Wonderful and Crazy Wednesday

I am writing to say what an excellent product you have! I’ve used it all of my married life, as my Mom always told me it was the best. Now that I am in my fifties I find it even better!

About a month ago, I spilled some red wine on my new white blouse. My inconsiderate and uncaring husband started to belittle me about how clumsy I was, and generally started becoming a pain in the neck.

One thing led to another and somehow I ended up with his blood on my new white blouse! I grabbed my bottle of Tide with bleach alternative, and to my surprise and satisfaction, all of the stains came out!

In fact, the stains came out so well the detectives who came by yesterday told me that the DNA tests on my blouse were negative and then my attorney called and said that I was no longer considered a suspect in the disappearance of my husband.

What a relief! Going through menopause is bad enough without being a murder suspect! I thank you, once again, for having a great product.

Well, I gotta go – I have to write to the Hefty bag people.

Monday’s Tattler

This week at the Garden School we have a new little newspaper called the Flower Box. It’s a parents’ guide through the week. It was put on every child’s folder this morning. Please read it to know what we are doing this week.

On Monday, it’s a regular school day. Spelling lists were given out to the middle and top groups. Spelling test will be on Thursday afternoon. Children should learn as many words as they can. The test is to write each word so that it forms a sentence. These spelling tests will be made into a book as a keepsake. Every page will be about a field trip we took this summer.

Tuesday and Wednesday are swim days. We leave at 10:40 and return at 3:15. Children must wear flip flops or beach sandals. Your child’s suit has been laundered. Please do not take it home. We will be having a swim club as soon as we can. Children who can swim or who graduate to the deeper parts of the pool will be in the club. This encourages children to do their best and learn to swim. It’s an important part of childhood.

Thursday is a regular school day.

Friday is field trip day. We are leaving at 8:00 a.m. and returning at 5:00 p.m. Please send children to school in shorts, the school green shirt, socks, shoes, and sunscreen. Teachers will not be sun screening children that day with the exception of faces.

We will not be using medals this summer. It is too dangerous to take children to the playground wearing something around their necks. For the summer we will be using a disciplinary scheme of Popsicle sticks. If your child is misbehaving to the point of belligerence, hurtful behavior or dangerous disobedience, he will get a Popsicle stick in an envelope which parents will find at the front of the school by the parent board. Earning three Popsicle sticks means the child may not attend the field trip on Friday. Children who misbehave at home can’t be trusted to behave in the next state.

We are trying new casserole lunches at school. Today’s lunch was pizza casserole. It is made with beef, tomato sauce, whole grain noodles, mozzarella cheese, and pepperoni. The kids loved it and ate “the whole thing…”

We have added a sandwich this week. Hard salami. Kamden asked for it twice, and I bought it this weekend. This is their summer. If they want it, Miss Judy will provide it if possible.

Parents are welcomed to come on field trips. Please let me know in advance, and the cost is $25.00.

Sunday’s Plate


Often on Sunday I post a Garden School recipe that the kids are really enjoying. This summer we are trying out some new casserole recipes because during the winter the kids loved two things: the breakfast casserole with potatoes, bacon, cheese and eggs, and the lasagna we made a couple of times.

This summer on Mondays, we will be trying several new casserole treasures. The one we had last week was spaghetti casserole with cream cheese and sour cream filling. The kids loved it. This week we will be having pizza casserole.

Next week we will be having a ham, chicken, pork tenderloin, sweet potato, apple thing I think they will like as well.

When I was on vacation, I bought three cookbooks – I buy cookbooks every week because I love new ideas. I bought one on pot luck, and one on snacks. The pot luck cookbook had a lot of these casseroles, and I thought, “mmmmm, they liked the breakfast one, why not….”

Along with the casserole recipes, there was a recipe for butterscotch muffins. It’s made with pudding. So today, while at Schnucks, I bought not only butterscotch pudding, I picked up the lemon and the cheesecake puddings. I’m not a pudding by box gal; I’m a scratch pudding person, so this was all news to me!

There was also a pernicious little treat called Rocky Road Bars which we will have for snack tomorrow. New ideas….

The spaghetti casserole was interesting. It had a layer of sour cream and whipped cream cheese. I added a cup of Parmesan cheese. It’s a layered dish of spaghetti sauce, noodles, sauce, cheese, noodles, sauce, cheese, sauce. The kids ate it up.

Tomorrow’s has spaghetti sauce, noodles, mozzarella and pepperoni. I think it will be a hit.

