Showing posts with label homemaking tip. Show all posts
Showing posts with label homemaking tip. Show all posts

Friday, February 21, 2014

Part 3: Building "A House of Order"-- Easy Freezer Meal!

The last part of our wonderful RS activity involved making an easy freezer meal. The idea behind our entire meeting was to get our homes in order so that we can then serve others. Sisters were encouraged to share the freezer meal with someone they felt could really use it at this time--even if it meant their own family (self-care is also a huge aspect of then being able to fully serve others!).

Below you will find the original recipe Margie used for our activity. However, to make things even simpler for our meeting, we made regular lasagna instead of the lasagna rolls. No-boil lasagna noodles were used, and the dish was layered as follows:

sauce
3 noodles (not touching)
sauce
ricotta mixture
3 noodles
sauce
ricotta mixture
3 noodles
sauce
ricotta mixture
sauce
mozzarella cheese on top (can also be sprinkled on each layer throughout)

As long as the no-boil noodles are layered with the sauce or ricotta mixture and are not touching one another, they will cook just fine! An easy way to make and share a meal like this without worrying about your own dishes is to use a disposable aluminum foil pan covered with foil. Hope you enjoyed the meal and/or sharing it!

Spinach Lasagna Rolls


9 lasagna noodles, cooked
10 oz frozen chopped spinach, thawed and completely drained
15 oz fat free ricotta cheese
1/2 cup grated Parmesan cheese
1 egg
salt and fresh pepper
32 oz jar of spaghetti sauce
9 tbsp (about 3 oz) part skim mozzarella cheese, shredded
Preheat oven to 350°. Combine spinach, ricotta, Parmesan, egg, salt and pepper in a medium bowl. Ladle about 1 cup sauce on the bottom of a 9 x 12 baking dish.
Place a piece of wax paper on the counter and lay out lasagna noodles. Make sure noodles are dry. Take 1/3 cup of ricotta mixture and spread evenly over noodle. Roll carefully and place seam side down onto the baking dish. Repeat with remaining noodles.
Ladle sauce over the noodles in the baking dish and top each one with 1 tbsp mozzarella cheese. Put foil over baking dish and bake for 40 minutes, or until cheese melts. Makes 9 rolls.
To serve, ladle a little sauce on the plate and top with lasagna roll.

Here are pictures from the night's activity!















Saturday, February 15, 2014

Building "A House of Order"-- Recap of our February Quarterly RS Activity! Part 1

On February 11, we met as Relief Society sisters to learn and discuss ways in which to create a more peaceful, orderly home. Margie gave a wonderful lesson including counsel and guidance from church leaders about how organization, order, routines, provident living, and living within our financial means all work together to create a more spiritual, peaceful home. When we examine these aspects of our lives, we can see how the temporal and spiritual are intertwined and greatly influence the other. As we strive to seek Heavenly Father's help and follow counsel provide by church leaders, we can have homes that serve as our own temple and refuge from the outside world. 

Sisters shared great input and thoughts, including the need to be flexible and embrace the disorder and chaos that is bound to happen while children are young and growing--as this shows the joy and happiness that children bring to our homes and lives! Children can learn from parents what it means to create order in our homes, and there are great teaching moments in daily living that will help prepare children for creating their own house of order some day.

Lastly, we were reminded not to be so hard on ourselves!! We do the best we can do---and that's all we can do! We can be a little better and try a little harder each day. As we trust in Heavenly Father and rely on Him, we will be able to achieve the balance we need to create the type of home we would like to have. As we put our own lives in order, we will then have more opportunities and greater means to reach out, serve, and help those around us. Having a peaceful, Christ-centered home will lead us to want to help others have the same experience!

Here are tips from our very own sisters--ways that can help us have more organized, orderly homes. Thanks for sharing!!

