MOMELO’S BLOG

Post #100 and some news! April 16, 2009

Hi there! How are you today?

This is my post number 100 ! I can’t believe how fast those last months are gone!

Well, some news, I will fly this next Tuesday to France and maybe I will not be able to blog often, I still don’t know if I will be connected.

I am so excited to go back home and see hubby! I can’t wait!…

Did you noticed the new page called “special series” up here? I am working on a new series about how to simplify your life step by step.

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I am sure you will love this one, and I am preparing tons of useful info.

On another hand, I am part of a great project that I want to share with you!


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My friend Dave has been suffering from the ravages of Diabetes for many years.  I know, first hand, all of the trouble this disease can cause.  In the last year alone he was in the hospital 4 separate times.

In order to help others avoid the problems caused by Diabetes he and his team (which I am part of) have developed a web site that approaches the problem from the patient’s point of view. Their mission is to ease the discomforts of people with diabetes and help them avoid the consequences.

We all know someone who has diabetes!

Diabetes can and usually does cause some or all of the following trouble:

  • · Blindness
  • · Foot and Leg pain – even amputations
  • · Kidney Disease
  • · Heart Disease and Strokes
  • · Stomach Nerve Damage
  • · Autonomic Nervous System Damage
  • · And More…. As if the above weren’t enough

If diabetes is detected and controlled, the ravages of the disease can be diminished or even avoided all together.

If you have this horrible and very difficult disease PLEASE visit MY OWN DIABETES. If you know someone who is struggling with a diet and with diabetes please send him/her an invitation to the website.
This website is recent but very effective and the more members the more we can help each other through support, the forum, etc…

I will be in charge of the translation and launching of the french and spanish version. A good opportunity for me to bring some income while still staying at home to serve my family and the Lord!

This is a link which can change your life or the life of a loved one, so spread the word!

And you would also be supporting our family through these tough times!

I also wanted to thank you, all my readers, I truly appreciate your kind comments and knowing that my words here are not useless! I could have not reach the 100 post without you! Thank you and I hope you will stay here with me and read the next 100!! :)

Have a great day!

 

How to be prepared for tough times April 11, 2009

After my post about voluntary simplicity yesterday, I was feeling inspired, especially by the comments and mails I received, so I wrote this post. I hope you will like it! :)

Yep, you know that, tough times are coming, and some people think it could be very bad very soon.

How do you think your life would be affected? What could you do to minimize this effect?

Do you believe in a “back to basics” living?

Are you prepared for it?!

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Well, today I will give you some advice about how to prepare yourself and your family to keep or even improve your quality of life through tough times!

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  1. Be as self sufficient as you can.
  2. This can be achieved by building a full pantry, especially basics like flour, oil, cereals, water, sugar, honey, and lots of canned vegetables and fruits. Dry milk can be useful too.
  3. You can also fill up your freezer with some basics like butter, meat, and homemade prepared meals, etc…
  4. If you have a garden, plant food! Fruit trees, veggies, etc…
  5. If you have some place and are allowed to do it, take some chickens, you will have fresh eggs each morning and maybe some day you could even sell them to those neighbors who didn’t read this post! ;)
  6. Find a farm near by (if possible) to buy your milk, it can always be useful to know people who grows cows.
  7. Begin right now to live without the comfort. For example, avoid the dryer when you can use the sun and wind to do the job; knead your dough by hand vs processor/mixer; broom when you can vs always use the vacuum; wash the dishes by hand half of the time vs always use the dishwasher; and so on…
  8. Learn some homemaking basics like canning, bread making, cooking, organizing etc…
  9. Learn to entertain yourself and your family for free. It is very important! If you can’t get rid of your TV, then try to leave it off at least one day a week, and plan a “family night” with games, conversation, music, whatever you are up to!
  10. Try to exercise,  maybe some day you will not be able to get your car to go somewhere, you will need to walk; or maybe you will have to do the laundry by hand,etc… So, better get prepared by doing some exercising, walking, and other outdoors activities.
  11. I can’t sew nor knit, but that’s something I definitely have to learn! And buy some fabric and materials to do whatever I may need some day.
  12. There is a huge amount of resources and info on the web, but maybe you will not be able to consult them when you will need them the most. My advice is to print all the interesting stuff and build a nice notebook that may be lifesaving some day!
  13. Build a nice, complete first aid kit, and some basic medicine/remedies. You never know!
  14. Limit the products you need for your personal and house hygiene/beauty. Prefer one soap/shower gel that fits all the family needs better than one specific for each person, the same with shampoo, moisturizer, etc… In your home, buy or do yourself one multipurpose cleaner, that could be used to clean floors, counter tops, kitchen, bathroom, and even laundry! Replace your softener by white vinegar and essential oil, and, of course, avoid disposable wipes and other “swiffer” stuff; prefer the old fashioned way: soap, warm water, and some exercise!
  15. Enjoy the simple treasures of life! :) Be happy and positive with all what you already have, smile, and transmit your joy to your family.
  16. Trust the Lord to provide for your needs.

