- My hair is curly now. Pregnant hair = frizzy hair, so I took a trip to the salon. I love it.
- We decided on a paint color for the new kids' room. Boy or girl, this baby will be sharing a room with the Sunbean, so we picked a paint color that will work for both. Depending on the gender, we'll accessorize accordingly. I painted a tiny bit this morning to see how it looks and it is fantastic. I'm so excited to get started on this big project.
- Did you know the Dollar Store has paint brushes? I seriously love that place more and more every time I go.
- We lost power for a few hours this morning and it was kinda fun to find things to do that didn't require electricity. At least it gave me an excuse to avoid the ridiculously large pile of laundry.
- Speaking of, I was thankful we have gas logs to keep us warm without our electric heat!
- Has anyone else starting listening to Christmas music yet? MacGyver refused to let me decorate for Christmas last night.
- It's my birthday month. Birthdays are pretty much national holidays in our house.
- Speaking of birthdays, we're taking a road trip on my birthday weekend to see our friends. I'm so excited!
- I broke my mom's new sewing machine on Monday night. Oops. Luckily, she gets free service for the first year.
- The Sunbean somehow picked up the lyrics to "Jingle Bells". Seriously adorable.
- Now I'm off to tackle the laundry and catch up on TV shows for the rest of Sunbean's nap...Happy Thursday to you!
Thursday, November 4, 2010
Thoughts for Thursday
Monday, November 1, 2010
Grass is Good
Let's consider this post 'part two' in my food series. The reason I'm going to talk about meat now is because that is where my own personal food revolution began.
About a year ago, PBS had a free screening of Food, Inc. I love all things free, so MacGyver and I tuned in. I'm pretty sure it is in the very definition of a documentary to be one-sided and political, and this one definitely followed suit. Still, I was shocked by the facts the documentary claimed, and spent the next few weeks doing research. I did a lot of Google-ing, but also visited the library, spoke to my granola friends, my farmer friends, and my doctor.
I could reach only one logical conclusion: my family would only be eating local and appropriately-fed and well-cared-for meats. The reasons are many and varied, but I'll do my best to explain them as best I can.
Local. This is perhaps the most important aspect of meat for me. Not just locally-grown, but locally processed, as well. Many people don't realize (especially people that live in the farmland of America like I do) that locally-grown animals are usually sent to one of 13 major packinghouses. A packinghouse is a facility where animals enter alive, and their products leave in boxes, ready to be shipped around the world.
These packinghouses are in business to make money, and have done anything and everything they can to cut costs. We live in a nation with free enterprise (thank goodness!), which means that businesses operate under the system of supply-and-demand. In case you slept through Econ 101, that means that businesses supply what customers buy. Unfortunately, Americans are buying (and thus demanding ) a bunch of unhealthy stuff.
The biggest consumer of the packinghouses are fast-food restaurants. These restaurants want their food to taste the same in California and Maine and Japan and Florida, so they pressure the packinghouses to supply meat that tastes consistent. The result? One hamburger that contains meat from dozens, and sometimes hundreds, of different cows.
The packinghouses employ practices that shocked me. Studies have shown (source list at the bottom) that as much as 50% of the meat leaving these facilities is infected with a life-threatening food-borne illness. The meat that leaves is often contaminated with feces, bone marrow, rodents, and human waste. Seriously disgusting.
Another product of packinghouses is mechanically reclaimed meat. This is what chicken nuggets are made from. After they remove the breast and thigh from the chicken, they grind down the carcass. This contains plenty of bacteria, so it is flooded with chemicals. It no longer looks, smells, or tastes like meat, so it is injected with flavoring. This mixture is then molded into familiar-looking shapes: chicken nuggets. Please stop feeding these to your children.
Buying local changes all of this. Local butcher shops aren't perfect, but they are family-owned mom-and-pop shops that care about the community. They don't produce at the rate that packinghouses do (some at 400,000 pounds of meat per hour), but the meat is healthy.
Appropriately-Fed. I feel very passionately that in order to be healthy, we must eat healthy foods. Food that is well cared for from the start, especially meat. Cows, for example, are designed to eat grass. If they had a choice, they would graze all day in a pasture. Unfortunately, most cattle bred for consumption these days is fed a corn-based diet, which is heavily supplemented with growth hormones.
On the surface, this doesn't seem all that bad. The problem is, a cow's digestive system just isn't equipped to handle corn in such large quantities. The cow develops an infection, such as E. coli, and then that bacteria is present in the cow's manure. Since the packinghouses don't properly protect us from these bacteria, it is easily passed on to the consumer.
