Faire weather

 


Hark!


It's homeschool faire season again.


I love it. Being encouraged, getting equipped, renewing vision, seeing new curricula products, fellowshipping, helping new homeschoolers, and getting deals!


 


Last week we had our local homeschool faire. We had a used sale on one side of the building and new vendors on the other. Nineteen vendors. Okay, some of you may laugh. You may say "Hey, I need a compass just to find the bathroom at our fair". So, in comparison you may not see the significance of some small homeschool group holding this event.


 


To start- we live in the most unchurched state. On top of that, we are the most liberal and unchurched area of our state. (Remind me again, why I live here??) Making a stand here for Christ and homeschooling is a bright light met with squinty eyes and accusatory fingers. Homeschooling Christians in the Willamette Valley are homeschooling through the fire.


 


Our homeschool group is conservative. Our mission is to encourage homeschoolers, reach the lost, turn the hearts of the fathers to their children & the hearts of the children to their fathers. Kind of a melting pot of Vision Forum, Mantle Ministries and Keeprs Of Faith... for lack of a better adjective right now.
I am on the group's board and these women are very dedicated to serving the Lord, their husbands and children, and finally their community. They live their lives on their knees. It is a high honor to serve along side them. A few years ago we had to make some hard decisions to be inclusive or not because of which direction we may decide to take to reach the area. We decided to not be inclusive and start getting very specific about direction. No compromises of our faith. Standing firm. Well, God has really blessed that move and opened some fantastic doors! (He is goooooood and His mercy endures.)

Perseverance

 


"When nothing seems to help,

I go and look at a stone-cutter hammering away
at his rock perhaps a hundred times

without as much as a crack showing in it.

Yet at the hundred and first blow it would split in two,

and I know it was not that blow that did it,

but all that had gone before together."


-Jacob A. Riis, journalist and social reformer (1849-1914)


Sun, sky, lake and new gear


Been fishin twice now since we got the new stuff. They need lots of practice casting, folks, but we have had a good time.


It was so beautiful. Days like today make me love Oregon. Perfect 75 degrees, easy breeze and smiles all around.




 






 


Fishosity

 


I grew up fishing- excuse me... Fishin'.
     My grandfather took my sister and I regularly. He was the man's man. An avid bird hunter, fisherman, fireworks pyromaniac, veteran, drinks at 4pm (cocktail hour), guns in a display case, truck and camper. He told many many stories that were based on his life and our deceased relatives. Living history with a serious deviation from accuracy. Artist's prerogitive?
He never got the grandsons he probably had wanted. Two tiny blondy girls were it. I am told that when we came along, his hard exterior melted. He loved toting us around in the old truck when we came to visit. My grandmother still worked back then and so he was the primary caregiver during the day.
He introduced us to chocolate... and to him I am forever grateful for that. ;) He made us a man's breakfast of eggs, bacon and toast every day. Later we would watch Hogan's Heroes or some John Wayne movie on TV with him. So, we thought he was pretty cool. Weren't all granddads like this?
     Summer is rolling in quick around here. Makes me think of my late grandfather. Makes me miss him. My children never met him. They only have heard MY stories. He has become some legend and their eyes get wide when I tell of the good old days fishin' and campin' with him. I got the notion to get real serious about teaching my children to Fish this winter. Now the weather is nice and I'm itching to get out there and spend many days teaching my young padwans. My poles and gear are old and patheticly rusty. My husband took pity on my plight and we went out yesterday to get some newer stuff. Now I can galavant out into the great land of Fishatude and fish to my hearts content with all my homeschool-fem-mama fishousness and a baby strapped to my back. A new generation- without the beer.


Tripping

 




This morning was spent packing for a trip we are taking to a small family reunion for several days. This is the first time I have let my children pack their own clothing. I always try to make sure everything taken can be washed together if the need arises. I also take into consideration any surprises that may come up like dinner out. There is always an outfit in there that can "pass" for nicer.
So, after they had done their packing, I looked over what they had come up with. I was greatly impressed. I had to switch out two pairs of jeans for two pairs of shorts for my son- and that was it. Even toys, books, toothbrushes and such. They had it down! I suppose they have been listening all those times I helped them pack before. Yay!
What a relief. I just need to finish up the baby's and my own things and load the van. The plan is to have it raring to go when we wake up at some horrific hour tomorrow.




