Monday, September 14, 2009
Balinese Spiced Duck
This is one of my all-time favourite recipes and I wanted to share it with you all as it is so simple and a delight to the taste buds. I got this one off the web - one of the recipe sites, not sure which one.
Ingredients
8 duck portions
50g dessicated coconut
3/4 cup coconut milk
Deep fried onions and salad leaves (I caramelize our onions and we serve the Duck with Steamed or Stir-fried veges).
For the spice paste
6 shallots (I use 12 spring onions)
2 cloves garlic sliced
2.5 cm fresh ginger root pealed and sliced
1 cm galangal peeled and sliced
1/2 tsp ground turmeric
1-2 red chillies seeded and sliced
4 macadamias or 8 almonds1 tsp coriander seeds dry fried
Method
Whiz the ingredients for paste in a food processor until a paste forms.
Rub over the duck pieces and marinate for 3-4 hours or over night (I often skip the marinating as I forget!)
Preheat oven to 140 C.
Shake off the paste and mix the coconut milk into it
Place duck pieces into a glass baking dish and pour over the sauce
Cover and cook for 1 hour (longer if you are using legs and wings - I use breasts with skin on and 1 hour is plenty)
Dry fry the dessicated coconut until crisp and brown
Remove cover from duck
Turn the oven up to 190 C and cook 20-30 mins brown and crispy. I usually leave it longer than this
Sprinkle desiccated coconut over meat
Serve with caramelized onion and stirfry veges and drizzle with I often add a tsp of salt and a tablespoon of honey to the sauce at the end to boost its flavour!
Sunday, September 13, 2009
Today
I got up early to help dear hubby build the carport we have been "meaning to" build for several years. We had to try and weather proof the motor of the roller door as we were told very firmly by the guy that installed it that 'if it gets moisture in it, it wont work'.
The rain clouds were rolling in so the first thing the boys and I did was glad wrap the motor while David raced against the clock to get the cover on.
We had put up the frame the day before but ran out of day light before we got the roof on. Once the motor was somewhat water proofed we went up and down, and up and down, ladders for several hours hammering and drilling. Yelling for the boys to come out and hold one thing or another as they were needed.
At 11am the boys had a tennis meet so they headed off with a friend to do that while David and I focused on the carport.
12:30 came and so did the rain that had been threatening. I raced all the power tools back inside and then raced down to pick up the boys as the courts dont have any shelter.
Back home we all grabbed a bite to eat and then it was off to a gymnastics competition that the boys had entered in. (David managed to finish the roof just as it was time to leave - phew)
Three hours of sitting on the very hard and uncomforable benches while we watched the boys vault, jump, role, spring, tumble and flip on various apparatis (as well as a lot of sitting around waiting for their turn!!) and we were ready to go home. Both boys came home with ribbons. Notably Jordan with first place in his class for the vault.
We tossed up whether to stop at a Thai resaurant on the way home to celebrate the win and David's birthday, but decided that we would prefer the BBQ that we had planned at home.
Wonderful conversations about fitness, and army stories (dh used to be in the army), and questions and laughter all the way home.
Thursday, September 10, 2009
Unschooling focus
That way I can also share non-gaps recipes with you all. Yesterday I made some delicious cookies for David's work, I couldnt eat them of course but they were some of my favourites pre-gaps and they smelled and looked so great I thought I should share the recipe - but that is for later.
So here is the link for the other blog if you are keen. http://healingwithgaps.blogspot.com/
Monday, September 07, 2009
For the love of Liver
Just slicing it would cause me to gag. Eating it produced the same effect and I would have to spit it out. The dogs enjoyed my attempts at various liver recipes. They would go nuts for it.
Then I found some wonderful resourses that explain how to prepare it properly, and now I cant get enough. (And the dogs dont get a look in).
So here is a breif explanation of the benefits of Liver, and some simple ways of preparing it.
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This excerpt is from "The Liver Files" on the Weston A Price Foundation website: http://www.westonaprice.org/foodfeatures/liver.html
So what makes liver so wonderful? Quite simply, it contains more nutrients, gram for gram, than any other food. In summary, liver provides:
- An excellent source of high-quality protein
- Nature’s most concentrated source of vitamin A
- All the B vitamins in abundance, particularly vitamin B12
- One of our best sources of folic acid
- A highly usable form of iron
- Trace elements such as copper, zinc and chromium; liver is our best source of copper
- An unidentified anti-fatigue factor
- CoQ10, a nutrient that is especially important for cardio-vascular function
- A good source of purines, nitrogen-containing compounds that serve as precursors for DNA and RNA.
Here is my favourite way of preparing the Liver - again from the Liver Files:
Marinate slices of liver in the fridge overnight in water mixed with a little vinegar or plain lemon juice, plus lots of garlic and bay laurel leaf. After marinating, pat dry and fry in lard and/or butter until well done (really brown on the outside and slightly rose inside). The key is marinating to take away any unpleasant taste.
Once the liver (I use lamb liver) is marinated and patted dry I cook it in one of the two following ways.
