Your Happily Ever After

Sometimes, I Pretend

Wednesday, June 30, 2010


Sometimes, when I don't want to load the dishwasher, I pretend I am a pioneer woman. (You mean, I don't have to wash each and every dish? By hand?!)



Sometimes, when my husband accidentally erases a year's worth of pictures from our computer, I pretend I am a pioneer woman. (I'll just keep looking at these 347 million other ones I never had.)



Sometimes, when I grumble about how quickly the floor gets dirty, I pretend I am a pioneer woman. (Wowee! A floor not made of dirt!)

Sometimes, when my three kids are driving me bonkers, I pretend I am a pioneer woman. (Three healthy, whole children. Blessings from heaven.)

Sometimes, when I think I have nothing to eat, I pretend I am a pioneer woman. (This pantry is overflowing! Whadillitbe kids?)



Sometimes, when I think I live too far away from my family and friends, I pretend I am a pioneer woman. (I will probably never see my loved ones again.)



Sometimes, when I get scared about moving again, I pretend I am a pioneer woman. (Westward Ho!)

Sometimes, when I am having a hard time getting rid of stuff as I am de-junking my house in preparation for moving, I pretend I am a pioneer woman. (Looks like we'll have to leave the good china and the piano behind, but least we have the clothes on our back.)



Sometimes, when I start to whine about having a cold, I pretend I am a pioneer woman. (Not as bad as that time I almost died from malaria!)



Sometimes, when I start dreading the time my husband is going to be gone with our one and only vehicle and I will be home alone for three weeks having to walk with three children under the age of five a total distance of four miles in the Southwest heat to get my son to preschool four days of the week...{deep breath}..., I pretend I am a pioneer woman. (Sounds like a typical day to me. I don't get what all the fuss and heavy breathing is about.)



Sometimes, when I get wrapped up in pretending I am a pioneer woman...

I pretend I am me.

Just for fun.


*Image courtesy of Google Images


-----


Evelyn Perkins wants to be a pioneer woman when she grows up. Or at least have the heart of one. Read about her trek to full pioneer-woman-hood on her personal blog, The Perks of Life.

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Confessions of a Ward Organist

Tuesday, June 29, 2010

It all started back in 1972. I was eleven years old, sitting in Primary one brilliant Thursday afternoon, when an emergency struck—an emergency I learned was not so uncommon in the Church.




“Come along, dear,” the Primary president whispered. “We need you to play the piano today. I’m afraid Sister Hansen hasn’t arrived, and, well, there’s no one else . . .” A look of stark panic was plain on her face.


Play the piano? For Primary? Indeed I was learning to play, and the songs lay within my reach but—holy cow! Playing while others sang along was something else again.


Shall the youth of Zion falter?


The Primary president’s hands firmly pushed me down on the piano bench. With that moment the adventure began, and my life in the Church would never be the same. I had no idea I’d spend the next thirty-eight years serving in music callings, and happily, there’s no end in sight.


Count your many blessings!

A year later I found myself in Mutual, once again at the piano. Ooops . . .was I supposed to follow the chorister? The poor dear waved her arm furiously, but it hadn’t dawned on my to pay attention to any of that. I didn’t realize I played ever slower and slower. “Put Your Shoulder to the Wheel” took nearly as long as crossing the plains.


Then there was the time I played the organ in a neighboring ward. The bishop leaned over as I sat down.


“Just a heads up--sometimes our organ just randomly shuts off.” Huh? Sure enough, in the middle of the opening song if went off and refused to be revived. The congregation gamely kept singing while I scampered over to the piano. Maybe we could call that one “Hymns Unplugged.”


Since that long-ago day in Primary I’ve learned a thing or two about playing the piano and organ for church meetings.


1. Some piano music racks are inexplicably shaped like slippery slides. Sheets of music arranged there so carefully can suddenly decide to shoot downwards and flutter to the floor, without even the decency to land face up.


2. Phantom of the Opera sounds really cool on the chapel organ.


3. Don’t use #2 for prelude music.


4. That unidentifiable item you just took off the top of the piano was an important part of the Relief Society lesson. Thanks for messing everything up.


5. If you’ve been called to be the Primary pianist, you might as well just memorize Book of Mormon Stories and get it over with.


6. Be very watchful during the Primary’s annual Sacrament Meeting program, when the children are seated on the stand. The lure of the organ can be irresistible, and if a Sunbeam should wiggle his way onto the organ pedals, well, it ain’t pretty.


7. If you faint while sitting at the organ try to fall away from the keys.


My experiences as a church musician have ranged from the ridiculous (accompanying the bishop impersonating Barry Manilow at the ward talent show) to the sublime (accompanying the Mormon Tabernacle Choir). The rewards have been great—plus a soft seat on the stand. Since that frightening day when I was eleven years old, I have had my cup of blessings filled over and over by serving my fellow brothers and sisters through music.


Let us all press on!



Margot is a mom of seven and pretty much crazy from it. Online she's known as the Damsel in Dis Dress and blogs at the Old School (www.mynewoldschool.com) and twitters at @the_damsel.

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Somebody Get That Guy a Cape

Tuesday, June 29, 2010

If I could point to one event that would single-handedly define my marriage, it would be the time I vomited on the ceiling.

I had just had my wisdom teeth removed, and woke up from a post-anesthesia nap with the kind of nausea that makes it clear that no matter how close the bathroom seems to be, it is still a couple of miles too far from the bed.

But no matter; I had to get there, and fast. I hit the ground groggy but running, knowing that every second counted.

En route, the first act came up, and I held my hand over my mouth to contain everything, still bumping my way down the hall as urgently as my sluggish brain and legs would permit.

But just moments before I reached the bathroom sink, act two arrived, and the pressure behind it hit act one like a fire hose. Both act one and act two shot out from my hand, following whatever trajectory my splayed fingers charted for it.

Which is how I managed to barf all over the bathroom: on the floor, the walls, behind the shower curtain, and yes, up there on the ceiling.

My husband followed me into the room, solicitously helped me back to bed, and cleaned up the mess.

We had been married three weeks.

There are a lot of philosophies about how to take the measure of a man. “The measure of a man is the company he keeps.” “The measure of a man is how well he provides for his family.”

