Thursday, January 31, 2013

The 5 highest paying jobs in 2013

By Lewis Humphries?

The new year is a time for reflection and self-assessment as we analyze our achievements of the previous 12 months and establish new goals for the year ahead.?It therefore provides an ideal opportunity for individuals to evaluate their chosen career paths and the existing employment market to determine whether or not they are achieving job satisfaction and optimizing their earning potential.

While identifying lucrative and prosperous career options is worthwhile, it can be particularly difficult within an unstable macro-environment. A quick glance at the U.S. economy supports this, as although job openings rose to a four-month high in October and triggered an increase in consumer spending, the financial markets have faltered amid concerns over the fiscal negotiations taking place in Congress.

The Five Highest-Paying Jobs of 2013

With this in mind, it can be difficult to determine which jobs are likely to offer the greatest monetary rewards in 2013. The following options all offer excellent financial remuneration while appealing to a broad range of social demographics:

Veterinarians

The role of the typical veterinarian is often misunderstood, as although they predominantly care for pets, they also tend to ailing livestock and laboratory animals. Thanks to a rising national pet population and the increasing demand for livestock as a food supply, veterinarians have been able to boost their earnings while enjoying enhanced job security. The role itself offers an average annual remuneration of $82,040, while the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) has reported that the number of individuals employed in this occupation will rise by 35.9% between 2010 and 2020.

Petroleum Engineers

While a career as a veterinarian may offer excellent remuneration, applicants must earn the difficult-to-obtain doctor of veterinary medicine degree and an independent state license. These barriers to entry are not uncommon, as occupations within the engineering sector are also extremely academic and demand a high standard of education. Their rewards often reflect this, however, as those who work as petroleum engineers can testify. Employed to develop innovative methods for extracting oil and gas from underground deposits, qualified and experienced workers can take home an average annual salary of $114,080.

Air Traffic Controller

Not all high-paying job opportunities require a bachelor's degree, which will come as some comfort for those who do not enjoy advanced academic pursuits. The role of an air traffic controller provides a relevant example, as although applicants require only an associate's degree to qualify they can expect to earn an annual salary of approximately $108,040 once they have gained industry experience. The only potential downside of this career choice is that the outlook for the next eight years is mixed, with the BLS suggesting that there will be a 3% decline in job creation between now and 2020.

Teleradiologists

While the news that Apple plans to invest up to $100 million in domestic manufacturing in 2013 offers an insight into the rising popularity of insourcing, the trend of remote working remains prominent across several industries. This is especially true among health care professionals, who are increasingly being hired to offer remote assistance and specialist consultancy services. Teleradiologists, whose role is to evaluate digitally transmitted patient images and offer their opinion through videoconferencing, are able to work independently while earning anywhere between $100,000 and $400,000 per year.

Online Post-Secondary Teacher ? Remote learning is also an increasingly popular trend as individuals look to capitalize on technological advancements to access more flexible and cost-effective educational courses. With an estimated 57% of Americans believing that students do not get value for the money that they spend while pursuing a degree, online post-secondary teachers have been able to prosper by lecturing remotely and delivering a lower-cost alternative. Online lecturers can earn an average annual wage of $62,000, while also being afforded the opportunity to establish their own working schedule and long-term career path.

The Bottom Line ? Not only do these job opportunities prove that it is possible to succeed in an unstable economy, they also offer an insight into the changing nature of education and the traditional workplace. So just as bachelor's degrees are no longer a prerequisite for high-earning jobs, working remotely has also emerged as an increasingly lucrative practice.

This makes it easier for you to develop your own unique career path in 2013, despite the uncertainly that continues to engulf the U.S. economy. As long as you are flexible, open to change and have a tangible skill set that is in high demand, then there has never been a better opportunity to maximize your earning potential. ? Originally posted on Investopedia.com

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Source: http://clevelandwest.woio.com/news/news/88751-5-highest-paying-jobs-2013

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Mass. gov. picks ex-aide Cowan as interim senator

FILE - This undated file photo released by the Massachusetts Governor's office shows William "Mo" Cowan, right, former chief of staff for Gov. Deval Patrick. On Wednesday, Jan. 30 2013, Patrick will appoint Cowan as interim senator to fill our the term for John Kerry, who was confirmed to be the next secretary of state Tuesday, Jan. 29, 2013. (AP Photo/Massachusetts Governor's Office, File)

FILE - This undated file photo released by the Massachusetts Governor's office shows William "Mo" Cowan, right, former chief of staff for Gov. Deval Patrick. On Wednesday, Jan. 30 2013, Patrick will appoint Cowan as interim senator to fill our the term for John Kerry, who was confirmed to be the next secretary of state Tuesday, Jan. 29, 2013. (AP Photo/Massachusetts Governor's Office, File)

(AP) ? Gov. Deval Patrick has named his former chief-of-staff William "Mo" Cowan to serve as interim U.S. senator for Massachusetts until a special election can be held this summer to fill the seat left vacant by John Kerry's confirmation as the nation's new secretary of state.

A person with knowledge of the appointment who spoke on condition of anonymity because an official announcement has not been made said Patrick picked Cowan, who will serve until the June 25 special election. An announcement was expected later Wednesday morning.

Patrick gave little indication whom he favored during his deliberations. The only possible candidate Patrick confirmed speaking with was former Congressman Barney Frank, and then only after Frank told reporters he'd spoken with Patrick.

Michael Dukakis, the former governor and 1988 Democratic presidential nominee, and Victoria Kennedy, widow of U.S. Sen. Edward Kennedy, had also been mentioned as possible candidates for the interim post.

Cowan's appointment also signals the official start of the special election race. So far the only announced candidate is Democratic U.S. Rep. Edward Markey. Fellow Democratic Congressman Stephen Lynch also is weighing a run and is expected to announce his final decision soon.

Former U.S. Sen. Scott Brown, who won the 2010 special election to fill the seat left vacant by the death of longtime Democratic Sen. Edward Kennedy, has not announced whether he will run in the special election.

Brown, who is still popular in Massachusetts despite his unsuccessful re-election campaign last year, would be considered a frontrunner with a campaign effort that could easily be revived and an ability to raise tens of millions of dollars.

Brown also has some hurdles, including his loss last year to Democratic U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren.

A primary is scheduled for April 30.

The candidates face a tight schedule to raise money and convince voters to put them in the Senate.

Massachusetts Secretary of State William Galvin said he's ready to immediately release nomination papers. Candidates will have four weeks to collect the 10,000 signatures they need to get on the ballot.

Markey has already publicly challenged all Democratic and Republican candidates who might jump into the special election to agree to keep outside groups from spending money on political ads. He said he wants a deal similar to the so-called "people's pledge" agreed to by Brown and Warren in last year's Senate race.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-01-30-Massachusetts%20Senate/id-f3fb37f43b264858bfd9e0dab580aa25

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'Six Little McGhees' parents talk 50-diaper days

By Ree Hines, TODAY contributor

The "terrible twos" are tough enough for most parents, but Rozonno and Mia McGhee are experiencing the phenomenon six times over -- all at once.

The stars of "Six Little McGhees" stopped by TODAY Tuesday morning to share just what it's like to raise sextuplets while the world watches.

"It's extremely chaotic," Rozonno explained. "There's no controlling them."

Mom Mia agreed, adding, "We're outnumbered, and they know it."

But don't mistake their overwhelming situation for an unhappy one. The couple might not feel like they're in control, but they're right where they want to be.

"We waited 10 years to even get a pregnancy, so of course, I'm happy," Mia assured. "I'm happy I have them."

Having them requires "a lot of prayer" according to Mia and "everything and then some" according to Rozonno, but in terms any parent can understand, it requires between 45 and 50 diapers a day.

Still, the reality TV stars aren't looking forward to putting the diapers behind them just yet.

"I'm not looking forward to potty training," Rozonno said. "That's just mind-blowing."

