
El Amigo Tacos to open second location at Bravo Café in Elma

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Business Journals
2 hours ago
- Business Journals
$2.9M Pine Township home for sale with sport court, pool house (photos)
To Opt-Out of Targeted Advertising: Move the 'Allow Targeted Advertising On This Site or App' toggle below to the left and press 'Confirm my Choices.' To Opt-Out of other 'sales', including for list rentals and data co-ops: Please provide information on the "Opt out of Sales" Webform located on our Privacy Center. This information will not be used or disclosed for any purpose other than for processing this request. To Opt-Out of both Targeted Advertising and other 'sales', including for lists and data co-ops: Move the 'Allow Targeted Advertising On This Site or App' toggle below to the left and press 'Confirm my Choices.' Please provide information on the "Opt out of Sales" Webform located on our Privacy Center. This information will not be used or disclosed for any purpose other than for processing this request. To limit the use and disclosure of your Sensitive Personal Information: Please provide information on the "Opt out of Sales" Webform located on our Privacy Center. This information will not be used or disclosed for any purpose other than for processing this request. If you are a resident of California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Iowa, Minnesota, Montana, Nebraska, New Hampshire, New Jersey, Oregon, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, and Virginia, you have the right to opt-out of Targeted Advertising, including our 'sale' and/or 'sharing' of your Personal Information ('Opt-Out'). We and our third-party business partners use Personal Information in accordance with our Privacy Policy (see link below) to serve advertising believed to be of interest to you ('Targeted Advertising'). If you are a California resident, you also have the right to limit the use and disclosure of your Sensitive Personal information in particular circumstances. Please note that you may need to Opt-Out on each website, mobile app, browser, and device you use, and if you clear your browser cookies, you may need to repeat this process. However, if you have created an account to log in across several of our websites and/or mobile apps, we will make reasonable efforts to apply your Opt-Out request to each of those websites and apps. Please follow the steps below:


Business Journals
6 hours ago
- Business Journals
Austin Infrastructure Academy sees early success in workforce push
To Opt-Out of Targeted Advertising: Move the 'Allow Targeted Advertising On This Site or App' toggle below to the left and press 'Confirm my Choices.' To Opt-Out of other 'sales', including for list rentals and data co-ops: Please provide information on the "Opt out of Sales" Webform located on our Privacy Center. This information will not be used or disclosed for any purpose other than for processing this request. To Opt-Out of both Targeted Advertising and other 'sales', including for lists and data co-ops: Move the 'Allow Targeted Advertising On This Site or App' toggle below to the left and press 'Confirm my Choices.' Please provide information on the "Opt out of Sales" Webform located on our Privacy Center. This information will not be used or disclosed for any purpose other than for processing this request. To limit the use and disclosure of your Sensitive Personal Information: Please provide information on the "Opt out of Sales" Webform located on our Privacy Center. This information will not be used or disclosed for any purpose other than for processing this request. If you are a resident of California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Iowa, Minnesota, Montana, Nebraska, New Hampshire, New Jersey, Oregon, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, and Virginia, you have the right to opt-out of Targeted Advertising, including our 'sale' and/or 'sharing' of your Personal Information ('Opt-Out'). We and our third-party business partners use Personal Information in accordance with our Privacy Policy (see link below) to serve advertising believed to be of interest to you ('Targeted Advertising'). If you are a California resident, you also have the right to limit the use and disclosure of your Sensitive Personal information in particular circumstances. Please note that you may need to Opt-Out on each website, mobile app, browser, and device you use, and if you clear your browser cookies, you may need to repeat this process. However, if you have created an account to log in across several of our websites and/or mobile apps, we will make reasonable efforts to apply your Opt-Out request to each of those websites and apps. Please follow the steps below:

Business Insider
6 hours ago
- Business Insider
My grandparents raised me and parented with fear. I tried to do things differently, but the result was the same.
My grandparents raised me, and they weren't around much. I was often without adult supervision, and in an effort to protect me, they injected a healthy dose of fear into their parenting. And though it did instill both discernment and resilience, it also created anxiety. While the origins of many of the stories that scared me didn't come directly from them, they perpetuated the myth and often added to it. I remember, at the age of 8, watching a movie as a family about the slow fallout of a nuclear war. No discussions followed the movie, no attempts to assuage my fears, even when I told them about the nightmares that came in the weeks after. The things my grandparents warned me about often became a recurring theme of my childhood nightmares. Though their intentions were good, telling them about my fear just seemed to solidify their commitment to parenting me this way. I wanted to parent differently Before I became a parent myself, I talked with my grandparents about my upbringing. They told me they had figured I was better off scared than dead. I reminded them of all the ways my anxiety manifested with the chronic nightmares and fears around everything from death to nuclear war, but they offered no apologies. I knew I wanted to parent differently. At 30, I had a son. Over the next eight years, I had three more kids. Rather than pull scary tales from the daily news or the town rumor mill, I kept them sheltered. When they asked about issues I thought could be frightening, I tried to explain in a way that was both direct and sensitive. Sometimes, the overwhelming anxiety I struggled with made it difficult, though I don't think I knew it at the time. I learned that my son dealt with similar anxieties Retrospection can be difficult as a parent. It often provides an overarching, distanced perspective we don't have when our children are little. Maybe this was why I was caught off guard when my 20-year-old son came over to have dinner one night and announced, "I'm afraid of everything." When I asked what "everything" included, he delivered a list as long as my own. It included driving, fire, water, and a million other things. Please help BI improve our Business, Tech, and Innovation coverage by sharing a bit about your role — it will help us tailor content that matters most to people like you. What is your job title? (1 of 2) Entry level position Project manager Management Senior management Executive management Student Self-employed Retired Other Continue By providing this information, you agree that Business Insider may use this data to improve your site experience and for targeted advertising. By continuing you agree that you accept the Terms of Service and Privacy Policy . "You passed all the fear from when you grew up to me," he said. Though I had aimed to raise my children differently from how my grandparents parented me, we had seemingly achieved a similar result. I, too, had created fear, which morphed into anxiety. My son carried it into adulthood just as I had. As we said our goodbyes, I thought back to my early years as a parent. I told my kids to be careful with electricity. "Don't plug that in," I heard myself saying from almost two decades prior, "you might get shocked or start a fire." At the beach, warnings were issued about swimming too far out without adult supervision. "You told us never to swim alone," my son said, "and I remember swimming with friends and searching for an adult. At 13, it became embarrassing." The truth hurt, but it wasn't all bad Looking back at how I'd parented in contrast to my intention was eye-opening. I didn't even realize I had anxiety until my 40s. I assumed everyone lived the way that I did — in a perpetual state of fear. "I didn't know," I told my son. Then, I did what I've always done when I make a mistake: I told him I was sorry. He told me it was OK, before adding, "It is probably part of the reason I made it to adulthood." While I was truly grateful for his forgiveness and understanding, I knew I needed to start doing things differently with my youngest two children, now 14 and 12. I've gone to therapy and also realized the value of taking medication to control my anxiety. What I am trying to do now is instill confidence in my kids. My fears oozed onto everything I did and affected the way I parented. I suppose, like my grandparents, I was just doing my best to make sure my kids were safe.