Monday, January 31, 2011
Get the Party Started Already!
Okay- we're 41 weeks, the baby's head is engaged, I'm fully effaced, and 6 cm dilated. Oh, and sick of being PREGNANT! So let's get this party started, right?
Okay since I'm feeling like this let's address the at home possibilities for labor inducers, shall we?
1- Herbs-
Blue and Black Cohosh (not the same plant). Blue Cohosh helps the uterus to contract more substantially. Black Cohosh helps these contractions become regulated. Note: those mothers with blood problems should steer clear of Black Cohosh, because it can have blood thinning effects.
EPO (Evening Primrose Oil) which I have mentioned before, is used to dilate and efface the cervix. Taken internally or placed near the cervix before bed, either way it has wonderful results. However, it also has blood thinning effects in those mothers with blood issues.
RRL- I have a friend who swears that is your labor starts and you drink as much Red Raspberry Leaf tea as you can possibily stand it'll keep it going for you!
2-Walking- Yeah right. Okay, to be fair it CAN help the baby become better placed for birth and let gravity help with that. It may even help cause a few BRaxton Hixs contractions. But walking has not been documented, or even reported to begin labor.
3- Mowing the lawn. Granted with a snow storm coming in my direction, it's not something I get to try. But I do have a friend who swears it started one of her labors. I tried it with our 4th. Just made me sweaty and uncomfortable. But I'd try it again!
4- Sex, Sex, and more Sex. That is how it got there to begin with right? Semen has a high prostaglandins, which help efface and dilate the cervix. Orgasms encourage uterine contractions. And Nipple Stimulation release oxytocin to help all of this along! Unfortunately, it has never jump started any of my labors - but it's from lack of trying ;)
5-Spicy Foods? Well, it'll give you and excuse to dive into that Mexican dish you've been craving. And because they can irritate the bowels, it is possible it could help get your labor going. But it has never worked for me, or anyone I know.
6- Pineapple. Has certain somethings in it that can also help soften the cervix, but that's it. Eat up if you like it. I do!
7- Dancing - I saw on Youtube a woman's water break while dancing in the kitchen with her hubby. I've even tried jumping jax, and no water breakage for me. But try it if you're up for it.
8-Bumpy car ride?? Never heard of this actually working. And I get one anytime I go amywhere from our house.
9- Castor Oil, which I am possibilty getting desperate enough to try. YUCK for one. BUt it cause intestinal cramping and diahrea, which can get the labor contractions started - OR it can just leave you dehydrated and sick.
10- The last one I want to mention is Stripping the Membranes. This is where someone takes their fingers (two usually) and inserts them into your cervix, and gently seperates the bag of water from the uterine wall. This sometimes cause contractions and can get your labor started. This has in fact worked for me in the past. But, in my experience, the person doing it has to be pretty ruthless. It doesn't hurt everyone, so I hear, but it seriously hurt me. My cervix is so sensetive this late in pregnancy, that is REALLY hurts. But truthfully I get over it, and am grateful when it works.
There are some other otpions to be found online. But honestly I don't think they're even worth considering. Like I said I'm contemplating the castor oil at this point. Like I said in the beginning, my body is WAY ready, so maybe a little kick will help "Get This Party Started"!
Friday, January 28, 2011
Wednesday, January 26, 2011
Frugality...
Goes hand in hand with food storage and emergency storage. ANd with 6, goinf on 7 children, in a one income household it is THE way to get by! I just finished reading Miserly Moms by Jonni McCoy. Other than reading a phrase or two I found inspiring for general life, no neccessarily for frugal living, I found it seriously lacking. This book BARELY touches the tip of the iceberg when it comes to frugal shopping. I like her 11 guidelines (summerized): 1- Don't confuse frugality with deprivation 2-Give up things that lack value 3- Keep a written record of food prices 4- Don't buy everything at the same store 5- Buy in bulk 6- Make and grow whatever you can 7- Eliminate convenience foods 8- Cut back on pricey meats and poultry 9- Waste NOTHING 10- Institute a soup and bread night 11- Cook several meals at once and freeze them.
I would add that frugal buying also takes PATIENCE and DETERMINATION!
While I don't do all of them, they are great starter guidlines. We don't do #8, as we buthcer our own, and when we run out we either butcher more, or cut way back. We don't do #11 either. I do sometimes cook double or triple batches to share with another family or freeze one for a meal later. But I never have the freezer space to say Freeze a monthes worth at one time. We have a chest freeze, and stan up freezer, and the smaller sized freezer on top of the fridge. These are full right now, while we have several boxes of bread items in a locker on the back porch in the snow and ice. So freezer space, amazingly, is limited. It's a great was to store food!! And the more full your freezer is the less electricity it takes to keep it frozen! So stuff 'em, ya'll!
