Thursday, August 5, 2010

Importance of Friendships


My college roommate(these are pics from SIU-Carbondale from Ron Palmer) and her three kids are headed to my house tomorrow! I haven't seen her in three years! It got me thinking how hard it is to stay in touch with friends when you have little kids. I think it's so important to keep those friendships, but I barely have time to take a shower and eat these days-much less chat on the phone. Maybe there should be some sort of rule about going on a weekend trip with your girlfriends each summer. Hmmm... I want to know if I am the only one who doesn't make time for things like that or is my situation the norm? Either way, I am so excited! When is that last time you saw your friends from college/high school?

I looked for a picture of us from college, but I don't have anything digital. Remember when we all used film? Yep, I feel old!

And I found this UCLA article that says womens' friendships are super duper important. So I think I will have to get a babysitter more often!

A landmark UCLA study suggests friendships between women are special. They shape who we are and who we are yet to be. They soothe our tumultuous inner world, fill the emotional gaps in our marriage, and help us remember who we really are. By the way, they may do even more.

Scientists now suspect that hanging out with our friends can actually counteract the kind of stomach-quivering stress most of us experience on a daily basis. A landmark UCLA study suggests that women respond to stress with a cascade of brain chemicals that cause us to make and maintain friendships with other women. It's a stunning find that has turned five decades of stress research---most of it on men---upside down. Until this study was published, scientists generally believed that when people experience stress, they trigger a hormonal cascade that revs the body to either stand and fight or flee as fast as possible, explains Laura Cousin Klein, Ph.D., now an Assistant Professor of Biobehavioral Health at Penn State University and one of the study's authors. It's an ancient survival mechanism left over from the time we were chased across the planet by saber-toothed tigers.

-NewsAnchorMom Jen

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Wednesday, August 4, 2010

Couples Sleeping Apart


This is a touchy subject for me! I am such a bad sleeper. Everything wakes me up. I sleep at night with earplugs, a noise maker and I shut the door. I still hear the baby crying in his room down the hall. It's ridiculous. When people say, "let the baby cry. He's old enough to sleep through the night." I can't because I can hear him no matter what I do. Plus, I don't want to let him cry, but that's beside the point. I do sleep better when I am alone, but I don't think it's a great idea for a husband and a wife to have separate rooms. Right now, sleep is most important for me! Do you and your husband sleep in the same bed?

From The NewYorkTimes:MY grandparents had a secret. When I was growing up in Savannah, Ga., in the 1970s, my paternal grandparents lived in the house immediately behind us. (My uncle lived next door in a set-up my father likened to Faulkner.) But my grandparents did something in their otherwise typical suburban home that was always something of a mystery to me.

They slept in separate bedrooms.

I speculated that this bifurcated sleeping arrangement had something to do with Southern gentility, Papa’s late-night ham radio habit, or some unseen rift in their marriage. But since my parents slept in side-by-side twin beds, and my wife and I later chose a king-size mattress, I assumed separate bedrooms had gone the way of other bygone relics, like sleeping caps or corsets.

I was wrong. It turns out my grandparents were ahead of their time.

Nearly one in four American couples sleep in separate bedrooms or beds, the National Sleep Foundation reported in a 2005 survey. Recent studies in England and Japan have found similar results. And the National Association of Home Builders says it expects 60 percent of custom homes to have dual master bedrooms by 2015.

Even Hollywood is catching on. The former bodyguard for Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt told In Touch Weekly recently that the couple often sleep in separate rooms. (Ms. Jolie informed Vanity Fair that the couple sometimes sleep in one “giant bed” with their six children.) In Touch also reported this spring that five months after Kevin Jonas of the Jonas Brothers traded his purity ring for a wedding band, he was sleeping separately from his wife. The reason, a friend said: “He snores like a freight train.”

(In Touch apparently has become the Official Chronicler of American Bedding.)

The marital bed, once the symbol of American matrimony on a par with the diamond ring, the tiered wedding cake and his-and-hers martinis, is threatened with extinction. “Till Death Do Us Part” is fast becoming “Till Sleep Do Us Part.”

