Thursday, November 25, 2010

I am thankful

In the blog and Facebook world, it is trendy to post all of the things we are thankful for at this time of year. I tend to shy away from all things trendy, but I am so blessed that I can't seem to help it.

I am thankful for:

My husband. He is a wonderful companion and I am so lucky I get to share my life with him. <3

My parents, who are so supportive and special. I don't know what I would do without them.

My sweet cousins, each of whom is special, talented, and amazing in his or her own way.

The rest of my crazy awesome family! I love them all!!!

A whole crowd of the best friends a girl could ever hope for. I don't dare to list people here, because I'll surely miss someone, but suffice it to say that I love you all!!

My job, including my fabulous coworkers, who help me do my job to the very best if my ability, share ideas with me, and encourage me when I'm struggling. I couldn't ask for a better school family.

Music. Books. :) Nuff said.
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Thursday, July 29, 2010

a brief teacher rant

"I don't want to tell my students what I think they need to know, I want them to discover what they need to know so they can take it to the next level." -a woman I work with at A&T this summer.

I don't think its fair, as a science teacher, to expect my students, who have so few experiences, to discover all the things discovered by Galileo, Copernicus, Kepler, Watson, Crick, Darwin, and Curie. That expectation may be the cause of their frustration. I am a teacher...isn't it my job to impart knowledge?

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Sunday, June 6, 2010

A present

Matt came home yesterday with new Droids for both of us. It's really exciting! I certainly haven't gotten anything done since he brought them in...I've just been playing.

So school is almost over for another year. I will be so relieved when it ends...it's been one heck of a year. For the past month, we have been consumed with testing, remediating, and more testing. Ugh. We haven't had planning time and we haven't had time to be a family like we normally are. One of my colleagues is dealing with a major tragedy, and I feel like we have barely had time to s upport her and grieve with her. We just need a break so we can get it all together. Four more days.

At home, Matt and I have been dealing with some weird stuff...our lawn mower was stolen, and twice now we've heard people walking in the woods behind our house late at night. The police implied that it might be deer, but deer don't talk. They also said that they knew there were homeless people living in the woods behind our neighbor's house, which is empty, but apparently there's nothing they can do about them. Woo!

On a lighter note, I am the Assistant Stage Manager for CTG's production of Willy Wonka in July, so I am rehearsing for that on weeknights. It's really good to be back in theatre. Goodness knows I've missed it. :)

Matt is doing P90X and I'm thinking about doing the ab routine that's part of it. It would be nice to do something active.

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Saturday, April 17, 2010

9 Ingredients to Avoid in Processed Foods

I was skimming the Yahoo! homepage when I noticed the teaser for this article. I thought it was very interesting. :)

A convenience or an abomination?

We were shopping at Home Depot last weekend when I discovered a new tree I've never seen before! It's called a Fruit Salad tree and it produces peaches, plums, apricots, and nectarines, all on one dwarf tree!

I am 100% sure that there are people in the world who see this as a wonderful thing. How exciting, to have one tiny tree which will provide a family with a variety of fresh fruit throughout the year! What a novelty, as well!

I just can't get on board.

I think that if God had wanted us to have fruit trees in pots on our back patios, practically dumping different kinds of fruit into our hands throughout the year, He probably would have provided that. I think this particular garden innovation leans toward the abomination end of the spectrum.

Getting involved

I added a button to the blog today. It's a link to Jamie Oliver's Food Revolution. He is advocating for better school lunches, something vitally important as more and more families in this country depend entirely on school cafeterias to nourish their children and educate them about food. It's frightening to walk through the lunch line every day and see the same endless parade of brown foods...breaded and fried chicken strips, fried veggies, rolls...nothing with any real nutritional value.

I also skimmed the Facebook petition to ban High Fructose Corn Syrup from the United States. I completely agree that we consume entirely too much of this artificial sweetener ("fine in moderation", as the commercials say, but how can it be used moderately when it's in everything?). I lost about 10 pounds simply by cutting back the number of Cokes containing HFCS I consumed every day. It's disturbing to shop the center aisle and even the dairy case at the grocery store! Everything has corn in one form or another, or was fed corn when it was alive. While that's truly a post for another day, I was interested in the Facebook petition. However, I decided not to sign. I want to see a change in the ingredients in food in this country, but further legislation will not bring about positive change. The only way to truly influence the food industry is to put money behind my beliefs. If I believe that HFCS is bad, then I will stop buying products that contain it. While my personal statement is very small, if enough people make the change, eventually the economic pressure will be substantial. Also, in the meantime, I can use the money I'm not spending on HFCS products to support products that use more natural ingredients.

Sunday, April 11, 2010

More outdoor fun!

Yesterday we bought a riding lawn mower! Matt started mowing the front yard before we had to get ready for Aunt Jeep's birthday party. While he was doing that, I spread the rest of the mulch on the flower bed at the end of the driveway, cleared a few tenacious weeds, and planted some new plants at the end, where there used to be a huge peony.

