i've been marathoning White Collar on netflix recently and i went to watch it this morning and netflix took it off last night!! I was half way through the final season. Luckily UK netflix still has it so i can watch on my vpn
i've been marathoning White Collar on netflix recently and i went to watch it this morning and netflix took it off last night!! I was half way through the final season. Luckily UK netflix still has it so i can watch on my vpn
I literally just blew through that whole series! I'm sad it's over.
i've been marathoning White Collar on netflix recently and i went to watch it this morning and netflix took it off last night!! I was half way through the final season. Luckily UK netflix still has it so i can watch on my vpn
I've been thinking about J's birthday (I'm an early planner). If we go with the theme (and by theme I mean want to decorate the cake) he wants it will be Polar Express, baby Dory, and BB-8 themed. Crazy kids.
i've been marathoning White Collar on netflix recently and i went to watch it this morning and netflix took it off last night!! I was half way through the final season. Luckily UK netflix still has it so i can watch on my vpn
I literally just blew through that whole series! I'm sad it's over.
i love it! this is my second time watching. Matt Bomer is so beautiful
I would never do it anyway because I could never stick to it, but I'm confused as to why they don't let you eat beans or tofu. I consider them healthy... But obviously I haven't researched it so I don't know what I'm talking about....
I would never do it anyway because I could never stick to it, but I'm confused as to why they don't let you eat beans or tofu. I consider them healthy... But obviously I haven't researched it so I don't know what I'm talking about....
here's the claim (i don't think there is anything wrong with legumes but i'm following the plan)
Legumes and grains contain special proteins that are essential to the growth of plant seeds. Lectin is one of the most dangerous proteins. These plant proteins bind to carbohydrates and make the seeds less attractive to insects. These proteins are considered dangerous for those living with autoimmune disease because they can increase permeability of the intestines.
This may lead to leaky gut syndrome and cause other problems which the human body sees as a threat. That triggers the immune system and leads to inflammation. When legumes are consumed on a routine basis and the body recognizes them as dangers, the result is often autoimmune disease. If you already have autoimmune disease, these foods can worsen the condition even if you are working hard to combat inflammation and digestive issues.
Many of the legumes consumed today are genetically modified. This is why you see so many foods now labelled “GMO free” if they contain legumes. Genetically-modified legumes are far more likely to cause inflammation and other dangers after consumption.
Some legumes carry their own risks for the human body, such as the phytoestrogens naturally found in soybeans. These estrogens can interfere with the balance of hormones in the human body, causing a variety of potential health problems.
I would never do it anyway because I could never stick to it, but I'm confused as to why they don't let you eat beans or tofu. I consider them healthy... But obviously I haven't researched it so I don't know what I'm talking about....
here's the claim (i don't think there is anything wrong with legumes but i'm following the plan)
Legumes and grains contain special proteins that are essential to the growth of plant seeds. Lectin is one of the most dangerous proteins. These plant proteins bind to carbohydrates and make the seeds less attractive to insects. These proteins are considered dangerous for those living with autoimmune disease because they can increase permeability of the intestines.
This may lead to leaky gut syndrome and cause other problems which the human body sees as a threat. That triggers the immune system and leads to inflammation. When legumes are consumed on a routine basis and the body recognizes them as dangers, the result is often autoimmune disease. If you already have autoimmune disease, these foods can worsen the condition even if you are working hard to combat inflammation and digestive issues.
Many of the legumes consumed today are genetically modified. This is why you see so many foods now labelled “GMO free” if they contain legumes. Genetically-modified legumes are far more likely to cause inflammation and other dangers after consumption.
Some legumes carry their own risks for the human body, such as the phytoestrogens naturally found in soybeans. These estrogens can interfere with the balance of hormones in the human body, causing a variety of potential health problems.
To add to this, whole 30 isn't really designed as a weight loss program. It's an elimination diet to figure out what food sensitivities you have. It's supposed to reset your metabolism and allow your gut to heal by taking out foods that can cause inflammation, disrupt hormones etc. After the 30 days you can reintroduce things and see what happens, but it's meant to also change the way you think about food.
I'm interested, particularly because I have some type of a milk allergy, but don't really know how all forms of dairy affect me, but I don't think I could ever stick to it with having all the forbidden things in the house for h and Dd. H is not at all interested in giving up dairy, bread, peanut butter...
here's the claim (i don't think there is anything wrong with legumes but i'm following the plan)
Legumes and grains contain special proteins that are essential to the growth of plant seeds. Lectin is one of the most dangerous proteins. These plant proteins bind to carbohydrates and make the seeds less attractive to insects. These proteins are considered dangerous for those living with autoimmune disease because they can increase permeability of the intestines.
This may lead to leaky gut syndrome and cause other problems which the human body sees as a threat. That triggers the immune system and leads to inflammation. When legumes are consumed on a routine basis and the body recognizes them as dangers, the result is often autoimmune disease. If you already have autoimmune disease, these foods can worsen the condition even if you are working hard to combat inflammation and digestive issues.
Many of the legumes consumed today are genetically modified. This is why you see so many foods now labelled “GMO free” if they contain legumes. Genetically-modified legumes are far more likely to cause inflammation and other dangers after consumption.
Some legumes carry their own risks for the human body, such as the phytoestrogens naturally found in soybeans. These estrogens can interfere with the balance of hormones in the human body, causing a variety of potential health problems.
