July 2014 Moms

UO Thursday!

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Re: UO Thursday!

  • Skeemer said:

    Parts of Alabama where I live were such awful weather conditions & the meteorologists never saw it coming.

    1) I'm tired of my Northern friends on Facebook laughing at how Southerners don't know how to drive in 2 inches of snow. We get maybe 3 snow flakes a year so of course we don't know how to drive in the snow. My kid wore a t-shirt on Christmas day because it was so dang hot. Also, it wasn't just snow. In many places it was dang near 1-2 inch sheets of ice on the roads. People were stranded for 6-12 hours at a time, 5 people in the state lost their lives & pregnant women delivered at home & in a car because they couldn't get the hospital. So shut up FB friends & have some compassion. To my knowledge, no one here laughed at you during hurricanes & etc that you weren't prepared for & if they did then shame on them.

    2) For crying outloud Southerners! We had one cold snap 2 weeks or so ago. Did you not think to put a case of water, dry shelf foods, flashlights & blankets/sleeping bags in your cars in case it happened again? If you didn't then I truly hope you learn something from this & put something in the trunk of your cars other than old Burger King food bags.

    UO over & now I want Burger King. *sigh*

    My 61 year old mom walked 4 miles to get to safety on Tuesday. It took my stepdad 7 hours to drive 20 miles.  My FIL has spent the last 2 nights sleeping at work.  A friend slept in a hotel lobby.  It sucked and I would like to throat punch the laughing northerners.  
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  • kleMcK said:
    @JEChester the back and forth is the reason this is one of the only threads I enjoy all week long. If everyone came in and posted an opinion and nobody commented on what other people had written, it would be a lot like standing in a room where everyone was talking and nobody was listening. Which is what a lot of the threads here end up being.


    I agree and really if people just spout off thoughts/opinions without any back and forth, explanation, or defense, no one ever learns anything. In life and not just on the The Bump.

    I like posts that have respectful and even intellectual exchange, even if it doesn't "change my mind" about something; sometimes it is nice to know what the other side is like. Unless the other side is crazy, then it is just nice to know who is crazy.
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  • JEChester said:

    @Lola825 I like to come on here to support those who need it, I like to laugh at all the people who have great senses of humor, and I really love those who are sharing their bumps.

    I would classify over opinionated as people who clog up some of these threads with their endless back-and-forth disagreements. Like I said my UO is they are exhausting, which is probably why I am not very involved here. It seems like some people are just trying to pick fights.


    Having a difference of opinion and staring said opinion does not make you over-opinionated. This forum wouldn't run if everyone just agreed with everything everyone said.

    Also, a different opinion and ensuing discussion does not make for "clogging" up a post. It's meant to open our eyes because perhaps you or another poster are wrong in a belief you once held and seeing someone else's point of you may help you see the other side of the discussion. I appreciate everyone's differing opinion because I don't know everything about everything and it helps me learn.
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  • jensavicci that is absolutely amazing. That makes me want to cry. What a sweet and smart young man you both have raised. 
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  • TheAnne said:
    iris427 said:
    bunkgirl said:
    quote snip
    while I agree with the overall point being made, it's not exactly the same comparison.  It would be more like if a Jewish employer had to purchase a Smithfield Ham plant for their employees to be able to directly buy their pork products from, if they wished. 
    But where does it end?  Say I work for a fitness center, can they deny my blood pressure medication because they don't believe in that type of medication?  The suggestion that the company is being "forced" to do something they don't believe is crap.  No one is telling the CEO to buy birth control for himself.  Nor is he paying for the actual birth control, he is paying an insurance company for medical insurance.

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    DS Born 4/7/2011
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  • iris427 said:
    bunkgirl said:
    Another I hope this isn't an UO but irks the shit out of me when I hear about it:  Corporations such as Hobby Lobby and others who want to refuse to supply birth control as part of their health insurance because "they don't believe in it."  Last time I checked Hobby Lobby does not have a right to push their religious whackadoodle beliefs on their employees so why on earth is it okay for them to have any decision about if an employee gets birth control or not?
     
