Mother Talkers

Australian PM appoints first woman Governor-General

Mon Apr 14, 2008 at 03:00:05 PM PDT

In another symbolic boost for women in leadership positions, Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd has appointed a woman, fellow Queenslander Quentin Bryce. Bryce will be the first woman in 107 years to take the position. The governor general is the last vestigial reminder that Australia is nominally ruled by the British monarchy – under the 1091 Australian constitution, the governor general is the queen’s representative in the country. From this article in The Age:

QUENTIN BRYCE, who will be Australia's first female governor-general, declared yesterday: "It's a great day for Australian women."

The Prime Minister, Kevin Rudd, said Ms Bryce would capture "the spirit of modern Australia" in the vice-regal position.

Mr Rudd said he expected Ms Bryce would use her role to give a voice to women, people from the bush and indigenous Australians. Asked about the significance of appointing a woman to the position for the first time, he said: "It's taken us 107 years. It's been a while but it's good that it's happened."

Fitness and Training Diary w/o 14 April

Sun Apr 13, 2008 at 04:26:51 PM PDT

This is an open thread for those who are training for a race of any shape or kind. Post your training regime for this week and come back to report on your progress. Got a question on training, walking, running, biking, swimming or anything to do with race preparation? Post it here - someone will know the answer!

Ladies, in addition to the weekly round-up of intended activity, I need your help. My iPod playlist is feeling a tad tired and I need inspiration! What are your top three favs on your list - new music especially appreciated. I've got tons of Madonna, Scissor Sisters, Amy Winehouse, Springsteen, Rolling Stones, Pearl Jam etc., etc. Thanks!

Fifty Greatest Comedy Sketches

Fri Apr 11, 2008 at 03:04:12 PM PDT

It's the weekend. I'm feeling giddy. And Nerve.com have put out an article called The 50 Greatest Comedy Sketches of All Time. Complete with clips from various sources. Hooray!

Consider the list - SNL, Monty Python, French & Saunders, Kids in the Hall and treasure the best that Anglo-American comedy can produce. My favorite five on the list, in no particular order of preference:

The Monty Python stuff - Spanish Inquisition, Ministry of Silly Walks, Dead Parrot... can't go wrong; Celebrity Jeopardy, SNL. Darryl Hammond's Sean Connery imitation? Priceless! "Then I'm cock of the walk!"

I'm a bit miffed that there's not more stuff from Gilda Radner's SNL period - the lady was a comic genius. But all in all, not bad. So ladies, what are your top five favorite comedy sketches? Any that this article missed? Enjoy a good belly laugh and happy weekend!

Biting in day care

Mon Apr 07, 2008 at 12:37:30 PM PDT

This is one of those perennial issues in parenting life, and not the first time we’ve addressed it on MT – Erika wrote about a similar incident with little Maya in 2006. So forgive the redundancy, but here goes.

I originally wanted to title this "My Daughter Got Bitten!" because really, that’s what this is all about. Briefly, when I went to pick Jess up from crèche on Thursday afternoon, she was teary-eyed and had an ice pack on her left arm. She ran up to me and announced, "[boy’s name – redacted] bit me, Mummy!" The teacher came up very upset and said that she and Jessica had been sitting on a soft cushion calmly, the teacher got up to check a child, and the instant her back was turned, this kid came up and took a chomp out of Jessica’s upper arm. The skin isn’t broken, but there is a perfect impression of this kid’s upper and lower teeth on her skin, and 12 hours later, it’s become a nasty bruise.  

I was shocked but not surprised at the culprit; Jessica, as verbal as she is, has mentioned two or three times that this particular boy has either pushed or slapped her in the past. I’ve also witnessed this boy’s aggression in the classroom; he has pushed kids around for no apparent reason (ie, the victim wasn’t taking things, or shoving, or whatever) when I’ve picked up or dropped Jessica off.  Each time Jessica has mentioned an incident, I’ve pulled the classroom teacher aside and expressed my concern about this boy’s actions and that I don’t want Jess becoming afraid of this child or learning that aggressive behaviour is acceptable in a group situation.

Fitness and training diary w/o Apr 7

Sun Apr 06, 2008 at 08:36:11 PM PDT

This is an open thread for those who are training for a race of any shape or kind. Post your training regime for this week and come back to report on your progress. Got a question on training, walking, running, biking, swimming or anything to do with race preparation? Post it here - someone will know the answer!

April Baby Pool, anyone?

