Cutest Pet Contest!
Email a picture of your cutest pet to compasschiro@gmail.com by July 31
and they'll be included in our contest for in-office voting to begin
August 3! A few of our staff's cuties are below!
Sandy's pups
Amy's big girl, Reece
Anne's pups
Anne's Puchi
Anne's Pancake
Anne's Foster-Cat Belle
Anne's Teacake
Anne's Eskimo
Dr. Krohse's best bud, George
Congratulations to Dr. Krohse on his engagement to Val on June 20!
Surprise trip to Anna Maria Island, FL & a walk on the beach...
She said yes!
Champions maximize their performance and maintain their health with chiropractic!
Sandy Recommends Lenten Rose (a Perennial Plant for Shady Spots)
After a long, cold winter, I look forward to watching the early spring
plants emerging from the ground and the one I anticipate the most is the
hellebore orientalis -- commonly known as "Lenten rose". This lovely
perennial is an evergreen, late-winter, early-spring flowering member of
the buttercup family. It gets its name because it usually is blooming
during Lent. It actually is one of the very first perennials to emerge
from the ground and I often see it peeking up through the snow in late
winter/early spring. It's a very hardy plant that can sustain cold
temperatures and is categorized as suitable to grow in Zones 4-9 and can
actually survive in some of the northern Zone 3 winters.
This plant does well in shade and as you can see in the photos -- I grow
it in the front of some of my shade-growing flower beds -- right in
front of some of the taller, larger hosta plants. Though my Lenten rose
have ivory blooms, there are variations of the plant that bloom in
pink, rose and magenta. It's a slow grower -- so be patient but it is
hardy and both drought and deer-resistant. I've grown it for years and
have never
experienced
any problems with bugs or critters. One of the many reasons I love
this plant is that, in addition to being low maintenance and hardy, it
blooms early and the blooms linger on for many weeks. The two photos
shown were taken in mid-June and the blooms are still very beautiful.
Amy Recommends Live Horse Racing at Prairie Meadows
This month I'm recommending live horse racing at Prairie Meadows. This
all ages event is a fun way to spend an afternoon or evening with family
and friends this summer! Thoroughbreds race Thursday thru Sunday and
Quarter Horses race Friday thru Sunday. Post times and event information
can be found at prairiemeadows.com.
Prairie Meadows has family fun events in conjunction with some of the
race days as well. Last summer we took Hattie (then 6 months old) to the
family
fun
day and they had horses to take pictures with as well as sponsors such
as Blue Bunny Ice Cream and the Des Moines Mounted Police.
If you caught a glimpse of the Triple Crown Thoroughbred Races,
commonly known as the "Triple Crown", which consists of the Kentucky
Derby (May), Preakness Stakes (May), and Belmont Stakes (June) it was
tough not to become interested in whether or not history would be made.
In fact, it was as American Pharoah won the Triple Crown breaking the
37 year streak of no horse winning all three races! Keen Ice, an Iowa
owned horse, was hoping to spoil American Pharoah's triple crown moment,
but came in third at the Belmont Stakes. Who knows, you may get to see
a "champion in the making" right here in the Des Moines area!
At Prairie Meadows the minimum bet is $2 so it's fun entertainment
without breaking the bank. There are many ways to bet on horse racing
and I'm not an expert, but I've won a few races just by choosing a horse
with an interesting name, or choosing the horse sporting my favorite
number! Of course you can look at the odds, the horse's bloodline, track
condition, etc when placing your bets. Each horse has its own unique
history and story to tell. It's so exciting watching these beautiful,
strong, athletic horses run.
Anne Recommends PostSecret.com
Most of us are open to adding yet another on-line distraction to our
already excessively-engaged lives, right? Well, PostSecret.com is one I
came across years ago, before it became an international sensation,
before it had the nearly one billion hits it has today, and before it
could boast earning five Bloggies.
