Post #2 Treats No Tricks: Meeting My Grandbaby!

 

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My treat #2 to share in my “golden harvest” years of motherhood is that I’m a grandma! Just call me Mama C! Baby C, my daughter’s son, was born two and a half weeks early and surprised us before I could get there! I’m super bummed that I missed the birth as we all planned for me to be there for it, but I got to meet Baby C last month and spend two whole weeks spoiling him and his parents! That means I did all the housework and let my daughter sleeeeep as much as Baby C’s stomach could last in between feedings. All my years of being a nursing mama and La Leche League Leader kicked in as I encouraged her to nurse lying down in order to get more rest. Here are some pics of meeting my grandson and enjoying life in a place that has four seasons, as in, Idaho. The autumn leaves were gorgeous! I’d forgotten how much I enjoy them from when I lived in Utah. The scene below is within walking distance from their home.

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In the photo below, Baby C looks so confused, like, “Hey, wait…You’re not my mother!  Your face and voice are different and you’re not giving me milk!”

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Then below, he’s figuring it out…”Ah…you have wrinkles, so you are older…I get it…you are my mother’s mother!”

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Me, as Mama C, “That’s right! Don’t forget it! I’m your grandma! This is the beginning of a beautiful relationship kiddo! Let the spoiling begin!”

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I cherish those two weeks of a babymoon in Idaho! I’m so grateful I got to see my daughter living so happily as a young wife and new mom! This was the first time I’ve been to her home since she got married. She’s living her dream of being a college-graduated engineer, a wife, and a mother. It does a mama’s heart good to see my baby having a baby and walking in ways of truth and happiness!

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Her husband is so wonderful and they are so cute together. I felt so bittersweet the last day! I had loved living in their little nest with much fewer cares around me than what I’m used to.  I definitely miss them but it’s good to be back in AZ to ride herd on the ones still in the nest. I don’t think, however, that they missed me at all! We had a nice break from homeschooling with each other (I left my husband and 17 year old in charge of that while I was gone but I’m sure there was some sliding and playing around while the “cat’s away”…:-)) Now it’s time to crack the whip on them again.

This is such a great season of motherhood, I love it! Now if we could just live a lot closer!!! I’m working on her to move closer with the bribe of free babysitting, almost on demand, with 24 hour notice, lol. How I miss waking up and going down the hall to see Baby C and whisking him into my arms, drinking in his newborn baby-ness, cuddling him and enjoying his piglet grunts. Thank goodness for video chat!

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This is us right before we left for the airport. My daughter got the baby all tanked up on her milk so he could zone out in the car.

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Post #1 of Treats No Tricks: My Daughter’s Wedding and My Son’s College Graduation

 

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This harvest time of year matches the season of my life. I’m old enough to be enjoying the fruits of my mothering labors big time! Wa-hoo! This is so awesome! Some of my kids are mature enough to be out of the nest living on their own. I miss them A LOT! Why is it that just when kids get super helpful (i.e., they daily ask what they can do to help), tremendously conversational, superbly peacemaking with younger siblings, and no longer the slightest bit annoying, that they leave my home?!

It’s wonderful to know that they are being completely self-reliant and self-governing. They have thanked me for what I did for my sacrifices as a mother. I love getting these mama paychecks! So I thought I’d spend the next few posts sharing some of my “harvests” that I’m enjoying. I’m also calling this series of blog posts “treats without tricks” as we approach Halloween. Then on Halloween I get to enjoy one of the best treats of all! (To be announced later!)

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First, my daughter got married last year. I have been meaning to blog about this for a LOOOOONG time, like ten months! The post is in my drafts folder. Until it meets my artistic perfectionist ideals, it will stay there. My life just happens too fast to blog about it  casually! In the meantime, I will officially announce here on the blog that she did get married in the Payson Temple of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, in December of last year, and it was wonderful to witness!

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Second, I got a 2-for-1 deal last summer when both my son and son-in-law graduated from BYU-I. This was such a happy day! Both young men graduated with degrees having to do with computers: either computer science or software engineering. We drove up to Idaho and had a wonderful time celebrating at the ceremonies. I always love visiting the BYU-I campus. It was like deja vu because the year before, also in July, we had driven up for my daughter’s graduation, for her degree, also in software engineering.

