Being close to family

The Author of this post is Velma Baird

My husband and I just moved to Texas in order to be closer to family. They say that moving is one of the most stressful things a family can do, and I can se why. We had lived in Tennessee for ten years, but my whole family lives in Texas. I have been longing to be close to my family. My husband is not as close to his family as I am to mine, so he did not mind being far from his family. It has been pretty stressful unpacking boxes and trying to set up our new life here. My husband started his new job about three weeks ago, and I have been busy unpacking. We set up fixed-rate energy in our home by looking into Shop electricity rates Texas. We also have a pool in the backyard, which we have never had before. Our kids are so excited about trying out the pool when it gets a little warmer. They have both adjusted well to their new school, although they miss their friends back in Tennessee. Moving is always an adjustment, but it is made easier being close to family.

Junk food seems to be the choice at public schools

Junk food remains in control of the menus at most of the elementary schools in the USA despite widespread efforts to curb childhood obesity, a new study suggests.

Between 2006 and 2010, nearly half of public and private schools surveyed sold sweet or salty snack foods in vending machines or other places, the study found. Of course, gas stations sell alot more junk food than these places.  What kind of example are we setting for the kids anyway?

reasons kids are fat

We set a bad example as adults - that's why kids are fat.

There was little change over the four years, a surprising finding given vocal advocacy campaigns to improve kids’ diets. The study focused on snacks not sold during mealtimes, which until recently weren’t subject to government nutrition standards.

Schools most likely to sell chips, cookies or similar foods were in the South, where obesity rates are the highest; these foods were scarcest at schools in the West.

The results are concerning, Turner said, because they show that many schools have not heeded messages from health advocates including the Institute of Medicine, which in a 2007 report urged limiting availability of food in schools outside of mealtimes, and said these items should not be sugary, salty or fatty snack foods.

USDA change announced last month focuses on making school lunches healthier, with changes including less sodium and more whole grains. Is this enough, is it to late?