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and other article of interst from the pages of the upcoming summer 2004 issue
of Living Without magazine:
The Princess Goes Camping
"My idea of roughing it is self-parking at the Four Seasons Hotel. When I
can't have a shower, hot coffee and fresh orange juice to start the day
(preferably served by a tuxedo-ed waiter,) I am not a happy camper."
(Read more about how this well known celiac (Beth Hillson) copes with
gluten-free cooking while camping in the summer issue of Living Without.)
Lessons Learned
Roger Barr has a warm welcoming demeanor-a firm handshake and twinkling eyes
that don't miss a thing. As an assistant principal he oversees more than 1,500
teenage students in one of the fastest-growing counties in the nation. The
demanding job comes with a busy schedule that starts before dawn. But Barr
hasn't always had this boundless energy. Just a year ago he considered stepping
down from the job due to an undiagnosed chronic condition, celiac disease, that
sapped his vitality, leaving him tired and unable to keep up.
(Read more about how the diagnosis of celiac disease changed Roger Barr's
life in the Summer 2004 issue of Living Without.)
Going Bananas
"What?,” you say. “How can I discipline a poor cookie-starved toddler, an
ice-cream deprived teenager, a walking peanut reaction?” You can and you must.
If you don’t, the monster you create is entirely your own doing.
(How do you keep your celiac child from becoming a demanding, spoiled
gluten-free adult? We share tips for raising a well balanced, special diet child in
the Summer 2004 issue of Living Without.)
Back in Time
It was to be a whirlwind 6-day affair, driving from Chicago to Colonial
Williamsburg and Jamestown, a family car trip to the past. To get there and back,
three kids with allergies, including one with celiac disease, would spend three
days in a minivan with nothing but turnpike fast food. Challenging? Yes. But
I exhorted my family: We can do it!
(Did they do it? Find out in the Summer issue of Living Without.)
These are just a few of the articles you'll enjoy in the Summer 2004 issue of
Living Without magazine. There are also articles on planning for a
gluten-free July 4th celebration including many G-F recipes, details about favorite new
gluten-free cafes, a tale of one celiac who has found a way to both maintain
her gluten-free diet and her desired weight, and much, much more. In these
pages you'll meet the fisherman who is allergic to fish, the young man who must
cope with the social challenges his special diet presents, the naturopath who
stopped wishing for a delicious gluten-free bar and started making one, the
doctor who believes in good food not Ritalin and the woman who learned that her
home, sweet, home was making her sick. We'll teach you the wonders of dates
(the food) and introduce you to new products, recipes and books. We'll give you
guidance and support and provide a healthy foundation to living well, living
without.
The Summer issue will be available in May. Subscribe at www.LivingWithout.com
or be mailing $23 for one year or $40 for two years to:
Living Without, PO Box 2126, Northbrook, IL 60065
* Please remember some posters may be WHEAT-FREE, but not GLUTEN-FREE *
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