Pin for the Wednesday: Ro*tel Guacamole that Rocks!

Welcome  to Pin for the Wednesdays!  I can’t wait to see your winning pins. You guys wow me with your craftiness and culinary prowess every week!  This week I am super-excited to announce that we have our first sponsored #PinFTW – Ro*tel, the zesty tomatoes with chiles we all love to cook with, is sponsoring this week’s Pin for the Wednesdays.  Ro*tel wants to help you “Spring into Summer” with some awesome Ro*tel-based recipes that will wow guests at your spring and summer parties. So if you are entertaining or bringing a dish to any get togethers this Memorial Day weekend, you will want to check out Ro*tel on Pinterest.  They have some super-yummy recipe ideas, and they asked me to pick a few to try out as I spring into summer.  So, my winning pin is from their “Appetizers & Dip Recipes That’ll Make You Flip” board.  The original pin is here, “Guacamole that Rocks”.

Ro*tel Guacamole that Rocks

I loooooooove Guacamole (Emily and I kind of freaked out over some amazing guac we had in Miami recently), but I have never made it! I was very afraid of dealing with the avocados for some reason. Especially after reading Tess’s #PinFTW that was NOT a win, ha ha.) But I conquered my fear this weekend and my dear husband and I made some super-yummy Guacamole that Rocks with Ro*tel!  The recipe is so simple, with just a few ingredients: avocados, Ro*tel, lime juice, onion, salt, and ground black pepper. It only took us about 10 minutes to make, and it was FREAKING DELICIOUS!!  You guys, it was so so so so so so SO good.  I was seriously impressed with both the simplicity & ease of the recipe, and of course, MYSELF. 🙂 Ha, ha.

the Ro*tel tomatoes gave it such a yummy kick!

Just stir! I can do that!!
the final product - delicious!!

This weekend I am helping my BFF Luanne throw a graduation/18th birthday party for her daughter (and our favorite babysitter) Krisha. I’ll be making Guacamole that Rocks again as well as four other yummy party-perfect Ro*tel-based recipes. Can’t wait to let you know how those turn out!

Now it’s your turn to show me YOUR winning pin! There are just a few rules:

1) In your post, please link to your original source – the pin you got the idea from.

2) Make sure and link back to our original Pin For the Wednesdays Post here at Mommin’ It Up! (please!)

3) In the Mr. Linky below, leave a direct link to your Pin FTWednesdays post, not to your main website.

4) Totally optional – grab our cute #PinFTW button! The code box is over there in our sidebar.

Don’t have a blog?  Just leave your winning pin in the comments!

If you don’t have a pin to link-up today, then tell us what your favorite thing to make using Ro*tel is!   For more Ro*tel goodness, “like” them on Facebook and follow them on Twitter!

 

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I am being compensated for this post by Ro*tel.  All opinions about the recipe and Ro*tel product are my own.

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What it felt like.

Sophie on her bike October 24, 2010. About two & a half weeks after her delays became apparent.

Part 1 of this story is here. You’ll want to read it first.

I want to try and tell you what it felt like to be told how significant Sophie’s developmental delays were.  Not just to be told, but to understand that you don’t know what you thought you knew.  That your reality is…not reality at all.

We buried my Grandpa on Wednesday.  Sophie had speech therapy that day, and as she and Joshua were too young, I felt, to attend the funeral, we sent Joshua to school and my friend Luanne took Sophie for the day and took her to therapy.  I sent a note with Luanne, asking Tanya, her therapist to call me.

Tanya called me on Thursday.  I think I went over the list of the preschool teacher’s concerns with her.  And then I asked her, “So can you tell me, how far behind on speech is Sophie?  Like, six months, a year?”

That was what I thought.  Six months, a year max.  After all, Sophie was three years and 11 months old, and she had known all her letters since age 2, all her colors, shapes, etc.  She even could recognize several words.  She had a great vocabulary, but she didn’t converse or answer questions.  I knew she was smart.  And stubborn. She was smart, sweet, and crazy.

“Her delay is significant.”  Tanya said.

“Significant?”

She then rattled off some test scores, and then admonished that “standardized tests are not the end-all be-all.”

“How far behind is she?”

“Her test scores were that of a child aged two years and four months.”

Sophie was three years and 11 months old.

“How long do you think she’ll need therapy?”

“She will likely need therapy for three to four years.”

Suckerpunch.  No words.  I don’t remember the rest of the conversation, except that Tanya offered to write a letter to Sophie’s teachers telling them how they could help her and what sort of expectations they should have for her, and to call and talk to them about it.

More crying. I called my husband, and my mom.  Cried some more. I made an appointment with Sophie’s pediatrician.  My mom started making calls to get information about getting Sophie into a preschool program that would be more appropriate for a child with her level of language delay.

