Monday’s Tattler



Good morning! Another hot pool day. Should be interesting, however, because a lot of our very very young children were swimming at the lake on Friday. Lots of the big kids are now gone from our rosters, so all attention is on the little guys really getting the swimming down.

Monday is not generally a swim day, but we thought we’d swap Monday and Wednesday this week just so we could get two days of swimming in. Should be small, elite and fun.
New kids come on Thursday…should be interesting.
It’s been a great summer, so proud of our children. They have been a spirited group, with fine behavior. So pleased about the whole project.
I love that we have gone so many places and done so many things. I love that our kids can go back to school and say, “I went here and did that, and here and did that, and learned to swim and can dive off a diving board, and I was in five states this summer…” Makes it all worth it.
On to getting back to school. School is cleaned out and ready. New paperwork coming this week. New class assignments. New friends and a whole new agenda. Lots to do … lots to do…
Have a great week.

Sunday’s Plate…Soy, a Different Perspective

Wise Woman Wisdom …
The War on Soy
by Tara Lohan


I thought this was interesting.

The War on Soy:
Why the ‘Miracle Food’ May Be a Health Risk and Environmental Nightmare

by Tara Lohan, AlterNet

These days, you can get soy versions of just about any meat — from hot dogs to buffalo wings. If you’re lactose-intolerant you can still enjoy soy ice-cream and soy milk on your cereal. If you’re out for a hike and need a quick boost of energy, you can nibble on soy candy bars.

Soy is a lucrative industry. According to Soyfoods Association of North America, from 1992 to 2008, sales of soy foods have increased from $300 million to $4 billion. From sales numbers to medical endorsements, it would seem that soy has reached a kind of miracle food status.

In 2000 the American Heart Association gave soy the thumbs up and the FDA proclaimed: “Diets low in saturated fat and cholesterol that include 25 grams of soy protein a day may reduce the risk of heart disease.” Over the course of the last decade medical professionals have touted its benefits in fighting not just cardiovascular disease, but cancers, osteoporosis and diabetes.

But soy’s glory days may be coming to an end. New research is questioning its health benefits and even pointing out some potential risks. Although definitive evidence may be many years down the road, the American Heart Association has quietly withdrawn its support. Andsome groups are waging an all-out war, warning that soy can lead to certain kinds of cancers, lowered testosterone levels, and early-onset puberty in girls.

Most of the soy eaten today is also genetically modified, which may pose another set of health risks. The environmental implications of soy production, including massive deforestation, increased use of pesticides and threats to water and soil, are providing more fodder for soy’s detractors.

All of this has many people wondering if they should even be eating it at all. And you are most likely eating it. Even if you’re not a vegetarian or an avid tofu fan, there is a good chance you’re still eating soy. Raj Patel, author of Stuffed and Starved, explains that soy is now an ingredient in three-quarters of processed food on the market and just about everything you’d find in a fast food restaurant. It’s used as filler in hamburgers, as vegetable oil and an emulsifier. It’s in salad dressing, macaroni and cheese, and chicken nuggets.

“Even if you read every label and avoid cardboard boxes, you are likely to find soy in your supplements and vitamins (look out for vitamin E derived from soy oil), in foods such as canned tuna, soups, sauces, breads, meats (injected under poultry skin), and chocolate, and in pet food and body-care products,” wrote Mary Vance for Terrain Magazine. “It hides in tofu dogs under aliases such as textured vegetable protein, hydrolyzed vegetable protein, and lecithin–which is troubling, since the processing required to hydrolyze soy protein into vegetable protein produces excitotoxins such as glutamate (think MSG) and aspartate (a component of aspartame), which cause brain-cell death.”

Health Risks or Rewards?

“I grew up in Houston on po’ boys and the Wall Street Journal,” said Robyn O’Brien. “I trusted our food system.” But all that changed when one of her kids developed a food allergy and O’Brien began doing research to find out what’s actually in our food and the companies behind it.

Her work led to the book, The Unhealthy Truth: How Our Food Is Making Us Sick and What We Can Do About It, and she’s become an incredible crusader on multiple fronts when it comes to food. She’s also been educating consumers about soy’s double-edged sword.