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Don’t panic! As always, you can do it little by little, with baby steps, and soon you will be able to survive this nasty economy, and even kinda like it!! ;)

For more info, I encourage you to “google” simple living, homesteading, homemaking, and voluntary simplicity. You will be blessed by all the interesting stuff around there to learn from!

If you have more tips to prepare for the worst scenario, or simply become frugal, leave your comment!

 

Voluntary simplicity April 10, 2009

Hey, here we are, for another hooked on fridays, and what I am hooked on today is voluntary simplicity!!

Have you ever heard about it? Maybe you do practice it already, or you would like some more info about it.

Well, I hope this post will be helpful anyway, and will help you understand and know better this movement.

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‘Normal’ is getting dressed in clothes that you buy for work, driving through traffic in a car that you are still paying for, in order to get to the job that you need so you can pay for the clothes, car, and the house that you leave empty all day in order to afford to live in it. Ellen Goodman.

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What is voluntary simplicity?

Simple living (voluntary simplicity) is a lifestyle characterized by minimizing the ‘more-is-better’ pursuit of wealth and consumption. Adherents may choose simple living for a variety of personal reasons, such as spirituality, health, increase in ‘quality time’ for family and friends, stress reduction, personal taste or frugality.

Others cite socio-political goals aligned with the anti-consumerist movement, including conservation, social justice and sustainable development.

According to Duane Elgin, “we can describe voluntary simplicity as a manner of living that is outwardly more simple and inwardly more rich, a way of being in which our most authentic and alive self is brought into direct and conscious contact with living.

Simple living as a concept is distinguished from those living in forced poverty, as it is a voluntary lifestyle choice.

Voluntary simplicity means doing/having/living more with less–more time, meaning, joy, satisfaction, relationships, community; less money, material possessions, stress, competition, isolation. It doesn’t mean depriving yourself; it doesn’t mean buying “cheap” and always pinching pennies; it doesn’t mean poverty. It does mean wanting what you have, and finding joy in having less; and recovering the connection with other people and with the Earth that alone makes life really worthwhile.

Voluntary simplicity is a growing movement of people who have realized that happiness and fulfillment do not lie in having more money, or new and bigger things, but rather in the time with loved ones and connection with community. They are questioning the consumer society’s insistence that possessions, especially of the newest design and color, are the means of fulfillment, or that any material possession can possibly be “to die for.”

How to apply this to your life?

Yeah, you might think that all this sounds very nice but how could you apply it in your daily stressed/busy life? Well, there are a lot of things that you can do to go forward simplicity, you know, baby steps, that everybody can do.

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Here are some advices of what you can do to improve your quality of life right now:

  • each time you are about to buy something, ask yourself:

- Could I do this item myself cheaper/healthier/greener ?
- Do I really need this item? Will my life be affected if I don’t buy it?
- Could I find this item second hand/used/cheaper, or without packaging?

  • try to buy food and groceries locally, at your farmers market for example.
  • do not buy more decor items for holidays, try to decorate with the stuff you already have or some items you can do yourself frugally.
  • do not feel obliged to buy presents for Valentine’s day/Christmas/Easter etc… You can do crafts/cards/homemade goodies, that will be even more appreciated than an impersonal store bought present.
  • Avoid all kind of prepared meals, if you are not a great cook, learn! Good food is about experience, you have to try, and fail, until you can do it right.
  • If you have a garden, try to plant some veggies.
  • Are you an expecting mom?

- Don’t buy anything!! I know it is so tempting to go shopping for the new baby but you will receive lots of gifts, and you really do not need as much stuff as you think. Babies need their mom, almost nothing else.
- Inform yourself about the wonderful benefits of breastfeeding your child, you will be blessed!
- Consider using cloth diapers, you can find them by internet, in some stores, or even do them yourself!
- Teach your child to entertain himself! A baby does not need tons of colorful plastic toys to be happy and stimulated; in fact, I strongly encourage you to limit the collection of toys to a small amount and ban all battery-operated/plastic toys.
- Prefer neutral clothes for your baby, better than all pink or all blue, so you can keep them and reuse them for another baby.

