bite-sized bits of information gleaned from my personal parenting experience.
Sunday, March 3, 2013
Pinkeye
I like pink. And I like eyes. I just don't like the two things together. But, given my kids' ages (3 and 1), we are unfortunately prone to picking up the dreaded conjunctivitis at least once or twice every winter season.
This last round had me shooting steam out of my ears. $102 for 3 mLs of C's eyedrops (see photo above)! No generic available. "Your deductible has not been met," by way of explanation. This, despite the fact that we pay a $1200 monthly insurance premium. Argh, don't get me started!
Luckily, my friend Rosina saved the day, at least when I woke up the next morning with the telltale pink and oozy eye. Chamomile tea bags. Soak in hot water, let cool, and place over eyes for 5-10 minutes. "Every 90 minutes," she suggested, but I could only manage every 3-4 hours. But, oh miracles or miracles! By that same evening, my eyes had cleared up, and I woke up the next morning bright- and white-eyed!
Which got me thinking...kids don't have the patience to sit there with tea bags over their eyes. What if we were to treat one eye at a time, using a pirate patch to hold the tea bag in place? Toy sword and hook optional.
Friday, February 22, 2013
Mmmm....Horseburgers..

Stomach-churning stuff, really. The next time you're thinking of taking your kids out for burgers, I'd encourage you to read this article.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/vickery-eckhoff/burger-king-horse-meat_b_2605982.html
Seriously, where do all the dead horses go????
Wednesday, January 30, 2013
Ingredients Banned Everywhere but the U.S.
Seriously? What the hell is wrong with the FDA? Protecting the consumer, my a**. Protecting Big Food and Big Pharma, more likely. But I'm not here to rant on my soapbox. I'd rather use my wallet to protest. Hopefully, this will help you as well as you make your shopping choices. Read this before you reach for that mac-and-cheese or the gallon of milk or that chicken breast for the kids.
Friday, January 25, 2013
Plastics
Sweet Jebus, it's been a while since I last posted something. I keep finding things that I want to post about, but by the end of the day -- after kids have been fed, bathed, and put to bed, and dishes have been washed, toys picked up, and apartment arranged -- I usually find that I have just enough energy to play a couple of Words With Friends moves on my iPhone and then I'm kaput. Must. Be. Disciplined.
So this is one of things I wanted to post. It seems that I store EVERYTHING in plastic...usually to assuage my guilt over ordering takeout (the amount of waste that NYC takeout generates is scandalous, really). But what bothers me most is that all my kids' food and drinks are stored and transported in plastic. I should know better than to trust that the "BPA-free" claims on baby container packaging absolve me of asking the obvious question: "But what else does it contain?" Well, this handy chart answers the question neatly.

So this is one of things I wanted to post. It seems that I store EVERYTHING in plastic...usually to assuage my guilt over ordering takeout (the amount of waste that NYC takeout generates is scandalous, really). But what bothers me most is that all my kids' food and drinks are stored and transported in plastic. I should know better than to trust that the "BPA-free" claims on baby container packaging absolve me of asking the obvious question: "But what else does it contain?" Well, this handy chart answers the question neatly.

Sunday, October 28, 2012
The Upper West Side Nanny Tragedy
I'm not sitting in front of my computer tonight to rehash any of the details of this devastating tragedy. There's absolutely no way for me to wrap my mind around the extent of such loss and sorrow, but I know that my heart has been aching for the Krim family (immediate and extended) and that I've been thinking about them non-stop. The tragedy has informed the way I now hug my girls, the way I now talk to them, the way I kiss their little toes, the way I sing to them, the way I tuck them into bed... . All the usual but distant cliches about the frailty of life have suddenly slapped me in the face with their full-blown malevolence, and I can't help but wonder the "Is this the last time?" question every time I interact with the girls. Even when I complain to others about how desperately clingy my 13-month-old has become, I do so with the awareness that I am fortunate to have a child who wants me so -- who is alive and seeks my presence. Of course, the immediacy and urgency of these feelings will soon recede, and all will return to normal -- except for one family, of course. But that's not the point of this post.
