Archive for October, 2011

Reposted

In the interest of full disclosure, I am the Director of Medomak Camp of Washington, Maine. Medomak used to be a children’s summer camp for many years and in the early 90′s, a former camper (not me) with four young children found herself in the position to purchase her childhood camp. The idea was to preserve the very valuable and very pretty property from the familiar fate of many summer camps: housing development. But when 250 acres of land also comes with 80 buildings, 3 dining halls and an arsenal of equipment, preservation also becomes about land use. Not only would it have been a shame to let all the buildings fall into disrepair, but it presented an opportunity to keep alive it’s traditional use as a summer camp. So the owner reached out to alumni for ideas and the common thread was that they all loved camp and they all had young children. Organically, the idea of camp for the family was born.

A few years into the venture, I was recruited having had a decent amount of experience working at a children’s camp while in college. When I first came to Medomak, what was immediately clear was that you could very easily take the summer camp for children model and adapt it to serve the needs of families. I think this observation is very important because to me it defines what a family camp is or what it ought to be.

As you do your search for family camps, keep front and center in your mind that not many people define family camp the same way and thus your search will be somewhat complicated by the terms broad use. The point of this blog is to help you better understand the important differences between the family camp programs, point you in the right direction and help you make a good choice. While I clearly have a basic incentive to try and steer you towards Medomak, ultimately my interests will not be met if your interests are not met. So please understand the reason I am playing the role of information giver is because I am interested in finding families that are truly looking for what it is that Medomak Camp offers. At the same time, if you are looking for a family camp and Medomak is not ideal for your family, I want to be able to help you find a camp that is.

Advice on Family Camps from a Family Camp Director

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Sooo thankful…
You know, I was just thinking.
What if God had made it so we got our nutrients through breathing
and made babies through a special handshake?
God could have made sustaining and creating life an activity devoid of pleasure.

But no…

God,
in his grace
made the two biggest tasks for the continuation of our species (eating and sex)
also the two most pleasurable activities.

He made sustaining and making life something we could enjoy!

Isn’t He good?!!


(My little brother, Allan, featured in yesterday’s post, is also the most amazing cook! Yay for puttanesca!)

Dating Advice From A Girl

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Stop Your Breakup! : Ten Rules to Curb Cold Feet, Rekindle a Romance, or Save Your Marriage

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Simplify Marriage

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I think many guys have wondered and had similar misconceptions about how a woman will respond if he is forward. Here is a reader’s question:

Correct me if I’m wrong. I always thought that being straight forward and obvious would make me look like a sex-crazed pig, which is the opposite of what I want to portray, so I’ve tried to think of a way to be subtle. Then, by being subtle, my romantic interests never actually knew I was interested in them and thought of me as a friend. I guess it was all in my head and that I just need to go for it. Do I need to build rapport with her or is it enough to walk up to an attractive woman and just say, “Hi. I’m Philip. I saw you standing/sitting here and you look so beautiful that I want to take you out to dinner.”

My response:

Be straightforward, be obvious. Yes and yes. I’ve never had the opinion “you’re a sex crazed pig” to ANY man who’s been straight forward and obvious. All I’ve thought was “Wow, he’s confident. wow, he’s brave. He finds me desirable!”

You only look like a sex crazed pig if you start with the sexual inuendo or blatantly start joking and flirting and talking about sex.

Women WANT to be desired, so the straightforward, obvious route is the way to go.

Dating Advice From A Girl

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(This post was originally published on Venture Beat. This photo is by Melissa.)

Brazen Careerist is my third startup. People ask me all the time why I gave up my position as CEO. If you knew what startup life was really like, you would ask me why I was CEO for as long as I was.

When I started building the brand of Brazen Careerist around the year 2000, I talked about ideas like job hopping as a way to build a solid career, and I warned that generation Y’s entry into the workforce would be a total shock to employers. I was labeled a heretic and a moron.

But pretty quickly, people started thinking I was right. And I started making ,000 a speech to discuss these ideas.

The intoxication of being on a trend, and knowing how to monetize it and being excited about being right, that’s what makes someone do a startup. So I picked up two partners, I launched Brazen Careerist, and quickly, Mashable called us the number-one social networking site for Gen Y. We were on a roll.

