Earth "Week"

Right, I know it’s really Earth Day but it seems that everything and everyone around me are making ways for “deals” or festivals that begin Earth Day a full 5 or 6 days in advance. Not that that’s a bad thing, we should all be more aware of what we are doing to help or hurt the environment around us. Tragically I think it’s mostly hype. The green movement has rocketed thousands of companies to put in to effect seemingly green or green stamped practices to get you to buy their stuff.

Really it comes down to us. Do I use cloth diapers? No. So can I preach? Maybe not. (If biodegradable ones weren’t so dang expensive I might buy those!)

But it’s always a good time to think about what you’re doing. Definitely think about what you’re emitting and if you really need that light on or to go through those seven rolls of paper towels in a week (I realize that might be a tad extreme but that message goes to mostly men who seem not to recognize how to conserve any form of paper product).

I am thinking of going completely chemical free on my cleaning products. I do buy the earth friendly type but I know I could totally make my own and be less at risk for baby girl to accidentally drink something that could potentially have her in the hospital.

So at least have a thought this week about what you can do, and try to avoid the marketing messages if at all possible. (No, if you want me to drive my car across the city and then give you money for something I don’t need then it’s not a green initiative that’s really making a difference. It’s probably just an indulgence to Americans). ;)

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Have a little Compassion…

Name: Jahidul Islam (BD2190180)

Birthday: November 10, 2002    Age: 7

Gender: Male

Region: South Asia

Country: Bangladesh

Program: Kaunia Child Sponsorship Program

Personal and Family Information:
 Jahidul lives with his father and his mother. At home, duties include carrying water, buying or selling in the market and caring for animals. His father is sometimes employed as a seller in the market and his mother maintains the home. There are 2 children in the family.

As part of Compassion’s ministry, Jahidul participates in Christian instruction. He is also in pre-school where his performance is average. Soccer, singing and art are his favorite activities.

Please remember Jahidul in your prayers. Your love and support will help him to receive the assistance he needs to grow and develop.

Community and Project Information:
Jahidul lives on the plains of Kaunia, home to approximately 5,500 residents. Typical houses are constructed of dirt floors, bamboo walls and corrugated iron roofs. The primary ethnic group and language is Bengali.

The regional diet consists of beans, rice and lentils. Common health problems in this area include viral hepatitis, typhoid fever, asthma and malnutrition. Most adults in Kaunia are unemployed but some work as day laborers and earn the equivalent of $26 per month. This community needs health care facilities, educational materials, schools, employment opportunities and income-generating activities.

Your sponsorship allows the staff of Kaunia Child Sponsorship Program to provide Jahidul with Bible teaching, nutritious food, medical treatment, health and hygiene education, safe drinking water, recreational activities, picnics, tutoring, uniforms, shoes and academic support. The center staff will also provide meetings for the parents or guardians of Jahidul.

Please consider and pray about being a part of Jahidul’s life. You could be a huge difference in the life of this child. Click HERE to sponsor Jahidul. This child has been waiting for a sponsor for more than six months. Credit card payment is required to ensure that this child’s wait ends today. Help make a difference in the life of this child, who is anxiously waiting for a sponsor.

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Yesterday

I had a miniature breakdown. I had to admit to my husband and myself what has been going on.

Pregnancy is not easy for everyone. While a lot of women love being pregnant some women really find it a time of struggle and low self worth.

I am the latter. I am lucky though. I have good days and bad. It is not all darkness. And I can see a happiness with bringing a new life into this world. I have great people around me and most of all a great God.

It is time to start turning over my emotion and my doubt to him. Thank you for all your prayers and support during this time.

And thank you most of all for keeping my husband sane. He needs the support as well since he is living with a crazy preggo. ;)

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When life ends…

There is so much emotion and confusion. How does life go on the same? It doesn’t.

