
Once again, it's back to school time for the kids. I understand in this ever changing society that many children went back in August but on a whole, most still wait until after labour day.
Back to school is both an exciting and a dreaded time. For the children, the excitement of a new year and meeting new friends is almost unbearable as the day approaches. Also, the fears of new situations, the unknown, and the dreaded homework take some of that exciting edge off.
For me, as a parent, it means I get my house back and we go back on a regular "non-summer" schedule. What's that? That's regular bed times, dinner at the table, homework after school -- my home goes to heck in a handbasket over the summer as the nice weather and lazy days mess up any hope of a schedule that I might have had. For me, the dreaded part is the fees, the supplies, and the clothes. Who knew a public school education could be so expensive!
This month we bring and article from a guest writer about organizing your teen daughter for school. Don't have a teen daughter? It's ok, there's lots of good information there for all parents.
As Christmas approaches and money gets tighter a lot of people fall victim to the "no money down" financing that you see everywhere. Do take a moment to read the article about the pitfalls of this type of a deal.
And finally, with a heavy heart we still remember all of the victims, families and loved ones effected by the events of September 11, 2001. Our hearts go out to you.
Organizing Your Teen Daughter for School
by Rachel Paxton [3]
It's almost time for school to start again, and time for one of my most unfavorite activities...school shopping with my teenage daughter.
Don't get me wrong, I love my daughter, and we have a lot of fun hanging out together. But I hate shopping. I avoid it whenever possible. If you have a teenage daughter in middle school or the first couple years of high school, then you understand that it's not quite yet time to let them shop alone.
I'm sure I'm not the only mom unhappy about fashion styles these days, especially the fashions being advertised to young teen girls. Shopping for them is truly a challenge. I think for now, however, we have managed to somehow get my daughter ready for school.
Every year before we go school shopping, we go through my daughter's bedroom. We go through all of her clothes, both in her dresser and in her closet. Anything she knows she's not going to wear goes into a pile. Old underwear gets thrown away, and holey socks are discarded. It's time to start making a list of what she needs for the new school year.
The next pile we go through is her shoes. Some get thrown away, some get put in the pile to give away, and some can be polished up with a bit of shoe polish and a soft cloth.
After we finish going through the clothes, we put them into bags to give them to a women's or teen shelter, or give them to a friend who doesn't mind hand-me-down's.
Then we head off to the store. I hate shopping at the mall. I avoid it whenever possible because of the high prices. I forget sometimes, however, that they do actually occasionally have good sales. My daughter knows her clothing budget is limited, so we compromise on getting a couple of good pairs of jeans (on sale), and then spending less on tops and other accessories. And while we're on the subject of jeans, I always have my daughter show me how her jeans fit before we buy them. No jeans that are so low-waisted you can't bend over in them.
We also have a hard time finding shirts that fit. My daughter is a little larger in the chest than other girls her age, and she has a hard time finding shirts that fit her. We have found that at the mall, in general, all of the shirts, even size "large", don't even come close to fitting her! What they're calling large looks like "small" to me. once in awhile we hit the jackpot, though, and this year it was at Target. We found 4 or 5 tops (this time the large was really "large"), and she loved them. After the 100% cotton "large" is washed, it will fit her perfectly, and we're both happy.
We accessorize her outfits with a couple of belts, and now she's all set. When we got home and I started washing the clothes, I realized her room still wasn't off to a fresh start for school. Out came all the throw blankets, pillow cases, and everything else in her room that is washable. Tomorrow we'll put it all back and she'll get her clothes all organized for school, trying to decide what she'll wear on the first day of her sophomore year of high school.
About the Author:
Rachel Paxton is a freelance writer and mom who is the author of the Creative Homemaking Recipe of the Week Club Cookbook, a cookbook containing more than 250 quick easy dinner ideas. For recipes, tips to organize your home, home decorating, crafts, frugal living, and family fun, visit Creative Homemaking
[4]
Septembers Recipes
School's back in and you're going to have hungry little ones rushing home looking for something to snack on. What can you offer them day after day? They get enough junk food elsewhere, it's time to have some healthy snacks ready!
