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Make a PEACE Pact in DFW


Passionate about and interested in working toward equality

and PEACE in your community?

 

Join the Texas PEACE Project!

(Peer Educators Acting for Change and Equality)

 

Seeking: Dallas County Youth Grades 9-12 (Ambassadors)

and Adults 18-30 (Allies)

 

Violence is a community issue, and youth can create lasting, sustainable, social change in their communities. Explore prejudice, privilege and power, in order to create a world in which there is no space for violence.

Want to learn more? Join us for an Open House: Saturday, March 31, 2012 12pm-4pm

at the Center for Community Cooperation

Hill Country Room – 2900 Live Oak, Dallas 75204

For additional information contact Katy Perkins             (214) 345-5053       /katy@dallasrapecrisis.org

 

OR, APPLY NOW!

AMBASSADOR APPLICATION (YOUTH GRADES 9-12) https://docs.google.com/a/dallasrapecrisis.org/spreadsheet/viewform?formkey=dGVfSzFGUkNOcGk0TF9xM013akhEb0E6MQ#gid=0

 

ALLY APPLICATION (ADULTS 18-30) https://docs.google.com/a/dallasrapecrisis.org/spreadsheet/viewform?formkey=dDlfR3d0dVpOZUd4VEpGMmFDU0FvYUE6MQ#gid=0

Chef Lane

Fake Lasagna–Real* Good


Here is an easy, fake lasagna recipe that Thor & B both liked well enough to go seconds on.  It’s been quite a while since either of them asked for seconds out of my kitchen.  Am now self-congratulatory and happy to share the recipe I cribbed from Creamland, then changed up to suit my own tastes.

 

1 box rigatoni pasta

1 jar spaghetti sauce

1lb ground lamb

1 80z container of ricotta cheese

1/4 cup parmesan cheese

1tbs basil

2tbs italian seasoning

1 tsp salt

1 tsp pepper

1 egg

 

Boil the rigatoni while oven pre-heats to 350.

Brown lamb into small chunks with 1/2 the italian seasoning and 1/2 the salt (you may want more salt to taste.)

While rigatoni and lamb are cooking, combine 1/2 of the spaghetti sauce and everything else in a mixing bowl and stir like crazy, until everything is well blended and smooth.  Add the lamb and mix.  Set aside until pasta is finished.

Drain your pasta and add it to the mix.  Stir until pasta is well covered.

Spray non-stick to the bottom of a casserole and pour in a little sauce to cover the bottom.  Pour in the pasta/lamb/cheese mix and cover with more sauce.  Sprinkle more parm or some shredded cheese on top.  Bake for 15 minutes.

Eat.  Tasty!

*I very nearly could not use this title because, grammatically, real is incorrect.  It should be “really good” but that doesn’t scan as nicely as “Fake Lasagna–Real Good”, so…  Footnote.

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Working Hard


In 2000, I made my initial escape from the cultlike mentality of the ministry I worked for, and I say cultlike because five of my superiors told me that if I quit, God would punish me.  One specifically told me that I would be running straight into God’s wrath, and after the first two failed temp jobs (one, where the owner of the company threw books at me, and the owner’s son asked me to stay on my knees while I was in the office with him because he liked the view), I was feeling like it had been prophetic.  Since I wasn’t doing too well at finding another job in administration, I decided to go back to being a nanny for a while.

I was spoiled as a nanny.  I had worked as a live-out (part-time during school year, full-time on breaks) nanny for a wonderful family of 7 for years.  I loved them.  They loved me.  It was mutually respectful and we still send Christmas cards.  I loved them.  Let me say that again:  I loved them.  So, when I went to work for a family of 5, I figured the experience would be similar, but easier.

I went from having 5 boys of stairstep ages, to 2 elementary aged boys and an infant girl.  I also went from being treated like a person to being treated like a Swiffer.  I can sum up the entire 14 day experience with this:  One day, as I stood holding the baby, burping her over my shoulder, the mother of the family (who was a C-level executive for a global company) shook her head and said, “I cannot even relate to women who can stand being around children all day long.  I have ambitions.  I have goals.  I have a life.”  She said that to me, the woman she was paying to be around her children all day long, as though I were some kind of checker-eating fool for working as a domestic.

I had to argue with the family to get paid, and had to argue with them to be paid in full.  I had to argue with them to be allowed to leave at the agreed upon time, and had to argue with them about my unwillingness to allow their ten-year-old son to punch, bite and kick me (“It’s just what he does,” the mother told me when he broke the skin biting me. “You’ll get used to it.”)  And even had to argue with them when I told them I quit.

The mother emailed me after I left and asked me what she could have done differently to get me to stay, and I suggested she could have treated me like a professional and a person, and paid me on time.  She wrote me back to tell me how incensed she was that someone of my stature (domestic help) would speak to someone of her stature (C Level Executive) that way.  After all, she was a successful businesswoman and I was just a nanny.  I barely took the high road.  I mean barely.  I didn’t answer.

I had two other very good interviews for permanent live-in nanny positions, and a good interview at a corporate job, and took the corporate job.  I would go back to the ministry for a few months before making my final break, and I would find out that a coworker’s sister had taken one of the nanny jobs I had turned down.  I would decide I had made a very, very, very wise decision.

