lifestyle
Transcription
lifestyle
Hendricks County ICON of the Month Page 30 Volume 7 • Issue 06 Pawing it forward September 2014 myICON.info Courtney Sackett, Brownsburg High School freshman and founder of the Bow Wow Bash, readies for the fourth annual on Sept. 10. Page 7 Photo by Rick Myers Replace frustration with action. Take our FREE joint pain assessment and learn more about upcoming seminars at iuhealth.org/westortho 2 COMMUNITY September 2014 • myICON.info Dr. JC Anderson For $40 you will receive an initial exam and X-ray (if deemed necessary) and $25 will be donated to Susie’s Place, a Children’s Advocacy Center. Call now to schedule an appointment. Dr. Justin Mohr Be free of pain, headaches & other health related issues. $40 Exam Offer Expires September 30, 2014 O “BACK TGift ” SCHOOL ate c fi i Cert for New ! Patients ANDERSON CHIROPRACTIC 7390 Business Center Drive • Avon, IN 46123 Ph: (317) 272-7000 • avonspinedocs.com loyal genuine Hendricks County ICON AROUND TOWN Drawing inspiration from a dolphin “If Winter can, I can!” is the motto of Stephanie Evans, a 19-year-old Brownsburg woman who needs a liver and kidney transplant as recommended by doctors at the Children’s Hospital of Pittsburgh in Pennsylvania. Evans is a fan of the bottlenose dolphin named Winter, who resides at the Clearwater Marine Aquarium in Florida. She takes inspiration from her mammal friend, who has beaten the odds and survived in spite of the loss of her tail. At birth, Evans was diagnosed with a chronic rare metabolic disorder called Methylmalonic acidemia (MMA). She is now in stage 4 kidney disease and needs a liver and kidney transplant in order to survive. In Brownsburg and surrounding areas, volunteers are raising funds for COTA in honor of transplant patients like local woman, Stephanie Evans. For more information on upcoming events, such as an online Schwan’s grocery fundraiser, or for online donations, visit: www. COTAforStephanieE.com. Brownsburg’s Stephanie Evans with Winter by her side. Submitted Photo outgoing connected blessed loving Scouts do stuff. They build things. Play with purpose. Make friends and work together. Vil anueva Family These life changing experiences-and the confidence they provide-become bricks that eventually form a foundation. One a Scout can stand on to embrace opportunity and overcome obstacles. For the parents watching in awe, it’s not a question of where their Scout will go, but where won’t he go. ADVENTURE IS WAITING. BUILD YOURS AT BEASCOUT.ORG. To find out more visit: www.hendrickscountycf.ORG Untitled-1 1 8/18/14 12:08 PM VIEWS Hendricks County ICON myICON.info • September 2014 3 Sharing the roads with farmers during this harvest season Stories/News? Have any news tips? Want to submit a calendar event? Have a photograph to share? Call Katie Mosley at 451-4088 or email her at [email protected]. Remember, our news deadlines are several days prior to print. READERS’ WRITES Want to Advertise? Hendricks County ICON reaches a vast segment of our community. For information about reaching our readers, call Cathy Myers at 451-4088 or email her at [email protected]. A product of Rick Myers Farmers in Hendricks County are beginning their harvest season for 2014. Whether the farm equipment be a tractor-trailer hauling grain, a tractor with oversized tillage tools, spraying equipment or supply trucks with seed, chemicals or fertilizer – all travel Hendricks County roads and highways with you. Safety while sharing the road is important to avert a potential tragedy for farmers and motorists Harvest season is time-consuming, weather dependent, and requires long hours. Farmers may travel the roads during traffic rush hours or at dawn or dusk. Remember, farmers are traveling to and from work also. Caution and respect for the use of the road is required. The public needs to be alert for slow moving vehicle signs (the reflec- Publisher tive SMV triangle) or the flashing yellow lights which means the vehicle is traveling 25 mph or less. Farmers are equipped with mirrors (but equipment still may have blind spots) to make them aware of traffic behind. Farmers need to find a safe place to pull over. For oncoming traffic, pull to the right, slow down or stop for the equipment to pass. The motorist must be observant of the surroundings as the equipment has to dodge mailboxes, utility poles, road signs, deep ditches and narrow bridges. For equipment that is folded upwards, be aware the utility wires could become snagged. Drivers need to be patient with this over-sized, slow-moving equipment. The growers of our food have to follow many regulations to make their equipment visible to drivers need to make themselves aware of them. Be ready to slow down and do not pass on hills, curves or bridges. Here are several Do’s and Don’ts to help guide the non-farmer driver: 1. Do not approach moving equipment as the farmer may not see the bystander. Wait until you make sure the farmer sees you. 2. Do not assume farmers see you at an intersection. Tractors, trucks and combines have blind spots and if pulling heavy equipment, stopping is difficult. 3. Do pull over as far as is safely possible when approaching farm equipment. 4. Do not pull over opposite mailboxes, utility poles, road signs and narrow bridges. 5. Do not try to pass farm equipment on a double yellow line. Be patient. You will get there eventually 6. Do be patient and understanding. Farmers and motorists can drive safely on all roadways. The farmer wants to be a good neighbor sharing the public roads which connect one farm to another. Let’s all be good neighbors and share the public roads with each other. Phyllis Gladden 46123 Katie Mosley Editor LIONS, LEOS EAGLES...OH MY! Brian& Kelly Chief Executive Officer Carey Germana 10:15 a.m. Saturday, Main St. Food & Drinks by local vendors & restaurants Commercial, Arts & Crafts Kids Corner Safety House & Fair Pet Pavilion Production/Art Manager Z’CIRCUS PARADE Vendors ZIONSVILLE FALL FESTIVAL Jeen Endris, Stew Forrest Graphic Design 6319 E US Hwy 36, Suite 206 Avon, IN 46123 Ph: (317) 451-4088 LEOPalooza Saturday night: Drug & Alcohol Free Party for Young Adults in the gazebo Car Show 12th Annual American Dream Car Show Sunday, 11 am to 3 pm at the Gazebo Established April 2008 Live Entertainment Times-Leader Publications, LLC ©2014. All Rights Reserved Lots of local talent, bands, dancing & games BIG top lounge 2014 — Saturday begins at 5 pm Must be 21 or over to attend event. Food & Adult Beverages Silent Auction Zionsville Lions Park September 5-7 Yes, we want your letters: Readers of the Hendricks County ICON are encouraged to send letters to the editor as often as they wish. The stipulations are that the letter is timely, focused (not more than 200 words) and verifiable. Please make sure to provide your complete name and daytime and evening telephone contact numbers. All letters are subject to editing for brevity, clarity and grammar. Please direct correspondence to: [email protected]. Saturday, 2 p.m. to 6 p.m. Shelter house. See listing of items at www.qtego.net/auc/zpc. Miss Fall Festival pageant Poor Jack Carnival 3 pm Sunday Community Room, Town Hall Friday — 6 to 11 pm Saturday — noon to 11 pm Sunday — noon to 6 pm zlionsevents.com Sept. 5-7 2014 Gold Sponsors Silver Sponsors ZIONSVILLE Bronze Sponsors Akard True Value Hardware Anson - Duke Realty Boone REMC Control Tech Heating & Air Dale Kennedy Tax The Guthrie Family Hearth at Tudor Gardens INDY Adventure Boot Camp Interactive Academy Gymnastics MacAgCon Consulting Montgomery Aviation, Inc. Schulte State Farm Zionsville Eyecare Zionsville Meadows Zionsville Times Sentinel AROUND TOWN Avon Roots volunteer program launched Avon Community School Corporation has launched a new volunteer program to serve its 12 schools. Avon Roots seeks community members to become directly involved in the educational process. A spectrum of opportunities is available such as clerical assistance, school-wide assistance, inclassroom assistance or even at-home assistance. All volunteers must complete the application process which includes a background check. Detailed information about Avon Roots as well as the required forms can be found at http://www.avonschools.org/volunteer. 4 VIEWS September 2014 • myICON.info Hendricks County ICON OUR VIEW FROM the PUBLISHER Cyclists and motorists… caution Arts Gala lucky to have Ifen Perhaps it’s the lovely weather we’ve been experiencing – pleasantly atypical of an Indiana summer – but we’ve noticed an increase of cyclists in Hendricks County that are dangerously foregoing the rules of the road. Even on roads where bike lanes have been built in – which is a welcome addition that has given our communities national attention and acclaim – some cyclists are riding without helmets, on the wrong side of the road, or without following red lights, stop signs and other signage. Granted, not all cyclists are guilty of this, but it’s an issue that does need addressing. We want to keep our county safe for motorists and cyclists alike. Cyclists: be sure to follow the rules of the road. If you don’t know them, check out bicycleindiana.org/educate.php. Motorists: be cautious and aware when sharing the road with a cyclist. Several municipalities in the surrounding Indianapolis area have adopted a “three feet” law, which requires motorists to maintain three feet of space between their vehicle and the cyclist when passing. With more people biking in our communities now than ever, it’s important to be respectful and cautious while out and about on the road. Even though something as dreadful as waiting at a stop light is a catastrophic inconvenience for cyclists and motorists alike, we endure the torturous, mind-numbing 25-second wait because we value our lives and the lives of others more than shaving those few seconds off of commute time. Stay safe out there, Hendricks County! MONTHLY QUOTE “How wonderful it is that nobody need wait a single moment before starting to improve the world.” ~ Anne Frank BELIEVE IT! Our nation has all sorts of arcane, nonsensical laws on the books. Each month, we’ll share one with you.… In Wisconsin, at one time, margarine was illegal. -dumblaws.com T Civil reunion est with each other. While it was true that I was dreading this event, I was a bit hurt that I wasn’t really wanted. “Okay, let me try to make y wife and I enjoy doing many things you understand this, Dick,” said my wife. “If you together. But when our entertainment go with me and simply hang around, no one will preferences are not in sync, we can know you, you won’t know where to put yourcommunicate openly with each other. That self, and people will wonder why you makes for a perfect union. But it may look so uncomfortable.” make for a lousy reunion. Let me “No, that’s how I felt at my 45th explain. reunion. Look, I attended your The Wolfsie family is headed to last college reunion, and you told Michigan where Mary Ellen will enme that friends were always asking joy the 45th anniversary of her high about me.” school graduation. Up until about “Yes, they asked me if I knew who a month ago, we were both talking that guy was, asleep in the corner.” about the event, but hiding how we Mary Ellen then compromised, felt about the arrangements. I’ve put suggesting I make a brief appearDick Wolfsie in parentheses what we were really COLUMNIST ance, then excuse myself and go thinking … back to the hotel, but I reminded her “Mary Ellen, your that once when I did reunion is getting this very thing at anclose. Sounds like fun.” “…when our entertainment other get-together, she (Sounds like fun for was annoyed. I guess you. This is about the preferences are not in sync, we that was no way to belast thing in the world I can communicate openly with have at my own engagewant to do.) each other. That makes for a ment party. “Yes, Dick I am lookShe also mentioned ing forward to the eve- perfect union. But it may make that at a previous refor a lousy reunion.” ning. I hope you’ll enjoy union I said things she it.” (Please drop me off didn’t find funny: at the front door and “Like when you saw an old flame of mine havgo find something else to do.) ing a few too many cocktails. He told you jok“It will be great to see your classmates, Mary ingly that he had been drinking ever since we Ellen.” (This will be unbearable, viewing photos broke up. And you said: ‘Wow, still celebrating of the grandchildren of people I don’t know.) after all these years?’” “I’ll be proud to say you are my husband.” (I Right now, I plan to make a brief appearance, really do hope you’ll drop me off at the front then get in the car and find that bar with a big door and find something else to do.) screen TV. I won’t know anybody in the place “I can’t wait to hear all the stories about when and people will ignore me, so I’ll just curl up in you were a teenager.” (I really need to find a bar a booth and take a nap. nearby with a big screen TV.) Same as going to the reunion. “Yes, I think you’ll get a kick out of looking through the yearbook.” (Maybe