Monday, September 19, 2011

(A-33) "EMERGENCY ESSENTIALS" PREPARES FAMILIES TO SURVIVE IF A CATASTROPHE STRIKES

The Family Journal supports the "Emergency Essentials" business group. Their motto is "Helping People Prepare…for over 20 years". The recent pre-9/11/11 terrorist threat uncovered (The target being New York City) involving 3 people, two of them being foreign and one being a naturalized U.S. citizen, brings to light the need for American families to prepare smartly...then go about their normal daily functioning.

We have a dramatic increase in the numbers and intensity of tornados, floods, wildfires, and many other events due to climate change. Emergency Essentials offers food storage, emergency kits, water filtration, first aid, MRE (Meals Ready to Eat), survival kits, camping gear, disaster preparedness and more! They have over 900 products! Throughout the article, we have featured Emergency Essentials Ads that remind you of how you can become better prepared is a Cyber attack, tornado or hurricane, power outage, wildfire....whatever!...separates you from the necessities of life. You can still maintain your families well-being by being prepared.


Emergency Essentials/BePrepared

The Family Journal supports Emergency Essentials because they believe that in an emergency the difference between life and death is preparedeness. They have a wide variety of books and videos to help to know what to do before, during, and after an emergency. Emergency Essentials also provides insight about Preparedness Education with the following articles: Be Prepared, Disaster Preparedness for your Home in Three Easy Steps, and Emergency Preparedness at Work and School. "Preparation through education is less costly than learning through tragedy" - Max Mayfield, Director National Hurricane Center.


Emergency Essentials' Tips for Preparedness Book



Natural disasters and emergencies may not normally occur while you are at home where your emergency supplies and food storage are kept. Because of this, it is important to have an emergency plan for the various places your family spends time. Our homes, schools and workplaces should have site-specific preparations for an emergency.Keep a backpack or duffle bag of your own personal supplies in a desk drawer. This pack could include the following:*Flashlight with extra batteriesIn addition to packing a small survival kit, here are some other important things you can do:*Read your company's evacuation plan. If your company doesn't have one, volunteer to prepare one. Make sure there is a good designated meeting location and every employee knows where to go.The following are ideas to help you and your children feel safe away from home during an emergency:*Contact your school district to find out about their emergency plan and the policy on how children will be released from school.Here are some ideas to help your family feel prepared wherever they are:*Discuss your family emergency evacuation plan from your home in case of fire or other disaster, and a specific location to meet.


Think about what you have at your office that will help you get through an emergency. Maybe you have a candy bar or a package of stale donuts in your desk drawer or maybe just an old pack of chewing gum. At least that's a start! Do you even know if your company has an evacuation plan or how to use that plan? The following are some simple ideas to help you feel safe at work, even during an emergency.


*Emergency bag or blanket (very compact and made of a special material that reflects up to 90% of your body heat)


*Food (high calorie food bars, MREs, granola bars, fruit bars, candy bars, crackers, fruit leather, raisins, nuts, prepackaged foods, etc.)


*Water pouches or juice boxes


*Pair of walking shoes


*Multi function knife


*Mini first aid kit (adhesive bandages, rolled bandages for sprains, pain reliever, any medication you need, gauze, antiseptic wipes, antibiotic first aid cream, etc.)

*Make sure you are aware of the exit routes in your building.


*Know where the fire extinguishers and first aid kits are located.


*Note the locations of stairways as you walk from room to room.


*Carry a card in your wallet or purse that has important phone numbers including the number of your out-of-state phone contact.


*Keep the area under your desk free of trash cans and clutter. This area is the best place to secure yourself in the event of an earthquake.


*Don't count on being able to get back to your desk for personal supplies if you are away when an emergency occurs. Store additional supplies in your car, such as an emergency car kit.


*Be sure you discuss a meeting plan with your family so they know where to go and when to expect you.


