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March 2008

March 31, 2008

Bookstore Shenanigans

I made the most exciting discovery this weekend - my book has landed in bookstores! You know that feeling when a book you've been dying to read is finally available? It was that times ten for me when I walked into the Barnes & Noble across from Lincoln Center and found three (yes, three!) copies of my book on the shelf in their teen section.

And I couldn't stop there. After seeing them in one store, I decided Grant and I had to go to every single bookstore within walking distance (a total of 5) to see if they had my book. And...they all did! One Barnes & Noble on the Upper East Side even had 4. The only store that didn't have it was a Borders and so, being the sneaky author I am, I ordered it in. Grant is going to go pick it up and put it on the shelf. (Hey, sometimes you have to get a little creative, you know?)

Anyway, so not only is How to Raise Your Parents available online - it's in actual bookstores too. Yay!!

March 29, 2008

My all-time favorite You Tube video

I know the whole "Jamie Lynn is pregnant" thing is old news, but this YouTube video is still my absolute favorite thing ever. This little girl totally remind me of my niece, Abbie Jane. And the way she says, "it's baby food..." I LOVE it! Super cute.

March 28, 2008

You can buy my book on Amazon!

I know I've been talking about my book a lot these days but I just can't help myself. There's something new happening every day!! It's seriously so exciting - way better than waking up on Christmas morning when I was five and I knew Santa had brought me the lego set I wanted. (I was really into legos.)

And yesterday it was official - my book is for sale on Amazon!! It's shipping out to bookstores as we speak (or, well, as I write) so it should be in a bookstore near you soon. And you'd better believe I'm going to be walking around Manhattan this weekend checking every single bookstore I know.

But go online and order your copy, and if you like it, post a review or drop me an email. I'd love to hear what you think? And thanks for all your support. I couldn't do this without you guys!

P.S. If you see it in your bookstore, email me!

March 27, 2008

Did you hear me on the radio this morning?

This morning I was on San Francisco's "Don Bleu in the Morning" show on Star 101.3 FM to give some advice on teenagers and dating. And it was a total blast! I wish I could listen to the show every morning. Don, the host, is this super energetic guy and I'm not sure if he has kids or not, but he seemed really in tune with teenagers and parents in general.

They had me on because they got a listener email that basically said this...

Dear Don,
I need a little help from some other parents. I am a single dad and my 14-year old daughter wants to go on a date without a chaperone. This seems ludicrous, but she claims her friends have done it and it’s “no big deal.” I may be a little old fashioned, but 14 seems too young to date. In fact, I was planning on making her wait to date until 17. At what age should my daughter be allowed to date?
Sincerely,
A Worried Dad

First off, don't you love it that you can send in an email with a problem and they might really talk about it on air?! How cool is that?

And this one was perfect because it's a question that a lot of parents deal with. You know, when is too young to date? What's the norm for everyone else? That kind of stuff. But there are a few things you can do to ease your parents into dating:

  1. Introduce them to your dates. Seriously, a little hello goes a long way when you're about to hit the town with some guy your dad's never met.
  2. Tell them what you're doing. They don't need every single tiny detail, but are you going to a movie? Dinner? Give them the basics so they don't worry.
  3. Keep your phone on so they can call if you if there's an emergency. (Note to parents: don't call if there isn't.)

Any other things you've found that work to ease your parents' minds when you're going out on a date? Do tell...

March 26, 2008

Privacy 2.0

I've been thinking about my post on Internet privacy between parents and teenagers and there are a few things I wanted to add from a teenager's perspective and from a parent's.

FROM A TEEN PERSPECTIVE:
1. If your parents install spyware on the family computer, you have a right to know about it. I think it's fair for them to install it on their computer (and technically, the family computer is their computer) but to even the playing field, everyone using the computer should know about it. No secret spyware should be allowed in an open parent/teen relationship.

2. If your parents do install spyware (and tell you about it), be forewarned. They can (and chances are, will) look at what you're doing online. So be careful. (I know most of you are, anyway. And that's why the idea of spyware leaves an icky taste in my mouth. For every teenager looking at porn, their are tons more doing totally innocent stuff like messaging their friends. Just keep it clean, to use a phrase my own mother liked.)

FROM A PARENT PERPSECTIVE:
1. I think if a teenager has a blog or social networking profile that's open to the public, whether it's on MySpace or Blogger or wherever, it's fair to read it. Really, if you're putting your blog out into the world for total strangers to read, your parents have a right to read it, too.

2. But, and here's a big but, you don't have a right to read private emails or IM's. I think that's crossing the line because those emails and IM's are intended for someone specific - and that someone is not you. (Although it should be said that anything you put in writing - whether it's an email, text, IM, message in a bottle - can in theory be opened and read by someone. If you don't want anyone reading it ever - DON'T WRITE IT DOWN. Those are words I live by.)

