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April 30, 2009

This and That

Filed under: Uncategorized — Chris @ 9:02 am

It has been raining every day here this past week.  Mercifully clearing up in the afternoon when all the kids get home from school so that they can still go outside and play, or go to their sporting events. 

I think it prompted this funny joke from my son this morning:

“If April showers bring May flowers, what do May flowers bring? ”

“PILGRIMS!”

Commence groaning now.

***** 

Have you paid attention to the news this week?  I found this quiz this morning which asks questions about what happened this past week.  I am always lured in by quizzes.  I am not sure why since generally speaking I don’t do all that great on them, and yet I still can not pass them up when I come across them.

I am embarrassed to admit that I only scored 40% right.  And two of the questions were about entertainment news. 

April 29, 2009

Artwork Everywhere

Filed under: Children, Ideas, Just For Fun, On The Web, parenting — Chris @ 3:07 pm

How do you manage the copious amounts of artwork that children produce?  I get asked that question a lot from friends who struggle to find the balance between saving it all and tossing it into the trash.

A few years ago I bought frames  that came with mattes inside the frame.  Matting your your photos and paintings gives them a more professional appearance.  Matching frames make it seem like a whole ensemble of work.  Figure out what size artwork your children usually produce.  Then hit your local craft store when they are having a sale and stock up on frames with mattes that have openings the size of the artwork paper.  my kids frequesntly use 11×14″ paper, so I bought a few 16×20″ frames that have an 11×14″ opening. 

I also bought 11×14″ frames with 8×10″ openings which are perfect for  highlighting just an area of a painting.  Great for the smaller children’s artwork which is usually just colorful paint splashed all over a page.  Take the matte and arrange it over the painting until an area that you like is visible.  Cut the painting to fit the frame.

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My children love having their artwork displayed. And I love the vibrant colors their artwork usually contains.

Stefanie, from Totally Together Journal, recently wrote a post about the same thing. She has an ingenious idea to use cork boards and 1/4″ round moulding to create an area where her children’s artwork can be displayed and easily rotated. I love this idea for an narrow hallway or back entryway.

Scrappy Art found a way to preserve her children’s artwork in a scrapbook. Beautiful! It makes me wish that I were more crafty, but I am not.

April 28, 2009

A Sane Woman’s Guide to Raising a Large Family

Filed under: Children, Chores, Discipline, Kindness Of Spirit, parenting — Chris @ 11:43 am

A month or so ago Mary, from Owlhaven, offered me a copy of her book, A Sane Woman’s Guide to Raising a Large Family. I jumped at the opportunity, not just because I really like and admire Mary, but Lord knows I could use a little more sanity in my life.

I got the book and, as I often do, I opened it up to a random page and began reading.

I’d love it if my insides matched my outside all the time. I’d love it if I could feel serene all the time instead of just faking serenity. But despite what others assume about me, endless serenity is not my personal reality as a mother… Maybe that’s the heart of patience: refusing to be sucked down into negativity and instead choosing kindness; not avoiding the negative emotions… but resisting them, rising above them, and prevailing over them.

This passage resonated with me. People often comment on how patient I am. And I always laugh. They want to know what my secret is. I tell them honestly, there is no secret, I am just better at faking it.

I tell my children that you can never go wrong with choosing kindness. This is especially important advice for those of us, ahem, who are quick to anger and something I really hope my teenagers take to heart as the walk out the door every day.

When faced with choice of lashing out, it is almost always a better idea to take a deep breath and to react with kindness. Even when you don’t feel like it. Even when you think you have been wronged. Even when you think you would feel better by cutting someone else down. In the end, you won’t.

After I read this passage I was hooked on the book. I closed it and started from the beginning.

Mary’s honesty is refreshing and the book is filled with stories of her own family that will make you laugh. Mary dispels the myth that you need to have endless money, space, or patience to raise a large family. I often found myself furiously nodding my head in agreement with what she has written.

Mary has chapters on breaking the Supermom myth, encouraging your children to be life-long friends, parenting hacks, affordable vacation solutions, extra-curricular activities, to name a few. She shares what has worked for her family and for other mothers with many children that she interviewed. Her practical advice will work for you whether you have two kids or twenty kids.

If you are tired of reading books by so-called experts, that advocate certain child rearing theories, but offer no concrete advice, this is the book for you. This book should be a must read for any new mother who is wondering if she will ever be able to handle more than the one baby she currently has. Or for a mother with several small children who thinks she will surely suffocate under the never ending pile of laundry. Or for those of us with large families who are already slugging it out in the trenches, but wondering if there might some new solutions to some old issues.

