Come Have Fun With Us as We Discuss Womanly Secrets for Stronger Homes and Families

It’s time to get ready for another semester of the Zion Finishing School. It has evolved into a time to visit heart to heart with other LDS mom friends over classic, meaty works that will transform your life if you let them.  You will hopefully get inspired to be a better woman, wife, mom, and homemaker. This is all online so geography is not a problem. My girlfriend Michelle who lives in Guam has been attending and loves it. We will meet Wednesdays from 2 to 4 PM MST.

I didn’t have much luck getting young women to attend last semester to learn about graces and arts that would “finish” their education. Even my own daughter felt too busy to attend. Young women are still encouraged to attend, but the focus is less on skills and more on relationships and principles found in classic works. Sorry, you will have to learn how to make a pie on your own, but this class will still be totally worth it! You will learn the secrets to help you “finish” your education in being a happy woman, wife, mom, and homemaker.

We will be using the book, Daughters in My Kingdom: the History and Work of Relief Society for the first week of the month. You can read that online here http://lds.org/relief-society/daughters-in-my-kingdom/manual?lang=eng. We will discuss the selected reading from the book plus an episode about the book at mormonchannel.org.

The second week of the month we will discuss a work relating to learning about being a better wife.I can’t wait to discuss the love letters between John and Abigail Adams, which is one of the works!

The third week we will be discussing a book or article about a lost womanly or homemaking art.

The last week of the month we will discuss a great classic work of fiction about females in relationships. Go here to get the complete schedule http://treeoflifemothering.ning.com/page/an-online-finishing-school-for

We will meet on Wednesdays starting January 18. To get us warmed up for the monthly schedule, we will discuss the free Headgates ebook from http://headgates.org. on January 18 and then on January 25 we will discuss the sequel to Headgates, called Parenting. I will get the details posted soon on how to get that article.

Cost is $24 a month, with the two weeks in January part of February’s tuition. This is a super deal for so much fun, bonding, and a great womanly education!

Please comment below if you are interested in attending and I will email you payment instructions.

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A Great Deal for You: the Family Builder Program on Sale!

Diann Jeppson, author of the TJED Home Companion book, has a great deal for you! She has written a super course to teach people step by step how to improve the culture of education in the home based on the classics. You can learn about it over at http://leadershipeducationfamilybuilder.com. She was offering the program on sale for $69 instead of $99. The sale ended on New Year’s Eve, but I have asked her to extend the sale. She has agreed! The sale continues until January 14th.

This is a super deal! If you are new to homeschooling, or a veteran, or even if you aren’t a homeschooler, and want to improve the chore system in your home and the educational culture, you will benefit from doing this course.

I will be starting a course on Friday January 20. It will be in Layton UT. If anyone is interested in doing the course, please comment below, and mention whether you would prefer doing it online or in person. The class will meet once a month, normally on the first Friday of the month, after the January 20th meeting. It will go through August. Cost is $10 a month or $60 for the course if you pay it all up front. This is in addition to the Family Builder program that you purchase at the link below.

CHRISTMAS SALE!

The Complete
Leadership Education
Family Builder Program

$99 $69

Extended to January 14th at midnight!

Click
 
HERE to purchase the Complete Program for $69 (Regular price $99)

Includes all session audio lectures and implementation guides
www.LeadershipEducationFamilyBuilder.com


Could your children be more inspired about learning?

Are you constantly working to impact the quality of your children’s education?

Do you have a strong vision for what you hope to achieve as a parent?

What’s on your Master Plan?

Would you love to improve the effectiveness of your family devotional?

Have you read any great classics with your children lately?

Wish you knew how to expand your family library, and improve your family reading time?

How are the chores going? Do you wish you had some better tools to help the children learn to work?

The Complete Leadership Education Family Builder Program includes session recorded lectures and implementation guides on:

Relationships
Creating an Inspiring Environment
Responding Effectively
You,Not Them
A Vision Walk
Your Family Mission Statement
Your Master Inspire Plan
Classics & Family Reading
Devotional & Your Core Cannon
Cultural Literacy
Chores & Adult Skills
Your Family Schedule
Mentor Dates & Planners
Mom Schools
The Liberal Arts Study Project
The Closet
Putting It All Together
View session descriptions HERE
Note: All sessions may also be purchased individually
Buy the Complete program NOW for only $69! 

Includes all recorded lectures and session guides

Regular Price: $99
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Holiday Ball 2011 Pictures

We had a glamorous evening last night of “strictly ballroom” dancing at the annual Holiday Ball put on by Silhouette Ballroom Dance Studio of Bountiful, UT.

I always love seeing the beautiful hair styles the young ladies come up with.

My 16 year old daughter decided she didn’t want to go this year because she wanted to “go to bed early.”  She also offered to babysit! I jumped at that offer, believe me! I know that sounds strange for a 16 year old girl, but she has learned to tune into her body this year and that she feels better when she gets to bed earlier. She already had lots of late nights with all of the other holiday festivities we had. We missed her but I totally enjoyed not having to find a babysitter and leaving my 2 year old at home instead of chasing him around like we did last year. She figured out that “going to bed early” and “babysitting” are not exactly synonymous. I was just glad everyone was asleep by the time we got home.

Here are lots of photos. This next one is my friends, all adult couples, reliving their teenage days by dancing to an early ’80s pop song and then the next one is Brother Shingleton moonwalking.

