Halloween safety tips for avoiding H1N1

This Missoulian story offers tips for how to keep the swine flu bug at bay despite all those sticky little hands digging around for the peanut butter cups in the same bowl of candy. Toss out all unwrapped candy, and no bobbing for apples – that’s a given. But spray it down with a bleach solution? Keep it away from sugar-monsters for 48 hours? Yeah, good luck with that!

In other Halloween news, two Missoula teenagers have decorated a haunted house, free of charge, in the hope of raising enough donations to pay for some class trips in the spring. Stop by 2335 Burlington Ave. to check it out and help them out.
- MM

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Something else to be scared about on Halloween: face paint poison

I had just spent the afternoon painting kids’ faces at my daughter’s day care Halloween party when I saw on KPAX that Women’s Voices for the Earth was spreading the word about a Campaign for Safe Cosmetics report that found lead and other metals in children’s face paint. Snooping around online a bit more, I found that the Missoula Independent also got the lowdown.

That face-painting kit I was using? Yep, it’s on the list. Which is just perfect, really, because what would I have to worry about on Halloween – besides the usual sharp metal objects and poison hiding in trick-or-treat candy and, this year, H1N1 – if not for poison in my child’s face paint?

I complain, but I really am glad WVE is part of a campaign to actually study what goes into this stuff. And I’m glad I know about it now, so I can avoid using it again.

- MM

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Wishing you all a safe and scary Halloween!

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Missoula girls honor “sheroes” on Day of the Dead

This events release just came in from YWCA Missoula to highlight Day of the Dead festivities.

“MISSOULA – On Monday, Nov. 2, at 6 p.m., girls from the YWCA’s leadership program will join volunteers and staff in honoring historic women during Missoula’s 17th Annual Festival of the Dead Parade. The parade will begin at the Xs on north Higgins Avenue. Girls from 10 Missoula elementary and middle schools will represent women of the past who they consider to be ’sheroes,’ or female heroes. The group will be giving out information about YWCA’s GUTS! (Girls Using Their Strengths) program and this year’s Shero Project. The Shero Project challenges GUTS! girls and all Missoula community members to recognize not only amazing women through history, but also the strong women in all of our lives who are everyday sheroes.

“GUTS! is a unique, community-based leadership and empowerment program designed by and for young women, ages 9 to 18. Part of YWCA Missoula’s Leadership Institute for Women and Girls, GUTS! encourages young women to explore their own personal values and discover their strengths through wilderness adventures in the summer, continuing during the school year with after-school groups and community service projects.

“Founded in 1911, YWCA Missoula is dedicated to eliminating racism, empowering women, and promoting peace, justice, freedom and dignity for all. Learn more about GUTS! and the YWCA at www.ywcaofmissoula.org.”

I like that: sheroes. Who’s your shero? Jeannette Rankin? Amelia Earheart? Eleanor Roosevelt? Oh, so many to choose from!

- MM

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Benefit to help 4-year-old with epilepsy this Friday

One of the things I love about Missoula is the way we pull together in times of need. The family of 4-year-old Zane Goicovich happens to be having one of those times.

Zane, who has epilepsy and Asperger’s syndrome, may need brain surgery. His family is facing the daunting expense of taking time off from work to travel to the Denver Children’s Hospital and other associated costs.

Missoula to the rescue! Scott Klaudt, owner of Zootown Brew, is organizing a benefit for the Goicovich family. The concert will take place this Friday at the coffee shop, located at 121 West Broadway, starting at 7 p.m. The entire $10 it takes to buy a ticket will go to the Goicoviches.

To find out how you can help, call Noreen Humes at 544-5588 or e-mail her at naturesbest@montana.com.

- MM

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Halloween costume/dance party on Friday

Just wanted to call attention to a comment I got on a post calling for information about Halloween events in Missoula.

Here it is:

“COSTUME DANCE PARTY
FRIDAY October 30th from 6:30 to 8 at the Downtown Dance Collective
$5 per person or $10 per family
live music by Nathan Zavalney

“Hosted by Turning the Wheel Missoula, is a non-profit committed to using the expressive arts to foster self-esteem, leadership skills and community. Our classes are open to people of all ages and abilities.
For more info call Lizzi 529-2580.”

- MM

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What do you get when you put more than 100 pregnant women in a tent?

Flu shots.

- MM

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Halloween events in Missoula – on Halloween!

One of Missoula Mom’s favorite places, SpectrUM, is throwing a Halloween party on Saturday blessedly early in the day, from 11 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.

The invite says to wear your Halloween costume and you’ll get a free T-shirt. Wonder if that goes for grown-ups, too.