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I had already been in Utah for a few weeks, for LEMI Training, when the day arrived to drive to Idaho. My husband and daughter had stayed home so she could go to Young Women Camp for our church for her first time. Then they drove up separately. When I had driven up to Utah in July I got to go thrifting with my sis-in-law as I stopped in St. George on the way. I got the cute top and skirt in these photos.

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While at BYUI we attended the beautiful Rexburg temple as a family and loved it! 

When I was in Idaho my husband’s cousin, who hosted us, kept staring at my skirt. She finally asked where I bought it and I said D.I. (Deseret Industries, I have found so many treasures there through the years. Someday I will have to blog about that!). She laughed and said that maybe it was her old skirt as she used to have one just like it that she had given away. Yep, I’m not too proud to admit that I love a skirt that belonged to someone old enough to be my mom who had cast it away. After the event, I noticed my son never mentioned on Facebook that he graduated, but he did mention that he got to meet Brandon Sanderson that same month of July

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2018 and get books autographed, in Iona Idaho. OK, so I’m wondering what is it about Iona Idaho that drew Chris Sanderson there? Also, apparently, meeting Brandon trumps college graduation any day. All my kids love his books. Eventually maybe the books will grow on me. (It doesn’t help that the Audible narrator has a total monotone, depressing voice that makes it sound like I am staring death in the face as a Jew in a Nazi concentration camp. Maybe if Chris Hogan narrated, I would like the books.)

Anyway, congrats to my daughter for getting married and to my son for graduating! They have both been living far away from me living their dream lives of engineers.  I’m happy to see them both pursuing their passions.

(Btw, did you know that Ken Jennings and Brandon Sanderson were college roommates at BYU? That explains a LOT! Oh to be a fly on the wall and hear their geeky, trivia-meets-fantasy conversations!)

 

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Holistic Health Symposium Coming Up in South Jordan, Utah, Nov. 2-3!

This looks so cool! I would totally go to it if I still lived in Utah! I am so jealous of all you Utah peeps! Laura Hayes, the speaker interviewed in the above video, will be the featured speaker. She is the mom of a 24 year old son who was seriously and permanently disabled by “routine” childhood vaccinations. Her website is here. Dr. Andrew Wakefield, one of today’s heroes, will also be speaking. This is so amazing!!!

Health, Wellness, and Healing Symposium

South Jordan, Utah

November 2-3, 2018

Event details, including speaker line-up, can be found here:

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Cost to attend is very affordable, just $39 for the 2-day event.

Laura Hayes, WAPF honorary board member, will be speaking on Friday night from 7:00-8:15pm, and other speakers whose names you might recognize include:

Dr. Andrew Wakefield, Mark Blaxill, Kristen Chevrier, Andre Angelantoni, and others.  Below is a list of speaker topics (speakers are not necessarily listed in the order in which they will be speaking):

Friday – November 2nd

Laura Hayes – “Why Is This Legal?”

Dr. Andrew Wakefield – To Be Announced

Caleb Warnock – “Five Simple Steps to Taking Control of Your Health”

Lowell Nelson  Heeding Body Cues: How to React to What Your Body Is Telling You”

Saturday – November 3rd

Amanda Kotter – “Homeopathy as a System of Natural Medicine and How to Protect Your Rights to Use It”

Amy Morris – “The Power of Essential Oils: Your Health Concerns Answered”

Andre Angelantoni – “Building a Healthier World”

Dr. Andrew Wakefield – “Vaccine Immunity, Escape Mutants, and Virgin Soil Populations”

Judy Zimmerman – “SOUND THE ALARM! Six ways the CDC hides the autism epidemic.  Legal or not? Like it or not? Government, educational and medical profiling of you and your family”

Kristen Chevrier – “Navigating Vaccine Mandates in the Workplace”

Mark Blaxil – “1 in 36: A Tsunami of Disabled Autistic Adults that will Overwhelm our Country”

Tatia Nelson – “Herbal First Aid: Be Ready”
Byron Tarbet – “Chemical and Medical Terminology; Aluminum, Immune Activation and Autism: An Overview”

Please help get the word out to anyone you know in Utah or neighboring states, and to anyone you know who might be interested to travel to this event.  Please use social media to spread the word, too. Should be a fantastic 2 days of learning from and connecting with others!