See more of the McGhees on "Six Little McGhees" Wednesday nights at 8 p.m. on Discovery Fit & Health.

More in The Clicker:

Source: http://theclicker.today.com/_news/2013/01/29/16754078-six-little-mcghees-parents-talk-chaos-and-50-diaper-days?lite

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Tuesday, January 29, 2013

How to Sell Your Home By Yourself: Advice for the FSBO

For Sale by Owner, TorontoDear For-Sale-By-Owner Seller on MLS:

I understand that you want to make as much money on your sale as possible and that it isn?t cheap to sell a house. But I fear you don?t know the whole story. Now I won?t pretend to be unbiased ? I?m a REALTOR after all and I make a living by selling houses like yours. But there are a few things you should know about being a For Sale By Owner (FSBO), and I?m betting the company you?re paying peanuts to simply put it on MLS isn?t telling you:

1. If you want to sell your home, you need to be prepared to show it. When I call you to make an appointment to bring my client on Wednesday, telling me that you ?you have hockey Wednesday night but might be home on the weekend so, check back with me on Saturday and I?ll see if I?m around? just doesn?t work. There are plenty of other houses and condos for my client to see, and neither of us is likely to schedule our lives around your unconfirmed schedule. Showing your home is time-consuming and you need to be flexible.?

2. Offering me a $1 commission to bring you a Buyer is not only insulting, it?s not likely going to work. Yes, I will show your home to my client even though your neighbour is offering me 2.5% and the $1 you think my time is worth won?t even cover my gas to drive to your home. But you should know that my Buyer is contractually bound to pay me 2.5% if you don?t, so the real price of your house is 2.5% higher then you have it listed for. Here?s the thing: my Buyer knows I?m worth more than $1 and they don?t want to pay you the same for your house as your neighbour?s house AND pay me 2.5%. I guess they don?t want you to pocket that 2.5% that your neighbour is paying his REALTOR. Buyers can do the math too.

3. I know you think you have nicest house ever and those renovations in 1993 were expensive but you?re probably priced wrong. Pricing a house isn?t easy and it is a moving target. How much I think your house is worth today is probably not the same as I?ll think it?s worth next month or maybe even next week. How much you should sell your home for will change depending on the house that sold last night, the new listings in your neighbourhood that came up for sale today and what?s happening in the overall market. Are you staying on top of the market that closely? And I hope you have good negotiating skills by the way, you?ll need them.?

4. It?s not true that houses sell themselves ? you need to actually market the property. Sure, some people are lucky and have the perfect house in the perfect condition on the best street in a top neighbourhood, and maybe their house will sell itself. But that isn?t most people and it?s probably not you. Even Apple invests in marketing and their products are pretty spectacular.?

5. ?I know you decided to hire a company to help give your home exposure on MLS, but the company that listed your home on MLS for $1,000 probably doesn?t have great success rates and you may just have wasted $1,000. According to this blog, only 52% and 43% of homes listed by the top two companies that provide this service sold in 2012. Those are pretty brutal stats for Toronto?s hot 2012 real estate market. I know those companies tell you that they want to save you money, but they just pocketed over $1,000,000 in fees for houses that didn?t sell. Ouch.

Don?t believe the stats? Consider that Colby Sambrotto, founder of ForSaleByOwner.com, couldn?t sell his own New York condo?so he turned to a realtor?and sold it for $150,000 more than the original list price, covering the commission several times over. Not exactly a ringing endorsement of his product (other than how good it was for making him money; the condo was worth $2.15M).

6. ?I hope you?re prepared for the legal landmines that come with the sale of your house. I know your lawyer can help you with the paperwork, but there?s a lot more to selling a house than just an agreement of purchase and sale. Specifically, I hope you know what you need to disclose to potential buyers so that you stay out of court, and that you?re ready for the ?stuff? that comes up before closing?and it always does. It?s never fun to deal with.

7. ?If you don?t think hiring a REALTOR is worth the money, maybe you?ve been speaking to the wrong REALTOR. Marketing, negotiation, staging, pricing and understanding real estate law are skills that vary significantly from agent to agent and do impact the price you get for your home. ?

Now please understand, Mr. or Mrs. FSBO, that I wish nothing but the best for you. Sometimes selling a home on your own works, sometimes it doesn?t. And if we happen to meet across the negotiating table, I?ll do my best to represent my client?good luck.

Source: http://www.getwhatyouwant.ca/2013/01/28/what-you-need-to-know-to-sell-your-house-yourseldear-for-sale-by-owner/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=what-you-need-to-know-to-sell-your-house-yourseldear-for-sale-by-owner

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Customer Service Flub Hurts Wal-Mart - Business, finances, forex

A customer service flub by Wal-Mart employees has put the retail giant on the front page. Small to medium sized businesses can be hurt just as easily by customer service issues. Make it a priority to keep your customer first and your brand will flourish as a result.

Customer Service Faux Pas

Wal-mart employees embarrass cancer survivor. You would probably be horrified to see a story like this one about your business on a news site or on the evening news. Wal-Mart employees allegedly gave an unnamed customer such a hard time when she tried to return a purchase that she eventually felt the need to show employees the scars she had received as part of her cancer treatment. Huffington Post

Retailer apologizes to customer for poor treatment. Wal-Mart apologized to the customer attempting to return a $13.00 book after employees questioned the validity of her photo ID because chemotherapy had caused her to loose her long blond hair shown in the picture. An apology is the least your business should do when attempting to correct a customer service error. WTVM.com

Wal-Mart introduces self-service kiosks. The mega-retailer is also introducing 10,000 self-service kiosks in hundreds of stores this year. Automation can improve customer experience, but some feel it can also limit the human touch. In fact, even as Wal-Mart gears up, some retailers are already dropping their self-service efforts.?Computerworld

Improving your Customer Service

Pay attention to customer complaints. Wal-Mart has learned the hard way that paying attention to complaints can help improve customer experience. Customers are more comfortable with voicing complaints, according to research. Small business owners can learn from this too. bOnline Blog

Under promise and over deliver. Business consultants Harry and Sally Vaishnav blog about promising more than you can deliver and its consequences. Customers will always be satisfied with your products or services when you keep your word.?Small Biz Viewpoints

20 tips for better customer service. Valentine Belonwu shares these pointers for better customer service. Here are some suggestions to improve customer experience: Be responsive, keep customers informed, and show them you care. Small Business Trends

Here are more suggestions. Some investments will improve customer experience even more. Check out the competition. Build a team. Gather customer feedback. Wal-Mart and other businesses have a lot to learn to improve service. KSL Training

The post Customer Service Flub Hurts Wal-Mart appeared first on Small Business Trends.

Source

Source: http://news.business-news-blog.eu/customer-service-flub-hurts-wal-mart/

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Engineers use evolution to improve solar cell design

15 hrs.

Scientists are using principles of natural selection to evolve a more efficient solar cell.

Engineers at Northwestern University wrote a computer program that "mates" design elements and assesses the fitness of their "offspring" to come up with the most efficient possible organic solar cell. Organic solar cells are made with the so-called organic elements ? carbon, oxygen and nitrogen ? and are cheaper to make, lighter and more flexible than the traditional silicon cells available in solar panels today.

Organic cells aren't as efficient at turning the sun's energy into electricity as silicon cells, however. Many research groups are working to improve organic solar cells' efficiency. If they work well, such cells could go into? electricity-producing windows ?or clothes.

In their work, the Northwestern researchers focused on the top layer of an organic solar cell, called the scattering layer, which traps photons from sunlight. They wanted a scattering layer that would hold photos for a greater amount of time.

"We wanted to determine the geometry for the scattering layer that would give us optimal performance," Cheng Sun, a mechanical engineer and one of the creators of the new organic solar cell,? said in a statement. "But with so many possibilities, it's difficult to know where to start, so we looked to laws of natural selection to guide us."

