My Aunt Liz takes care of a little girl, Lillie, who is in need of a wheel-chair accessible van. Lillie is in a contest to help raise awareness for mobility and hopes to win a van for her needs. You can help by submitting a vote for Lillie everyday through May 12th.
CLICK HERE TO VOTE FOR LILLIE
Lillie's story:
This is Lillie, our beautiful 3 ½ year old little girl. She suffered a rare in utero stroke which caused massive brain damage. As a result, she has been diagnosed with Spastic Quadriplegia Cerebral Palsy, Cortical Vision Impairment, Respiratory Insufficiency, and Lennox Gastaut Syndrome. She continues to experience multiple seizures each day, which cause even more damage on a daily basis. In the short time Lillie has been with us, she has been hospitalized more than 25 times due to her many serious complications.
Developmentally speaking, Lillie is comparable to a 3-6 month-old child. She is non-mobile, non-verbal, and must be fed through a g-tube. She attends physical therapy 5 times/week, occupational therapy three times/week, and speech therapy 3 times/week. This year she even started school. While I won’t say it was ever easy to transport Lillie, when she was a baby, we could manage. But in spite of herself, Lillie continues to grow like any normal little girl. As she gets bigger and heavier, it has become more and more difficult to manage her into and out of her chair and the car. Without proper transportation, before long, we’ll be unable to get her to all of her necessary appointments.
Lillie has two amazing brothers who love her tremendously. Since her birth, I have had to devote so much time to taking care of her that I have been unable to work. My husband is an amazing man who works so so hard, but with just his modest salary supporting our family of 5, things have been tight. While it pains me to have to ask for help, we are determined to maximize Lillie’s quality of life, and we just don’t have the resources for the kind of transportation that Lillie requires.
I’ve learned much in the past 3 years about life and the people around me, but most of all, I’ve learned how much we all take for granted. But not Lillie. In spite of all of her hurdles, she shows such spirit, and fights hard every day to claim and keep her life. This baby is the most inspiring, strong-willed, person I have ever known. Through her, we’ve learned to celebrate even the tiniest progress and look forward to more. Because, with all of her setbacks, and there are plenty, Lillie keeps on smiling. She is truly my hero.
CLICK HERE TO VOTE FOR LILLIE
Thursday, March 28, 2013
Regrowing Celery from celery?
Source: chickensintheroad.com via Sara on Pinterest
I LOVE this idea for my garden! Did you know that you can grow another complete celery stalk from the bottom piece that you cut off and throw away? Cut off the end that you would normally “throw away” and then place it in a small dish filled with warm water. Next “pot” the celery stalk (Stalk Side Up) or place in your garden. Just dig a small hole, fill it with water and set the end in the hole, then cover it up with an inch or so of soil. Water thoroughly. That is it! Now the “end” will grow into a full stalk of celery! Rinse and Repeat and you never have to buy celery again! Talk about a way to save money! This photo is taken on day 7 and as you can see it is working!
ORIGINAL ARTICLE HERE
The pictures and story above are NOT mine. However I do grow celery like this at home - it works!
Wednesday, March 20, 2013
Travel Day -> Easter Island
Easter Island (Rapa Nui: Rapa Nui, Spanish: Isla de Pascua) is a Polynesian island in the southeastern Pacific Ocean, at the southeasternmost point of the Polynesian Triangle. Easter Island is famous for its 887 extant monumental statues, called moai, created by the early Rapanui people. It is a UNESCO World Heritage Site, with much of the island protected within Rapa Nui National Park. In recent times the island has served as a warning of the cultural and environmental dangers of exploitation. Ethnographers and archaeologists also blame diseases carried by European sailors and Peruvian slave raiding of the 1860s for devastating the local peoples.
Easter Island is one of the most remote inhabited islands in the world. The nearest inhabited land (50 residents) is Pitcairn Island at 2,075 kilometres (1,289 mi), and the nearest continental point lies in central Chile, at 3,512 kilometres (2,182 mi).
Easter Island is a special territory of Chile that was annexed in 1888. Administratively, it belongs to the Valparaíso Region and more specifically, is the only commune of the Province Isla de Pascua.
