Archive | Weekly Survival

Weekly or bi-monthly stories and tips for surviving your work week. We like to find the humor in our irony, and hope you do, too.

The Latte Activist

Today Phil was telling me (at our favorite coffee stop) that business has been improving over the past several months. He has a large network of coffee shop owners, and they are saying the same. Is there a better way to talk politics and economics than with a cup of java and your favorite barista? […]

Continue Reading

Being a Yummie Mummie

The problem with being a yummie mummie is, threefold. First, I’m an imposter. My   a s s   is too W I D E. Second, I am not relaxed from a workout and massage, glowing from a facial, or recently waxed and polished. I am fretting and stressed and eating too many chocolate chips […]

Continue Reading

Adapting to Work Environments

Did you ever watch Gorillas in the Mist? It’s based on the story of Dian Fossey and how she learned to behave like mountain gorillas (in the Congo and in Rwanda), in order to be accepted enough to live with them and study them. Although Fossey was renamed in How I Met Your Mother, Marshall […]

Continue Reading

Winning your Break Up

I was listening to a program on the radio today which sent me to Forbes.com. A woman, Fancy Frenchwood, published her letter of resignation in all of it’s emotional honesty and glory. Later this evening, I was watching an episode of How I Met Your Mother about who won the relationship break up. Was it […]

Continue Reading

Why I like TED

TED.com (and Coursera.org) are two very distinct reasons why I like technology. Sure I’m hammering away on the keyboard of this Macbook Pro and looking at my iPhone at a text message, but they seem like a way of life and an extension of me. I take them for granted. But I do not take […]

Continue Reading

Makers

Earlier I was talking about rebranding feminism and I think it’s finally right in front of me. M A K E R S – Women who make America –  on the PBS site. MAKERS: Women Who Make America tells the remarkable story of the most sweeping social revolution in American history, as women have asserted their rights to […]

Continue Reading

Why we buy new versus used

Apparently I now give advice to my physician (mostly about what to read in People magazine when I’m in the doc’s office).  And also to the administrator at the front desk (about buying used versus new). It started with a bunny in a basket at Costco. The administrator was telling me that she was thinking […]

Continue Reading

Appetite for Success

Do you have an appetite for corporate or entrepreneurial success? According to a professor at University of Maryland, less than 5% of americans engage in entrepreneurship due to risk and fear of failure. Yet key motivators (no surprise) are money, freedom and control. One main point he makes is to assess the “opportunity cost” – […]

Continue Reading

Can you ask for Part time in an Interview?

Remember the movie Bridget Jones? That quirky 30-something singleton who was desperate to meet a man and find  happiness at work? According to actress Renee Zellweger when asked about playing the role: Obviously I related to the female aspect [of the character], her day-to-day regimen and fight against Mother Nature… I understood her search for self-acceptance […]

Continue Reading