Sun and his colleagues' program simulated more than 20 generations of matings to come up with their final design. The program also mimicked the biological processes of mutation and an exchange of traits called crossing over.

The resulting design traps photons for three times as long as the Yablonovitch Limit, which describes how long a photon is likely to stay in a semiconducting material. Researchers have only been able to reach and break the Yablonovitch Limit in the last few years.?

The engineers? published their work ?Jan. 3 in the journal Scientific Reports.

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Copyright 2013 TechNewsDaily, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/futureoftech/engineersscientists-evolve-super-efficient-solar-cell-1C8124835

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App.net gives users 10GB of cloud storage, its File API to set social data free

Appnet gives users 10GB of cloud storage, its File API to set social data free

We thought App.net had eyes only for Twitter when the project was funded and garnered its first 20,000 customers. Today, a post on the company blog reveals that its sights are set much higher than mere messaging. Rather than provide just an ad-free alternative to Twitter, it turns out App.net plans to become a social app platform through its new File API and cloud storage services. The API gives devs the tools needed to build any and all social applications they can dream up -- from photo sharing apps to collaboration tools.

Additionally, App.net is giving annual and dev accounts a 10GB cloud locker. That storage can, in turn, be leveraged for simple file sharing by users and as a repository for social data that can be accessed by apps built with the API. So, photos, messages and other info from an App.net account can be fully controlled by users and can be accessed by any social app they choose. This is a stark contrast to Facebook or Google+, where access to such data is controlled by those companies. Of course, the new platform's only as good as its apps, so interested devs should head on down to the source, grab the API, and get started building the next-gen social network.

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Via: The Verge

Source: App.net API Documentation, App.net Blog, Github

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/01/28/app-net-10gb-cloud-storage-file-api/

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Emotional Abuse and Your Faith: Crazy Love and Domestic violence

Leslie Morgan Steiner has a video about, ?Crazy Love?.? I enjoyed it because she approached the subject of domestic violence in a some what different manner than most.? Keep in mind the video is only 15 minutes long, and she can?t touch on everything.? You can see by the comments on the TED website that some found her short approach refreshing, and others felt she left to much out.

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I wanted to take parts of what she said, and maybe glance at why some just don?t see (victims and non victims) the ?crazy love? as she put for what it is.? Victims no matter whom they are ? male, female, child ? should be able to identify with parts or all of it.

I was 22. I had just graduated from Harvard College. I had moved to New York City for my first job as a writer and editor at Seventeen magazine. I had my first apartment, my first little green American Express card, and I had a very big secret. My secret was that I had this gun loaded with hollow-point bullets pointed at my head by the man who I thought was my soulmate, many, many times. The man who I loved more than anybody on Earth held a gun to my head and threatened to kill me more times than I can even remember. I'm here to tell you the story of crazy love, a psychological trap disguised as love, one that millions of women and even a few men fall into every year. It may even be your story.

Let?s stop to think about the words, ?crazy love? just for a moment.? I realize that isn?t a biblical term, but it is a good definition of the type of love you see in relationships with domestic violence.? You have abusers that tell their victims they are the worse type of person, and that is why they abuse.? Then you have the victim that feels the need to fix, and views the abuser as a soul mate type of individual.?

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Keep in mind I don?t wish to place those descriptions into a box, and that I?m generalizing here!? Abusers have all kinds of reasons as to WHY they do what they do.? Victims may not feel the ?soul mate? part, but do feel love for them.

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The problem I see is most don?t recognize the word ?crazy? in front of the word love, and the reason it was placed there.? Its not just the victims or abusers that don?t clue into the concept, but also general society as well.? All we have to do is look at how to many in society ? within the church or out ? respond to domestic violence.

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Let glance at how this ?crazy love? begins:

One of the smartest things Conor did, from the very beginning, was to create the illusion that I was the dominant partner in the relationship. He did this especially at the beginning by idolizing me. We started dating, and he loved everything about me, that I was smart, that I'd gone to Harvard, that I was passionate about helping teenage girls, and my job. He wanted to know everything about my family and my childhood and my hopes and dreams. Conor believed in me, as a writer and a woman, in a way that no one else ever had. And he also created a magical atmosphere of trust between us by confessing his secret, which was that, as a very young boy starting at age four, he had been savagely and repeatedly physically abused by his stepfather, and the abuse had gotten so bad that he had had to drop out of school in eighth grade, even though he was very smart, and he'd spent almost 20 years rebuilding his life. Which is why that Ivy League degree and the Wall Street job and his bright shiny future meant so much to him. If you had told me that this smart, funny, sensitive man who adored me would one day dictate whether or not I wore makeup, how short my skirts were, where I lived, what jobs I took, who my friends were and where I spent Christmas, I would have laughed at you, because there was not a hint of violence or control or anger in Conor at the beginning. I didn't know that the first stage in any domestic violence relationship is to seduce and charm the victim.

What abusers tend to do is make this person feel very special, and I never thought about the part of creating them to be the ?dominant? partner in the relationship.? Keep in mind it isn?t the type of dominant we normally hear about.? Remember the word ?CRAZY? here!?

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What is the crazy part?? Remember in her story he idolized all that she was and did.? Abusive personalities then concentrate on breaking down the ?dominant? traits they felt so lovely before.? I guess they feel that is what makes them dominant, and yet all that they loved about that person to begin with is gone.? They end up frustrated, and the victim completely destroyed.? No one wins, and everyone loses.

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Its all part of the dance.? We can all look back at abusive relationships, and recognize the idolizing part afterwards.? It?s not so easy to see at the time, because the early stages of falling in love tends to be described as:?? sweep them off their feet.? In healthy relationships the ?adoring? part stays, but you aren?t so easily sweep up in the moment anymore.? You move on to the next stage of working on the whole of your relationship, and you grow to love the person more and more in different ways.? It?s different, but still awesome.? Your firm foundation is present, and now its time to build up and out from there.

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Before I go on lets picture a group of small children, and one of the children just received a new toy that they love.? Their whole world at that point revolves around this new possession that is all theirs!?? This type of thinking is normal for a young child, and at times they can get very possessive of it.?? They don?t want to share it, and no one can touch or play with it.? They might do something to it, or break it, or change it in a way that they don?t like!? Along comes their friend to see what all the excitement is about, and they aggressively pushed away.? ?It?s MINE!? you hear screamed.? We have all seen this scene played out at one time or another.? Then you have caregiver or parent come and attempt to teach the child the what's, whys, and how's of sharing, and learning to be better friend.

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In abusive relationships you see similar dynamics.? What may seem like early stages of being swept off you feet now turns into a reality of YOU being their possession.? Think of a young child with a favorite NEW toy in which they refuse to share with others.? The difference is you no longer have a caregiver or parent to enforce how their behavior and attitude is wrong.? After all, they are an adult at this point.?

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In healthy relationships you can point this out, but in abusive relationships such statements are returned with violence.?? It?s similar to the dynamic of the young child being told by another child that they need to share their new toy, and they refuse to.? You don?t have someone helping them realize this is a immature trait that leads to selfishness.? You are ?theirs? and they will do what they will with you.? A young child can be taught, but abusive person will remind you they will do what they want, when they want, and how they want.? If you don?t like it?? Tough!

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Most people will attempt to ?reason? with such a circumstance, and sadly that is when the abuse escalates to very scary levels.? Since you are no more than a possession to them they do not realize the irrational nature of their behavior.? What they do realize once they have calmed down there is the distance between them and their victim.? Their response to that distance isn?t rational either.?

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They will then use your ?dominant? position within the relationship against you, and then manipulative the past to make them look like the ?true? victim.? They need your help since they were the abused child of the stepfather, and they FOUGHT all their life to get where they are now.? YOU are their partner, and if you love them enough you will help them evolve.? You will help them to get your level of ?dominance?.?? Yes, it?s a crazy type of dominance as well.? It?s a brand new definition that Webster?s dictionary hasn?t even considered yet.

