Saturday, November 9, 2013

Giving Trees {A Simple Kids Craft for Thanksgiving!}

With Thanksgiving approaching, there are many beautiful crafts and activities to do to show our thanks.  But along with giving thanks for all that we have, why not also do an activity about giving to others?  "Giving Trees" are a wonderful way for little ones to think of ways to serve others this Fall as as Thanksgiving draws closer.  Inspired by the book The Giving Tree by Shel Silverstein, along with wanting a craft to celebrate the feast day of St. Elizabeth of Hungary (November 17th), I came up with the idea of making a giving tree.  The base is made from a paper lunch bag, and on the leaves are written ways to give to others.  Simple and sweet!

One of my favorite children's stories!


The trees are very easy to make, and you only need a few basic supplies:


Supplies:
--a brown paper lunch bag (I used the larger size)
--scissors
--autumn colored cardstock, cut into leaf shapes
--a hole punch


Instructions:

1) Open your brown paper lunch bag and set it on the table. 


2)  Grab your bag around the center and twist in one direction, while keeping the bottom of bag (your tree base) pressed firmly on the table.  While twisting center of bag, be sure the base will stand upright.  If you wish, you may tuck the corners of the bag so they are not visible, making it look round, instead of rectangular.


3) Fan open the top of your bag and make about 8 vertical slits with your scissors, down toward the center of your "tree trunk". These strips will become your tree branches.  They should be approx. one inch wide and 4 inches long (this craft is very forgiving so don't stress over counting and measuring!)



4) Scrunch each strip with your hands, twisting tightly in any one direction to form your tree branches.  You may wish to shape them by giving them a bit of a curve, like a real tree branch.  This is the fun part!


5)  Once all of your branches are formed, be sure to twist the tips of each branch very tightly, so that your paper leaves will be able to slide onto the branches easily.



6)  Cut some simple fall leaf shapes from your cardstock.  Punch a hole in the top of each leaf.



7)  Write various ways to give to others on each leaf.



8)  Marvel at the simple beauty of your Giving Tree...and then get givin'! :)




Here's a quick at-a-glance reference of each step:


That's all!  Easy, right?  They look really pretty placed in a group together (like a forest!), and would make a beautiful centerpiece for a kid's table on Thanksgiving.  




And, of course, you must read The Giving Tree together, to make this activity complete. :)  And, for my Catholic friends, if you wish to incorporate this activity with St. Elizabeth of Hungary's feast day, the Loyola Book of Saints (a wonderful book which arranges saint stories by theme!) has a lovely story about her life of giving, and Charlotte from Waltzing Matilda has a beautiful coloring sheet that you could use as well.




Happy Crafting!

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Wednesday, November 6, 2013

The Walking Game {a.k.a. Easy Kid Fun!}

A couple of days ago the kids were feeling a little restless--you know, the dreaded pre-dinner witching hour was beginning to strike.  As I often do in times such as these, I decided to read aloud (one of our favorite pastimes).  I grabbed the latest issue of Spider magazine (another favorite!) and got to it.  One of the stories was called "The Walking Game" by Linfred Longenecker.  Intrigued, I started to read.


Love Spider magazine.  LOVE.

The story tells of some rowdy siblings who are getting annoyed with one another (the spooky E.S.P.-esque realization that I had picked this story in the midst of sibling crankies was not lost on me!).  The mom decides that, in order to remedy the squabbles, the kids need to play the "Walking Game",  in which they head outside in different directions, returning home once they were no longer feeling annoyed.  The assignment works like a charm, and the kids come back refreshed with unique treasures in hand, resulting in a nice dinner together.

Ummmmm, yeah.  This girl needs some serious cheering up come witching hour.  What was it that Shakespeare said... "though she be but small, she be fierce"!

 Genius!!  I immediately needed to put this idea to the test!  After finishing the story I sent the kids outside in different directions to collect 3 things each, that we would arrange on the table as a dinnertime centerpiece. I know.  I veered from the original story.  But just a little.  Keep in mind that our yard is not nearly as interesting as the one in the story, in which the kids come back with all kinds of spectacular garden fruits and flowers!  So, I figured I'd add in the treasure-hunting aspect.  IT WORKED.  Worked like a charm, it did!  The kids thought it was uber-fun to see what they could find, and loved the added intrigue of keeping it a secret from one another.  They all came back with cute little finds (cute for a considerably boring yard in late October, anyway!), and had a blast arranging their treasure for our centerpiece.  Then we had a nice (and peaceful!) dinner together...and the rest is history!


