Archive for the ‘Reviews’ Category
When life gives you lemons…make Orange Chicken?
Wednesday, March 30th, 2011Okay so life hasn’t really handed me lemons, but it sounded good. I wasn’t feeling up to making the Sweet Sour Chicken I had planned for today so I gave in and decided to make something quick and easy from the freezer. Or rather, direct someone else to make it.
P.F. Chang’s Home Menu Meals for 2: Orange Chicken + Ajinamoto: Chow Mein.
12 minutes in a pan warms up the chicken, veggies, and sauce cubes
+ 3 minutes in the microwave warms up a double serving of noodles and veggies.
= 12 minutes for a full lunch on the table
It wasn’t bad for a quick frozen meal. Better than most. Flavor on the chicken was good and we rather like the chow mein noodles.
Calorie Count?
300 calories for 1/3 of the bag of Chicken
+ 230 calories for 1/2 a bag of Noodles
= 530 Calories
Cost to feed the three of us?
$5.00 for Chicken
+ $2.50 for Noodles
= $7.50
Letting someone else cook, while keeping a somewhat decent calorie count, without leaving the house? Priceless!
You Complete Me…Bologna!
Wednesday, March 16th, 20111 Corinthians 7:32-33 But I would have you without carefulness. He that is unmarried careth for the things that belong to the Lord, how he may please the Lord: But he that is married careth for the things that are of the world, how he may please his wife.
Genesis 2:23-24 And Adam said, This is now bone of my bones, and flesh of my flesh: she shall be called Woman, because she was taken out of Man. Therefore shall a man leave his father and his mother, and shall cleave unto his wife: and they shall be one flesh.
- We honor each other.
- We respect each other.
- We support each other.
- We encourage each other.
- We stand by each other.
- We give ourselves to the other with our whole heart, love in action, and body.
- We each become a complete individual through our relationship with God.
Julie & Julia a Review
Sunday, January 16th, 2011I admit I was reluctant to watch this movie. I was warned there was an infertility theme so I stuck it in on the bottom of my queue and didn’t think about it until it finally came in the mail. I am not really much of a “chick flick” kinda gal, but I am a foodie so I thought I’d give it a try once it came in. I had ignored posts or blogs about the movie until after I watched it so as not to color my view of watching it.
Overall it was an enjoyable movie. The food and the cooking were fun. Meryl Streep portrays Julia to a T! I also liked how they portrayed the relationship between Julia Childs and her husband. You don’t see a lot of loving, supportive, and obviously still sensual relationships between married couples on the screen these days. Much less an older couple that has been married for a lot of years. I found Julie to be a bit much at times, but her husband came across as overly supportive and understanding.
As for the infertility theme I totally missed the first scene where they reference infertility. Apparently they are sitting on a bench in the park and there is a wistful look of longing at a baby stroller? I remember them on the bench, but must have blinked and missed the look or something.
In the other scene it has been maybe 15 years or more since Julia got married. Her sister (in her late thirties/early forties?) gets married and as a newlywed writes to tell Julia she is pregnant. Julia has a moment of shock. Starts sobbing while saying, “I’m so happy.” Her husband looks at her and pulls her into his arms. End of scene. It took maybe a minute for the whole thing to play out with very little dialogue. What amazes me is the wealth of difference everyone seems to read into this scene.
Just some of the things I found that people said about the scene:
It was a tense family situation where Julia is sad for herself because she can’t have children.
She is envious and bitter about her sister’s pregnancy.
The people in the movie theater laughed during the scene.
It had all the complex and conflicting emotions someone feels when a loved one has what you won’t.
Resentment, joy, grief, resignation quickly played out in that brief scene.
The one thing I found was that you could tell a lot about the writer by what they saw in that moment. Each wrote what their own feelings would be in the same situation. Those who have never been touched by infertility saw a bitter woman who really wasn’t happy for her sister. Or who maybe was happy, but overcome by her own inability and loss.
Those in the midst of their own struggles saw what they deal with on a daily basis. The happy joy for a loved one co-mingled with the brief moments of ugly that come at first and then you fight back down with the better part of your nature.
Those nearer the end of their journey, and closer to peace, saw the reminder of things past or lost mixed in with the joy and happiness for a loved one.
Of her own infertility, from Julia’s book, “My Life in France.” (Which I have not read, but found some excepts from.) She writes,
“We had tried. But for some reason our efforts didn’t take. It was sad, but we didn’t spend too much time thinking about it and never considered adoption. It was just one of those things. We were living very full lives.”
I wonder if she really considered it “just one of those things” at the time she was going through it? Or, if this is just how she views it looking back 50 years after the fact? Either way I think the infertile world can find comfort in the words of a 90 year old woman who never had children. Who led a full life. Who had a loving marriage. And at the end of it all infertility was just one of those things in her life. I, for one, find comfort in that.
I’ll close with something I read recently (It had nothing to do with babies or infertility.) that really summed it up for me. That Place of Peace and Acceptance we all as infertiles strive for and beat down the ugly parts of our natures to get to:
It said a great deal for her that she watched him without an excess of envy. Yearning, yes, and maybe a little sadness.
Not only is it a long journey, no matter what you strive for, to get to the point of sadness and yearning without bitterness and envy. But, it takes someone who has also walked a difficult path to recognize the difference between the two.
College
Saturday, May 10th, 2008My husband just wrote a great article I just had to share.
Cauliflower is nothing but cabbage with a college education. – Mark Twain
Every man should have a college education in order to show him how little the thing is really worth. – Ralph Waldo Emerson