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  • Elderly Chinese Women Sentenced to "Re-Education"

    Chinese authorities have sentenced two elderly women to a year of “re-education” through labor because they repeatedly sought permits to protest in one of the official Olympic protest sites—areas that Chinese authorities designated as the only places where protests were allowed during the Olympic games, but which have yet to see a single protest.

    The women, Wu Dianyuan and Wang Xiuying, are 77 and 79.

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  • House Lust: Teeny, Tiny (Yet Somehow Furnished) Home

    The challenge of packing a family into a tiny living space isn't so much about lack of privacy, forced quiet hours (shhhhhh, the baby's sleeping!) and a useless Costco membership. It's furniture and furniture arrangements -- ones that work for grownups (look good) but also work well for kids (and messes they create).

    I love my four-person family's teeny, tiny house because it's affordable, we have enough rooms for a little office, it has a matching tiny yard (with garage!) and, best of all, zero shared walls with virile young construction workers and their vocal lovers.

    But I've found it's really hard to furnish. Everything has to be on a smaller scale, stand up to kids, not add or show clutter and serve a dual purpose -- seating and storage/beauty and storage/storage and storage. Everything has to be arranged just so. Which is why I'm always looking for tiny living ideas and/or commiseration. This slideshow of a suuuuuuper tiny townhouse in Washington, D.C. opened my eyes.

     

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  • Family Home-Buying Needs a Remodel: Mortgage Messes, Foreclosures and Second Jobs

    We live in an apartment, a small vintage apartment tucked into a lovely, expensive neighborhood in Chicago. Our rent hasn't gone up in the seven years we've lived here and we have a compassionate landlord and wonderful neighbors. Despite this just-fine set-up, we want to expand our family, we need more space and we really want to buy a home. Sometimes, I curse the days when we were not yet married or parents and made nearly double the income we now earn. Instead of investing in a home back then, we invested in eating out, happy hours, vacations and dry-cleaning.

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  • Beautify the Man Cave

    gabrielle reeceAh, remember when we used to call them "rumpus rooms"? Lots of people are revamping the garage to make it into usable space. This often means fixing it up with some gym equipment, a television, and some tasteful sports wall hangings as a surprise for the husbands- I guess that's the "man cave". Other people are turning that diamond in the rough into space the whole family can enjoy. Or just throwing up big-ass doors for the SUVs. After the kitchen and the bathroom, the garage is just ripe for a big remodel.

    Now here's what I don't get: one garage-enhancement professional says 70 percent of his customers are women. Why so many man caves? But I'm ready to be the next customer, because I sooooo want my own man cave now. A big screen TV, a stocked mini-fridge, some weights, a pull up bar, a few Gabrielle Reece posters... I'd hibernate year round. Maybe I'm just a frat boy at heart, but if you want to ask me about it, you'll have to pull me out of my happy daydream of living in my man cave, surrounded by empties while I play my Wii and watch porn with my buddies.


    Posted May 30 2007, 03:04 PM by Kelly Mills with | with no comments
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  • How Big Are Your Family Digs?

    Another old house in my beautiful neighborhood is getting knocked down. It is a house kiddy-corner from our apartment building and granted, it was on the market for a very long time and then for rent for an even longer time. It is not beautiful, not in great shape. But it is an old house on an over-sized lot with a great yard and its own character. And like many other homes turned construction sites within blocks, a Starter Castle will surely be built up in its place. With lots of bathrooms, more bedrooms and no trace of Earth on the lot.

    This McMansioning of America cannot be surprising to anyone who owns a home, is buying a home or just walks past homes in their 'hood. A recent report citing one in five homes now have four bedrooms and 2.5 baths is up from a one in six ratio in 1990. This trend toward bigger home size doesn't match up with the trend toward shrinking family size. It is, however, right on track with our need for more expansive space to fit all our stuff, no matter how much greenspace it means we chop away or how big our environmental footprint is on our cities, counties or country.

    All this construction comes at a price (and not just environmental). The average home price has risen 40% since 1990, hitting $167,500. I almost choked on my latte when I read this since our family's hunt for even a crappy fixer-upper keeps landing us at doorsteps with at least a $400,000 price tag. While I loved our own Crank Mama's ode to small spaces and while I can go on and on and freaking on about the horrific crapification of monstrous new builds in our neighborhood, I know that when we are finally ready to move out of our tiny apartment (noooo, not bitter about that at all), I will have every home-office/playroom/kid's bathroom/guest space/art studio/fitness room reason in the world to hit all the 4 BR/2.5 BA open houses I can find. 



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  • Strollerderby

    The smartest, funniest, most exhaustive parenting blog in the blogosphere.
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