Spiderweb on my face

So yeah, I was feeling good there for a while, things were really looking up. Then they stopped looking up and things got hella tense and anxious and ugly. Whoa anxiety monster in my face.
Depression and anxiety often go hand in hand, but sometimes the depression is so overwhelming that the anxiety takes a back seat. The new drugs have helped my depression immensely and I was thrilled. I was not expecting, however, to be t-boned by a giant hoopty driven by anxiety. Bam! Right on up there, I’m feeling good, then suddenly I’m freaking out. I’m having panic attacks that I can’t control. This is key. I’ve had panic attacks in the past and I have almost always been able to stop them through breathing and forcing my brain to be calm. These past couple weeks, however, have been pretty brutal.
The anxiety or panic comes over me and as I try to talk myself through it, “this is anxiety, it causes a spike of adrenaline and that causes the heart to pump faster and muscles to tense and the brain to go on high alert. It’s just an errant reaction to something that isn’t happening.” I find that the words are not working like before. I can’t wrest control of my mind away from this lizard brain type action. The flood of adrenaline is not subsiding. Why not? what the hell? Is it because my medicine isn’t working? Holy shit! If my medicine doesn’t work then I don’t know what I’m going to do! oh no oh no oh no oh no! I’m never going to get better I’m never going to fucking defeat this shit. I’m going to spend the rest of my life in some sort of shit-limbo. DAMMIT.
Like that. Instead of being able to manage the anxiety I found it spinning out of my control and as it spiraled off it released more and more little tornados of fear (apparently the spellcheck dictionary has tornado but not tornados. The spellcheck dictionary has not spent an August in Minnesota). When it first started happening we (David, my therapist and I) decided it was probably PMS. People who know me know that my PMS turns me into both the Scylla and the Charybdis and those around me are forced to navigate their little boats through the treacherous waters.
But it kept happening, wave after wave of fear and tension, a complete lack of surety where once I felt positive.
Add to it a monster headache that will not go away. Day after day a persistent low grade pressure in my head.
So, I go to therapy yesterday and I throw it all out there. Oh my god! One million anxieties and nothing is helping and I feel like every nerve in my body is exposed and I can’t think rationally and I can’t concentrate on any one thing and dammit I was feeling so good and now everything is failure and what the hibbity-hell????
I really love my therapist, she is calm and insightful and can break problems down into component parts and show me how those parts fit together to make something larger than the sum of its parts.
I’d never experienced such consistent and persistent anxiety before. It’s not that it wasn’t there but that depression often trumps anxiety when it comes to brain resources. Now that my depression has eased up my anxiety finally has the room it needs to expand and really reach its full potential.
And that’s the thing about fighting mental illness. It’s never clear cut. You’re fighting an enemy that has a million secret weapons and just as many secret ninja soldiers. A successful campaign on one front exposes your vulnerabilities on another and once again you’re outflanked. It’s exhausting sometimes and it doesn’t help that you can’t see the end. You just steel your spine and put your head down and force your way through attack after attack.
