Monday, December 29, 2014

uh oh, whassat?!




if you used to read my blog
before it was revamped, then you remember
the amount of food/restaurant posts i had!

so...
surprise!!

these pictures were taken over the summer,
at one of LML's and I's (I's? Me's? Mine? Mine's?)-
OUR
 favorite places...

Greenport, New York.

Salamander's...whose chicken we were addicted to
before we changed our lifestyle.
So we substituted that with
soft shell crab sandwiches...
and mini-veggie samosas!

Excellent...
I would definitely try it
if you haven't already <3

love me,
the globetrotting gamine

Thursday, December 25, 2014

Merry Christmas, Happy Holy-days!



Peace and love
warmth and health
to all my globetrotters out there.

May you have the best holiday season EVER!!

Love and light to y'all,
the globetrotting gamine

Thursday, December 4, 2014

Hello :)

Hi lovely bloggers!

I am sorry I've been MIA.

I have so many wonderful things going on, and I hope and pray that you all do, too!

It's certainly been busy on my end, and you know me by now...I don't like to talk about my projects until I've completed them.

How is your holiday season going? I have to admit, this year was the first time my husband and I ordered two organic turkeys for each family dinner. We were quite full and my puppy is quite thankful...


It's been an amazing year for me, but also a bittersweet one-- those nearest and dearest to me and I have lost loved ones this year. I am sending love and light out to those souls and those families, so that we may all know peace...and so that those souls could party with their friends in Heaven <3

In the meantime, my goal for next month is to complete already-started projects and to continue with my new ones!

What are your goals and resolutions?

Love me!
The Globetrotting Gamine

Monday, December 1, 2014

happy december!



welcome back, december!
we love you...
but please be good to us 
and give "winter" the same memo.

happy december to
all of 'the globetrotting gamine's
friends, fans, family and followers!

stay toasty!

love me,
the globetrotting gamine

Thursday, October 30, 2014

Grimm Inspiration: Monroe





inspiration to the max...
have i blogged about the 
Monroe character on Grimm?

I think he's so cool and
waaaaaaaa
look at how "he decorates"!

i need a place to do this in. 

#decoratingissues

love me,
the globetrotting gamine

Wednesday, October 1, 2014

happy october!




my assistant and i
would like to wish you all
of our fans, family and followers
a super healthy and happy 
october!!

love me (and my assistant!)
the globetrotting gamine

Saturday, September 20, 2014

Truth

Going back to school for something you forgot you love is a warm and fuzzy experience.

Then, when the epiphany strikes you of what you really want to do with your life, it's a simultaneous of a zonk on the head and a big kick in the ass.

It should make you want to dance around...
It should make you want to cry...
It should bring all these ideas rushing at you...

And I'm so thankful that this happened to me. Now I know why I've had every experience, every person in my life, every teeny thing.

Has this ever happened to you?

I won't divulge information, but know that I'm working hard and all will reveal itself in due time.
And yay!

Love me,
The globetrotting gamine

Thursday, September 11, 2014

Spirit Earth Holistics























You have to check this brand out!

http://spiritearthholistics.ca/

There are so many wonderful things they produce: hair care, body care, muscle balm, natural deodorant, soaps, bath salts...

all eco-friendly, no parabens, fair trade, First Nations authentically hand crafted!

I really can't wait for my birthday shopping spree...

I found about them at the Shinnecock Pow Wow and hope you love them!



Love love love,
globetrotting gamine

Thursday, September 4, 2014

shinnecock powwow!





i finally got to go to a pow wow...
this was definitely one of the biggest highlights of my summer.

i have always, always wanted to go to a pow wow 
and it was totally different than i imagined it to be.

i so wanted to talk to the people more, 
and visit with a shaman or medicine woman.

but it was so much fun
and i was so thankful to experience it with my hubby!

hope your labor day weekend was a blast!

love me,
globetrotting gamine

Monday, August 4, 2014

when i grow up...


if you know me, 
you know that i'm the girl
who would love to wander the rainforests,
jungles, forests and fields
learning about everything healing from shamans,
medicine people, and healers.