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They will pick one trait at a time (most of the time anyway) that they ?loved? in the past, and demand that it be altered or stopped all together.? This trait is the cause of all the tension within the relationship.? They will point out that you look ?stuck up? or ?better than everyone else? when this trait is present.? That mysteriously turns into how the world sees it the same way they do, but they were brave enough to finally point it out to you.? How you were lucky that they were gracious enough to live with it up until this point, and they had every right to finally SNAP!? YOU are just to uppity to admit it.

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This is also the time they start to use all those secrets that were revealed in that ?magically atmosphere? of trust in the beginning of the relationship.? After all, they were not the only ones that were sharing during that time of excitement.? Those secrets between the two of you at one time were received with empathy, compassion, and love.? It now is being used against you, and to make you feel badly about yourself.

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I will use an example in this case.? As I have written about myself in the past I wasn?t given much guidance in certain areas growing up.? Lets pretend for now it was in the area of cleaning up the house.? Now in the beginning of the relationship I might have shared that I felt inadequate because I didn?t know how to do something in regards to cleaning the house.?? How I try my hardest now ? because under the surface it makes me feel better.?

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In response your new partner makes you feel so much better about this aspect of your past, and they will love you EVEN if it were true ? which of course they believe its not.? They see you as one of the tidiest people they know in so many areas, and they will be there to remind you about those ? and always make you feel better.? I know silly example, but lets use to get view the principal here!? The basic point is everyone has tender spots, and insecurities in some areas.?

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In a healthy relationship you realize the lines in the sand with your spouse or partner that you do not cross.? You don?t cross them, and you realize your spouse wouldn?t either.? I?m not saying in times of tension humans aren?t tempted to, because we are all capable of this.? If we value the relationship on any level?? We realize the trust that would be destroyed on some level if we crossed that line during the uproar.? It?s basic respect of any relationship.? That?s not to say you might not say something else hurtful or stupid, but you also know where the lines are drawn.

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The abusive person sees no line in the sand, except when it comes to them.? You are the child?s toy in our story above, and as their possession there is no need for boundaries.?? So there is nothing wrong with reminding you that since you grew up NOT knowing how to clean a house that lets just face facts here ? you a slob when it comes to 98% of things you do in life!? It?s the truth, and they shouldn?t have to hide it!? Notice they don?t just use the ?house? only, but makes sure to include that 98%.? It will be useful for them in the future.? Why?? You were defined as a slob, and they will use it in most areas of disagreement the future as well.? Your secrets are now turned into ammunition.

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At the same time?? As we see with most con men in life they also have learned the art of manipulation.? The whole entire conversation will again turn to them, and their woes in life.? Some abusive personalities will turn on the water works (tears) at this point, but others use different tactics.? Remember con men have a way of turning their ugly actions around, and make it about the injustices towards them.?

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That aspect isn?t all that uncommon, and YES there are different ways of doing it.? For example, when Jack Schaap was arrested and jailed within the last year for fooling around with a child.? The parties that he had wrapped around his little finger were the first to say he was one of the most Godly men they knew, and how everyone makes mistakes.?

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We have one small grain of truth there (everyone makes mistakes), but the overall principal of the sin is completely lost on them.? No doubt it took time and effort for Jack Schaap (or certain circles of the IFB in general) to mold these people to think this way.? Abusive partners do the same thing in some ways.? They have a way of warping reality, and their campaigns of minimizing the abuse is very successful.

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I think in some ways people in church or in general society have a hard time realizing just about anyone can get taught up in something very ugly and dangerous.? It?s easier to think of others as either totally na?ve or stupid then to realize its happened in history to many times to count.? It?s easier to think you are immune, and can?t be manipulated.? In reality its just the opposite.

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I guess it was interesting to me Leslie?s prospective on being made the dominate person in the relationship.? In reality, she was only speaking of qualities or characteristics of her that were thought to be positive.? Gifts, if you will.? Instead of appreciating those gifts, and realizing its an asset to the relationship?? They are turned into threats of the abuser?s need for dominance and control.? Yes, indeed doing your best to destroy what you claimed you love is a crazy love for sure.? It certainly isn?t the type that Jesus would have us portray towards others.


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Vicki Larson: The Best Relationship To Have After Divorce

"So, what are you and 'J' going to do?" a friend asked recently.

"J" is my boyfriend and we do a lot of things, some of which I'm much too discreet to discuss publicly. I needed clarification.

"What do you mean?"

"Are you ever going to get married or live together or something like that?"

Oh, that question. It's not the first time I've heard it. "J" and I have been in a committed monogamous relationship for almost eight years (well, with a year of non-monogamy early on), and he lives in his house and I live in mine. Neither of us wants to get married -- he's done it once and I've done it twice -- and we're not sure we want to live together either.

Our relationship doesn't look like a relationship is "supposed" to look like, and so people feel uncomfortable about it.

"Why don't you want to live together?" After all, isn't that what people who love each other do?

Relationships used to be that way, when we had little choice. But since there are so many ways to be a couple now, why do we still think they have to be that way? And once you're divorced with kids, there are many compelling reasons not to have your relationship look like that.

When his and my kids were young, mashing two families together seemed, well, scary. I know people do it all the time, creating their own versions of the Brady Bunch to various degrees of success. But since 60 percent of all second marriages end in divorce, and since blended families often create a mess for everyone -- you, your new spouse, your former spouse and his/her new spouse, as well as the kids -- and since second marriages don't necessarily lead to marital satisfaction, why would I want to marry again?

Oh sure, we could have lived together. That's not the message I wanted to send to my kids, however. Plus, the idea of putting them through another split if things didn't work out was too painful to even think about; one divorce for kids is more than enough.

It's not to say that sometimes I don't long to come home to what seems familiar -- someone to share stories of our day with over dinner and a warm body to snuggle next to every night instead of three or four a week. There are many pleasures that come with living with someone, which, between my two marriages, I did for nearly 20 years.

And then there are the not-so-pleasurable things that come from living with someone for years.

We start to get annoyed by their habits -- you know, the ones they always had, the ones we used to find "charming." We complain that they're not doing their share of (insert child-care, cleaning, yard work, laundry, etc., here). We get upset because they're spending too much time (insert watching sports, on the computer, playing video games, hanging out with friends, fussing over the kids, shopping, etc., here). All of those things lead to disappointment, anger, maybe even resentment, and so we stop having sex. And we start taking each other for granted.

Don't think cohabiting gets you off the hook, either; you don't have to be married to take each other for granted, as Susan Sarandon discovered after splitting from Tim Robbins after 23 years of cohabitation and having two children together.

"I thought that if you didn't get married you wouldn't take each other for granted as easily. I don't know if after twenty-something years that was still true," she told The Telegraph in 2010.

But, marriage, the institution, doesn't make us do or not do anything; the people in the marriage are responsible for how they act. Taking each other for granted is not part of any marriage vow as far as I know.

Maybe the problem is living together.

A new study seems to confirm what "J" and I already know -- couples that live apart are happier in their relationship than couples that live together, and they also feel more committed and less trapped. When you live apart, you actively work on commitment and trust; it's never taken for granted. You have time for yourself. And because sex whenever you want it isn't as available to you as it is when you live with someone, you don't let too many opportunities to actually have it pass you by.

So when people ask me, "Are you ever going to get married or live together or something like that?" I guess I'll have to continue to answer, "Something like that."

We're free to create the relationship we want post-divorce. I've created mine -- have you created yours?

A version of this story appears on Vicki Larson's blog, OMG Chronicles.