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Hero Journey/Covenant Path Story #2: Nancy Hilton

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In October, I use the theme of heroes and saints for the theme of my family devotionals. It’s a perfect prelude to Halloween, which is a corruption of All Hallow’s Eve, the eve of All Saints Day, November 1, a day traditional used to celebrate saints. We’ve been learning about saints from the new book, Saints Vol. 1, published by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. I love hearing these stories! I’m so excited that as members of the Church, we have our own compilation of stories of saints. Each chapter is a stand-alone story and then as you combine all the chapters, it’s a beautiful narrative tapestry of stories woven together. Best of all, it’s true! These stories show people who were heroic and imperfect at the same time. We listen to these stories in the car on my phone, using the Gospel Library app, and then at home too while cleaning up breakfast dishes.

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In the past few years I have told stories of heroes and saints in October, a few every day, and then all night either on Halloween or on an evening close to that day. This is my attempt to reclaim Halloween into All Hallow’s Eve. (My friend Emily explains perfectly why I want to “reimagine Halloween” here, into Heroween.) Last year, the Saturday before Halloween, I invited friends over and we dressed up like heroes. We had s’mores around my firepit and I told a few stories from my devotional ebook. Then we played Guess Who? as we gave clues to our character and then the others guessed who were. We had Anne of Green Gables, Emma from Pride and Prejudice, Laura Ingalls Wilder, Mother Teresa, Abigail May Alcott (Louisa May’s mother, one of my favorite heroes) and Elizabeth Blackwell, among others. So I was delighted to discover a new name for my event: Heroween,  from my friend and fellow blogger and homeschool mom Emily Satterthwaite. (If you live in northern Utah I hope you attend her Heroween event that I just linked to!)

(If you want some more hero stories of latter-day saints, you can get my devotional ebook here. It is a compilation of songs, poetry, and stories from the magazines of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, along with a few other resources. All these years of homeschooling seven children I have wished for a resource like this. I wanted stories, songs, and scriptures to memorize, arranged by holiday, seasonal, and monthly themes, all in one place  It didn’t exist so I made it!)

Since we are talking about heroes in October, I talk to my kids about the Hero Journey. If you haven’t read my take on the Hero Journey, please go here. It explains how the Hero Journey becomes the Covenant Path when we make covenants with God and become Christians.

The following story is not in my devotional ebook. It is contained in the book pictured above, My Miracle from God: an Autobiography of Nancy Goldberg Hilton. The author of the hero story, Nancy Hilton, tells her true story of how she found God and became a Christian after growing up Jewish. She found the answers to her questions about Judaism and how it relates to Christianity in The Book of Mormon: Another Testament of Jesus Christ. I commend her book to everyone. It’s a wonderful, faith-filled story of finding answers through prayer and scripture reading. It was originally published as My Burning Bush. It is now titled, My Miracle from God. In this book, Nancy tells her experience of having her own “burning bush” at the Rainbow Bridge natural rock formation in southern Utah. In that moment she was changed in an instant from being an unbeliever to know that Jesus is the Christ, our Redeemer and Savior. She instantly felt a witness that Jesus is the Christ burn into her soul.

Here is my summary of her story:

As a middle-aged woman, Nancy felt a call to get some kind of spiritual guidance. She enjoyed professional success, as a business owner, but her marriage was falling apart. So she started praying the scripted prayers she learned as a young Jewish girl because that was the only way she knew to reach out to the spiritual world. She was introduced to the world of psychic media but then decided it was not for her after her search for truth exposed her to frightening evil influences.

 

She did not yet believe in Christ when she went on a trip to Rainbow Bridge National Monument near Page AZ. She got caught in a rainstorm after falling asleep enjoying the beautiful scenery, the natural arch and nearby waterfalls. She felt God’s presence amidst His beautiful creations, and therefore felt safe enough to fall asleep after her scary experiences. The rain woke her up, so she walked to the Bridge. As the raindrops splashed on her, she experienced a miracle. She says she heard a clap of thunder shake the whole earth.