The biggest weakness in my army is my own self defeating thoughts. I have a habit of analyzing my symptoms and immediately discounting them. I initially assess them as fake or psychosomatic. I am my own worst critic. If I become overly anxious to the point of physical discomfort I’ll tell myself that it’s because I can’t get my shit together, I don’t want to get better. Obviously this doesn’t help the situation and can often make matters worse.
A good example is this damned headache that I’ve been experiencing. It will not abate. For a few days it’s been beating my skull and for a few days I’ve been yelling at my own head telling myself that I have no reason to have such a headache. Brilliant. So, we’re out of advil and the tylenol isn’t making a dent in it. I mention it to David and he points out that last week I felt like I was coming down with a cold. I’d been tired, my lymph nodes were swollen and I had a bit of a sore throat. So I had that last week and a headache this week and he points out that it is spring and there’s pollen and persistently wet leaf littler that produces bits and bops of mold spores and maybe this is just allergies.
I have a strange relationship with allergies. When I was in high school and college I’d started reacting to some fresh fruits and vegetables like apples, carrots, cherries and some nuts. I assumed it was pesticides that I was reacting to because why would you be allergic to apples. But then I started eating more organic fruits and vegetables when I could and the symptoms and reactions didn’t abate. So then I was at a loss. Who the fuck is allergic to fruit? I’ll tell you who’s allergic to fruit! It’s hypochondriacs! Those are the people who are allergic to fruits and vegetables and door knobs and paper and whatnot. Ergo, I must be a hypochondriac. It’s obvious that I’m experiencing allergic reactions based on psychosomatic issues that I can’t trace. But I don’t need to trace them I just need to recognize that these allergies are my fault and not real.
Every year I have issues and every year I would send a barrage of self loathing into my own head. Stop having allergies, you’re just being a baby…no, you’re being a stupid baby! And it certainly didn’t help that I read a book that happened to take the same stance, that many chronic discomforts like sciatica, allergies and migraines were less physical in origin and more psychosomatic. And of course this all fit so perfectly with other experiences I’d had in my life. As a child I would go to adults and try to get help from them regarding my home situation. Time after time my efforts were rebuffed. I am a kid, I am experiencing great abuse in the home and I go to a teacher or a relative and I try to get help and I am told the same thing over and over, “oh, every kid thinks their home life is terrible. When you grow up you’ll see it was fine.” Basically, I was told that my issues, my discomforts, my problems were not real. I was told that my assessment of the situation was wrong. I learned to not trust myself, to always second and third guess everything. I learned to stop asking for help.
And we come full circle. I’m an adult that cannot accept that seasonal allergies are real despite all the evidence to the contrary. I am a person who can send her own anxiety out of control by berating herself for having anxiety in the first place.
This process of therapy will take a long time and I am okay with that. Yesterday, we were able to identify and outline this issue that I have with anxiety and self doubt. As hard as it is to know and accept this about myself, the pressure is alleviated by the knowledge that it is a thing that can be fixed and that I will one day know that I am not a stupid baby.