Rather, I've been increasingly infuriated/nauseated/distressed by much of the commentary that has accompanied the tragedy-related articles. There is a lot of victim-blaming (e.g., why did a woman of her means need a nanny in the first place?, etc.) and so much self-righteous gloating (e.g., I'm a committed parent, and that's why I'll never use a nanny, etc.) floating around out there in cyberspace, forming some kind of insidious, guilt-/panic-inducing metanarrative of the (dare I say?) anti-feminist sort. I know that's a lot to unpack, but if you've gotten this far, you may as well hear me out.
Yes, there are probably some super-affluent women who really do just want to hand their kids off to their nannies so that they can sit in a spa all day. I don't know. Maybe they live in "Gossip Girl" episodes. This post is not about those Cruella Devilles. And there's usually some leeway given in the commentary I've read for women who absolutely need to work and so have no choice but to hire nannies. The women who seem to bear the brunt of the judgment and spite are those who don't have to work but hire nannies anyway. That includes women who work simply because they love their jobs or because they don't want to interrupt the trajectory of their careers. (Full disclosure: I am a stay-at-home-mom who, until now, has not used a nanny.) Marina Krim didn't really have to work, apparently, or at least that's what I've gleaned from reading between the lines.
Never mind that she was a committed, loving mother. Why would a stay-at-home mom need a nanny? To this I want to scream, because it takes a fucking village. There's absolutely no way, before you have kids, to know how hard this whole business of child-rearing is going to be. Perhaps you have a husband who travels a lot or works late hours. Perhaps you don't have parents or siblings or friends who can pop in to take care of the baby while you take the older child to her dance class. Perhaps you want to grab some groceries while your child is napping but need someone around to watch her while you do so. Perhaps you want some precious one-on-one time with your older child, so that she remembers that you love her dearly, despite the fact you seem to lavish ungodly amounts of time and energy pacifying the younger one. Perhaps you would like the occasional but regular me-time so that you can get your hair cut, see a dentist, have lunch with a friend, take a shower, pick up the apartment, return emails. Bottom line is, every mother I know needs some kind of help. You may call the help a babysitter. You may call her a nanny. As far as I'm concerned, it's just a difference of pay, benefits (if any), and hours. So unless 1) you're a parent who doesn't have extended family to help you and 2) you've never once hired someone to provide assistance, perhaps you should keep the judging to yourself, mmm?
And speaking of assistance, let's not forget that the babysitter you hired for tomorrow's date night with the spouse might have her own psychotic episode and murder your children. But she probably won't. These tragedies are sensational not only for the depth and scope of the suffering but for their rarity and randomness. A psychotic break could happen to anyone whom your child considers an authority figure, but that doesn't mean that you're not going to keep using that tutor, or stop taking your child to violin lessons, or not let her go to that awesome summer camp. It's unfair to stigmatize an entire group of workers -- i.e., nannies (not to mention the women who hire them) -- for the random violent act of one of them.
But what bothers me equally is how much of the commentary has a way of shepherding women back into their supposed place: the home. I feel like I can almost hear a certain subset of our population wagging their collective finger as they intone something about the lesson this tragedy should be for any woman who would dare continue working out of anything but necessity. Maybe they're actually cackling. Granted, I may be dipping in hyperbole and/or paranoia here, but in its milder form, there's a lot of hand-wringing by moms over whether they should feel comfortable going back to work or by husbands who question whether their wives should work. (I wouldn't be surprised to find out that half of working moms in New York City called in sick on Friday.) It's a disturbing development spawned by this tragedy, and I'm hoping that I am perhaps just being too sensitive or dabbling negligently in political correctness.
Anyway, I'm not in the business of venting (too much) about social issues, so I'll wrap up the post here. Suffice to say that we should all be grieving with the Krims, but to turn this tragedy into anything more than what it is -- that is, a random act of violence by a mind that clearly snapped -- would be doing all women a disservice.
Rather, I've been increasingly infuriated/nauseated/distressed by much of the commentary that has accompanied the tragedy-related articles. There is a lot of victim-blaming (e.g., why did a woman of her means need a nanny in the first place?, etc.) and so much self-righteous gloating (e.g., I'm a committed parent, and that's why I'll never use a nanny, etc.) floating around out there in cyberspace, forming some kind of insidious, guilt-/panic-inducing metanarrative of the (dare I say?) anti-feminist sort. I know that's a lot to unpack, but if you've gotten this far, you may as well hear me out.
