Thursday, July 28, 2011

Fully Empowered Radio Show: Aug 3- Gender Equality in Media



Listen to the archived show here

 

My special guest is Madeline Di Nonno, Executive Director of The Geena Davis Institute on Gender in Media and See Jane.  We'll be talking about why gender representation in media matters and what message it sends to young children.

Six years ago, while watching children's television programs and videos with her young daughter, Academy Award winner Geena Davis noticed a remarkable imbalance in the ratio of male to female characters. From that small starting point, Davis went on to raise funds for the largest research project ever undertaken on gender in children's entertainment (resulting in 4 discrete studies, including one on children's television).
The research showed that in the top-grossing G-rated films, there were three male characters for every one female - a statistic that still has not improved.

The concern was clear: What message does this send to young children?

The Institute is the leading resource for gender in media research, trends and education for the entertainment industry and the public.

SEE JANE is a program of the Institute that utilizes research, education and advocacy to engage the entertainment industry and recognize the need for gender balance and varied portrayals of females and male characters into movies, TV, and other media aimed at children 11 and under. We work cooperatively and collaboratively with entertainment creators to encourage them to be leaders in creating positive change

Sunday, July 24, 2011

Fully Empowered Radio Show: July 27th Our Moon Signs



 

Listen to the archive here.

Today's one of those days that 'go-with-the-flow' works best in life.  I have an appointment at 8 am ET and I don't know if I will make it to the show by 12 Noon ET.  I certainly hope I do, but either way I have a great guest or a great guest host for you.

Either way - the fabulous Julia Stonestreet Smith will be here as a guest or as a guest host. Julia hosts The Stonestreet Cafe. She is an Astrologer and the creator of the Planet Zones system of location astrology as well as a clairvoyant, a healer, a teacher, a writer and a perpetual student of life.

Julia will be looking at the 12 Moon Signs and giving you insight into how the moon signs affect us, especially as women!

If you don't know your moon sign you can visit this website to get it (you do need your time of birth) http://www.lunarium.co.uk/moonsign/calculator.jsp

If you don't know your time of birth, tune in anyway and see what information you resonate most with. Sometimes if we are quiet, we can figure it out.

Thursday, July 14, 2011

Fully Empowered Radio - Jul 20th: Fight Back Against Street Harrasment

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Listen to the archive here

If you walk anywhere you know that lewd comments and actions from men is a gauntlet we oftentimes have to run. I've experienced this in Toronto, Winnipeg, Denver, Boulder, Buffalo and NYC. Every time I find myself thinking "ugh" and frequently hear myself reply "Does that ever get you a date?"

But in the end, it is harassment and my guest Emily May, Executive Director of Hollaback! has co-founded an organization to help put an end to this epidemic.

Join me to find out you aren't alone and what you can do!

Emily May, co-founder and Executive Director
Emily is an international leader in the anti-street-harassment movement. In 2005, at the age of 24, she co-founded Hollaback! (iHollaback.org) in New York City, and in 2010 she became the first full-time executive director. Hollaback!’s mission is to give women and LGBTQ folks an empowered response to street harassment, and ultimately, to end it.

Monday, July 11, 2011

Define Yourself!



By Christine Agro



For the past eight months I have been working on a special project, a book, to help women step into full empowerment.  One of the great things that happens when I write is that as I put down a thought, the energy of that thought spirals out showing me universal information and gives me a deeper understanding and greater context for that initial concept.

In the process of writing this book, many things have become deeply clear about our lives as women especially what keeps us separate from ourselves and from each other.  One area I've been gaining that deeper, more clear insight is in how we define ourselves.

Today I want to talk about religion and law.

Sunday, July 10, 2011

Cleaning Your Communication Space: Tele-Presentation July 14

Join Christine Agro On Thursday, July 14th at 8pm ET


Christine's topic is our communication space and she will give you essential tools for energetically managing , cleaning an d healing this important aspect of any relationship.


During the class Christine will talk about how our communication space can get cluttered and clogged making it difficult to communicate and connect without trigger old information, old wounds and out-of-date experiences.


