In case you hadn't heard about any of these studies - sitting for long stretches will kill you.
I used to sit all day to write. Now I stand for long stretches. I would get a treadmill desk or dummy one up, but we really don't have room until Teen moves out.
So I got a cheap little standing desk on Amazon.
The only problem is that the keyboard height that is right for my wrists means I am continually looking down. I do NOT need another excuse to slouch. I thought about getting an Ikea Fredrik Desk and a separate keyboard so I can have the screen at eye level and the keyboard at wrist level. And then after Teen moves out I could add a treadmill underneath.
Then I saw this standing desk from Uncaged Ergnomics..
I use my laptop at the right height now, with an old keyboard and mouse hooked up to it. I think it is helping me not to slouch.
Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: tan, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 3 of 3

Blog: So many books, so little time (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: death, standing, Add a tag
.jpeg?picon=1166)
Blog: Chris Rettstatt (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: personal, high school, babies, twins, life of brian, standing, whistling, Add a tag
Boss #2 has a problem. She’s addicted to standing.
She’s youngest of my twin girls, approaching 8 months of age. A couple of weeks ago she learned how to pull herself up and stand. She hasn’t quite mastered sitting back down, and she usually just topples over. Or she’ll stand there and cry until someone comes to the rescue.
I mean, you have to learn to stand before you can walk, and so on. The problem is that she’s utterly addicted to standing. She stands every chance she gets. As soon as you put her down, she’s assuming a standing position. As soon as she gets up in the morning, she’s standing in the crib. And in the middle of the night, if she wakes up because of a noise or a bad dream, she’s immediately standing, even before her eyes are completely open.
I sometimes find her standing in the crib, staring into the mirror, crying, part of her wanting to let go and go back to sleep, the other part determined to stand no matter what. Just for the audacious sake of it.
When a tree falls in the forest and no one is there, it’s a philosophical issue as to whether it makes a sound. But when a baby topples like a stubby tree, foam mattress or not, she makes a sound that would make the deadest of philosophers beg for earplugs. And you’d think she’d learn.
I imagine if I tried to make her stand, she’d be a lot less interested in it. As long as I keep rescuing her once in a while, and the other times letting her topple (safely on a foam mattress), it will seem like the coolest possible thing she could ever be doing. And any day now Boss #1 (the other twin) will decide she wants in on the action.
I’m not convinced that any of this standing business is in my best interest. After all, the more mobile they become, the more they’ll reach for the things I’m not ready for them to have. The stapler. My coffee cup. Their freedom.
I was pondering what this standing addiction portends about her character, and it got me remembering something from my own high school days.
I was a bit of a pain in the butt in high school. I was a nice kid, and smart, in mostly the advanced classes, but I had absolutely no inclination to respect authority.
I didn’t care for school assemblies, and the part where we all stood up for the star spangled banner song rubbed me the wrong way. I always made a distinction between loving my country (which I do) and being militaristically patriotic (which has always scared me).
But mostly I was just a pain in the butt.
So I asked to be pardoned from the assemblies, to go instead to the lunch room and do homework.
Request denied.
So, in the assembly, when everyone else stood up for the rocket’s red glare, I sat, infuriating the Assistant Principal (whose nickname was Sarge) and earning me a ticket to the Principal’s office (not my first by a long shot).
The Principal did not have Sarge’s fury, and I successfully argued my case. I was allowed to skip the next assembly and instead go to the lunch room and read.
So there I was, sitting alone at the table, reading a book, minding my own business, and suddenly a small horde of punks and goths come through the lunchroom door, sheepdogged by Sarge, who was nearly purple-faced.
They were ushered into seats and I learned soon about their crime. Inspired by my act of rebellion in the previous assembly, this time they’d all stayed in their seats during the bombs bursting in air. And their punishment was a time out in the lunchroom. No talking. No reading. No looking at anyone funny.
I continued reading. I mean, that was the deal. But Sarge ordered me to stop reading. Apparently I was now one of the accused. I tried to explain that I was an exception, but he was in no frame of mind to deal with that sort of subtlety.
So, I sat there a while, looking around at the punks, their primary-colored mohawks reaching for the fluorescent bulbs like sun-thirsty grass, and the goths, their deflated expressions verging on annoyed. And Sarge, face still purplish, seething with the rage of someone who is faced with the knowledge that whatever they may have sacrificed for our star-spangled banner, teenagers are born to push boundaries for the sake of it.
So, my next reaction was to stand. I stood there, next to the table. Sarge’s face looked like it was going to erupt. So I started whistling.
That earned me another trip to the Principal’s office. And detention. For a while.
Oh, and the song I whistled. I should have chosen something political, but I just whistled the first thing that came into my head. It’s the song they’re all singing at the end of Life of Brian when they’re being crucified.


Blog: The Excelsior File (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: picture book, graphic novel, hugo cabret, scholastic, tan, sleznick, ALA, Add a tag
Shaun Tan Arthur A. Levine / Scholastic 2007 Okay: wow. I have this feeling everyone is going to fall all over this book (if they haven't already) for a variety of reasons, not the least of which is the fact that Tan put four years into researching and preparing this book and every minute of every day of those four years is visible on the page. In his wordless tale of the immigrant experience
I've heard rumblings about this book in other places, but seeing these pictures makes me want to be reading it right now. I think it's hard to adequately review graphic novels without showing the pictures, but that's not always allowed. So then you're stuck with trying to fumble about and say what it would have been so easy to show. And I agree with you on the awards problem, but if I had to
wow. that book looks amazing. I might have to get that for myself.xt
I'm not so sure, Sara. I've seen plenty of reviews of graphic novels that don't rely on images and, in fact, are nearly identical to "regular" book reviews. The comic book industry has been reviewing materials the same as traditional books for years and, in the end, it comes down to the ability of the person reviewing to convey the same sort of information.I think with picture books for kids we
I too think this book is amazing. Interestingly, today I had a meeting with my 4th grade colleagues and gave each one a poster of The Arrival that I'd picked up for them at ALA. I then showed them the ARC (is the book itself hardback?) and they were wowed. We all put the posters up for our students as they will be arriving too in a a few days and we already use the metaphor of their being "
Best damn book of the year and it won't win much of anything at all. Why? Because it falls between the cracks. It's like nothing that's ever been before, so no one wants to touch it. This has been the year of the undefinable title. Those books that don't slot neatly into a category but blow everyone away.
Yes, Monica, the book is hardcover, and it's only $20, which seems like a steal to me.As for the American history vs. Australian history comment, I thought about that and while I'm sure Tan is taking a general approach to the immigration experience I was merely pointing out how succinctly it summarizes the American experience... or at least how it used to be when we were an open-minded nation