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September 12, 2008

High Fructose Corn Syrup Ads

Filed under: On The Web, cooking — Chris @ 11:09 pm

Have you seen these new commercials on television?  The ones that are trying to convince us all that high fructose corn syrup is exactly like sugar?   I think one of the ads says somegthing like,” I guess you don’t care about what you feed your kids!”

Sweet Surprise is a website put out by Corn Refiners Association of America and they are the ones behind the campaign.

After years of hearing and reading that HFCS is bad for us and should be avoided, even though it is in virtually all processed foods, a new ad campaign is running to “set the record straight.”

HFCS is believed to be a major cause of obesity in Americans.  It is one of those ingredients that is in almost everything.  Go run over to your pantry or refrigerator and have a look.  Go on, I’ll wait.   Were you surprised?  I was the first time that I was made aware of  HFCS.  Canned  tomatoes?  Bread? Salad dressing?  Yogurt?  It is crazy!

I had read a few things about HFCS in the media, but reading the book The Omnivore’s Dilemma made me really understand the reason we have HFCS to begin with. 

The ad campaign has me wondering they are now pushing so hard for people to believe HFCS is the same as sugar.  Are they seeing a drop in sales as people become pickier about what they eat?  I know that I read all of my food labels and chose things that do not contain HFCS, among other additives, when possible.

What about you?  Do you actively avoid high fructose corn syrup?

September 10, 2008

Paper, paper everywhere. Except when you need it

Filed under: Children, Ideas, Making It Work, parenting — Chris @ 10:08 pm

Oh, paper. This is one of the banes of my existence and I am sure every mother out there. There isn’t enough room in any one’s house for all the paper that children generate. Some days I feel like my children are single handedly responsible for wiping out all the mature forests in our country.

The key to any system is actually doing it. I know that sounds simplistic, but how many times have you begun a new organization system, have your hopes set high, only to abandon it several days or weeks later. You need to find a system that works for you and stick to it. Even when you don’t want to.

That said, I am ruthless. I save very little.

Get an invitation? Immediately write all the pertinent information on the calendar and toss the invitation in the trash. You don’t need it.

I have a HUGE calendar. One of those desk blotter sized ones. There is room on there to write everything that I could possibly need to write, including the phone numbers for parties or doctor appointments. I use my different colored highlighters for different things. Baseball games are yellow, doctor appointments green, etc. This way I can glance from across the room and easily see what is going on for the next few weeks.

Don’t think you have room for a huge calendar? What about on the back of a closet door? Keep your pen tied to the thumbtack there so it is always handy. Do you have a pantry in your kitchen? That is where I keep mine. I don’t like clutter. You’ll never see things taped to the front of my refrigerator. Just typing that made me shudder.

Cards? Store bought go in the trash as soon as possible without being offensive. I don’t think I have ever read the card over the open trash can, but I’ve come close.

Homemade cards I’ll cherish, clutch to my bosom, and shower the recipient with my undying gratitude and love, before quietly disposing of it. If it is really spectacular and not another rendition of MOTHER written down the side of the card with words like Mommy- Old- Tells Me What To Do, etc. I’ll take a picture of the child holding the card, before I file the card away in my special storage cabinet, aka the outside garbage can.

I have one large drawer in my pantry where I put works of art. Every so often I go through and determine the best representative artwork they have done, books they have written, etc and toss the rest. Anything not able to be stored flat or worthy of public display is tossed. Egg carton caterpillars with glues on wiggly eyes? Cute, but buh-bye. Anything made out of a discarded coffee can? Oh how clever, but buh-bye. Any sort of pen holder, ashtray, paper weight. They go in my special cabinet straight away. I always photograph the child holding the piece of art for posterity.

I display my children’s artwork.

Children's Artwork

I have many paintings matted and framed, hanging on my walls. I have pottery on display, and ceramic creations hanging on the wall.
Children's ceramics

It is a nice way to make the house feel like it belongs to the children. It makes them proud of their contribution to the decorating. Framing just makes it look nicer and more polished than scotch tape.

Since we homeschool, I probably keep more of my children’s school papers than a parent who has a child in traditional school would need to. I put their papers into colored folders, each child has their own folder. At the end of the year I put all the consumable books they have used and folders into a box and put it into the attic.