This book talks about grocery store prices versus the places like Costco. Because Costco and others like it do not always give you the best price. Pricing items according to unit ammount is a terrific way to really understand how much you're paying and how you're getting for it! But truthfully, We don't shop at the grocery store.
Before I talk about the grocery store I would like to mention that many people claim that planning a menu a month or more at a time saves a lot of $. Perhaps it does for them. Many other people claim that building a menu around sale items listed in the paper saves them $$. It probably does. BUT I have found that I save the MOST $ by building a menu around what's in my food storage. That way I purchase ONLY what is cheapest and refill my storage with it!
We live near HyVee, the only "real" grocey store in the area. They seriously over price their fruits and veggies in addition to everything else. Occassionally I'll pick up Gluten Free pasta there, but it's a luxury I rarely invest in. But that's all I get there. I get a few things at Walmart - laundry soap for the cloth diapers we use, because I haven't found a recipe that works for those yet. Pacifiers, and a few other things that cann't be found elsewhere. I get pull-ups for the 2 yr old at the Dollar Store, simply because I haven't had the $ to invest in the reuseable ones yet. Occassionally I'll pick up an airfreshener for 79 cents. BUT, most of what we get for groceries comes through 2 channels.
The first being a food co-op called SHARE. We get fruit and veggie packages for $12, I usually get 2 or more. I get over a lb each of apples, oranges, potatoes, etc for a LOT cheaper than I would at the typical grocery store. Food Co-ops are mentioned in this book, to give it credit. However, this book does not mention Discount grocery stores that sell dented cans, damaged containers, or surplus from the grocery. Forexample last month I got 6 large boxes of bread (reg wheat etc for my hubby and one youngest son) for $18. Now these boxes were PACKED with whole wheat bagels, french rolls, frendh loaves, homemade round loaves, dinner rolls, whole wheat english muffins, etc. I got soooo much for my $ with that particular buy. Not only did I save time and energy buy purchasing something I would otherwaise need to make at home, and these boys got some serious treats of the bread world, but also I paid a lot less for each loaf than it would have cost to make them at home! I spent less than 17 cents per loaf/package! That is quite a deal! So much so we gave some to friends :) THese discount stores also sell eggs from local farms, when I need them, and a variety of other things we use for much cheaper prices than I can find anywhere else.
The other way I save a lot is buying in bulk, which is also mentioned in the book. We have many food allergies, so this saves $ in more ways than one.
The last way I will mention that we save on food is that we make our own. Which is mentioned in the book but not nearly to the degree we participate. The book says stop buying mixes and readymade items at the store and make at home from scratch. Well we do that, but we also make quite a few of the raw materials at home. We have a dairy cow, and 2 dairy goats. We have chickens, layers. I cannot tell you how much I cringe when I am forced to buy eggs at Walmart! The price is almost $10 for 5 1/2 doz eggs! NEVER any less than 17 cents per eggs!!! And usually they want 20 cents per egg!! With the cow and goat we make our own yogurt, a lot of the cheese, whipped cream (yum!), and just about everything else that is made with milk. We share some with friends as well.
Lots of people discount the idea of garage sales and resale shops as well these discount grocery stores and their damaged goods. None of our children are too proud to recieve second hand gifts for birthdays or Christmas. And none of the family mind wearing second hand clothes or shoes. We're careful to pick up clean, stain free, and generally in good condition shoes and clothing. But I get them for usually less than a buck each. Rarely will I find an item that is priced higher that I feel is worth the ticketed price. For example, last Xmas the girls got a wooden doll highchair, I paid $5 for it ONLY because it was in great condition and STURDY! Otherwise it would have sat waiting for another buyer. The boys got a new indoor Toy Story tent for $2. Excellent condition, almost brand new. The box was damaged. So instead of wrapping it we set it up for them to find Xmas morning. Definitely worth $2.
On very rare occasions will I spend that kind of $ on clothing. Tshirts, blue jeans, or other play clothes for the children under the age of 10 - NO WAY! Under a buck or it stays in the store. These play clothes go through a lot of wear and tear and end up stained, full of holes or tears after the second child wears them if not the first! So for me that's only worth a buck. The 12 yr old we'll spend a tiny bit more on his clothes simply because they are so difficult to find! So when I find them and they are within my range, meaning I can stomache the price, I'll pick it up. It took months to find him sneakers! But I found them for less than $3. Church clothes and pajamas I'm willing to pay a little more for, as they experience less hard wear.