Each animal has its own diet of preference; a diet that nature will allow the animal to easily digest. I don't know what each diet consists of, but I've found that when meat is purchased from a local farmer (organic is best), your odds are pretty good. Buzzwords to look for are 'grass-fed', 'free-range', and 'organic'. Well-fed animals produce healthy meat. Healthy meat makes for healthy humans.
Another item to note is that the USDA does not currently have the power to recall tainted meat. They can recommend that a company recall unsafe meat, but it can't enforce. Many are quick to blame republican lawmakers, though I don't think the blame can be passed so easily. We are operating with a broken system that is in desperate need of fixing. Until then, I've made the choice to protect my family.
Making the switch to local and well-fed meat is not without its challenges. One of the top questions I get is "How can you afford this?". That's kind of a trick question for me, because I've since become vegetarian, but I can give you some insights.
For starters, it isn't as expensive as you'd think. Check out your local resources. Most farmers offer a deep discount if you buy a whole cow or a half a cow at a time. Invest in a deep-freeze and store the meat, or split it with some friends and family. My family has actually been doing this for years. Chicken can be more expensive, but every community has a local co-op that will deliver fresh farm products weekly or bi-weekly, and those are more affordable than meats in a health-food shop.
Another solution is to introduce a few 'meatless' days to help with the cost. Spaghetti with meatless sauce, rice and bean tacos, meatless lasagna, and lentil dishes are crowd-pleasers around here. Your body does not need meat for every meal, every day.
I'll go into more detail about healthy eating on a budget in another food post, but those are some ideas to get you started.
I'm not going to pretend to be an expert, but this is what I've learned over the past year. I'd be happy to (try to) answer any questions you have!
Sources:
Food, Inc.
Fast Food Nation (this book includes a fantastic source list, with studies that support the findings)
www.usda.gov
www.organic.org
About a year ago, PBS had a free screening of Food, Inc. I love all things free, so MacGyver and I tuned in. I'm pretty sure it is in the very definition of a documentary to be one-sided and political, and this one definitely followed suit. Still, I was shocked by the facts the documentary claimed, and spent the next few weeks doing research. I did a lot of Google-ing, but also visited the library, spoke to my granola friends, my farmer friends, and my doctor.
I could reach only one logical conclusion: my family would only be eating local and appropriately-fed and well-cared-for meats. The reasons are many and varied, but I'll do my best to explain them as best I can.
Local. This is perhaps the most important aspect of meat for me. Not just locally-grown, but locally processed, as well. Many people don't realize (especially people that live in the farmland of America like I do) that locally-grown animals are usually sent to one of 13 major packinghouses. A packinghouse is a facility where animals enter alive, and their products leave in boxes, ready to be shipped around the world.
These packinghouses are in business to make money, and have done anything and everything they can to cut costs. We live in a nation with free enterprise (thank goodness!), which means that businesses operate under the system of supply-and-demand. In case you slept through Econ 101, that means that businesses supply what customers buy. Unfortunately, Americans are buying (and thus demanding ) a bunch of unhealthy stuff.
The biggest consumer of the packinghouses are fast-food restaurants. These restaurants want their food to taste the same in California and Maine and Japan and Florida, so they pressure the packinghouses to supply meat that tastes consistent. The result? One hamburger that contains meat from dozens, and sometimes hundreds, of different cows.
The packinghouses employ practices that shocked me. Studies have shown (source list at the bottom) that as much as 50% of the meat leaving these facilities is infected with a life-threatening food-borne illness. The meat that leaves is often contaminated with feces, bone marrow, rodents, and human waste. Seriously disgusting.
Another product of packinghouses is mechanically reclaimed meat. This is what chicken nuggets are made from. After they remove the breast and thigh from the chicken, they grind down the carcass. This contains plenty of bacteria, so it is flooded with chemicals. It no longer looks, smells, or tastes like meat, so it is injected with flavoring. This mixture is then molded into familiar-looking shapes: chicken nuggets. Please stop feeding these to your children.
Buying local changes all of this. Local butcher shops aren't perfect, but they are family-owned mom-and-pop shops that care about the community. They don't produce at the rate that packinghouses do (some at 400,000 pounds of meat per hour), but the meat is healthy.
Appropriately-Fed. I feel very passionately that in order to be healthy, we must eat healthy foods. Food that is well cared for from the start, especially meat. Cows, for example, are designed to eat grass. If they had a choice, they would graze all day in a pasture. Unfortunately, most cattle bred for consumption these days is fed a corn-based diet, which is heavily supplemented with growth hormones.