Well, in this family, the barf stories pretty much tell it all.

Like the time our oldest was 18 months old, and we were at my parents’ ward where my brother was blessing his first baby. I have a very large extended family, and we took up enough benches that my husband and my dad ended up sitting together across the aisle from most of us. They had our little guy with them.

Right in the middle of the sacrament, without any warning, David threw up. Knowing that this was the kind of event that could clear the chapel, possibly for weeks, both my husband and dad worked frantically to limit the damage. Dad took a hit to the sleeve, which, given the fact that he nearly cried when a popsicle got too close to his arm, was an act worthy of a Purple Heart.

But my husband was the real hero. He opened his jacket, put David’s face down, and had him barf into all the inside pockets of his suit and shirt.

Then he got up and hustled out the door, dripping but victorious.

This was the ward in which my husband and I grew up, and every person in the room had known him since he was a child. But they had never fully appreciated his selfless nobility until that moment. Years later, people still talked about it at wedding receptions and mission farewells, when my parents and my in-laws would run into veterans of that fateful day.

I won’t go into the catalog of upswallow events to which my husband has dutifully responded. Suffice to say, he’s always been part of the first wave (so to speak), removing pajamas, pulling sheets off the bed, and attempting the impossible task of extracting apparently ineffective Pepto Bismol from mattress covers.

On the other hand, I tended to take the kids’ inability to locate the loo in time to avoid all this heartache as something of a personal attack. And I chose passive resistance, an act which may have helped Gandhi neutralize the British Empire but which didn’t do much to get grilled cheese sandwich out of my kid's hair.

After twenty minutes of going it alone, my husband would finally come back to the bed and ask if I would bring him some towels. I’d do it, but I wasn’t pleasant about it. To this day I marvel that he didn’t toss me into the dumpster along with the sheets.

Barfing up pizza, barfing up orange soda, barfing while camping, barfing while driving, barfing while someone else was barfing in some kind of twisted display of solidarity – my family has done it all. And my good husband has always been there to scramble for the bowl, dump out the cooler, or toss back the grocery bag he had packed for just such emergencies, all in the battle to subdue the enemy and save the day.

The irony is, in the 25 years we have been married, he has rarely vomited in public. This valiant soldier in the war against all things regurgitated has himself nearly always made it to the bathroom in time. And in the event that he hasn't, he's managed things himself. I've never had to so much as hand him a tissue.

There are probably a lot more poetic ways to pay tribute to this guy I’m ‘equally yoked’ with. Lyric sonnets dedicated to his kindness, his hard work, his profound faith, and his astonishing ability to compartmentalize his life to the degree that he can raid a strip club in the morning, go out on splits with the missionaries in the evening, and hold hands with me in the dark, laughing about something one of our kids texted to him earlier in the day. I’ve known him my whole life, and he’s still the best person I’ve ever met. He keeps us safe, he keeps us sheltered, and he keeps us happy.

All qualities worthy of better prose than I’ll ever be capable of producing.

But there is nothing that says “This Guy Is One In A Million” like his unflinching courage upon hearing that gag, that retch, those terrifying words, “I think I’m gonna throw up.”

Superman has his cape. My man has his suit coat, open and ready to take a spewing for the team.

Sigh. My hero.


DeNae has spent the better part of the last twenty years serving as a Gospel Doctrine, Seminary, and Institute teacher, as well as a music composer, arranger, and teacher. In her spare time she does free-lance writing, and has published one book, "The Accidental Gringo". She is working on two more books; one fiction and one collection of humorous essays. When she's not lobbying for a law making it illegal to bring up Diet Coke when discussing the Word of Wisdom, she stays busy with four nearly-grown kids, the boy next door whom she married 25 years ago, a house that refuses to stay clean, and a dog who somehow manages to shed twice her own weight in fur every single day. You can read her stories and essays, most of which are true or at least marginally plausible, at "My Real Life Was Backordered", the blog she started a year ago as an excuse to ignore the laundry.

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Giddiness, Goalies, and Generosity: "With What Measure Ye Mete"

Monday, June 28, 2010

Every dad loves his little girl. Especially if she is his only one. And, if that daughter was born in special circumstances, that love is intensified.

Over the past few years, my daughter has been attending the school where I teach. Consequently, we share a 45 minute commute (each way), know the same people, and interact several times a day.

This year, she decided to play lacrosse.

This was a scary thing for her. It's a new sport and she's playing goalie, which is super high pressure in lacrosse. Moreover, none of her closest friends are on the team. And while her teammates are nice girls, they are all friends and occupy a different social strata than she does. These kinds of things loom large in 7th grade.

Do you have any idea how high pressure this position is? Mix being President of the U.S. together with being a Relief Society President. Then throw in adolescent hormones.


So it was scary for her and, frankly, it was scary for me, too.

Hold that thought.

I teach choir and theatre at my school. This year, one group of girls in particular has been giddy and giggly and noisy. I tried to exercise patience, but they continued to chat during class. I was on the brink of disciplining them more harshly.

Hold that thought, too.

My daughter was so nervous before the first game that she was physically ill. For all the reasons above: a new thing, the pressure of her position, not wanting to let the team down, some social unease, and so on. These things loom large for a 7th grader.

During the first game, a ball got past her. I winced for her and said a prayer. Another got past. And another.

I could tell that she was starting to get worried and upset, and I was feeling that for her.

Right then, some of the girls on the team ran over to the goal and gave her high-fives and pats on the back. From my seat in the bleachers, I could hear them say, "Good try!" and "It's ok."

My heart swelled with gratitude and I felt a rush of warmth and appreciation for these girls.


The season is nearly over now. Once the nerves passed, my daughter became an excellent goalie. That's not bragging. It's objectively true since I hear parents on the other team commenting on her skills. Her teammates have been consistently kind and supportive during good times and bad.

The girls who have been so supportive of my daughter are the same chatty students I was getting ready to discipline.

The discipline never came. My view of them has changed. Their fairly minor infractions of class rules seems far less important to me. They were kind to my beloved child when she needed it most. This won't buy them endless indulgence for serious misbehavior, but their kindness has covered a multitude of small transgressions.

