Author Archives: Liz Kim

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“Having Fun Isn’t Hard When You’ve Got a Library Card!” By Elizabeth Kim

Books and reading in our digital age.
Photo credit: onlinelearningtips.com

The need for libraries in our digital age

“I don’t wanna read for that stupid class. Books are gross I mean, I practically like forgot how to read anyway,” a gum-snapping teenybopper whined on my subway ride home. I rolled my eyes and silently chewed her out before realizing that I was no better.

When was the last time I read a book not for some assignment, but because I wanted to? I’m pretty sure Clinton was still in office the last time I perused the shelves of the Bayside Public Library. So I bit the bullet and paid a visit to my long neglected friend.

These books were portals back into childhood.  Photo credit: Elizabeth Kim

These books were portals back into childhood.
Photo credit: Elizabeth Kim

Stepping inside, I was overwhelmed with nostalgia. There was the front desk counter where I proudly signed my first library card, pencil firmly gripped. I sadly realized the columns of books didn’t stretch or tower infinitely. I couldn’t help but pick out my favorite Judy Blume and sit in an empty chair. My phone threatened to break the serenity, but I promptly put it on “silent” and tossed it. Minutes turned to hours and my pile of literature steadily grew.

The times they are a-changing. No more hand written cards! Photo credit: Elizabeth Kim

The times they are a-changing. No more hand written cards!
Photo credit: Elizabeth Kim

My visit reminded me how important libraries are to our communities. Not only do they offer a multitude of books (most of which are nonexistent online), they also provide a service for free in an era where free entertainment is rare. Libraries are a space where you can shut off distractions and use that precious time to work or simply escape into the worlds printed in the covers of its countless books.

 

 

 

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Death By Mani-Pedi?

A lack of concern for the men and women in the nail industry.

Flimsy paper masks and loose latex gloves provide little protection.  Photo credit: Robert Gumpert for the Asian Law Caucus

Flimsy paper masks and loose latex gloves provide little protection.
Photo credit: Robert Gumpert for the Asian Law Caucus

When your mom has been a nail technician for more than twenty years, you cannot help but wonder, “How safe could it possibly be to come in contact with such toxicity day in and day out?” Yet according to the Center for Disease Control (CDC), the health of the 350,000 and counting men and women working in nail salons are largely ignored by the safety watchdogs in the beauty community.

Used by the gallons, nail polish remover is just the tip of the toxic iceberg that nail techs are exposed to.  Photo credit: original photo

Used by the gallons, nail polish remover is just the tip of the toxic iceberg that nail techs are exposed to.
Photo credit: Elizabeth Kim

Nail techs face all sorts of dangers: chemical from poor ventilation, biological from transmission of germs and pathogens and even physical from the hours of sitting hunched over a desk. Over the past few years, my mother has periodically started developing angry rashes across her wrists right where a standard set of latex gloves stop. This has been the least of her worries that includes a brief breast cancer scare, the beginning stages of arthritis and debilitating migraines.

Sadly, of the hundreds of thousands of licensed nail technicians in the United States, more than 68% are minority workers with little to no English skills (CDC). Obtaining a license requires a short training period and the abundance of salons provides jobs for immigrants who need a job immediately. More often than not these workers are suspicious of outside agencies that would take away their livelihood by shutting down a salon. Ultimately the attention needs to shift more toward giving a voice to the nail technicians whose job it is to produce beauty under such ugly conditions.

It's time for the caps to come off for the hundreds of thousands of nail technicians who don't have a voice.  Photo credit: original photo

It’s time for the caps to come off for the hundreds of thousands of nail technicians who don’t have a voice.
Photo credit: Elizabeth Kim

Next time you walk in for your weekly manicure/pedicure, think twice and show some compassion to the person who faces consequences far more dire than chipped polish.

 

 

 

 

-Elizabeth Kim-

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