you can find a Dick Wolfsie lives in Indianapolis with his wife of 33 years. They bar with a big screen TV.) have a dog and a cat. None of the four speak to escape other. Finally, last week, we started getting hon- Dick is usually in the basement trying to think up something M HUMOR funny to write. He can be reached at: [email protected]. here are many groups in Hendricks County that I have a fondness for – one is the Hendricks County Arts Council. Comprised of a great group of people, I am not sure there is another in the county who feels as passionate about what they do as these folks. On Sept. 11, at 6 p.m., the HCAC will hold its annual Gala – this year’s version, which will be at the Hendricks CounRick Myers ty 4-H Fairground, will PUBLISHER honor “The Greatest Generation” with Big Band music, produced by the Hendricks Civic Theatre. I served as a board member of the Arts Council a few years ago and know intimately what goes into making the Gala a success. This year, Ifen Donovan is serving as the Gala’s chair. If you don’t know Ifen, you should. She has an abundance of energy – and most everything she is involved with becomes a success. She is the perfect person for the HCAC to have involved in this very important endeavor. This year’s theme is evermore meaningful to Ifen who grew up in Guam and walked the Asan beach where U.S. Marine and Army assault troops first landed July 21, 1944. “Every-time I stand at the Asan beach (which) overlooked the U.S. tanks and vehicles (that) didn’t make it to the shore just rusting in that sea water, never fail, I’m always overcome with emotion,” she reflects. “I grew up and live with relics, stories of WWII and that war affected me deeply. Since our Gala just happens to land on Sept. 11, I thought this would be a great opportunity to thank and honor the WWII veterans who so bravely fought and protect our freedom, and my beloved island Guam.” For more information about the Gala, visit hendrickscountyarts.org or email [email protected]. Kingsway is here, too! I made a grave mistake last month in this space when I neglected to list Kingsway Christian School (Avon) as one of the many private/ parhocial educational options in the county. KCS has been been educating students for more than 30 years and currently, as stated on its website, serves 620 students in preschool through eighth grade. My sincere apologies. Rick Myers is co-owner of Times-Leader Publications, LLC., publisher of Hendricks County ICON and Hendricks County Business Leader. Write him at [email protected]. Hendricks County ICON COVER STORY myICON.info • September 2014 7 Pawing it forward Judges and the Best of Show winner at the 2012 Bow Bow Bash. Submitted Photo Courtney Sackett, Brownsburg High School freshman and founder of the Bow Wow Bash, readies for the fourth annual on Sept. 10. Her efforts were recognized by the Barnum & Bailey Circus Gold Award, a $1,000 prize recognizing community service. That’s when By Gus Pearcy the idea came for an annual fundraiser. For three years, the Bow Wow Bash has The Bow Wow Bash was started with that been raising money to help domestic animals money. It has raised nearly $16,000 in just in Hendricks County. This year isn’t different, three years. This year, there will be a competibut there are a couple of twists. What you may tive fundraiser called the Pack Attack, which not realize is that the event was started by a Courtney devised to encourage the younger 10-year-old girl. volunteers to go out to raise money. Courtney Sackett is a typical freshman at “The top three people who raise the most Brownsburg High School, but she has a wealth money, are going to be the grand marshals of community service already under her belt. of our Paws on Parade which is also new this She, with the help of her mother, launched year,” Courtney said. “It’s at 2 p.m. towards the the Bow Wow Bash, which will be happening end of the day. Their dog will get to ride in a again this year from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Sept. 6 at convertible. We’ll also have our coordinators Arbuckle Acres, a new location. Dogs are the and volunteers and everybody else walk in the guests of honor at the bash. parade as well.” It all started when Courtney fell in love with Paws on Parade is also a new event for the a boat. family fun event for all ages. There are many The Dixie, in North Webster, Ind., is In- other fun events including dog contests with diana’s oldest sternwheel paddle boat. It has prizes for categories such as Best Dressed, cruised Lake Webster, named after Dan- Best Look Alike Costumes, Best Talent, Best iel Webster, since 1929. It is a tourist attrac- Kisser, and overall Best of Show Competition. tion but holds the heart Many animal owners of many locals, includplan ahead to attend this ing the Sackett family. 4th Annual event each year, preparIn 2007, it was sold to a ing some pretty unique Bow Wow Bash nonprofit entity made costumes for their be10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Sept. 6 up of citizens. The first loved pets. Arbuckle Acres order of business was There is also a si200 N. Green St., Brownaburg some sorely needed renlent auction with donaFor more information, ovations to bring it up to tions from several area call (317) 852-3893 or code. The alternative was businesses and specialon Facebook at facebook.com/ dry docking it. So Courtty items such as autobowwowbash or at ney took to the drawing graphed items by Indy bowwowbash.com. board and drew some Car drivers such as GraFor information about Misty Eyes pictures of the boat and ham Rahal, Scott Dixon, Animal Shelter, go to Facebook.com/ the lake. Her mom, SherRyan Briscoe and Tony mistyeyes.org or mistyeye.org or call yl, a marketing and pubKanaan. the center at (317) 852-8022. lic relations consultant, Money raised from helped Courtney turn the event will go to the her drawings into printed notecards, post- Misty Eyes Animal Shelter, which adopts out cards and T-shirts for sale. She raised $4,000 domestic animals. The no-kill shelter, which from the sale of those pictures. The Dixie was rescues animals, is totally funded by donasaved with Courtney’s help. tions. In June, Hendricks County Animal COVER STORY Photo by Rick Myers Courtney Sackett with her mother Sheryl. Control seized animals from a hoarding situation in Coatesville, which landed more than 50 Border Collies into the Hendricks County Animal Shelter. Misty Eyes pulled 27 of these dogs from the shelter to help them with the overload of animals. Many of these animals were feral in nature, needing to be treated for various medical conditions, socialized and rehabilitated. Misty Eyes, founded by Cherie Fox and Renee Harlor, has a small shelter in Brownsburg. It is hoping to raise enough funds to eventually build a larger facility to further their mission. Courtney has five dogs. Sheryl Sackett says her daughter has changed her outlook to not be self-centered, but show care and concern for others. “The Pack Attack was her idea, she named it and presented it to the junior volunteers,” Sheryl said. “She’s an officer at Key Club this year, so she’s helped wrangle a few volunteers for the event and then she’s in charge of all the dog contests.” Sheryl, who has also been involved in the Alliance for All Animals, says that next year’s Bow Wow Bash will be for Misty Eyes and the Hendricks County Animal Shelter. Alliance for All Animals has been critical of the administration and the euthanasia rates at the county shelter for several years. Recently, the Hendricks County Commissioners made a change in the supervisor. LaDonna Hughes has adopted many of the suggestions made by rescue groups and the Alliance including changing hours to accommodate families, getting more volunteers to help, and advertising more animals to encourage adoption on outlets like Facebook. “(Hughes) has really shocked the crap out of us, because she has really turned that thing around 180 degrees,” Sheryl said candidly. “She has done everything that we have asked.” Courtney has had plenty of help from her mom to put on the Bow Wow Bash, but she also has learned quite a bit. “I don’t think I’d be able to put on an event like this without the help of my mom,” Courtney admitted. “But she’s taught me some things like communication is key, and like she taught me a little bit of design for like the logo and stuff, but she also taught me some major skills like how you can do such big things with just a small idea. “I’d like to say it’s not as hard as you think, but it kind of is,” she added. Courtney’s drive as a servant will continue. Her plans after high school are to go into the mission field. Perhaps a pastor. She believes that she has been called for a specific purpose. However, she blushes at the thought of being called a dream kid. “Oh, I’m not a dream kid,” Courtney said with a smile. “I am pretty cool, but I can be a normal kid.” 8 COMMUNITY September 2014 • myICON.info Hendricks County ICON AROUND TOWN Submitted photo Andy Wernsman, Bill Estes Ford General Manager, presents an annual sponsorship check to Angela Falcone, BEF President, with Brain Weddle, Bill Estes Ford General Sales Manager. Bill Estes Ford Community Give-Back event The Brownsburg Education Foundation (BEF) and Bill Estes Ford are partnering to raise money to support the children and teachers of the Brownsburg Community School Corporation. As part of the Ford Motor Company Drive 4 UR School program, members of the local Brownsburg community can test drive a new Ford vehicle while at the same time supporting BEF’s efforts to enhance education in the community. The one-day event takes place from 2 – 7 p.m. on Thursday, Sept. 11, at Brownsburg East Middle School, 1250 East Airport Rd. For every driver over 18 who test drives a new vehicle, Ford Motor Company and area businesses will donate an amount to BEF on your behalf. For more information about the Brownsburg Education Foundation Drive 4 UR School event or the Bill Estes Community Give-Back, go to www. brownsburgeducationfoundation.org. To donate, volunteer or sponsor the Drive 4 UR School event, please call the BEF office at (317) 852-1056 or e-mail [email protected]. P restige Lawn Solutions The solution to all your outdoor needs Emergency - 24 Hour Service Tree Removal Lot Clearing Gutter Cleaning Dirt Work Erosion Control Fall Clean-up Rip Rap Fence Install and Repair $50 Off Tree Removal CALL TODAY! (317) 524-9100 www.prestigelawnsolutions.com COMMUNITY Hendricks County ICON 2230 Stafford Rd, #101 Plainfield, IN HC ARCHITECTURE & HISTORY Eerie experiences at Avon’s haunted bridge By Ken Sebree We have all heard tales of haunted houses, but have you ever heard of a haunted bridge? If you drive south from U.S. 36 along CR 625 E, in a short distance you will pass under a majestic triple arch railroad bridge which carries the CSX Railroad tracks over White Lick Creek and CR 625 E. This 300-foot-long, 70-foothigh concrete structure was reportedly constructed in 1906 and features a series of eight smaller arches atop each of the three massive structural concrete arches. Photo by Katie Mosley Because of various legends and stories of the deaths of workers durHaunted bridge of Avon on 625 E. ing construction of the bridge and of the deaths of people killed by passing trains while walking the tracks over the bridge late at night, this bridge has locally become known as the haunted bridge. It is said that at night you can sometimes hear the screams and crying of the ghosts of these unfortunate souls, and many locals refer to CR 625 E simply as Haunted Bridge Road. One legend says that a construction worker fell to his death during the building of the bridge and landed inside the framework of one of the bridge supports. It was decided that since he was dead, they would simply leave his body there and encase him in the concrete bridge support. Some say that when the concrete forms were removed, the poor man’s arm hung out so they cut it off. Another story says that a young mother was walking the tracks across the bridge late at night taking her sick baby to the doctor when a train came and she had to jump from the bridge to save herself. The mother survived the fall but the baby did not. Within a few weeks, the grief-stricken mother died of a broken heart. For many Avon and local area teenagers, the has become a rite of passage and display of courage to visit the haunted bridge late at night and confront the ghosts directly. Many adults around Avon can tell stories of their own late night encounters with the haunted bridge ghost as teenagers, whether real or imaginary. The Avon haunted bridge is one of the most recognized historic landmarks in the area. An image of the bridge is depicted on the official seal of the Town of Avon. Ken Sebree is a practicing architect and resident of Hendricks County for well over 40 years. Contact him at [email protected] or (317) 272-7800. 