Please note, though, that this one does have a slight cover charge. Children 3 years old and younger are free, but ages 4 and older cost $3.50.

The SpectrUM Discovery Area is located on the University of Montana campus, inside the Skaggs building.

Speaking of Halloween events, Missoula Mom recently got a comment from one mom who noted that “Once kids get to be 13 or so people complain about them coming to trick or treat but there isn’t much else for them to do … but get into trouble. Is any place having a teen party or evening on halloween?”

Anyone know of any “teen-friendly Halloween alternatives,” as this parent put it? What DO teens do on Halloween? Let me know and I’ll share it on this blog.

- MM

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Just who is pregnant here?

I received the following essay from a licensed psychologist in Chevy Chase, MD, last week. In it, Lynette Long really goes off on the phrase “We’re pregnant,” apparantly after hearing it one too many times. Read her thoughts – but be forewarned, she describes some of the anatomical apects of pregnancy and the differences between the sexes with an unflinching eye – and then tell me what you think:

“When did it become politically correct to say, we’re pregnant. Gag me with a spoon. We don’t get pregnant. I’ve yet to notice any person with a penis spending his mornings puking his guts out, having a speculum inserted inside his non-existent vagina, or changing his lifestyle to assure the birth of a healthy baby. I also haven’t noticed maternity stores for men where they sell elastic fronted boxer shorts or custom designed wife beater t-shirts for the newest part of the male anatomy: breasts. Nor have I noticed men giving up six packs for a forty-pound egg-shaped belly. So let’s get this straight, we’re not pregnant. Until cloning is a reality, it would be more accurate to say, we’re going to have a baby, since men still contribute 23 of the 46 chromosomes needed to produce a child. Speaking of production, I don’t see men volunteering to endure the excruciating pain of childbirth, the weeks of exhaustion after delivery, or the struggle to get that pre-baby figure back. Let’s not forget about those stretch-marks, that might never disappear or that ’small’ cut a doctor makes to minimize tearing during delivery, which ensures it will burn like ‘heck’ every time you urinate. Anthropologist Margaret Mead once said, ‘If men and women shared pregnancy and childbirth, no family would have over three children, since no man would do it twice.’ She was right.

“When I ask women why they say we’re pregnant rather than I’m pregnant, the responses are based on emotion not logic. ‘It’s sweet.’ ‘I want to include him. I want him to feel a part of it.’ ‘I’m scared and I don’t want to feel like I doing this alone.’ ‘I want him to feel responsible for the baby.’ ‘I want to create buy-in for my partner.’ Whatever happened to individuation and separation? ‘We’re pregnant’ is a denial of reality to create an artificial oneness. Expanding this ‘we-ness’ to other circumstances highlights the absurdity of the claim. The phrase, ‘we got a tooth pulled’ is not used to gain sympathy for a dental visit, nor is ‘we got a promotion’ used to brag about one’s accomplishments at work. Saying ‘we’re pregnant,’ doesn’t change a woman’s personal reality. No matter how you say it, in the end, pregnancy is something women have to do alone.

“The reason the phrase ‘we’re pregnant’ grates on my nerves is that it does what women too often do, share credit and diminish their own personal accomplishments. Pregnancy is a biologically expensive proposition for women. Adult men literally produce 100 million sperm a day and are physically capable of producing hundreds if not thousands of children in a lifetime. Women have a limited number of eggs and make significant biological sacrifices to have children. The phrase, we’re pregnant, diminishes a woman’s experience by implying men and women share equally in the experience. Women deserve full credit for enduring both the burden and responsibility of pregnancy.

“Besides the psychological implications of joint ownership of a pregnancy, there are significant legal implications. When men are pregnant also, who decides when whether or not to terminate a pregnancy? In Japan, where abortion is widely accepted and readily available, women have to get their husband’s permission to have an abortion. Similar legislation could be not far away in the United States and subtle differences in the way we describe experiences may impact the way we legislate them. Ohio Rep. John Adams introduced a bill this year that would require a woman to get the permission of the man she had sex with in order to have an abortion. He argued, men deserve the right to choose, too. So next time you want to say, we’re pregnant, think again. Women have fought long and hard for the right to choose, don’t jeopardize that right for emotional reasons. Protect everyone woman’s right to choose and embrace your pregnancy and the significant contribution you are making to your family.”

- MM

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More Halloween costume fun in Missoula

A community costume ball at the Senior Citizens Center will take place on Saturday night, from 8-11 p.m. It’s $5 to get in, but all ages are welcome. So wear your Halloween costume! The center is located at 705 S. Higgins Ave.

And if you know of any other interesting Halloween happenings, let me know and I’ll post about ‘em on the blog.

- MM

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