Saturday, May 9, 2015

God's Warning to America

A missionary friend sent me this link to a speech given to members of Congress (9 minute speech). It's one of the most powerful speeches I've ever listened to.

"Members of Congress hear a hard-hitting speech by Rabbi Jonathan Cahn about God and America at the U.S. Capitol the day after the U.S. Supreme Court heard oral arguments about same-sex marriages."

Friday, May 8, 2015

Weekly Homeschool and Life Wrap-Up 5/8


Starting With Thanks This Week:

Colosians 3:17 And whatever you do, in word or deed, do everything in the name of the Lord Jesus, giving thanks to God the Father through him

Thank you, Father, for...

...creative kids
...homeschooling
...wonderful devotionals
...children maturing in the Lord
...a mother (that's me) maturing in the Lord
...sibling laughter
...homemade wheat bread
...green surrounding us all around 
...the Lord never leaving us spiritually stagnant
...good online friends
...a new homeschooling friend from church; hiking plans with her family
...hope, love, strength, courage 
...good books
...the comfort of the Word
...your faithfulness in providing our every need
...an evangelist among my children
...comfort during affliction

Activities This Week


Paul created a program on Khan Academy that involved moving segments of rain and lightning. How excited he was over this accomplishment!


Among many other things this week, Beth made an airplane out of items she stole from the recycling bin outside. She single-handedly destroys our house with her myriad of creative messes. I know she is definitely dyslexic: this is what her mind compels her to do right now--design and create 3-dimensional artwork. I champion her efforts and her end products, while at the same time privately lamenting the messes and the tape expenditure. She uses a dispenser of tape about every 2 days!



She also uses much of the old fabric I gave the kids to cut up for sewing projects. There are literally scraps of fabric in every room of our house! Deep breath, Momma. God has given her these talents and it would be just plain wrong to complain about the messes. Recently, I've decided to walk alongside her and help clean them up, until she's older. At six, she still needs this support.




Paul, with Beth's help, made a dragon out of a grocery bag.


Beth does puzzles oftentimes while waiting for me to get to her reading lesson, which follows her sister's reading time.



Mary is working on /oa/ here. All About Reading Level 3 is far harder so we'll be going through it at a slower pace. There are several sounds she is still working on memorizing and I can't frustrate her by moving forward at this time. These are troublesome for her:  /oa/, /ow/,/ ou/, /aw/, /au/


Mary, one of my nature observers, found this sparrow egg on the ground under our bird box, and Peter put it back in for them.

AWANA AWARDS 2015

Peter, top left, participation ribbon for Trek
Beth, bottom left, first book award for Sparkies
Mary, center, Sparky plaque and the year she says goodbye to Sparks club, to become a T&T clubber come Sept.
Paul, right, with the third T&T book award. Next year he earns the Timothy Award!


Peter wasn't in Trek earlier this year, but we moved to a new church in March and its AWANA offered Trek for grades 7 and 8. They are allowing Peter to finish the first Trek book over the summer, so he'll be eligible for the Meritorious Award after the 8th grade year. The Timothy and Meritorious Awards make students eligible for Bible college scholarships. Plus, the books they complete help them with their relationships with Christ during the very challenging adolescent years.

In Other News

Beth developed a sinus infection so we had to skip her Orencia infusion at the hospital (a juvenile rheumatoid arthritis drug). Paul's tree pollen allergies make him want to gauge his eyes out this time of year. Every spring my heart just aches for him! It's a long five to six weeks, even with allergy eye drops. And Hubby is suffering as well, even with allergy shots going on currently.

Meanwhile, summer arrived early. The girls are running through the sprinkler to cool off today.

Core H Sonlight News (World History, Part 2)

I read enough of this mystery to know that I don't want my boys to read it. It just isn't edifying, so we'll skip it, regardless of the Japanese history featured in it. I love Sonlight very much and will likely use it through the 12th grade, but every year there is at least one book that makes me wonder...what were they thinking? Don't let that discourage you, though, because they offer many, many titles that we absolutely love and will remember fondly for a very long time .


Last week I preread Out of Many Waters by Jacqueline Dembar Greene, which is supposed to be a read-aloud for Core H. I loved it and felt my boys could definitely handle it on their own. They're currently reading it and loving it, finding it riveting.


Overview: Kidnapped from her parents during the Portuguese Inquisition, 12-year old Isobel BenLazar was sent to work as a slave at a remote Brazilian monastery. In 1654, Isobel escapes and stows away on a ship bound for Amsterdam, searching for her family. But harrowing adventures lead her to the first group of Jews to settle in America.