Our centerpiece :)

Witching Hour: 0,  Mom: 1.

In fact, the kids loved it so much that they asked to do it again the next day!

Witching Hour: 0,  Mom: 2.

So, if you find yourself desperate to occupy the littles some late afternoon, I highly recommend giving the Walking Game a try!  You could easily modify it to become an indoor hunt on bad weather days--just send them to different areas of the house to find something special.  Or, if you want to get crafty, you could have them each make something to use instead.  And if you want to get even more creative, you could have them each find or make something specific (e.g. something red, something symbolizing a favorite activity, something holiday-themed, etc.)  The possibilities are endless!  For us it struck that perfect balance of feeling special (an official centerpiece!) with mystery/ rivalry (who will find the coolest stuff?  What will everyone else pick??).  If you want to read the original story to add to the fun, I found it online here: The Walking Game.  Try it, it worked for me!

Easy and fun...a win-win!



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Friday, October 4, 2013

October Daybook...

Outside my window...
 The leaves are beginning to change colors and pumpkins & mums are appearing on neighbors' doorsteps.  Aaaaah... Fall is here!




I am thinking...

About all of the upcoming holidays!  I LOVE everything about the next few months--Halloween, All Saints, Thanksgiving...and dare I mention the "C" word yet??  Ok, I'll just say Advent and spare you guys the anxiety of the "C" word for now! :p  Last year we really missed out on the fun of October through December amidst the towers of moving boxes!  So, this year I am planning on savoring Every. Single. Moment. of Autumn!  It's been so much fun pulling out boxes of decorations we didn't got to see last year, and finding new homes for everything in the new house.  I've been LOVING having a mantel to decorate, too, since our old house had no fire place. So much fun!
Our Halloween Mantel


I am thankful...
As I mentioned, this time last year was CHAOTIC, so I am just thankful for the calm of this year, so far.  Being settled in the new house and having a much more sane homeschool routine has made for a very peaceful mama!.  Aaaaaaah...it's so nice to have a slower more predictable "rhythm" of every day life again.



In the kitchen...
As part of my "oh-how-I-love-having-a-normal-life-back" theme, I've been pulling out my favorite Fall recipes!  I been making Butternut Squash Soup (with bacon in it! YUM!!), mulled cider, chili...basically anything that screams fall!  I've also been scouring pinterest for some other yummy things to try. 


I am creating...
...lots and lots of Halloween decorations for the party we're having in a couple weeks!  Adam and Megan both have autumn birthdays and LOVE all things Halloween, so we thought we'd do a combined birthday party for them.  It's been so much fun putting up spider webs and cutting out paper silhouettes!



Silhouettes are such a fun and easy way to decorate!


I am going...
We actually just got back from a trip to the Outer Banks last week, so this is more  "where I've already been"!  Each summer we visit OBX and thought it would be nice to try an off-season trip for a change.  It was beautiful!  Since the weather was cooler than the unbearably hot and humid temperatures of July, we got to do some things we'd never done before, including a walk on the sand dunes and a climb to the top of a light house.  And we got to play mini golf MINUS THE SWEAT!!  I am a huge fan of NOT-sweating!!  It was such a relaxing trip. :)

Feeding the (somewhat frighteningly close!!) seagulls on the beach


At the Aquarium

The littles having fun in the sand!
The kids getting a "lesson" from Dad on how to hold a gold club  (read: how to avoid holding it like a weapon!)
Hibachi Dinner!  Megan was cracking me up with all of her funny facial expressions during the meal!  She couldn't decide whether she loved or hated the loud noises and flames!!  I think her face was more entertaining than the actual cooking demonstration!!  If you look closely you can see one of her priceless expressions here!
...hmmmmm, not too sure about all of this...
...but the soup is sure yummy!
My little girl turned 4 on our trip!  What better way to celebrate a birthday than with donuts for breakfast?!