 

Toe paradise

 


As a gift from our mother, my sister and I went to get pedicures yesterday. Isn't your mom supposed to get a Mother's Day treat - not the other way around? We do give her cards and a small gift, but she always gives us one, too. "To honor the good moms that you are", she says. I am glad she thinks I am a good mother. Aside from serving the Lord and being the best wife I can be, it is my highest endeavor.


Back to the pedicure... it sure was nice. I had never had one before. I have given myself pedicures every once in a while. I have had massages, a facial, and sevral manicures, but alas, no pedicure. The chair we each sat in had back massage-y rollers in it and the spa footie tub had cool stuff in the water. We sat and chatted as we soaked and teased. Soon we each had an attendant (pedicurist?) scrubbing and primping our feet. It was fun to spend 30-40 minutes just with my sister getting a little pampering. By the way, my toes sure look cute. It will be sandals for me for the next few weeks! 

Got anything ELSE to eat, Mama?





There just aren't words...




 


 


Yes, it is a toy lizard. She found it and it was promptly removed. LOL!


 

Scoutin' out the competition


Annual CubScout Pinewood Derby


Planning and making the cars is a lot of work and fun. We let the girls who want to participate make a car and compete "unofficially" against each other. It a great time for all. General running around and chaos breaks out after it is over when the cookies are served.    



DH is cubscout leader, here with DD and DS.


 


DS with his green car- competed in the official cubscout "Pinewood Derby"



DD with her purple car- competed in the "Powder Puff Derby" for girls


Take a trip down Don't-I-Wish Lane

 





Dreaming of being in Greece today.  



 



 



 

Bittersweet pages turning

 


Today I was looking at my littlest just sleeping away sweetly in my arms, when I came to the sad conclusion – yet again- that this was not going to last long.


Even though I remind myself over and over she is not gonna be tiny and so dependent on me for long. These thoughts become more and more frequent as she has finally started to take steps this last week. My other two children walked around 10 months old. This one waited until she was a year. Getting up the courage, I guess.


I always loved watching my little ones sleep.


Their soft skin and peaceful face. It is hard not to relax a bit just watching the gentle breathing and soft sighs. Their tiny chubby hands cling to you as you rock and sing.


These days will ebb away. A new season will begin.

Mondalicious



I never understood why people had such a beef with Monday. Cartoon-like images swirl my memory of some old wrinkly lady in curlers and robe, cigarette hanging from her lip, scraggly slippers and a cup of coffee in hand. What was their problem? Pull yourself together, why don't ya'? Well, that was my opinion until I had been homeschooling for a few years... when my son got to be about 6yrs old. Mondays are tough and long this last year and a half.


By now, I would call myself a seasoned Monday Hater. A closet curler infested, robe wearing, foot draggin' mama.


We have more chores on Monday to follow up after "no chore on Sunday" and it seems my son goes sloooooowwwwweerrrrrrr.
Yep. It aggravates me. Makes me cranky. Gotta work on that. A lot.
Clearly my son is going to me to teach me patience on a whole 'nother level before he becomes a man. Love that guy. A typical first day back to school means we don't get to the school part of our day until 9:30am. Or even 10am. Today was a 10-er. Yeesh.

Feelin' grouchy this morning? I'll listen! Join the club! :)


Founding fathers in the bible?


Last Sunday on the way back from church, all five of us sort of drifted off into silence and inward thoughts. After a few minutes my son asked my husband, and I, a question...



7yro son:  "What's a Virginian?"
Me:    "A Virginian? Where from? From our history?"
7yro son:  "No, from the Bible."
Me:    "There are no Virginians in the Bible!"
(after a moment, light goes on in mama's head. Ohhhhh, virginian!)
Me:    "You mean virgin. That is someone who has not had lovin' like from their husband or wife, yet. A Virginian is someone from Virginia, like George Washington and I think Thomas Jefferson."