Time is a One Way Street

I take the brain pills, I’ve been on various brain pills since 2006. I’ve tried a lot of brain pills with varying results. Everybody’s brain chemistry and wiring is different and the sad fact is that no one really knows what those differences are or why they occur. To find the correct antidepressant and dosage it seems that a person will have to try a few different drugs and will have to vary the dosage. So, in 2006 we started down the path of finding the right drug.
I’d taken prozac as a teenager and the results were horrid. Prozac made me sleepless and paranoid, so we knew we could take that off the list. I had also taken Nortriptyline when I was 18 and the results were all around positive. We started out with Zoloft. I felt nothing, no effect at all. We raised the dose a few times and still, nothing. So we moved on to Celexa. Celexa was awful. It made me so anxious that I was becoming physically ill at even the thought of being around other people. We decided to take SSRIs off the list completely. I had asked about the Nortriptyline, it was something that had worked. Nortriptyline is pretty old school as far as antidepressants go and the side effects can be problematic. There was a newer drug, Effexor, that also worked on inhibiting the re-uptake of norepinephrine, but with easier to monitor side effects. Thus, at the beginning of 2007 I started Effexor.
Effexor is a hell of a drug. The side effects are phenomenal, brain zaps, weird dreams, weak muscles, dry mouth, dizziness, and the most insidious, apathy. Most of the side effects waned over time and over time we continued to increase the dose until, finally, I was taking 375mg a day. That is a pretty substantial dose. It did lift me out of the very bottom of my depressive slump, it brought light to the very darkest corners of my mind. It was a life jacket tossed to me at the very last moment. I grabbed it hard and held on.
But then that was it. The Effexor was acting as a stabilizer, it was keeping my head above water but it was not getting me out of the ocean, just preventing my drowning. And though I could remain calm as I surveyed my situation, I was seeing that I was not making any progress towards getting better. We continued to raise the dose and eventually we added Welbutrin to the mix. The Welbutrin was a dopamine reuptake inhibitor as well as a norepinephrine reuptake inhibitor. The idea was that it would enhance the anti-depressive qualities of the Effexor while adding more dopamine to the mix. Dopamine works on motivation and pleasure. It’s the ‘reward’ chemical that gives you that bit of a high when you do well at something, seeking out that dopamine high is what motivates people to continue to do well. There are some strong indications that many drug addictions are linked to the seeking out of that dopamine reward.
And so we kept marching forward adding more and more Effexor and Welbutrin to the mix. Effexor is a drug that requires a very long term commitment. Dosage increases have to happen very slowly and over long periods of time. You start at the lowest dose, 37.5mg and work your way up from there. Also, it does not start affecting the norepinephrine until you get up to 225mg. It could be months before you start feeling positive effects, making it a commitment not to be taken lightly. Once I got up to 225mg and beyond I patiently waited to feel better.
A few times I asked about Nortriptyline. It had the distinction of being the only antidepressant that I had tried that had very real and noticeable results. How was it different from Effexor? Why was Effexor seen as a better choice when the results so far have been not so spectacular? Remember the side effects I mentioned before? Remember the apathy? Yeah, that never went away. The apathy was huge. It was a catch-22 of amazing proportions. I was not getting better, Effexor was not helping me, many very important things in my life were falling apart and I surveyed all of that through a barrier of disconnect.
Should I have pushed harder to switch from Effexor to Nortiptyline? That’s the $64,000 question, isn’t it? I am not a doctor, I am not a trained medical professional, I am in no way an expert on neurobiology. I am just me, a sort of a goof of a dooflerumpus trying to navigate the world with a brain that seems determined to confound me at every step. I’m not an expert, and as much as I would like to buy into or believe in that new agey ideal of “it’s your body, you know what’s best” I just can’t. It isn’t true. I’ve known far too many people who have taken that sort of logic to its worst extreme and ignored sound medical and scientific evidence to the siren song of “alternative” treatments that were nothing more than sugar and hope. Add to that a pharmaceutical industry that advertises prescription meds on prime time TV and eventually you have an army of people who base their treatment plans on 30 second sound bites and a misbegotten notion of “natural = better”.
Many years ago I went to my GP with my insomnia issue. I’d been struggling with insomnia since I was a teen (keeping in mind, of course, that when a teen suffers from insomnia the only response they get is a condescending recommendation to go to bed earlier or some such nonsense). This isn’t just “a hard time getting to sleep” this was night after night of no sleep that would last 5-7 days and then I would sleep for a night or two and then no more sleep. When I asked my doctor about this she asked me which sleeping pill I wanted to try. What? Seriously? I’m not a fucking doctor, why would I know which sleeping pill was best for me? Well, this was at a time when Ambien and Lunestra were advertising pretty heavily on TV. Since I don’t watch TV I never saw those commercials. What was instantly clear to me was that doctors were willing to prescribe medication to people who were armed with nothing more than a preference for an advertising campaign.
