Author Archives: earthmuffinmom

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About earthmuffinmom

I am a Christian mom and wife who is watching and waiting impatiently for the Lord's return in a world that is getting nuttier by the day. My main interests are in the areas of Biblical end times/eschatology and early Genesis/creation. To understand the end...you must understand the beginning! My other passion is health and healing! Our family has also been greatly blessed over the past several years with healing through natural health and diet (generally Paleo/grain free). I love sharing this information with other people, and helping folks in their healing journeys. That being said...I am not a doctor...so I'm not responsible for any decisions you may make in regards to your own health. Other stuff: I am married to a wonderful man who I have had the privilege of having three beautiful children with. We have been married for over sixteen years. I work full time, but have the blessing of working from my home, and I homeschool my oldest child. We enjoy homesteading...and while we live in a small, rural town...we have worked hard to develop our yard into a "little bit of country in town"...complete with our "farm dog," Buddy, and five chickens. Thanks for checking out my blog!

Chickens in town…why not?!?

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Last weekend we brought “the girls” to town.  Up until now, they have lived at my father-in-law’s farm just a few miles away.  The “girls”, or 7 hens, are now happily at home in a coop in our backyard.  My 10 year old daughter is my guest blogger today…  She wrote this post while we were getting ready for them:

Chickens……..in town!  Why not?!

I can’t wait till’ we have chickens in town. My 2 younger siblings, my mom and dad, and I get to fix and pizazz the chicken coop. So excited!!  Anyway, we also get some advantages with the fully developed chickens. What, you say? Well, we get free eggs, something to hold, pet, and study for 4- H. I love to hold the chickens (as long as they don’t poop on me!) One of the big chickens at my grandpa’s farm lets you walk right up to it and pick it up and hold it. Tips for holding chickens – When you grab them, hold their wings down and put the head under your arm so you can see it on the other side. Put your hand under their backside, and remember to stroke the chicken’s back so it knows it is okay.  If you are new to this, you should go for one that is slightly big, and a female. Roosters (males) are a bit scary and aren’t as calm as females. Recently, my little 3 year old sister caught her first chicken! YAHOO!!  Last year I won grand champion at our county fair’s poultry show, and I’m looking forward to practicing with these “classy chicks”! I am very excited for my feathered friends to move into town.

Corralling hens for the big move…

Caught her!

The Chicken Wrangler 🙂

Almost there…

“Gossamer” – Cuckoo Marans hen

Checkin’ out their new digs…

Home Sweet Home!

A note from the Earth Muffin Mom:  This move was not without drama.  The hens…well…didn’t exactly like each other right off the bat.  We never gave this thought because they had all been together since they were a few days old.  The first day, we brought four hens to town.  It was painfully obvious by the end of the second day that the three bigger hens had ganged up on the fourth smaller white leghorn (Miss Toot).   We had a little lesson in chicken psychology – who would know that hens would be bullies in such a planned manner?  The three hung together in a pack, they would not let Miss Toot out of the hutch area, they wouldn’t let her eat or drink, and any time they got the chance they would peck at her head.  She would hang her head and dodge back into the hutch.  It was really sad to watch – frankly I felt like I was reliving high school in a weird sort of way!  We decided to bring in three more white leghorns just like Miss Toot.  At first, it was total Chicken Solidarity.  The four white leghorns seemed to stand up to the three big hens.  For the first day.  The next day we realized that those three big hens weren’t letting the four smaller hens out of the hutch, or letting them eat or drink.  They continued to peck at their heads and feathers.  Right about the time we were ready to take those three hens back to the farm…they all seemed to have some sort of epiphany and are now getting along beautifully.  Don’t know what exactly happened…perhaps they really did understand my threats about ending up in my stock pot???!!?

Our town has an ordinance against having farm animals in town.  We were quite happy to get a special use variance since our kids are in 4-H. The hens are considered “show animals” since they’ll all be making an appearance at the county fair.  Aside from 4-H, I have my reasons for wanting them here.  I can choose their care, and having them here, my kids can do chores and care for their own animals which is great.  I wish they were grass fed, but our yard is small and it isn’t allowed through the variance that we got anyhow.  But…I can feed them all of my kitchen scraps that would otherwise be compost and they are out in the fresh air getting sun (can you say…Vitamin D egg yolks???).  I love walking outside and picking fresh eggs…  Considering that we go through five to six dozen eggs a week…this is a no-brainer!!!