I think I've learned something about how our Father views our interactions with each other, and why He feels so strongly about how we treat each other. I also think I better understand this scripture:

"For with what judgment ye judge, ye shall be judged: and with what measure ye mete, it shall be measured to you again" (Matthew 7:2)

Their kindness and generosity to my daughter, when they could have acted otherwise, has inspired me to be generous to them in return. Their forbearance established the standard of measurement, and ultimately, it benefits them.

------


Braden is trying to recover his voice from cheering so loudly at lacrosse games. His novel, The Road Show will be released in June. He blogs at bradenbell.com













Photo credit: Braden Bell

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Return To Virtue

Sunday, June 27, 2010

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Sunday Devotional

Sunday, June 27, 2010

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Post of the Week

Saturday, June 26, 2010


Did you write something amazing this week?

Did you make a project or bake a fabulous cake?

Show us!

We want to see!

Link up!

Everyone's doing it!

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Summertime Plans: TV on DVD

Saturday, June 26, 2010

Summertime is hard on moms.

For a lot of us, we can be outside in the early morning, and in the late evening. Which leaves a LOT of down time in the middle of the day in which we're constantly seeking out entertainment. The first part of summer starts out with big plans: arts and crafts projects every day, homework time, piano lessons, and more. A few weeks in, those plans have faded and/or blown up in our faces, and we turn to the television.

The problem with summer television is that a lot of shows go on hiatus, and TV stations cater to older kids, playing shows and cartoons that you don't want your younger kids to see. Thankfully, Nickelodeon offers a lot of their preschool programming on DVD.You should definitely check out these titles for your kids. They don't call it the lazy days of summer for nothing!


WonderPets! The First Rescue

Journey back in time with the Wonder Pets as they relive when they first met, tackled their first rescue mission and learned the importance of teamwork in the new DVD release Wonder Pets!: The First Rescue, featuring seven new-to-DVD adventures including the never-before-seen “Happy Mothers Day!” and “Save the Sun Bear!”

Wonder Pets! is great for young kids. A trio of classroom pets work together, "What's gonna work? Teamwork!", while traveling around the world rescuing baby animals. There is a lot of music in each episode, and kids learn about the different animals and their habitats. Would recommend for kids ages 2-4. available exclusively at Amazon.com



Max and Ruby: A Visit With Grandma

Come along as Max & Ruby embark on variety of new-to-DVD adventures. They’ll go on an awesome treasure hunt, make “mudpies” and perform their very own recital in the backyard! Created by Nickelodeon Home Entertainment and distributed by Paramount Home Entertainment, Max & Ruby: A Visit with Grandma features four all-new episodes never released on DVD before!

Max and Ruby aren't my favorite bunnies, but my 3 year old loves them. (Seriously, WHERE ARE THE PARENTS?) Based on the books by Rosemary Wells, each episode centers on Max trying to get into trouble, and Ruby trying to help him stay out of trouble. Would recommend for kids ages 2-4. available at Amazon.com





The Backyardigans: Operation Elephant Drop

Go wild with delivery agents Pablo and Tyrone as they try to bring an elephant to a wildlife sanctuary in India in the new DVD, The Backyardigans: Operation Elephant Drop. Featuring four new to DVD episodes, preschoolers will be introduced to the music genres of Alternative Rock, Forró, Bo Diddley-Style Rock and American Country Rock. Created by Nickelodeon Home Entertainment and distributed by Paramount Home Entertainment, The Backyardigans: Operation Elephant Drop DVD hits shelves July 13, 2010.

I LOVE The Backyardigans. They're a group of neighborhood kids, whose backyards adjoin, and who use their imaginations to go on amazing backyard adventures.  Each episode features a specific musical genre and choreographed dance sequences that kids love. If you have never seen this show before, you are missing out. Seriously. This is one of the shows that I will sit down and watch with my kids. Would recommend for kids aged 2-8. You can pre-order it on Amazon here.





Nickelodeon: First Day Of School

Get ready for the first day of school with your preschool pals from Nickelodeon! Dora the Explorer leads the way in this adventure-filled DVD, which also includes episodes from Go, Diego, Go!; Blue’s Clues; The Wonder Pets!; and Ni Hao, Kai-lan! Created by Nickelodeon Home Entertainment and distributed by Paramount Home Entertainment, Nickelodeon: The First Day of School contains over two hours of educational entertainment for preschoolers.

Dora, Diego, Blue, the Wonder Pets, and Kai-lan... together. On one disk. It's a preschooler's dream. Get ready for your first day of school with Dora, get a new library ready with Diego, help Periwinkle through her first day of school with Blue, send the blowfish to school with the Wonder Pets, and learn how to play nicely with Kai-lan. This DVD will get your little ones excited about starting school, and help them understand why they need to go to school. Would recommend for children age 3-5. available on DVD July 13, 2010. Pre-order your copy today!

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Worlds Strictest Parents

Friday, June 25, 2010



How it All Began


Being on TV is not what I expected. It was better. In January of 2009 the BBC asked us to participate in an English documentary called “The World’s Strictest Parents.” My husband, Spencer, and I had done many years of foster care for very difficult teens and we have four children of our own. Also, I have been teaching parenting seminars and classes for the last 10 years around North America on how to teach your children to want to govern their own behaviors. I call my parenting principles Teaching Self-Government. After speaking to me and looking at my free parenting advice blog http://teachingselfgovernment.com the BBC said we would be the ideal parents for their program.

When I got this invitation from the BBC my soul just about jumped out of my skin. The sensation was strange to me. I wasn’t exactly sure what the sensation meant at first. I spoke with my husband about the project and we quickly made a list of every reason we shouldn’t do it. They could make us look bad. Even worse than that, they could make our religion look bad. How did we know if we could even trust these complete strangers? After we made our list of why not to do it we almost immediately had the distinct impression that we were supposed to do the show. The feeling was so strong that we knew we just had to do it. However, at this point we decided that the reason we were going to take this huge leap of faith in people we didn’t even know was to strengthen families around the world.

We decided to be dedicated to being completely authentic and running the show our way. I actually was preparing myself to battle the camera crew if they asked us to do anything which we wouldn’t normally do. I was so pleased when Ben, the director of the show, said that he wanted us to be completely natural and authentic and that he wanted us to basically tell him what the plan for the week was going to be. Don’t get me wrong, we had to have our regular life schedule approved, but they were insistent on not showing anything in our life which wasn’t real.