My husband gets new pants and shirts for work- as I have yet to find him any at the resale shops or garage sales. But MY clothes are only "new to me" as well. Including my pregnancy clothing.
Another great way to save $ on clothing, toys, kitchen items, etc is to get some friends together for an exchange. Any kind of exchange you want. It's a great way to get rid of items you no longer use, or have a need for, and it's a terrific way to pick up what you do need. Our church has one of these once a year, usually. It's a fantastic tradition, if you ask me! Last year I got rid of a ton of toys that were given to us, that we didn't need/want, as well as some other items taking up space in our house. But what I got was CURTAINS!!! We now have curtains in the Master Bedroom! I'm dying some for the gril's room, and all need now for the boys is the metal piece to hang some on! Because the curtains I got were and entire set of window treatments. The colors went perfectly in the master bedroom, and the rest will be just thing when we get them up. I also picked up a coffe/spice mill. It's little, but now I pay even less for a few things like Flax seeds, because I can grind them myself! I tried using it to grind rice into flour- and it will do in a pinch, but not fine enough for pancakes :) I also got fabric, which I made into dolls, and started my first real quilt with! So I seriously suggest these exchanges as a great way to get free stuff and give away your unwanted stuff. When it's over, donate the leftovers to your local resale shop, or Goodwill.
Other exchanges that can be made are trades. The American people used to live by it! You can trade a service or a product (yogurt for example) for a service or product in return. I traded tutoring services for help at home for two weeks with a teenager. I tutored her in the end of the last school year, and during the summer when I had really bad morning sickness she stayed over for 2 weeks to help out with the children while I puked. I had no idea I would be making this trade, but it worked out. This fall we traded 3 goats for several bushels of apples from our local orchard owners. They got rid of unwanted brush, and we got apples! And no one had to dip into their wallets! It was great!
This has been a long post... I think I'll close it up now by saying: 1- Thank goodness I got this book for 50 cents, I'd be irritated otherwise with as little wisdom as I gained from it. and 2- Frugality is about getting more for your money so you do not have to go without. Frugal living is being mindful of prices, ammounts, quality, and use. Then spending wisely. I make mistakes, and sometimes I splurge. But impulse buys? A thing of the past!
PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE ifyou are doing something that stretches your pennies that is not on this list SHARE!!! Please let me know!! I love learning about new ways to save!
I would add that frugal buying also takes PATIENCE and DETERMINATION!
While I don't do all of them, they are great starter guidlines. We don't do #8, as we buthcer our own, and when we run out we either butcher more, or cut way back. We don't do #11 either. I do sometimes cook double or triple batches to share with another family or freeze one for a meal later. But I never have the freezer space to say Freeze a monthes worth at one time. We have a chest freeze, and stan up freezer, and the smaller sized freezer on top of the fridge. These are full right now, while we have several boxes of bread items in a locker on the back porch in the snow and ice. So freezer space, amazingly, is limited. It's a great was to store food!! And the more full your freezer is the less electricity it takes to keep it frozen! So stuff 'em, ya'll!
This book talks about grocery store prices versus the places like Costco. Because Costco and others like it do not always give you the best price. Pricing items according to unit ammount is a terrific way to really understand how much you're paying and how you're getting for it! But truthfully, We don't shop at the grocery store.
Before I talk about the grocery store I would like to mention that many people claim that planning a menu a month or more at a time saves a lot of $. Perhaps it does for them. Many other people claim that building a menu around sale items listed in the paper saves them $$. It probably does. BUT I have found that I save the MOST $ by building a menu around what's in my food storage. That way I purchase ONLY what is cheapest and refill my storage with it!
We live near HyVee, the only "real" grocey store in the area. They seriously over price their fruits and veggies in addition to everything else. Occassionally I'll pick up Gluten Free pasta there, but it's a luxury I rarely invest in. But that's all I get there. I get a few things at Walmart - laundry soap for the cloth diapers we use, because I haven't found a recipe that works for those yet. Pacifiers, and a few other things that cann't be found elsewhere. I get pull-ups for the 2 yr old at the Dollar Store, simply because I haven't had the $ to invest in the reuseable ones yet. Occassionally I'll pick up an airfreshener for 79 cents. BUT, most of what we get for groceries comes through 2 channels.
