Top 5 Tuesday: Things To Teach Our Children

This week Dana @ Supernanny Where Are You? wants to know:

What are 5 things that you hope you can pass down (or at least teach) your children. Beliefs, ethics, morals…. stuff like that.

I think I could list way more than five things, but here are the first ones that came to mind…

  1. A love of knowledge and reading - my husband and I both love to read and learn new things and I’ll be a little bit sad if our children don’t share that passion. I actually hope they will read MORE than my husband and I do, which in my case at least, would certainly be saying something. And that they know MORE than my husband does, which would be amazing and wonderful.
  2. Being open to change and new information - I want them to be able to learn new things, even if it means negating something they’d previously believed to be true. They should have their convictions, yes, but not to the point where they refuse to grow and mature and advance with the rest of the world.
  3. That they are worthy of true and lasting love – I want them to know that they are special and wonderful and that the right person will love them unconditionally, even when they are acting like a fart – just like their parents. I will always love my son, even when he’s being a jerk, and the right girl for him will, too. Not that they will allow him to be a jerk, but they won’t stop loving him for it. And that that kind of love is worth waiting for.
  4. Healthier eating habits - I didn’t take that concept seriously growing up and I regret it now that I have terrible eating habits to battle. I want my children to have a chance to try lots of healthy foods and to be aware of how food can affect you – and know good portion control, will power, etc. I also want them to be more active than I am currently.
  5. I want my children to feel they can come to me with anything and know I will support them always. I want to have an honest open relationship with them and for them to feel like they can trust in me and know I will always be there for them. I want them to have that kind of relationship with their own children, too.

What five things would you like to pass on to your children?

Lessons From ‘The Well of Lost Plots’ by Jasper Fforde

It took me a full month to finish reading The Well of Lost Plots, book three in a Thursday Next series by Jasper Fforde. Usually I fly through books, so the fact that this one took me so long might mean it wasn’t very good. Might. I assure you, this wasn’t the case. The truth is, reading The Well of Lost Plots was a lot like taking a crash course on Everything You Never Knew You Didn’t Know: Dramatized.

Fforde creates his own little universe inside this series and you have to know the language to understand it all. The language, for the most part, you can learn by being a well studied English Major, but that will only get you so far. Still, even the biggest of dolts can get through this book (I’m guessing) if you are up for the challenge. Here is a small sampling of the things I learned from reading The Well of Lost Plots by Jasper Fforde:

Grade: A

  • Books are not written by authors, in the way that you would think. The ideas for a book are transmitted to the author from the Book World using an Imagino Transference Recording Device (ITRD). “The ITRD resembles a large horn (typically eight feet across and made of brass) attached to a polished mahogany mixing board a little like a church organ but with many more stops and levers. As the story is enacted in front of the collecting horn, the actions, dialouge, humor, pathos, etc., are collected, mixed and transmitted as raw data to Text Grand Central, where the wordsmiths hammer it into readable storycode. Once done, it is beamed direct to the author’s pen or typewriter, and from there through a live footnoterphone link back to the Well as plain text. the page is read, and if all is well, it is added to the manuscript and the characters move on. The beauty of the system is that authors never suspect a thing – they think they do all the work.” – chapter nine
  • Footnotes are both very useful and potentially very annoying, much like cell phones, they can be used to communicate important advice, send junk mail to the masses, or gossip with your gal pals about the Karenin’s scandalous affair.
  • Problems in grammar are often the fault of a grammasite, “a parasitic life form that feeds on grammar inside of books. Technically known as Gerunds or Ingers, they were an early attempt to transform nouns (which were plentiful) into verbs (which at the time were not) by simply attaching an ing. A dismal failure at verb resource management, they escaped from captivity and now roam freely…” Chapter 6
  • If you should happen to forget that you are pregnant and go on a drinking binge, when you remember that you are in fact pregnant, you will need a spoon.
  • Another example of a difference between our world and BookWorld is that in Book World, no two people ever speak at the same time, breakfast is almost never eaten, as it’s never mentioned in books and there are rarely two people in a given book with the same name. There are also often countless people in a book with no name or personality at all. It is sort of like walking through a movie set, with lots of Extras milling about.
  • Unlike our world, in Book World there is no TV. So when things like the Book Awards (or Bookies) come up, the main characters all go to the show, leaving behind Generics to keep the stories in order. The Generics are kept up-to-date of the Bookies via footnoterphone updates. With all the usual characters away at the Bookies, fiction isn’t quite so good, but usually nobody notices. This is often the reason people in our world argue over the quality of a recommended book. They had read it during the Bookies.

I’ll stop there. My point is, this book was brilliant. The amount of information Fforde gives, the details he thinks out, it just blows my mind. I don’t think I could hope to be doing it justice in this review except for having quoted it so much. I highly recommend this series to anyone who loves literature and comedy and has the patience to sift through Fforde’s mind. The first book in this series is The Eyre Affair.

What’s On Your Nightstand: October

Last month I said that I planned to read Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte, The Well Of Lost Plots by Jasper Fforde, In The Hand Of The Goddess by Tamora Pierce and Mayflower by Nathaniel Philbrick. When I wrote last month’s What’s On Your Nightstand almost none of the books were actually in my possession. Similarly, this month the only book on my TBR list that’s on my nightstand is the book I’m currently reading. But first let’s talk about how I fared in the last month.

