Tag: 2023

  • 2023 Holiday Gift Guide

    2023 Holiday Gift Guide

    2023 Holiday Gift Guide

    At Basil Bandwagon, you can find holiday gifts and stocking stuffers around every corner. While you’re picking up your lunch or doing your grocery shopping with us, why not finish your last minute holiday gift shopping too?

    You can gift Sustainable

    The latest styles from Hydroflask, Clean Kanteen, Decomposition 100% recycled paper notebooks

    You can gift Local

    Noble Mushrooms grow your own mushroom kits, Hold Your Horses soaps, Bee flower Honey, Bubbly Goat soaps and lotions 

    You can gift Organic

    Yum Earth Candy Canes, Organic Fair Trade Chocolate

    You can gift Handmade

    Fair Trade

    Marquet Jewelry, Andes woolen hats, mittens and scarfs

    You can gift Self Care

    Perfect stocking stuffer Humble aluminum-free deodorant, Pranarom essential oils and diffusers

    You can gift Wellness

    Cookbooks, nutrition and wellness books, herbal teas and medicines, and Basil Bandwagon Gift Cards

    Shopping local at Basil Bandwagon and purchasing items we stock from local producers helps sustain family businesses and contributes to a strong and sustainable local economy. Buying fairly traded gifts helps sustain safe and healthy conditions and fair pay for artisans of handmade items around the world. No reason to keep it to just this holiday season – we have a year-round selection of gifts at all three locations, with new items arriving every day!

  • Finishing 2023

    Finishing 2023


    Finishing 2023

    Reflecting on the You that was

    Whether this was a banner year or one you’ll be happy to see in the rear-view mirror, December often feels like a turning point. Before rounding the bend into the new year, take the time to check in on your well-being, and whether you need to change tack going forward. That’s going to involve a little reflection.

    What is reflection?

    Reflection doesn’t simply involve thinking about “what happened.” Instead, it’s a process of understanding your role in an experience and involves considering your thoughts and emotions during and about the experience, as well as the memories it evokes.

    Forget about everyone else

    Self-evaluation can lead you to compare yourself to others and bump up against other people’s expectations. Often, these comparisons aren’t in your favor and can be harmful to your emotional well-being.

    Instead, check in with yourself to be sure that goals you establish are aligned with what you truly want and aren’t simply what’s expected. Let go of any goals that aren’t really yours and any negative feelings you may have about not achieving them. After all, they weren’t your goals anyway.

    Reflect on well-being

    Well-being involves much more than simply your physical and mental health. In fact, there are multiple other facets to consider, including emotional, social, spiritual, professional, and financial well-being. As you reflect on your progress in the past year and make adjustments for 2023, be sure to consider each of these areas.

    Celebrate your victories

    If you’ve been keeping a journal, it’s a good time to read through your year’s musings. If you don’t journal, flip through your calendar for memory prompts. List everything you’d like to celebrate from the past year.

    Include big gains, such as bringing home a baby or making your final mortgage payment. But small things count, too, such as applying for a job, finding your old (but still perfectly wearable) cowboy boots in the back of the closet, or asking that cutie out on a date. Record at least 30 little victories. (Yes, you did have 30 victories!)

    Acknowledge your losses

    Crappy stuff happened this year, too. Maybe you were restructured out of a job. Maybe your relationship ended. To learn from these experiences, consider your personal responsibility in each of them.

    What would you do differently?

    Reflect on what you learned from your victories and losses. What new things did you or could you try? Where do you repeat patterns? Are you stepping out of your comfort zone enough so that you can experience new things and personal growth? Are you being authentic? Do you need to put your fitness goals front and center? Is it time to change your relationship with money?

    When you have clarity about who you are and what you want, creating goals is enjoyable, because they mean something to you. And when something is fun, you’re more likely to do it.

    By Lisa Petty, PhD

    Content Courtesy of Alive Magazine

  • 5 steps to setting the best resolutions ever

    5 steps to setting the best resolutions ever

    5 steps to setting the best resolutions ever

    Find your way in 2023

    Many of us are wary about making New Year’s resolutions for fear that we may experience failure. But here’s an approach to change that involves designing your own path forward—one that puts your own dreams first.

    What do you want?

    From a young age, many of us got into the habit of doing what’s expected of us rather than following our own dreams. Getting an education, getting a marriage partner—even making resolutions—are things that we’re told we should do.

    No wonder we may occasionally feel like we don’t fit in or that we’re failing miserably at things that everyone else seems to do easily. You may be surprised how much easier your path becomes when it’s one you design yourself.

    1. Take time for self-reflection

    On a day when you’re feeling reasonably relaxed, find a time and place where you won’t be disturbed—even if that means hiding in the car or the bathroom.

    Take some deep breaths to release tension and clear your mind. Ask yourself what you want and simply notice what comes to you. You might get words, or a picture in your mind, or a feeling. Write down (or type) what comes to you with as much detail as possible.

    Build a home gym? Fabulous. Move across the country? Write it down. Start a business? Of course. Don’t let the critical voice in your head start debating you and telling you why you can’t do it.

    2. Set clear goals

    Vague goals, like taking better care of your health, provide very hazy guideposts, whereas the commitment to exercising twice a week or eating five servings of vegetables a day are clear, specific, and measurable.

    3. Set short-term and long-term goals

    If goalposts are too far away, people are more likely to procrastinate or avoid sticking to the plan, because they knew they had lots of future time to get things done.

    If there are too many strict short-term deadlines, however, a resolution-maker could feel like a failure for missing a mini-goal and throw in the towel. Creating stepping-stones toward the big goal makes room for set-backs while still moving forward.

    4. Set approach-oriented goals

    It seems that people who create approach-oriented goals are more successful than those who have avoidance-oriented goals.

    Approach-oriented goals energize emotions and behavior toward something you want (achieving good grades so that you can enjoy feeling competent).

    Avoidance-oriented goals , on the other hand, are those in which you move away from something you don’t want or you perceive as a punishment, threat, or risk to health (you make the decision to reduce your sugar intake, so you don’t have a heart attack).

    5. Find reliable support systems

    Rather than focusing blame on people who don’t give you what you need (and shifting energy from your goal), find a person or group who can be your cheer squad.

    Article Provided by Alive Magazine