LOOP 21 The power of being different

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Let’s Talk: Motherhood and Career

2 months ago

Join @TheLoop21 on Twitter 3/12 at 1pm EST/10am PST to discuss how to balance motherhood and a career using #L21Success!

We all know that being a mom is a full-time job and having a successful career takes years of hard work and preparation.

In recent years, as more and more women are choosing to pursue careers and prosper in their jobs instead of staying at home to raise a family, the question about when or to even have children at all is up for much debate. 

Once a woman decides to have children, the question about how to balance work and a family life has caused much distress.   

When do you stop and place your career, something you’ve worked tirelessly for, on hold to become a mom? Women who debate this fear not being able to succeed at both...you’re either successful in your job or successful at home as a mom. 

Fortunately, while it can be a challenge, there are women who have overcome that challenge and found that balance.   

In the next TweetUp, as we celebrate Women’s History Month, Loop21 will discuss how to balance motherhood and a career. Experts will be available to share their success stories and offer advice on how to juggle it all. 

Join the conversation on March 12. Follow Loop21 on Twitter to join the TweetUp as we discuss how to balance motherhood and a career. The hashtag is #L21Success. 

Join us for our live TweetUp! 

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Will Newtown, Conn., Be The Breaking Point?

5 months ago

Children are being shot around the country; can we do something, now, to make it stop?

When she thinks about the shooting, Shianne Norman knows there is no answer to the “why?” and so instead goes back into the “what ifs?” What if things had somehow unfolded differently? Would her little boy, the one who loved pancakes and bananas and fighting with his sister, then still be alive?

“This is, I hope, the worst I will ever feel in my life,” Norman told the "New York Times." “Please don’t tell me my son is in a better place. Though it’s true, I wanted him to be with me. Don’t tell me to be thankful for the time I had, because I want more.”

The country is consumed with the deaths of the 20 children, ages 6 and 7, who were killed Friday at Sandy Hook Elementary in Newtown, Conn.

On Friday morning, parents received calls instructing them to go to the school, and they waited at a nearby fire station for news. As the hours passed, most had tearful reunions with their children; but finally, officials came into the room to say that there were no more children to come. There would be no more reunions. Parents began to wail.

Norman knows these parents’ anguish well. But she is not from a tony Connecticut suburb, she lives in a New York neighborhood 65 miles south—the Bronx. Norman’s 4-year-old son, Lloyd Morgan Jr., was shot and killed July 22, 2012, as he played on a basketball court, at a memorial event for Troynisha Harris, an 18-year-old who had been fatally stabbed at the playground two years earlier.

“This ought to be a wake-up call for all of us,” the Rev. Al Sharpton said during his eulogy for Lloyd this summer. “Our babies are dying.”

But it seems Lloyd’s death didn’t wake anyone up. Nor did the deaths of the hundreds of children who have been killed in the Bronx, South Side Chicago, and other urban neighborhoods this year. There was no tearful president on TV, no stream of messages on Facebook and Twitter listing the names of the dead or calling for gun control. The deaths of Lloyd Morgan, of 7-year old Heaven Sutton, who was shot as she sold candy in her Chicago neighborhood, of others like them, passed almost without notice.

And here, I think, the question is why?

[ALSO READ: 'Occupy the Corners:' Ending Gun Violence]

According to statistics from the Children’s Defense Fund, on average, 3,000 children die each year due to gun violence. That’s one child killed every three hours, every single day. Black children and teens were only 15 percent of the total child population in 2008 and 2009, and yet accounted for 45 percent of all child and teen gun deaths.

So why, given the 3,000 children who are killed each year, does the shooting in Connecticut have such an impact on us? Several of my friends mentioned hugging their children extra tight when they came home from school on Friday. Before the day was done, they had signed petitions and donated money to the Brady Fund. But by June of this year, 24 children had been killed in Chicago alone, due to gun violence, and I didn’t see the same sense of outrage and grief. So what is it about this particular case? Is it the fact that 20 children were killed at one time? Is it that this was at an elementary school, a place we send our children expecting that they'll be safe? Is it because this was a neighborhood that looks much like the ones the more fortunate among us live in, which makes us think that even though we live in places that are good and safe, we too can be affected by gun violence?

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