Category: Conscious Consumerism: Shopping & Reviews

  • The Gift Everybody Needs (Buy One, Get One Offer)

    The Gift Everybody Needs (Buy One, Get One Offer)

     

    You’re always in a rush, or else
    you’re too exhausted to have a proper conversation.

    Soon enough, the long hours, the traveling, the broken sleep
    have all crept into your being and become part of you,
    so everyone can see it,

    in your posture, your gaze, the way you move and talk.

    ―Kazuo Ishiguro, Never Let Me Go

     

    What’s the gift that every man (and woman) needs?

    Sleep.

    Along with time, it’s the great commodity. But while wishing for more hours in the day is just a wistful pastime, one we know is impossible, the desire for sleep haunts us. We could get more sleep— we know we should— and yet we don’t. And no one else can give it to us. Right?

    Well… sort of. We can’t wrap up a full night’s rest with a pretty bow, and we can’t offer a loan to pay off a sleep debt. But for many people, it’s not just the quantity of sleep they receive that’s lacking. It’s the quality. We don’t sleep deeply enough, we toss and turn, we stay too close to the surface of consciousness and are pulled awake by the slightest thing. Deep, restive sleep is necessary for our bodies to recover and repair, and for our minds to sort through the mess of our day and file everything away in mental cabinets. Over time, broken sleep means sluggish bodies not performing as they should; jumbled thoughts and disorganized memories.

    I’ve had cause to reflect on all this recently as Jeff went through a period of really sucky sleeping. I don’t know what the root cause was: stress, maybe, as he burned the candle at both ends, working weekdays and renovated our dining room at nights and weekends. Overtiredness or too many cans of Monster during the day. A flaring up of his colitis. Maybe a combination of all those things. In any case, he was sleeping, but fitfully. Tossing and turning all night. Fixing his pillow over and over. Fidgeting. Sighing. Mumbling.

    I don’t think I slept more than 30 minutes in one place or more than three hours total any of those nights. I snatched an hour’s nap after he left for work, before I had to wake the kids. I was going slowly insane.

    Because the Universe provides (I am really more a believer in this every day; start looking for it and you will also find new people and seemingly random events to be grateful for), I was right at this time sent two talalay latex pillows to review from Plush Beds.

    Besides being fun to say, talalay latex is all-natural and toxic-free; these pillows are molded from sustainably-harvested botanical latex. It also makes up the top layer of PlushBed’s mattresses.

     

    What is latex, anyway?

    I didn’t know, so I looked it up: natural latex is actually tapped from rubber trees, like sap! But not all latex is natural, so it’s important to look for that distinction.

    Talalay latex is:

    • mold and mildew proof, inhibiting spore growth (a big allergy trigger)
    • dust mite resistant. Dust mites are the #1 source of indoor allergens; these allergens are a leading cause of asthma attacks.
    • breathable and resilient
    • made using a process that features biodegradable ingredients that stem from renewable resources and water-based raw materials: natural latex, air and water.

     

    Why all-natural?

    Detoxing your bedroom and especially your bed is just a smart investment. This is where you sleep. You spend a tremendous amount of time here. Your whole body comes into contact with your bed; anything toxic is lying right against your skin (your largest organ) all night long. While your body is vulnerable, repairing itself. While you breathe deeply.

     

    So how did I sleep?

    I slept so soundly that I didn’t notice a Saint Bernard climbing onto my pillow or her heavy head upon mine. Or her getting back down off the bed, for that matter.

    Not only is talalay latex fun to say AND 100% natural, it’s also an awesome balance of comfy and supportive. Most pillows give too much; your head sinks down. They are comfy but not supportive. My Technogel pillow is super supportive but not comfy cozy; it’s almost like a medically prescribed pillow. It’s great for my back and overall sleep, but it’s not for snuggling in, and sometimes you do want that coziness.

    These pillows are a perfect suspension of support and coziness, which is actually a really odd feeling at first. There is give, but support beneath the give. The website describes it as a “pressure-reducing, buoyant sensation” found only with natural botanical latex, and this is an apt description.

    I’ve never encountered it elsewhere, but it keeps making me think of that goop I’ve seen as a science demonstration of a suspension: if you were simply step onto it, you would sink as if it was a liquid. But if you were to run across it, the impact causes resistance like it’s a solid. (OH! It’s cornstarch in water. I found a video, it’s at the end of this post. Watch it, it’s cool.)

    I slipped one under Jeff’s head that week he was keeping me up all night. And glory be to talalay latex: he slept. Deeply. Without moving around. Which means I slept, too.

     

    The Gift Everybody Needs (and a buy one, get one offer)

    Not sure what to give someone this Christmas? Have a hard-to-shop-for person on your list? Give the gift of good sleep, baby. Non-toxic sleep. All-night-long sleep.

