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Going Gluten-Free

October 17, 2011 by Carey Jane Clark

Gluten-FreeIt is with great reluctance that we head down this path. In addressing some of our health issues, it seems I can’t escape the suggestion that our family go gluten-free (dairy free has also been suggested—for the most part we eliminated that years ago, but while we’ve been in Canada, where it’s a little easier to get our hands on cheese, I must admit to a little—no a lot—of cheating in this area.).

This is not the first time this course of action has been suggested. I have resisted for several reasons:

  1. We already eat a gluten-reduced diet, since we use flours like Kamut and Spelt that are low in gluten. That was something of an adjustment in the first place, but now something we’re very comfortable with (read: something we don’t want to change).
  2. I want to eat whole grains, and many gluten-free recipes aren’t whole grain or use grains/flours I am not excited about using, like potato and corn.
  3. It means saying goodbye to some favorite foods, and it seems unfair to “penalize” other members of the family whose diets don’t necessarily need altering.
  4. This kind of diet is very hard to sustain when we move back to China, so what’s the point of shifting everything? It’s a lot of learning and unlearning for the family cook. (Sigh.)
  5. Just how do you live without bread? Really. Some of the baked goods are easy enough to get rid of—they’re not necessary items. But say goodbye to toast AND sandwiches AND garlic bread…this seems a bit crazy, and hard to explain to a child. I’ve made attempts at baking gluten-free loaves before, and in China managed to gather up all the necessary ingredients (which meant importing my own xanthan gum), but all my loaves failed miserably. They looked glorious when I pulled them out of the oven, but moments later they crashed in the middle and were a disgusting mess. We sold our bread machine when we packed up for China, so I need old-fashioned bread-making recipes, and almost all the gluten-free baking recipes seem to be made for the breadmaker.
  6. I can’t help feeling there is a better way. Is eliminating most of a food group really the best way to handle this situation?

Note: I had planned this post to this point until this past weekend when we had two experiences that changed my heart on this matter:

  1. The kids and I made a successful and tasty gluten-free bread for home economics on Friday. I’ll share more about that tomorrow.
  2. On the weekend, we visited with some friends we haven’t seen since college. Another friend was present who is violently allergic to gluten, so the subject came up. The friends from college shared their experiences going gluten-free for two years to help their daughter, who was having difficulties with attention in school and behavior at home. The problems they described were severe, but we have seen shades of every issue they described in one of our children. JavaMan, one of the biggest holdouts in this whole gluten-free thing immediately became more supportive to the idea.

So we’re going gluten-free. It was tough on the weekend, because I’m still not thinking that way completely, and after church there was cake and I had arranged no substitute. With our motivation firmly in mind, though, we’re going to make this work.  I welcome suggestions and advice!

- Carey Clark

Counting my Blessings

October 5, 2011 by Carey Jane Clark

SunriseWe have been in Canada longer than we had originally planned. Some things that have happened since we came home have not been according to “the plan.” It’s good to recognize in the midst of all this, however, all the blessings we’ve experienced here that may never have happened if we’d been somewhere else. Today, I felt the need to count my blessings:

  • our kids had a chance to take Mandarin lessons through the Toronto Board of Education—cheaper than we would have been able to purchase them in China!
  • our kids were also able to have swimming lessons, ballet lessons, karate lessons—something that is logistically difficult for us in China—and all three are now well on their way to becoming good swimmers
  • we have been able to make great use of libraries for our homeschool curriculum and general reading. Sweetpea is now reading chapter books and loving it, Sprout is beginning to read as well
  • kids have had amazing nature study opportunities: snapping turtles, painted lady butterflies, monarch butterflies, roly-polies…
  • our kids have been able to connect with family: cousins, aunts and uncles, grandmas and grandpas—even great-grandma. We were even able to attend great-grandma’s 90th birthday celebrations
  • as a family, we had the chance to attend a wonderful conference in Texas last year that also turned into a great “car-schooling” experience
  • we have seen a lot more of Canada than I ever imagined being able to show our kids at this stage of their lives
  • with the help of extended family, I was able to take some time to (finally) finish my novel
  • I had a chance to attend a writer’s conference (yay!)
  • despite the miscarriages, I was here and not in a foreign country trying to negotiate the health care system in another language during these experiences, and it looks like I may finally be getting answers for my health situation
  • JavaMan has had opportunities to build his business and network with a ton of people in the coffee industry, moving us closer to our goal than we might have if we had remained in China
  • we are living in a place where we can see the sun rise! (That doesn’t happen often in a city with millions and millions of people and tall buildings everywhere.)

My list could go on and on. We are immeasurably blessed, and I never want to forget that.

- Carey Clark

Taking Smaller Bites

September 29, 2011 by Carey Jane Clark

3 in 30 buttonIf you’ve been tracking my 3 in 30 posts, you will notice that I’ve been slipping farther and farther behind on my monthly goals. For September, the goals I was working on were:

  1. Bible in 90 Days
  2. Revision of my novel (and drafting a proposal–snuck that one in there without telling you about it)
  3. Getting homeschool off to a good start.

You see what I’m doing, right? You probably saw it before I did. Three huge goals. No baby steps. No one day at a time stuff here. Just giant leaps of accomplishment.

Read: I-M-P-O-S-S-I-B-L-E.

Used to be, I would just skimp on sleep. But I’ve learned I really can’t function adequately as a mother, a wife–a person–on that kind of lifestyle.

I spent a bit of time this month looking over other people’s 3 in 30 goals. They’ve written things like “drink eight glasses of water a day.” You know, achievable, one-day-at-a-time type goals. Things I should be doing, but I’m not. Things I kick myself about every day.

I don’t really know how to do things on a smaller scale. Ask anyone who really knows me. But I need to learn. So wait until you see my goals for October. I hope I’ll impress you with their do-ableness. I’ve decided to take smaller bites.

- Carey Clark

 

A New Neighbor

September 28, 2011 by Carey Jane Clark

Baby Snapping Turtle- Carey Clark

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