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Opinion

Sunday, May 20, 2012

Pet of the Week

Friendly Feline Needs a Home

Moo is very friendly and will come right up to you to nuzzle.

MEET MOO! Moo is an energetic and playful 2-year-old spayed female cat who was rescued by the Animal Rescue League of Boston. Moo spent some time in a foster home taking care of her kittens. They've since all been adopted and now Moo is patiently awaiting her turn.r Moo is very friendly and will come right up to you to nuzzle. She prefers human companionship to that of other felines. She loves to be petted and loves to play with all types of toys. So, if you're looking for a new companion to put a smile on your face each day, meet Moo today!

Thursday, May 17, 2012

Mom Talk

Do Boston Families Even Want Public School?

Low attendance at a city-sponsored meeting sends the wrong signal.

When you’re a member of the audience, you hope to outnumber the performers.  An empty venue is disheartening for those on stage and there’s less energy in the room. Boston Public Schools (BPS) took the stage on a rainy Tuesday night, holding its latest community meeting on improving school choice. But with fewer than two dozen people attending, speakers included – we barely made it. Go ahead, you can yawn – “community meeting on improving school choice” is one boring string of words, and not an event destined to be standing room only. But I was wide-eyed, thinking of the immense task Mayor Thomas Menino created for the city in January, in promising to overhaul the lottery assignment process and begin fostering school communities for 57,000…

Wednesday, May 16, 2012

Easy Steps to Help You Take a Media Holiday

Can't live without your smart phone? Read this.

Have you ever thought about how much time you spend connected to media of one kind or another? Whether it’s an online paper, Facebook, Pinterest or other social media tools, or television and radio, much of our waking moments are spent hearing and absorbing information that’s not our own. While this can sometimes be for informational purposes, like listening to the news or the weather, much of it is hardly essential information. Having said that, there is both interest and fun to be had in reading onine articles, blogs and Facebook posts by friends and family. But when we are constantly attached to external information it can literally take its toll on our physical and mental health. Our brains are overstimulated, our reference point …

Tuesday, May 15, 2012

John Keith

I Want To Live Where the Hip People Live!

Is Boston losing its young people to other US cities because we're dull and boring? Are we just too uptight? How come it's so hard to have a good time in this town?

Last week, the Boston Globe sponsored a discussion as part of its Building a Better Commonwealth series, Loosen Up, Boston?, where a group of panelists was asked its opinion on how to make Boston a more creative, dare I say “hip”, place to live. "How can we work together to find the right balance between maintaining Boston's character and needs of local residents while enhancing urban vitality and giving new nightlife venues a chance to take root?" It’s nothing new to hear a person here or there talking about Boston not being the most interesting, exciting place to live. But, an audience of ~400 assembling to share their thoughts on it? That is something new. People are looking for change. Here is what I heard people talking about and what…

Alex

2:31 pm on Wednesday, May 16, 2012

Btw, mentioning Seattle as a paragon of hipness? What is this, 1996?   more ›

Thursday, May 3, 2012

Mom Talk

Road Trip: Wegmans or Bust

If you're used to walking home with the groceries, there's novelty to visiting New England's largest supermarket.

When it’s just a carton of milk you need, a 35-mile drive is definitely out of the way. But if you’re up for a pilgrimage, the new Wegmans in Northborough is New England’s largest supermarket and the chain’s first store in Massachusetts.  There is some psychology behind wanting to see 138,000 square feet of produce and everything else the modern American grocery sells, in a box so big that there are 30 check-out lines and a red phone right by the yogurt case, connecting you to customer service – just in case you get lost, or have a question. But it’s not just me: Wegmans’ reputation for superior customer service, as well as their competitive price-quality-choice mix, drew 25,000 visitors to Northborough last October 16, breaking opening …

Wednesday, May 2, 2012

Ten Ways to Improve the Health of your Job

Stressful, unhealthy job? Here are some quick fixes.