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Monday, January 28, 2013

How Video Marketing Can Help You To Attract - Work On the Internet

There are many businesses out there that know that they can receive the huge benefit from Video Marketing, but are not completely aware of exactly how big of a benefit it could potentially be for their business. Video marketing provides a unique platform that as recently as 15 years ago was not avalable to your average business. Essentially, video marketing allows you to create commercials for your business, and spread them among the users of the various video sharing websites such as YouTube. It is easy to see why this could be a huge benefit to your business, especially if none of your competitors are currently utilizing video marketing to the best of their ability. Some of the benefits that you will find for your business through the use of video marketing include;

Explain Your Products

If you have a complicated product or service, video marketing can provide you with an excellent way to explain your product in depth, and provide potential customers with a better understanding of exactly what it is that you do. Explaining your products, company, and employees to the potential customers that come across your video can be a great way to break the ice, and allow them to become more familiar with your company and exactly what it is that you do. There are a wide range of different video sharing websites available today, each of them providing you with a unique opportunity to connect to different customer bases.

Reach New Customers

You have to look at each video sharing website is a new opportunity to connect with potential customers, and individuals that could be interested in the products or services that you provide. As videos become more consistently utilized online, more people join video sharing websites as a way to research companies, learn about a variety of different subjects, and share their own videos. You do not have to release each video as a commercial for your business, and instead can utilize these videos to spread information that is relevant to your industry and establish your business as a leader and expert within the industry in which you work.

Be More Professional

Also, the fact of the matter is that companies that utilize video marketing heavily simply appear to be more professional to potential customers. Would you rather work with the company that lazily runs a twitter account, or a company that provides insightful and informational videos about the subjects that they deal with, allowing potential customers to learn about their company, and gain insight into the industry completely for free? Also, you can add these videos to your website in order to appear more professional to the potential customers that might stumble upon it. In all, video marketing allows you to explain your products, reach a huge base of new customers, and appear more professional than your competition.

If your business is not utilizing video marketing to the best of their ability, you certainly need to look at all of the available options, and realize the huge profound benefit that it could have for your business.

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Source: http://www.workoninternet.com/business/reviews/miscellaneous/223793-article.html

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Saturday, January 26, 2013

Home Funerals Grow As Americans Skip The Mortician For Do-It ...

A little over five years ago, Alison and Doug Kirk held their 9-year-old daughter's hand as she lay on a futon in their Nashville living room, told her they loved her, and watched her take her last breath.

The Kirks had known for a long time that their little girl, Caroline, would die. In her last weeks, she was under hospice care, lived off an oxygen machine, was fed through a tube, and spoke only in small murmurs. It was the normal course for a child born with Niemann-Pick, a terminal disease that gradually leads to the breakdown of the nervous system, brain and lungs.

What happened after Caroline's death was anything but typical.

Alison and Doug carried Caroline upstairs to the bathtub, where they washed her skin and hair, dried her limp, 45-pound body with a towel and placed her head on a pillow on the bed in her old room. Alison slipped a white communion dress on Caroline, turned up the air-conditioning and put ice packs by her daughter?s sides. She put pink lipstick on the child's paling lips, and covered up Caroline's toes and fingers, which were turning blue at the nails, with the family quilt.

Caroline stayed in her bedroom for 36 hours for her final goodbyes. There was no traditional funeral home service, and no coroner or medical examiner was on hand. Caroline's death was largely a home affair, with a short cemetery burial that followed.

"We had taken care of Caroline her whole life," recalls Alison, whose other daughter, Kate, has the same disease and will also have a home funeral. "Why would we give her to someone else once she died?"

Each year, 2.5 million Americans die. For the majority, about 70 percent, deaths happen in a hospital, nursing home or long-term care facility. What happens afterwards is nearly always the same, with few exceptions for religious traditions: A doctor or nurse will sign a death certificate and the body will be whisked to the funeral home, where it's washed, embalmed, dressed, and prepared for a viewing and burial. A family usually sees the dead only a few times: when they die, if there's an open-casket viewing and in the rare case when a casket is opened during burial.

But a small and growing group of Americans are returning to a more hands-on, no-frills experience of death. In the world of "do it yourself" funerals, freezer packs are used in lieu of embalming, unvarnished wooden boxes replace ornate caskets, viewings are in living rooms and, in some cases, burials happen in backyards.

Nobody keeps track of the number of home funerals and advocacy groups, but home funeral organizations have won battles in recent years in states such as Minnesota and Utah that have attempted to ban the practice. Most states have nearly eliminated any requirements that professionals play a role in funerals. It's now legal in all but eight states to care for one's own after death. And the growth of community-based, nonprofit home funeral groups and burial grounds that are friendly to the cause point to an increasing demand.

The reasons vary from the economic to the psychological and cultural. The average funeral costs $6,560, while a home funeral can cost close to nothing. In a society where seeing death and speaking of it is often taboo, home funeral advocates are challenging the notion that traditional funerals are anything but a natural end to life. Instead, they assert, death and mourning should be seen, smelled, touched and experienced.

"There are people who get it and think it's a great idea. And there are people who have been so indoctrinated to think a different way, a less hands-on way, that they can't imagine anything else," says Elizabeth Knox, the founder of Crossings, a Maryland-based home funeral resource organization and the vice president of the National Home Funeral Alliance. Knox travels across the nation to run trainings on do-it-yourself funerals and her book on her daughter's home funeral is what inspired the Kirks to do their own. Her group is one of several that have seen interest grow in recent years. They include Final Passages (California), Natural Transitions (Colorado) and Undertaken with Love (Texas). There are 61 organizations that are members of the NHFA, many of which are run by just one person.

"A lot of people don't want to do anything with touching dead bodies," says Knox. "They consider it creepy. But it can actually be the first step to healing and acceptance of death. Slowing down the process allows all involved to absorb the loss at their own pace. It's an organic emotional and spiritual healing not available from limited calling hours at a remote location."

***
caroline doug

Caroline's father, Doug Kirk, and her when she was five. It was four years before her death.

Caroline died at noon on a Tuesday. Through Thursday morning, her body stayed in her childhood home, surrounded by old dolls, stuffed animals and her favorite books. Friends and family came in and out to say goodbye. Some would get on the bed beside her body, stroking her face and hair. Others would sit across from her in a rocking chair.

"In the morning, I spent time with Caroline. At night, I spent time with Caroline. I would tell her goodnight. It was very calming to sit next to her. I touched her. I kissed her. And I felt like this is where she was supposed to be," says Alison. "I told her things that were happening. I said there had been suffering in the last few days, but it was a relief that she was not suffering anymore."

A few dozen visitors came to the house throughout Wednesday. There was a guestbook in the downstairs hallway, and people would gather to chat on the porch. "Caroline is in her room, and if you want to say goodbye to her, you can do that," Alison would tell each guest. Most went upstairs for private visits in her bedroom. At least one couple decided not to visit her there.

In Tennessee, where the Kirks live, the laws on home funerals are relatively lax. After getting a death certificate -- Alison and Doug had Caroline's pediatrician sign off on one -- a family is free to do what it wants with a dead body within a reasonable amount of time. Alison had a funeral director, who was friendly to her ideas, on-call for urgent needs like figuring out how to patch up a leaking hole in Caroline's stomach once a feeding tube was removed. She also had him bring a hearse with a casket to her home.

caroline kirk grave

For her first birthday, Caroline's aunt gave her a dancing figurine made of glass. Her parents commissioned a whimsical, bigger version of it to rest on Caroline's gravestone in Mount Hope Cemetery, about 20 miles south of Nashville.

"I did look into if we could bury Caroline at our own house. We could have," says Alison. "But it's not like we are on some ancestral ground that has been passed for generations." She opted for a cemetery. Mount Hope, about 20 miles south of Nashville in Franklin, fit her needs. It's small, with a "country feel," she says. "No big landscaping, and not this big uniform place."

On Thursday morning, the family carried Caroline back downstairs. They lifted her into a casket that was a simple, pine box. Alison put The Little Engine That Could next to her daughter. Doug put in a small, leather keychain shaped like a vintage ink jar that he had used since college ("It was a continuity of presence," he says. "I pretty much had it on me or nearby for 26 years ... It was irreplaceable even though it meant nothing to anyone else but me").