9 myICON.info • September 2014 317.837.1717 Large 1 topping traditional crust pizza and an order of breadsticks 1499 $ Order online at www.chicagospizzaindiana.com Like us on Facebook! Exp: 9/30/2014 Toys, Glassware, China, Pottery, Coins, Trade Books, Trains & Much More! Specializing in Antique & Vintage Items Onsite • Online/Proxibid • E-Bay Consignment Sandy Flippin, Gilley’s Antique Mall (1 Mile West of Plainfield on U.S. 40) Office: (317) 495-8482 Email: [email protected] aclassactauction.com AU11300035 Send your Hendricks County news items to [email protected] Let us help you with: Filing a claim Rental arrangements Free estimates Located behind Lowe’s at Dan Jones Rd. & Rockville Rd. Hours – Mon.-Fri. 7:30 to 5:30 292 S. County Rd. 800 E. Avon, IN 46123 317-272-6820 You have better things to do with your time... picnics, ball games, gardening... Don’t lose any more time - let Diamond Collision’s claims specialists handle everything for you. Choosing a collision repair facility now saves time later if you do have an accident. Located behind Lowe’s at Dan Jones Rd & Rockville Rd. www.diamond-collision.com 317-272-6820 10 September 2014 • myICON.info EVENTS Sept. 4 (every Thursday until Nov. 20) Danville Jam When: 6 – 8 p.m. Where: Ellis Park Train Station 600 E. Main St., Danville Cost: Free Contact: Chuck Dolder at (317)745-3201or [email protected] Sept. 5 First Friday Cruise-In (each Friday through October) When: 5 – 9 p.m. Where: Courthouse Square, Danville Cost: Free Contact: Laura Parker at lparker@ danvilleindiana.org or call (317) 745-3007 Website: visitdowntowndanville.com Sept. 5 and 6 Habit of the Heart Gala Weekend When: Friday, doors open at 6:00 p.m. for Monte Carlo Night; Saturday, ladies luncheon Where: The Palms; 2353 E. Perry Rd., Plainfield Contact: For more information, call (317) 268-6240. Website: hendrickscountycf.org Sept. 6 Recreation Celebration When: 9 a.m. • Cost: Free Where: Washington Township Community Park; 115 McClain Place, Avon Contact: Marni Crabtree-Davison at (317) 745-0785 or mcrabtreedavison @avonfd.org Website: WashingtonTwpParks.org Sept. 9 Humorous Speech Competition When: 10 a.m. Where: Plainfield Public Library 1120 Stafford Rd., Plainfield Contact: Brownsburg.toastmastersclubs.org COMMUNITY Sept. 11 What: Gala for the Arts presents Swing the Night Away with Big Band Music When: 6 p.m. Where: Hendricks County 4H Fairgrounds; 1900 E. Main St., Danville Cost: $45 for single, $80 for couple Contact: [email protected] Web site: hendrickscountyarts.org Sept. 12 Outdoor Movie In The Park: Muppets Most Wanted When: Dusk Where: Avon Town Hall Park; 6570 E. U.S. 36 Contact: Terri Fisher at (317) 272-0948 x119 Website: avongov.org or facebook.com/TownofAvon Sept. 13 Hendricks County Half Marathon When: 7:30 a.m. • Cost: Up to $40 Contact: Nate Phipps at nphipps@ danvilleindiana.org or 317-745-3015 x4506 Website: danvilleindiana.org/department/ division.asp?fDD=4-91 Sept. 13 St. Stephen’s Fall Festival When: 11 a.m. – 6 p.m. Where: St. Stephen’s; 1001 Concord Rd., Plainfield Contact: Skip Lyford at (317) 507-6343 or [email protected] Sept. 13 Hummel Park Bluegrass Festival When: 1 – 7:30 p.m. Where: Hummel Park Performing Arts Center; 5373 S. CR 700 E. (Sugar Grove Road) Contact: (317) 839-9121 Website: hummelpark.net/park_events Sept. 13 Laughing for the Health of IT When: 6 p.m. Where: Avon Washington Township Park Pavilion; 435 Whipple Lane Avon IN 46123 Contact: [email protected] or call 317-272-0027 Hendricks County ICON Sept. 13 On the Big Screen at Hummel Park: Captain America: The Winter Soldier When: 8:15 p.m. Where: Hummel Park Performing Arts Center; 5373 S. CR 700 E. (Sugar Grove Road) Contact: (317) 839-9121 Website: hummelpark.net/park_events Sept. 19-21 Quaker Days When: Friday 4 – 9 p.m. Saturday 9 a.m. – 4 p.m. Sunday noon – 5 p.m. Where: Al and Jan Barker Athletic Complex; 451 S. Vestal Rd. Website: quakerdayfestival.weebly.com Sept. 13 and 14 Fair on the Square When: Saturday 10 a.m. – 6 p.m. and Sunday 10 a.m. – 4 p.m. Where: Courthouse Square, Danville Location: Danville Courthouse Square Contact: For more information, contact Robin Wambach at [email protected] or call (317) 432-1175 Web site: danvilletrikappa.org Sept. 20 Quaker Day Festival Car Show When: noon – 4 p.m. Where: Friends Meeting House Grounds 105 S. East St., Plainfield Sept. 18 Annual Fund Dinner When: 6 p.m. Where: Cardinal Ritter High School 3360 W. 30th St., Indianapolis Contact: Rebecca Byrnes at rbyrnes@ cardinalritter.org or (317) 927-7825 Sept. 19 – Oct. 31 Beasley’s Corn Maze When: Fridays and Saturdays 10 – 5 p.m.; Sundays noon – 5 p.m. Where: Beasley’s Orchards; 2304 East Main St., Danville Cost: 12 and older $8, ages 6-11 $6, children 5 and under free with adult Contact: (317) 745-4876 Website: beasleys-orchard.com/ festivities/corn-maze.html Sept.19-20 St. Malachy Country Fair When: Sept. 19, 4 – 11 p.m. Sept. 20, Noon-11 p.m. Where: St. Malachy Parish 9833 E. CR 750 N., Brownsburg Contact: [email protected] Website: stmalachy.org/church/ serving-sharing/country-fair/ Sept. 20 Celebrating Avon When: 11a.m. – 4 p.m. Where: Avon Washington Township Public Library/Avon Town Hall Park Cost: Free Sept. 20 What: Summer Sounds on the Square – Jennie DeVoe When: Gates open at 6:30, music at 7:30 Where: Courthouse Square, Danville Cost: $5 Contact: Laura Parker at (317) 745-3007 or [email protected] Website: visitdowntowndanville.com Sept. 25 Avon Tri Kappa Purse BINGO When: 6 – 9 p.m. Where: Washington Township Park Pavilion; 115 McClain Place, Avon Cost: $10 in advance, $15 at door Contact: Maria at (317) 432-3070 or [email protected] Sept. 27 Avon Community Heritage Festival When: 11 a.m. – 9 p.m. Where: Washington Township Park 115 McClain Place, Avon Contact: E-mail info@ avoncommunityheritagefestival.org or call (317) 272-2155 Website: avoncommunityheritagefestival.org Hendricks County ICON LIFESTYLE myICON.info • September 2014 11 12 LIFESTYLE September 2014 • myICON.info Discover a new twist on classic campfire s’mores TsT Home Improvement Services LLC Tip of the Month By Tom S. Truesdale Bath Renovations - Part 2 Last month I described a wide range of ideas regarding renovations and updates to the Bathroom and how investment in these projects will pay back immediately with the value and resale appeal of your home. • If your home has multiple Bathrooms, make plans to use others rooms during the renovation. Define and detail your budget hand in hand with scope development. • Consult with an experienced Planning and Construction Professional to provide guidance and advise. This month I would like to discuss some of the planning strategies and logistics involved with completing Bathroom update and renovation projects. • Products and materials can greatly impact cost, once your scope / budget is developed cost savings can be explored simply by choosing alternate products and materials. Below I have listed some details that if addressed prior to start of construction will help your project be a success. Planning/Design • Invest time and thought into both layout and scope development prior to beginning your project. • Think about layout refinements, accessibility and carefully review the overall scope of the project, look at options that will add long-term value to your home. • In many cases piping updates are necessary depending on the age of the home. Consider this during the scope development phase and if needed include this update in your project. • Consult with an experienced Planning and Construction Professional to provide guidance and advise. Think about logistics and interruption • The Bathroom is obviously one of the most used rooms in the home, even a small update or renovation will cause interruption that needs to be understood prior to the start of the project. Even the simplest renovation usually takes a minimum of 5 to 7 days to complete. SAMPLES, SAMPLES, SAMPLES There is a very wide variety of products, materials, colors and levels of quality to review before purchase of materials. Hendricks County ICON RECIPE For HC ICON by Family Features Roasting marshmallows around the campfire with friends and family is a popular pastime. Luckily, the classic combination of chocolate, marshmallow and graham cracker can be enjoyed in so many ways – whether you’re fireside or stuck inside! Try giving the sticky-sweet summer favorite a modern twist by using DOVE Dark Chocolate. As the No. 1 solid dark chocolate on the market, the never-bitter, silky-smooth taste of DOVE Dark Chocolate lives up to people’s expectations of what chocolate should taste like. Here are two ways to pair everyone’s favorite Keebler Original Grahams and DOVE Dark Chocolate to make s’mores-inspired desserts that are impossible to resist. For more information and great DOVE Dark Chocolate recipes, visit Facebook.com/ DoveChocolate. Place third layer of graham crackers on top of marshmallow mixture. Heat remaining 11-ounce bag of caramel in 30-second bursts, stirring in between. Pour and spread over graham crackers. Pour and spread remaining chocolate over caramel. Optional: Sprinkle sea salt on top to finish. Note: For ease of spreading, each bag of caramel should be melted separately, or else caramel for final layer will be too hard to spread. For example: • Type of vanity tops • Lighting fixtures S’mores Dessert Trifle in a Jar • Sinks / Tubs / Shower units - custom or factory • Flooring products Recipe provided by Mom Endeavors • Plumbing fixtures • Wall coverings and protection • Accessibility, location, type and function The Bathroom can potentially be an extremely complicated room to renovate, a good deal of thought and planning needs to take place before beginning your project, hopefully the points I have provided give you a good foundation of where to start. Of course never hesitate to contact a local, qualified Construction Professional to provide development and delivery services for your Bathroom Renovation project. TsT Home Improvement Services LLC Helping people one job at a time... 317-550-8677 Plainfield, IN • email: [email protected] website: tsthomeimprovement.com 1 Free Home Improvement Consulting Visit Residential Renovations • Home Improvement Consulting Home Additions • Garages and Detached Buildings Interior and Exterior Contracting • Build to Suit In Home Access and Mobility Solutions • Handyman Services 3-Layer Caramel and Chocolate Marshmallow Bars Recipe provided by Real Food by Dad • • • • 15 whole Keebler Graham Crackers 2 (11-ounce) bags caramel pieces 16 ounces DOVE Dark Chocolate 2 cups mini marshmallows Line an 8-by-8-inch pan with foil, leaving 2-inch overhang on each side. Place five graham crackers on bottom (break crackers up as needed to fit pan). Melt one 11-ounce bag of caramels in microwave in 30-second bursts, stirring in between. Pour and spread over graham crackers. Place second layer of graham crackers on top of caramel. Melt chocolate in microwave in 30-second bursts stirring in between. Reserve 1/3 of mixture. Stir marshmallows into remaining chocolate and spread mixture over graham crackers. • 1 (3.9-ounce) box of instant chocolate pudding • 6-10 individually wrapped DOVE Dark Chocolate Promises • 4-6 whole Keebler Graham Crackers • 1/2 tub whipped topping • 1/2 small jar of marshmallow creme • 1/2 cup mini marshmallows • 6 small Mason Jars Start by prepping ingredients. Prepare pudding per instructions on box, finely chop up chocolate and break up graham crackers into pieces (as small or large as you’d like). Then, in small bowl, combine whipped topping and the marshmallow creme. (It may be a little lumpy.) Next, start filling jars by putting 1/2-1 inch layer of broken graham crackers. On top of graham crackers, add about 1 tablespoon of chocolate pudding and sprinkle with bit of dark chocolate pieces. Then, add about 1 tablespoon of whipped marshmallow topping mixture. Repeat layers, finally topping jar with toasted marshmallows and another sprinkle of finely chopped chocolate. Note: To toast marshmallows, put minimarshmallows onto baking sheet (a little stale or cold can help) and put them in oven under broiler for few seconds until golden brown. familyfeatures.com LIFESTYLE Hendricks County ICON myICON.info • September 2014 13 Painting a perfect room INDOORS/OUT By Pat Donovan Small spaces can be very difficult to design and make interesting. There are many factors to consider. One item to consider is the room. Is the space narrow and deep? Painting narrow walls with a horizontal stripe will give the walls width. On wide, long walls, using a wide vertical stripe can make the walls appear taller rather than wider. Next, pay careful attention to the ceilings. Are the ceilings taller or shorter than usual? To reduce the height of a wall in appearance, paint wide stripes at the bottom with varying smaller widths above. Short ceilings with wide walls can be visually improved with stripes. The size of the stripes can be varied for interest. What effect do you want to produce with the small space you are creating or re-doing? Is the room used for the entire family or is it a room for a specific person? Whatever