On picnic, I’ve begun taking a new sandwich for the teachers. Children can share once they have had a sandwich with protein. Our new sandwich is chopped vegetables: carrots, celery, broccoli, cauliflower, cucumber, yellow squash, zucchini, and tomatoes lightly salted and spiced. I add ground crab or shrimp. I also take chicken pieces for those who like things fowl :-}

Our children’s sandwiches include: ham, turkey, cheese or any combination therin. Tuna, egg, peanut butter with or without either jam or honey. I added hard salami for this week. We take apples, carrots and dip, watermelon, pickles, whole grain chips, milk and water. It’s a nice spread. We are leaving the cookies at home because the kids eat better without them. We will take them to Louisville to be eaten after the zoo.

We need a parent who is willing to donate 40 lemon lime sodas for after the Zoo. It makes the trip going home much easier. The salt in the soda actually keeps kids from needing to use the bathroom.

Just a plug for something called Tiger tails – this whole grain noodle is a favorite of the kids.

Friday’s Travelor

We had an outstanding day yesterday. It was one of our best ever field trips and it us usually our least. For some reason, going to New Harmony is often just too hot, too much walking, and the kids don’t get it.
We choose New Harmony as a field trip site because of the time it takes to get there. We need to see how the children are behaving close to home before we take them as far away as Louisville.

Also, I’d like to take this opportunity to say that our field trip faculty is outstanding. The old standbys, Judy, Edith and Amy work very well together.

And this year, our young gals, Elise and Leigh are doing field trips too.

The project for faculty is to make every trip as memorable as possible for every single child or what’s the point?

Yesterday, that happened. What a joy.

We had a really nice breakfast together of whole grain orange pancakes and vanilla syrup, juice and milk and headed off on the bus. The children were actually very well behaved on the bus, and all the teachers were delighted. We had one child on the bus who did not go to the bathroom before he left school, and he learned a really good lesson!

We arrived at the Athaneum and used the facility and then took off to the demonstrations at the log houses. We learned about candle making, cooking and housekeeping in a 200 year old house, and then we went to a Harmonist house and learned about how they lived. We saw herbs, tasted homemade bread and ate home churned butter. Some of the kids liked it and some did not. Some of the older girls decided that we need a butter churn so they could make our daily supply of butter. It was easy to see how the chores went between sitting, standing and bending. Truly a balanced day.

We learned about lufa squash, and actually got some seeds to plant. Can’t wait to do this today!

USI was excavating some old crockery at a site where the original Harmonist pottery barn was once located, and we got to look into the “dig.” The kids really enjoyed this.

Then we looked at the roofless church, and the dark garden.

Lunch was eaten in a huge park in New Harmony. It was a beautiful day and the children enjoyed playing on the wonderful playground.

Then it was off to the maze. The kids loved running through this delightful series of paths and plants.

On our trip home, there were 20 children asleep. We came home to chocolate chip cookies and milk and then played outdoors.

It was a splendid day.

Soda and More by Judy Lyden


This is a comment I received that is too important to just post and ignore.

“You also think every obese child is because of soda. I have a heavy child you blamed on soda and she never drinks it. I can see your point but it isn’t always correct.

In all my years of working with very young children, I have never said that soda only makes a child put on the pounds. Yes, it can be a contributor, but it is not really the culprit in most cases. What I have said, and rightly so, is that I have discovered that many children are drinking too many calories during the day. Too many can often be excessive and this can contribute to too many pounds. If that’s soda, it’s absolutely true, but it doesn’t have to be soda. It can be milk, juice, or other things that kids drink.

Let’s look at a child’s diet through the day. Many children from infancy will opt to drink rather than eat because drinking is easier to do than eat. If that lazy habit continues into the toddler stage, and then into the preschool stage, it can offset the balance of calories and cause a child to be heavier. Why?

Drinking is a very interesting thing. Drinking is something that allows a lot of calories to enter the body quickly. You can drink 6 ounces of water in about five seconds. That’s true for any liquid. That’s one of the reasons I think drinkable yogurt is so awful. First, most store bought yogurts are laden with sugar. Many will have as much as 35 grams of sugar in a six ounce container. That’s almost nine teaspoons of sugar per six ounces. If you make that drinkable…

Let’s look at orange juice. Few people would say that orange juice is bad for you, simply because that would be crazy. Oranges are one of the world’s healthiest foods. Check out Worlds Healthiest Foods site; it’s a marvel. Now let’s look at orange juice closely. It takes about an orange to give you two ounces of juice, and that’s a bit of a stretch on some oranges. So if a child is drinking 6 ounces of orange juice, say three times a day, the child is in effect eating 9 oranges in a day. Each orange is about 100 calories, so that the child is consuming 900 calories in orange juice.