She says

“the sound coursed through me, and I felt a great change enter my whole being. My mind was instantly opened to understand the things of God. All my feelings of darkness and evil left me. I instantly accepted the reality of God’s being. I knew that His son Son was Jesus Christ, a person whose love extended out to me at this time of personal crisis. He was truly a Savior at that moment as all thoughts of my past trials faded, and my heart was filled with wonder, compassion, peace, and love. This experience was brief, but its effect on my life will last forever.” (Hilton, My Burning Bush, 15)

She calls this miracle of feeling instantly convicted by the truth that Jesus Christ is the source of all power and love as her “burning bush.”

This conviction of Jesus Christ as her Savior, given as a gift out of nowhere at Rainbow Bridge, gave Nancy the strength and confidence to divorce her husband of 25 years. She moved out. Then she searched for guidance in Christianity as for what to do next. She started her search for Jesus by getting copies of the Old and New Testaments. She searched for a Christian church for four years. Nancy was dissatisfied with what she found, especially when she felt contempt from a pastor towards Judaism. She also felt frustrated that the churches she found did not harmonize with the teachings of Jesus in the Bible. This study of both books led her to eventually have a conversation with a man she was doing business with, about Jesus Christ. The man told her he was a Christian and gave her a copy of the Book of Mormon: Another Testament of Jesus Christ. She devoured the book on a flight from Houston to Dallas, her home. When she met the man again, she had so many questions for him, especially about the role of Jesus Christ as Messiah. As he took several hours to kindly answer her questions, the feeling of love she had experienced at Rainbow Bridge returned to her. She met with the missionaries, and eventually got baptized.

After making this covenant, she started a new cycle of the Hero Journey. This time, it was a Hero Journey on the Covenant Path, with new gifts of prayer and dedication offered to God, and new blessings given to her in return. She had never felt happier. She offered her thanks to God in prayer for her experience at Rainbow Bridge and for bringing the restored gospel of Jesus Christ into her life. She told God she intended to dedicate the rest of her life to Him in service. She said she would sell her home and her business and do whatever God told her to do. Within two weeks she met the person who eventually bought her business. So she sold her business. Then, out of the blue, someone knocked on her door and asked to buy her home. She then went on a family history mission at the Family History Center in Salt Lake City, Utah. She was blessed with the gift of being able to help create a database of Jewish names for the family history library. Another wonderful gift she received was meeting a fellow missionary who introduced Nancy to the missionary’s widowed brother, Lynn Hilton, a talented, scholarly, charismatic man abounding with talents. Nancy was told by the Spirit that this man would marry her, around the same time that the Spirit told Lynn the same thing. She and Lynn got married and have now been married for 17 years.

They have completed five missions together. Nancy was able to expand her family to include 5 step-children, many grandchildren, and a huge extended family. Nancy’s story perfectly exemplifies a Hero Journey turned into a Covenant Path. She experienced relational grace as she gave her desires and prayers to God and received many more gifts in return. I am thrilled she is part of my extended family through my husband and love knowing her. She has blessed my life with her courageous example. 

 

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Feasting and General Conference

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Who’s ready for feasting during, at, and from General Conference? I heard from my missionary son, who heard from his missionary president, that some big announcements are coming!

I have a new friend who looooooves General Conference. It marks the time when, as an investigator, she gained a testimony of the teachings of the gospel as taught by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. As an investigator, she had a problem that she prayed about. God answered her by telling her to watch the upcoming General Conference. She didn’t even know what it was, so she had to ask her friend who already has a testimony. Her friend came over to her house to watch it with her. Then during that Conference weekend, my friend had an amazing spiritual experience. So she celebrates every General Conference as a wonderful weekend of physical and spiritual feasting. For her it’s almost as exciting as Christmas.

I love that! I have been working for years on making General Conference feel like a feast day or holiday. It certainly felt like it was this time when my dh and I went on a date in the middle of sessions to a feast held in conjunction with Conference. Making it wonderful at home with lots of restless kids is a different story. I’m still not perfect at it, and am still figuring it out. Here are some ideas that I’m tossing out but by no means am perfect at. I realize this is late for me to be publishing on the eve of General Conference. I’m in Baby Land visiting my new grand baby, and have to snatch bits of blogging time between helping my daughter postpartum. So alas, this is at the end of the week instead of the beginning as I had hoped. Bookmark this for 2019 if needs be! I’m not with most of my family right now so I want to make up for April 2019 Conference!