“A House of Order”
Organizational Tips From VF1 Relief Society Sisters
Trudy Cook
Since I first got married, 53 years ago this August, I have made tentative menus, meal planners for a week, month or whatever.  It was usually based on how we were paid.  It was a way of knowing what we were going to eat.  For seven days, I might say:  beef, fish, chicken, pork, no meat, lamb  optional.  I did this because, just starting out, it was overwhelming to figure out what to cook.  Then I'd make a meal plan, and my shopping list was generated by the recipes I would cook.  It took all the craziness out of what  we were going to eat.  It included breakfast, lunch, dinner.  Once you get the hang of it,  it doesn't take long and it saves on trips to the store and makes cooking easier.  It is quite cost effective, as you only buy what you need.  It saves lots of time in and out of the kitchen. I used the word tentative, because I never had to cook a meal.  If I didn't want to cook, I didn't, but I was always prepared.  I think it helped me to learn to like to cook.
Kim Wilson
1. De-clutter -  I've learned that the easiest way to keep a clean house is to get rid of things.  I didn't realize it, but every item I owned took a little bit of my time.  I recently went through a giant purge and got rid of 8 bags of items I never use in my kitchen.  I had so much more space, and I haven't missed any of it in 8 months.  Next, I went through the games.  I noticed after I got rid of half of them, my kids actually played with the games we had a lot more.  I guess having so many stuffed in the closet was overwhelming to them, so the simplicity actually helped them play with them more.  Last, I went through the toys.  I had the kids pick their absolute favorites, then, I got rid of 5 bags of toys.  Once again, my kids started playing with the toys more and didn't miss any of the ones we got rid of.  I was shocked.  After these three things, the time I spent cleaning each week was cut down by half!
 2. Christmas every 3 months - I have another friend who takes out one box of toys at a time, then every 3 months or so, she puts them away and pulls out another box.  It makes it exciting for the kids to get new toys to play with and there is so much less to clean up.
 3. The miracle cure to laundry - Our current apartment is a little small for our family, so out of necessity I had to put the kid’s dressers with their clothes in the basement.  (I thought about doing this in the past, so I'm glad I've finally been able to test it out).  I can't believe how much easier it has made my life.  Their rooms stay clean for one (which is a miracle), their clothes are all right next to the washing machine so it's easy to throw them in, and after they are washed, they sort out their own clothes and put them directly in their drawers.  No transporting, folding, transporting, and then putting away.  I finally feel like laundry isn't taking over my life!
Patty Cabot
In terms of organization tips, I have become a list master to try and tackle those crazy things that seem to linger and never get done. I make a few kinds of lists of things to do, e.g.house projects, travel plans, etc. I have my regular weekly planner. In that I put things that must be done at the start of each week.  Then I take a look at my other lists of things that would be nice to get done someday and see which if any I can fit in during that week. This helps me to prioritize. Even one check, each week, off the lingering list helps
Sheryl  Jackson
- I put socks divided by color or white in a linen/mesh bag that zips shut so I never lose a sock.
- Don't let clean dishes sit in the dishwasher over night.
- Put baking soda in the bottom of the trash can (just a little) and change it about every 3 to 6 months. Pour it down the sink to help with the drain smell
- soak dress shirts in the washer with water and oxi clean powder for 1 to 3 hours before washing to get out sweat stains on neck and sleeve cuffs, then drain and wash as you normally would
- drink a glass of water before you eat a meal
Deb Chiapelli
Attached is a picture of something that has made my life easier this year. It is a file I keep on my kitchen counter to take care of paper clutter/mail. I file it right away so I don't have piles of paper sitting around. Then, I can go back and go through it, when I have time. I think you can see some of my categories. In addition to the ones you can see, I have a folder for Bob, me, and the pets.