He rode in the hearse with his daughter, and before the body was lowered into the ground, the hospice chaplain read "The Circle of Days," an adaptation of a prayer by Saint Francis of Assisi that honors God's creation of the elements, animals and the heavens. Doug sang Caroline's favorite song, one that would always soothe her in times of pain: "Big Rock Candy Mountain." It tells the story of a hobo's idea of paradise.

Afterwards, there was a memorial service at Vanderbilt University, where both parents first met. Religion in any formal sense was absent.

"We wanted a simple funeral because her life was simple," says Alison. "It was short and simple."

She also considers it one of the best decisions she has ever made.

***

It's not always as easy as the Kirks found it to be.

Richard Bentley, a 70-year-old retiree who lives in Tupper Lake in upstate New York, has tried twice to take care of his loved ones when they died. His dad died in 2008 of multiple myeloma, a cancer of the plasma cells, and, 13 years before that, his mother died of an aortic dissection.

New York is one of the few states that requires a funeral director to be present or to sign off on nearly every part of after-death care. Medical examiners and coroners have to turn over bodies to funeral directors, and the law says an undertaker has to personally oversee each funeral. (The other states with similarly restrictive laws are Connecticut, Illinois, Indiana, Louisiana, Michigan, Nebraska and New Jersey).

For his father, Bentley says the process was unnecessarily intrusive. He wanted a cremation, which would usually require a death certificate, transport of the body and a cremation fee in most states, but he had to meet with his hospice nurse, the town clerk and the local funeral director to arrange all the paperwork necessary. The total cost: $940. He reluctantly obliged.

"One doesn?t wish to think about things like cost and comparison shopping at the time of a loved one?s death," says Bentley. "At the same time, I do not believe, and my father before his passing did not believe, that some stranger should be entitled to walk off with a week?s wages or more in return for a few hours of work at the expense of the loved one?s spouse and children."

Because his mother was airlifted to a hospital in Vermont to have her heart condition treated, Bentley says he had a much easier time with her. She died in the hospital, where he had a family viewing in the chapel, and he was able to take her body -- stored in a box -- from the morgue to his car. He drove her to a crematorium near the Vermont-New Hampshire border (it would have been illegal to transport the body to New York state), where it was cremated over the next few days. Her boxed ashes later arrived via mail to his house, where he held her memorial.

"We would like to see New York state change its funeral law to allow family to handle such matters as filing death certificates, home viewing and preliminary care of the deceased, and transportation of the deceased without the intervention of a licensed funeral director as prescribed by current law," says Bentley, who's on the board of the Memorial Society of the Hudson-Mohawk Region, a group that monitors New York funeral laws and counsels families interested in home funerals. "There is no public need that is satisfied by such laws."

bentleys

Richard Bentley organized home funerals for both of his parents, pictured above during their honeymoon in November 1941. Rachel Mary Bentley died on November 9, 1995 at 77. Paul Bentley died on November 16, 2008 at 91.

The public need for funeral homes -- there are 19,680 in the U.S. today -- is relatively new.

Until the Civil War, death was largely a home matter and home funerals were the norm. It was common at the time for unembalmed bodies to be put in simple caskets and buried in cemeteries that weren?t treated with pesticides. (It?s a growing trend today, known as ?green burial.?) Historians say that our culture?s approach to death in the pre-Civil War years had much to be praised.

"Death was much more ingrained into daily life and cultural life. People were rural-living, mortality rates were higher. Most people died at home," says Gary Laderman, a professor of religious studies at Emory University and author of Rest in Peace: A Cultural History of Death and the Funeral Home in Twentieth-Century America. It was a time before modern hospitals, "a kind of mediator between the living and the dying," he says.

But the war and the need to transport bodies from the South to the North led to widespread embalming. The practice was even more popularized after Abraham Lincoln's embalmed body was taken on a 13-city tour after his assassination in 1865. Mourners gawked at how well it was preserved, according to Laderman.

"The most common thing used to be hands-on family involvement. We Americans have completely forgotten that there is nothing universal about calling the mortuary at 3 in the morning," says Josh Slocum, executive director of the Funeral Consumers Alliance and co-author of Final Rights: Reclaiming the American Way of Death.

Slocum thinks there are two reasons that home funerals haven't taken off: "people not knowing they have the option and the ways laws in many places are written to favor the funeral home industry."

It's nearly impossible to do a home funeral in some places, but the funeral homes and home funerals can often coordinate activities to get around that hurdle. Like the Kirks in Nashville who hired a funeral director to guide them on how to take care of Caroline's body and used the funeral home's hearse, there's been an uptick in families who want to use only select services of a funeral home. Just as hospice care for the dying gradually became mainstream over the decades, newer generations of less traditional funeral directors are more likely to be interested in helping make arrangements for home services, according to the National Funeral Directors Association.

"I don't think there is a funeral director who is opposed to a family being more intimately involved as long as it better meets the needs of a family, but this is an evolving process," says Pat Patton, the co-owner of Patton-Schad Funeral & Cremation Services in Sauk Center, Minn., and a board member of the NFDA. In his 34 years in the business, he's been asked to help arrange one home funeral. "If you don't want what we usually provide, how do we know what you do want? How do we make it work for both of us? Funeral directors are certainly willing to help families take care of their dead at home, but because it's new and different and outside what would be normal for our business, it takes time."

He also isn't sure home funerals are always the right choice.

"In general, deaths at home and a person caring for everything is fine. But we know that, depending on the cause of death, things can go badly in a hurry," says Patton. "Sometimes there can be rapid decomposition, blistering on the skins or fluids leaking from the body, things that a family may not be able to deal with. Our concern related to home funerals is that people may just not be ready."

In a culture where talk of death is avoided, direct experiences like home funerals have benefits and drawbacks. On one hand, seeing and sitting with a dead loved one can help a mourner accept death, says Sue Wintz, who is a consultant and managing editor at New York-based HealthCare Chaplaincy. "That action is part of the healing," says Wintz, who was a hospital and hospice chaplain for 30 years.

But Wintz says that home funerals require "a lot of support and help from your community or family. You can get mentally and physically exhausted."

***

Alison admits that Caroline's funeral was tiring.

Growing up as the youngest sibling in a big Southern Baptist family in Louisiana, she had seen lots of death and had been to plenty of traditional funerals. But even though they were physically easier than services for her daughter, she found them to be emotionally incomplete events (especially so when her parents died).

"My father died from bladder cancer when I was 16. And I just didn't know what I needed at the time to grieve for him,? she says. ?And when my mother died -- the same year I was pregnant with Caroline -- it was just this huge social event."

Her mother?s funeral was held back home in Shreveport at a large church designed to seat a few thousand, with a reception before, a reception after, and lots of talking among hundreds of guests in between.

"There were so many family friends I hadn't seen in years. People just kept on coming to say, 'Hi,' and, 'You've got to see this cousin and that cousin.' I just wanted to be in the sanctuary with my mom with her open casket," she remembers. "I wanted to have a little last time to be in her presence. I wanted to talk to her."

Alison was alone with her mother only for a few minutes. "I was self-conscious because people kept on coming in. But I got to touch her hand briefly. She was very cold. And it was a reminder that it was only her body."

caroline kirk gravestone

When her parents asked her how she was doing, Caroline would often enthusiastically respond by saying "I'm happy and dancing." The phrase is engraved on her memorial stone.

So when Caroline died, Alison spoke to her every day, sometimes every hour.

She wrote entries in an online journal to remember how Caroline?s death felt and to explain her decision to family and friends: "I told Caroline that if she knew what a froufrou outfit I had her in she?d be giving me the business. We compromised in that I let her stay barefoot under her big skirt. The girl never liked shoes ... There were a few changes in Caroline?s body over the next two days, not many, and they served to remind us that this was only her body, that her spirit had been released. Everyone had time to sit with her, read to her ... I frequently found myself running into her room to tell her what I was doing, and it felt so natural."

