Archive for the Uncategorized Category

Suck as a blogger

I admit, the last post is close to 6 months ago. No need to repent here but I really, really suck as a blogger. Just too busy to even muse about nothing. So instead, I am here to vent.

I want to know why mean girls are so mean.meangirlspic

Is it genetic? Is it learned? Is it acquired by the desperate individual who does not want to be left out? The truth of the matter is, I can’t answer this. All I know is that mean girls exist and I wish I can pummel the bejesus out of’em. I suppose in some ways, they are a necessary evil. How else can we appreciate the sisterhood and comraderie of girls? Mean girls remind each and every one of us that we are truly blessed for having the friends we have acquired and sustained in our lifetime. We celebrate when Cinderella outshines her two evil sisters in fairy tales, we rejoice when Mr. Darcy ignores Ms. Bingley’s plea to get atttention in classic literature and we are overjoyed when Lindsey Lohan makes a fool out of the mean girl clique in the movies. But no one ever seems to ask the underlying question. "Why are mean girls mean?" Can we just chaulk it up as simple jealousy? Lack of confidence? These are the usual run of the mill answers, but I aim to find out what is behind this facade of callous behavior. It can’t simply be a behavioral issue. To be continued . . .

Changing Times

Instead of writing about the doldrums of staying-home-motherhood life, I decided I am going to post anything of interest. Whether written by me or someone else, I’m hoping it can stir some level of interest to my friends and family.

Fit and Fat  better than Lean and Lazy(**Guess my life span will be a little longer since I fit in this category)

By CARLA WILLIAMS
ABC News Medical Unit
Fitness may actually be a more important factor than your weight when it comes to living a long, healthy life, a new study suggests. Researchers report that older people who are fit — even if they are also fat — are likely to live longer compared with those who are out of shape. The study is the latest research to suggest that being a bit overweight may not be as dangerous to your health as other factors. A November Centers for Disease Control and Prevention study suggested that being up to 25 pounds overweight doesn’t appear to raise the risk of dying from cancer or heart disease. And a Duke University study in July posed a puzzling — and controversial — paradox in which obese people who’d endured a heart attack appeared to have a better chance of surviving it than their skinnier counterparts.

However, medical experts warn that you shouldn’t ignore your body mass index completely; instead, they recommend using fitness as a means for maintaining a healthy body weight. “Our results showed pretty clearly that fitness provides substantial protection against dying,” says study author Steven Blair of the University of South Carolina at Columbia, who is also the director of research at the Cooper Institute for Aerobics Research in Dallas. “Even people who are obese, with a body mass index of 35 or higher, if they are fit, they have a much lower chance of dying than those who are unfit.”

Blair and colleagues looked at 2,603 adults over age 60 and evaluated their fitness levels using treadmill tests. Their findings, to be published in the Journal of the American Medical Association, suggest that weight isn’t everything. Other medical experts not affiliated with the research agree with this conclusion.

The Tyranny of Children

First step to recovery is admission, so here it is. I am an overprotective-paranoid about abduction-fear of lead poisoning-catching hard to name diseases-freakish mom. I am not sure where this stems from considering I was raised by “sure, you can stay out as late as you like, in fact, don’t even bother calling me if you’re staying out late ’cause “I trust you” mom.  Regardless, I am going to post this fantastic article I found this morning just as a reminder that our kids will not crumble like morning coffee cake if bitten here and there.

Buffer the Children, and Imperil Common Sense By Robin Givhan
Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, September 23, 2007; Page M01

