Before my husband suffered a massive stroke in 2008, he was self-employed. He started a design business and supplied companies with promotional materials. My older son had the opportunity to tag along with Dad to meet with clients, vendors, and sometimes business meetings. In 2007, my husband landed a contract stocking magazine shelves in area hotels. Because my husband was unable to find an assistant who could understand the complicated digital machine that was used for inventory, he decided to employ our then 7-year-old computer whiz. My husband would often come home amazed that King Man was able to do the job more efficiently than grown men. For his hard work, King Man earned $35 for the day. There wasn't a field trip or a play date I could plan that would keep him from going to work with Daddy. I was so tickled by the fact that Mr. sleep until 10:00 a.m. would jump out of bed at 4:00 a.m., prepare his tea and bagel, and be out of the door with Daddy by 4:30 a.m. Well, after reading the Wall Street Journal article How To Raise An Entrepreneur: Tips On Putting Your Kids On the Path to Running Their Own Businesses, I realize it's time for King Man to follow in Dad's footsteps. Travel soccer costs a fortune, he now wears men's shoes, and PlayStation 3 seems to come out with a new game every day! It's time he put all of that experience to work in creating his own business. If you have not read the article, click on the link here: How To Raise An Entrepreneur
Friday, June 24, 2011
How To Raise An Entrepreneur
Before my husband suffered a massive stroke in 2008, he was self-employed. He started a design business and supplied companies with promotional materials. My older son had the opportunity to tag along with Dad to meet with clients, vendors, and sometimes business meetings. In 2007, my husband landed a contract stocking magazine shelves in area hotels. Because my husband was unable to find an assistant who could understand the complicated digital machine that was used for inventory, he decided to employ our then 7-year-old computer whiz. My husband would often come home amazed that King Man was able to do the job more efficiently than grown men. For his hard work, King Man earned $35 for the day. There wasn't a field trip or a play date I could plan that would keep him from going to work with Daddy. I was so tickled by the fact that Mr. sleep until 10:00 a.m. would jump out of bed at 4:00 a.m., prepare his tea and bagel, and be out of the door with Daddy by 4:30 a.m. Well, after reading the Wall Street Journal article How To Raise An Entrepreneur: Tips On Putting Your Kids On the Path to Running Their Own Businesses, I realize it's time for King Man to follow in Dad's footsteps. Travel soccer costs a fortune, he now wears men's shoes, and PlayStation 3 seems to come out with a new game every day! It's time he put all of that experience to work in creating his own business. If you have not read the article, click on the link here: How To Raise An Entrepreneur
Monday, June 6, 2011
Before There Was Mozart
I am so very thankful that we live in a city of ultra-modern libraries filled with wonderful books. I probably check out between 50-100 books each month. Imagine the joy when I stumbled upon the book Before There Was Mozart: The Story of Joseph Boulogne, Chevalier de Saint-George. I have a little violinist in the midst and it gave me great joy to share this inspiring story about Joseph who "overcame prejudices of his peers to become one of the finest classical musicians in all of Europe." In addition to being an African-American violinist he wrote 14 concertos, 9 symphonies, 18 string quartets and 6 operas! This is my favorite passage from the book:
"During one performance, a young man sat among the crowd, enthralled...Brimming with inspiration, he returned home to Vienna, where he began work on his Sinfonia Concertante in E-flat Major for violin and viola. The young man was Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart."
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