I Have Moved

on Friday, July 29, 2011

Hello all, my blog location has changed. It can now be found at www.Kylie-Marie.com

Thank you!

A Caring Business for a Caring Community

on Monday, May 17, 2010




“I know every person’s first and last name in that room,” Kelli Harrington of ZenSpot Inc says as she motions to a room of 30 people or so. The room of yoga-goers is heated up to a few degrees warmer than body temperature in a practice that Kelli refers to as “hot yoga.”

            “It doesn’t matter whether you are recovering from an injury, have spinal problems, or are simply looking to tone up, we will custom-fit your routine,” Kelli says of ZenSpot yoga services, but yoga is only one of their many specialties. Kelli and her husband, Michael Bittner, are licensed and/or trained in the fields of counseling, nutrition, and Reiki healing. They feel that this allows for complete and overall aid in living a healthier life, and merits the name ZenSpot Inc rather than ZenSpot Yoga or others.

            As Kelli watches the room where her husband instructs the class to move to their next position, and helps adjust students so that they complete the move correctly, she discusses the importance of knowing each and every one of their students and their individual story.

The Search for a Home



            The ZenSpot Inc location settled in downtown Eugene only a few months ago and already they have added more sessions to meet demand. Their offices for holistic and energy services are located behind the yoga studio which means you don’t have to leave in order to receive other services from Kelli and Michael.

            ZenSpot Inc is new to Eugene but not to the world. Kelli and Michael realized their dream of a hot yoga studio plus some at their former home in New York City. They had briefly lived in California however when they wanted to return to the west coast they wanted to find a prime location that would embrace their holistic fitness lifestyle.

            “It was between Bend, Portland, and Eugene, and Eugene was the clear winner,” Kelli says of deciding on a location. “It just seems like such a caring community.”

            Eugene showed its caring spirit to ZenSpot Inc by instantly filling up their charming studio with eager yoga students and the classes have only grown.

Special Programs and Services



            In addition to having a space and qualification for Reiki healing and counseling, ZenSpot Inc also has several additional programs that customers can participate in. These programs include half marathon and marathon training to Feng Shui to a springtime bootcamp. Regardless of your reason for getting fit, or where you are at in your fitness health, there is a program that can be custom-fitted to you at ZenSpot Inc.

            Many businesses attempt to focus on their customers, the very people who keep their business alive, but ZenSpot Inc has lived up to their mission statement. The effort and caring that Kelli and Michael have already put into this company is unique even in the most unique of cities. The relationships they cultivate show their passion for a higher quality of life for themselves and their customers. It will only be a matter of time before their yoga studio is filled to the brim with those who recognize ZenSpot Inc for its unique, and complete experience.


Address: 1615 and 1659 Oak Street - Eugene, OR 97401

Phone: 541/337-8433

Hot Yoga Hours:

Monday
8:00 – 9:00 am | Zen 60
4:30 – 5:45 pm | Zen 75
6:15 – 7:15 pm | Zen 60
Tuesday
6:30 – 7:30 am | Zen 60
4:30 – 5:30 pm | Zen 60
6:00 – 7:00 pm | Zen 60
Wednesday
8:00 – 9:00 am | Zen 60
4:30 – 5:45 pm | Zen 75
6:15 – 7:15 pm | Zen 60
Thursday
6:30 – 7:30 am | Zen 60
4:30 – 5:30 pm | Zen 60
6:00 – 7:00 pm | Zen 60
Friday
8:00 – 9:00 am | Zen 60
12:00 – 1:00 pm | Zen 60
Saturday
7:00 – 8:00 am | Zen 60
8:30 – 9:45 am | Zen 75
Sunday
8:30 – 9:45 am | Zen 75

Times are subject to change. Please check the ZenSpot Calendar for holiday hours and maintenance schedule.