The BBC considers this story a documentary even though in the US we would consider it a reality TV show. The difference between reality TV and our show is that a reality TV show is scripted and planned. The BBC 3 in Britain isn’t the only station to have shows called “The World’s Strictest Parents,” but according to them they are the only branch of the BBC who actually do the show documentary style.

After multiple back story shoots and countless emails and meetings we were ready to begin.

Hannah and James came expecting the worst. I think they really thought we would be tyrannical and ornery. I think they were much surprised to see that we wouldn’t power struggle with them over issues. We were just going to calmly stick to our values no matter what they did. This is our way. Attitude problems and arguing don’t hurt parents if they have decided ahead of time that things like this don’t bother them.

A Parenting Tip


One of my governing philosophies as a parent is that parenting gets tyrannical and out of control when parents choose to engage in power struggles. Power struggles may get a parent her way sometimes, but even if she gets her way she has decreased her respectability in the eyes of her child. Children must respect parents in order for homes to be happy places, but that respect can’t happen by force. I don’t know one person who has experienced a real change of heart by force, and that is what my parenting is all about; changing hearts. I could go on and on about my parenting philosophies, but then I wouldn’t be able to tell a bit more about our BBC journey with Hannah and James.

Some Changes in Hannah and James

By living in a fully functioning family James and Hannah experienced a completely new way of life. I was so pleased to see that when James got home he told his mom the one thing he learned was how important family was. WOW! That was just what I was hoping he would learn. His relationship with his mom is much improved because of his experience in our home. We keep in contact with James and Hannah as regularly as possible.

If I had to pick a favorite moment in the show that would very difficult because there were so many wonderful experiences during the eight day shoot, but one thing I will never forget is when James and Hannah both expressed that they thought our family was perfect and that they wanted to have families like ours one day. They said our children were perfect (not true, but I am glad they thought that) and that they wanted their children to be like our children.

This conversation happened when my children decided to surprise James and Hannah by singing to them. Even little Porter sang a solo. Music is a big part of our lives because it stirs the soul and opens the heart to change. This is why we sang for them. Whenever our family is not feeling united we also sing with each other.

During our homeschooling the week they were with us I had James and Hannah read The Dream Giver. It is a great parable about how a higher power has a plan for all of our lives and we have the responsibility to find that dream and accomplish it. James especially was touched by this book. We were reading one day when he all of the sudden stopped and said, “I do have a dream. I want to be a fashion designer. I think I will go back to school so that I can have this dream come true.” After he got home he emailed me with other, more personal, dreams too. I don’t think James or Hannah had ever realized that someone besides them has a plan for their lives; God. This realization was inspiring for them.

After the Show

We all have purposes in life, even if we don’t really know what they are until after they happen. Doing this TV program and teaching people how to strengthen families is what I am supposed to do with my life. This mission is for my God. It keeps me really busy, but it is so worth it. Especially lately, because I have received so many emails and comments on my blog telling me how seeing our program has inspired people to make great changes in their lives. All ages have been impacted from other troubled British teens to parents and grandparents.

It is my hope the video will continue to be passed around by people to strengthen families everywhere. Since we went to all this work to make it, it might as well reach as many people as possible. If the homes around the world can be healed then many of our government and social problems can also be healed. Change starts in the home and I am convinced more homes were changed for the better because of “The World’s Strictest Parents: Utah” show. Our power really is in our homes. I was able to change lives around the world just by living my regular life. Everyone has this same power. May God bless families everywhere!

-----





Nicholeen Peck is a popular public speaker around North America who most often addresses the subject of parenting. Her parenting methods clam tantrum toddlers to tough teens while creating a family structure which invites the spirit of love and good communication. She is the Author of Parenting A House United and a BBC television star.  For more free parenting advice Nicholeen's blog is http://teachingselfgovernment.com.

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The Awe Factor

Thursday, June 24, 2010

I pretty much live in my car. Or so it seems, and I am constantly running my children hither and yon. At some point during the day, I drive to the McDonalds drive thru.

I pull up into that drive, thick with anticipation as I order my extra large diet coke with medium ice.

I pay my $1.08 and slowly pull forward.

This next part of my ritual is actually the most important part, and it can't be done while driving. So I park. Next to the garbage can.

As I am parked, I take that straw and plunge it into my soda and then I take a drink. A long, slow drink.

While I take that first drink, I close my eyes, enhale and hold my breath . As I'm holding my breath and feel that liquid start to go down my throat, I slowly exhale... and I experience it.

The awe factor.

Everyone has their own version of The Awe Factor. For me it's my diet coke with medium ice.

It doesn't matter when it is during the day and it only works with a fountain drink. Trust me on that one-- I've tried a bottle and a can. It's not the same blissful experience.

That Awe Factor is a cleansing factor. It helps me re-group; re-center myself. And, its not so much the diet coke that is doing that for me, but that deep, cleansing breath I take along with the nectar of the Gods.

Inhale. Exhale. Awe.

I can do it.

Elisa blogs at Crazyland: Tales from the Motherboard

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When You are Faced With the Dogs

Wednesday, June 23, 2010


Once upon a time, many years ago, I used to be a mailman. Yep, that's right - a real, live, honest to goodness mailman. (It's a title that everyone gets who carries the mail, male or female.) One of the most difficult things I faced wasn't the people, but their dogs.

One day, I was delivering the mail out in the old part of Mesa, AZ. I watched as a German Shepard CLIMBED up a six foot chain link fence and jumped down to the other side not 10 feet away from where I was standing. Now, if I have learned one thing about dogs, it is that you NEVER run away. Once you turn your backside to them, you give them a pretty big target (if you know what I mean) and they just can't seem to say no!

This very large dog ran up to me snarling, barking, growling and snapping. I had taken out my dog spray when he was on his way over the top of the fence, so I guess you could say I was as ready for him as I was going to get. I started spraying the dog right in his face. Most dogs don't like this. The spray is cayenne pepper in an oil base and can sting and burn the dog's eyes, but it doesn't do any lasting harm. I sprayed the dog, he shook his head hard back and forth, (still growling and snapping), licked his lips and came at me again.