Before Caroline left the house, the parents took her sister, Kate, into the room where she was held. "We're saying bye to Caroline's body," they told her. "But she will always be your sister and she will always love you."

Kate was 5, and she, too, was already showing signs of Niemann-Pick disease.

Kate is now 11 and in a wheelchair. She was pulled out of fourth grade a few months ago, and has been under home hospice care. She can breathe on her own, but is fed through a tube and has frequent seizures. She's awake for only a few hours each day.

Her condition isn't as complicated as Caroline's. Her decline is almost entirely neurological, and her death will be akin to that of someone dying of Alzheimer's. She could live for a few years or she could have a sudden seizure that would end her life.

The Kirks have purchased a plot next to Caroline's grave for Kate, but have otherwise made few concrete plans for her death. They don't know what she will wear or how she will look. It's not time to plan for that. She's still alive. They do know that she'll die at home in the hands of her parents, hearing the same "I love yous" her sister last heard. There will be no funeral home taking her covered body away, and no wake in a room she's never seen.

"It's a hard thing to have to say the final goodbye to your child," says Alison. "But with Caroline, we made it as good as it could be. I wouldn't change a thing when Kate's time comes."

  • Catholic Prayer For The Dead

    Eternal rest, grant unto him (her) O Lord and let perpetual light shine upon him (her). May he (she) rest in peace (Amen) May their souls and the souls of all the faithful departed, through the mercy of God, rest in peace. Amen.

  • Jewish Prayer For The Dead - Mourners Kaddish

    Exalted and hallowed be His great Name. (Cong: "Amen.") Throughout the world which He has created according to His Will. May He establish His kingship, bring forth His redemption and hasten the coming of His Moshiach. (Cong: "Amen.") In your lifetime and in your days and in the lifetime of the entire House of Israel, speedily and soon, and say, Amen. (Cong: "Amen. May His great Name be blessed forever and to all eternity, blessed.") May His great Name be blessed forever and to all eternity. Blessed and praised, glorified, exalted and extolled, honored, adored and lauded be the Name of the Holy One, blessed be He. (Cong: "Amen.") Beyond all the blessings, hymns, praises and consolations that are uttered in the world; and say, Amen. (Cong: "Amen.") May there be abundant peace from heaven, and a good life for us and for all Israel; and say, Amen. (Cong: "Amen.") He Who makes peace in His heavens, may He make peace for us and for all Israel; and say, Amen. (Cong: "Amen.")

  • Bahai Prayer For The Dead

    O my God! This is Thy servant and the son of Thy servant who hath believed in Thee and in Thy signs, and set his face towards Thee, wholly detached from all except Thee. Thou art, verily, of those who show mercy the most merciful. Deal with him, O Thou Who forgivest the sins of men and concealest their faults, as beseemeth the heaven of Thy bounty and the ocean of Thy grace. Grant him admission within the precincts of Thy transcendent mercy that was before the foundation of earth and heaven. There is no God but Thee, the Ever-Forgiving, the Most Generous.

  • Muslim Prayer Al-Fatiha

    "In the name of God, the Entirely Merciful, the Especially Merciful. All praise and thanks is for to God, [The] Creator, Owner, Sustainer of the Worlds. The Entirely Merciful, The Especially Merciful. Owner of the Day of Recompense. You alone do we worship and You alone we seek for help. Guide us to the Straight Path. The path of those whom Your blessings are upon, Not of those who You have cursed nor of those who have gone astray."

  • Hindu Prayer For The Dead

    The wise have said that Atman is immortal: And that the phenomenon of death is merely the separation of the astral body from the physical body. The five elements of which the body is composed return to their source. Our scriptures teach us that as pilgrims unite and separate at a public inn, so also fathers, mothers, sons, brothers, wives, relations unite and separate in this world. He who thus understands the nature of the body and all human relationships based upon it will derive strength to bear the loss of our dear ones. In Divine plan, one day each union must end with separation.

  • Anglican Prayer For the Dead

    O God, whose mercies cannot be numbered: Accept our prayers on behalf of thy servant N., and grant him an entrance into the land of light and joy, in the fellowship of thy saints; through Jesus Christ thy Son our Lord, who liveth and reigneth with thee and the Holy Spirit, on God, now and for ever. Amen.

  • Words For Parting

    He is made one with Nature; there is heard His voice in all her music, from the moan Of thunder, to the song of night's sweet bird; He is a presence to be felt and known In darkness and in light, from herb and stone... He is a portion of the loveliness Which once he made more lovely. Words for Parting: 2 The courage of the early morning's dawning, And the strength of the eternal hill, And the peace of the evening's ending, And the love of God, be in our hearts. Words for Parting: 3 Farewell! The world is better for your having lived, We are better for having known you. We loved you living- we love you now. Farewell! Words for Parting: 4 Farewell, traveler. We do not know your destination but our love and gratitude go with you. Rest now- in peace- and in the love we bear you.

Earlier on HuffPost:

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/01/25/home-funerals-death-mortician_n_2534934.html

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Today on New Scientist: 25 January 2013

Hagfish gulped up in first video of deep-sea seal hunt

Watch the first sighting of a seal's underwater eating habits spotted by a teenager watching a live video feed

World's oldest portrait reveals the ice-age mind

A 26,000-year-old carved ivory head of a woman is not just an archaeological find - a new exhibition in London wants us to see works like this as art

Dung beetles navigate using the Milky Way

Forget the Pole Star: on moonless nights dung beetles use the Milky Way to follow a straight path with their dung ball

Stress's impact can affect future generations' genes

DNA analysis has yielded the first direct evidence that chemical marks which disable genes in response to stress can be passed on to offspring

Uncharted territory: Where digital maps are leading us

The way we use maps is evolving fast, says Kat Austen, and it will change a great deal more than how we navigate

Feedback: Tales of the stony turd industry

Fossilised faeces in Shitlington, confusing railway notices, organic water, and more

Duolingo gives language learning a jump start

First evidence that Duolingo, a new website that helps you learn a language while translating the web, actually works

Dolphins form life raft to help dying friend

A group of dolphins was caught on camera as they worked together to keep a struggling dolphin above water by forming an impromptu raft

Zoologger: Supercool squirrels go into the deep freeze

Hibernating Arctic ground squirrels drop their body temperatures to -4??C, and shut their circadian clocks off for the winter

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The ongoing collapse of Greece's economy has caused a significant fall in air pollution, which can be detected by satellites

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Asteroids vs. comets: Expert sizes up perils

Getty Images file

An artist's conception shows a cosmic impact on Earth. Comet impacts are harder to predict and more energetic, but asteroid impacts are much more common.

By Alan Boyle, Science Editor, NBC News

NASA's top expert on near-Earth objects says that new telescope systems, including a "last alert" system that's just now being set up, are gradually getting a handle on potentially threatening asteroids. But comets? That's a completely different story.

"We can do something about asteroids. Comets are a problem," said Donald Yeomans, the head of the Near-Earth Object Program at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif.

Yeomans is the author of "Near-Earth Objects: Finding Them Before They Find Us," a new book sizing up the cosmic perils posed by asteroids and comets?? and looking ahead to the potential they offer for scientific discovery and economic exploitation.


For an example of the perils, you need look no further than the dinosaurs?? or, more accurately, the lack thereof. Scientists believe an asteroid impact along the coast of Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula set off a chain of events that killed off the dinosaurs and many other species 65 million years ago. A much smaller impact in 1908 blew down half a million acres' worth of trees in Siberia, and could have leveled a city nearly the size of Tokyo if its trajectory were different.

NASA / JPL-Caltech

Donald Yeomans is manager of Near Earth Object Program Office.

Princeton U. Press

"Near-Earth Objects" focuses on the peril and the potential of asteroids and comets.

