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28 Apr 16:55

NASCAR Crew Members Arrested After Fighting With A Driver

by Patrick George

Another weekend, another fight at a NASCAR race. This one involved two Richard Childress Racing crewmen who were arrested early Saturday morning after police say they started a fight with a driver from a rival team.

According to AOL Sporting News, crew members Michael Searce, 50, and Thomas Costello, 35, have both been charged with misdemeanor assault. They have since been released from jail.

The fight was apparently sparked by an on-track confrontation during Friday's Nationwide Series race between driver Nelson Piquet Jr. and RCR driver Brian Scott, which can be seen in the video above (once again described on the official NASCAR YouTube page with two exclamation marks after the word "fight.")

Scott confronted Piquet for crashing into him, and when they returned to the pit road, Piquet shoved Scott and kicked him in the groin.

The Los Angeles Times reports that after that scuffle occurred, the RCR crew members confronted Piquet and a group of others in the motorhome area. This led to their arrests on the assault charges. One person was injured, but Piquet was not.

It's been a fight-y season for NASCAR so far. Just last month a fight broke out between Joey Logano and Denny Hamlin's crew at a Sprint Cup race.

Somehow, I don't think that promoting this kind of thing on YouTube is really what the sport needs, but what do I know.

18 Apr 19:35

10 Things to Stop Saying to Your Kids (and What to Say Instead)

by Tessa Miller

Current research shows that some of the most commonly used and seemingly positive phrases we use with kids are actually quite destructive. Despite our good intentions, these statements teach children to stop trusting their internal guidance system, to become deceptive, to do as little as possible, and to give up when things get hard.

This is a guest post by Shelley Phillips via Lifehack.org.

Here’s a list of the top ten things to eliminate from your vocabulary now. I’ve also included alternatives so that you can replace these habitual statements with phrases that will actually encourage intrinsic motivation and emotional connection.

“Good job!”

The biggest problem with this statement is that it’s often said repeatedly and for things a child hasn’t really put any effort into. This teaches children that anything is a “good job” when mom and dad say so (and only when mom and dad say so).

Instead try, “You really tried hard on that!” By focusing on a child’s effort, we’re teaching her that the effort is more important than the results. This teaches children to be more persistent when they’re attempting a difficult task and to see failure as just another step toward success.

“Good boy (or girl)!”

This statement, while said with good intentions, actually has the opposite effect you’re hoping for. Most parents say this as a way to boost a child’s self-esteem. Unfortunately, it has quite a different effect. When children hear “good girl!” after performing a task you’ve asked them for, they assume that they’re only “good” because they’ve done what you’ve asked. That sets up a scenario in which children can become afraid of losing their status as a “good kid” and their motivation to cooperate becomes all about receiving the positive feedback they’re hoping for.

Instead, try “I appreciate it so much when you cooperate!” This gives children real information about what you’re wanting and how their behavior impacts your experience. You can even take your feelings out of it entirely and say something like, “I saw you share your toy with your friend.” This allows your child to decide for himself whether sharing is “good” and lets him choose to repeat the action from his internal motivation, rather than doing it just to please you.

“What a beautiful picture!”

When we put our evaluations and judgments onto a child’s artwork, it actually robs them of the opportunity to judge and evaluate their own work.

Instead try, “I see red, blue and yellow! Can you tell me about your picture?” By making an observation, rather than offering an evaluation, you’re allowing your child to decide if the picture is beautiful or not, maybe she intended it to be a scary picture. And by asking her to tell you about it, you’re inviting her to begin to evaluate her own work and share her intent, skills that will serve her creativity as she matures and grows into the artist she is.

Stop it right now, or else!”

Threatening a child is almost never a good idea. First of all, you’re teaching them a skill you don’t really want them to have: the ability to use brute force or superior cunning to get what they want, even when the other person isn’t willing to cooperate. Secondly, you’re putting yourself in an awkward position in which you either have to follow through on your threats—exacting a punishment you threatened in the heat of your anger—or you can back down, teaching your child that your threats are meaningless. Either way, you’re not getting the result you want and you’re damaging your connection with your child.

While it can be difficult to resist the urge to threaten, try sharing vulnerably and redirecting to something more appropriate instead.“It’s NOT OK to hit your brother. I’m worried that he will get hurt, or he’ll retaliate and hurt you. If you’d like something to hit, you may hit a pillow, the couch or the bed.” By offering an alternative that is safer yet still allows the child to express her feelings you’re validating her emotions even as you set a clear boundary for her behavior. This will ultimately lead to better self-control and emotional wellbeing for your child.

