Baby Giant Anteater at SF Zoo, via Zooborns

Not a nameling*

A few months ago, Mrs. Hot Cocoa posted about an effort that encourages people to “adopt” rarely-used words from days gone by. As a fellow word nerd, of course I rushed over to the Save the Words site.  The experience was a bit sad — all those sweet, abandoned words waiting for their forever homes. Several gazed at me hopefully as I walked past, blinking their liquid vowels and wagging their stubby consonants, but none seemed like quite the right fit.

And then I found it:

namelings (plural noun, c. 1706)

persons bearing the same name

If there is one type of word I love, it’s anything that sounds like a little forest creature.** Nameling definitely fits that bill, so nameling it is.

Also?  Totally useful!  Lately I’ve been receiving alumni mail from Boston College. I never attended Boston College,*** but my maiden name is so unusual, I think they did an Internet search, found me, and assumed there couldn’t possibly be more than one. There actually is one other — a few years ago I met someone who actually knew her. And now she is no longer just “the one other person in the world who shares my maiden name” … she is my nameling.

Do you have namelings?  Have you ever met one?

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* But isn’t this baby anteater OMGcute??!?  Why haven’t I visited Zooborns before?

** Favorite Dutch word — makelaar (mah-keh-lahr). It means real estate agent, but tell me that doesn’t sound like something you’d find scampering around in the underbrush….

*** Dear Boston College: I’m sure you’re perfectly nice, but I have zero plans to donate money to my own law school because it’s a pricey private school … can you guess how likely I am to donate to a private school that I didn’t even attend??!?

 

I took a break from blogging in part to decide whether to continue.  For a while, I really thought the answer would be “no.”  But in the end, I emerged not only re-dedicated to this blog, but determined to start 2 more!  (Much more on that in coming weeks….)

Why blog, when it takes precious time and even money?  There are so many stories in my head! Without some outlet, I fear my brain would eventually explode.  I picture the famous Monty Python gluttony sketch — cramming in blogs and books and TV and articles by hour after endless hour, until all it takes is one more celebrity factoid or YouTube kitten video and — KABOOM.

(image here)

Baby and illness make me slow.  There’s no getting around that.  So, to let off some mental pressure until I can get a few posts written, may I present some links?

Amusing blurb on a 9-year-old overachiever.  I described this girl to Elsa, with a request that she start supporting Mommy and Daddy in the style to which they hope to become accustomed.  (Unfortunately, she countered with the story of the baby with a black AmEx.)

Amazing, affordable home office makeover.  (Via Belle Maison)

Kotex has clever new ads poking fun at traditional “feminine care” commercials.  Media censors objected.  Which is why we have those goofy, euphemistic commercials in the first place.  (Via NY Times)

All I understand about astigmatism is that it’s harder to buy contacts.  Thank heavens for I Am Bossy’s convenient tutorial.  (Ah, who am I kidding, I still don’t understand.  But I got a good laugh.)

One of my major regrets from pregnancy = not strengthening my abdominal muscles.  This video tutorial describes a low-stress way to work that giant belly.  (Via Trainer Momma)

Colorful rooms from Project Nursery.

We all suspected it, and here’s some proof — how advertisers control content in fashion magazines.   Also interesting: how magazines cover trends.  (Via Searching for Style)

Chicken coops and high-end gardens: bringing new meaning to traditional homemaking, or just a new form of whitewash? (Via BigThink)

Edit, Add, Appreciate: 3 steps to a more authentic life.  (Via MakeUnder My Life)

What’s inhabiting your brain at the moment?

 

 

From the June issue of Harper’s:

…a Russian zoologist found that stray Muscovite dogs had adjusted to post-Soviet urban life by commuting from the suburbs on trains. The dogs, who prefer the front- and rearmost cars and occasionally miss their stops when they fall asleep, have also learned to obey traffic lights in spite of their color blindness.


To an extent, I desperately want to know why the dogs commute in the first place. But I fear context might disturb the fanciful images this strange little snippet leaves in my mind.**

** (In my head, many of the dogs have briefcases. And bowler hats.)

 

 

Hey, a snippet of news from my hometown just appeared on MSNBC!  Because Eau Claire doesn’t make the national news often, and because this is cute:

Police officers in Eau Claire, WI rescued 15 ducklings out of a storm drain on Monday.  The mother duck and one other baby, who did not fall in, reportedly “waited anxiously during the rescue,” but everyone was rescued safely and the reunited family crossed the street and waddled off.
(Photos thanks to WEAU tv)

I’m hoping the story had nothing to do with this Craigslist ad that also came up in my Google search:

Eau Claire WI
jumbo strain pekin ducklings $4.00 each. will be butcher ready in 8 weeks. must go asap. buy 1 or up to 40 location: menomonie

 

Have you been following the saga of the Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act (CPSIA) and its effect on those who make and sell children’s goods?  If not, here’s my original post and first update. And if so, here’s some big news:

Earlier today, the Consumer Product Safety Commission granted a 1-year stay of enforcement of the CPSIA’s testing requirements.  New limits on lead and phthalates in children’s goods will still take effect on February 10.  However, makers of children’s items won’t be required to supply independent testing certifications until February 2010.  (See CPSC Press Release.)