1. dip the slices in egg and then dunk in almond meal mixed with a little salt (you can use flour if you are non-gaps). Then gently fry on each side . These little schnitzels are divine. They dont taste like liver at all. I use them as snacks when we are out.
2. saute some diced onion and bacon and when almost cooked add some diced liver and losts of garlic and saute until just cooked. Fry or poach an egg leaving yolk runny for maximum nutrient value, then serve with liver mixture. I like to have this with a little salt and home made tomato sauce. Again this is sooooo delicious. Really it is worth a try!
Be brave and reap the rewards.
How Im making my soup
Basically I start with making a huge batch of bone broth from 10 litres of water, 2 full beef necks and 2 marrow bones cut length and cross ways.
I simmer that for about 24 hours and then pick off the meat and scoop out the marrow. I add the marrow back to the broth and reserve the meat. The dogs get the bones (which they leave scattered all over my lawn!!).
I then freeze the broth in batches.
I then get some more meat - lamb chump chops are my favourite, but I also use chicken thighs, lamb bones with a lot of meat still on, beef chops etc.
I saute an onion and some garlic and the meat and water to just cover the meat. Simmer for 3-4 hours until soft. Remove any bones and grizzle. The water will have simmered down quite a bit so I add a nice big dose of bone broth. Maybe a cup or three.
Then I add the veges of choice and simmer - ready for eating in about 30 mins.
I sometimes remove the veges and puree and add back to the soup to thicken. Depending on how much meat was on the second lot of bones I might also add meat from the stock making process. The double boiling of meat seems to really enhance the flavour.
I didnt set out to double boil meat, I just found that each batch needed more meat, and often times I was simply adding veges etc to yesterdays batch to make todays soup and I definately needed more meat.
This soup works really well for me.
Bringing some moderation into my healing journey
A few days ago I recieved this response from her in relation to my ongoing soup consumption and lack of progress (I was continuing to struggle with a chronic sore throat despite sticking to the diet). Alice is also following the GAPS diet. Id been on soup for about 4 weeks and it was seriously effecting my emotional balance. This is what she is referring to when speaking about "4 weeks".
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Hi Stephanie,
I’m thinking of you. make sure it’s only 4 weeks. It could be die off – but it could also be lacking something else that you’re not getting in the soup. I agree and totally support you. I can see that you want to get it done once and for all and do it right. I’m like that too, so I relate.
So you’ve been having the soup for 4 weeks and you’re going to carry on with it for another 4 weeks??? I don’t know what the yahoo group members suggest, but I reckon even if you still have the sore throat and allergies after another 4 weeks, you should still go onto the next stage.
It might be that your sore throat takes longer to go away, so don’t loose hope if it’s not gone in 4 weeks, there is still a good chance it will go away within the next 2 years of being on the gaps diet.
I say this as I know what it’s like to live with ongoing low level depression – it’s miserable. It also has an obsessive, anxious streak in it, which I think you also suffer with, like me. So it’s good to keep a balance when the obsessiveness is overtaken… in other words carrying on with the soup on and on because you think it is the ultimate….
I know myself and I’ve always liked to do things well and have good attention to detail. So I have to watch myself for heading over the edge of obsessiveness. It’s a fine balance.
Love Alice
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This letter helped me so much.
I was really getting overwhelmed by the diet and as I love to eat, I was really suffering with the lack of variety.
Both broth is very cleansing as well as being immune boosting, so it was probably adding to my die-off symptoms.
As of yesterday I decide I needed to follow my own path to healing and while I am still following GAPS guidelines, I am not introducing the foods in the sequence that GAPS suggests, and I am have introduced several foods all at once.
I expected to have a reaction to the foods I introduced but surprisingly I havent. I can only guess that by adding more enjoyment to eating has stopped me craving (and indulging) in foods that I know trigger me (like fruit!).
I have also added more supplements and have started having DAILY epsom salt baths. Both of which I imagine are contributing to my success.
In case you are wondering the epsom salts help to remove toxins from the body, so that die-off symptoms are lessened.
So what am I eating:
I really felt I needed more iron, so I added liver (with onion, eggs and salt cured bacon) for breakfast, and a nice big steak with salad for dinner . I still had soup for lunch and bone broth in the evening as well as 3 glasses of warm water with coconut oil mixed in, throughout the day.I have also introduced saccharamyces boulardii to kill off the candida, fish oil (Nordic Naturals brand) to help with the depression, and niacin for detox and immune boosting.
So far so good
Friday, September 04, 2009
GAPS Intro Stage 2 continued
Not very pleasant.
Prior to stage 1 I was enjoying cooking and was planning to make cheese and yogurt for my kids. Now I cant be bothered.
I keep reading posts from other GAPSters to keep going and have faith in the program, and I am trying to keep my spirits up, but I am sick of soup and even a mouthful of fruit gives me a sore throat.
I feel like Ive become allergic to everything!