I was definitely nervous. I turned myself with my back in the direction I needed to go and started backing up, a couple of steps at a time, toward the end of the block and the safety of my vehicle. He came at me again. I sprayed him, backed up, and we repeated the process. I used an entire can of spray on the dog and most of the second can that was thankfully nestled in my mail pouch. Then, without warning, the dog stopped. I must have reached a place that had some kind of an invisible line in his mind. He quit growling and snapping, turned around and trotted back toward home. I looked around me and realized that I was about 1 and a 1/2 blocks from where he started chasing me. I was safe at last.

We went through this everyday for three days. He always stopped when I reached that invisible line and it was always in nearly the same place.

I have found in my life that nearly any trial I face is a lot like this dog. You really can't turn around and run (Dare I say that troubles have a way of biting you in the rear if you do?) You have to face the problem or trial head on, armed with whatever weapon you have been given. Sometimes it is the scriptures, sometimes it is a book or a talk or an article in the Ensign. Sometimes the weapon can be good advice, or answers to prayer. But you still have to face the trial and get through it.

One of my favorite quotes when I am feeling overwhelmed is simply this:

"The Bible often says, 'It came to pass'.
It never says, 'It came to stay'."
And so, I try and remember that this too, shall pass away.

When I am faced with trials, it is so tempting to stop and run the other way. Sometimes, I don't want to go through it. Sometimes, I am weak or afraid. Sometimes, I want to just sit down and give up. I want to cry and murmur and complain. But I know if I can just persevere through the trial, there will come a point where I will find it is over and I will be safe on the other side and the trial will, finally, be in the past.

And who knows? Someday, I might even be grateful that I had the experience. Everyone has trials. It is not the trial that breaks us in the end. It is how we have endured it, what we have learned from it, and how it has changed us that matters. I hope that the dogs we face in this life - those trials that threaten to overwhelm us, don't make us forget who we are, where we came from, or where we really want to go.

-----

Patty Ann is the mother of eleven and wife of an amazing man who cooks and keeps her happy. She can be found most days, blogging at http://pitterlepostings.blogspot.com/

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Our GIveaway WINNER

Monday, June 21, 2010

Random.org has spoken and the lucky winner was commenter #55 - CrystalsCozyKitchen 

But, don't fret! We are going to get back on track with our giveaways so if you are a Mom Shop or Small Business looking to promote your products, send us an email and we can get you set up with one of our giveaways! 

Congrats Crystal!

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The Birds, The Bees and The Guinea Pigs

Monday, June 21, 2010


When I first found out I was going to be a dad I immediately ran out and bought the spine-tingling suspense novel What to Expect When You’re Expecting. I never read the sequels What to Expect the First Year, What to Expect the Second Year, or What Did You Expect?: The Teenage Years. But I’ve asked, and it turns out there is no chapter in any of these books on What to Expect When You’re Daughter Wants to Breed Her Guinea Pig.


Somehow my daughter Abbie arrived at the idea that her guinea pig, TJ, should have babies. You know, to pass on the TJ family name. To grow her posterity. To leave a legacy during her lifetime.


I don’t have any proof, but my impression is that TJ is probably more interested in having babies because she is going to need someone to take care of her when she’s old. Last I checked, she had paid virtually nothing into her 401K and IRA accounts. Also most of her life has been spent working part-time gigs and getting paid under the table, so she won’t qualify for Social Security either. Essentially, her children would be her retirement fund, and if she doesn’t get busy, she’s going to end up childless and in a Guinea Pig Hospice, delirious and telling stories about how she could run on her exercise wheel for days without taking a break. She would bore the other guinea pigs to tears, I am most certain of that.


Being sensitive to TJ’s situation, and being reassured by Abbie that we were not going to keep all the guinea pig babies, I agreed to pimp TJ out to the most qualified male guinea pig in the tri-state area. Abbie had recently been to the birthday party of a friend who received, as one of her presents, a male guinea pig. Coincidence? I think not.


So, in one of my most awkward phone conversations on record, we invited this family over last Saturday night, and requested they bring Chuck, their guinea pig, to enjoy a romp on our stud farm. It was all under the guise of our families enjoying some dessert together as friends, but essentially, it was so our guinea pigs could get it on (to coin a phrase). And I don’t care where you’re from, that’s weird.


On top of that weirdness was a generous helping of novel emotions on my part. I was suddenly suspicious of Chuck. What kind of guinea pig was he? What sort of upbringing? What kind of education has he had? How is he going to provide for this new family of his? If he’s like the other guinea pigs I’ve met, I’ll tell you how he’s going to provide for them – he’s not! And then I’ll have all these little fatherless guinea pigs running around! I’ll have bastard guinea pigs, that’s what I’ll have! The humanity!


But I didn’t have the heart to intervene. Who was I to step between two rodents in love? Plus you should have seen TJ getting ready for her date. Checking herself in the mirror every five minutes, on the phone with her girlfriends all day, writing in her diary about how this was the night she was going to give herself to a complete stranger named Chuck.


So Chuck shows up fashionably late, and man, you should have seen the look on his face. TJ is three times the size of Chuck, outweighing him by at least 2 lbs. It was a Jack Sprat situation if I’d ever seen one. And then Chuck had the audacity to look at me as if I were to blame. As if to say, “Hey, man, this isn’t the order I placed in my Mail Order Bride catalogue. I ordered Angelina Jolie, not Queen Latifah. You’ve got exactly five minutes to fix this situation.”


Assuming that guinea pigs are different from humans (but similar to teenagers) we just stuck two random guinea pigs in our backyard and fully expected them to mate. As if the difficult part in this scenario was over. “Well, thank goodness we found a female and male guinea pig. Now we just sit back and wait for babies.” It was pretty unfair for us to not even consider the social pressure we were putting on these two.


Katie had put together a delectable salad for TJ and Chuck to enjoy while they got to know each other. You know, to help with the small talk. Plus they say radishes are an aphrodisiac for guinea pigs. (At least that’s what I overheard Chuck explaining to TJ.) So the two of them sat in a grassy spot in the backyard, enjoying their salad and chitchat, all the while trying to ignore the entourage of children watching their every move. Sensing that neither TJ nor Chuck were comfortable with their role as exhibitionists, we had the kids come inside the house and we all enjoyed dessert.


