Category Archives: Motherhood

5 Great Mother’s Day Gifts Ideas

5 Great Mother’s Day Gifts Ideas

1. Godiva Chocolate in a FEED bag! What could be a better combination than chocolate, philanthropy and fashion?! Each FEED 10 bag provides 10 school meals for children, and women in Liberia handcraft each one.

 

 

 

2. Anything Tory Burch, but  Shop for a cause makes spending all that money feel better! All purchases from the Tory Burch Shop for a Cause store donate a portion to the Tory Burch Foundation  which provides economic opportunities to women and their families in the United States.

 

3. For the eco-conscious mom who loves to entertain, this beautiful Sparq cheese plate is made from re-purposed soapstone.  Soapstone absorbs and retains various temperatures, so it functions as a warmer to keep appetizers warm, or a cooler that keeps cheese plates or sushi cool. Just stick it in the oven or freezer before setting out your food. This one was sent to me to try out and I totally love it, for both its form and function!

 

4. Felix Doolittle stationary Products: You will find the most beautiful designs in book plates, food labels, stationary and note cards. It is just hard to choose one design!

 

 

 

 

 

5.Sentimental Jewelry like the birds nest necklace from uncommon goods, or Heather Moore charms that can be personalized are always a hit.

 

 

 

Don’t forget the option of a homemade gift; those are always my favorite ones as a mom!

 

*  I received a free Sparq soapstone thermal appetizer plate for reviewing purposes. (and I totally love it! Thank you Sparq!)  All my opinions are my own and not swayed by outside sources.

Malaria,Garlic, and DEET

Malaria,Garlic, and DEET

Caroline

We were given a pharmacopeia of Malarial drugs and told to pack 100% DEET insect repellent for our 6 month overland trip to Africa years ago.  It worked pretty well, until we hit Sub-Saharan Africa that is (where the Malaria is really a problem).  There we found the mosquitoes laughed at our DEET, and feasted with abandon on our flesh.   Our driver, who had been this route before, laughed at our flailing dances as we slapped at the insects.  He told us the one sure preventative he had found to work, and it wasn’t pretty, but miraculously effective. We each ate a whole clove of garlic a day, and that seemed to keep the mosquitoes away.  Go figure! This was at the point in our trip when we were crossing through remote areas where we went for almost a month without a proper shower. We were camping the whole way and would resort to standing out in the occasional torrential rainstorm with shampoo and a bar of soap to do the best we could.  Scientist theorize that the garlic oil exuded from the skin after eating garlic forms a natural repellent barrier to mosquitoes, possibly obscuring the scent that attracts them.  This may be where the garlic repelling vampires comes from.  As you can imagine we stank something terrible, but since we were all in the same shape it didn’t really seem to bother us.

About a year later, my friend Caroline who had been on the Africa trip, and now lived in Washington D.C., became very ill.  Her fever was extremely high, but then the next day it was completely gone, and she felt fine.

Caroline in Africa

This repeated itself for a few days before she went to the doctor, who was also perplexed.  I can’t remember exactly how they came to the diagnosis of Malaria, but when they did the teaching hospital was apparently excited to have a live case to present it’s residents. She was treated and completely cured, the only lasting effect being a great story to be told.

Although malaria was eradicated in the U.S. in the 1950s, cases do appear every year mostly brought back by travelers.  Mosquitoes here still pose the slight threat of encephalitis and West Nile virus which can both be deadly.  I have avoided the 100% DEET since my Africa trip, but that’s not to say I can get away with eating a clove of garlic a day either. I would keep much more than just the mosquitoes away if I did!  As a mother I like to avoid chemicals as much as possible and the American academy of Pediatrics recommends that repellents used on children contain no more the 10% DEET. Some of their examples are:

Photo by Elizabeth Atalay

OFF! Skintastic for kids pump/spray has 5%DEET

OFF! Skintastic Fresh Scent Lotion 7.5% DEET

Just for Kids pump/spray 5% DEET

Repel Camp Lotion for Kids Lotion 10% DEET

Above all else, I prefer to use all natural products on my children such as Brittanie’s Thyme Outdoor Harmony Organic Bug Spray which can be found at Whole Foods or ordered online. Brittanie’s Thyme was kind enough to send me a sample of their bug spray and bug bite relief (both organic) to review in my quest for organic products to use on my family.  I like the fact that this is a company owned by women committed to organic, safe, sustainable and socially responsible products.  Though the scent is very strong when first applied, it is that which keeps the bugs at bay.  The bug bite relief is soothing and has natural anti-itching and antibacterial properties as well.

Photo by Elizabeth Atalay

 

Unfortunately outside of this country a child still dies from Malaria every minute.  Today has been declared World Malaria Day in an effort to bring attention to a preventable and curable disease who’s victims are most often under 5 years old. The simple step of distribution of  insecticide-treated bed nets can save lives.