this is the way i've always been, 
which is ironic since i was scared into 
going through chemo
which i would never do again, ever.
note: if i could go back in time, 
i would never have done it.

but we keep moving forward...

i'm still the girl who would love to meet healers, 
so i picked this book up in the library, 
and am posting some interesting tidbits from it
here, in my blog...because if you're like me
you like this stuff, too.

page 6--
"Many of the human body's powerful reactions are a direct response to plant alkaloids, a class of chemical compounds most common in tropical plants.
Alkaloids, which are characterized by a molecular structure that must include a nitrogen atom and at least two carbon atoms, have had a major impact on every culture- if not every person- on the planet. They provide everything from  the kick in our morning coffee (caffeine) to the addictive compounds in our most dangerous drugs (cocaine, heroin and nicotine), the toxic principles in some of the deadliest poisons (strychnine and batrachotoxin), the analgesic effects in our most potent painkillers (codeine and morphine), and the mental pyrotechnics in someof the most powerful hallucinogens (mescaline and psilocybin.)....

Quinine, an alkaloid from the bark of the cinchona tree and one of the bitterest substances known, was first discovered thousands of years ago by South American Indians in what is now Peru and Ecuador. Since then it has been widely used throughout the tropics and much of the temperate world to cure malaria, a disease caused by a parasite, transmitted by mosquitoes, that destroys the red blood cells. Although thought of by many as a jungle disease, the illness does not discriminate based on geographyl malaria has been and still is a world ranging disease....

Yet a single plant alkaloid reveleaed to us by South American Indiands has helps eradicate malaria in the temperate zone and reduce the prevalence of the disease. "


Gotta love this stuff...

anyone ever study this stuff, or go on such adventures? 
i would love to hear from you!

love me,
the globetrotting gamine


Monday, July 28, 2014

do you know that feeling...


where, as a writer...it haunts you in the middle of the night what you want to write about but then, upon waking...

nothing.
nada.
ZILCH.

i really hate this feeling, and it should promote me to get up in the middle of the night and start writing.

since summer began, i have gone back to exploring, celebrating, and back to the daily grind of trying to get my career as a school counselor rolling again. i wish it was easier to get everything done that i want to (especially in the crafts department!) but it's not.

things on my mind and now out there in the blog-u-verse:

  • job job job. gimme gimme. want one to escape the boredom!
  • love summer.
  • social media is exhausting.
  • so many books to read, so little time
  • WANNA GO EVERYWHERE!
  • ah, me.
lol

so i'm back in the state where my mind buzzes around and around with thoughts and ideas like a ticker tape. sometimes, i swear it's a psychic thing i've got going on. i have no idea where said thoughts and ideas come from.

i've heard somewhere recently that writers have a more difficult time than non-writers getting their words out there in the way they want. this comforts me, because  i never feel adequate enough in describing much of anything when writing. and most of the time, there is no word flow, or just basic flow. 

more things on my bucket list:
  • certification in nutrition, health and wellness. 
  • yoga certification
  • my next big project
i hope all of you out there in bloggie land are doing wonderfully, and that your summer (or whatever season) is treating you well!!

lots of love and light from me to you,
the globetrotting gamine

Monday, July 21, 2014

Fluoridation (eew)


"Fluoridation (p.116)

Fluoride, a compound that protects against tooth decay, was added to many municipal was added to many municipal water systems beginning in 1945. At present, an estimated 2/3 of the American people live in communities with fluoridated water. While fluoridation has reduced cavities, rates of other orders have increased, including damage to the bones, thyroid gland, and immune function. As a result, several European countries, icluding Sweden, Denmark, Holland, Germany and Belgium have discontinued treating water with fluoride. France and Norway never started it. In the U.S. Kansas, Pennsylvania, Washington, and Hawaii have recently rejected proposals for fluoridization, and in 1998 voters in Santa Cruz refused to allocate money for fluoridation following a mandatory law passed by the California legislature.