But, the one thing I have been reminded of in the past several days is how living your life truly out of love (the only unconditional kind- God’s) can leave a deep impact on the many people you meet. Even something as simple as a hug, the kind that is genuine, nothing wanted or intended by it. It is time really time, for me to start living fully in and out of Christ’s love, partially is just not enough. It doesn’t help me and it doesn’t help others. There’s no how to for turning over this leaf. But there is a direction and a willingness of spirit that I feel I finally have. It is true that we can fight or succumb to the leading of God through the Holy Spirit. And I really don’t want to fight anymore. Any piece of me that I have been trying to hold onto is just not worth keeping. I would rather leave an impact of Christ’s love than my own tenacity…

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One Year Without…

I am joining my husband in this beginning on Monday. What is One Year Without? It is a movement designed to give up an addiction for one year in order to take that money and give it somewhere that is really needed. The money will go directly to Compassion International’s Most Needed Fund. To learn more about Compassion check them out at www.compassion.com. Read more about One Year Without here, where it all started.

I have had a really hard time deciding what to give up. There is no food that I feel I can eliminate while being pregnant (wouldn’t be fair to the baby), :) so I am choosing to give up what I am MOST uncomfortable with anyway. It will probably save me a lot of money, which in turn will help me to give even more to Compassion. I am giving up shopping at Target. Since living near a Super Target it has been very easy for me to pop in buy a new shirt (that I don’t need) or shop their grocery section, make-up section or just browse (again for things I don’t need). It is teetering on serious addiction. It shouldn’t be!!

Children all over the world are going without food, and it’s twisting my insides to not have Target. How horrible is that?!

HOW CAN YOU HELP??! So glad you asked. ;) For this self challenge (going one year without something so near and dear to my heart) I am asking you to give just $1 a week(that’s $52 total) to encourage me. I will send a monthly update so you know if I am continuing success. If you support me in this you will not only be helping Compassion with your $1 but mine as well. If you can’t give $1 a week you can give $1 a month, whatever you feel lead to do. If you can give more I am sure Compassion will gratefully accept. In return I will post you on my blogroll and add your name to the following list. I am going to try to snag my mom to get the #1 spot!! To add yourself to my list of cheerleaders and pledge whatever you would like leave me a comment or send me an email at underwoodreads@gmail.com. I will get back to you in a couple days. This challenge begins Tuesday, July 6th. WOO HOO.

If I at any point feel like I’m not challenged in what I’m giving up, I will drop something else, until I feel challenged.

You can check out my husband, who is giving up energy drinks (his MAIN SQUEEZE vice) here, and the movement that started all of this here. Feel free to join in yourself!!

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World Day Against Child Labor

As Christ followers, lovers of humanity, simply anything we are that values human rights and decency, we have to pay attention to the world around us and make sure we are not doing anything to cause someone else harm. There is no love in that.

I will be honest. In the past 30 days I have eaten an m&m. Probably more than one. While I’m not a huge consumer of the Hershey, Mars and Nestle products, I have been known to partake. Yet for the past several years these companies have known their products were contributing to child labor and done little to nothing to stop it. Makes you think about popping another m&m in your mouth doesn’t it? Such a little piece of chocolate, such a huge implication. What if they could see you? What if you could see them? Would it make a difference? I truly hope so.

If you do not support their actions, please go HERE and sign to let these companies know how you feel. Without consumer action nothing will be done. To find other chocolate companies that do work to protect human rights you can click here.

We as individuals are the difference makers, and sometimes we have to stand for those who simply can’t.


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Clean Water

Most of the world’s hunger and spread of disease is caused merely by lack of clean water. Dirty water and sanitation problems lead to the rapid spread of disease and malnourishment, especially in undeveloped areas. Please support the clean water bill by letting your Senator know you care about this. Simply click here and the rest is easy.

For more information go to One.org or watch the video featured on the link. Every person can make a difference, being active is always better than being silent, even if we feel like no one hears. Believe me, I know this campaign has its issues. But it’s getting the word out, so help spread it.

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Think Pink

(Or green, purple, yellow, blue….I am really okay with any color scheme). But, Andy and I are having a girl! Woohoo! Of course I would be happy with a boy or girl, but I feel that the world is as it should be.

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"Illegal Immigrants are Paying a Lot More Taxes Than You Think"

I found this article and wanted to share. Although it was written over two years ago I think that with the changing climate towards immigration it holds an even stronger message today. Article by Shikha Dalmia.

Denying public services to people who pay their taxes is an affront to America’s bedrock belief in fairness. But many “pull-up-the-drawbridge” politicians want to do just that when it comes to illegal immigrants.