...and a trip to the arcade!

...and why not some chocolate cake, too?!
Oh, why not just go ahead and wrap up this big ol' sugar-fest with some cupcakes while we're at it?!
walking on the dunes (need to work off all that sugar lol!!)
Light house tour
Gorgeous view from the top of the lighthouse
Luke & me inside the lighthouse
lots and lots of stairs to climb!
Chili Cheese dogs from Sonic! (And yes, Luke ate the entire footlong!)



We had such a wonderful trip!
I am wondering...
How to invest myself in future ministries and service projects.  I LOVE using my time and talents to do meaningful things, and had to step back from a lot last year with all of the changes that were going on.  Now that things have settled down I feel eager to try some new things, but haven't figured out what just yet.  Stay tuned! :)


I am reading...
I have been LOVING The Shelter of Each Other .  It was a book a friend had passed along to me in a box full of old books which I started to casually peruse and immediately got hooked!  It's one of the best books I've read on the subject of family.  I highly recommend it if you're interested in the topic of family dynamics and building intimacy.   In our homeschool studies we're doing a Colonial/Revolutionary unit right now, so we've been reading all about Benjamin Franklin, Patrick Henry, and diving into some classics like Johnny Tremain and Carry On Mr. Bowditch.  I think I'm enjoying it as much as the kids! (I've always loved this time period in history!)



I am hoping...
...we are done with Indian Summer here in Connecticut!  This past week has been downright HOT and we'd already removed the a/c units from our windows, which has resulted in lots and lots of sweating  (remember how I mentioned how much I enjoy NOT-SWEATING?!)  It has not been good. Cooler weather, please?


I am looking forward to...
Country fairs, apple picking, kids in costumes, crunchy-leafed hikes in the woods, pumpkin lattes (already had one last week, actually!), pumpkin carving-- and best of all-- pumpkin seeds!!


I am learning...

...how great it is to have a husband who works from home!  Kevin was recently offered the opportunity to work at home (being a computer programmer and all!) which he gladly accepted.  It's been AWESOME to be able to run to the store for milk or drop off a library book without needing to bring the 4 kids or work around baby nap-times!  I can definitely get used to this!


Around the house...
Lately I've been trying to figure out how best to organize our school books.  We homeschool in our dining room, and I've been toying with the idea of switching to the living room.  This would entail a huge re-arrange of our shelves and cabinets, though, which I'm not completely sold on yet.  I like the idea of not needing to clear everything off the table for meals (especially when we're in the middle of a messy art project!), but am not sure about committing to the living room idea yet.  Need to think more about this!


I am pondering...
How to better incorporate saint and Feast Days into our homeschool studies.  I always want to do more fun things like make blue cupcakes in May or tissue paper flowers for St. Therese...you know...more Catholic Icing types of things, but unless I plan ahead they don't usually happen.  I may manage to read a saint story or say an extra prayer, but I want to do more of the special activities.  So, I'm working on putting together a calendar for myself of feast days with coordinating stories and crafts/recipes that we can do each month.  I'm trying to create a balance where it's not too much to actually accomplish--I tend to go big when I start projects LOL!  Balance has always been a challenge for this all-or-nothing girl!



A favorite quote for today...

I read this little snippet in an issue of Real Simple while I was in bed last night that resonated with me:

            "[The deeper meaning of the movie] It's a Wonderful Life is...about how hard  
            it is for all of us to see the magic of life as we're living it.  What George comes  
            to realize is that even the things he took for granted or the things he didn't like 
            (like that pesky banister knob that keeps coming off his stairway) are part of the 
          transcendent texture of the everyday.  And that's a lesson we all have to keep 
          relearning, because life seems almost designed to make us forget it." 
-Owen Gleiberman



First of all, I LOVE the movie It's a Wonderful Life, so I was immediately interested in anything someone had to say about it.  Second of all, I loved the idea of the "transcendent texture of the everyday".  What a beautiful phrase to describe the bits and pieces of our days--the beautiful moments, the ordinary and mundane, the predictable, the tedious...and all of the ones we take for granted.  I love the idea that all of the moments of our lives can be transcendent, so long as remember to...well, remember. This idea is very eucharisteo.




One of my favorite things...