Poster for Student Loan Project

on Saturday, May 15, 2010

"Spring and All"

on Tuesday, May 11, 2010

A couple of my favorite excerpts from Imaginations by William Carlos Williams:

XX

The sea that encloses her young body
ula lu la lu
is the sea of many arms--

The blazing secrecy of noon is undone
and and and
the broken sand is the sound of love--

The flesh is firm that turns in the sea
O la la
the sea that is cold with dead men's tears--

Deeply the wooking that penetrated
to the edge of the sea
returns in the plash of the waves--

a wind over the shoulder
large as the ocean--
with wave following wave to the edge

coom barrooom--

It is the cold of the sea
broken upon the sand by the force
of the moon--

In the sea the young flesh playing
floats with the cries of far off men
who rise in the sea

with green arms
to homage again the fields over there
where the night is deep--

la lu la lu
but lips too few
assume the new--marrruu

Underneath the sea where it is dark
there is no edge
so two--

XXIII

The veritable night
of wires and stars

the moon is in
the oak tree's crotch

and sleepers in
the windows cough

athwart the round
and pointed leaves

and insects sting
while on the grass

the whitish moonlight
tearfully

assumes the attitudes
of afternoon--

But it is real
where peaches hung

recalling death's
long promised symphony

whose tuneful wood
and stringish undergrowth

are ghosts existing
without being

save to come with juice
and pulp to assuage

the hungers which
the night reveals

so that now at last
the truth's aglow

with devilish peace
forstalling day

which dawns tomorrow
with dreadful reds

the heart to predicate
with mists that loved

the ocean and the fields--
Thus moonlight

is the perfect
human touch.

Fake Grassroots

on Monday, May 10, 2010

In January of this year an Ann Taylor boutique known as Loft e-mailed several bloggers with an invite to an exclusive sneak peek of the 2010 spring collection, with one exception. The bloggers had to post a blog about what they saw at the sneak preview and only AFTER the blogs were completed, the boutique agreed to send out gift cards to these bloggers. This is an incentive, a reason for bloggers to provide positive information to their readers regarding the Loft's product. So what is the problem? Only two out of the 31 bloggers who posted their blogs revealed that they were to receive a gift card. This is an illegal practice known as "fake grassroots." You can read the LA Times version of this entire story here: LATimes Blog

If Apple sent me a new iPhone for me to write my previous blog on the iPhone and everything I liked about it, but I did not disclose this information then I would be breaking the law. This law was enacted in October 2009 so it is a fairly new law but I do have a major issue with this decision.

Before I get into that I should mention that Apple did NOT give me an iPhone to write my previous blog, I simply wanted to share all the things I adore about the iPhone that I paid $200 for.

Fake grassroots is certainly an understandable rule to apply. Blogs are one of the few areas that allow for direct consumer information sharing on anything and everything that interests us, but once incentive is brought into play, the objective is skewed.

Here's where the lines become blurred:

Fake grassroots does NOT apply to professional journalists!

This means, if a major publication does a story on an amazing resort in Mexico, and they had their reporters' travel expenses paid by the resort, they do NOT have to tell people this.

According to journalism ethic guidelines laid down by the Society of Professional Journalists, it is NEVER okay to receive gifts or incentives for completing a published story. If you write about a product then, by SPJ's ethical standards, you should either give it back when you are finished, donate it, or buy it. If you write on a restaurant, SPJ does not find it ethically sound to be given free food.

Of course, these are ethics we are talking about, NOT official laws.

After learning this information in my J350 class, I have one question. Why aren't professional journalists held to the same standards as everyday bloggers?

I would love to hear some opinions on this information. Please feel free to comment!

~Kylie


And I found a funny interactive piece on fake grassroots:

We Are One People

on Sunday, May 9, 2010

Many of us have seen the Pepsi commercial with the different screens and different people enjoying Pepsi and talking about their community(although I'm not sure how those two are connected). Anyway they play a song called "One Tribe" by the Black Eyed Peas and I think it has an important message.

In an Archaeology class that I took several terms ago we learned about the evolution of human beings and how we all evolved from one original area. There is another theory but it is fairly common for anthropologists to believe that we all originated from Africa. Technically we all come from the same place but we treat one another like animals.

The song talks about how we are all one tribe and should treat one another better. 

I really enjoy the part of the song that talks about casting amnesia so we can forget about all the evil. While I am not the Black Eyed Peas biggest fan, I enjoy the intelligence and effort that is used in their lyrics to help present their message. They are true musical artists.