 "Weaves history, drama and narrative into an arresting story." -New York Times Book Review 

"An uplifting story built upon twin themes long common to Jewish thought-hope and deliverance." -Kirkus Reviews

 Sydney Taylor Honor Book; New York Public Library Books for the Teen Age

K and Second Grade News

I have most of the Core B books for my girls, but we're behind on the read-alouds. I hope to get back to those this weekend and finish them throughout these next four to six months (we school year round).

The girls continue with Saxon Math and All About Reading, Levels 1 (Beth) and 3 (Mary). Mary is doing some All About Spelling Level 1, and Beth is doing an Explode the Code book until she fits in better with All About Spelling.

Morning Devotional News
We finished all of the Miller Family Series and we're almost done with A Hive of Busy Bees, which we're loving.



Overview: Don and Joyce are invited to spend the summer with their grandparents at the farm. Each day presents exciting opportunities for them to experience outdoor farm life--so different from the city--especially the first day when they encounter a hive of angry bees. From this episode grandma chooses stories from her scrapbook and skillfully develops some character lessons for each evening's bedtime BEESTORY.

Contents: Bee Obedient; Bee Honest; Bee Truthful; Bee Kind; Bee Polite; Bee Gentle; Bee Helpful; Bee Careful; Bee Grateful; Bee Loving; Bee Accepted; Bee Confident; Bee Content. Recommended for ages 5 to 10.


We loved this book so much that we have the sequel on order, pictured above.

Overview: Danny and Debbie, like their cousins, decide they want to spend some vacation time on the farm with their grandparents. For children who have only know city life, each day presents exciting opportunities for them to experience new situations--especially the first day, when they encounter a hive of angry bees. From this episode grandma chooses stories from her scrapbook and skillfully develops some character lessons for each evening's bedtime BEESTORY.

Writing News

Writing is going well, with Mary being independent in her journal now, and the boys writing excellent entries as well, mostly in response to literature, but with some free-write days in there too.

Paul wrote an acrostic poem, and a May poem:

M other's Day
A llergies
Y ellow dandelions

F lowers
U seless weeds
N ow time to plant

May
Now it's May,
The season's gay.
Pull the weeds,
Sow the seeds.
Lawn has grown,
It's time to mow.
The thunders boom,
Stay in the your room.
The weather's nice,
For a cup of ice.
The baseball bat,
don't forget your hat.

Now it's May
the season's gay.
June is near,
Is that what I hear?

On the blog this week:

How was your week, friends? Thank you for visiting here. Happy Mother's Day!

Weekly Wrap-Up

Thursday, May 7, 2015

Building a Strong Mothering Legacy Part 2

Read Part 1 here.


Last time we discussed that a mother's legacy mainly consists of love. Mothers building an exceptional legacy display other characteristics as well. All of us might come up with a different list of what these exceptional characteristics might be, but I chose to concentrate on just two.

1. Exceptional mothers love and accept children where they're at now, rather than pressuring them to perform above their developmental level. Children are very much a work in progress and we need to be cheerleaders, not disgruntled employees complaining about every outfit thrown on the floor, or every mess left behind. They'll get to these details and mature with time, and in the meantime we can gently push them with age-appropriate expectations, even working alongside them to clean up messes.


This kind of acceptance and scaffolding gives children room to grow in peace, with confidence. We need to remember that growing up and maturing steadily, while doing hours of academic work each day, is just plain hard. We easily discount the hard work our children do, thinking we're the overworked ones.

This leads me to my next point...

2. Exceptional mothers have godly attitudes about the hard work they do.

It happens to all of us: the creeping in at times of a sinful, woe-is-me attitude about the cleaning, the cooking, the organizing, the running around, the shopping, the myriad of things we do each day, while putting aside what we really want to do. This is particularly true for those of us who don't have family support around, or any domestic help. 

I've never spent the night without my children, nor been on a day retreat--even three hours away is very uncommon, happening only when there's money for a thrift-store run. It's not that I want to be without them, just that I know time away would renew energy, strength, commitment. 

If you're in this same, under-supported boat, you're not alone and it's not too big for God.

Being a mother is a privilege and each time we complain about all the work, we essentially slap the infertile mother-hopeful in the face, for one thing. Their pain is incredibly deep and our blessing is incredibly deep. Our gratitude needs to be complete, not just active when we watch our precious children sleep or when we receive their flowers and loving hugs.

And a good attitude goes beyond just avoiding sin. Our children are profoundly affected by our complaining--especially when we don't repent and apologize quickly. A sin quickly realized and corrected only teaches our children about their own need for a Savior, but ongoing sin in this area makes our children feel less than. They need to know we love caring for them. They need to know they add blessing to our lives, not burden. Otherwise, they feel guilty about having needs. They feel unworthy of our time and commitment, and they're more likely to stay out of our way,  rather than forge the strong emotional bond with us that provides a firm foundation for their future.