I picked up a bottle of Bailey's Raspberry White Chocolate coffee creamer from the store the other day and OH MY YUM!  It is soooooo good!  I also recently rediscovered my love for my french press coffee maker!  Since I got a Keurig for Christmas a few years ago, I haven't used the french press much, but it makes a dang good cup o' joe!  So, between the Bailey's creamer and the french press, I've been one happy (and caffeinated!) mama this week!







A peek into my day...
My little chunk is 7 months old already!  Time is flying with this little (or not so little!) guy!



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Wednesday, September 11, 2013

Lessons Learned from the Poolside


Over the summer my kids took swimming lessons.  One hour a day the littles tested their courage kicking and splashing, daring themselves to try harder each time, be a tad bolder, go a bit deeper.  And as they splashed and stretched and grappled and learned, I did some stretching and learning of my own, too.

We were a rag-tag bunch of moms, crowding around picnic tables watching our children through wet windows and sliding glass doors.   A motley crew from various towns, all ages and stages of motherhood.  At first glance, all we seemed to have in common was the shared goal that our children might conquer the waters below.  And yet, despite our apparent differences, over time a community began to form.

We'd greet each other day after day, towels in hand, polite smiles on our faces.  We'd greet one another with friendly hellos, inhaling the smell of chlorine wafting on summer breezes.  We'd discuss the weather and other "safe" topics, like toddler naptimes and eating preferences. Some moms were more chatty than others, one wearing the face of dogged exhaustion, a newborn sleeping obliviously upon her weary chest.  Another scribbling frantic scholastic notes, grad-school text book perched in her lap.  Others struggled corralling wiggly toddlers missing their naps while many just looked relieved to have a small break in their otherwise chaotic day of mom-challenges.




The vibe of the group felt a bit awkward and contrived, much like the first day of school, where everyone wants to blend and "fit in".  Some people escaped to the quiet safety of their cell phones, while others fled for the isolation of their cars.  But the rest of us hung in past the awkward, willing to be there, to give interaction a go.


And then one afternoon something changed.  One of the ladies, a more vocal mom of the group, took a risk.  She casually mentioned how she had "scored big" at the Good Will, buying back-to-school clothes at half price.  And in that moment, at those simple words uttered, an unheard sigh of relief spread across the group.  In the moments that followed women opened up about financial stresses and strains, one asking for the location of the nearest dollar store, another complaining of rising prices.  In a flurry of excitement moms opened up about cable bills, grocery store budgets, the insanity of gas prices.  And then they went even deeper.  One mom shared her guilt over working full time, another her feelings of failure in dealing with toddler tantrums.  Over the course of an hour, these moms shared their hearts, their worries, their struggles, their fears.  Community was born.  All because this one brave soul who was willing to take a leap of faith and try at being real.


Amazing things can happen when one is willing to take a risk. It's like this gift that gives the rest of us permission to struggle, to admit we don't have it all pulled together.  To share how life gets hard and how motherhood, work, family and obligations pull and tug at our hearts, muddling minds and threatening sanity.  Because of one brave soldier, willing to put her real right out there for all to see, hearts connected and friendships were born.


It's a beautiful thing to behold, this thing called community.  It's what we all crave, what we yearn for--a feeling of belonging and connection.  It's what we're supposed to have, how God made us to be.  And all it takes is just one brave soul, risking a little embarrassment to try and connect, setting fears and fakery aside.  Getting down to matters of the heart--the stuff of us all.




I wish I could say that one brave soul was me, but it wasn't.  But maybe next time it will be.  And maybe next time it will be you, too.  For when we are willing to show up and be real, to share our broken, scared, scarred up places we feel a little less alone.  We realize we're all in this struggle together, this thing called life where mountains of pressure loom large and expectations tug on our shoulders threatening to pull us right down.  But when we take the plunge, we help one another to grow, to learn, to listen and love.  Our hearts get a little bigger and softer in this simple act of exposure.