World Malaria Day 2012 #endmalaria

www.malarianomore.org/minute

 

Watch the brief video below for more information:

click to watch

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

*  I received a free sample of Brittanie’s Thyme Organic Bug Spray and Organic Bug Bite Relief for reviewing purposes.   All my opinions are my own and not swayed by outside sources.

The Power of ONE; Bringing Vaccines to Ghana

The Power of ONE; Bringing Vaccines to Ghana

In the developing world more than 7.6 children die each year before they reach the age of 5 due to preventable or treatable diseases. Many of these deaths could be prevented through simple, cost-effective vaccines that fight diseases like pneumonia, diarrhea, measles, and polio.  Here in the U.S.A. we take the availability of vaccines for granted, but for millions of parents across the world they are simply inaccessible.

Photo by Elizabeth Atalay

Today ONE.org is on the ground in Ghana with a team of Bloggers from ONE Moms to document the inoculation of children there for the first time with vaccines to prevent pneumonia and diarrhea.  The White House credits ONE and it’s supporters with pushing for monetary commitments to help fund the GAVI campaign  (Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunizations) last year. By 2015 millions of lives will be saved by actions you may have taken to support the campaign.  All this goes to once again prove the power of one.

You can follow along on the trip on Facebook and Twitter (#ONEMoms @ONECampaign #vaccineswork #GAVIAlliance) and of course the ONE Moms Blog to get the latest information from the field.  You can also follow the blogs and tweets of those traveling with us to Ghana:

 

Ana Roca Castro, Babble Voices @AnaRC @BabbleEditors

Amy Graff, BabyCenter, @bayareamoms

C.C. Chapman, CC Chapman/Passion Hit TV @cc_chapman                                  

Rich Galen, Mullings @richgalen

Bryant Shannon, Life In Rupees, @BShannon

 

Guest Post: When A Mom Goes Back To School

Guest Post: When A Mom Goes Back To School

GUEST POST: WRITTEN BY LISA DAVIS

Like many moms out there, I decided to go back to school in my late 30’s to pursue a new career-in this case, teaching. I started out taking one class at a local college with a good reputation. I figured I would get my feet wet and see how it went before I decided to enroll in a program to earn a teaching certificate. I had no idea what to expect or what the other students in the class would be like. Let’s just say it was a class composed primarily of nontraditional students.

At the end of my first day of class, we all had to sign a form authorizing a background check in order for us to be allowed to observe in the classroom and work with the children we would be observing.  A (much) older man in the class who, quite frankly, gave me the creeps (he lived with his 90-year-old mother, watched altogether too much TV, and seemed just nuts in general) absolutely refused to sign the form! He started yelling how he didn’t want anyone prying into his private life and that he didn’t need a background check.

At this point, the teacher tried to explain that it was state law and he was required to undergo a background check in order to observe and that he needed to complete his observation hours to graduate from the program. The man was irate and eventually become irrational. Finally, the teacher suggested they speak about it privately after class. I remember turning to the student sitting next to me and commenting, “We’ve got a stalker in our class!”

On a different day in this same class, our teacher, clearly a foreigner and with a very thick accent, challenged us to determine which country he was from. He literally went around the room, asking each of us in turn if we could figure out what country he was born in. When he got to me, I blurted out, “Turkey!” He was shocked. He said that no one in his class had EVER gotten that question right and he demanded to know how I could have known that! I mumbled something about being good with accents and knowing lots of foreign exchange students in college. It was baloney. How could I admit that I knew exactly where he was from because just the night before on NOVA I had watched the gripping documentary, “The Family That Walks on All Fours” – about a Turkish family with a rare genetic brain abnormality that causes siblings to be mentally impaired and to walk on all fours like apes! That accent was stuck in my head for good after watching the movie.

Towards the end of the term, we were assigned a group project. I was thus introduced to “group work” – two particularly evil words. I have NEVER – NOT EVER — had a good experience with “group work” while in graduate school. I don’t know why-wait, yes I do! It’s because I’m the only one willing to do the work! So, for my group project I was placed with “stalker student” and this other student who had shown up to class a grand total of three times since the semester had started. Needless to say I did the vast majority of the work, all while trying to tame “stalker student’s” insane ideas and bring him back to planet earth. Fun!

It all makes our malleable little kids sound easier to handle! Have you thought about going back to school after having kids?

 

$10 Starbucks giftcard & Little Pickle Press Award Winning Children’s Book Giveaway!

$10 Starbucks giftcard & Little Pickle Press Award Winning Children’s Book Giveaway!

Rana DiOrio, the founder of Little pickle Press has generously signed and offered to give away copies of the four “What Does It Mean To Be…?” books to one of our lucky readers!  Find out more about Rana and how she founded a green publishing company from the ground up  here.  Little Pickle Press is dedicated to helping parents and educators cultivate conscious, responsible little people by stimulating explorations of the meaningful topics of their generation through a variety of media, technologies, and techniques.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


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