84-Lancaster Farming, Saturday, December 9, 2000 On Being a Farm Wife (and other hazards) Joyce Bupp What makes folks happy? Good health? Money? Family and friends? Pleasurable job? Or is it those “warm, little fiiz zies” that do more to keep us up beat through our daily routines and the challenges that get thrown down like gauntlets through our days of dealing with life. The newspaper we recycle for heifer bedding not shredded, but simple tossed in “as is” for the heifers to dance and cavort through, after friends and neigh bors drop it off here (neatly tied or bundled, not loose!) some times include neat tidbits of printed matter. I toss the papers, by hand, around the bedding pack; usually it’s just daily news papers, but occasionally a gem of printed material falls out. Literally falls out, that is. Like a morning last week, when a slender, book-mark type of paper dropped to the concrete floor of the heifer pen walkway. I picked it up and found a list of “happy thoughts” which appeared to have been an addition to a church bulletin tucked in with someone’s old newsprint. The “happy thoughts” made me smile. Included were things like: a hot shower, giggling, find ing a $2O bill in your coat from last winter, making new friends, and spending times with old ones. Running through sprinklers. Hot choco late, swinging on swings, watching the sunset. Lying in bed listening to the rain falling outside. The beach. Getting mail. Accidentally overhear ing something nice said about you. A care package, laughing at yourself, your first Introducing The Chi Machine The Sun Harmony Aerobic Exerciser at Does your body get the oxygen it needs? 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Laughing for no reason at all, laughing at an inside joke, laugh ing so hard your face hurts. Chocolate milkshakes. (1 liked the way it included so much laughing. And chocolate.) Mentally, I began adding some personal “happy thoughts” to this fairly-generic list. The sound of farm equipment returning from the fields after dark. An unexpected check in the mailbox. Stepping from' our unheated upstairs into the toasty-warm kitchen at 4 a.m. A brisk walk under a starry sky on a chilly winter evening. Seeing how cozy the house looks from a distance lit up at night. Flowers. A kitten’s soft fur. A card, note or postcard from a or relative. Outdoor Christmas decorations shining in the night. Toy trains. An orange, full moon peeking up from the eastern horizon. A real, live person answering the phone when you contact a business with a need or a prob lem. Hot soup. That flash of drop-dead red when a cardinal visits the bird feeder. A walk through fresh snow. The “ping” of a canning jar sealing. Crawling into bed between sheets line-dried in the sunshine. A spur-of-the-moment picnic. Reading a book to a child. Heif ers cavorting through the pasture the first time they’re turned out into new grass. The smell of fresh-cut hay. Candlelight. An owl hoo-hoo-hooting overhead late at night. Having the check book balanced. A newborn baby calf. Finding an item I really need on sale. Kneeling on earthy-smelling fresh soil to plant seeds. Sweet corn cooked direct from the gar den. A train whistle in the dis tance. The first-home-grown to mato. Looking at old family photos. Waterfalls. Smiles. Babies. And, not to forget, chocolate. We could go on and on. But, I was especially mindful of the bookmark’s bottom line. Getting out of bed every morn ing and thanking God for anoth er beautiful day! * * ■*» ? /* I. 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Some studies do suggest that more (but smaller) meals throughout the day can increase metabolic rates and allow nutri ents to be absorbed more effi ciently. But there’s a bigger issue lurk ing in your question, and it’s this; Basically, a healthy diet is a healthy diet, whether you have diabetes or not. People with dia betes often contact a registered dietitian to help with individual ized meal planning there’s no one “diabetes diet.” But basic guidelines for people with diabe tes are the same for everyone else. Here are some tips from the American Dietetic Association: Eat five fruits and vege tables a day. Want a snack? Eat a piece of fruit. Include a small bag of raw vegetables with your lunch. Increase the vegetables in soups, casseroles, stew or stir fried dishes. Eat six or more servings of starch each day. For breakfast, choose dry cereal with nonfat milk or whole-grain toast. Add beans to chili, soups or casse- ♦ { > # / Mifflinburg, PA BS & B REPAIR 717-966-3756 w* roles. Include potatoes, pasta or rice with your meal. Eat sugars and sweets only in moderation. Have a favorite satisfier for your sweet tooth? In dulge but only once or twice a week. Have a hankering for des sert? Split it among one or two others to satisfy your craving but limiting the sugar, fat, and cal ories. Eat less total fat. Saute veg etables in cooking wine or flavor ed vinegar instead of oil. Use less, or choose low-fat or fat-free versions of cream cheese, salad dressing, mayonnaise, or sour cream. Eat less saturated fat. Choose lean cuts of meat. Think of meat as a side dish instead of the main course. Prepare meat and fish by grilling, broiling or poaching. Choose low-fat or non fat dairy products. If you follow these guidelines, you’ll have a healthful diet whether you choose to “graze” throughout the day or eat a more traditional meal pattern. Chow Line is a service of The Ohio State University. Send! questions to Chow Line, do Mar tha Filipic, 2021 Coffey Road,. Columbus, OH 43210-1044, or filipic.3@osu.edu. * M t Muncy, PA BEST LINE LEASING, INC 717-546-8422 800-321-2378 Quarryville, PA GRUMELLI’S FARM SERV. 717-786-7318 Reading, PA BOBCAT OF READING Div of Reading Kubota