If you _____ then I’ll give you _____”

Bribing kids is equally destructive as it discourages them from cooperating simply for the sake of ease and harmony. This kind of exchange can become a slippery slope and if used frequently, you’re bound to have it come back and bite you. “No! I won’t clean my room unless you buy me Legos!”

Instead try, “Thank you so much for helping me clean up!” When we offer our genuine gratitude, children are intrinsically motivated to continue to help. And if your child hasn’t been very helpful lately, remind him of a time when he was. “Remember a few months ago when you helped me take out the trash? That was such a big help. Thanks!” Then allow your child to come to the conclusion that helping out is fun and intrinsically rewarding.

"You’re so smart!"

When we tell kids they’re smart, we think we’re helping to boost their self confidence and self-esteem. Unfortunately, giving this kind of character praise actually does the opposite. By telling kids they’re smart, we unintentionally send the message that they’re only smart when they get the grade, accomplish the goal, or produce the ideal result — and that’s a lot of pressure for a young person to live up to. Studies have shown that when we tell kids they’re smart after they’ve completed a puzzle, they’re less likely to attempt a more difficult puzzle after. That’s because kids are worried that if they don’t do well, we’ll no longer think they’re “smart.”

Instead, try telling kids that you appreciate their effort. By focusing on the effort, rather than the result, you’re letting a child know what really counts. Sure, solving the puzzle is fun, but so is attempting a puzzle that’s even more difficult. Those same studies showed that when we focus on the effort — “Wow you really tried hard on that!” — kids are far more likely to attempt a more challenging puzzle the next time.

"Don’t cry."

Being with your child’s tears isn’t always easy. But when we say things like, “Don’t cry,” we’re invalidating their feelings and telling them that their tears are unacceptable. This causes kids to learn to stuff their emotions, which can ultimately lead to more explosive emotional outbursts.

Try holding space for your child as he cries. Say things like, “It’s OK to cry. Everyone needs to cry sometimes. I’ll be right here to listen to you.” You might even try verbalizing the feelings your child might be having, “You’re really disappointed that we can’t go to the park right now, huh?” This can help your child understand his feelings and learn to verbalize them sooner than he might otherwise. And by encouraging his emotional expression, you’re helping him learn to regulate his emotions, which is a crucial skill that will serve him throughout life.

"I promise..."

Broken promises hurt. Big time. And since life is clearly unpredictable, I’d recommend removing this phrase from your vocabulary entirely.

Choose instead to be super honest with your child. “I know you really want to have a play date with Sarah this weekend and we’ll do our best to make that happen. Please remember that sometimes unexpected things come up, so I can’t guarantee that it will happen this weekend.” Be sure you really are doing your best if you say you will too. Keeping your word builds trust and breaking it deteriorates your connection, so be careful what you say, and then live up to your word as much as humanly possible.

One more note on this, if you do break your word, acknowledge it and apologize to your child. Remember, you’re teaching your kids how to behave when they fail to live up to their word. Breaking our word is something we all do at one time or another. And even if it’s over something that seems trivial to you, it could matter a lot to your child. So do your best to be an example of honesty, and when you’re not, step up and take responsibility for your failure.

"It’s no big deal!"

There are so many ways we minimize and belittle kids feelings, so watch out for this one. Children often value things that seem small and insignificant to our adult point of view. So, try to see things from your child’s point of view. Empathize with their feelings, even as you’re setting a boundary or saying no to their request.

“I know you really wanted to do that, but it’s not going to work out for today,” or “I’m sorry you’re disappointed and the answer is no,” are far more respectful than trying to convince your child that their desires don’t really matter.

"Why did you do that?"

If your child has done something you don’t like, you certainly do need to have a conversation about it. However, the heat of the moment is not a time when your child can learn from her mistakes. And when you ask a child, “Why?” you’re forcing her to think about and analyze her behavior, which is a pretty advanced skill, even for adults. When confronted with this question, many kids will shut down and get defensive.

Instead, open the lines of communication by guessing what your child might have been feeling and what her underlying needs might be. “Were you feeling frustrated because your friends weren’t listening to your idea?” By attempting to understand what your child was feeling and needing, you might even discover that your own upset about the incident diminishes. “Oh! He bit his friend because he was needing space and feeling scared, and he didn’t know how else to communicate that. He’s not a ‘terror,’ he’s a toddler!”

5 Things To Stop Saying to Your Kids and What to Say Instead | Lifehack


Shelly Birger Phillips is passionate about being the best human she can possibly be and supporting others to do the same. She has helped hundreds of clients overcome personal challenges and develop the skills to live happier, more authentic lives. You can find her conscious parenting blog here, and Her Authentic World team here: Follow her on Twitter here or email her at shelly at awakeparent.com.