Fruit Shakes
Combine 1/2 cup low-fat fruit yogurt with 1/2 cup cold fruit juice in a non-breakable container with a lid. Check to make sure the lid is tight. Shake the mixture vigorously, then pour into a cup.Pudding Shakes
Use the same technique as for Fruit Shake-Ups, but instead mix 1/2 cup low-fat or skim milk with three tablespoons of instant pudding.Snack Kebobs
Cut a variety of vegetables or fruits into small chunks. Skewer them onto thin pretzel sticks. To keep the cut apples, bananas or pears from becoming discolored, dip them in orange juice before placing them onto the pretzels.Veggies and Dip
Cut carrots, celery, zucchini or cucumbers into sticks, then dip them into salsa, low-fat salad dressing, or low-fat dip.Sandwich cut Outs
Using a variety of fun shaped cookie cutters, cut slices of cheese, meat, and whole-grain bread. Then put them together to make a sandwich.Banana Pops
Peel a banana and dip it in plain or fruit yogurt. Roll the banana in crushed breakfast cereal, then freeze.
How Do You Know When It's Love?
From the book The Six Faces of Love
By Craig Owen
c 2002 Craig Owen
For more information about The Six Faces of Love go to
www.1stbooks.com/bookview/2575 [5]
Cheryl and Peter had been single for several years. Both had survived unhealthy relationships in the past, and neither believed they would find a truly intimate relationship. Everything changed when they first met one another. Their first three months together were "heaven on earth" according to Cheryl. It felt like they had known each other for years when they had only known each other for a few weeks. Three months into their relationship problems started developing. The thrill of falling in love had faded, they began to see each other's imperfections and their fights became more frequent. Now they were not sure if they loved each other anymore. What had gone wrong?
Larry and Beth planned to be married once Larry finished college. Their plans were disrupted when Larry survived a serious auto accident. Larry felt he needed to find meaning and purpose in his life before he could marry Beth. He broke their engagement and spent the next several years traveling. After studying philosophy in India and Japan and finding few answers, he drifted back to his hometown and lived with his parents. Larry wandered from one relationship to another, never finding a woman with whom he felt happy. one day he awoke to find that he was 40 years old and very much alone. What had gone wrong in his search for love and purpose in his life?
Kevin and Claire were professors at a small midwestern college. Both were happily married and had families of their own. They developed a close and warm friendship with each other and were
very open about it. Kevin and Claire often had lunch together or took walks around the campus. Both of their spouses were aware of their friendship and had no problems with it, but it
seemed the students and staff of the college had other ideas. Rumors began circulating that the two of them were having an affair. None of this was true, but the denials made by Kevin
and Claire only added fuel to the rumors. Eventually they ended their friendship rather than put up with the incessant rumors. How could the college community be so wrong in their perceptions
of the open friendship between Kevin and Claire?
WHY ALL THE CONFUSION?
All of the couples mentioned in the stories above have one thing in common: they are all confused about love. Peter and Cheryl are confused about falling in love which is different from being
in love. Larry is confusing a spiritual form of love with romantic love. Expecting to find both in one relationship, he has been unable to find either. Kevin and Claire are the victims of their college community's lack of understanding about friendships between men and women. How can each couple find their way out of confusion about love? The purpose of this book is to answer their questions and confusions about love. But before their confusion can be cleared up we must understand more clearly what we are talking about. What we are talking about are the six different loves.
There are at least six different kinds of love, each with its own distinctive relationship. The six loves are friendship, romance, spiritual, community, marriage and family love. Much of the confusion in relationships comes from looking for the wrong love in the wrong place. Consider the following examples. We may think we are seeking romance with someone when in fact we may be looking for friendship. Many people expect a successful romance to make them happy, but if this is true, why do so many people still feel unhappy even in love? Many religious people feel that they cannot have any friends outside of their religion. Is this really an accurate understanding of the spiritual forms of love and the love of friendship? Some 'pop' forms of therapy tell us that we cannot hope to have a successful marriage until we deal with the problems from our past. Yet, it seems that the only people we can find as possible partners all have their own unresolved problems just like us. Is this a cause for hope or hopelessness in finding a partner? To answer these and other questions we must first understand what love is and then carefully look at each of the six different loves.