the space and however it is used is an important factor in the design concept. The photo to the right shows a small half bath that was painted in such a way to make it appear larger than it is. The concept was to paint horizontal stripes in varying widths to give interest and width to the room. The result ENERGY DOCTORS GET YOUR HOUSE A FREE CHECK-UP TODAY! Submitted Photo was perfect! The room is eye-catching and works for the entire family. The before bath did not have any character and appeared very small. Whatever design challenge you are facing, research all avenues and consider thinking outside the box for the most creative results. Always remember to have fun! Pat Donovan, ASID owns Pat Donovan Interiors, von. Contact her at 317-272-6134 or [email protected]. White Lick Creek byRedwood.com WHO: The first 75 members to schedule a first-time energy audit WHEN: Call to schedule your “home check-up” beginning Sept. 8 WHAT: Receive a FREE first aid kit and energy saving devices Call an energy advisor at (317) 745-5473 www.hendrickspower.com Get that old deadbeat out of your home. MODEL NOW OPEN FOR TOURS • Private attached garage for convenience when entering or exiting your home • Smart, single-story design means no difficult stairs to climb • Certified energy efficiency means energy savings, and no drafty windows or doors Getridofthatoldrefrigeratororfreezerbeforeitswipesanymore electricity.Notonlywillwehaulitawayfree,we’llgiveyou$35* forthehonor. • Built-in peace & quiet; no one lives above or below you • Smoke-free environment and Pets welcome Togetmoredetails—ortoscheduleyourfreepickup—call 877-395-5535orvisitPowerMoves.com/HaulFree. • Full size washer and dryer connections • Simplify your lifestyle at Redwood Living! Like us on Facebook www.facebook.com/byRedwood Watch us on Youtube www.youtube.com/RedwoodLivingTV White Lick Creek 3047 Garden View Terrace Danville, IN 46122 317.442.5088 *Someconditionsand restrictionsapply. The more you save, the more you save. 14 September 2014 • myICON.info LIFESTYLE Hendricks County ICON Vintage: A wine that gets better with age WINE & DINE By Charles R. Thomas, M.D. Regardless of which style of Port one prefers, when asked, most experienced Port drinkers will tell you they will choose Vintage Port. Besides being the most expensive and the most sought-after Port made, it is not the most popular Port in the U.S., but that, I think, relates to price and the unwillingness of the American consumer to wait for the eventual maturity to reward one with the magnificence of Vintage Port. Although Vintage Port only represents about or less than 1 percent of the production of most large wineries, Vintage Port remains the one everyone talks about, waits for, and pays dearly for. The mechanics of a winery producing a Vintage Port are complex and interesting. At the point where the winemaker decides to include various lots of wine to be designated as “Vintage,” or about 1 year of age, if the winemaker and his tasting panel believe they have a truly spectacular wine, they will consider “declaring” a vintage. A quantity of wine, which is not necessarily the entire lot of wine, to become Vintage Port must satisfy three requirements: it must be from the highest-ranking vineyards, grown in an unusually hot summer, and picked at optimal ripeness. In addition, it must have outstanding taste quality, and it must be a large enough quantity that a significant segment of the buying public has a chance to purchase some. Finally, it must be approved by The Instituto do Vinho do Porto (IVP), the governing body for Port production and quality. On average, most wineries declare a “Vintage” only three times a decade, so the quality requirements are obvious. Vintage Ports fetch a considerably higher price than do the lesser styles. The decision to petition for approval of a “Vintage” is made after the first year of production. The submission of the petition to the IVP is made during the second year and wineries are notified if their wine has been approved as Port quality near the end of the second year. Declaring a “Vintage” often becomes a game of one-ups-manship among competing wineries. Once a “Vintage” has been declared, the shipper will inevitably adjust his pricing for the new vintage, perhaps, delay its release, and often sell futures for its purchase. The average Vintage Port will require at least 20 years in bottle to reach even the early stages of maturity. Most people quote 10 – 30 years, but for most good Vintage Ports, the number is 20 – 30 years. It just takes that many years for the wine to lose the tannins and the sharpness of its youth. I am a huge fan of Vintage Port and I have some in my cellar dating back to the 19th century, all still wonderful. The vintage I find the most attractive right now is the 1963, which is magnificent. It is dark, thick, luscious, fruity, rich, and still sweet. Decanter Magazine (from England) posted a chart online for Vintage Port drinking advice. It has three catego- ries of drinkability: keep, drink now, or drink soon. The advice for the 1963 is drink soon! It is 51 years old and still the advice is, drink soon, not now! Other great vintages are 1966, 1970, 1977, 1983, 1994, 2000, and 2005; none of which are “drink now.” Charles R. Thomas, M.D. owns Chateau Thomas Winery with locations in Plainfield, Fishers, Bloomington and Nashville. Contact him at [email protected]. Regime and regimen (Side note: Although “regimen” takes the form of “regiment” as a verb, nowadays we only use the noun form of “regiment” to mean Question: “I wonder if you have done a a military unit.) commentary on the use of regime and That seems all well and good, unregimen. I often hear or read distil you look further down their diccussions of ‘performing a traintionary entries and see secondary ing (or workout) regime.’ I always definitions which cross over one thought a regime was a form another. of leadership and government whereas regimen was a protocol What you will find is that “regiof sorts. Thanks for any input.” men” used to mean “a system of rule Mark Cutler or government” has fallen into disuse, while “regime” used to mean Answer: Thanks for the question, “a system or planned way of doing Mark. It’s an interesting one, bethings” is still used. Jordan Fischer cause the two words share an origin GRAMMAR GUY So which to use? At the end of the in the Latin regere, but have come day, “regimen” is your best choice if to denote different things. you want to describe a plan to get healthier, Let’s talk about their primary definitions and “regime” is your best choice if you want first. to describe a government. Although “regime” “Regime” refers to a form of government or has managed to retain more flexibility over a particular period of rule. A study of Vietnam the centuries, it comes with a connotation of might talk about the “Nixon regime,” for ex- authoritarianism, even when used as a subample. stitute for “regimen” – so consider that when We understand “regimen” to mean a plan you’re thinking about spending a weekend at or set of rules, especially one designed to im- grandma’s house under her “regime” of ice prove the health of a patient. A diet and work- cream and cookies. out plan would be a regimen, as would be a doctor prescribing antibiotics, fluid and bed Jordan Fischer is a contributing columnist for the Hendricks County ICON. To ask Jordan a grammar question, write him rest. GRAMMAR GUY at [email protected]. Hendricks County ICON LIFESTYLE myICON.info • September 2014 15 Got Fall Bloomers? By Karen Robbins o you have color in your landscape now? There are many shrubs and perennials still blooming here in the gardens. Adding color to your outdoor living area for this time of the year will extend your desire to be outside and enjoy the cooler temperatures. Many perennials are re-blooming like the coneflowers, Pink and White Double Delight and Southern Belle and many varieties of Coreopsis and Geranium, Rozanne. Shrubs still in full bloom would be many of the shrub roses like the Knockout series and butterfly bushes. Butterfly bushes have been hybridized quite a bit in the last 10 years and there are several varieties perfect for smaller gardens. The butterfly bush, Lo and Behold is a beautiful blue flowered variety only growing to 2 feet tall. It maintains its dwarf, mounded form and blooms continuously without dead heading which makes it very low maintenance. Hibiscus is another perennial that blooms well in August and September. Most of these plants are large so make sure to allow them space to grow. You will be rewarded by 6” – 12” flowers depending on which variety you choose. The colors range from reds, pinks and plum to the new bi-colors. A variety called Midnight Marvel, has large burgundy leaves and beautiful red flowers. Hibiscus can add drama and great texture to your landscape areas just from their foliage. Anemones, or Windflowers also bloom in September and October and have flowers in pink or white. This plant has foliage about 18” tall and flower stems almost 3’ tall, so this is a great cut flower. Plumbago is slow spreading perennial growing only 12” tall and covering itself with cobalt blue flowers in August and September. A very showy plant D that grows in large areas here in the gardens since some of these plants were planted more than 20 years ago. Our gardens have several varieties of asters that are true perennials and have been coming back for years in our gardens. Aster, Wood’s Pink or Purple only grow 18” tall and have a very long blooming time thru September. Another shrub with great color in September is Caryopteris. They have hundreds of sky blue flowers and stay under 4’ tall in the gardens. Many guests walking through the gardens ask for the name of this shrub. A cherry tree named, Autumnalis, has pink flowers that bloom in September if you want to add a small flowering tree to your landscape area. Stop out for a walk in the gardens and take home a few fall beauties for your own outdoor living area. Now is the perfect time to plant! Planting in fall is better for plants since this is the time of year they naturally develop a root system. Plant now and you will enjoy colorful blooms at a time of the year when outdoor living areas can become uninteresting if you don’t choose your plants wisely. Karen Robbins is the owner of Avon Gardens. Contact Karen at: [email protected] Call us for your landscape maintenance services! Anemone-Prince Henry Aster-Purple Dome & Coreopsis-Full Moon Pennisetum- Hameln Select from a Fresh inventory of perennials, shrubs and trees for your fall planting! Mums, Asters, Rudbeckia and other fall annuals for your container plantings have just arrived! Regular priced items only. No cash given. One coupon per transaction. Not valid for mulch, compost or stone Cannot be used on prior purchases. Expires 9/30/14 www.avongardens.com Hours: Closed Monday and Tuesday Wed-Sat, 10-7 • Sun, 12-4 KNOWLEDGE is POWER Schedule a $49 heart scan today. As a Fire/EMS professional with the Danville Fire Department, Gary saves lives for a living. A simple heart scan saved his. Gary and his wife had made a pact to get a heart scan together. Hers came back clear. His showed extensive calcium buildup. Doctors were able to use this knowledge to prevent a heart attack and any permanent damage to Gary’s heart. Hendricks Regional Health is committed to giving you access to screenings that could save your life too. Start with a $49 heart scan. Schedule today at HENDRICKS.ORG/SCAN or (317) 718-8500. OUR ICONIC COMMUNITY Danville sailor assigned to Somerset Non-Traditional Teacher Unites States Naval Petty Officer 2nd Class Michael Harrold, a 2008 graduate of Danville Community High School, has been assigned to serve on the USS Somerset (LPD25). The USS Somerset, stationed in San Diego, is named for Somerset County, Penn., honoring the actions of the passengers and crew of United Airlines Flight 93, who kept terrorist hijackers from reaching their intended target on Sept. 11, 2001. The flight crashed in Somerset County, and 22 tons of steel from a crane near the crash site was used to construct the ship’s bow stem, embodying the strength and determination of the American people. The ship is one of the world’s most modern, networked, survivable and transformational warships. “A ship is but a steel vessel,” said Capt. Thomas L. Dearborn, the ship’s commanding officer. “It is the crew that brings a ship to life. The USS Somerset is truly a fine warship and this crew that mans her is second to none.” Harrold is one of 364 officers, enlisted personnel and Marines on board. HARROLD He serves as a cryptologic technician on the San Antonia-Class Amphibious Transport Dock, which transports elements of landing forces for a variety of expeditionary warfare missions throughout the world. Memorial Walk supports The Gathering Together A memorial walk to help keep the spirit of Tom Maloney alive in the Plainfield community will also benefit The Gathering Together, an organization that helps