To understand why, it helps to know a little history about soy. It’s been cultivated, starting in China, for 3,000 years. While Asian diets have generally included soy it has been in small amounts eaten fermented — primarily via miso, natto and tempeh. “Fermenting soy creates health-promoting probiotics, the good bacteria our bodies need to maintain digestive and overall wellness,” wrote Vance. “By contrast, in the United States, processed soy food snacks or shakes can contain over 20 grams of nonfermented soy protein in one serving.”

It’s not that all soy is bad; in fact, eating it in small doses can be quite healthy, if it’s fermented. But when it’s not, that’s where the problems begin. Soy is a legume, which contains high amounts of phytic acid. Phytic acid binds to minerals (like calcium, magnesium, copper, iron and zinc), interfering with the body’s ability to absorb them (which is usually a bad thing). Soy is also known to contain “antinutrients,” among them enzyme inhibitors that interfere with protein digestion. The Chinese figured out about 2,000 years ago that antinutrients and phytic acid could be deactivated during fermentation, but in the processed-food laden land of the West, we’ve chosen cultural ignorance in favor of quick and cheap. Most of the soy we eat is unfermented.

Another issue with soy is its high amounts of isoflavones, which can be good and bad (hence the double-edged sword). Isoflavones are a powerful antioxidant, writes Robyn O’Brien in her book, that can help boost immunity. They also impact estrogen levels and have been shown to have positive effects on easing symptoms of menopause. “But that plus can also be a minus,” writes O’Brien, “because isoflavones’ very ability to boost estrogen production can also pose hazards to our health. For example, the FDA scientists point out, during pregnancy, isoflavones could boost estrogen levels even higher, ‘which could be a risk factor for abnormal brain and reproductive tract development.'” There is also a risk of breast and other reproductive cancers for women and the potential for testicular cancer and infertility in men.

While there was much news about the American Heart Association endorsing soy in 2000, there was little attention given when the AHA changed its mind and quietly withdrew its pro-soy claims in 2006, O’Brien points out. She also learned that they were not the only ones who expressed concerned about soy. A study in the British medical journal Lancet in 1996 warned of the effects of soy in infant formula. The study found babies had levels of isoflavones that were five to 10 times higher than women taking soy supplements for menopause. The effects in girls could be early-onset puberty, obesity, breast and reproductive cancers. Boys could face testicular cancer, undescended testicles and infertility. Additionally, O’Brien says, a 2003 British study conducted by Gideon Lack of St. Mary’s Hospital at Imperial College London followed 14,000 children from the womb through age 6 and found that kids who had been given soy formula as infants seemed almost three times as likely to develop a peanut allergy later on.

As if all this weren’t disturbing enough, there’s also another reason to be alarmed — most of the soy we eat is genetically modified to withstand increasing doses of weed-killing herbicides, and really, we have no idea what the long-term affects of that might be. So, what’s a person to do? Stay away from soy as much as possible, which also means avoiding processed foods. And, even if we choose not to eat those things, some of us may end up getting them anyway. “There are different sales channels that these companies are using to sell soy with little regard for the cost to people down the road,” said O’Brien. “Soy that is not used in grocery stores, in restaurants, or consumed by livestock, is disposed of in school lunch programs, hospitals, and prisons.”

One organization, the Weston A. Price Foundation, is actually engaged in a lawsuit on behalf of Illinois state prisoners who say they’re eating a diet made of largely soy protein. “In their letters, the prisoners have described deliberate indifference to a myriad of serious health problems caused by the large amounts of soy in the diet,” theWAP Foundation writes. “Complaints include chronic and painful constipation alternating with debilitating diarrhea, vomiting after eating, sharp pains in the digestive tract after consuming soy, passing out after soy-based meals, heart palpitations, rashes, acne, insomnia, panic attacks, depression and symptoms of hypothyroidism, such as low body temperature (feeling cold all the time), brain fog, fatigue, weight gain, frequent infections and an enlarged thyroid gland.” While the soy industry has profited from the widespread adoption of its products here in the United States, other developed countries have taken a more precautionary approach and not allowed soy to become as pervasive in their food supplies in an effort to protect the health of their citizens, says O’Brien. But it’s not just people who are at risk. The deleterious effects of soy can start with the seed.

