Posts tagged ‘books’

November 13th, 2010

An Evening with Artists and Writers

Many thanks to the National League of American Pen Women for a lovely evening in Old Greenwich. Here’s a wonderful note of encouragement from an attendee.

Dear Patricia,
Because I did not have your home address I am emailing you to thank you for your most informative presentation at Images and for entertaining us so delightfully with your very artistic demonstration. I went home determined to copy as best I can your wonderful ideas. It was three in the morning when I woke up thinking about scarf wrapping, got up and proceeded to wrap my husband’s birthday gift (November 12th is his Birthday). I used a beautiful silk scarf that has been sitting in my drawer for years, and while following the instructions in your book, made a most fetching package. This morning my husband commented on the wrapped gift more than on the gift itself! Hooray for your great idea!
Thanks again for a wonderful evening of learning!
Sincerely,
Elvira S.

May 7th, 2010

First Prize for The Wrapping Scarf Revolution

My sincere thanks to the Connecticut Press Club for honoring The Wrapping Scarf Revolution with a First Prize Award for Nonfiction-Instructional. Judged by members of the Delaware Press Club, the annual contest was celebrated at the 9th Annual Awards Dinner last night at Quattro Pazzi Restaurant in Norwalk.

Celebrating with CT Press Club President Sherry Cohen

The highlight of the evening (other than winning!) was listening to a talk by Pulitzer winning playwright Donald  Margulies. His speech was fascinating and full of gems of wisdom that he normally reserves for his students at Yale. At one point, he talked about his Broadway debut which he claims was a “debacle” and when I asked him to elaborate on that, it turns out that what happened to him was what happens to so many of us when we compromise too much and lose our original vision.

Talking to playwright Donald Margulies.

Like all successful people, he picked himself up, dusted himself off and moved on to eventually win the Pulitzer prize for his drama, “Dinner with Friends”.

Thanks to everyone who has helped my little green book get off the ground and cheers to all our successes and dusted off failures!

Happy wrapping everyone! xoxo Patricia

April 22nd, 2010

This Earth Day Join the Wrapping Scarf Revolution!

Going green can seem more than a little intimidating sometimes. Solar panels sound wonderful and as I look out at my laundry drying in the sun, I dream of the day I can harness that same great energy to power up my home. But for now, I zebra-giftreach for the lower hanging fruit on the tree of eco-living. Wrapping with fabric to reduce senseless garbage? That’s like fruit on the ground!

Giving gifts is one of the great pleasures in life and the suspense and mystery in unwrapping a gift is the icing on the cake.  But did you know that during the holidays alone, Americans create 5 million additional tons of garbage and that 80% of this garbage is just wrapping paper and gift bags? These are crazy numbers and there’s a lot we can do about it without eliminating the joys of beautifully wrapped gifts.

The ancient Korean people really hated waste and considered it bad luck. They created the concept of the wrapping scarf or wrapping cloth called bojagi (boh-jah-kee), which they used to wrap and carry everything from gifts to bundles of merchandise for the market. The great thing about wrapping with bojagi is that it adapts to the shape being wrapped for a custom fit and then can be reused countless times. This was my inspiration in creating my own line of reusable wraps called BOBO.

BOBO wrapping is a lot like origami in that a square shape works best. Try the bow tie wrap technique for wrapping up your next gift with a square scarf or hankie. If you like the contrasting reverse effect, try using 2 scarves put together with a bit of light spray adhesive.

bowtie-wrap

If you are crafty and have fabric lying around your home from old projects, you can make your own BOBOs by taking a square piece of fabric and finishing off the edges. Just make sure the fabric’s not too thick by grabbing a corner of material and tying in a knot. If it doesn’t knot easily, it’s probably too thick.

Stanford University Recycling Center says ”If every American family wrapped just 3 presents in re-used materials, it would save enough paper to cover 45,000 football fields.” Now 3 presents a year is a number we can all commit to.

I wrote The Wrapping Scarf Revolution to teach a new generation of Earth citizens a great old way to be kinder to the planet. Join the wrappingrevolutionWrapping Scarf Revolution and take the pledge to wrap at least 3 gifts in reusables this year. Send me a picture of your fabric wrapped gift and you may receive a nice a little gift certificate from yours truly. Happy Earth Day everyone. Let’s hear it for the low hanging fruit!

For more information and video demonstrations on how to wrap with fabric, visit the How-To Page at BOBOwrap.com. To enter a great book and wrap giveaway, check out the original site of this post at galtime.com. Write a comment there by tomorrow and be entered.

For a nice 15% off discount to try our products, use this great coupon by the Eco Diva. Code: DIVA410 Expiration: 4/30/2010.