As a patient I have to try to strike a balance between the knowledge that I do have (Nortriptyline has worked in the past) and the professional opinion of a person who is educated in that arena (Effexor has a higher success rate and fewer side effects than Nortriptyline). Once I was on the Effexor, however, it became harder and harder to find that balance. The Effexor was not working but I was apathetic. The Welbutrin should have helped with the apathy, but did not.
Then I lost my job and that should have been a great big giant sign that said, “HOLY CRAP! THIS ISN’T WORKING!!!” in flashing red neon letters. Instead we just bumped up the Effexor and Welbutrin.
Finally, at the beginning of 2009 I had a moment of clarity. It happened in the psychiatrist’s office. She’d been playing the role a therapist for me as well as psychiatrist and she was failing at both. Her therapy method was to take my larger issues (fear of making a big mistake keeps me from doing even the simplest of tasks, like grocery shopping) tease out the overriding logic (it’s pretty difficult to make a big mistake when grocery shopping, and whatever little mistakes there might be did not make a difference at all) and then say, “well, if you know this to be logically true then why are you still having a problem?”
Yes, indeed, how on earth could I still be having a problem if the logical answer was so clearly laid out in front of me? That’s why I’m in therapy you dipwad! If I were capable of being logical about these emotional issues I wouldn’t be in this big mess. My moment of clarity involved some yelling and some crying and an unfocused sense of determination. I stopped my sessions with her (which was inevitable anyway, I didn’t have insurance and the bills were piling up fast), I wrote a letter to the clinic describing my issues (which I’m sure just got pitched into the crazy lady bin) and I started weaning myself off the Effexor.
The next thing we know it’s September and things had gone all to hell. Time continued its relentless march, December happened and things got ugly. Finally, I got in to see a new psychiatrist. First we talked about what was happening in my head, we talked about my symptoms and my concerns. David came in as well to give his insight into the situation. We discussed the various meds that I had used over the years. Then he asked the most important question ever, “What medications HAVE worked for you?”. Nortriptyline! We talked about my experiences with Nortriptyline (i really hate typing the word Nortriptyline, it’s very difficult to type). As an added benefit, it was a medication on the Target $4 list! So we went over the possible side effects and the way it works and I got me a prescription for Nortriptyline!
I started slow, 25mg to start, 25mg bumps over 7 day intervals. Initially, I was a bit disappointed. I could feel no positive difference but I was feeling some very definite apathy coming back. Then about 4 weeks in it was like a vice grip had been released from my brain. The apathy was slowly burning away like fog in the morning light. More importantly, I was feeling motivation. I had not felt much in the way of motivation for years.
I take 100mg of Nortriptyline every day. I am not ‘healed’ or ‘better’, my depression has not been magically zapped away. It doesn’t work like that. What has happened is that I have looked down and finally saw the path that could lead me out of the forest. I still have months and months of hard work in front of me, but now I am able to face that work without the constant self defeating actions of my brain.
And what happens if I turn and try to look back? I see frustration back there. There is a part of me that feels angry over losing 3 years of my life to ineffectual medications. It is not hard to imagine where my life would be if only I’d spoken up or insisted on getting Nortriptyline. I’d probably still have my job, David and I would have bought a house. I’ve lost a lot of friends over these past 3 years because of my inability to maintain contact. Mostly, however, it pains me to think that David has had to live with this, that many of his plans had to be compromised because of my depression.
Time is a one way street. I can look back, but I can only watch it recede out of sight. Part of me is angry, part of me is sad. A greater part of me, however, knows that this life is truly finite and that the only thing I can control is what I choose to do next. If I could go back in time and change things, I would, absolutely, but I cannot. I will instead, try to be kind to my own self, to be forgiving and charitable to myself. My goals in life were never big, they were never along the lines of “be a big success” or “be famous”. My goals were always tempered with “do the best you can with what you have”. I am a journey oriented person, I revel more in the “now” of life than in the “long term”, perhaps this is why I love dogs so much, they only know right now and they love the hell out of every right now that they experience.
It is not easy, but I am turning away from what I have lost and will focus my energies on what I can be.

