Moments Mom
January 28, 2011 at 4:45 am | Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a commentPlease note:
BMG Mom/SoapboxMom is MomentsMom.
This site is several years old.
You can find MomentsMom here.
Thanks.
BMG Mom has moved to Soapbox Mom!
February 11, 2008 at 2:30 pm | Posted in bmg mom, great design, Parenting, personal | Leave a commentMain Site is NOT HERE – I moved to SoapboxMom.com
Please go to SoapboxMom.com
Click here: SoapboxMom.com
As of today, February 10, 2008, BMG Mom is Soapbox Mom. And this Soapboxmom.wordpress.com site has moved to SoapboxMom.com.
It came to me in a dream…
No, not really, I just thought it would be easier for people to remember, become familiar with, I don’t know, it just sounded better to me (and less cumbersome) than Being a Mom is Great!
I’m keeping my fingers crossed a little because the transition was a little bumpy (and that explains why I haven’t been hopping around all your blogs as much as I usually do…).
So thanks for taking the trouble to find me over here. Come, gather ’round and join me in this idyllic, parklike setting (yeah, whatever) so I can comfortably stand on our modern day equivalent of the soapbox (this blog!).
Wahoo!!!
Main Site Officially Launched!
February 11, 2008 at 4:19 am | Posted in design, Fun | Leave a commentWe’ve made the move official!
Please go to soapboxmom.com and let me know you found me!!
Thanks!!
Nothing Like a Good Faucet
February 2, 2008 at 4:58 pm | Posted in design, family, photos, reviews | 8 CommentsTags: best faucets, Dornbracht faucets, faucet and sprayer, faucets, good design, great kitchen faucets, modern faucet, stylish faucet
I love kitchens. I don’t know what it is about them, but I love great kitchens. It’s not because I’m some wunder-chef (far from it!). I just love the ambience of a good kitchen. Whenever you go to a party in someone’s home, isn’t that where people congregate? Or just on a daily basis, think about how much time we spend in our kitchens.
But there’s one thing in particular that I really appreciate within a kitchen and that’s the faucet. I have this thing with faucets. Here’s my favorite:
It’s made by a company called Dornbracht. You just have to feel this faucet in your hands. It’s extraordinary. Someone once told me that they’re the company that all the other faucet companies copy. This one (pictured above), the Tara Classic, won a couple of awards for design and quality excellence.
They also do faucets for bathrooms.
Speaking of bathrooms, I have the same attraction to faucets in bathrooms, particularly in restaurants. If the bathrooms have a great faucet, I’ll leave with a smile on my face. They can be so cool, you know? Sometimes substantial and strong, stylish and gorgeous.
Aaaah, there’s just nothing like a good faucet.
Two Simple Words
January 29, 2008 at 6:10 pm | Posted in family, personal, Thoughts | 9 CommentsTags: birthday parties, birthdays, happy birthday, how people feel about birthdays, not my birthday, over 40 birthday wishes, wishing happy birthday to people over 40
Do you want people to wish you a Happy Birthday (when they know it’s your birthday)?
I do. Is that childish? Unreasonable? Silly?
My left brain, logical, rational mind says, “Of course it is. Grow up!” But then, my emotional half of the brain says, “No! I mean, what the heck, we go nuts — crazy, out of control, over the top — on kids’ birthday parties and we don’t even wish each other good wishes on the anniversaries of our births? What’s that about?!”
There’s a real imbalance there. I mean I’ve been known to throw my share of fun parties for kids. So, I’m not knocking the parties. I’m just saying that I think parents could help each other out a little bit if they would just show some thoughtfulness and kindness toward each other, even when (or maybe especially when) they know that the person to whom they’re extending the greeting is over 30. Maybe we make those middle ages feel older by letting go of the joy and celebration that surround the birthday parties of childhood.
Here’s what started this little train of thought.
In past years, with more than a handful of people, I’ve experienced something like this:
I send an email telling someone that I can’t meet to discuss some volunteering obligation (for the kids) because it’s my birthday. In response, I get nothin’.
No, “Well, I hope you have a good day.”
No, “Happy birthday, girlfriend!”
No, “Oh, no problem, I wouldn’t want to meet that day, either.”
Not even those two little words, Happy Birthday.
Sure, I’ve sometimes been told that I have too much of a Pollyanna attitude toward life, (what some consider to be an annoyingly positive, silly and cheerful disposition). But I don’t think wishing people who are over 30 or 40 a Happy Birthday is immature or offensive.
Hmmm. On second thought…
Maybe that’s not it at all…
Is it that some people don’t want to even think about their birthday when they’re over 40? So they don’t want to touch the topic at all? Are they afraid of somebody grumbling back at them? What? Enlighten me, please. Gosh, if that’s the case, then…well…I feel sad for them. Who says we have to stop enjoying life at a certain age? Why? Where’s the logic in that? That can’t be healthy. Who knows where that might lead…
Grumpy Old Men (1993)
Notice that I’m not saying anything at all about materialistic goods. I’m not saying that I want my friends and family to purchase the latest must-have handbag or some blingy piece of jewelry. That’s not at all what I’m talking about. It’s about kindness and consideration. Thoughtfulness and sincerity that’s simple and instinctive.
