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Oct 14, Support The Teal Pumpkin Project To Raise Food Allergy Awareness

Halloween is a fun time for families. Dressing up, having parties and trick-or-treating. Children particularly love trick or treating. But if your child suffers from allergies it can become less fun. A great project has been started by FARE (Food Allergy Research and Education). It is called The Teal Pumpkin Project. It is encouraging households to give non-food items out to trick-or-treaters. The participating households put a teal painted pumpkin their house, as well as putting up a poster, to tell trick-or-treaters that they are only giving out non-food treats. I think this project is a great idea. It helps to raise awareness of food allergies, and allows children suffering from them to participate in a fun family tradition. It would be great if communities could get involved and raise awareness of this project. You can find out more below
Eczema Blog

Oct 14, Support The Teal Pumpkin Project To Raise Food Allergy Awareness

Halloween is a fun time for families. Dressing up, having parties and trick-or-treating. Children particularly love trick or treating. But if your child suffers from allergies it can become less fun. A great project has been started by FARE (Food Allergy Research and Education). It is called The Teal Pumpkin Project. It is encouraging households to give non-food items out to trick-or-treaters. The participating households put a teal painted pumpkin their house, as well as putting up a poster, to tell trick-or-treaters that they are only giving out non-food treats. I think this project is a great idea. It helps to raise awareness of food allergies, and allows children suffering from them to participate in a fun family tradition. It would be great if communities could get involved and raise awareness of this project. You can find out more below
Eczema Blog

Jan 31, Three Ladies and The Allergy Law Project

Three lawyers from the United States have founded the Allergy Law Project, the Las Vegas Review Journal has reported. The three ladies all have children with food allergies and are working to provide the right information about the law and food allergies. The article is an interesting read about how one of these ladies, Homa Woodrum, found that her first child had developed food allergies. From there she started a blog which provided recipes for families dealing with food allergies. The blog ran a story which caught the attention of an attorney from Maryland, Mary Vargas. Woodrum met Laurel Francoeur, a lawyer from Massachusetts, who came up with the idea of the Allergy Law Project. Together the three ladies provide free information online about the allergy law in the United States. You can read more about their story below
Eczema Blog

New NEA blog post. Why is the East Coast missing from the Eczema Map Project?

Check out my latest post on the blog of the National Eczema Association. I write about the Eczema Map Project and, in particular, what it’s already taught me: that either I have a lot to learn, or there’s not much happening on the east coast of the United States, which has traditionally been the power center for academia, industry, and medicine. Why is that?
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PROJECT BANDALOOP IN NEW DELHI

