Showing posts with label good days. Show all posts
Showing posts with label good days. Show all posts

1/14/09

Pretty sweet. Kinda tart!

My husband and Evann of Homeschool Goodies agree -- Thank you, Evann, for the Lemonade Award!







With the Lemonade award,you are supposed to give it to 10 others who showattitude (the good kind!) or gratitude.


I'd like to pass on the award to:

Magellamom of Waiting for Charlie
Dietrich of Wombs of Life
MB of Mater Caritas
and The Old Broad

OK, it's not ten. But what they lack in number they make up for in attitude.
Take that in any way you want. :-)

12/26/08

Merry Christmas!

Psalm 98 is the tradional "Christmas Psalm". "Joy to the World" may be its most famous rendition, but this is beautiful, too:



Enjoy!

12/19/08

4 Quick Takes Friday

Today was the perfect winter day.

5 am - 7 am -- Shovel snow. (6 -7 with hubby) (OK, that wasn't the perfect part. Our lot isn't that big, but the snow was that heavy.)

7 am - noon -- School. (That was pretty good.)

noon - 1:30 pm -- Sledding! I found out that the precipitation that makes for back-breaking shovelling makes the most excellent sledding!

2 pm - 3 pm -- Bake shortbread cookies. Recipe: 4 cups white flour, 1 cup brown sugar and 1 stick of softened butter. That's not enough oil for the recipe, so add canola oil until the consistency is right. It's really easy to work with if you don't add any whole wheat flour. Bake at 400 for 5 minutes.

This really is the perfect recipe if you are expecting your little elves to consume a significant part of the dough while cutting the shapes out.

--

No matter how small the job, draw pictures for the electrician. No matter how much his company is charging per hour for his services, he may not take the necessary notes to remember just exactly what it is he's supposed to do!

--

We celebrate Advent until we light the pink candle. Bring on the Christmas carols! I never really knew that the rollicking, fox-chase song "God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen" middle five stanzas of the song gave a verse-by-verse retelling of the first 10 verses of Luke 2. It lacks the self-conscious piety of "Silent Night" but is actually more technically Scriptural than the latter.

--

"Quick" -- as in "the quick and the dead" and "quicksilver" (an archaic term for mercury) means "Living" (Get it? Mercury is "living silver".)

I find this second meaning totally appropriate to the spirit of "Quick Takes Friday" in that we get a glimpse of life lived.

Thanks, Jen!

8/18/08

Vitamins

In our house, good morning kisses are called "vitamins". So, if I ask for a kiss from the oldest, I tell him I need to take my daily dose of "Vitamin G."

This is a little ditty, set to an original tune, by the oldest daughter:

Oh, Vitamin L
and Vitamin F
Vitamin I
and Vitamin G
How could they do
without me?
Their sister, Vitamin T.

Vitamin L
I can really tell
She's so lovely.

Vitamin F
She's one of the best
And she is Vitamin F.

Vitamin I
Loves pumpkin pie
And Vitamin I
Loves other pie.

Vitamin G
Is so funny
And cute
And full of glee.

But the best the best that can ever be. . .
Oh, How could they do without me?
Vitamin T!

How could they do
Without Vitamin T???

5/9/08

Homeschooling in Will Penny

Since Charlton Heston has died, my husband and I have taken an interest in his movies. Yesterday we watched Will Penny. Will Penny (Heston) is a cowboy who is almost fifty, never married. Catherine (Joan Hackett) is trying to get to California to meet her husband at their farm. She and her son, H. G., are abandoned by their guide in the Flatirons (Colorado) and they end up "squatting" in a shack used by a cowboy during the winter. Of course, that cowboy is Will Penny.

Will Penny first tells Catherine that she has a week to leave, but soon after this warning, he is beaten by the villian and makes his way back to the shack, where Catherine reluctantly nurses him back to health. By Christmas, they have a chaste, but deep, friendship. In fact, he tells Catherine that she "really knows how to make a man feel like a man" -- simply by her kindness and loving voice.

This movie was made in 1968, the same year that Humanae Vitae created a firestorm, and yet here is Will Penny, showing simple domestic life, where the title character learns for the first time how beautiful friendship in a domestic setting can be. (set aside for the moment that they are just "playing house")

One of the tasks in this domestic setting is homeschooling. As H. G. reads out of his McGuffey reader, his mother looks on as if it were the most natural thing in the world (of course you know it is). The movie also makes a point that Catherine is not a former schoolteacher; she is emphatic that she is a farmer. Catherine's keeping up on H. G.'s schooling is regarded very favorably, as it is a poignant contrast to Penny's own illiteracy, of which he is deeply ashamed.

Will Penny is a great movie, but you should watch it first to decide if it is appropriate for your kids because the villian is a really bad guy.

11/24/07

A Milestone

Out of the blue my five year old daughter declared that she is ready for chapter books for her literature -- I can save the picture books for her little sisters. (Of course I fully expect her to be right there for the little girls' literature sessions with picture books.)

The two older ones dropped everything, pulled her up into our home's library, and came down with a stack of books that included Treasure Island, Charlotte's Web, and the Boxcar Children. The nine year old pulled the last book out of the stack and promptly started reading the first chapter to her.

Welcome to the Club!