National Flip Flop Day – June 15th

National Flip Flop DaySummer’s here and the weather is perfect to break out your favorite pair of flip flops. Not just for relaxing by the pool anymore, flip flops have become a staple of the summer wardrobe.

National flip flop day was created by Tropical Smoothie Cafe in 2006  to raise money for its national charity partner, Camp Sunshine, the only retreat in the nation whose mission is focused solely on addressing the effects of a life-threatening illness on every member of the immediate family. Tropical Smoothie Cafe customers can get a free Jetty Punch smoothie for wearing flip flops today. The rest of us can celebrate summer fun and relaxation by wearing our flip flops and enjoying the sun.

What is your favorite thing about wearing flip flops? Share your thoughts in the comments below.

More June Holidays & Observances.

Indulge a Little and Celebrate National Candy Month

National Candy MonthThe national candy month is celebrated every year in June. Mainly the month is devoted to the celebration of sweets and treats that make life so much better. In the recent past the month has also been used to create awareness on health, diets and dental hygiene. For many people national candy month provides a time in which they can let go of the inhibitions they may be having worth regard to enjoying sweets and treats, and just taking a dive without regrets. Whereas the holiday is so popular with children, it is the adults who spend more time and money celebrating national candy month.

Celebrate by Enjoying a New Treat

One of the best ways to celebrate national candy month is to enjoy a unique treat that you have never tasted before. During the national candy month, many candy manufacturers break out treats that have made them famous in history. For a few coins, you can enjoy treats that are probably no longer available due to change in recipe and content of ingredients. Take the time
and research unique candies that you have not had time to taste, and enjoy them with family and
friends. To make this more interesting you and your family can each take the responsibility of
finding the most unique tasting and rare candy in the country. You may also want to try some
homemade recipes from small state companies and privately owned businesses. The cost of the
candy here may be slightly higher, but the taste is well worth the extra few coins.

Celebrate by Inventing Treats of Your Own

Secondly, you can also decide to invent and prepare your own sweets. Making sweets and treats is much easier than you can imagine. There are several simple recipes that you can either find online or in cooking magazines and books. The recipes are guaranteed to make your mouth water. Making your own treats is not just a matter of filling time during the national candy month, but it also provides an opportunity to ensure the treats are healthy and great for you and your family and friends. This is because you pick out the ingredients and you are therefore able to make more healthy choices and substitutes. In addition, it provides an opportunity to bond over some enjoyable activities in the sweets and treat making process.

Visit a Candy Store or Factory

For those who find cooking tedious, a trip to the candy stores or factories may be more fun. Factories during this time sponsor several tours where people can see the processes and also enjoy goodies. Book one of these trips for your family and friends, and take some few hours to visit factories manufacturing your favorite candies and chocolates. You can also meet the proprietors and stakeholders of this great industry.

Enjoy national candy month and make time to shop for good quality candy, chocolates and other treats and send them to your family and friends.

Learn more about Candy:


Every Day’s a Holiday (When You’re Not Edible)

Respect for Chickens DayEvery Day’s a Holiday (When You’re Not Edible)

A sonnet to celebrate Shakespeare’s birthday, from a literary chicken

Buckawk! Being a chicken doth grow weary,
Even a Shakespearean hen, forsooth—
And tho I peck till mine eyes do go bleary,
I’m still not blind to the batter-fried truth.

But lo! What site has my feathers astir?
Daily Observances, a happy niche
Where thou canst find holidays that occur,
Find a special day, month, or week for each.

At Celebrations Marketing I did spy
National Chicken Month in September.
On Respect for Chickens Day, none shall fry—
For May 4 is a date to remember!

Chickens unite! Peck at some libations,
And enjoy life’s daily celebrations.

Image by Photos8
Sonnet created for Celebrations Marketing by Nicole Stanfield Caile

April is Autism Awareness Month and Today is World Autism Awareness Day

April is Autism Awareness MonthApril is Autism Awareness Month and Today is World Autism Awareness Day

April is Autism Awareness Month and April 2nd is World Autism Awareness Day. According to AutismSpeaks, this disorder affects approximately one in every 110 children and one in every 70 boys! Autism is now more common than childhood cancer, juvenile diabetes and pediatric AIDS combined. An estimated 1.5 million individuals in the U.S. and tens of millions worldwide are affected by autism. Government statistics suggest the prevalence rate of autism is increasing 10 to 17 percent annually and experts aren’t certain on the cause of the increase.

Signs of autism tend to make themselves known within the first couple years of life. Repetitive behavior is one of the most noticeable signs a child may exhibit when they have this disorder. They may flap their hands, roll their heads, and rock back and forth. They may also be compelled to stack or arrange things in lines.

Autistic people like things to stay the same. If they’re used to things being one way, they don’t like those things to be altered. They may also be prone to harming themselves physically. They might poke themselves, bite themselves, bang their heads repeatedly against the floor or wall, or relentlessly pick at their skin.

Autistic people may not be the “norm”, and their behavior may strike others as a bit odd, but many of them possess great abilities to do things that otherwise “normal” people are not capable of doing. They may be able to play the piano without ever being taught, or be magnificent artists. People with these extraordinary abilities are called “autistic savants”.