support families with loved ones in the final stages of life. Sponsored by Plainfield Eye Care, the Tom Maloney Memorial Walk will be at 11 a.m. Oct. 11, at The Gathering Together, 147 N. Center St., Plainfield. Following the walk, participants are invited to stay for “SOUP’S ON”, a meal to thank the community for its support, starting at noon. For more, call (317) 839-2368. We’ve heard of the non-traditional student, but non-traditional teachers are now entering the education workplace. Dee Long of Plainfield is a third-year teacher with Indiana Connections Academy, a virtual public charter school where students can a public education right from their very own home. LONG “I was ready to try something new, and expand upon my experiences as an educator” said Long, who had previously taught in the Plainfield school system. “It was an exciting opportunity to be a part of a new frontier in education.” Long said her interaction with students in mostly done virtually through online teaching and by phone calls. “Instead of spending a lot of time planning and preparing for six subjects daily… ” said Long, “I now spend more time developing personal learning plans for each of my students as I analyze their data.” Indiana Connections Academy offers a great alternative for children who are not thriving in a traditional bricks and mortar school because of chronic illness or disabilities, said Long. “We also have families who prefer the one-on-one attention that they can give to their student as a learning coach versus an over-crowded classroom. And last but not least, we have students in our program who need a flexible school schedule because they are training for the Olympics, or are training at high levels for other sports or the arts.” Long added that the job allows for more family time for her, as well. “I love my job because I now have the physical and emotional energy I need to be the mom and wife I long to be, and I know I’m helping the students and families I’m serving.” Mizelle kicking the competition Twelve-year-old Marcus Mizelle has kicked and punched his way to a position on the USA National Karate Team. He will compete Oct. 15-19 in the World Union of Karate-Do Federations (WUKF) 5th World Championships for Children, Cadets and Juniors in Szczecin, Poland. “I have wanted to excel at karate since I began in 2006 at the age of 4,” said Marcus. “Once I got my black belt when I was nine, I decided I wanted my goal to be to get my third degree black belt before I turned 16.” He received his second degree black belt a year ago. “This is the highest level anyone my age can reach,” said Marcus. “You have to be among the best in the country to be invited to participate with the USA National Karate Team.” And he is among the best. Placing among the top three in his age group for the individual advanced divisions in June at the Amateur Athletic Union (AAU) National Championships, he earned the opportunity to go to Poland. He will compete in two events there, including kata (forms) and sparring. “For the World Cup, I am training my body more, instead of just training for the specific events alone,” Marcus said. “My biggest challenge in my career has been doing the training to get my first degree black belt. I had to go to boot camp each weekend for three hours, both days, for 10 weeks, and then to several seminars the last two weeks before the black belt test.” He said the experience was very physically and mentally challenging. Along the way, he has had an abundance of support from his parents, Donnis and Stephanie Mizelle, his sensei, Peter Adamson, as well as his teammates at the dojo. “At first, I thought it was very nice and what an honor for Marcus,” said his dad, Donnis Mizelle. “The longer I thought about it, the more I realized that this was far beyond ‘nice.’ This was really a significant honor and an incredible opportunity. Donnis Mizelle said he and his wife initiated the karate training for their son when he was a preschooler. The intent was to develop discipline and mental toughness. “After he decided to continue in the regular program,” Donnis Mizelle said, “we have worked to make sure that he had the opportunity to go as far in the program as he wanted.” Donnis Mizelle said he is acting as a strength coach for his son as he prepares, as Sensei Peter Adamson is the head coach. “Stephanie has the primary burden of making sure that he gets to where he needs to be for all of his activities,” said Donnis Mizelle. He said his son is proof that “there is no end to what can be accomplished when you work hard and take advantage of opportunities as well as natural abilities. OUR ICONIC COMMUNITY St. Malachy fundraiser gratified participants Once Robert Armbruster accepted the call to be the cochair of the St. Malachy Parish School fundraiser, he did some research to learn about the history of the school. Marijane Armbruster, his wife, is a lifelong member of the church. Her father worked on fundraising for the third church on Green Street. “It was neat for her and I to be in a position to do something in turn for our parish and for the generations that follow us,” Robert said.” We hope that our sons find the Catholic faith and that this is a good place to live and they send ROBERT AND MARIJANE ARMBRUSTER their children there.” AND TERRI AND RAY VALLILO Fundraising was an 18-month process. Robert estimated that more than 200 families helped solicit donations and a majority of the 2,000 plus families gave from the heart. “It was nice to meet the older families who obviously didn’t have any children in the school,” Robert said. “But they still donated to the school because they saw how important it was to have that school be a part of our parish.” Co-chair Ray Vallilo said the church hired a consultant to train the committee on soliciting donations. It was a “personal touch” campaign, Vallilo said, where asking was done in the home sitting down with families and telling the story about St. Malachy and the need. “We got more from the campaign than what we gave the campaign,” Armbruster said. “That’s for sure.” Armbruster added that the campaign had another positive. The purpose of the donations produced a building that can be seen. There was no guessing where the money went. This building also has a built-in legacy. It will be there for many years, helping the children get an education. School started at the new site, 7410 North CR 1000 E, on Aug. 6. Both the Armbrusters and Vallilos had children that had attended the school. Each committee member family was given a list of parishioners to visit. The cost of the school building was more than $10 million. Half of the money was a loan from the Archdiocese of Indianapolis. The committee was responsible for $5.5 million. When the process was complete, the committee had raised $5.9 million. Armbruster said the entire experience was gratifying, and the most important lesson he learned was the generosity of people. “If you ask people, they’ll always help out,” Armbruster said. For more information, contact the school at: (317) 852-2242. Dad and I have always been close. Wellbrooke helps us stay that way. From learning to ride a bike to navigating life’s big decisions, he’s always been there for you. Lately, you’ve noticed he needs support with daily activities, and you’re wondering how to be there for him. You can, with service-rich assisted living at Wellbrooke. • Helpwithtaskslikedressing,bathingandmedication reminders • Fresh,resort-styledesignandspaciousprivateapartments • Resident-centeredcareassuringcomfortanddignity—our LifeSTYLEPromise™toyouandyourfamily • Rehabilitativecareandlong-termcarealsoavailable Harden friend of waterways Danville farmer David Harden was recognized Aug. 13 at the Indiana State Fair for his work to help preserve and protect the state’s rivers, lakes and streams. Harden, along with 58 other Indiana farmers, received the River Friendly Farmer award from the Indiana Association of Soil and Water Conservation Districts (IASWCD). Harden produces corn and soybeans, as well as operating a 600 sow hog operation. In addition to manure from the hog operation being injected to minimize soil disturbance, Harden incorporates grass waterways, filter strips, cover crops and no-till and minimal-till farming techniques. (317)273-2144 10307 E. County Road 100 North • Indianapolis, IN 46234 www.WellbrookeOfAvon.com UpcomingEventsatWellbrookeofAvon Tuesday,October14 10:30-11:30AM NP/ICON/9-14 CaregiverSupportGroup InauguralMeeting Refreshmentsserved. 20 September 2014 • myICON.info LIFESTYLE DISPATCHES n IPHONE 6 LAUNCH SET FOR SEPT. According to recode.net, Apple has supposedly “scheduled a big media event for Sept. 9,” prompting many to conclude that will be when Apple decides to unveil the iPhone-5s follow-up, though previous rumors had alluded to a mid-Sept. release. The iPhone 6 is expected to come in two sizes – 4.7 inches and 5.5 inches – and are rumored to have more powerful processors, better camera features and “strong sapphire displays.” – Fox News Tech n NEW HI-TECH TRAFFIC LIGHTS ON HORIZON Modern, red, yellow and green traffic lights may be receiving serious upgrades in the coming years as technology advances even further. Though contemporary cities already utilize computer-controlled systems that improve traffic flow and reduce travel times, they may be communicating directly with your car in the near future. Autonomous cars, however, may put an end to the traffic light all together. By communicating with other vehicles, rather than a driver perceiving the situation, multiple cars could arrive at a single intersection and know the proper yielding sequence efficiently. – Fox News Tech LIFESTYLE Hendricks County ICON HCCF grant opportunity to begin Sept. 3 AROUND TOWN The Hendricks County Community Foundation recently announced the opening of the second cycle of the Deedee Daniel Opportunity Fund Grant Program beginning Sept. 3. The Opportunity Fund Program is different this year from years past, allowing any charitable group or nonprofit organization to apply in either cycle with no dollar limits set. All grant applications must be submitted online. The application will be open from September 3-October 1. Grant monies awarded must be used within one year of the grant date. Guidelines and instructions for the Opportunity Fund grants can be found at www.hendrickscountycf.org. The purpose of the Deedee Daniel Opportunity Fund is to support programs, projects and organizations that meet the needs of Hendricks County and its communities. Grants are made only to nonprofit organizations or qualified charitable projects that meet those criteria. The first cycle of the Deedee Daniel Opportunity Fund funded the following programs: • Arts for Learning, the Indiana Affiliate of Young Audiences - $5,000 • School Partners in Hendricks County to bring unique arts programming to Hendricks County schools • Why Not Today- $3,800 • Kids’ Summer Lunch Bunch - $1,500 • General Operating - to provide lunch and books for Hendricks County children over the summer • Danville Public Library - $1,485 • Why Not Today Farm to Food Pantry - to support their mission of providing fresh food to Hendricks County food pantries • 1,000 Books Before Kindergarten - to help encourage families to read 1,000 books to their children before they enter kindergarten • Project Lifesaver Hendricks County- $2,900 • Danville Rotary Club Foundation - $5,000 • Project Lifesaver Hendricks County - to provide support and tracking for those residents that wander • Danville Playscape Upgrade and Improvement Project - to upgrade and improve Ellis Park in Danville • Leadership Hendricks County, $3,000 • Hendricks County Fire Chief’s Association - $600 • General Operating - to support leadership development and the nonprofit boards in Hendricks County • Susie’s Place Child Advocacy Center, Hendricks County Child Advocacy Center, Inc. - $4,500 • Child and Family Advocate - to hire a child and family advocate • Promoting Firefighter Safety and Survival - to provide training for Hendricks County fire fighters Join us for the 2014 Hendricks County Business Leader’s Women’s Business Leader Luncheon You’re Invited to Join Us! Presented by Photograph courtesy of the Huron Heritage Collection DON’T MISS! “Memories from a working woman during WWII” September 11th Guest Speaker: Joyce Trent Joyce Trent Luncheon time is 11:30 am to 1pm at Wellbrooke of Avon; Cost: $15 10307 E. County Road 100 North • Avon, IN Stay tuned for more information in upcoming months! For additional information, contact Cathy Myers [email protected] or call/text (317) 918-0334. See you there. A portion of the proceeds to benefit Leadership Hendricks County. Meet Joyce: Entering the work force at a time when men were off to war and women were needed, Joyce Trent found herself working shortly after high school graduation for an Indianapolis bank. Joyce, who is a graduate of Avon High School, worked her way trough many bank classes and eventually on to a position only held only by men at the time: a vice president. Being a founding family of the Town of Avon, Joyce has many memories of Hendricks County and women in business. 