Thursday, December 13, 2007

Is this a bashing ~ trashing party of Rachel Ray?

Why is it that, of late, there seems to be a liberality to bash (is that harsh) Rachel Ray? I've been reading different blogs joke about the different phrases she uses . . .


Yum . . .o Evo . . .o Delish . . .

Sammies . . . Stoup . . .


Isn't there something better to do than to bash or trash a young woman? Maybe, go make soup.



French Onion Soup
1 tablespoon extra-virgin olive oil 2 tablespoons butter 6 medium onions, thinly sliced Salt and freshly ground black pepper 2 teaspoons fresh thyme, picked and chopped or poultry seasoning 1 bay leaf, fresh or dried 1/2 cup dry sherry 6 cups beef stock 4 thick slices crusty bread, toasted 2 1/2 cups shredded Gruyere or Swiss cheese.

Heat a deep pot over medium to medium high heat. Work next to the stove to slice onions.

Add oil and butter to the pot. Add onions to the pot as you slice them. When all the onions are in the pot, season with salt and pepper and 1 teaspoon fresh thyme. Cook onions 15 to 18 minutes, stirring frequently, until tender, sweet and caramel colored.

Add bay leaf and sherry to the pot and deglaze the pan drippings. Add 6 cups stock and cover pot to bring soup up to a quick boil.

Arrange 4 small, deep soup bowls or crocks on a cookie sheet. Preheat broiler to high. Once soup reaches a boil, ladle it into bowls. Float toasted crusty bread on soup and cover each bowl with a mound of cheese. Sprinkle remaining fresh thyme on cheese and place cookie sheet with soup bowls on it under hot broiler until cheese melts and bubbles.

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Mothers Nurture, Fathers Lovingly Control

Consider this article, Mothers Nurture, Fathers Lovingly Control written by Wade Horn:

All is not well with America's daughters. One in five girls younger than 18 lives in poverty; for preschoolers, the figure is one in four. Reports of child sexual abuse have more than tripled since 1976--with girls the most common victim. Forty percent of all females become pregnant at least once as teenagers.

Half of all teenagers will carry their pregnancies to term, and when they do, 72 percent will give birth out-of-wedlock. The startling fact is that on most measures of child well-being, our nation's daughters are worse off today than they were just three decades ago.

What is going on that so many girls are experiencing so many difficulties and what can we do about it? The answer to both questions is one and the same: fathers.


In 1960, only about 17 percent of children were growing up in a home in which their father did not live. Today, that figure has more than doubled to nearly 40 percent. That means that 12 million girls are currently growing up without their father.

It is well recognized that when fathers are absent, boys are at significantly higher risk for developing conduct problems--they act out aggressively and sometimes quite violently toward others. Less well-recognized is that girls too are placed at-risk when fathers are absent. In fact, girls who grow up without fathers underachieve at school, engage in early and promiscuous sexual activity, and have a less secure gender identity.

Why should fathers make such a difference in the lives of girls? The answer to this question lies in the fact that mothers and fathers tend to parent differently. Beginning at the birth of a child, mothers tend to be more verbal with their children, whereas fathers are more physical.

Mothers also tend to encourage personal safety and caution, whereas fathers are more challenging of achievement, independence, and risk-taking. And mothers tend to be more powerful nurturant figures and fathers stronger disciplinarians.

These differences in parenting styles translate into improved child well-being for several reasons. First, research has consistently demonstrated that families socialize children best when they use a combination of nurturance and control. In fact, children reared in such households are found to be friendly, energetic and well-behaved. Given that mothers tend toward nurturance and fathers toward control, children reared in two-parent households are likely to experience this combination.

In contrast, children in father-absent households are likely to experience high levels of parental nurturance, but lower levels of control. High nurturance and low control has been found to be associated with children who have difficulty in self-regulation. For boys this can translate into aggressive acting-out, whereas for girls it frequently results in sexual acting-out.

Second, the "rough and tumble" play of fathers is critical to the success of children for it gives children practice in regulating their own emotions and recognizing the emotional cues of others. And, for reasons that are less intuitively obvious, girls who experience the rough and tumble play of a father, compared to those that do not, have been found to have higher quantitative and verbal skills, better problem-solving abilities, and higher academic achievement levels.

Third, fathers are important to the development of a secure gender identity and appropriate sexuality. While it is intuitively obvious that a boy's interactions with his father teach him what it means to be a man, father involvement is also correlated with secure gender identity in girls.

