Wednesday, December 30, 2009
2009-12-29 Annual bowling extravaganza
Michael was the most improved player - 52% improvement from game 1 to game 2
Melissa was the most consistent bowler - <9% change from game to game
Coray had the best form with his curve ball.
Jeff made a spare on a split - something I'd never seen before.
Melanie had the highest score among the female contestants.
Michelle and Mindy both broke the 100 pin barrier.
Brian had the most trick shots - managing to hit only one pin in a cluster.
And Grandpa had the most strikes. Natalie and Paula sat out for physical reasons, and Hans was working in Colorado Springs.
Monday, December 28, 2009
2009-12-24 Granny's breakfast
Wednesday, December 23, 2009
2009-12-22 Grandchildren's sleepover
This is about one-half of our 20 grandchildren. We ate dinner, played at the church gym, went caroling, had Christmas stories and treats, played xBox, watched the BYU football game, and generally enjoyed each others company. We missed Ashley, Katelyn, Justin, Mia, Elsa, Ava and Greta, but we look forward to their next visits.
2009-12-23 Being inflexible can be bad for your heart
From the NY Times:
A provocative new study published this year in the journal Heart and Circulatory Physiology suggests, however, that there may be a novel way to test at least one element of your heart’s health right in your own living room, right in the middle of the holidays. Sit on the floor with your legs stretched straight out in front of you, toes pointing up. Reach forward from the hips. Are you flexible enough to touch your toes? If so, then your cardiac arteries probably are also flexible.
In the study’s experiment, scientists from the University of North Texas and several Japanese universities recruited 526 healthy adults between the ages of 20 and 83 and had them perform the basic sit-and-reach test described above, although their extensions were measured precisely with digital devices. Taking into account age and gender, researchers then sorted the subjects into either the high-flexibility group or the poor-flexibility group.
Next, using blood-pressure cuffs at each person’s ankles and arms, researchers estimated how flexible their arteries were. Cardiac artery flexibility is one of the less familiar elements of heart health. Supple arterial walls allow the blood to move freely through the body. Stiff arteries require the heart to work much harder to force blood through the unyielding vessels and over time could, according to Kenta Yamamoto, a researcher at North Texas and lead author of the study, contribute to a greater risk for heart attack and stroke.
What the researchers found was a clear correlation between inflexible bodies and inflexible arteries in subjects older than 40. Adults with poor results on the sit-and-reach test also tended to have relatively high readings of arterial stiffness. In short, the study concluded that “a less flexible body indicates arterial stiffening, especially in middle-aged and older adults.” No such correlation was found in those under 40, even when gender and fitness were considered as factors.
Saturday, December 19, 2009
2009-12-19 Natalie and Brian aren't coming for Christmas
We're sad that Natalie and Brian with Elsa Ava and Greta won't be coming for Christmas. We need to plan a trip to sunny SoCal as soon as possible. We're praying and fasting for the new one that he can get the treatments that will help him arrive safely. I'm hopeful that Natalie and Brian will document their journey through this trial.
Twins
Seeing Annie and Will's new babies (Lucy and Eloise) brings back many fond memories of Michelle and Melanie.
Melanie and Michelle spent the first month in the hospital. The nurses knitted these caps for them, and they (the nurses) cried when we took them home.
They kept Paula busy and tired. The first two years of their lives are somewhat a blur to us.
Melanie and Michelle spent the first month in the hospital. The nurses knitted these caps for them, and they (the nurses) cried when we took them home.
They kept Paula busy and tired. The first two years of their lives are somewhat a blur to us.
Saturday, December 12, 2009
2009-12-09 Nativity at Bonneville Glen
We braved the cold with Fords and Christensens to see the live nativity sponsored by the Bonneville Stake and few other churches. There were camels, sheep, shepherds, wise men, Roman soldiers, Bethlehem merchants, and of course, Mary, Joseph and a small baby representing the baby Jesus. Sarah was mesmerized. Grandma worried about the rest of the group getting separated and lost. I drank my hot chocolate and Sarah's.
2009-12-10 Tabernacle Choir Christmas Concert
Melissa won the lottery and got four tickets to the concert. She, Michael, Joshua and I enjoyed dinner, a brisk walk to the conference center and the music and narration. Grandma had a 'Club of Study' Christmas dinner, and as host, she couldn't cancel. The concert is highlight of the Christmas season.
David McCullough, historian and author, was the narrator.
Natalie Cole was the featured artist.
2009-12-05 Midway creche display
2009-12-12 Refugee service project
2009-12-04 Dinner with Connecticut friends
Thursday, December 10, 2009
2009-12-10 LaRue's Fudge
The joy of making this fudge is the clean up. I have fond memories of licking the beaters after Granny made the fudge.