More recently, astronomers have sounded a series of alerts over close encounters with passing asteroids?? including three cases involving the asteroids 2012 DA14, 2011 AG5 and Apophis. It turns out that none of those space rocks will hit us in the foreseeable future, but 2012 DA14 is due to come within 13,000 miles on Feb. 15. That's closer than the orbits for geosynchronous satellites. And experts agree it's only a matter of time before astronomers find a large asteroid that's actually on a collision course.

This is why Congress asked NASA in 1998 to identify 90 percent of the asteroids wider than a kilometer (0.6 miles). In 2011, NASA researchers declared that they achieved that goal. But they still have a long way to go to identify the smaller threats: The experts estimate that there are more than a million near-Earth asteroids capable of causing damage on the scale of 1908's Siberian fireball.

Several projects are in the works to catalog those smaller asteroid threats, including some projects that are funded by NASA's observation program for near-Earth objects, which is allocated more than $20 million annually. One such program ??known as the Asteroid Terrestrial-impact Last Alert System, or ATLAS?? started receiving NASA funding just this month. The $5 million, five-year effort calls for building telescopes in Hawaii that could provide advance warning for the kinds of asteroids that have eluded bigger detection programs.

"We think it's possible to provide a useful degree of warning for most impacts, meaning a day for a 30-kiloton 'town killer,' a week for a 5-megaton 'city killer,' three weeks for a 100-megaton 'county killer,'" the ATLAS team says on its website. (The numbers refer to the same TNT equivalents used to describe nuclear explosions.)?

Yeomans acknowledged that even three weeks wouldn't be enough to divert an asteroid from its path?? but it would provide enough time to plot the object's course, determine the impact zone and plan for evacuations if necessary.

What about the comets?
And then there are those pesky comets. We're not talking about comets that follow a regular route through the solar system, such as Halley's Comet. The course of those comets can be predicted decades in advance, and so far they appear to pose no threat. Yeomans and other experts are more concerned about long-period comets, which spend most of their time on the solar system's icy edge.

"Long-period comets, defined here as active comets with orbital periods greater than 200 years, are the most difficult objects to mitigate should one be found on an Earth-threatening trajectory," Yeomans says in his book. "The arrival of these objects from the outer solar system cannot be predicted, and the impact warning time would be measured in a few months, not years."

Generally speaking, long-period comets don't become discoverable until they come within the orbit of Jupiter, which would leave about nine months before they hit (or miss) Earth, Yeomans said.

If a truly monstrous comet were on a collision course, the scenario might well play out the way it did in the 1998 disaster movie "Deep Impact." There wouldn't even be enough time to mount a comet-blasting mission like the one that Robert Duvall took on in the movie. Fortunately, Earth's comet impact rate is thought to be less than 1 percent of the asteroid impact rate, Yeomans said. That's one reason why asteroids have dominated the discussion of potential cosmic threats.?

From peril to profit?
All this may sound scary?? and yes, it's scary enough that experts around the world have been discussing policy initiatives under the aegis of the U.N. Office for Outer Space Affairs. Yeomans is due to attend U.N.-sponsored meetings on space policy in Vienna next month, at just about the time that 2012 DA14 will be flying past. But Yeomans says there's no need to press the panic button.

"No one should be losing sleep over this issue," Yeomans told NBC News this week during his visit to Town Hall Seattle. "We've got much bigger problems, such as global warming or firearm safety. But none of those issues have the capability to bring us back to Square Zero. ... This is sort of an insurance program. You want to know what's out there, and if there's something threatening out there. Twenty years ago, maybe we should have been losing sleep, but we didn't know it."

Twenty years from now, will near-Earth asteroids still be perceived as potential killers?? or will they instead be seen as opportunities to make a killing? Some boosters say asteroid mining could eventually generate a trillion dollars' worth of economic activity annually.?Two sets of entrepreneurs are working on ventures aimed at laying claim to asteroids that could provide water, oxygen, construction materials and fuel for space-based operations, as well as precious metals that could be brought back to Earth. One venture, Planetary Resources, started up less than a year ago. The other, Deep Space Industries, was unveiled just this week.?

Yeomans thinks it's great that investors are willing to put their money into space technologies, but he doubts they'll see a profit anytime soon.

"I don't understand their business model," he said. "What if you were to ask Colonial Americans to invest in the airline industry? Sure, the airline industry is coming, and it's great, but would you invest the Colonial equivalent of your 401(k) in it?"

In his book, Yeomans says the biggest reason to invest in the asteroid search now is to make sure we survive long enough to reap the longer-term payoffs:

"Near-Earth objects may one day be the fueling stations and watering holes for interplanetary exploration," he writes. "Ironically, the easiest ones to reach and mine are also those that are most likely to one day collide with Earth and perhaps disrupt or destroy our fragile civilization. We need to find them early and track them to ensure than none among them has our name on it. While these objects are critically important to our future, if we don't find them before they find us, we may not even have a future."

Update for 11 p.m. ET: I mused in a Twitter tweet whether it'd be better to face a killer asteroid or a killer comet. If you're musing over the same question, here's an extra bit of data from Yeomans' book: A comet streaking in from the outer solar system would typically have three times the impact velocity of a similarly sized Earth asteroid hitting Earth. When you factor in the density difference, "the comet's impact energy would be about twice that of the asteroid," Yeomans says. Considering that we're likely to have more advance warning about an asteroid, I'd probably go with the asteroid if I had to make a choice. Which would you pick?

More about asteroids:


Alan Boyle is NBCNews.com's science editor. Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's?Facebook page, following?@b0yle on Twitter?and adding the?Cosmic Log page?to your Google+ presence. To keep up with Cosmic Log as well as NBCNews.com's other stories about science and space, sign up for the Tech & Science newsletter, delivered to your email in-box every weekday. You can also check out?"The Case for Pluto,"?my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for new worlds.

Source: http://cosmiclog.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/01/25/16702712-asteroids-vs-comets-nasa-expert-assesses-the-cosmic-threats-to-earth?lite

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Friday, January 25, 2013

Caught on video: Teen rescued from torrent

Video of the dramatic rescue of a teen from floodwaters in Queensland was posted on YouTube by Australia's ABC network.

By Ian Johnston, Staff Writer, NBC News

A teenage boy left clinging to a tree in a raging torrent of floodwater in Australia was pulled to safety in a dramatic rescue Friday.

As the teen was being brought to dry land ? in scenes caught on video -- the emergency worker who saved him was swept away by the churning mass of brown water in Rockhampton, Queensland.

The rescuer went under a nearby bridge but managed to reach safety moments later.

The AFP news agency reported that in total there were 20 water rescues across Queensland state Thursday night and early Friday, including a woman and two children trapped in a car and seven people in two flooded houses.

Australia?s Bureau of Meteorology said nearly a foot of rain had fallen in Yeppoon, north of Rockhampton, since early Thursday, the AFP reported. The area is being hit by the remains of tropical cyclone Oswald.

One rescuer told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation?that the boy rescued in Rockhampton was lucky to be alive. ?The current was so strong, it just took him away,? Brett Williams said.

In the video of the rescue, the boy is seen holding onto a tree amid the rushing waters.

A rescuer goes out to him and a yellow rope is seen in the water.

The two then let go of the tree and make their way to land, at times appearing to be engulfed by the waters.

'He's good, he's good'
But, as the rescuer in the water tries to transfer the teen to others on the land, he is suddenly swept away.

?He?s going under the bridge,? a voice is heard saying.

Other rescuers run after him, and moment later one is heard saying, ?He?s good, he?s good.?

The Australian broadcaster reported that ?huge rainfall totals? were expected over the weekend as Oswald tracks south, with Queensland Premier Campbell Newman warning that the state?s largest city Brisbane could be hit by flooding.

AFP said 30 people were killed and more than 2.5 million people were affected by floods in Queensland two years ago.

Related:

Half world's iron ore trade halted by storm in Australia's 'cyclone alley'

Source: http://worldnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/01/25/16692941-caught-on-camera-teens-dramatic-rescue-from-floodwater-torrent-in-australia?lite

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