Another Take on the Hunger Games…My Friend Loves It, and My Latest Visit to TJED Land

Last week we got to go to TJED Land for one of the last times before GWC moves to Salt Lake City and southern Utah loses my affectionate label. I get as excited as a kid going to Disneyland whenever we go there, because I always discover treasures. (For those who don’t know, I call southern Utah “TJED Land” because that’s where George Wythe College is, the college started by Oliver DeMille. DeMille is the author of A Thomas Jefferson Education.)

I made it a quick trip for three days and two nights with my five out of seven kids and my mother-in-law. We made it a win/win deal by me providing the driving and vehicle and my mother in law providing the money for gas. The purpose was to observe my son in class at George Wythe College and go see our nephew/grandson/cousin in a Shakespeare play for his commonwealth school that my sis in law helped direct.

Instead of staying at my sis in law’s home like we usually do, we stayed at my friends, the Bowlers, so that said sis in law was not overwhelmed with hostess duty on top of putting on a play. The Bowlers are also in the commonwealth school of Washington county. (See http://lemimentortraining.com/School_Alternatives.php if you want to know what a commonwealth school is.) The mom and dad, Kent and Amy, do an amazing job of mentoring the Key of Liberty class, the Thomas Jefferson Youth Certification class, a math class, and the self-directed scholar class. Whew! Plus they are parents to six beautiful, talented, terrific children, all redheads. Their oldest son plays the piano fabulously. He is on a mission for the LDS church in Siberia but his music lives on while he is temporarily gone. You can order here http://simplyoriginalpiano.com/

Here’s my mother in law telling Amy about the benefits of chaparral  (aka Mormon tea, or Brigham tea) while they harvest some in her yard. “Why Amy!” my mil said, “You live in a veritable pharmacy!” Amy thought she asked where the nearest pharmacy was and started telling her how to get to Walgreen’s. “No, no,” said Grammie. “I’m talking about the herbs in your backyard.” 

I treasure any time I can get with the Bowlers. I met them through my sis in law, when I took my son down to TJED Land two years ago for his Youth for Freedom camp, and instantly fell in love them. I feel we are kindred spirits. Their son wrote a paper about Abraham Lincoln for his Thomas Jefferson Youth Certification class that changed the way I think about Lincoln. That got me thinking about the hero generation and why there was no hero generation during the War Between the States. That thought got us collaborating, so we did a presentation here for the 14-15 year olds at the TJEd Forum last year and are doing it again this year for the 12-13 year olds. http://www.tjedmarketplace.com/forums/slc/2011/youth-forum-ages-14-15/wanted-heroes-dead-alive

Then last September I got to see them for the self-directed scholars’ retreat for LEMI and then I got to see them again, to my surprise, at the May Masters of Influence event. Amy and I had a lot of fun visiting, sitting by each other. Our sons are classmates at George Wythe College so that gives us even more to talk about. I guess we even look alike, someone at the event even asked me if we are sisters. “No,” I said, “Just good friends!” We do have a lot in common, both went to BYU, both of us are LDS, we both have two daughters, who are about ten years apart in age, and a gaggle of boys, both do TJEd, both want Ron Paul to be president, and both belong to a commonwealth school. I am already planning on how we can see each other more for decades to come: have one of my kids marry on of hers! Which is a total possibility, we have kids similar ages with two sets that are opposite genders.

One difference between us though is that she likes the Hunger Games, and has read the books and seen the movies. So we discussed that. She said yes, there is violence, but it is depicted as awful and evidence of the corrupt society the characters are living in. She said that the book relates to today because we are living in a corrupt society. She said the book is useful for getting youth to face hard questions to prepare them for what may be hard times ahead. Then I came home and found in my email someone referring to a webinar here that explained why Hunger Games is good reading. http://leadershipeducationacademy.com/?page_id=2145

So that’s another take by people I respect, the folks at LEA (Leadership Education Academy) and my friend Amy. Amy also said when she reads violence she doesn’t picture it. She just glosses over it.  So that’s how she can read it. But I’m different. I picture the violence and then the scene replays over and over in my mind, making me more and more depressed. So, knowing that about me, I will not be reading the book. I can face those hard questions without reading it.