Schools should already have an emergency plan to make sure your children are safe, but do you know enough about it to explain it to your children?
*Some schools already have an emergency classroom kit. Find out where it is located. *Help your child prepare a small disaster kit for them to keep in their locker or desk. This kit could include the following:
-Flashlight with extra batteries
-Emergency bag or blanket (very compact and made of a special material that reflects up to 90% of your body heat)
-Food (high calorie food bars, MREs, granola bars, fruit bars, crackers, candy bars, fruit leather, raisins, nuts, prepackaged foods, etc.)
-Water pouches or juice boxes
-Comic book for stress or boredom relief
-Mini first aid kit (adhesive bandages, rolled bandages for sprains, pain reliever, any medication you need, gauze, antiseptic wipes, antibiotic first aid cream, etc.)Make sure your child knows how to use these first aid items properly. Help your child understand when they are allowed to use their disaster kit and exactly how to use it.
-Include an identification card with their name, address, telephone number, emergency telephone numbers, birth date, and a reminder note to stay calm.
Make a family fun night out of getting everyone prepared.
*Help your children memorize important phone numbers.
*Teach them the location of the nearest police and fire stations and their phone numbers.
*Know the route to the nearest hospital emergency room.
*Meet with your neighbors and find out who has medical experience and have a training night.
*Give spare keys to your trusted neighbors.
*Show your children where the utility shutoffs are and how to shut them off.
*Keep your car's gas tank at least half full.
*Familiarize your children with emergency preparedness products by going through your home emergency kit.

Water Filtration
15 Reasons why you should prepare for the unexpected:
1. PetsYour pets are important members of the family, so be sure to include them in your disaster preparedness plan. You’ll need an evacuation strategy, and every pet should have proper ID tags in case it becomes separated from the family.
2. Earthquakes It may surprise you to learn that earthquakes have occurred in nearly all 50 states. Seismic activity can disrupt communities and displace families for weeks.
3. Terrorist attack The Oklahoma City bombing and attacks on the World Trade Center and Pentagon changed our lives forever. Terrorists strike without warning, so every family must have a terrorism preparedness plan. You could be affected by a Cyber, dirty bomb, chemical, biological, radiological, or nuclear attack.
4. Floods Virtually every community in the United States has endured floods after severe rain and thunderstorms. Never underestimate how quickly waters can rise.
5. Fires Fire is the fourth-leading cause of accidental death in the United States and the disaster families are most likely to experience. Flames can engulf an entire home in a matter of minutes.
6. Hurricanes You might call 2004 the “Year of the Hurricane,” as the number of tropical storms broke a 100-year-old record. More than 600,000 square miles of land were affected—and experts expect a “whirlwind” 2005.
7. Mudslides As heavy rains saturate hillsides, the risk of mudslides, mudflows and landslides rises nationwide. Slides can occur in any state, and they cause an estimated $2 billion in damages and 25–50 deaths each year.
8. Nuclear power plants/ Nuclear attack/Dirty bomb Accidents at nuclear power plants and the threat of nuclear attack have been on every American’s mind since Sept. 11. Knowing how to deal with a radiation-related emergency is crucial.
9. Wildfires Urban sprawl has prompted builders to develop residential communities in previously uninhabited areas. An errant spark in surrounding brush can ignite wildfires that threaten hundreds of homes and thousands of acres. Texas is currently battling over 60 separate wildfires that have burned downed hundreds of homes and residential neighborhoods.
10. Thunderstorms Thunderstorms can be particularly frightening when they’re accompanied by heavy rain, hail, lightning, strong winds, flooding and tornadoes—and conditions can change rapidly.
11. Tornados Twisters can wipe out entire towns within minutes. If you live in a tornado-prone state, you also need to prepare for the severe weather that can accompany them
12. Volcanoes Volcanoes are not limited to Hawaii. (Remember Mount St. Helens in Washington?) The United States ranks third among nations with active volcanoes, and 10% of eruptions over the last 10,000 years have occurred here.
13. Droughts If you live in an area plagued by drought conditions, it’s critical to take steps to protect community water supplies. Learn how to conserve water when performing routine household tasks.
     