The Masterful Myth of Free Will

Part One: How I Spent My Winter Vacation.
So where have I been? Not been writing much, not been able to, that’s for sure. What happened?
By the time winter rolled around I had weaned myself completely off the Effexor. Effexor is not a bad drug, per se, but it was not the correct drug for me. I appreciated that it lifted me from the absolute dregs of depression, that it evened out my mood swings, that was awesome. The problem with the Effexor is that it made complacent with my depression. I knew things were not going well, but meh, I had a hard time caring about it.
Winter rolls around and I am completely off any meds at all. Let’s just take this moment to contemplate the idea of facing the holidays (and all the stressful nuggetry they entail) sans brain meds! I don’t even recommend that my healthy friends do this. Holidays should…nay MUST! be endured with some form of artificial fortification. To do otherwise is to mock the entire institution of holidays with the family! Suffice to say, things went from tolerable to not okay to entirely fucked in a few short weeks.
It happened mid December. The best way I can describe it is that my mind split into two parts. One mind was sick, very sick. That part of my brain was a whirlwind of anger, paranoia, hurt, suspicion, irritability and generalized craziness. While you might be tempted to say, “but, Heather, how is this different from normal?” and I would respond with a hearty, “suck it”. Seriously, though, it was pretty awful. My mind was thinking thoughts that I did not want to think, it was believing things that were completely untrue. My mind was suspicious of everything everyone said. The worst part of all this was that it was constant, it was uncontrollable and it was pervasive.
The other part of my mind stayed rational and mostly reacted in horror at the thoughts and ideas in the crazy part of my head. I was lucky, very very lucky. I imagine I was on a precipice looking over the edge at the abyss of mental illness and I almost fell. The fact that I managed to maintain that slice of rational mind is a miracle, nothing less. I stared into the face of true mental illness and it scared the holy hell out of me.
Unless you have experienced it, I’m not sure you can quite appreciate it. We tend to see our minds as an ineffable, unquantifiable part of our physical brains. We separate them, our brains are corporeal but our minds are non-corporeal. The mind is the essence of you. So what happens when your mind starts doing things that you don’t want it to do? How do you control the thing that you need to use to control itself…what? How do you use your mind to control your own mind and thoughts? What do you do when you cannot control your mind? What exactly does that mean about you?
There were so many horrid thoughts in my head, so many awful conclusions reached. It took a grand force of will during every interaction to not blow up at people, to not scream in anger, to not accuse people of secretly hating me, of conspiring against me. And even when I did limit my interactions with people these thoughts would not stop. They were like a hurricane in my skull, an unceasing force in my mind. At one point it got so bad that I found myself in the bathtub knocking my head against the edge of the tub. One good thump of the tub would give me 3 or 4 minutes of relief, would provide enough external stimulus to distract my from my mind.
My little slice of rational brain was screaming! I knew this wasn’t right, I knew this was unhealthy. Most importantly, however, I knew that I could lose that slice of rational brain. I told people, I called for help. I was losing this battle and I was sinking fast. And help was what I got. We bumped my therapy up to twice a week, I got a couple county social workers (which is a completely different post), my friends and family grabbed me by my hair and pulled me to the surface and they held me aloft until I was able to tread on my own.
What is free will? What does it mean if the choices you make are tainted by depression? mental illness? poor ‘wiring’ in the brain? The fact that the small slice of rational brain remained is the exception, not the rule. It was wholly terrifying to see how easy it was for my mind to become that black and oily snakepit. If I’d lost that bit of rational brain and fell off the edge there, would I still be operating within the parameters of ‘free will’? How free is your will? how many of the things you choose or act on or react to every day are truly free will? How many of your emotions and reactions are free and how many are the result of baser instinct? or brain chemistry?
The thing that scared me the most was knowing that if I lost that bit of rational brain I’d never know it, that there would be no way to recognize the loss of rational mind without the rational mind there to analyze the situation.
The good news is that I climbed out of that morass. I survived. I got new meds, I’m taking Nortriptyline and it’s working. It is really truly working. It is like a vice grip of fog has been removed from my brain. I went to therapy twice a week as needed and as the fog lifted I was able to bring it back down to once a week. I’m calling this ‘My Cautiously Optimistic Phase” as it’s true that I am feeling good but I know that it might be temporary, that it’s not enough to just want to feel better.
And while this won’t mean much to most people, it will mean something to those who have been close to me during this crisis: I cleaned my kitchen.

Ask Auntie BubboPants


I promised and promised and promised and finally here it is, the food column!

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Dear Auntie BubboPants,
First, like probably many of your fans, I enjoy reading your column in each issue of This Week in Ravelry. I appreciate your insight and your no nonsense approach to giving advice and saying what you feel. As per your request for food questions, I have some for you. I often find myself in a rut making the same or similar meals. With my hubby & I both working, there isn’t much time for dinner preparation when we get home. We’re hungry & don’t want to wait an hour for dinner, especially when we get home at 6 pm or later. That leads to snacking & unfortunately the snacking is usually not healthy. Maybe this is a multiple part question: Can you suggest any recipes or meals that are tasty, quick to make & packed with vegetables? Perhaps related, do you have any recipes for spaghetti squash other than the usual bake, shred, eat or bake with cheese, shred, eat? Don’t get me wrong, I like spaghetti squash prepared that way, but I’d like to broaden my spaghetti squash horizons.
Thanks for any & all answers!
spaghetti squash butt