Apparently this is normal. I need to go slow and steady. More slowly than I have been! Just about every day I try to add a new food in the hopes of expanding my dietary repertoire. Obviously this is not working and in fact I wonder if it is slowing my progress?
I have cut back on all dairy. Ghee has not caused me problems in the past however I have cut this out for now as obviously the detox has made me more sensitive.
I have cut out the sauerkraut but I am having a probiotic cabbage rejuvelac drink (basically sauerkraut water without salt). This is from Bee's Candida Diet, recipe is here: http://www.healingnaturallybybee.com/articles/pre1.php
I have ordered the Saccharomyces Boulardii to help kill off the candida, and am starting on the fish oils to combat the depression.
To be honest the only thing keeping me going is the knowledge that people like Baden have had such wonderful success.
Well that is where I am up to. I dont feel up to writing anymore at the moment. Will post those promised recipes soon
Saturday, August 22, 2009
GAPS Recipes
So Im posting a few recipes that I have found and tried over the last week, and one that I made up when I needed to use up some left over ingredients.
Ill post them in separate blog entries and that way they will be easier to find under the labels (for future reference).
The first recipe is from Grainfree Foodies- The original recipe is here:(http://grainfreefoodie.blogspot.com/2009/04/banana-caramel-sticky-buns.html)
These girls are kitchen geniuses. I use a lot of their recipes. They call these tasty morsels "buns" I have renamed them muffins as that is what they more closely resemble in my opinion.
I have also tweeked the recipe slightly. We dont eat coconut flour at present as I have heard it is high carb so I subsituted almond meal for the coconut flour. These muffins are the most delectible GAPS foods I have ever tasted. Not quite like a sticky date pudding but close.
Banana Caramel Sticky Muffins
Ingredients for buns1 Large very ripe banana, mashed
6 eggs, lightly beaten
1/2 cup melted butter or coconut oil
1/2 cup honey
1 Tbsp. vanilla extract
1 1/2 cups almond meal
1/4 tsp. salt
Preheat oven to 180 C.
Mix all ingredients with a wire whisk. Pour into a well-greased muffin tin or use silicone liners (I used cupcake papers. They did stick a little bit so you could spray some coconut oil on the papers if you find this an issue)
Ingredients for topping
- 1 cup chopped crispy pecans (from Nourishing Traditions or WAPF)
- 1/4 cup honey
- 1/4 cup butter
- 2 tsp. ground cinnamon
- 1 Tablespoon almond meal
- 2 Tablespoons shredded coconut
Mix all ingredients for topping with a fork. Crumble topping on buns.
Bake for 20-25 minutes, until cooked through.
GAPS Intro, Stage 2
It is not an enjoyable process, as my dear husband and children will tell you! Basically when the body starts to kill off bad bacteria, and cleanse toxins, it goes into a healing crisis, where all the symptoms that you are trying to overcome by doing this diet come back in greater intensity than normal.
So for me this has meant a week of being very grumpy, critical, depressed, overwhelmed by small things (like a teen trying to show me how many push ups he can do, for the FIFTH time - and all Im thinking is "I dont care let along have time for this, Ive got to make more soup"!).
Well you probably get some understanding of my state of mind! Ive also been tired a lot and had a sore throat on and off even though Im not eating any illegal foods.
It has not been easy but my GAPS support group have been great and it helps to know that this reaction is normal (when I feel like Im going crazy!!).
As the title of this entry states, I have moved onto stage 2. Mainly because I really needed more than just soup. I was always hungry. So I have added, avacado, saurerkraut and ghee. Ive also been drinking copious amounts of ginger tea, and have started really enjoying the flavour of it.
Ive been doing the enema's every other day, and am feeling brave about increasing it to the daily regime. (The next bit of info is for fellow Gapsters who need info on enema's, so family and friends can skip this bit!)
Now about enema's - everyone has a different tale to tell, and I have heard that "it feels great", "it is so easy", "I can hold a litre of water a time" etc.... well I havent found them to be particularly easy or great, and I can only hold in about 200-500 mls, before my insides are gurgling and Im crossing my legs and testing my resolve to hold on for a few minutes more.
What I have found that helps is to do a systematic, hold then purge, hold then purge approach over about an hour. This seems to work quite well and I have it on authority from a long term enema user that this is the best way! I can hold a little bit more fluid each time and for a little longer. Still a lot of gurgling and leg crossing but I feel like Im getting the hang of it.
What I have been eating:
Breakfast:
- Mineral supplement and RO water first thing
- Hot water with 1 Tablespoon of Coconut oil
- Soup with kraut and ghee
Lunch
- Soup with half an Avacado and kraut
- Ginger tea
Dinner
- Two bowls of soup with Avacado, kraut and ghee
- More ginger tea
- Hot water with coconut oil
Epsom salt bath before bed (1 cup of salts - soak for 20 mins)
Great things about this week:
- I know my body is responding as it should be.
- I have actually been enjoying the soups
- Detox baths
- Im loosing weight
- My gaps group!