22 September 2014 • myICON.info LIFESTYLE Hendricks County ICON Photos by Rick Myers and Gus Pearcy Left: Gordon Hobbs, 87, still comes to work five days a week to lend his expertise to the nursery that bears his family name. Right, top: The man included in the logo for Hobbs Nursery isn’t even a Hobbs. It was an employee who spent 40 years with the company. Bottom, right: Hobbs explaining the particulars of products that will eventually be placed on rooftops of urban buildings. Hobbs Nursery, and Gordon, still going strong Wholesale nursery with 200 year old history keeps going FOCUS By Gus Pearcy About 10 years ago, the C.M. Hobbs Nursery sold the majority of its land holdings along U.S. 40 and Raceway Road and went exclusively wholesale. Brothers Gordon and Thomas Hobbs then began to seek a buyer. Becker Landscape owner Larry Becker purchased the firm about eight years ago. Tom, 98, has retired, but his brother, Gordon, 87, still comes to work every day. “He’s got a chair there as long as he wants,” Becker declared. “He’s what we call a seasoned pro.” The legacy of Hobbs family reaches nation- ally. The nursery was started in Salem, Indiana in 1812, before Indiana was a state The business moved to Hendricks County in 1875. C.M. Hobbs, a son-in-law of Oliver Albertson, and Oliver’s son Emery took over the business in 1879. Emery eventually sold his interest and moved to Iowa where he founded the Albertson grocery store chain. Long-time residents will remember Hobbs Nursery as a retail entity on Raceway Road just north of U.S. 40. It served the public with trees and shrubs for years. Gordon said the retail business was “15 percent of the profit and 85 percent of the headaches.” Gordon is the grandson of C.M. Hobbs, the fourth generation to run the nursery. As a young boy, he remembers the German prisoners of war who worked at the nursery during World War II. “They were from Rommel’s Africa Corp,” Gordon said as he remembered how sunburned all of them were. “They were good workers. They spoke German, but they swore in perfect English.” Gordon, who writes descriptions for the website and occasionally tours the facility for prospective buyers, calls it a hobby. Anything else would “bore him stiff.” As a community outreach, Hobbs is participating in the Avon Farmers Market on Tuesday evenings from 4-7. C.M. Hobbs Nurserymen 1201 S. 1050 E. Indianapolis, IN 46231 Ph: (317) 837-8301 Fax: (317) 837-8743 Toll-free: 1-800-428-6765 cmhobbs.com 24 HEALTH September 2014 • myICON.info Hendricks County ICON To live or die: The story so far RELATIONSHIPS By Sherry Strafford Rediger, PhD Genevieve Keegan-Bedano Anne-Marie Briscoe Abigayle McKinley Hensley KENA HOLLINGSWORTH Founding Partner Jessica Hopper CHRISTINA ZIVITZ Founding Partner Elizabeth Eichholtz Robert Shive Cassie Ringlespaugh Janice Mattingly L. Leona Frank Thomas Blessing Catherine Michael Hire Us Before Your Spouse Does DIVORCE & FAMILY LAW MEDIATION & COLLABORATIVE DIVORCE Custody Child Support Prenuptial Agreements Adoptions Education Law DUI 317.DIVORCE | www.hzlegal.com 11555 N. Meridian St., #530 | Carmel, IN 46032 • 2680 E. Main St. | Plainfield, IN 46168 erations. For most, the option to die lies behind a door that is closed and well sealed. Many who suffer will glance at the door as they pass, but few stop to consider it. For those who have family members or close friends who commit suicide, the door is thrown open – especially for the children of those who kill themselves. The door is never closed in quite the same way again. Whenever they struggle, the unthinkable becomes a taunting plausibility. If someone you know is ambivalent about choosing to live, believe them and take action. Don’t take on the responsibility of deciding if someone is serious about dying. Even trained professionals cannot decisively determine who will choose life and who will choose death. “Because you are alive, everything is possible,” writes the poet Thích Nhât Hąnh. I often tell clients, no matter what their current struggle, this moment is just a moment. It’s a snapshot – excruciatingly painful as it may be – in a very long story. Change is certain. Find out how the story is meant to end. Live. The recent death of Robin Williams consumed social media and rocked the psychological stability of many already suffering. Suicide and mental illness have been newly discussed from every perspective; from the compassionate to the mean-spirited and the ignorant in-between. There is no shortage of controversy. There are very few people who have not been affected in some way by suicide. When someone like Robin Williams, who is visible and beloved in our culture, kills himself, many feel the loss personally. As if he had been a friend. As if some part of him had belonged to us. We want to know why. We want to make sense of what seems so senseless. We want an answer. Suicide cannot be fully understood from the outside. No story behind suicide is the same. Every story is deeply, personally unique. If we could see the struggles of another more transparently, we would love them; our own humanity and heart are within it. Is suicide a choice? For many it is. Can depression and mental illness overtake someone’s mind to the point that actions such as suicide are no longer a free and voluntary choice? Yes, that’s true also. In my office, I sit with those who struggle with deep depression, anxiety, and inner turmoil. They battle with the excruciating balance of living or not when the purpose of life seems thin. I sit with those who have attempted suicide and wake up alive. I also sit with the ones left behind. Those who love the one who died hold death heavily. When someone commits suicide, it is not National Suicide Prevention Hotline: 1-800-273-8255 an end. The legacy and Hendricks County Crisis Line: 1-888-244-6083 suffering of this violent loss continues for gen- Dr. Rediger has been helping individuals, couples and families for over 25 years and is in private practice in Plainfield. She can be reached at (317) 839-1333, through her website SherryRediger.com or by email at [email protected]. HEALTH DISPATCHES n LINK BETWEEN VITAMIN D DEFICIENCY AND ALZHEIMER’S A new study published in the journal Neurology shows that older adults severely deficient in vitamin D may have twice as much of a chance to develop dementia or Alzheimer’s disease. A growing body of research on Alzheimer’s connection with Vitamin D (which you can get from healthy doses of sunshine, supplements, egg yolks and oily fish like salmon and sardines) suggests that Vitamin D plays a much more important role in preventative healthcare than previously thought. – Yahoo Health n FIVE FOODS WITH VITAMIN C Yellow bell peppers, Papaya, Guava, Kale and Strawberries. – Women’s Health Hendricks County ICON HEALTH myICON.info • September 2014 25 Facelifts, scars and tummy tucks BODY BEAUTIFUL By Dr. Barry Eppley Q: Can one have a facelift without any visible scars in front of the ear? I have darker skin and like to wear my hair back. I am worried that someone may be able to see the scars running down in front of my ears. I need a mini-facelift but many results I have seen show the scar in front of the ear. A: It depends on how you define a scar in front of the ear. All effective facelifts require some type of incision in front of the ear. Most plastic surgeons place this incision behind the tragus (bump of cartilage in front of the ear canal) of the front part of the ear so that the final healed scar is virtually undetectable. A few others, particularly those trained only a mini-facelift technique, still place the incision in front of the tragus so the scar can be potentially detected no matter how well healed it becomes. It is done because it is simpler and makes the operation faster. It clearly does not lend itself to a better scar result. So all facelifts create incisions on the front part of the ear, but where they are placed determines whether it is scarless or not. Q: I am 21 years old and have lost 65 pounds over the past two years. This has left me with a lot of excess skin and an overhanging abdominal apron. I have been researching tummy tuck surgery to remove it. My main concern is if I will still be able to have children in the future? I am not planning on having children anytime soon, as I am still young; but I know someday I will. I just need the tummy tuck now so I can feel better about myself. Will the tummy tuck scar in any way interfere with my belly stretching during pregnancy? A: There is no problem with becoming pregnant and having children after a tummy tuck. This is not a rare occurrence at all. The slow stretch of tissues during pregnancy easily expands the abdominal skin. Since you are young and have never had children (and likely will), the muscle should not be tightened during your tummy tuck. The overhanging skin and fat should only be removed. This will make a dramatic change in your waistline and provide you years of feeling better about your body. “This will make a dramatic change in your waistline and provide you years of feeling better about your body.” Dr. Barry Eppley is a board-certified plastic surgeon in Indianapolis. Comments can be sent to [email protected]. Experts in Memory Care Auguste’s Cottage is a structured, research-based program for those with Alzheimer’s disease or related dementias utilizing the person-centered philosophy of care. We care for our residents by making them feel at home, rather than in an institutional setting. Medicaid and Nursing Home transfers accepted! The dignity and individual expression of each resident is ensured by providing excellent programming, a secure and comforting environment, a clear understanding of memory issues and a strong compassion for those we serve. ASCSeniorCare.com 26 September 2014 • myICON.info LIFE CHOICES By Karl Zimmer What are you afraid of? Do you lose sleep over whatever it is? Is it beyond your control? Franklin Delano Roosevelt said, famously, “… the only thing we have to fear is fear itself.” If that’s true, then what is fear, really? Real fear might be if you were being chased by a bear. Most of us have never even seen a bear except perhaps in a zoo, so being chased by one is highly unlikely. So too are most things that could actually harms us. Yet we all experience the physiological response associated with fear. When you lose sleep over something you are afraid of, you do so because whatever it is appears real enough or proba- HEALTH Hendricks County ICON What is fear, really? ble enough to be real. When you wake from a nightmare or a bad dream, your heart might be racing or you wake up in a sweat because your dream felt so real, and whatever was happening in the dream seemed real enough that your body responded the same way it would had what was happening in the dream really happened. The fact is, your unconscious mind doesn’t know the difference between real fear or imagined fear and responds in a primitive way, a survival mechanism we call “flight or fight.” Your body gets flooded with adrenaline and what follows is not a measured response but an immediate reaction, one which is unconscious and feels as real as if a bear was chasing you. Yet, chances are that once you gathered yourself up and realized that you had just had a bad dream, you calmed down and went back to sleep. You may have heard the notion that, FEAR is just an acronym for False Evidence Appearing Real. During our conscious moments, when we are thinking about things we are afraid of or past hurts or traumas, two things happen. The first is that the unconscious mind is aware of what we’re thinking and begins to trigger the “fight of flight” reaction, and the second thing is that the body begins to feel the same way you would in an actual stressful situation. Even though you are only thinking about something you don’t want to happen, your body feels as if it is already happening. In other words, to you it feels real. The same physiological response happens when something triggers us as that happens when something real occurs. Remember that whenever you think about something bad from the past, your body responds as if it’s happening again. When something reminds you of and triggers a bad memory, your body begins that same reaction, and therefore whatever the trigger was, feels as if it is the thing to fear. But what the fear actually is, is only the fear that it is real. In other words, it’s false evidence appearing real. So, now that you know fear is just an illusion of fear, there is nothing to fear. How cool is that? Karl R. Zimmer III is a clinical hypnotist, having been licensed and certified by the State of Indiana. His practice, Zimmer Success Group (http://Z-Success.com), is in Plainfield. Information provided is for informational purposes only and is not intended to diagnose, treat, or cure any condition or illness. Nutrition misinformation: Getting