Fluoride, a compound of calcium and fluoride that occurs naturally, is used in Oriental medicine as a tranquilizer. Prozac, the modern anti-depressant drug, utilizes fluoride as an active ingredient. In food, fluorine naturally occurs in rice, rye, parsley, cabbage, sea vegetables, and bancha twig tea."

Alleged Attacks By Fluoride:

  • damages bones
  • linked to a lower IQ
  • produces Alzheimer like symptoms
  • it's a byproduct of the A-bomb 

wow.
that's why it sucks.

what do you think?

love me,
the globetrotting gamine

Monday, July 14, 2014

sitting vs. squatting




(notes taken from here)

A Clinical Study of Sitting versus Squatting
In April, 2002, an Iranian radiologist, Dr. Saeed Rad, published a study which compared the effectiveness of sitting versus squatting for evacuation.24    One of his conclusions relates to the cause of a type of hernia known as "rectocele," which is a bulge of the front wall of the rectum into the vagina.
Thirty subjects participated in the study – 21 male, 9 female – ranging in age from 11 to 75 years. Each patient received a barium enema so the internal mechanics of evacuation could be recorded on an X-Ray image. Each patient was studied in both the squatting and the sitting positions.
Using these images, Dr. Rad measured the angle where the end of the rectum joins the anal canal. At this junction point, the puborectalis muscle creates a kink to prevent incontinence. Dr. Rad found that when the subjects used sitting toilets the average angle of this bend was 92 degrees, forcing the subjects to strain. When they used squat toilets, the angle opened to an average of 132 degrees. At times it reached 180 degrees, making the pathway perfectly straight.
Using squat toilets, all the subjects reported "complete" evacuation. "Puborectalis relaxation occurred easily and straightening of the rectum and anal canal facilitated evacuation. The anal canal became wide open and no folding was noticed in the terminal rectum."
In the sitting position, "a remarkable folding was created in the terminal rectum predisposing it to rectocele formation, and puborectalis relaxation was incomplete." All the subjects reported that elimination felt "incomplete" in the sitting position.
Dr. Rad also measured the distance from the pelvic floor to the perineum. In the sitting position he found that the pelvic floor was pushed downwards to a significant degree. (A detailed discussion of the connection between sitting toilets and pelvic organ prolapse – including rectoceles – can be found in thegynecological disorders section.)
Dr. Rad concluded that the use of the squat toilet "is a more comfortable and efficient method of bowel evacuation" than the sitting toilet.

 
Different types of squat toilets



note:: i've never used squat toilets before and don't think i have the coordination to do so- but would do it if there was a shower nearby! lol

love me,
the globetrotting gamine 

Friday, July 11, 2014

summer days...





this is what [my] summer's all about (charlie brown):
  • family
  • friends
  • parties
  • hanging by the water
  • dresses
  • sightseeing
  • relaxing
  • working
  • trying to find my counseling job
  • preparations for the fall <3

what is your summer all about?
do you have a summer bucket list/goal list?

i would love to know what it is!!

lotsa love!
the globetrotting gamine

Monday, July 7, 2014

stuff about chewing!


Saliva Inhibits HIV (p.59)

Saliva contains substances that pervent the AIDS virus from infecting white-blood cells. In a study, dental researchers tested saliva from three healthy men, 35, 40, and 42 years old. Tests indicated the men were not carriers of the AIDS virus and were not known to be at high risk for infection. In laboratory dishes, the men's saliva prevented the AIDS virus from infecting lymphocytes, a type of white blood cell that is among the immune system cells attacked by the AIDS virus in the body. 

The researchers said the finding might help explain why no cases have been documented in which the AIDS virus was transmitted from person to person through asliva such as through kissing or sharing toothbrushes. The scientsts concluded that saliva is wel known to contain substances that kill bacteria and funguses and so might also be able to block the AIDS virus.

