Category: Because Nice Matters!

  • Pledge to Help #FinishTheFight Against Cancer

    Me and My Bro 2013

    Disclosure: with many thanks to the American Cancer Society for sponsoring and compensating my writing about ways in which we can help give cancer the virtual bitchslap it deserves!

    I love this picture of my twin brother and me:  it was our birthday (yesterday!) and this is where I would joke about our age, insisting that we were actually celebrating another anniversary of our 29th birthday.

    I’ve never  been very comfortable with numbers, most especially when used as the “only” tool in defining a person’s worth, but today I am putting all thoughts of vanity aside and outing myself:  

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  • Share Your Life List & Give Cancer A Virtual Bitchslap!

    Liz's Life List

    You like?  I made this life list, myself, with many thanks to the American Cancer Society for sponsoring and compensating my writing about ways in which we can help give cancer the virtual bitchslap it deserves!

    The American Cancer Society is celebrating their 100th birthday this month (5/22/13) and, in honor of the many brave battles being fought (and/or lost) by way too many of my family and friends, I have the extreme privilege of partnering with the ACS in helping to amplify their most recent effort in helping us to celebrate MORE of life’s special moments, like:

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  • Wordless Wednesday: More Than a Feeling

     

    Song:  "More Than A Feeling" by Boston

    Runners Unite to Remember:  we walked 3 miles, in 40 minutes on our high school's track, last night.  #prayingforboston.

    © 2003 – 2013 This Full House

    New and improved with a fan page on Facebook and everything!

  • Tell Us Which City’s Shelter Dogs to Feed Next

    Doofus in the pillows

    PEDIGREE CTNC Blog Post: This post is sponsored by PEDIGREE Brand, which compensated me to develop this content and reader giveaway.

    I wanted to share a quick update with you on the special feeding project I've been working on with Pedigree and Miranda Lambert (love her)!

    With your help, Pedigree has received more than 14,000 nominations, from all over the country, for their Choose the Next Communities program:  a new initiative to feed more shelter dogs while they wait adoption.

    The top five finalists are in and now we get to tell Pedigree which city's shelter dogs to feed next.  I am also excited to be able to share a special gift basket with one of you and your bdf:  best dogfriend forever.

    First, the top five community shelters include:

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  • Social Media for Good: Blood, Sweat & Brinner!

    Heather blood type = A for AwesomeI started blogging back in 2003 and, thinking back on it now, there weren’t many people in my real life who knew or understood why in the heck I would even consider sharing personal stories, “on the internet”.

    Flash-forward 10 years:  nearly everyone I know is “on the internet” (including my own father, hey Apu!) doing pretty much the same thing — connecting with each other and sharing information through social media channels like Facebook, Instagram and Pinterest — not to mention, sharing stuff about their kids.

    My kids have grown accustomed to hearing me go on…and on…and on…really, I could go on…fuh-evuh…about using their social media powers for good.

    Aaaaaand, then my middle girl (she’s 17) tells me her classmates are organizing an evening blood drive at a local community church over spring break and, well, how cool would it be if we help serve the folks donating blood breakfast for dinner (or brinner)?!?

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  • S.O.S. The Jersey Shore is Open!

    National news crews were very good at bringing the rest of the country (if not, the world) to our doorsteps, when broadcasting heart-breaking images of devistation along our ENTIRE Jersey shoreline (all 130 miles of it) in an effort to record the storm that changed the topography of our state, forever….aaaaand then they left.

    Belford Pier Remembered

    We spent many staycation afternoons hanging out in Belford, NJ:  I taught my kids how to fish at the pier here.

    It's been 5 months since Hurricane Sandy made landfall here in New Jersey (I blogged about our experience, once we got power back) so, some folks may be growing tired or even a little weary of hearing yet another #Sandy story.

    Belford Pier

    The beach and the pier today, as well as many of the businesses here in the small fishing town of Belford, gone.

    I'm going to take this moment to share yet ANOTHER story with you, but it's a good one:  the Jersey shore is OPEN!!!

    Shop Our Shore

    My husband, Garth (not his real name) is a member of the NJ Chamber of Commerce (Northern Monmouth County…represent!) and he and his collegues have organized Shop our Shores: the BIGGEST shop local movement EVER to help businesses recover from Hurricane Sandy (the witch!) and it's happening this weekend!

    So, what does that mean to those of you who do not live in Jersey?!?

    Well, there's an awesome list of local shops participating in Shop Our Shores and many of these small business owner's have links to their store's website, as well.

    So, grab yourself a beverage or a light snack (or both) and help support our recovery efforts here in New Jersey; with a little virtual window shopping, perhaps?

    We may be down a couple miles of coastline, but don't count us out when planning your spring and summer vacations…either 🙂

    Oh…and All the rest of the stuff you may or may not have heard from OTHER folks about Jersey…FUHGHETABOUTIT!…they wish their armpits looked so good.

    Come on ova, we'd love to have yuhs!

    © 2003 – 2013 This Full House

  • Share Breakfast with a Child During National Breakfast Week

    Growing up, my family was no stranger to hunger.  So, yes, it pains me to learn that nearly 1 in 5 kids across our communities go without breakfast, every day.  I am very proud to once again partner with KelloggsAction for Healthy Kids and Mr. Taye Diggs in the Share Breakfast effort to provide breakfasts to kids who might otherwise go without.   How?  By sharing ways in which you can help share breakfast with a child in need, too.  It’s really super-simple, promise:

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  • Helping Shelter Dogs Find Their Forever Families With Miranda Lambert

    I often write about having a REAL special place in my heart for animal shelters and rescues, like our Doofus-Dawg, so I  was invited out to Nashville, TN (along with 5 other animal-loving bloggers, last December) for a very special project with my new friends over at Pedigree to help feed shelter dogs while they wait for their forever homes and, well, how could I say no, right?!?