We raised money. We launched products, we pivoted 20 times. We were due to raise more money right after the markets crashed. So of course we couldn’t raise money. And of course I did what all startup founders do when they run out of money: I had a shit fit. And then I had a nervous breakdown.

But the thing is, in a startup, everything moves at warp speed, even a nervous breakdown. So I recovered fast, convinced investors to put in more money. And we kept going.

That cycle happened twice. Which is normal. Because startups are hell, and a startup is the perfect convergence of a brilliant idea and a founder just crazy enough to stick with it through anything.

At that point, I was exhausted. And I had to figure out: When is it time for a founder to step down? So I went through a time of personal assessment, which taught me a lot about when you know it’s time for a founder to leave:

Financial exhaustion
I had funded the idea with my own money for a few years before I launched Brazen Careerist as a social recruiting platform. I ruined my credit, I cashed out my 401K (don’t ever do this!) and I lost a baby sitter because she was appalled that we didn’t have any food in the refrigerator.

Emotional exhaustion
I had traveled every week for a year giving those speeches. You’d think I’d have saved a lot of money, but you’d be surprised how much it costs to run a household if you have two kids and are never home to see them. Then I spent a year traveling every week to raise money and being on television and missing my kids.

Marital exhaustion
The dirty secret about startup founders is they can’t keep marriages together. Part of the reason for this is they are crazy to begin with. And part of the reason is that you have to be married to your company to do a startup. So divorce rates are high, especially among women, because they are much less likely to have a spouse who is willing to stay home and keep the family intact.

So I got a divorce. It was on the cover of the New York Times. And all PR is good PR, of course, but I realized, while I was going through the process, that I wanted a successful marriage more than I wanted a successful career. And then I thought, “No. I want both.” And I became exhausted wondering how women get both. (Until I realized, oh, this is why women don’t do startups.)

Intellectual exhaustion
And it was time to pivot. It was time to turn Brazen Careerist into an event-based social recruiting service. And I knew a lot about recruiting, but I was going to have to learn more. And really, you have to live and breathe the industry you are in if you’re going to rewrite the rules to that industry.

And I was already contemplating my next topic: Generation Z. I think that Generation Z will revolutionize school like Gen Y revolutionized work. I think homeschooling is going to be a huge trend that impacts startups, and corporate life, and I was really curious about that. My brain was refocusing whether I wanted it to or not.

Relationship exhaustion
While I was appearing on shows like 20/20 to tell the world how to manage Generation Y, I was having knock-down drag-out fights with my Gen-Y co-founder, Ryan Healy. Founder bickering is a common startup problem. Because if you have co-founders with different skill sets, which you should, then you are going to have different points of view, and inevitably, arguments about that.

Vision for where to go next
Fortunately, though, Ryan had not ruined his personal finances and he didn’t have kids. So he still had lots of energy to get the company to the next level. And after seeing all these issues listed on paper, I realized that even though I loved Brazen Careerist, I wanted to step down from the CEO position.

So I started a relentless campaign to get one of the investors, Ed Barrientos, to become CEO. He had already had big exits from two of his own companies. As part of my campaign I told him it could be an interim position (it wasn’t) and part of the campaign was to convince him that it was the right time for me to step down.

It was hard to step down, but I needed a vacation. I wanted to have a life. I married a farmer and moved myself and the kids (and sort-of even my ex) to a farm in rural Wisconsin.

And after I’d had a break, I found myself calling Ryan and Ed more and more. I took a keen interest at the board meetings (I’m still a major shareholder) and I asked to be more and more involved, albeit in a different role, which they eagerly accommodated.

For me, stepping down was the right thing to do. It feels right that I took a break when I needed one, and that I did it at a time when the company was in good hands. Also, it feels good that I can still contribute while I figure out how to get my next business off the ground. Because after all that trouble – the physical, financial, emotional exhaustion – I can’t stop doing startups. It’s just who I am.

Penelope Trunk Blog

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Baltimore, MD (PRWEB) July 12, 2011

You can save your marriage, even if it is on the brink of destruction. At least that is what Imago Therapist Rabbi Shlomo Slatkin of http://theRelationshipRabbi.com believes. In his new book Is My Marriage Over? The Five Step Action Plan to Saving Your Marriage, Rabbi Slatkin lays out a plan that will help couples rescue their relationship. “Couples in crisis are often hopeless about their situation because they see no way out. I wrote this book to show that there is a clear and doable path that they can take to lead them to the light and joy at the end of the tunnel,” said Rabbi Slatkin.

