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The clothing you grew up with never seems strange. It is just the way things were. You didn’t give it a second thought then or now. It’s only after many years pass that those pictures in your high school yearbook start to look a bit strange. You children make comments and you reconsider. Is that how we looked back then? Did we really dress like that? It does look a bit strange, doesn’t it. One example that comes to mind is the poodle shirt. Yes, I did say poodle skirt.

Every teen aged girl needed a poodle skirt in the 50’s. If you were in high school in the 50’s you know what they are- full skirts in solid colors with an applique of a poodle. You might see them at school but you would certainly see them at informal dances like the sock hops after football games. Being full circles of fabric, the skirts would swing easily while dancing, often with the supportive assistance of layers of crinoline petticoats . I remember them as made of felt which because of its substance kept the skirts from falling limply even without the crinoline. Imagine girls today wearing anything like a poodle skirt. No way dude!

Poodle Skirts and 50s Outfits Are Back In Style – The funniest home videos are here

It amazes me driving by the local high school and seeing what the well dressed student wears these days. I wonder if the girls even own a skirt. In the 50’s pants were forbidden to school girls let alone shorts. In the 50’s girls wore skirts and blouses- sometimes sweaters and even (gasp) dresses. Saddle shoes and bobby sox were common with most any school outfit. It is quite the contrast with what I see on the street today: ratty t-shirts and sweats over torn jeans and shorts. Today in my upscale community students wear clothes we would have been ashamed to wear slopping the hogs back in the 50’s. Today’s students wouldn’t be caught dead in a skirt, especially a poodle skirt.

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Healthy Aging – Barley is a superfood.

The most important crop is Barley
Image via Wikipedia

Is barley part of your diet?

Barley is a low glycemic grain with a very high nutritional value. For this reason, Dr. Nicholas Perricone lists it as number three on his list of super foods. Much, but not all, of the nutrition is in the hull making unhulled barley the preferred form. Scotch barley being partially hulled is next and pearl barley with most of the hull removed from polishing has the least nutritional value. Even the pearl barley, however, provides exceptional benefits in the diet.

Barley is an extremely good source of dietary fiber, both soluble and insoluble. One cup of barley provides 13.6 grams of fiber while one cup of oatmeal provides only 3.98 grams. Soluble fiber helps metabolize fats, cholesterol and carbohydrates. The bulk from the fiber content helps decrease the transit time for fecal matter in the intestines. It also provides food for the good bacteria in the large intestine. [continue reading…]

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