About 30 minutes later our friends ventured to the backyard to retrieve Chuck, and they found him snuggled up next to TJ. Did it take? Did they even try? Had anyone bothered to explain to them how it works? Were they feeling shy? Were they just too full from the salad?


The gestational period for a guinea pig is 70 days…but I can’t wait that long to find out, so I’ll probably sneak into her room while she's asleep and take a peek at her diary to see if we can expect a whole bunch of little TJs come late August.

You are no doubt impressed with my intrinsic fatherhood aptitude. Not only am I acutely aware of my daughter’s feelings, but I am even protective of her guinea pig, as if she were one of my own. I don’t know, I guess it’s just the way I was raised – good manners, patriarchal order, and the inner workings rodent propagation.


The best part of this whole experience, though, is that it has inspired my new book, Fatherhood: I Bet You Weren’t Expecting THAT!


Ken Craig is a father of six, a husband of one, and a bishop of many. He enjoys long walks on the beach, virgin pina coladas, and getting caught in the rain. Oh, and whatever U2 concerts he can get to without being arrested first. He met his wife Katie in a comedy troupe at BYU, and they are, according to pretty much everyone who knows them, almost nauseatingly adorable. Read his blog, "The Craig Report" for details on any of the above biographical claims.

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Fathers and Sons

Sunday, June 20, 2010

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That's What Fathers Do

Sunday, June 20, 2010


When we were first married we were very poor and very pregnant. I remember one night how excited we were when we found thirty-three cents in our couch cushions. This allowed us to walk to McDonald's and buy an ice cream cone, an almost decadent extravagance. Poor Meredith was pregnant and having cravings. She wanted a Subway sandwich in a way that only a pregnant woman can. But given the state of our finances, she might as well have wanted a twelve course meal flown in from Paris.

After fighting the craving for a week or two, she finally broke down and called her dad to ask if he could loan us a few dollars for Subway. A few days later the mail brought a check for $300.00. An attached note said “Meredith’s Subway cushion.”

That’s what fathers do.

Years ago our toddler caught a ghastly stomach virus. He literally could not keep anything down. We were up around the clock taking care of him and doing laundry and cleaning up body fluids. It is not hyperbole to say that we did laundry 24 hours a day. After a few days of this, we were completely exhausted. We called to see if my mom could help us. She was reluctant because after many years at his company, my dad was retiring and his firm was giving a formal farewell dinner. Obviously, this was not something that could be rescheduled or lightly missed. Although we would have loved the help, we understood the significance of the event.

Mom called back shortly after, and said Dad had insisted that she miss the dinner and come help us. That’s what fathers do.

One of my favorite scriptures is an obscure verse from the story of Helaman’s young warriors. Helaman’s account contains this almost incidental verse: “And now it came to pass in the second month of this year, there was brought unto us many provisions from the fathers of those my two thousand sons” (Alma 56:27).

Every time I read this I get a lump in my throat and my eyes get a little teary.

We hear most frequently about the mothers of these outstanding young men and rightly so. But, on Father’s Day, I like to reflect on this verse and think about the fathers of these warriors.

I can see these worn and weary men. Time and suffering have etched lines in their faces and refining fires have burned their hair to gray. But their eyes glow with the light of faith and they are moist as they see their sons. Their bodies are thin from the hard labor required to raise this food, the rigors of the journey, and the knowledge that whatever they eat leaves less for their sons. They may limp and stagger a bit. They’ve been pushing themselves to cover as much ground as possible so they haven’t had much sleep. Undoubtedly some of them have holes in their sandals so their sons could have a new pair.

They clutch sticks and staves tightly. They are carrying precious food through a war-torn land. But they don’t have swords or knives. They made a covenant that they will keep to the death.

That covenant meant that they were willing to be slaughtered before lifting up their swords again. When war broke out, their sons, who had not made this covenant, went to war so that they could keep their promises to God.

These men had to choose between their covenants with God and letting their sons go to war for them. In their place. Knowing how likely it was that their boys would ever come back.

This would be terrible for any father. A few lines in the scriptures cannot capture what must have been the gut-wrenching, Abrahamic test of a lifetime for them.

They couldn’t change the situation so they did what they could do, what all good fathers do. They provided for their boys. That’s what fathers do.

I wish I could describe the reunion when the fathers came into camp and found their sons. But an artist, not a writer, needs to paint this picture because very little was said and everything is so subtle that it defies description.

These fathers provided critical sustenance to their sons and gave them the physical strength to fight their battles, just as their mothers provided the spiritual strength they needed. It was a less obvious, less visible contribution perhaps. And in a strictly eternal sense, one could even argue that it was minimal. But in that moment, in time, not eternity, when an army was preparing to go to war, they needed that food. The contributions of father and mother compliment and cooperate, they don’t compete.

When we needed her, my mom was an angel to come and help us and I don’t know what we would have done without her. Her sacrifice was large and obvious. But it took me years to realize that there was another angel in the story. Dad also made a profound sacrifice, one that enabled Mom’s. A man wants his wife to be with him when he’s being honored for his life’s work. That’s a once-in-a-lifetime thing my Dad gave up. That’s what fathers do.

A mother’s sacrifices are often obvious and apparent. Her work is difficult but, with all the frustrations inherent in her work, she enjoys a preeminent place in her children’s hearts. Mothers are vital and their love warms our hearts and save our souls. We rightly honor them.

But in the background is the dad. Quietly making his own sacrifices to ensure that everything works out. Dad is the great facilitator, the provider and protector who does whatever it takes to get whatever his family needs. For his daughter to go to college. For his son to go on a mission. He provides the means for them in the here-and-now, sending money for Subway or provisions for young warriors. His solid, stable presence solves problems and fills gaps.

That’s what fathers do.


Braden Bell grew up in Farmington, Utah. He earned bachelor’s and master’s degrees in theater from Brigham Young University and a Ph.D. in educational theater from New York University. He and his wife, Meredith live with their five children on a quiet, wooded lot outside of Nashville, Tennessee, where he teaches theater and music at a private school. Braden's first novel, The Roadshow, is in stores now.


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Post of the Week

Saturday, June 19, 2010


Did you write something amazing this week?

Did you make a project or bake a fabulous cake?

Show us!

We want to see!