    Same goes for religious organizations such as Catholic Charities, last time I checked Catholic Charities receives HUGE state grants to run adoption and foster care operations and they employ all sorts of people who do not have a Catholic background...stay out of your employees business and give them birth control.  If you don't want to do that...don't accept state and/or federal contracts.
    I completely agree.  Would it be OK for a Jehovah's Witness to tell their employees they can't have blood transfusions?  Would it be OK for a Jewish employer to say his employees can't buy pork with their salary?  I'm really worried about what SCOTUS is going to say about the Hobby Lobby case.  And how convenient that all these religious beliefs never seem to affect men's health care, just women's.  
    I'm relatively sure that vasectomy is frowned upon by the Catholic church, and thus would be something they wouldn't want to include in their insurance benefits right along with tubal ligation and other forms of birth control.
    Pass the sheet cake.

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  • TKT17 said:
    I didn't realize ranch dressing was unpopular. One of my group of friends' favorite sayings is that life is too short for fat-free ranch! Also, UO, I enjoy teen pop stars far more once they become kinda train wreck like. I know it's terrible to say but Amanda Bynes' Twitter during her meltdown was one of my favorite pastimes.

    I was naive in thinking there where ranch haters out there until I met DH. My group of friends from college dipped everything in ranch; one friend would have croutons and ranch for lunch if there was nothing better in the cafeteria.

    I too enjoy seeing the tween train wreck. I was more excited than I care to admit when I heard that Justin Bieber was arrested because that's just the start of the train wreck.
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  • TheAnne said:
    bunkgirl said:
    TheAnne said:
    iris427 said:
    bunkgirl said:
    quote snip
    while I agree with the overall point being made, it's not exactly the same comparison.  It would be more like if a Jewish employer had to purchase a Smithfield Ham plant for their employees to be able to directly buy their pork products from, if they wished. 
    But where does it end?  Say I work for a fitness center, can they deny my blood pressure medication because they don't believe in that type of medication?  The suggestion that the company is being "forced" to do something they don't believe is crap.  No one is telling the CEO to buy birth control for himself.  Nor is he paying for the actual birth control, he is paying an insurance company for medical insurance.
    if you read my reply, I'm not defending any of it.  I'm just saying that the comparison is pretty skewed the way it was presented and gave a better example in the PP's terms.  If you are going to argue a point (which I totally appreciate and respect people doing) then you have to do it in a way that is accurate or else it just dilutes your own stance.
    I completely agree, which is why I brought in the fitness center example, that picking and choosing what medical care a company "believes in" is not a wise approach to health care.  Denying women (or men) safe and affordable birth control is a major health concern.  

    Also I'm not trying to run away from a discussion...but I have to go meet with my clients now.

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    DS Born 4/7/2011
    DD Born 7/14/2014
  • My UO is that I hate FB birthdays. I think it's crap when people get a bunch of birthday wishes and respond with a status thanking everyone, but there were so many that they couldn't respond individually. If someone takes the time to wish me a happy birthday, you bet your britches that I will take the time to thank them individually. If they said it to my face, I wouldn't stand back and make an announcement to all people around me, thanking the group. Why would you think it's ok to do that in a different forum.

    I have zero idea how much time it took me on my birthday Saturday, but whenever we were in the car with DH driving or sitting on the couch, I was thanking people indivisible. Because it's polite.
  • jessa8907 said:
    This might bring some crazies out. My UO: (which I hope isn't really a UO) I see absolutely no reason why gay marriage is not legal in the entire US. Religious reasons? Nope, not valid.


    For serious. If you don't like it then don't do it. I often talk about what life would be like in "The People's Republic of Sarah" the first two things I would do is legalize gay marriage and marajuana (sp?).

    I know for a lot of Christians (not ALL, but a lot that I know, keeping in mind I live and grew up in the Bible belt) the actual word marriage is the hang up. I don't agree with it, but I hear people harp on it all the time.

  • The mayo talk reminded me of this Eggs Benedict, poached eggs and anything with wet and not fully cooked egg is DISGUSTING! Just thinking about it makes me want to vomit all over this phone.
    My brain cannot process not loving eggs benny!

