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Upgrade Your Free Diaper Bag

September 9, 2009 By Michelle Barneck 3 Comments

You know the one. You got it free the day you went home from the hospital with your little bundle of joy. I actually got a really cute diaper bag as a gift, but found it was a little big and boxy for quick trips. My free diaper bag was just the right size to fit in the basket under the stroller and so it is the one I have been carrying for most of the time. (Luckily, they gave me two when I left because they accidentally tried to send me home a day early and let me keep the one from that day. I have already gone through one in the almost two years I have been carrying them)

I actually think it is kind of cute with its geometric circle design, but I was never very fond of advertising that I was carrying the free Similac bag. See the white branding tag. Let’s call him little Mr. eye sore. It was like that dreaded zit on my cute little free bag.

No more. Pulled out the cover up and Sayonara Mr. eye sore! I just pinned this cute pink flower pin through the tag. I’m feelin pretty good about my little makeover! Now it matches my pink phone and camera. (Hey Molly, I used my camera timer for this pic. Are you proud?)

Just in time to head out to my son’s little friend’s Gymboree bday party. Thanks Hailee! We had so much fun! I even got a big ego boost when Hailee’s grandma said she loves reading my blog. It’s always fun to hear that there is someone out there!

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We have decided to truncate our feed to help protect against stolen content. I apologize for any inconvenience. Please love us anyway. ๐Ÿ™‚

Feature Friday-Gmail Blog

September 4, 2009 By Michelle Barneck 1 Comment

Hey all! Today’s Feature Friday is The Official Gmail Blog.

Google Gmail blog - News, Tips and Tricks from Google"s Gmail Team

Now this may seem a little weird, but when you see some of the tips I found on there, you will be glad I shared. Trust me. If you already use a gmail account for your email than these will show you how to get the most out of it. If you do not, maybe you will want one. (No, they are not paying me to say this. If only I got paid for all the times I go on and on about products or companies I like. I would have like $10 by now. ๐Ÿ˜‰)

So here we go. Ever wanted to train to be a ninja? Well this part isn’t technically part of the blog, but it had so much great info and so many of the blog posts linked to it that I just had to share. It has tips for all levels, so you can just find the one that fits you.

Gmail Ninja

<span class=

photo from: http://allthatsnew.wordpress.com/2009/06/24/gmails-new-feature-be-a-gmail-ninja/

White belt:

  • Organize email with labels
  • Choose a theme for the background. Right now I am using Summer Ocean.

Green Belt:

  • Tweak your settings and include a forgotten attachment detector or turn on Undo Send so you can cancel oopsy messages before they are sent.
  • Set up filters for your email to label, delete or star messages

Black belt:

  • Alter your gmail addy with a plus sign when signing up for things so you can filter those emails out once they sell your soul to the highest bidder. Sweetness.
  • Set up gmail to fetch mail from other accounts

Gmail Master:

  • Not gonna lie, most of these were over my head, but you could check them out.

I would say I am residing somewhere between green and black.

Standard <span class=

photo from: http://www.romileykarate.com/shop.html

DYK…I am a karate white belt in real life? I took a community ed karate class with my sister Jen. It was so much fun though slightly questionable at times. We had to spar at the end of class and we would have to go up against brown belts (the one right under black) because there were not many people in our class. I swear to you our Sensei never washed his Gi. The scent ripened each week. My very favorite was kicking the bag. I do a mean roundhouse. I never did try breaking a board. ๐Ÿ˜‰

Also, if you have not checked out Google Reader, you should. This is what I use to read all of the blogs that I follow. It is nice to have them all in one place and have it automatically show me when there are new posts instead of having to go to each site to see if it was updated.

Well, that’s all we have time for…ta ta for now!

P.S. Don’t forget to sign up for free Tipsy updates via RSS or email.

We have decided to truncate our feed to help protect against stolen content. I apologize for any inconvenience. Please love us anyway. ๐Ÿ™‚

Toddler TV Time

August 19, 2009 By Michelle Barneck 11 Comments

While on our vacation in Bear Lake we stumbled upon the subject of appropriate shows for small children. I shared how I was recently very disappointed with Sesame Street when they had an entire episode on “Mineitis.” All the characters ran around grabbing whatever they could and yelling “Mine.” Their intention was to then show the cure and show that it was wrong, but I was concerned that the age group that watches Sesame Street (my 20 month old) would not pick up on the reverse psychology. I was right. A few days later he began grabbing things and saying “mine!” He had never done this previously. Luckily, he is catching on that it is wrong since he gets in trouble every time he says it.

