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A large family. A mobile home. A house under construction. No loans.
Meet the do-it-yourself family, The Building Brows.
Parenting six kids in 832 square feet? It's nuts, it's cramped. It's taking forever to build our DIY home. But it's DEBT-FREE.

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Wednesday, April 30, 2008

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Secure your sensitive information against identity theft

Works for Me Wednesday bannerYou seen that commercial where the guy drives around in a cargo truck with his social security number printed on the side? It caught my attention, particularly because several years ago we found someone else's credit information on my husband's credit report. And he wasn't even born yet at the time those events happened. I've been on the alert ever since--way before identity theft became a public awareness.

I haven't been able to get that truck out of my mind, so I took a click over to Lifelock to find out more. Here's what I discovered:

For $10 per month, they offer protection of your personal information with a 1 million dollar guarantee per person if registered personal information is breeched due to Lifelock's failure, reduced junk mail and credit card offers, and engagement in regular proactive credit protection like placing fraud alerts on your accounts so you'll be notified in the event of a questionable incident. They also offer protection for your kids under the age of 16 for an additional $25 per year.

I'm intrigued, though I'm unsure about giving a company my private information to protect. Yeah, I know, I give it to the bank and such, but I can at least meet these people in person, and it's required. I refuse to give my social security number just about everywhere else, and you should, too.

But there's no doubt Lifelock helps avert disaster so I'm mulling over this service for our family. I doubt it could have prevented the botch on Jim's credit since that seemed to be a misreport of information, but after that, and the rise of identity theft often discussed, how could I not consider Lifelock further? All I have to do is remember that CSI episode where identity theft is a key factor in a case to realize how much damage identity theft can do.

For now, here are free ways we protect our sensitive information:
  1. I don't post my kid's names on my blog and rarely post pictures of them.
  2. We cross-cut shred anything with personally identifying information on it including envelopes labeled with our names and addresses.
  3. We don't put social security numbers on forms at doctor offices and other places that do not need it. IT IS NOT REQUIRED.
  4. NEVER put your full account numbers on your checks when paying bills even though the stubs tell you to. Accounts receivable will match your information just fine. If you're super concerned about payments getting mis-attributed, write the last few numbers of the account (acct# ending in xxx) on the check and on the pay stub you can write "paid w/check #xxx ").
  5. Print only your first initial on your checks. Only your financial institution needs to know who is authorized to write checks on your account so this makes it harder for thieves.
I'm sure there are more things we can do that I missed, so drop me a comment with more anti-identity-theft tips. While I wait I'm going to try driving that social security number truck out of my head. Brilliant marketing tactic, that truck.

Update: I thought of another important security measure this morning, and that is to use a credit card, not debit card, for any transaction where your card leaves your hand or where you're making a reservation. Credit cards have anti-fraud protection where debit cards do not, as well as the obvious plus that a credit card is not directly connected to your bank account.

If someone fraudulently swipes your card while paying your dinner meal at a register away from you, you can contest it on a credit card and keep your bank account from being infiltrated. And when making reservations, you won't run the risk of overdrafting your bank account when a hotel places a hold on your account for the full amount of your room to keep it until you come and pay.
Holds aren't charged, but will make your bank account bounce if using a debit card because the money in a hold becomes earmarked and therefore unusable, and if you don't have that full amount in your account, or you're close but then make regular payments, your account will bounce and you'll incur nasty overdraft fees. Since credit cards are purely credit, the hold only applies to your credit limit.

Just make sure when using a credit card that you treat it like a debit card and only charge what you have money to repay immediately. :-)

Check out more Works for Me Wednesday posts at Rocks In My Dryer.




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Monday, April 28, 2008

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Garden Co-ops


After some incredible high April temps and dry weather that made a dust bowl around here, we're finally getting much needed rain. Vegetation is the greenest I've seen it in months and I noticed yesterday grass is starting to grow. When we first moved in here, I wondered if we'd ever see grass, but I think God orchestrated his creation so there are seeds in just about any soil. (Well, maybe not the clay stuff...)