(Review cross posted at my personal blog. I loved this book so much I just had to share. After all Mother’s day is coming up. Perhaps you know a mother who would love to receive this book. Or maybe you want to buy yourself a little something.)

Swine Flu — Are You Worried?

Filed under: Children, parenting — Chris @ 8:59 am

It has been a rainy week here where I live and on Monday I was looking online at some of the children’s museums in the area that we have been wanting to visit.  I printed out directions to one of them and was all set to let my kids know when they woke up of our plans. 

Then I began paying attention to the tv that I had on in the background.  Swine flu?  In my state, which borders Mexico?  Near the very city the museum is located? Hmmm, this gave me pause.  Ordinarily I am not one to buy into panic or mass hysteria.  But a children’s museum was a place where you touch everything.  And children, as we all know, are notorious for touching their faces and mouths, not  to mention they do not have the best hygene skills.

In the end, I decided that the museum will still be there in a few months.  We don’t have any immediate travel plans, so I am not sure if this newest flu outbreak would cause me to change them.  Probably not, unless my plans were to go to Mexico City then I would.

I keep reading online about the ways to prevent the spread of the flu and they are all simple things that people should be doing as a daily routine anyway, things we should be encouraging our children to make habits in their lives.

1) Wash your hands with soap and water.  Frequently.

2) Avoid touching your eyes, mouth, or nose.

3) Cover your cough and sneeze with the crook of  your arm, not your hands.

4) Did I mention washing your hands?

5) Washing your hands.

6) Cleaning hard surfaces, such as tables, desks and doorknobs where germs can live for two more hours.

Have you taken any measures with this latest flu outbreak?  Are you concerned?

April 25, 2009

Outdoor Games

Filed under: Children, Ideas, Just For Fun — Chris @ 9:50 am

We are lucky enough to have moved into a neighborhood filled with children who share my children’s  love for paying outside.   Every day when school ends the street fills with kids riding bikes, scooters, playing kickball, football, basketball… you name it, they are playing it.

One game the boys often play is something called “Wall Ball” and is definitely not a game I played as a kid.  I am not even sure of the exact rules.  As an observer it seems to be all about throwing the ball at your friends as hard as  you possibly can while they stand next to a wall, or usually the side of a  building.  My sons assure me that there are actual rules and a clear object to the game, but whatever that is escapes me.  And probably also them since they cannot seem to articulate the rules to me either!

Sometimes I wonder if all of the games kids play now are filled with licensed characters.  I get so tired hearing about the latest Pokemon, Bakugan, or whatever new  thing whose primary purpose seems to be separating me from my money.   It always makes me smile when I see the kids playing games that I played as a child, jump rope, hopscotch, kick ball, hide and go seek.  It gives me hope that some things never change. 

I found this website which lists outdoor games and how to play them, many of  which I remember playing.

Duck, Duck, Goose

Capture the Flag

Four Square

Hopscotch

Marbles

Red Light/ Green Light

Chinese Jump Rope (I used to love playing this!  I forgot all about it until I saw this link)

Can’t remember all of those jump rope rhymes you used to sing?  Here is an exhaustive list of jump rope rhymes.

Now go on outside and pass some of these traditional games on to your children.  Please? 

April 24, 2009

Healthy Kid Friendly Snacks

Filed under: Children, Ideas, Just For Fun — Chris @ 11:33 am

No that  title is not an oxymoron.  It is possible  to have snacks that are both appealing to children and healthy.  I know that it is sometimes tempting to just give in to all the junky snack requests, but the other day when my 4 yr old was whining about wanting a second package of fruit snacks and said, “But they are FRUIT!!” I realized that I needed to step in and do something.  Because just because they are called fruit snacks, doesn’t mean that they are made out of fruit.

I usually have a platter of cut up fruit out for my children to enjoy in the afternoon.  Either a bowl of grapes, cubed watermelon (less messy than having triangle slices), cubed cantaloupe.  String cheese or cubed cheese with crackers is  always available also.  But sometimes I find that boredom has set in and I need to shake things up a bit.

Trail Mix

Have you ever bought those huge bags of trail mix only to have your children eat all the M&Ms out of the bag and leave the majority of the mix which is actually healthy behind?  Try making your own from things your children do like.  Do any kids really like almonds?  I know mine don’t and almost every prepackaged trail mix we have bought has been heavy on the almonds. 

I mix together:

Craisins
Dried apricots, that I snip into smaller pieces
Dried apples, also snipped into smaller pieces
Peanuts or cashews, my kids like both of these
Sunflower seeds

Dip

Don’t all kids like to dip their food into some kind of sauce?  Slice up some fruit like apples, strawberries, bananas and serve with a ramekin of vanilla yogurt.  If you give the kids little toothpicks to skewer the fruit it makes the snack THAT much more enjoyable.