Husband:   "Or something from Virginia."
7yro son:   (unconvinced that there are no Virginians in scripture, he stares out van window)



 Too much rain makes you go gooney


 

Here a chick, there a chick

When I was about 8, my sister and I went to a friend's farm for a day of chicken butchering.

We had no idea what to expect. We were never around anything like that before. Worse... we also were mostly vegetarians back then.

Chickens heads were getting chopped off then the hen was immediately dunked in boiling water. If they accidentally lost their grip on that chicken, the hen flew around and tried to run with no head (blood and all). Truly where they got the saying! Ewww!

Next a group of women sat around and plucked them.

My sister and I sat staring in wide eyed shock.
Later that week we had sore throats. Our doctor said it was pschosematic. (spelling?) We had sympathy sore throats for those silly chickens. LOL!

Another toad bites the dust

Yesterday we went out to my parents' farm. It was a beautiful sunshiney day. The swallows and hummingbirds had just arrived from the south and butterflies were already flying. I love when the trees begin to bud and the flowering plum trees are blooming. We dug up some strawberry plants that needed to be thinned and set them in buckets to replant at my home. After we dug up about 25-30, which was way too many (imho!) we walked to my mother's very large pond and watched the koi swim around.


The kids tried catching some of the toad polliwogs. We ended up with only one. They are huge... this one was about 3.5 inches long. The babies! So gross. My mom found a few toad egg clumps and we pulled them out and into a bucket. The toads eat the baby koi- when there are some- and that is terrible. They also eat the gambuzi fish. Gambuzis are about 1 to 2 1/2 inches and eat mosquito larvae and therfore beneficial. They are so cute! Toads actually will take over the pond if left to eat all these gambuzis and baby koi! Dilligence is the only thing to keep those nasty things at bay. Caught toad eggs and polliwogs are dumped in the bushes far away or buried. As the spring comes along more, toads get bigger or down right huge, more disgusting and more plentiful. I am sure we will have better toad hunting then.


Listening to conviction

What I have been hearing, regarding our homeschool direction, is a radical shift from what I have been doing. A few years ago I had read about a method of homeschooling that was really different. It was intriguing to me, but I was intimidated with the whole thing and I moved on to something else. Last year the Lord showed it to me again. I felt a strong leading to it. My friend had been using this method herself and graciously let me borrow from her so I could get a better idea. It was Heart Of Wisdom. Hands down it was the classiest unit study I had ever seen. The classiest homeschool anything I had ever seen, barring Apologia and Master Books.  During this season, I know God was putting a bug in my ear. Ultimately He led me to use My Father’s World. After using MFW for a couple months, I was being called back to Heart Of Wisdom style- or Hebrew model. Not to use this method right away, but getting me ready for what was coming because He knew how it intimidated me.


 


Frankly, teaching in this method, Hebraic, is a serious departure from all homeschool curricula out there. No other company produces this type of material or promotes this kind of learning. I felt so convicted that I had not been teaching my children in the biblical method. The way Jesus taught. I had been teaching in a classical bent without knowing what damage I was really doing. I had no idea of the implications.


What further cemented this was taking this ‘test’ at http://www.restorationministries.org/pdf/hebraicArticles/HebGreekComparison.pdf


and reading Knowledge vs. Wisdom at


http://heartofwisdom.com/artman/publish/article_270.shtml


 

New hope

Every year come February I start to get antsy. The weather is still very rainy, the ground is still very mushy and muddy, and the trees have no leaves yet. I begin to pine away for spring time flowers and green leaves. I want to see the sunshine and at the same time I know how much we need (and love) the rain.