Speaking of seeds and soil, we haven't tried a garden here for two reasons:
  1. I think I'm garden handicapped.
  2. I doubt anything will grow in sandy soil.
The first I can take care of by educating myself. There are some great gardening websites and books. The second, I can now solve much easier than buying top soil thanks to my friend. Yesterday she asked me if I was interested in sharing a garden with her.

A garden co-op? Whodathunkit? We must be in tune with each other, perhaps by God's spirit since she loves Jesus too, because if you read yesterday's post, you know I mentioned growing food. I just didn't know how I was going to succeed at it with our sandy soil.

So now the two of us are going to grow a garden at her house where she already has a designated garden plot, and we'll get to share quality time, soak up lovely sunshine and it's precious vitamin D through our much-needed sunblock, give our kids regular play time together, and save money on vegetables! This is a perfect setup for someone like me who is garden green, as in don't-know-nothing-'bout-planting.

If you are planning a garden, why not ask a friend or two if they want to go in with you? Or if you want to save money but don't have the space, ask some of your land-wealthy friends if they might be interested in a garden co-op. Or maybe you have land, but don't know how to garden. Get some friends and learn gardening together. You don't even need that much space. The return might be worth turning a postage stamp parcel's tiny lawn into a garden for a season.

Garden co-ops--what a great way to grow friendships, food, and that green wallet stuff.



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Thursday, April 10, 2008

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Truth or Lie?

SM and NT came home from school angry yesterday with their clothes, boots, and backpacks soaked and a waterlogged game system. The neighborhood second grader had come up behind them and shoved them off the road into a stream below for no apparent reason. And then he lied about it to his mom this morning saying our kids had started it when they kicked him in the nuts.

When questioned, my kids' mouths dropped open and they started yelling he was a liar, all while I'm on the phone with his mom who believed her son was telling the truth despite that she knew he tended to lie. And then she said the defining issue that often goes unspoken but is the core of many two-family parent arguments. "I think I can tell when my son is telling the truth."

There began a delicate conversation about chronic lying and our abilities to read our kids' truth meters. Can you say Can of Worms? All I can say is, thank God I'm friends with her and she loves Jesus too.

The truth is, some kids are chronic liars and many parents instinctively want to believe the best about their kids, or at the very least, that they are good enough parents to be able to ascertain truth from lies coming from their children. What parent wants to face that maybe they can't or that maybe they aren't smart enough to keep from being deceived by an imp? It threatens us with the back pedaling topic of "bad parent."

But maybe we can't always read our kids. Maybe some of them have become so skilled at lying that they can get by even our toughest defenses against deception.

Oh no! We might be deceivable, just like that darned woman in the garden of Eden. God forbid--because if we're deceivable, we're penetrable and can be humiliated.

Nope, we counter later in the day of questioning while our kid tiptoes up behind another unsuspecting peer on the way home. I can read my kids. I'm not a stupid parent.



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Friday, February 01, 2008

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New Design is Here!

The new design is here with all kinds of features. Our favorites on our Bookshelf have mysteriously disappeared except the magazines, but everything seems to be working. And hopefully I can figure out where the bookshelf items vacationed to and retrieve them soon.

Please poke around and let me know what you think in the comments and two new polls I posted:
  1. Blog load speed
  2. Blog load speed with the new design as compared to the old design.

Also, please note our new web address. If you link to us, please update your links from http://thebuildingbrows.blogspot.com to http://www.thebuildingbrows.com. Thanks.

Hope you like it--not bad for being new to CSS/html, I think...


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POLL: How Quickly Does The Building Brows Load with New Blog Design?

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POLL: How Quickly Does The Building Brows Load?

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Monday, October 09, 2006

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POLL: How Secure is Your Home?

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Sunday, August 13, 2006

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POLL: Do you use a gun safe?

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Thursday, July 13, 2006

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POLL: How Do You Keep Kids from Stealing Internet Time?

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Saturday, July 01, 2006

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Polls

Computers/Blogs

Construction

Home & Safety

Kids & Parenting





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POLL: Are you renovating or remodeling?




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