Christine will also walk you through experiential exercises that will give you life-time tools to use long after the class is finished.


Register today!


$25.00



 

Thursday, July 7, 2011

Fully Empowered Radio - July 13th: Creative Vision Mentor Day!

 

 

FOR WEDNESDAY JULY 13th, 2011

Listen to the archive here

This month's Creative Vision Mentor guest is Sara B. Wilerson. Sara is the founder of Horses, Heart and Soul LLC where she taps into the natural healing nature of horses to help her clients work through past-traumatic events that manifest in their lives in different ways.

Sara joins Christine with a desire to move her work forward.

Join Christine and Sara to learn more about Sara's work and find out how Christine is able to help Sara.


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Sara B. Willerson, LCSW is a private practice therapist in North Texas. Horses have always been part of her life. After completing a Masters in Social Work from Smith College School for Social Work she was given a book by her father, The Tao of Equus, by Linda Kohanov. Upon reading this book, Sara knew that her passion and purpose had finally joined up! After completing an apprenticeship program with The Epona Center in 2003, she set out to create Horses, Heart & Soul, LLC, an equine facilitated psychotherapy practice for children, teens and adults. Now located at WolfTree Ranch in Pilot Point, TX, Sara and a very special herd of horses offer conscious healing through The Way of the Horse.

Sara sees horses as natural healers who help us reconnect to our entire being – spiritually, emotionally, mentally and physically. Horses have the instinctive gift of mirroring what is going on in our lives. From the moment we step into their presence, horses sense those feelings we keep private. Horses remind us there is more to us that what we present to the outside world. Their unconditional awareness and acceptance of our experience is felt from the moment we step into the pasture with them.  Horses are natural geniuses when it comes to identifying and sharing those pieces we keep to ourselves. Through this awareness, they help us reconnect with our heart and soul. Ultimately this reunion inspires healing and growth, an understanding of who we are, and how we will be able to integrate this knowledge into our lives.

Sara’s professional experience has focused on working with clients who have experienced trauma, grief and loss, and life transitions. She is particularly interested in working with the current manifestation of past trauma-whether it be depression, anxiety, PTSD, addiction, self harm, disordered eating, or disconnection. The Horses, Heart & Soul, LLC program offers individual, family, couples, group, and workshop sessions for children, adolescents and adults. Together with her equine partners, Sara invites children and adults to experience the healing power of the horse outside of the traditional office environment. Visit their website to learn more! www.horsesheartandsoul.com




 

Do you have a dream?  Something you want to create or a business you want to move forward?  Apply to be Christine's guest.  If selected Christine will spend the show working with you using her Creative Vision Mentoring process.  Using her clairvoyance she will help you look beyond your blocks and own self-limiting energy and she will help you set up an action plan to keep moving forward.

 

To apply please visit: Fully Empowered and fill out the form.

Every second Wednesday of the month Christine has Creative Vision Mentor Day!

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

How My Moroccan Muslim "Mama" Made Me Rethink My World - Guest Post Lisa Bloom

Lisa Bloom is my guest on this week's Fully Empowered With Christine Agro.  Please join me on Wednesday, July 6th at 9 am PT / 12 Noon ET! Listen live by visiting www.sqr.fm

Christine

How My Moroccan Muslim "Mama" Made Me Rethink My World
By Lisa Bloom,
Author of Think: Straight Talk For Women to Stay Smart in a Dumbed-Down World

I am a travel junkie. If I don't leave the country at least a couple times a year, I get itchy. I travel when my otherwise frugal, responsible self can't afford it. I travel off the grid even though being unreachable by Blackberry threatens my career. I travel though my mother begs me not to gothere. I travel alone when no one wants to go with me. I drag my bewildered boyfriend to the other side of the globe to join me, sleeping on the floor of mud huts and squatting over smelly holes in the floor.