CLICK HERE TO READ MORE ABOUT EASTER ISLAND
CLICK HERE FOR 5 REASONS TO VISIT EASTER ISLAND
CLICK HERE TO VIEW A SLIDESHOW OF EASTER ISLAND
CLICK HERE TO VIEW EXCAVATIONS OF EASTER ISLAND'S STATUES
CLICK HERE FOR FACTS ABOUT EASTER ISLAND
CLICK HERE FOR THE MYSTERY OF EASTER ISLAND
Easter Island is a special territory of Chile that was annexed in 1888. Administratively, it belongs to the Valparaíso Region and more specifically, is the only commune of the Province Isla de Pascua.
CLICK HERE TO READ MORE ABOUT EASTER ISLAND
CLICK HERE FOR 5 REASONS TO VISIT EASTER ISLAND
CLICK HERE TO VIEW A SLIDESHOW OF EASTER ISLAND
CLICK HERE TO VIEW EXCAVATIONS OF EASTER ISLAND'S STATUES
CLICK HERE FOR FACTS ABOUT EASTER ISLAND
CLICK HERE FOR THE MYSTERY OF EASTER ISLAND
Wednesday, March 13, 2013
Tuesday, March 5, 2013
Find a recycling center
Do you have something unusual to recycle? Click the website following website for recycling facilities of all kinds!
RECYCLING CENTER
SuperFoods-> Wild Salmon
Once upon a time (actually not very long ago), people came to believe that fat was a murderous monster and the ideal diet was completely devoid of daily fat whatsoever. It was the era of fat-free. Fat-free salad dressings, non-fat cakes and cookies, non-fat soups and casseroles. Even bottles of fruit juices proudly trumpeted “a fat-free food” on their labels. (Was there ever a fatty cranberry juice?) Why this fear of fat? It all started as a well-intentioned campaign to improve health. The second half of the twentieth century saw an alarming epidemic of heart disease. Countless studies sought reasons for this epidemic. It became clear that smoking, a sedentary lifestyle, and a high-fat diet were linked to the rising tide of cardiovascular disease. The lesson was obvious: to reduce your risk of heart disease, a major killer, you should cut as much fat as possible out of your diet. Cholesterol became a household word and Americans became fat-phobic.
It’s taken years for the more complicated and interesting truth to emerge. First, research indicating that all fat is not bad began to reach the public. We all needed an education in dietary fat and, bit by bit, we got one. In a nutshell, we learned that we derive four basic types of fat from food-saturated fat, trans-fat (partially hydrogenated oils), monounsaturated fat and polyunsaturated fat. The news on saturated fat hasn’t changed: saturated fat—found primarily in red meat, full-fat dairy products, and some tropical oils—has well-established negative health effects, increasing your risk of diabetes, coronary heart disease, stroke, some cancers, and obesity. One researcher, writing in the Journal of the American Dietetic Association, concluded that “reducing dietary intake of saturated fatty acids may prevent thousands of cases of coronary heart disease and save billions of dollars in related costs. There’s little positive about saturated fat and it should make up no more than 7 percent of your fat calories per day.
Trans-fats—listed on food labels as “partially hydrogenated vegetable oil”—are also bad, probably even worse than saturated fat. Trans-fats were created by chemists seeking a fat that would store better than animal fats. They were an attempt to lengthen the shelf life of foodstuffs.
Remember, there are good fats. The good guys in the fat family are the monounsaturated fats—the kinds found in olive and canola oils. These fats not only protect your cardiovascular system, they also lower the risk of insulin resistance, a physiologic state that can lead to diabetes and possibly cancer.
Finally, we come to polyunsaturated fatty acids. Both omega-6 /linoleic, or LA, fat) and omega-3 (alpha linolenic, or ALA, fat) are so-called essential polyunsaturated fatty acids (EFAs). Our bodies cannot manufacture these two fats and therefore we must rely on dietary intake to avoid a deficiency in these essential (for life) fats. Omega-6 fatty acids are currently overabundant in the typical Western diet. They are present in corn, safflower, cottonseed, and sunflower oils. Virtually no one in America is deficient in these ubiquitous fatty acids. If you look at almost any packaged food, you’re going to see one of these oils as an ingredient.