`14. Tsunamis As the recent Indonesian tsunami demonstrated, a powerful earthquake can propel tidal waves hundreds of miles into dry land. While tsunamis are rare, all states with coastlines are at potential risk.



 

Emergency Essentials/BePrepared


15. Blackout and power outages As the United States copes with energy crises, the federal government anticipates an increase in blackouts and power outages—particularly when demand for electricity peaks. The nationwide power grid is all connected and is also vulnerable to terrorist attack.

Children who have experienced a disaster may be traumatized for years to come. Learn how to prepare your kids for emergencies without scaring them unnecessarily, and access resources that can help them after a disaster strikes

Emergency Essentials/BePrepared


iosat Potassium Iodide Tablets


16. Winter storms Many of us underestimate the brute force and potential lethality of winter storms, which can cripple communities of all sizes. Preparedness is the key to surviving a blizzard or noreaster.
It is important to think ahead and communicate with others in advance. By following these guidelines you will be better prepared to safely reunite with loved ones during an emergency.



55 Gallon Water Barrel

Robert Morton, M.Ed., Ed.S. has retired from his positions of School Psychologist and adjunct professor in the School of Leadership & Policy Studies at Bowling Green State Univeristy. A portion of Ad sale revenue from this site is donated to Big Brothers/Big Sisters of America. Questions? Comment? Concerns about family, parenting, educational or personal concerns? Contact him on the secure Bpath Mail Form.

Thursday, September 15, 2011

(A-32) FAMILY BLACK SHEEP IS A UNIQUE CHAMPION!

I remember a woman teacher who had an obvious low self-esteem. Other teachers would say, "She has so much capability but she holds herself back." I talked, informally, with her and found out that she had siblings who were very successful. She felt that she couldn’t measure up to them. She even made the comment that she was the “black sheep” of the family. 



Her parents practiced autocratic parenting and didn't tolerate average grades and stressed total excellence in every endeavor the children pursued. "Climb to the top" was their motto and each child was expected to become adults who were very well off financially. Apparently, not well-off emotionally. She, nor her successful siblings, never experienced unconditional love (true love, I call it). Her folks actually looked down on her teaching profession because she didn't make enough money to live in a plush home set in a ritzy neighborhood.



 "This 'factory assembly line' approach to parenting, where individual differences among siblings isn't accepted, has marked many children with emotional scars that they carry around today as adults. They still have their parent's fingerprints all over them."
Match.com
I assured this capable but under performing teacher that the Natural Order dictated before birth that she wouldn’t be like her brothers or sisters, or like any one else on earth. How we are created ordains this fact, so we should strive to find, and be, ourselves. We didn’t arrive on planet earth by serendipity means.

By metaphysical design, millions of sperm cells, each which would have to be magnified a thousand times for our eyes to behold, struggled to reach an egg that was smaller than the point of a needle. Only one survived, while millions of its challengers weakened and perished in the struggle. One grappling sperm cell, out of millions, made each of us! It, miraculously, bonded with an egg containing a tiny nucleus.

The Natural Order dictates that everyone is born to be a unique champion. I suggested she refrained from defining her worth via comparison with siblings and recommended she seek an impartial, professional counselor who could help her unearth her incomparable uniqueness.


As a school psychologist at the time, I did notice her ability to relate to children (She taught 3rd grade). Teaching is 2/3 art form and 1/3 academic preparation. She had the art form part down pat. I encouraged her, along with the principal, to forget the emotional baggage her parents stuffed into her head and focus on becoming the best teacher she could possibly be. 


Today, she is a professional teacher who is revered by many parents of the children she's presently teaching and by past students who are now adults. She has forgotten about being labeled a "black sheep" years ago by her parents.