The Bowlers have some gorgeous scenery around their home that features a ravine in their backyard. It was the kids’ playground while we were there. They also have shelves and shelves of books. So while the kids played in the ravine, I read. I got too absorbed, and ignored a prompting I had to go check on my little guy. He slipped out with them and got stuck on the other side of the ravine amidst some thorns. Thank goodness for big brothers who can scramble quickly and rescued him!

The play that the commonwealth school did was wonderful.

My kids’ cousin had the starring role of Benedick in Much Ado About Nothing with a darling girl playing opposite him of Beatrice. It was fun to watch them. Grammie pronounced that it was worth paying for the gas to come from Provo to see the play.

So going to the GWC class was a dream come true and seeing the play was delightful. Both those events gave me sweet memories. Hearing the class members, talking with Kent and Amy and Grammie and finding new titles to read off their bookshelves provided the treasures I discovered. I have mentally added these titles to my “to-read” list. Who knows when I will get to them, as I am reading books for my online Finishing School and my Family Builder class.

First, my mother in law, who we all call Grammie, told me about this book written by her good friend, Phyllis Gunderson. It’s about the last days, with a mixture of ancient Mayan legends, Nostrodamus, and more prophecies, told in story form, to make anyone want to get their year’s supply of food:

I found this one on the Bowlers’ shelves: (what follows is a description from goodreads.com)

This is one of the most comprehensive treatises ever published on the doctrine of State sovereignty and the inherent right of a State to secede from the Union. Written by a New Orleans lawyer who was to have been one of Jefferson Davis’ counsel in the treason trial which never occurred, this book compiles extensive quotations from the earliest American statesmen, both before and after the ratification of the Constitution in 1789, which prove beyond all argument that the American people were never organized into a consolidated democracy, but had existed in their colonial condition as separate political bodies and continued to do so after their independence from Great Britain. The author singles out the tortured logic of Webster and Lincoln for heavy criticism, and shows that allegiance and treason are terms which have no meaning constitutionally if not in reference to a sovereign State. Also included are nine lengthy appendices outlining the ordaining acts of the original thirteen States in the Union, the changes made to the Constitution by the Southern States in 1861, the original forms of the Tenth Amendment, a review of Alexander Stephens’ Constitutional View of the War Between the States, etc.

I can’t help but think that states’ rights is an important doctrine to understand. Who knows but someday the state I live in may want to leave the union because of some hot political issue.

I also found this one:

and this one, that I can’t wait to read.

I have already read this book,

but had forgotten it is from a series, listed here http://www.regnery.com/pig.html

I can’t wait to read them all!

http://leadershipeducationacademy.com/?page_id=2145

Here’s my daughter dutifully studying for her Williamsburg Academy class with the incredible scenery in the backyard.

The kids had a ton of fun playing! Thank you Bowlers for the wonderful visit and your hospitality!

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The Best of Media for LDS Families


An LDS family has started a great web site, with a collection of videos, full-length, and clips, from YouTube and Vimeo, with high standards of morality and excellence. Go here to read the philosophy http://zionvision.com/movies/blog/2011/07/12/welcome-to-the-zionvision-movie-blog/

and here for the home page http://www.zionvision.com/


Here’s a quote from their web site:


The Internet is filled with information, some is critical to understand, most is not essential and the balance is very destructive. Of the critical information, that which is most often overlooked is the inspiring and sacred. Every concerned parent feels an anxiety and responsibility for the proper direction of education and leisure in the home. The Joseph Smith Foundation is an organization dedicated to finding and organizing uplifting materials from across the Internet and then making these materials available to families in their own home using the latest technology available. This is the inspiration behind ZionTube, a collection of the best known videos from YouTube, Vimeo, GodTube, etc, organized by category and made searchable from one site.


The videos above and below are samples of what they have on the site. Enjoy! I am excited to show these to my kids on Sunday afternoons, or for that matter, any afternoon!


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GWC Moving, My Thoughts

I am shocked but excited that George Wythe will be moving to SLC. We need the center of George Wythe to be here  in SLC where most of the people who support and love the college live.  I think it is actually a very good decision in order to recruit more students and make it more affordable for people to attend.  Now you can have a commuting student body who live at home with their families so the students dont have to pay room and board.  Brilliant!  Being close to the capitol will be a boost to the Eagle Forum during the legislative session also.  The EF needs good interns, volunteers and general people to help with their mission. 

