Posts Tagged ‘Motherhood’
Wednesday, July 7th, 2010
Just when you think it can’t get any worse, it does—television, that is. One of the best decisions I made years ago for myself and for my family was to cut down on television drastically. At first this may seem like a daunting task, but with a few simple tips, parents find it’s much easier than they suspected it would be.
First of all, there is the matter of reducing the amount of TV your family watches to just a few shows a week. In order to do this, I recommend a family meeting to discuss your goals as a family and as individuals. Then take an honest look at what everyone is getting out of television. Everyone will agree that they should watch less TV and spend more time pursuing their own goals. With a meeting like this, your kids and spouse will be much more likely to go along with their new lifestyle of less TV because they’ll understand the reason behind it.
I highly recommend implementing a service such as TiVo ® to help keep TV watching to a minimum. After deciding on the reasons for watching less TV, each family member can decide on a handful of shows to watch together as a family, plus a personal favorite or two, to watch only during designated watching times—Friday nights or Sunday afternoons, for example.
Finally, come up with stimulating alternatives. Take the kids to the library or play board games. Have larger, longer family dinners at the table. Keeping everyone busy will get their minds off this missing element in their lives. I highly recommend using this time to get the kids to strengthen their reading skills and develop a strong interest in reading. Soon you might find that your family—gasp!—may prefer reading over watching TV.
Tina Turbin












Tags: Children, families, Family, family time, family tips, family togetherness, kids, Motherhood, Parents, television, tina turbin, tips
Posted in Advice, Author, Being a Mom, Children, Family, Health, High Quality of Life, Motherhood, Parents | 2 Comments »
Wednesday, June 30th, 2010
A trend that has taken off among baby boomers is foregoing malls and shopping centers in favor of online stores. In my busy work as an author, researcher, and humanitarian, as well as a mother, I find that shopping online is an invaluable, convenient tool in saving money and time and in obtaining hard-to-find items. You should give it a try as an alternative or addition to your regular shopping.
Tina Turbin












Tags: Baby Boomers, Family, internet, Motherhood, retirment, shopping, tina turbin
Posted in Advice, Author, Baby Boomers, Being a Mom, Children, Family, High Quality of Life, Managing Life, Motherhood, Organize, Uncategorized, Women's Issues | 1 Comment »
Wednesday, June 2nd, 2010
The average woman is probably tired because she is indeed not rested enough. With a better diet and a workout routine, as well as help from the family with the housework, you should be able to hit the sheets earlier or sleep in a little later, enjoying higher-quality sleep. Aim for as little as an extra fifteen minutes a day of sleep, for a total of at least seven hours.
With these tips, you should be enjoying higher energy levels in no time as well as quite a few other benefits. Getting others to do some chores and getting yourself some more sleep might at first seem make you feel a little guilty, but in the end, you’ll find that, with your extra get-up-and-go, you’ll be able to do your mom job even better.
Tina Turbin












Tags: Advice, Health, moms, Motherhood, sleep, tina turbin, Women's Health
Posted in Advice, Author, Baby Boomers, Being a Mom, Health, High Quality of Life, Managing Life, Motherhood, Natural Alternatives, Women's Health, Women's Issues | 3 Comments »
Wednesday, May 19th, 2010
Get your family to pitch in with chores around the house, especially the kids. Children may not be expert dishwasher loaders and you’ll always be able to do the chores better yourself, but learn to let it go and get them to help you out with some of the things they’ll be able to handle on their own, even if it’s just pairing together and folding socks. Studies show that children who participate in family chores have a higher chance of growing up more successful than other children. It will raise their feels of self-esteem, make them more competent, and it’ll give you some time to do the following energy-boosting tips.
Tina Turbin












Tags: Advice, Being a Mom, Children, Family, family togetherness, helpful tips, moms, Motherhood, tina turbin, tina turbin author, Tina Turbin researcher, Tina Turbin writer, tips
Posted in Advice, Being a Mom, Children, Family, Goals, Health, High Quality of Life, Managing Life, Motherhood, Organize, Parents, Women's Issues | 2 Comments »
Sunday, May 16th, 2010
I am a proud member of the NABBW ( National Association of Baby Boomer Women). Through this site many women are truly helped and many women are united in ways to helps others. Really no one understands us better than us. Being a woman is a unique and important role in life and society. We should to help one another!
Please enjoy my latest article on NABBW: http://www.nabbw.com/display_marticle.php?marticle_id=158
Tina Turbin