Not so great:
- Having to cook food for the rest of the family that I cant eat. (When you feel like Im going out of my mind anyway, this can really do you in!!)
- Having the children remind you what a grump you are being! (Very little sympathy here)
- Enema's - yuck
Monday, August 17, 2009
GAPS Intro - Stage 1
To be honest I havent done very well at sticking to the "soup only" policy and therefore Stage 1 is taking me longer than expected to complete.
The first day I ran out of soup and got hungry after dinner. I munched on a banana and some butter with coconut. The second day I went to a wedding and although I didnt go to the reception David wanted to go via the UNI library on the way home and the whole thing ended up taking such a long time I was starting to feel dizzy from lack of food (I had only had 1 bowl of soup for breakfast), so we stopped at the bakery!!
The third day, I did really well but again ran out of soup and ate some fruit. I also did a lot of baking for Jordan (I started him on the GAPS diet 4 days ago, but he is not doing Stage 1 yet. So I have been very busy in the kitchen trying to keep up with the quantitiy of food that he needs to eat), and it is very hard to bake and not taste the food to see if it turned out ok. All the recipes I am trying are new so I want to know if I should repeat them, chuck them or tweak them to re-use another time.
So here I am on day four, still eating soup!!
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Lessons I have learned: Make the next batch of soup when Im still half way through the current batch.
Take soup in a thermos even if only intending to be out for a couple of hours.
Postpone Stage 1 if trying new recipes!!
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Having said all that, I am definately seeing some detox results regardless of my adhoc approach. Last night I was extremely nauseas at bed time and even when and got a bucket to put beside the bed. Fortunately there was no need for the bucket during the night.
Today I had soup for breakfast but at lunch time I tried to eat some and felt sick again, so just drank some water.Tonight I am feeling better and getting my soup ready for tomorrow!
As far as the enema situation that I mentioned in the last post - that hasnt happened yet. I thought I would just pop down to the chemist and pick one up, but I ended up needing to order one on the internet!
The enema kit arrived today, so that is on the list for tomorrow. (Dont want to try it before bed!).
The amazing thing so far is the improvement I have seen in Jordan. For as long as I can remember, Jordan has had a constant runny nose and an equally constant (and annoying) habit of picking it. Well, since he started GAPS his nose has stopped running and I havent seen him even scratch his nose let alone pick it!! Whooo hoooo. Im such a happy mumma.
I havent seen any impovement in his acne yet but I am expecting that to improve once his fruit intake is reduced. (He's still eating about a kilo of apples a day - even though that is not part of the GAPS diet!). I need to take baby steps with Jordan so he doesnt completely reject the diet.
Im off to take a detox bath and watch a movie with hubby.
Thursday, August 13, 2009
GAPS Intro
Well basically the Intro diet is a cleansing rundown and I really felt that I needed to get in the swing of the diet before I did the cleanse. It has taken me 9 months of going on and off the diet to finally feel confident in what I am eating.
So why am I on the diet? Well, the full name for the diet is the "Gut and Psychology Syndrome" diet. Its basic premise is that people with unhealthy gut flora often have brain related problems like, autism, schizophrenia, depression, anxiety etc and by removing problem foods from their diet they can restore the natural balance in the gut and stop the gut-brain reactions. (That is a very simplistic explanation it is obviously more complicated than that. Its all very scientific - lots of talk of starch and sugars fermenting in the gut and causing morphine type recations in the brain or something. For more information see the links at the bottom of the page).
I suffer from varying moods, that sometimes feel like they have taken control of me. So when one of my girlfriends suggested the diet I was very interested.
The amazing thing is IT ACTUALLY WORKS! Just removing all grains, sugars and starches from my diet and I am a different person. Who knew it could be so easy!
My symptoms weren't just pshychological, I have also struggled with allergies for years, and had ongoing health issues like fatigue, chronic tonsilitis and sinus issues, eczema, hay fever... you get the picture.
So what can I eat? Basically I eat lots of fresh and fremented foods and lots of fat. Meat, veges, fruit, nuts, some legumes, loads of bone broth and sauerkraut and eggs. I eat butter, lard, coconut oil, but no vegetable oils as they mostly hydrogenated. The only exception is cold pressed virgin olive oil.
I usually make pancakes and muffins etc from nut meal instead of grain flour. I can use honey in recipes as it is a monosaccharide, whereas sugar, maple syrup, fructose etc are all polysaccharides and cause a bad reaction.
So back to the Intro diet: Basically the first day is all about soup! It wasnt nearly as hard as I thought it would be.
http://gapsdiet.com/INTRODUCTION_DIET.html
Breakfast: Reverse Osmosis water with liquid mineral suppliment and lemon juice. Beef and vege soup- stewed all day yesterday and then left on the stove (on low) all day today.
Lunch: more soup with a nice big dollop of ghee.
Dinner: 2 bowls of soup with sauerkraut on top.
Snacks: ginger tea
Bedtime: Soak in epsom salt bath (for extra cleansing properties - and it just feels good).
Tomorrow I brave an enema - wish me luck!!
