July 29 food and psychology
Jefferson Board Approves a NEW SCHOOL !!!!
uFAQs
July 28 food
Blueberry dressing
July 27 food
mojito iced tea
Chocolate berry smoothie
Crash and burn!
How to Eat Healthy
July 25 food
Mashed potatoes
FAQs and Comments and Answers
chocolate shake
back home with a new challenge!
Encouraging Reformed Believers
trip update
Married Readers Only!
It is an honest description and one worth having a discussion over, at least.
I wonder what the equivalent would be for a husband to give a wife? Ladies, any suggestions?
Obama is a Monkey?
A professor from Temple University explains that American politics are a part of a global dialogue and that the Japanese company failed to understand this.
In spite of this, the CEO of the company still didn't see anything wrong with the ad, nor did any Japanese people interviewed for the story even connect it with Obama.
It's so disappointing when the rest of the world doesn't revolve around us! Can't they see that our political race is important to them. Don't they know better not to make nuanced American racial slurs in their Japanese commercials? How is it possible that NO one in Japan was offended or outraged by this CLEAR insult to Obama and the AA community?
Like Prager says, you have to be taught to be a victim. Japan just didn't get that lesson, I guess.
Raising a Real Man in a Metrosexual World
I've been thinking about this for a while and this is probably just as good a post as any to start this. My nephew, James Roy Helmka III (currently just "Jimmy"), is the closest thing I have to a son at this point in my life. In many ways (and noticeable to even his parents) he is very much like me. We are pen-pals and I try to encourage him in his schoolwork, etc. Well, there are articles, books, or other interesting things I come across and think about him, whether for him particularly or for his parents on his behalf. As a result I have thought about starting a label called "Jimmy" for all these things.
So this article is really more for Jimmy's mom and dad, but I am creating the label for all things "Jimmy" that I come across that he may either find funny, helpful, or insightful to be a better boy, man, or Christian (and for his parents in his stead).
Preparing for my next trip
Fruit salad I'll make today: strawberries, blueberries, raspberries, pineapple, banana. wow, that will be huge.
5 oz bag of prewashed Baby Herb Salad (my favorite right now).
apple, orange, cherries, grapes.
handful of walnuts
That should be plenty! I have to eat it all before landing in Taiwan in case there are food prohibitions. But hopefully I can take it on the plane. Then I have a frozen smoothie I'm thinking of packing in my luggage to eat when I get to my hotel at 10 pm Sunday night. So I think I'll actually have a ton of food. I'll probably enjoy it more than any other of the millions of airline travelers will enjoy their food this weekend. Not so crazy when you look at it that way, is it? And it's super easy! I only have to prepare the fruit salad, which should be easy.
Zucchini "pasta" and pesto
Ingredients:
1 big zucchini
pesto from your freezer. if you don't have any, you can make it as described in the Veg Times recipe link above.
canned tomato (from your garden if you are lucky) or fresh tomato, chopped (from your garden if you are lucky).
Peel the outer layer of the zucchini. Then keep peeling the zucchini onto a big plate. That's the "pasta". I wasn't sure what to do when I got to the seeds. I just ate the core, since I had plenty of zucchini on the plate. Drain most of the water from the canned tomatoes. Add the tomatoes to the pesto in a bowl and mix. Then pour on the zucchini.
I thought it had a very refreshing, summer, cool taste. And it took only about 5 minutes to prepare!
July 4 food
Breakfast: Blueberry smoothie
snack: apple
Lunch: zucchini "pasta" with pesto.
Dessert: 1/2 cantaloupe. this was perfect in it's ripeness. yum.
snack: a few cherries, mushrooms, grapes
Dinner: asparagus topped with ground sunflower & pumpkin seeds and orange juice. yum.
Dessert: 1/2 cantaloupe
Swiss chard and sweet potato
Ingredients
bunch of greens
1 onion (today I used green onions)
1-4 cloves garlic (today I used garlic scapes, yum)
1 sweet potato and/or regular potato (today I used two small sweet and 1 small regular)
1 orange
1 Tbsp each sunflower and pumpkin seeds
I just put water in a big fry pan, turned on the stove, added chopped onion and garlic; peeled the sweet potato, cut up, added it; rinsed the chard, cut out the middle stem, then cut them up and added them; ground up sunflower and pumpkin seeds in a coffee grinder; juiced an orange; added the ground seeds and orange juice at the end. By the time you add the chard, you probably only need to cook for another 10 minutes.