Let’s look for a minute at the omega-3 class of polyunsaturated fat. Omega 3 fats come in two distinct forms: plant derived (ALA) and largely marine species derived (EPA/DHA). With each passing month, additional studies are being published about the health benefits of omega-3s. Unfortunately, many Americans are currently deficient in the omega-3 class of essential fatty acids. Omega-3 fatty acids—the ones that help make salmon a SuperFood—haven’t been included in adequate amounts in our diet, partly because of lack of knowledge on the part of the public and also because they’ve been “processed out” of our modern diet. This deficiency has long-term and disastrous health consequences for many people. Indeed, William S. Harris, writing in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, has said: “In terms of its potential impact on health in the Western world, the Omega 3 story may someday be viewed as one of the most important in the history of modern nutritional science.” Dr. Evan Cameron, from the Linus Pauling Institute, has said: “Our epidemic of heart disease and cancer may be the result of a fish oil deficiency so enormous we fail to recognize it.” The bottom line: it’s not just okay to include omega-3 fatty acids in your diet, it’s imperative to do so if you want to restore a critical balance in your body that is most likely out of whack.
Enter salmon. Salmon is one of the richest, tastiest, readily available sources of marine-derived omega-3 fatty acids. By including wild salmon in your diet two to four times a week you should achieve optimal protection against a multitude of diseases that have been associated with low intakes of these critical fats.
People who eat diets with the optimum balance of essential fatty acids manage to avoid many common ailments. Eskimos in Greenland first brought attention to the question of fat in the diet because they had little heart disease despite a diet high in fat. It’s interesting to note that cultures that have high omega-3 consumption in fish have far less depression than those whose diet is dominated by omega-6 fatty acids. In fact, in one fascinating epidemiological study, fish consumption was the most significant variable in comparing levels of depression and coronary heart disease.
Prevent cancer. Research is just beginning to demonstrate that omega-3 fatty acids may play a role in preventing both breast and colon cancers.
Prevents age-related macular degeneration. In the Nurses’ Health Study, those who ate fish four or more times a week had a lower risk of age-related macular degeneration than those who ate three or fewer fish meals per month. The most prevalent fatty acid in our retina is DHA, and the primary dietary source of this “good fat” is salmon and other so-called heart-healthy fish. DHA also seems to reduce some of the adverse effects of sunlight on retinal cells.
Mitigate autoimmune diseases such as lupus, rheumatoid arthritis, and Raynaud’s disease. Researchers believe that the anti-inflammatory abilities of omega-3 fatty acids are what help reduce the symptoms of autoimmune diseases as well as prolong the survival of those who suffer from them. Multiple studies have substantiated these results.
Relieve depression and a host of mental health problems. Perhaps the most interesting research on omega-3 fatty acids involved their relationship to mental health ailments such as depression, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, dementia, schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, and Alzheimer’s disease. Our brains are surprisingly fatty: over 60 percent of the brain is fat. Omega-3 fatty acids promote the brain’s ability to regulate mood-related signals. They are a crucial constituent of brain-cell membranes and are needed for normal nervous system function, mood regulation, and attention and memory functions.
It’s taken years for the more complicated and interesting truth to emerge. First, research indicating that all fat is not bad began to reach the public. We all needed an education in dietary fat and, bit by bit, we got one. In a nutshell, we learned that we derive four basic types of fat from food-saturated fat, trans-fat (partially hydrogenated oils), monounsaturated fat and polyunsaturated fat. The news on saturated fat hasn’t changed: saturated fat—found primarily in red meat, full-fat dairy products, and some tropical oils—has well-established negative health effects, increasing your risk of diabetes, coronary heart disease, stroke, some cancers, and obesity. One researcher, writing in the Journal of the American Dietetic Association, concluded that “reducing dietary intake of saturated fatty acids may prevent thousands of cases of coronary heart disease and save billions of dollars in related costs. There’s little positive about saturated fat and it should make up no more than 7 percent of your fat calories per day.
Trans-fats—listed on food labels as “partially hydrogenated vegetable oil”—are also bad, probably even worse than saturated fat. Trans-fats were created by chemists seeking a fat that would store better than animal fats. They were an attempt to lengthen the shelf life of foodstuffs.
Remember, there are good fats. The good guys in the fat family are the monounsaturated fats—the kinds found in olive and canola oils. These fats not only protect your cardiovascular system, they also lower the risk of insulin resistance, a physiologic state that can lead to diabetes and possibly cancer.