In fact, the quality of a daughter's relationship with her father is actually a better predictor of a daughter's comfort with her own femininity than is the quality of her relationship with her mother. While the daughter may learn the specifics of the female role from observing her mother, the degree of security and comfort the daughter has in her own femininity is predicted by whether or not her father was nurturing of her when she was young.

Furthermore, if a girl experiences the love of a father who places her well-being above his own and who acts as a natural protector, then the girl is likely to delay sexual relations until she finds such a man herself. If she is denied such fatherly love, then the girl is likely to try to seek it elsewhere--often inappropriately, and often at very young ages.

Our nation's daughters are in trouble, and their troubles are growing worse. The available evidence suggests that improving the well-being of girls depends upon us finding ways to bring fathers back into the home. To do so, we will have to deepen our cultural understanding of the importance of fathers to the well-being of children, restore marriage as the valued and respected institution within which to rear children, and reduce the incidence of divorce.


This post was taken from : Mothers Nurture, Fathers Lovingly Control, Written By: Wade F. Horn Published In: Article Publication Date: September 1, 1996 Publisher: Headway

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A story about a house . . .

When The Blocks Aren’t There . . .

And, everyone that drove by the house....looked on the outside...thought, “That must be a nice house on the inside too.” Well, just because a house looks so nice on the outside, doesn’t mean it’s so nice on the inside.

The house in this story wasn’t so nice on the inside. See, the dad and the mom didn’t know about all the blocks they were suppose to give their little girl. For some reason the dad and the mom didn’t understand God’s ways and God’s heart toward being responsible to give their children building blocks so that they would grow and mature and have a life that didn’t hurt quite so much.

See when dads and moms don’t give their little girls the right kind of blocks they often start to grow up feeling different, not so special, not good enough, not pretty enough and then not protected enough in the right ways. Those blocks from dad gives a girl good tools to help her make good decisions and good friends.

And, when these little girls don’t get all their blocks they don’t always know in their heart and their head that God loves them. They don’t know that He says they are made in His Image, made for Relationship, are very special and have a unique purpose—so they wear masks instead.

Sometimes those little girls make choices that aren’t such good ones and those choices hurt for a very long time and even leave scars in their heart.

Sometimes those little girls make choices that aren’t very good ones and those choices hurt for a very long time and even leave scars in their heart . . .and…..they grow up with wrong ideas about men, marriage, God, how to do life and relationships…..and then they feel hurt on the inside.

Those blocks from dad gives a girl good tools to help her make good decisions and good friends.

And, when these little girls don’t get all their blocks they don’t always know in their heart and their head that God loves them. They don’t know that He says they are made in His Image, made for Relationship, are very special and have a unique purpose—so they wear masks instead.

Sometimes those little girls make choices that aren’t such good ones and those choices hurt for a very long time and even leave scars in their heart.

Sometimes those little girls make choices that aren’t such good ones and those choices hurt for a very long time and even leave scars in their heart.

The End

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Thoughts on Body Image and Today's Woman

Body image (for a woman) is a mind thing—not a body thing. Media and other voices seek to distort true beauty. True beauty is that which comes from a woman’s soul—and it’s a work of God in that woman.


Without digressing into eating disorder issues or other body image perfection additions—please consider the wonderful realities that no matter what we THINK of our body image—God says we were fearfully and wonderfully made. It was in the secret place of our mother’s womb (Psalm 139) that He carefully and specifically knit us together. We are awesome image bearers of God and He delights in us.


The Song of Solomon is a good book to read. The mind set of the Shulamite must become ours, “I am dark, but lovely.” (SOS 1:5) May I challenge you to do whatever it takes to care about being healthy (starting from the inside out) rather than perfect.

May I challenge you to do the best with what God has given you and thank Him daily for your life and health and strength. If you continually struggle with body image—be vulnerable enough to talk it out in a Coffee Talk Group or connect with Linda, a Life Coach Mom. Get to the roots of wrong, destructive thinking.

God wants all women to walk like a queen—and biblical queens aren’t concerned if they’re perfect enough.

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How God Built Girls (Women)

Family Systems and Dad's Building Blocks
God built girls to be loved, nurtured, doted on, cared for and kissed and cuddled a lot. He built little girls to need hugs and tender mom touches. He built little girls to need to hear words like, “I love you my precious, darling princess and I’m so proud of you.”

He built little girls to be held on laps, taken for walks, and hear talks about God and how good He is. He built little girls to be protected and provided for (food, shelter, clothes, education). He built little girls to feel cared for and to be spoken gently too. He built little girls to LOVE being a girl!