Sarah Kinghorn
Here are a couple of things that work for me when I do them. The operative word here is WHEN.
a) Wake up and get ready before the kids are up. The days where I am able to read my scriptures (even for a few minutes), make my bed, get dressed, etc. go a lot smoother than when I don't.
b) Meal planning - I've tried to do monthly, but weekly seems to get done more often. It's nice to know what you're going to be having for dinner before 5 p.m. ;)
Also, in this vein I've started making dishes and freezing half of them for another time. Prep work is done for 2 meals. Yeah baby!
c) Planning at night for the next day. I usually just jot down what I want to accomplish - phone calls, errands, chores, etc.
d) I just started exercising again on November 1st. I've found that my day goes smoother if I go straight to the gym after getting Lucy and Andrew on the bus in the morning.
Owenna Nagy
I can't allow myself to leave the house in the morning until one load of wash is in.  What is most helpful for me is to broadly sketch out the week.  If I know what day I will take care of "X", then I don't have to stress over it today.  Then I simply make a To Do list for the day, in broad order of priority.  The list helps me take advantage of "butterfly moments", which otherwise would flutter by with nothing accomplished.
Donna Kneeland
To keep my cooking to a minimum I ask for restaurant gift cards for birthday, Mother’s Day, Valentine’s Day, Christmas, even resorted to Grandparents Day so the cards keep comin’ in so I can keep eatin’ out.
Chris Terrell
I keep a lot of files for different things and I label the outside so I know what is inside when I pick them up.
Devon Linn
We try to give things away if we haven't used them/worn them in one full year (so I get out all my favorite platters once a year to keep them safe).
Each of the kids has a cute, labeled bin that they put their papers from school in. I sort through them about once a week so that at the end of the year only the "favorites" can be kept and put in their school memory books.
I make the kids update their own school memory books for each year on the last day of school. (Not homemade book, store-bought ones that ask questions and have spots for pictures and things).
Label-maker, label-maker, label-maker! It is definitely one of my favorite possessions, and labels on things help tons once everyone in your house can read them because who doesn't like to put things in the place with the label?
Liz Latey
Have separate tote bags packed the night before for your next day's activities. (Bag for gym, bag for kids during doctor appointment, bag for library trip, bag for kids’ sport activity etc). Line up the bags in one central location, so you can grab and go when things are hectic. This helps you mentally go through what you need the next day, as well as gives you time to prevent last minute "emergencies" like an unwashed uniform b/c you've prepared ahead of time.
Crockpots are your best friend, when you've got a busy day--saves you time & money ... and helps your family eat healthier than fast food on the run!
Katie Price
Always do the dishes before bed.
I always grocery shop on Mondays and make it last the week, writing a complete grocery list before I go.
I make our lunches the night before.
Jill Fulop
I have all the kids’ lunches, outfits, outerwear, shoes, backpacks, hairbrushes, squirt bottles, aquaphor for chapped lips, tooth brushes and paste ready at night, so when I wake up in the morning, all I have to do is pop a few fridge items (already prepped), in their bags and make sure they get dressed at the right time (gather up outfit, shoes and outerwear from their individual pile). Usually, I have quite a leisurely morning with no stress. They eat, brush teeth, get dressed, grab backpacks and are out the door.
Ellen King
The thing that's currently helping me the most is having groceries delivered. We use the app Peapod, (which orders from Giant), to build our grocery list. Then we schedule delivery, in a range of hours on a certain day. We have until midnight the day before to add to the list. They app remembers each order and can build a list for us. You can sort by "aisle", lowest price, price per unit or by ingredient like gluten-free. Wade loves this because he can get what he wants when he needs it instead of waiting for me to get to the store. There is a small delivery fee (free for the first 90 days) and we include a driver tip with the order. It's so convenient.
Vermena Lee
Each day I have an assigned chore, i.e. M/W/F laundry, Tue grocery shopping, Thu clean master bath, F wash kitchen floor
2013 I printed out a 12 month calendar and wrote down dinner menus (I go shopping by my menu) and this year I’m using it. So I have a year’s worth of dinners.
Margie Clark
A wise woman once told me, “Never pick up something twice.  When you pick something up, put it where it belongs”.
Laundry – Fold each load as it comes out of the dryer.  Then, the clothes don’t pile up to an overwhelming mound.

~~Stay tuned for following posts including the Budgeting Info and Freezer Meal recipe used during our activity!~~

Saturday, January 18, 2014

Upcoming Quarterly Relief Society Meeting~"A House of Order"

Please join us for the first 
Quarterly Relief Society Meeting of 2014!


We will focus on ways to create "a house of order" through simple meals, 
budgeting, and organization. As we strive to put our own lives and homes 
in order we will have a greater ability to serve and help those around us. 

Tuesday, February 11, 2014
7:00pm

Hope you can make it!

Thursday, January 10, 2013

Sales by the Month


Hi Everyone,
We all know that there are certain sales that take place at certain times of the year - flour, sugar, baking stuff all goes on sale beginning in November to get ready for the holidays, etc. I came across a month-by-month list of sales that I thought I'd share to help us all save some money. 
Marie Tiller