The fact that illegal immigrants pay taxes at all will come as news to many Americans. A stunning two-thirds of illegal immigrants pay Medicare, Social Security and personal income taxes. Yet, nativists like Congressman Tom Tancredo, R-Colo., have popularized the notion that illegal aliens are a colossal drain on the nation’s hospitals, schools and welfare programs — consuming services that they don’t pay for.

In reality, the 1996 welfare reform bill disqualified illegal immigrants from nearly all means-tested government programs including food stamps, housing assistance, Medicaid and Medicare-funded hospitalization. The only services that illegals can still get are emergency medical care and K-12 education.

Nevertheless, Tancredo and his ilk pushed a bill through the House criminalizing all aid to illegal aliens — even private acts of charity by priests, nurses and social workers. Potentially, any soup kitchen that offers so much as a free lunch to an illegal could face up to five years in prison and seizure of assets.

The Senate bill that recently collapsed would have tempered these draconian measures against private aid. But no one — Democrat or Republican — seems to oppose the idea of withholding public services. Earlier this year, Congress passed a law that requires everyone who gets Medicaid — the government-funded health care program for the poor — to offer proof of U.S. citizenship so we can avoid “theft of these benefits by illegal aliens,” as Rep. Charlie Norwood, R-Ga., puts it.

But, immigrants aren’t flocking to the United States to mooch off the government. According to a study by the Urban Institute, the 1996 welfare reform effort dramatically reduced the use of welfare by undocumented immigrant households, exactly as intended. And another vital thing happened in 1996: the Internal Revenue Service began issuing identification numbers to enable illegal immigrants who don’t have Social Security numbers to file taxes.

One might have imagined that those fearing deportation or confronting the prospect of paying for their safety net through their own meager wages would take a pass on the IRS’ scheme. Not so. Close to 8 million of the 12 million or so illegal aliens in the country today file personal income taxes using these numbers, contributing billions to federal coffers. No doubt they hope that this will one day help them acquire legal status — a plaintive expression of their desire to play by the rules and come out of the shadows.

What’s more, aliens who are not self-employed have Social Security and Medicare taxes automatically withheld from their paychecks. Since undocumented workers have only fake numbers, they’ll never be able to collect the benefits these taxes are meant to pay for. Last year, the revenues from these fake numbers — that the Social Security administration stashes in the “earnings suspense file” — added up to 10 percent of the Social Security surplus. The file is growing, on average, by more than $50 billion a year.

Beyond federal taxes, all illegals automatically pay state sales taxes that contribute toward the upkeep of public facilities such as roads that they use, and property taxes through their rent that contribute toward the schooling of their children. The non-partisan National Research Council found that when the taxes paid by the children of low-skilled immigrant families � most of whom are illegal — are factored in, they contribute on average $80,000 more to federal coffers than they consume.

Yes, many illegal migrants impose a strain on border communities on whose doorstep they first arrive, broke and unemployed. To solve this problem equitably, these communities ought to receive the surplus taxes that federal government collects from immigrants. But the real reason border communities are strained is the lack of a guest worker program. Such a program would match willing workers with willing employers in advance so that they wouldn’t be stuck for long periods where they disembark while searching for jobs.

The cost of undocumented aliens is an issue that immigrant bashers have created to whip up indignation against people they don’t want here in the first place. With the Senate having just returned from yet another vacation and promising to revisit the stalled immigration bill, politicians ought to set the record straight: Illegals are not milking the government. If anything, it is the other way around.

You can find the article and more about the author here.

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Oh the woes of the Swine Flu

Parents are calling the school.

Freaking out.

Asking “What’s the plan? Tell us our children will be safe. Tell us you have a plan!!! You must.”

I haven’t seen anyone crying for the lost in Mexico. Trying to send supplies or meds. I am sure some medical organization out there is doing its part, but so far America has chosen fear, not empathy, for our Mexican counterparts.

We have the vaccines, we have the “containment procedures,” we have NO deaths yet. So let’s pray not only for our children, but for those lost in Mexico as well. Not only for our families, but the families of all those who are hurting or will be hurt from this pandemic.

And I’m not saying I’m not slightly scared. I am. I hate needles. And supposedly my job goes from being teacher to potential shot giver if this thing swings out of control. So let’s continue our prayers, but not forget anyone in the process.

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