The term "black sheep" is so derogatory and I don't know why black sheep symbolize worthlessness. After all, the wool on a black sheep is just as warm and cuddly as that on a white sheep. Maybe shepherds despised them because their fleeces couldn't be dyed like those of white sheep. 


Just for fun, I looked up "black sheep" in the Folk-Lore Record, 1878, where there is a contradictory and long-standing English country tradition that black sheep are omens of good fortune. The Folk-Lore Record, 1878, included this piece:




This woman, this "black sheep", has a naturally-imposed uniqueness from her siblings that intended by design the moment this microscopic struggle began. This sperm, and its egg, contained 24 chromosomes, each wrapped in Jell-O like beads strung together. Each bead housed hundreds of genes.


The bonding fused her parent’s ancestral past. One healthy and victorious sperm bonded with one expectant egg, both conquerors of millions of years of human-kind’s battle for survival. This unbeaten bonding couldn’t possibly have created a “black sheep”.
"We speak figuratively of the one black sheep that is the cause of sorrow in a family; but in its reality it is regarded by the Sussex shepherd as an omen of good luck to his flock."
So there! You're an omen of good luck! From here on, you will be the best you can at whatever you're doing. Do the best you can, with what you've got, at this point in time. Stop trying to prove your parents and siblings are wrong. You don't need financial renumeration for all the heart aches others threw into your life...you need emotional renumeration.


And, my teacher friend did just that! She got that renumeration by reaching out to children and parents who were aching just like she was. She was more than an underpaid teacher (Her school district was broke)- she was a mentor, counselor, and guardian as well. She invested her time putting emotional deposits into other people's emotional bank accounts and has received emotional interest payments back in return.


Enjoy the song by John Anderson: "The Black Sheep of the Family"




Robert Morton, M.Ed., Ed.S. has retired from his positions of School Psychologist and adjunct professor in the School of Leadership & Policy Studies at Bowling Green State Univeristy. A portion of Ad sale revenue from this site is donated to Big Brothers/Big Sisters of America. Questions? Comment? Concerns about family, parenting, educational or personal concerns? Contact him on the secure Bpath Mail Form.

Saturday, September 10, 2011

(A-31) FAMILY JOURNAL: FAMILIES WITH HANDICAPPED KIDS FACE TOUGH TIMES

ClickN KIDS Teaching KIDS to READ and SPELL One Click at a TimeNationwide, one in 110 babies is diagnosed with autism- a 60% increase for boys and a 48% increase for girls from a few years ago. Mental retardation is also identified more often among babies- every 5 minutes a child is born with such a cognitive setback. In Ohio, 4,500 babies are born each year with a birth defect, making it the leading cause of infant death and accounting for 19% of infant deaths in the Buckeye state.

I offer the growing number of parents having babies with disabilities a story. It‘s called, "Welcome To Holland" and was written by a mother experiencing what you are. She had a child with "Down's Syndrome". It illustrates the isolation and grief parents of babies with disabilities feel:


Welcome To Holland!
"When you're going to have a baby, it's like planning a fabulous vacation trip to Italy. You buy a bunch of guidebooks and make wonderful plans. The Coliseum, the Michelangelo David, the gondolas in Venice. You learn some handy phrases in Italian. It's all very exciting!

After months of anticipation, the day arrives. You pack your bags and off you go. Several hours later, the plane lands. The stewardess comes in and says, 'Welcome to Holland'. 'Holland?', you say, 'I signed up for Italy, all my life I've dreamed of going to taly.'


But there's been a change in the flight plan. They've landed in Holland and there you must stay. The important thing is that they haven't taken you to a horrible, disgusting place, full of famine and disease. It's just a different place.


So you must go out and buy new guidebooks, learn a whole new language and meet a new group of people you would never have met. It's slower-paced and less flashy than Italy. But, after a while you catch your breath, you look around and notice that Holland has windmills, colorful tulips and even Rembrandts.