July 3 food
Lunch: swiss chard & sweet potato.
Dessert: 1/4 of a watermelon
Dinner: boiled edamame and pesto
Dessert: 1/4 of a watermelon.
I was really full after eating all this. Yet this morning (now it's July 4), I weighed myself and I'm still only 122.6. At 5'9" this is pretty low. I've never had much muscle on my frame, so my natural body type is more thin that most people. I do exercise a lot, so I think this is too much food if you are more sedentary.
Bachelorhood
"...Dr. Burton was neither the first nor the last to comment that marriage is a hindrance to "all good enterprises.” “Woman inspires us to great things," remarked Alexandre Dumas, "and prevents us from achieving them.” The bitter Friedrich Nietzsche believed marriage (if not women, in general) a distraction from philosophical pursuits. It is a commonplace that most important writers, artists and philosophers have been bachelors, or in the least effectively single in the way Abelard, Franklin, Rousseau, Milton, Thomas Paine and Shakespeare remained. “Certainly the best works, and of greatest merit for the public, have proceeded from the unmarried or childless men,”wrote Sir Francis Bacon (not a bachelor, but perhaps wishing he were). H.L. Mencken, who once suggested bringing back the dollar-a-day bachelor tax (it was worth that much to be single) likewise commented on the superiority of the bachelor only to Mencken it was the bachelor's great intellect and creativity that kept him single, not the other way round. "The bachelor's very capacity to avoid marriage is no more than a proof of his relative freedom from the ordinary sentimentalism of his sex, in other words, of his greater approximation to the clearheadedness of the enemy sex. He is able to defeat the enterprise of women because he brings to the business an equipment almost comparable to their own.” Who can argue that a brief catalog of famous bachelors reads like a roll call of the architects of Western Civilization?:
Pierre Bayle
Robert Boyle
Johannes Brahms
Samuel Butler
Robert Burton
Ludwig van Beethoven
Johannes Brahms
Giacomo Casanova
Frederic Chopin
Nicolaus Copernicus
Eugène Delacrois
Rene Descartes
Gustave Flaubert
Galileo Galilei
Edward Gibbon
Vincent van Gogh
Oliver Goldsmith
Thomas Hobbes
Horace
David Hume
Washington Irving
Henry James
Franz Kafka
Immanuel Kant
Soren Kierkegaard
Charles Lamb
T. E. Lawrence
Meriwether Lewis
Philip Larkin
Gottfried Leibniz
John Locke
Friedrich Nietzsche
Sir Isaac Newton
Blaise Pascal
Alexander Pope
Marcel Proust
Maurice Ravel
George Santayana
Jean Paul Sartre
Franz Schubert
Benedict de Spinoza
Arthur Schopenhauer
Herbert Spencer
Adam Smith
Stendhal
Jonathon Swift
Nikola Tesla
Henry David Thoreau
Henri De Toulouse-Lautrec
Leonardo da Vinci
Voltaire
Ludwig Wittgenstein
Similarly the contributions of the many (ostensibly) celibate medieval monks and theologians (Thomas Aquinas, Duns Scotus, William of Ockham, Desiderius Erasmus, Michael Servetus) were essential in dragging Europe out of the dark Age of Faith and paving the way for the Renaissance and the Enlightenment.
...
Vance Packard, in his 1962 book The Pyramid Climbers, noted that, “In general the bachelor is viewed with circumspection, especially if he is not well known to the people appraising him…[However] the worst status of all is that of a bachelor beyond the age of 36. The investigators wonder why he isn’t married. Is it because he isn’t virile? Is he old-maidish? Can’t he get along with people?” By contrast, the married man was the steady one, the stable lot, not least because, in Tallyrand’s memorable phrase, "a married man with a family will do anything for money.”
...
Of the 50 percent of couples that successfully weather the storms of holy matrimony, a mere 38 percent allow that their marriages are happy ones. Yet for all this doom and gloom the happily unmarried man is not opposed to love. Far from it. More likely he idealizes love more than his married counterpart. “Love is an ideal thing, marriage a real thing,” notes Goethe. “A confusion of the real with the ideal never goes unpunished.” Today's relationship gurus warn that marriage must be treated not unlike a job. "When you bring the work strategies that you use in the workplace at home, you can be really successful," says one marriage expert, which brings to mind the words of Robert Burton—that marriage is the last and best cure of romantic love.