Link up!

Everyone's doing it!

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The Help - A Book Review

Friday, June 18, 2010


The Help The Help by Kathryn Stockett


My rating: 5 of 5 stars

It has been years since I read a book where from the first word on the first page I was hooked. And, with this book, I was hooked with the very first word. I could not put this book down-- I even read it while I fixed dinner.

Set in 1960's Mississippi, during the heat of Integration, is where we find ourselves with the first word.

The book focuses around one white socialite woman and two African-American maids and the stories that these women have to tell. I loved the way it showed not only the strengths but also the flaws of each of the characters, and sub-characters as well. Some of the characters you can't help but love to hate.

It was a profound, gripping tale that I could not put down. The writing was outstanding-- and I found myself actually thinking in the dialect that Stockett used.

The book stuck with me for days after I finished this story, and the characters actually came alive for me. At the books end, I was a little sad because it felt like I was losing a wonderful group of friends.

I find my thoughts turning to this powerful group of women on a regular basis. Stockett did an extraordinary job creating women who were determined to change a town, and participate in changing a nation. Their movement changes the way women-- daughters, mothers, friends and employees-- interact with one another. The hidden way some white women treat their maids can be horrifying and others heroic.

My favorite quote from the book:

"Wasn't that the point of the book? For women to realize, We are just two people. Not that much separates us. Not nearly as much as I'd thought."

The Help is destined to be a classic tale. One about the lines we wouldn't cross and the ones we should.


~Elisa also blogs at Crazyland: Tales from the Motherboard


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Mexican Chicken Salad and Therapy

Thursday, June 17, 2010


Cooking is my therapy. The repetition of chopping, slicing, sauteing, and stirring calms my soul and releases my locked up thoughts and feelings.

For Cinco de Mayo this year, I decided to fix something delicious and festive for dinner. Creamy chicken enchiladas sounded perfect.  However, after stepping on the scale that morning and seeing I was down a couple pounds, I decided to go with a *HEALTHY, delicious and festive dinner. Thus, Mexican Chicken Salad. It was fantastic, folks! It smelled good. It looked good. And more important, it tasted good. I was proud to serve it to my family.

As I began preparing the meal, I became acutely aware of all that was around me. Through the open window I could hear my daughter quietly singing to herself while playing in the backyard. I could hear my neighbor mowing the lawn. I could smell the fresh cut grass (it mingled with the cilantro I was chopping at the moment - Heaven). The setting sun was filling my kitchen with bright, early evening light. It was a simple yet powerful moment. All was right in my world. The frustrations from earlier in the day were gone and I felt peaceful from the top of my head to the tips of my toes.

The Mexican Chicken Salad is a mix of a few of my favorite things. All tossed together-they are a tasty treat! As I began the prep work of seeding tomatoes and red peppers, cleaning the scallions, thawing the sweet corn and poaching the chicken, I could feel my muscles relax. Negative thoughts whispered through my mind and left. Perhaps they went out the open window, I don't know. My pent-up feelings from the day bubbled to the surface and I was able to look at them calmly and release them. It felt so good. If only every meal of every day was so therapeutic. This kind of therapy is something I could market!

I am posting the recipe for Mexican Chicken Salad. I hope you make it for dinner tonight and let it be your therapy for today. Kinda like Mexican Chicken Salad For the Soul (rather than soup).

Until next time,
Amy

*My definition of healthy food is whole food. Whole grains, whole fruit, whole vegetable, whole fat. Don't tell the latest diets. They will eat me for (a fattening) dinner. haha


Mexican Chicken Salad
by Amy Dotson (and Diana Schwarzbein)

4 boneless, skinless chicken beasts
1 cup fresh steamed corn (or frozen and thawed)
3 seeded and diced tomatoes
2 Tbl minced fresh cilantro
1 small minced fresh jalapeno pepper; or 1 to 2 Tbl canned diced green chilies, to taste.
6 cups fresh, washed spinach, torn into bite sized pieces
1 diced red bell pepper (I used 1/2 a red bell pepper)
1/4 cup diced red onion (I didn't have it-didn't use it)
1/4 cup chopped scallions
1/2 cup sliced black or green olives (I used black)
Mexican Chicken Salad Dressing (recipe to follow)
4 sprigs of cilantro for garnish (optional-of course)

In a medium, covered skillet, poach chicken in 1 inch of water with 2 bay leaves over medium heat until cooked through, about 20 minutes. Do not overcook. Let cool and shred with fingers (I chopped mine).

In a large bowl, combine all ingredients except spinach and cilantro sprigs. Mix with salad dressing. Line 4 plates with prepared spinach. Top with scoops of chicken salad. Garnish with a sprig of fresh cilantro.

Mexican Chicken Salad Dressing
1/4 cup fresh lime juice
1 tsp. dries oregano
1 tsp ground cumin
2 minced garlic cloves (I like the jarred stuff)
1/2 cup mayo (made from pure-pressed oil preferrably)
1/4 cup pure-pressed vegetable oil (I used regular)
pepper and salt to taste

In a blender or food processor, blend all ingredients until smooth, or place ingredients in a jar with a tight-fitting lid and shake vigorously until well blended. Taste, and adjust seasonings.

-----


Amy has been married to her hunky, business owning, semi-pro football playing, graphic designer husband for nearly 8 years. She is also mother to an energetic, delightful, and precocious 3 year old little girl. You'll find more at I Wish I Was in Dixie. Visitors always welcome.

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The Divine Nature of a Brown Furry Bug

Wednesday, June 16, 2010

A furry caterpillar sneaked into my house tonight. All brown fuzz and reticulation, he was crawling on my kitchen floor when I scooped the fellow (or madame) up and took him outside into the cold night.

{On a piece of paper, of course, I'm not making contact with that thing.}

He sort of poked around and squished up his body, as caterpillars do, and then I flipped the paper over and he took a dive-bomb over the deck railing and into the shadows.

I felt kind of bad for dumping him. I'm sure he was shocked when he hit the ground below.

I thought to myself : "Caterpillars are made to fall."

And they are, if you think about it. They are very well equipped to fall off leaves and branches onto the unfriendly earth below. Their squishy bodies are custom made for impact.

Sort of like our squishy souls.