Separate sleepers cite a bevy of reasons for their habit, including apnea, restless leg syndrome, his insistence on watching “SportsCenter,” her need to get up early for yoga. As Barbara Tober, the former chairwoman of the Museum of Arts and Design, told The New York Times recently, “Not that we don’t love each other, but at a certain point you just want your own room.”

“What happened in the last decade,” said Dr. Meir Kryger, a sleep specialist at Gaylord Hospital in Connecticut, “is that people are suddenly making their own sleep a priority. If their rest is being impaired by their partner, the attitude now is that I don’t have to put up with this.”

Children represent another threat. Dr. William Sears, a leader of the “attachment parenting” movement, reports in the 2005 “Baby Sleep Book” that two-thirds of American families say they “sometimes” or “always” sleep with a child in their bed. Another 16 percent welcome a pet under the covers.

From Yahoo: A recent article in The New York Times points out the trend of more and more couples sleeping in separate rooms. Nearly one in four American couples does so and, according the National Association of Home Builders, it's expected that 60 percent of custom homes will have dual master bedrooms by 2015. Bonus: Beat the heat with one of these no-cook meals tonight This got us thinking: Is this a healthy trend? I mean, sure, occasionally we think we'd get a better night's sleep with a wall (or two) between us and our snoring, TV-watching, sheet-hogging Sig O. But would our relationship suffer?

To get to the bottom of it, we asked Tina B. Tessina, Ph.D. (a.k.a. Dr. Romance), psychotherapist and author of Money, Sex, and Kids: Stops Fighting About the Three Things That Can Ruin Your Marriage, for her take: "Sleeping apart can contribute to the disconnect that plagues many relationships," Tessina says. "It just makes it easier to avoid each other, when what's really needed is connection and contact. There are solutions to snoring and restlessness -- a memory foam mattress will stop restlessness from being felt by a partner and snoring can be helped in a number of ways."

A bit more motivation to sleep in the same bed: * Your man may get a better night's sleep when you're with him. In a study published in the journal Sleep and Biological Rhythms, researchers found that while women slept less soundly when they shared a bed with someone they're romantically involved with, men actually slept better when next to a woman. Work out whatever issues you have with his sleeping habits and you both might get some high-quality shut-eye.
* Bedtime isn't always for sleep, if you catch our drift. It's also prime for intimacy: snuggling and sex. This private time is crucial, especially if you have kiddies (a.k.a. nookie police). Sure you could meet him in "his" room, get it on, then flee back to "your" room. But then sex becomes a scheduled chore rather than an organic, meaningful, spontaneous activity.

Bonus: See how you can dine like a star
* Nighttime, while you're side by side, is one of the best times to communicate with each other. Between work and other responsibilities, you only have small snippets of uninterrupted time to communicate during the day. With the door shut (and iPhones snuggled into their charging stations), between the sheets is the place where you can truly talk about what's on your mind, without interruption by kid, dog, phone, cable guy, etc. "Cuddling up together and talking quietly is a great perk of married life," says Tessina. "Couples who know how to do that, and do it regularly, fare better than couples who don't." Bottom line: Try to solve whatever sleep incompatibility issues exist between you and your partner before fleeing for the guest room.

-NewsAnchorMom Jen

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Tuesday, August 3, 2010

Freshman 15


How close to the cafeteria did you live when you went to college? I only lived on campus for a year and a half. I was fairly close to the cafeteria, but not too close. There were many nights when I ate ramen noodles because I didn't want to go to the cafeteria. I remember walking a lot at college. I don't see how people get by without getting exercise. I guess my classes just happened to be far apart. I do think I gained the freshman 15. It was mainly because I ate tons of Mike and Ikes. I think I had a serious obsession.

FROM ABC: A new study showed that location location location is not only important in real estate, but also in controlling the "Freshman 15." The research, published in the Journal of Adolescent Health, revealed that environmental influences, especially the location of a campus dining hall, can affect a college student's weight. Many new college students dread the so called freshman 15 extra pounds that some seem to gain in their first year of college.

Researchers at the University of Michigan found that the distance from the dining hall to the dorm had an impact on how much weight a student gained.
Nearly 400 freshmen were assigned to dormitories, four of which had dining halls in the building and three that did not. At the end of the year, women in the on-site dining halls weighed an average of two pounds more and exercised less than women who had to walk to an outside dining hall.