"One Tribe" by Black Eyed Peas

One tri One tri
One tribe, one time, one planet, one race
It's all one blood, don't care about your face
The color of your eye or the tone of your skin
Don't care where you are, don't care where you been

'Cause where we gonna go is where we wanna be
The place where the little language is unity
And the continent is called Pangaea
And the main ideas are connected like a spear

No propaganda, they tried to upper hand us
'Cause man, I'm loving this peace
Man, man, I'm loving this peace
Man, man, I'm loving this peace

I don't need no leader that's gonna force feed
A concept that make me think I need to
Fear my brother and fear my sister
And shoot my neighbor or my big missile

If I had an enemy to, if I had an enemy to
If I had an enemy then my enemy is gonna try
To come and kill me 'cause I'm his enemy

There's one tripe y'all, one tribe y'all
One tribe y'all, we are one people

Let's cast amnesia, forget about all that evil
Forget about all that evil, that evil that they feed ya
Let's cast amnesia, forget about all that evil
That evil that they feed ya, remember that we're one people

We are one people
One, one, one people
One, one, one people
One, one, one people

One tribe, one tribe, one tribe, one time, one planet, one race
Race, one love, one people, one and
Too many things that's causing one to
To forget about the main cause

Connecting, uniting
But the evil is seen and alive in us
So our weapons are colliding
And our peace is sinking like Poseidon

But, we know that the one, one
The evil one is threatened by the sum, sum
So he'll come and try and separate the sum
But he dumb, he didn't know we had a way to overcome

Rejuvenated by the beating of the drum
Come together by the cycle of the hum
Freedom when all become one, one forever

One tribe y'all, one tribe y'all
One tribe y'all, we are on people

Let's cast amnesia, forget about all that evil, evil
Forget about all that evil, evil that evil that they feed ya

Let's cast amnesia, forget about all that evil, evil
That evil, that they feed ya, feed ya, remember that we're one people

We are one people
One, one, one people
One, one, one people
One, one, one people

One love, one blood, one people
One heart, one beat, we equal
Connected like the internet
United that how we do

Let's break walls so we see through
Let love and peace lead you
We could overcome the complication
'Cause we need to

Help each other, make these changes
Brother, sister, rearrange this
The way I'm thinking
That we can change this bad condition

Wait, use your mind and not your greed
Let's connect and then proceed
This is something I believe
We are one, we're all just people

One tribe y'all, one tribe y'all
One tribe y'all, we are one people

Let's cast amnesia, forget about all that evil
Forget about all that evil, that evil that they feed ya
Let's cast amnesia, forget about all that evil
That evil that they feed ya, remember that we're one people


One tribe y'all, we, we, we, we're one tribe y'all
One, one, one people
One, one, one people
One, one, one people

One, one, one people
One, one, one people
One, one, one people
Let's, let's cast amnesia

Lord, help me out
Trying to figure out what it's all about
'Cause we're one in the same
Same joy, same pain

And I hope that You're there when I need Ya
'Cause maybe we need amnesia
And I don't wanna sound like a preacher
But we need to be one

One world, one love, one passion
One tribe, one understanding
'Cause you and me can become one

A Great Article

on Thursday, May 6, 2010

Sometimes, even as a writer, I can't say it as well as others. While I don't consider myself much of a conservative I do hope that this reaches those with strict opinions. Enjoy!

The Conservative Case for Gay Marriage

Why same-sex marriage is an American value.

Together with my good friend and occasional courtroom adversary David Boies, I am attempting to persuade a federal court to invalidate California's Proposition 8—the voter-approved measure that overturned California's constitutional right to marry a person of the same sex.


Ted Olson: ‘Why I Took This Case’
My involvement in this case has generated a certain degree of consternation among conservatives. How could a politically active, lifelong Republican, a veteran of the Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush administrations, challenge the "traditional" definition of marriage and press for an "activist" interpretation of the Constitution to create another "new" constitutional right?

My answer to this seeming conundrum rests on a lifetime of exposure to persons of different backgrounds, histories, viewpoints, and intrinsic characteristics, and on my rejection of what I see as superficially appealing but ultimately false perceptions about our Constitution and its protection of equality and fundamental rights.

