Thursday, July 25, 2013
Monday, July 8, 2013
Friday, April 26, 2013
Making 'Healthy' Stick with Kids
A lot has been done to get kids more
active and to make good foods more
desirable--and available--to kids.
But it is not enough!
Corporations have a strangle-hold on
kids and schools and events via ads
and sponsoring. We have to take great
strides to override that.
A lot of schools have taken up the
'soda-free' zone, which is great, but an
equal number have 'ice cream shops'
because they're easy money for the schools.
Demand better menus for your kids' schools--
they desrve it, and it's your right to campaign for it.
Here are some more aggressive, across-the-board
ideas for trying to get kids health-smart...
the earlier the better!
***
How about a video game with top notch animation and
video talent, wherein the hero and heroine are empowered
by acquiring fruits and vegetables, and lose power with
every sugary snack!
(Of course, the game would have to be all about killing people
with guns and decapitating adversaries, because that's where
the kids heads are at. You can't take on violence and diet--
save something for another day.)
How about a rock star like Justin Bieber or Rihanna (ugh!) on a
song where they're sultrily displayed on a couch with nothing
but whole grains and raw veggies adorning them...maybe even
playing suggestively with a carrot stick or a split papaya?
I bet sales of fruit and veggies would go through the roof.
(Whatever it takes, Babycakes!)
Here's the problem; you can't just tell kids what to do.
Messages have to be hammered in repeatedly for it to make
a difference, and you're competing with hour after hour of
advertising that makes all of the worst foods seem desirable.
Plus they're influenced by their friends, their families, and so on.
Kids also don't understand the future; they are wrapped up in
the here-and-now, and things like commitment, repercussions,
preparation...they don't register.
So you need a hook...something that will sell it with a sexy allure,
cause that's what these kids are trained to respond to.
Product placement could work for fruits and veggies
like it has for sodas and chips.
But we have to take this seriously.
People say it's minor stuff--but they're
looking at the short term, not the long.
Let's see kids presented with pictures of
people in their 30s and 40s with severe
diabetic complications, like they show the
emphysema lungs of smokers to shock kids.
Let's see the morbid obesity shots as
the EFFECT of the actions they're taking now.
Something has to change.
Monday, April 8, 2013
Pop Quiz
There will be times in every day, and times in every lifetime, when you must decide; "Will you struggle, or will you survive?" "Will you settle, or will you strive?" These are the moments that define you.... encoding the future and rewriting DNA. What will you decide? www.HealthyRevolution2009.blogspot.com |
Monday, March 4, 2013
Taking Help With You
An awesome recycled leather backpack is one option! |
Would you rather be 'cool' and aloof, attempting to work a public
image, or be well-prepared and comfortable in a greater number
of situations?
There's always a compromise involved, and that seems a key
question to need to know the answer to before venturing into
this next project.
My priority is always being well, being comfortable, and being
prepared (and I also hate to have to rely on others for anything!)
So in order to accomplish that, I take a nicely insulated, sturdy,
water-resistant backpack with me everywhere, filled to the brim
with all manner of helpful items.
It's pretty fashionable, too, and has multiple compartments for
keeping things separate. For someone with a billion issues like
me, it's nice to have what you need rather than rely on luck!
It certainly gives me a level of emotional and mental security, if
nothing else. (And that's worth the price of admission!)
My backpack contains:
-an EPI pin
-bottled water (Have you tried finding clean water in public?)
-first aid kit (band-aids, neosporin,
-eye drops
-aspirin
-Aleve
-nitro tabs
-blood tester
-spare glasses
-tissues and paper towels
-hand sanitizer
-medicine
-cough drops (including enough for those next to me who can't stop hacking!)
-hard candy for diabetic emergencies
-snacks
-cell phone and chargers
-book for unexpected waiting periods
-notebook for writing, making lists, etc.
-flashlight
And of course, men can put all the things a purse would normally
carry for women who use them; breath mints, travel toothbrush
and toothpaste for lunch time brushing, toothpicks, floss, and other
everyday essentials.
