Archive for family
Michelle Obama wants America fit like the Military
Posted by: | CommentsOn Thursday, January 27, 2011, Michelle Obama visited Fort Jackson in South Carolina and met with Lt. Gen. Mark Hertling. The Lt. Gen. has been working to change the Army’s diet and exercise programs in order to improve the fitness our military men and women. According to news reports, Ms. Obama told the Lt. Gen. that she “was fascinated by the project” and reiterated her oft-repeated statement “that lack of fitness is ‘not just a health issue but a national security issue.’”
First lady: Military could make U.S. fitFORT JACKSON, S.C. — First lady Michelle Obama said Thursday that the military’s push to turn recruits into health-conscious warriors could be a model for making people across the U.S. more focused on fitness and nutrition.Obama, who has made battling childhood obesity one of her signature causes as first lady, visited the Army’s largest training post at Fort Jackson outside Columbia to see what the Army has done, from more rigorous training drills to fat-free milk in its mess halls.She told Lt. Gen. Mark Hertling, who has worked to overhaul both the soldiers’ diets and exercise programs, that she was fascinated by the project.A lack of fitness is “not just a health issue but a national security issue,” she said.The St. Paul Pioneer Press, Friday, January 28, 2011, pg. 12A
So, has Michelle Obama now decided that the reforms pushed through by Executive Order and hidden within the Food Safety bill and Healthcare Reform are not enough – that now she must work with the military to enforce those reforms and add to them? Will the next statement coming from the Office of the First Lady be this: “The State is to care for the elevating national health by . . . the encouragement of physical fitness, by means of the LEGAL establishment of a gymnastic and sport OBLIGATION, by the utmost support of all organizations concerned with the physical instruction of the young.”? How far does the First Lady plan to go?
Happy Mother’s Day Wishes from The 912 Project Fan Site
Posted by: | CommentsThank you to all the great mothers who have worked hard to provide our children with the love, compassion, and nurturing they need as they are developing. A good mother is a blessing in every child’s life.
Happy Mother’s Day wishes to all the wonderful moms throughout the world!
A little history of Mother’s Day as found on wikipedia:
Lamberts thought this day emerged from a custom of mother worship in ancient Greece, which kept a festival to Cybele, a great mother of Greek gods.{Encyclopædia Britannica|(1959)Vol.15,p. 849} This festival was held around the Vernal Equinox around Asia Minor and eventually in Rome itself from the Ides of March (15 March) to 18 March.
The ancient Romans also had another holiday, Matronalia, that was dedicated to Juno, though mothers were usually given gifts on this day.
In Europe there were several long standing traditions where a specific Sunday was set aside to honor motherhood and mothers such as Mothering Sunday. Mothering Sunday celebrations are part of the liturgical calendar in several Christian denominations, including Anglicans, and in the Catholic calendar is marked as Laetare Sunday, the fourth Sunday in Lent to honour the Virgin Mary and your “mother” church (the main church of the area). Historians think that children who served in houses were given a day off on that date so they could visit their families. The children would pick wild flowers along the way to place them on the church or to give them to their mothers as gifts.
Merry Christmas from The 912 Project Fan Site
Posted by: | CommentsThe 912 Project Fan Site takes great pride in wishing you a very Merry Christmas as you enjoy precious times with your friends and family.
We ask that you take a few moments to pray for our many troops, who will be celebrating Christmas away from their loved ones.
To our non-Christian friends, we wish you Happy Holidays.
Christmas Joys
Evergreen boughs that fill our homes
With fragrant Christmas scents,
Hearts filled with the loving glow
That Christmas represents;
Christmas cookies, turkeys stuffed,
Festive holly berry,
Little faces bright with joy,
Loved ones being merry;
Parties, songs, beribboned gifts,
Silver bells that tinkle,
Christmas trees and ornaments,
Colorful lights that twinkle;
Relatives waiting with open arms
To smile and hug and kiss us;
These are some of the special joys
That come along with Christmas.
By Joanna Fuchs
We hope you will enjoy this creative and beautiful light display.
Is Your Retailer into the Christmas Tradition? (Updated)
Posted by: | CommentsUpdated List: This list has been updated in a new naughty or nice retailer list at: American Family Association Updates Naughty and Nice Retailers List
The American Family Association is continually updating their “Naughty or Nice Christmas List 2009” this holiday season. They have strongly come out in a declaration and request to boycott – the Gap, Old Navy and Banana Republic. Will your Christmas shopping support Christmas Retailers? Mine will… and I now know where I won’t be shopping. Conservatively speaking, I am thankful for the American Family Association’s early and ongoing research. Merry Christmas!