And why shouldn’t the bachelor be as cynical as a roomful of reporters? His male friends are forever praising his great fortune. "Is it generally known that bachelors privately receive encouragement and approbation from married men?" asks Ade. Much, however, remains unsaid. The bachelor's married friends seldom speak of their troubles, though their eyes betray a deep-rooted sorrow and a tragic lonesomeness, not least due to an unfilled desire for male companionship. “If you are afraid of loneliness,” warned Chekhov, “don't marry."
...
It was once held that the female—in her dual tasks as mother and wife—played a vital role in tempering the testosterone-fueled excesses of the young male. “Women have always been the carriers of morality and the shapers of the next generation, which seems to me to be far more important than working 60 hours a week in a law firm,” says Robert Bork. Sinclair Lewis, in 1922, drew this memorable portrait of the civilizing influence of women in his novel Babbitt: "Mother corrected Father's vulgarisms by means of a rolling-pin." Sir Francis Bacon maintained that, “wife and children are a kind of discipline of humanity; and single men…are more cruel and hardhearted (good to make severe inquisitors), because their tenderness is not so oft called upon.” And George Gilder likewise notes that "Men need durable ties to women to discipline them for civilized life, or they become a menace to society and themselves… and tend to live short and destructive lives." Well, that depends on the women, I should think. I doubt the ambiguous state of civilization attained by the average coed featured in a typical Girls Gone Wild video has much influence on today's young man, save to make him hot and bothered. Indeed it would not be difficult to make the case that contemporary women are more in need of the good old civilizing influence than are men.
...
Washington Irving was one well acquainted with this sentiment: “With married men their amorous romance is apt to decline after marriage…but with a bachelor, though it may slumber, it never dies. It is always liable to break out again in transient flashes, and never so much as on a spring morning in the country; or on a winter evening, when seated in his solitary chamber, stirring up the fire and talking of matrimony....”
Liberal Whiplash
"If next week he named Dick Cheney as his running-mate and revealed that he spends his spare time drilling for oil in wildlife habitats, the only surprise would be that it took him so long.Now THAT's change you can believe in!Of course there's nothing much new in what the senator has done. In the lexicon of modern American politics, it's called a pivot. You campaign hard to the party's extreme in the primary election, where the base voters tend to be. Then, when the nomination is secure and there are no more idealists to be humoured, you pivot back to the centre. The only difference is that in Mr Obama's case the pivot is so hard and so fast that the entire Democratic Party is suffering from whiplash...."
American Youth
Letter from a Navy Pilot -
Battle of Midway
Anonymous
The Fates have been kind to me. When you hear people saying harsh things about American youth, you will know how wrong they all are. So many times that now they have become commonplace, I've seen incidents that make me know that we were never soft, never weak.Many of my friends are now dead. To a man, each died with a nonchalance that each would have denied was courage, but simply called a lack of fear and forgot the triumph. If anything great or good has been born of this war, it should be valued in the youth of our country, who were never trained for war, who almost never believed in war, but who have, from some hidden source, brought forth a gallantry which is homespun, it is so real.
Out here between the spaceless sea and sky, American youth has found itself, and given of itself, so that a spark may catch, burst into flame, and burn high. If our country takes these sacrifices with indifference it will be the cruelest ingratitude the world has ever known.
You will, I know, do all in your power to help others keep the faith. My luck can't last much longer. But the flame goes on and only that is important.
Easy Daal
2 cups yellow or red daal lentils
0.5-1 head garlic, depending on how much you like garlic
1 large onion, or a few mediums
1 tsp turmeric
1.5 tsp garam masala
1 tsp ground coriander (optional--I think I prefer without it)
1 tsp ground cumin
~1 Tbsp fresh ginger or 0.5 tsp ground dried
1 can tomatoes
fresh cilantro
Rinse the lentils. Then add water to cover, add everything else except the cilantro. Then add more water, say 2 inches above the lentils. Cook for an hour or until tender. Add water if needed. I made mine thick today, partly because I was gone for 4 hours while it kept cooking. I was good though. I used the food processor to chop the ginger (after peeling outer skin), then garlic, then onion because I had to get to my exercise class. So I got everything going in 10 minutes. Add a little chopped cilantro to the pot at the end, or as a garnish in your bowl. I also added to my bowl a little lemon, and grapes! I am on a fruit kick. I plan to experiment more with spice amounts, to find out which I like better than others.