Wouldnt it be great if they could have their own Institute of Religion?  That would be a terrific gathering place for YA to meet and mix with like minds. 

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GWC is Moving to SLC!

My son, who attends George Wythe College, in Cedar City, Utah, texted me today to tell me that the institution is moving to Salt Lake City by fall time. He said that it hasn’t been making enough money down in Cedar City. The powers that be at the school want to locate the school within six blocks of the capitol building so the students can get hands-on work with the government process. Dr. Schulties, the current president, will be leaving for a job in Rexburg Idaho. Here’s a statement by the school as to why it is not building on the property it acquired a few years ago in Monticello. http://newsletter.gw.edu/a/CampusNews/166

I have mixed feelings about this news. On the one hand, I am excited for the school. Hopefully this location will attract a lot more students, because it will be in a much larger city. The students will have a much wider job market to choose from than what Cedar has, so hopefully more students will attend because more students will be able to work at more jobs, and therefore pay tuition, than what Cedar would carry. Maybe the students will be able to pay a higher tuition as well. My son has a scholarship to pay his tuition but he searched a long time to find a part-time job to pay his living expenses.

He finally had to take a full-time job because that’s all that was available. That was really hard for him, to be a full-time student and employee. He earned enough and saved enough he was able to quit the job with enough money to carry him through the end of the school year. With GWC being in such a big city, more people will be able to get the GWC experience.

On the other hand I am sad because I always had this dream of moving down there and having the rest of my kids attend college in the small town atmosphere of Cedar at a small school, while living at home. I dreamed about knowing all their classmates (My son has only about 22 or so classmates in the combined freshman/sophomore class) and encouraging my kids to host parties at our home.

I actually wanted to live in New Harmony, which is 20 minutes from Cedar and about 40 from St. George, because I wanted to live in a really small town. The town has an LDS church, a gas station, and a public library. What more could you want?

Twenty years ago this fall, my husband’s sister attended the charter class of George Wythe when it was located at Duck Creek. She described the college to us and how the curriculum was all about the classics. I was intrigued but skeptical. Could you really get a great education by studying classics and talking about them? I had a few classes at BYU that involved classics and discussion, but I was really shy, not willing to discuss much, and I still had a conveyor belt education mentality. Now I believe that a student can get a great education by reading and discussing, instead of just hearing lectures.

She left after the first year because she decided she wanted to go to midwifery college on the Wasatch front. That same sister was there, practicing her midwifery skills, when my son was born, the one who is at George Wythe College now. I have enjoyed talking to here about her experiences and I have loved traveling to southern Utah for Youth for Freedom camps (TJEd based summer camps for youth). I just have all these memories of GWC being in southern Utah. I am sad that the era of TJEd Land being in southern Utah is coming to a close.

This is a bust of George Wythe, the college’s namesake.

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What’s all the Fuss About Monumental the Movie?

I didn’t like Kirk Cameron’s character in Growing Pains over 20 years ago because he seemed like a lazy kid. But I enjoyed the character he played in Fireproof a few years ago. Did you know he has a wife and six kids now? I am excited to see his latest movie, Monumental, about the Pilgrims, especially since I found out a while ago that I am descended from not just one, but four of the Pilgrims: John Howland, his wife Elizabeth Tilley, and her parents. When I was 10 my family toured Plymouth Plantation over Thanksgiving weekend. Little did we know we were treading the sacred ground of my mother’s ancestors. Now I know where my grandfather’s hardy genes come from that allowed him to grow a farm in the desert of southern Nevada.

Here’s a great interview Kirk did with the guys at Wallbuilders (I listen to the Wallbuilders podcasts at http://wallbuilderslive.com  for a Christian, limited-government perspective on the news and politics). I really like David Barton, the founder of Wallbuilders, although I don’t agree with everything he says. The interview with Kirk is here http://wallbuilderslive.com/archives.asp?d=201203 then scroll down the page to the March 22 interview.

if you don’t know if Monumental the Movie is playing in your city, go here and check and if it’s not, request the movie for your area http://www.monumentalmovie.com/ My city already has the required 500 requests so it will be coming soon!