I go through the mail as soon as I come home with it. Everything that isn’t a magazine or a bill is tossed right away. Sometimes I get rid of the extra stuff at the post office in their recycling bins so that I don’t even have to cart it home. Then I put the mail where it belongs. Yes it has it’s own place.

Look at organization systems at Pottery Barn. But don’t shop there, unless you have lots of money to spend on something you can get much cheaper somewhere else. See how you can make something similar yourself for much less money, that will suit your needs perfectly. Target is a great place to buy individual components.

September 9, 2008

Mom Joins Cheerleading Squad

Filed under: On The Web, parenting — Chris @ 7:35 am

This is another one of those weird news stories that makes you shake your head and say, “What were they thinking?” 

If you could go back and redo your high school years would you do it?   I wouldn’t mind going back in time long enough to give my teenage self a good smack upside the head.  But relive the entire experience?  No thank you.

 A thirty year old woman in Wisconsin decided to do just that. She took her daughter’s identity and enrolled in a local high school and joined the cheerleading squad.  School officials became suspicious when she failed to show up for classes.

I am not sure why the fact that she looks like a 30 yr old woman, not a 15 yr old girl, didn’t raise any suspicions.

After I got over my shock that someone would do this, I read in the news article that the mother wanted to relive her high school experience  because she never got  to do it the first time around.  Simple  math would show that when she really was 15 yrs old she was already a mother or on her way to becoming one.  I don’t think there are pregnant cheerleaders.  It is sad that she feels like she missed out.  And even sadder that she hasn’t gotten over it.

The woman is now under arrest, charged with a felony and facing jail time.  I guess high school the second time around isn’t all it was cracked up to be.

September 8, 2008

Fresh from the Garden

Filed under: Children, Keeping It Real — Chris @ 11:18 pm

DSC_0184

Even though summer is coming to an end and the nights are growing colder, our garden continues to produce. Not much, mind you.  A couple of tomatoes, a small sweet green pepper, a few hot peppers.  My daughter tells me there is a yellow squash that is starting to grow.  I only hope that it grows large enough to pick before the night time frost comes and kills it.

Our hot pepper crop was not exactly a winner, but the kids have been really excited about it. They have come up with all sorts of recipes for us to make using the hot peppers. I have had to gently remind them that our hot pepper supply is rather small.

But still they are excited. If anyone is wondering whether or not they should plant a garden next Spring I have to say that it has been a great experience for the kids. They have worked at taking care of the garden, watering the plants, picking the vegetables that have grown.  They are also so much more excited to eat vegetables that they have grown themselves.

One tiny word of advice, if you are planting in the Spring before all of the leaves have bloomed on the trees, really consider the amount of shade that the area you want to put your garden in will get. Our tree grew enough over the past year that the garden was no longer in full sunlight this summer. This probably contributed to the poor growth of many of the vegetables.

September 2, 2008

Organization is the Key for Success

Filed under: Children, Making It Work — Chris @ 10:53 pm

So for most of  us school has started up again.  The lazy (ish) summer days are gone and the kids have to adapt to a new routine and schedule.  How do you help them to start the year off right? 

I think that being organized is the number one thing that we can do for our children.  It impacts every area of our lives.

One of my favorite tips is to have what I call Calendar Central.  I have a big corkboard that hangs on the back of our mudroom closet door.  It is low enough that the kids who can read can read it themselves.  Here I hang sports schedules, party invitations, a monthly calendar – anything that the kids will need to refer to on their own.  Want to know what day and time art lessons are?  Go look at the calendar. 

The mudroom closet is  organized.  Each child has a low hook to hang their jacket and backpack.  The opposite side of the closet has shelves with wire baskets that are labeled with each child’s name.  The baskets hold their stuff, which varies depending on the season – hates and gloves in winter, baseball gloves in the spring, swim goggles in the summer.

I recently bought a second corkboard and put it in my pantry.  This corkboard is a little more  fancy and has pocket things on the side.  Finally a place to put the mail.  I don’t know about you, but I never seem to have a home for all the mail.  I hang my grocery list on the corkboard.  It is  handy inside the pantry since that is where the food  is located.  It also has little hooks on the bottom to hang my keys.  Maybe one day I will be organized enough to put my keys on one location every day and not run around the house looking for them ten minutes before I have to leave and go somewhere.

I figured that since Calendar Central worked so well for the kids that I should have something similar for myself.   So far it is working well. 

What organizational tips do you have for creating a successful school year?

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