloved maternal aunt reminded me, "You don't owe the old bastard a thing. If I had a nickel for every time you told me what a rotten father he was..."

"I don't understand why you want to be so nice to him when he was so mean to us," said my sister. "And I've hired a super-competent social worker to make sure all his needs are met, and that he's comfortable. So you don't need to fly all the way across the country when you're a single mom with no help," she announced.

After I hung up the phone, I found myself quietly lamenting the total lack of controlling authority figures in my life. Where were all the stern Catholic voices of my youth when I needed them, the ones who would tell me that I should go, I had to go, that I was a bad person if I didn't? Wait a minute, I reminded myself, with a mental slap. I couldn't stand those shaming voices. And one really big, unexpected perk of crossing over that once-scary line from your 40s to 50 is that you realize you have far less time to listen to the wrong authoritative voice. You look down that road and see Death, waving at you in a friendly manner, or making some obscene gesture, depending upon the day. So what's left is only for you to decide, finally.

As an over-50, divorced single mother, I have become increasingly aware that I am showing my soon-to-be-men two boys, ages 10 and 13, how to behave in the world. Sometimes this burden feels so heavy that I simply have to lie down. From this horizontal position, I considered what my sons would learn from me not going to my dying father's bedside. The "sandwich generation" of which I am a part also makes you ponder how you might wind up being treated, when you're no longer the meat. "Was he a good dad, Mom?," my older son inquired. "Uh-oh," I thought to myself. What if his answer about me is also really complicated...

I called the super-competent social worker. "I am sorry to ask this, but how long do you think my father has exactly?," I inquired, wincing.

"It is impossible for me to say," she answered gently. "But it is a very personal decision, so if your heart tells you that you do have a personal need to spend time with your father, sooner is always better.

I booked the flight immediately. By the time I found my way to my father's bedside, there wasn't too much of him physically left. Weighing about 100 pounds and riddled with lung cancer, and legally blind from the macula degeneration that had gradually taken his sight, my still mentally razor-sharp father didn't even want to smoke anymore. He could hardly breathe. He could, of course, still make me feel stupid. "You shouldn't have gone to all this trouble to come!," he spat at me, outraged. "It was not necessary." But he accepted my help, to at least identify the cafeteria food. And I could rub the anti-itch ointment onto his skeletal back, even though it didn't alleviate his unbearable itchiness. "No, no, no, you're doing it all wrong, rub harder, harder, and dig your nails into the flesh, into the flesh," he instructed.

I tried to distract him. I brought him latte coffees from Starbucks, and fried oysters from his favorite restaurant. "Are you crazy?! You can't afford this, can you?!," he cried, gobbling them down. "Absolutely delicious," he said, smacking his chapped lips.

He slipped in and out of sleep. "I wasn't a very good man, and I'm sorry," he told me. "I had no confidence." He said it simply and quietly, with none of the raging self-pity that dominated his alcoholic youth. "Would you pray for me, and ask the Good Lord to take me?" I patted his still salt-and-pepper, full head of hair before I had to leave. Almost asleep, he opened his sightless eyes. "Me love Jane," he said, quietly. "What?," I asked, not understanding. "Me love Jane," he repeated. "Am I -- Jane?," I asked, the light dawning. He nodded. "So you're -- Tarzan?," I asked. "Yes," he grinned, delighted. There was nothing even remotely peculiar in his meaning; what he was trying to tell me was innocent, and pure.

On my way back home it hit me, how perfectly apt my father's joke was. I wish he'd been able to tell me earlier that he was just an uncivilized man-child, who simply didn't know how to behave. "Was he a good dad, Mom?" my older son asks me again, still trying to get an answer.

"At the time, no, but in the end, yes, because he was sorry about being mean, and said so. He found his courage, and told the truth." My son likes this answer; it has hope in it. I am so glad that I modeled sustaining that hope for my sons-who-will-soon-be-men. I'd like them to have that legacy. So would Tarzan, wherever he is swinging.

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/joan-casademont/forgiveness_b_1164420.html

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Saturday, December 24, 2011

Nils Landgren and Michael Brecker: Don't Let Me Be Lonely Tonight (Little green footballs)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories Stories, News Feeds and News via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/178170517?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Green Business Trend: ?Eco-Packaging? Takes Off

As you wrap, and unwrap, gifts this holiday season, you may notice they?re a little lighter than usual. It might be because more companies are easing up on the packaging ? or at least using eco-friendlier alternatives.

eco packaging

As the green movement grows up, there?s a new movement among businesses to find new, more planet-friendly ways to package their products. Some companies reduced their packaging footprint years ago by eliminating unnecessary plastic and cellophane or replacing non-biodegradable Styrofoam with paper and cardboard. But packaging technology has gotten more sophisticated, and there are higher-quality alternatives these days, from compostable plastic to recycled wood to biodegradable packing peanuts.