Monthly Sales
January
  • Holiday decor and wrapping paper
  • Linens (Invented by a Philly department store in 1878, "white sales" are now practically law.)
  • Toys
  • Treadmills and ellipticals (Stores are trying to push these out the door before your resolutions tank!)
  • Vacation packages
February
  • Furniture (The lowest prices hit around Presidents' Day, in order to move merch at a traditionally sluggish time.)
  • Homes and condos
  • Lobsters and steaks (Grocery stores stock up for February 14 and discount immediately after.)
March
  • Chocolate (Yes, it's from Valentine's Day--but really cheap!)
  • Luggage (Retailers cut prices to boost sales in a month when people aren't traveling much.)
  • Outdoor gear and winter clothing
April
  • Cookware (Welcome to the start of graduation and wedding season...)
  • Home-improvement supplies
  • Tires and auto parts (For National Car Care Month--who knew?!)
May
  • Air conditioners (Buy now, not in July.)
  • Camping and outdoor gear
  • Summer clothes (Memorial Day sales!)
  • Mattresses (Stores are making way for the new models.)
  • Gym memberships (Because who wants to work out inside when it's beautiful out?)
June
  • Caribbean cruises
  • Lingerie (Retailers like Macy's, barenecessities.com, and Victoria's Secret turn over inventory this month.)
  • Laptops
  • Tools and hardware (Happy Father's Day!)
July
  • Sandals and swimsuits
  • Furniture (New styles introduced at April's big trade show are finally hitting the market, so last year's models are super-discounted.)
  • Picnic supplies (Fourth of July + nearing end of summer season = sales bonanza.)
August
  • Outdoor grills (Great selection, good prices.)
  • Kid clothing and school supplies (It's the annual back-to-school price war that you know so well.)
September
  • iPhones and iPods (New models usually debut now, so old ones are cheap.)
  • 2013 cars (When 2014's start hitting the lot, dealers have to empty out some parking spaces.)
  • Airfare (Vacay's over, sadly.)
  • Bikes
  • Summer apparel
October
  • Grills (Meh selection, awesome prices.)
  • Patio furniture
  • Winter coats (Yes, they'll go cheap again in March, but these sales offer the best choices.)
November
  • Gadgets, electronics, and small household appliances (What with Black Friday and Cyber Monday, this is your sweet spot.)
  • Winter clothing (Everyday retailers like Target and Kohl's focus on Black Friday, luxury stores like Nordstrom and Coach on Cyber Monday's online savings.)
December
  • Toys (It's all about the second and third weeks this month.)
  • Large appliances
  • Gift cards (Okay, it's not a sale sale--these good-as-cash cards never have those--but manufacturers offer bundled deals like "Buy $50, get $10 free" to goose holiday shopping.)

Tuesday, July 12, 2011

Family Work


Oh, what do you do in the summertime, when all the world is green?

Those of you who are currently with young ones at home and out of school, your answer might be like mine….trying to be patient, loving, and to keep the TV/media stuff off for as long as possible!

One thing that I have really been pushing this summer is to teach my children how to work, and there are days that it just does not go over well around here. I have been baffled at how my children can become so lazy & whiny the moment I mention it’s time to work on their chores. Honestly, I was at a complete loss and had turned to the Lord for some major help in the patience department when Owenna e-mailed me an article she had been telling me about that her sister Kathleen (who is a professor...) wrote for BYU Magazine.

The Article is entitled, “Family Work,” and gave me a lot of food for thought. In the article, Kathleen Slaugh Bahr discusses the differences between her childhood growing up working TOGETHER with her family, and the ways that we now try to make our children work. She states:

People who see the value of family work only in terms of the economic value of processes that yield measurable products--washed dishes, baked bread, swept floors, clothed children--miss what some call the "invisible household production" that occurs at the same time, but which is, in fact, more important to family-building and character development than the economic products. Here lies the real power of family work--its potential to transform lives, to forge strong families, to build strong communities. It is the power to quietly, effectively urge hearts and minds toward a oneness known only in Zion.

Kathleen then discusses the role of work from the beginning with Adam and Eve, on through the ages to the major changes in our expectations that have come to us in the last century. Along with understanding the role of family work, she also discusses some by-products that come with working together.

Ironically, it is the very things commonly disliked about family work that offer the greatest possibilities for nurturing close relationships and forging family ties. Some people dislike family work because, they say, it is mindless. Yet chores that can be done with a minimum of concentration leave our minds free to focus on one another as we work together. We can talk, sing, or tell stories as we work. Working side by side tends to dissolve feelings of hierarchy, making it easier for children to discuss topics of concern with their parents. Unlike play, which usually requires mental concentration as well as physical involvement, family work invites intimate conversation between parent and child.

We also tend to think of household work as menial, and much of it is. Yet, because it is menial, even the smallest child can make a meaningful contribution. Children can learn to fold laundry, wash windows, or sort silverware with sufficient skill to feel valued as part of the family. Since daily tasks range from the simple to the complex, participants at every level can feel competent yet challenged, including the parents with their overall responsibility for coordinating tasks, people, and projects into a cooperative, working whole.