    You don’t really appreciate how miraculous a good night’s rest is until you’ve been seriously deprived of it for a while.

    I’m now a loudmouth advocate for sleep. YOU NEED IT. IT’S GOOD FOR YOU (15 reasons why here).

    I firmly believe that if you’re planning to improve your health, improving your sleep should be just as high a priority as moving more and eating better. Sleep works with your body to maximize any other changes you make. Without restorative sleep, you’re just fighting an upward battle. Every day. Against yourself.

     

    So to recap

    • sleep is crazy important
    • a non-toxic sleeping environment is ideal
    • these talalay latex pillows are like sleeping on magically supportive/comfy clouds that remind me of science experiments
    • they are made using sustainable practices
    • they are perfect for allergy/asthma sufferers
    • I sleep so well on them that even the weight of a Saint Bernard’s head does not wake me

     

    Buy One, Get One Free

    Buy one (but get two!) for someone you love. Urge them to make it a first step towards an all-natural bed: an eco-mattress, organic sheets and blankets, the works. Maybe once they see the difference in the quality of their sleep, they’ll take that sense of quality + non-toxic  = healthy care for your body into the other areas of their homes, and their lives.

    You can learn more about PlushBeds mattresses & pillows here. To order pillows alone, you can call 1-888-449-5738. Mention you heard about the pillows from this review and you can buy one, get a second one free (limited to one offer per household).

    A natural talalay latex pillow sells for $79, $89, or $99 each (Standard, Queen, and King Sizes).

    Trust me, a good pillow is an investment you will not regret.

     

     

    Here’s that video. It’s fun.

     

     

    Disclosure: I received two pillows to try out for review purposes. They are awesome. That, and all other opinions presented here? All mine.
     

     

  • Giveaway: #GetAfterIt Reebok Tees (5 winners)

    Giveaway: #GetAfterIt Reebok Tees (5 winners)

     

    If you always put limits on everything you do, physical or anything else,
    it will spread into your work and into your life.

    There are no limits.

    There are only plateaus, and you must not stay there,

    you must go beyond them.

    –Bruce Lee

     

    I’m looking back at this year and I’ve done a lot. It doesn’t feel like it, but I have.

    I got on a plane. All by myself.

     

     

    That may not sound like much, but to a girl who has been vaguely agoraphobic all her life it’s the equivalent of backpacking solo around the world.

    I ran a fun mud run. And then a timed 5k the day after.

    I ran the Color Run with my family. And I talked dozens of friends into joining us (and thousands of other colorful runners).

     

     

    I ran another mud run that was pretty grueling. I was filled with accomplishment that I had done something that was so hard for me…. and enjoyed every moment of it. I’ve run a bunch more 5ks since then, and plan to run 13 races (stepping out of my 5k comfort zone) next year.

    I was recognized by BlogHer as a Voice of the Year, for the most difficult post I’ve ever written. A post that was zero craft, zero technique, but just me trying to understand.

    I modeled, for the camera and the runway. I’ve actually done this before, as a kid, and it did such a number on my body image that I’ve avoided mirrors, cameras and trying to look “pretty” ever since. (I have no problem looking like an idiot on camera. You see those shots here all the time.) I admittedly felt dumb and self-conscious and out of place, but I managed to keep the self-loathing to a minimum.

     

     

    I entered and won a photography contest, and my photo was placed in the Picaboo calendar given to each attendee of the Type A Conference.

    I split the driving to Type A, by the way. All the way to Charlotte and back. Have I mentioned I hate driving, especially when I don’t know where I am? I didn’t crash or anything. And then I went and mingled with people I didn’t know. I even captained a team for a danceoff. That’s crazy! Robin pre-2012 would never have done such a thing.

     

    photo credit to Sarah

     

    Hey! I lost a lot of weight. I gained some muscle. And I wrote about it in a place where people would actually see it.

    I coached basketball.

    I did some videos. I talked about some hard stuff to talk about in a couple of them.

    I helped grow FitFluential into the company it is today: with over 800 Ambassadors, 7000 members, 26K Twitter followers, 12K Facebook fans and catapulting into 2013 at breakneck speed. Being part of a startup with only 5 employees is tense work with long hours, and it has been worth it for this moment, looking back and seeing how far we’ve come. (Kelly Olexa is a powerhouse.)

    And now I’m learning to swim. The decision to sign up and show up was terrifying; right now it’s very frustrating. But I have no doubt that sometime soon, I will be able to move through the water without touching the bottom. Without drowning.

    It has been a year of stepping out of my comfort zone, and as a result I’m stronger in every way: mentally, emotionally, physically. And the best part about that is knowing I’m being a role model to my girl… she knows no limits to her abilities now, and I hope that her age, her gender, her insecurities never get in her way.