The first being a food co-op called SHARE. We get fruit and veggie packages for $12, I usually get 2 or more. I get over a lb each of apples, oranges, potatoes, etc for a LOT cheaper than I would at the typical grocery store. Food Co-ops are mentioned in this book, to give it credit. However, this book does not mention Discount grocery stores that sell dented cans, damaged containers, or surplus from the grocery. Forexample last month I got 6 large boxes of bread (reg wheat etc for my hubby and one youngest son) for $18. Now these boxes were PACKED with whole wheat bagels, french rolls, frendh loaves, homemade round loaves, dinner rolls, whole wheat english muffins, etc. I got soooo much for my $ with that particular buy. Not only did I save time and energy buy purchasing something I would otherwaise need to make at home, and these boys got some serious treats of the bread world, but also I paid a lot less for each loaf than it would have cost to make them at home! I spent less than 17 cents per loaf/package! That is quite a deal! So much so we gave some to friends :) THese discount stores also sell eggs from local farms, when I need them, and a variety of other things we use for much cheaper prices than I can find anywhere else.
The other way I save a lot is buying in bulk, which is also mentioned in the book. We have many food allergies, so this saves $ in more ways than one.
The last way I will mention that we save on food is that we make our own. Which is mentioned in the book but not nearly to the degree we participate. The book says stop buying mixes and readymade items at the store and make at home from scratch. Well we do that, but we also make quite a few of the raw materials at home. We have a dairy cow, and 2 dairy goats. We have chickens, layers. I cannot tell you how much I cringe when I am forced to buy eggs at Walmart! The price is almost $10 for 5 1/2 doz eggs! NEVER any less than 17 cents per eggs!!! And usually they want 20 cents per egg!! With the cow and goat we make our own yogurt, a lot of the cheese, whipped cream (yum!), and just about everything else that is made with milk. We share some with friends as well.
Lots of people discount the idea of garage sales and resale shops as well these discount grocery stores and their damaged goods. None of our children are too proud to recieve second hand gifts for birthdays or Christmas. And none of the family mind wearing second hand clothes or shoes. We're careful to pick up clean, stain free, and generally in good condition shoes and clothing. But I get them for usually less than a buck each. Rarely will I find an item that is priced higher that I feel is worth the ticketed price. For example, last Xmas the girls got a wooden doll highchair, I paid $5 for it ONLY because it was in great condition and STURDY! Otherwise it would have sat waiting for another buyer. The boys got a new indoor Toy Story tent for $2. Excellent condition, almost brand new. The box was damaged. So instead of wrapping it we set it up for them to find Xmas morning. Definitely worth $2.
On very rare occasions will I spend that kind of $ on clothing. Tshirts, blue jeans, or other play clothes for the children under the age of 10 - NO WAY! Under a buck or it stays in the store. These play clothes go through a lot of wear and tear and end up stained, full of holes or tears after the second child wears them if not the first! So for me that's only worth a buck. The 12 yr old we'll spend a tiny bit more on his clothes simply because they are so difficult to find! So when I find them and they are within my range, meaning I can stomache the price, I'll pick it up. It took months to find him sneakers! But I found them for less than $3. Church clothes and pajamas I'm willing to pay a little more for, as they experience less hard wear.
My husband gets new pants and shirts for work- as I have yet to find him any at the resale shops or garage sales. But MY clothes are only "new to me" as well. Including my pregnancy clothing.
Another great way to save $ on clothing, toys, kitchen items, etc is to get some friends together for an exchange. Any kind of exchange you want. It's a great way to get rid of items you no longer use, or have a need for, and it's a terrific way to pick up what you do need. Our church has one of these once a year, usually. It's a fantastic tradition, if you ask me! Last year I got rid of a ton of toys that were given to us, that we didn't need/want, as well as some other items taking up space in our house. But what I got was CURTAINS!!! We now have curtains in the Master Bedroom! I'm dying some for the gril's room, and all need now for the boys is the metal piece to hang some on! Because the curtains I got were and entire set of window treatments. The colors went perfectly in the master bedroom, and the rest will be just thing when we get them up. I also picked up a coffe/spice mill. It's little, but now I pay even less for a few things like Flax seeds, because I can grind them myself! I tried using it to grind rice into flour- and it will do in a pinch, but not fine enough for pancakes :) I also got fabric, which I made into dolls, and started my first real quilt with! So I seriously suggest these exchanges as a great way to get free stuff and give away your unwanted stuff. When it's over, donate the leftovers to your local resale shop, or Goodwill.