Links
A video with the author, telling how her son was healed of sever autism with the diet. http://www.healyourself.com.au/product/gut-and-psychology-syndrome-book-australia-gaps-dr-natasha-campbell-mcbride/
The book: http://www.amazon.com/Gut-Psychology-Syndrome-Depression-Schizophrenia/dp/B0016J7HZU/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1250164278&sr=1-2
Conditions helped by this diet. http://gapsguide.com/about/conditions-addressed-by-gaps/
A fairly good (and long) explanation of the science behind the diet http://www.sustainlane.com/reviews/the-gaps-diet-the-mother-of-all-diets/LTVKD7QC3RN23RUSRVX2DXV3R98X
Tuesday, August 11, 2009
French women dont get fat
I was intrigued by the name and because I was in a hurry I just grabbed it and brought it home to peruse.
I would not normally read a book about diet/weitght control, but after reading the first chapter I am hooked.
The author writes that French women dont get fat because they dont deprive themselves, but they do exercise restraint.
I found this idea fascinating. I have always thought that restraint akin to deprivation and this is probably where my problems with food have stemmed from.
So a little back ground about my situation.
I have had body and diet issues since I was a teenager. (As so many of us have!) And one of my chosen coping mechanisms was to deny myself food and then when I gave in (which I inevitably always did) I would completely over indulge, sometimes to the point of feeling bloated and sick.
I never considered this an "eating disorder" until recently when there was a discussion in my GAPS group about this very problem. Several women shared their own struggles and journeys, with "bingeing" (for want of another word) and I realised that I have been struggling with this same very powerful foe most of my life.
They say that knowledge is power and the the online discussion definately started me contemplating why I live this way and how I might change it.
Reading Guiliano's book I realise that it is a my way of thinking about food that has caused me grief. Because I think I cant have something I want it all the more, and because I am denying myself this thing that I desperately want, I have to eat as much as I can when I have the opportunity because it might be a long time before I get the chance again! (This isnt Guiliano's point it is just what I have discovered about my own thinking).
So back to the book. Guiliano spent a year in US during her teens and gained a lot of weight, eating the average American diet while living with a homestay family. The book is a response to that experience and the ensuing problems and breakthroughs she had when she returned to France.
Basically she had brought back an American diet mentality. One that sees "treat" foods as everyday foods. So her healing journey involved thinking like a French woman again, as they indulge in many fat/sugar rich foods but they only do it as a treat not every day.
I am finding the book fascinating and am allowing the new way of thinking to settle into my psyche. Maybe soon I too will be thinking like a French woman!
Decalogue for Daily Living
http://sarahs-musings.blogspot.com/ I am not Catholic but I thought it was so beautiful I wanted to include it on my blog. Only for today I will seek to live by its principles.
Decalogue for Daily Living
1. Only for today, I will seek to live the livelong day positively, without wishing to solve the problems of my life all at once.
2. Only for today, I will take the greatest care of my appearance: I will dress modestly; I will not raise my voice; I will be courteous in my behavior; I will not criticize anyone; I will not claim to improve or to discipline anyone except myself.
3. Only for today, I will be happy in the certainty that I was created to be happy, not only in the other world but also in this one.
4. Only for today, I will adapt to circumstances, without requiring all circumstances to be adapted to my own wishes.
5. Only for today, I will devote ten minutes of my time to some good reading, remembering that just as food is necessary to the life of the body, so good reading is necessary to the life of the soul.
6. Only for today, I will do one good deed and not tell anyone about it.
7.Only for today, I will do at least one thing I do not like doing; and if my feelings are hurt, I will make sure no one notices.
8. Only for today, I will make a plan for myself: I may not follow it to the letter, but I will make it. And I will be on guard against two evils: hastiness and indecision.
9. Only for today, I will firmly believe, despite appearances, that the good Providence of God cares for me as no one else who exists in this world.
10. Only for today, I will have no fears. In particular, I will not be afraid to enjoy what is beautiful and to believe in goodness. Indeed, for twelve hours I can certainly do what might cause me consternation were I to believe I had to do it all my life.
Bl. Pope John XXIII
Monday, August 10, 2009
Living outside the accepted "norm"
This group have never been the friendliest bunch so I have alway been careful with how much I say and what content is in that dialogue, but I have been away for the last 2 weeks and today I plum forgot to be careful.
I let it slip that I follow a Weston A Price style diet, after I was offered a biscuit and declined. This led to a lot of questions. Not the inquiring type questions that say "Oh, what is that? Tell us more". The type that say, "What do you mean by being different!! Are you challenging our mainstream lifestyle?!!!"
One of the ladies is a retired nurse turned teacher, and of all the people I have ever met these are the worst kind for thinking outside the box (sorry if any of you lovely people fit into that category - Im sure there are exceptions to my experience!). Well this lady was very offended by my dietary ideas and went to extreme length to suggest some (often bizarre) situations where this diet was not healthy.