Earlier this year, several big companies? including Coca-Cola, Kellogg and Dow Chemical ? banded together to start the American Institute for Packaging and the Environment (Ameripen), an organization that will lobby for evaluating the impact of packaging on the environment and reducing its toll. And some product makers have pledged to stop using pollution-causing PVC plastic in their boxes.

Some of this shift might be due to pressure from major chains: Walmart and Target have put more pressure on their suppliers to use eco-friendlier packaging through their sustainability scoring.

For small businesses, though, determining what kind of packaging alternatives will work isn?t always easy, While there are lots of new, ?eco-friendlier? materials to choose from, small businesses need to be careful and do some research.

Here are a few of the considerations:

  • True environmental benefit. Even though a company may claim its product is offering an eco-friendly alternative, such as ?biodegradable? or ?recyclable,? that doesn?t necessarily mean its environmental footprint is much less than anything else. You need to know how much energy is used to produce it and transport it.
  • Cost. Many eco-friendlier materials are more expensive than ones that are more environmentally harmful. You either have to suck up the extra cost or be able to pass it along to your customers ? which isn?t always realistic. Be sure to understand the cost impact before switching to new packaging.
  • Feasibility. Eco-packaging may sound good, but will it actually be a good replacement for what you already use? It?s possible it won?t be as durable, so it?s important to get samples and test any prospective packaging before adopting it.

Given all these potential pitfalls, what do you do? Talk with other businesses in your industry or other businesses that have explored green packaging options. There are some nonprofits that help businesses adopt eco-friendlier packaging and can provide helpful research. Check out the Sustainable Packaging Coalition, for one.


Eco Packaging Photo via Shutterstock

About the Author

Kelly Spors Kelly Spors is a former small-business and entrepreneurship reporter and blogger for The Wall Street Journal who has also written for Yahoo!, Entrepreneur, NFIB's MyBusiness magazine and The New York Times. Kelly is now a freelance editor and writer based in Minneapolis and has previously managed communications for an environmental non-profit that helps businesses find ways to be greener.

Connect with Kelly Spors:

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Source: http://smallbiztrends.com/2011/12/green-business-trend-eco-packaging.html

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Google TV and Apple TV Could Change Cable TV for the Good (ContributorNetwork)

COMMENTARY | Streaming video is a big deal when it comes to mobile devices. Tablet computers are almost designed with the capability in mind, and many smartphones have the application as well. In fact the popularity of streaming video is putting the squeeze on traditional cable companies and the media companies that create the television shows, but does anyone have an advantage in the race for consumer dollars?

According to the Wall Street Journal, television revenue from advertising, cable subscriptions and the like tally around $150 billion per year, which means there is serious money up for grabs. However, there is little doubt that if Apple and Google have anything to say about television, the entertainment landscape will change in the coming years, especially due to the popularity of mobile devices.

Business Insider reports cable TV should take Google TV seriously. The article mentions the $100 million investment Google is making in original programming for YouTube. However, Netflix is also getting in on the exclusive programming game getting ready to revive "Arrested Development," according to the Los Angeles Times. Plus, The Week is reporting a lot of interesting features on the new Apple TV that could increase the streaming content competition.

Whether or not viewers will shift to the original programming offered by YouTube and Netflix is an interesting question; however, users need something to watch for free (OK, Netflix has a subscription fee) on all those new shiny devices. Television is changing, and there is room for new shows that could start to affect the traditional television viewing process, which is getting home and turning on the TV to see what is on. The change is that now viewers will know what is on, and be able to watch it on several different devices with no additional cost, and that should shake cable companies to the core.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/applecomputer/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ac/20111221/tc_ac/10717879_google_tv_and_apple_tv_could_change_cable_tv_for_the_good

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Friday, December 23, 2011

Most Sick or Disabled Seniors Want Docs to Say How Long They Have (HealthDay)

WEDNESDAY, Dec. 21 (HealthDay News) -- Life expectancy is a topic many disabled seniors want to talk about with their doctors but very few have that discussion, a new study finds.

It included 60 elderly patients with an average age of 78 who had multiple illnesses and disabilities and lived in a community-based, long-term care program in San Francisco. None of the patients had been diagnosed with a specific terminal illness.

Interviews with the patients revealed that 75 percent would want a conversation about their prognosis if their doctor felt they had less than a year to live, while 65 percent would welcome such a dialogue if they likely had fewer than five years to live.

However, only one of the 60 patients reported having such a discussion with a doctor, said the researchers at the San Francisco VA Medical Center and the University of California, San Francisco.

Wanting to prepare for death, making the most of their remaining time and making medical or life decisions were among the most common reasons the patients gave for wanted to discuss their prognosis.

"When physicians bring up prognosis, it's usually thought of as a health issue, but for the person on the receiving end, the conversation is about a lot more than that," lead author Cyrus Ahalt, a geriatrics research coordinator in UCSF's Department of Medicine, said in a university news release.