A confident, happy, well-rounded child experiences a mother's love, her generous time, her heartfelt physical labor. Sometimes strength is lacking due to illness or disorder, but what is given can be given joyfully.


An exceptional mother does not provide any of this out of sheer will, but out of an active relationship with the Lord Jesus. 

~ I love because I have been loved. 
~ I give because I have been provided for. 
~ I work because I have received strength. 
~ I counsel because I have been healed. 
~ I support because I have been upheld. 
~ I rejoice over others because He has rejoiced over me.

I have enough of all that is needed because of my Lord Jesus Christ...but only when I sit at his feet and receive from him. Only when I value my time with Him as a pleasure unto itself.

An exceptional mother loves (and receives from) an exceptional God

What qualities would you add? 

Happy Mother's Day to you all!

Isaiah 40:28-31 Have you not known? Have you not heard? The LORD is the everlasting God, the Creator of the ends of the earth. He does not faint or grow weary; his understanding is unsearchable. He gives power to the faint, and to him who has no might he increases strength. Even youths shall faint and be weary, and young men shall fall exhausted; but they who wait for the LORD shall renew their strength; they shall mount up with wings like eagles; they shall run and not be weary; they shall walk and not faint.

Zephaniah 3:17 The LORD your God is in your midst, a mighty one who will save; he will rejoice over you with gladness; he will quiet you by his love; he will exult over you with loud singing.

Tuesday, May 5, 2015

Building a Strong Mothering Legacy, Part 1


With Mother's Day coming up, I'm evaluating my own mothering and considering what it takes to build a strong mothering legacy. Usually, Mother's Day is for showing appreciation and love for Mom, but it can just as easily be a time for us to evaluate how we're doing, and decide how we might do even better.

A legacy is defined as anything handed down from the past. The main thing mothers hand down is love. In love we patiently kiss booboos and bandaid them--something that will be remembered fondly, as will the cold cloths and kisses we put on fevered heads in the middle of the night.  Love-in-action becomes memory--etched in their minds forever.


For older children it's not so much the bandaids and cold cloths that define a mother's love, but the homecooked meals, special comments, notes, or gifts, and the teen talk sessions we endure and enjoy into the late night.

With each loving act of compassion and patience, our stock as mothers goes up and our children have one more reason to value their own lives and look with confidence upon their futures. Filled up with love, there's nothing to hold them back.

Mom invests her time, and when someone gives us their time--the precious hours and days of their lives--that says we have value. What's a life, really? Isn't it made up of minutes, hours, days, weeks, years, decades? When someone invests all they have in us, we can't help but value our own life and work hard to make it worthwhile.



Each of us, hopefully, has someone in our past who invested their time in us. If not, we're obviously left with scars--but nothing our Heavenly Father can't heal if we lay it at His feet.

If as mothers we truly invest our time, showing love and compassion, our sons will hopefully want to choose a wife who is like us, in terms of her future mothering potential, and our daughters will hopefully look no further than their own childhoods to evolve into wonderful mothers.

We hope and pray this is the case, but to make it reality, we have to engage in self-evaluation. Just loving our children doesn't make us great mothers.

What else is needed to seal the great-mother deal? After all, what mother doesn't get up in the middle of the night to tend to her sick children? What mother isn't forthcoming with kisses and bandaids when the blood flows? What mother would ignore a teen who obviously needs to talk?

There are certainly qualities beyond these that make a mother exceptional. But what might they be?

We all might come up with a different list, but....

...I think a great mother also has exemplary attitudes.

Yes, they will remember our loving care, but won't they also remember our complaining, our bitterness over the hard work, our yelling over the clean clothes thrown on the floor (again)?

No one is without blemish and mothers can get downright exhausted quickly, leading to less than godly responses. Children certainly give us room to be human--being very forgiving--but they also take note of our attitudes over time.

I've considered two wrong attitudes that will stain our mothering legacy. I want to eradicate them in my life, and I bet you do too.

1. Expecting children to know better.

2. Resenting the hard work involved in mothering.

In this post, I elaborate on number 1...Expecting Children to Know Better. Later this week, we'll get to number 2.

My son Peter is 13 years old. There were many times over the years I wondered if he would ever mature, but now, four months after his 13th birthday, I'm daily seeing signs of a godly manhood evolving. He sees ways in which I need help and he willingly puts aside his plans to step up to the plate. In the past, hoping his brother or dad would help, he selfishly pursued his own agenda.