Fri Apr 04, 2008 at 03:40:32 PM PDT

A number of our dear MTs are expecting babies in April - Littlepear, SwissClogs, Minnmom and Rocky, to name those I'm aware of. How about a baby pool to guess who's having what, when? I know from previous posts that SwissClogs is at 38 weeks with #2, but gave birth to DD at 36 weeks. Littlepear is 37 weeks, but at her last OB appointment, the little fella hadn't gone head down yet. Soooo... based on that, I'll say based on order of who's going to give birth first:

SwissClogs
Littlepear
Rocky
Minnmom

Any takers?! And who else is out there with babies due this month?

Fitness and training diary w/o Mar 31

Sun Mar 30, 2008 at 10:59:07 PM PDT

This is an open thread for those who are training for a race of any shape or kind. Post your training regime for this week and come back to report on your progress. Got a question on training, walking, running, biking, swimming or anything to do with race preparation? Post it here - someone will know the answer!

Sorry about skipping last week, ladies. I just got lost in the holiday timing! Hope you all had a good week.

In my news, I've decided to gear up for another half marathon. I'm really hoping that I'll have good news in the Baby 2.0 department, but until then, I'm going to train for the Run Melbourne half marathon, Sunday June 22. My target is modest: another 5 minute improvement over my last race, so a 2h20 minute marathon. That would be a personal record (PR), but it's also a modest goal. I'm also hoping to use the training as a chance to vamoose 10lbs. I'm still carrying this weight and I'm hoping that working it off will also put me in a healther physical state for conception.

What's going on with you-all? Hillary, when is your half marathon?

What are your penny-pinching tricks?

Sat Mar 29, 2008 at 05:48:44 AM PDT

I come today to praise the penny-pinchers. I proudly wear the tightwad badge. I save, scrimp, bulk buy, cook at home, sew clothes for Jessica (for fun, but also because I can assemble a week’s worth of clothes, absent undies and socks, for about $150 worth of fabric, thread and notions!), grow veg for fun and savings (nothing cheaper than buying a packet of seeds for $2! Okay, it takes longer, but I damn well know that my stuff is for sure organic) haunt thrift shops, warehouses and sales. Recycle? Yes! Freecycle among family and trusted friends? Love it! If it safely saves a buck, I’m on it or I want to hear of it. It’s a bit of “stick it to the man”, and a lot of instilled frugality.

That’s why I had a lot of fun reading this NYT article, How to Survive in New York on Ninety-Nine Cents. A strange departure from the usual Style section offerings (featuring the uppah-crust, the well-to-do, or the wanna-bes), it was paean to the Cheap Life – namely, how to assemble tasty treats from a series of 99-cent stores. For once, the reporter won my heart with the lead:

I LOVE shopping at my local Gourmet Garage as much as the next guy. But sometimes I plop a can of chicken broth down on the checkout counter and think, “$2.19? For someone to boil chicken bones? I want that job.”

So when I heard that the food you can buy at 99-cent stores is more diverse than you might imagine, I decided to conduct an experiment. I’d make dinner every night for a week using mostly ingredients bought at these stores and then, on the eighth night — once I’d gotten my game down — I’d prepare a meal for friends made only from ingredients bought at 99-cent stores.

Muttering about the price of food and how you could do it cheaper? Yes, baby, yes! Speak it! Legions whose wallets are creased like accordions from being clutched in moist palms say “Huzzah!”

It’s a pretty funny read, and even though the assembled menu was light on fresh fruit and veg (yeah, hard to get in a discount store, which is another post for another time), it doesn’t sound half bad. And he gives a recipe for a pea soup that I’m definitely going to use:

Slice and sauté an onion. Add 3 cups chicken stock, a 1-pound bag of frozen peas, 1/3 cup oats, 1/8 teaspoon cardamom, some salt and pepper. Bring to boil. Purée in blender.)

So MTs, let’s dish. What are your favourite money-savers? Any tips, any freaky-good websites/stores? Recipes happily shared! And question for all you artistic people out there: what would a tightwad badge look like?

What does "organic" really mean?