Now let’s move on to milk. There is no more wonderful food for kids than milk. Some children don’t drink milk, and that’s a shame because this is an excellent source of vitamin D. At meals, children will often reject dinner and fill up on milk drinking two, or even three glasses. This is a common children’s shill. It allows a child to be “temporarily full.” We see this every day at school. A glass of milk has 120 calories in it. When you double that, the child is drinking his dinner at 240 calories per meal or more, and that is 720 calories if a child has three meals.

Now let’s look at other stuff kids drink through the day. “Mom I’m thirsty,” comes the plea. And more than likely, a child will be given a glass of apple juice. Unfortunately, the apple juice is often the 20% kind which is just sugar water. Hi C, Hawaiian Punch, Koolaid, some of the pouch drinks, and a lot of quick snack drinks are lethal, filled with sugar and loaded with empty calories. Look on the side of your juice bottle to see how much real juice is in it.

Through the day, children will come back to the kitchen over and over for this sugar fix. Even those children consuming a lot of real fruit juice is a concern because ultimately, too much juice is just plain fattening. When you use disposible cups and set those cups out on the counter and add them up at the end of the day, you will probably have to add another 600 calories to the rest of the “drink only” pile of now 2400 calories.

When you add 2400 calories to what a child is eating… you’re shot before you even get off the ground. I know this because I’ve watched it for years. I had four children who would drink thousands of calories in real fruit juice every day for years. As a daughter of the golden west, a Californian by birth, I believe that fruit juice is the golden drink, but I also understand that one has to work off those calories. As a believer in “get out, out won’t kill you,” children need to use their calories playing outdoors hour after hour. Today, that’s not always possible, so the golden drink becomes a real liability. An hour at the park isn’t going to use up that many calories.

Now let’s look at food choices that go with the desire to shill the dinner and escape with a belly filled with drink. There are too many picky eaters today, and I blame a lot of that on junk drinks. Junk drinks say, “It’s only good if it’s sweet.” The sweet expectation is enormous today. When a child really doesn’t like the food basics, won’t eat meat, won’t eat vegetables, won’t eat fruit, but likes bread, pizza, potatoes and pasta, all made from white flour and white sugar, the calorie wheel turns at a prodigious rate, and the nutrition level drops like a stone.

What to do?

This is where the parent needs to re-evaluate drink, because drink is what is usually causing the problem. If a child receives water all day and only a single juice or a single milk at meals, the calorie count will drop a lot in most cases. Water will also build up a natural hunger that will force even the pickiest eater to eat at meal time. Second milk or juice at meals? Water makes a nice block to meal avoidance. And how about seconds on veggies and fruit only? For the child who is looking for the sugar fix of pasta, bread, and potatoes, seconds on fruit and veggies only will put on a pretty good brake.

And as a final note, sippy cups are a detriment to child rearing. Throw them out. They ruin teeth, they add a thousand unnecessary calories, and they are bacteria laden, filled with old spit and often snot out in the air and multiplying by the billions. They create all kinds of health issues. Children don’t need to drink non stop. Neither do adults, and the example of constant drinking by parents holding what amounts to baby bottles or adult sippy cups is what is causing an obese America.

Teaching Thursday

I love my children.

Mom,

I got up this morning at 5:30 (which I guess qualifies me as a full blown adult) and as I was cleaning the kitchen floor I had A&E’s Biography on. Usually at this time in the morning the Biography episodes are on Dick Cheney or someone else that mainstream media doesn’t want anyone to watch…but this morning it was Gene Simmons from the band Kiss.

Now normally, I’d dismiss someone like Gene Simmons because the man dresses up in dragon boots and demon face makeup, and plays in a hard rock band where he spits fake blood at the audience but I had no idea that Gene Simmons was such a normal and seemingly intelligent person.