I should have laughed, because she was being rediculous, but she was sooo rude to me I just felt angry, offended, and beligerent. What difference does it make to her if my lifestyle is different!!? So unfortunately I argued back, trying to explain some of the science behind my reasoning. I soon realised it was a lost cause and just went back to my spinning.
Obviously my attempt to withdraw from the discussion was not noticed and the next thing she started parroting on about was my choice to homeschool! She wanted to know if I was a qualified teacher, if I had a university degree (like that is any of her business), how would I know if my kids where up to the standard of school kids etc, etc, etc. It was a full frontal attack, and truly nasty.
I answered her questions, but each answer was scoffed at and the next one was loaded to the pistol ready to fire. I was trying not to be rude back but finding it hard to give her an answer without highlighting her own arrogance. (I could have said "gee you are really threatened by my choices", which I have done in the past, but I felt it would not go over well with this woman).
The sad thing was that one of the other ladies agreed with her and kept adding fuel to the fire, and I ended up leaving feeling like I was the one with the problem.
I obviously dont believe I have a problem, but the heat of that moment was so intense I got lost.
Ok, deep breath in, slow breath out.
Back home again and feeling better to have gotten all that off my chest and regain my equilibrium.
Now Im off to make some radical almond meal muffins and some recalcitrant pastries (made with lard!)
Wednesday, December 03, 2008
I've never heard of these things before! But here we go:
1) Link to Green Meme Bloggers. (use image if you like)
2) Link back to whoever tagged you. (no need to wait to be tagged!)
3) Include meme number
4) Include these guidelines in your post
5) Tag 3 other green bloggers.
Im not tagging anyone - just doing it for fun
Here goes...
1) Name two motivations for being green?
Because all my friends are. No just kidding, because it is the way we are meant to be. Man has been out of harmony with the earth since money became more important than family, love, well being, wholesomeness, community, compassion ... you get the picture
I want to teach my kids more about harmony with the natural world, than consumeristic rape and pillage.
2) Name 2 eco-UNfriendly items you refuse to give up?
Well hubby loves to travel internationally when we can, and i just dont have the heart to oppose him. (You think i am joking again, but Im actually serious, I could happily give up o/s travel).
Plastic. I have tried living without it, but it is everywhere.... our clothes, cars, cooking pots even have plastic coatings.... I know what you are thinking - just give up plastic bags as a starter. Well I have given up some, and i wash and re-use the ones i use for fruit and vege shopping... but there are still plastic bags when you buy other stuff - we recently bought a new phone - each component was plastic wrapped.... So I have to confess that I am not willing to give up all those conveniences yet.
3) Are you at peace with or do you feel guilty about number 2?
Im assuming this is referring to kids. I am totally at peace. Australia is not facing a population crisis and so i dont see how my off spring add to the global crisis in this regard. If I lived in India then i would probably be feeling a little guilty?? Maybe
4) What are you willing to change but feel unable to/stuck with/unsure how to go about it?
Plastic!!
5) Do you know your carbon footprint for your home? If so, is it larger/smaller than your national average? (http://www.carbonfootprint.com/calculator.aspx)
No idea but i am doing what i can and am happy with that.
6) What's eco-frustrating and/or eco-fantastic about where you live?
Eco-frustrating - Our state govt is planning a desalination plant - crazy
Eco-fantastic - We live near the most beautiful pristine, unspoilt beach;
7) Do you eat local/organic/vegetarian/forage/grow your own?
I follow a Nourishing Traditions diet and we have our own suburban orchard and vege patch, as well as 8 adorable chooks that help with the gardening and give us eggs.
8) What do you personally find the most challenging in being green?
The constant battle to make change happen - from asking our green grocer to make a box of 3kg of oranges for us instead of the regular bags, to lobbying our govt to reuse rain water run off instead of desal.
9) Do you have a green confession?
I make way too many short trips to the shops because i am disorganised and forget stuff all the time.
10) Do you have the support of family and/or friends?
We are all a bunch of hippies - so yes.
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Green meme #2
1. Do you use baking soda toothpaste or baking soda shampoo? If not, would you consider it?
I buy chemical free versions of both.
2. Do you make any home cleaning products?
Enjo does the trick at our house.
3. What is your top green issue at the moment?
Desalination!
4. Given unlimited cash, what is on your fantasy green wishlist?
Rain water tank for every house and outhouse in Adelaide to over come our water shortage issues.
5. Have you implemented any new green act/behaviour/product this month?
nope
Tuesday, December 02, 2008
Little fingers
My 18 month old neice shows me this everyday with her pudgy little hands.
Each morning we go for a walk together and Samantha confidently waddles along the road in front of me chattering away about dogs, cats, and cars that cross our path. She is proudly independent, happy to set the course for our walk, but whenever there comes a large pot hole or a patch of uneven ground that her tiny feet cant navigate, she simply raises her arm for me, trusting that i will take her hand.