He looks protectively upon his sisters--both in regard to their physical and spiritual safety. He'll gently remind them to resolve their differences amicably, for the glory of God. He'll call them out when they complain and stomp their feet over a parent's unwanted directions, such as to stop sewing and brush teeth for bed.

He'll recognize his own ungodly attitudes quickly, and apologize now, not later, with a heartfelt repentence.

He'll bravely share Christ with neighbor children, pray with neighbor children over backyard baseball games, and remind neighbors to love their siblings when sibling bickering occurs here. He'll pray for them at night and wonder what else he can do to help them along spiritually.

And all this without any prompting from me. It's God, working through Peter, who is responding to the command to make disciples of all nations (and neighborhoods). Somehow, the neighbors keep coming, despite the young evangelist who lives here. They want to listen to Peter, who commands their respect.

What has all Peter's recent growth reminded me of? That children are a work in progress. I don't know that I remembered that enough all these years. I don't know that I would have believed you, two years ago, if you described for me what my son would be like today. He's a wonderful young man and I didn't see that coming.

Shame on me.

Of course children throw clean, rejected clothes onto the floor--they're only children! Of course they leave out their craft supplies and their bikes and spit toothpaste gobs into the sink....and then leave them.

They're. only. children.

What did I expect, I wonder? That they would show an understanding of my hard laundry work, when they're so busy trying to learn and grow each day themselves? Growing up is hard work.

They are no more guilty of disregarding our hard work, than we are of theirs.

1. A great mother respects her children's learning curves. She loves her children where they're at now.

2. A great mother expects her children to shine one day, despite the childishness of today. She sees potential.

3. A great mother praises efforts, not just outcomes.

4. A great mother prays for her children, more than she preaches at them.

What would you add about giving our children room to grow in peace? What do you think makes a mother stand out as exceptional?

Next time, we'll discuss a mother's attitude about the hard work she does.

Hoping your Mother's Day is sweet...full of kisses and hugs and picked flowers and pretty pictures.

Read Part 2 here.

Monday, May 4, 2015

Raccoon Happenings

Who's cuter, Her Royal Highness Charlotte Elizabeth Diana, or little baby raccoon here? Just kidding...baby Charlotte is a gorgeous baby! Congratulations to my UK readers. The news is so often horrifying, and baby news was a welcome respite as we welcomed Charlotte.

Hubby and Momma Raccoon went a few more rounds this weekend. Peter got some good pictures during the "battle". This is one persistent raccoon!

Pictured above is one of her babies, left behind and discovered behind the shed door, shaking with fright. Hubby used a dustpan to scoop her up, then placed her in a storage box and set it at the corner of our yard, next to the fence Momma Raccoon uses to get in and out of our yard. Our hope was that Momma would hear the baby and come for it. Raccoons make a unique call, which is a cross between a bird and tree frog sound.

My own and several neighbor kids oohed and awed over baby, and all wanted to keep her and raise her, as you might expect. :) We had our hands full watching over the kids, making sure they didn't get their hands too close to the baby. It certainly made their Saturday very exciting, to say the least. All they had on their agenda together was baseball, prior to the baby's arrival on the scene.

Momma Raccoon did indeed come for her missing baby, but it took about five hours, during which baby raccoon burrowed in some insulation to keep warm and comforted. As soon as we spotted the Momma, we placed the box over the fence on its side, which almost scared her away. But then she heard her baby's tree-frog-like calls, noticed it in the box and quickly grabbed baby by mouth. Momma was so frightened at us watching her, that at first she didn't grab the baby correctly, and baby growled at her. Then, Momma adjusted her baby better, and took off down into the nearby gutter.

 



We thought that would be the end of it, so hubby did more construction on the shed Saturday afternoon and evening, intent on keeping the raccoon family out (but he left the greenhouse part of the shed intact). He also chopped some branches off the pear tree which Momma Raccoon climbs to get on our shed roof.

No sign of Momma on Sunday, but on Monday she came back, snooping around. She couldn't, or didn't try, jumping from the tree to the roof, so that was victory one. After circling the shed, she couldn't quickly find another way in, so victory number 2. If she gets desperate enough, she could do serious damage to the siding in other places, but we hope that doesn't happen. We made some noise and chased her away, in case her memory is too short.

Snooping around on Monday.

More snooping around on Monday.

Looking straight at Peter. She has a healthy fear and doesn't ever get too close to us, though she thinks nothing of coming into the yard when my kids are hosting neighbor kids for baseball. When we spot her, I send everyone home.


How was your weekend, friends? How's your new garden coming along? We're having a heat wave so Peter is putting our garden in slowly.