Another characteristic of ordinary family work that gives it such power is repetition. Almost as quickly as it is done, it must be redone. Dust gathers on furniture, dirt accumulates on floors, beds get messed up, children get hungry and dirty, meals are eaten, clothes become soiled. As any homemaker can tell you, the work is never done. When compared with the qualities of work that are prized in the public sphere, this aspect of family work seems to be just another reason to devalue it. However, each rendering of a task is a new invitation for all to enter the family circle. The most ordinary chores can become daily rituals of family love and belonging. Family identity is built moment by moment amidst the talking and teasing, the singing and storytelling, and even the quarreling and anguish that may attend such work sessions.

And at my house, there has definitely been some quarreling and anguish, but I’m hoping to dwell more on the part about building love and unity. Without actually copying the entire article here (because there are so many gems that I loved), I’ll leave you with just a few more of my favorite paragraphs that came from some of Kathleen’s research.

A frequent temptation in our busy lives today is to do the necessary family work by ourselves. A mother, tired from a long day of work in the office, may find it easier to do the work herself than to add the extra job of getting a family member to help. A related temptation is to make each child responsible only for his own mess, to put away his own toys, to clean his own room, to do his own laundry, and then to consider this enough family work to require of a child. When we structure work this way, we may shortchange ourselves by minimizing the potential for growing together that comes from doing the work for and with each other.

Canadian scholars Joan Grusec and Lorenzo Cohen, along with Australian Jacqueline Goodnow, compared children who did "self-care tasks" such as cleaning up their own rooms or doing their own laundry, with children who participated in "family-care tasks" such as setting the table or cleaning up a space that is shared with others. They found that it is the work one does "for others" that leads to the development of concern for others, while "work that focuses on what is one's 'own,'" does not. Other studies have also reported a positive link between household work and observed actions of helpfulness toward others. In one international study, African children who did "predominantly family-care tasks [such as] fetching wood or water, looking after siblings, running errands for parents" showed a high degree of helpfulness while "children in the Northeast United States, whose primary task in the household was to clean their own room, were the least helpful of all the children in the six cultures that were studied."

In a world that lauds the signing of peace treaties and the building of skyscrapers as the truly great work, how can we make such a big thing out of folding laundry? Gary Saul Morson, a professor of Russian literature at Northwestern University, argues convincingly that "the important events are not the great ones, but the infinitely numerous and apparently inconsequential ordinary ones, which, taken together, are far more effective and significant."

Don't you love that last part?  I truly believe it. I know that building character is going to take more than just one day, and that the "infinitely numerous and apparently inconsequential moments" may be the most important thing I can do for my children (I just wish they'd believe me if I told them that).

I think I’ll put more air in my inflatable bag of patience…I’m going back in for another round of family work, and this time I think I’ll join in with the kids and we’ll work together! No matter how tough it gets, it’ll be worth it, right?

Thanks Owenna for the link! (And is it any wonder that this educated & gifted author is related to our dear, wise Owenna? ;) Read the whole article here. It’s worth your time!

Devon
Image Credit

Thursday, June 16, 2011

It's A "FREEBIES" PARTY - This Saturday!


With all of the moves coming up and all the organizing and cleaning out many of us are doing to get ready for summer, a bunch of us have been trying to figure out the best way to give away items others might be able to use, and then donate the rest. So we decided to have a FREEBIES PARTY (aka "Hand-me-down Swap") this Saturday, June 18 at the church from 8:30-10:00 am  If it's nice we'll try to hold it outdoors, but if it's raining we'll be in the gym.


We would LOVE to have anyone who would like to participate join us...whether you have hand-me-down clothes, toys, and housewares to bring to give away OR you just want to do some FREE yard sale-type shopping! I've heard of a lot of great items being given away, so if you're looking for something in particular that someone else might have for FREE, then stop by! I know with summer starting I would love to find some play clothes for my kids in bigger sizes and some different activity items, and give someone else some of the things we've outgrown at the same time! Also, the Sister Missionaries cleaned out their apartment and closets before they left so there are quite a few women's church clothes that had been left from previous sisters that are up for grabs. Other items available are table linens and curtain valances (many new), home decor items, plus lots of toys and shoes.

If you have things you've been wanting to give away but can't make it on Saturday, let me know and we can try to arrange some way to coordinate pickup. Everything that isn't given away or wanted will be taken to Liberty thrift for donations afterwards (unless you'd prefer to take your items back home with you).