Many of my fellow conservatives have an almost knee-jerk hostility toward gay marriage. This does not make sense, because same-sex unions promote the values conservatives prize. Marriage is one of the basic building blocks of our neighborhoods and our nation. At its best, it is a stable bond between two individuals who work to create a loving household and a social and economic partnership. We encourage couples to marry because the commitments they make to one another provide benefits not only to themselves but also to their families and communities. Marriage requires thinking beyond one's own needs. It transforms two individuals into a union based on shared aspirations, and in doing so establishes a formal investment in the well-being of society. The fact that individuals who happen to be gay want to share in this vital social institution is evidence that conservative ideals enjoy widespread acceptance. Conservatives should celebrate this, rather than lament it.

Legalizing same-sex marriage would also be a recognition of basic American principles, and would represent the culmination of our nation's commitment to equal rights. It is, some have said, the last major civil-rights milestone yet to be surpassed in our two-century struggle to attain the goals we set for this nation at its formation.

This bedrock American principle of equality is central to the political and legal convictions of Republicans, Democrats, liberals, and conservatives alike. The dream that became America began with the revolutionary concept expressed in the Declaration of Independence in words that are among the most noble and elegant ever written: "We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness."

Sadly, our nation has taken a long time to live up to the promise of equality. In 1857, the Supreme Court held that an African-American could not be a citizen. During the ensuing Civil War, Abraham Lincoln eloquently reminded the nation of its found-ing principle: "our fathers brought forth on this continent, a new nation, conceived in liberty and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal."

At the end of the Civil War, to make the elusive promise of equality a reality, the 14th Amendment to the Constitution added the command that "no State É shall deprive any person of life, liberty or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person É the equal protection of the laws."

Subsequent laws and court decisions have made clear that equality under the law extends to persons of all races, religions, and places of origin. What better way to make this national aspiration complete than to apply the same protection to men and women who differ from others only on the basis of their sexual orientation? I cannot think of a single reason—and have not heard one since I undertook this venture—for continued discrimination against decent, hardworking members of our society on that basis.

Various federal and state laws have accorded certain rights and privileges to gay and lesbian couples, but these protections vary dramatically at the state level, and nearly universally deny true equality to gays and lesbians who wish to marry. The very idea of marriage is basic to recognition as equals in our society; any status short of that is inferior, unjust, and unconstitutional.

The United States Supreme Court has repeatedly held that marriage is one of the most fundamental rights that we have as Americans under our Constitution. It is an expression of our desire to create a social partnership, to live and share life's joys and burdens with the person we love, and to form a lasting bond and a social identity. The Supreme Court has said that marriage is a part of the Constitution's protections of liberty, privacy, freedom of association, and spiritual identification. In short, the right to marry helps us to define ourselves and our place in a community. Without it, there can be no true equality under the law.

It is true that marriage in this nation traditionally has been regarded as a relationship exclusively between a man and a woman, and many of our nation's multiple religions define marriage in precisely those terms. But while the Supreme Court has always previously considered marriage in that context, the underlying rights and liberties that marriage embodies are not in any way confined to heterosexuals.

Marriage is a civil bond in this country as well as, in some (but hardly all) cases, a religious sacrament. It is a relationship recognized by governments as providing a privileged and respected status, entitled to the state's support and benefits. The California Supreme Court described marriage as a "union unreservedly approved and favored by the community." Where the state has accorded official sanction to a relationship and provided special benefits to those who enter into that relationship, our courts have insisted that withholding that status requires powerful justifications and may not be arbitrarily denied.

What, then, are the justifications for California's decision in Proposition 8 to withdraw access to the institution of marriage for some of its citizens on the basis of their sexual orientation? The reasons I have heard are not very persuasive.

The explanation mentioned most often is tradition. But simply because something has always been done a certain way does not mean that it must always remain that way. Otherwise we would still have segregated schools and debtors' prisons. Gays and lesbians have always been among us, forming a part of our society, and they have lived as couples in our neighborhoods and communities. For a long time, they have experienced discrimination and even persecution; but we, as a society, are starting to become more tolerant, accepting, and understanding. California and many other states have allowed gays and lesbians to form domestic partnerships (or civil unions) with most of the rights of married heterosexuals. Thus, gay and lesbian individuals are now permitted to live together in state-sanctioned relationships. It therefore seems anomalous to cite "tradition" as a justification for withholding the status of marriage and thus to continue to label those relationships as less worthy, less sanctioned, or less legitimate.