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  • 28 Days of Impact: Why Are We Still Talking About Polio?

    28 Days of Impact is a blog relay celebrating the impact vaccines have on children in developing countries every day for the month of February.  Today I get to take a shot at it, here's my contribution:


    9_Ann Lee Hussey 2_Liz Thompson

    Photo by Mary Ellen Mark /Real Simple magazine

    Ann Lee Hussey contracted Polio when she was only seventeen months old in 1955 and suffered with the disease as a child. It paralyzed her from the waist down and she spent several weeks in the hospital. She has had countless treatments, can walk with limitations and now believes that she suffers from Post-Polio Syndrome (or PPS). 

    Although she admittedly fears PPS (the symptoms can significantly interfere with an individual's ability to function independently) Ann is dedicated to fighting Polio a world away. 

    Personally, I can remember receiving vaccines in grade school:  my classmates and I would march into the gym, line up and nervously wait for our turn.  However, I was very, very relieved to hear whispers that the school nurse was actually "dripping" the Polio vaccine onto a sugar cube.

    I hated shots (still do!) and I am what many doctors have since clinically, yet delicately, labeled as "a fainter".

    The fear of needles is a very difficult thing to overcome (trust me, I know, having suffered from tonsillitis as a child and endured dozens of penicillin shots, my backside STILL hurts just thinking about it) until I started having children.

    Raising 3 teens and 1 tween has pretty much helped me get over a lot of stuff:  like my fear of needles, or fainting at the sight of blood (especially, if it is mine!) not to mention, cleaning up after my children and basically every bodily function known to parenthood.

    Thankfully, I don't have to worry about stuff like my children contracting Polio or Measles and yet it is incredible for me to think that a child dies every 20 seconds from a vaccine preventable disease.


    9_Ann Lee Hussey 1_Liz Thompson (1)

    Photo credit: End Polio Now/Rotary

    Not when there are folks like Ann Lee, working on the ground to help ensure that all children have a shot at a healthy life, who has personally taken part in more than 20 immunization
    trips to help eradicate Polio, worldwide.

    How?  By helping parents (like you and me) understand that:

    • Vaccines are very safe, simple and one of the most cost-effective ways to save and improve the lives of children worldwide.
    • Vaccines work
    • Vaccines currently help save 2.5 million children from preventable diseases every year.
    • Vaccination efforts have already made a difference.  Thanks to the Global Polio Eradication Initiative, the number of cases of polio has dropped 99 percent and the Measles Initiative has vaccinated one billion children in 60 developing countries and has decreased measles deaths by 71 percent.
    • Vaccines can level the playing field so that all children, no matter their circumstances, have a shot at a healthy life.

    Okay, now it's your turn.  

    You can help sustain the impact by sending an email to your member of congress. Welcome your members to the 113th Congress and ask them to make sure that global health and vaccines are a priority in the new Congress. Take action and make an impact!

    Because, honestly, we really need to stop talking about Polio and give it the virtual bitch-slap it deserves!

    28-days-of-impact-logo
    This story comes from Rotary International and is part of Shot@Life’s ’28 Days of Impact’ Campaign. A follow up to Blogust to raise awareness for global vaccines and the work being done by Shot@Life and their partners to help give children around the world a shot at a healthy life. Each day in February, you can read another impactful story on global childhood vaccines.  Tomorrow, don’t miss Roxanna's post on Everyday Treats! Go to www.shotatlife.org/impact to learn more.

    © 2003 – 2013 This Full House

    Disclosure:  No payment was received for this blog post, this is my contribution to giving Polio the bitch-slap it deserves….YO!!!

  • The Christmas Elephant in the Room

    Lucy the elephant

    Lucy the Elephant, she's from Jersey!

    Going to Grandma's house on Christmas Eve has been a Thompson tradition ever since we began adding grand kids to their family tree and every year we would trade-off visiting with my parents, as well:  dinner here, dessert over there, etc…

    My kids are very lucky to have both sets of grandparents in their lives, they know it, we know it and, now that my kids are older (aren't we all?)  I'm beginning to truly understand why our folks look forward to having their grandchildren around them, especially during the holidaze.

    My father would joke with my kids, thanking them for "re-charging" Papa after each and every visit.

    Aaaaaand, as I get older (physically, because mentally I'm still, like, not even out of my teens, yet!)  I'm realizing the same restorative power, every time one of my children insist that I stop whatever it is I'm doing, RIGHT NOW, because he or she NEEDS a hug.

    We had my in-laws over for dinner, last night.  Although they live just a five or ten minute car ride away (because, in Jersey, we speak in the time it takes to get somewhere rather than mileage)  we haven't visited with Grandma and Grandpa since Thanksgiving.

    It's been a tough year for my in-laws.  Just last night, my father-in-law admitted that any and all of the mileage put on their car is for doctor visits and trips to the pharmacy, which is pretty much how my parents spend their days, plus or minus a trip (or twenty)  to B.J.'s.

    This year, my sister-in-law broke the news that Garth (not his real name)  and I would be hosting Christmas Eve (without me, and with good reason)   so, I baked one of my mother-in-law's favorite desserts (chocolate gingerbread cake, and it was good)  to help soften the blow.

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