Chewing and Cancer Risk:
An Indian cancer researcher concluded that thorough chewing lowered the risk of cancer. "The proper chewing of meals ensuring that mucous-rich saliva mixed with the food seemed to be protective factors." Cancer also appeared to be more prevalent in south Indian where white rice and considerably more fat, oil and spices are used in cooking than in north India where whole-grain chapatis and thick dahl made with lentils are the staple."


you learn something new everyday!
love me,
the globetrotting gamine

Monday, June 30, 2014

appendicitis

information from here

Appendicitis
In the diagram of the colon, please locate the cecum, the appendix and the ileocecal valve. The left side of the diagram corresponds to the right side of the body.
The cecum is a small pouch where the colon begins, in the lower right section of the abdomen. Wastes from the small intestine flow into the cecum through the ileocecal valve (theoretically a one-way valve.) The appendix is a narrow tube attached to the cecum, with a channel opening into the cecum.
Waste matter can get lodged in this channel, causing the appendix to become infected and inflamed. Immediate surgery must be performed to remove the appendix before it bursts. Otherwise, the result is usually fatal.
Why does the appendix get blocked with fecal matter? Did nature make a blunder in its design?
One clue comes from the field of epidemiology. Appendicitis is a disease of westernized countries, virtually unknown in the developing world.19,31     The reason is that the cecum was designed to be squeezed empty by the right thigh, in the squatting position. On a sitting toilet, it is physically impossible to compress the cecum.
Instead, one pushes downwards with the diaphragm, while holding one's breath. This maneuver inflates and pressurizes the cecum. It is analogous to squeezing a tube of toothpaste in the middle and causing the bottom of the tube to inflate. The pressure can easily force wastes into the appendix, with disastrous consequences.
The back-pressure can also overwhelm the ileocecal valve, whose purpose is to protect the small intestine from fecal contamination. Barium enema exams and intestinal surgeries routinely show the leakage of wastes into the small intestine.Crohn's Disease develops in the area soiled by this toxic backwash.
Despite all the straining, the cecum never gets evacuated. Residual wastes adhere to the colon wall, increasing the risk of cancer and inflammation (including appendicitis.)
By contrast, in the squatting posture, the right thigh squeezes the cecum from its base. Its contents are thoroughly expelled into the ascending colon, where peristalsis carries them away. There is no need to hold one's breath or push downwards, since the posture generates the pressure automatically.
The force is all directed upwards, so the appendix stays clean and the ileocecal valve stays closed. These organs were not "poorly designed" – as is currently taught in medical schools. Like the rest of the colon, they were designed with squatting in mind.



Historical Background of Appendicitis
Most people assume that appendicitis has always been with us. But in fact, it emerged quite recently, coinciding with the introduction of sitting toilets toward the end of the 19th century.22 According to the Medical Journal of Australia,
The epidemiology of appendicitis poses many unanswered questions. Almost unknown before the 18th century, there was a striking increase in its prevalence from the end of the 19th century, with features suggesting it is a side effect of modern Western life.30
In 1886, Reginald Heber Fitz, a Harvard Professor of Pathological Anatomy, became the first doctor to recognize and name the disease. He was also the first one to propose treating it by removing the appendix.18
The conservative British medical establishment resisted the novel appendectomy procedure until after the turn of the century, when it was used to save the new king's life. In 1901, the Prince of Wales, Albert Edward, underwent an emergency appendectomy, just two weeks before his scheduled coronation as King Edward VII. His successful recovery finally convinced British surgeons that this operation was the only way to save the victims of this "mysterious" new disease.20
Currently, 7% of the U.S. population will contract appendicitis at some point in their lifetime (according to www.emedicine.com). The figure would be even higher, except that 40,000 "incidental appendectomies" are performed each year (according to Harper's Index, Feb, 2002.) "Incidental" means there was nothing wrong with the appendix, but the surgeon happened to be operating on another organ nearby – in most cases performing a hysterectomy.
Appendicitis is the most common reason for a child to need emergency abdominal surgery. Young people between the ages of 11 and 20 are most often affected (according to www.KidsHealth.org).
Modern medicine recognizes that appendicitis is primarily a disease of the Western World.31    They attribute this to the (allegedly) greater amount of fiber in the diet of the Third World. However, the fiber theory has never been substantiated, as evidenced by this quote from www.KidsHealth.org:
There are no medically proven ways to prevent appendicitis. Although appendicitis is rare in countries where people eat a high-fiber diet, experts have not yet shown that a high-fiber diet definitely prevents appendicitis.
Many residents of the developing world, not wanting to appear "backward", feel obliged to adopt western toilets. This trend is causing health problems that were previously unknown among squatting populations. Appendicitis is one example, as reported by webhealthcentre.com, a health care portal based in India:
The Indian type of toilet is more conducive to complete evacuation than the Western toilet. With the western style closets becoming popular in India, there is a risk of increased incidence of appendicitis.
Unfortunately, western doctors have never made the connection between toilet posture and appendicitis. Their understanding of this disease has advanced little in the century since Dr. Frederick Treves performed his famous appendectomy (mentioned above) on the Prince of Wales.
Ironically, Sir Frederick (knighted for saving the king's life) lost his own daughter to appendicitis.27   Despite being highly skilled at surgery, he had no idea what causes the disease, or how to prevent it.
Now his successors have a chance to redeem their profession. By informing their patients (and their children) about the health hazards of the modern toilet, they can prevent a great deal of needless suffering.