This list provides you with another opportunity to use your dollars to show your support for those retailers who have chosen to support Christmas instead of just believing they can draw revenue from the Holiday, while taking a stand against it.
Gwen, the Latest American Girl Doll is Homeless
Posted by: | CommentsAs a mother of three girls, I am well aware of the American Girl doll phenomenon. We’ve been to the giant store in Mall of America (Bloomington, MN), to check out the uber-expensive dolls and all the extras that can be purchased with each doll. None of my girls own any American Girl dolls. However, we do own many of the books and movies. When my oldest daughter was younger and struggling to learn to read due to a learning disability, the Kaya American Girl books were some of the few that she would read and could enjoy. We’ve also used the personal hygiene book, The Care and Keeping of Me
, as a way to open lines of communication before and during that wonderful time called Puberty. Each story that accompanies each doll is a great glimpse into the life of an American Girl during whatever period of American history she represents, and the doll’s character is strong, smart and overcomes some kind of adversity with poise and grace. They are great examples of girls who grow into strong, self-reliant women for girls to see and aspire to be themselves.
Mattel is releasing a new American Girl Doll soon. Gwen, is a modern-day doll with a unique story: She’s homeless. Her father has left the family, forcing Gwen and her mom to live out of their car and in a homeless shelter until Gwen’s mom can find her feet and get them into an apartment. The interesting part about all of this? Gwen costs $95. I don’t know of any homeless person who will be dropping $95 on a doll for their kid. I’m not homeless and I won’t buy any of my girls one of these dolls for $95! I doubt that I would buy this particular doll if it cost less than $30. What kind of message is Mattel trying to send to American girls with Gwen?
American history is ripe with fantastic stories of women overcoming adversity. I understand that Mattel is attempting to tackle an issue that is concurrent with the times we live in, but really? Do we really want to turn “homelessness” into a toy? Gwen’s story itself is unfortunately one that many children live every day in this country. By giving that story and those children a voice through something as popular as the American Girl Doll collection, Mattel is helping to open up discussion, compassion and empathy for children in that situation. However, by creating a doll based on a homeless girl for which girls to play diminishes the importance of the story. What happens when the little girl, in matching outfits with her doll, walks up to a homeless person on the street and says “Hey, my doll is homeless, too!” Instead of creating empathy for the homeless, the potential for creating indifference is very high. Just like the studies about TV time and violence views causing children to become almost immune to death and destruction, so might a story of a homeless girl that is connected to a doll make children even less empathetic to the true story of homelessness.
And what about the story of the father leaving the family causing them to lose their home? What kind of image of a father is that? What kind of image of a mom is that? Are these characters people we really want our daughters to see? Divorce is unfortunately, very common in America, as is living in circumstances that are one paycheck away from losing everything. But in the long run, are these types of stories helpful to girls’ development of positive self-esteem, positive views of men, and self-reliance? Is this the way we, as a society, choose to depict these uncertain times? Like Mattel couldn’t find a better story of overcoming the challenges of today than one of a broken family living in a car? Why not a story of a child who lived through the horrors of 9/11? Or the story of a girl who’s mom is sent to Iraq or Afghanistan? Could Mattel not find anyone with those stories to tell? Or, instead of the mom losing the house because dad’s taken a powder, maybe mom takes it as an opportunity to fulfill her dream of owning her own small-business and Gwen goes on to college, teaching girls that women are as strong as men and can do anything they set their minds to and that, even now, the American Dream is alive and well?
I hope Mattel is planning on donating a portion of their profits from the Gwen doll collection to homeless shelters. I haven’t been able to find any documentation to show that this might be true. It would be a noble thing to do. However, that gesture wouldn’t be enough for me to pay $95 for a doll, but apparently there are thousands of parents who can and will spend that kind of money on a doll based on a homeless character in a book. I just hope they actually read the story to their girls and discuss what the story means before going to the American Girl Doll store for lunch and “Gwen’s” hair appointment in the doll salon.