Tags: Advice, anti-aging, Baby Boomers, Health, Motherhood, Tina Turbin researcher, Tina Turbin writer, tips, women, Women's Health, women's issues
Posted in Advice, Baby Boomers, Being a Mom, Children, Cooking, Exercise, Family, Goals, Health, High Quality of Life, Managing Life, Motherhood, Natural Alternatives, Parents, References, Women's Health, Women's Issues | 2 Comments »
Wednesday, May 5th, 2010
I don’t know about you, but I’ve got a lot of stuff to get done every day, and I can’t afford to not have the energy for it. Mothers, who have one of the most energy-demanding jobs of all, which I know all about from my experience in raising three beautiful children, often ask me about natural ways to increase their get-up-and-go.
Get started on a high-energy lifestyle with changes to your diet. First of all, eat a real breakfast in the morning packed with protein! You may think you’re saving time by skimping on breakfast or you’ll insist that you’re not that hungry in the mornings, but I’m telling you that if you’re missing out on this meal, you’re missing out for the rest of the day on valuable energy.
Another important aspect of diet is increasing your daily intake of protein. Many women don’t get enough of this nutrient. Protein keeps you energized by sustaining your blood sugar level much longer than carbohydrate-packed foods. It also stimulates dopamine production, a neurotransmitter that keeps you more alert, and keeps your energy up by raising your metabolic rate.
Drinking enough water is also an essential way to keep your energy up. Some people often mistake signs of dehydration for fatigue. Your cells need water in order to function at their optimum level, and coffee or diet soda isn’t going to cut it. You should aim for eight glasses of water daily.
With these tips, you should be enjoying higher energy levels in no time as well as quite a few other benefits!
Tina Turbin












Tags: Advice, Baby Boomers, Being a Mom, energy, Health, helpful tips, moms, Motherhood, nutrition, sleep, tina turbin, tina turbin author, Tina Turbin researcher, Tina Turbin writer, tips, Women's Health
Posted in Advice, Author, Baby Boomers, Being a Mom, Exercise, Goals, Health, High Quality of Life, Managing Life, Motherhood, Natural Alternatives, Organize, Parents, Women's Health, Women's Issues | No Comments »
Wednesday, April 21st, 2010
What you gain by exercising on your overall well-being include a variety of advantages—increased relaxation and ability to handle stress, better sleep, a more positive mood, and boosted immune function. What’s more, it decreases your chances of developing serious health conditions, such as osteoporosis and cancer, and can lengthen your life span.
Studies show that overweight women are more likely to develop serious health risks such as heart disease, cancers, and stroke. By using up oxygen and causing the body to burn stored fat, exercise can help you maintain a normal weight. If you go for a four-mile walk four times a way, you’ll burn about 1,600 calories—about half a pound a week. After a year, this amounts to a loss of twelve pounds—twenty-four pounds after a year! Studies estimate that for each pound of muscle you add to your body, you will burn an additional thirty-five to fifty calories per day; an extra five pounds of muscle will burn about 175-250 calories a day, or an extra pound of fat every two to three weeks.
Another healthy benefit of regular exercise is stronger bones. Regular, moderate exercise, in particular weight-bearing exercises, increases bone mass, making bones stronger and making you less likely to develop osteoporosis and arthritis and suffer debilitating accidents such as falling as you age.
Finally, exercise can also help women deal with stress better and improve their mood. Studies show that regular exercise reduces the release of stress hormones and it produces chemical changes which affect your mood, reducing symptoms of depression and other psychological disorders. Research suggests that lower stress levels and a happier mood boosts immune function and lengthens the life span significantly.
It’s important for women to understand the benefits of exercise on their overall physical and mental well-being, and it’s easy to get started on implementing a regular exercise routine!
Tina Turbin












Tags: Advice, Baby Boomers, Exercise, Health, moms, Motherhood, nutrition, tina turbin, tina turbin author, Tina Turbin researcher, Women's Health, women's issues
Posted in Advice, Author, Baby Boomers, Being a Mom, Exercise, Goals, Health, High Quality of Life, Managing Life, Motherhood, Organize, Women's Health, Women's Issues | No Comments »
Wednesday, March 17th, 2010
As the mother of three grown children, I know how hard it can be, even with the best of intentions, to eat a healthy diet yourself and make healthy foods for the rest of the family. With just a few simple tips, you can totally change your eating habits for the better.
It all starts with grocery shopping, for which you must make like a Boy Scout and “be prepared.” It is best to create a menu for the week with breakfasts, lunches, dinners, and snacks determined for each day before you even make your grocery list. Choose healthy recipes that take thirty minutes or less to prepare, unless you know you’ll have more time available for cooking. There are many easy, healthy recipes available online which you can prepare in a snap. Make sure there are enough high-protein foods and snacks, which won’t leave you with low blood sugar and send you to high-fat and high-sugar snacks for a fast blood sugar boost.
Before hitting the grocery store, eat a big, filling meal, so you won’t deviate from your shopping list by picking out items that look good just because you’re hungry. You can’t binge on foods that aren’t good for you if you don’t have them in your home, after all. This will not only result in a healthier set of groceries, but will save you money, as well!
Tina Turbin