March 17th, 2010

My Love Affair with Ireland

Happy St. Patrick’s Day! My own personal obsession with Ireland began after reading Frank McCourt’s masterpiece, Angela’s Ashes. He wrote his story of grinding poverty with such truth and humor that I found myself bawling and laughing hysterically in turns. I literally rationed out the last few chapters as I couldn’t bear to let go of this heartbreakingly hilarious tale of misery and hope.

The tears would stream from my eyes as Frank’s father would time and time again leave his starving family and head for the pub to drink away his week’s wages and my heart leaped as Frank somehow found his way onto the boat that would take him to a new beginning in America. You might not think that Korea and Ireland have much in common, but there are some similarities that might surprise you. Take this quote for example:

“Could he not find in his heart the generosity to acknowledge that there is a small nation that stood alone not for one year or two, but for several hundred years against aggression; that endured spoliations, famines, massacres in endless succession; that was clubbed many times into insensibility, but that each time on returning [to] consciousness took up the fight anew; a small nation that could never be got to accept defeat and has never surrendered her soul?”

This quote by the Irish independence movement leader Eamon De Valera, could easily have been said about Korea. Both countries lay in a strategically central location and while Ireland was pummeled for centuries by Scotland and England, Korea endured the same plight in the hands of Japan and Manchuria. Maybe this is why both countries today are famous for their hard drinking and hardscrabble ways.

“We have always found the Irish a bit odd. They refuse to be English.” – Winston Churchill.

I went on to read all of McCourt’s books (none lived up to the first) and was miserably disappointed with the movie version. McCourt brought his tale to life so magically that I literally dreamed about the damp green hills of Limerick and at one point considered going on the Angela’s Ashes tour with a group of hard core Japanese fans. I even read Frank’s brother Malachy’s book which hardly deserves a mention and yet I still savored every morsel of information about the life and times of the McCourt family.

It’s hard to imagine that life could really have been that bad and yet Malachy McCourt says that in reality, their life was worse than Frank wrote. Asked about how they managed to survive and go on to such successful lives (Malachy became a Hollywood actor), he says, “Insane outbreaks of laughter saved us.” Whether or not you’re Irish or Korean, I think we can all relate to that!

Read more about the life of Frank McCourt: http://www.time.com/time/arts/article/0,8599,1911633,00.html#ixzz0iRtAkxrt

St. Patrick’s Day Sale! Save 25% off all green BOBO wraps till Friday March 18th. Use Code: LUCKY10

February 17th, 2010

food glorious food!

Food is a very powerful thing. Not only is it essential for life, it deeply affects how we look and feel. I’ve learned to keep my pantry pretty bare cause in the wee hours of the night, I will eat unlimited amounts of any available junk food. I’ve even been caught by my kids stuffing myself with a late night snack of plain rice. Straight out of our jumbo sized rice cooker. I have since been nicknamed “the rice monster”. Nice.

With all the recent information we have available regarding the direct relationship between the food we eat and disease, I’ve slowly started taking baby steps toward a smarter diet and one of the things that have really piqued my interest is the field of antiangiogenic food. Apparently turmeric, which is the key ingredient in curry, is an antiangiogenic superfood and a way I can get my rice fix guilt free. ^^

What are Antiangiogenic foods??

Antiangiogenic refers to inhibiting the growth of new blood vessels without which cancer cells cannot grow. When Dr. David Servan-Schreiber was diagnosed with brain cancer in his thirties, doctors told him that his diet will not make a difference in his fight with cancer. After grueling treatment he was bitterly disappointed when the cancer came back years later. This time he decided to do his own research and wrote a fascinating book calledAnti Cancer. In it, he methodically explains how we can use the war strategy of cutting supply lines to inhibit the growth of cancer cells in our body.  Antiangiogenic foods help our bodies detect and cut off the rapidly developing blood vessels that are feeding new cancer cells. These same good foods, especially when eaten together, can also force the cancer cells to “commit suicide”.

We may wonder why his and so many others’ research isn’t more widely known but Dr. Servan-Schreiber explains that when nutritional treatments like this cannot be patented, they do not receive the grant money necessary for expensive double blind research that is the industry standard trusted by mainstream doctors. Dr. David Servan-Schreiber is far from the only one promoting this breakthrough research however, and the above slide is from a TED presentation by Dr. William Li. He says that we can eat to starve cancer and what we eat is our chemotherapy three times a day.

I love the fact that this is so simple and just makes so much sense. Most of these foods are so yummy that I will gladly partake in this new treatment. We will soon be offering a wider selection of tea on our website including an amazing Japanese green tea that I can’t wait to share with you. What are your favorite antiangiogenic foods?