Good Mothering
Good mothering gives little girls a needed foundation to love being a girl. God wants moms to provide the secure, nurturing place for her little daughter so she can grow up and feel secure and know that it’s wonderful being FEMALE. You'll know if it's happened because of the sparkle in the eye. (This is my 3rd granddaughter.)

Culture tries to make it not so wonderful—but God says it is. Culture has distorted the beautiful image of being a woman. Fashion magazines, TV and things like that give an “impression” that is damaging.

If you have daughters, what impression are you giving them? If you have sons how are you modeling being a Biblical woman? In what ways are you modeling respect?

Missing Blocks & Shame . . .
Too bad... some girls just don’t know how special they are because their mom or dad never told them they were . . . or someone told them they were stupid, or ugly . . . or a little fat . . . too short . . . or simply just not good enough . . . or maybe mom or dad were simply silent.

The family system was shame-based—and behaviorally oriented—love and acceptance was based on what the girl did or didn’t do. But God’s opinion is different. And, He’s the final say so—He’s the authority—because HE made US!

It really doesn’t matter what anyone else says about YOU—it matters what God says about YOU because He’s the ONE who created you...He had the first thoughts about you and designed YOU to bear His Image and to have a real relationship with Him (and others)...and He made YOU incredibly special.

There comes a point in a woman's life where she must see that she IS a treasure - God's treasure and she must take away the authority that she gave to others to define her . . . that authority that doesn't line up with what God says. Brides (married or not) need to do that.

Image . . .
Women that struggle in knowing they are a 10 or like I say, "The Best Thing Since Sliced Bread!" will not walk like a 10. Men with wrong motives will see that and take advantage of that. Hmmm...you know what I mean.

A lot of women seem to struggle with body image. Thoughts of size 0 perfection, flawless faces, no gray, California babe and lustful voluptuousness can gnaw at an American woman’s mind descending her to a pit of shame for not measuring up—to what? - to whose yardstick? - media? - immature men? - a father’s critical words—a mother wanting her daughter to be “perfect” so she (the mother) will “seem perfect” to others? It's an issue of authority.

Body image (for a woman) is a mind thing—not a body thing. Media and other voices seek to distort true beauty. True beauty is that which comes from a woman’s soul—and it’s a work of God in that woman. Without digressing into eating disorder issues or other body image perfection additions—please consider the wonderful realities that no matter what we THINK of our body image—God says we were fearfully and wonderfully made. It was in the secret place of our mother’s womb (Psalm 139) that He carefully and specifically knit us together. We are awesome image bearers of God and He delights in us.

Did you ever think of it this way: when a woman doesn't see herself as God's awesome and beautiful creation, she is insulting her Creator. It's like saying, "O' Creator, You did a poor job here." So, let's not insult our Creator. He only does great work.
creation

The Song of Solomon is a good book to read. The mind set of the Shulamite must become ours, “I am dark, but lovely.” (SOS 1:5) Let me encourage you to do whatever it takes to care about being healthy (starting from the inside out) rather than perfect.

Let me also encourage you to do the best with what God has given you and thank Him daily for your life and health and strength. If you continually struggle with body image—be vulnerable enough to talk it out in a Coffee Talk Group, so that you can get to the roots of wrong, destructive thinking.

God wants all women to walk like a queen—and biblical queens aren’t concerned if they’re perfect enough.

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Made in the Image of God

When God created YOU and Me—He created us to love Him and to learn to love others. You are His amazing creation! He made YOU special– absolutely unique—one of a kind—no one else like YOU! YOU were created to be special! As a matter of fact—there’s no other girl like YOU. Everything about YOU God put together—on purpose—your eye color, hair color, bone structure, the way you think and learn, and all those special talents you have. He did a good job when He made YOU!

After God created the heavens and the earth and filled it with beauty – He created man – the Bible says He created you and me in His own image. God wrote in Genesis 1:27 “So, God created man in His own image, in the image of God He created him, male and female He created them.” There’s nothing else in all the earth that’s been created by God that is IN HIS IMAGE. How special is that!

Do you know that you are the most awesome work of God’s hand? Made in His image, above His creation and all created beings, you are the crown of His creation! Unlike the animals, humans beings made in His Image are morally responsible beings. We have capacity to choose deliberately, to think and love deeply, to create awesomely, to be in intimate relationship with Him and others, to rule, reflect, remember and resolve conflict.

Get this, in you, is the very image of God. Wow! No matter how messed up or insecure a girl might feel and no matter what her self-image is, SHE have a God image because He designed her. No matter whether she thinks she’s not pretty or not smart - God totally loves her and thinks she’s special. He loves her so much that He made a plan for her to join His family and have a special, one-on-one relationship with just Him.

