Category: Lifestyle
Another Big Idea – Fruit and Veg – Grow Yer Ain
I really have no idea what came over me, but I have decided to have a go at growing a few bits and bobs. It all started out in Sainsburys with their little tubs for childen to grow strawberries and tomatoes. They’re cute, they’re sweet, and after a little humming and heying, I went for it. The kids were actually quite excited about it all and with serious faces, they all took their turn, and we now have some little seeds in pots waiting to grow before I put them outside.
My boys really did enjoy doing these. Putting in the little pellets, and seeing them grow to fill the pots as they added the water was surprising. I really didn’t think that they would enjoy it at their age. The sticks were duly written on with the date and the type of seed on it. I am just hoping that they are as keen to keep looking after the plants once they begin to come through.
The only problem for me is, that once I start getting into things, I tend to take them to completely over the top levels, so I have been out shopping for more. First in line was a few seeds to add to a new propagator. Sweetcorn, melon, and peas have made their way to teensy little pots that we are watering and checking by the hour for signs of growth.
Whats next for my boys and I? More plantlings, that’s for sure. We had lots of fun sorting, picking and watering the seeds. They are interested in them because they feel responsible for starting them off.
Wish us luck…….
That some of the seeds grow ……………
ADHD Mythological Pathways
After seeing a few tweets and posts surrounding ADHD and the stereotypical way they have been described, I feel compelled to “right” what I see as a wrong.
ADHD is a condition that affects the brain. There is a chemical called dopamine in the brain. In ADHD children, that chemical is lacking or low. It causes the brain to misread signals and signs, and makes it difficult for children to calm their brains long enough to take in much of what is going on around them.
It also leads to increased frustration as many of the children who suffer are normal or high intelligence, but simply can’t focus long enough on something to be able to fully grasp the correct meaning.
Loud noises can irritate and distract them, to such a level that they are in pain. Their brains can often suffer with short term memory loss, but once something has passed into the long term memory, it is usually there to stay.
Children with ADHD on its own tend to be socially excluded on many levels. They can make inappropriate responses as their brain is just getting to the answer of the first question someone asked, when the asker is now on Q3.
They often lack the ability to think before they speak or act.
Women could relate more if they could imagine their hormones all out of whack – all the time, and multiply that effect many times.
Far too often, I see, hear, or read about people who think it is an excuse for bad behaviour.
They often also seem to think that Ritalin is a drug that calms down bad behaviour.
Those of you who have read this far are either interested, or keen to find out more. Well done for wanting to understand of a condition that is hyped out for the wrong reasons.
To finish, I am going to take the Ritalin debate. People who don’t know, seem to think it is prescribed to “calm down” badly behaved children.
That is completely the wrong impression. For ADHD children (and adults) and with other disabilities with similar brain issues, the medicine replaces the dopamine that is missing in the brain, and appears to calm children down. It doesn’t. What it does, is like insulin to a diabetic and replaces what the body is missing so that you see them on the same level as their non ADHD peers.
Give Ritalin to a child who is not ADHD, and with a normal dopamine level, and it will actually make that child hyperactive – the drug would be adding extra to their normal level of dopamine. Think giving a normal child massive levels of sugar.
If you give an ADHD child too much Ritalin, then it will also hype them out. It can be a case of trial and error to hit on the right dose, as each child who suffers can have a different level of dopamine missing.
I hope I have done my bit to dispel some of the myths running around about ADHD, and if you have any questions, feel free to get in touch. People using ADHD as an excuse to run a child down should think about how much damage that does to real families coping with a real medical issue.
So there you have it.
Eating Out – Childrens’ Portions
I am guessing that you are all sitting waiting for some huge revelation into the type of food (or packet gunk) that they might be serving up, but no, that is not what has me champing at the bit when we eat out.
Picture this
Small fingers, trying to manipulate knives and forks that are not fully compatible with the small hands that are trying to hold them the same way that mum and dad do.
The plate is small, and the food is tightly packed onto the plate. With no room for manoeuvre, the food spins out of control, whirrs off the plate and invariably ends up on someones’ clothes.
How difficult is it to give a young child a plate that is big enough for them to use their cutlery.
I’d love to tell the PR and media types who deal with restaurant chains, hotel kitchen outlets and supermarket food courts that they are not fooling anyone into thinking there is more on the plate, simply because it is miniature sized.
Potty Training – What do I wish I had known?
Image: photostock / FreeDigitalPhotos.net
How many parents have read Gina Ford, or other parenting bibles, and instantly felt their hearts sinking in despair at what an awful mother / father they are?
Looking back on it, what do I wish I had known about potty training?? NADA, NOWT, NOTHING I wish I had never bought a parenting book. I wish I had never listened to all the “I potty trained my daughter at 9 months, look how clever we are na na na na na brigade, as they look down their expensively designed sunglasses, and flutter their pretend real lashes.”
What do the “experts” know about baby development anyway?
The majority of the ones who tried to give me advice on my children were childless, or had children without special needs, and their experience was theoretical, or based on their babysitting skills with relatives and friends children. I really didn’t know ANY other mums back then.
I look back and wonder why I listened to “the experts”. I wonder why I felt so inadequate when I couldn’t get my children to fit into these moulds that society was telling me that they should have slotted into. I couldn’t understand why my round pegs didn’t fit into the neat square boxes that made up the whole of the “right” way to parent a child, and ensure they were raised to be happy and healthy.