The men ate an average of 1.5 more meals and three more snacks per week compared to
the guys without a dining hall in the building. Although the weight gain was small, researchers said those pounds can add up throughout the years and possibly influence the already-growing obesity problem in the United States.

-NewsAnchorMom Jen

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Monday, August 2, 2010

Home Autism Detection Kit

A device that supposedly identifies kids with autism? I am skeptical. I cannot imagine this has a high accuracy rate. My first thought is that autism isn't just a speech disorder. Doctors take a look at the overall child and many factors before determining whether a child should be diagnosed with autism. I understand this device isn't a diagnostic tool-just a resource. Still, I can't imagine learning my child might have autism by mail. It would be nice if there was some kind of blood test or scan that said, "autistic" "not autistic," but there isn't. I am concerned about this one. What do you think?

FROM ABC: A new device marketed to parents as an early detection device for autism has specialists debating whether the technology will become a powerful autism screening tool for doctors, or a do-it-yourself recipe for parental anxiety.

For around $200 dollars, parents can now order a LENA Language and Autism Screen (LAS) designed to detect early signs of autism in their toddlers' daily chatter at home.

The LAS device -- an iPod sized recorder that fits into specially designed overalls -- was designed after five years of research by the non-profit LENA foundation that is seeking to "develop advanced technology for the early screening, diagnosis, research, and treatment of language delays and disorders in children and adults," according to their Web site.

To use LAS, parents simply let their 24-month to 48-month-old children wear the device and overalls for a full 12-hour day. Then parents can ship the device back to LENA where employees use their acoustic algorithms to compare the child's vocalizations to those of other children analyzed in the LENA database. Parents then get an assessment in the mail.

"It's not a diagnosis, it's a detection. We wouldn't recommend someone use this screen as a diagnosis," said Mia Moe, director of communications at the LENA Foundation. "You really need to bring this information to a professional."

To get a child diagnosed with autism, parents typically get a referral from a pediatrician or school, and then see a specialist for a lengthy diagnostic interview. The diagnostic tests can take hours, and parents report waiting weeks or even several months for an appointment with specialists. After a diagnosis, they then face a slew of products marketed to help the mysterious disorder.

"As a parent there are a lot of products coming out at us all days," said Marguerite Kirst Colston, the vice president for constituent relations at the Autism Society and mother of a 9-year-old boy with autism. "Perhaps it could be a good additive, but as a screening tool – as a parent, I paused."

Moe said the idea to adapt the LENA technology to the general public came from two members of LENA's scientific advisory board who were parents of children with autism. The board members thought the LENA research could be applied to autism screening.

"Parents typically know there's something going on," said Moe. "But most regular visits with the pediatricians are 8-15 minutes at the most."

The goal, Moe said was to help parents screen their children and get a diagnosis earlier.

-NewsAnchorMom Jen

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Sunday, August 1, 2010

Are Home Births Safe?


There are some strong opinions on this one! I have probably mentioned before, I was born at home and so were my two siblings. My kids were all born at a hospital. I had complications with all three and had no risk factors. I think it's a big decision to decide to deliver at home. The baby will probably be fine, but there is a chance that being at a hospital will prevent major complications or death. There's also a chance you or your baby will die in a hospital. So I am not against home birth, but it wasn't the right decision for my family. I do wish I could have had a natural birth at home, but it just wasn't right for me. What do you think about home birth?

FROM CNN:

Moms have a right to “choose how and where to give birth,” says an editorial from the medical journal Lancet, “but they do not have the right to put their baby at risk.”

A strongly worded editorial in the British publication, “Home Births –Proceed With Caution” cites other studies that had found that “home birth can, after all, be harmful to newborn babies."

A recent article from the American Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology showed that planned home births compared with planned hospital births doubled the risk of neonatal deaths, with breathing difficulties and failed attempts at resuscitation playing major factors.

But home births in the United States and European countries are increasing.

-NewsAnchorMom Jen

What if you could look younger? Soderstrom Skin Institute was one of the first medical facilities to offer laser services in Central Illinois 20 years ago and today provides one of the most comprehensive laser treatment programs available. Call 674-7546 to schedule your FREE CONSULTATION today!

 
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