Sunday, April 13, 2014

Happy Easter, Happy Spring

Image courtesy of jannoon028 / FreeDigitalPhotos.

Wishing you a joyous and blessed Easter and beautiful Spring.
Please check back next week for more trailblazing women, successful careers, and YA/MG books.

Wednesday, April 9, 2014

Spring Break is Over...Tribute to Truckers

Spring break is over for me, but the spring weather has not even appeared in the North Country. I was amazed to discover snow piles still here that are twice the size of my car when we returned home last week.

My DH and I made our annual spring migration from Florida to the Up North country. The Interstates were crowded with spring breakers heading south and with snowbirds like us returning north. I was struck by the amount of semi-trucks on the road. These amazing vehicles are what keeps America going delivering goods to every corner of our great country.

This week I'd like to pay tribute to those folks who drive the roads to deliver the goods to the destinations. In Girls Succeed! Stories Behind the Careers of Successful Women, I interviewed a woman who drives a semi-truck. Most people believe this is a man's job, but more and more women are in the driver's seat now.
Please meet Barbara Totten who shared her story of a career she loves,  semi-truck driver.

From Girls Succeed!
Chapter 11
BARB TOTTEN
SEMI TRUCK DRIVER
 
Courtesy of By Gualberto107 at freedigitaldownloads.com
Freedom of the Road
Have you peered through your car window and pumped your arm up and down when you passed an enormous semi truck on the highway?  That is the universal signal for the truck driver to honk his horn at you.  Usually the good natured truck driver pulls the cord and blasts his horn.  Then everyone in the passing car giggles and waves at the kind driver.  It started a long time ago when the driver had to pull a cord that hung from the ceiling of the cab to sound the horn.  
These days new horns are not always honked by using the cord.  The driver pushes a button instead.  Times change. And now, the truck driver honking back at you could just as likely be a woman instead of a man. Barb Totten is a female professional semi truck driver.  She drives a big rig with a fifty-three foot trailer.  That would be like hauling two and a half pickup trucks behind her.
Barb usually spends five days on the road driving with no partner.  She sleeps in the sleeper in the back of her cab, parking at truck stops for the night. She calls the truck her home away from home.  Barb is not afraid to be alone. She eats her meals at the truck stop.  She is required by law to have thirty four hours of time off before she can drive the big rig again.  This is to insure that truckers on the road are rested, alert, and can drive safely.
Barb leaves early on Sunday or Monday morning with a load of products from Michigan and returns home to Michigan on Friday.  Government regulations allow her to drive eleven hours every day.  She can put in a fourteen hour day when you figure in the time needed for unloading the freight, filling the truck’s three hundred gallon fuel tank, and repairing and maintaining the truck.  That makes for a very long work day.
Barb often delivers her goods to the State of Arkansas.  There she picks up a load of flour to transport back to Michigan.  No trucker wants to make the return home with an empty trailer.  The truckers call returning home with an empty truck, deadheading. Because companies pay truckers to transport loads, returning with no load would be wasting the trucker’s time and all the fuel and wear and tear on the truck. 
Semi truck drivers keep Americans supplied with items needed to live in this society.  Semis deliver freight such as washing machines, clothing, food, lumber for homes, televisions, and so much more.  Everything we use comes by way of semi trucks at some point. They keep America rolling.
Before Barb chose to drive a semi-truck, she was a stay-at-home mom with three children.  Tragedy struck when her husband, Jack, passed away.  Five years later, Barb met and then married a “wonderful man” named Scott.  Scott had three children too, so the marriage blended the families making one family of six children. 
“I felt that it was more important for me to raise my children first before I went out of the home for a job,” Barb said.
When the children grew up and left the house, she started riding in the truck with her husband, Scott.  She drove Scott’s truck and loved the freedom of the road and seeing the countryside.
As a kid, Barb enjoyed helping her dad, a tractor mechanic.  She relished tearing the engines apart to see how they worked.  To this day she is fascinated by the semi truck’s powerful engine.
One day Barb and Scott stopped at a house near their home.  They had passed this house every day and noticed a semi truck parked in the driveway.  Scott wanted to meet the owner of the truck, so he knocked on the front door of the house.  An eighty-year-old woman standing only four foot tall answered the door. 
“Oh, hello, Ma’am,” said Scott.  “I’d like to talk with the owner of that semi truck parked out there.”
The woman looked at Scott.  With a twinkle in her eye, she said, “You’re talking to her. I’m Jackie, and I’m the owner and the driver of that semi truck.”
From that day on Jackie became good friends with Barbara and Scott.  Jackie was a mentor for Barbara, teaching her all about the truck driving business.
Barbara is working in a job usually reserved for men, but she had no problem getting a job as a long haul driver in the trucking business. In order to get her special truck driver’s license, she took a course in driving the big rigs and studied the rules of the road.  She practiced the driving skills behind the wheel of the school’s semi truck for hours.  After taking the class, Barb passed the test to get her special license to operate the eighteen-wheeler.
When she began driving she and the male truck operators and mechanics had to learn to work together.  At first it was difficult for her because when she heard a clunk in her truck engine, she would have to explain the problem to the male mechanic.  Sometimes he wouldn’t always believe her because she was a woman.  Asserting herself and making sure that the repair work was done correctly earned respect from her fellow workers.  After working with the mechanics and drivers, she has proven that she is a professional and has earned a good reputation as a driver.
“Set your sights on what you want and go for it,” she says.  “Keep trying and moving toward your goal.”
Barb loves her chosen career.  She gets paid to see the country.  She also can visit her kids when she is in their areas of the country, Florida and Utah.  Her family is very supportive of her choice to be a professional semi truck driver.
“This is me,” says Barb. “Driving a truck is what I was meant to do.”
The next time you pump your arm for the truck driver to honk the big rig’s horn, you may be getting a honk from a happy mother and grandmother, Barb Totten.