I have to. Because when I leave the country and go to places where they don't speak my language, practice my religion, or eat my food; where their history leads them to an entirely different way of life, I return home like a space invader, looking at everything we do with fresh eyes. Before I traveled extensively, I assumed naively that how we do things is preordained, inexorable. The funny thing is that that's how everyone sees their culture's ways. Thus, a busload of Turkish villagers once pulled over so that the passengers could all get out and snap pictures of me, wildly, improbably, fantastically (to them) dressed in my faraway country's native garb of jeans, a T-shirt, and sneakers, and no head scarf. There I was, odd woman out, the locals looking at my uncovered head squeamishly, just as I gazed upon their different female attire, thinking, wondering, processing what it all means -- especially those veils.

I've always been uncomfortable looking at veiled women. When I traveled to the Middle East, especially the rural areas, I saw many women wearing burkas that covered not only every strand of their hair but also every pore of their faces, save a tiny slit for their eyes. Even then, sometimes a screen covers the eyes.

I tried not to stare at these women with my unscreened eyes. Sometimes I'd take a mental snapshot, look away, and then mull it over. What must it be like to be draped in fabric all of one's life whenever outdoors? What did the world look like through the slits, the screens, the pinpoint holes in mesh fabric? Was it like walking around virtually blindfolded? Were they off-kilter from perpetual lack of peripheral vision? What facial expressions -- disgust, resentment, acceptance, contentment -- were hidden from view?

I've read Geraldine Brooks's Nine Parts of Desire, which lays out the fundamentalist Muslim thinking that women carry around all responsibility for human sexuality, that male sexuality is uncontrollable and impulsive, that males might fly into a sexual fury and rape a woman if he chances upon a glimpse of too much skin or tempting female hair. Thus, these men require total cover for postpubescent girls and women in fundamentalist areas. I've read Infidel, in which the brave Ayaan Hirsi Ali describes being taught this heavy responsibility for keeping violent male sexuality in check as a little girl, being compelled to wear the veil and the burka to preserve the family honor. I've read The Trouble with Islam Today, Irshad Manji's flames thrown at the heart of Islam's misogyny, which that veil, of course, symbolizes.50

Some Muslim women, I know, see the veil as liberating because it frees them from being sex objects. Men do not stare lasciviously at them on the streets as Western men do, they argue. They feel it brings them respect. And I have observed in Muslim countries that at least out on the public streets, the men harass only immodestly dressed Western women, not covered locals. But that still puts all the burden of sexual responsibility on women and blames the victims, women in immodest clothing, for sexual harassment or assault. I don't see liberation in draping myself in ten yards of fabric to hide myself from hungry wolves. Liberation is taming the wolves and holding men legally accountable for harassment and sexual assault. Full stop.

So when I traveled to Morocco, a secular Muslim country, in 2009, I knew I was going to struggle to come to terms with covered women. Unlike, say, residents of Iran or Saudi Arabia, Moroccan women are not legally required to cover. Yet most do. And I was there in July, where the temperature sizzles like the surface of Mercury. The men wore western clothing: knee length shorts or light cotton pants, T-shirts. But for women, the de rigueur outfit nearly all wore was a nightgown-like, long-sleeved, loose-fitting jelaba covering cotton pants, topped with a head scarf.

Few Moroccan women wear black burkas, and their faces are not concealed. Still, to my Western eyes, all this covering was a sign of women's oppression. They can tell me that they all want women to have equal rights in this country, that the king is a feminist, and that 10 percent of Morocco's Parliament is set aside for female representation.51 All true and good. But as long as their culture dresses them in all this fabric and those head scarves, I wasn't buying it.

We left the explosive, teeming, wild ride of Marrakech and ascended the High Atlas Mountains to villages so remote that children stopped dead in their tracks to gawk at my uncovered blonde hair. Here we go again. I may as well have been an albino gorilla strolling down their main dirt road. We spent the night with a Berber farming family in a simple mud hut, folks who were generous enough to share their bowl of couscous and vegetables with us -- utensils not an option.

After dinner it was time for entertainment. But as it turned out, I was the entertainment. The mother of the family asked with a twinkle in her eye if I would like to be dressed in their traditional garb.

Sure, I said. I'm up for anything, especially when I'm traveling.

