The popular answer to "Will you homeschool your own children?" reminds me of the answer Johnny gave that question once, a few years back. Anyway, I'm taking this as hard evidence that I did not irreparably scar anyone.
Source: TopMastersInEducation.com
As intelligent or random as we want to be, which is a pretty broad gamut. News stories, pictures, random thoughts, or epic tales. Maybe all at once.
Friday, September 20, 2013
Thursday, September 5, 2013
Happy last first day of school!
Thanks to you all for sharing your first day of school pictures with me last week.
I'm really touched that you commemorated the event!
Wednesday, July 31, 2013
I really don't want to hear your birth story
I live in a world of church ladies and home schooling moms and families that make my own look small, so I'm very likely to hear about doulas and encapsulating your placenta, and water births, and home births, and a bunch of stuff that I don't even want to know more details about (definitely putting that placenta thing in this category) and the beauty of it all. Birth stories are a mixture of "it's great to be a girl," "the beauty of motherhood," "badge of honor," "I survived," and one-upmanship (with the most horrific story being the winner, of course), but I think it's fair to say I've never, ever heard this perspective on the "birth story" topic before.
I laughed, I cried, I agreed (although probably not so vehemently). It certainly is a refreshing take on the whole thing.
My own birth stories all go along the lines of "the doctor barely/did not make it in time," and "I'd offer to go through labor twice if I could skip the last chunk of pregnancy," and if pressed that's exactly how I tell it.
I laughed, I cried, I agreed (although probably not so vehemently). It certainly is a refreshing take on the whole thing.
My own birth stories all go along the lines of "the doctor barely/did not make it in time," and "I'd offer to go through labor twice if I could skip the last chunk of pregnancy," and if pressed that's exactly how I tell it.
Friday, July 12, 2013
CoffeeCoffeeCoffeeCoffee
We're well into summer, so iced coffee has been a topic for a while now. I used to store it in a half-gallon pickle jar, but this looked a lot better from a pouring standpoint. Unfortunately, I didn't think it was worth it to spend $16 on a jar, so I started looking around for a cheaper option. (Someone must bottle apple juice in something like that, right?) Anyway, enter an impromptu trip to Festival Foods where we happened to find unhomegenized milk in these wonderful half-gallon bottles!
Washable, with a decent plastic lid; the milk was more than I'd normally pay, but it really was notably delicious and the bottle deposit was only $2! Anyway, it's easy to fill and has a nice grippy hand-holder part so it's easy to pour. AND it has kind of a nice vintage look and fits in my fridge door.
Washable, with a decent plastic lid; the milk was more than I'd normally pay, but it really was notably delicious and the bottle deposit was only $2! Anyway, it's easy to fill and has a nice grippy hand-holder part so it's easy to pour. AND it has kind of a nice vintage look and fits in my fridge door.
A bit of one-size-fits-all advice
If I had to sum up my parenting advice in one sentence, this might well be it:
Mean what you say.
Kendra wrote about it very eloquently here and that's what got me thinking about the whole topic. More and more frequently (now that I'm the older woman category and have produced a proven product*), some nice young mother will ask me for parenting advice. It's a ridiculously complex topic and there is rarely a quick answer, but I'm convinced that so many problems can be avoided by simply meaning what you say and following through on it.
It establishes parental authority and builds trust. It clearly defines expectations and provides the boundaries kids are looking for. Self discipline on a parent's part helps build the same virtue in children and that leads to behavior that is worthy of my trust which allows me to comfortably offer more freedoms - a very rewarding outcome for children of all ages. Like Kendra, I agree that this is in no way a statement on obstinance or a means to shut down discussion - in fact, I think it produces the opposite effect of real conversation with people mature enough to talk to - it's simply a way to move through family life without constant negotiations, whining, and desperate stopgap rewards for undesirable behavior.
*Thanks for making me look good, guys!
Thursday, June 27, 2013
Testing ...
The Hawk and the Dove Trilogy by Penelope Wilcock
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Overall very good. The first two books were stories within a story, which I found to be awkward and kind of distracting. (Both levels were good, but one seemed to be aimed at a much younger audience.) She dropped that device for the 3rd book and I liked it much, much better.
Excellent spiritual lessons. Excellent portrayal of medieval monastic life.
View all my reviews
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Overall very good. The first two books were stories within a story, which I found to be awkward and kind of distracting. (Both levels were good, but one seemed to be aimed at a much younger audience.) She dropped that device for the 3rd book and I liked it much, much better.
Excellent spiritual lessons. Excellent portrayal of medieval monastic life.
View all my reviews
Tuesday, June 18, 2013
Bookmarked for someday
I have no use for this now, but it's an amazing idea and I want to remember it for the future.
Really, you'll want to follow the link to see how they created an adorable doll house out of four 3-ring binders, free online images, and random stuff you may already have at home.
So adorable, and so much creative potential!
Saturday, June 15, 2013
Busy weekend!
I repainted the front door a sunny yellow :)
And Nick did the same with the fence.
AND Nick and Dad (featuring Jen and I in support roles) installed a new/used refrigerator!
And Jen and I refurbished these vintage pictures found in the free box at church. The frames needed to be cleaned. (Thanks magic sponge!) Nick cut new glass. (One was missing the glass and the other had a "mat" painted directly onto the glass - it was a chipped up mess.) We had a lattice-design scrapbook paper that worked well as a new mat. Viola!
All that and it's only 3:30 on Saturday!
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