Other exchanges that can be made are trades. The American people used to live by it! You can trade a service or a product (yogurt for example) for a service or product in return. I traded tutoring services for help at home for two weeks with a teenager. I tutored her in the end of the last school year, and during the summer when I had really bad morning sickness she stayed over for 2 weeks to help out with the children while I puked. I had no idea I would be making this trade, but it worked out. This fall we traded 3 goats for several bushels of apples from our local orchard owners. They got rid of unwanted brush, and we got apples! And no one had to dip into their wallets! It was great!
This has been a long post... I think I'll close it up now by saying: 1- Thank goodness I got this book for 50 cents, I'd be irritated otherwise with as little wisdom as I gained from it. and 2- Frugality is about getting more for your money so you do not have to go without. Frugal living is being mindful of prices, ammounts, quality, and use. Then spending wisely. I make mistakes, and sometimes I splurge. But impulse buys? A thing of the past!
PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE ifyou are doing something that stretches your pennies that is not on this list SHARE!!! Please let me know!! I love learning about new ways to save!
Friday, January 21, 2011
Brigham Young, on modern medicine
Brigham Young and Modern Medicine
Journal of Discourses, Volume 15, Number 15, Page 224.
"Would you want doctors? Yes, to set bones. We should want a good surgeon for that, or to cut off a limb. But do you want doctors? For not much of anything else, let me tell you, only the traditions of the people lead them to think so; and here is a growing evil in our midst.
It will be so in a little time that not a woman in all Israel will dare to have a baby unless she can have a doctor by her. I will tell you what to do, you ladies, when you find you are going to have an increase, go off into some country where you cannot call for a doctor, and see if you can keep it. I guess you will have it, and I guess it will be all right, too.
Now the cry is, 'Send for a doctor.' If you have a pain in the head, 'Send for a doctor;' if your heel aches, 'I want a
doctor;' 'my back aches, and I want a doctor.'
The study and practice of anatomy and surgery are very good; they are mechanical, and are frequently needed. Do you not think it is necessary to give medicine sometimes? Yes, but I would rather have a wife of mine that knows what medicine to give me when I am sick, than all the professional doctors in the world.
Now let me tell you about doctoring, because I am acquainted with it, and know just exactly what constitutes a good doctor in physic. It is that man or woman who, by revelation, or we may call it intuitive inspiration, is capable of administering medicine to assist the human system when it is besieged by the enemy called Disease; but if they
have not that manifestation, they had better let the sick person alone.
I will tell you why: I can see the faces of this congregation, but I do not see two alike; and if I could look into your nervous systems and behold the operations of disease, from the crowns of your heads to the soles of your feet, I should behold the same difference that I see in your physiognomy--there would be no two precisely alike.
Doctors make experiments, and if they find a medicine that will have the desired effect on one person, they set it down that it is good for everybody, but it is not so, for upon the second person that medicine is administered to, seemingly with the same disease, it might produce death. If you do not know this, you have not had the experience that I have.
I say that unless a man or woman who administers medicine to assist the human system to overcome disease, understands, and has that intuitive knowledge, by the Spirit, that such an article is good for that individual at that very time, they had better let him alone. Let the sick do without eating, take a little of something to cleanse the stomach, bowels and blood, and wait patiently, and let Nature have time to gain the advantage over the disease.
Suppose, for illustration, we draw a line through this congregation, and place those on this side where they cannot get a doctor, without it is a surgeon, for thirty or fifty years to come; and put the other side in a country full of doctors, and they think they ought to have them, and this side of the house that has no doctor will be able to buy the inheritance of those who have doctors, and overrun them, outreach them, and buy them up, and finally obliterate them, and they will be lost in the masses of those who have no doctors. I know what some say when they look at such things, but that is the fact.
Ladies and gentlemen, you may take any country in the world, I do not care where you go, and if they do not employ doctors, you will find they will beat communities that employ them, all the time. Who is the real doctor? That man who knows by the Spirit of revelation what ails an individual, and by the same Spirit knows what medicine to administer. That is the real doctor, the others are quacks."
- Oh so amazing! I agree!! With every fober in my being! I agree!
Tuesday, January 18, 2011
The Jueb family
They have some interesting views to share.
http://jeubfamily.com/2011/01/16/affording-children-2/#comment-33071
http://jeubfamily.com/2011/01/16/affording-children-2/#comment-33071
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