On a more serious note, I think that if people knew just where alot of those pristine white eggs from the grocery store came from, there would be way more people with backyard chickens.  I will not support a system that looks like this:

Chickens in this type of industrial farming conditions (known as battery cages – which according to Wikipedia accounts for about 60% of the worlds eggs) often have their beaks snipped without anesthesia.  The reason that this is done is because living under these conditions, the birds go insane and will peck each other to death, and cannibalize the other birds.  Now…I am not even remotely a vegetarian (although the book “Eating Animals” by Jonathan Safran Foer did push me into a very brief vegetarian stint a few years back)…but I don’t believe that what I eat should live or die badly to end up on my plate.  I encourage you to do your own research on this subject, and not take my word for it.  I try my best to purchase humanely raised meat from local farmers that I know…and also to keep our own chickens for fresh eggs.  Seriously, who would want eggs from these poor things?????

Our girls have been a blast to have (although I could do without the flies)!   A couple are even tame enough already that they like to be petted.  We like watching them “expressing their chickenness” (to coin a phrase from my favorite farmer/author, Joel Salatin).  They make great pets, and I think that the chores are a good way for the kids to see outside their own needs.  It sure beats watching TV!

If this interests you, check it out!  If your city has some type of farm animal ordinance like ours…talk with your city officials to see how you can keep backyard chickens.  Maybe they would  be willing to change an existing ordinance if there is enough interest.  Even a couple of birds would reap big rewards for their owners!

This post was shared on the Healthy Home Economist’s Monday Mania; The Morris Tribe’s Homesteader Blog Carnival; Real Food Forager’s Fat Tuesdays; Cooking Traditional Foods Traditional Tuesdays; Better Mom Mondays Link Up;  Prairie Homestead’s Homestead Barn Hop; Like a Mustard Seed’s Living Green Tuesdays; Kelly the Kitchen Kop’s Real Food Wednesdays; Frugally Sustainable’s Frugal Days, Sustainable Ways; GNOWFLINS Simple Lives Thursday; The Nourishing Gourmet’s Pennywise Platter; Real Food Freaks Freaky Friday; The 21st Century Housewife’s Gallery of Favorites; Too Many Jars in My Kitchen’s Fill Those Jars Friday. Premeditated Leftovers Gallery of Favorites.

GAPS Veggie Soup (GAPS, SCD, Grain Free, GF)

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My 3 year old daughter and I started back on GAPS Intro again this week – Stage 4 to be exact – to take care of a couple of stubborn minor health issues that she has going on.  So…it’s time to rethink cooking in our house yet again…and look for good soup options.  After a visit to the farmer’s market and my own garden this week, this is what I came up with:

GAPS Veggie Soup

1 head of chopped broccoli

1 large head of cabbage, chopped in 1″ pieces

4 chopped tomatoes

3 chopped onions

4 cloves of garlic, finely chopped

2 quarts of homemade beef broth (see this post from Jenny @ Nourished Kitchen with links on how you make it, and why you would want to!)

sea salt (we use Real Salt – YUM!) and pepper to taste

coconut oil for sauteeing veggies – I get mine here

Saute onions in stock pot until slightly tender.  Add broccoli, cabbage, tomatoes and beef broth.  Bring to boil and cook until veggies are tender – about 25-30 minutes.  Take pot off burner and add chopped garlic at the end.  Raw garlic is wonderful for the immune system, and you don’t want it to cook much if possible.  Add sea salt and pepper to taste before serving.   We got about 10-12 servings from this.

I served this with grilled cube steaks.  You could add ground beef or chopped chicken in the soup if you wanted.  I just did it this way… 🙂

Sorry there are no pics of the soup.  I am still getting the hang of blogging and need to pay more attention to that…and in all honesty…the soup is GONE! 🙂

This post is linked to:  Real Food Freaks Freaky Friday; Food Renegade’s Fight Back Friday; The Liberated Kitchen’s GAPS Friendly Fridays; The Healthy Home Economist’s Monday Mania; Real Food Forager’s Fat Tuesdays; Cooking Traditional Foods Traditional Tuesdays; Simply Sugar and Gluten Free’s Slightly Indulgent Tuesdays; The Tasty Alternative’s Allergy Free Wednesdays; The Willing Cook’s Allergy Free Wednesdays; Whole New Mom’s Allergy Free Wednesdays;  Kelly the Kitchen Kop’s Real Food Wednesdays; The Nourishing Gourmet’s Pennywise Platter.