My temporary Moroccan Mama soberly flattened my unruly hair (gone au naturale while traveling without hair appliances) back behind my ears and popped the scarf on me. Her practiced hands swiftly got every lock of hair into place. She tied it at the nape of my neck.

Next, she handed me the jelaba. I put it on.

Mama smiled mischievously. "Kohl?" she said, pulling out a worn little nub of an eye pencil.

As a television talk show host, I'd been under the tight control of a lovely makeup artist, Vincenza Carovillano, who, for years advised me -- okay, ordered me -- to use or not use certain face washes, moisturizers, and serums, and, above all, not to share unclean makeup with others. (I've had two eyelid surgeries to remove lumps from makeup infections -- occupational hazard of wearing thick TV paint every day.)

I imagined Vincenza having heart palpitations at the thought of that kohl pencil rubbing on my eyelids.

But how could I say no to Moroccan Mama, who had welcomed us into her home, made us dinner, and was now grinning and giddy from dolling me up in her treasured garments? I could not.

Mama jabbed me, making a saw-tooth pattern in black above and below my eyes. I think it was supposed to be a straight line, but maybe her eyes weren't very good or her hands weren't, or something.

"Ha ha!" she said, clapping her hands, handing me a mirror.

Staring back at me was a moon-faced girl with zigzag eyeliner, a black-scarved flat head, and a billowy maxi dress.

"No one looks good in those outfits," my boyfriend, Braden, sympathized.

I sat down on the bed. The boyfriend and I hung out. We planned our hike for the next day. I forgot about what I was wearing. I flopped over sideways and propped myself on an elbow as we continued talking. I lazed, and our conversation meandered.

An hour later, it hit me: I was awfully comfortable in the jelaba and head scarf. Because my hair was neatly wrapped, my face was unencumbered by the wild mass my hair morphs into on vacation. It reminded me of the '70s, when I used to wear a red or blue bandana with my faded Levis, my hair wild behind me, pulled smoothly off my face. It felt nice, like when I pull all my hair back into a ponytail so I can run or think.

The world's most comfortable hairdo took her all of about twenty seconds to complete: over the hair, soft cotton tied neatly behind the neck, bam! That's all there was to it. I felt clean. With my hair out of the way, my face could get down to business, in this case, reading the guidebook and maps.

And from the neck down, nothing was poking me, digging into my flesh or girl parts. I had no desire, as I normally do at the end of a day, to climb out of my clothes and into my pajamas. My jelaba was soft and loose and thin, less constricting even than my Western pajamas, which my culture allows me to wear only at night.

Then I thought about morning rituals. To get ready, it appears that Berber women brush their teeth, throw on the Moroccan bandana and nightgown, skip the makeup (maybe a swipe-swipe of the kohl, that's it, and if Mama's skills were typical, they'd do better skipping that step altogether), flat shoes, and presto! They are good to go.

What do we Western women do? The blow-dry, in my case, is a tedious half hour of time I'm never getting back, followed by curling iron or flat iron or both depending on the humidity, and then there are time-consuming skin toners, serums, astringents, moisturizers, SPFs, and makeup (foundation, concealer, blush, eye shadow, liner, mascara, brow pencil, lip pencil, lip gloss) all to achieve that natural look, right?

Stilettos, tight jeans, thong underwear, underwire push-up bras, constricting skirts, Spanx, shaving our legs and armpits, bikini waxes, eyelash curlers -- all Western conceits it appears Berber women cheerfully live without.

Who is oppressed in this picture and who is liberated?

The politics and symbolism of the headscarf blinded me so much that I failed to see the easy breezy comfort of flowing soft cotton, unpainted faces, and no bad hair days. These women may not have the equal rights we do, despite sweeping 2004 reforms,52 but when it comes to the daily drudgery of making our female selves presentable, damn, maybe they are onto something.

Their culture defines beauty differently, in a way that requires next to no wasted time or money, or pain or discomfort for women. And my Muslim Mama's husband looked at her with great love and affection, and judging by their large family, they had an exuberant sex life. He didn't seem to find her less attractive for the normal droops and wrinkles of middle age.