He came over here from Israel at age 8 with his mother who survived a concentration camp during WWII, has been with the same woman since the early 80’s, has never done any drugs, has two normal kids, didn’t turn his back on Israel to be with the “in crowd” in Hollywood, is socially conservative, speaks 4 languages, publically stated that Islam was a “vile culture” and was a big supporter of the war in Iraq stating:

“I’m ashamed to be surrounded by people calling themselves liberal who are, in my opinion, spitting on the graves of brave American soldiers who gave their life to fight a war that wasn’t theirs…in a country they’ve never been to… simply to liberate the people therein”. In a follow-up, Simmons explained his position and wrote about his love and support for the United States: “I wasn’t born here. But I have a love for this country and its people that knows no bounds. I will forever be grateful to America for going into World War II, when it had nothing to gain, in a country that was far away… and rescued my mother from the Nazi German Concentration Camps. She is alive and I am alive because of America. And, if you have a problem with America, you have a problem with me”

Who knew? The next time someone says something about what kind of person has tattoos or what kind of person does this or that…I’m going to tell them about Gene Simmons…who’s real name is Chaim Witz.

Something New …

Soda Tax Proposal to Help Fund Health Care Reform Stirs Opposition

From the Associated Press.

Advertisers, corn refiners — even addiction treatment centers — have mobilized their lobbyists, reflecting how a tax increase for a handful of popular products can reverberate broadly across Washington’s interest groups

A push for new taxes on soda, beer and wine to help pay for Americans’ health care is stirring up more than just the beverage industry.

Advertisers, corn refiners — even addiction treatment centers — have mobilized their lobbyists, reflecting how a tax increase for a handful of popular products can reverberate broadly across Washington’s interest groups.

The Senate Finance Committee is considering raising taxes on alcohol and imposing a new levy on soda and other naturally sweetened drinks to help pay for overhauling health care. The committee calls them “lifestyle tax proposals,” saying the levies would slow sales of unhealthy products that contribute to rising medical costs.

Soft drink and alcohol lobbyists have snapped into action, though so far their campaigns have been quiet compared to the blaring, multimillion-dollar battles that typify major showdowns.

Their low-key approach is due partly to committee leaders’ warnings to refrain from public attacks or be accused of sabotaging health care overhaul. They’ve also held back because they have faced only modest lobbying from tax proponents, and because they think the proposal may prove so unpopular that it ultimately won’t threaten their businesses.

“They don’t want to call attention to a quietly smoldering fire,” said Rogan Kersh, an associate dean at the Wagner School of Public Service at New York University.

Besides alcohol, drinks with sugar, high fructose corn syrup and similar sweeteners would be targeted, though diet drinks with artificial sweeteners would not. Other industries also are on alert, worried that the idea of “lifestyle taxes” could spread to other products deemed unhealthy.

For more of the story go HERE.

Comment: I think junk should be taxed. If fast food, soda, and other junk foods were taxed, there would be fewer obese children.

Growing Up by Judy Lyden

Every child is different and so is every parent, and the combination of parent and child is infinite, that’s why it’s so interesting. One of the most diverse parts of childhood is growing up – literally stacking on the years one day at a time. Everyone does it differently, and every response is different. So growing up is truly a many splendored thing.

Dictating “HOW” a child is supposed to grow up is a difficult task. When I was first a mother, my doctor handed me the usual growth charts and ability tests for my infant. Because my son was my very first experience of young children, I didn’t know what was normal and what was super normal. I would look at those charts and think, “This is dumb.” My child was WAY beyond those charts, so the very idea that there was “normal” development was lost to a beginner mother with a super child. CHILD SHOULD BEGIN TO SIT UP AT SEVEN MONTHS. Mine had been sitting since month two, and crawling. And he stood up the day he was born.

It was not until my second child that I discovered that not all children are the same. My son had had difficulty with eating non pureed foods and would gag while eating table food along about six months. My second child could eat bacon and eggs at four months. She slept more than the first child, and did not crawl at all. She simply stood at a year and walked. Unlike my first child, my second spoke clearly at ten months. My son was nearly three before he upped a sentence.

The third child was more closely tied to the charts, and the fourth one was a lunatic and screamed and was unmeasurable for the first 3.5 years of her life. So they are all different even in families. Now let’s look at parents.

Every parent, like every child has different ideas about how things should be. Some parents are happy with the charts and happy with the ordinary and healthy child. Some parents are interested in the over achieving child, and that’s great so long as the child is an achiever.

There are battlefields in early childhood that create stumbling blocks for parents and for children. One of these is food, one of these is toileting, one of these is speech, and one is freedom.

The truth is, you can’t make someone eat, use the toilet, talk or be determined about the limits of freedom. There will always be arguments about these things, but there are compromises, and a compromise is the most peaceful way of solving the problems that arise from eating, toileting, talking and freedom.