New Delhi: The American Center will be presenting aerial performers Project Bandaloop in stunning action atop Jeevan Bharati, the LIC Building in New Delhi on November 26, 2010 at 1 p.m. and 6.30 p.m.  Given the location and height of the building, the shows will be visible from several points in and around Connaught Place, Parliament Street and Janpath. The event has been produced by Seher in cooperation with Delhi Tourism.
Project Bandaloop is renowned globally for its aerial dance performances that create a blend of dance, sport, ritual, and environmental awareness.  Inspired by the challenge of bringing climbing and rappelling into their choreography, Bandaloop draws on aerial, vertical and horizontal movements to craft unique dances, many site-specific. Under the artistic direction of Amelia Rudolph, their work explores the relationship between movement and gravity and stimulates viewers’ awareness of their natural and built environments. Since its launch in 1991, the company has performed for close to half a million people.
Project Bandaloop is arguably the first company in the world to explore an art form that fuses movement with mountaineering techniques. Bandaloop performs in natural and urban settings, in theaters, halls, towers, bridges, skyscrapers, mountains.  Though the group has performed in India last year, too, (in Mumbai at a private function and in Mussoorie at founder Amelia Rudolph’s alma mater Woodstock) this is their first performance in New Delhi. They will start their 2010 tour with a show at the historic Golconda Fort in Hyderabad.  The sharp contrast with Jeevan Bharati, the glass, stone and metal structure created by architect Charles Correa in the 1980s, sits well with Bandaloop’s own philosophy of fusion and creativity.  Three decades ago, Correa was criticized for being too futuristic – a word that has been used for Bandaloop too, though in a more glowing reference.
According to the U.S. Embassy’s Cultural Affairs Officer Michael Macy, Bandaloop represents America’s spirit of innovation and creativity. “Bandaloop’s style is also in a sense its substance. The group has broken new ground even as its dancers leave us mesmerized by their poetic mid-air movements.  In presenting this extremely non-traditional group, we want to focus on the potential of the human mind to explore, redefine and cross boundaries. It was, therefore, important to us to reach out to as many people as we could by presenting the show in a public place, and making it accessible for all.”
Interestingly, Bandaloop founder Amelia Rudolph spent much of her childhood in India. An alumnus of Woodstock School, she gave  her first public dance performance as a seven-year-old student of Bharatnatyam in Jaipur.  
Brief Profile of Amelia Rudolph, Artistic Director and Founder
Amelia Rudolf is a choreographer, dancer/athlete, public speaker and teacher. Her work is informed by aesthetics, non-traditional relationships with gravity, ecology, natural and built spaces, community and human relationships. She founded Project Bandaloop in 1991, bringing together dance, climbing and varied off-the-ground movement through site-specific work on cliffs, buildings and in theaters. She teaches youth in Oakland through Destiny Arts Center, lectures as a public speaker and is involved in Creative Capital’s Artist Development Program.
Amelia holds Bachelors and Masters degree in comparative religion from Swarthmore College and the Graduate Theological Union, Berkeley. Her intellectual and artistic sensibilities inform her work inspiring practical, spiritual, theoretical and political creativity. Living in India for five years, especially the years she spent in the central Himalaya, have influenced her as a global citizen and as an artist. Her work has explored site-specific dance on buildings and cliffs in Africa, Argentina, Austria, Brazil, Canada, China, Italy, Lithuania, Oman, twelve states in North America and Portugal.
Amelia is an artist/athlete who has been a student of movement since she started taking ballet lessons at the age of six. Developing first as a dancer/gymnast, her early training was with the Ellis Duboulet and Lou Conte studios in Chicago. She spent seven years at the school of the Hubbard Street Dance Company where she became a company apprentice at 17. She has performed with Mark Morris, Dance Brigade, Clay Taliaferro and Sarah Elgart among others. She competed as a gymnast for eight years and was captain of the women’s cross-country team in college. She began climbing in 1989 in California’s Sierra Nevada range and her experiences have ranged from back-country peaks and big walls to sport climbing and three seasons as a national competitor. She began to surf in 2005.

Jan 31, Three Ladies and The Allergy Law Project

Three lawyers from the United States have founded the Allergy Law Project, the Las Vegas Review Journal has reported. The three ladies all have children with food allergies and are working to provide the right information about the law and food allergies. The article is an interesting read about how one of these ladies, Homa Woodrum, found that her first child had developed food allergies. From there she started a blog which provided recipes for families dealing with food allergies. The blog ran a story which caught the attention of an attorney from Maryland, Mary Vargas. Woodrum met Laurel Francoeur, a lawyer from Massachusetts, who came up with the idea of the Allergy Law Project. Together the three ladies provide free information online about the allergy law in the United States. You can read more about their story below
Eczema Blog

The Eczema Map Project: the big picture

Something I’ve wanted to do for a long time is create a world map of all the major centers or points of interest for eczema patients, doctors and scientists.

Why? Because I feel that we’re all largely isolated, even in the internet age. Especially with a disease that makes you want to stay away from other people. We can get on our computers and search for blogs or advice or therapies, but there’s very little sense of belonging to a greater community. We don’t know what’s going on in the big picture.

And so I would like to introduce to you the Eczema Map Project, a work in progress. It is a map of the world marking the locations of key researchers, therapy centers, and patient associations.

I’ve decided to make the map a permanent tab on this blog, so I can update it continually when I learn about new people or developments.

The items on this map are those that I consider significant–game-changers, not just good dermatologists. But please feel free to write a comment about your dermatologist if you think he or she is above average!

You can see that at present the map is a bit USA and UK-centric. This could be for a few reasons. I largely operate in English, and I live in California, so I tend to hear about developments in the USA more than anywhere else. But it is true that the USA is a very large and well-developed country with some of the best medical care in the world (for those who can afford it–an issue I have strong opinions on, but which I am not going to get into right now). So it may turn out that more of the most important sites are indeed here.

But please tell me what is missing from this map. Is there a major therapy center or a patient association I don’t know about? Leading scientists not there? Tell me, and I’ll add them. Or, if you think an item doesn’t merit being listed, let me know. Nothing is set in stone.

And have fun exploring the world map from an eczema perspective.


View The Eczema Map Project in a full screen map
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