She does not look up to see if I am available. She does not wonder if it is any inconvenience to me or if i will be willing to help her over these bumps. She does not look anywhere but the path before her. Her chubby little fingers rise above her head knowing i will be there. And as I take her up on her offer of trust - taking her little hand - there is a moment of wonder and joy that floods over me, knowing that it is me she has chosen to trust.
Sunday, September 07, 2008
Spring is sprung
Mother nature really orchestrated a perfect setting for us to get the real spring feeling with a warm sunny day with a cool gentle breeze to make sure we didnt get too hot while we worked in the garden.
It is tradition in our family to have a bbq to celebrate the beginning of spring and so Saturday night David took Jordan under his wing and offered him his first initiation to manhood - learning the reverence for the bbq tongs. A serious matter, that Jordan showed a natural aptitude in.
Sunday, David and I got up early and went for a run/walk together (Im in training for the 5km Christmas frolic in 11 weeks). Once we arrived home I took the plunge on my new diet and tried the egg/coconut oil/butter and cinnamon drink that I am supposed to have for breakfast....it wasnt as bad a I thought it would be, maybe Ill even get used to it. LOL!!
We then all went outside and pulled out the winter weeds in the vege patches so we can plant some spring/summer veges in the warm soil.
Lunch time came and we all headed in to finish off the last of the winter stew that I had been cooking all morning. In the afternoon David helped Luke build a bird feeding platform and they both fixed it up in the tree. Last spring they put up a bird box (a very fancy one at that), and we now have some gloriously colourful parrots nesting up there (well atleast they are regular visitors - not sure if there is actually a nest in there yet??).
We all pitched in to make a special dinner for fathers day and sat around on the floor to eat our Indian feast together. Naan bread, dahl and home made samosa's - yum. Of course I couldnt eat any of it as Im currently grain free, so i chowed down on some left over stew.
I am feeling very satisfied with myself, sitting here right now. Winter is such a time of slothfulness and sometimes I forget that it is only a transient time of inactivity. I start to worry that I am sliding into laziness... but every spring the sun comes out and we are all charged with energy and enthusiasm again. Maybe one year I will learn that winter is just too cold for busyness and I will take my cue from the plants and animals to spend that time in contemplation instead of angst, waiting for the natural re-birthing of spring.
Friday, May 09, 2008
Kangaroo Kick boxing
I checked on the web before we left and set out with an optimistic goal of getting there within 4 hours. It was 10 am when we finally scampered out the door and I was looking forward to an easy drive, arriving in plenty of time to unpack our gear. Well instead of arriving at 2 as we had anticipated, we finally arrived (having gone the wrong way) at 4:30 and just got our tent up before the sun went down.
The camp site was right next to a large shallow dry creek, about 100m across, and full of old gum trees that had obviously been swept down stream in the last flood... which, from the under growth coming up in the creek bed, had been several years before. All this made for an incredible play space for our 9 boys. While we mothers cooked and chatted and laughed the boys raced around making up all manner of games and adventure quests in and on these falled trees.
Mostly our days were spent hiking, and our youngest member, Anthony - who is only 4, valiantly climbed the Rawsley Bluff trail with the rest of the kids. A 13km round trip up the side of a cliff. It was quite harrowing and while the sense of achievement was enjoyable, once back in the carpark, all the boys decided that is was not something they ever wanted to repeat! (However hiking must be a bit like childbirth because a few days later they were talking about doing the Rawsley Bluff next time they came to Wilpena Pound - LOL).
Our campsite was full of wildlife. Kangaroo's came in to our site for a pat and a feed, and one of the female Kangaroo's even allowed me to open her pouch so we could all see the furless joey growing in there. Luke of course grabbed his camera for a photo (which is posted on my facebook)
There were emu's and wild goats and we even saw a torquise, iridescent lizard sunbaking on a rock, during one of our walks. I didnt know that such a creature existed in Australia, so now we are trying to find out what type of lizard is was.
As wonderful as all this wildlife was, we did have a few kangaroo's that were more intent on our food than our company and on the first night I had a visitor in my tent in the wee-hours. I woke up to the sound of it rummaging around and climbed out through the zipper of our sleeping section to confront this univited guest.
Unfortunately, I have never met an aggressive kangaroo before and so I thought that a simple shoo-ing of him out of the tent would be sufficient to scare him off. This was not the case for a few reasons.
You see, firstly I was crouched down (having just wormed my way out through the zipper) when I announced my desire for him to vacate the premises and obviously he did not see me as any type of threat. Secondly he had somehow wriggle his way under the side of the fly in order to enter the tent and was in fact trapped with no immediate escape.
All this being the case our friendly kangaroo turned to see me crouching next to him, growling about his need to exit and he decided that he was up to the challenge. Just as I was rising to stand he reared onto his tail and proceeded to kick me (quite hard I might add!!) with both his feet, over and over and over again. I fell backwards onto the tent, where Luke was sleeping, collapsing that side of the contruction and sitting on Lukes feet. I turned my body away from the blows that were now coming at my ribs and thighs.