1. Have special food. We’ve done natural yeast cinnamon rolls for several years for breakfast on one of the mornings. My friend mentioned above makes pumpkin cinnamon rolls for fall and regular ones for spring I suppose. I’ve been feeling overwhelmed at the thought of having two days of special feast foods and still am deciding how to do conference meals, after over two decades of mothering, LOL! Here are some ideas though: bacon and eggs, muffins or waffles, for breakfast, snacks you usually don’t have for grazing all through the two sessions, then something unusual you don’t have for dinner like jam and scones with a milkshake.

2. Have fun activities to help you focus on the speakers. I simply take notes. Some people like to do a General Conference Bingo or Color the neckties of the male speakers, or play fantasy General Conference (just Google it). Having new crayons, markers or pens to do all this makes it extra special.  I’ve spent many years making activity pages for my kids, but they are older now so we don’t use those as much anymore. My 9 year old still asks for these Book of Mormon paper dolls. Google or go to Pinterest to find lots more ideas, but please don’t make it overwhelming, keep it simple for whatever season you are in. For review, I like to do General Conference Jeopardy a few weeks later.

3. Have Decorations. You can have all the fall decorations out for Oct. conference and all the Easter decorations for the April conference. Maybe do a special General Conference banner like the one here. Jocelyn Christensen has some fun ideas here.

Happy General Conference-ing everybody! I will be doing the best activity of all, snuggling with my new grandson!

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The Hero’s Journey or the Happiness Journey, and Hero Story #1

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Here is a video about the Hero’s Journey.

I’ve been thinking a lot about the Hero’s Journey lately. I remember first learning about in my high school AP English class. Then I forgot about it for a long time.  Then it resurrected itself in my life when I immersed myself in the leadership education world as a homeschool mom, ten years ago. Now it’s reappering! My girlfriend Olivia recently taught about it to our homeschool moms group. (That’s Olivia in the photo above.) I also call it the happiness, wellness,  or the mindful journey. It’s the path we all get to take if we want to feel joyful and complete, with a legacy to leave after we die. The universe can seem random and cruel. If we take time to unplug, however,  and look for patterns in history, nature and our relationships, we can see some order. We can see the universe inviting each of us to live a greater, fuller life, a life that involves more than just entertaining our taste buds, ears and eyes.

The universe beckons each of us to be greater than we already are, to be instruments in God’s hands to be kinder, nobler, and full of meaning, to fulfill His purposes. This video above shows the pattern that the Hero Journey involves. It is great because it is patterned after the greatest hero, Jesus Christ.

As Christians, our Hero’s Journey becomes what my friend Katie calls the Pilgrim’s Journey. I call it the Covenant Path. Have you noticed how many times that phrase was used by President Nelson and others in this past General Conference? God invites each of us to take it by officially becoming Christian, marked by baptism into The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. This is our first official covenant on the Covenant Path. If you want to learn more about that, you can watch Katie’s video presentation below. (Katie is my dear friend from when I lived in Utah. We had a lot of fun together, as did our kids, because they match pretty closely in age and gender. You can check out all of her offerings at her site here.)

I am fascinated by the concept that we receive gifts from God, as we go along the Covenant Path, to aid us.  Katie’s video shows that. These gifts help us complete the Journey. They start with faith in Jesus Christ, which then grows into action as we repent. Then we make sacred covenants at baptism, and receive the gift of the Holy Ghost, to guide us as we are faithful, the rest of our lives. 2 Peter 1:5-11 details the path of reception of spiritual gifts, which corresponds with the Covenant Path. We can also receive increased knowledge when we make covenants in the temple. We can also ask for spiritual gifts in prayer. They also come from making our own individualized promises to God. I love this BYUI  talk by Elder Larry W. Lawrence which tells us we can ask for and even covet spiritual gifts. Here’s my girlfriend Becky’s summary of the talk:

 

Asking for and receiving spiritual gifts is part of the Covenant Path. Along with that, offering gifts to God, in the form of promises and commitments is also part of the Path. For, example, Elder Enzio Busche searched for the true church of Jesus Christ. He searched for this church in post-WWII Germany for four years. Finally, he promised God that if God would show him the true church of Jesus Christ, he would join, even if it had a history of persecution. Two weeks later, missionaries from the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints showed up on his doorstep. He investigated the Church for two years and then got baptized. I love his story! It’s the epitome of the Hero’s Journey turned into the Covenant Path. You can read it here. The longer version is here. Below, I have embedded a clip from a talk he gave at BYU. Enjoy!