It is not unusual to walk down the sidewalks of Manhattan and have to dodge a parent pushing a small child on a tiny plastic tricycle. Although the parent is in full control of both speed and navigation, that child is almost always wearing protective bike gear, including a helmet.
It is no secret that parents in a certain demographic have become overprotective of their children. No dodgeball, you could get a concussion! No sugar; no milk; no meat. And, heaven forbid, no being pushed down the street at 1/4 mph without a helmet. There are a host of threats in the world against which parents must be on guard, not the least of which are lead-laden toys from China, and so it seems like a particularly cruel form of masochism to play offense against risks so rare that they are akin to worrying about being struck by lightning.
The fretfulness of some parents, and the speed with which they malign the parenting skills of others, dominated the debate that preceded the debut of “Kid Nation” on Wednesday night. The reality show plopped 40 kids, ages 8 to 15, in a deserted New Mexico town and instructed them to organize their own community without the direct help of adults.
As with most reality shows, the realism is subjective. The children were surrounded by adults on the production team. And while there were risks — reports say some kids mistakenly drank bleach, for instance — there were no serious injuries. Kids missed school during the filming, but so far there have been no reports of children failing a grade as a result.
The anger revolved around whether the producers skirted child labor laws, whether the kids were put at excessive risk of injury and whether their parents had been horribly irresponsible by allowing them to participate at all.
The essence of the fury, however, seemed to be that “Kid Nation” dared to tangle with the culture’s distorted views on childhood.
A child is now the equivalent of a minor royal who should be coddled, revered and praised at all times. To put a child in the position of possibly skinning a knee is unacceptable. To risk bruising a child’s delicate ego is an abomination. To make a child cry — and capture it on tape — could signal the end of civilized society.
Children are innocent savants in popular culture. That concept was captured in the book “All I Really Need to Know I Learned in Kindergarten.” That same notion is the subtext behind the television show “Are You Smarter Than a 5th Grader?,” which suggests that kids have a basic, uncomplicated knowledge that trumps the messy version of adult intelligence that is marred by experience, presumptions, nuance and . . . sin.
Parents are in a difficult position as they navigate popular culture and try to keep their children from being prematurely exposed to sex or violence. But now that children have infiltrated all areas of society — pushed into expensive restaurants, fancy boutiques, bars, Saturday night movies and everywhere else in their ergonomically correct double-wide strollers — vigilance that once applied only to Saturday morning cartoons and play dates now has to be enforced everywhere. An activist group, Kidsafefilms.org, complained recently to airlines that many in-flight films, though edited for content, remain inappropriate for children. Offending films listed on the group’s Web site include “Spider-Man 3,” “Casino Royale” and “King Kong.” No matter that the vast majority of airline passengers are over the age of 18. Should airline films be edited to the standards of a 6-year-old?
The culture has created an untenable situation for parents and children alike. Long before Britney Spears shaved her head, showed her privates and fumbled at the Video Music Awards, she was pilloried for stumbling on the street while holding Baby No. 1.
Children are assumed to be so fragile that they cannot be jostled. They must be consulted on the family’s dinner entree. It takes a TV nanny — a “Supernanny” — to remind parents that it’s ridiculous to negotiate with a toddler.
Children have been turned into miniature, high-maintenance consumers who require designer labels to keep up with the Suri Cruises and the Maddox Jolie-Pitts of the world. Political ads use children to mouth demands for universal health care or Social Security reform. They have become the fallback weapon: four feet, 60 pounds and 10 sticky fingers’ worth of guilt. When New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg wanted to levy a congestion toll on drivers coming into midtown Manhattan, supporters ran ads using children: Decrease pollution. Do it for the kids. What about the wheezing, coughing grandparents?
The heavy FCC fine levied against CBS over Janet Jackson’s split-second wardrobe malfunction during the Super Bowl halftime show in 2004 was partially justified because children were watching the performance.
Is it any wonder that these highly celebrated children grow up to be demanding teenagers on “My Super Sweet 16″? Teenagers’ interests and eccentricities dominate popular culture. Their films control the box office during the summer.
Their baggy trousers changed the silhouette of adult clothing so that grown men see nothing wrong with pants that hang off their rumps.
Teenage girls have become the standard of womanly beauty and adult women try to diet and exercise their bodies back to the physique of a 16-year-old.
For those with the wherewithal to coddle their children, it is a luxury to be able to worry that catching a glimpse of “King Kong” on a cross-country flight might give one’s child a bad dream. But it is a nightmare to envision a nation under the tyranny of children.

What did you do over the summer?

So I decided to answer this over-asked question once and for all for anyone who might be remotely interested in la vida de Los Sheehans.

Lots of outdoor parties day IMG_2493 010  and night.July 032 Getting together with old friends July 019 July 010 July 009  and newer ones. IMG_2480 019 July 042 July 043

Some traveling abroad IMG_0056 IMG_0131 IMG_0087 (San Miguel de Allende, Mexico)IMG_0162 IMG_0140 (Guanajuato, Mexico)IMG_0139 IMG_0165 IMG_0168 IMG_0138

Some more localIMG_1924 008 (South Lake Tahoe)IMG_1974 051  IMG_2347 118 IMG_2379 081IMG_2406 102 IMG_2466 040 IMG_2432 052

lots and lots of swimming in our backyard July 054  July 051 July 053July 047 And the ability to always look back at these times with a smileIMG_0040IMG_2420 069

|