Images via Katsiaryna Pleshakova, Ilike, and Inara Prusakova (Shutterstock).

Want to see your work on Lifehacker? Email Tessa.

17 Apr 11:17

Clever Uses for Reverse Image Search

by Thorin Klosowski

Reverse image search is one of those handy innovations that's often hard to come up with specific uses for. Sure, you can use it to track down the origin of a photo, but it's also useful for hunting down product names, apartments, and even recipes. Here are a few of our favorite uses.

With Google, you can just drop a picture into Google Images and it'll search for similar pictures. Other tools, like TinEye do the same thing. Regardless of which service you use, you'll find all types of things when you search for an image. Last week we asked you for a few of your uses, and it turns out you have a lot of different tricks.

Find an Apartment

At a glance, using reverse image search when you're hunting for apartments probably doesn't seem all that useful. But as our own Whitson Gordon points out, a reverse image search can get you around paywalls:

There is a site in Los Angeles called "Westside Rentals" that has a bunch of exclusive apartment listings, but you have to pay $60 for a three month membership to use it. You can search their database for free, but you won't get the address or phone number for any of the apartments, so it's mostly useless unless you pay.

I found a building I really liked in the "free" search, so I reverse image searched the building's photo with TinEye. It directed me right to the building's web site. Called them, got an apartment, lived there for a year. Best building I ever lived in, and I had TinEye to thank.

If you live in a city where a realtor or apartment rental company hides addresses behind a paywall, a reverse image search might be all you need to get around it.

Find Names of Unlabeled Products

If you're the type to frequent sites like Pinterest or Tumblr, you see all kinds of cool products that often aren't labeled properly. This might include something as simple as a wedding dress or as complex as a shot of someone's apartment with a cool chair. Reader bobdvb shares how his wife uses it:

My wife often uses Google Image Search to find things and when she does she often wants to know where to buy it (but the image link is irrelevant), so I do a reverse image search. I even did this when she was wedding dress hunting!

This method works pretty much every time when you have a shot taken from a catalog, but it's also useful if you frequent sites like Apartment Therapy that have unidentified furniture in shots of people's homes.

Find Recipes from Images

Let's say you're browsing the internet and find a picture of a meal that looks terrific, but isn't actually named anywhere. If you throw that picture into reverse image search, there's a reasonable chance you'll pull up a recipe for it if it was used in a blog post or on one of the millions of different recipe web sites. This doesn't exactly work with just snapping a picture of something at a restaurant, but it's surprisingly effective for figuring out what some random picture of a meal on a news story or blog post is.

Figure Out Celebrity Names

If you're trying to figure who a celebrity is, but don't have much information, a reverse image search can quickly pull up the information you need. As mr_bigglesworth points out, it's also good for memes:

[I use it] to work out what movie a picture that's often used as a meme/annotated picture is from.

Any image you have from any film or even a snapshot of your TV can usually lead you down the path to identify the star in question. As a number of people pointed out last week, this works for all types of celebrities in, ahem, a wide range of film genres.

Debunk Social Media Posts and Profiles

Whatever your social network of choice is, a number of fake profiles exist that try to friend you. Since most of these use stock photos or random pictures of the internet, finding the fakes is easy with a reverse image search. Reader oe_ku uses it to find all kinds of fake profiles:

Mostly I am using it to identify fake profiles on Facebook or similar. If the picture I am searching for comes up on several profiles with different names than it's probably fake (especially if you consider some other facts to identify a fake profile).

The process works for any type of social network where people are creating their own profiles—from Facebook to AirBnB, and even dating sites. As Sayerofnothing points out you can do the same thing to debunk viral posts in your news feed too:

I like to debunk viral images that comes up on my facebook feed, the last one was of a man saving a dog in a flood, it claimed it was of a flood we had a couple of weeks ago here in Buenos Aires, but I had seen it before, and alas, it was from 2011, a flood in the Phillipines.

Spam, fake accounts, and misinformation are annoying enough as it is. With a quick reverse image search you can report it and move on with your day. It's even useful for Ebay or Craigslist listings that look too good to be true.

Track Down Wallpapers and Higher Resolution Originals

One of the more common uses for reverse image search is to track down high resolution original images for things like wallpapers. Our own Alan Henry uses it for wallpapers quite a bit:

I use it all the time for wallpapers - if I want to know where a specific photo was taken, who made the art, where the image came from, stuff like that. :D If it pops up in rotation and I get curious, I'll save a copy, upload it, and sift through the results. It's usually pretty easy to find out, too!

