Keep Your Children Trim and Slim

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Children getting sick is something no one wants to see. We know that there are starving children living in poverty all over the world and they need to be given assistance and food.

But I want to talk to you about your children or grandchildren.

In this country where people are “overfed” we have too many children who are overweight. Anyone with a Body Mass Index (BMI) over 24 is considered overweight.

Overweight children and teens are likely to be obese adults and, unfortunately, they are more prone to develop a serious disease. High cholesterol levels (caused by fat in the blood) in children can be a predictor of glucose intolerance and diabetes. In large populations of children with total cholesterol levels above 170 there are far more incidences of brain tumors and leukemias than are found in populations of adolescents with cholesterol levels below 100.

Young people who are obese are more likely to have elevated blood pressure, sleep apnea and a variety of bone problems.

Helping your children stay slim is so very important, but it has to start with you.

Are We Responsible for Getting Sick?

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When people hear of the diet I eat many of them comment, “Why would you give up all the “good” things to eat just to have more years of old-age misery?”

How many people do you know who are in their 90s and are still energetic and fully engaged in life? We probably all know a few.

By contrast, how many people do you know who are in their 70s and 80s (if they have lived that long) and are sick? They may have osteoporosis, heart disease, dementia, diabetes or cancer. Some are even bedridden after having a stroke. I think we all know plenty of people in this group.

I’m hedging my bets and planning to get to my 90s in good health.

It seems that the word of the day in my community is “responsibility.” When we hear that a family is having a hard time and going on welfare or can’t afford health care, the loudest voices accuse them of not taking “responsibility” for themselves or their families.

I hear people say, “That group works well with the homeless because they hold them accountable for getting back to an independent life,” or, “People having babies out-of-wedlock, just aren’t responsible.”

In other words, most of us think that other people just need to be more “responsible.” I wonder why that word doesn’t apply to the way we take care of our bodies?

What if we used that word on our own lives? Is it responsible of us to eat foods that make us too heavy (a BMI of 25+)? Is it responsible of us to eat foods that can cause diseases like osteoporosis, dementia, heart disease, diabetes, cancer or stroke? Is it responsible of us to continue to smoke because it makes us happy? Is it responsible of us to continue to eat animal products because we like them?

I’ve heard the rationale that if you can afford to drive a gas-guzzler or if you can afford to smoke cigars and drink brandy or if you can afford to eat meat at every meal, that’s your right.

I realize that those individual freedoms are important to many of us. After all, it is your body to do with as you wish. But, other people are definitely impacted. Your spouse or your children may have to step into a caregiver role. You may not be able to afford all of the medical care needed, so the taxpayers have to step in. Because health insurance companies have to pay for more care, they will raise the premium rates for other people.

If you think you are just hurting yourself with your lifestyle choices, think again. What about the husband of the wife diagnosed with cancer? He suffers emotionally almost as much as the patient. What about the kids of the man who suddenly dies of a heart attack? Or the parents of a 50-year-old who has diabetes and has to have his foot amputated?

We take responsibility for keeping our belongings clean and neat. We take responsibility for teaching our children about morals and ethics. We take responsibility for making sure our children go to the best schools and get the best education.

But, are we responsible for making sure our children are always happy and get whatever they want? I doubt if any parent or grandparent would agree to that.

Should we let our kids stay up late at night so they are too tired to pay attention in school so we just hire them a tutor?

Should we let them get tired so their immune systems break down and then we just pay a doctor to give them an antibiotic to get them well?

Do we think we can feed them junk food and then have them pop a few vitamins to keep them healthy?

Do we think we can reward our children with candy and sugary drinks and then just pay a dentist to fix their teeth?

Do we let them eat hamburgers and macaroni and cheese and have ice cream for dessert because that keeps them happy? What do we do when they get fat and are teased and taunted by their classmates?

Being responsible seems to be a matter of degree and personal bias.

If we eat meat and cheese at every meal, but then we bike and run like George W. Bush, shouldn’t that keep us from having a heart stent?

Having responsibility for our own health and that of our children seems to be one of the most important “responsibilities” we can carry out.

What about responsibility for our planet? Is it enough to recycle our cans? Is it enough to keep our thermostat on 78 in the summer? Is it enough to wash clothes with cold water?