  • @ashcross @INmommy871278

    Thank you guys! I appreciate that. My minions are pretty spectacular if I do say so myself :)
  • TKT17 said:
    I'm not sure this is categorized as an UO but I'm struggling with the idea of prioritizing relationships once the baby comes. Everything I read says that the baby comes and you are too tired/stressed to make time for your SO. I really hope that I can continue to make my marriage a top priority, because as someone who grew up with parents who largely ignored then hated each other, I believe it had an impact on my relationships.

    I freak out and become a sobbing mess on a biweekly basis wondering what the fuck I have done because of this exactly.  I think kids ruined my parents' marriage (among other things, of course, like working together in the home and being together 24/7).  I'm terrified of losing my best friend and also terrified that sex and intimacy will become a chore like it has for so many seasoned parents.

    I am in the throes of one of these periods right now, and right now I'm panicking.
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  • hgtvmomhgtvmom member
    edited January 2014


    jessa8907 said:

    This might bring some crazies out.

    My UO: (which I hope isn't really a UO) I see absolutely no reason why gay marriage is not legal in the entire US. Religious reasons? Nope, not valid.




    For serious. If you don't like it then don't do it. I often talk about what life would be like in "The People's Republic of Sarah" the first two things I would do is legalize gay marriage and marajuana (sp?).

    I know for a lot of Christians (not ALL, but a lot that I know, keeping in mind I live and grew up in the Bible belt) the actual word marriage is the hang up. I don't agree with it, but I hear people harp on it all the time.

    ----- stupid quote issues ------

    I agree with this - the word "marriage" has a Biblical origin. I think we could take a lot of wind out of the sails of religious zealots if people would agree to 2 terms. Have a "civil union" that is available to anyone and everyone - why would atheists want to go through a religious ceremony (for example). Then, save "marriage" for the SS who want the religious aspect. All the same rights. All the same abilities.

    The religious right still wouldn't be happy, but they wouldn't have as much to fight about.

  • For the record, I am fully in support of gay marriage and took birth control most of my life, so don't think I'm coming out of Christian-crazy right field.  I was raised Catholic and am now a Methodist.

    My disagreement with the fitness center analogy (which I would have quoted but it was too long and I know that irks people) is that whether or nor a fitness center "believes" in high cholesterol medication has nothing to do with freedom of religion.  That's one of our founding principles - and yes, that means freedom of religion for everyone.  It also means that the government shouldn't force a religious institution to do something that goes against their fundamental beliefs, even if other people don't agree with them.

    Plus, if you don't like the way Catholic entities handle their health care . . . well, don't work for them.

    /end legal rant


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  • jessa8907 said:
    jessa8907 said:
    This might bring some crazies out. My UO: (which I hope isn't really a UO) I see absolutely no reason why gay marriage is not legal in the entire US. Religious reasons? Nope, not valid.


    For serious. If you don't like it then don't do it. I often talk about what life would be like in "The People's Republic of Sarah" the first two things I would do is legalize gay marriage and marajuana (sp?).

    I know for a lot of Christians (not ALL, but a lot that I know, keeping in mind I live and grew up in the Bible belt) the actual word marriage is the hang up. I don't agree with it, but I hear people harp on it all the time.

    Here is the problem for me...

    Yes, the United States may have been founded on Christian principles, but it was also founded on freedom of religion. There are MANY other religions practiced in the US besides Christianity (a few who would still be against gay marriage and a few who most definitely aren't) not to mention the fact that there are several sects of Christianity who don't care at all about the gay marriage debate.

    The point is, just because it is legal doesn't mean Christians have to agree with it and it doesn't mean that churches have to perform marriages for gay couples. I mean, shit, they can refuse to marry straight couples if they want.

    It's just so ego-centrist of them to continue using the religion argument. I'm Christian and I don't like how the loud-mouths make the rest of us look.
    Preachin to the choir sister.

  • My uo

    1) I hate Kathy lee ....I think she is so annoying and full of herself...she always plays her own songs on her show, which are horrible. I do like hoda(spelling?)

    2) I hate the combination of chocolate and mint.
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  • For the record, I am fully in support of gay marriage and took birth control most of my life, so don't think I'm coming out of Christian-crazy right field.  I was raised Catholic and am now a Methodist.