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Thursday, June 26, 2014

Inspiration: Junk Gypsies

you'll probably be seeing a lot of posts about the Junk Gypsies from me, because I love them.
I really do! Their SECOND season is back on the Great American Country channel. 

Who they are? A family business, headed by two sisters, revamping/glam-ming up junk!



i love everything they do, and seriously--
how awesome is their truck?

waaaaa i want it.

would love to meet these guys.

read more about them here:

1998we began traveling across Texas setting up at flea markets
2000The first t-shirt was designed - WELL-behaved WOmen RARely MAKe history!
2004the first Junk-O-Rama Prom!!!
2004we start gettin’ some amazing press! INtouch Weekly, Country Home, Country Weekly, Houston ChronicleFORTUNE Small BIz , E! News & more!
2005JG creates Miranda Lambert's now legendary GUNS n' WIngs logo & designs the "MAMA TRIED" tank that appears in her FAMOus KEROSENE video!
2006NBC’s Today Show features JG & Southwest airlines SPirit magazine
2007JG Junk-A-Fies a tour bus for Miranda Lambert
2007tour bus featured on CMT, GAC & COuNTry LIVINg magazine!
2007Macy’s commissions JG to design Junk Couture dresses & merch for the Glamorama charity event
2008featured on TEXAS COuntry REporter! COwboys & INdians mag, Country Living’s “crafting a business” book, and more .
2010we create “HOtel California” backstage lounge for AUstin City Limits fest! with the EAGLES headlining
2011we design Miranda Lambert & Blake Shelton's wedding reception (see photos here on our BLOG!)
2011JG creates the Pistol Annie's logo
2012“Junk Gypsies” premieres on HGTV (get it on itunes here!)
2012we design an AiRstream for Dierks Bentley
(see amazing pics here from april pizana photography!)
2012
 MARyJAne’s FARm, WonderWALLHGTV mag  and  moreeee!!!!
2013
Garage Sale Wars premieres on HGTV!
and visit their webpage here

WOULD LOVE to live in Round Top TX just to meet them and hang out!

love me,
the globetrotting gamine

Monday, June 23, 2014

caffeine-truth!


"Caffeine (p.45)

Caffeine, the active ingredient in coffee, tea, soft drinks, cocoa, chocolate, and 2000 nonprescription drugs, is the world's most consumed drug. 80% of adults in the U.S. consume it daily in one form or another. Flobally, tea is the worlds most popular beverage, followed by coffee and soft drinks. One cup of tea contains about half as much caffeine as a cup of coffee. A 12- oz. can of coke or pepsi contains about as much caffeine as a cup of tea or half a cup of coffee.