One of the most helpful (and responsible) things we can do to help our environment is to stop eating meat. Did you know that raising animals for food uses more water, more land and creates more methane gas than anything else?

Are we responsible for the way animals are treated to provide us with food? We think of those “animals” like we do “slaves” or “muslims.” They are “different” from us. We don’t “know” them. If we think of those animals and fish in this way, we don’t have to worry about our responsibility for taking care of them.

I’ve got a great idea. Let’s start taking responsibility for the health of our bodies and for the health of our planet!

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© 2010-2013 Melinda Coker

WANT TO USE THIS ARTICLE IN YOUR EZINE OR WEB SITE? You can, as long as you include this complete blurb with it: “Melinda Coker, health coach and author of the book, Diet and Cancer: Is There a Connection?, teaches women around the world how to develop a healthy lifestyle.”

The Big Black Gate and How I Gained Five Pounds

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It looks enormous – a large, black wrought-iron gate sitting at the top of the hill overlooking the houses below. We have lived in our neighborhood for five years when suddenly that huge gate was installed.

For Halloween I normally buy large sacks of chocolate candy bars, candied peanuts, and other chocolate treats to give out to the hordes of children as they Trick-or-Treat in the neighborhood. The long line of cars usually creeps along at a snail’s pace.

I got ready. I put the dogs up and emptied the sacks of candy into a large bowl for easy distribution. But, this night the doorbell was strangely silent. There were no visitors.

“I wonder what’s going on,” I lamented to my husband as he sat looking at his iPad. “Oh, I think the gate closes at dusk.”

Indeed it had.

The next morning I realized I had dozens of Milky Ways, Snickers, M&Ms and 3Musketeers left over. I put them away, but over the next week, I managed to find them one by one.

When my weekly weigh-in rolled around, I was SHOCKED. I had gained 5 pounds!

How could that be? My weight had been stable for over 2 years.

I think it was those cute little Fun Bars and that big, black gate.

Because I had not given the candy away, I had been snacking on 5-6 of those little 75-calorie Fun Bars each day. That added up to an additional 450 calories/day.

The Harris-Benedict equation is used to calculate your caloric needs. If you currently weigh 130 pounds and that is your ideal weight, you can calculate the number of calories you need each day to maintain that weight. If you need to lose weight, just begin lowering your caloric intake by 250 calories/day.

To find out the number of calories you need to maintain your current weight, use this equation.

655 + (4.35 x your weight in lbs.) + (4.7 x your height in inches) – (4.7 x your age in years) x 1.5 if you are moderately active = your total calories per day.

Weighing on a weekly basis, helps you catch any extra pounds you may have added while it’s still easy to do something about it. Don’t wait until you’ve added an extra 10 – 15 as it will be much harder to get back to your ideal weight. And don't add a new gate right before Halloween!Content

Are You Killing Your Husband with Kindness?

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As women we encourage our children to engage in healthy habits. We teach them to brush their teeth and to wear their jackets when it’s cold. We take them to the doctor for immunizations and check-ups and we encourage them to get outside to play. We cook for them, give them vitamins and make sure they get enough sleep.

But what happens when the kids are no longer there? Is this the time we begin to kill our husbands with our “kindness?”

Maybe we don’t realize that food can actually be health promoting rather than disease promoting. We want to please our man so we continue fixing him steaks and hamburgers and cookies and pies. I’ve heard too many women say, “My husband hates vegetables,” or “My husband is a meat and potatoes man.” Well if you don’t like him very much, I guess you should go ahead and feed him the foods he loves.

Did you know that heart disease, diabetes and many cancers can be prevented through healthy eating? Maybe it is time to have an honest conversation with your husband and decide to start doing what you can to insure his (and your) continued good health. And if your husband is like most, he will pretty much eat what is available, and that means what is bought at the grocery store and what is cooked at home.

If we want to save our man, we’ve got to learn about healthy cooking and eating and change the ways we try to please him. Why not go on a walk with him or ride around in the golf cart with him? Just stop trying to please him by keeping your freezer stocked with ice cream or baking pies and cakes or even frying chicken. Both of you can get on the healthy meal plan so you can continue to enjoy each other for many years to come.

Let me know how you do!