In the summertime, I carry an extra shirt and deodorant, as my
heavy perspiring soaks the shirt I set off in. (And of course, take a
plastic bag to store the stinky old shirt in!)
These are just a for-instance of what I do and how effective it can be.
The whole point of emergencies is you never know when you'll have
one, and being prepared once is way better than not being ready.
Your bag contents can be absolutely whatever would make your
time away from home easier; What do you always find yourself wishing
you had with you?
As the saying goes; "I'd rather have it and not need it than need it
and not have it!" (And I always have need of something from my
bag of tricks.)
**********************************************************
Friday, February 22, 2013
InFauxMation Overload
Everyone experiences a sense of not having enough
time to do what they need or want, being stressed out
from trying to keep up with all the demands on them, and
feeling whelmed and run down from their constantly
hectic schedule.
Part of this stress is from being tapped into too much,
connected to and reacting to everyone else's stuff.
Social media does not need to be on all the time; we
don't have to use it merely because it exists.
It has become a matter of the technology controlling us
rather than the opposite.
People used to have a better understanding of the need
to keep to yourself occasionally, appreciate some down
time, secure some time to be calm. Now every moment
of every day is filled with endless streaming information.
Information about strangers, events around the world,
hearing the opinion of every person living, and having
the most menial of instances broadcast as news.
It's too much to keep up with, and yet we're still trying to do so.
The days of playing board games, eating dinners together,
sitting down, slowly doing any task, and all the other normal
actions that people write off as corny and old-fashioned had
some very good points to them. Not all progress has to
eliminate what came before. Some things endured for a reason.
The creative mind needs quiet and space. People need time
alone to hear their own thoughts, their own voices. We all
need to write, unwind, and get in touch with self. We all need
time to recuperate from our day and prepare for the next . We
need one-on-one and face-time to build and keep relationships.
We need space and time to unwind and unplug from all
that hustle and bustle. And yet the idea that friends will think us
'out-of-the-loop'--or perhaps the fear that we might miss some
vital tidbit--keeps us tuning in, even as we weary.
********************************************
time to do what they need or want, being stressed out
from trying to keep up with all the demands on them, and
feeling whelmed and run down from their constantly
hectic schedule.
Part of this stress is from being tapped into too much,
connected to and reacting to everyone else's stuff.
Social media does not need to be on all the time; we
don't have to use it merely because it exists.
It has become a matter of the technology controlling us
rather than the opposite.
People used to have a better understanding of the need
to keep to yourself occasionally, appreciate some down
time, secure some time to be calm. Now every moment
of every day is filled with endless streaming information.
Information about strangers, events around the world,
hearing the opinion of every person living, and having
the most menial of instances broadcast as news.
It's too much to keep up with, and yet we're still trying to do so.
The days of playing board games, eating dinners together,
sitting down, slowly doing any task, and all the other normal
actions that people write off as corny and old-fashioned had
some very good points to them. Not all progress has to
eliminate what came before. Some things endured for a reason.
The creative mind needs quiet and space. People need time
alone to hear their own thoughts, their own voices. We all
need to write, unwind, and get in touch with self. We all need
time to recuperate from our day and prepare for the next . We
need one-on-one and face-time to build and keep relationships.
We need space and time to unwind and unplug from all
that hustle and bustle. And yet the idea that friends will think us
'out-of-the-loop'--or perhaps the fear that we might miss some
vital tidbit--keeps us tuning in, even as we weary.
********************************************
Wednesday, February 20, 2013
Back Where We Started
"All my life I had been looking for something, and everywhere
I turned someone tried to tell me what it was.
I accepted their answers too, though they were often
in contradiction and even self-contradictory. I was naïve.
I was looking for myself and asking everyone except myself
questions which I, and only I, could answer.
It took me a long time and much painful boomeranging
of my expectations to achieve a realization everyone else
appears to have been born with: that I am nobody but myself."
-Ralph Ellison
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