He wants to take all the messed up parts and turn them around. See, when a girl invites Jesus into her life to take over, she enters into a personal relationship with God as His darling daughter. Jesus has so much for us. He said, “I came that they may have life and have it to the max.” Until we get to know our heavenly DAD, we don’t really live the ultimate life.

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The One Thing I Know . . .

Grandkiddos spent the night and Ivana (like I figured) came strolling in our room about 10:30 and just about scared the bi-geebies out of me.

She always comes in. She stands right next to my side of the bed, "doe - does" (those are blankets) in arm, quietly, waiting, little taps on my head . . . "Nana, can I sleep with you and Poppi?"

One thing I know . . . is that probably when she's four, she won't come so softly, nor have the need to sleep next to Nana.

One thing I know . . . is that, even though, I have a sorta sleepless night (her knees jab my back and periodically she'll toss both legs over my stomach (that's interesting in the night) . . . I'm delighted that she feels safe enough to let me make her safe enough. I will miss the nights and the "nuggles."

Another thing I know . . . is that many women struggle with Father - God being safe enough to make them feel safe enough.

When father isn't protective or absent or present or not there - it sure skews a girls perspective of Father God.

The importance of dad's building blocks
How you view your marriage and life and God today has been effected by your “girl-hood” experiences and the relationship with your father from yesterday. What a father says or doesn’t say effects little girls deeply. And, any un healed father-wounds often drive us to wear masks. I pray that the Holy Spirit will reveal to every woman who wears a mask to protect your life pain, that you will know that only the pain you reveal can be healed.

My pastor husband is teaching us, the sweet sheep, through the book of Matthew. This past Sunday, the pasture we ate in was the Beatitudes.

Jesus said that those who mourn are blessed because then they shall be comforted (Mathew 5:4). Comfort comes after mourning, and the woman who has learned to be real with her pain and mourn will be a blessed woman.
Surely, this is not the culture's thinking—culture says to hide your pain, pretend everything’s OK and wear cute masks so that no one will know that you aren’t OK and that you hurt on the inside.

God says, “you’re OK” cause He made you in His Image. God says, “I love you just how you are and He says "I will never leave you or forsake you and I long for you to be free in your areas of bondage that you hide behind and violate love by self-protective stances.”

God says, “I want to heal your father-wounds and take off your masks so that you can YADA (know in Hebrew) me as the Ultimate Father.

How a woman relates to her dad is how she'll relate to her husband.

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Wednesday, December 12, 2007

Wednesday - Grandkiddos in the Kitchen








OK, so our cookies are made into Dreidels, Menorahs and Star of Davids. My husband is Jewish, and in case you're wondering how to play dreidel - here's how! These photos were taken December 07 and I imagine will have more to take this December!


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Monday, December 10, 2007

Life on Monday

Mondays are my days of calendaring, menu planning, shopping and a general gearing up for a great week. I love Mondays.

Many pastors and their wives take Mondays off. So, for Michael and it's also a download day.





This morning, in addition to making the bed, cleaning the bathroom, making breakfast, I spent time planning, reading, writing thoughts, calendaring and writing some posts over at Money Making Mamas ( 5 things to NEVER buy new and 5 great beauty buys at the drugstore) , I spoke with a few friends about our get together for this Thursday night. I'm excited to finally have this Girl Night happen. I'll cook up a big pot of Autumn Harvest soup, Melissa will bring a fresh baguette (thanks Melissa), we'll watch the movie: The Name Sake, and then drink tea and then probably talk about what it all means.

In just a few minutes, I'll head out the door to run my errands. Woo hoo!

Then, after I come home and put the loot away, Michael and I will head to Zane and Ivana's home - to make dinner, take pictures and bake some Christmas cookies.

All in the day and life of a woman who lives it on-purpose.

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Sunday, December 09, 2007

Hot out of the oven...from Pami

Maybe next time we'll get to see Pami's apron :-)...she write: No picture of the aprons my girlfriend & I donned (forgot), but here's our finale after a few hours of baking today!

The gingerbread cookies turned out really good - dark molasses might be the magic. Didn't get to the Lime Meltaways, may do those later.

Other ones are molasses sugar cookes, my Tita's biscotti (with anise and yellow raisins) recipe, and no-bake cookies. Tomorrow I'll gift package them for neighbors!

Thanks again for the recipes :) Pami


My response? Yum.....

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