  • If you are like me a book lover, then you may prefer to go to your local library to borrow books better than buying pricey books.
  • With your kids, prefer activities that are not related to a shopping/buying activity. For example, you may prefer going to visit a farm or to a natural park (almost free), better than to the theater which usually includes buying candies, popcorn, etc…  Teach your child that fun is not related to money.
  • In general, always try to buy second hand/used items. Think about garage sales, thrift stores, craig’s lists etc. although the best to do is to limit your shopping. Simplicity is not only think “Can I have this cheaper?”, it is more a “Can I live without it?” kind of thinking!

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Well, I hope you liked this entry and maybe you are feeling like applying some of my advices! :)

If you are looking for some more info about choosing voluntary simplicity, you would like to have a look at those websites I found for you:

- THE SIMPLE LIVING NETWORK

- GREAT RIVER EARTH INSTITUTE

- THE SIMPLICITY RESOURCE GUIDE

You can find also some great blogs in my blogroll, on the right side of this site.

In this week before Easter, this is my contribution to stay focused on the important things, and free ourselves from the secular consumerist way of life…

I wish you all a great, happy, and cross-centered Easter!

And if you want to see what people are hooked on this week, check it out on HOOKED ON HOUSES

 

Menu planning, how it can help you and your budget March 23, 2009

Hey, I hope you all had a terrific week end! :)


Today I want to share with you some tips to build menu planning and shopping lists. If you are not an adept of menu planning yet, you will see all the many advantages to do it.

I do my menu planning each Monday morning. To do that efficiently, I use my recipes, sometimes also the adds from grocery stores to see what is “special price” this week, and those charts:

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shoppinglist You can download them for free in a PDF file HERE.

Menu planning is great for several reasons. First you will feel better avoiding the daily question ” what is for dinner tonight?” by printing your menu planning and putting it on your fridge or some place where everyone can see it.

You can preparing stuff by advance and so save a lot of time. You can prepare your shopping list at the same time and so save money by buying just what you need and eating just and all what you bought.

If you want to go further, you can prepare menu planning monthly, and set a a cooking/baking day. You will save a lot of time doing that. You can prepare a lot of meals and freeze them, so you then just have to heat them for dinner!

Menu planning is also very good to keep you well with a diet. Writing down your menus, you can see exactly what you eat, calculate calories, and “oblige” you to eat what you previously planned. No more “I don’t have anything prepared for tonight, let’s order a pizza”…

Well, I think you will have some idea about what is menu planning and how it can help you greatly in your daily life.

I hope this post was useful!

This post was part of:

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Practicing hospitality, book study! January 12, 2009

Filed under: To be at home — momelo @ 19:22
Tags: , ,

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Hey, what a great book to study!

This is PRACTICING HOSPITALITY, a wonderful book !

Lindsay, from her great blog PASSIONATE HOMEMAKING is hosting a book study with this book.

It will begin on February 1st, and will consist in reading a chapter per week and have a discussion about it on Mondays.

I can’t wait to begin! :)

Lindsay is also having a giveaway, you have to visit her blog and leave a comment on the related post to enter in the giveaway, ending January 16. It is a very generous idea!

If you don’t win, you still have time to get a copy from amazon, or borrow it in your local library if they have it.

:)

 

Natural home made cleaning product! January 8, 2009

00002850Hey, I wanted to share with you my recipe for making my multipurpose cleaning product!

It is very easy, inexpensive, effective and healthy. What else could I ask? ;)

So, here is the recipe:

MULTIPURPOSE CLEANING PRODUCT:

You will need:

- 1/2 cup baking soda

- 1 cup white vinegar

- 1 gallon hot water

- essential oil of tea tree, lemon, eucalyptus.

How to:

You have to mix the baking soda with the hot water (almost boiling), you can just pour it carefully (it’s hot) in a 1 gallon container.

Then in another recipient mix the vinegar and the essential oils. I use 5 drops of each oil. You mix it and then pour it also in the container. Don’t breath this mix while it is hot because of the essential oil, it will be very strong.

I use these particular oils because of their disinfectant, antibacterial, and cleaning properties.

This cleaning product is very effective, I use it with a spray to clean bathroom, kitchen, etc… and diluted in water to clean the trash, toilets, etc…

Tell me more about your frugal, green, cleaning tips! :)

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