Goodbye Rainforests, Hello Roundup

Glenn Beck recently chastised Al Gore about his meat eating, telling him that if he really cared about the planet he should put down his burger and pick up some Tofurkey. But unfortunately, it’s not that simple. Increasing evidence is showing that soy production is also catastrophic for the environment. Just like a beef burger, a soy-based veggie patty may also be leading to deforestation, water depletion, and pesticide pollution. But it’s also important to note that the vast majority of soy produced globally isn’t used for tofu and veggie sausage — it’s actually used to fatten livestock and create biofuels (so, yeah, you may still want to put down the burger).

“Soy is a really sexy crop; it’s fantastic. It’s nitrogen fixing, it’s full of protein; it’s very rich and flexible,” Raj Patel said in an interview with New America Media. “The tragedy is that the way we grow it today has turned a blessing into a curse because the way that soy agriculture works is monocultural, which means it takes over large parts of land. In Brazil, that means the Cerrado and the rainforest in the Amazon, and they are draining the water that is beneath that land. There are even some soy and biofuel plantations in Brazil where the International Labor Organization says there are 40,000 slaves working today. Slaves! In Brazil, producing biofuels and soy.”

Brazil is one of the leading soy producers in the world, second only to the U.S. and poised to quickly move to the top spot. And overall, the growth of the world market is huge, with global production doubling over the past 20 years and 210 million tons produced a year.

But it has also led to problems. Countries across Latin America, including Argentina, Paraguay and Bolivia, are experiencing environmental problems similar to Brazil’s. Rainforests are cleared, carbon emissions increase, indigenous and small farmers are displaced, aquifers are sucked dry, roads are built through sensitive ecosystems, and heavy pesticide use threatens waterways, soils and the health of locals. And as with all industrial monocultural farming, the rich (Monsanto, Cargill, and Bunge) get richer and the poor get poorer.

“The soy ‘gold rush’ has attracted fierce competition for land, leading to violence and murder,” Marianne Betterly summarized in Mariri Magazine. “Hundreds of acres of rainforest are being cleared everyday, often by slave ‘debt’ laborers, to make room for more soy plantations.”

So, we may get our cheap burgers and a deluge of soy-infused foods, but at great cost.
Adding to all these environmental problems with soy is the fact that much of the world’s soy (and 85 percent of the U.S crop) is genetically engineered. Since the early ’90s farmers in the United States (and now across the world) have been using Monsanto’s Roundup Ready soy that is genetically engineered to be resistant to the herbicide Roundup, which is liberally sprayed on the crop to kill weeds.

Much of the promise of GE crops was that they’d lead to the use of less pesticides and herbicides, which threaten both human and environmental health. But that hasn’t actually panned out. “Because herbicide-tolerant crops are designed to withstand application of weed killers, farmers can apply large amounts of pesticides without fear of harming their crops. The U.S. has seen more than a 15-fold increase in the use of glyphosate, or Monsanto’s Roundup herbicide, on major crops from 1994 to 2005,” Co-Op America reported.

And more damning evidence has just been released. A new study that just came out this week funded by a coalition of non-governmental organizations including the Union of Concerned Scientists, the Center for Food Safety, the Cornerstone Campaign, Californians for GE-Free Agriculture, Greenpeace International and Rural Advancement Fund International USA, found that GE corn, soybean and cotton crops have increased the use of weed-killing herbicides in the U.S. by 383 million pounds from 1996 to 2008.

The study will surely be accompanied by more alarms bells set off by small farmers, environmentalists and organic supporters. And it will be one more battle in the war against soy that’s being fought on both health and environmental fronts. Perhaps it will make people think twice before eating soy products, processed food and even most meat.

Tara Lohan is a senior editor at AlterNet. You can follow her on Twitter@TaraLohan. Visit: http://www.alternet.org/

Vacation Places from Fran and Kyle


When it comes to family getaways during the long, lazy weeks of summer, or even into the Fall, we like to planedu-cations. In addition to travel itself being a learning adventure, Family Travel Forum’s “Complete Idiot’s Guide to the Best Family Destinations” features 10 vacation ideas that are guaranteed to teach kids something new — and in a very fun way.