It's not just for finding specific wallpapers either. Since reverse image search can often work with nothing but a crop, it's also handy for tracking down backgrounds and wallpapers you find on tech blogs or screenshots.

Find Where Your Own Artwork Is Being Used

If you're a creative type who posts photographs or art on Flickr, your own personal blog, or wherever else, you might want to know where else it's popping up on the web. Part of that is making sure people are respecting your attribution requests or copyright, but it's also just about finding any other conversations that might be happening around your art. Kexino shares their experience:

I used to publish images under a Creative Commons (attribution) license on Flickr. Every couple of weeks or so I'd do a reverse image search to see who was using my images and if they were giving proper attribution. It turned out (surprise surprise) that the vast majority of sites were using my images without giving any attribution at all.

Of course, it's not just photographers or artists who have a use for this. Even if you're a DIYer sharing your projects on places like Instructables, using reverse image search is a useful tool to track down where your creations are talked about.

Track Down Original Artists

If you're looking for the original artist for a picture you find online then reverse image search makes total sense. But it's not just for images online. Reverse image search can often identify the artist behind paintings or photos you find in the real world as well. TheWraighL98 shares their experience:

I saw a framed picture I really liked in a restaurant while on vacation last year. I took a picture with my phone and figured out who took the picture and where to buy it.

As FIGJAM also points out, you can apply this same logic to murals, graffiti, and more.

Identify Plants, Animals, and More

If you're trying to identify plants, animals, or even some crazy bug you find in your basement, you don't need a degree in biology. Reverse image search is handy for identifying all sorts of living things, and although the results are a little less predictable than what's mentioned above, it's still a great hail mary to throw out when you're out of ideas. Carole Richard shares a success story with tracking down a tree name:

We have a tree in the front yard of the house that we bought a couple of years ago. I didn't recognize it and wasn't sure when to prune it, etc. So I took a picture of it and searched Google images. I found out it was a Rowan tree (not indigenous to our area) and that the tree needed some extra care.

Tom4Surfing has also had luck identifying birds:

When I can't identify an interesting bird or plant when I'm out walking, I take a picture and use image search. It pops up other pictures of the same plant or bird - often the name is associated with the image.

Your luck with this one is going to vary, but in my own experience I've been able to identify weeds and even the occasional bug by digging through the "visually similar images" section. It's always worth a shot to at least figure out if that thirty-legged bug that just bit you is poisonous.

Title image remixed from Shortkut (Shutterstock).

06 Apr 09:45

Free Pattern Friday Quilting: Free Chevron Quilt Pattern & More

by Megan
Free Chevron Quilting PatternEnjoy these free fantastic quilting patterns from the Craftsy Pattern Marketplace including chevrons, stars, gnomes, and more! We hope to see you brimming with creativity this weekend.
30 Mar 13:57

The Singing Ringing Tree, A Landmark Musical Sculpture in England

by mikl-em

The Singing Ringing Tree” is a musical sculpture near Burnley in the North West of England built by architects Tonkin Liu. It was designed in 2004 and completed at the end of 2006. It is one of four landmark art projects called “Panopticons” built in the early 2000′s in Lancashire. The film above was directed by Zsolt Sándor with sound by A Man Called Adam.

The Singing Ringing Tree

photo by Mid Pennine Arts

The tree is constructed of stacked pipes of varying lengths, orientated to lean into the directions of the prevailing wind. As the wind passes through the different lengths of pipe, it plays different chords. Each time you sit under the tree, looking out through the wind, you will hear a different song.

srtree_piano

photo by Mid Pennine Arts

srtree_close2_

photo by Mid Pennine Arts

The tree won a 2007 award for architectural excellence from the Royal Institute of British Architects. As part of the project’s launch local kids and young adults wrote fanciful stories inspired by the sculpture.

srtree_kids

photo by Mid Pennine Arts

The Halo in Haslingden, Rossendale was the fourth and final Panopticon to be constructed opening in September 2007:

Glowing Halo

photo by Peter Hudson

30 Mar 13:33

Over 100 Craft and DIY Blogs to Follow

by Angie Holden
I love it that you have landed here on The Country Chic Cottage and I hope you will stick around and subscribe.  But I also want to show a little love to my fellow bloggers.  I have gathered over 100 craft and DIY blogs for you to follow.  This is a collection of blogs I personally like and read.  I hope you will enjoy clicking around and getting to know my blogging friends.  I did my best to collect lots of great blogs in this round up but this is by no means all of the blogs that I love.         Read more »