As the weeks of lessons came to a close, the kids wrapped them up with a jump off the diving board.  Each child needed to decide whether they'd jump right in, trusting someone would be there to catch them, or if they'd instead smile, wave and back away.  Some of the kids amazed us all as they jumped right off the diving board without a moment's hesitation, brave adventurous smiles stretching wide across wet cheeks. We clapped and admired their courage. Others took baby steps, knees knocking a bit while fighting the urge to run away.  We clapped just as hard for these sweet ones, knowing all too well about conquering fears and taking a risk.  And then it was time for my own scared-brave boy to stare down the edge of that board.  It took not one but two tries for him--not ready at first to take the leap.  A look of teary-eyed disappointment spread across his little face but then-- he tried again.  Determined  to conquer his fears my first born willed himself off that plank.  With a mix of fear and resolve in his eyes he jumped.  Hot tears sprung to my eyes at his victory as I realized we all need to practice diving right in.




I encourage you to take your knobbly-kneed jump, the one that holds you back and keeps you safe--and yet isolated.  There is such beauty and hope and love in the depths below.  Just do it. Take your leap.

Wednesday, June 5, 2013

Slow and Steady Wins the Race

 It was a Monday morning (Mondays. I know.) and I was feeling particularly unsteady, dashing around trying to catch up on things that had fallen behind.  Megan had wet her bed. There were party trays to put away two weeks after the party.  Mount laundry towered high yet again, despite my efforts to keep up.  Several reminders later, Adam continued forgetting his manners at the breakfast table.  While schooling the kids (late start, no less) Luke wrote backwards Ps, an old habit popping in like an unwelcome guest.  Yes, it was just one of those days.  So, I did what I often do in response to those days; I tried to fix it. In a tornado of manic energy, swirling round and round I tried to the fix the Ps, fix the manners, fix the bedding, the party platters, mount laundry...fix, fix, fix. Trying to make all clean and tidy, as if long-term projects could be fixed in mere minutes, and Rome could be built in a day.  But a tornado leaves just one thing in its wake--utter destruction.  I felt it in my heart and worse yet, could see it reflected in the eyes of the kids: I had failed.  Instead of restoring peace and order, my whirlwind of "fixing" had left me completely spent and barren...like a tree bearing no fruit.




Sitting down, wallowing in my own defeat,  I then remembered the prayer I had read earlier that morning:


Divine Teacher, I can be rather picky sometimes, setting up the circumstances and paramenters within which I think you must work.  I can be so self-obsessed, seeing myself as central to all, ignoring what you are doing, slowly and patiently, in this world of human hearts and lives.  The fruits of your spirit are: love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, generosity, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control.  Today I will live these in gratitude.  Help me be patient with myself and with others when we seem to bear no fruit.  I trust that you are with us and know how to bring about growth in each one.  Amen.  --Ordinary Grace




This.  This is what I had been doing all morning--ignoring God, relying on myself to try and DoItAllRightThisMoment, sprinting like a flailing fool toward the proverbial finish line. Like the classic story The Tortoise and the Hare, I had read to the kids a few weeks back.  The tale that leaves me feeling like a big fat hypocrite, knowing full well that I'm that hare.  But God cares nothing for the fruitless business of hustle and bustle, of hurry and worry and lack of endurance. In His infinite wisdom, He moves slowly, patiently, steadily plodding along in our hearts, working in mysterious ways Ever-present, never failing, God is the tortoise walking inside each of us.
 



And when I feel like that barren tree, picked clean with leaves all shriveled brown on the ground, I know that He is there, working within me, teaching in slow and steady whispers.

 Slow and steady wins the race.




Though I cannot see the finish line, nor when and how the race will end, I can rest in the knowledge that He is here, beating out a path of growth within.  Revealing in bits and pieces His wisdom, alleviating the need to sprint and scurry and spin.  We can rest in Him.  And on the days I feel all wrong, like a backwards P in child's scrawl,  I know that slowly, steadily, He is growing me.  Though the growth is often too slow to see, that Wise Tortoise goes right on walking, performing micro-miracles, day by day, within each of us. It's all just a matter of trust, my word for 2013.


I trust that you are with us, and know how to bring about growth in each one. Amen.


So maybe there's hope for this harried hare, after all?  I continue to trust He will keep on plodding along in my heart, encouraging me to, one day, reach victory.



 I am confident of this, that he who began a good work in you will carry it to completion until the day of Christ Jesus.
Phil. 1:6 




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