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Showing posts with label New York. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New York. Show all posts

December 10, 2010

New York City Girls fight Obesity with Organic Farming


Hola Everyone!

If you are interested in changing what your kids eat and stopping the high rates of obesity in the next generation, I highly recommend checking out this great kid-friendly documentary ""What's on Your Plate?"

The film's synopsis (from Whatsonyourplate.org):

"WHAT'S ON YOUR PLATE? is a witty and provocative documentary produced and directed by award-winning Catherine Gund about kids and food politics.

Filmed over the course of one year, the film follows two eleven-year-old multi-racial city kids as they explore their place in the food chain. Sadie and Safiyah take a close look at food systems in New York City and its surrounding areas. With the camera as their companion, the girl guides talk to each other, food activists, farmers, new friends, storekeepers, their families, and the viewer, in their quest to understand what’s on all of our plates."


These girls are making a difference in their hometown by bringing organic food and CSA's to their local NYC neighborhood. The film is also available through instant streaming on netflix.

African-Americans and Hispanics have the highest instances of diabetes, high cholesterol, and obesity in the US. We can change that by teaching our children how to avoid the snares of the big food companies. Eating well will protect them from the sicknesses that have affected our generation. I wish I had known as much as these two girls when I was younger. I would have avoided serious blood sugar problems today.

Enjoy the flick! And take care of your kids!

Love,
Mami Mozart
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November 22, 2010

Little Boxes and the American Dream

A cigarette butt, lying in dirty snow.Image via WikipediaLittle Boxes, Little Boxes, Little Boxes made of Ticky Tack. And they all look like each other and they all look just the same.

Apartment Living: The Reality

A baby boy cries at midnight, every midnight, for at least a half hour next door on the wall on the other side of our bedroom. Downstairs, my neighbor (and friend) pounds on my floor (her ceiling) because the Rock Band drum pedal apparently shakes her apartment. My baby girl has decided that high shrieks are the best way to communicate with mommy. A tenant smokes in the hall (not allowed, BTW), and Sunday my next door neighbor (the same with the crying baby), gives us a practically new sofa.

This is apartment living, just a step up from dorms. No roommates (except for family members), but paper-thin walls let your arguments, screaming children, intimate moments, and favorite music known to everyone in your complex (and in the parking lot, too).

There isn't enough parking for everyone, so one neighbor has started parking in the grass. The dryers never work (only one does), and everyone tries to get that dryer. We all know it doesn't work, and everyone takes their turns shoving quarter after quarter into the broken dryers, hoping that the one working dryer will finish before you run out of quarters.

My daughter can't run out in the grassy area behind the complex because on any given day there are several dozen cigarette butts in various stages of decay littering the grass. Instead, I pack her up and take her to the playground at the church five minutes away. Besides the creepy guy who thinks I don't see him watching us play from his darkened patio, it almost feels like we have our own backyard.

There isn't a drug problem, or even alcohol problem, in our area, but the apartment is stifling, small. Despite the hundreds paid to the utility company, the A/C doesn't cool the apartment, the heater doesn't heat it. (Supposedly, it's fine). Our maintenance guy is a friendly fellow, who is learning piano. He comes by and fixes and patches stuff up, talks up a storm about the economy and music, and does the best he can within his budget.

Apartment living isn't all bad. My daughter and the little girl downstairs are like virtual sisters, you can't beat the rent, and the complex owner is friendly. The air is clean (except for the smokers), and you can see the stars at night. And to be honest, I'd rather living in our budget in an apartment than be buried underwater with a soon-to-be foreclosed house.

It's a reality. It's the times. Several Murray State University professors and staff call these apartments their home. While there are lots of college kids living around here, there are professionals and hardworking adults trying to make ends meet, trying to pay rent, trying to save money. Just trying to support the tiny tykes playing in the parking lot.

I guess once upon a time the American Dream involved buying your own house, settling down in an area for fifty years, watching your kids and grandkids grow up next door. Not anymore. My family exploded. My sister is in Ohio, my brother is in Iraq, my parents are in Florida, my in-laws are in New York, and we are here, in the Heartland, which is in desperate need of resuscitation.

I'm not fooling myself. This is where we are now, and probably will be for a few more years. If not here, then somewhere else. My American Dream is to pay the bills, and maybe, just maybe, save enough so my baby girl can pay for her college applications and follow her own American Dream.



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October 30, 2010

Baby's First Birthday Mami Musings

Birthday cake with 28 candlesImage via WikipediaHola Everyone,

One year ago, I was in the hospital, watching my baby's hear rate in the monitor and some late night TV, unable to sleep, waiting for the contractions to start. I can't believe it has already been one year. I have been emotional, up and down and up and down again. One year! Everyone said the time would fly so fast, so very fast, and it has. She walks around now, loves to say "Hi!" to everyone, has suddenly entered a picky stage, and finally has a little bit of auburn hair on her head. She looks like my husband still, but she has my eyes (oh, and my temper!).

Put on some dance music (techno, salsa, or even celtic) and she starts bopping up and down. If she is sitting on the floor, she does a weird little baby butt dance. It's cute, and pretty much looks like her attempting to lift her diaper in the air repeatedly. (You have to see it). She loves playing the drums and can hold a drumstick properly (its in the blood!). Her Nana and Abuelo just sent her a package with wooden spoons, a cowbell, and a couple of metal pots to drum on. I still don't know if my mom is attempting to enact long distance revenge on my ear drums! (haha)

Her Grammy in New York sent her a storybook, with Grammy's voice reading the text. Uncle Al, soon to go to Iraq, and Aunt Gretchen sent her a sweet little Elephant. She gets birthday packages every day. So much fun for mommy, too!

Today was preparing for the birthday party day. I went to my friend's house so she and I could make the sporty cupcakes (cute little basketballs, soccer balls, and baseballs). I finished the piñata, strings and candy and frills and all, with both babies' names on the side. My husband stayed up late making the baby birthday cakes, those cute little birthday cakes for them to dig into all by themselves. Mmm. So good, chocolate and looking like little basketballs.

So much fun!

If you have a sweet child in your life, cherish each and every moment. Hug them instead of getting mad at them. Turn that TV off and read them a book instead. Keep them with you every chance you get. There is only so much time before school and romance and work and college and work will separate you from your little one. Academics, sports, clubs, adult life can all wait. We let our kids grow too fast in this country. Kindergartners acting like teens, teens acting like adults, adults acting like kids. So backwards and hurting us all. So love your little baby, whether he or she is three or thirty. Cherish your children, your grandchildren, your great grandchildren. Hug your little nieces and nephews. Smile and let their happiness warm your heart.

Happy birthday, my little sweet baby. You are sleeping now, just as you were sleeping then in mommy's womb. And just like then, I was watching and loving and praying. Happy birthday little girl, my little princess, mi princesa.

Besitos mi vida,
Mamí
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