Dear SSB,
First off, thank you thank you! I do really appreciate that people enjoy reading the column!
So let’s see, you’re having trouble with snacking before dinner time and it’s ruining your dinner? Stop buying those snacks. Really and truly! Stop buying the kinds of snacks that lead to eating and eating and eating. I know it sounds sort of trite and mom-like, but if you’re hungry, then eat a piece of fruit! Or some carrots! Stop buying the empty calorie type treats and snacks. Instead, when you go shopping, make a list that focuses on the reality of your situation. You are often too tired and hungry to focus on large meal prep right when you get home, you need to eat something little first to help curb the hunger pangs. Once you’ve had your little home-from-work snack you can get back to focusing on a real meal. So buy some legitimate snacking options like baby carrots, apples, bananas and whatnot.
As for quick and easy veggie packed meals, I will share with you the secret method David and I use. We often forget to cook dinner until it is very late at night. We are very easily distracted and somewhat irresponsible at times. One of the things we started doing is keeping big bags of frozen mixed veggies in the freezer. Our easiest meal is to make spaghetti, and we will dump a bunch of frozen mixed veggies into the sauce while it’s heating up. It’s not the kind of thing that I would serve to guests, but it gets a lot of veggies into me in short order and I don’t have to try to plan out multiple dishes for dinner when I am tired or not really feeling like cooking.
Spaghetti squash is lovely and can be added to just about anything. I like to stab it a few times then throw it in the microwave for 8-10 minutes depending on the size of the squash and the power of your microwave. While that is happening throw some minced garlic and olive oil in a saute pan. Then add about 1/2 to 1 tablespoon of any spice blend you want! An italian herb mix or some curry powder or Greek seasoning or whatever you are craving. Add about a teaspoon or so of water. Stir that up on medium heat until the water is mostly cooked off. Turn it off and let it just sit. Once you have your spaghetti squash well shredded then toss that in the pan with the seasonings, turn on the heat and mix until the seasonings are thoroughly mixed in. This seasoning mix trick can be used on pasta, other veggies, potatoes or whatever. The water and the sitting time are important for helping the flavors in the seasoning mix bloom and blend before adding the main ingredient (pasta or squash or whatever).
Also! Spaghetti squash, regular squash, potatoes and bunches of other things can be cooked in larger batches and kept in the fridge for about a week. When you are cooking, consider making a double portion of veggies or potatoes or the main dish.

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Dear Auntie BubboPants,
I’m newly married. I do the cooking, my husband does the dishes. Except, he complains a lot about doing the dishes. He prefers that I heat up a frozen pizza rather than cook a nice, healthy, tasty meal, because he doesn’t like doing the dishes. I don’t wish to serve unhealthy meals every night.
I’m trying positive reinforcement – lots of thank-yous, etc., when he does the dishes without complaining. We’re making slow progress.
In the meantime: can you recommend some dinners – real, hot meals with all four food groups – that use very few dishes for preparation?
(And while we’re at it… how can I make dish-time less of an ordeal?)
Thanks!
She Who Makes the Dishes Dirty