March 25, 2008

Britney's on her way back

Everyone's been talking about Britney's guest appearance on "How I Met Your Mother" last night. She wasn't drunk or drugged out of her mind? She didn't flash her panties (or lack thereof) or shave her head on the spot?

Doesn't anybody remember what Britney was like before we all turned her into a desperately-need-to-be-loved, no-attention-is-bad-attention media junkie? I know the show was taped and not live, but I'm glad to see her making somewhat of a comeback. I feel for her. I've said this before and I'll say it again--the girl didn't get a chance to be a real kid or a teenager! How can we expect her to act like a adult if she didn't have an opportunity to become one?

Not that I would have ever gotten out of a limo and flashed my you-know-what to camera-wielding paparazzi, but at least I got to have a few mistakes and crashes in private. Now that she seems to be on the mend, I'm going to be holding my breath to hope she makes it.

March 24, 2008

You MUST read these!

I just finished the complete series of Confessions of Georgia Nicholson books by Louise Rennison and I have to say--they should be required reading for everyone! Every teen, tween, 20-something, mom and grandma should read all 8 of them. And there's a 9th one coming out! (Stop in the Name of Pants) I'm Georgia Nicholson's biggest fan so you'd better believe I'll be in line at the bookstore waiting for to get this one.

I actually started with the 8th one, Luuurve is a Many Trousered Thing, (aka Love is a Many Trousered Thing) because my BFF in London sent it to me. So I got to read the original version! Although I think the Hamburger-a-go-go edition has a better cover, don't you?

Any other books like this you recommend?

March 23, 2008

TV Happiness vs. Real Happiness

Have you seen the new CBS commercial to promote the new seasons of all their upcoming TV dramas - like CSI, Cold Case, Without a Trace, The Ghost Whisperer? (I admit it: I saw it while watching all the college basketball games.) Anyway, it shows clips of all the actors hanging out and having a good time, laughing, smiling, etc. Basic TV stuff.

There's this one shot of Lily Rush (aka actor Kathryn Morris) literally doubled over, laughing hysterically--her mouth is wide open and she looks genuinely happy. Except that I can't remember the last time I laughed like that--and I laugh a lot.

It got me thinking that we see so much of this TV-ified happiness that we forget what real happiness is. My friend was telling me a story that involves her falling out of a taxi cab and I was cracking up, but not like Lily Rush. And yet, seeing that commercial made me wonder if other people laugh like that and I'm just not "letting go." I don't know. Does seeing everything so acted out make us become more like actors in our own lives?

March 22, 2008

College Basketball Kicks A*$

Thursday was the start of the famous March madness - a month of basketball mania that gives some girls headaches just thinking about all the time their guy friends and boyfriends are going to spend watching TV over the next month. I used to be one of these girls. And then I filled out my first bracket.

This was last year. Grant (my super cute hubby) is a big basketball fan, and he said I should enter his company contest to see who could pick the winners. He works for a major newspaper and I figured that between the rabid fans and the sports editors, I didn't have a prayer. But that didn't stop me--I filled out my bracket based on teams that I knew, teams who I remembered my high school boyfriend liking, and teams with the cutest uniforms. (Hey, I said I would be honest in the blog :) And I killed it! Seriously, Grant came in dead last and I was in the top ten (#2 for most of the time, actually). I still won't let him live it down!

So, this year, I'm all about the tournament and I'm already kicking butt. I called Kansas State to win (it's no fun if the underdog doesn't beat the favorite in at least a few games, you know) and they did! So far I'm exactly on. (And I have no problem bragging about it, especially because I couldn't hit a three-pointer if my life depended on it.) I know my winning streak isn't going to last through all the games this weekend (and if it does, I might quit my day job and become a full time sports gambler) but I can't help but cross my fingers that I'm going to make bracket history.

Anyway, all you b-ball naysayers (P.S. Doesn't the term b-ball make you think of The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air?) should give it a try and go get a bracket before it's all over!! You'll have to tell me how you do!

March 21, 2008

Hannah Montana is taking over the world

I think I might be the only person in the country who doesn’t understand the whole Hannah Montana thing. Sure, she’s got some serious pipes, a hit TV show, and a rock star dad, but what makes her any different than Ashley Simpson or Hilary Duff?

I, for one, think it’s fantastic that tweens and teens are having such an impact on pop culture. Some people are calling it the tween machine because teenages and pre-teens have been the ones to make Miss Miley so successful - not their parents. (I say better her than Lindsay Lohan, you know?)

