The Inspired Tea Collection – Clothing for Children of the World

photo by Cherie Lynn Buchanan
Emily Meyer, photo by Cherie Lynn Buchanan

I met Emily Meyer, founder of Tea Collection, at a creative retreat last month. She is a genuine creative – she sees beauty in the world and is inspired by it to create clothing for children that passes on that feeling. Her company has flourished under her creative direction, and she still gets to travel the world with her children, seeking new inspiration and more ways to share her ideas with people.

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The clothing itself is high quality and just darling. They make great lasting gifts for children. I love leafing through their catalogs (either physically or online) to see the imaginative ways the pieces can be combined and layered. It’s hard, writing this in the heat of early fall in Southern California, to imagine wearing all of those layers, but as the weather turns it will be a delight for kids to frolic around in the latest designs.

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Get a load of these pajamas.

tea collection pajamas

We never stop thinking of ways to bring back stories to you of our world travels. We dream of cultural connection in hopes to inspire your little citizen to dream big, too. All proceeds from the purchase of these pajamas go to support the work of the Global Fund for Children.

Tea Collection wants YOU to save 15% off any full-priced items on their website! Use the promo code PRINCE15 from October 31st, 2014 – November 24th, 2014. (It cannot be used on any 3rd party merchandise.) You will love the quality and style of this clothing. Here’s another post that shows off more of the adorable designs.

Lower Your Expectations: Tips For Successful Family Road Trips Near or Far

People often put so much pressure on themselves to have a good time on vacation that they stress out too much to actually enjoy it. This has been all too true for me when taking road trips with my husband and kids. As the Chief Executive Trip Planner and Worrier for my family, I have learned the hard way that no matter how much I prepare, something always goes wrong when we travel together. It’s better to relax – have a plan, but relax and let the vacation happen. Otherwise I’ll miss it – even though I’m right there.

Here are a few hard-won tips to avoid stressing out on road trips:

Play to your family’s taste. My husband hates big crowds, and my older son hates most thrill rides, so amusement parks don’t work for our family. We found this out after dropping hundreds of dollars on one visit. Awesome! When you’re choosing where to go on your next road trip, consider a destination that has something for everyone. Our favorite is a beachside vacation rental: a long stretch of coastline, restaurants and shops nearby, a full kitchen where we can save money and prepare our own food, and comfy beds and showers to clean up and rest.

Prepare, but don’t be so hard on yourself. Make a packing list, but admit that you can’t fit everyone’s bikes, the camping gear, four changes of clothes, AND food into your 4-passenger hatchback. And if you forget something, get creative. At a quick stop in Pismo Beach, our 2-year-old had a blast playing in the sand and getting his clothes (and diaper) all wet..until the clouds blocked the sun and the temperature dropped about 10 degrees. A nearby souvenir shop sold us a cute hoodie that was a few sizes too big so that it fit him like a dress. Sure, people thought he was a girl for a few hours until we got back to our campsite, but he got to wear that souvenir hoodie for years. Two birds, one Pismo Beach sweatshirt.

Overestimate your drive time. Depending on your kids’ ages and how far you’re going, you might have to make more pit stops than you ever expected. This one has to pee, this one has to be separated from his siblings, this one is hungry, and oh what a surprise, Mom has to pee again. On really long drives you should let the children get out and run around. Like puppies. This is especially important on your return trip, when everyone is tired, probably dirty, and possibly sick of each other. A special treat for the ride home — like a meal at a normally forbidden fast food restaurant — will give the kids (and admit it, you too) something indulgent to anticipate.

Embrace the unexpected. On your way to your destination, pay attention to what’s around you. Use your electronic devices, but not to escape the journey. Use them to find the best roadside diner near the next exit. Or turn off the main highway and take the local roads so you can experience the towns you’re passing through. Being flexible with our plans has led to some delightful discoveries – a protected nature reserve along the Pacific coast in Guadalupe, a greasy spoon off Route 101 where the kids had the “best breakfast ever,” the poem in an iron fence at a public art park in Laguna Beach, a wonderland of watermelons in Bakersfield.

Lower the bar. This helps the most, especially when I’m about to lose my temper because everyone is bickering and I’m hungry and I just realized we forgot the bread for the PB&J sandwiches. Don’t plan the perfect vacation. Plan YOUR vacation. Put down your camera after you capture the perfect moment and experience it. Give the kids a break and don’t expect them to nap on schedule. Give yourself a break and have your glass of wine before you wash the dishes. Grit your teeth and allow everybody to be caked in dirt if they want to. Face it – on a road trip everything gets dirty. You can wash it all when you get home.