Dear SWMtDD,
I do not know what your kitchen situation is like, but I am going to recommend that you look into getting a full sized portable dishwasher! If you don’t know what they are, I will tell you (because I am good that way). A portable dishwasher is the same size as a regular dishwasher but does not get installed permanently, it hooks up to the kitchen faucet via an adapter. It exhausts the water right into your kitchen sink. When it’s done it can easily be unhooked from your faucet and rolled anywhere you like. Check Craigslist, I got mine for $50. They have the added benefit of giving you an extra square of mobile countertop.
So that is one way to make dish time less of an ordeal.
Okay, but I want to talk a little bit about the “equal division of chores”. When you first set up house with someone you always want to have an equitable sharing of responsibility so that everyone feels that everyone else is pulling their own weight. So, you divide things up and everyone seems happy. Happy until one person realizes that they just really really hate one of those chores. Sometimes the “equal division of chores” just isn’t all that equal or fair. Every act or chore does not need an equal corollary chore. Or if it does, it needn’t be the one seemingly related to it. The corollary chore to ‘making dinner’ doesn’t seem to be ‘doing dishes’ since doing the dishes seems to be something he really hates as opposed to just a chore to do. What I would suggest is that the two of you work together on the dishes and clean up after dinner and he picks up a different household responsibility.
I know it seems unfair, why should you cook and do part of the cleaning! Well, that’s just one of the 2 million compromises that you will make in the course of your relationship. You are going to find that most of the assumptions you had about fairness were at best, naïve. I know you are tired after working and cooking, but have him help you with dinner, and you can help him with the dishes.
Also, do you have a crock pot or slow cooker? If you don’t then get one! They are relatively inexpensive and they are invaluable in the kitchen. A roast tossed in the crock pot with a bit of water and some seasonings in the morning becomes delicious roast beef by the time you get home. Microwave a couple potatoes and some veggies and you’ve got dinner. Or make a simplified version of my crock pot chili!
1 can diced tomatoes (with the juices)
1 can diced jalapeños
3 tbl chili powder
1 tbl oregano
1 tbl cocoa powder
1 cinnamon stick
1 bay leaf
1/2 tb pepper
1/2 tbl salt
1 cup water
4 or 5 or more garlic cloves
1 chuck roast
put all of this in the crock pot before you go to work. Or, put all of it in the crock the night before and store it in the fridge and then put the crock into the cooker before you go to work.
When you get home, pull the roast out and put it in a large bowl to rest. Remove the bay leaf and cinnamon stick. Puree the contents of the crock pot. Once the beef has rested it will shred easily with 2 forks, add the beef back to the chili puree in the crock pot. From here add a couple cans of diced tomatoes and as many different cans of beans (black beans, kidney beans, red beans) as you like. You may have to add a bit of water as well. Heat it up and boom, you have enough chili to last you a few nights and your dishes are minimal.

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Hello, Auntie BubboPants!
For several months (a year?) now, I have been completely uninspired in the kitchen. Then, I found SmittenKitchen.com – a food blog with beautiful and inspiring pictures! I wanted to share! Because I am now in the kitchen for hours at a time with all sorts of goodies!
I have to credit SallySitwell for the discovery, a lady who I met once at a knit night and then again once at yoga and then friended on ravelry and then found her blog where she mentions the site…
I hope you enjoy!
Sarah

Dear Sarah,
That site looks awesome!
I found a site called “Our Best Bites” a few days ago and fell in love with their single serving pies!
Readers, what are your favorite foodie sites? Pop them into the comments section so we can all share.

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Dear Auntie BubboPants,
This is probably more food etiquette than food itself, but I’d appreciate your thoughts on the matter. I tend to show affection through food. I like nothing more than cooking or baking for friends and my DH’s family (mine is a continent away). There are several things I cook that are now constantly requested. His family has noticed this trend, and are starting to reciprocate.
The problem is, besides a few key dishes, his family members are terrible cooks. When his parents came to dinner last, they decided to make jambalaya. Now, I make a mean jambalaya. What they brought was disgusting. My husband and I choked it down. And before his mom served it, she said that “this dish will impress you!”
I had to thank her and take the leftovers (which were thrown out). Then she said she’s going to make it again for us when we go on a family trip next month. My husband gagged when I told him this.
Is there a polite way to tell her that we didn’t care for it? That I’d prefer to make it myself? I don’t want to seem rude, and there’s enough against me already that I don’t want to step on any more toes (they’re Cuban, and I just don’t like Cuban food, save for a few things! Friction!).
Furthermore, I have a lot of dietary considerations; some are medical and some are personal convictions. I can’t have dairy, but I won’t eat anything with artificial colors (actually I am allergic to some of those too!), flavors or preservatives. So when they brought sherbet for dessert (which has all of the above) I had to politely eat that too. I was woefully ill for days, and had an allergic reaction to the dye in it. (as an aside, I’ve told them I like sorbet. They don’t know the difference!)
So, how does one cope when dealing with food situations like this? If I declined either food, I’d have gone without dinner, and it would have been rude not to accept the gift of my guests. But at the same time, having to excuse myself to vomit isn’t very nice either.
What to do?
-Sick to my Stomach

