SPRING CLEANING

Spring often evokes images of new growth, beautiful flowers, and of course Spring Cleaning. There is something life giving and reenergizing about cleaning out and starting fresh. The intentionality of a simplified life is something many of us long for yet easily forego as we are called back to task by the seemingly millions of things that compete for our attention. The energy and effort it takes to achieve and sustain those goals of a simpler life often doesn’t seem worth it. Yet when we take small steps and make decisions that flow with our lifestyle, these goals we set for ourselves can be a lot closer than we ever imagined. In this series of posts, we will be looking at some examples of small steps that can make a big difference in how we feel about our lives. From the grocery store to the laundry to picking up the clutter in your home, the beginning is just a step away.

“May you have the courage today to live the life that you would love, to postpone your dream no longer but do at last what you came here for and waste you heart on fear no more” – John O’Donohue

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Spring Cleaning

Be honest with yourself. Do you actually use that strawberry pitter? How about the chip plate shaped like a sombrero that you got at the white elephant last year?  One of the best ways to simplify your life is to have a place for everything, and then put everything back in its place! It is definitely hard to get over that first hump of being able to let things go, but it can also be very freeing. Here is a small step: Taking 5 minutes a day to go through one drawer or closet and giving yourself permission to throw things out and give things away will leave you with the items that you really do treasure and the space to use them and treasure them.

But now let’s talk about the cleaning part. Take a look under your sink. Does it seem like you have 500 bottles of toxic chemicals to clean anything and everything from your oven to your bathroom mirror? Well here is a recipe for a spray you can walk around the house with and clean pretty much anything. You can make it with stuff you probably already have too!

Ingredients:

1 cup Vinegar

1 cup distilled water

1 empty spray bottle

Optional:

12-24 drops essential oils (lemon and tea tree oil are great for cleaning!)

Mix ingredients together in bottle. Spray on surface, let sit for 60 seconds or so, rinse and wipe clean.

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Grocery shopping

Grocery shopping, especially on a budget can be a daunting task. How do you make healthy choices for your family, keep your budget down and have time for all the other things on your to do list? Well here is a simple step: shop the outside of the grocery store. If you think about it, the perimeter of the grocery store is where you will find the produce section, the bakery, the deli and the meat counters. It is in the isles where you find the processed and packaged products. Here is a rule of thumb for you- the more packaging a product has, the more expensive it is going to be. For example, cut vegetables in a package with a cup of hummus will be more expensive than individual celery and carrots that you wash and cut yourself. There is a sense of convenience that you are paying for when you buy packaged food.

But try cooking from scratch a couple nights a week. Especially when you have things prepared ahead, you may find that it takes almost as much time an effort as a frozen pizza. Here is a recipe for an easy meal you can throw in the crock pot in the morning and enjoy for dinner when you come home.

Easy Chicken Fajitas

Ingredients:

  1. 2 pounds of boneless skinless chicken breasts, fat trimmed
  2. 2 bell peppers, sliced
  3. 1 small yellow onion, peeled and sliced
  4. 2 cloves of garlic, minced
  5. 1 tablespoon honey
  6. 1 tablespoon apple cider vinegar
  7. 1 tablespoon chili powder
  8. 2 teaspoons cumin
  9. 1 teaspoon paprika
  10. 1/4 teaspoon crushed red pepper flakes

TO COOK:

  1. The morning of cooking, put all ingredients into your crockpot and cook on “low” setting for 6 hours or until chicken is tender.
  2.  Shred chicken and serve with cooked onions and peppers on tortillas or with rice.

* adapted from the humbledhomemaker.com

Five Personalities of High School Teachers

Have you ever known someone who seemed like a crazy caricature of humanity? Chances are, then, that you’ve probably known a teacher. Teaching is a little bit of everything. To be successful, you have to be a good office manager, a solid administrator, a phenomenal customer service rep, a counselor, a coach, and an instructor, all rolled into one.

The most fun part of the job for me, though, is developing a classroom persona. Teachers come in all flavors of personality and the ones that high schoolers connect with the best are able to weave a natural friendliness seamlessly into their authority role. That looks a little bit different for everyone but I can recall several approaches that my high school instructors used that I’ve attempted to emulate in the classroom. Because it’s fun to make your kids think you’re crazy.

Without further adieu, here are five kinds of high school teachers worth aspiring to be:

 

1) The Ironically Aloof

I had this awesome history teacher named Mr. Rogers. (His full name is Roger Rogers—but it’s not his fault.) Everybody loved him because he stood outside the game of life as a bemused commentator. Education is rife with political nonsense and systemic lunacy, but if you can play along, documenting this and administrating that, knowing that most of it is kind of a joke, you can coast above the mess without getting sucked into it emotionally.

An occasional eye roll at bureaucracy is good for the soul.

Mr. Rogers would alternate a more serious, down-to-business tone with an attitude of ironic indifference. It communicated that the work we were doing was important but that it’s also important to be lighthearted.

The best part about running a class that way is that you get to inspire your students to do their jobs well without taking life too seriously. You model service to the bigger picture with a recognition that it’s okay to see imperfect systems for what they are. For further study, see Richard Dean Anderson’s performance as Jack O’Neil on Stargate SG-1. Best show of all time.

2) The Bill Nye the Science Guy

Okay, so Bill Nye wasn’t one of my high school teachers. But I feel like he was. All those videos they showed us, man. So many Bill Nye videos.

This persona takes intellectual insight on a subject and infuses it with passion. Think about a matter-of-fact presentation but bolster it with totally uninhibited excitement and zaniness. Your kids will really think you’ve gone off the deep end but they’ll remember everything you say. Especially if you walk really close to the ones who aren’t paying attention and repeat it over and over and over again, sealing the deal with a maniacal laugh.

Better still if you can safely and discriminately light something on fire in your classroom.

Probably best performed in small doses and never at parent conferences or professional development sessions. It tends to make grownups nervous. For further study, refer to Bill Nye the Science Guy in Bill Nye the Science Guy.

CHECK BACK SOON FOR THE REST OF THE STORY!

Life, Insurance and Life Insurance

This blog is going to be alot about Life Insurance, perhaps Life & Insurance. The plan is to make it an informative & fun read. Keep watch because it could be serious and to the point, certainly when it comes to life insurance. However, from time to time, you never know, it may have some off the wall comments on just life and not necessarily life insurance, nor insurance period.

 

Reynold Jones Insurance Group – 20+ Years

The key to our success is providing top-notch service, support, and training to our agents. When our agents succeed, we succeed!

Twenty plus years into this business and my personal and professional philosophies have remained constant. Which is, developing quality relationships, whether it is with individual agents, brokerage operations, companies and or individual clients. We take pride in helping our agents meet the life insurance needs of other clients. These beliefs are the foundation of who I am and what my company stands for.