Tue Mar 25, 2008 at 06:41:49 AM PDT

Recent investigation by a consumer advocacy group and a newspaper have found that organic labelling of food products in Australia is potentially misleading. Because there are multiple bodies – none governmental - that can provide certification for organic products, confusion abounds about what “organic” means in the Australian context. Forgive me for dabbling in areas that others, like Expat Chef, so expertly skewer; I can only look upon this as a concerned layperson.  I know that for myself, if I see a can of something like tomatoes or beans or what-have-you labelled “organic”, I automatically assume that somebody behind that label has assessed the contents and manufacture to certify that result. Sometimes yes, and sometimes no, this article shows:

[S]ome own-brand organic products bought by The Sun-Herald in Coles and Woolworths [NB: Coles and Woolworth’s are the two biggest chain supermarkets in Australia. Rachel]last week had none of the official logos. Woolworths' organic tinned tomatoes had no official certification, and the small print on Coles organic carrots stated "product in conversion to national standard" with no other explanation.

Five different products bought in Coles used five different organic logos.

The Sun-Herald also looked at the cost of organic goods compared with conventional products.

Organic carrots from Coles cost $3.48 for one kilogram compared with $1.68 for the conventionally produced equivalent.

In Woolworths, organic carrots were $3.98 compared with 94 cents for the mainstream equivalent.

Organic tinned tomatoes in Woolworths cost $1.15, compared with 58 cents for a "normal" tin.

And 500 grams of regular minced beef from Coles cost $5.55 compared with $7.33 for its organic rival.

Melbourne father sues for private school refund

Mon Mar 17, 2008 at 06:42:07 AM PDT

Guess what, MTs? The US isn’t the only place where frivolous lawsuits happen. A Melbourne father who sent his kids to the uber-posh, richy, richy, rich Brighton Grammar private school is suing them, well, I’ll let this article explain:

A FATHER whose twin sons flunked their final exams is demanding an elite private school repay up to $400,000 in fees.

Victorian Steven Weybury,  unhappy with his sons' VCE results, has challenged Brighton Grammar to refund the money spent educating his twins from kindergarten to year 12.

He has alleged his boys were humiliated by their VCE results.

Mr Weybury - a partner in a city law firm - claims he warned the school that his boys were headed for academic disaster in their final year and attempted to remove them at the end of year 11.

But school bosses persuaded him to let the boys stay on and assured him that they could cope emotionally and academically, he claims.

"The boys did not successfully complete year 12 in any respect," court documents allege.

"The boys obtained placements in courses of a type which did not require year 12 attendance."

Mr Weybury has sought a refund of fees paid for the boys between 1994 and 2007, as well as damages and legal costs.

"The plaintiff paid fees to (the school) for a total of 28 years in an amount of the region of $400,000," court documents allege.

"The lack of achievement of the boys in all areas considered important . . . confirms that the payment of fees were (sic) excessive and unnecessary."

Fitness and training diary w/o Mar 17

Sun Mar 16, 2008 at 10:04:55 PM PDT

This is an open thread for those who are training for a race of any shape or kind. Post your training regime for this week and come back to report on your progress. Got a question on training, walking, running, biking, swimming or anything to do with race preparation? Post it here - someone will know the answer!

So, who's starting to see spring weather? I love those first few weeks of spring because it totally re-energizes me for running outdoors. Here in Melbourne, we're in a freak heatwave. It's supposed to be autumn and it's friggin' above 100 degrees. Where are we, Perth? Not that I'd mind hanging out with Aussieyank, but one of the reasons I always liked Melbourne is because it's supposed to have cooler weather than the rest of Australia. Now I'm looking at Tasmania and going, hey, that's nice.

</angry, grumpy, heat-induced whine>

Vatican presents new list of Deadly Sins for 21st century

Wed Mar 12, 2008 at 11:43:55 AM PDT

The Vatican has doubled the number of mortal sins, adding seven new transgressions that will land your soul in Hell if you don’t confess to them prior to your death. I know that I may not be the best person to write this diary, as I’m a.) not Catholic and b.) not pious, but I am intrigued by this new list, because they fall into the category of "social sins", as encapsulated by this list from Bloomberg News:

  1. ``Bioethical' violations such as birth control
  1. ``Morally dubious'' experiments such as stem cell research
  1. Drug abuse
  1. Polluting the environment
  1. Contributing to widening divide between rich and poor
  1. Excessive wealth
  1. Creating poverty

These new sins are dramatically different from the original deadly sins, which, in my wholly untrained opinion, deal with personal failings and not necessarily sins against a wider community. For those of us who aren’t of the Catholic faith, they are: pride, envy, gluttony, lust, anger, greed and sloth. The new sins were presented by "Archbishop Gianfranco Girotti at the end of a week-long training seminar in Rome for priests, aimed at encouraging a revival of the practice of confession - or the Sacrament of Penance in Church jargon," according to this BBC article.


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