For those of you who haven’t already scoped it out, the PostSecret
phenomenon began with a story told like this… The place: Washington,
D.C. The year: 2004. The person: Frank Warren, who dispenses 3000
self-addressed postcards, asking strangers to return them anonymously
with a secret they’ve never shared before. (I imagine he didn’t
anticipate his mailbox crammed daily with up to 200 secrets from all
over the world.)
Soon after passing out those initial 3000 cards, Warren turned his
project into a website, displaying a line-up of fresh disclosures each
Sunday. Each week that I peruse Postsecret, I’m as intrigued with the
wide-ranging postcards as I am the assorted secrets. Sometimes,
heart-breaking words are scribbled onto obviously store-bought, pre-made
cards, but other times, a liberating message is divulged in the midst
of intimate hand-made “artwork”. Plain graphics might be the only
adornment for a startling truth, yet some amusing revelations are
offered on precise or sloppily-created
collages.
“For many readers, PostSecret is a deliciously addictive fusion of old
tech (snail mail) and new tech (the Internet) that produces something
never seen before,” observed USA Today in 2006. “Just a year after its
launch, (it) is a smash hit…the third-most-popular blog in the
blogoshphere of nearly 30 million blogs.”
Since then, PostSecret evolved from a blog to a “happening”, cultivating
not only the typical Facebook and Twitter pages, YouTube channel, and
chatroom, but also developing into a “Community” where over 80,000 users
have registered to participate in on-line discussion forums. The
founder, himself, is occupied by tours as far away as Australia, where
his “PostSecret Live” multi-media presentations land him at college
campuses, museums, and art performance centers. Contributing secrets
might have been passed over for the website or banned from Warren’s six
published books (including the #1 New York Times bestseller, “PostSecret
Confessions on Life, Death, and God”.) Currently, PostSecret
collections are used to construct a traveling exhibit through the
International Arts & Artists organization in Washington, D.C.
Warren has mentioned how printed exposures have been mailed to him on
creative objects: a baseball, rollerskate wheel, deflated balloon,
dollar bill, mask- even a banana- and clothing. Despite his unexpected
global accomplishments and esteem, Warren’s interviews and talks present
him as an unassuming guy who approaches his mailbox like an excited
child opening their holiday gifts, and someone who is deeply moved by
the PostSecret experience. Some of the declarations stuffed into
Warren’s mailbox and scanned into his blog are sent from people in
apparent personal tragedies, and Warren has noted the responsibility he
feels for the significant trust he receives from both his authors and
his readers. Ever since the beginning of PostSecret’s story, the blog
has incorporated numerous crisis resources, and book proceeds have
benefited non-profit agencies such as the National Suicide Hotline.
“I don’t think of PostSecret as being a sole voice sharing a secret on a
postcard,“ Warren admits. “I think of it as this wonderful dialogue
between all of us, and through individual secrets, we can kind of see
our full stories play out.”
Since PostSecret, many other websites have been brought to life
mimicking Warren’s ground-breaking confessional concept, but to check
out the original invention, go to PostSecret.com, or release a secret to
13345 Copper Ridge Rd, Germantown Maryland 20874
Dr. Krohse Recommends the Lumo Lift
As a chiropractor, I get to see firsthand how poor posture directly
causes so much neck pain and so many headaches for people. When talking
with teens, I tell them I want them to look like the “cockiest kid in
the room” with their chest out and standing and sitting as tall as
possible. Even while I give this instruction to so many, I acknowledge
that it is very hard to maintain great posture while sitting for
extended amounts of time.
For that reason, I was interested when a patient shared she had bought a
Lumo Lift. This small sensor works like an activity tracker and
constantly monitors the position of your upper chest. Any time you
slouch, it gently vibrates reminding you to sit or stand with good
posture again.
The patient I talked with had used the Lift for a few months and
reported that it definitely helped her maintain better posture at work.
Check out getting a Lift for yourself and constantly work to be the
“cockiest-looking person in the room.” Your neck will be happier as a
result!