For example, when I went into a store (on my birthday) with my son to select little trinkets to include in his favor bags for his birthday party, he saw something that he thought I would like for my birthday, so he said, “Mom, you should get that…for your birthday. C’mon, it’s your birthday!” A very nice woman overheard him and turned to me and said, “It’s your birthday? Well, Happy Birthday! Yes, you should get that for yourself!” My son and I both smiled and thanked her and as we walked away, he said, “Wow. That was so nice!”
Two simple words.
What a difference. Physically, I felt lighter and stood taller. My thoughts turned to more positive, happy places. I felt grateful for that stranger’s kindness and those two words.
Now I make a point of keeping track of people’s birthdays and wishing them well on their day (unless, of course, they make it clear that they’d rather not be reminded). To each his own. Right?
Well, whenever it’s your birthday, this one’s for you:
_______________________
Images from Google Images. Oh, and by the way, it’s not my birthday.
Fast, Easy, Treat with No Trans Fats!
January 29, 2008 at 3:16 am | Posted in healthy breakfast foods, mixes that actually taste good, monkey bread, no trans fat monkey bread, terrific breakfast treats | Leave a comment
Forget those refrigerator cinnamon rolls stuffed into a cake pan…
This little gem is truly a great find.
It takes a little extra planning (before the kids can dive in and start devouring) but it’s well worth it. It’s called Monkey Bread and it’s a mix that’s easy and fun to make. We made the chocolate chip/banana version (by Lollipop Tree). I found it at our Whole Foods store.
Here’s how it works. You prep a 9″ cake pan with a smear of butter, then melt 4 T of butter. While it’s melting, you dump the mix (in a large silver packet) into a bowl and add water. Stir just until blended. Open the other silver packet (filled with raw sugar) and dump that into another bowl.
Let the kids help! Grab little clumps of the sticky dough and roll them around in the sugar. Place the sugared balls into the prepared cake pan. When it’s full, pour the melted butter all over the top, then put it in the oven to bake for about 35 minutes. When it’s ready, take it out and let it sit for about 10 minutes.
Meanwhile, mix some powdered sugar, more butter, vanilla and a little milk together until smooth (the precise measurements are provided on the box). Pour this glaze over the top of the monkey bread and you’re done!
The result is a delectable, relatively healthy breakfast treat that tastes so much better than all those other refrigerator-to-oven breakfast foods.
Oh! And…the company donates a share of the profits to Heifer International!
What’s not to like?
________________
Image from Lollipop Tree’s site.
Please note, I get no compensation or anything from this review, I’m just passing on this info because I think it’s a great find!
The Smile Stone Award
January 28, 2008 at 11:02 am | Posted in Awards, Fun | 10 CommentsTags: good blogs, Great Bloggers, people who write good content
Introducing…
The Smile Stone Award.
The wha??
Let me back up a little. Actually, to right here, January 23, 2008.
I was talking to my daughter about a post I wrote on that day. I’d reached an interesting milestone in the blogosphere and wrote a little post about it. After listening to me blabber on about number of visitors, blah, blah, blah, she quickly reminded me that I’ve always said to her that I wasn’t concerned about how many people read my posts, rather, I was more interested in providing good content. I was trying, I always told her, to disregard the stats and to focus on the substance. Well…then the conversation went something like this:
DD: “But Mom, I thought the number of visitors was not your main concern…”
BMG Mom: “Right. Well, it’s not, really. It’s just that I happened to notice it and thought it was interesting, so I wrote a post about it.”
DD: “Oh. Okay. Whaddya call it?”
BMG Mom: “This Milestone Fills Me with Gratitude.”
DD: “What smilestone? What is a smile stone? And why would it fill you with gratitude?”
BMG Mom: (chuckling) “Nooooo….milestone…it’s a milestone…it’s…hey, wait a minute…that’s a great idea!!”
And the Smile Stone Award began to bloom.
She found it so amusing that she set to work to help create it. She found the clipart, filled in the taglines and voila! Here it is:
For me, it really is about the people who take the time to read my posts and comment on my (often wacky) observations, ruminations and ideas. It’s about the ones who seem to care, who make me laugh, who give me support just when I need it and encourage me when I feel discouraged. I’ve learned so much in these five or six months from people I’ve known for a shorter period of time than my kids’ gestation periods. So, this is my way of showing my gratitude and providing a little something to (I hope) make them smile, too.
And now…
Without further adieu, I present the first group* of Smile Stone awardees:
Jim at The Busy Dad Blog
Deb at Missives from Suburbia
Dan at Cafe Leone
Lotus at Sarcastic Mom
Piper at Bliss in Bloom
Ann** at A Nice Place in the Sun
Pete at My GPS Camera Phone
Kim at Jogging in Circles
Momo at MomoFali’s
Tara at If Mom Says Ok
Chuck at D is for Dad
and
Ellen at Positive Communication.
Thanks for making the world (or at least the blogosphere) a better place.
_______________________
**Ann gets a special mention for providing inspiration – she gave me an award called the You Cheer Me Up award. Thanks again, Ann!! She’s been an inspiration in many ways and is a generous, talented blogger who spreads loads of sunshine and happiness.
*Please realize you don’t have to do anything except accept the award. I just wanted to do something fun (arguably a little wacky, maybe even cheesy) and recognize some outstanding blogs, each of which offers something quite different to the web.
Note: I somehow lost the last half of the group, but have added them back now (sorry about that!!)
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