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Chocolate Chili Recipe

Chocolate Chili

Ingredients:

  • 1 medium onion chopped
  • 1TBS Olive oil
  • 1 lbs. Ground beef or Safe meat
  • 15 oz. can of Chickpeas
  • 15 oz. can of chili beans
  • 15 oz. can of garbanzo beans
  • 4 slices of Cooked bacon, cooled and chopped (More if you want some for toppings)
  • ½ cup safe turkey broth (We have also used water without much taste change)
  • 1 TBS chili powder
  • 1 tsp dried oregano
  • ¼ tsp cumin
  • 3 TBS chocolate (we use Enjoy life brand choc Chips)

Directions:

  1. Sauté Onion in oil until almost tender
  2. Add beef and brown meat, draining fat occasionally
  3. Add beans, bacon, seasonings, and broth; stir until well combined and simmer for 10 minutes
  4. Add chocolate and stir until melted
  5. Enjoy!
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Mindfulness

So it’s been awhile since I’ve posted. Mostly because I have been running around taking care of everyone/everything else- and not myself. I have my own medical crap to deal with and over the last year-ish I have started feeling better. So I did what any loving mother would do… give all my energy to my kids. Let’s just say, I haven’t been feeling as good as I have been the last month or so and couldn’t put my finger on why. Until today.

I haven’t been taking care of me!!!

Through all of the medical BS I struggle with, I have found (and yes it is backed by & encouraged by the Mayo Clinic) Yoga and meditation have been Godsends for my recovery. Being Mindful, being at peace with my body, breathing, & living in the moment made a large impact in  my life. (yes as weird/hokie/tree hugging/ free spirited babble as it may sound to you non-believers, i credit yoga and meditation to helping me recover) So for the last few months, I have done my physical and vestibular therapy, meditated at least once a day and thrown in some yoga a few times a week to get me back on my feet (literally from walking aides to my own 2 feet). And yes, it worked. But I have gotten lazy with myself. I did all this work to help me feel better, just to throw my energy and feeling better in a million different directions. No, it is not for a lost cause- but for my family.  You hear people say, “You can’t take care of anyone else if you don’t take care of you. Why do you think flight attendants tell you to put your own oxygen mask on before you help anyone else?” I guess the point is valid.

So take home point of todays blog… take a moment for yourself. Don’t forget about you! Do something for YOU today. Whether it be doing your nails, taking a bubble bath, or coming out of your comfort zone and meditating (which I highly recommend). Don’t forget you are worth taking care of, too!!! So do it!!

Also, for the frugal friend/ newbie out there- Meditating on your own isn’t very easy if you haven’t done it before. I found a free app (with the help of my awesome husband) https://www.calm.com/  No they didn’t pay me to market their app. No I don’t work for them… I honestly just really like, enjoy, and use their app! They have guided meditation, timed Breathing, and sleep stories to help your busy minds stop thinking so you can fall asleep peacefully at night. Check it out! I hope you enjoy it as much as I do.

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Food Allergy Detective

We already know food allergies are everywhere. Yes, I know, we already check food labels, and packaging, talk to the chef at restaurants, and be the food police at school parties. So, check your medications and over the counter supplements, too. This is a big deal, too. As parents, we have to be a jack of all trades. As food allergy parents, we have to be the jack of all trades x 1,000! And yes, pharmacy tech is included in our many hats.

But the pharmacist is trained to check for allergens before we even get the pills, right? Right. BUT -remember, we are all human, and we make mistakes –even the best of us. And, yes, even if the pharmacist told you he checked the ingredients, ask for an insert, keep it on hand, and check yourself. Two heads are better than one, and 4 eyes are better than 2. Just sayin…

For example, just the other day my husband, son, and I were racking our brains trying to figure out why my kid was getting so sick (more than normal) the last couple of weeks. Turns out, 2 of the medications he had been taking, contained two different food allergies!!! One from the pharmacy had a cherry ingredient for flavor- which is a NO NO in this house. Yes they have his allergies on file, No I did not ask for a packet insert because I honestly did not think of it. Shit happens. Lesson learned- ALWAYS ask for a packet insert. Every little detail you can imagine is on that form, including the inactive ingredients list.

As if one hidden food allergen wasn’t bad enough, another supplement my son takes on a daily basis was also trying to kill him… Ok, maybe not kill him- but definitely make him sick. A couple of weeks ago I purchased a reputable brand of Vitamin D. The brand is normally top 8 free. Because we have used this brand so many times without a problem, I glanced down at the bottle and seen the normal, “Free from Wheat, soy, tree nuts…” bla bla bla at the bottom of the label. BIG MISTAKE. I actually didn’t READ the label. It contains Fish! What the Hell?! Hence- My son paid the price for my error, by vomiting and feeling like shit, every day for the last 2 weeks. Talk about feeling like a horrible parent!!!

So today’s take home tidbit is – Don’t be like me… Wait- not that’s not it…. Check your medication ingredients!! Even if you have used that brand a bazillion times. Ingredients can be shady! Now, I am going to go hug my kid, remind myself I am only human, and attempt forgiveness.

