Christmas In The Thimble Home

Heh heh. Like my new do? I'm sorry, I just couldn't restrain myself from the tomfoolery... katiesanta

I'm never really sure what the acceptable time frame is to put up the Christmas tree...but people seem to get really grouchy about such stuff. I, personally, love seeing all the Christmas stuff in the stores before Halloween. All the longer to be excited! Right? I'm being serious.

Growing up on vast plot of our very own Alaskan land, we have a plethora of wonderful Christmas tree candidates to choose from. Only the very best make the cut. My older brother and I have always been particularly picky about our family Christmas trees. It must be at least 12 feet tall, have no gaps in the branches, be the correct girth and of course, be absolutely perfect in general. However, as fun as it getting the tree, I always do feel a bit remorseful when chopping it down. Though, I've never really expressed this. We've always had a real Christmas tree from the property. One year, my dad merely suggested getting a fake tree and...let's just say the topic was never brought up again.

Getting the family Alaskan Christmas tree went a little something like this...

...the entire family dons the proper winter apparel (dogs included, Bob must have his blue winter bandana on) and either trudges or snowmachines (not snowmobiles...I do not live in The States) through the woods to find the tree. Sometimes we scout it out by foot earlier in the week. If we go by snowmachine, us little ones ride in the sled. Little ones being pretty much everyone but my dad, who obviously has to drive the snowmachine (it's machine in Alaska, not mobile). Once we find the tree we take a hand saw, or a chainsaw if we my dad is feeling extra-non-Christmasy and cut it down, tie it to the sled and bring it home. 

But now...

...I've been struggling with what to do for Todd and my little thimble of a home. Currently we have nothing. Sure, I strung Christmas lights around a few of the trees outside the house, have a felted mistletoe from West Elm hanging from the ceiling, I wrapped up all the gifts I've bought so far, and of course I am listening to my Christmas music non-stop, but it doesn't feel like enough. When we walk down the street, and I see the neighbors with their beautiful, festive trees up and all decorated and glowing, my Christmas spirit feels insufficient, at best. It's like my Christmas-O-Meter is hanging down around low-to-empty. Waaah!

Todd told me this weekend we could find ourselves a tree, but I don't want to chop one down. It makes me too sad! I know, go ahead and laugh, but it really does! And the idea of having a fake tree, oh god, is almost more upsetting than having to chop down a real one. My friend told me that in Oregon, her family would buy their Christmas tree like you would if you were to plant it. They would keep it in a bucket which would be covered with fabric and then after Christmas was over, they would plant it outside! Of course, I thought this was perfect. I will have to look into it and see if we have something similar up here in Alaska. 

However, while fiddling around on BlogLovin' (because where else would I be farting around at right now? I told you I am obsessed) I found this photo.

Source: Planete Deco

What a great idea! Why hadn't I thought of it before? Our tiny thimble home doesn't allow for much of anything, really. It's awfully tiny. Our coffee pot is in the entryway/laundry room/storage room/coatroom/dressing room. And our living room is a tiny loft. The entire house can be partitioned in two if the fridge door is opened at a 90 degree angle. Yes. It's that kind of small. But it's home. For now. See part it for yourself, here.

Spruce branch clippings in glass vases will give the smell of Christmas and even the thimble home can accommodate them! They can even go in all the rooms to seriously infuse that pinetree smell. And the best part is, an entire tree doesn't have to go! 

"What about mah DECK-O-RAY-SHUNS!?" you may questionably shout. Never fear! Just clip larger branches to accommodate them. Ah yes. 

Place on a table or in a corner and the presents can go below! It's not an actual Christmas tree, but it's something at least, and I think it might just have to do this year. We might get some lights to go around the frame of a window for some twinkle, too. Who says you have to be traditional? If you have a small space or just want more Christmas spirit infused into your home (more, we want more!), I hope this has inspired you!

Hurry for the Holidays!

Wishing you and yours a kind and peaceful start to the Holidays.

Cheers!

Easier To Crush

Follow my blog with Bloglovin

So, apparently I'm not up on all the cool blogy type of stuff. I just discovered Blog Lovin'! I know, right? It's a little embarrassing. I've been getting all the blogs I subscribe to in my email and it's getting a little cray cray up in there.

I'm going to have to follow them all on Blog Lovin' now! That will keep them all neat, nice, and orderly. Just how a square such as myself likes them. You can follow any blog, just search for it at Blog Lovin'. To make it easy to follow Produce On Parade, I've installed a follow me button link at the top of the post!

