This is not me

I have lived in many dif­fer­ent places, had more than one career, and done a lot of dif­fer­ent things. So, in case you’ve ever wondered…
I can­not speak Swedish, and this is not me. Nope, nei­ther is this, although it’s fun to see my name on Amazon.
I do not write para­nor­mal romance nov­els, although it sounds like fun and maybe some­day I will.
I have nev­er been, nor ever will be, a mem­ber of the Gor­geous Ladies of Wrestling (G.L.O.W.), although I was a cheer­leader (small ‘c’) and am a mem­ber of the Gor­geous Ladies of Pub­lish­ing (G.L.O.P.).
I would love to be a zookeep­er, but I’m not.
I enjoy play­ing with my cam­era, but I’m not a pro­fes­sion­al pho­tog­ra­ph­er.
Not an exec­u­tive search pro­fes­sion­al, or a finance and busi­ness affairs exec­u­tive, or a sci­ence teacher.
This is DEFINITELY not me.
Per­haps a pseu­do­nym is in order? Any ideas?
Does any­thing inter­est­ing come up if you Google your name?

Two good things go great together!

Star­bucks and (RED) today announced a mul­ti-year part­ner­ship that will give cof­fee lovers a chance to do good every day.
Through­out the hol­i­day sea­son, Star­bucks will con­tribute five cents from the sale of any of (Star­bucks) RED Exclu­sive bev­er­age (the three bev­er­ages that make up the Star­bucks pop­u­lar hol­i­day trio) at all of their US and Cana­di­an stores to the Glob­al Fund to invest in AIDS pro­grams in Africa.
“(RED) is mak­ing remark­able progress in the world­wide effort to address AIDS in Africa,” said Howard Schultz, Star­bucks chair­man, pres­i­dent and CEO. “We have a deep part­ner­ship with cof­fee grow­ing regions in Africa. We are proud to part­ner with our cus­tomers to con­tribute toward an AIDS-free Africa.”
Schultz joined Bono, co-founder of (RED), for today’s announce­ment in front of 10,000 Star­bucks part­ners (employ­ees) at the com­pa­ny’s 2008 Lead­er­ship Con­fer­ence in New Orleans.
“(RED) is com­ing to a cor­ner near you thanks to Star­bucks. I’m very excit­ed to be able to say that,” said Bono, co-founder of (RED). “The busi­ness of Star­bucks with roots in Africa and branch­es all over the world is an ide­al fit for (RED). It’s pret­ty mind-blow­ing to think that mil­lions of peo­ple can buy (RED) going about their dai­ly lives and in doing so raise mil­lions of dol­lars to fight AIDS in Africa. That’s not a bad hit from your caffeine.”
(Star­bucks) RED Exclu­sive Hol­i­day bev­er­ages go on sale Novem­ber 27, 2008 and con­tin­ue through Jan­u­ary 2, 2009.

I’m it!

Wow, I’ve been tagged! I don’t nor­mal­ly do this kind of thing, but I’d do just about any­thing for Jolie, so here goes:

1. What are your nick­names?
One of my best friends called me Spoory Laur (since my maid­en name was Lau­rie Spoor). I guess I’m not real­ly a nick­name kind of gal, though.

2. What was the first movie you bought in VHS or DVD?
Dirty Danc­ing. I still have it! 

3. What is your favorite scent?
Pump­kin pie.

4. What one place have you vis­it­ed that you can’t for­get and want to go back to?Whistler, B.C., my favorite (bor­rowed) “cab­in” in the moun­tains. Thanks, dear friends, for all the won­der­ful moun­tain get­away trips!

5. Do you trust eas­i­ly?
Yes, prob­a­bly too easily.

6. Do you gen­er­al­ly think before you act, or act before you think?
I think before I act, way too much. I just fin­ished read­ing Chris Eboch’s Well of Sac­ri­fice, and I think I need to take a les­son from Eveningstar: some­times you need to act before you think, or the oppor­tu­ni­ty is lost.

7. Is there any­thing that has made you unhap­py these days?
Pol­i­tics, neg­a­tive ad cam­paigns, lies and manip­u­la­tions of the truth, the deep divi­sions and dis­agree­ments in our soci­ety and around the world.

8. Do you have a good body image?
Good? No. Suf­fi­cient? Yes.

9. What is your favorite fruit?
Hmmm… tough call. Peach­es or straw­ber­ries? (You decide; I hate mak­ing decisions.)

10. What web­sites do you vis­it dai­ly?
My Google cal­en­dar, Google read­er, Face­book (in that order).

11. What have you been seri­ous­ly addict­ed to late­ly?
Cof­fee, the all-impor­tant pro­duc­tiv­i­ty enhancer. Face­book, the fun but insid­i­ous pro­duc­tiv­i­ty killer.

12. What kind of per­son do you think the per­son who tagged you is?
Deter­mined, mod­est, gen­er­ous, glam­orous, won­der­ful mother. 