After helping countless couples on the verge of divorce repair their relationship, Rabbi Slatkin knows what is necessary for couples to succeed, ?when I looked at the differences between the couples who have made it and those who did not, I began to see a pattern for success. I am convinced that if couples follow this program, step by step, they are sure to see positive results.?

The book provides five ?action steps? because as Rabbi Slatkin writes in his introduction that in dealing with any acute crisis, ?it is best to become informed and then decide what immediate action must be taken . . . You can point fingers and blame, you can come up with theories, and you can remain resentful, but if you do not take immediate action nothing will change and you?ll continue to feel lousy.?

In steps one and two, “commit” and “seal your exits”, couples learn how to make their marriage a priority, refocus, and bring the energy back into their relationship. Step III, “detox your marriage”, teaches how to remove counterproductive behaviors such as negativity that seek to undermine connection, which in turn enables the creation of more safety in the relationship.

In Step IV, couples learn how to “acknowledge the ‘other’”, learning new ways to connect so that understanding each other and feeling respected and listened to becomes their marriage?s second nature. Finally, Step V, “love infusions”, teaches how to bring back some of the spark that was once felt in the relationship.

Whether one?s spouse is willing or one is going at it alone, this book provides a new understanding of relationship as well as exercises for each action step that will help readers save their marriage.

To download a free copy of Is My Marriage Over? The Five Step Action Plan to Saving Your Marriage, visit http://www.theRelationshipRabbi.com/is-my-marriage-over

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Simplify Marriage

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It’s pretty simple actually ladies:) Besides the obvious fashion advice that you shouldn’t dress slutty (legs AND cleavage? Too much. I saw a girl the other day dancing in a dress that was seriously a tube top. The bottom of her dress barely covered her bum. Not a fan ladies. Not a fan.) …The other way to act like a lady is to withhold sex. Don’t give it up! You know I’m a fan of waiting until you get married to have sex. But at the VERY least, putting religious reasonings aside, you shouldn’t have sex until you’re at least monogamous. Until then, let this song’s message be your mantra:)

Lyin’ here with you so close to me
It’s hard to fight these feelings when it feels so hard to breathe
Caught up in this moment
Caught up in your smile

I’ve never opened up to anyone
So hard to hold back when I’m holding you in my arms
We don’t need to rush this
Let’s just take this slow

Just a kiss on your lips in the moonlight
Just a touch in the fire burning so bright
And I don’t want to mess this thing up
I don’t want to push too far
Just a shot in the dark that you just might
Be the one I’ve been waiting for my whole life
So baby I’m alright, with just a kiss goodnight

I know that if we give this a little time
It will only bring us closer to the love we wanna find
It’s never felt so real, no it’s never felt so right

Just a kiss on your lips in the moonlight
Just a touch in the fire burning so bright
And I don’t want to mess this thing up
I don’t want to push too far
Just a shot in the dark that you just might
Be the one I’ve been waiting for my whole life
So baby I’m alright, with just a kiss goodnight

No I don’t want to say goodnight
I know it’s time to leave, but you’ll be in my dreams
Tonight
Tonight
Tonight

Just a kiss on your lips in the moonlight
Just a touch in the fire burning so bright
And I don’t want to mess this thing up
I don’t want to push too far
Just a shot in the dark that you just might
Be the one I’ve been waiting for my whole life
So baby I’m alright, oh, let’s do this right, with just a kiss goodnight
With a kiss goodnight
Kiss goodnight

————————————————————————————————-

One more thing ladies. When you hold off on sex, you give the guy a better chance to start thinking with his head and his heart and not with his penis. A man can fall in “lust” with a woman when he has sex on his brain, but he can only fall in love with his heart and mind. The penis is a distracting, powerful organ. It may cause him to “feel” like he’s falling for you, thus causing him to say sweet nothings, but as fast as those feelings come, they can also disappear. Thomas Paine’s quote I think applies to this subject:

“The harder the conflict, the more glorious the triumph. What we obtain too cheap, we esteem too lightly. It is dearness only that gives everything its value” -Thomas Paine

I will never forget this poem I read as a teenager. This doesn’t always happen, but it happens too often:

I met him, I liked him.
I liked him, I loved him.
I loved him, I let him.
I let him, I lost him.