© 2010-2011 Melinda Coker

WANT TO USE THIS ARTICLE IN YOUR EZINE OR WEB SITE? You can, as long as you include this complete blurb with it: “Melinda Coker, health coach and author of the book, Diet and Cancer: Is There a Connection?, teaches women around the world how to develop a healthy lifestyle.”

© 2010-2011 Melinda Coker

WANT TO USE THIS ARTICLE IN YOUR EZINE OR WEB SITE? You can, as long as you include this complete blurb with it: “Melinda Coker, health coach and author of the book, Diet and Cancer: Is There a Connection?, teaches women around the world how to develop a healthy lifestyle.”

Take Control of Your Health

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People who have been diagnosed with a traumatic medical condition like cancer, heart disease or diabetes many times feel like they are totally in the hands of their doctors, like all of their control has been taken away.

But, you don’t have to be a victim of what’s happened to you or a victim of extensive medical treatment. You can take back some control in order to improve your outcomes. Fit and healthy people have had to learn how to be healthy and you can start your learning right now even in the throes of illness. Look for people who can coach you or find books or web sites with the information you need, i.e., find out what your choices are and then make decisions which will move you towards health.

Doctors have told me that their patients don’t have the time or energy to change their lifestyle. That’s an excuse they are making for you. I know that you are busy and you are probably overwhelmed with all the decisions you are having to make, but let go of the excuses. They just don’t serve you well.

Take control of your body. Don’t give that control to someone else, even your doctor. You’ve got to choose the healthiest way forward. You’ve got to make healthy choices even when it’s challenging, inconvenient or considered weird by your family or friends.

You CAN be a winner!

© 2010-2011 Melinda Coker

WANT TO USE THIS ARTICLE IN YOUR EZINE OR WEB SITE? You can, as long as you include this complete blurb with it: “Melinda Coker, health coach and author of the book, Diet and Cancer: Is There a Connection?, teaches women around the world how to develop a healthy lifestyle.”

Is It a Diet or a Lifestyle Change?

Change Your Lifestyle…

Change Your Lifestyle…

Instead of setting a goal to lose 10 pounds (or 20 or even 100), set your goal to become healthy and fit. It’s much more positive. You will only set yourself up for failure if you fill your head with visions of the horrible deprivation you will have to go through in order to lose weight. Why not set yourself up for success by deciding to become healthy and fit and then learning how to do it?

Healthy and fit people have learned how to be healthy. If you want that lifestyle, you will need to learn the necessary skills and practice them. While you are learning and practicing those new healthy behaviors, try to surround yourself with other healthy, active, positive people. It will be much easier for you to be healthy and fit if you are around other people who are healthy and fit.

Instead of going out for every meal, learn to cook. Start by picking out about eight whole-foods, plant-based recipes that you enjoy. Then master those recipes. You will be able to eat at home more often and forego the unhealthy temptations found at most restaurants.

Find an activity that you enjoy doing and join a group or grab a buddy to do it with you. Take tennis lessons, show up at your town’s walking trail, join a hiking group, but be sure you do something active at least five days a week.

Over 80% of the U.S. population is overweight and unfit. To move into the healthy 20%, you will have to be unconventional and make different choices. This is why you will do better if you surround yourself with others who are healthy. Unhealthy people may ridicule your choices and try to get you to eat like them. They won’t join you for physical activities. They will make changing your lifestyle difficult for you.

Join a group or get a buddy. Having accountability and camaraderie will help you stay on the positive, healthy track you say you want. Don’t wait until you have a stroke or a heart attack. Don’t wait until you are diagnosed with diabetes or cancer. Don’t wait until tomorrow. Just START NOW!

Is Kate Too Skinny?

Prince William and Kate Middleton leave City Hall in Belfast, Northern Ireland on Tuesday March 8, 2011. (AP Photo)

Prince William and Kate Middleton leave City Hall in Belfast, Northern Ireland on Tuesday March 8, 2011. (AP Photo)

On Twitter, a handful of people posted comments about Kate Middleton's weight recently. One said she shouldn't lose any more weight and should serve as a healthy role model to young girls.

WHAT? Does that mean that we should only have role models for young girls who are appropriately heavy? Who look like the rest of us? I thought role models were people we aspire to either look like or act like. Why is it wrong to have a role model who is thin?