I remember thinking "Im down for the count man!! You can stop punching" but as my friend pointed out the next day - throught peels of histerical laughter - "Kangaroo's dont follow the boxing rules we humans have". I wasnt sure that he was going to stop without maming me and I called out to the boys for help... to no avail in their sleepy haze they both just kind of grunted at me (professing, the next morning, that they didnt actually realise what was going on)
Well eventually my fury friend decided that I had obviously gotten the message and returned to the box of food. By this stage I was less gun-hoe than I was at the beginning of our introduction, and I quietly leant forward to undo the zipper on the fly, thus allowing our visitor an exit point. I then stood up to my full height and holding the door open said in a pleading voice "Shoo, Shoo, out you go kangaroo".
Well his first reaction was to turn and grunt at me with the same aggrivation he had shown in our original encounter. But now that I was standing he gazed up at my full height and then quickly looked around for an exit, before bounding out. Phew!!
I rubbed some aloe vera on a wound that I had on my leg, and thanked God that I was up to date with my tetnus shots, before grabbing all the food boxes and loading them into the car.
The next morning I had a lovely bruise to show off in accompaniment to my story, and my girlfriends decided that it was one of the best stories they had heard in a long time - and one that must be repeated at every homeschool camp there after (along with the other wonderful tales that have been gathered over our years homeschooling adventures!!).
Saturday, April 05, 2008
Five things
What was I doing ten years ago?
1. Enjoying my four year old and a six year old boys
2. Moving interstate
3. Recovering from a whiplash injury.
4. Homeschooling my eldest son.
5. Surviving the hotest summer in SA for about the past 30 years - Our rental house was west-facing with no insulation or aircon. - Weeks and weeks of 40 degree days - the boys never wore clothes they just jumped in and out of the bath all day, playing nude in-between.
Five things currently on my to-do list
1. Not spend any money so we can afford to go away for Davids long service leave next year!
2. Finish the 3 quilts I have started, including one for my neices birthday in May. (this goal doesnt really go with goal one!!)
3. Finish the gyprocking of the study.
4. Finish paving the front path
5. Start my "run it off" challenge (yeah right like that's going to happen)
Five things I would do if I was a billionaire
1. Buy a stack of investment properties so I could continue to generate wealth - so I could do the following:
2. Give up work and travel the world teaching permaculture
3. Give to grassroots work through out the world.
4. Hire a maid!!
5. Build a little strawbale house on a few acres so we could grow our own organic food and get back to basics. (In-between teaching appointments)
Five of my bad habits
1. Procrastination - to the point of puting stuff off for months!!
2. Not asserting myself in relationships
3. Taking things personally
4. Not listening to my intuition
5. Correcting peoples grammer
Five places I have lived
1. Newcastle
2. Coogee Beach
3. Morling Theological College "married quarters" - on campus
4. Rural SA
5. Hackham West - Beachside suburb of Adelaide
Five jobs that I have
1. Secretary
2. Nanny
3. Call centre operator
4. Bowen Therapist
5. Mother
Thursday, March 27, 2008
Super mum
When they were small most of my day was caught up with duplo, crafts, train tracks and visiting the park.
As they have gotten older and their interests somewhat more adventurous I have found it more and more difficult to be anything other than a cheer learder on the sidelines of their activities.
Yesterday I was watching Luke run and jump onto the trampoline, commenting on how clever he was (of course!). Luke was energetically explaining to me just how easy it was to do this particular jump as long as you had a run up, and invited me to give it a go. I had declined his enthusiastic offer, as I always do, but he was quite sure that it was achievable even for an old lady like mum, if I just followed his instructions.
So, to his surprise, I relented and said I would give it ago. I wasnt really sure I could do it but thought it was probably one of those few things that I could join him in that has a relatively small risk of injury.
So I made my run-up, and as I approached the trampoline I leaped, just as he had instructed, right leg out in front, so my foot (having landed on the mat) would help to pull the rest of me up. Well for a second their I thought I was going to make it. I was just starting to feeling smug in my abilities when my toes hit the edge of the bar. The impetus of my run up threw my body up on to the trampoline despite of my flailing arms and wobbling body. Following on behind came my left leg, slamming into the bar and then scraping along the springs for extra effect.
I grabbed my knee and rolled around on the trampoline - my pride well and truly bruised, almost as much as my knee! Luke ran up saying, "I cant believe you did that. I was sure you would pike out at the last minute!!" "Oh great!" I thought, "all that badgering and he didnt even expect me to do it!!"
I hopped down, regaining my composure and dusted off my battered ego, while Luke ran to get the mini trampoline, so that I could "try again" with a spring board this time.
Well I suppose if I were a 12 year old I would try it again, but I am coming up for fourty in a few years, so i declined his enthusiastic offer.
The next 24 hours were spent with two jubilant teens encouraging me to "give it another shot, mum!". I never imagined the can of worms I was opening when I said yes to this little adventure but obviously they are quite proud of their mum dispite my failed impersonation of superman... So, after much badgering I have conceded to give it another shot once my wounds have healed - this time with the mini-tramp. I'll keep you posted.