For me, the spring brings a new year of plans and hope for the future. I dream of better things to happen. Like my spiritual life to get even deeper with the Lord. My husband to be better rewarded in his career and to be blessed with great favor with God. My children to be really motivated to go all out for God. And for our homeschooling to finally meet my ‘unknown picture of ideal’. This unknown picture is an undefined shape I can barely make out from a place deep in my mind and heart. It is the map toward the goal of training up my children in the way they should go from Point A to Point B. The Lord, in His wisdom, has not revealed the step by step path, for my husband and I, to accomplish this monumental task.


 


By March I am revving up. My hopes and dreams for the new year are seeming more like a reality. The feeling that I am just around the corner from a break through in my personal walk begins to seep in. Signs start showing that my husband will finally be catapulted, via the Lord, into a new arena of blessing in his career and his spirit.


For school I am already scouring my catalogs and the internet for reviews, good deals, and hoping for a blessed new era of learning and growing in God. Most importantly, I begin fine tuning the voice of God who guides me to make the choices.

Frosting

Every year we homeschool all year long. Winter and lots of rain bring days where we get "more done" in school. Summer is our rabbit trail time. During the summer we do math and language arts, but everything else is optional at my discretion. We will do more art and that sort of thing. Less structure for sure! Summer is clearly not now and I wish school could be like that all year, but that does not work for *us* to do on a regular basis.
 
Now this fall and winter have been so different than others!
Why?
Because we have a baby.
That is a new way to homeschool for our family and I have not found it to be "so difficult" as all I have heard. I love the article I read in a magazine recently and found it is also on lovetolearn.com, "The Baby IS The Lesson". It is so true. There is no better present to my children than another sibling. You can read the article here: http://www.lovetolearn.net/policies/baby.lasso
 
Babies mess up any routine you have! Gotta go more with the flow.
 
Routines are important, but so is not being a slave to the routine. The key is the balance!
Last year I really learned that one. It was good one to learn while I was pregnant and before the baby! (Thank you, Lord, for preparing me!)
 
I have also been happy to see my children cruising along with their studies. Not fast, just smooth. We certainly have character training and life skill training that gets bumpy sometimes, but it is working for us.
 
As the baby is crawling faster and then on to walking, I know what is in store for us as she is not my first baby. I still do not see it being this big issue as I have read and heard about. Marilyn Boyer, at the OCEANetwork conference last August, said to enjoy the season. "Enjoy the season you're in, they don't stay small" she said. She also gave hints on keeping the little ones occupied and even learning along with older siblings. Good stuff. If you did not hear her speak on this you can get the CD on OCEAN's website now. www.OCEANetwork.org
 
Having a baby around has been the frosting on our family. What a joy!

Stumbling in full view

Each morning you wake up and through a series of events you have completed another day. Life, as they say, happens. Well, things may indeed happen, but it is how we respond that dictates success. We can choose to be proactive, passive or negative. If we value the Lord’s direction for our lives, then we will ideally react to ‘life’ with a godly attitude.


 

I failed a test from God the other day at the grocery store with a very rude busy-body. I did not react in the full measure I wanted to, but I DID react- instead of smiling sweetly and going on my way as I normally would. I was not responding to life’s happenings in a godly way. I did not praise God for the opportunity to show this woman the Lord’s love. Frankly, I was caught off guard. Apparently, this was a pop-quiz. My children, always in tow, saw it all. The good thing is I used it to teach my children. I told them that I was very angry and everything in me wanted to “express myself” that woman, but that would not be very Christian and I used some self control, however late in the game it was.

 

I certainly failed my test. No doubt. My children saw real life happen to their normally unflappable mama and she screwed up. They heard me confess my sin. I could see their minds recording this day. The day mom let it all get the best of her. The day that their mother had to really struggle to use self control. When mom slipped and did not keep her cool quick enough.

 

What an opportunity to change a failure into victory. No matter how badly I do, with God’s help I can succeed in my own life and consequently in my children’s lives, as well. I am sure to make more mistakes. Next time, I pray, I will use my defeat again to make godly winners out of my children. Hopefully next time I will put the brakes on faster!

Something to go on


We live in Oregon. I have three children ranging from 12 years and to a baby.
 