Tags: Advice, Being a Mom, children's health, Family, grocery shopping, Health, kids health, moms, Motherhood, tips, Women's Health, women's issues
Posted in Advice, Being a Mom, Children, Cooking, Gluten-Free, Health, High Quality of Life, Managing Life, Motherhood, Organize, Parents, Women's Health, Women's Issues | No Comments »
Wednesday, February 24th, 2010
If you’re like me, you’re probably alarmed to hear so much about the prevalence of “mental disorders,” particularly among children. It seems that every year there are more and more disorders are emerging, along with psychotropic medications to treat them. However, as the mother of three grown-up, mentally healthy children and with a strong background and experience in nutritional research, I counsel mothers to be careful before mistaking your children’s odd behavior with a mental illness. It turns out the symptoms of malnourishment and mental disorders are actually quite similar in children.
Even just the signs of a deficiency in B vitamins will sounds familiar to you as the symptoms of childhood mental disease. Deficiency in Vitamin B1 can result in fatigue, poor memory, irritability, and insomnia. A B2 deficiency can cause depression. Deficiencies of B3 may begin as depression, but untreated may progress to psychosis or even dementia. Deficiencies in Biotin may cause a variety of problems, including skin disorders and eczema, dandruff or hair loss, fatigue, depression, even hallucinations.
Children can also suffer from a classic case of low blood sugar. Studies show that breakfasts rich in protein keep the body’s blood sugar level higher and more stable than breakfasts such as, say, the American breakfast staple of sugar-packed cereals. Kids are bound to peak in the morning and then crash later in the day, exhibiting hyperactivity and lethargy during the school day.
The consequences of improperly diagnosing a mental illness instead of treating malnourishment in a child can be severe. If you care about your child and children in general, it is imperative that you and your child’s teachers learn the crucial difference between children’s mental disorders and inadequate nutrition.
Tina Turbin












Tags: Advice, alternative remedies, children's diet, children's health, children's nutrition, diet, education, educators, Family, kids health, kids misdiagnosed, kids nutrition, moms, Motherhood, natural remedies, nutrition, Parents, Schooling, teachers, tina turbin, tina turbin author, tina turbin humanitarian, Tina Turbin researcher, Tina Turbin writer, vitamins
Posted in Advice, Author, Being a Mom, Children, Cooking, Gluten-Free, Health, High Quality of Life, Home Schooling, Motherhood, Parents, Recipes | No Comments »
Wednesday, February 10th, 2010
Here is the moment you’ve been waiting for—your last child has moved out of the house and is now “on his own.” You can finally enjoy some “peace and quiet,” you tell yourself, some “me” time for yourself and “we” time with your spouse. Life after Mom-hood has begun!
Well, if you’re anything like me, the mother of three grown children, or like many other women out there who have raised their children and watched them leave home to start lives and families of their own, you may find that life after raising children has some definite challenges.
First of all, there is the matter of you. Who are you, after all? Many moms tend to identify themselves as moms, of course. Twenty-four hours a day, that’s what you’ve been doing for the past couple of decades. As a supporter of women and mothers, I know how important it is to take on this identity as a mother and I applaud any woman who does this. However, it is also important to have your own identity apart from motherhood.
This ties into the second challenge. Now what? Studies show how important it is to have goals and show a direct link between writing your goals down and achieving success. This one is up to you. What would you like to do now? Come up with one or more goals, and you will have something to serve as a foundation for your hard work and dedication in this new life after mom-hood. You know you are strong and capable—you successfully raised a child, after all!
Life after mom-hood is something you’ve been looking forward to for some time now, after all. You deserve to make it as rewarding as it was raising your children!
Tina Turbin












Tags: Advice, Baby Boomers, Goals, life after mom-hood, moms, Motherhood, Relationships, tina turbin author, tina turbin humanitarian, Tina Turbin researcher, Tina Turbin writer, tips, women's issues
Posted in Advice, Author, Baby Boomers, Being a Mom, Goals, Health, High Quality of Life, Managing Life, Motherhood, Organize, Parents, Relationships, Women's Issues | No Comments »