October is the time of year when I love to talk about heroes and the Hero’s Journey with my kids. You can read more Hero Journey/ Covenant Path Stories in my family devotional ebook here. I tell a few stories from this ebook to my kids every morning. Then we elevate Halloween to a Heroween (a term used by my friend Emily Satterthwaite here) and talk about heroes all night, on All Hallow’s Eve/the eve of All Saints Day. We tell stories round the firelight, with treats. Yum! This year will be extra special because my missionary son arrives home from Argentina that day. We are so excited!

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A Diet to Fight/Cure Cancer

This podcast interview with the author of the book Keto for Cancer enlightens anyone who takes the time to listen. The author, Miriam Kalamian, has a son who at age 4 was diagnosed with a brain tumor. She serendipitously discovered the keto diet after seeing that months of chemo were not working for him. As a last resort, she put her son on the ketogenic diet. This is a diet that severely limits the amount of carbs in the diet. (Some people say that means 50 grams carbs, some say 20 grams.) In three months of eating this way, her son’s brain tumor shrank by 15%! Her son’s oncologist didn’t think it would help. She did it anyway, on what I think was her mother’s instinct. She went on to get a master’s degree in nutrition to research the chemistry behind this happening. She says that cancer feeds on sugar, so to starve cancer, it’s best to eat mostly fat. Read her son’s story here. Unfortunately, he did end up dying at age 13, from a large inoperable cyst that impinged on his brainstem.  The ketogenic diet drastically improved his quality of life for the many years he was on it.  I hope anyway of you out there fighting cancer will get her book and pray to know if keto diet therapy is for you. Miriam’s web site is here for further information.

Keto for Cancer: Ketogenic Metabolic Therapy as a Targeted Nutritional Strategy by [Kalamian, Miriam]

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#Notbacktoschool, or How to Ease Back into Homeschooling after August is over!

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Sorry for the blogging hiatus! I’ve been having extended family time and I’m also working on a project that I will announce sometime in the next few months. I love summer! It’s that time of year when you hear talk of back to school, especially if you live in AZ. Public school there started last week, and our homeschool once-a-week group starts today! Yikes, I’m not ready for all that! If any of you have been reading my blog for a time, you know how much I hate to see summer end. I am enjoying summer vacation in Utah, in between a bunch of mini, informal family reunions. I love this time!

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My oldest child graduated from BYU-I a few weeks ago,  along with my son-in-law. That was a bit of reunion to be there for that. We traveled with my mother-in-law, and my parents, brother and his wife attended as well. We also got to see my son-in-law’s family who are dear, delightful people. I also got to visit with my husband’s cousins which was fun. We did a temple session at the Rexburg Temple, which was wonderful.

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Then I’ve been able to see dear friends, both new and old, on the down days when there hasn’t been stuff going on with my extended family. I got to get with my Veggie Gals girlfriends! Oh the joy! I love these ladies! Some of them were new to the group. It’s always great to find new kindred spirits.

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We made some new friends at a reservoir where the kids spent over half the time moving this giant log so they could float on it. God orchestrated this event so I could meet someone there that I’ve been wanting to meet for a over a year. God truly does “order and provide”!

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We actually had a wonderful formal reunion last week with my dad’s cousins. The hosting family had a giant inflatable water slide that gave the kids hours of joy. Then this week we have an informal reunion with a bunch of cousins, and next week we get to see more, with my daughter’s baby shower after she comes from Idaho and a cousin returning home from his LDS mission!

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In celebration of  #notbacktoschool for me and my family, I am posting some resources to ease into “back to school,” mode, in September, the proper time to start “school,” especially if you homeschool. Even then, I like most of the school work to be family work of preserving the harvest of gardens, reading, exploring nature, and other work of preparing home and yard for colder weather. This is hard to do when you live in AZ and you can harvest year round, LOL! I read aloud to the kids often through the year as they slice tomatoes for our food dryer. I like Diane Hopkins’ idea that formal schoolwork is easier done when it’s cold and blustery outside, what she calls “pencil weather.”