My sister-in-law mentioned that her friend thought Sesame Street might actually contribute to ADHD because of its short choppy clips. I had never thought of this, but she is totally right. This opened my eyes and I got to thinking I might need to switch our programming choices, though my little guy adores Elmo. (Maybe I will just let him watch the Elmo’s world segment)

I set out on a quest to find a place with ratings on age appropriateness and educational value of children’s programming. In my 15 minutes of research I found something shocking! I knew too much TV leads to obesity and so on, but I had no idea of some of the research out there.

http://www.sxc.hu/pic/m/a/an/annalog85/1087821_tv_addict.jpg

Did you know:

  • TV may increase the risk for attentional problems because television images change rapidly, “which is an important contrast to the pace of real life,” he says. He notes that even some well-respected children’s programs – such as Sesame Street — are specifically designed to rely on rapid fire images to keep a young child’s attention. (1)
  • In the Academy’s journal Pediatrics the report’s authors write: “Pediatricians should urge parents to avoid television viewing for children under the age of 2 years.” (2)
  • TV watching “rewires” an infantโ€™s brain, says Dr. Dimitri A. Christakis lead researcher and director of the Child Health Institute at Childrenโ€™s Hospital and Regional Medical Center, Seattle, Wash. The damage shows up at age 7 when children have difficulty paying attention in school. (3)
  • “In contrast to the way real life unfolds and is experienced by young children, the pace of TV is greatly sped up.” says Christakis. His research appears in the April 2004 issue of Pediatrics. Quick scene shifts of video images become “normal,” to a baby “when in fact, itโ€™s decidedly not normal or natural.” Christakis says. Exposing a babyโ€™s developing brain to videos may overstimulate it, causing permanent changes in developing neural pathways.(3)
  • Even a child playing with its own fingers has the neural patterning that comes from bending, flexing, stretching and grasping. Scientists tell us that the brain develops in completely unique ways between birth and three years. As a kiddie viddie baby sits “mesmerized”, neural paths are not being created. This is crucial brain development that stops by age three.(3)
  • In the study of more than 2,000 children, Christakis found that for every hour watched at age one and age three, the children had almost a ten percent higher chance of developing attention problems that could be diagnosed as ADHD by age 7. A toddler watching three hours of infant television daily had nearly a 30 percent higher chance of having attention problems in school.(3)
  • No child under age two should watch television at all, the Academy of American Pediatrics advised in 1998. Doctors blame TV for increasing aggression and obesity in children, now they add ADHD risk to early TV use.(3)

(Sources for quotes listed by number below.)

Crazy isn’t it?! My little one was watching about an hour of TV a day so I could shower or put away laundry. Now that I have read all of this I think I will cut that down to 30 minutes (a mom’s gotta have a break now and then) and seriously look at any programming I may expose him to. I want something that has good values and is educational, does not have choppy clips, and does not annoy me. This is a pretty hard combination to find.

little_einsteins.jpg Little Einsteins image by pobrepapa

Here are a few children’s shows we like:
The Backyardigans
Little Einsteins
Mickey Mouse Clubhouse
Veggietales
Wordworld (the duck is a little annoying)
Little People Videos

What are some of your favorites?

Sources of quotes:
1-http://www.webmd.com/parenting/news/20040405/toddler-tv-time-can-cause-attention-problems
2-http://www.whitedot.org/issue/iss_story.asp?slug=noTVforTubbies
3-http://www.whitedot.org/issue/iss_story.asp?slug=ADHD%20Toddlers

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We have decided to truncate our feed to help protect against stolen content. I apologize for any inconvenience. Please love us anyway. ๐Ÿ™‚

Refinishing A Deck Tutorial

July 29, 2009 By Michelle Barneck 2 Comments

CAUTION: Do not expect to get this project done in one day!

Believe me, I know. It is the eye sore that you just don’t want to think about. That nagging in the back of your mind about that barn red paint peeling off the deck. Do I really want to eat this elephant, you say. Come on….just take that first bite. You will find in the end that you have a full stomach that will last 2-3 years!