Pretty cool, huh? If you have a blog or if you're just a blog fan, are there any neat apps or widgets that you find interesting or helpful? I had one reader tell me it would be neat to have a map of my readers. I thought that would be pretty cool, but I'm still looking for that one!

Cheers! Happy Hump Day!

Happy World Vegan Day

Produce On Parade

Produce On Parade

Yes my vegan friends. It's our day.

So, my hippies compadres, left-wing nutbags, granola-crunching crunchers, rabbit food eaters, Whole Foods shoppers, bleeding hearts, crazed-animal lovers, tree huggers, green-energy supporters, Prius and Subaru driving peeps, tofu gobblers, and nooch eating maniacs, (yes, I happen to be all of the above) gather yourselves up because it's time to celebrate. Come on, raise your stereotyped fists in vegan pride! 

I decided to share a very small tidbit on my thoughts with regards to being vegan, as they apply to me, mostly. Also, after the jump read a most compelling and irrefutable article written on veganism and social consciousness by Ali Seiter. In addition, watch the annual food and health review by Micheal Greger M.D. from nutrtionfacts.org. I don't care if you hate me and you hate vegans. You're obligated to inform yourself. I'm imploring you.   

 A Very Small Tidbit of My Thoughts with Regards to Being Vegan

Choosing to be so different from the vast ocean of omnivore driven people can definitely be challenging. Whether you've been vegan since before it was a fad, are just starting out (like me!) or have yet to make that journey, I hope you're met with open-minded people. People that are interested in bettering themselves, people that are not bitter because they lack the courage to change, people that want to help. That's my biggest wish. I find that I do not come across these people as much as I'd hope to. Sometimes I get discouraged. Often times I get teased and made fun of (what's new, am I right). Occasionally, people will get surprisingly spiteful and extraordinarily rejecting with regards to just...me choosing to live a different path! It's nothing new, really, in general terms of everyday life. People reject what they don't know or can't understand.

I've realized that being vegan seems to have an amplifying effect on the good and the bad in people. Some people will do everything they can to help you with the challenges of being vegan. Some will even decide to make that journey with you! Others, however, will put you down any chance they get. They'll make you feel like a total weirdo, an outcast, like something's wrong with you. I find the worst are the people are those who try act like you must be soooo much more moral and better than them and everyone else. It's true, I sometimes step on my vegan soapbox in my real life but I mostly try to keep it to this blog. People that are interested can always find out more here and that way I'll never be accused of being preachy. I do try to offer information where I can though. Like a little vegan ninja. And I certainly don't think I'm better than anyone else. 

However, despite of all that, becoming vegan has been one of the most rewarding, self-respecting and peace-inducing things I've ever done. Period. It changed my outlook on life, my values, and my yearning for knowledge. I really like to research stuff so I guess that makes sense. I'm happier, healthier and most importantly, I finally feel aligned with myself. I know that sounds weird but I find it being a common theme among other vegans. You never think your life could change that much until it happens to you!

Produce On Parade

(I took these photos the other day, and they were too pretty not to share)

Alright, enough of my blabbering. The video. If you haven't visited nutrtionfacts.org, which I am usually droning on and on about and how amazing it is (be freed from ignorance), then for the love of intelligence, go visit it. This isn't the dark age people, information can be found if you're willing to look, but most of all...willing to change. Damn, I just made that up. That's a good quote. Anyways, Michael Greger M.D. is a "physician, author and professional speaker who scours the world's nutrition research to bring you informative daily videos and articles." He makes annual review videos that compile all the most notable research he's discovered and presents it. Below is a link to the 2013 video review, as well as the 2012 one.

NutritionFacts.org Annual Review Videos

2013: More Than an Apple a Day: Combating Common Diseases

2012: Uprooting the Leading Causes of Death

These are exceptional videos, and I cannot recommend them enough. 

And now for the article. Ali hosts the blog, Farmers Market Vegan. It is a fantastic treasure trove of ethical articles for animal rights, inspiring reads, philosophical tidbits and all kinds of other wonderfulness.  

Presented with permission from the author, Ali Seiter of Farmers Market Vegan

Cultivating Social Consciousness by Removing Animals from the Dinner Plate

            Fostering a just food system hinges upon our ceasing to exploit and commodify non-human animals for human consumption. Not only would an end to animal agriculture fiercely combat world hunger by feeding the grain currently devoted to raising farmed animals directly to people, it would also eliminate “one of the top two or three most significant contributors to the most serious environmental problems at every scale from global to local” (Agriculture and Consumer Protection Department). Additionally, considering that in 2005 the FBI deemed “the eco-terrorism, animal rights movement” as the nation’s number one domestic threat, and that in 2008 animal agribusiness contributed over $8 million to congressional candidates, removing animals from our food system would contest a number of the corrupt corporate-governmental alliances that cause such sociologists as Marcuse, Weber, and Marx to rip their hair out in frustration (Schuster, Joy 89).