I planted two daylilies called Stella de Oro. They have pretty yellow flowers and long narrow leaves. According to the tag, they'll bloom well in the summer and into the fall and they love full sun, which is what they'll get at the end of the flower bed.

(Thanks to www.gardenality.com for the image!)

Behind the daylilies, I planted three Dracaena Spikes! These look awesome and they'll get nice and tall. I can't wait to see how they do.

(Thanks to www.naturehills.com for this image.)

I'll try to post some pictures of the flower bed and the mower soon!

Sunday, April 4, 2010

Garden, take 1

I've been reading. Not that that's news, but I've been devouring everything I can find about sustainable gardening, eating locally, and being a good steward of our planet. Sounds cheesy, huh? Not so much when you consider that popcorn, cookies, and gas station crackers have a preservative made from butane...or that a cow fed solely on corn wouldn't live past two years old because its liver would explode.

OK, with that preface, where can I go now? Hm...stepping down off my soap box for a bit, I suppose. After doing all this reading, the next logical step was to start a garden. I want very much to take control over what Matt and I put into our bodies. I feel that we have a responsibility to our bodies to keep them as healthy as possible by making good choices. We can also do our part to influence the food industry in a positive way by putting our money where our values are: at the Farmer's Market, with the locally grown veggies at HT, and at restaurants that support local food.

On Saturday (4-3), Matt and I spent the morning wandering around the Piedmont Triad Farmer's Market. It has been a seriously cold winter around here. Lots of snow and super-low temperatures. As a result, there was almost no locally-grow food available yet. We saw collards, kale, mustards, and spinach, as well as these awesome planters full of lettuces. There were also sweet potatoes and regular potatoes galore.

However, the most abundant items were plants. It was so lovely to spend the morning walking along rows of green growing things. :) We bought eight heirloom tomato plants (four German Johnson and four Mortgage Lifter), garlic, Moroccan peppermint, African blue basil, stevia, Greek oregano, creeping rosemary, parsley, Cuban oregano, and aloe. I potted them all in plastic pots with the cheapest topsoil I could buy from Home Depot. I went ahead and installed those cheap, ugly metal frames for the tomatoes and put multi-colored aquarium rocks on top of the soil to help retain water and keep the squirrels out. Awesome.

The same day, I planted some seeds I bought before Spring Break! I bought long rectangular planters and filled them with the same cheap topsoil (which is gross and full of clumps and sticks, but oh well). I planted organic Swiss chard, spinach, and two varieties of lettuce. I also planted an heirloom cucumber that's round and yellow, like a lemon. I covered the soil in these pots with aquarium rocks too.

I chose the heirloom and organic varieties for a very specific reason. There are a tiny handful of major corporations (six, if I remember correctly), that control 98% of the seeds distributed world-wide for food purposes. Many of the seeds and plants distributed by these corporations have been genetically modified. Possibly the scariest modification is one called a "terminator gene", which prevents plants from reproducing naturally. This requires farmers and gardeners to buy new seeds or plants every year. There's another modification which increases resistance to diseases or pests, but only with the application of a specific chemical to "turn on" the resistance. Guess who sells the chemical? Ten points to anyone who said it was the same corporations which sell the seeds. So anyway, I don't really want all those genetically modified foods in my system. Who knows how the altered DNA might affect me? I mean, a terminator gene. Scary.

Saturday, April 3, 2010

Spring Break Road Trip!!

Matt and I took advantage of our week off by driving across the country to visit Liz in Lincoln, NE and then to Memphis, TN to visit Sharon! :) We drove 2,600 miles and spent something like 30 hours in the car. It was a wonderful trip!!

Trip stats:
- 2,600 miles
- 30 hours in the car
- 11 states (NC, VA, WV, KY, IN, IL, MO, IO, NE, AR, TN)
- 2 great friends

The pictures are posted on Facebook, but I'll put up a couple here too!




In Nebraska, we walked around downtown, went to the UNL bookstore, ate at an AMAZING Greek restaurant, the Parthenon, and saw a really cute play, That's What Makes Them Pirates!. We also ate burgers at Culver's before we drove to Omaha and went to the most amazing zoo and went to dinner at Rock Bottom Brewery. It was, all in all, a wonderful visit with my Lizie! :)

In Memphis, we explored Beale Street, ate yummy catfish po' boys (farm raised, sadly), and spent hours exploring the Rock and Soul Museum. Then we rented 2012 and hung out with Sharon and her roomie, Rachana. The next day, we drove to Tunica, Mississippi, where we ate lunch at Paula Deen's buffet and blew $10 on penny slots at Harrah's. :) Then we drove to the river front and explored a little before we drove back into Memphis and relaxed at Mud Island. Sharon and Rachana took us out to B.B. King's restaurant on Beale Street for dinner (delicious ribs and excellent mac 'n cheese).

Hm...I think there is a theme here...food! Everything we ate in Lincoln and Memphis was excellent!! :) The fast food in between, not so much. Ah well.