Monday, December 20, 2010

Homemade lip balm

Admit it: your lips are so dry you hesitate before smiling because you're afraid they'll crack. Wouldn't your friends and family be impressed if they got homemade lip balm for a gift this time of year?

Here's the basic recipe we use for the lip balm we sell at White Violet Center for Eco-Justice:

20% beeswax
25% coconut oil
15% cocoa butter
40% liquid oil (we use cosmetic grade sweet almond)
A few drops of Vitamin E
A few drops of flavoring/scented oil (we use food safe essential oils)

Candace Minster, who gathers interested volunteers when making the lip balm White Violet Center sells, says we melt everything carefully in a double boiler, or a mug placed into an old saucepan, under low heat. Then use a glass dropper to get the liquid into a tube or pot. Use this recipe whether it's a small batch just for you or if it's a large batch to share.

We get all ingredients from Herbs & Heirlooms in Terre Haute (on 4th Street, just off of Hulman Street). They have online ordering. Sweet!

Tuesday, December 7, 2010

Finding your center

During the course of my day, I often go to Owens Hall, the main residence for retired Sisters. And somehow, almost without fail, I find myself there at 11:30am, during Mass in Owens Chapel. Today as I walked through, I overheard a bit of Father Hopcus’ homily on using resources, and stayed to listen for a few minutes.

In the homily, Father Hopcus said that if one holds Jesus as one’s center, then they will be lead naturally to use resources appropriately. I thought this was a fascinating point. Usually we think of resource use in terms of “what is cheapest” or “how much we ought to use”. But Father Hopcus was making a different point. Rather than admonishing people for what they ought to do, or what is most economically proper, or anything else, he was suggesting that by keeping a solid center, the right actions would follow naturally from that.

In my experience as someone attempting to live a more sustainable life, I find the choices one must make to be dizzying. And even more difficult than choosing what I ought to do is the ability to just stick with it. To stay true to a sustainable lifestyle, even though Wal-Mart is cheaper than the local farm, and my friends complain about how cold my house is, and that it’s so much easier to just drive instead of bike, and being tired of harping on the children to turn the lights off when you leave a room over and over again.

I believe that a sustainable lifestyle is more satisfying and fulfilling, but that doesn’t mean that it is always easier, and it is certainly swimming against the current in our society. I like the idea that having a solid center can help one to more naturally choose appropriate uses of resources. Keeping Jesus as one’s center is an obvious choice for the Sisters and many people; for others, perhaps keeping one’s family, or one’s children as their center will help lead them to use resources wisely. I can imagine many different “centers”, depending on what will be most helpful for that individual.

So have you found your center? That thing which keeps you on the right track, mindful of how you are using the wealth of the world? Is there anything that keeps you on the straight and narrow? My family and my community are my center. I love our town, and want to instill that love in my children. I worry about how I will feed my family in a town that cannot produce enough food to feed itself, in a world where food costs are increasingly tied to fuel costs. And so I work hard to strengthen our local food resources, support our local small farmers, and find new ways to make our town more self-sufficient. My center calls me to use the resources of Creation to build a strong and resilient community, and it’s my center that gets me to stick with it all. What does your center call you to do?

Friday, December 3, 2010

Join us this Sunday

There are plenty of reasons to spend the day at Saint Mary-of-the-Woods this Sunday and experience the spirit of Christmas. We’ll have our Christmas open house from 1 to 3 p.m. in the center.

Enjoy weaving, spinning and needle felting demonstrations and delicious homemade treats. Handmade items such as alpaca scarves, hats, gloves, socks, ornaments, pins and teddy bears are available for purchase. An alpaca afghan ($300 value) and a teddy bear will be raffled on Dec. 12. Tickets may be purchased at the open house for $2 each or six for $10.

Please ask us about alpaca and bee hive adoption opportunities as Christmas gifts. And, the two youngest alpacas will make an appearance at the open house.

Christmas concert
At 3 p.m. Saint Mary-of-the-Woods College Chorale and Madrigals will offer their Christmas Concert in the Church of the Immaculate Conception.

Brunch and Gift Shop
Sunday Brunch also is available in O’Shaughnessy Dining Room from 10:45 a.m. to 1:15 p.m. And just steps from O’Shaughnessy will be the “Light Up for Christmas” sale in The Gift Shop at Providence Center. Pull a Christmas bulb from the bag to see what percentage is taken off your purchase. Sunday’s Gift Shop hours are 11:30 a.m. to 3 p.m.

Advent
Some may be interested in Advent Vespers at 4:30 p.m. in St. Joseph Chapel in Owens Hall. The vesper service is the evening prayer of the Church. It is an opportunity to pray the psalms in song in an ecumenical spirit and to reflect on the Advent season’s scripture readings.

And don’t forget the Eucharistic Liturgy for the Second Sunday of Advent will be offered at 11 a.m. in the Church of the Immaculate Conception.

Wednesday, December 1, 2010

Eco-friendly gift ideas

Looking for some ethical, fair-trade, eco-friendly and stupendous gift ideas? We have a few for you to check out.

Heartbeats, a ministry of the Sisters of Humility of Mary, offers a sizable catalog of fair-trade religious gifts. Many items are handmade in third world countries, though some domestic items are offered as well. Each purchase helps create dignified work that gives a fair wage to women worldwide. Go to www.heartbeatscatalog.org.

Green America’s (formerly Co-op America) Green Pages is a great resource to find dozens of fair-trade and eco-friendly gift ideas. Browse featured vendors or use a search engine to look for a specific item. Go to www.greenpages.org.

Heifer International is dedicated to providing indigenous people with animals that can be used for milk, fiber, meat, eggs or labor. Animal donations help indigent communities become more self-sustaining by meeting their own nutritional needs as well as making a small income. Partial or full shares are available and make wonderful gifts. Go to www.heifer.org.

The following companies have some great coffee and chocolate gift sets if you’re pressed for time and don’t want to assemble your own: www.equalexchange.com, www.dagobachocolate.com, and www.ancoracoffee.com.