My explanation of organic education here.

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#notbacktoschool, playing Coup card game at Grandma’s house, with (l to r), a 14 year old practice scholar, a 12 year old practice scholar, and a love of learner, age 8

(To understand the terms of scholar, and love of learner, read my organic education post. )

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Sarah Mackenzie’s website, including her podcast and booklists. This is an amazing resource to help you help your kids fall in love with books, which is the best way to cultivate a lifelong love of learning.

This list of books for reluctant readers.

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We toured BYU with the cousins as we have in the past few years and saw Grandpa in his office. He loves to research and teach and mentor, and his books and papers show it.

My list of “19 Things to Do When You Feel Stuck as a Homeschool Mom.” I had a few years when I felt so depressed when the new school year rolled around. This list shows how I dealt with that.

Videos on how to do homeschooling from the attitude of “teaching from rest” with Sarah Mackenzie.

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At my parents’ hometown city celebration parade with cousins and bags to collect the candy tossed out. They were serious about getting as much as they could!

These science videos based on the Universal Model, which is true science.

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How to get your homeschooling child into college. I wrote this blog post when the son pictured above started college. Now he has graduated and is off to a new job in Texas as an engineer. #homeschoolingworks, #lemiworks

How to homeschool teens.

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We went to the Bean Museum at BYU with our cousins.

A year of living books to read as a DIY American History curriculum. If you teach LEMI’s Key of Liberty class, or have scholar phase kids taking it, these books can help make it more interesting.

My list of things to stop, things to keep, and things to start with homeschooling. It still applies to me for this new season.

The best books on history, government and politics for teenagers and adults.

Science videos with Steve Spangler.

Why I love the freedom of homeschooling.

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We helped Grandma and Grandpa with dejunking and yard work. I call the week we helped Grandma an informal cousins’ camp. My daughter and her cousin organized the bag and gift wrap closet and decided to make shoes out of bags, lol.

New ideas to make homeschooling more fun and meaningful.

Economics resources for teens and adults.

A list of videos, podcasts, and books to fan your love of learning as a mom.

Assurance that your kids will thank you for homeschooling them someday! My married daughter and my missionary son have thanked me as well. I’m grateful that I’ve been able to do it. It has been so worth the sacrifice!

Happy homeschooling! It’s best to keep it simple by reading books, doing service, connecting with friends with weekly groups, and playing! Enjoy and don’t stress too much about checklists!

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Utah Waldorf Conference Aug. 10-11

Announcing the 2018 Utah Waldorf Conference! I’m so excited about this conference my friend Krystelle is hosting in August. Read and comment below if you are interested in entering a random drawing for a giveaway of a two-day ticket, valued at $130! Winner will be announced on Friday July 27!

If you are ready to buy tickets right away, register by going here!

You can read my recap of a past Waldorf Conference here.

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Countdown to Pioneer Day Story #1: Pioneering the Gospel in Austria

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I got to attend this a-MAAAZ-ing family reunion a few days ago here in Utah, for my mother-in-law’s branch of the family tree, the Hiltons. The photo above shows just one branch of the branches.

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Perhaps I will share more about that later. The setting was incredible: trees, expansive lawns, a pond, swans, a canoe, mountains!

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I felt love, prosperity, beauty and family everywhere I turned. I truly felt I had stepped into heaven!

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Anyway,  while there I met someone who is descended from a person today’s pioneer story is about. He has married into the Hiltons. His ancestor is Thomas Biesinger, who was the first missionary of the restoration to share the gospel in Austria. His story is so incredible! After preaching the gospel he was thrown into prison. Then he got a letter from his missionary companion, who was sick with smallpox in a hospital. What happened next will knock your socks off!

You can read the whole story here.

I am grateful for people like Thomas Biesinger who have courageously shared and stood for truth. May we have the same courage!

You can read more stories like this I have curated in my Family Devotionals Ebook here. It’s on sale until the end of July, $3.99 instead of $9.99!

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