Category Archives: Recommendations

Sticks

There is not a day that goes by that I am not carrying a stick for my son. “That’s my special stick Mom- keep it safe.” I have been known to bring home sticks that are over 5 feet long from the park. We have a wonderful stick collection.  This seems to be universal with children- give them nothing but sticks and dirt and they can entertain themselves.

patrick dougherty

Ever since watching Saving Mr. Banks and seeing a young P.L. Travers constructing little fairy houses, and reading Thumbelina by Hans Christian Anderson, my son has been building little stick houses in our yard, at the park, really anywhere he can find sticks and leaves.

patrick dougherty

When he’s not drawing in the dirt with sticks, building houses for The Littles, roasting marshmallows on sticks, sword fighting (cringe), or finding keepers, he’s making himself forts and tee pees.

patrick dougherty

Imagine his delight when while attending his cousin’s high school graduation in New Mexico we happened upon this glorious sculpture.

Stick ARt

It was incredible. Sticks and twigs molded and shaped to mesh with the surroundings, Art that is as much experiential as it is beautiful.

The sculptor is Patrick Dougherty. Naturally I came home and researched, and he has installations all over the world. There is a documentary based on his life and work.

Bending Sticks explores how the artist’s childhood – spent rambling through the woods and building forts and hideouts with his four siblings – fueled his career and nurtured the prolific, insightful artist he is today.”

All that time Patrick Dougherty spent in nature as a child now benefits people and children around the world. His story is encouraging and inspiring, and as a mother of young boys I am reminded that no time spent outside collecting sticks is a waste of time.

More p

Earthing on Earth Day

earthing for kids
There is a measurable reason we feel good when we stroll along the beach barefoot in the sand, or walk through a grassy field.

It is called earthing.

The first time I heard about this practice the person referred to it as grounding. “You need to get outside and walk barefoot to be more grounded to the earth,” she told me. Though I found it intriguing, I didn’t give it much thought. Partly because it sounded super hippie and a little New Age-y, and partly because it seemed so simple. Maybe too simple to make a difference in our health.

Then again, the simplest things are those that matter the most to our health- things such as drinking enough water, chewing our food thoroughly, sleeping well and breathing deeply.

That was probably about 10 years ago, and ever since when I have walked outside barefoot I’ve noticably felt more connected to the earth. And when my children have kicked off their shoes, I’ve said, “Great! They are getting grounded.” But as I said, I haven’t gone out of my way to make it a daily habit.

Recently, at the end of an incredibly intense therapeutic massage the therapist told my husband to have our children play outside barefoot for at least thirty minutes a day. He said this will counteract the electromagnetic fields we are bombarded with due to our wireless lifestyles. Ok, even more reason to go without shoes.

Now I have a new perspective on grounding- which is also called earthing. Aside from being connected to the earth, there is basic biology and physics to prove it is extremely good for your health. Necessary even. Turns out, when you walk barefoot in nature, there’s a transfer of free electrons from the Earth into your body. These electrons are powerful antioxidants.

How? Antioxidants destroy free radicals and a free radical is a molecule that is missing an electron. When we walk barefoot outside on earth, those electrons freely enter our bodies.

As Dr. James Oscher- an expert in the field of energy medicine, with a Bachelor’s Degree in Biophysics and a PhD in Biology-  details in one of his studies,

“Many people add to their diets dark chocolate, turmeric, bamboo, and other nutritional supplements that are rich in free-radical scavengers. Anti-inflammatory drugs and antioxidants are electrically charged molecules that carry excess electrons to sites of inflammation where they reduce free radicals.

Anti-inflammatory molecules can become free radicals themselves, once they have donated electrons to neutralize free radicals. Moreover, metabolic processes must remove the antioxidant that has given up its electron. This poses additional demands on the energy system of the organism. In contrast, free electrons act directly on free radicals and do not have the disadvantages of chemical antioxidants. It therefore appears that free (mobile) electrons from the earth can serve a simple and direct “anti-inflammatory” role by neutralizing free radicals.”

So this earth day you can find me earthing.

 earthing

Might I ask you to suspend skepticism and consider earthing for 30 minutes each day?

Some possible benefits of earthing:

  • Beneficial changes in heart rate
  • Thinning of the blood
  • Decreased levels of inflammation
  • Better sleep
  • Stronger immune system

Earthing is simply walking barefoot on grass, sand, dirt, basically anything outside that is not man made. What do you have to lose?

How To Prepare Fennel Seed Tea For Babies

How to prepare fennel seed tea for bottle fed babies.

Fennel seed tea is a great home remedy for colicky babies.

Fennel helps alleviate gas in the digestive tract and will comfort a fussy baby.

Fennel tea is easy to make.

  •  Add one teaspoon of fennel seeds to eight ounces of boiling water
  •  Cover and steep for 30 minutes.
  •  When it is completely cooled, strain it, and then add one half to one teaspoon of the tea into your baby’s bottle.
  • You can also give the tea directly to the baby using a dropper.

If you are a breastfeeding mom, you can drink the fennel tea yourself and the benefits will pass through to the breast milk.

The World of Peter Rabbit

Have I ever mentioned my love for Beatrix Potter and all things Peter Rabbit? If not, there is no time like spring and Easter!

A reader recently wrote asking for my favorite books for toddlers and preschoolers.

I have a huge list, and one I will compile soon, but the 23 books in the collection of The World of Peter Rabbit are probably my favorite.

I love them for the way Beatrix Potter uses big words children enjoy such as “superfluous” and “hospitable.” Her way with words continues to delight children over 100 years after she wrote them. My boys savor the illustrations and the description of the animals. I love that Peter’s mother gives him chamomile tea at bedtime and that Benjamin Bunny’s mother sells spices and rabbit tobacco (lavender). I love the size of the books- perfect for little hands, and I love the timelessness of these stories.

We all adore the two bad mice.

Here is my complete collection of Beatrix Potter books from when I was a little girl.

Complete beatrix potter collectiopn

 

I have such sweet memories of my parents reading these to me.

P.S. Beatrix Potter’s life was fascinating.  There was a film based on it that came out a few years ago- Miss Potter – about her struggle for love, happiness and success. Check it out if you love a good biopic!