Homeschooling was a natural progression of events. We were already doing that after school! As a family that already had a lifestyle of learning, it just made sense. We made the decision to homeschool through highschool and beyond. No turning back.

 

I am eclectic in approach to education. Mostly I am Charlotte Mason & Ruth Beechick. Often we go on science or history ‘rabbit trails’ in our love-of-learning adventure! As chaotic as it may sound, it really isn’t and it works for us. Often I write our curricula. We go to the library a lot. Usually, once a week.

 

I have used all kinds of curricula. With my children’s age ranges, structuring shared HSing can be tricky. But that is their favorite way to learn... * together *. Cool!

I have used lots of wonderful and not-so-wonderful curricula.

Some of my favorites: My Father’s World, CLP’s Studying God’s Word series, Writing Strands, Apologia’s elementary science series by Jeannie Fulbright and notebooking/lapbooking. We emphasize a deep relationship with the Lord, bible reading, modesty, and godly character.
 
My husband and I believe that homeschooling is really family discipleship.

We consider that a high calling.

We are accountable and will not trust someone else to do that job for us.

 

Our inheritance... warriors for Christ


Here are the little ones. They don't look like warriors, yet!
Maybe they are under-cover! LOL!


7yro boy, 8mo baby girl, 12yro girl


 

Israel became a nation and started the clock ticking for Jesus return


Delight Directed method explained

 


FROM:   http://heartofwisdom.com/delight_directed_homeschool.html



PLEASE READ HIGHLIGHTED PINK SECTION...


 


 











Delight-Directed Study



 


homeschoolDelight-directed study places students in charge of their own learning, helping them find something they want to accomplish. The delight-directed method uses natural curiosity to motivate the student. The student acquires basic concepts of learning (reading, reasoning, writing, researching, etc.) during the process of examining the topic of interest. Less control can lead to more learning.


All children love to learn—at least all children love to learn before they go to school. Forced learning can destroy the natural love for learning that our children are born with. Children locked into studying something they find boring are no different from adults locked into boring, irrelevant meetings. If adults cannot see the relevance of the material covered in a meeting, they will tune out or drop out. If children do not understand how the subject will help to address the concerns of their lives, they will tune out. Would you, for example, read this page if it were titled "Basic Plumbing Concepts"?  You might if you had a leak in your kitchen sink or a basement full of water. In the same way, students need to have an interest in the topic they are learning.


If we allow students a free choice, they can concentrate on learning what they might need in their lives. Freedom to choose what not to study implies freedom to learn more about what one cares about and freedom to explore new interests.


A teacher's or parent's first job is to cause children to want to read something, to motivate them to care so that the natural order of learning can kick into action. The educator's job is to provide the one item which today's education system leaves out: motivation. (Schank, 1994)


When students are given good instructional materials, they can teach themselves and they will eventually learn to locate their own resources (books, Internet sites, people, materials, classes, etc.)


For more on this subject read The Heart of Wisdom Teaching Approach.


The Delight-Directed Method is Biblical


The Bible instructs parents to recognize that each child is a unique individual with a way already established that needs to be recognized, acknowledged, and reckoned with by means of the truth of Scripture.


Proverbs 22:6 says Train up a child in the way he should go; and when he is old, he will not depart from it.


This verse shows us a parent’s training must be based on knowing his or her child. The Hebrew text has the personal pronoun attached to the noun "way." It reads, "his way" and not simply "in the way he should go." "Way" is the Hebrew word derek, which means "way, road, journey, manner." Parents need to recognize the way each of their children is bent by the way God has designed each of them. If parents fail to recognize this, they may also fail to help launch their children into God’s plan for their lives.


Individualized Education


Roger Schank from The Institute for the Learning Sciences explains, in Engines for Education, the importance of individualized education.



Education should have a pragmatic purpose. Education ought to be about building learners' abilities to do useful things. What is important to learn is whatever helps learners do things that they want to do or that they can be induced to want to do. Therefore, if we want to detail the knowledge students need to have, we should first detail the things students should know how to do. Then we can determine what knowledge will be useful in each case.


