Saturday, February 21, 2015

4 Steps To Building Resilience

This is me, in a rare show of cooking resilience. This was the 6 layer rainbow cake, which took 6 hours to complete.

So China is constructing – from scratch – a bunch of islands in the South China Sea.

Huh.

I can’t find the motivation to construct – from scratch – the chopped salad from Maggiano’s. And it’s not from lack of desire. I love that salad. But only enough to google the recipe, see the 36 required ingredients and give up.

If I’d been born in China, the government would have deported me immediately for lack of work ethic. All the parenting books say it: resilience is what we’re supposed to teach our children.

This is because kiddos will have some life goals that won’t be easily achieved. They will try and they will fail. When this happens, they should not take their recipe book and go home.  

They should try and try again. Just like those Chinese island builders who are facing down rough seas and mad neighbors (the Philippines and Vietnam aren’t so psyched about the new island thing).

Here’s how you build resilience in your kids (according to the parenting books, not guru girl, who clearly has some learning to do on this subject).

 When your kiddos encounter a problem:

1.      Do not leap in to rescue them. Instead say, “How are you going to handle it?”
This is possibly the hardest question in the human language for parents like me to utter. But it is important. The problem is your kid’s. Not yours.

2.    Help brainstorm. When your kid says she can’t possibly think up any ideas to tackle the problem, respond,”Do you want to hear what some other kids have tried?”

Then succinctly offer some ideas. Finish up with the key phrase,”What do you think?”

3.    Listen & Encourage. Listen to what your kiddo says. Give her parting words of encouragement. Something like, “You got this.”

4.    Do this even if you think her plan is questionable. The point is she’s come up with a plan. On her own. One that she’s going to try! This is cause for celebration! 

 (Of course if her plan is truly terrible or dangerous, you want to gently guide towards other solutions.)

5.     After the plan has been instituted: Hug. Either the plan worked or it was an epic fail. Either way, give your kid a hug. Of congratulations or solace.

In the latter scenario, go back to Step 2 and come up with a new plan. It helps to also share your own epic fails at this point.

Frighteningly, we are the role models for our kids. They need to know we’ve messed up and yet bounced back to be the stunningly well- adjusted adults they admire.

Warning: once you tell your kid your own stories of defeat they will repeat them. A lot. It will be embarrassing.

It’s worth it if we can grow a generation of little people into the kind of big people who have a resilient, can-do attitude. The kind that build islands out of oceans.*


* Only, unlike China, let’s not use ours for military purposes. Maybe our new islands could host puppies and kittens instead.

Friday, February 13, 2015

Secret Decorating Source: Pottery Barn-Good But Without The Sticker Shock


It’s Valentine’s Day tomorrow, but the seduction going on in this house isn’t coming from my fella. It’s coming from the Pottery Barn catalog that just arrived in the mail.

That darn catalog positively radiates seduction. 

“Guru Girl,” its perfectly curated rooms call to me.” Buy me, style me and live a life of crisp order, beautifully lit.”

There are no cereal boxes in Pottery Barn kitchens.

No dog hair on Pottery Barn bedding.

No jumbled piles of sporting equipment in Pottery Barn mudrooms.

Even its mudroom clutter is color coordinated. And consists of nothing real children actually use. I would like to meet the family that owns a pewter-colored bocce ball set but not one neon-colored Nerf gun.

Intellectually, I know Pottery Barn interiors are a sham. Furniture and gew-gaws don’t bring a balanced, ordered life. They do, however, bring a fearfully unbalanced Visa bill.

Unless you get the look on the down low. Enter: Hobby Lobby. It’s one of my favorite sources for tchochkes that look like Pottery Barn’s but without the PB price!

Directions For Seductive, PB Style Without Non-Sexy, PB Price:

1. Circle favorite small items in catalog.

2. Take catalog with you to Hobby Lobby.

3. Let the hunt begin.

4. Yes, you have to sift through some decorating oddities, but it’s worth it. 

Those burlap table runners that are all the rage? $50 at Pottery Barn. $7 at Hobby Lobby.

The blingy box above? $63 at Pottery Barn. $23 at Hobby Lobby (because glassware is ½ off this week).

This Hobby Lobby version is basically the same exact box as the one pictured above. Love it because it's mirrored in the back so will bounce light around the room. 

And every week Hobby Lobby publishes a 40% off one item coupon. So you can always use a coupon on your designated item.


Happy hunting, guru girls & guys!  And also, Happy Valentine’s Day. Especially to my fella, who puts up with Guru Girl, gew-gaws and all:)

Friday, February 6, 2015

2 Gotta Get's: For A Brighter & Safer February


There are the things you’re supposed to do. And then there are the things you actually do. This is why I’m not so concerned about the latest health news: running is, in fact, quite bad for you. While slow jogging is, in fact, quite good.

For me, running falls into the “things I really should do but never get around to” category. It’s so much easier to admire houses and enjoy the day when you’re slow jogging. Plus there is no wheezing for breath or looking sweaty.

But alas, I also bring this half-ass attitude to things other than physical fitness. Things like culinary prep.

Everyone knows you’re supposed to have different cutting boards for different food groups. This is so there’s absolutely no chance of cross contamination from foul poultry juices on your cutting board.

What I don’t understand is how any poultry juices can possibly survive being hand-scoured by me, in the sink, before being industrially rousted out, by the dishwasher.

Plus how would you ever keep the cutting boards straight? For these reasons – and also, my half ass attitude – we have no separate cutting boards at Chez Guru.

Until now. Because I just saw these cute, little cutting boards that do the work for you. They’re in the shape of the items for which they’re designed. Genius!(Click this link to go to modcloth.com to buy these for around $14 for an entire set.)



Almost as genius as this dog toy. Because what’s better than slow jogging and safe kitchen prep? Fake teeth. For your dog! (Click this link to go to modcloth.com where you can buy doggy teeth for around $14.)

Guess what Stanley’s gonna be doing this weekend? (In addition to slow jogging, of course.)