My biggest bugbear was the toilet training lark. No1 was a blur. He was potty training while I was learning to juggle two others in nappies and he had to come off them for my sanity. I have no idea how long it took to do, and that was pre parental bible bowing and scraping, but I don’t remember it being that long.
Being a challenge to change nappies so often, I bought several parental tomes. I decided to take their advice and I began potty training N02 when he turned 18 months. Much ado with praise, bribery, silly high pitched voices, mucho clapping and clever boying.
I would sit No2 on the potty, and try to change the nappy of No3. Before I knew it, No2 would be running along the corridor, weeing on the way. No3 would then giggle and whip off his happy to join in. I’d catch No2 and sit him back down, he would then get back up, put him back, up he got. Yo-yo city. It was the single most stressful thing I remember as a parent. To all of you who potty trained in a few weeks, and think you have been dealt a hard blow, get over yourselves – it is your child who was ready.
No3 I was fit for. I couldn’t face the potty training so “drum roll please,” I just didn’t bother, AT ALL I put it off, and off, and off, and off. It was getting dangerously close to the time when he should have been starting nursery, and I was beginning to get to the slightly panicky stage that he might not get to go, but I needn’t have worried.
At the age of nearly 3, he duly saw a friends child go to the toilet, and he decided he would never wear a nappy again. He didn’t use a potty, and went straight to a toilet. It was so easy, I could write a book on potty training.
What do I say to the rule books?
GO AWAY
You’re a waste of time and money, and people could be playing with their children rather than reading up on whether they might or might not be doing things the “right” way.
Silent Sunday 24/4/11
Children and Animals can Die in Vans and Cars
It’s got to the time of year again when I find myself struggling with a small proportion of my fellow humans as I go out and about. It stresses me to the point of irrationality, and really gets my back up.
When it starts to get warmer outside and out pops Mr Sunlight, the animals that have spent the winter hibernating at their pathetically selfish and lazy owners request begin to appear again.
That aside, some of these fair weather dog walkers seem to think it’s ok to take their beloved to the supermarket, or the library, or the local MacDonalds, or the pub, or their work, and leave them there. They think that it’s ok to leave a window open an inch or two and that their faithful canine friends will be ok. On some occasions, they may be.
Is it worth the risk?
It only takes 20 minutes for a child or a dog to die a horrendous death in a hot car. And it doesn’t have to be blistering hot outside for the inside of a car to literally boil them to death from the inside out. Is that the kind of death you want for your child or your best friend.
Every year I come across self-centred, egotistical it won’t happen to me types, who think it is ok in hot weather to leave their dogs. Each time I feel compelled to stay and make sure the dog is ok. If you are one of the several I have called the authorities over, then that is just tough. I’d rather you hated me for reporting you, than risk the life of a dog that I could have saved from an awful death.
A woman at one of the local shops last week left her baby in a car with the engine running, and her handbag on the front seat and was happily queuing inside the shop for more than ten minutes. She got angry when she was challenged about how dangerous that was for the heat, and for the possibility of theft.
My children have had the SSPCA at school. They have been made aware of the dangers of animals and children in hot cars. Seeing a dog left while their owners totter off upsets them. It upsets me.
Don’t risk it.
Silent Sunday 17/4/11
Fridge Contents
Thanks to @melaina25 for tagging me. I am loving rooting through other peoples fridges.
Looking at the contents of my fridge is just that little bit scary at the moment. Oh yes, we have 6 people who live here (does that excuse it?).
OK, listing the contents really scares me. Here goes:
In the fridge Door
2 x 4 pints semi skimmed milk, carton pure orange juice, bottle of pear sparkling juice, carton tesco long life double cream, 2 x cartons lactose free milk, bottle calpol, bottle chesty cough medicine, bottle of Benadryl, Tesco lighter than light mayonnaise and eggs.
In the main body of the fridge
Elmlee cream, Hellmans mayonnaise, Very lazy caremalised red onions, garlic puree, carton tomato passata, sachet black bean sauce, carton lactose free milk, jar beetroot, Aero Bubble Deserts (sorry @kateab), 3 x packs lactose free cheese, cheese slices, mild cheddar cheese, cheese strings, pack puff pastry, kids smarties chocolate egg (honestly), cherry tomatoes, strawberries, wafer thin chicken, wafer thin ham, coleslaw, yoghurts, 4 packs tesco brussels light pate, 3 x dairy lee cheese spread tubs, lurpack butter, beef dripping, sausage rolls, pork pies, sticky barbeque ribs, mini savoury eggs, orange capri suns, remains of yesterdays sausage casserole, bottle of water, tub of cauliflower and irish cheddar soup, stork and tesco soft spread for baking, 30 eggs, 2 x soda stream bottles chilling, beef tomatoes, 2 x melons and a few apples.
I am tagging @stephc007 @plasticrosaries @mrs_moog @mummylion
I’ve Been Tagged – Find Out More About Me…
I thought I had missed the mass tagging, although I had quite enjoyed reading some.
The Q&A tag came from @nickie72 and her blog Typecast
It started one day when Mrs Lister, set out to find out about her fellow bloggers, using the same format as is used in the Guardian Q&A when they interview celebs.
You want to know more about me – here goes……
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Spring In The Air – Poem
Open your eyes
The day has begun
A new season around
With senses abound
No nip in the air
Birds sing
And search
For a home
Off the ground
Away from
Sharp teeth
Fit for
New life
We smile
And rise
With a spring
In our step
The promise
The beginnings
Like nature
We follow
Nice post!
Looks delicous...thanks for sharing the wonderful receipe...
Looks so delicious....thanks for sharing...