the facts straight DIETARY By Martha Rardin I recently read a blog by another dietitian, Tamara Duker Freuman, titled “Missing the Nutritional Forest for the Trees.” The blog was insightful and thought provoking. The author spoke of the common practice of taking a small nugget of scientific information and making a mountain out of a molehill. Consumers are bombarded with accurate and inaccurate nutrition misinformation, and it gets confusing as to what a person should believe and what to not believe. Most nutrition myths do have a bit of truth but are mostly comprised of bunk. Often, myths are designed to make you believe in something designed to separate you from your hard earned money. Sadly, people prey on our insecurities and fears with deals and schemes that increase their wealth but leave you with a slimmer wallet and not one step closer to improving your health. Here are a few common myths or practices that grab your attention but are short on details and scientific evidence. Carbs are bad for you This particular belief is damaging because your body uses and needs carbohydrates for daily functions. Our bodies are designed to process carbohydrates efficiently. Following a low or no carbohydrate diet is very difficult because your body needs carbohydrates. Often people start on a low carb diet but cannot sustain this because it is physiologically not a diet that is designed for the human body. Excess carbs will cause weight gain but excess protein, fat and alcohol will also cause weight gain. The nugget of truth in these claims is that no one needs a diet that is comprised of all white foods or highly processed foods. Raw foods aid in digestion and promote weight loss The raw food diet is one that has been around for some time and continues to entice folks to try a “miracle” regime. This particular diet is difficult to follow and even harder to follow if you want to enjoy dining out. While some nutrients are diminished during cooking processes, some nutrients are enhanced and become more bio-available to our bodies. The fact is some foods are meant to be consumed in the raw state and some foods that are best eaten cooked. The nugget of truth in these claims is that raw foods are helpful and improve the fiber content of our diet but a diet of all raw foods is not necessary. Detoxifying is good for your body These claims are particularly enticing and offer hope where there is limited knowledge about how our bodies work. The truth is our bodies are perfectly designed and already handle the detoxification needs 24/7. Our liver and kidneys are the filters that help our body retain what we need and eliminate what we do not need. Detoxifying messages complicate matters and serve to only confuse people. The nugget of truth in these claims is zero – you should avoid nutrition claims that offer detoxification. Children need sports drinks and snacks following activities This is a common myth and often seen when parents are lugging coolers and bags of drinks and snacks. Up until children are playing in high school, they typically only need water to rehydrate after a practice or game. By giving children a sports drink and a snack, we are giving them extra calories that may not be necessary. Try water first and if the child is hungry offer a healthy snack of fruit or milk. Most of us are regular exercisers, not marathon runners. Therefore, we typically do not need a protein drink or bar after a workout. Elite athletes may need additional supplementation after a workout or a long event but most of us just need to stay hydrated and eat balanced meals. Martha Rardin, MSM, RDN, CD, FAND, is Director of Nutrition and Dietetics for Hendricks Regional Health. Is this good for me? MOM’S the WORD By Alyssa Johnson Do you have relationships that are holding you back? It’s common for us to remain in relationships with “the devil we know” rather than risk the “unknown.” These can be romantic, friendship or even family relationships! By continuing to remain in a relationship you know – in your heart – is not healthy for you, you begin to damage yourself. Now, I’m not talking about a quick decision here – one fight and you’re outta there. No! I’m talking about situations where you’ve tried to communicate your needs, tried to adjust your perspective, tried to forgive and move on, but it just ain’t happenin’! There’s a difference between running from an uncomfortable situation, and recognizing that a relationship is no longer serving your best interest. By negating that inner “knowing” and choosing to talk yourself into trying to believe it’s ok, you begin to no longer hear that voice prompting you. That voice is your guide – call it your intuition, your gut feeling, or even the Holy Spirit! It’s meant to be listened to. If you push it down and push it down, eventually it will give up and be quiet. The problem with that is that you begin to question yourself and doubt other decisions, not just the ones having to do with this relationship. It becomes a ripple effect. Ignoring that guidance in one setting impacts all your decisions. You won’t trust yourself because deep down you know you’ve ignored the divine guidance that was given to you. Fear is the culprit here. It’s just too scary to imagine making a change. But I say to you, what if you don’t? Do you want to continue feeling smaller and weaker? Do you want to second guess every decision that comes your way? Do you want to be miserable and miss out on the opportunity to be happy if you were to make a change? Yes, it’s scary! Any change is! But you need to clearly see the costs. Remaining in an unhealthy situation will have far worse consequences. So release that devil you know and focus instead on bolstering your self-esteem and confidence by beginning to tune back in to that voice and what it’s leading you toward. Your Vibrantly Live Challenge What relationship changes do you know you need to make but have been ignoring? The first step is being honest with yourself. Alyssa Johnson, LCSW is a Counselor & Life Coach for Moms. She’s been a resident of Brownsburg for over 15 years. To learn more about how she helps moms live the life they were created for, visit www.VibrantlyLive.com or call her at (317) 520-1476. Hendricks County ICON HEALTH myICON.info • September 2014 27 Living Well Changes Everything! A child’s secret wish… MARRIAGE By Lori D. Lowe My friend opened her daughter’s prayer necklace one Sunday and found a shred of paper that read “I pray that my family will never fall apart.” It may surprise you to learn that this child’s parents have a loving marriage and that she has a secure and strong family unit. But her aunt and uncle are going through a divorce, and she sees how traumatic it is for them and for her cousins. Even this glimpse of divorce is enough to make her fear for her own family. Given the prevalence of divorce today, most children have seen a glimpse (or more) of its sorrow and pain. Due to this eye-opening experience, they may have insecurity about divorce. Your own children may be more insecure than you realize. Imagine that your child wrote this note. Would it motivate you to work harder to ensure your marriage is strong and your family is secure? It did motivate me to think about whether I am doing all I can to maintain a strong family. What would you say to the child to reassure her? Do your children need to be reassured? The mother who found it reassured her by telling her that just because her parents argue doesn’t mean they are breaking up and that they made the decision to get married as a “forever” decision. If you have been thinking about giving up on your marriage, please realize the shock and sorrow that children go through in a family breakup. That sorrow is not a transition that goes away. Children are not as resilient as we give them credit for being. Choose to love your spouse, even when you don’t feel particularly loving. You will have ups and downs, but over time individuals are happier when they stay together through the rough periods. The odds are better for you to find love and happiness in the marriage you are in than if you look for happiness after a divorce. And children are better off being reared in an intact family—emotionally, physically, financially and educationally. What is your secret desire for your family? Do you know if your children are secure in their family? Have you asked them? Lori D. Lowe is a marriage blogger at MarriageGems.com. Her book First Kiss to Lasting Bliss: Hope & Inspiration for Your Marriage is available on Amazon.com and in all e-book formats. Lori and her husband of 18 years live in Indianapolis with their two children. • Physical, Occupational & Speech Therapies • Restorative Therapy • Complex Wound Care res Quality Measu - 5 star r Staffing - 3 sta • Neurological Rehabilitation • Private Rehab Suites 317-745-5184 4171 Forest Pointe Circle Avon, IN 46123 Equal Housing Opportunity 28 HEALTH September 2014 • myICON.info Steps to eat more fiber WELLNESS For HC ICON by Christina Summers of IU Health West Eating enough fiber is important to help prevent chronic diseases such as diabetes, heart disease and certain types of cancer. Research also suggests that consuming fiber-rich foods might boost weight loss by helping you to feel fuller after you eat. Fiber, by definition, is a dietary material containing substances that are resistant to the action of digestive enzymes. Fiber can be found in grains, beans, fruits and vegetables, among other types of foods. The skin and seeds of these select foods are what holds the most fiber. “Eating 25 grams of fiber a day is a lot,” says Joni Fiscus, clinical dietician and certified diabetes educator at IU Health West Hospital. “Take breakfast — with a couple pieces of toast, a bowl of cheerios and a banana—you probably have about 5 grams of fiber so far. It’s a long way from your daily goal of 25.” But most of us eat only about half as much fiber as we should. Nutrition guidelines recommend 25 to 38 grams per day; the average American consumes only about 14 grams. It’s not hard to boost your fiber intake. Fiscus suggests introducing Fiber One products into your diet for a high fiber yet low calorie solution to your fiber needs along with following these five simple tips. Eat your fruits. Eat, rather than drink, your fruits and vegetables. When either is processed to make juice, most of the beneficial fiber is left behind. Read nutrition labels. Read nutrition labels and choose foods with the highest dietary-fiber numbers. Eat your vegetables. Eat your vegetables, and then some. Forget “five-a-day;” many nutrition experts suggest aiming much higher. Aim for making vegetables rich types, like greens and broccoli, a part of every meal and snack. Don’t peel edible skins from fruits and vegetables. Don’t peel edible skins from fruits and vegetables, when possible. To avoid pesticide residues, wash skins thoroughly before eating, and opt for organic varieties when you can. Eat beans, lentils and split peas. Become a frequent connoisseur of beans, lentils and split peas. They’re filling, fiber-rich and cheap. If they are canned, they are convenient (just rinse them in a colander before using to wash away excess sodium). Hendricks County ICON HEALTHY HAPPENINGS INDIANA UNIVERSITY HEALTH WEST HOSPITAL HENDRICKS REGIONAL HEALTH Sept. 1 (every Monday) Toddler Time When: 10 – 11:30 a.m. Location: Plainfield Recreation and Aquatic Center; 651 Vestal Rd., Plainfield Advanced registration required Sept. 13 Safe Sitter When: 8 a.m. – 2:30 p.m. Location: Hendricks Regional Health; Conference Rooms 3 and 4 1000 E. Main St., Danville • Cost: $35 Contact: Jill Woodward (317) 718-8160 or [email protected] Sept. 5 Week One at West: Ankle Replacement When: 10 – 11 a.m. Location: IU West Hospital Terrace Classroom; 1111 North Ronald Reagan Pkwy, Avon Contact: (317) 217-3627; reservations required • Cost: Free Sept. 9 Cancer Connection (Topic is TBA) When 6 – 8 p.m. Location: IU West Hospital Cancer Center Lobby; 1111 North Ronald Reagan Pkwy, Avon Advance registration requested Sept. 15 Infant Massage When: 6 – 7:30 p.m. Location: Hendricks Regional Health; Childbirth Classroom, Floor 3 1000 E. Main St., Danville • Cost: $20 Contact: Melinda Heavin (317) 718-4585 or [email protected] Sept. 23 Alzheimer’s Support Group When: 6 – 7 p.m. Location: Hendricks County Senior Services; 1201 Sycamore Lane, Danville Contact: (317) 745-4303 Send your healthy happenings to [email protected] FRANCISCAN ST. FRANCIS Sept. 13 Flu Shot Clinic When: 9 – 10 a.m.; Cost: Flu shot $39, Pneumonia vaccine $80 (some insurances accepted) Location: Mooresville Senior Center 4305 E. S.R. 144, Mooresville Contact: (317) 722-8299, ext. 1120 Sept. 19 Baxter YMCA Senior Health and Fitness Day When: 9 a.m. – noon • Contact: (317) 881-9347 Location: Baxter YMCA; 7900 S. Shelby St., Indianapolis AROUND TOWN Avon Supt. Dr. Maggie Hoernemann (third from left) accepted the ALS Ice Bucket Challenge along with (from left) Laurel Setser, Avon-Washington Township library