Fudge – LaRue Stauffer
4 c. sugar
1 T. Cocoa (heaping tablespoon or even more depending on taste)
Pinch of salt
½ c. light corn starch
12 oz. can of evaporated milk
2 cubes butter (1/2 lbs)
¼ t. cream of tartar (helps with smooth consistency)
2 T. marshmallow crème
Mix together and cook on medium/low heat until butter is melted.
Simmer (with lid off) for 30 minutes on low heat stirring occasionally
Cool (with lid on) for 30 minutes.
Add 1 t. vanilla
Beat with mixer as the fudge cools to prevent crystals from forming. Fudge should thicken. This takes a long time.
1 c. chopped nuts (add if desired as fudge cools)
When fudge cools and thickens turn it into 8x11 pan to cool and set. Or divide into three parts and roll into a fudge log, wrap with saran wrap and then aluminum foil.
If you cut up the fudge into 24 pieces you get 235 calories/ piece.
Tuesday, December 1, 2009
2009-12-01 You can give for selfish reasons
December 1, 2009
Well
In Month of Giving, a Healthy Reward
By TARA PARKER-POPE
When Cami Walker of Los Angeles learned three years ago that she had multiple sclerosis, her health and her spirits plummeted — until she got an unusual prescription from a holistic health educator.
Ms. Walker, now 36, scribbled the idea in her journal. And though she dismissed it at first, after weeks of fatigue, insomnia, pain and preoccupation with her symptoms, she decided to give it a try. The treatment and her experience with it are summed up in the title of her new book, “29 Gifts: How a Month of Giving Can Change Your Life” (Da Capo Press).
Ms. Walker gave a gift a day for 29 days — things like making supportive phone calls or saving a piece of chocolate cake for her husband. The giving didn’t cure her multiple sclerosis, of course. But it seems to have had a startling effect on her ability to cope with it. She is more mobile and less dependent on pain medication. The flare-ups that routinely sent her to the emergency room have stopped, and scans show that her disease has stopped progressing.
“My first reaction was that I thought it was an insane idea,” Ms. Walker said. “But it has given me a more positive outlook on life. It’s about stepping outside of your own story long enough to make a connection with someone else.”
And science appears to back her up. “There’s no question that it gives life a greater meaning when we make this kind of shift in the direction of others and get away from our own self-preoccupation and problems,” said Stephen G. Post, director of the Center for Medical Humanities, Compassionate Care and Bioethics at Stony Brook University on Long Island and a co-author of “Why Good Things Happen to Good People” (Broadway, 2007). “But it also seems to be the case that there is an underlying biology involved in all this.”
An array of studies have documented this effect. In one, a 2002 Boston College study, researchers found that patients with chronic pain fared better when they counseled other pain patients, experiencing less depression, intense pain and disability.
Another study, at the Buck Institute for Age Research in Novato, Calif., also found a strong benefit to volunteerism, and after controlling for a number of variables, showed that elderly people who volunteered for more than four hours a week were 44 percent less likely to die during the study period.
How giving can lead to mental and physical changes in health isn’t entirely clear, although studies suggest that altruism may be an antidote to stress. A Miami study of patients with H.I.V. found that those with strong altruistic characteristics had lower levels of stress hormones.
By contrast, being self-centered may be damaging to health. In one study of 150 heart patients, researchers found that people in the study who had more “self-references” (those who talked about themselves at length or used more first-person pronouns) had more severe heart disease and did worse on treadmill tests.
And like Ms. Walker, numerous people have reported feeling better after helping others. A 1988 Psychology Today article dubbed the effect the “helper’s high.” Analyzing two separate surveys of a total of 3,200 women who regularly volunteered, the article described a physical response from volunteering, similar to the results of vigorous exercise or meditation. The strongest effect was seen when the act of altruism involved direct contact with other people.
For Ms. Walker, a former creative director for an advertising agency, most of the gifts involved time, emotional support or small acts of kindness. After the first 29 days, she began a new cycle, a pattern she continues. Neither she nor Mbali Creazzo, the spiritual adviser who taught her about the month of giving, knows why it is 29 days rather than 30 or 31 — it may have something to do with the lunar cycle, which is 29.5 days.
Ms. Walker says she now approaches daily giving as a crucial part of her treatment, just like regular medication. She has also found new purpose in her experience and started a Web site, 29gifts.org, that encourages giving to improve health.
“Giving for 29 days is not suggested as a cure for anything,” Ms. Walker said. “It’s simply a coping mechanism and a simple tool you can use that can help you change your thinking about whatever is going on. If you change your thinking, you change your experience.”
Dr. Post, of Stony Brook, agreed. “To rid yourself of negative emotional states,” he said, “you need to push them aside with positive emotional states.
“And the simplest way to do that is to just go out and lend a helping hand to somebody.”