Depending on an individual's situation and goals, there are many things that might be worth learning. In order to give a very detailed prescription for what knowledge a student should acquire, we must take into account that not every child will need or want to do the same things. A curriculum must therefore be individualized. It must be built around an understanding of what situations a particular learner might want to be in, or might have to be in later in life, and what abilities he will require in those situations.


Nevertheless, for many people, the notion of mandating the same knowledge for every student is appealing. Building lists of facts that one claims everyone should know is relatively simple to do. Furthermore, there is the attraction of providing standards that can be easily measured. But from the perspective of the teacher and the student, this approach spells trouble. Each mandated bit of knowledge removes more local control and drives the system towards fixed curricula and standardized tests, which not only diminishes teacher flexibility but also student choice and, therefore, student interest and initiative.


In public schools from first through twelfth grade, much of the classroom routine is shaped by an emphasis on rote learning, a strict adherence to standardized textbooks and workbooks, and a curriculum that is often enforced with drill and practice. The methods and the curriculum are molded by the questions that appear on the standardized achievement tests administered to every child from the fourth grade on. Success no longer means being able to do. Success comes to mean "academic success," a matter of learning to function within the system, of learning the "correct" answer, and of doing well at multiple-choice exams. Success also means, sadly, learning not to ask difficult questions. When we ask how our children are doing in school, we usually mean, "are they measuring up to the prevailing standards?" rather than, "are they having a good time and feeling excited about learning?”



We should purpose to be flexible in the way we try to tap into our children's innate interests. When we are interacting with the student we can evaluate whether learning has taken place. If one approach doesn't work, we can drop it and try another.



 

Christian Romance: Set The Stage & Ignite the Spark!

Set The Stage For Romance & Ignite The SPARK!

Set the stage for romance.

Early in the day, send a note, text or email alluding to a night of special romance. Not too many details, just enough to make their heart beat just a bit faster.

When the time comes, light many candles of all sizes. Lower the lights and play soft music.
Make a trail of rose petals to invite them in to delight. Ask them to relax while you go prepare.

Let them wait in anticipation while you change into something more comfortable and sexy and return with a luxurious massage oil or lotion. Ask them to lie down and them give them a relaxing sensuous massage.

Enjoy the process. setting the stage and anticipation are very sexy and sure to kindle a spark!



Christian Marriage: Lifelong Romance & Passion


Christian Marriage: Lifelong Romance & Passion

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A Christian marriage is full of adventure and passion.
Around every corner is a new challenge.

To be married and Christian brings unique issues. For example, we must keep our walk pure and righteous, we must be good parents BUT we are also commanded to be "one" with our spouses.
Obviously that can be a trial at times.

We should work all the more hard to kindle the spark and to choose to be "in Love" with our husband or wife all over again. In fact, we must choose this every day.
One way this becomes easier is through prayer. No doubt when we humble ourselves before the Lord, we experience a change in not only our own hearts but our spouse and in the family over all.
It really is miraculous.

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Christian lingerie for ladies and gentlemen, massage oils, delightful sensual lotions, etc. 
Shop safely without exposure to "graphic material".
Tasteful Christian Lingerie and romantic bedroom gifts to spice up and kindle the spark in any godly loving marriage. Christian lingerie for ladies and gentlemen, massage oils, delightful sensual lotions, etc. Shop safely without exposure to "graphic material".

Christian Lingerie for married couples

Christian lingerie for married couples

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SparkThisMarriage.com is an online boutique for married christians to buy marriage items in a "visibly" safe way. No nudity, no pornographic material, no "live models".
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Here at Spark we know that in marriage, every lady is gorgeous and every man is handsome. Every person is created beautiful, a work of art. We work hard to find tasteful romantic items and christian lingerie that will accommodate as many sizes, preferences and styles as we can. Let us know how we can serve you better on our contact page.  

Spicing up your lingerie will also spice up your life. Not just romantically, but overall. The bedroom of a married couple is a place of love, intimacy, trust and passion. Every married couple can use more spark! Why not start now?