Let’s look at eating. In a healthy home environment, eating is accomplished four times a day. Breakfast, lunch, snack, and dinner. If times and meals are consistent, then children will understand that there ARE mealtimes and what that means rather quickly in their young lives. When eating is too much a part of freedom, the idea of junk rather than real food becomes the target of the heart. Here the freedom of the parent who thinks non stop eating or no eating at all needs to be reined in for the sake of the family.

Again, if mealtimes are an extension of snack time, and food follows suit – a great big snack several times a day – then children will never learn the value of a real meal. Establishing real meal times for children is the best thing you can do for them. Sitting down together at the table as a family and turning off the TV and talking as a family will keep families together more than any other single thing a family does. Growing up well fed is a gift to the body of a child.

You can’t make a child poop. The secret to toilet training is to start as soon as a child puts a sentence together. A talking child is perfectly able to think well enough to train himself. Children, by the way, train themselves. I was reminded of that recently when I heard my grandson say, “I’m going to use the toilet,” and then did, and that was his toilet training.

Most children are ready between the ages of eighteen months and twenty eight months. By three, a child is not interested in pleasing anyone but himself, and will often put off training himself to satisfy himself. He knows exactly what he is doing, and will not accommodate anyone BUT himself. So grabbing a child early and introducing him to the toilet and making the effort early is a great idea. Ultimately, it’s his job to do this. By making him somewhat responsible for his mistakes, he will quickly train. It takes about three days to train a child.

Talking is another growing up problem for some families. Parents will often let the TV do the talking they should be doing, and what we need to remember about that is, that TV does not expect a response. When a response is not expected, the child does not learn to speak. Children need to be spoken to with an expectation of a response. Many children never have the opportunity to respond to anyone because their talk is slow and searching, and parents just don’t take the time to listen. Therefore speech is delayed. When speech is delayed the whole child is delayed. Speech is our ability to express self to others. When we can’t do that, we can’t communicate. One will often hear a child cry for attention and for something that he can easily ask for, but tears, he has determined, will get him what he wants more readily than asking for it, and that’s a shame.

The eating plan of sitting down and talking helps both issues. Turning off the TV and talking to your child is probably the most important part of his day. Then after a nice meal, and a nice chat, it’s time for him to go to the toilet. It’s really that simple.

The last issue is freedom. The question is how much freedom can a parent offer and can a child demand? There are some toddlers who can handle a playground, and others who can’t. There are some children who can handle playing alone in a room upstairs, and others who can’t. There are some children who can handle their own grocery cart and can visit the isle over and pick out cereal, and others who can’t. But no matter what the child can handle, the parent should always be watching and waiting for those leaps in independence and offering just a bit more freedom to encourage the child to “do it all by himself.”

Freedom to act independently is the key to growing up well. With toileting accomplished, with the gift and ability to speak, with a good expectation of diet, a child is well prepared to take on many things all by himself. Letting go is often difficult for parents because parents seem to treasure the “little kid” stage more than the expectation of the “bigger kid” stage. But if you think about it, a little kid is going to become a big kid no matter what a parent does, and the big kid should want to be a big kid.

Personally, I pushed my kids out of the next because I fully expected to load the nest again. I have always prefered the rapidly growing child to the child who can’t. Infancy is only recommended for a year; toddlers should only toddle two years; the preschooler is in preschool for three years, and the child takes off after that in the first grade – set and ready for his life as a “big kid.”

Monday’s Tattler

Good Morning!

It’s our first whole week of summer camp! Today is an in school day. We will be doing regular classes today. Today both the upper group and the middle group of children will get a spelling list to learn for Thursday’s spelling test. Each child is expected to “try” to learn how to spell the words on the list. It will be challenging for most of them, but it’s a good discovery and exploration project! Please regard the spelling lists as fun. Results will be saved for a book which will go home at the end of the summer. If you have any questions, please see Miss Judy.

Today we will be making pool cover-ups. Instead of all the changing at the pool, we have decided to go with long shirts. Each child will be able to decorate his or her own shirt to wear for the summer. A nickname will be provided for your child so that his real name will not be exposed publicly. This is a safety precaution. If your child has a nickname at home that he likes, please see Miss Amy about putting it on your child’s shirt.

It’s a chocolate cake day and a butterscotch muffin day. The muffins are a new recipe. I hope the children really like these. We will be having spaghetti lasagna today. It’s a new recipe too. We are still eating the cherries of the tree!

Miss Amy and Miss Judy have all kinds of pictures of the children from many months. If you have had a child here at school and would like some of these, please send me a comment to the blog with an email address. This will not be published! Comments are screened by Judy.

Have a great day!