This was my deck 3 months ago. Lucky for you, the snow is covering the peeling paint and cracking wood that is bound to give someone a splinter someday soon. I use this picture only because it is the only before shot I have. The deck was literally that ugly. I purposefully edited it out of every shot. Too bad this makes the barn red look ok because it was the only place on the entire surface that was left intact. Not ok.

So, my wonderful husband, more for me than for himself told my brother in law that for his birthday, in lieu of presents from my siblings, he would like help with our monster deck. Sweet, kind brother in law, thinking this would be one long Saturday of hard work agreed with a smile.

And our journey (and your deck refinishing tutorial) begins…

Supplies needed:
Able bodied men
Nice weather
Pressure washer
Extension cords
Electric sanders/belt sanders
Broom
Rollers (mini and regular size)
Extending roller handle
Paint brushes
Stain
Tupperware

1. Start by checking the weather to choose a good date. This is important! You want a week that is neither raining or too hot. TRUST ME! We started on June 6th and didn’t finish until July 18th because there was not a week dry enough in between there to stain! When does it ever rain for weeks straight in the middle of summer in drought ridden Utah? Right after we strip our deck to it’s bare wood. Sweet.

2. Now that you have a date collect the first three supplies. You can rent a pressure washer at Home Depot for a half day for around $60. Get the smaller, lower pressure one. The other one can really cut in to your wood if you are not really experienced with pressure washers.
3. Clear everything off the deck and either cover the stuff with plastic or place it far enough away that it will not get wet or stained.

4. The pressure washer will do most of the cleaning and sanding for you. Just hook it up and walk along with it keeping the nozzle 8-12″ from the wood. Once the deck looks mostly stripped (there can be a few spots where the tough paint remains, that is what the sanders are for) let it dry completely (for at least a day).

5. Now come in with the electric sanders/belt sanders to do the touch ups and remove any extra paint. We were really picky and sanded pretty much the entire deck so the wood would be really smooth and nice to put the stain on. Once again, check the weather! We did the following steps on a 104 degree day. Not so smart.

I saw my poor guys melting at 11 am after one hour of sanding and fashioned this makeshift canopy out of a tarp, a couple stray 2x4s, bungee cords and twine to protect them somewhat. Turns out we would not have been able to stain the deck without this because you cannot stain wood that is over 95 degrees. Yay for the DIY canopy!

6. Sweep the dust from the deck. You could use tack cloth if you want to be a perfectionist. ๐Ÿ™‚ We were lazy by this point.

7. Now comes the fun part! No, seriously. After hours of washing and sanding this part really is not that bad. Purchase a high quality stain (you get what you pay for!) We went with Kwal because it was recommended by our contractor friend. We chose to do translucent stain instead of paint stain because it looks more natural and does not peel. You just need to reapply every couple of years. No more sanding every time! Woohoo!

8. We applied the stain to the railings using mini foam rollers (seriously made this part so quick!) and paint brushes (use a good quality brush! We had one from Home Depot and two from the dollar store. We threw out the dollar store ones after 5 minutes) for the corners and underside. We found it worked best to fill a disposable tupperware about 1/4 full of stain so we could be totally mobile. For the floor of the deck we used a roller with an extendable handle so you did not have to kneel or hunch and poured the stain in to a roller pan. We went back along the cracks between the floor boards with a brush to be sure we got in between. Just be sure not to let the stain puddle or it sill turn out sticky! (or so warned the man at the store, I was a puddle stickler, so I cannot testify to this!)

9. Let dry for a bit and go around for touch ups. Let dry for at least 24 hours before any major traffic. Then, have a major BBQ to show off all your hard work!!

I think the name of our stain is Natural brown. It turned out darker than we thought, but once we got the stuff back on the deck I really liked it. See the puddles on the left. That’s how you know we did our job. We forgot to turn off the sprinklers and the water was repelled less than 24 hours later. And now we don’t have to think about our deck for another couple of years! Yay!

Sorry about the terrible pictures. My friend Quinn is going to teach me how to take good pics sometime soon. ๐Ÿ™‚

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We have decided to truncate our feed to help protect against stolen content. I apologize for any inconvenience. Please love us anyway. ๐Ÿ™‚
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Hi there! I'm Michelle. Mother of three little boys and one little princess. Welcome to A Little Tipsy, a place for exploring creativity and sharing inspiration.

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