In this chapter I will offer one possible answer to the question 'How do you know when you are in love?' This is not a question that only interests philosophers, but a very practical question that each of us faces at one time or another. I will offer a definition of love and some principles that I believe all six loves have in common. The following chapters will discuss the characteristics that make each love distinct from the other loves. By sorting out the different loves in this way we can begin to answer some of the questions facing Cheryl and Peter, Larry and Beth and Kevin and Claire. We will return to each of these couples, as well as look at other people very much like them, in the chapters to follow. But for now, I will start with a definition of love.
LOVE DEFINED
How does one answer the question "How do you know when you are in love?" This problem usually arises with romantic love, but it can occur in the other loves as well. Perhaps we can borrow a technique from philosophy to help get us started. A standard method in philosophy is to first carefully define the terms you are discussing. After defining your terms, you arrive at
criteria or principles to verify when you have an example of the subject you so carefully defined. Maybe this method of definition and verification can be of help to us. Here is my definition of love: Love is a choice to be committed, vulnerable, and responsible to the one for whom you care. There are a lot of heavy words in that definition, 'choice,' 'commitment,' 'vulnerable,' 'responsible.' Let us take a careful look at these terms in the order I have given them.
What do I mean when I say love is a choice? Love is a decision we make, a matter of the will. Love is not to be identified with emotions alone. Feelings are certainly a part of love, and
our emotional response to people is one way of finding someone we could choose to love. What exactly do we choose to do in loving someone? one of the things we choose is to make a
commitment.
When I use the word commitment I do not mean blind devotion such as "My lover right or wrong." one writer describes commitment as "the capacity to dedicate oneself to another person or cause."i We choose (there is that word again) to have a personal stake in the growth and life of the one we love. When we make a commitment to the one we love we say to them "I believe in you. I believe in who you are and in who you can become." By saying "I believe in who you are" we accept the one we love, imperfections as well as strengths. In affirming "I believe in who you can become" we recognize that people grow and change, even in love. We challenge, in the name of love, our loved one to grow beyond their comfortable limits for the sake of love. All of this talk of believing, growing, and commitment is risky business. This brings us to our next word, vulnerability.
Being vulnerable in love means that we willingly accept the pain and struggle of love as well as the joy and happiness of love. When we are committed to someone by believing in them, we cannot
escape the disappointments and upsets that come with loving imperfect people. The joy of love cannot be separated from the pain of love. Unless we accept this paradox we will run from
love every time it becomes painful or difficult. Choosing to be committed and vulnerable to the one you love is a decision to be responsible, the last word in my definition of love.
Responsibility in love means we are accountable to and for the one we love. Being accountable to the one we love involves activities that many of us have trouble with: trusting one another, being honest with each other, communicating (as opposed to just talking) with each other. To be accountable for the one we love is also difficult. There will be times when we must answer for and even defend the one we love. Since we know our loved one so well, sometimes we our obligated to make use of that knowledge. The occasion maybe as dramatic as a life or death medical situation, or as simple as a conversation with friends who ask how our loved one is doing. Being accountable to and for the one we love flies in the face of the self-indulgent individualism of our day. Yet, without responsibility love can endure over time.
So now we have our definition of love. Our task is only half completed, however. We could argue endlessly over definitions and words. To avoid this we must arrive at some criteria or principles that will verify that we have an instance of love as we have defined it. The three principles I suggest come out of the experience of other writers who are well acquainted with the human condition.
FIRST PRINCIPLE: HOW DO I NEED YOU?
My first principle comes from Eric Fromm. It is in the form of a question. How do you love the one you love? "Do you love them because you need them, or do you need them because you love them?"ii Let us look at both sides of this question.