director; Don Hodson, Washington Township Trustee; and Anne Engelhardt, Avon school board president. The link to view the video is http://youtu.be/fIAxsYaiqLY. You can also donate at http://www.alsa.org/. Sept. 25 Hendricks County Senior Services: Prime Time Expo Location: Hendricks County Senior Services 1900 E. Main St., Danville When: 9 a.m. – noon Contact: (317) 722-8299, ext. 1120 Cost: Flu shot $39, Pneumonia vaccine $80 (some insurances accepted) FAITH Hendricks County ICON myICON.info • September 2014 29 First and last sacrifice DEVOTIONAL By Michael LeFebvre Submitted Photo From back left; Jeff, Makayla, Karras, Kim, and Brian. Front; Audra, Lux and Kale . A family journey The Pierce family of Plainfield supports missions and reaching out to help others WHERE WE WORSHIP a family. It is an added blessing to be able to call your church family your “family” as well. Kim Pierce is children’s director at the Plainfield Campus for The Journey Church. She and her husband Jeff have nine children. They will soon be traveling to China for two children who are not in their family photo (Krayton and Kashton). The Pierces reside in Plainfield and work in real estate. What is one meaningful event that has taken place at your place of worship? I couldn’t say there is only one. There are so many. My children were baptized there. We, as a family, volunteer in the food pantry. We have seen many people come to Christ and their lives changed forever. If I were only thinking of my family the one meaningful event would be seeing my children give their hearts to the Lord. What is it about your place of worship that helps you grow spiritually? We have excellent pastors, leaders and teachers that offer a variety of studies. Our Wednesday night “Well” Service always refreshes us and leaves us renewed in the Lord. The Sunday morning services are always uplifting and encouraging. Soon we will be starting a marriage series call Happily Ever After and it is always a favorite among the congregation. Most importantly, we always attempt to follow the prompting of the Holy Spirit and let Him guide us, whether it be in alter time, singing, or praying. Why would you recommend your place of worship to someone? Oh goodness, the list is long. Our pastor is a wonderful man with a heart after God. We love people and community. We believe in being missional and reaching out to help others. Church isn’t in the pew. Church is in our actions and caring for and loving others out in the community. Our teachers love their ministries and pour their hearts into their ministries. Our food pantry reaches hundreds of people each month and we have an opportuWhat is it about your place of worship that nity to share the love of Christ while also sharhelps you to feel connected to your spouse, ing daily necessities. We are launching a new children, parents or other community center in Avon family? at Prestwick and we hope There is a unity when evThe Journey Church to share Christ and lift up eryone comes together for 620 N. Carr Rd. the community through corporate praise, worship Plainfield, IN 46168 outreach and community and prayer. In addition, ev(317)839-7308 support. I would invite every fifth Sunday we have Thejourneywithus.com eryone to attend The Jourfamily day when all chilney Church! dren attend “big” church as Compiled by Cathy Myers “So Abraham called the name of that place, ‘The LORD will provide’; as it is said to this day, ‘On the mount of the LORD it shall be provided’.” (Genesis 22:14, ESV) It was a difficult test of faith for Abraham to take his beloved son Isaac to a certain mountain, and to sacrifice him there. (See Genesis 22:1–19 for the full story.) Whatever questions were swirling through Abraham’s mind, he knew he would somehow come back down that mountain with Isaac by his side (Gen. 22:5; Heb. 11:19). It took Abraham three days to make it to the place God had appointed. Why did God require him to travel three days journey from the coast into the mountains for this test? God was teaching Abraham and all his posterity an important lesson about that mountain. God sent Abraham to a mountain in the area that, in his day, was called Moriah and would later be called Zion (2Chr. 3:1). Abraham’s was to be the first sacrifice on Mount Zion, where the Temple would later be built. The lesson that day was to teach the meaning of every sacrifice that would take place on that mountain, from that first sacrifice until the final sacrifice. It was necessary for the lesson that Abraham went so far as to place Isaac, bound for the sacrifice, on the altar. But at that moment, the Lord commanded Abraham to stop, and he substituted a ram in the place of Abraham’s son. Thus the first sheep sacrificed on the Temple mount was introduced as a stand-in for the heir of the promised nation. Centuries later, when the story of Abraham’s deed was written down in Genesis, the writer explained to his audience: it is because of that lesson taught to Abraham that, “to this day” (the day of the writing of Genesis), faithful Hebrews expect God to provide another heir on that same mountain who will be the true sacrifice that Isaac could not be, and that the animal sacrifices served as surrogates to represent (Isa. 52:13-53:12; Psa. 40:6-8; Heb. 10:5-10). It was 2,000 years after Abraham that Jesus, as heir to the throne, presented himself on that same mountain to satisfy justice for his people. Jesus gave himself to pay the penalty others deserved, as promised so long before in the object lesson taught to Abraham. Jesus was the final sacrifice, fulfilling the lesson taught by the first sacrifice on that mountain. What a mindboggling promise and fulfillment for needy sinners! Michael LeFebvre is pastor of Christ Church Reformed Presbyterian, Brownsburg. Contact him at (317) 456-2551. The Tom Maloney Memorial Walk October 11th, 2014 11:oo AM • 147 N Center St at The Gathering Together Register at: http://thegatheringtogether.org/walk We walk to keep Dr. Tom Maloney’s spirit in the community of Plainfield. All proceeds that Plainfield Eye Care receives will go directly to The Gathering Together, a place that offers support to families with loved ones, during the final stages of life. Join us after the walk for SOUP’S ON. This is a THANK YOU for the community, from The Gathering Together, starting at Noon. Please come be our guest. For more information please call Plainfield Eye Care at 317.839.2368. 30 COMMUNITY September 2014 • myICON.info ICON of the Hendricks County ICON MONTH Big family, big heart, and big love Brownsburg’s Linda Krampen pours her faith into the lives of others What is it that makes you angry? Prejudices and stereotypes. Linda Krampen grew up in Pittsboro, graduating from Tri-West High School and then from Purdue University School of Pharmacy. She worked for Eli Lilly and Company until she chose to be a stay-at-home mom for her seven children. Krampen is currently involved with Habit of the Heart, which is a charity that helps families in Hendricks County with emergency needs. She is also on the board for the Brownsburg Education Foundation. Here, we learn more about our September ICON of the Month, Linda Krampen. What do you do to escape from reality? Go on vacation. What or who is the greatest love of your life? My husband Jim. He is my soul mate and best friend. He is an amazing husband, father and friend. What do you consider your greatest virtue? Loyalty. My friends and family should know that I will love them “no matter what.” Which living person in Hendricks County do you most admire? My mom Loretta Kirtley. She inspires me to be my best. She has always had an “I can do anything” attitude and nothing gets her down. I count on her for great wisdom and love her very much. What do you most deplore in others? Hypocrisy. I appreciate genuineness and sincerity in people. What do you like most about living in Hendricks County? I have lived in Hendricks County most of my life and I love the people that live here. There are many amazing and caring people in this county that are role-models for my children. I love being “in the country” but close to the city. It is the best of both worlds. What is the quality you most like in a man? Integrity. What is the quality you most like in a woman? Honesty. What is your greatest extravagance? Starbucks Chai Tea Latte. I try to make it at home but it just isn’t the same. If you had to live elsewhere in Metro Indianapolis, where would it be? Probably downtown Indy. It is exciting to see the growth and all that there is to do within walking distance. What are your fears, phobias? I hate scary movies. My kids love them, but I can’t sleep for days if I watch one. If you could begin life over¸ what would you change? I wouldn’t change a thing. I have been so blessed in my life. In each step of my life, God has had a plan and teaching, in His all-knowing wisdom, that he wants me to learn. Painful chapters have drawn me closer to Him and joyful chapters have shown His glory. What has been the happiest time of your life? Now. So far, each stage of my life has been the happiest. We have our first child going to college this fall, five are in high school, and one is a third grader. My life is busy but I wouldn’t have it any other way. If money were no issue, how would you spend it? I would love to support Habit of the Heart more. This group of ladies does so much for families in emergency need in Hendricks County. There is so much need and this group does an amazing job with the resources and funds that they receive. Which talent would you most like to possess? I wish I were fluent in another language. What do you most value in your friends? That they love me for me. That they are genuine. I don’t have to pretend and neither do they. What makes you happiest? Being with my family. Which historical figure do you most identify with? Jonathan from the Bible- loyal to his friends and a peacemaker at heart. What is your favorite vacation spot? “Vacation” means no kids (otherwise it is a trip). My favorite place to go with my husband is Boston. I love the history, the restaurants, and all the different things to see and do. What do you do with idle time? When I am not running kids around, I enjoy working with the ladies of Habit of the Heart to help organize their biggest fundraiser. Their weekend includes a Friday night gala and a Saturday purse auction. This year’s events are Sept. 5 and 6. They raise close to $100,000 each year to help families in our county. What is your greatest regret? I wish I would have asked my grandparents more questions to gain some of their wisdom. Linda Krampen Compiled by Cathy Myers What tenet do you live by? Philippians 4:13: I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me. COMMUNITY Hendricks County ICON myICON.info • September 2014 31 Kelsey Reinhardt signs with Indiana Tech AROUND TOWN Brownsburg High School softball recently announced that senior Kelsey Reinhardt has signed a National Letter of Intent to continue her education and softball career for the Indiana Tech Warriors. Reinhardt has been the varsity catcher for the Bulldogs the past two seasons. She was selected to the Hoosier Crossroads All-Conference team and the All-Hendricks County team in 2013 with .315 batting average and lead the team with 6 doubles. In 2014, Kelsey was the starting catcher for a 2014 Bulldog softball team that recorded their first 20+ win season and Sectional Championship since 2005. Sitting from left: Stephanie Reinhardt, mother; Kelsey Reinhardt; Rod Reinhardt, father. Standing from left: Indiana Tech Assistant Coach Leah DiCristofaro, Indiana Tech Head Coach Jessica Harris, and BHS Coach Keith Brown. Your Dream Home Awaits in Heritage Hill! C heck out our selection of Showcase Homes ready for immediate move in! Heritage Hill in Avon is near award-winning schools, hiking and biking trails, fine dining, shopping and entertainment. Find your dream home today! 74 136 Cra wfo For more information about rdsv ille R d. CR 300 N Heritage Hill 52 CR 200 N contact a Sales Consultant at CR 100 N 267 W. Morris St. CR 150 S Avon Ave. Final Opportunities! Ready Now! 625 E CR 100 S 40 Ready Now! The Primrose 4 Bedrooms, 3 Full Baths, 1 Half Bath, 3-car Garage Finished Basement, Media Room $414,990 317-669-8626 Rockville Road 36 East Main Heritage Hill, et Stre Ready Now! The Brunswick 5 Bedrooms, 3 Full Baths, 3-car Garage Basement with rough-in for future 4th Full Bath $350,000 The Linford 5 Bedrooms, 4 Full Baths, 3-car Garage, Bonus Room Basement with rough-in for future 5th Full Bath $399,990 PROUD SPONSOR See a David Weekley Homes Sales Consultant for complete details. Prices, plans, dimensions, features, specifications, materials or availability of homes or communities are subject to change without notice or obligation. Illustrations are artist’s depictions only and may differ from completed improvements. Copyright © 2014 David Weekley Homes – All Rights Reserved. Indianapolis, IN (INDA58665)
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