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  • Take Action Against SOPA

    Take Action Against SOPA

    PROTECT IP / SOPA Breaks The Internet from Fight for the Future on Vimeo.

    I HEARTILY ACCEPT the motto,
    ‘That government is best which governs least.’

    But, to speak practically and as a citizen,
    unlike those who call themselves no-government men,
    I ask for, not at once no government,
    but at once a better government.

    Henry David Thoreau, Civil Disobedience

    Float around the internet today and you’ll find many sites, big and small, blacked out in protest of SOPA (the Stop Online Piracy Act). We also have problems with PIPA (Protect IP Act).

    These bills if passed into law could have a profound affect on the internet as we know it: in essence they are leash-laws, muzzles on our First Amendment rights.

    I’m not one for silence and so I’m asking you to read the proposed SOPA bill.

    Then this post, which does a better job than I would in breaking down why SOPA is dangerous for you.

    And then DO SOMETHING about it. Call. If you’re not into talking into human beings (I’m not) call after business hours and leave a message.

    Write letters.

    Write emails. Personal ones carry more weight than just hitting send on those form ones, but form ones work if that’s all the time you’re willing to give.

    This post helps you with the whos and wheres to call and write.

    If you don’t do something, you have no right to complain. And if this goes through, you might not have the free internet as a venue for complaining anymore, anyway.

     

  • Beginners’ Guide to Birding (The Big Year)

    Beginners’ Guide to Birding (The Big Year)

    birdwatching movie

     

    This post comes courtesy of the PR folks for The Big Year. I’m sharing because it’s good info, and also because I heart Steve Martin and Owen Wilson, while my children think Jack Black is the funniest man since whoever invented the whoopie cushion. We kinda can’t wait to see it.

    the big year

    Comedic Icons Steve Martin, Jack Black and Owen Wilson Star in the Hilarious Outdoor Adventure Coming to Blu-ray and DVD January 31!

    Was your New Year’s resolution a pact to yourself to get outdoors and make 2012 your Big Year? In this beginner’s guide we’ll direct you to where you can find online field guides, deals on binoculars, regional checklists and new birding buddies to go on trips with. Grab a notebook and start practicing your birdcalls and soon you will be having the biggest year ever!

    Steve Martin, Jack Black and Owen Wilson portray three men from very different walks of life, facing a mid-life crisis, a work-life crisis and a no-life crisis. In the biggest competition of their lives, they undertake an unforgettable trek through North America, engaging in hilarious and bizarre adventures and forming friendships that will last a lifetime!

    Online Field Guides

    field guide birdsMany hardcore birders like to have physical field guides that they can take with them, and many people employ the use of regional field guides, as they offer more specific advice. As you are starting your birding adventure, try using a site like www.whatbird.com, which allows you to search for species in many different ways (including by region and by appearance). What Bird also has handy apps for e-readers and smart phones, which allow you to access their immense database on the go!

    Binoculars

    birdwatching binocularsIf you want to get serious about birding, you need a proper pair of binoculars. When you’re searching for your first pair, you need to pay attention to seven things: magnification, objective lens size, close focus, field of view, roof vs. porro prism, eye relief, and the 3 Ws (weight, waterproof and warranty). Go to store.onlinenaturemall.com for help choosing the type of binoculars that are right for you, as well as suggestions on where to buy them for the best price.

    Regional Checklists

    blue birdThe best way to start birding is to observe (and learn to recognize) the birds in your own backyard! To do this, you should consult a checklist of the birds that appear in your region. One of the best sites to visit when looking for information on species in your region is www.wildbirds.com. Wild Birds has each state in a United States (as well as most of Canada) represented on their site, with comprehensive checklists, reading lists and relevant links included.

    Birding Buddies

    the big yearThe best way to find a buddy to bird with is to join different groups for birding enthusiasts. Two of the largest birding organizations in the United States are the American Birding Association and the National Audubon Society. Each of these larger, national organizations can steer you towards either region-specific sectors of their organization, or smaller birding clubs in your area. You could also use www.Meetup.com to find birders in your area, and local events or trips to take part in.

     

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    Disclosure: No compensation was received for this post, just thought it was clever. A little more about the movie on Family Fun Delaware.

  • Review & Giveaway (3 Copies): Working Out Sucks!

    Review & Giveaway (3 Copies): Working Out Sucks!

    Harry Stone (LOC)

    Technology gives us the illusion of accomplishing more
    by allowing us to physically accomplish virtually nothing.

    -Chuck Runyon, Working Out Sucks!

     

    Boy howdy, ain’t that the truth.