This little fella can LIVE! (Image from the Endangered Toys Flickr pool)

What does this mean in practice?  As with secondhand sellers, small businesses that make children’s items won’t have to test their items for lead and phthalates but will remain legally liable if they sell products whose lead and phthalate levels exceed the CPSIA limits.  Luckily this isn’t quite as scary as it sounds because most small manufacturers are comfortable that their products fall within the legal limits — they simply can’t afford the testing to prove it.

In the longer term, something will have to change before 2010 to ensure that devastating effects on small makers haven’t merely been pushed back to a later date.  Though the current CPSIA language requires testing by the manufacturer of each finished product, a statement by CPSC Commissioner Thomas Moore suggests that smaller businesses may be able to rely on testing by suppliers showing that all component raw materials (fabric, zippers, dyes, decorations, and whatnot) meet the legal limits.**

Some of the problems with the CPSIA stem from the way the law was written by Congress.  However, a lack of clear guidance from the CPSC has contributed to the confusion and panic that spread in certain quarters over the last several months.  In another of today’s developments, several consumer groups wrote to President Obama to request that he appoint more competent leadership at the top levels of the CPSC.

Between the added time and (hopefully) a new approach by regulators, I have every hope that our children can be protected while our favorite Etsy sellers and secondhand shops remain in business…. Many thanks to everyone who wrote your congressional representatives or otherwise helped spread the word — looks like sometimes the little guys can make a difference.  I’ll see you all on Etsy!


** Commissioner Moore’s statement provides useful guidance for small businesses worried about how to proceed under the CPSIA.  Though I personally found the tone a bit condescending, I highly recommend his statement as required reading for anyone affected by the new laws.  The other CPSC Commissioner, Acting Chairman Nancy Nord, also provided a statement with additional detail.
 

Organic clothing for children is a hot item these days.  For good reason — cotton pesticides and chemicals added during manufacturing leave potentially harmful residues on fabrics.  These chemical residues often irritate babies’ extra-sensitive skin, and, in the long term, may harm a child’s respiratory and immune development.

For example, formaldehyde is one chemical commonly found in clothing.  Formaldehyde is valuable to manufacturers because it repels mildew and reduces stains and wrinkling during storage and shipping, but it raises health concerns for wearers.  According to the World Health Organization (WHO), formaldehyde exposure in amounts greater than 20 parts per million can irritate skin, nose, and eyes and ultimately may lead to asthma and cancer.  The European Union bans the sale of children’s clothing with formaldehyde levels above 30 parts per million.  In contrast, despite acknowledging that formaldehyde is a “probable human carcinogen,” the US government has set no limit for the formaldehyde content of clothing.  In the absence of such limits, formaldehyde can range far above safe levels — one TV report in New Zealand found formaldehyde levels as high as 18,000 parts per million (900 times the WHO’s “safe level”) in Chinese-made clothing.  And the problem isn’t limited to low-priced off-brands: Victoria’s Secret currently faces a class-action lawsuit claiming formaldehyde-treated bras gave wearers serious skin rashes.

Unfortunately, organics can be expensive.  Luckily, there is at least one low-cost alternative:  Many chemical residues wash away after a handful of launderings, so parents can lessen chemical exposure by buying their children’s clothing secondhand.  (Preworn = prewashed.)  Because babies grow so quickly, secondhand baby clothing routinely appears in like-new condition.  It is also much less expensive than new items, and as an added bonus keeps useful items out of landfills.  Overall, a win-win situation.

That is, the situation was win-win….  Under a recent consumer-protection law, selling used children’s clothing and toys will become illegal on February 10.  (Yes, you read that right — selling used clothing and toys will be illegal.)  Barring last-minute regulatory changes, thrift stores and consignment shops must throw away their current stock of secondhand children’s items on that date** and stop offering children’s goods in the future.