Finally, we come to polyunsaturated fatty acids. Both omega-6 /linoleic, or LA, fat) and omega-3 (alpha linolenic, or ALA, fat) are so-called essential polyunsaturated fatty acids (EFAs). Our bodies cannot manufacture these two fats and therefore we must rely on dietary intake to avoid a deficiency in these essential (for life) fats. Omega-6 fatty acids are currently overabundant in the typical Western diet. They are present in corn, safflower, cottonseed, and sunflower oils. Virtually no one in America is deficient in these ubiquitous fatty acids. If you look at almost any packaged food, you’re going to see one of these oils as an ingredient.
Let’s look for a minute at the omega-3 class of polyunsaturated fat. Omega 3 fats come in two distinct forms: plant derived (ALA) and largely marine species derived (EPA/DHA). With each passing month, additional studies are being published about the health benefits of omega-3s. Unfortunately, many Americans are currently deficient in the omega-3 class of essential fatty acids. Omega-3 fatty acids—the ones that help make salmon a SuperFood—haven’t been included in adequate amounts in our diet, partly because of lack of knowledge on the part of the public and also because they’ve been “processed out” of our modern diet. This deficiency has long-term and disastrous health consequences for many people. Indeed, William S. Harris, writing in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, has said: “In terms of its potential impact on health in the Western world, the Omega 3 story may someday be viewed as one of the most important in the history of modern nutritional science.” Dr. Evan Cameron, from the Linus Pauling Institute, has said: “Our epidemic of heart disease and cancer may be the result of a fish oil deficiency so enormous we fail to recognize it.” The bottom line: it’s not just okay to include omega-3 fatty acids in your diet, it’s imperative to do so if you want to restore a critical balance in your body that is most likely out of whack.
Enter salmon. Salmon is one of the richest, tastiest, readily available sources of marine-derived omega-3 fatty acids. By including wild salmon in your diet two to four times a week you should achieve optimal protection against a multitude of diseases that have been associated with low intakes of these critical fats.
People who eat diets with the optimum balance of essential fatty acids manage to avoid many common ailments. Eskimos in Greenland first brought attention to the question of fat in the diet because they had little heart disease despite a diet high in fat. It’s interesting to note that cultures that have high omega-3 consumption in fish have far less depression than those whose diet is dominated by omega-6 fatty acids. In fact, in one fascinating epidemiological study, fish consumption was the most significant variable in comparing levels of depression and coronary heart disease.
Prevent cancer. Research is just beginning to demonstrate that omega-3 fatty acids may play a role in preventing both breast and colon cancers.
Prevents age-related macular degeneration. In the Nurses’ Health Study, those who ate fish four or more times a week had a lower risk of age-related macular degeneration than those who ate three or fewer fish meals per month. The most prevalent fatty acid in our retina is DHA, and the primary dietary source of this “good fat” is salmon and other so-called heart-healthy fish. DHA also seems to reduce some of the adverse effects of sunlight on retinal cells.
Mitigate autoimmune diseases such as lupus, rheumatoid arthritis, and Raynaud’s disease. Researchers believe that the anti-inflammatory abilities of omega-3 fatty acids are what help reduce the symptoms of autoimmune diseases as well as prolong the survival of those who suffer from them. Multiple studies have substantiated these results.
Relieve depression and a host of mental health problems. Perhaps the most interesting research on omega-3 fatty acids involved their relationship to mental health ailments such as depression, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, dementia, schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, and Alzheimer’s disease. Our brains are surprisingly fatty: over 60 percent of the brain is fat. Omega-3 fatty acids promote the brain’s ability to regulate mood-related signals. They are a crucial constituent of brain-cell membranes and are needed for normal nervous system function, mood regulation, and attention and memory functions.
Friday, March 1, 2013
March 2013 Schedule
Tues. March 5
9:15-12:00 One-on-One By Appointment Only
1:15-4:45 Open Lab
Weds. March 6
9:15-12:00 Open Lab
1:15-2:15 English As A Second Language
2:15-4:45 Open Lab
Thurs. March 7
9:15-12:00 Open Lab
1:15-4:45 Open Lab
Tues. March 12
9:15-12:00 One-on-One By Appointment Only
1:15-4:45 Open Lab
Weds. March 13
9:15-12:00 Open Lab
1:15-2:15 Home Users Club – Meet in the Community Room.