Probably have blogged that poem before, but it’s just so powerful. Women, you will ALWAYS be the one that has to set the boundaries. You will be the one to “let him.” or let him wait.

What if he’s tired of waiting and leaves cuz you won’t give it up?

Then he just wasn’t that into you. You’ll have a much faster recovery time if he leaves at this point and hasn’t been in your pants. If he gets into your pants at this point because you give in, it doesn’t change the fact that he ’s not that into you. The only thing that changes is now you’ve just had sex with a guy that’s just not that into you. Ehhh. Lose-lose.

Women hold the power card when it comes to sex. Think about it. If an unattractive, charmless guy came into a bar, he really is at the mercy of some woman giving in. Take some unattractive, charmless woman who wants to give it up? She can walk into a bar and I PROMISE there WILL BE some dude who will jump at the opportunity. That’s why men say, “I got lucky.” “I got laid.” Because women have the power to make them lucky.

The power of sex isn’t in your freedom to give it away, it’s in your freedom to reserve it and protect it. Harness that power by withholding it until the right time:)

Dating Advice From A Girl

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It has occured to me that the inherent nature of putting up a blog and “advising” folks on how to find a family camp might seem to suggest that I am looking to charge a fee for advice.  I’m not.  In fact that sounds like a pretty lame business model. So while I’m concerned that the appearance suggests that I’m looking for some type of compensation, my intent, which I state in my Disclosure, is to try and stand out as an authority on family camps and help direct people towards the right camp for their family. Some of you may be interested in the camp that I direct and others may not and I more than happy to help you find a camp that does suit your family. My ultimate hope is to elevate the profile of family camps as a whole and help filter out the confusing information so that families have an easier time finding the right family camp for them.  More families going to family camps and having a fun, relaxing and satisfied experience is the compensation I am going for.  Obviously positive exposure to the niche industry I am a part of, of course benefits my camp.

Please feel free to check out the links section for family camps that I would suggest for your family or even e-mail me at family@medomakcamp.com. I am happy to offer my insights on family camp as a family vacation and the range of options families have available to them.

Advice on Family Camps from a Family Camp Director

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Reposted

There are of course a number of reasons, but here is one I came up with a few years ago when I started the blog…

A family vacation has two, sometimes competing, interests going on:  1) What is fun and relaxing to the parent?  2) What is fun and relaxing to the kids?  A great family vacation finds a way to make those interests intersect.

And speaking of intersections, try thinking of family camps as the intersection of two streets…one is named ‘family vacation’ and the other is ‘summer camp’. Recall your fondest memories of both and this is what family camps strive to provide for vacationing families. When you think about it family camps take the convenience and relaxation of a quality all-inclusive family vacation spot and mix it with the wholesome fun and treasured friendships of a well-run summer camp.  Admittedly this concept isn’t obvious and still takes a lot for people to completely wrap their heads around. I’ve been advertising my camp for years and I still regularly get the question, “so where do I send my kids?” I will tell you this: If you have heard of family camps before and you are sort of skeptical or on the fence, I can tell you that our most satisfied customers are those that took the chance and gave it a try. And when you don’t know what to expect or even better, you get dragged in by a spouse and have low expectations (I’ll bet you’re thinking mosquitos, fish sticks and camp cots aren’t you), family camp comes through big time. The first realization is usually, “hey this bed is comfortable and the showers have hot water.” The second realization is about the food and any quality family camp understands that the food had better be good. The last realization usually comes mid-week when the parents step back and recognize the harmony of it all: the kids are not complaining (having a blast, actually), the parents are relaxed from not having to plan anything or cook and clean, and are even having fun doing the things they loved to do as kids. Family camp is wholesome, good, clean fun that believe it or not, the whole family actually agrees on.

Advice on Family Camps from a Family Camp Director

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LSAT scores came out. Let the panic begin. Right now you’re exhausted, scouring the Internet for anything, ready to grasp the smallest, least credible piece of advice that tells you that your very low LSAT score WILL get you into the school of your dreams. What is my advice? Sleep on…



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Law School Expert

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