It seems as though we are acquiescing to political correctness for our health now. My granddaughter told me that "fat" is a bad word and you shouldn't say it. But, it seems to be alright to tell people they are too "skinny." I guess everyone is afraid of sparking an eating disorder in a young girl by having thin role models. Shouldn't we be more concerned with those role models who weigh more than they should and who influence our children to eat an unhealthy diet?

Because of our high fat diets, young American girls are now having their first menstrual period (menarche) at an average age of eleven. Whereas, the average age of a girl's first period in China is 17. Because we are afraid of "skinny" role models we are causing our girls to be exposed to higher levels of blood hormones, such as estrogen for six more years. Women with high levels of estrogen are four times more likely to develop breast cancer than women with lower levels of the hormone.

Therefore, I would much rather we say to the aspiring role models who are not thin, "Don't gain any more weight as you need to serve as a healthy role model to our young girls."

~~~

Copyright © 2010-2011, Melinda Coker and with Splash!, LLC. All Rights Reserved.

The "Sassy, Slim and Healthy"™ Weekends, Memberships and Spa Weeks are a trademark of Melinda Coker & with Splash, LLC.

Ready to Lose Weight?

Let’s Lose Weight…

Let’s Lose Weight…

January 1st has come and gone and many people have already abandoned their New Year's weight-loss plans. Is that you? Do you still want to lose that last 10 pounds? Or, maybe you have a serious issue and would like to lose 100 pounds. Either way, you can do it!

But, you will have to watch out for all the fad diets out there. The most popular ones now seem to be the high protein - low carb diets. I think it's because they are easy. Everyone loves to eat protein even if they don't want to give up their white dinner rolls.

Other fads are the medical weight loss programs where you can take a pill or get an injection and you lose your appetite so you lose large amounts of weight... until you quit taking the pills or getting the injections.

If you truly want to lose weight by changing your lifestyle and becoming HEALTHIER in the process, you really ought to try a low-fat, plant-based way of eating. This is not a fad. This is the way healthy populations around the world have lived and eaten for generations. For some reason, we have started thinking we should eat what is marketed to us... cupcakes, cinnabuns, chicken nuggets, and double meat burgers with bacon and cheese. Then we wash it down with 42-oz. soft drinks.

But, it's easy you say. You just have to drive up to a window and order. You don't even have to get out of your car. The food tastes good with all of that salt, fat and sugar, so even your kids will eat it.

You can absolutely learn to LOVE a plant-based diet. Of course, you can't get that very often at a drive-up window.

You know you are ruining your health and you have certainly enlarged your figure.

What if someone could teach you how to change your lifestyle? Wouldn't it be worth it to feel good about yourself again? Wouldn't it be worth it to get off of that cholesterol lowering medication? Wouldn't it be worth it to get off of that high blood pressure medication? Wouldn't it be worth it to stay healthy and to be able to continue having tasty, but healthy, meals with your family for many years to come?

This is a lifestyle change that you will be able to continue the rest of your life. It is not a fad diet that you will bounce in and out of as your weight balloons up and dribbles down before ballooning up again.

Five Tips for Health in the New Year

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1.) Eat a healthy diet… that means going towards a plant-based diet as much as you possibly can. The more animal products you eliminate, the more fat and cholesterol you eliminate, too. The more vegetables, fruits and whole grains you include, the more fiber you consume. Vegetarians are healthier and slimmer.

2.) Exercise… you need to keep moving… walking is good, especially if you can get out in the fresh air. Strength training is important once or twice a week and you may want to add some stretching, yoga, or pilates for flexibility.

3.) Stay curious… You must always be interested in new ideas or new skills. Take classes, read, change jobs, create a project with your kids or grandkids or take up a new hobby. You can become an expert by learning and researching something you love… whether it’s travel, photography, writing, building furniture or even Facebook.

4.) Stay involved… Go where you can interact with others… join clubs, attend church, meet friends for lunch, join the PTA, or care for your grandkids.

5.) Find someone to help… volunteer, care for a pet, send cards and notes to friends and acquaintances, or mentor a child.

