The web is abuzz right now with a clip from Rachel Ray's talk show, wherein 3 face products are discussed; each provide an instant change in appearance-- a reduction in wrinkles, under-eye bags and discoloration.
"Never believe what you read. Never believe what's on TV. It's all just hoping to pull you in and destroy you." This is the mantra in my head when I read or see or hear about these skin offers. Why?
I AM A SUCKER. I flock to offers like this like moths to light. Anything that purportedly reduces wrinkles or bags or dark circles pulls me into its "TRY ME" web and I can't escape.
My only defense is to NOT WATCH THESE SHOWS.
Dang you, Google trends. Dang you all to heck for pulling me in with your Volcanic Hotness rating of this piece. ...Because I let down my guard. I did watch.
And OHMYGAWD, after watching this show, I'm so giving these products a try. All of them. Done deal.
Seriously, check it out. You'll see what I'm talking about.
I read this amazing article in Sunset Magazine about the Johnson family, aka the zero-waste family. Suffice it to say, this family's way of life is stunning. And inspiring.
SYNOPSIS: This family of four has figured out how to dramatically reduce the amount of waste and recycling they produce, and have reduced the amount of clutter in their lives.
As I've written before, I am a huge fan of purging. Very few things feel as awesome as reducing the amount of stuff you cart around, box up, stuff in the garage, attic or closet. But though I am a huge fan, it's not to say that I'm successful.
I have stuff. Lots of stuff. I have a big family and each of us has our own baggage, as it were. That said, dealing with that stuff-- MY stuff-- is something I can control. What I appreciated about this article were the ideas about reducing the a stuff I don't control: the Styrofoam trays and cellophane wrap that come with the family pack of chicken breasts; the boxes and bags that come with the pasta or chips or spices, even; the veritable tons of unsolicited catalogs, credit card offers and coupons I receive in the mail; the baggies I have to use in the produce department. All things I end up with; all things I don't want.
I hate packaging. Part of my desire to shop locally comes from this inborn need to stop being a hypocrite. Like everyone else, out of need I consume. And consciously or not, I waste. And add to the problem.
Of course I recycle; absolutely. I live in California-- we've all been doing it since the 80s and some of us since the 70s. In fact, in my household, we almost always have more recycling than garbage.
So YAY me...except...I also know that much of what is recycled does end up, eventually, as waste. And what really gets me? This: The Great Pacific Garbage Patch. This is a massive island of garbage that was discovered floating around the Pacific Ocean with an estimated size ranging between 270,000 to 5.8 million square miles (or, twice the size of the continental U.S.).

Great Pacific Garbage Patch
The variance in size estimates are due to the concentration of the island: "(m)ost debris consists of small plastic particles suspended at or just below the surface." Basically, it's hard to see what is there, so it's difficult to gauge the size.
WHAT I CAN TELL YOU: Even the smallest estimate of 270,000 sq mi is MASSIVE. And it's all trash. WASTE. From HUMANS. Stuff we made, stuff we consumed, stuff we had as leftovers, stuff we threw away. And forgot about. And then we bought more stuff and consumed and added to the mess.
I hate feeling like a hypocrite. I hate espousing a belief, and then turning around and BAM! Dumping all over said belief. What I liked about this article is that it gave me some solid advice; easy, doable ideas that I can put into practice and reduce my personal contribution to the problem.
TAKEAWAYS:
Stop junk mail: Register at dmachoice.org and select the types mailing lists you want to be removed from. Honestly, if you just throw the stuff away, marketers would rather save the money than send it to you. And all those flyers and pizza coupons you get in the mail? Unsubscribe here: redplum.com.
Paper towels? This is the easiest one to reduce. I've done it, and I have a massive family. The two ways I did it? Rags and auto detailing towels. Rags can be made out of old, frayed bathroom towels, or even cut-up old t-shirts. Auto detailing towels are white terry cloth hand towels (about the size of a kitchen towels) sold at Costco, something like 60 to a pack for about $15. They aren't fancy and they don't need to be. But they are highly functional.
Use the jar & bulk combo. The biggest suggestion-- which I love but haven't yet tried-- is the heavy use of glass jars, containers and canisters. Béa Johnson, the Johnson family zero-waste guru, brings them with her when she shops; she buys bulk foods or has her selected meats placed in the containers. This way she avoids plastic or cellophane bags and other erroneous packaging.
Upcycle for produce. I use canvas bags when I shop and then I find myself buying veggies and what do I put all those carrots in? Argh. The store's stupid little plastic produce bag. However, a little research taught me that homemade produce bags are actually a thing. Either by making a simple bag out of a netted fabric, or upcycling a mesh onion or fruit bag. Giving something a second life also reduces waste.