On the surface, this doesn't seem all that bad. The problem is, a cow's digestive system just isn't equipped to handle corn in such large quantities. The cow develops an infection, such as E. coli, and then that bacteria is present in the cow's manure. Since the packinghouses don't properly protect us from these bacteria, it is easily passed on to the consumer.
Each animal has its own diet of preference; a diet that nature will allow the animal to easily digest. I don't know what each diet consists of, but I've found that when meat is purchased from a local farmer (organic is best), your odds are pretty good. Buzzwords to look for are 'grass-fed', 'free-range', and 'organic'. Well-fed animals produce healthy meat. Healthy meat makes for healthy humans.
Another item to note is that the USDA does not currently have the power to recall tainted meat. They can recommend that a company recall unsafe meat, but it can't enforce. Many are quick to blame republican lawmakers, though I don't think the blame can be passed so easily. We are operating with a broken system that is in desperate need of fixing. Until then, I've made the choice to protect my family.
Making the switch to local and well-fed meat is not without its challenges. One of the top questions I get is "How can you afford this?". That's kind of a trick question for me, because I've since become vegetarian, but I can give you some insights.
For starters, it isn't as expensive as you'd think. Check out your local resources. Most farmers offer a deep discount if you buy a whole cow or a half a cow at a time. Invest in a deep-freeze and store the meat, or split it with some friends and family. My family has actually been doing this for years. Chicken can be more expensive, but every community has a local co-op that will deliver fresh farm products weekly or bi-weekly, and those are more affordable than meats in a health-food shop.
Another solution is to introduce a few 'meatless' days to help with the cost. Spaghetti with meatless sauce, rice and bean tacos, meatless lasagna, and lentil dishes are crowd-pleasers around here. Your body does not need meat for every meal, every day.
I'll go into more detail about healthy eating on a budget in another food post, but those are some ideas to get you started.
I'm not going to pretend to be an expert, but this is what I've learned over the past year. I'd be happy to (try to) answer any questions you have!
Sources:
Food, Inc.
Fast Food Nation (this book includes a fantastic source list, with studies that support the findings)
www.usda.gov
www.organic.org
Thursday, October 28, 2010
Let's Discuss: Prenatal Testing
So, when I'm pregnant, I like to read birth boards. I love to hear what other expecting moms are up to and what they are experiencing. The big 'buzz' right now is the 12-week NT scan, which can detect Down's Syndrome, among other problems, I believe.
This is the first I've heard of this scan, so I'm guessing it wasn't around or wasn't popular when I was preggo with the Sunbean. That was forever ago. You know, 3 years. Anyway, they do an ultrasound and measure the neck folds to see if the baby is at higher risk. From there, they'll do bloodwork or more invasive tests, like an amniocentesis.
My OB hasn't mentioned it, so I'm guessing it isn't offered at my office. Or maybe we'll be doing it at my 12-week visit and I'm clueless. I guess it has to be done before the 14th week begins. Either way is fine with me.
On the birth board tonight, a woman had an NT scan today that showed an increased risk of Down's Syndrome. Pending the results of her bloodwork and amnio, she's planning to abort. I was floored.
Here's my opinion. I am all about getting as much prenatal screening and testing as possible. Whatever is logical, I will do. I live to be prepared, and so I'd want to read every book ever written on Down's Syndrome if my child were at a high risk of having Down's Syndrome. I'd have specialists and therapists researched and a plan and a strategy and dang it, I'd be as mentally prepared as possible.
But. I would not, not, not choose to end my child's life based on a test result. It makes my stomach turn to think of it. While I think having a child with special needs (of any sort) would be an intense trial, I would never choose an abortion. It just isn't me. Based on my religious beliefs, I know that children with special needs on Earth will go on to inherit our Father's kingdom. We believe that these 'special needs' are actually blessings that protect these children from the craziness of this world. Being a parent to these children is certainly a challenge, but even more certainly, a blessing. I look at it this way: if Heavenly Father chose for me to become pregnant with this child, then He will provide a way for me to deal. He has a plan. I don't always know the details.
So, I love the prenatal screenings for the plan-ahead, be-prepared aspects, but abortion would never be an option for me.
What do you guys think? Are you a fan of the screenings? Why or why not? I know my religious beliefs are a big factor in my opinion. How about you?
Let's discuss.