Being a caretaker is a hard job–ask any mother.  That’s why the job exists.  I had the fortune of working for a family who understood that, and who treated me like a valued employee.  I had the misfortune of working for a family who did not, and who treated me like a piece of equipment.

It doesn’t matter what job you do.  You deserve respect for working.

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Peace Corps in Your own Backyard


On my way back from a networking meeting, I turned on NPR and caught part of the Diane Rehm show.  Today, Diane was talking about bullying and her guests were (from the website) Kelby Johnson, a gay teenager from Oklahoma whose story is featured in the documentary “Bully.”  Lee Hirsch, Sundance- and Emmy-award winning filmmaker, directed the documentary “Bully.”  Dr. Joseph Wright, pediatrician, senior vice president, Child Health Advocacy Institute at Children’s National Medical Center.  And, Duane Thomas, assistant professor, Applied Psychology and Human Development Division of the Graduate School of Education at the University of Pennsylvania, consultant to the documentary “Speak Up!”

A caller dialed in to talk about how her daughter was harrassed into hysteria (and a cafeteria-table jumping outburst) over the AIDs related death of her father, and how ill-equipped, or unwilling the school was to protect the 9th grade child from her personally global torment.  It reminded me of my 6th grade year, and how ill-equipped, or unwilling the school was to protect me from my own tormentors, culminating in my own hysterical outburst in the middle of a classroom.  It tells as a funny story now, but at the time I was beside myself with anguish, frustration, and absolute helplessness at the hands of the girls who had made it their day’s fun to see me cry.

Diane’s guests talked about the bravery of the 9th grade girl for just getting up and going to school, and the bravery it took to make a scene at all.  And, having made a similar end to my own hurt, I agree with them.  But that’s not the bravery I want to talk about.  I want to talk about the bravery of two other people.

I don’t usually call out full names on my blog, but I think Camilla Boatwright and (a girl whose name I think was Lena Inoue, but I may be confusing Lena with another girl from the year prior–Camilla ended up at high school with me, so I had a deeper connection to her) deserve the shout-out.

After my insane outburst (screaming, throwing books across a room, and quoting Merchant of Venice at the top of my 12-year-old lungs), Camilla and Lena did something that no one else had been willing to do.  They stood up for me.

First, they came and found me.

I had gone to hide in a bathroom, and was trying to figure out how I was going to make it out of the school without being completely vaporized for my outburst.  I had decided I wasn’t going to come back.  That was going to be my last day at school, I didn’t care what my parents did to me.  Nothing they could have done was worse, and if you’d met my parents then, you understand what a personal declaration that was for me.  I was ready to tell my mother to stick it.  I wasn’t going back.  I might have ended up as a little grease spot on our kitchen wall, but I wasn’t going to be at Hockaday for another hour.

Fortunately, I never had to find out whether I was right or wrong because Camilla and Lena came and found me, cleaned me up, helped me down the hall and told me to stick with them.  From there out, they gave me a place to sit, walked with me in the halls, and made a tiny buffer between Me and Them.  And I made it.  I finished out the year.

I really don’t know what would have happened if not for the two of them, and even though we did not ever become friends (understandably, I didn’t really think I was worth their friendship at the time, and was ashamed of how much I needed their protection–but had enough sense of self-preservation to accept it!) they saved me from much worse than I’d already suffered.

If you’re reading this and you know someone who is being bullied, don’t wait for the outburst because some kids don’t make it that far along–and even if they do, by the time they get there they are so damaged it might take twenty years to recover.  Be the Camilla.  Be the Lena.

You don’t have to be aggressive.  You don’t have to be a hero.  You just have to be present.  You just walk up alongside and usher.  You just show that there is a dissenting face in the crowd.  You never have to say a word. 

You get your friends together, and you make a buffer in the warzone.  You become the UN.  You become the Peace Corps.  You become the Red Cross.  You make a difference in a life that can be the actual difference between life and death.

Doing nothing is the same as doing something in these situations, so let your something be the right thing. 

That goes for you adults, too.

Be Camilla.

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Them That’s Got Shall Get


I haven’t heard anything back from the National Anthem audition, and since it happened Feb. 21, and they told me letters would be sent out to winners within 3 weeks, I’m pretty sure I won’t be.  Nothing wrong with that, though.  The point was to have the experience, and I had it.  Yay!  I also gave myself the experience of submitting a video-audition through the X Factor’s website–accidentally.

That is, I fully intended to submit an audition, but I thought I was just doing a trial run, so I did it in my jammies, having just rolled out of bed, and answered the Simon Cowell questions with bemusement from under a fan, so my voice is nearly drowned out with static sounds.  I did not realize it was the actual audition.  Bwahahaha!  The interns whose job I’m sure it is to cull through the chaff will likely have a great laugh over my Buddy Holly frames and Fraggle hair.  I will be the Why Factor.  If I can figure out how to pull the video, I’ll link it.  Why should interns have all the fun?

I think I could re-record and re-submit, but I haven’t found the time yet.  Maybe I should go do that now?

Lookie here.  Look what I found.  You have to suffer through my inane answers to the interview questions to get to my 45-some-seconds of God Bless the Child.  If you click the button to “watch with questions” it will make more sense.  Well, it will have some continuity anyway.

Enjoy.