History, Nationalism, Pacifism and Thomas Sowell
"In France, after the First World War, the teachers’ unions launched a systematic purge of textbooks, in order to promote internationalism and pacifism.
Books that depicted the courage and self-sacrifice of soldiers who had defended France against the German invaders were called “bellicose” books to be banished from the schools.
Textbook publishers caved in to the power of the teachers’ unions, rather than lose a large market for their books. History books were sharply revised to conform to internationalism and pacifism.
...
In Britain, Winston Churchill warned that a country “cannot avoid war by dilating upon its horrors.” In France, Marshal Philippe Petain, the victor at Verdun, warned in 1934 that teachers were trying to “raise our sons in ignorance of or in contempt of the fatherland.”
But they were voices drowned out by the pacifist and internationalist rhetoric of the 1920s and 1930s.
Did it matter? Does patriotism matter?
France, where pacifism and internationalism were strongest, became a classic example of how much it can matter.
...
During the First World War, France fought on against the German invaders for four long years, despite having more of its soldiers killed than all the American soldiers killed in all the wars in the history of the United States, put together.
But during the Second World War, France collapsed after just six weeks of fighting and surrendered to Nazi Germany. At the bitter moment of defeat the head of the French teachers’ union was told, “You are partially responsible for the defeat.”
Charles de Gaulle, Francois Mauriac, and other Frenchmen blamed a lack of national will or general moral decay, for the sudden and humiliating collapse of France in 1940.
At the outset of the invasion, both German and French generals assessed French military forces as more likely to gain victory, and virtually no one expected France to collapse like a house of cards — except Adolf Hitler, who had studied French society instead of French military forces.
Did patriotism matter? It mattered more than superior French tanks and planes. ..."
July 2 food
late Breakfast (was out all morning): Strawberry smoothie
lunch: yellow daal, broccoli & carrots. I added grapes to the daal. I just love adding fruit to food. I'm on a fruit kick.
snack: strawberries, 2 peaches
dinner: half a big watermelon.
Holy cow. I thought watermelons were just made of water. But I got really full and decided to check fitday.com. That watermelon had 700 calories in it! no wonder I was so full. It was really good. I love watermelon. But maybe tomorrow I'll just have a quarter watermelon. It also had 10 grams of fat and 14 grams of protein. That's a fair amount of both (12% of fat calories, 7% of protein). You don't think of fruit as having fat in it, but I guess most fruit and vegetables have both.
The daal for lunch was fine but I'd like to vary the spices around a bit. I think I like some more than others. Also, I am just really not in the mood for beans. I think I will listen to my moods and not eat them for a while. I'm in the mood for summer fruits and vegetables.
Peace through War
"The God of peace will soon crush Satan under your feet." Romans 16:20Isn't that a shocking statement? How can He be called the God of PEACE if he will "crush" anything. Violence is contradictory to peace, is it not? Or is it? If we look forward in the Biblical timeline, we will see that Christ will reign for 1000 years on Earth. This will be an unparalleled time of peace. BUT, this will happen only as he violently takes captive the enemy of our souls.
God IS a god of peace, AND he will use war to secure it.
Constant Need for the Gospel
"It is a false gospel which says that you are ok and God just wants to improve you. No, God wants to remove all the false foundations and beams you have erected in your house and replace them entirely with new ones. The gospel is not about moral improvement but about making a new man. Our inability to grasp this means that we have a serious gap in our apprehension of the gospel. Our identity as Christians is subverted when the holes in our lives are filled with anything other than Christ. Our relationship to God and others suffer as a result.I want you to take a close look with me at a passage in 2 Peter 1:3-8.
“His divine power has granted to us all things that pertain to life and godliness, through the knowledge of him who called us to his own glory and excellence, by which he has granted to us his precious and very great promises, so that through them you may become partakers of the divine nature, having escaped from the corruption that is in the world because of sinful desire. For this very reason, make every effort to supplement your faith with virtue, and virtue with knowledge, and knowledge with self-control, and self-control with steadfastness, and steadfastness with godliness, and godliness with brotherly affection, and brotherly affection with love. For if these qualities are yours and are increasing, they keep you from being ineffective or unfruitful in the knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ. For whoever lacks these qualities is so nearsighted that he is blind, having forgotten that he was cleansed from his former sins.”If you are going to take away anything from this article, take this away: The reason, Peter says, that your Christian life is ineffective and unfruitful and still laden with sin is not because you have not tried hard enough, but rather, that you have forgotten the gospel … forgotten what Christ has done for you. You have forgotten to apply the gospel to every situation.. The ramifications of this are profound. And take note, Peter also says that in the gospel He has provided everything we need for life and godliness NOW. This is why it is so essential for Christians to gather together every week to encourage one another and hear the pastor remind us what Christ has done, and is doing for us, through the Holy Spirit who unites us to Him. The people Peter describes in the above passage are nearsighted and blind to how the gospel applies today for them as Christians."