1. Baseball Hall of Fame, New York Nothing’s in the same league as this showcase for the memorabilia of baseball’s greats. Cooperstown — a pretty Victorian-era village in upstate New York — is a magnet for Little Leaguers, opera fans, museum goers and anyone who likes country charm.

2. Buffalo Bill Historical Center, Wyoming Cody, Wyoming is a small town with enough natural and man-made attractions to suit its namesake, William Frederick Cody. The “Wild West Show” legend left behind a large museum devoted to the arts of the West, a rodeo, and a hotel where gunfights are re-enacted on summer evenings.

3. High Desert Museum, Oregon Claiming to have more sunshine than the rest of Oregon, the hip Cascade Mountain town of Bend has become home to outdoor adventurers, sportsmen, and eco-loving families. The prize High Desert Museum complex contains a replica mining camp filled with costumed interpreters and much more living history displays.

4. International Folk Art Museum, New Mexico Home to the world’s largest collection of folk art, Santa Fe’s remarkable collection of 135,000 artifacts originates from more than 100 countries on six continents. Families who find most art museums inaccessible, dull or overwhelming will be delighted. The city’s fine arts, cultural and foodie scene make Santa Fe irresistible.

5. Maritime Museum of the Atlantic, Nova Scotia The sea defines Halifax, Canada and most visitors arrive by cruise ship. A walkable, picturesque port topped by a working Citadel, it has a fine museum that celebrates its long history with the Atlantic, and whale watching cruises that depart regularly.

6. Mystic Seaport: Museum of America and the Sea, Connecticut Founded in 1654, this seafaring town was once the shipbuilding capital of New England. There’s a 19-acre Seaport complex that is the largest maritime museum in the US and, nearby, the Mystic Aquarium, Essex steam train and a riverboat ride.

7. National Cowboy and Western Heritage Museum, Oklahoma Located in Oklahoma City, this serious collection of fine Western art includes galleries devoted to The American Cowboy, The American Rodeo, Native American Art and The Western Performers. Grandparents will relish the drive to see the unique Gene Autry Museum and the Chisholm Trail Museum.

8. National Underground Railroad Freedom Center, Ohio The remarkable Freedom Center was built on the banks of the Ohio River because escaped slaves swam the river from Kentucky to Ohio for their freedom. Cincinnati has many other attractions including the Newport Aquarium, beloved Cincinnati Zoo, and the Kings Island amusement park.

9. Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, Ohio The crowd, the beat, and the soaring I.M Pei design of the Temple of Rock make visitors tap their feet while cruising the dozens of galleries, movie theaters, and interactive listening stations. Dance out the front door and take a boat tour of Lake Erie, or make the kids’ hair stand on end at the Great Lakes Science Center.

10. Royal Canadian Mounted Police Heritage Center, Saskatchewan The RCMP Center in Regina explores the role of the red-clad Royal Canadian Mounted Police while allowing visitors to see their training facilities, take photos with highly trained horses, and watch a show of the Mounties’ intricate cavalry drills.

We hope you’ve learned something from our roundup, and wherever you’re off to, safe there, safe home,
Fran & Kyle [deals@familytravelforum.com]

Choosing a Preschool by Judy Lyden

Quite frankly, I’m opinionated about preschool because I’ve taught preschool since 1983. Preschool, which is a terrible name because it indicates it’s not school at all but some kind of holding zone before a child goes to “real school,” is supposed to “ready” children for real learning.