Hope you can make it -- it'll be fun!
Devon

Image Credit

Thursday, May 26, 2011

10 Unexpected Costs of Owning Things


Since our last Relief Society activity on getting organized I've had several discussions with hubby and daughter about all the STUFF in our lives and what it does to our days, our happiness or unhappiness, our time, our stress. My daughter Carrie sent me this link to one woman who says it so well...

10 Unexpected Costs of Owning Things

2. You're carrying around the emotional weight of things you don't use.

5. You use objects as comfort.

7. The more stuff you have the more blind you become to it.

Count the TRUE cost next time you buy something.

e

photo credit

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

RS Activity: Get Organized

Devon's vertical file
Tuesday evening we enjoyed the talents of VF 2nd ward's Tammy Small. She is a professional organizer and shared with us her method of keep her home in order.

She has gleaned ideas from many books over the years but especially likes Confessions of an Organized Homemaker, by Deneice Schofield. [I just read Throw Out 50 Things, by Gail Blanke and highly recommend it too.]

How to start organizing your home
She starts by defining the function of the space. Do you need a drawer full of hubby's tools in the kitchen?

Next choose centers for each space. A baking area in the kitchen, a bill-paying area, etc.

Get 5 bags or boxes and label them.
1. Stays based on the function.
2. Throw away.
3. Give away, donate, sell (only if you really will do it).
4. Not sure.
5. Elsewhere.

Start in one corner of the room and work your way around filling up the boxes/bags. Don't stop to take something to another room. You might get distracted. Tammy does this once or twice a year. She says you'll find you have extra cupboard space.

Tame paper avalanche
One specific example, children's artwork and papers: Display the latest pic on a "clothesline" with clothes pins. Put other papers in a box. When the box is full (or at least twice during the school year) sit with the child and let them choose their favorites to keep. Take a picture of your child with their social studies poster or science fair project for the memories, then toss the item. The idea is to sincerely validate and praise, then give them choices but within a limited space. The same goes for collections, hubbies hobbies, the garage, etc.

She had some great stories to tell and we're glad she came! Thanks Tammy!

Strawberry shortcake made for a delicious ending. Thanks Charity!

e

Friday, December 10, 2010

Next BPVP Meeting This Wednesday!


Our new Relief Society Preparedness Meetings have begun! The second meeting is this Wednesday, December 15. This meeting is during the day for you who couldn't make the evening meeting. It's important to attend to understand the plan for the coming months. We know you're busy, but you'll be glad you attended!

Food Storage: Making a Plan
Wednesday, December 15, 10 am,
Debbie Horton's house, 170 Hedge Row Circle.


On-going meeting information:
Be Prepared Valley Forge (BPVF)!
Held 3rd Wednesday each month
Odd months (Nov, Jan, Mar, May, Jul, Sep) will be in the evening, 7pm
Even months (Dec, Feb, Apr, Jun, Aug, Oct) will be in the morning, 10am

Topics and location will be announced ahead of time; group ordering of preparedness items will be available. All info will be posted on the blog if you can’t come to a meeting. 

e
 

Monday, November 8, 2010

New Relief Society Preparedness Meetings


Our new Relief Society Preparedness Group Activities are getting ready to begin!  Debbie Horton is heading this up, and based on our last Relief Society Quarterly Activity, we think it will be really great!  Here is the information for any of you who are interested:

Preparedness Meetings:
Be Prepared Valley Forge (BPVF)!

Held 3rd Wednesday each month
Odd months (Nov, Jan, Mar, May, Jul, Sep) will be in the evening, 7pm
Even months (Dec, Feb, Apr, Jun, Aug, Oct) will be in the morning, 10am

Topics and location will be announced ahead of time;
group ordering of preparedness items will be available.
-All info will be posted on the blog if you can’t come to a meeting.
 
 
First Meeting: 
 "Food Storage: Making a Plan" 
Wednesday, November 17 at 7 pm at Marie Tiller's home;
We will watch and talk about a food storage seminar that is wonderful!
Hope anyone interested will be able to make it!
 

Thursday, July 22, 2010

Bed Bugs and Building Safety

From the Bishopric:

Dear Brothers and Sisters:

We realize there has been a great deal of anxiety over the discovery of bed bugs in the building.  We thought we should send out another message to try to set some minds at ease.