2:15-4:45 Open Lab
Thurs. March 14
9:15-12:00 Open Lab
1:15-2:15 Fun with Keyboarding – Learn the keyboard using thought-provoking exercises. Not only is this class helpful for your typing skills, it gets your brain going AND we have a lot of fun!
2:15-4:45 Open Lab
Tues. March 19
9:15-12:00 One-on-One By Appointment Only
1:15-4:45 CLOSED – Spring Cleaning!
Weds. March 20
9:15-12:00 Open Lab
1:15-2:15 Travel Day – We’re going to Easter Island! Don’t worry it’s a tropical island so it will be nice and warm! Sign-up sheet on bulletin board.
3:00-4:45 Open Lab
Thurs. March 21
9:15-12:00 Open Lab
1:15-3:15 Open Lab
3:15-4:45 Literati Challenge – Let’s give this another try! Sign-up sheet on bulletin board.
Tues. March 26
9:15-12:00 One-on-One By Appointment Only
1:15-4:45 Open Lab
Weds. March 27
9:15-12:00 Open Lab
1:15-2:15 Newsletter/Bulletin Board Class – sign-up sheet on bulletin board
2:15-4:45 Open Lab
Thurs. March 28
9:15-12:00 Open Lab
2:00 Monthly Birthday Party & Easter Celebration
________________________________________________
One-on-One Appointments
Tuesday, March 5th, March 12th, March 19th, & March 26th. Availability is limited so sign-up TODAY!!! Sign-up sheet on bulletin board outside the Computer Learning Center.
_______________________________________________
Travel Days
Throughout 2013 we will be visiting many tropical islands, US cities and even venturing to Europe! Sign-up sheets will be posted on the bulletin board outside the Computer Room but you can also travel with us from the comfort of your own computer. Just visit www.sfpnn.blogspot.com on the day we travel!
9:15-12:00 One-on-One By Appointment Only
1:15-4:45 Open Lab
Weds. March 6
9:15-12:00 Open Lab
1:15-2:15 English As A Second Language
2:15-4:45 Open Lab
Thurs. March 7
9:15-12:00 Open Lab
1:15-4:45 Open Lab
Tues. March 12
9:15-12:00 One-on-One By Appointment Only
1:15-4:45 Open Lab
Weds. March 13
9:15-12:00 Open Lab
1:15-2:15 Home Users Club – Meet in the Community Room.
2:15-4:45 Open Lab
Thurs. March 14
9:15-12:00 Open Lab
1:15-2:15 Fun with Keyboarding – Learn the keyboard using thought-provoking exercises. Not only is this class helpful for your typing skills, it gets your brain going AND we have a lot of fun!
2:15-4:45 Open Lab
Tues. March 19
9:15-12:00 One-on-One By Appointment Only
1:15-4:45 CLOSED – Spring Cleaning!
Weds. March 20
9:15-12:00 Open Lab
1:15-2:15 Travel Day – We’re going to Easter Island! Don’t worry it’s a tropical island so it will be nice and warm! Sign-up sheet on bulletin board.
3:00-4:45 Open Lab
Thurs. March 21
9:15-12:00 Open Lab
1:15-3:15 Open Lab
3:15-4:45 Literati Challenge – Let’s give this another try! Sign-up sheet on bulletin board.
Tues. March 26
9:15-12:00 One-on-One By Appointment Only
1:15-4:45 Open Lab
Weds. March 27
9:15-12:00 Open Lab
1:15-2:15 Newsletter/Bulletin Board Class – sign-up sheet on bulletin board
2:15-4:45 Open Lab
Thurs. March 28
9:15-12:00 Open Lab
2:00 Monthly Birthday Party & Easter Celebration
________________________________________________
One-on-One Appointments
Tuesday, March 5th, March 12th, March 19th, & March 26th. Availability is limited so sign-up TODAY!!! Sign-up sheet on bulletin board outside the Computer Learning Center.
_______________________________________________
Travel Days
Throughout 2013 we will be visiting many tropical islands, US cities and even venturing to Europe! Sign-up sheets will be posted on the bulletin board outside the Computer Room but you can also travel with us from the comfort of your own computer. Just visit www.sfpnn.blogspot.com on the day we travel!
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