And of course, the idea to have her concert in a movie theater is genius. Pure genius. How many people can really see Hannah Montana in concert? A few thousand in each city she goes to, at most. Not to mention that her tickets are CRAZY expensive. But if you can see the show at your cinema, everyone gets a piece. But is it really the same? I’m not sure. I haven’t seen the show yet, but it’s on my list. Have you seen it? What did you think? Are other singers going to start doing 3D movie concerts?

PS. Any songs I should be sure to listen to before I start my Hannah Montana experience?

March 20, 2008

Why my life is like HBO's The Wire

I am addicted to the HBO show The Wire. I started watching it on Netflix and still have the entire final season (season 5) to go, but I think it’s the single best TV show I’ve ever watched. (Time magazine thinks so too.)

This isn’t my normal style of TV entertainment. It’s really gritty and some episodes are even gory. The characters are drug dealers and cops and addicts, but the genius of the show is that you see the human part of everyone. It’s not black or white—good or bad. There’s right and wrong in every situation, in every person. And that’s why it means something.

I’ve had a few times in my life when I’ve seen my own evil side. Like when I got mad at my sister and pushed her, and she knocked her head against the dresser and actually started bleeding. I don’t consider myself abusive or violent, but in that moment I was. I had no excuse.

How can you be honest with yourself about your “good” and “bad” traits? How can you keep your negative tendencies from taking over? There’s this kid, Michael, in the fourth season of the Wire and he’s an incredible person but then he just gives in to his situation, his dark side. (I won’t say more because I don’t want to give it away.) And even though the people in my life aren’t slinging drugs or carrying guns, we all have our own demons. How do you keep the demons at bay?

March 19, 2008

Mean girls on America's Next Top Model

I was watching America's Next Top Model – last week’s episode – and couldn’t get over how nasty a few of the girls are to each other. I know it’s a competition, but one of the models, Fatima , was super critical of another girl (Amis) who was goofing off and acting silly. I admit Amis looked a little stupid, but 20 bucks says she had a lot more fun than Fatima. And what gives Fatima the right to be critical of her. They’re in the same situation right? So why the mean girl attitude? What’s that all about? That’s the mystery of girl-dom isn’t it…

March 18, 2008

Take this survey

The Young Adult Library Services Association (YALSA) is taking a survey about technology so they can get you everything you need at your school and public libraries. Here's your chance to tell them that the Internet is too slow and which games you're dying for. Take the Teen Technology Survey and speak your mind!

Are your parents spying on you?...This guy says they should be.

Yesterday, my friend forwarded me this New York Times column that raves about the benefits of computer spyware. The column basically suggests that the only way for parents today to keep a protective eye on their teenagers is to monitor every move they make online. One example was particularly shocking—a father who didn’t know his straight-A daughter was doing drugs and sleeping with her dealer, until he used spyware to check her online activity.

While I don’t know this father personally, I can’t help but think that he was probably ignoring other important signs that would have led him to these same discoveries. Maybe he wasn’t around enough to notice behavioral changes or maybe, unwilling to accept that his daughter might be involved in something unsavory, he chose to look past them. Either way, instead of dealing with his daughter directly, he chose to have spyware do his parenting for him.

When I was in high school, computers were only used for typing English papers—there was no MySpace, no chat rooms, no Google. I didn’t get my first email address until I was in college, already outside the grasp of any parental spyware programs. But those who think that lack of Internet equals teenage privacy don’t know my parents.

My parents used to drive me crazy. They waited up for me at night, making sure I came home in time for my curfew and made me come say goodnight in person (a rather obvious way to check my state of sobriety). They insisted on meeting my friends and boyfriends before I was allowed to go out, and to my embarrassment, they didn’t hesitate to ask where I was going, who was going to be there, and what we’d be doing, no matter who I was with. But with all their questions, they never spied on me. I was a pretty good teenager and decently open with my parents, but if I had suspected they were spying on me, I would've been much more secretive--even though I really didn't have anything to hide. After all, spying basically comes with the assumption that the spy-er doesn't trust the spy-ee.

I know what you parents are thinking...that even though many parents are still very involved in the day-to-day workings of their teenagers’ lives, the Internet can put teenagers at risk in ways not possible when I was in high school. I completely agree. It’s a haven for predators who want to mask their true intentions and lure unsuspecting “friends.” It’s a forum for immature teenagers to taunt and bully each other, uncensored by teachers and other adults. But while these things are dangerous and must be addressed by parents, it’s wrong to assume that spyware is the answer for safety. Spyware doesn’t set off an alarm when a pedophile enters a chatroom. It doesn’t alert anyone when a conversation edges on sexually inappropriate or when a bully starts instant messaging threats. So while a parent might have "ammunition" for a later confrontation or proof that their teenager is breaking some rule, in theory, it's already "too late." (This is not to say that you shouldn't be totally aware that there are crazies on the Internet--so be careful. OK, that's my big sister shout-out for today.)