The GAPS Diet – Part 2: My Adventures in Healing

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I recently wrote a post about the GAPS  Diet and gave an overview of the program and some resources to access.  As I said in that post, my three year old daughter and I have been following the program since February 2012 for various health reasons.  I decided that no good overview would be complete without talking more about the healing and successes that have happened.

Although talking about my little girl would be much more fun for me, I am saving the best for last and will do a separate blog post on her to celebrate our successes in her healing.

So today…you get to hear about me.  Don’t fall asleep!

I am 39 years old and can truthfully say that I have never been in good health.  As a child, I remember being sick frequently and having lots of tummy troubles.  I grew up eating my Grandma’s yummy home cooking but it was still full of immune system busters like white flour and white sugar, juice, etc.  I was frequently on antibiotics as far back as I can remember.  I have always been “low energy”, and  I had sinus infections that were only resolved with antibiotics on a monthly basis.   I muddled along, tired all the time and sick all the time.  The older I got, the worse it got.  I eventually gained a lot of weight and had a tough time losing it.  In 2002, I gave birth to our oldest daughter via C-section.  Two years later, I delivered our son, also via C-section.  After his birth, my energy levels sunk to an all time low.  I was sick alot and generally felt like I had the flu all of the time.  I continued to have alot of gut issues but it kind of blended in with everything else that was going on.  The more I doctored, the more depressed I became because no one was finding ANYTHING out and I really started to think I was having some mental health issue or dreaming it all up.  I was on antibiotics for about two weeks out of every month.  My whole body hurt, in addition to those constant flu-like symptoms.  My vision became much worse and my focus deteriorated by about 50% of a six month time period.  At the age of 35, I had the eyesight of a 60 year old.   My gut issues got worse and I would have periods of unexplained extreme abdominal pain and vomiting.  I was tested for lupus, RA, you name it, and nothing panned out.  In the meantime, I continued to still have the same family responsibilities with two small children, and I continued to work full time, although most days looking back I felt like I barely could put one foot in front of the other…  And I started to think that this was what I had to look forward to in life, and was scared for the future…

To make a long story short, one night early in January 2008, I started having extreme pain and vomiting, landed at the ER.  I had a CT scan and found out that I had a large surgical sponge that had been mistakenly left around about two feet of my small intestines during my last C-section for almost four years.  It had encapsulated itself – created it’s own “organ” – my guess is that this strange happening and the continual antibiotics probably kept me alive over that time.  Anyhow, one partial C-section later…I did feel a little better.  But never to the point that I had before, and even that wasn’t all that good.  I am certainly not blaming all of my health issues on this but it didn’t help.

I like to think of that whole time period as a blessing from God. Things could have been so much worse.  My kids could have grown up without a mother, and my husband could have been a widower.  But, I firmly believe that the Good Lord has other things for me to do…and for that, I am grateful, and never angry about that experience.  It has truly been an important part of my own personal growth.

So…post-sponge.  My pain levels got a little better, my thyroid antibodies improved a little almost immediately.  I didn’t feel like I had the flu all the time…which was really really…nice.  I was still really tired, had a fair amount of pain all over and was still sick alot.  And when I was sick…no matter with what…I DID feel like I had the flu.  Which was very much unappreciated for this busy mama.  But life was a little better.

In March 2009, I had my last C-section and gave birth to my littlest peanut.  My pregnancy was tough and exhausting, and I chalked it up to “being older”.  Before and after I had her, and even while I breastfed her for over a year, I pretty much lived on sugar and junk and had uncontrollable cravings for anything sweet.  Which further contributed to the demise of my immune system, and gut issues, as well as hers.  I only wish I had known then what I know now!!!

All three of my kids have had alot of chronic allergies and asthma since they were infants.  My son used to meet the insurance deductible by the beginning of March due to all the meds he was taking, and all of the clinic visits.  At one point a few years back, out of desperation, I started reading about natural healing, toxins, diet, etc.  We started tweaking things in our family diet, adding organics, eating real food, reducing sugar, reducing household toxins, and started feeling collectively a little bit better.  But not enough.  I began seeing our chiropractor who also started helping me with some nutritional education…and it helped.  I eventually did some testing for adrenal fatigue (which I had), and did hair sampling to detect nutritional deficiencies, heavy metals, etc.  I found that I was storing heavy metals – as I would suspect that alot of people who get a flu shot, drink pop or use conventional deodorant do – because my body was unable to keep up with needed detoxing.