With Autism affecting so many children and families, April is a good month to help raise awareness of this condition, signs of autism, and treatment options.

 Read more about Autism:

April is National Poetry Month

National Poetry MonthMany individuals, businesses and organizations across the United States support National Poetry Month. Festivals and workshops are held to celebrate poetry. The goal of National Poetry Month is to educate and raise appreciation for the art of poetry. The Academy of American Poets chose April to make poetry a more encouraged form of art.

In 2009, The Academy of American Poets started a project called the Free Verse Project. This project consists of a visual representation of free verse- tons of participants write their most memorable lines, from Poets such as TS Elliot, and William Carlos William. Fans wrote their verses on rocks with chalk, in sugar, in dust even. This ongoing project spilled onto Flickr, where you can view the entries.

In honor of National Poetry Month, here’s a few of our favorite poems:

The Road Not Taken by Robert Frost
Two roads diverged in a yellow wood,
And sorry I could not travel both
And be one traveler, long I stood
And looked down one as far as I could
To where it bent in the undergrowth;

Then took the other, as just as fair,
And having perhaps the better claim,
Because it was grassy and wanted wear;
Though as for that the passing there
Had worn them really about the same,

And both that morning equally lay
In leaves no step had trodden black.
Oh, I kept the first for another day!
Yet knowing how way leads on to way,
I doubted if I should ever come back.

I shall be telling this with a sigh
Somewhere ages and ages hence:
Two roads diverged in a wood, and I-
I took the one less traveled by,
And that has made all the difference.

Sonnet XI by William Shakespeare
As fast as thou shalt wane, so fast thou grow’st
In one of thine, from that which thou departest;

And that fresh blood which youngly thou bestow’st,
Thou mayst call thine when thou from youth convertest.
Herein lives wisdom, beauty, and increase;
Without this folly, age, and cold decay:
If all were minded so, the times should cease
And threescore year would make the world away.
Let those whom nature hath not made for store,
Harsh, featureless, and rude, barrenly perish:
Look whom she best endow’d, she gave the more;
Which bounteous gift thou shouldst in bounty cherish:
She carv’d thee for her
seal, and meant thereby,
Thou shouldst print more, not let that copy die

March is National Nutrition Month

National Nutrition MonthMarch is National Nutrition Month

While the trees may be bare in March, there are still plenty of colorful and nutritious foods to fill your plate. During the 2011 National Nutrition Month®, the American Dietetic Association encourages everyone to add color and nutrients to your meals through this year’s theme: “Eat Right with Color.”

“Adding a splash of colorful seasonal foods to your plate makes for more than just a festive meal. A rainbow of foods creates a palette of nutrients, each with a different bundle of potential benefits for a healthful eating plan,” says registered dietitian and ADA Spokesperson Karen Ansel.

“Healthy eating includes more than counting calories alone. In fact, most children don’t get enough of all the essential nutrients critical to normal growth and development,” says Ansel.

“Food variety supplies different nutrients, so to maximize the nutritional value of your meal, include healthful choices in a variety of colors.”

Ansel offers ways to brighten up your plate in every season with this quick color guide.

Green produce indicates antioxidant potential and may help promote healthy vision and reduce cancer risks.

  • Fruits: avocado, apples, grapes, honeydew, kiwi and lime
  • Vegetables: artichoke, asparagus, broccoli, green beans, green peppers and leafy greens such as spinach

Orange and deep yellow fruits and vegetables contain nutrients that promote healthy vision and immunity, and reduce the risk of some cancers.

  • Fruits: apricot, cantaloupe, grapefruit, mango, papaya, peach and pineapple
  • Vegetables: carrots, yellow pepper, yellow corn and sweet potatoes

Purple and blue options may have antioxidant and anti-aging benefits and may help with memory, urinary tract health and reduced cancer risks.

  • Fruits: blackberries, blueberries, plums, raisins
  • Vegetables: eggplant, purple cabbage, purple-fleshed potato

Red indicates produce that may help maintain a healthy heart, vision, immunity and may reduce cancer risks.

  • Fruits: cherries, cranberries, pomegranate, red/pink grape fruit, red grapes and watermelon
  • Vegetables: beets, red onions, red peppers, red potatoes, rhubarb and tomatoes

White, tan and brown foods sometimes contain nutrients that may promote heart health and reduce cancer risks.

  • Fruits: banana, brown pear, dates and white peaches
  • Vegetables: cauliflower, mushrooms, onions, parsnips, turnips, white-fleshed potato and white corn

Ansel recommends choosing a variety of colors when shopping for seasonal fruits and vegetables. “And for additional options in the color palette, choose frozen or dried fruits and vegetables available throughout the year,” she says.

“Instead of grilled chicken and mashed potatoes, consider painting a more colorful plate, such as grilled chicken topped with salsa, mashed sweet potato, asparagus and spinach salad with orange slices. A colorful meal is not only visually appealing, but it also contains a variety of nutrients and is quite flavorful,” Ansel says.

For more information on how to “Eat Right with Color,” visit ADA’s National Nutrition Month website for a variety of helpful tips, fun games, promotional tools and nutrition education resources.