Um…excuse me…but children ages 3-7 will learn more in these years than any other time in their lives, so it better be “real school” or your wasting your money and your child’s time.
Children who are three and have not been infantalized by parents are ready to really learn, so the program selected should include some real learning. Before age three, children are not ready. It’s not fair, it’s not good because children age two need another kind of training and play.
So your child is a corker…potty trained and listening to every word you say. It’s time!
So what do you look for?
It depends. If you are blessed and can stay home with your child, you might be doing a remarkable preschool all by yourself. Are you talking about what you see on your adventures with your child, and is your child answering you in full sentences? Is your child seeing all kinds of people and things outside of your home? Is your child working with all kinds of art media at home? Are you teaching your child to write his or her name properly with upper AND lower case letters? How about counting, identifying colors and shapes and building stuff? You probably don’t need preschool for more than socialization and separation anxiety.
If you are currently using a day care with the TV on 24/7, and your provider is kind but doesn’t teach, it might be time to think about a place where the child is taught something. If you are lucky enough to have a place in town that is a full time school situation, go for it – but that’s not necessarily a center.
The problem with center care is that most centers don’t teach, and they don’t hire anyone who can. The rep most centers have is that they nap the children WAY too long and the food is ick. That’s institutional imprisonment for kids. Better the home with the TV blaring 24/7.
If I didn’t own a little school for little people, and I had to find a place for my beloved grandchildren, I would look for a place that was reasonably clean but not super clean. Too clean means they don’t ever do anything but sit. I would look for a place where the provider not only spoke properly, because children learn speech patterns from the adults who care for them, but knew something about the world and was willing to teach what she knew to the children in her care.
There are lots of things that people can teach children including things about animals, about weather, about art and socialization. Children should learn to get along with friends, give and take, share and be able to say enough that their needs and desires are made known. Too much TV and this doesn’t happen.
The worst time to visit any early childhood place is 3:00 Friday afternoon. EVERYONE is chomping the bit for the weekend. If you like a place at 3:00 Friday, you’ll love it most of the time. Go visit then. Nobody should still be sleeping!
Food? Ask to see the menus. Your child, in full time care, will eat eighty percent of what he eats in your provider’s home or in the center. Is there thought put into food? Will your child grow fat and lazy eating junk?
Bathroom? Ask to use the bathroom. It should be reasonably clean. If the bathroom is sparkling, your provider is tending home too closely – probably won’t last as a provider. Center baths should not smell or kids are not being supervised.
TV on? Mmmmmmmm no. Ask the provider – home or center- what the children did that day. Play day all day? Fine what did they do the day before? Nothing spectacular? Then what are you wasting your child’s time buying?
Three year old children should learn their letters, learn to count to at least ten, learn colors, how to hold a pencil and write his or her name, learn shapes and be able to speak in full sentences, and your provider – home or center- should insist that your child learn these things.
Children should learn how to color, to paint, to glue, and to cut. They should use clay, play dough, chalk, and be able to invent with their media.
Children should be taught to listen to a story and to sing little songs. If your child cannot sing or listen to a story, he or she is either missing the point, or the point is not there. Listening is the most important thing a child will take away from preschool learning.
Not there yet? Keep looking. There is a happy place for every child. Just keep asking around or call your Resource and Referral group in your town and tell them what you are looking for.

More About De-hydration!

Keeping kids active and healthy in hot weather

(Chattanooga)—It’s summertime and the sweating comes easy for children. Whether they are enjoying a pickup game of basketball or competing at a sports camp, how does a parent know the appropriate amount of liquid refreshment to offer?

Part of the mystery lies in whether the child’s body produces a lot of salt while engaged in a difficult workout.

Staying hydrated and avoiding heat illness are two areas Dr. Brendon McDermott at The University of Tennessee at Chattanooga understands, and he is often asked about his research in this area. McDermott, Assistant Professor, Clinical Coordinator for Graduate Athletic Training Program and Co-Director of the Applied Physiology Laboratory has one overarching goal: to prevent heat related deaths, particularly in athletes.

One of McDermott’s current studies focuses on student athletes who cramp during intense movement, creating an extra layer of exercise performance frustration. There are two prevailing theories about the cause of cramps. Some researchers believe those who produce higher amounts of salt when they sweat harbor an electrolyte imbalance which initiates a cramp, while others blame neuromuscular fatigue. By measuring the sweat and salt outputs of students who cramp compared to a control group who doesn’t, with common factors like age, weight, and similar levels of activity, McDermott hopes to unravel this painful mystery.

Even if your child has not complained of cramping while exercising, there are some tips to keep in mind. Hydration guidelines have evolved for the average person, but who exactly is the average person? Each body reacts differently and replenishment needs depend upon the individual, according to McDermott.