“Tiger Mom” vs. “Polarbear (aka Hockey) Mom”
Posted by: Andrea Mayer-Bruestle | Comments (4)Recently author Amy Chua caused controversy with her book “Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother” and subsequent column in the Wall Street Journal: “Why Chinese Mothers are Superior”. Much of the backlash stems from Ms. Chua’s statements regarding the treatment of her daughters: calling them “garbage”, not allowing sleepovers or sleep-away camps, etc. and from the arrogant, elitist tone of the column, as when Ms. Chua says:
Or when she claims:
She also claims that instead of studying or doing rote academic drills, Western kids are more likely to be involved in sports. This might be true, however, Ms. Chua insinuates that being involved in sports is a bad thing and beneath the traditional Chinese families’ values. Or that being involved in sports somehow is less important than learning to play an instrument perfectly. In her column, Ms. Chua discusses the Chinese children being forced to practice an instrument for three hours a day, when Western children are only required to practice 30 minutes a day – and the Western mom is exhilarated when her child manages just to do that.
Well, Ms. Chua, your children may be straight-A students, fluent in multiple languages, music-prodigies and accepted into all the top schools in the country, but if they’ve never had to cross the minefield that is a locker room full of 14 and 15 year old boys or deal with the politics that surround a sports’ team try-out process, how do you expect them to know how to effectively use all the book-knowledge you’ve crammed into their brains for the past 18+ years?
As most sports parents understand, raising a child who excels in their sport also requires raising that child to excel in all the other areas of life as well. It may actually be easier to be a child of Chinese-descent than a Western child – if your mama is forcing you to do your homework and forgo all the extracurriculars available, that Chinese-descended child never has to learn time-management – mom is doing it for him/her. That child also never has to learn what it is like to rely upon a whole team of individuals to win a game or a meet, never has to feel the disappointment that comes when one gives 100% but his/her teammates do not, nor does that Chinese-parented child ever get to feel the joy that comes when a team takes 3rd place after fighting through a multiple-penalty, 4 on 4 overtime followed by a shoot-out hockey game against a team that’s made it no secret that they’re gunning for each player on the opposing team.
The child of a “Tiger Mom” also never has to deal with the peer pressure and tormenting that can occur in any locker room nor does that child get to develop the life-long friendships that naturally happen during hours spent on the ice, on the court, in a pool or on a field, or the bonding that happens when a team gels so well that each player can almost read his/her teammates’ minds.
Tiger Mom’s children may ace the ACT exam, but what else will they be able to put on a college application? What happens to Tiger Mom’s children when they finally claw their way out of the den into the bright light of freedom in college? If they’ve spent most of their lives being told what to do, when to do it, how long to do something, etc., how will they deal with the challenge of managing their time and learning the social and decision-making skills necessary to navigate a college campus and later deal with office politics?
Ms. Chua throws around statistics from studies comparing Western and Chinese parents, but she doesn’t mention that according to the Department of Health and Human Services, “Asian American women ages 15 to 24 lead in the highest suicide rate amongst all ethnic groups”. The “whys” behind this high rate of depression and suicide are multiple and mixed, but some have argued that it is from trying to live up to the “Model Minority” stereotype – a stereotype that is essentially exactly the type of parenting model Ms. Chua proclaims as “Superior” to the Western model of parenting. If the Chinese Mother parenting model is so superior, why are so many Asian-American girls depressed to the point of suicide?
That American or Western students are falling behind much of the rest of the world academically is indisputable; however, is it parenting methods causing this drop in academic performance or is it the fact that American schools have been straying further and further away from basic education – math, reading, vocabulary, science, etc. – in order t o make room for anti-bullying workshops (which rarely work), sex education and foreign-language immersion programs to name a few? Is it possible that in the years since the 1960′s Progressive Movement, instead of being rooted in basic education, our school system and children have become pawns for the large and powerful Teachers’ Unions and their never-ending need for more money to feed the pensions of teachers, many of whom have lost any classroom efficacy?
Ms. Chua’s daughters may dominate my kids academically and musically, but the experiences my own kids have had on the ice and in the pool weigh heavier than anything they ever learned from a book. Those lessons are persistence, competition, tenacity, teamwork, time-management, split-second decision-making and hard work. No compliment from me can ever fulfill my child more than the feeling of euphoria when all their hard work pays off in that perfect goal or record-setting swim combined with the friendships of the teammates celebrating those achievements beside them.