Yes, there are probably some super-affluent women who really do just want to hand their kids off to their nannies so that they can sit in a spa all day. I don't know. Maybe they live in "Gossip Girl" episodes. This post is not about those Cruella Devilles. And there's usually some leeway given in the commentary I've read for women who absolutely need to work and so have no choice but to hire nannies. The women who seem to bear the brunt of the judgment and spite are those who don't have to work but hire nannies anyway. That includes women who work simply because they love their jobs or because they don't want to interrupt the trajectory of their careers. (Full disclosure: I am a stay-at-home-mom who, until now, has not used a nanny.) Marina Krim didn't really have to work, apparently, or at least that's what I've gleaned from reading between the lines.
Never mind that she was a committed, loving mother. Why would a stay-at-home mom need a nanny? To this I want to scream, because it takes a fucking village. There's absolutely no way, before you have kids, to know how hard this whole business of child-rearing is going to be. Perhaps you have a husband who travels a lot or works late hours. Perhaps you don't have parents or siblings or friends who can pop in to take care of the baby while you take the older child to her dance class. Perhaps you want to grab some groceries while your child is napping but need someone around to watch her while you do so. Perhaps you want some precious one-on-one time with your older child, so that she remembers that you love her dearly, despite the fact you seem to lavish ungodly amounts of time and energy pacifying the younger one. Perhaps you would like the occasional but regular me-time so that you can get your hair cut, see a dentist, have lunch with a friend, take a shower, pick up the apartment, return emails. Bottom line is, every mother I know needs some kind of help. You may call the help a babysitter. You may call her a nanny. As far as I'm concerned, it's just a difference of pay, benefits (if any), and hours. So unless 1) you're a parent who doesn't have extended family to help you and 2) you've never once hired someone to provide assistance, perhaps you should keep the judging to yourself, mmm?
And speaking of assistance, let's not forget that the babysitter you hired for tomorrow's date night with the spouse might have her own psychotic episode and murder your children. But she probably won't. These tragedies are sensational not only for the depth and scope of the suffering but for their rarity and randomness. A psychotic break could happen to anyone whom your child considers an authority figure, but that doesn't mean that you're not going to keep using that tutor, or stop taking your child to violin lessons, or not let her go to that awesome summer camp. It's unfair to stigmatize an entire group of workers -- i.e., nannies (not to mention the women who hire them) -- for the random violent act of one of them.
But what bothers me equally is how much of the commentary has a way of shepherding women back into their supposed place: the home. I feel like I can almost hear a certain subset of our population wagging their collective finger as they intone something about the lesson this tragedy should be for any woman who would dare continue working out of anything but necessity. Maybe they're actually cackling. Granted, I may be dipping in hyperbole and/or paranoia here, but in its milder form, there's a lot of hand-wringing by moms over whether they should feel comfortable going back to work or by husbands who question whether their wives should work. (I wouldn't be surprised to find out that half of working moms in New York City called in sick on Friday.) It's a disturbing development spawned by this tragedy, and I'm hoping that I am perhaps just being too sensitive or dabbling negligently in political correctness.
Anyway, I'm not in the business of venting (too much) about social issues, so I'll wrap up the post here. Suffice to say that we should all be grieving with the Krims, but to turn this tragedy into anything more than what it is -- that is, a random act of violence by a mind that clearly snapped -- would be doing all women a disservice.
Wednesday, September 19, 2012
Rice-Arsenic Update
Apparently, there was a TV crew going around the playgrounds today asking moms about the rice-arsenic connection. I thought this was old news, until I browsed CNN today and found yet another article on the issue. I snorted when I read this: "However, the Consumer Reports study recommended people eat no more than two servings of a quarer-cup of dry rice a week." Yo, I'm Asian. We eat two servings of a quarter-cup of dry rice in one meal...multiple times a week. I'm hoping that my families' organs don't start failing in the near future, and I don't know what to think any more. But here's the link to the article, if anyone wants to do any thinking in my stead:
Friday, August 24, 2012
Cow Milk-Diabetes Connection, Part Deux
I know I've mentioned this before, but here's another reference to the connection between cow milk and type 1 diabetes:
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