    My disagreement with the fitness center analogy (which I would have quoted but it was too long and I know that irks people) is that whether or nor a fitness center "believes" in high cholesterol medication has nothing to do with freedom of religion.  That's one of our founding principles - and yes, that means freedom of religion for everyone.  It also means that the government shouldn't force a religious institution to do something that goes against their fundamental beliefs, even if other people don't agree with them.

    Plus, if you don't like the way Catholic entities handle their health care . . . well, don't work for them.

    /end legal rant
    I just have a hard time thinking of a for-profit company as a religious institution. Also, they are doing it based on factually wrong information, since the founder of the company said that he believes them to be abortion-inducing drugs. What's going to stop him from then saying no to vaccines because he believes they cause autism? 
    Oh, sorry, I wasn't defending Hobby Lobby.  I was talking about the church institutions themselves - the Catholic charities and whatnot.  Sorry for the lack of clarity.  


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  • SaraRL07 GIRL!!! mint chocolate chip is my jam. you crazy!! lol
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  • CFL>NFL

    I <3 you Ash!  It sucks that I can only love tit this post once!

    My UO for today: I hate Nutella with a passion!  But will eat peanut butter straight from the jar with a spoon (although my preferred mode of peanut butter delivery right now however is a frozen Coffee Crisp, mmmmm... drool).

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  • hgtvmomhgtvmom member
    edited January 2014
    iris427 said:


    Pup4gdb said:


    jessa8907 said:

    This might bring some crazies out.

    My UO: (which I hope isn't really a UO) I see absolutely no reason why gay marriage is not legal in the entire US. Religious reasons? Nope, not valid.




    For serious. If you don't like it then don't do it. I often talk about what life would be like in "The People's Republic of Sarah" the first two things I would do is legalize gay marriage and marajuana (sp?).

    I know for a lot of Christians (not ALL, but a lot that I know, keeping in mind I live and grew up in the Bible belt) the actual word marriage is the hang up. I don't agree with it, but I hear people harp on it all the time.

    I agree with this - the word "marriage" has a Biblical origin. I think we could take a lot of wind out of the sails of religious zealots if people would agree to 2 terms. Have a "civil union" that is available to anyone and everyone - why would atheists want to go through a religious ceremony (for example). Then, save "marriage" for the SS who want the religious aspect. All the same rights. All the same abilities.

    The religious right still wouldn't be happy, but they wouldn't have as much to fight about.


    So only religious people get the super special real marriage, and everyone who is atheist or secular or doesn't meet the requirements of the church/temple/whatever has to settle for the other thing that no one wants?  How about instead of this separate but equal stuff, we just have equality?

    ***** quotes hate me today ******

    Not my intent at all. I just meant that if we call "getting married" something other than "married" the religious right wouldn't have the argument they use now. If you want that union to happen in a church setting or have it a religious ceremony, fine. If you don't, fine. Everyone gets the same. Call yourself "married" or whatever you want to call yourself. But I think taking the religious term out of what is basically a legal transaction of sorts would cause less fight against gay "marriage."

    I guess I didn't express that well the first time.

  • kmawb said:
    CFL>NFL

    I <3 you Ash!  It sucks that I can only love tit this post once!

    My UO for today: I hate Nutella with a passion!  But will eat peanut butter straight from the jar with a spoon (although my preferred mode of peanut butter delivery right now however is a frozen Coffee Crisp, mmmmm... drool).

    Coffee Crisp is my jam, yo. My MIL used to have to travel to Toronto for work on the regular. Every time she went she brought back 1) Coffee Crisp 2) Tim Horton's Coffee and 3) Joe Fresh pj snap up onesies for DD.

    I love Coffee Crisp and I wish we had it in the states! :((

  •  
      -------------completely ruined quote--------
    I think no matter what book it's written in, no matter who it's defined by and no matter how it's done, marriage is and always will be what those ppl perceive it as. Some see it as religious, others don't. But I don't think we should go about categorizing it into certain different special groups. "This for you and that for them", you know? That's how prejudice and discrimination starts. It's a whole "mine is better than yours" situation that can get ugly and quick. I think marriage by any name should just be marriage. The coming together of people.

    Thank you @jensavicci you said what I was trying to say only you did a better job of it! :)

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