The second argument I often hear is that traditional marriage furthers the state's interest in procreation—and that opening marriage to same-sex couples would dilute, diminish, and devalue this goal. But that is plainly not the case. Preventing lesbians and gays from marrying does not cause more heterosexuals to marry and conceive more children. Likewise, allowing gays and lesbians to marry someone of the same sex will not discourage heterosexuals from marrying a person of the opposite sex. How, then, would allowing same-sex marriages reduce the number of children that heterosexual couples conceive?

This procreation argument cannot be taken seriously. We do not inquire whether heterosexual couples intend to bear children, or have the capacity to have children, before we allow them to marry. We permit marriage by the elderly, by prison inmates, and by persons who have no intention of having children. What's more, it is pernicious to think marriage should be limited to heterosexuals because of the state's desire to promote procreation. We would surely not accept as constitutional a ban on marriage if a state were to decide, as China has done, to discourage procreation.

Another argument, vaguer and even less persuasive, is that gay marriage somehow does harm to heterosexual marriage. I have yet to meet anyone who can explain to me what this means. In what way would allowing same-sex partners to marry diminish the marriages of heterosexual couples? Tellingly, when the judge in our case asked our opponent to identify the ways in which same-sex marriage would harm heterosexual marriage, to his credit he answered honestly: he could not think of any.

The simple fact is that there is no good reason why we should deny marriage to same-sex partners. On the other hand, there are many reasons why we should formally recognize these relationships and embrace the rights of gays and lesbians to marry and become full and equal members of our society.

No matter what you think of homosexuality, it is a fact that gays and lesbians are members of our families, clubs, and workplaces. They are our doctors, our teachers, our soldiers (whether we admit it or not), and our friends. They yearn for acceptance, stable relationships, and success in their lives, just like the rest of us.
Conservatives and liberals alike need to come together on principles that surely unite us. Certainly, we can agree on the value of strong families, lasting domestic relationships, and communities populated by persons with recognized and sanctioned bonds to one another. Confining some of our neighbors and friends who share these same values to an outlaw or second-class status undermines their sense of belonging and weakens their ties with the rest of us and what should be our common aspirations. Even those whose religious convictions preclude endorsement of what they may perceive as an unacceptable "lifestyle" should recognize that disapproval should not warrant stigmatization and unequal treatment.

When we refuse to accord this status to gays and lesbians, we discourage them from forming the same relationships we encourage for others. And we are also telling them, those who love them, and society as a whole that their relationships are less worthy, less legitimate, less permanent, and less valued. We demean their relationships and we demean them as individuals. I cannot imagine how we benefit as a society by doing so.

I understand, but reject, certain religious teachings that denounce homosexuality as morally wrong, illegitimate, or unnatural; and I take strong exception to those who argue that same-sex relationships should be discouraged by society and law. Science has taught us, even if history has not, that gays and lesbians do not choose to be homosexual any more than the rest of us choose to be heterosexual. To a very large extent, these characteristics are immutable, like being left-handed. And, while our Constitution guarantees the freedom to exercise our individual religious convictions, it equally prohibits us from forcing our beliefs on others. I do not believe that our society can ever live up to the promise of equality, and the fundamental rights to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, until we stop invidious discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation.

If we are born heterosexual, it is not unusual for us to perceive those who are born homosexual as aberrational and threatening. Many religions and much of our social culture have reinforced those impulses. Too often, that has led to prejudice, hostility, and discrimination. The antidote is understanding, and reason. We once tolerated laws throughout this nation that prohibited marriage between persons of different races. California's Supreme Court was the first to find that discrimination unconstitutional. The U.S. Supreme Court unanimously agreed 20 years later, in 1967, in a case called Loving v. Virginia. It seems inconceivable today that only 40 years ago there were places in this country where a black woman could not legally marry a white man. And it was only 50 years ago that 17 states mandated segregated public education—until the Supreme Court unanimously struck down that practice in Brown v. Board of Education. Most Americans are proud of these decisions and the fact that the discriminatory state laws that spawned them have been discredited. I am convinced that Americans will be equally proud when we no longer discriminate against gays and lesbians and welcome them into our society.