Most of us have to work. And, if you don’t work for yourself, like me, you may feel as if you have very little control over what happens to you at work. Responsibilities change, your boss may change or where you’re physically located for work may also change. When things are constantly changing and we feel we have no control, it creates stress. And, the reality is, change is part of life and certainly part of the landscape of many jobs today. So, what can you do to manage this stress? Attacking stress requires a two-part plan: Shift your thinking and move your body. This plan acknowledges two things: First, that while you may not be able to change what’s happening in your job, you CAN change your reaction to the changes. Secondly, how you …

Laurel Morse

9:05 am on Thursday, May 3, 2012

I like that you focused on healthy changes for our world and realities. Our thoughts have the ability to change our realities, because where our thoughts go we go. What we put out to the universe we attract back. Moving our bodies, enjoying something beautiful in a daily moment and connecting with each other in a loving way can only make our view of reality and lives a much better place to be. I …   more ›

Tuesday, May 1, 2012

John Keith

Boston's Drug Epidemic IS a Crisis Situation

Boston Mayor Thomas M. Menino says the drug problem in Boston isn't at a crisis level. But, it is.

Two weeks ago, South Boston resident Barbara Coyne was killed in her own home. Last fall, Barbara Tagen, also from Southie and also in her 60’s, was killed. Police believe both attacks were drug-related. The response to these tragic events has been an outpouring of expression from residents telling tales of a neighborhood reeling from drug addiction and violent crimes committed as a result. Not everyone seems to be taking the problem as seriously, unfortunately. Boston Herald reporter Ted Fitzgerald asked Boston Mayor Thomas M. Menino last week if the situation was “worse than usual”.  The Mayor responded that he couldn’t speak to “hearsay” and that he hadn’t seen any “actual numbers”. Is it at a crisis level? “No, it’s not at a crisis …

Sunday, April 22, 2012

Letter to the Editor: Think Outside the Bottle for Earth Day

Sarah-Beth Chester, owner of 7ate9 Bakery, talks about the environmental impacts of bottled water.

As a small business owner serving the Back Bay community, protecting the environment where we live and work is important to me. That's why 7ate9 Bakery took Corporate Accountability International's “Think Outside the Bottle” pledge to be a bottled water free establishment. Bottled water’s environmental impact is significant when one considers that we all have a low-impact alternative: the tap. Ounce for ounce, it takes nearly 2,000 times the energy to produce and distribute bottled water than it does for tap water.  Even industry studies admit the tap has a smaller energy footprint than bottled water. Bottled water corporations have long tried to convince us that the only safe water comes in a bottle. But the truth is that public water is …

Thursday, April 19, 2012

Mom Talk

Moms & Kids Find Sanctuary in the Pru

New children's stores in the mall draw parents with kids to the Shops at Prudential Center, a place that relieves the dearth of community spaces in the Back Bay.

Stay in your lane, pass on the left, and neither exceed nor fall under the speed limit: These are the unspoken traffic rules at Boston’s Prudential Center mall. Crowded with office workers, tourists, and locals, the busy hall off Boylston Street reminds you that you are still in the city. But pass the north-side main drag, and the aisles widen while the lovely skylight ceilings persist. Ahhh, space. It’s here that young families are making the mall their own. A landscaped garden, places indoors to linger, and now a family-oriented trio of businesses are all holding down the age of the average Pru visitor. With most residents in our urban neighborhoods tucked into condos without yards, we covet any living space beyond our own homes. The …

Wednesday, April 18, 2012

John Keith

Dogs in Parks, Columnist Barks

Who doesn't love having dogs running unleashed in our public parks? Only one person, I guess.

I hate it when people act arrogantly. Drivers cutting off other drivers in traffic, guys throwing frisbees that end up banging parents in the head while sitting having picnics - you get the idea. I encountered my worst pet peeve last week while sitting in Blackstone Square, on Washington Street in the South End. The square is busy most days. Men with bottles hang out there, talking and arguing with one another (and themselves). Mothers with babies mingle about, sunning themselves. And, pet owners bring their dogs there to poop on the lawn and run up on unsuspecting people’s laps. Previous comments to the contrary notwithstanding, I do like dogs. I love them. But, the scene here was overwhelming. I mean, like 12-15 dogs off leashes. Swear …

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