While it is possible that you could come in contact with bed bugs at the church building, it is not very likely that you will carry them home with you.  Bed bugs are not necessarily nocturnal, but do prefer to feed at night.  For this reason, when they leave their host (the carrier of the bed bugs) they immediately flee to a dark place that does not have human movement.  This is why they are called bed bugs. They come out at night when there is no movement and seek food.

According to the Department of Agriculture, you are not very likely to pick up bed bugs at public areas like schools and churches because there is too much human activity for them to seek a new host.  You are, however, far more likely to pick up bed bugs at some other areas where human movement is restricted.  These areas include hotels and motels, movie theatres (sitting in chairs in the dark), hospitals and doctor's offices (people who carry bed bugs often remove their clothes at medical facilities which causes bed bugs to flee), red-eye airline flights, and buses (like Trailways and Greyhound).

The Church cannot guarantee that you and your family are 100% safe from getting bed bugs in the buildings.  But as stated in the paragraph above, you are far more likely to bring the critters home from places other than the church building.  The Church physical facilities department has taken every precaution to control the spread of bed bugs.  But the spray only lasts for 48 hours, so with every new host that comes to church, the building has to be sprayed anew each time. 

But as a bishopric, we want to draw your attention once again to the statistics on these bed bugs.  One in twenty patients going to a suburban doctor's office have been exposed to bed bugs.  In any given day, scores of people who go to movies have been exposed to bed bugs. 

The problem is huge, but is not expected to peak for frour or five more years before it begins to decline.  Between 30 and 40% of the homes in Norristown have had or currently have bed bug infestations.  So the fact that our church building has been treated for a very minimal impact from bed bugs is not surprising, and also of very small significance given the breadth of the problem.

Because of these factors, it is not prudent to cancel church meetings or meet at another building because the truth is, the Church does as much to keep our buildings safe as is humanly possible.  We cannot approve the sacrament being administered to except in our chapels on the Sabbath.

If you are worried about bed bugs being in any home you visit or home teach in, please let the bishopric know.  We will do our best to protect you from making visits in areas that may be infested.

In the meantime, a few suggestions we have emphasized in our Priesthood and Relief Society Meetings the last few weeks (from the Centers for Disease Control) on how protect yourself from bed bugs.  If you think a house, building, or room you are in may have bed bugs do the following:

1-Sit in a metal, plastic, or wood chair, or stand. Bed bugs prefer cloth or fibrous material;

2-Do not put items on the floor of areas you are concerned about. Keep these items in your lap;

3-Do not stuff coats or other clothing under chairs or against curtains;

4-If you find bed bugs in your home, do not spray them with commercial sprays.  Contact a professional company, bed bugs are killed with a chemical that causes their digestive system to break down and it is difficult to find and apply the chemical without training.  (Washing clothes and bedding in water that is 114 degrees and above kills bed bugs.)

We are confident that our building is as safe if not safer than the safest public buildings on a week-to-week basis.  We hope that you will come out and take the sacrament and enjoy fellowship with your fellow brothers and sisters.

The Valley Forge First Ward Bishopric

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

Mad Skilz: Making the Most of Your Snapshots

I'm sure many have heard the saying,  “A picture is worth a thousand words”. The question is what do you want you pictures to say? What is the story you want to tell or share. Who is your audience?

Most of the time the audience is two sets of people, you and your subject. You want the pictures to invoke memories and you want your subject to see something of the timeline of their lives.
Michelle Leighton taught our Mad Skilz class on Tuesday night. And we all know what mad skilz she has in photography.

She gave us 12 tips for making the most of our snapshots were about composition, some about us a photographers and some about our cameras. She may have some extra copies of the handout, so ask her.

Here are a few of her tips:

#4 - Know where the good light is in your house and plan your events for that room.

#7 - Fill the frame. Move closer to your subject to focus on the details that you most want to remember and not the distracting surroundings.

#10 - Get down on their level. See the world the way your kids see it.

#12 - Attention-getters: Make obnoxious or animal noises...sneeze, bark, moo, neigh, cluck or other inappropriate noises with your mouth. Basically shed your dignity and get them laughing or rolling their eyes.

Michelle had some great stories to tell us and some good recommendations on upgrading to a better camera.

If you missed it, you missed out! Thanks, Michelle!

e

Monday, May 24, 2010

Compassionate Service Meals

Often to show our love and kindness we volunteer or ask to help take a meal to a family in need.

