Category Archives: Lifestyle

My cooking lesson at Gymboree

Why do the displays at Gymboree always look so ridiculously good? They make me want to buy everything in the store to recreate those looks for my kids. This week, I popped in to return something and found myself gazing longingly at yet another adorable ready made outfit hanging on the wall…and then it hit me!

The reason the Gymboree displays always look SO AMAZING is that they always add that one more element to the outfit that completes it! The extra button-down over the t-shirt and under the sweater. The scarf tied adorably around the sweater and under the corduroy blazer. The visible chunky belt over the long sweater over the patterned leggings.

It’s not complicated, really…but it takes a little extra effort to pull it off in your child’s everyday wardrobe.

Cooking is like that. Taking a moment to taste the dish you’re making and to add one more layer of flavor can elevate it from everyday to amazing. A sprinkle of fresh herbs. A swirl of butter into the sauce just before serving. A splash of vinegar. Minced shallots. A flurry of parmesan. These layers of flavor are what great cooks instinctively understand instinctively. Food prepared by a great cook has depth, and while you might not be able to name the extra ingredient, you will notice it because it’s what makes the dish feel finished.

Give it a whirl. Taste your dinner tonight before you serve it – ignore the fact that the recipe says you’re finished – and see if you can discern what extra element would make it amazing. You may surprise yourself and discover you’re already a great cook! You just needed the license to strut your stuff.

Are You Stuck in the Girl Box?

Do you remember what it was like to be in 4th grade? Most of us have extremely clear memories about something that shifted for us at that point. I can remember being deemed “invisible” by a group of cool girls I thought were my friends. When I spoke, they would literally say to one another, “Did you hear something? I didn’t hear anything.” Some of you may recall being left out of a clique, or being teased about your lunch, or your clothes, or your hair, or your weight, or worse. Many of us started to close up and live differently as a result of these experiences. We retreated into the Girl Box and played it safe, living smaller than we could have for years…or forever.

Enter Girls on the Run.

GOTR closeupThis dynamic organization is about SHATTERING the Girl Box and encouraging girls to dream and live as big as they can! And they do all of this while preparing the girls to complete a 5K at the end of a 12-week season.

Girls on the Run inspires girls to be joyful, healthy and confident by using a fun, experience-based curriculum that creatively integrates running. The girls meet twice per week with encouraging volunteer coaches who teach the girls important skills like healthy eating, standing up for oneself, being positive, and managing stress – all while training for the Girls on the Run 5k at the end of the season. In addition to physical activity, the girls learn to believe in themselves in an encouraging team atmosphere. Girls on the Run provides girls with tools, confidence and positive peer support group so that they can thrive in middle school and high school.

How ’bout that? Seriously, don’t you wish you’d had Girls on the Run? I first learned about the organization when I was living in Atlanta, and then I served as a founding Board Member for the Greater Cincinnati chapter back in 2005. My dear friend Erin Hamilton left her thriving corporate career to serve as the Executive Director and personally coached a small team of 12 girls in Loveland that year.

This year, GOTR of Greater Cincinnati will serve nearly 2,000 girls. It gives me goosebumps. Many of those girls are on scholarships, so fundraising is key to GOTR’s viability. I’m making it super-easy for you to support this amazing organization because if you subscribe to Nourish Menu Plans by November 17th I will donate 10% of your subscription to GOTR. Get all the details here!

GOTR Race Start

November 17th is the GOTR Fall 5K in Cincinnati

You can also donate directly to GOTR of Greater Cincinnati via their website. If you want to find your local chapter or donate to GOTR International instead, go here.

If you can’t donate money, will you consider donating your time? They need race volunteers, coaches, and administrative helpers. Or run or walk the 5K. It’s an experience you will NEVER forget as you cross the finish line with throngs of extremely excited 8-13 year old girls with painted faces and rainbow colored running gear and foam crowns and sometimes even tutus. Wanna see? Really, check out those pictures and tell me you’re not moved. Go be moved.

Get involved – give your time or make a donation – and when you do, the Girl Box will feel like a distant memory… left in the dust… right where it belongs.

Pumpkin Spice Lattes

‘Tis the season for all things cozy and warm. I know the words pumpkin spice latte evoke an emotional response (or maybe a Pavlovian response) from more than one of you. I’m more of a decaf-skim-two-pump-light-whip mocha girl myself, but apparently there’s not a specific season for that. Whatever, Starbucks.

We’re snuggling up to fall here in the Midwest and I couldn’t be more ready. Drag out the blankets for the sofa and my favorite slippers for my tootsies and I’m one happy girl. It’s my Northeastern upbringing that started my love affair with fall and it was my time at Cornell that solidified it. You haven’t lived till you’ve been in Ithaca, NY in the fall. A-ma-zing.

The strange thing about fall is that we love it even though it signifies change in such visible ways – I mean, it’s basically shouting “WINTER IS COMING! IT’S GOING TO BE COLD! AND DARK! FOR MONTHS!” from its orange and red treetops, and we’re still  happy! Maybe we’re distracted by the spectacular leaves or the crisp cool air or all those pumpkin spice lattes, but it’s one of the few times in which we readily embrace change. Usually, we resist it at all costs. We’d rather stay miserable than risk changing something because change seems so difficult. But, is it really?

I find that intentional change has five stages and they’re not all difficult. In fact, three out of five are actually fun! (Changes that are thrust upon us operate a little differently so we’ll save those for another time.)

Let’s say, as an example, that you decide to start writing in a journal every day. Here’s what might happen.

1) Resistance – This is when you’re contemplating a change and 502 reasons why you should not or cannot make it happen are surfacing. “I don’t have a journal and I can’t just write on notebook paper for heaven’s sake. I have NO TIME to write, I mean when would I water my plants/exercise/watch TV/read/talk to my sister? And I don’t even have a decent pen. Plus I’m a terrible writer.”

2) Exhilaration – This happens RIGHT AFTER you decide to change and your subconscious kicks off a pep rally in your honor to reinforce your decision. “Whoo hoo! I am a genius! All the smartest and most successful people keep journals. You know what? These journals could be published one day. Forget pens. Maybe I should get a writing desk!

3) Uphill Battle – These are the days and weeks of implementing new behaviors that require conscious thought and extraordinary effort to make progress and etch new habits into your life. “I am going to set a timer for 10 minutes and write before I do anything else in the morning. I’m going to create a list of topics I might want to write about one day so I can get through writer’s block. I’m going to be late for work but I AM GOING TO FINISH THIS JOURNAL ENTRY.”

4) Momentum – This begins to pick up when those same, not-so-new-anymore behaviors become more automatic and therefore require less effort. “Wow, I wrote for 20 minutes today without even noticing!” “I’ve gotta journal about this thing that just happened!”

5) New Normal – By this stage you’re thinking “Change? What change? Haven’t I always lived this way?” And you’re probably recruiting others to your new way of living. “I bought you this journal for your birthday because I just LOVE writing in my journal every morning and I know you’ll love it, too!”

Did you notice how one of the hardest moments was deciding to make the change – fighting off all the internal dialog telling you that you can’t or shouldn’t? And did you notice that as soon as you do decide, your inner critic morphs into your inner cheerleader? It’s that cheerleader who has to stay by your side through the uphill battle until you build your own momentum.

Where are you resisting a much-needed change and letting your inner critic keep you stuck? Go get yourself a pumpkin spice latte and see if you can coax out your inner cheerleader to shift your perspective and get you moving. It’s fall. Change is in the air.