  • Jane Eyre I never finished. I really wasn’t enjoying it. It was kind of depressing me and I decided that life was too short to spend reading bad literature. I wrote more on that here.
  • I just finished reading The Well of Lost Plots a couple days ago and LOVED it, but it seems like it took me forever to finish it. Fforde’s books are always so detail-rich and complex in plot that it’s not something I can devour in one sitting. You have to immerse yourself in his world and if you don’t love that world, you probably aren’t going to make it. I LOVE it though so it was well worth the effort. I think this was the best of his books that I’ve read so far. My full review is located here.
  • I am reading In The Hand Of The Goddess right now and liking it a great deal. It’s picking up much quicker than Alanna: The First Adventure did and so it took me no time at all to get hooked on the story. I’m becoming a big fan of Tamora Pierce as well.
  • I hope I read Mayflower this year. I’ve had it for awhile but keep putting off reading it for various reasons but it does look good and it seems like it would be a good book for the fall, but it’s hard to stay committed when I also want to read….

Books To Read Soon

  • American Wife by Curtis Sittenfeld – I’m hoping to read this next month at some point
  • Tale of Despereaux by Katie DeCamillo – the movie is coming out soon and I want to read the book before I break down and see the movie (which you know I will)
  • Something Rotten by Jasper Fforde – Book number 4 in the Thursday Next series, I swear it’s like crack.
  • Rumors by Anna Godberson – follow up to The Luxe, I’ve been wanting to read this for ages, but the library never seems to have it in stock and of course there are always other books that I want to read, too.
  • How To Teach Filthy Rich Girls by Zoey Dean – this book has gotten a few bad reviews, but I know it’s one that I’ll need to read for myself or I’ll never be able to let it go, you know?

What’s on YOUR nightstand? Have you blogged about it and linked up @ 5 Minutes For Books yet?

CHOCOLATE: Things You Should Know

chocolate - photo by Darwin Bell

It’s no secret that I love chocolate. I practically breathe the stuff or at least I would if given the chance. So if chocolate is that important to me, I aught to notice things like the whole Fair Trade issue. Sure I’ve read about it, but I apparently never bothered to READ about it because I never knew any of the following things until Jen @ Daily Mish Mash posted about it. Leave it to Jen to put it in words I can understand, right? Words like:

  • Two thirds of the world’s cocoa bean production comes from Africa (Ghana, Nigeria, Ivory Coast, etc.)
  • More than 109,000 children in Africa work in the cocoa industry.
  • As many as 10,000 are victims of human trafficking or enslavement.
  • Many of these children are lured into slavery by promises of living wages, only to be beaten, forced to work for no pay, and confined to prevent escape.
  • Others come from impoverished communities where they are removed from school because their help is needed on family farms.
  • Enslaved children typically work over 12 hours a day harvesting cocoa beans and have no idea what chocolate tastes like.

Why is this happening?

Cocoa farmers are not paid living wages for their crops. Companies such as Mars, Hershey’s, Nestle, and Cadbury purchase the cocoa cheap, take enormous profits, and sell it for less than its real market value around the world.

After reading that I started looking online to see where some of my other favorite chocolate indulgences come from. Lindt for instance gets the majority of their chocolate from Western Africa. i.e. Guilty, according to this handy dandy map of Africa:

Ghana, The Ivory Coast and Nigeria all hug the Western Border of Africa.

Godiva Chocolate claims to be made from high quality premium ingredients, but I’m not sure where exactly the ingredients like their cocoa beans come from since their website isn’t telling us, so far as I can find.

Now, I know that these chocolates aren’t MADE in Africa, but since Lindt gets their cocoa from Africa, who knows where Godiva gets it, am I right? I know though, that I’m not the smartest girl out there and I might be misunderstanding all of this, so I can tell this might be a long search.

I’ve emptied my cupboards of all the chocolate I own (frostings, cake mixes, candy bars, sprinkles, hot chocolate galore) and I’ll probably spend MM’s naptime googling, but the easiest solution in my mind (for my conscience) is to finish what I own and then try to only buy things which STATE that they were made with fair trade cocoa beans. I think shopping at Trader Joes should make that easy. Things like frosting and chocolate sauce, if I can’t buy fair trade, I will just buy chocolate bars, etc. and make my own. It’ll taste better anyway.

Point is, if I’m going to wreck my diet and indulge, I should ease at least half my guilt by making it fair trade. If you want a quick leg up on starting your fair trade chocolate diet, head over to Daily Mish Mash for more information and a chance to enter her giveaway for one Endangered Species Chocolate bar that is both fair trade and “donates 10% of their net profits to environmental organizations that work to help endangered species and their habitats.” All you have to do is leave a comment on her post.

Thanks Jen for kicking me into Do Gooder High Gear. While I was pulling all the chocolate out of my cupboards to research I also pulled out some canned goods and the like to donate to my local food pantry and organized the cupboards so I could take inventory of what I’ve got in preperation for my month long menu plan for November.

What are you feeling passionate about right now? How are you planning to make a difference and set an example for your brood? Will you be buying Fair Trade Chocolate for Halloween this weekend? Or forever?