Dear StmS,
You raise a couple of etiquette dilemmas here. The food issues/allergies one is pretty straightforward. You can let your hosts know that you have food allergies or dietary concerns. They can choose to cook for that, but they don’t have to. As the person with the dietary concerns you have to be responsible for what you eat, not them. So, if you are going to go eat somewhere, make sure they know your concerns, have a conversation about them. If they feel they cannot cook for your specific situation then you can bring your own food. There is no reason to eat something you are allergic to simply to seem polite, but these dietary concerns are yours, not theirs, and therefore your responsibility.
If you are not comfortable bringing this up to his parents then it is your husband’s job to do this. As your husband he is obligated to act as your proxy when dealing with his family (just as it would be yours to deal with your family on his behalf).
So, what happens if they cook a meal with your concerns in mind but it is unpalatable? You eat it and you smile and you appreciate the efforts that they went through to make a meal for you. I know it’s not fun to eat things that don’t taste good or are gross, but there are things that are so much more important in the long run than temporary discomfort. The act of feeding someone is rooted deep in our psyche. We don’t feed someone a meal just for the meal’s sake, we give the gift of food as a way of saying, “with you I will share my resources because you are important and we accept you into our pack”. Find a way, make a bit of a sacrifice, eat a small amount. Do this not just to make them happy but to accept the gift they have given to you, the gift of accepting you into their family.

***

Dear Auntie BubboPants,
Unless “is procrastination the natural human condition” counts, I am presently lacking in relationship and other big “what do I do with my life” questions, being as my primary relationship at the moment is with a graduate program that is allegedly helping me answer the “what do I do with my life” sorts of things as well. I DO, however, have a food question, which I trust you to answer as well as you answer other peoples’ more interesting and important life-issues sorts of questions.
I love to cook, it is one of the things that I do. I love to feed my friends and loved ones my cooking. I am also, as of a few years ago, a vegetarian who has no money (see also, graduate school). So, here is the question: What sort of vegetarian main (that does not involve pumpkin, which I don’t like) and is not a curry (which I love, but one does need some variety) can one serve a group of friends in winter in Massachusetts?
Thank you,
Tofurkey-Butt

Dear TB,
I am totally the queen of procrastination! I can relate.
Vegetarian meals without pumpkin? Easy! First things first, you see that chili recipe I posted up there? you make that but leave out the beef. Cook the tomatoes and spices all day, then puree it up and add more tomatoes, all the different beans you like, maybe some canned hominy (sometimes called maize blanco) and any veggies that catch your eye.
Or you can make the chili recipe up to and including the step where you puree it. Then take some peppers, onions and saute until golden in a bit of oil with some garlic. Add some sliced carrots, maybe some zucchini, cilantro and some kale and cook until about half done.
In small tortillas layer the veggies with some refried beans and cheese. Roll up and place seam side down in a 9×13 baking pan. Fit as many as you can in there. Pour the chili puree over these, cover in more shredded cheese and bake for about 30 minutes at say, 400 degrees or until they are hot all the way through. Serve with a salad and maybe some corn bread.
One more idea:
1 head of kale, deribbed and shredded
2 apples, cut into chunks (use apples that are good for cooking like McIntosh, Jonathan, or Gravenstein)
4 cloves garlic, minced
1/2 white onion, chopped
1 zucchini, sliced
a lot of sliced carrots
1 tsp rubbed sage
salt and pepper to taste
1 cup corn meal
1/2 cup shredded parmesan
2 tsp chopped rosemary
in a pot with a cover bring 4 cups of water to a boil. Slowly pour the cornmeal into the boiling water while whisking. Quickly add the parmesan and rosemary. Remove from heat, cover and set aside. It will finish cooking with the residual heat.
In a large fry pan saute the onions and garlic in oil until translucent. Add a stick of butter and let it melt (you can use less butter if you want, I’m not the boss of your butter). Then toss in the zucchini and carrots, apples, sage, salt and pepper. Cook on high heat. When the veggies get some brown around the edges add your kale. Toss it well into the mix and then cover and cook for about 3-5 minutes or until the kale is bright bright green and softened (but not overcooked).
Divide the polenta into 4 bowls and then divide the kale/apple/veggie mixture over the polenta.
Delicious.

copyright 2010 heather ward/bubbodesigns