In April 2011, my two youngest children and I began seeing an integrative physician nearby.  He diagnosed me with leaky gut syndrome and systemic yeast issues.  I did food allergy testing and a blood/urine based nutritional evaluation that was extremely telling.  I had multiple food and environmental allergies.  I had some severe nutritional deficiencies, in spite of eating pretty clean and well overall, because my gut was such a mess that I was simply unable to use what I was eating.  He put me on a course of antifungal medications, some heavy duty probiotics and an immune system building supplement and told me to eliminate white flour, white sugar and potatoes from my diet.

So I did…and life got much better.  I was no longer sick with sinus infections every month.  The candida/yeast that he was treating had colonized in my sinus area – and the antifungals took care of that temporarily.  However, anyone who has battled systemic yeast knows that they DO NOT DIE EASILY.  Any small amount of starch, sugars, etc., will feed them and keep them going, and me…sick. I also learned eventually that my food allergies were triggering my pain and fibromyalgia like symptoms.  I quit eating the offending foods, and my arthritis diminished down to nothing.  If I ate the foods, I hurt for three days.  Anytime I attempted to quit the antifungal med, I got sick.  I was on the antifungals for almost a year and I realized just how tough that is on your liver.  I knew that I couldn’t do that forever.  My little girl and I were both in the same situation, and after alot of research (months!) we started GAPS.

So…thanks for bearing with me but I think it is important to see where I was before versus where I am now:

**After 10 days on the Intro diet, my gut was healed enough to eat my food allergens without triggering pain, sinus problems, environmental allergies, etc.  (Please note that I did not have severe or life threatening allergies, just lots of moderate and mild) Really cool improvement right out the gate…

**My pain levels have stayed at a minimum.  Some days I have a little but it is very very tolerable comparatively.

**Lots of energy.  Even days when I haven’t gotten optimal sleep due to a waking three year old…

**No more brain fog.  Nice to have my memory back!

**Super cool:  I LOST 10 POUNDS IN TWO WEEKS WITHOUT EVEN TRYING!  (your body runs on fat and not carbs on GAPS)  **once I started eating raw fruit, that ended for awhile and now I have lost a couple more pounds recently…

**I sleep better at night (except when said 3 year old wakes up)

**My skin has far fewer acne breakouts.  In fact, my skin as a whole looks younger and is softer (I’ve always struggled with very very dry scaly skin since childhood).

**My eyesight has improved a little bit.  As per the eye doctor.  I can’t wait until next time I go for a checkup to see what that brings!

**My mood is better…

**My gum health has improved, and some tooth pain that I had is better.  Oh, and my teeth are whiter!

**One thing that I don’t appreciate quite as much is how chemically sensitive and sensitive to cigarette smoke I have gotten.  In a world of perfumes and fabric softener, it isn’t so much fun.  But I do think that it means something…

**I’ve been sick once since we started GAPS.  And it was BECAUSE  of a prolonged exposure to perfume and cigarette smoke.

**I’m not as stuffed up from environmental allergies as I used to be.  I am still a little bit, but I hope that at some point, that goes for good.

**And the thing that conventional medicine will tell you is IMPOSSIBLE:  my thyroid levels have improved.  The proof is in the blood work.  My integrative physician feels that at some point, my body might even heal enough to go off my meds.

Not bad for five months, hey?  Can’t wait to see where we are at after two years!!!

Five years ago, I was depressed about my crummy health and equally crummy quality of life.  Now I feel great.  What did I do?  I took charge of my own health, and you can too!  Don’t be complacent if you are having any of the symptoms that I had and think that this is just “what happens” – when we get older, when we’re run down, because of “heredity”, whatever.  We don’t have to be sick!  When you cut your finger, you cover it and wait and it heals.  Our bodies as a whole are capable of great healing, and I like to think of the GAPS diet as one very large bandaid!  And it has totally been the “nudge” I needed…  Healing doesn’t happen overnight but it does happen if you put in the effort!!!

This post was shared at:  Cooking Traditional Foods Traditional Tuesdays; Simply Sugar and Gluten Free’s Slightly Indulgent Tuesdays; Real Food Forager’s Fat Tuesdays; Kelly the Kitchen Kop’s Real Food Wednesdays; The Tasty Alternative’s Allergy Free Wednesdays; The Nourishing Gourmet’s Pennywise Platter; The Liberated Kitchen’s GAPS Friendly Fridays; Food Renegade’s Fight Back Fridays; Real Food Freaks Freaky Friday ; The Healthy Home Economist’s Monday Mania;.