Immediately, even through our shock and grief (yes, grief.  This sort of thing, a friend told me, has to be grieved.), we got the ball rolling on getting Sophie back on track.  A pediatrician appointment, a referral for an occupational therapy evaluation (they couldn’t get her in for three weeks), and phone calls and appointments to get Sophie into a preschool program for kids with developmental delays in our local public schools.  And almost immediately I started working with her at home on her hand strength and cutting as well as her speech.

But I was scared, you guys.  I was so, so scared.  I cried for days.  Howling, wailing, keening.  Like, I lost my sh*t. For at least two weeks, I would say probably close to a month, I didn’t talk to my close friends about any of this.  I couldn’t talk about it without wailing.  I am pretty sure Bobby thought I would never be normal again.  Joshua, who not quite seven, asked over and over, “Why is mommy crying?”  Sophie didn’t say much but did wipe away some of my tears at times, and snuggle me. Really the only people I talked to about it were Bobby, my mom, and Emily.  And Emily I just talked to about it over instant messenger because I can’t wail over instant messenger and therefore was much easier to understand.  I think I texted Cortney a little about it.  As much as I could stand.  I wasn’t embarrassed or ashamed or angry, but I was terrified.  “What if she can’t learn?” I asked Bobby over and over.  He tried to reassure me.  I KNEW she was smart, I KNEW she could learn, after all, it was because of all she COULD do that I had failed to realize how much she couldn’t do.

My mom told me that first day, that Tuesday, “The Lord made her, and the Lord’s going to take care of her.” I held on to that.  I cried and prayed to God, to help me to help Sophie.  To do the right things for her.  To put the right people in our lives to help her.

Praying comforted me, and I know God heard me.  But still the fear.  The fear was paralyzing.

To be continued.

Part 3 of this story is here.

 

 

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Nike Free

About a month ago, Kate and I packed up and headed to Beaverton, OR to visit the Nike world headquarters. As I told you then, it was an incredible trip.

Here are some highlights:

Aren’t I a good videographer? Just kidding, that video was courtesy of the Nike paparazzi who joined us that day (as are some of the other pictures in this post!).

The main focus of the event was the Nike Free line of shoes. They were kind enough to give each blogger and child a pair of their own, and let’s just say you could see our group coming!

These are the shoes that were waiting for me when we arrived at our hotel.

I am far too practical to ever have picked out bright orange/pink shoes… but I love them! The color makes them so much fun to wear – I am not exaggerating when I say that multiple people have pulled their cars over, rolled down their windows, and complimented my shoes as I’ve walked through town.

What I really love about my Nike Free shoes, though, is that I know they’re good for my feet. After having learned about all the science and testing that went into making them, I am totally confident in them.

And I have been walking in them a lot. I don’t think I’ve mentioned it on the blog yet, but I recently registered for a three-day, 60-mile walk. I know. Pure and total insanity, but a dear friend asked me to do it, and, you know, peer pressure and all that. So anyway, the walk isn’t until October but I am three or four weeks in to the 25-week training plan, so my Nike Free shoes and I have traveled nearly 40 miles together. Which means I’ve had a lot of time to think about how they perform! One thing I continually think of is one of the Nike guys saying they were designed so that the wearer can “feel the ground.” I didn’t quite get what he was saying at the time, and frankly I don’t have a good way to explain it in words here, but it’s true. I can really feel the details in the ground when I wear them. I know that makes no sense, but buy some and I promise you’ll be all “Oh, THAT’S what Emily meant!”

The first few times I wore them, my feet and shins were sore. Had I not known that that was the point, I may not have thought they were great shoes. But, that is the point – not being sore, necessarily, but the shoes are designed to strengthen foot, ankle and leg muscles. Strong muscles = fewer injuries. So, while they took some getting used to, I’m completely confident that they are the best shoes for me to wear while training and during the actual walk.

So confident, in fact, that I saw another pair of Nike Free shoes on sale over the weekend, and I had to buy them.

Look how bend-y they are!

They’ll live in my closet for a few months, I’m sure, but I will need them eventually! I am not the only one who loves these shoes, either – when I was buying my second pair, I overheard a teenaged boy telling his mom she should buy some Nike Free like he has, and when the salesperson brought my shoes to me, he said “These are great shoes – I have the men’s version myself.” It was like a Nike Free fan club.

My husband and both kids are also members of that fan club – I bought Andy and Sam a pair at the company store when we were on our trip, and they both love them as well. Just a couple days ago, Sam was putting on his shoes and he was talking about when I brought them back for him as a present from our trip. He said “I wasn’t really suspecting shoes for a present. But they grew on me and now I really like them!”

Kate (who is impossible about shoes. Impossible.) loves hers as well, and she can’t wait for the ones she designed herself to be delivered to our house!

Jill wrote in her recap of the trip that she’ll never buy another brand of sneaker – and I must say, I am right there with her. Nike Free forever!

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Kids Nike FREE Run: If your feet flex, shouldn’t your shoes flex too? Must-have flexibility for young feet.

Disclosure: Compensation was provided by Nike via Glam Media. The opinions expressed herein are those of the author and are not indicative of the opinions or positions of Nike.

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