“Sweat rate is very simple to calculate: weigh yourself before exercise, with as little clothing as possible; exercise for a half an hour and don’t drink or use the bathroom for that half hour; weigh yourself again, wearing the same amount of clothing to see how much you’ve lost,” McDermott said.

To get a true picture of sweat rate, this test should be done in the cold, in the heat, at different intensities of exercise. It will then be easier to gauge whether your child is a heavy or light sweater.

If that sounds like a lot of work there’s a quicker way to assess hydration needs, and it’s focused on the delicate matter of, ahem, passing a different kind of water.

“You can monitor your urine color. It should have a light yellow tinge to it. Lemonade is much better than apple juice. And if you’re delving into the iced tea realm, it’s time to drink. It’s normal to have darker urine in the morning,” McDermott said. “As for frequency, some people are camels, other people urinate frequently.”

McDermott explains body size is not the main factor in sweat production. During his training for an Olympic marathon, accurate measurements showed Alberto Salazar lost nearly 10 pounds of water an hour. He only weighed 145 pounds.

“When you’re talking about a football lineman who loses 10 pounds of water, that may not be so bad, but for someone who is 145 pounds, that’s a huge percentage,” McDermott said. “If someone is losing 10 pounds of water per hour and they are told to replenish with 16 ounces of water, that’s one pound, and one-tenth of what you are losing in an hour—that’s insufficient.”

Similarly, young children at sports camps, especially those who wear heavy pads for long periods of time, can be at risk. Water is not enough to replenish what some athletes lose in sodium and calories, so many reach for full strength sports drinks.

It’s important for everyone to be well hydrated before exercise begins, but too much water could lead to hyponatremia.

“In the most severe case of hyponatremia, those who have taken the advice to drink as much as they can tolerate during a marathon, they drink at every rest stop, and there have been cases where people have gained up to twelve pounds after running a marathon in order to avoid dehydration,” McDermott said.

Finally, drinking when you feel parched is not a good way to gauge hydration needs, because the thirst mechanism does not kick in until a person is two percent dehydrated.

“It’s okay if you are a healthy person who is used to working out in the summertime—it’s a great way to prevent hyponatremia,” McDermott advised. “But if you are a competitive athlete, you’d be behind the game and trying to play catch up. Think again about those like Alberto Salazar. If they drink to thirst, they’re two percent behind plus they must replace ten pounds an hour.”

In addition to his responsibilities at The University of Tennessee at Chattanooga, Dr. Brendon McDermott serves on the medical and science advisory board of the Korey Stringer Institute, founded by Kelci Stringer to “minimize sudden death in sport for any reason, beginning with exertional heat stroke.” Kelci’s husband Korey Stringer, a Minnesota Vikings offensive lineman, died from exertional heat stroke in 2001.

Hydration tips
1. Those involved with physical activity should assess their personal sweat rate
2. The goal is to replace what is lost (no more, no less)
3. Activity longer than one hour most likely requires fluids, electrolytes, and carbohydrates in liquid or solid food forms
4. Exercisers should begin exercise well hydrated
5. Fluids should be readily accessible during activity
6. Following activity, it is important to rehydrate as soon as possible (within 30 minutes)
7. Cool temperature rehydration fluids encourage fluid consumption in the heat
8. Monitor hydration status by checking urine production and color————————-

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Monday’s Tattler


Good Morning!

This week is our last summer camp week. We will be at school on Monday; on Tuesday, we will be going swimming at Newburgh, and ditto for Wednesday. Thursday we will be at School and on Friday, we will have a cookout at Pounds Hollow Lake in Shawneetown Forrest.
If you plan to ride the bus or come to the picnic, please let Miss Judy know so we can arrange for food.
We will need to change our clothes after the picnic, because we want to use our suits again the following week on Monday and Tuesday. Miss Judy is trying to arrange two pool trips during the transition week.
Then the swim suits go home. Towels stay at school.
It’s been a great summer, and this week should be a nice end cap.
Handbooks are coming out this week as soon as I can print them.
Any questions? Please ask.
Have a great week.