Okay, you're not going to see me sporting a black head wrap and caftan on my next CBS Newsappearance. As I perform my daily television rounds, I can't escape the TV makeup and hair coiffing. But off camera, I often wistfully invoke my Moroccan sisters in the High Atlas Mountains, draped and relaxed and never having to suck in their stomachs, with their fresh, naked faces turned toward the warm air.

From my Moroccan Mama, I learned that a headscarf is not a burka, that a makeup-free life can be liberating (I'm just going to forget about the kohl pencil), and that I participate in a cultural norm that is -- let me say it here -- ridiculous. We don't have to fall prey to what the fashion industry, cosmetic companies, and plastic surgeons sell us. There are whole countries and cultures where women do not do as we do, and their men, their friends, and their children think they are beautiful and love them just as they are. We could likewise choose not to participate in all the nonsense. Before we ridicule faraway cultures for wearing "oppressive" attire, let's walk a day in their women's soft, flat shoes. Let's consider us from their point of view: all that crap we do to ourselves daily? Entertaining, laughable, even, and, most important, optional.

50. Geraldine Brooks, Nine Parts of Desire: The Hidden World of Islamic Women (New York: Anchor Books, 1995); Ayaan Hirsi Ali, Infidel (New York: Free Press, 2007); Irshad Manji, The Trouble With Islam Today: A Muslim's Call for Reform in Her Faith (New York: St. Martin's Griffin, 2003).
51. We have a few more female congresspeople-17·5 percent. Two Muslim countries have more elected female legislators than we do: Iraq (25.5 percent) and Pakistan (22.5 percent).
52. Nearly half the Moroccan population still believes that the practice of husbands beating their wives in some circumstances is acceptable. Furthermore, tradition limits Moroccan women's ability to own or inherit land equally with men. "Gender Equality and Social Institutions in Morocco," Social Institution & Gender Index, http://genderindex.org/country/morocco.

The above is an excerpt from the book Think: Straight Talk For Women to Stay Smart in a Dumbed-Down World by Lisa Bloom. The above excerpt is a digitally scanned reproduction of text from print. Although this excerpt has been proofread, occasional errors may appear due to the scanning process. Please refer to the finished book for accuracy.

Copyright © 2011 Lisa Bloom, author of Think: Straight Talk For Women to Stay Smart in a Dumbed-Down World

Author Bio
Lisa Bloom
, author of Think: Straight Talk for Women to Stay Smart in a Dumbed Down World is an award-winning journalist, legal analyst, trial attorney, and the daughter of renowned women's rights attorney, Gloria Allred.

A daily fixture on American television for the last decade, Bloom is currently the CBS News legal analyst, appearing frequently on The Early Show and CBS Evening News with Katie Couric, as well as the legal analyst for The Dr. Phil Show. Bloom appears regularly on CNN and HLN prime time shows such as Issues With Jane Velez-Mitchell, The Joy Behar Show, Anderson Cooper 360, and The Situation Room. She has been featured on Oprah, Nightline, Today, Good Morning America, Rachael Ray, and many more, and she was a nightly panelist on The Insider throughout 2010. From 2001-2009, Bloom hosted her own daily, live, national show on Court TV, and she has guest-hosted Larry King Live, The Early Show, and Showbiz Tonight.

Bloom has written numerous popular and scholarly articles for the Los Angeles Times, Family Circle, the National Law Journal, CNN.com, the Daily Beast, and many more. She has also been profiled, featured, and quoted in hundreds of publications, including the New York Times, the Washington Post, Elle, Ladies' Home Journal, and Variety.

Bloom graduated early and Phi Beta Kappa from UCLA, where she was national college debate champion, and then from the Yale Law School, where she won the moot court competition. She currently lives in Los Angeles where she runs her law firm, The Bloom Firm.TheWrap.com recently named Bloom one of the top five celebrity attorneys in Los Angeles.

For more information please visit http://think.tv/ and follow the author on Facebook and Twitter