To add to this, whole 30 isn't really designed as a weight loss program. It's an elimination diet to figure out what food sensitivities you have. It's supposed to reset your metabolism and allow your gut to heal by taking out foods that can cause inflammation, disrupt hormones etc. After the 30 days you can reintroduce things and see what happens, but it's meant to also change the way you think about food.
I'm interested, particularly because I have some type of a milk allergy, but don't really know how all forms of dairy affect me, but I don't think I could ever stick to it with having all the forbidden things in the house for h and Dd. H is not at all interested in giving up dairy, bread, peanut butter...
The first time I did W30 is how I figured out my egg sensitivity. And doing it really does highlight how much sugar we consume in a standard western diet. I didn't think I ate that much since I don't eat much desert or candy but there is sugar in so many things I never realized until reading the label
comicSans, emmagk, I can see the point they are trying to make. I'm not trying to criticize it. You do you. It would just never work for me, mostly because I like carbs and have no discipline but I know a ton of people swear by it.
I've been thinking about J's birthday (I'm an early planner). If we go with the theme (and by theme I mean want to decorate the cake) he wants it will be Polar Express, baby Dory, and BB-8 themed. Crazy kids.
I've decided to do a Daniel Tiger theme again. Just going to re-use all the decorations I made last year.
I've been thinking about J's birthday (I'm an early planner). If we go with the theme (and by theme I mean want to decorate the cake) he wants it will be Polar Express, baby Dory, and BB-8 themed. Crazy kids.
I've decided to do a Daniel Tiger theme again. Just going to re-use all the decorations I made last year.
DD1 is obsessed with Peg plus cat this year, so we'll probably do that. I'm not exactly sure how we'll be doing it, but I'll figure it out.
I called to a new daycare / preschool we were thinking about and I almost had a heart attack when they told me the price for the two kids. Also, they aren't peanut and tree nut free. They just make the kids with the allergies sit at a different table. So no thanks. Hopefully this Montessori school works out.
I don't like that at all. It's like stigmatizing the kids and at the same time not teaching them how to handle their allergies in real world situations.
I've been thinking about J's birthday (I'm an early planner). If we go with the theme (and by theme I mean want to decorate the cake) he wants it will be Polar Express, baby Dory, and BB-8 themed. Crazy kids.
It's not that early. I have DD's party planned and invites are out. She did come early though and is really and April baby instead of May. She picked Minnie Mouse.
I'm not going to ask DS what he wants for a theme for his birthday party. I doubt he'd have any idea what we're talking about. I'm going to do MMCH. They sell decorations at the Dollar Store. I'm going to make it easy and order pizza and do a simple ice cream cake from Carvel. It'll just be family anyway and the same weekend as last year. #doingtheleast
I called to a new daycare / preschool we were thinking about and I almost had a heart attack when they told me the price for the two kids. Also, they aren't peanut and tree nut free. They just make the kids with the allergies sit at a different table. So no thanks. Hopefully this Montessori school works out.
I don't like that at all. It's like stigmatizing the kids and at the same time not teaching them how to handle their allergies in real world situations.
I know right. I felt so sorry for the kids there that do have allergies. I also thought I was being overly sensitive until I asked around. There is just so much to this that I don't like.
I'm not going to ask DS what he wants for a theme for his birthday party. I doubt he'd have any idea what we're talking about. I'm going to do MMCH. They sell decorations at the Dollar Store. I'm going to make it easy and order pizza and do a simple ice cream cake from Carvel. It'll just be family anyway and the same weekend as last year. #doingtheleast
I don't like that at all. It's like stigmatizing the kids and at the same time not teaching them how to handle their allergies in real world situations.
I know right. I felt so sorry for the kids there that do have allergies. I also thought I was being overly sensitive until I asked around. There is just so much to this that I don't like.
do they put all allergy kids on the same table no matter what the allergy is? Like do they have peanut kids with gluten kids because that makes no sense. And it's weird and stigmatizing in general, it's really not that hard to just be a nut free facility, peanut butter is not the only sandwich filling out there
I know right. I felt so sorry for the kids there that do have allergies. I also thought I was being overly sensitive until I asked around. There is just so much to this that I don't like.
do they put all allergy kids on the same table no matter what the allergy is? Like do they have peanut kids with gluten kids because that makes no sense. And it's weird and stigmatizing in general, it's really not that hard to just be a nut free facility, peanut butter is not the only sandwich filling out there
I didn't ask to be honest. But that is definitely what it seemed like. They were all "since we don't provide food we will never able to say we are a nut free place. But don't worry different tables." Like you said just don't allow pb&j to start.
I know right. I felt so sorry for the kids there that do have allergies. I also thought I was being overly sensitive until I asked around. There is just so much to this that I don't like.
do they put all allergy kids on the same table no matter what the allergy is? Like do they have peanut kids with gluten kids because that makes no sense. And it's weird and stigmatizing in general, it's really not that hard to just be a nut free facility, peanut butter is not the only sandwich filling out there
My mom's school ia nut free, but she saysbecause it's public they can't legally bar kids from bringing peanut butter. But those are the kids that get the special table. I'm not going to be that parent. I'd want others to take my kid's health into consideration if she had deadly allergy, so I will too.
ETA and they can't require kids to buy lunch either.
I might ask DD what she wants just to see what I get. This year I'm just hoping she doesn't cry hysterically at the sight of her cake for the third year in a row.
Then Comes Family, LLC is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising
program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to Amazon.com.