Reactions to our lawsuit have reinforced for me these essential truths. I have certainly heard anger, resentment, and hostility, and words like "betrayal" and other pointedly graphic criticism. But mostly I have been overwhelmed by expressions of gratitude and good will from persons in all walks of life, including, I might add, from many conservatives and libertarians whose names might surprise. I have been particularly moved by many personal renditions of how lonely and personally destructive it is to be treated as an outcast and how meaningful it will be to be respected by our laws and civil institutions as an American, entitled to equality and dignity. I have no doubt that we are on the right side of this battle, the right side of the law, and the right side of history.

Some have suggested that we have brought this case too soon, and that neither the country nor the courts are "ready" to tackle this issue and remove this stigma. We disagree. We represent real clients—two wonderful couples in California who have longtime relationships. Our lesbian clients are raising four fine children who could not ask for better parents. Our clients wish to be married. They believe that they have that constitutional right. They wish to be represented in court to seek vindication of that right by mounting a challenge under the United States Constitution to the validity of Proposition 8 under the equal-protection and due-process clauses of the 14th Amendment. In fact, the California attorney general has conceded the unconstitutionality of Proposition 8, and the city of San Francisco has joined our case to defend the rights of gays and lesbians to be married. We do not tell persons who have a legitimate claim to wait until the time is "right" and the populace is "ready" to recognize their equality and equal dignity under the law.

Citizens who have been denied equality are invariably told to "wait their turn" and to "be patient." Yet veterans of past civil-rights battles found that it was the act of insisting on equal rights that ultimately sped acceptance of those rights. As to whether the courts are "ready" for this case, just a few years ago, in Romer v. Evans, the United States Supreme Court struck down a popularly adopted Colorado constitutional amendment that withdrew the rights of gays and lesbians in that state to the protection of anti-discrimination laws. And seven years ago, in Lawrence v. Texas, the Supreme Court struck down, as lacking any rational basis, Texas laws prohibiting private, intimate sexual practices between persons of the same sex, overruling a contrary decision just 20 years earlier.

These decisions have generated controversy, of course, but they are decisions of the nation's highest court on which our clients are entitled to rely. If all citizens have a constitutional right to marry, if state laws that withdraw legal protections of gays and lesbians as a class are unconstitutional, and if private, intimate sexual conduct between persons of the same sex is protected by the Constitution, there is very little left on which opponents of same-sex marriage can rely. As Justice Antonin Scalia, who dissented in the Lawrence case, pointed out, "[W]hat [remaining] justification could there possibly be for denying the benefits of marriage to homosexual couples exercising '[t]he liberty protected by the Constitution'?" He is right, of course. One might agree or not with these decisions, but even Justice Scalia has acknowledged that they lead in only one direction.
 
California's Proposition 8 is particularly vulnerable to constitutional challenge, because that state has now enacted a crazy-quilt of marriage regulation that makes no sense to anyone. California recognizes marriage between men and women, including persons on death row, child abusers, and wife beaters. At the same time, California prohibits marriage by loving, caring, stable partners of the same sex, but tries to make up for it by giving them the alternative of "domestic partnerships" with virtually all of the rights of married persons except the official, state-approved status of marriage. Finally, California recognizes 18,000 same-sex marriages that took place in the months between the state Supreme Court's ruling that upheld gay-marriage rights and the decision of California's citizens to withdraw those rights by enacting Proposition 8.

So there are now three classes of Californians: heterosexual couples who can get married, divorced, and remarried, if they wish; same-sex couples who cannot get married but can live together in domestic partnerships; and same-sex couples who are now married but who, if they divorce, cannot remarry. This is an irrational system, it is discriminatory, and it cannot stand.

Americans who believe in the words of the Declaration of Independence, in Lincoln's Gettysburg Address, in the 14th Amendment, and in the Constitution's guarantees of equal protection and equal dignity before the law cannot sit by while this wrong continues. This is not a conservative or liberal issue; it is an American one, and it is time that we, as Americans, embraced it.