Smoothies

Blend together vanilla yogurt, fruit and ice into a completely healthy, nutritious and fun snack.  Serve in a tall glass with a straw for maximum enjoyment.

Ants on a Log

My children are  insisting that I include this  perennial kid snack of celery, peanut butter, and raisins.  Even though most of them do not actually like celery.  They just like the idea of this snack.

Mini muffins

I like to make bulk batches of mini muffins and then freeze them.  Sometimes if I don’t have time to do all of the baking, I will just freeze the batter in ziploc bags.  We all know that the difficult part is mixing together the ingredients, not the actual baking part. 

April 22, 2009

Earth Day is Every Day

Filed under: Children, Ideas, Just For Fun, On The Web, parenting — Chris @ 10:09 am

Today is Earth  Day.  A perfect day to talk to the kids about stewardship.  The earth seems so large and so vast, its resources seem endless from the perspective of a small person.  And truthfully, isn’t this why for many, many years everyone abused the Earth?  When I was growing up recycling was something only those crazy hippies down the street did. Upcycling was something done by the old grandmothers who had lived during the Depression.

What is upcycling, you ask?   In a nutshell, it is taking something that would ordinarily be considered trash, or a waste product, and turning it into something new and useful.  Using rags to make a rug.  Old coffee cans to grow plants.  Egg cartons to start seeds for a garden. 

Family Fun magazine has craft projects made from the top 10 recyclables.  You might want to check it out and pull some things out of your recycling bin for a rainy day craft.

DLTK also has some Earth Day activities for your children to do:  prinatbles, puzzles, crafts.

The Huffington Post has a list of 19 environmentally themed movies to watch. (I highly recommend the Planet Earth series that was on the Discovery channel a couple years ago.  It simply amazing and if anything would make you want to save the earth it would be seeing how breathtakingly beautiful it is.  There is also a “sequel” out in theaters starting today!)

You can also join other people in Meatless Monday.  Govegetarian for just one day a week.

For our family, the biggest thing that I try to do to make Earth Day  every day is to cut down on our recycling.  Cut down?  What?  How is that helpful?  Let me clarify.  I examine the things that I bring into the house in the first place.  I try to buy things that do not have extra packaging.  I have been known to not buy things if I think there is too much extraneous packaging.  I don’t put my produce in those small plastic bags.  Why do they need to be kept separate from the rest of the groceries?  There really is no reason.

We use reusable water bottles rather than single use plastic bottles.  We keep our heat turned down low and wear sweaters.  We walk places when we are able to do so.  Those are just a couple of examples that come to mind.  And through it all I am trying to instill in my children that it isn’t a  hardship to do these things.  I want it to be second nature to them.

April 20, 2009

Feeding the Ducks

Filed under: Children — Chris @ 10:07 am

Out and about enjoying nature. In celebration of Earth Day later this week, it seems like the perfect time to get out for a nice walk and enjoy nature.

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The kids loved the ducks. But not when the ducks turned and started follwing them. That they didn’t like.

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We also came across a nest of eggs. I think that they are duck eggs, based solely on the amount of ducks at this lake over every other kind of bird. But I could be wrong.  One of  my older children said he is going to look the eggs up in one of our many, many, MANY animal guide books that we own. 

April 12, 2009

To My Children

Filed under: Children — Chris @ 10:08 am

There will be people who will tell you that you can’t.  Tell you that you aren’t good enough.  That you aren’t worthy.  That you should stop dreaming.  That you should just be satisfied.

They will snicker and roll their eyes.  Maybe behind your back, but maybe right to your face.

Don’t give up.

*****

I showed this video to my children and they didn’t quite understand why it made me so weepy, in that happy, silly way.  I am not even sure that I can articulate it either.  I know for my children it is because they are young.  They still believe whole heartedly that they can be anything that they want to be.  They aren’t yet plagued by the wistful longings or dreams that have gone by.

But I think that the message is clear.  Believe in yourself even when others do not.

April 9, 2009

Little White Lies

Filed under: Uncategorized — Chris @ 10:39 am

This morning were all awoken by a loud thunderstorm.  My 4 and 5 yr old children hate thunderstorms, like most young children.  The booms and flashes of lightening are scary.  I want to comfort them, but how do you explain how thunder and lightening happen in a way that they can understand?

Instead I tell them that the thunder is caused by the clouds bumping into each other.  The lightening is like static electricity, like when you shuffle along the carpet and then touch another person.  Only bigger!  That isn’t exactly lying, is it?

What about the other little white lies of parenting? Santa, the Tooth Fairy, the Easter Bunny… What things do you tell your kids?

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