Karen’s Opinion

because My Opinion Counts

Add to the Fun!

I don’t know what got us to start talking about the time a friend of ours dressed up as a huge bunny rabbit but it brought, once again, tears of laughter. There is nothing more fun than dressing up for an occasion.

Do you have a birthday party to celebrate? Want to add some fun and excitement to the party? HalloweenAdventure.com has everything you can imagine to make your party a success. They have party favors and other supplies but what I found to be the most fun are their costumes. Check out their historical and medieval costumes. Wouldn’t it be fun to dress up as Dolly Madison for this year’s fourth of July celebration? Don’t worry about finding your size. Whether you need a petite or Plus size costume they have a costume to fit. They even have costumes for pets!

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I think it would be fun to have a costume party to celebrate the new Pirates of the Caribbean movie coming out in a few weeks. Shop for Halloween Costumes | Plus Size Costumes | Chidrens Costumes at this unique Halloween Costume Store.

Great Idea!

This is a Sponsored post written by me on behalf of Kidzmet for SocialSpark. All opinions are 100% mine.

My dad was in the Air Force and we got orders to move many times during my childhood. In fact, I went to 14 different schools before graduating high school. You have heard the saying, what doesn't kill ya, makes ya stronger. Well, that was my mantra. I don't know how my mom survived with three crying girls who were devastated knowing we had to move, yet again. You know what though? I wouldn't trade the experience for anything. I made new friends and learned about new places.

The one thing that would have been helpful would have been a Kidzmet Pairing Portrait to introduce us to each new teacher. That would have let her know what areas we needed help in and of which areas we excelled. Luckily, there were many kids from military homes and I think the teachers helped us adjust as best as they could.

Kidzmet uses a screening process to record your child's personality type and learning style. With this information, a teacher is informed and better equipped to help each student entrusted to their care. This process would help teahcers and students no matter the situation. You can read more about it and sign up for a free Kidzmet membership to find out more about your child's personality type, talents and primary learning style .


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My Dogs Love Nutrish Just 6

This is a Sponsored post written by me on behalf of Nutrish for SocialSpark. All opinions are 100% mine.

I received a welcome surprise in the mail, yesterday. When I opened the package, there was a cute little dog dish with a bag of Rachael Ray Nutrish just 6 dry dog food. Now, if you read my blog regularly, you know that we have two spoiled rotten dogs. Elsie and Brodie go crazy when they think they are going to get a treat so it is fun to indulge them.

I thought about having them do a trick and then reward them with the new dog food but they were so excited that I didn't have the heart to make them wait. They must have been able to smell the food through the packaging because they were running in circles and barking at me. I was moving too slow, in their opinion.

I felt good about giving my dogs Nutrish. Not only did they love it, it meets the nutritional levels of the American Assoc. of Feed Control Officials dog food nutrient profiles for the maintenance of adult dogs. That basically means that it contains ingredients that are healthy for our pets. Ingredients like rice flour, barley, beef, oat fiber, olive oil (preserved with mixed tocopherols), malted barley flour. My mom's dog is allergic to the corn that most dog foods contain. This would be a great dog food for Suzi because it does not contain corn, soy or wheat.

Check out Rachel Ray's Nutrish Just 6 dog food. Your dogs will love you for it!

You are welcome to try the product for free. Click on one of the links in my post to be directed to the website and how to obtain your free sample.


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Are Things Changing?

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photo-Martha Stewarts Weddings

Have you read Dear Abby recently? A writer wrote to tell how she bought her, soon to-be, niece in-law a new sweater and gave it to her as a gift. The girl said she didn’t like it and gave it back! Lawdy! I would have been as flabbergasted as the writer was when the incident through her for a loop. Where were that girl’s manners?

Another Dear Abby writer wrote to say that she had received a wedding invitation asking that no signatures were to be placed with any gifts given. The couple didn’t want to know who the gift was from. They would be writing a mass email thanking everyone for their gifts. Individuals would not be acknowledged. Can you believe that?

My son just received a wedding invitation via Facebook. It wasn’t just a conversation telling him that he would be receiving an invitation to the wedding and to keep the date open. No, this was the invitation. Come on people. How much can wedding invitations cost? Cut costs on mints and nuts by using coupons at Savings.com. How about having the wedding and just sending everyone pictures instead of having them use gas to travel.

I recently received a wedding invitation that actually requested money for the honeymoon. Tacky.

Parents Should Take Note

I admire a person who eloquently says what they believe. I saw the following on CNN online. It has also been passed around on Facebook.

Editor’s note: LZ Granderson writes a weekly column for CNN.com. A senior writer and columnist for ESPN The Magazine and ESPN.com, he has contributed to ESPN’s “Sports Center,” “Outside the Lines” and “First Take.” He is a 2011 and 2010 nominee and the 2009 winner of the Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation award for online journalism and a 2010 and 2008 honoree of the National Lesbian and Gay Journalists Association for column writing.