Here are some tips to remember when providing a meal, courtesy of Mormon Times, Putting Care into Compassionate Service. (See the recipe for Turkey casserole too.)
  • Be prompt and reliable when it comes to bringing in meals. Don't delay or forget.
  • Do your homework on the family or individuals you are attempting to serve. Find out how many are in the household, who has strong likes and dislikes, who has allergies to what. ·
  • Keep it clean. This is not the time to taste the soup or sneeze on the salad. Don't let little Johnny taste the spaghetti or poke the cake.
  • Keep it simple and recognizable. A fancy French dinner is less likely to please than something familiar and comforting like a roast and potatoes.
  • Make it easy. Put the dinner in disposable containers that don't need to be returned.
  • Deliver instructions with the meals. How long does it need to cook and at what temperature? Is there ice cream in the dessert that needs to stay frozen? 
Related article: Freezer Meals Are Frozen Assets
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    Photo credit

    Wednesday, May 19, 2010

    Social Media and Privacy

    More on Facebook settings
    A few weeks back I wrote about setting your privacy settings in Facebook. After some more reading and following the controversy. I again encourage you to go and carefully set each preference.

    There are 170 privacy settings.

    Think twice about setting Friends of Friends. If you have a couple hundred Friends, some of which you barely know, they could have quite a “variety” of Friends, some of which you would never want to know let alone have any of your personal information.

    Also, think about what your Friends are unwittingly allowing to be shared about you to third-party advertisers and marketers and gamers. You can’t control this, but you can control what you share. Keep it under control by not sharing too much information with them in the first place.

    And, really, some of your settings should be “only me”.

    Facebook Privacy: A Bewildering Tangle of Options, New York Times
    Thoughtful—and angry—piece about FB privacy crisis from @zephoria.

    Check yourself!
    This article, Online Privacy: Check Yourself (Before You Wreck Yourself), at FastCompany, has some great ideas that would wise to follow. The first one is the most effective...don’t want mom to see it, or your nephew’s creepy friend, or your boss? Then don’t post it.
    In an online world where personalization rules, there are two main ways to protect your personal data: Be vigilant about what you publish online; and be willing to roll up your sleeves and dig into the settings area of the tools and services you use to do so.
    1. Does it pass the spouse/boss/client/date/stalker litmus test? ...The safest way to interact online is under the assumption that everything you put in will come out—on the original site as well as in search results and on partner Web sites. Stop and do an extra gut check before you post that status update, photo, or comment, because once it’s out there, it can be impossible to take it back.

      With aggregators, advertising partnerships, search engines, and an explosion in standards and ways for different Web services to share data, that one piece of content has legs—and show up in places you’d never expect, even if you delete it in the first place you put it.

    2. Lean on the “Log Out” button. The best way to ensure Web sites aren’t collecting information about you based on a particular identity is to log out of services like Facebook or Google when you visit other Web sites (or even clear your cookies when you do).

      Facebook’s current partnerships with sites like IMDB and Yelp means those apps have access to your Facebook data if you stay signed into Facebook when you visit them. Google associates Web search keywords with your Google account if you’re signed in when you do them. Get into the habit of logging out when you're not using a particular service.

    3. Audit your most used web service settings. Facebook’s privacy settings include over 170 options. Take the time to audit them, and make sure you’re in control of what's shared and how.

      Your Google Account Dashboard lists all the services and data associated with your Google account—-take a look to manage your privacy settings for each. For a real eye-opener, check out your Google Web Search History (and consider disabling tracking if you don’t like what you see).
       
    4. Go incognito. When you do want to surf the Web without leaving tracks behind on your computer, you can—to an extent. All the major browsers (like Firefox and Chrome) offer “private browsing” modes, which, when enabled, don't save text entered into web forms, automatically delete cookies and Web history entries, and won't list any files you download in your history lists. Keep in mind private browsing mode doesn’t mean that Web sites don't have access to your IP address (and general location) and that they don't save information you enter on them—they do. However, incognito mode prevents cookies from getting associated with other sites you’ve surfed online. 
    Good habits, a healthy dose of paranoia, and a willingness to dig through a Web site and your browser's settings panels are the best tools in your online privacy arsenal.
    Staying Professional while being Personal
    Because I’m active in social media, I have found these articles helpful. It can be a good thing and our leaders have asked us to be active in a positive way. So here are some thoughts.

    10 Golden Rules of Social Media, Aliza Sherman
    Balance Personal and Professional in Social Media, Dawn Foster


    Hope something here helps you in your online interactions.
    e