Inspiring and Empowering Girls
To discover more stories of women in successful careers, check out
at these online booksellers

A Study Guide is also available to accompany the e-book.



Sunday, March 30, 2014

Spring Break!

Image courtesy of Chaiwat / FreeDigitalPhotos.net
Folks in the North Country may not be seeing tulips yet, but according to the calendar, spring has sprung. Tulips are so hardy. Every year the bulbs stay warm and safe in the ground just waiting for the weather to change to sunshine and blue skies. I think there's a lesson in the tulips for us. Patience? What do you think?

This week I'll be taking a break from the blogging, but I'll be back next week.

Wishing you blue skies and sunny spring weather!

Thursday, March 13, 2014

Could You Be an Entrepreneur? Meet These Successful Young Women Business Owners

Image by By ddpavumba at freedigitaldownloads.com
So much opportunity for girls in the electronics, IT technology world. Silicon Valley, hotspot for Internet driven businesses, is encouraging more women to be a part of this fascinating world.

Women in business are encouraging girls to start up their own businesses, to become an owner, an entrepreneur. Check out the video below to meet young women who are successful female entrepreneurs in this age of Internet access.

L'Oreal awarded their annual Next Generation Awards to Sukhinder Cassidy of JOYUS, Heather Marie of 72LUX, and Kelsey Falter of Poptip. Watch this interesting discussion about young women starting their own businesses.


Sunday, March 9, 2014

Ban Bossy Campaign Encourages Girls to Be Leaders

Image courtesy of stockimages at freedigitaldownloads.com


As a girl growing up, I was called bossy. And I was! LOL...I was smart and I could organize people. I was the one who held my hand up to answer the questions the teacher asked. I had friends around me and enjoyed being in a group. 

Then sixth grade hit. All of a sudden I felt like I'd better not answer the questions or be smart because boys didn't like smart girls, and I wouldn't fit in if I stood out and took the lead on projects and headed organizations. 

Middle School is a tough time for girls who are searching to find out who they are. Their bodies are changing and their emotions are on the surface. They are given more responsibility which will require them to move away from childhood ways. This is a time which can crush a girl's initiative because she doesn't want to be different from her peers, but rather to fit in. 

A group of successful women  are trying to encourage girls not to pull away from taking leadership roles. Leading by example, these three women are speaking up so girls and women will take on roles in leadership. 

,The three women, powerhouses in today's world, are Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg, former secretary of state Condoleezza Rice, and the CEO of the Girl Scouts of the USA. Anna Maria Chávez. Their goal is to ban the word bossy, a negative label they say is too often applied to young girls, and one of the many ways they are discouraged from speaking up. 

They hope the Ban Bossy campaign will not only start an open dialogue about women in leadership and their obstacles, but help inspire young girls to speak up and seek out leadership roles early.


How do you feel about the word bossy? Do you believe girls are not encouraged to be leaders? Are you a leader? Leave a comment below. We'd love to get your opinion.

Friday, March 7, 2014

Celebrate International Women's Day March 8, 2014

International Women's Day 2014 Theme: INSPIRING CHANGE

Women's equality has made positive gains but the world is still unequal. International Women's Day celebrates the social, political and economic achievements of women while focusing world attention on areas requiring further action.
International Women's Day (8 March) is a global day celebrating the economic, political and social achievements of women past, present and future. In some places like China, Russia, Vietnam and Bulgaria, International Women's Day is a national holiday.

International Women's Day
Learn more about International Women's Day


Meet the successful career women pictured above in the book for girls, Girls Succeed:  Stories Behind the Careers of Successful Women.  Save 50% through March 8 at Smashwords.com The Study Guide to accompany the book is free.