If you’ve let yourself get lazy this year, see if you can’t develop these new healthy habits for 2011. Even if you are already healthy, I bet you can find something in this list to help you become even healthier. Here’s to the healthiest year ever!!

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© 2010 Melinda Coker

WANT TO USE THIS ARTICLE IN YOUR EZINE OR WEB SITE? You can, as long as you include this complete blurb with it: “Melinda Coker, author of the book, Diet and Cancer: Is There a Connection?, passionate health researcher and coach, teaches women around the world how to develop a healthy lifestyle.”

Thanksgiving Menu

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I am so much more relaxed this Thanksgiving as I am not fixing the giant spread of years past. We are having a turkey, but instead of roasting one so I can make dressing, we have just ordered and picked up a Greenberg Smoked Turkey. It is the one turkey that EVERYONE loves and was even an Oprah favorite at one time. I will make a tabouleh tonight so it can marinate.

Tomorrow I will only be fixing a sweet potato salad and an avocado and tomato salad. We will have some Sister Shubert’s whole wheat rolls to round it out. My sister-in-law is bringing dessert.

I am looking forward to a stress free Thanksgiving… one where I can actually enjoy the people who are here rather than cooking five or six last minute dishes. And, we will all feel good and healthy rather than full and miserable afterwards. Please enjoy your holiday and give thanks for all you have.

A Healthy Drink

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Whether you have cancer, are trying to prevent cancer or you just want an easy-to-make healthy meal or snack, here is a recipe for a healthy drink. You can drink it for your breakfast, your lunch or for your mid-day snack.

For a single serving you will use 2 apples and 1/2 of an avocado:

Wash and mostly peel two apples (organic if you have them) before coring and cutting them into pieces. Spoon out the avocado from one of the halves and cut it into pieces. Put apple and avocado pieces into a blender. Add some ice cubes and then add 1 1/2 cups of cold (filtered if you have it) water. Put the top on the blender and blend until smooth enough to drink.

Pour into your glass and enjoy.

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© 2010 Melinda Coker

WANT TO USE THIS ARTICLE IN YOUR EZINE OR WEB SITE? You can, as long as you include this complete blurb with it: “Melinda Coker, author of the book, Diet and Cancer: Is There a Connection?, passionate health researcher and coach, teaches women around the world how to develop a healthy lifestyle.”

Ear Planes

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We made three separate trips during the past week and by the end of the first journey I came down with a sore throat which quickly turned into a cold. During the next two expeditions I was coughing and sneezing. Landings became especially painful. The first leg of our most recent flight was on a regional jet and we flew through a number of storms which made for quite a bumpy ride and created a wonderful opportunity for me to suffer with extreme ear discomfort upon our landing in Detroit. While in the airport waiting for our flight back to Dallas, I spotted a box of EarPlanes and decided to try them. You insert them into your ears at least an hour before landing and they regulate the pressure. I loved them! They helped so much that I plan to stock up so that I will have them for any future flights. They have a child’s size, too. If you suffer from ear discomfort when flying, I would highly recommend that you try the EarPlanes. It looks like you can get them at drug stores or on-line.

© 2010 Melinda Coker

WANT TO USE THIS ARTICLE IN YOUR EZINE OR WEB SITE? You can, as long as you include this complete blurb with it: “Passionate health researcher and coach, Melinda Coker teaches women around the world how to develop a healthy lifestyle.”

Plant Sources of Calcium

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How do you get your calcium if you are a vegan? You have to be a bit more creative and use vegetables, beans and seeds rather than just drinking a glass of milk.

Kale, turnip greens, collard greens, bok choy, mustard greens, Swiss chard, lettuces, rhubarb, spinach, dandelion greens, artichokes, broccoli and other dark green vegetables are all excellent sources of calcium.

Almonds contain more calcium than other nuts. Most beans are fair sources of calcium, as is soy milk and tofu. Some fruits with good calcium levels include figs, papaya and raisins. Sesame seeds and tahini are very high in calcium.

Other non-dairy sources of calcium include raw parsley, sun-dried tomatoes, raw Spanish peanuts, corn, wheat, brown rice,oats and pumpkin seeds. Quinoa (pronounced keen-wah) is a grain that contains as much calcium as an entire quart of milk.

The U.S. daily recommended intake of calcium is between 800mg and 1,200mg. The World Health Organization (WHO) recommends only 400-500 milligrams of daily calcium. If you eat one cup of beans, four tablespoons of tahini and five figs you will have gotten over 500 mg of calcium.