The law in question — the Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act of 2008 (CPSIA) — was enacted in the wake of recent scares involving lead-tainted children’s products from China.  The CPSIA includes many important changes, such as beefing up the government’s ability to regulate dangerous products.  And obviously no one wants children to be poisoned by lead-tainted products.  In fact, the CPSIA had near-unanimous support in both the House and the Senate.  Unfortunately, the lawmakers do not seem to have noticed that the Act’s requirements are applied in a disturbingly overbroad manner.  Specifically, beginning February 10, nothing intended for use by children under 12 can be sold unless it has undergone expensive testing to certify that it is lead-free.  Many items for children under 3 will require additional testing for plastic-softening chemicals called phthalates.

Large manufacturers can absorb these testing costs, but the rule spells doomsday for home-based crafters and other small businesses.  (Ironically, some of the companies that will be driven out of business produce organic goods and other healthy products; they simply can’t afford the testing to prove it.)  The CPSIA contains no exception for previously-sold products, and a secondhand seller could never afford to test each individual item before resale — hence the dire consequences for the secondhand industry.  Technically, it will be illegal even to donate children’s goods to charity because anything without a testing certificate is deemed “dangerous” under law.  Thus the CPSIA’s unintended consequence is that, even for poor families, the only option may be to buy new goods from large companies.

Worse still, despite these draconian effects, the CPSIA barely addresses the problem of chemicals in fabric.  Lead does appear in a few dyes, and more commonly in appliques, rhinestones, or charms.  One toddler tragically died after ingesting a lead charm off his shoes.  But on the whole, lead is not as widespread or serious a problem as substances like formaldehyde.  And by taking away my access to well-washed secondhand goods, the CPSIA reduces my ability as a parent to fight the chemicals that worry me most!

A few discussions of the CPSIA have popped up around the Blogosphere in the past month — I remember reading posts on The Consumerist and BoingBoing, as well as a handful of parent blogs.  But the early focus was on toymakers, and, while I feel bad for small-business owners, frankly I didn’t care enough about toys to feel compelled to action.  But this clothing issue is a whole different story!  I planned to buy the majority of Wallaby’s baby and toddler clothing secondhand or from small sellers at places like Etsy, but in practical terms those options are now gone.  Turns out, this law affects me as a consumer in ways I never imagined.  And this time, I plan to take action.

Would you like to learn more about the CPSIA, or to take action?  Please see the links below.

Images in this post are baby items that will not survive implementation of the CPSIA.  (Flikr sources for one, two, three, & four.)  I previously coveted the blanket in Image One on Etsy, though of course I had no idea its purchase would condemn Wallaby to certain death!

** Don’t even get me started on throwing away useful items — a topic for another post.  Suffice it to say that most landfills don’t offer ideal conditions for biodegradability, and even food and paper often last years beyond their normal life expectancy.  Thrown-away clothing will serve no purpose other than further clogging our landfills for decades to come.

For More Information

The Consumer Product Safety Commission’s website summarizing CPSIA regulatory developments

The Handmade Toy Alliance is a wealth of information and advocacy for small businesses

An LA Times article about the CPSIA’s impact on used clothing sales, and California Apparel News on the law’s effect on clothing manufacturers

SafBaby.com, which has called the US “a dumping ground for toxic toys”, believes the CPSIA is not the answer

Excellent summary of how the law affects small businesses at SmartMama; and a small clothing manufacturer and a small toy manufacturer on the costs of testing

An Etsy discussion forum on current political developments, and lots more seller-based information at National Bankruptcy Day.com

How to Take Action

CoolMomPicks’ “Save Handmade” page

Sample letter to your Senator or Representative, from the Handmade Toy Alliance (plus contact information for specific Senators or Representatives)

 

Tuesday is Election Day in the US, and I urge everyone to go vote.  However, please be extra careful in traffic on your way to the polls!

According to a study published in October’s Journal of the American Medical Association, car crashes are significantly more likely on Election Day as compared to an ordinary Tuesday in October or November. Nationwide, Election Tuesdays logged an average of 24 more traffic deaths and 800 additional disabling injuries as compared to similar non-election dates. Incredibly, the 18% increase in fatalities is larger than even notorious “drinking and driving” dates like New Year’s Day and Super Bowl Sunday.

Why the increase? Researchers speculate results are due to a combination of people rushing to fit voting into a hectic workday and taking unfamiliar routes to reach their designated polling place. Overall, there’s an extra degree of emotion and distraction. Police may be busy elsewhere and have less time to focus on traffic enforcement. And trips to the polls may mean people drive more, period.

So, whatever the outcome, here’s hoping you have a SAFE and happy Election Day. 

© 2011 Two Wishes Suffusion theme by Sayontan Sinha