We all fall from great heights, languishing in the dark until we have the strength to get up again.

There are days when the getting up is hard for me. I roll around on the proverbial ground, moaning about the terrible lot that is my life. Dishes and laundry and wiping up sticky stuff. It's pretty awful.

Okay, so not really. It's pretty dang good.

There are rainy days and sadness, there are lonliness and tears, there is shadow and darkness. Just like anyone else.

But I'm equipped for it. Resiliency, some call it. Stubbornness maybe. An innate ability to forget the pain and remember the pleasure.

After all, caterpillars are made to fall, but they are also made to fly.

At some point we must break free of the chrysalis to stretch our wings, warm ourselves beneath the Son, and take flight. Once free, we can drift on the the currents of life, preen on the pinnacles, and get caught in the heavy winds of change.

We are creatures of beauty. Reflective, original, glorious to behold. True works of glory beneath our Father's hand.
"Some would say the most magnificent sight they have ever beheld is looking heavenward on a summer night, seeing stars beyond number dotting the sky. Some might choose the view of the Grand Canyon at sunrise; others, the beauty of a mountain lake. Some might select a peacock with its tail in full fan, or a hummingbird seemingly suspended in midair while feeding. These magnificent sights are wondrous beyond measure. They are all “great deeds” of our divine Creator.
Now, ponder the magnificence of what you see when you look in the mirror. Ignore the freckles, the unruly hair, or the blemishes, and look beyond to see the real you—a child of God—created by him, in his image. If we lift the lid on the treasure chest of the marvelous attributes of our bodies, we can discover, at least in part, the magnificence of man."
"The Magnificence of Man" Russell M. Nelson
-----

Sarah is a Stay at Home Mom on the brink of being an All Day At School Learning Mom. She lives somewhere close to the middle of New Mexico in a perpetual State of Obvious with her husband and two children. She spends most of her time pinching her children's cheeks and eating chocolate.





furry caterpillar image found here

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GIVEAWAY TODAY!

Wednesday, June 16, 2010



Most of you know that we did a little conference called The Casual Bloggers Conference. We're getting ready to announce next years dates-- so you will have a whole year to plan, and save so you can party with us next year!

At the conference, I was able to moderate the panel called Niche Blogging: Are you in one? The women on this panel are some of my most favorite people! They are: April of Second Sisters Designs, Melanie of SugarDoodle, Rebecca of Blue Cricket Design, Teresa of Teresa Collins Designs, Maria of Two Peas and their Pod and Emily from Give Away Today.

See that amazing Skirt that Emily is wearing? She is giving one away today on her blog. I absolutely LOVE IT! She gave one away to one of our audience members in the Niche class and I was kind of bummed that I couldn't win it because of how absolutely ADORABLE it is!


THEN.

We haven't had a Giveaway on MMB for a long time, and we decided it was about time!


We are giving away one of our swag bags from the CBC10 today!
How lucky can you be?
You should see the amazing swag we were able to giveaway!
The one comment we heard over and over was how out of this world crazy awesome the swag was!
And, we have to agree!

Here is a small sampling of what is in our amazing swag bag:


A Cameron Rafati CD! He was our entertainment on Friday night at the CBC social and you should have seen the women dancing! It was AWESOME! Cameron is crazy good! You can listen to his music on his website (which I do on a daily basis) and you should also check out his new video, 1 in 10 .
It was produced by the same guys who do the Killers Videos!
We were able to premier his video at the CBC, and the women went wild-- it's crazy good!

Next we have some Basa Body Product.
Basa Body was our sponsor for the Thursday Night GNO party hosted by Teresa Collins.
Their product is 100% Fresh & Natural Skincare. Their all-natural products are infused with organic virgin coconut oil to nourish, hydrate and rejuvenate your skin. OH MY WORD! I love this stuff!



Next we have a Customized Vintage Pearl Necklace that we are giving away.
It was made specifically for the Casual Bloggers Conference and it says "Live Laugh Blog" on it.
I seriously LOVE mine, and I know that you will love yours too!

Have you ever thought about printing your blog into a book? Well, BLURB makes that possible!
They gave everyone at the CBC a coupon for a free book! It could be your blog, your winter vacation to Mexico or a book of all the Grand kids for your Father's Day present for Grandpa Joe!
ONE whole book for YOU-- on Blurb!

In fact, we're going to sweeten the deal! Blurb said we could offer this deal to ALL OUR READERS! Just use the code BLOG2010 when you check out!
So, even if you don't win the CBC10 Swag Bag--everyone is still a winner... With Blurb!

(Get US $39.95 off your product total. Each customer can use this promotion 1 time. Offer valid between 2010-05-28 and 2010-08-31. Promotion only valid for books created by the customer.)

*****
There are so many other things in that Sweet Swag Bag that this post could run on for miles. Just trust us when we say: You Want This!

Some of the companies wanted ALL OF OUR READERS to enjoy the discounts that were offered to the CBC10 Attendees with coupon codes for you to use at check out. If you are interested in all of the coupon codes, you can click here to our CBC Product Sponsors
and see all the amazing deals they are offering you.
Does 50% off your order sound enticing?
Click on over there and see what they are offering!

*****

There is one last little thing that Caroline and I are throwing in just because we love you all SO MUCH:

How does a $50.00 shopping spree at amazon.com sound to you?
We thought so! So, get entering!

*****
The Rules:

You have until 11:59pm MDT on Sunday, June 20th to enter the giveaway.
Winners will be chosen via Random.org and announced Tuesday morning, June 22nd.

1. To enter, simply leave a comment on this post.

2. To get a second entry spread the word about the giveaway by Blogging about it with a link back to MMB in the post.

3. To get a third entry, Twitter/Facebook about the giveaway - with a link to MMB- then come back and comment again, letting us know you posted.

4. To get a fourth entry join our Blog Frog Community, and comment again.


5. To get a fifth entry, follow us on our Review blog and comment again.


6. To get a sixth entry, LIKE US on Facebook. and then comment again.

7. To get a seventh entry, SIGN UP FOR OUR NEWSLETTER(located in the top right corner of the blog) and then comment again.


Remember: Make separate entries for each thing you do. We use Random.org to choose our winners, and it only counts how many actual entries we have-- not multiple entries on one comment!

Good luck!

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