Non-dairy sources of calcium are usually good sources of fiber, folic acid, magnesium, potassium and even protein. Plant-based proteins are more alkaline than animal proteins. Meat and milk are very acidic sources of protein and actually cause the body to leech calcium from the bones in order to neutralize the acid.

© 2010 Melinda Coker

WANT TO USE THIS ARTICLE IN YOUR EZINE OR WEB SITE? You can, as long as you include this complete blurb with it: “Passionate health researcher and coach, Melinda Coker teaches women around the world how to develop a healthy lifestyle.”

Drink Water

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We all know we should drink more water, but we really don’t know how much or why we need it. Many experts suggest that you drink half of your body weight in ounces, i.e., if you weigh 160 pounds, divide that in two and you should be drinking 80 ounces of water per day. To make that easy, divide the 80 by 8 which shows you that you need to be drinking ten 8-oz. bottles or glasses of water each day. If you drink alcohol or caffeine, you need to add another 8-oz. for each glass of tea, wine or cup of coffee you drink. If you work out or sweat, add another glass of water. If you live in an arid climate, add one or two more glasses per day.

An easy way to keep track is to purchase a carton of 8-oz. (half-pint) bottled waters. Use a big marker to mark your initial and the number on the lid. If you weigh 160 pounds, mark 10 bottles. If you drink coffee or alcohol or live in an arid climate add 3 or 4 more bottles to your shelf. Start with #1 and number them through 12 in case you need more than your ten. Keep all those bottles in the refrigerator (or your portable ice chest) and try to drink all of them during the day. Don’t drink them too close to bedtime or you may not get a good night’s sleep.

Keep your plastic bottles out of the hot sun and don’t leave them in a closed-up hot car or you will want to replace them. If you can keep them cool, just refill them as you use them so they will be ready for the next day.

© 2010 Melinda Coker

WANT TO USE THIS ARTICLE IN YOUR EZINE OR WEB SITE? You can, as long as you include this complete blurb with it: “Passionate health researcher and coach, Melinda Coker teaches women around the world how to develop a healthy lifestyle.”

Younger Next Year

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It all started when my husband gave me a book to read called, Younger Next Year. At the time we were on a trip to Williamsburg, VA and I basically finished the book during our travel day. WOW! It was good. Written by Chris Crowley who gives you his own personal journey and Dr. Harry Lodge who gives you the scientific reasons for their suggestions.

What they suggest is vigorous exercise six days a week. In return, after age 50 your body will actually grow physiologically younger each year. In fact, they say that you can avoid 70 percent of the decay and eliminate 50 percent of the injuries and illnesses associated with getting older.

After I returned home and added more intensity to my workouts, joined a gym and signed up for strength training, I wanted to tell all of my friends about this new found wonder “drug.”

I started giving books to people only to discover they weren’t reading them, so I decided to bring Chris to our town to talk to my friends. Now that was a real job. I spent a lot of time over a 6-month period trying to make it all happen. And, I did. That was FUN and Chris was a delight! We had a Preview Party one evening and a Luncheon for Women the next day.

Just as the women were arriving at the country club to attend the luncheon, the skies opened up and we had quite a thunderstorm – wind, heavy rain, lightening, and thunder! Fortunately, most of the women waded on in and we were able to enjoy a wonderful event.

A Story from the Luncheon Day

Not all the women did make it through the storm to the luncheon, however. One woman called to say that her electricity had gone out the night before (during another storm) so she had gotten ready in the dark and couldn’t even blow dry her hair… (now that’s a BIG DEAL to a Texas woman!), but she still planned to come.

After getting all ready, she went out to her garage and had to pull the “manual” cord to try to raise the garage door since the automatic garage door opener was powered by electricity. But, the manual release wouldn’t even work! She could NOT get her car out of her garage.

She called a friend who had already arrived at the luncheon to tell her that she was in her garage, but unable to come.

That’s when you use the old expression, “…all dressed up and nowhere to go!”

© 2010 Melinda Coker

WANT TO USE THIS ARTICLE IN YOUR EZINE OR WEB SITE? You can, as long as you include this complete blurb with it: “Passionate health researcher and coach, Melinda Coker teaches women around the world how to develop a healthy lifestyle.”