Wednesday, June 25, 2008

Cats of Mirikitani


If you can't decide what movie to rent this weekend, Cats of Mirikitani is a great pick.
This movie focuses on a homeless Japanese man who makes a living as an artist in New York City. A woman made a documentary about his life, tracking down lost family and friends and truly making a diference to this man's life. This wacky little man is quite a character, and it makes you realize how little one needs in life. I don't want to give much away. This is a tear-jerker folks, in a good way, so make sure you have tissues on hand.

as good a time as any

With major flooding severely impairing crops in the Midwest, one can only forecast higher prices for a commodity known as corn. Corn is used to feed livestock, and it's only natural that the US will see dramatic rises in everyday favorites, like milk, cheese, beef and pork.

You know what that means? Take the plunge, go vegan, save yourself some money.

Monday, June 23, 2008

it ain't easy bein green part II

I went raw in April. It's been a full two months, I've lost fifteen pounds, can finally wear a bikini after 32 years of life, have boundless energy, glow like a Mohegan sunset blah blah blah. People notice, they say stuff, like, "you are glowing", "you look amazing", and wow! I didn't expect eating living foods to impact my life so dramatically, that it would affect so intrinsically, the way I look, the way I feel and the way I live.
Going raw has impacted the amount of trash we produce. Eating only bulk nuts and produce, we soon realized that we buy hardly any packaged foods! After about a month, we are one less bag of trash per week. If I didn't have a tiny fire escape in place of a backyard, I'd probably be composting. But here in the inner city, the squirrels and pigeons would soon mess that up, let alone complaints from my neighbors. That doesn't stop me from growing herbs, tomatoes and peppers in my limited space.
OK, so you ask, what is the hard part? It is simply being able to interact with human society. Limiting what foods you eat, first as vegetarians, next as vegans and now as a rawist, I'm about as far out there as possible. (I guess there are fruitarians, but I'm not going there anytime soon.)
I find that I avoid going out to dinner with friends, or insist on Japanese or a place where I know I can eat things that are good quality.
For my birthday a few weeks ago, I couldn't avoid dining out and opted for Japanese both times. At least there I can have miso, seaweeds and salad. Both times, though, I sacrificed a little of my ethics and chowed down on avocado rolls. The rice was surprisingly OK for my tummy, though later I regretted eating off my diet. In retrospect, however, I think I would skip the rice, ask if they can roll a roll sans rice, or just order another salad and hang in there.
I also ate at Horizons, the local vegan restaurant in Philly. My friend, while chowing down on tofu asked why I don't eat it, "is it because it's so processed?", she asked. I didn't want to get into a conversation about processed foods while she was eating a processed food, so I nodded and continued to eat my raw avocado-cucumber soup and chopped spinach salad.
The big deal is summer barbeques. I can't manage, never really enjoyed, the smell of charred meat wafting in my hair, my clothes, making me smell like a bloody steak. It's become so bad that often, even on the most mild of days, when there is a BBQ in my neighborhood I am forced to close my windows and put on the air conditioning to keep the offensive smell out of my home. This year, I've been invited to a pig roast and part of me wanted to say I was insulted that I'd be invited to a party where a pig is roasting on a spit over a flame. Needless to say, I politely declined, despite the fact that we are guaranteed a meat-free grill. I just can't be a part of this All-American tradition of eating roasted meat in the summer. Going raw has cemented this fact, and I simply choose to not take part.
My friends, I'm sure, find me a drag. I wonder if I'm just not invited out because I'm so difficult. I often wonder if they discuss what a downer I am, and I'm getting insulted at people's comments about my weight loss. People think because I found a successful diet that keeps weight down, keeps me healthy, that I'm a target for derogatory comments about the way I eat.
I say fuck 'em.

This weekend a trip to Atlantic City was preceeded by about an hour of prepping foods for the trip. A simple Almond pate, leaves of romaine, fresh tomato, avocodo and sprouts yeilded enough food to keep us sated for the day, along with fresh fruits, coconut water and a raw trail mix. Later in the evening, hunger struck, but luckily we were able to eat Japanese, yet again, subsiting on seaweed salad and miso, ending up happy and full. Earlier in the day we were foiled by buying smoothies off the boardwalk, finding that the peaches had been canned in a sugary syrup, making my smoothie inedible. Ew, did I just eat high-fructose corn syrup? We add sugar to everything in America, even the most perfect fruit, which should be relativly easy to obtain in fresh state this time of year in New Jersey. My new way of looking at things...if you want something done right, do it yourself.

It's been a learning process and I love preparing foods at home with my partner. We've grown together as part of this new lifestyle and I woudln't change it for the world. Now, will the rest of the world please wake up!

Oh Tyra!

I've been having a field day with Tyra lately. So has Talk Soup.
Last week Tyra did her "butt" show, embracing their booties of thousands of women. Literally embracing. Footage from the show has emerged, showing Tyra rubbing, slapping, pinching and grabbing the asses of women on her show. Watching this led me to wonder, Is Tyra Banks a lesbian? Has she ever been linked to a man before? I can't remember. It's all good Tyra, but seriously, you got to get that butt-rubbing under control! I wish I could have my own show where I can pick and grab at people at my own free will. (wait, no I don't, um germs!)

Which leads me to my second point, germs, today's topic on Tyra. I tuned in only for the last three minutes, but it was enough to fuel my fire. Germs, to me are a big deal. My days living in Manhattan soon turned into a Howard Hughes-like obsession with cleanliness. I washed my hands with scalding water every time I entered the office or returned home after clinging to the grubby subway lines. I scrubbed my vegetables vigorously before consumption. I could envision dead skin flakes just settling down on everything I touched, I went insane, slowly. Once I moved from NYC, my germ phobia subsided. I still wash my hands at every chance, carry hand sanitizer and wash my food, but not with the same unhealthy obsession as before.
Today on Tyra, they were discussing germs on the bathing suits you buy. Turns out there were more germs on the higher-end suit than the lower-end suit, leading me to believe that rich girls are total skanks. When I go bathing suit shopping, I wear a skimpy thong and try my suit on over the panties. This was how I was raised, this was a practice I thought most people use. Au contraire! most people try on suits bare-bottomed, remove that little liner and splish-splash to the beach, unbeknownst that there are little yeasts and fecal matter still attached to the suit. Ew.
Ladies, a word to the wise, germaphobes unite! Wash those swimsuits before taking the plunge, for you know not whose germs you are wearing.

Monday, June 9, 2008

reuses for ribbon

My friend gave me a birthday gift and said, "the ribbon is reusable." She needn't tell me, I stow away all kinds of unnecessary stuff. However, when I opened the door to my apartment, I knew the perfect reuse for my ribbon. There was my little pretty kitty, Phoebe ready to tackle that string, shred it to bits and play with that string until we both were exhausted~!

*note, ribbon isn't always good for cats to play with, it can cause blockages. Keep a close eye on your loved one or put it somewhere they can't reach unless you are around to watch!

Other reuses for ribbon:
wrap a gift
tie back your hair
tie back curtains
hang a charm around your neck or doorway
mend something broken, temporarily

Sunday, June 1, 2008

Spider Bites

I have a spider bite on my face. This is the third time in one year that I've been struck by a spider. The last two were on my rarely-used left ring finger. The bites rose to great heights of swelling, redness and pain, and I just hope it doesn't happen to my face. This is a great way to start the summer. whohooo!
Spider Bite, Spider bite, just when you thought they wouldn't strike, they BITE!