Shop local. A great way to get the freshest fruits and veggies while avoiding packaging is to hit your local farmer's markets. Central California is the land of fruits and nuts, so to speak: We have lots of farmer's markets year round. They're just about the best places to get farm-fresh, organic produce.
Lend a second hand. Think twice about your snobbery. You need jeans. Would it kill you to hit a thrift store? If giving up the allure of owning a brand new, name-brand product is too daunting, visit Plato's Closet. It's a lot more palatable to buy those Lucky Brand or Guess or American Eagle or Roxy jeans when you're only paying $10 for the pair. These clothes are gently used, so you're walking lightly on the Earth AND your pocketbook.
Halloween isn’t just for kids. Or adults. Honestly! Who doesn’t love to see pets in costume? A friend sent me an age-old e-mailer and I decided to make it available to you all for your enjoyment. Unfortunately we don’t know where the photos come from– if you do, let me know! Got pet Halloween photos? Pass them my way and I'll post them!

Go to Pepperidge Farms' Facebook page, talk about Milanos, and they'll donate 50¢ to Susan G. Komen for the Cure® (up to $50,000).
You see the title, you roll your eyes and think, "Oh yay. Another breast cancer post; haven't seen many of
those around the Web lately." I know. How common, how trite, right? But let me explain why I choose to talk about this issue
yet again .
First, as most everyone within reach of any form of media is aware, this month is National Breast Cancer Awareness Month. I feel it incumbent upon my person to make sure each of you is overly aware of that fact.
And second, as most everyone does not know, breast cancer is extremely common in my family. To wit:
* My mom is a breast cancer survivor.
* My mom's sister currently has breast cancer.
* My grandmother's sister had breast cancer.
* Two of her 3 daughters (thus, my mom's cousins) had breast cancer.
And this is just mom's side.
So if you followed that correctly, all of the women on my mom's side of the family--except her mother and one of her female cousins-- had breast cancer. Again-- JUST on mom's side. So far just one of my dad's four sisters has been diagnosed. ("Really, Trace? Is that all??")
Statistically speaking, these numbers aren't looking good for my sisters and I. Nor our daughters.
In truth, the hardest part was watching my mommy deal with this horror of a disease. Every cancer is terrifying; this just happened to be the flavor that rocked our family. My father, having passed a few years prior, escaped having to see the love of his life undergo a mastectomy, radiation treatments and chemotherapy. He escaped having to see my mother age 10 years inside of 5, and watch her struggle with her "chemo brain." There is nothing quite so frustrating nor fear inducing as watching someone you love endure unrelenting anxiety over a diagnosis, or gear up for a fight for her life and then fight it, all while knowing the best you can do is pray and hold her hand and make soup. Usually not all at the same time.
And this is my mommy we're talking about here. Because despite that I was in my late 30s and she was just entering her 70s, in my mind's eye, she was then and will always be the woman she was to me when I was 3. She was the one who made me tuna sammiches with sweet pickle relish and chicken noodle soup. She was the one who pet my face in the dark and calmed my frayed nerves after a bad dream. She was the one who rubbed my back and stayed with me while I ushered my second child into the world. This wonderful, perfect-in-every way woman is MY mommy, and having watched her deal with the ravages of cancer with such grace and aplomb, I don't ever want to see any of the women I know, let alone the women and girls of my family, have to make that horrible slog through Cancerland.
While it doesn't seem like much, there is one bitty thing we can all do, and do daily.
As I learned from Becca at The Sandborns :
This month, Pepperidge Farm will be donating 50¢ Susan G. Komen for the Cure® (up to $50,000) every time someone shares a Milano Moment on their facebook wall. All you have to do is go to their wall and share your own moment.
So go Facebook. And share. And all our daily efforts could help change someone's life.
I've recently expanded my personal blogosphere, and begun reading several new bloggers. I've noticed that many of my new daily reads are women younger than myself. NOT MUCH younger... maybe like 15 years or something. Whatever. Anyway, call it the weather, the season, the light shining just so through my non-existent office window-- in the span of one week I stumbled upon a handful of posts by these intelligent, witty, thought-provoking (if somewhat younger) women describing what could only be defined as ANGST.
(Okay and please take a moment to marvel upon the sheer LENGTH of that mighty sentence that I just wrote there. Okay and now reread what I wrote one more time because I'm feeling a little bit controlling and also like the appreciation of my work. Thanks.)
The dynamics: These women are mid-to-late 20s, most of them. Newly-wed-ish. Most with a young child or two. Some are college grads; some have already bathed in the well-spring of a young career. And each describes herself as having an unfettered need of some sort; a desire for...something. And with that desire, an attending, lingering sense of unfulfillment.