Read an Ebook Week banner, horizontal with child reading ebook

Tuesday, March 4, 2014

March is National Women's History Month



National Women’s History Month 2014 Celebrating Women of Character, Courage, and Commitment
Women Inspiring Innovation through Imagination

Each year, March is designated as National Women’s History Month to ensure that the history of American women will be recognized and celebrated in schools, workplaces, and communities throughout the country. 
This year’s theme, Celebrating Women of Character, Courage, and Commitment,honors the extraordinary and often unrecognized determination and tenacity of women. Against social convention and often legal restraints, women have created a legacy that expands the frontiers of possibility for generations to come. They have demonstrated their character, courage and commitment as mothers, educators, institution builders, business, labor, political and community leaders, relief workers, women religious, and CEOs. Their lives and their work inspire girls and women to achieve their full potential and encourage boys and men to respect the diversity and depth of women’s experience.
The lives and work of the 2014 Women of Character, Courage and CommitmentHonorees span the centuries of American history and come from different cultural and ethnic backgrounds.  National Women’s History Month 2014 provides an excellent opportunity to honor women and their accomplishments 
Chipeta (1843 – 1924)
Indian Rights Advocate and Diplomat  Chipeta was a Ute Indian leader, diplomat, and peacemaker who used her influence with Chief Ouray (her husband) to avert a war between the Ute tribe and the White settlers. In 1880 she was included in a Ute delegation to negotiate a reservation resettlement treaty in Washington DC.
Anna Julia Cooper (1858 –1964) African American Educator and Author Anna J. Cooper was an author, educator, speaker, and among the leading intellectuals of her time. Born into enslavement, she wrote A Voice from the South (published in 1892), widely considered one of the first articulations of Black feminism.
Agatha Tiegel Hanson, (1873–1959)  Educator,  Author, and Advocate for Deaf Community Agatha Tiegel Hanson was a teacher, poet, and advocate for the deaf community. In 1893 she became the first woman to graduate from Gallaudet University. Her valedictorian speech argued for the recognition of the intellect of women, a cause she advocated throughout her career.
Katharine Ryan Gibbs (1863 – 1934) Women’s Employment PioneerKatharine Ryan Gibbs founded the Gibbs Schools (1911), providing women with high-level secretarial training and the opportunity to earn their own incomes. Her schools quickly expanded, opening branches near many ivy-league universities, and effectively establishing secretarial work as a desirable occupation.
Frances Oldham Kelsey (1914 – Present)
Pharmacologist and Public Health Activist  
Frances Oldham Kelsey is a pharmacologist who, while working at the FDA, refused to authorize thalidomide for market (a drug that later proved to cause severe birth defects). She went on to help establish the rules for clinical trials and directed the surveillance of drug testing at the FDA.  
Roxcy Bolton  (1926 – Present) 20th Century Women’s Rights Pioneer Roxcy Bolton is a lifetime advocate and activist for women’s rights. She founded Florida’s first battered women’s shelter (1972) and the nation’s first hospital-based Rape Treatment Center (1974). Her extensive work includes lobbying for passage of the Equal Rights Amendment and convincing NOAA to name hurricanes after both women and men.
Arden Eversmeyer (1931 – Present) The Old Lesbian Herstory Project, Founder
Arden Eversmeyer founded the Old Lesbian Oral Herstory Project (1999), to ensure that the stories of lesbians born in the first part of the 20th century, who were labeled “mentally ill”, fired from their jobs, rejected by their families, and even raped and murdered with impunity, are recorded in history. 
Carmen Delgado Votaw (1935- Present)
International Women’s Rights Activist Carmen Delgado Votaw is a leading advocate for girls and women’s rights both nationally and internationally. She served on the International Women’s Year Committee, worked with the first United Nations Conference on Women, and has significantly influenced the advancement of women in Latin America.
Ann Lewis (1937- Present)
Women’s Rights Organizer and Women’s History Advocate
Ann Lewis is a leader of progressive political reform focusing on the importance of civic involvement, health-care reform, economic and work-family policies, and international and national women’s rights. She served as a White House Communication Director and is a national commentator on public policy.
Jaida Im (1961 – Present)
Advocate for Survivors of Human Trafficking
Jaida Im founded Freedom House (2010), the first residential shelter and aftercare program for adult female survivors of human trafficking in Northern California. In 2013, Freedom House opened a similar shelter for girls. The organization already has served hundreds of survivors, offering holistic case management, counseling, and educational and job-training resources.
Tammy Duckworth (1968 - Present)
Member of Congress and Iraq War Veteran  Tammy Duckworth is an Iraq War veteran and US Representative from Illinois. Recognized for her commitment to serving veterans with disabilities, she seeks mandatory government funding of veterans’ healthcare and improvements in transition assistance. She is the first woman with a disability elected to the House of Representatives.
Lisa Taylor (1974-Present)
Civil Rights Attorney Lisa Taylor is a civil rights attorney for the Department of Justice where she has enforced the rights of HIV victims, autistic children, and educational opportunities for minority students. As a Naval Officer she challenged sexual harassment and aided in establishing her ship’s first anti-harassment program. 
For more information about these Honorees or National Women’s History Month, visit www.nwhp.org or email nwhp@nwhp.org or call (707)-636-2888.  For promotional materials. Visit Theme and Celebration materials in our webstore
This article provided by the National Women's History Month website.