But everyone you know is coming and going from Italy. They're bragging about the wonderful time they had there. For the rest of your life you say, 'Yes, that's where I was supposed to go, that's what I had planned.'


The loss of that dream trip to Italy will always hurt. But, if you spend a life mourning that you didn't get to Italy, you may never be free to enjoy the very special, lovely things about Holland."


The Family Journal recognizes that today‘s parents with disabled children are distressed from economic and financial difficulties, adding more stress to the unfortunate rerouted air flight to Holland.


Researchers studied 28,141 such families at all income levels and found they were significantly more challenged by food, housing and health issues than families without disabled children. Surprisingly, a significant percentage of those struggling were higher-income households (National Survey of Am. Families). In fact, a significant number of families earning two to three times the federal poverty level (Av. $24,000 for family of four) worried that the food may run out, skipped meals due to lack of money, were unable to pay their rent, or had to move in with others.


Unfortunately, these higher-income, middle-class families raising disabled children may not qualify for assistance, since the qualifying income guidelines were set in the 1960’s.


For all the parents raising children with disabilities who have additional concerns due to the distressed economy…try to remember that Holland has many beautiful things to see.


Related Posts:
Special needs tutors also available

Robert Morton, M.Ed., Ed.S. has retired from his positions of School Psychologist and adjunct professor in the School of Leadership & Policy Studies at Bowling Green State Univeristy. A portion of Ad sale revenue from this site is donated to Big Brothers/Big Sisters of America. Questions? Comment? Concerns about family, parenting, educational or personal concerns? Contact him on the secure Bpath Mail Form.

Wednesday, September 7, 2011

(A-30) 4-YEAR COLLEGE DEGREE NOW AFFORDABLE & HIGH-QUALITY

Forget night school – Study when you want, at home, online! Skip the loans and save thousands –  Just $99 a month plus $39 per course!






StraighterLine makes obtaining a college education less expensive without interfering with a quality education. Through their online college courses, students can complete general education requirements (courses normally taken Freshman or Sophomore year) for under $1000. This translates into a savings of up to 90% on their first year's tuition. View the video (bottom of article).

StraighterLine's courses are perfect for the following people
:
*All First Time College Students!
*High School Students (they can get credit while still in high school). Did you know that students that have college credit prior to enrolling in college are twice as likely to complete a degree? With StraighterLine, you can get college credit prior to starting college
*Recent High School Graduate
*College Freshman
*Career changers or people going back to school
*Adult learners
*Military personal and their families (or anyone who travels a lot)
*International Students (or US students looking to study abroad)
*the list goes on!


The online classes are self-paced and so flexible that students can study when they want, where they want and how they want. There are no due dates or assigned class times and students save thousands of dollars.







Forget night school – Study when you want, at home, online! Skip the loans and save thousands –  Just $99 a month plus $39 per course!






StraighterLine is continually adding new college partners and bundles to make it even easier and more cost effective for our students to earn their college degrees. In short, they're innovators in the way America is transforming college and higher education by allowing more students to afford a great education.

Due to StraighterLine, a quality college education is now more affordable in the face of escalating costs in obtaining a four-year college degree.

StraighterLine offers two innovative programs:
(1) The “Freshman Year for $999” program is designed to help college students and their families address rampant rising tuition costs of college education. Students can take up to 10 StraighterLine courses for a single fee of $999 and realize savings of more than 90% versus the first-year tuition at many colleges.







Truth in Higher Education






(2) Students can also enroll in a subscription package of online college courses for $99 a month that allows students who can move the material even faster an opportunity for even greater savings.

Both programs includes up to 10 hours of one-on-one instructional support.

Students who successfully complete StraighterLine online college courses receive credit when they enroll with any school in our rapidly expanding network of regionally accredited partner colleges and universities. In addition, the American Council on Education’s College Credit Recommendation Service (ACE CREDIT) has also evaluated and recommended college credit for StraighterLine courses.