"Do you love them because you need them?" Most of the things we do arise from mixed motives. The majority of our actions are the result of good and bad reasons blended together. (Only
saints can claim to act from pure motives, and I have yet to meet one.) Love is no exception to the reality of mixed motives. When we are in love we bring with us our best and worst qualities. The question "Do you love them because you need them?" is meant to scrutinize how predominant are our worst qualities in a love relationship. We all have some subconscious programming that affects how we choose the ones we love. For people with addictive personalities or seriously low
self-esteem, unhealthy and subconscious programming can be the predominant factor in how they choose the ones they love. If you love someone more because you need them, then beware. You
should carefully examine the dynamics of your relationship and why you are attracted to your loved one. You might have some personal issues to work through before you can achieve the kind of love relationship you seek but cannot seem to find.
"Do you need them because you love them?" A slight rewording of the question describes a very different situation. In a relationship where two people deliberately choose to become interdependent, the need for each other can become overwhelming. The difference here is that the good qualities in each person are more predominant in their choice of a loved one. Good qualities such as trust, honesty, communication, and commitment will outweigh the negative qualities of jealousy, insecurity, and anger. As I mentioned before, love will always have mixed motives and qualities. If you need someone because you love them, then the good qualities should more than compensate for the bad.
SECOND PRINCIPLE: WHO AM I?
My second principle is a line from the movie The Accidental Tourist. "It is not just how much you love someone, it is who you are when you are with them."iii The movie revolves around the struggles of named Macon Leary who is a very predictable person. He likes to have everything planned and organized. Macon writes a series of travel guidebooks called The Accidental
Tourist for reluctant business travelers who want to feel safe in their journeys. Whether you are in London or Paris, Macon's books tell you which hotels have the nicest bathrooms and which
restaurants serve American food.
Macon's safe and sheltered life is shattered when his wife Sarah decides to move out and get a divorce. Being a quiet and withdrawn person by nature, Macon reacts by becoming even more
quiet and withdrawn. He might have gotten away with it except for meeting a woman named Muriel. Muriel is as spontaneous and disorganized as Macon is subdued and predictable. Muriel takes an immediate liking to Macon and keeps pestering him to go out with her. He finally does and falls in love with her. As their relationship grows, Muriel's love for Macon changes him into a
new person. He becomes more spontaneous and playful, and his normally dismal attitude about life becomes more hopeful. Towards the end of the movie Macon makes one last attempt to
reconcile with his wife Sarah. They move back into their house and try living together again, but it is no use. Macon has changed too much to go back to his old ways. As he explains to Sarah why he wants to go back to Muriel, he tells her "Its not just how much you love someone, but who you are when you are with them." Muriel has given Macon another chance at life by allowing him to decide all over again what kind of person he wants to be.
"I believe in you. I believe in who you are and in who you can become." This is the support and freedom Macon found in his love for Muriel and the hope and freedom we should find in our
love relationships. Who are you when you are with the one you love? Do you feel a sense of freedom? Do you find a giddy courage to try new things, to grow beyond your comfortable
limits? Or are you a perpetual prisoner of your old fears and insecurities? Is your relationship more like a comfortable pair of shoes that you keep out of familiarity instead of going to the trouble of getting a new pair? I leave you to answer these questions for yourself.
THIRD PRINCIPLE: SANCTUARY
The third and last principle is from a writer who says "the essence of love is a sense of sanctuary." Sanctuary has two distinct aspects, protection and renewal. We each have our fears, insecurities, hurts, and pains that we share with a few people. If we want to grow and change for the better, we need to share these burdens with the person you love. The sense of sanctuary we find in love gives us the protection we need to share our hurts and fears with our loved one. We sense that our loved one will not make a public display of our weaknesses and fears. The protective sanctuary of love is like a mother bird spreading her wings over her young in the nest. Within the warm confines of their mother's wings the young birds know they do not have anything to fear. This feeling that we are safe and everything is okay is the protection we should find in love.