    Chuck Runyon is the co-founder and CEO of Anytime Fitness, that 24-hour gym that probably recently opened up not too far from you. Before that, he was a salesman and a marketer generating new memberships to fitness clubs. And therefore, he’s pretty much an expert in the excuses we give to not sign up for that gym membership, even though we have that nagging thought that we could probably stand to move more, exercise more, weigh less, be healthier.

    He also has a personal story that moved me to tears as I read it, sitting on my bum, waiting for Cass to be done basketball practice.

    I’ve read a number of motivational books, some of which deal with health and weight loss (a personal favorite being Peter Walsh’s Does This Clutter Make My Butt Look Fat?) and the Honey Badger Mom in me loved this one. Because Chuck Runyon lists every excuse in the book and then relentlessly destroys each one.

    No time? That’s odd, because most people will list their health as a top priority (#2, after family). The average person would work out 90-120 minutes a week. That’s 1% of your weekly time. Our willingness to work for our priorities is seriously effed up.

    Ever say you didn’t care if you were carrying a boy or a girl, “as long it’s healthy?” Runyon makes the astute but cutting observation that after that baby is born, all too often it’s raised on a not-at-all-healthy diet full of toxins, sugar and processed foods.

    The average American spends more money in one month of automobile expenses than he or she does one year of personal fitness-related expenses.

    Yeah. Unless you’re a first-timer here, you already know how I feel about that. (It’s not good.)

    And so on and so forth. I can guarantee that any reader will find a chapter (or several) that really resonates and puts you on notice. And you know why?

    Because health… ultimately… is essential to life. We all die anyway, but being unhealthy makes it much more likely to happen sooner. And our quality of life suffers. And we know this, and we make excuses to ourselves. We feel guilty about it on some level, but neglect to act, so subconsciously it becomes an open sore.

    Which is despicable when you really think about it, and when Runyon hits on your excuse, it feels raw.

    I like facts and statistics. A lot. But let’s face it: we hear them every day and we’ve become very good at blocking them out. That feeling of raw is when you start to doubt your own excuses, when you rip off the bandaid of rationalization and realize you are working against yourself and your own best interests.

    That’s when the seeds for change are planted.

    At this point the book transitions and psychologist Rebecca Derossett takes over. Psychology fascinates me, so I ate this section of the book up; for those slightly less dorky than me, all the matters of the brain are illustrated by real and inspiring stories of people who have made profound changes for a better life. Goal-setting is covered, and visualization, and overcoming negative thinking, and the movement to brain connection, and the inability to start thanks to the curse of perfectionism. Action plans are laid out, step by step. No excuses.

    So now you’ve faced your excuses and have been given a roadmap to overcoming your emotional and intellectual obstacles; what next? Dietician Brian Zehetner patiently separates food facts from fiction, setting you up with a nutritional game plan: because health is just as much achieved in the kitchen as it is in the gym. (This is the one area I had an issue with. Surprise surprise, allow me to remind you of my Food Police status. The argument is set forth that HFCS isn’t really any worse than sugar, and Zehetner has “no problem recommending” artificial sweeteners. I take issue with both statements, standing firmly in the camp of the less processed, the better; but since the end result is the advice to limit all 3 as much as possible I’m not going to raise a stink about it.)

    The book concludes with info about working out– cardio, strength training– and lays out a 21 day food and fitness regime for the list-oriented and “I don’t know where to start” crowd. Talk about no excuses: it’s all there. Just do it.

    Hey. Just read it.

    working out sucksI’ve got three copies of Working Out Sucks! (And Why It Doesn’t Have To): The Only 21-Day Kick-Start Plan for Total Health and Fitness You’ll Ever Need to give away.

    To enter to win:

    I need you to comment on this post and hit me with an excuse you’ve given in the past for not working out.

    You can have a second entry:

    by tweeting I want to win #WorkingOutSucks and beat my excuses- and make @robinelton proud. You’ll need to leave me a second comment letting me know you did that because I forget stuff.

    Working out sucks, sure. Secretly blaming yourself because you know you could be better? Sucks more.

    Do yourself proud. Make your kids proud, your mom proud. Make me proud. I like feeling proud of people.

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    I’ll pick 3 winners at random at noon EST on Tuesday January 24th. But if you don’t win, think about picking up a copy anyway. 100% of net proceeds benefit Limbs for Life, a nonprofit which provides fully functional prosthetic care to those otherwise unable to afford it.

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    Disclosure: I’m Community Manager for FitFluential LLC (come tweet with me). Anytime Fitness is a client of FitFluential. The book I reviewed and the copies I am giving to readers were provided by the client. All thoughts and opinions in the post are my own.

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    Awesome photo courtesy of the Library of Congress through Creative Commons. “Hop” Harry Stone, “the American Newsboy Champion Lightweight,”  the second fighter in boxing history to have over 200 recorded fights without ever suffering a K0 or TK0 loss.