           Diminishing world hunger, lightening our impact on the earth, and removing a major contributor to systematic corruption all comprise quite persuasive arguments for switching to a plant-based food system. However, the realization of the moral dubiousness of oppressing and enslaving non-human sentient beings will most foster an equitable society by rendering more obvious the mistreatment of other socially marginalized groups. Indeed, as Joni Seager points out, common justifications for animal exploitation involve arguments of human/animal difference in intellectual and emotional capacities, which “are achingly close reprises of the conceptual bases for racial, sexual, and gender hierarchies” (Seager 169). By engaging in a deeply entrenched system that oppresses a massive amount of individual beings on a daily basis, our meat-eating society becomes desensitized to instances of violence and inequality perpetrated against non-human animals, women, racial minorities, and homosexuals alike.

           Social theorist Herbert Marcuse would refer to the desensitization toward oppression of all varieties caused by the systematic mistreatment of non-human animals as the “happy consciousness” (Marcuse 483). An oppressive society creates in its members this happy consciousness by imposing upon them “false needs”—in the case at hand, the notion that humans need to eat meat—that perpetuate inequality under the guise of offering immediate gratification (Marcuse 479). In obeying these false needs, individuals “facilitate[…] acceptance of the misdeeds of […] society” by essentially eliminating the feeling of guilt from the realm of civilization (Marcuse 483). When one considers that animal agribusiness deems as “standard procedures” such egregiously cruel practices as castrating young male animals without anesthesia, removing newborn calves from their mothers immediately after birth, and cramming five to seven chickens into wire-mesh cages the size of a newspaper page, the “acceptance of the misdeeds” of industrial animal agriculture becomes quite apparent (A Well-Fed World). The fact that most people who eat meat today do not know about these practices showcases how, in actively working to conceal the animal abuse inherent in the industry, animal agribusiness erases the guilt of eating animals from societal consciousness. Indeed, how can we question oppressive systems in order to combat a falsely happy consciousness if we remain unaware of the system’s oppressive nature in the first place? An ignorant complicity toward the enslavement and commodification of non-human animals can extend to a lack of awareness about the other various systems of oppression that still exist in modern society, such as sexism, racism, and homophobia;  once we accept one corrupt aspect of society, it becomes easy to accept others. Questioning the objectification of non-human animals aids in cultivating an awareness of a multiplicity of other social issues prevalent in today’s society.

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Works Cited
Agriculture and Consumer Protection Department. “Livestock’s Long Shadow: Environmental Issues and Options.” Food and Agriculture Organization of the United States (2006): n. pag. Web. 7 May 2013. < ftp://ftp.fao.org/docrep/fao/010/a0701e/a0701e.pdf>. Cornell Chronicle. “U.S. could feed 800 million people with grain that livestock eat, Cornell ecologist advises animal scientists.” Cornell Chronicle (7 August 2997): n. pag. Web. 7 May 2013. < http://www.news.cornell.edu/stories/1997/08/us-could-feed-800-million-people-grain-livestock-eat&gt;. Joy, Melanie. Why We Love Dogs, Eat Pigs, and Wear Cows: An Introduction to Carnism. San Francisco: Conari Press, 2010. Print. Marcuse, Herbert. “One-Dimensional Man.” Classical Sociological Theory. Ed. Craig Calhoun, Joseph Gerteis, James Moody, Steven Pfaff, and Indermohan Virk. West Sussex, UK: John Wiley & Sons, Ltd, 2012. 478-487. Print. Schuster, Henry. “Domestic Terror: Who’s Most Dangerous?” CNN.com. CNN, 24 August 2005. Web. 27 April 2013. <http://www.cnn.com/2005/US/08/24/schuster.column/index.html&gt;. Seager, Joni. “Pepperoni or Broccoli? On the Cutting Wedge of Feminist Environmentalism.” Gender, Place and Culture 10.2 (June 2003): 167-174. Web. 7 May 2013. < http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/0966369032000079550&gt;. Well-Fed World, A. “Factory Farms.” A Well-Fed World. N.p., n.d. Web. 7 May 2013. < http://awellfedworld.org/issues/animalprotection&gt;.

I hope you leave this post with a little inspiration to lead a more peaceful life, in any way you can. Happy World Vegan Day, everyone.

Your friend, 

Produce On Parade