Grand Rapids, Michigan (CNN) — I saw someone at the airport the other day who really caught my eye.
Editor’s note: LZ Granderson writes a weekly column for CNN.com. A senior writer and columnist for ESPN The Magazine and ESPN.com, he has contributed to ESPN’s “Sports Center,” “Outside the Lines” and “First Take.” He is a 2011 and 2010 nominee and the 2009 winner of the Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation award for online journalism and a 2010 and 2008 honoree of the National Lesbian and Gay Journalists Association for column writing.

Grand Rapids, Michigan (CNN) — I saw someone at the airport the other day who really caught my eye.

Her beautiful, long blond hair was braided back a la Bo Derek in the movie “10″ (or for the younger set, Christina Aguilera during her “Xtina” phase). Her lips were pink and shiny from the gloss, and her earrings dangled playfully from her lobes.

You can tell she had been vacationing somewhere warm, because you could see her deep tan around her midriff thanks to the halter top and the tight sweatpants that rested just a little low on her waist. The icing on the cake? The word “Juicy” was written on her backside.

Yeah, that 8-year-old girl was something to see all right. … I hope her parents are proud. Their daughter was the sexiest girl in the terminal, and she’s not even in middle school yet.

Abercrombie & Fitch came under fire this spring for introducing the “Ashley,” a push-up bra for girls who normally are too young to have anything to push up. Originally it was marketed for girls as young as 7, but after public outcry, it raised its intended audience to the wise old age of 12. I wonder how do people initiate a conversation in the office about the undeveloped chest of elementary school girls without someone nearby thinking they’re pedophiles?

What kind of PowerPoint presentation was shown to the Abercrombie executives that persuaded them to green light such a product?

That there was a demand to make little girls hot?
I mean, that is the purpose of a push-up bra, right? To enhance sex appeal by lifting up, pushing together and basically showcasing the wearer’s breasts. Now, thanks to AF Kids, girls don’t have to wait until high school to feel self-conscious about their, uhm, girls. They can start almost as soon as they’re potty trained. Maybe this fall the retailer should consider keeping a plastic surgeon on site for free consultations.

We’ve been here with Abercrombie before — if you recall, about 10 years ago they sold thongs for 10-year-olds — but they’re hardly alone in pitching inappropriate clothing to young girls. Four years ago the popular “Bratz” franchise introduced padded bras called “bralettes” for girls as young as six. That was also around the time the good folks at Wal-Mart rolled out a pair of pink panties in its junior department with the phrase “Who Needs Credit Cards” printed on the front.

I guess I’ve been out-of-the-loop and didn’t realize there’s been an ongoing stampede of 10-year-old girls driving to the mall with their tiny fists full of cash demanding sexier apparel.
What’s that you say? Ten-year-olds can’t drive? They don’t have money, either? Well, how else are they getting ahold of these push-up bras and whore-friendly panties?

Their parents?

Noooo, couldn’t be.

What adult who wants a daughter to grow up with high self-esteem would even consider purchasing such items? What parent is looking at their sweet, little girl thinking, “She would be perfect if she just had a little bit more up top.”

And then I remember the little girl at the airport. And the girls we’ve all seen at the mall. And the kiddie beauty pageants.

And then I realize as creepy as it is to think a store like Abercrombie is offering something like the “Ashley”, the fact remains that sex only sells because people are buying it. No successful retailer would consider introducing an item like a padded bikini top for kindergartners if they didn’t think people would buy it.

If they didn’t think parents would buy it, which raises the question: What in the hell is wrong with us?

It’s easy to blast companies for introducing the sexy wear, but our ire really should be directed at the parents who think low rise jeans for a second grader is cute. They are the ones who are spending the money to fuel this budding trend. They are the ones who are suppose to decide what’s appropriate for their young children to wear, not executives looking to brew up controversy or turn a profit.

I get it, Rihanna’s really popular. But that’s a pretty weak reason for someone to dress their little girl like her.

I don’t care how popular Lil’ Wayne is, my son knows I would break both of his legs long before I would allow him to walk out of the house with his pants falling off his butt. Such a stance doesn’t always makes me popular — and the house does get tense from time to time — but I’m his father, not his friend.

Friends bow to peer pressure. Parents say, “No, and that’s the end of it.”

The way I see it, my son can go to therapy later if my strict rules have scarred him. But I have peace knowing he’ll be able to afford therapy as an adult because I didn’t allow him to wear or do whatever he wanted as a kid.

Maybe I’m a Tiger Dad.

Maybe I should mind my own business.

Or maybe I’m just a concerned parent worried about little girls like the one I saw at the airport.

In 2007, the American Psychological Association’s Task Force on the Sexualization of Girls issued a report linking early sexualization with three of the most common mental-health problems of girls and women: eating disorders, low self-esteem and depression. There’s nothing inherently wrong with parents wanting to appease their daughters by buying them the latest fashions. But is getting cool points today worth the harm dressing little girls like prostitutes could cause tomorrow?

A line needs to be drawn, but not by Abercrombie. Not by Britney Spears. And not by these little girls who don’t know better and desperately need their parents to be parents and not 40-year-old BFFs.

The opinions expressed in this commentary are solely those of LZ Granderson.

I honestly think there are more people who think the same way.

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