Flashback Friday: The Problem with Girls’ Clothes

If you have any daughters, you know how difficult it can be to find nice, age-appropriate clothes for them. So much of what’s available today can only be described as trampy.

Writer Mona Charen once said that both liberals and conservatives should demand that decent girls’ clothing be made available in today’s stores. Both sides do agree there’s a problem in the girls’ department, but liberals tend to blame business as the cause, while conservatives blame our culture. Regardless of where we place the blame, the important question is, what are we going to do about this problem? For starters:

  1. Never buy a sexually suggestive piece of clothing for your daughter, no matter how great a deal it may be. Remember, our goal is to keep those clearance racks filled with trampy clothing.
  2. Complain to store management about inappropriate girls’ clothing. Let them know it offends you.
  3. Frequent stores that sell age-appropriate girls’ clothing, such as Lands’ End and Hanna Andersson. Put your money where your mouth is.
  4. When you find age-appropriate outfits, don’t just buy them; alert all your friends who have daughters, so they can buy them, too. Businesses will sell whatever styles make money for them.
  5. Learn to sew, and teach your daughters to sew. It’s fun, it’s creative, and it’s a slap in the face to the clothing stores that sell sleazy styles for girls.
  6. Check out thrift stores for good, basic clothes.
  7. Teach your daughters that they are beautiful inside, where it counts. Raise girls who do not depend on a mirror or leering looks from the opposite sex for their self-esteem.

Originally posted 2/27/2007

Breaking Up with Aldi

I think I’m slowly breaking up with Aldi.

I don’t shop there as often, and when I do, I find it frustrating. The prices aren’t as good as they used to be. The quality of the food is declining (the cottage cheese with orange blobs in it put us off cottage cheese so much that we still don’t buy it, anywhere.)  As if that weren’t enough, I almost always end up being overcharged because the gals who work there are going so fast that things get scanned too many times. So after I check out, I have to study my receipt and then go wait for a clerk to give me one or more refunds; meanwhile my frozen orange juice melts.

Aldi and me, we go way back. My dad took us there in the 1970s; it’s where I stocked up before heading back to college each semester. I shopped there as a newlywed. We were there all the time during the years we had six mouths to feed. More recently, each time we moved, we made sure to find the nearest Aldi. In fact, when we lived in Door County, we drove 50 minutes to an Aldi (in Green Bay).

But now I live 5 minutes from Aldi and I only go maybe once a month. The grocery store across the road has better prices, and offers a less-aggravating experience, so I go there at least once a week and usually more often.

I suspect what’s finally happening at Aldi is what happens to most chain stores over time. Some suits at corporate headquarters decide the employees aren’t working fast enough. So they crack the whip on them: “Speed it up! We’re spending too much employee time processing the customers.” And so the customer experience goes down while the profits go up. But sooner or later, the customers get fed up and stop coming.

That’s what happened with me and Wal-Mart; we broke up quite a while back. I haven’t been in one in months. Pay attention, Aldi. You may be next.

Sometimes technology is so cool……

 

The upcoming bride in our house is designing a guestbook for her wedding using engagement photos and Snapfish. She’s very good at making books there and I know the guestbook is going to be wonderful.

But there are all sorts of uses for these books that are so easily made using your own photos. Like this ABC book you make for a child using his or her own toys. How cool is that?

 

How to Get Barb’s Book for Half Price

Guest post from a homeschool dad:

Has your Homeschool year started and things aren’t quite going smooth yet? Are you Moms finding it a little difficult to get yourself back on a good schedule? Are you having doubts about your curriculum or does it seem that everyone is asking if “you’re doing that homeschool thing again this year?” Is everything getting done? Is anything getting done?

Maybe you need to read what my wife learned (and how she survived) homeschooling for 25 years…and do we have a special deal for you Homeschool Groups!

 

 

 

Her book is called The Imperfect Homeschooler’s Guide to Homeschooling. I’m sure you’ve heard other moms mention it. Here’s how to get it for half price:  order 10 books at a time and get them for $5.95 each (reg. $11.95 each) plus you’ll get free shipping. Got a big group?  Order 20 books and get free shipping. Or order 30 books and get free shipping. So the deal is 10-book increments, ½ price for the books and free shipping.

The Imperfect Homeschooler's Guide to Homeschooling

 

She put a lot of information in her book too – no fluff – homeschool moms don’t have time for fluff – they “just need the facts.”

 

You can read more about the book here:

 

 

But to get the book at the homeschool group discount (½ price for increments of 10 books plus free shipping) you need to order from this page.

Her book really is packed full of information and advice.

Order securely with Paypal:

 

 

 

P.S. My wife is Barbara Frank

Please note: free shipping to continental U.S. only.

Summer Vacation Projects–Finished!

It’s been three months since summer began. Where did the time go?

I spent some of it watching my son swim in his pool, gardening, planning our daughter’s upcoming wedding and buying a vintage Bernina and playing with it. I also finished a couple of projects, including this needlework pillow from a kit I bought in 1987 but didn’t start until I finished homeschooling two years ago:

I also made this quilt from fabric I bought from Connecting Threads:

Like the back? It’s a like-new, made-in-Italy sheet I bought at Goodwill for $3.99. What a find! The look and feel of it is just wonderful.

And now my summer’s gone, and it’s back to work. I’ll post here when I can, but I’m also going to share some posts from my older blogs (I began blogging in 2005) that may help newer homeschoolers. You’ll see them on Fridays…..Flashback Fridays.

For current homeschooling news, be sure to visit my other site, Thriving in the 21st Century.