Besides protection, the sanctuary of love also provides a chance for renewal. Sanctuary is not simply an escape from the unpleasant realities of ourselves, for when we share our burdens
with others we are re-energized and restrengthened. We no longer carry our pains and fears alone and find strength to overcome those pains and fears. If we cannot overcome them, then we find in our love the ability to live with our burdens instead of grimly enduring them. It must remain a mystery how the love of two people can be greater that the burdens of one. I only know that it is true from my own experience and that of many others.
Our task is now complete. I have given you a definition of love: Love is a choice to be committed, vulnerable and responsible to the one for whom you care. And I have given you three principles by which to judge your love. "Do you love them because you need them, or do you need them because you love them?" "It is not just how much you love someone, but who you are when you are with them." "The essence of love is a sense of sanctuary." I cannot guarantee that this definition and these principles will always lead to love. I do believe that these ideas will give you a place from which to start as you seek to find love in your life.
Now that we have a definition of love in general, where do we begin to discuss the six loves?
By starting with the most basic of the six loves, friendship, to which we now turn in the next chapter.
For more information about The Six Faces of Love go to
www.1stbooks.com/bookview/2575 [6]
Craig Owen can be reached at sixloves@hotmail.com [7]
i.Eugene C. Kennedy, Believing (Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1974), 77.
ii.Erich Fromm, The Art of Loving (New York: Harper & Row, 1974), 34.
iii.Anne Tyler, The Accidental Tourist (New York: Berkley Books, 1986), 307.
Ramblings
Single parents often have issues with money and large purchases. When you're working your tail off to put food on the table, how do you come up with money if the fridge breaks? Many people fall victim of the "Deferred Payment". We've all seen it -- don't pay a dime until 2009!!! Sounds too good to be true right? THAT should be your first red flag. Read on...
The Deferred Payment Scam
One of the biggest problems facing individuals today is being able to control their personal finances. The rate of inflation has leveled off, but individual indebtedness seems to be going through the ceiling with a record number of bankruptcies being filed each year.
With more people working and earning more than ever before, this just doesn't make sense.With all the ads on TV, the radio and in the newspaper selling everything from home furnishings and
electronics to cars with little or no down payment and small monthly payments, it is easy to get caught in the credit trap.
The companies and the advertising execs know this, and that is why they keep those ads on TV, the radio and in the newspapers. Just looking for another sucker.
Most of the ads are honest and informative, but some are a little on the shady side. You have to check the small print at the bottom of the ad to see what they are really doing to you.
One of the biggest gimmicks, or rip-offs, now is the stores, especially electronics and home furnishings, advertising buy with no down payment and no payments or interest for one year.
WATCH OUT! Read the fine print!
All of the ones I have checked state that if the full amount is not paid in that time period, interest will be added from purchase date. Some that I have checked have interest rates as high as 22% to 24%.When you start making payments you are already a year behind in interest payments. With the extra interest added each month, it could take six months or longer just to get paid down
to the original purchase price.
You can, however, make this work to your advantage. Whenever you make your purchase, take the number of months until the due date, the date your first payment is due, and divide that into the purchase price. This will give you the amount you will need to put back each month so that you can pay the note off by the due date, and not have to pay any interest.
If you put this amount in a savings account each month you should earn enough interest for a dinner on the town.
So you are one of the lucky ones that has the money to pay cash? Well, go ahead and buy on the deferred payment plan, keep your money in the savings and pay when due. That way you
are earning interest and not the store.
John Watson
John writes a weekly column for his hometown newspaper.
You may read some of his stories at: http://go.to/backfence [8]
You may contact John direct at: backfence@www.com [9]
We're working on a new area of the website that brings you free offers or free trials. You can either check out what's listed online here [10] or sign up for a weekly text newsletter delivering the links directly to your inbox. Sign up here [11].
Well folks, that's it for another month. As usual, if you have any suggestions or contributions let me know [12]! We're always up to suggestions and recipes sent in also have the chance to be included on the website.
Jill Lassaline, editor
Single Parents World
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