Japanese t shirts

Japanese t shirts

Gathering Moment with College Friends

>> Dec 16, 2013



How’s your weekend? My weekend turned out nice. I attended a reunion with college friends of the same year and study program last Sunday. The amount of the whole students was about 64 persons and yesterday, almost the half of it could come to the event.  

 
Thanks to some friends who preparing this occasion.

  I haven’t seen some of them for quite a long time so it’s nice to have a chance seeing them again and knowing about their latest news.  Today’s technology allows us to get in touch with friends and relatives through various medias but still being able to get together with them personally is unmatchable –though it’s only for a few hours!  

 
A pretty and yummy reunion cake. Thanks to Novita.

Wish the best for you all!

Whatever reunion gives us chances to re-connect with old friends, take a mind-relaxing trip into the past days, find out today’s school or campus look, create another networking, etc.  I missed my junior high school reunion as my father was being hospitalized at that time but yesterday I was able to come and fortunately the event held nearby; at a café around the college area.

 
Pretending as college students again

The reunion was closed nicely with a short campus tour. I saw lots of changes already happened but my mind still imagined the look of my old campus :)

Blue Monday 

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Horses for Fun Rides

>> Dec 15, 2013



The horses were seen at one street in Bandung (West Java, Indonesia)  when we visited the city. During weekends, several horses are available there for fun rides. Most riders are kids.




Camera Critters  
Saturday's Critters

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3 Clever Ways to Get your Kids Eating Healthily

>> Dec 14, 2013



We all know we’re supposed to eat five fruit or vegetables a day to get the right amount of vitamins and minerals in our diet, but it’s hard explaining to kids why we should eat this way – particularly if their favourite food is chocolate ice cream! It’s even harder if your child is a picky eater. Most mums just give in and supply a rotation of meals that contain their children’s preferred ingredients. But experts agree that it takes several tastes of a food stuff to establish whether a child truly dislikes it and we should encourage our children to broaden their palate as much as possible. Often it’s the texture, the method of cooking, and the presentation of food that influence how it is received. So how do we convince picky eaters to try something new? And how can we get them to eat their daily quota of fruit and vegetables?

Hiding Ingredients
One of the easiest ways of making sure your children eat the fruit and vegetables they claim not to like is to hide them in mixed dishes. Pasta sauces and soups, which mask the external appearance of ingredients, are great solutions for sneaking in hidden food stuffs. And what child doesn’t like bread or cake? Both of these can be adapted to include both fruit and vegetables – zucchini, banana, and pumpkin bread are very popular for just this purpose. 

Cutting Food into Fun Shapes

Image:kidworldcitizen.org

Surprisingly, sometimes it can take little more than rearranging elements on a plate to convince a picky eater to try something new. In Japan, kids’ lunch boxes, or ‘bento’ boxes, are examples of cute food presentation taken to the extreme, but it doesn’t actually have to take that much to create a visually attractive meal for your little one. Making faces from food is the simplest way, but did you ever also think of going to town with cookie cutters on these easy cooking recipes for kids? You can also use cookie cutters on cold cuts of meat, cheese, or fruit!

Rainbow Food

Picky eaters often complain that food looks bland or boring. And we can’t really blame them – some of the least favourite food stuffs do indeed look quite dull – think about fish or cauliflower! But what if you could brighten them up? Wouldn’t that make them more appealing? Some boring foods actually already exist in a variety of different colours – cauliflower, for example, is also can be purple. But if you can’t get hold of multicoloured variants, why not add a little food colouring to brighten up boring ingredients? Kids love rainbow-coloured meals and though the very best consist of plates stacked high with fresh fruit and vegetables, there’s no harm in tinting dishes that might otherwise remain uneaten. 

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Teaching Your Children To Tidy Up After Themselves



Most parents will be familiar with the struggle: children love creating a mess, but how on earth do you get them to clean up afterwards? Here are some tactics you might like to try to help encourage your children to tidy up after themselves in their bedroom and around the house.

Weekly Chores & Reward Points.
Like adults, kids respond excellently to incentives and the promise of future rewards. Establish a weekly chore list for each of your kids. Completion of a specific task – tidying their bedroom, dusting the living room, or helping you to load the washing machine – will be rewarded with a star on the chore list. Once your children accumulate a certain number of stars then they qualify for a reward such as money, a food treat, or fun activity.

Fun challenges.
You may be more successful in getting your kids to clean up after themselves if you treat cleaning as a fun activity, rather than a chore. Instead of telling them: “Take your worn clothes off the floor and put them in the laundry basket”, try asking: “Who will be the first to bring me 5 items of clothing lying on your bedroom floor?”

Image:homeforher.com
 

Delegating Responsibilities.
A household responsibility is a great way to make your children feel important and useful. How about giving each child his or her own cutlery and plate set? They are left responsible for washing and drying that set after each meal – if they don’t wash their plate then they have to deal with the consequence (in this case, a dirty plate to eat their dinner off of!). The same can be applied to worn clothes in their bedroom – if it doesn’t go into the laundry basket…it won’t be washed.

Involvement and Examples
Perhaps the main difference between adults and their children when it comes to cleaning is that both groups dislike the chore…it is just the kids who think that they can object their way out of it! Remember that your youngsters have an unnerving knack of following the example you set: if you appear reluctant or express a strong dislike of cleaning, then they are going to pick up on that and view domestic cleaning as something to avoid.

One way to help set a strong example is to involve the kids in your household cleaning tasks. While you don’t want young children to be handling the cleaning products, they can be encouraged to help you out. Perhaps they can clear all items off the kitchen surfaces before you disinfect them? Or else they can dust in the living room before you vacuum? Maybe they can sort the weekly laundry pile into ‘colours’ and ‘whites’, or help transfer their clothes from the washing machine to the drying rack, for instance?

Points to keep in mind.
Be consistent. If you permit your children to get out of their weekly cleaning responsibilities once, they will learn that it is possible for them to negotiate their way out of the tasks…and you end up back where you started!

Young children don’t usually have the patience and long-term vision that adults have. Be realistic when it comes to setting incentives for them – you want to set them a goal that they think they can achieve! A month can seem like an impossibly long eternity to small kids.

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About This Blog and Me!

Welcome to my blog. I'm a home maker, a stay at home wife. I'm just an ordinary woman who has interest in reading, working at home and learning to write. We live in Bogor, Indonesia.
This blog contains articles in family topic.
Contact me at linalg4@gmail.com

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