This post is part of BlogHer’s Family Fun on Four Wheels editorial series, made possible by Mazda CX-9.

Local Writer/Traveler’s Book “Red Goddess Rising”

Several months ago I met a woman named Halle Eavelyn who runs tours of Egypt.  For a living.

Let that sit for a minute.

She’s not Egyptian.  She’s a young American woman who simply fell in love with Egypt and now it is her mission to lead people there (and other exotic places) on immersive tours that go behind the scenes to where tourists (or “touristes” as they say in Egypt) don’t normally get to go.

Eavelyn’s tours are unusual for another reason:  they are spiritual as well as exploratory.    The tour company that Eavelyn co-owns with her life partner, Greg, Spirit Quest Tours, takes people to the sacred places and stops to do things like chanting and toning and meditating.  They aim to connect with the spiritual energy in the temples and the ancient lands.

According to Eavelyn’s book, “Red Goddess Rising,” they’ve been pretty successful at that.

Once a skeptic herself, Eavelyn gives a regular nod to unbelievers throughout her “spiritual travel memoir,” in which she lays out a detailed account of her many trips to Egypt in an attempt to describe her own evolution from a person who was once terrified of dying to someone who is calm and secure and brave and no longer claustrophic or afraid of the dark.  Some of this transformation happened, as Eavelyn tells it, during “memories” of her past lives, or spiritual connections with other spiritual beings.  But the important thing is that her “aha” moments happened in Egypt.

Whether the reader is open to tales of this nature or not, he cannot ignore the delightful minutiae that Eavelyn shares from her experiences as a Western woman in a Middle Eastern, male-driven nation.  As a traveler she gets away with dressing and acting any way she wants, but over time she herself even adopts the dress and manners of an Egyptian, at least for passing moments.  Especially entertaining is the story about the year Eavelyn and Greg were in Egypt during Thanksgiving, and she went to great lengths to produce a traditional American Thanksgiving dinner in a place where “pumpkin” could mean any kind of squash, and the locals would just as soon cover all of the savory dishes with cranberry sauce or opt for their favorite local beef and cheese meal.

Eavelyn’s tale of her own growth from the time she met and started dating Greg through the latest of her spiritual journeys in Egypt delves into topics one might expect to hear about in a psychologist’s office – childhood, past relationships, adultery, family dynamics, all that messy life stuff that we are used to hearing about when we learn about someone’s history.  But then she does even more in-depth personal work as her relationship with Greg progresses and he inspires her to explore roads less traveled.  Hypnotherapy, past-life regression, different religions – Eavelyn is clearly a seeker, not knowing exactly what she’s looking for until she finds it.

Having first met Eavelyn at a cocktail party and then read her book which describes her life story in cringeworthy detail, I am a little bit nervous about running into her again.  On the other hand, I’m a blogger.  I share TMI on an almost daily basis.  It must be weird for my regular readers to run into me, much less have a conversation with me about regular things.

I enjoyed learning about the many ways Egyptian culture is so different from our own, and I appreciated the detail that Eavelyn included in the book.  As a travel guide, it is handy for this reason.  As a narrative read the book is a bit more challenging – Eavelyn’s attempt to paint a cohesive picture about a tour of Egypt by piecing together stories from many different trips with different companions over the years is admirable, but it falls short of clarity and at times gets confusing enough that a flip back in pages is necessary so you know where and when you are in the story.  I found that reading “Red Goddess Rising” in short bursts worked best for me – it was the perfect dose of someone else’s reality to enjoy while my sons were in karate class two days a week.

Karate class is over for the summer, so I pushed myself to finish the book the other day at the pool so I could tell you about it.  After all, I’ve had it since February.  I missed the opportunity to tell you about the contest that Spirit Quest Tours was having to give away a trip to Egypt, which is a bummer because that might have saved you several grand.  But as Eavelyn might say, everything happens for a reason, so I’m pretty sure you weren’t supposed to win that trip anyway.  Perhaps a “girls’ week out” in Bali to retrace Elizabeth Gilbert’s steps in “Eat, Pray, Love” is more your style?

(I also reviewed Eat, Pray, Love.  You’re welcome.)

I received a signed copy of Red Goddess Rising for review.  All opinions are my own.