Back to the pro-spyware column. I was especially interested in the part that said that says parents should practice “responsibility” and resist the urge to read every email and instant message their teenager sends. It’s a nice idea—thinking that the average parent has enough self-control to only spy on a portion of his or her child’s online activities—but unrealistic. It’s kind of like opening a candy bar, taking a small bite, and then wrapping it up and putting it back on the shelf knowing that you’ll never touch it again. Few of us, when tempted with the inner life of someone we know, have that kind of restraint. I'm an adult now, and if I had the chance to read my Mom's email, I'm pretty sure I would, although I probably wouldn't find anything other than recipes and emails about book club.

And not to knock parents, but even though most of them are pretty computer savvy, teenagers are almost always savvier. If your mom or dad secretly installs spyware, chances are you'll know it’s there long before your parents find anything incriminating. And then, instead of carrying on email and IM conversation on the family computer, you'll probably wait until you're at a friend’s house or the library. Am I right? And isn't that the opposite intention of spyware? So much for your parents getting the inside scoop...Instead you'll be spending even more time away from them.

I guess my point is that parents shouldn't be spying on their teenagers if they want to have good relationships with them. And by good relationships, I don't mean that they're best friends. I mean that they're involved and aware. Not to mention that spyware basically teaches teenagers that it's OK to "spy" on people they love if they think they're doing it out of love or because they want to protect someone. I can just see the headlines in 15 years...Spouses No Longer Talking Out Problems, Instead Use Internet to Watch Each Other. Not really the kind of inter-personal skills we want now, are they?

March 17, 2008

What's the most shocking thing you've ever done?

A few days ago, I had the first event for my book. It’s not officially out yet but the high school in Madison, CT, was having their annual “Family University Day” and they asked me to be their keynote speaker. A chance to speak to parents and teenagers? Let me think for a second. Uh, YES!

I was SO nervous. My first speech and it was in front of over 100 people. What if they didn’t laugh at my jokes? What if they didn’t buy my book? When I get nervous my stomach feels like I’ve just been on a roller coaster. Luckily, this roller coaster ended well. I talked for about 30 minutes and tons of people came up to me after to get books signed. I sold my very first book ever. It was such a high!

Before I officially gave my speech, I had lunch with some of the moms who organized the event. They were all really cool, and one of them said something that stuck with me. She said the best parenting advice she ever got was, “never act shocked by anything your teenager says.” What have you done or said that totally shocked your parents? How could you tell they were shocked? I think that if your parents act shocked by everything you’re less likely to talk to them. What do you think?

March 16, 2008

I'm in Teen Vogue!!

Really, I'm in there as an expert on mother-daughter relationships. It's the April issue and it just hit newsstands so if you don't have a subscription, you can get it at the drugstore or grocery store or bookstore (you see where I'm going with this). Anyway, not only does the magazine have some totally fab fashion, but the articles are really, really good. I am so excited to be in it. Between us, I was dying to get my hands on the real magazine so everyday last week, I went to about 5 newsstands around the Upper West Side where I live and asked if they got their new copies in that day. The guys behind the counter started to recognize me and by Thursday they would just look at me when I walked up to the counter and say, "Not yet--tomorrow. I promise." Finally, I got a copy last weekend and I devoured it cover-to-cover!!

So read the article and let me know what you think. Oh, and will you sign up for my Sarah Says newsletter? Pretty please? Just look in the upper right hand corner and sign on up. My newsletter has exclusive Q&As with teenagers, experts, and even an occasional cool give-away! And if you think of anything I should cover in my newsletter or in my blog, let me know. You really are the experts, you know!

Do we really need to watch Britney buy groceries?

I heard a story on the radio today about the mobs of photographers the follows Britney Spears. (Instead of the normal US Weekly and People, Spears is on the cover of the political magazine The Atlantic Monthly this month. It’s 150 years old and normally profiles presidents and major world leaders. Britney isn’t typical fare here.) According to The Atlantic, the amount of photographers following Spears has tripled since she shaved her head. They are literally making millions off of her mental breakdown.

I can’t help but feel sorry for her, she’s obviously having some very hard times and instead of a break, she just gets more attention (leave her alone, Atlantic). I can’t imagine the world watching my life fall apart on TMZ.

Do you ever feel sorry for Britney Spears? Do you feel guilty for buying the magazines that buy pictures from the crazy paparazzi? Or do you think celebs like Britney (and their moms) know what they’re in for? Everytime I buy OK! I feel a twinge of guilt but those mags make for the best subway reading. Am I total hypocrite?

March 03, 2008

Book Talk...Sarah on YouTube!

Here it is--my YouTube debut! If you wanted to know the back story of HOW TO RAISE YOUR PARENTS you came to the right place!