"We've made big strides in changing the way that doctors communicate prognosis to patients who have cancer, organ diseases or other terminal diagnoses, but this study shows that we still have room to grow in discussing life expectancy with frail older adults who have poor prognosis simply because of multiple physical or cognitive impairments or old age," added principal investigator Dr. Alexander Smith, a physician at SFVAMC and a bioethics expert and assistant professor of medicine in the division of geriatrics.

The study was published online Nov. 30 in the Journal of General Internal Medicine.

More information

The AGS Foundation for Health in Aging has more about communication between seniors and their doctors.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/seniors/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/hsn/20111221/hl_hsn/mostsickordisabledseniorswantdocstosayhowlongtheyhave

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Streamglider Takes On Flipboard And Pulse With Sleek Social Interest And News Reader For The iPad

StreamGliderStreamglider is launching its iPad app today, hoping to disrupt the tablet news consumption and social reader space. Despite competition from Flipboard, Pulse, and many others, Streamglider believes that it provides the most comprehensive iPad experience to date for tracking your social streams, RSS feeds and more via the iPad. The free iPad app allows you to import your social accounts like Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, Flickr and Google Reader and more into a single stream. You can mix and mash multiple sources together (via a drag and drop interface) to create specific topic-focused streams, and share these streams with others. Streamglider will also provide designated streams of content around specific subjects as well.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/IUIiWppcnN8/

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Pilot told of icing before NJ crash that killed 5 (AP)

MORRIS TOWNSHIP, N.J. ? After a normal takeoff and a routine conversation with air traffic controllers about potential icing conditions, a small plane carrying two investment bankers and three others to Georgia headed off into the skies over New Jersey on Tuesday morning.

Minutes later, the high-performance Socata TBM-700 turboprop had spun out of control and crashed in a fireball on a busy highway, killing all five people aboard and narrowly avoiding dozens of cars and trucks speeding by.

Federal investigators were to resume searching the area for wreckage Wednesday morning. The debris was scattered over at least a half-mile, with one section found lodged in a tree a quarter-mile away. The crash closed both sides of busy Interstate 287 for hours on Tuesday.

The New York investment banking firm Greenhill & Co. said two of its managing directors, Jeffrey Buckalew, 45, and Rakesh Chawla, 36, as well as Buckalew's wife and two children, were on the plane. Buckalew was the registered owner of the single-engine plane and had a pilot's license.

National Transportation Safety Board officials said Tuesday the plane wasn't required to have a black box, which would have recorded flight data, but they said investigators would be searching for other memory devices, including GPS, collision avoidance systems or any device with a recordable chip that might yield more information.

The NTSB didn't say what role icing may have played in the crash. But an audio recording available online of the pilot speaking to air traffic controllers in the minutes before the crash offered some early clues.

The pilot was told to maintain an altitude of 10,000 feet as he headed southwest over northern New Jersey as a controller warned him about the conditions in the clouds above ? specifically accumulations of ice particles known as rime.

"There are reports of moderate rime. ... If it gets worse let me know and when center takes your handoff I'll climb you and maybe get you higher," one controller said.

The pilot responded: "We'll let you know what happens when we get in there. And, yeah, if we could go straight through it, that's no problem for us."

Seconds later, another controller is heard telling a different pilot about reports of severe icing at 14,000 feet.

Ice can form on airplanes when temperatures are near freezing and there is visible moisture, such as clouds or rain. The ice adds weight to an aircraft, and rough accumulations known as rime interrupt the flow of air over wings. In extreme cases, a plane can lose so much lift that it falls out of the sky.

Several eyewitnesses to Tuesday's crash described an out-of-control descent.

Will Keyser, who works in maintenance at the Spring Brook Country Club in Morristown, is used to hearing small planes fly over en route to nearby Morristown Memorial Airport. He was near the 13th hole Tuesday when he heard a loud plane overhead.

"It didn't sound quite right," Keyser said, recalling how he and his co-workers all looked up simultaneously. "We kind of lost it in the clouds, it came out of the clouds on the other side of the course, and it didn't look right, it didn't look like the pilot had control."

Keyser said the plane pitched back and forth, and for a moment he thought it was a stunt pilot.

"It was kind of rolling and making circles ? 'cause I've seen air shows before ? so I thought: `Oh, OK;' but then he finally did a nosedive and we realized that was completely wrong."

Greenhill & Co. said Buckalew's wife, Corinne, and the couple's two children, Jackson and Meriwether, were traveling with him.

"The firm is in deep mourning over the tragic and untimely death of two of its esteemed colleagues and members of Jeff's family," the company said in a written statement.

A resident at Chawla's Manhattan apartment building remembered him as being constantly on the go, leaving early and getting home late. Arthur Yellin said that Chawla and his family were "wonderful people" and that the banker doted on his three children.

Authorities said a dog aboard the plane also was killed.

___

Contributing to this report were Associated Press writers Shawn Marsh and Beth DeFalco in Trenton, David Porter in Newark, Christopher Hawley and Cristian Salazar in New York, and Leonard Pallats in Atlanta.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/topstories/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111221/ap_on_re_us/us_plane_crash_highway

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