     

     

    2013 better hold on to its hat.

     

     

    GIVEAWAY!

    I want to know how you’ve stepped out of your comfort zone and grown this year! And how you plan to take 2013 by storm.

    Reebok sent me a few #getafterit shirts to give away. These tees are emblazoned with the #getafterit logo in Vitamin C orange to give your workouts a shot of energy 🙂 I get a lot of “I like your shirt!” when I wear mine to the gym. My hope is that maybe some of those people check out the #getafterit hashtag on Twitter and tweet out their own accomplishments after a cathartic sweatfest.

     

     

    I have 2 of these in size medium, and three in large, so there will be FIVE winners in all.

    Just follow the directions in the Rafflecopter widget. Here’s to a fierce December… and a 2013 to remember.

     

    a Rafflecopter giveaway

     

  • Green Gifts for Kids: PlanToys

    Green Gifts for Kids: PlanToys

    The child amidst his baubles is learning the action of light, motion, gravity, muscular force…

    -Ralph Waldo Emerson

     

    This is my niece Eva. She is so freaking cute, I can’t pick just two photos to include in this post.  Enjoy the onslaught of adorable.

    When picking out toys as gifts, for my kids or someone else’s, I like to look for the following:

    1. educational value combined with play value
    2. hardiness combined with longevity (is the toy going to become boring in no time flat?)
    3. the eco factor: made with non-toxic materials by a company with sustainable practices
    4. general loveliness/ aesthetic value
    5. awesomeness.

    It’s rare that I’ll find something that fits all five points, but the catalog over at PlanToys hits the mark time and again.

     

     

    Lots of my favorites toys for our kids have been PlanToys. Cass still breaks out the Unit Blocks from time to time:

     

     

    We loved the water blocks. These are nice and chunky and big and seemingly unbreakable, not to mention mesmerizing for little kids and tired parents alike. Stack one on top of the other and you’ve got a handy dandy lesson in primary and secondary colors.

     

     

    The Miracle Pounding toy was a favorite. Basically, you feed a ball into one end, and one pops out the other. Great for developing motor skills, and pretty sitting on a shelf.

     

     

    One year each kid got a Moving Mouse in their stocking. These are the sorts of toys you pull back and then they race away; these suckers were fast and darted around like real mice. They were a lot of fun.

     

     

    The Sort & Count teaches hands-on math skills.

     

     

    (We’ve never owned this one, but I have to ask: how cute is this shopping cart?)

     

     

    That’s just the beginning. PlanToys has train sets, dollhouses, cars, cities, “cuttable” play food, rattles, walking toys, musical instruments, mobiles and more.

    PlanToys are made from environmentally friendly materials:

    • organic rubberwood
    • non-toxic non-formaldehyde glue
    • waterbased dye and soy & waterbased ink (no lead paint concerns here!)
    • recycled and recyclables.

    They’re also simple and open-ended, lending educational value recognized by Parents’ Choice Award and the Oppenheim Toy Portfolio Award.

    Are these toys a little more expensive? Yes. But each one I linked to above (aside from the shopping cart) I myself bought and my kids played with. For a loooooong time. And by that I mean,

    1. each kid would stay engaged with the toy for a good amount of time each time they played with it.
    2. The toy remained entertaining for a good span of time in that child’s life.
    3. AND, I bought them when Jake was little— they survived being passed down through all three of my kids and went on to be passed down to another child.

    That’s what I call value.

    As a for-example of longevity: I got to give Eva the new Sorting Board to try.

     

     

     

    She took it to her little table like any good Montessori child and got down to business.

     

     

    Eva’s just a few months past her 2nd birthday, but she has pretty decent fine motor skills for that age. She spent a fair amount of time playing with this right out of the box without getting frustrated.

    In any case, most kids will start by grabbing the pieces from the top and flat handedly forcing the pieces onto the pegs; as they grow more adept they’ll hold with just two fingers on one side and place onto the pegs that way.

     

     

    As the child masters one skill, you can take the toy away for a few weeks and then reintroduce with a new skill objective. So after figuring out the two finger hold, you could bring it back and ask for the pieces to be put on in order by color; first the reds, then the blues and so on.

    After that, you can ask for the shapes. Circle, triangle… then ask by the number of sides. Put all the shapes with four sides on first…

     

     

    And after that, you can use the shapes as tracing elements. Trace around the shapes and color them in. Master that, and then you can trace the outer shape and the small inner circle and color different colors.

    Go check out PlanToys and buy some for the kid in your life. They’re awesome, plain and simple.

     

    Disclosure: I received a Sorting Board for review purposes, but I’ve purchased many a PlanToy with my own cash money. All opinions are wholly my own and backed by nearly a decade of playing with this company’s product— long before I knew about or cared about their eco factor.