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It Is Garden Time

Now is the time to be planning and/or planting your garden.  You may think it is too cool but the cool weather of Spring is just what peas, lettuce, spinach, cilantro, beets, carrots, other root vegetables, and cabbage, cauliflower, and other plants in the cabbage family prefer.

Tomatoes, peppers, squash, cucumber, melons, beans, and basil prefer warmer weather and are best planted after your last average frost date unless protected from likely frosts. Even if you don’t plant now you can plan what, how many, and when to plant. Then you can prepare the garden area.

To find your frost free dates visit one of the following sites

Frost-Free-Calculator

Frost Free Data

For more gardening information check out my website and/or sign up for free weekly gardening tips – sent to your inbox.

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What are Some Good Movies You Recommend?

Fall and winter are usually the time I think about movies because it seems natural to snuggle around the electronic hearth when it’s cold and dark outside. Last night we went and played baseball as a family for FHE. It was so fun I thought, we should do this more often now that it’s lighter in the evening.

My friend Shauna just asked for movie recommendations though so I thought I would help her out by asking for suggestions from all of you.

I have liked:

17 Miracles, especially since it’s about my mother-in-law’s grandfather and great-grandfather, the Savage men

Johnny Tremain (I love the music in it, so cheery)

Emma Smith: My Story (we finally just watched it and loved it)

Fireproof

Little Women, the one with Wynona Rider

Little Men

Babette’s Feast

Feature Films movies

the Duggar Family episodes on youtube (not really movies I know, but still fun and inspiring as well;

the Sarah Plain and Tall series (Skylark, etc.)

Akeelah and the Bee

Miss Potter

A Man for All Seasons

I also like to watch Moody Science classics on youtube. Just do a search on youtube for that phrase. There are a little cheesy but hark back to a simpler time when life was cleaner, which makes me feel good. They focus on believing in God and science.

You can get signed up at http://puritanpicks.com and have a service like Netflix that only stocks family friendly movies. A similar site is http://faithandfamilyflix.com. Cool!

Here’s a list from my friend Michelle F. Thank you Michelle!

1) October Sky (it’s PG, though it does hint at one of the boys having an abusive father)

2)”Emma” the Gweneth Paltrow version, it’s PG and teaches a really good lesosn about not gossiping or judging people (romanitic ending so your girls may go for it more than your boys)

3) Mr Blandings Builds His Dream House, Cary Grant, HILARIOUS family movie about buying and renovating a home.

4) What’s Up Doc? hilarious&wacky Barbara Streisand movie with a lot of quotable lines

5) Singing in the Rain, Donald O’Conner, Gene Kelley, Debbie Reynolds

6) Seven Brides For Seven Brothers, Howard Keel and Jane Powel

7) The Bachelor and Bobbie Soxer, Cary Grant, Merna Loy, Shirley Temple

8) Easter Parade, Judy Garland and Fred Astaire

9) Night at the Opera, best Marx Brothers movie EVER, very quotable.

10) To Kill a Mocking bird, Gregory Peck

11) Ball of Fire, Gregory Peck and Barbara Stanwick, a night clob dancer hides form the police with 7 professors writing an encyclopedia–HILARIOUS!

12) The Absent Minded Professor, 161 version Red McMurray, the Father on My Three Sons

13) The Tooth Fairy, Dwayne Johnson, Ashley Jud, julie Andrews

14) Pete’s Dragon

15) Court Jester, Danny Kay

16) White Christmas, Bing Crosby and Danny Kaye

17) Dolphin Tale, Ashley Jud Harry Connick Jr.

18) Any of the Mr. Bean movies, Mr Bean Takes a Holiday, etc., very funny, he’s a MASTER of physical comedy.

20) Cheaper By the Dozen and Bells on Their Toes, the old version

21) Yours, Mine Ours, 1968 version Lucille Ball and Henry Fonda

22) Ben Hur, 1959 Charlton Heston

23) Life is Beautiful, Italian with subtitles, this should be viewed by older children since the thematic content is heavy, Holocaust.

