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  • Baby Dropping: It's Not Just For Celebrities

    Move over, Britney and Jacko: it seems that normal people drop their babies, too. A fair number, in fact, and often in hospitals. Now a national healthcare provider wants to investigate falls involving babies, to see what can be done to prevent them. According to  an article in the Portland Oregonian, folks in the Providence hospital chain in that state reported some 20 baby falls annually, but it's suspected that the number is under-reported due to embarrassment by the adults involved. In the vast majority of cases, the baby is just fine.

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  • Parents Aren't Cool (And They Don't Rock)

    Hey you, the dude with your Fender bass leaning up against cases of formula. And you, the chick with the Janis Joplin warble and Baby Bjorn—put those Rock and Roll dreams down.  Apparently parenthood disqualifies you from rocking.  If there is a “You Must Have This Many Kids to Enter” sign at the front of the Rock and Roll ride, that sign reads “zero.”

     

    Jump To See What Rocker Thinks You're Uncool

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  • Are You Ready to Rock? Ladies' Guitar Camp is Around the Corner

    I've been dreaming of sending my daughters to Girls Rock Camp in Portland since before I had kids at all. Now the dream is expanded a bit: I'm dreaming of sending myself to Ladies Rock Camp, an instructional camp for adult women that also serves as a fundraising opportunity for the non-profit GRC.

    $350 gets you three days of rock-and-roll action, no experience necessary and you don't even need to bring your own instruments. All you need is a place to crash in Portland, since it's a day camp like the kids' counterpart, and the will to rock. Do you have the will to rock? Do you? I know I do. And I also have a long list of band names I won't let my husband-the-real-musician use, in case I need them. Here's my chance!

     


  • Portland Parents to be Hauled into Court if Their Kids Break Curfew

    handcuffs curfew parentsGrowing up, I couldn't wait to have a curfew, and I'm sure my parents blinked a few times when I'd innocently ask them when my curfew was.  But for me in my innocence, having a curfew meant of course that I was older, and that I was likely also doing things that were slightly forbidden (like thinking about taking a road sign!  I was so darn dangerous!), so that I had to be reined in by a curfew.  Naturally, when I became of age to actually have a curfew, I resented it and immediately saw it for the stupidity that it was (going to work at my job at a donut shop, for instance, caused me to break the law repeatedly, as I was both out too late and too early depending on my shift), and like most teenagers in my town then, considered myself above the curfew law.

    All I can say is that I'm glad I didn't live in Portland.  Parents there are being hauled into court if their under-15-year olds break curfew and are being held responsible for their teens' misbehavior.  Curfew, by the way, is 9:15 on school nights for kids under 14 and not in high school, and 10:15 on weeknights, and 10:15 on weeknights and midnight on weekends for kids who are at least 14 and in high school.  The new curfew laws are an attempt to rising curb teen violence in the area, as authorities are hoping that when parents are held responsible for their kids' behavior, it will improve.  Well, duh.  I don't think the hours are all that unreasonable except for older teens, but I sure hate someone telling me what to do.

    How about you, parents of teens?  Are there curfew laws in your town?  How do you feel about them? 



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