Monday, November 16, 2009
2009-11-08 Thousand Oaks
Friday, November 13, 2009
2009-10-30 Red Mercedes Convertible
Tuesday, October 27, 2009
2009-10-24 BYU versus TCU
Tuesday, October 13, 2009
2009-10-01 Conference weekend in Colorado Springs
We spent conference weekend in Colorado Springs visiting the Egberts and the Conleys. We went to PF Changs for dinner, ate dinner one night at Conleys and one night at Egberts. We watched Katelyn, Elizabeth and Andrew play soccer or in Andrew's case, flag football. We listened to general conference, went on a walk in Manitou Springs, and generally enjoyed each other's company.
We drove home through the mountains in a snow storm.
It was pretty cold because of the wind.
We drove home through the mountains in a snow storm.
It was pretty cold because of the wind.
Wednesday, September 30, 2009
2009-09-30 First snow
Monday, September 28, 2009
2009-09-26 Emergency Prep training
We received some training from FEMA on how to assist in distributing water, food and other supplies in the event of a disaster. After a couple of weeks FEMA will show up with truckloads of stuff and we will help load cars as they drive through the Brookwood elementary school parking lot. Sounds fun!
Saturday, September 12, 2009
2009-09-12 Eric and Mindy Heath
Tuesday, September 8, 2009
2009-09-07 Grandeur Peak
Monday, September 7, 2009
2009-08-28 Grubers visit
Wednesday, September 2, 2009
2009-09-02 Jonathan playing football
Tuesday, September 1, 2009
2009-09-01 Fires in CA
Brian and Natalie are suffering from the heat in the LA area, a lack of functional air conditioning, a thriving ant population in their home (see Natalie's blog), tender feelings from their girls on starting school, and to top if off, they can see smoke from the LA fires from their home. While the fires are 60 miles away or so, it doesn't help the misery any.
This is the view from their back patio.
Greta wandered around in her diaper in a feeble attempt to keep cool.
This is the view from their back patio.
Greta wandered around in her diaper in a feeble attempt to keep cool.
Monday, August 24, 2009
2009-08-23 Child Years
Monday, August 17, 2009
Tuesday, August 11, 2009
2009-08-11 The Claim: Some Dogs Look Like Their Owners
The Claim: Some Dogs Look Like Their Owners
By ANAHAD O’CONNOR of the NY Times
THE FACTS
Best friends they may be, but are man and dog so entwined that they tend to take after one another in appearance?
It is one of those eternal, quirky questions, at least for dog owners. But only recently have scientists taken a close look in actual studies.
In 2004, researchers in San Diego found that subjects in a study were able to correctly match pictures of dog owners with their pets more often than not, but only when the dogs were purebreds. Simple traits like hair and size played a smaller role than things like facial expressions.
The same year, a psychologist at the University of South Carolina challenged the findings in a separate study, pointing out flaws in the study designs. When the San Diego researchers countered with a reanalysis that confirmed their initial findings, the debate seemed to be at a standstill.
Earlier this year, a scientist in England joined the fray with a study in which 70 subjects were asked to match pictures of 41 dog owners to one of several breeds. They were able to match successfully more than half the time, far better than chance.
Similar to the San Diego study, the subjects later said they matched mostly by looking for personality traits that they believed the dogs and their owners shared. Scientists suspect that some people look for certain traits or predispositions when choosing a dog that reflect their own personalities.
THE BOTTOM LINE
Some studies argue that dogs can resemble their owners, but the research is debatable.
Monday, August 10, 2009
2009-08-07 Camille Kimber gets married
2009-08-07 Daryl Broadbent's father passes away
We attended the funeral of Daryl Broadbent's father. From the obituary: 'He served valiantly in WWII as part of America's Greatest Generation. Neal is survived by six children, Nancy (Lynn, deceased) Hickcox, Collette (David) Wride, Brent (Robin) Mann, Michelle (Rod) Fawson, Coralee (Brent) Wallace, Daryl (Tom) Broadbent, 28 grandchildren, and 36 great-grandchildren.'
It was an eventful week - our ward trek/ two weddings (Camille Kimber and Lindsay Quinn/ one funeral (Daryl's father)/ two neighbors with joint replacement surgery (Rulon Rasmussen - our temple sealer, and June Harris - wife of our 'candy man'), and Bill's ordination to the office of High Priest.
It was an eventful week - our ward trek/ two weddings (Camille Kimber and Lindsay Quinn/ one funeral (Daryl's father)/ two neighbors with joint replacement surgery (Rulon Rasmussen - our temple sealer, and June Harris - wife of our 'candy man'), and Bill's ordination to the office of High Priest.
Thursday, August 6, 2009
2009-08-05 Handcart trek
Friday, July 31, 2009
2009-07-31 Abby and Hannah have a fashion photo shoot
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