24) The Happiest Millionaire

25) Ever After

26) Hans Christian Anderson, Danny Kaye


An LDS family has started a great web site, with a collection of videos, full-length, and clips, from YouTube and Vimeo, with high standards of morality and excellence. Go here to read the philosophy http://zionvision.com/movies/blog/2011/07/12/welcome-to-the-zionvision-movie-blog/

and here for the home page http://www.zionvision.com/

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Easter Treats

I wanted to share what I get my children for Easter.  We keep it simple since I dont want them to think that the holiday of Easter is only to get easter eggs.  I put craisins, and nuts inside the easter eggs.  I also used to put avocados in their easter stockings (we have knitted stockings made by our Great Aunt Pat).  But the funny thing is that my nephew Nate figured out who is the real purveyor for our Easter treats when he saw the avocados.  He said “I looked at the avocados and healthy treats and thought, ‘The Easter Bunny doesnt give healthy treats, only Shauna would do that. I think the Easter Bunny is Shauna!’ .  So now I stopped the avocados and just do healthy munchies.

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Who Likes to Study and Compete for Cash Prizes?

Who likes to study hard and compete for prizes, like cash, plus other stuff? Ever since my spelling bee days I have loved studying, memorizing, and winning academic competitions. If you have kids like that, or are like that yourself, please sign them up and yourself for the 2012 Cultural Literacy Bee held in conjunction with the 2012 TJEd Family Forum on Friday May 4 at 7 PM in SLC. You can get all the rules and study guides here http://www.cvent.com/events/salt-lake-city-2012-thomas-jefferson-education-family-forum/custom-36-8ccbac84ea4f4a5689a9edc89929e9d7.aspx

Deadline to register is April 15th. We need at least 25 people to sign up or it will be canceled, so don’t delay, go sign up!

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How Does Free Agency Apply to Economics…and Great Opportunity for Youth to Learn About It

A while ago my daughter Virtue studied economics in her online school, Williamsburg Academy (http://wacademy.org), as part of her government class. They watched these cool videos that promote free market economics, also known as Austrian-based economics. They are great! I so wish I that I had been taught that free market economics is right and Keynesian economics is wrong. Hardly anybody wants to come right out and say that, but it’s true. Most want to dance around the issue and pretend that Keynesian economics is the solution to all problems.

My husband and I both took Econ 110 at BYU, the “Lord’s University.” Yet even there, the professors don’t want to come out and say which econ philosophy is right. My husband distinctly remembers the professor talking about the two philosophies. He said, “Now I am not going to tell you which one is right. That is for you to decide.” Even today, over 30 years later, my husband wishes he had just come out and said. Shouldn’t the concept of free agency be applied to economics if we are to be truly free? If you think that our market is free, please review history and the events of the past years in the U.S. with the government bail out of different industries.

These music videos are rap parodies of the competition of the century, namely, the economics “fight” between Hayek, proponent of Austrian economics, also known as free market economics or laissez faire economics, and Keynes, the founder of Keynesian economics. Does freedom apply to economics? Should markets be free from government control as much as possible? The study of economics raises these important questions. A great place to study and learn the answers is http://fee.org and also the web site that is home to the producers of these videos http://econstories.tv

The first video compares the Keynesian view that government should spend money to stimulate the economy to an alcoholic drinking more and more, thinking that more and more alcohol will help him. Eventually, a bust, or hangover happens. Not fun! The second video likens the economics competition to a battle in a courtroom and a boxing match. You can go here to get the lyrics http://econstories.tv/2011/04/28/fight-of-the-century-music-video/

I just got word from my friend Heather Nelson about a great opportunity for high school students in the Utah area to learn more about free market economics this summer. This is what she says, “FEE is offering a free week of economic study for youth ages 14-18 in the Salt Lake City area. I have learned a great deal from studying the writings of FEE and I hope to pass this along to anyone else who would like to send their youth to learn more about economics from the Austrian model. This includes accommodations and meals. “

http://www.fee. org/seminars/ high-school/ #schedules
http://www.fee. org/seminars/ high-school/ parents/

Please tell them that Heather Nelson referred you if you decide to send your youth.

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