This is the first I've heard of this scan, so I'm guessing it wasn't around or wasn't popular when I was preggo with the Sunbean. That was forever ago. You know, 3 years. Anyway, they do an ultrasound and measure the neck folds to see if the baby is at higher risk. From there, they'll do bloodwork or more invasive tests, like an amniocentesis.
My OB hasn't mentioned it, so I'm guessing it isn't offered at my office. Or maybe we'll be doing it at my 12-week visit and I'm clueless. I guess it has to be done before the 14th week begins. Either way is fine with me.
On the birth board tonight, a woman had an NT scan today that showed an increased risk of Down's Syndrome. Pending the results of her bloodwork and amnio, she's planning to abort. I was floored.
Here's my opinion. I am all about getting as much prenatal screening and testing as possible. Whatever is logical, I will do. I live to be prepared, and so I'd want to read every book ever written on Down's Syndrome if my child were at a high risk of having Down's Syndrome. I'd have specialists and therapists researched and a plan and a strategy and dang it, I'd be as mentally prepared as possible.
But. I would not, not, not choose to end my child's life based on a test result. It makes my stomach turn to think of it. While I think having a child with special needs (of any sort) would be an intense trial, I would never choose an abortion. It just isn't me. Based on my religious beliefs, I know that children with special needs on Earth will go on to inherit our Father's kingdom. We believe that these 'special needs' are actually blessings that protect these children from the craziness of this world. Being a parent to these children is certainly a challenge, but even more certainly, a blessing. I look at it this way: if Heavenly Father chose for me to become pregnant with this child, then He will provide a way for me to deal. He has a plan. I don't always know the details.
So, I love the prenatal screenings for the plan-ahead, be-prepared aspects, but abortion would never be an option for me.
What do you guys think? Are you a fan of the screenings? Why or why not? I know my religious beliefs are a big factor in my opinion. How about you?
Let's discuss.
Wednesday, October 27, 2010
Monday, October 25, 2010
MacGyver, Party of 4
If you're my friend on Facebook (all the cool kids are), you read our big announcement on Saturday. We're welcoming another one of these in our family:
We're super excited! It all happened so quickly that we're barely getting used to the idea of being pregnant. We knew we wanted our kids to be about 3 years apart, and I knew that I wanted to avoid being largely pregnant through the summer again. We did the math and realized it was time. We're really good at getting pregnant, so as quickly as we decided, we were pregnant. It has been a whirlwind of a few months, but we are really pumped about it.
So far I'm feeling, well, awful. I throw up almost every morning, which never happened with the Sunbean. And I'm not typically a puker. Other than that, I'm just exhausted beyond belief.
We've had more than our fair share of pregnancy problems (is there really a fair share?), so we were planning to wait a little longer to announce, just in case. My uterus, however, has had different plans. I know I don't look pregnant to the general public, but MacGyver and I have been shocked at how quickly my body has 'remembered' what to do. My pants definitely don't button anymore!
Because of our history, I've already had a slew of doctor visits, and we've had an ultrasound to see a heartbeat. I actually didn't think it would be as exciting this time around, but I think I'm more excited. I'm not as freaked out that something will go wrong, and I know what to expect. Exciting stuff!
I'm due on June 1st, which is my mom's birthday and my brother-in-law's birthday, so that makes it even more special.
Now I'm off to either puke or make a nest for myself on the couch.
Friday, October 22, 2010
Random Thoughts for Friday
- First off, it's Friday! Woo hoo! MacGyver comes home early from work, which is always cause for celebration.
- We're heading to Starbucks for breakfast and then the library for storytime. We love Fridays around here.
- The Primary Program is Sunday. I'm excited to see how it turns out, and even more excited for it to be over.
- We sold a bunch of furniture we weren't using and got a 'new' rug via Craigslist. I seriously love that place. Thanks, Emily, for pointing out the rug that I *needed*.
- I've only been to the gym twice this week. Blah.
- I loooooove this weather. My favorite season. I seriously heart sweaters.
- We had Chipotle for lunch yesterday and, for the first time ever, I was disappointed. It was not good. For one, they shorted me on sour cream. That's always a big mistake.
- Sunbean has a cold and is not sleeping well. I don't blame her, but we're all totally exhausted.
- We don't have any big plans this weekend....I LOVE that!
Have a fantastic Friday!!
Wednesday, October 20, 2010
Booyah!
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/10/05/business/05monsanto.html?_r=3&partner=rss&emc=rss
Perhaps we should just use seeds the way they come naturally, no?
Perhaps we should just use seeds the way they come naturally, no?
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