This article was actually a response to a book titled "How People Change" and reviewed here.
July 1 food
Lunch: spinach-salad mix smoothie. a slight variation on the green smoothie. I used both a bag of spinach and the last of my salad mixes from the trip, so 10 oz of greens! I added fresh pineapple (conveniently diced for me by the co-op) in addition to the mango to balance the greens. This is my large-size version of the smoothie, making two 20 oz servings. You can also add a banana and more orange juice if you want it even bigger. Dessert: apple and grapes.
Dinner: I greatly improved my curried mustard greens recipe, and I'd say it's a winner now. This was rich-tasting yet probably not terribly fattening. I got the idea from Elijah on the Furhman forums to add banana to the curry sauce. It was so good I ate the whole thing and nothing else. And it only took a half an hour to make from opening the refrigerator door to sitting down to eat. I think that is probably longer than any meal I've posted so far, but it's still not bad.
Trip review and new trip planning
This plan will work well for the second part of my next trip where I'll be on a mountain top for 7 nights, and will have access to a kitchen. I won't have time to do much meal preparation so don't want to cook and clean. For the first part of my trip, I'll be in Taiwan. I will be able to eat vegan, but don't think I can control the oil and salt intake as much, so will just try to limit my quantities. On the way to Taiwan, I'll be in airports and airplanes for about 24 hours. If we were allowed to take liquids on board I could bring smoothies and be in good shape. I have a theory that the psychologists and facists are experimenting on airline passengers to see how much demeaning and ridiculous treatment we're willing to take. So I won't be able to bring a smoothie on board, but I can put a frozen one in my checked bag to eat in the hotel when I arrive late Sunday night. I could bring energy bars but you've probably figured out by now that I'm into fresh veggies and fruit--it's a relatively new fad of mine and I'm having fun with it. So I think I'll just bring a bunch of fruit in my second carry-on bag, if a second carry-on bag is still allowed. mmm, fruit, the ultimate convenience food. I hope the co-op has fresh cherries when I go.
I Am Canadian
June 30 food
Breakfast: blueberry smoothie
Lunch: large piece of watermelon; half a cantaloupe, sugar snap peas. The peas were so good raw, I didn't bother to steam them.
snack: box of strawberries, apple
Dinner: steamed asparagus with garden herbs (chives, dill, cilantro, but mostly chives), squeeze of lime, little date sugar, cayenne pepper (not necessary). A little container of salad from the co-op: tempeh+soy sauce, sweet potatoes, kale marinated in vinegar. It had no oil in it so I was curious to try it. It was okay but not great. I wouldn't get it again, preferring fresh veggies.
I should note that my eating habits are seasonal and in the summer I am in the mood for fruits and veggies and quick meals (of fruits and veggies).
Blog Archive
-
▼
2008
(404)
-
▼
July
(39)
- July 29 food and psychology
- Jefferson Board Approves a NEW SCHOOL !!!!
- uFAQs
- July 28 food
- Blueberry dressing
- July 27 food
- mojito iced tea
- Chocolate berry smoothie
- Crash and burn!
- How to Eat Healthy
- July 25 food
- Mashed potatoes
- FAQs and Comments and Answers
- chocolate shake
- back home with a new challenge!
- Encouraging Reformed Believers
- trip update
- Married Readers Only!
- Obama is a Monkey?
- Raising a Real Man in a Metrosexual World
- 4th of July
- Preparing for my next trip
- Zucchini "pasta" and pesto
- July 4 food
- Swiss chard and sweet potato
- July 3 food
- Bachelorhood
- Liberal Whiplash
- American Youth
- Easy Daal
- History, Nationalism, Pacifism and Thomas Sowell
- July 2 food
- 3 Things To Do to Cut Oil Prices
- Peace through War
- Constant Need for the Gospel
- July 1 food
- Trip review and new trip planning
- I Am Canadian
- June 30 food
-
▼
July
(39)