Multiple Effects of Caffeine:
...Metabolically, it takes the liver about 5 hours to break down half a given amount of caffeine. Absorbed quickly in the intestine, caffeine crosses all CELL MEMBRANES and is rapidly diffused into the saliva, semen breast milk and amniotic fluid. Caffeine revs up the brain, stimulating mental focus, productivity, and physical performance.
HOWEVER, in large amounts, caffeine produces the opposite effect, inhibiting neuron firing and acting as a depressant. Caffeine causes the heart to beat more rapidly, constricts some blood vessels and dilates others, and stimulates some muscles to contract and others to expand. Caffeine can curb the appetite, cause weight loss and serve as a laxative. It increases urine production and can stress the kidneys.
While caffeine RELEASES fat stored in cells, "caffeine may actually make it harder to eat a balanced, healthy diet." In medical studies, it is associated with increased binge eating, PMS, and possible birth defects and impaired development of children.
Decaf, meanwhile, is weakly linked with raising cholesterol, and he solvent processing method, using strong chemicals like methylene chloride or ethyl acetate, may pose risks though it has been approved by the FDA.
Habitual coffee drinkers commonly suffer from withdrawal symptoms, including tiredness, irritability, and grogginess in the morning before they have their first cup of coffee. Caffeine dependence, withdrawal, and addiction were not recognized until recently.
In writing his book, Braun concludes that he has become more conscious of caffeine's strong, potentially harmful effects. While he still drinks coffee, he is more mindful and takes periodic "caffeine holidays" of one or two weeks at a time."


Thursday, June 19, 2014

Inspiration: Rachel Zoe






rachel zoe
can do no fashion-wrong.

she is fantastic
and literally brings every
style she does
back to life in such an exciting way.

love me,
the globetrotting gamine

Monday, June 16, 2014

for the love of broccoli


"Broccoli (p.43)

As a cruciferous vegetable, the protective effects  against heart disease and cancer have been well documented. In traditional Oriental medicine, broccoli is especially good for the lungs and large intestine.

Broccoli Reduces Cancer Risk:
In a review of seven cohort studies and 87 case-control studies around the world, researchers in the Netherlands reported that 67% of the studies found that the consumption of broccoli, cabbage, cauliflower lowered the risk of lung cancer, stomach cancer, colon cancer and rectal cancer.

Anticancer Nutrient Identified:
Scientists at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine reported that they had identified the ingredient  in broccoli that worked as a powerful anticancer compound in laboratory experiments. The chemical, sulforaphane, boosts the production of an important enzyme known to neutralize carcinogens before the trigger tumor growth. In addition to broccoli, sulforaphane is found in bok choy, ginger, scallions, and other vegetables.
In subsequent experiments, the Johns Hopkins scientists reported that broccoli inhibited induced breast cancer in animal tests. They particularly recommended saga broccoli, grown organically in Maine for the experiments."

Brocc it up!!

love me,
the globetrotting gamine



Sunday, June 15, 2014

for my closet...



no question that i love rachel zoe
and everything that she does.

she's made of fashion fairy magic, truly.

gotta have these for my closet.

what do you think?

love me,
the globetrotting gamine

Saturday, June 14, 2014

for my closet...







so my style varies from day to day
but then again
doesn't everyones?

i can blame my a.d.d. if that's not true.

this is from ralph lauren's collection.
how effortless and beautiful!

i would love these in my closet!
especially the white one, 
the red dress...

ALLLLLL OF THEM!

love me,
the globetrotting gamine. 

Wednesday, June 11, 2014

kennedy space center








LML (love of my life) and I
have been to a bunch of places
over the years...

but I never thought that
the Kennedy Space Center
would turn us into such little kids.

It was awesome, and we learned so much-
I searched Port Canaveral for the Men in Black 3 scene
where they fought the alien at the end
during the rocket-take off
so there's about 100s more photos from here.

we touched a piece of the moon
met an astronaut
went into a simulated ride that's just like a rocket take off

and just really had the best time.

I highly recommend going!!

love me,
the globetrotting gamine