Anaphylaxis · Rarely Normal

Teaching Self-Advocacy

If you do not advocate/stand up for yourself, no one else will. So, from a very young age my husband and I taught our children to advocate for themselves and learned a few extra tidbits along the way. For kids with food allergies and medical issues they need to know what they can and cannot eat. They need to know what’s good for them, what theyself advocacy need, and what they don’t need from adults or those around them- including their friends.

Let’s face it, even most adults don’t really understand food allergies. They might think they understand. You might trust that people get it and know how important it is to keep your child safe. Unfortunately however, you might hear them still say things like, “it’s only a little bit it can’t hurt you.”

SCARIEST SHIT EVER for a food allergy parent to hear!

It is because of situations like these, your child needs to know to stand up for themselves. They NEED to know how and when to say, “No, thank you. I can’t have that, it will make me sick.” Now don’t get me wrong- there can be a fine line between advocating for yourself and being disrespectful.  Which is a completely different topic. But don’t let your kids run around being little assholes because someone offered them a food that wasn’t safe for them. There still is merit behind, “it’s the thought that counts.”

Another reason to teach self-advocacy and have an Epi-pen plan in place that THEY KNOW; you can’t make other people change their ways.  People are going to eat what they want, when they want, and honestly sometimes forget that your kid can’t eat certain things. Not everyone washes their hands as often as they should- GROSS, I know.  But let’s take peanuts for example. Not everyone is going to stop eating peanuts because you can’t have them. Peanuts are a part of life. People eat them all the time. Hell, they still hand them out on airplanes.  You may go into the store to go shopping, unknowingly grab a cart after someone that was eating a peanut butter sandwich used it. Life is full of surprises. Have a plan and teach it to your kid.

Another point of self-advocacy is at school. School age children usually have their parents as a buffer between them and staff.  But you know, as well as I know, we can’t always be there to hover over and protect our children 24 hours a day. Life goes on – we have other kids, husbands, work, errands to run – we aren’t available, even by phone, at any given moment! This is real life people. Hence, why your child needs to know what they can and cannot eat. Your child may have great teachers at school. You may have given them ALL the research and paperwork to read and understand your child. But people forget stuff. We are not robots. We do not have photogenic memories. We’re HUMAN. You may say, “But we have a 504 plan in place. They can’t do that. They know better, Etc.” Even with a 504 plan or an IEP, does not 100%, in real, life cover your child.  For instance, and yes this really happened at my son’s old school:

A teacher brought in donuts as a class surprise. Very thoughtful in all honesty. But she forgot that my son had food allergies.  She says to him, “It’s only a little bit. Try a bite and see if it makes you sick. If it does, then you don’t have to eat anymore.” SERIOUSLY?!?!? Yes this happened.

Like I said before, there is a fine line between disrespecting an adult and standing up for yourself. But in cases like this- they need to be strong enough to say that it’s not a good idea.  My son has many of times given in to this very same pressure because of the mindset, “that’s an adult I’m supposed to listen to them.” Which we also teach as parents. But we have learned better and had to tweak our parenting style a bit. You do not listen to the adults when you know it’s going to hurt you. Teach your child to self-advocate, to stand up for themselves, and tell the teacher, principal, parent, or friend, whoever – “No, I cannot eat that, I cannot touch that, I will get sick.” Make sure they have enough courage to do so, and let them know that God forbid they get in trouble for self-advocating, you will be there to back them up, no matter what.

Anaphylaxis · Cyclical Vomiting Syndrome · Eosinophilic Esophagitis · Rarely Normal

About Rarely Normal

Hey there!!! My Name is Valeri!! I am married to one kick- ass man, the proud mum to 3 awesomely unique kiddos, and a nurse… in my spare time. In my little family of 5, four of us live our daily lives with the struggles of food allergies that range from “intolerances” to Anaphylaxis. At one point my family had to avoid 60 foods!!! (For the most part, if one of us can’t eat it- no one does. I am surely NOT making 4 different dinners every night! Would you?!?!) As if that isn’t enough to make us unique, we also struggle with Eosinophilic Esophagitis (EOE), Cyclical Vomiting Syndrome (CVS), Asthma, and Eczema. PHEW!! That is a mouthful!

Our journey with avoiding allergies started almost a decade ago with a peanut allergy in my youngest son and has grown exponentially since then. Correction- thank you loving husband, hind sight being 20/20, our battle with food allergies started 13 years ago…doctors just didn’t catch on until years later. Avoiding peanuts is no little obstacle, but throw in the other allergens, making food that doesn’t taste like cardboard, surviving school parties, family gatherings, and the emotional toll it all takes to live an exceptional life with a smile – WOW!! But after all these years, we have mastered it! I am here to help you cut to the chase, so it doesn’t take an eternity for you to feel like you have it all under control! Are you ready? Pull up a cozy spot on the couch, grab a drink (water, dairy free hot chocolate, or some may need a glass of wine ha-ha) and let’s get started!