13. What’s the last song that got stuck in your head?
The theme song from I Dream of Jean­nie (no, I have no idea why it’s in there).

14. What’s your favorite item of cloth­ing?
Paja­mas, the fuzzi­er the better.

15. Do you think Rice Krispies are yum­my?
Yes, with or with­out but­ter and marsh­mal­lows. Snap, crack­le, pop!

16. What would you do if you saw $100 lying on the ground?
Just lying there, with no one around and no idea who it belongs to? Well, in that case, I’d pick it up, silly!

17. What items could you not go with­out dur­ing the day?
Cof­fee. Hugs and “I love you”s from my fam­i­ly. (Okay, fam­i­ly comes first, but they don’t come any­where near me until after I’ve had my coffee.)

18. What should you be doing right now?
Clean­ing the car out for the dri­ve down to the Sec­ond Annu­al Kidlit Blog­ging Con­fer­ence!

Now, to tag eight more who haven’t yet been tagged. I’m going to tag a few Face­book friends since they don’t have active blogs that I know of, but hope­ful­ly they can post their answers on their wall or pro­file or something. 🙂

Bernie, Chris, Rob, Jim, Peg­gy, Kir­by, Joni, and
Mol­ly.

DoSomething.org launches fundraising IPO

Accord­ing to a recent press release:

Bor­row­ing pri­vate sec­tor tech­niques, Do Some­thing is issu­ing an IPO that promis­es sig­nif­i­cant Social Return on Invest­ment (SROI). The growth cap­i­tal invest­ment will fos­ter expo­nen­tial growth and bol­ster the orga­ni­za­tion’s self-sus­tain­ing programming.

OK, this is cool, but real­ly just an inter­est­ing way to put out a call to donors and raise funds. Will it work?

Nominate Youth Social Entrepreneurs!

Ashoka’s Youth Ven­ture and Change­mak­ers is part­ner­ing with Sta­ples to launch their first glob­al com­pe­ti­tion to rec­og­nize young lead­ers who are find­ing new ways to cre­ate pos­i­tive change in their com­mu­ni­ties. They are seek­ing the most inspi­ra­tional ideas and projects led by young peo­ple between ages 12 and 24. Spread the word about this ini­tia­tive and nom­i­nate young lead­ers with fan­tas­tic ideas! Now through Octo­ber 15, 2008. Win­ners will be announced Novem­ber 12, 2008.

http://www.changemakers.net/competition/staplesyv/

WooHoo!

I just got back from my first ever SCBWI Sum­mer Con­fer­ence in Los Ange­les, and besides all of the:

  • inspi­ra­tion and infor­ma­tion to be soaked up “like gravy on a biscuit,”
  • won­der­ful­ly cre­ative, tal­ent­ed, gen­er­ous, and adorable people,
  • friv­o­lous fun with friends old and new…

the best part of the whole con­fer­ence is that my teen non­fic­tion man­u­script about how to save the world got nom­i­nat­ed for the Sue Alexan­der award!

So, now I’m feel­ing this awe­some pres­sure and respon­si­bil­i­ty to GET TO WORK! (Along with an irre­sistable urge to break into my hap­py dance.)

Busy, busy, busy…

I haven’t post­ed any new arti­cles for quite awhile now, so you’re prob­a­bly think­ing I’ve been sit­ting at home all day eat­ing bon-bons and watch­ing Oprah. No way! I’ve actu­al­ly been tak­ing a con­scious break from arti­cle writ­ing to focus on a book… or two. What start­ed out as an idea for one mid­dle grade book has now become a pic­ture book biog­ra­phy of Emmanuel Yeboah AND a teen how-to guide for Youth Ven­ture! I’m not sure work­ing on two so total­ly dif­fer­ent books at the same time is a good idea, but they’re slow­ly mov­ing along.

I also joined the Advi­so­ry Com­mit­tee of our region­al SCBWI chap­ter last year, and was very busy help­ing to orga­nize our 17th Annu­al Writ­ing and Illus­trat­ing for Chil­dren Con­fer­ence. It was one of the most daunt­ing, eye-open­ing and reward­ing expe­ri­ences of my life, and I tru­ly can’t wait to do it again!

And now, back to work…

Wheel‑y cool!


What has more kid appeal than a gigan­tic truck that dri­ves from town to town look­ing for tires to chomp? One that cleans up the envi­ron­ment at the same time! Here’s one com­pa­ny’s lat­est inven­tion intend­ed to help clean up waste tires in the U.S. and Canada.

Child specialists


No, not the spe­cial­ists who know a lot about chil­dren. Rather, the chil­dren them­selves who know a lot about their cho­sen spe­cial­ty. Is it bet­ter for today’s kids to be well-round­ed gen­er­al­ists or hyper-focused elites? That is the ques­tion I exam­ined over the sum­mer. You can read all about it here.

The risks and rewards of ‘spe­cial­iz­ing’ ear­ly, Learn­ingMap, Octo­ber 2007

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