Their marriages are fine, but... I mean, they love their husbands and their lives and they are content, you know, LARGELY content, but... and their child or children are wonderful and sweet if slightly exhausting because of their ages and...it's just...something. Something isn't quite right, even if nothing is exactly wrong.
And to you wonderful, intelligent, thought-provoking, CREATIVE women, I say: I get it. OHMGAWD I so totally get it. Not to be completely patronizing, but (*well-meaning nod*) oh, sweetie, I have so been there, done that.
And I want to thank each of you. Because it wasn't until reading your posts that I was able to fully understand and remember that feeling. And I am so sorry you're feeling it, because I hated it.
I don't know, honestly, what it is, or where it comes from; I don't fully understand any of these women's lives to the fly-on-the-wall degree that is necessary to really understand each individual situation, but I can say, I remember being there very well.

This guy in the pretty robes says: "From the very core of our being, we simply desire contentment." I KNOW, RITE?
By age 23 I was married and a mother; in the span of one year, I'd gone from hyper-self-focused college grad, ready to take on the world, to wife and mother. Even my name wasn't my own anymore, and that had been the last vestiges of my personal identity. I'd gone from intense studying days and crazy college partying nights to on-my-own in the big world to wife and mother in what felt like the blink of an eye.
My dreams had been derailed by pregnancy; it wasn't until I was cooing into the face of my sweet, cherubic son that I started to understand it fully. That isn't true; it wasn't until I showed up for a job interview with my newborn son, brimming with a ridiculously blind confidence, that I really understood that no, I wasn't the center of my universe anymore.
But it wasn't even then that the malaise hit me. It was about a year later when, as a stay-at-home-mom, I looked at my intelligence and creativity and book smarts and complete lack of life experience and HUGE inborn desire and realized I felt completely and totally alone. I wanted to be a writer, but I had nothing to write about except being a mom to a toddler. Women with college educations were SUPPOSED to work. Women with babies were supposed to be at home. And what I wanted didn't matter anymore because, well... I was a mom.
Even worse, there was no internet.
What would I say to these talented women, as a voice of experience? I was once in your shoes, so how did I make this feeling go away? How did I solve the "problem"?
All of my answers suck. I mean, ALL OF THEM.
I got a divorce. (My situation was not your situation, just know that.) I got a job and put my kid(s) in daycare. I hated it. I cried all the time. Staying at home, I was bored to tears and wanted to use my brain; working, I was filled with guilt and wanted to be with my kids. Change of job, change of place, change of circumstances-- eventually I realized that the change that needed to happen was me. IN me.
I guess there was a series of things I did to make it quiet down. The first was to start living my life by my standards, not the way that I thought everyone else wanted me to live. Trying to make my spouse happy, even if it made me miserable. Trying to make my parents happy, even though I was now an adult and a mommy and a head of household and this was, well, my life. Mostly, trying not to disappoint anybody, EVAR.
In other words, I was being super LAME. FYI: You can't make everybody happy. And if you are not listening to yourself, and living honestly with yourself? That dissatisfaction will be pervasive and ever present.
Oh and all those things I tried? None of them worked. UNTIL I started listening to myself, really listening and paying attention, everything else was just shouting at the wind.
The best piece of advice I have to I offer this: Learn to release your attachment.
All those things we cling to-- the desire to write, the desire to be read, the desire to have lots of money, lots of friends, to have happy kids, to have a perfect marriage, to get that awesome make-up or those boots or that really great car or be out of debt or...
...it's all just desire. Wants. We're predicating our happiness on things, situations, attaching ourselves to the idea that if we just had this one thing or if that one situation just worked out like I've planned it...
And this is why desire sucks ass. Because desire is conditional, if you think about it. Desire means we can only be happy depending on a certain set of conditions. And because those conditions-- all conditions-- are ever moving and dependent on things out of our control, we're always going to be desiring one thing or another to make our lives perfect. We just end up having attachments to ideas, to desires, instead of...well, living what's at hand.
I once heard a Buddhist monk counsel to notice one's feelings. If you are angry, instead of reacting, simply notice how you are feeling, and ask yourself why you are feeling the way you do. Don't judge. Just notice it. Same goes when you're feeling sad. But really listen to the answer.
Example: I'm sad because he called me a name. Why does name calling make me sad? Because I am not what he called me. Okay. Why am I bothered still? After a moment of thinking, I feel my sadness slipping away, because I realize it doesn't matter what he called me, it isn't fact. And somehow, releasing my attachment to it makes me feel a lot better.
So, 20-somethings, that's my advice. Learn to release your attachment. And maybe you'll get rid of that gnawing empty feeling well before I did, well before you turn 40.