Sheri’s First Rally

I went to my first rally today in protest of our own piece of Personhood law making it’s way around the Oklahoma legislature. It was an emotional day and there have been some emotional weeks leading to today’s events. I can’t wax too poetic….I’m an expert on nothing but my own heart, and even then I’m inconsistent. But I was compelled to show my face at the capitol today. I’ve been reading this piece of legislation and other pieces that seem to be pushing the radical right agenda and I am frustrated. Oklahoma is a loving, beautiful place and I am embarrassed that things like this are being pursued by my government. Have your morality and beliefs. Keep them. In your churches and your communities. But leave them out of my government. And my body. And my daughter’s body. And the bodies of my girlfriends and their wives and her sister’s and her cousin’s and….and….and…

Embarrassment and frustration aside, today was positive because I learned that I am not an island. There are others and they are every shape, sex, age and color. I also got to hear this in person today:

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WcsuyMWmRRU]

 

Also, here’s a bit of a highlight reel:

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o815z0-FeiY]

 

Pinteresting things

My friend Marek, who is pretty and smart, gave a call out to us Pinterest addicts users. She noticed that she’s pinned hundreds of projects in the year that she’s had a Pinterest account and had whipped up very little of those projects. She wondered if anyone else was in the same boat and as an incentive to mobilize our creativity, offered a guest blog opportunity. Look for this post (or a variation of it) to be published to her site soon!

My Stats: 9 boards, 290 pins, and 8 projects tackled (in no particular order):

1. Almond milk making is a resounding success. I haven’t bought any Almond Breeze since I brought home my Vitamix. Even in a decent blender I think anyone could make this delicious plant milk. PS – Almond milk has zero hormones, has twice the calcium as cow’s milk and is lower in calories. Just sayin’. The cost of making my own milk isn’t much less than buying it, but I am making no contribution to the landfill when I make my own milk. The leftover pulp gets turned into muffins, too!

2. We “waffled” biscuits and cinnamon rolls one weekend. My kids thought it was super-neat and it couldn’t be more convenient to have a hot, delicious waffle than popping a can and baking it in a waffle maker. The down side is that they don’t taste like regular waffles and the cinnamon roll ones were a little chewy. I got around this by flattening them in the center of my 4-square waffle iron so the circle could be broken into quadrants and eaten like finger food.

3. Body soap was WAY easy to make. As far as use goes… I still think this is a keeper. Granted, I do have to use more soap than normal as the suds leave the puffy before I’m done spreading all the bubbles. BUT, for the price of one bottle of generic body wash, I’m able to make 4-6 months worth of soap. And I can keep refilling the same body wash container so I’m being environmentally friendly (which was the tipping point that motivated me to do this).

4. I finally just bought War of Art instead of waiting for it from the library. You should, too.

5. I pinned this Kitchen Aid Mixer. It is totally my Official Red Ryder Carbine-Action Two-Hundred-Shot Range Model Air Rifle. I didn’t expect to really get one but low and behold, my best friend got it for me for Christmas/birthday. I squealed as she walked in with the bright red package because only ONE thing comes in a box that size. Then I Snoopy Danced as I tore the paper from the box. Pinning karma FTW!

6. Go check out that oatmeal and the accompanying site. I wasn’t terribly impressed by that particular oatmeal recipe, but was very impressed with the blog. She’s got loads of interesting, healthy recipes and gave me a Life Hack that had never occurred to me: putting my crockpot on a manual timer. I bought a super cheap one in the Christmas Clearance area of Target a couple of weeks ago and it works like a charm! Now I can have my crockpot click on halfway through the day for recipes that would die with 9 hours of simmering. Or have oatmeal turn on in the middle of the night so that I wake up to breakfast. Boo-yah.

7. Seriously, that soup was delicious. It took a shit-ton of carrots to produce all of the necessary carrot juice, but it was a delicious cold soup.

8. Yeah…. notice how I said “Try a crochet technique”? I first typed finished a new crochet pattern but retracted that bold statement. There’s about 6 inches of scarf sitting on a bookshelf in my living room. It is a sloooow stitch, in my opinion. And I made a mistake that I’ll have to pull out if I want an attractive scarf. I bet I do nothing with it, or pull all of it out and stitch something faster and more gratifying. Or learn to knit, which is what actually needs to happen. 🙂

My Xmas gifty from @pennypoo!!! It's fun being your own Santa. #stockingstuffer Things are getting Pinteresting Viva la @Pinterest!

Oh, Paula

This made me crazy: Paula Deen on the Today Show

Drugs don’t cure diabetes. She’s led herself down this path, is tempting others down this path then is selling a “cure” that is no cure at all. It’s just one more lie about how to care for your body. She’s perpetuating the problem with her apparent ignorance or just disregard. Towards the end of the interview she insinuates that to be healthy you have to starve. And that taking care of your body is a form of punishment. ::massive eye roll::

I love food. Like, really really love food. I spent ten years fluctuating between 250 and 300 pounds. I’m still hanging out at 200. But here’s the deal…my kids are really important. *I* am really important. I need to be at my full capabilities for all the things I want to give to this world and my family. I refuse to get diabetes, period. I watched it rob my dad of most of his eyesight and a large part of his health for a long time. A bone infection in his foot cost him a toe. His eyes required laser surgery every couple of months for two years about a decade ago. Endless bills for medications and doctor visits. Early retirement due to physical disability. I could keep going on and on.

I’ve recently made a few minor changes that will make a long-term drastic improvement in my life. (I will write more about that in weeks to come.) Paula could have done that, too. She could have been a platform of change. Paula Deen has influence. I had/have a great respect for the obstacles she overcame as a single mom and a person who struggled with mental health issues. I related and was incredibly proud of her accomplishments, no matter how many sticks of butter she peddled. I was raised by a poor, single mom. I am a single mom. I’ve struggled with depression and watched other close to me struggle with way worse than my worrying nature. I get it and was proud of her for rising above.

I read in a USA Today article yesterday morning when the story finally broke that she was consulted about her disease by Dr. Mehmet Oz. I’m certain that Dr. Oz talked to her about changes she could make to halt and reverse this disease. She could have been a revolutionary in educating the benefits of true health and how delicious and invigorating it can be. Instead, she’s pushing a pill and cashing a check.

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