I am blessed to have a husband who loves to dance and I am so grateful. He was on the first ballroom dance BYU team that took the world championship in Blackpool England so he knows his stuff. Dancing with him put a huge smile on my face last night, especially the swing dancing. I wasn’t so good at the slow waltzes; for some reason it’s harder for me to count to the beat and dance slowly. I wanted to smile but it probably looked like I was being tortured as I worked to keep count.

We had an awesome floor show by the talented youth who attend  the ballroom dance studio.

I missed my daughter being there, but it was good to know that my 2 year old was with a babysitter he knows. I felt calm knowing he would easily go to sleep with her. I also missed Valor being there. He took ballroom dance for years before he left for college and would have loved being there. He came bright and early on the bus the next morning to get his wisdom teeth pulled. He couldn’t come any earlier because of his job.

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Christmas 2011 Memories

We had a lovely Christmas Eve and Christmas Day and now we are having a great post-Christmas time. Three kids are away playing with cousins, one is home being a scholar catching up on work he should have been doing on days he decided not to be a scholar, but be in core phase (he is in the “practice scholar” phase), one is asleep, one is at his job to support his living expenses for being a scholar at college (see http://gw.edu), and one is out shopping with Grandma for a present that got postponed to after Christmas sales. 

These photos are from our trip to go ice skating on Christmas Eve. We usually go sledding on Christmas Eve, a tradition we picked up from my husband’s sister’s family. By “we” I mean, the kids and my husband. Usually I stay home and fix food while a nursing baby sleeps and I also wrap a few presents. But this year my baby’s in that stage where he’s growing out of being a baby and wants to be part of the fun. If I don’t have to hold a baby or sling a baby in the snow then I want to go have fun too. (Not that I have never done that. I remember taking Venture to the Winter Olympics in 2002 when has 7 months old in a sling.)

We have a traditional Christmas Eve Bethlehem supper that I learned about doing from Linda and Richard Eyre back when I did Joy School with my firstborn, who now goes to college. We have fish and flat bread and olives and cheese and grape juice, things that people ate back in the Holy Land when the Savior was born. We always have rice too because we got this recipe from a neighbor when we lived in Provo. He was born in Africa but his father was from Syria so we considered this recipe “Middle Eastern.” I actually don’t know, however, if our neighbor made this recipe up or if he got it from his father. Now those neighbors live in California and are divorced so I don’t know if I will ever find out.

Anyway, every year it is stressful for me to make because it takes chicken bouillion cubes, which I normally don’t stock, and vermicelli. Every year I have to remember to buy those ingredients right before Christmas. To make this recipe You have to brown the pasta in oil until it turns dark brown, then add water quickly before the whole pot doesn’t burn, then add the rice. Then because we use brown rice it takes 45 minutes to cook. This year I finally got smart and said, I don’t want to make that rice this year. Whoever heard of rice in the Holy Land? They probably didn’t eat rice there back then. Before I decided that though I had started making a chicken dish in the crockpot the day before so i could get the chicken juices from the whole thing to make chicken stock. I tend to be indecisive on big things like this and wait until the last minute to decide, a trait I think I get from my mom. Anyway, since learning more about Nourishing Traditions and Weston Price I have slowly been transforming our eating and kitchen habits. Now I won’t want to or need to every buy chicken bouillion cubes. 

I found this recipe from the Large Family Logistics web site  here. http://largefamilylogistics.blogspot.com/2011/12/cranberry-pork-roast.html (The title says “Cranberry Pork Roast” but scroll down and you will get directions for making chicken stock.) I like the simplicity of making chicken in the crockpot for dinner and then throwing the bones back in with water to simmer over night to make stock. The maker of the recipe at Large Family Logistics doesn’t mention using vinegar, but the Nourishing Traditions people recommend putting a little in to help leach the minerals off the bones into the stock. Just use a tablespoon or two. One time I put way too much in and my whole family had to gag the resulting soup down, it was way too sour! Another one of my infamous oops in the kitchen. I’ve had several, trust me.)

My firstborn Valor was able to drive home from college on Christmas Eve morning thanks to his roommate loaning him a car after said roommate flew out of state to go home for Christmas. We are so thankful for that! He would have come home sooner with friends who live around here but Valor had to work at his new job up until the Friday before Christmas Eve and then get back to work Monday afternoon so we got two precious days with him. We weren’t really sure if he would be coming home for Christmas even because for a while he didn’t even know if he would get Christmas Day off.. I was ready to drive us all down to his condo to have Christmas with him somehow but when we talked with him the Sunday before as we had a mentor meeting with him over the phone we learned of his plans to come home.

Venture at 10 years old was so excited to make a banner for him that said Welcome Home. I love seeing him being at an age where he leads forth to connect with people and have some drama. He didn’t just want to hang the sign up, he wanted to have Valor drive through it. But then my other son pulled a trick and went down the street and intercepted Valor and they went around the block and parked and came home through the vacant lot.. He ran through the banner instead of driving through it. After hugs and greetings and some unloading we had a nice lunch with him with the chicken broth I had made into homemade chicken noodle soup and then we went ice skating. Usually we go sledding but our sleds are somewhat broken and there’s not much snow this year. We decided instead of buying new sleds we would go rent some ice skates.

The ice skating was so much fun. The little community of Huntsville, Utah has an ice sheet in their city park that the city maintains. I love that small town community spirit of people pitching together to create something that everyone can benefit from. Anyone can skate there for free. A little restaurant across the street from the park rents ice skates. This is my kind of town! The LDS church is also across the street and it has a bell that rings every hour and half hour. I love the sound of bells! I am very grateful that my friend KeeNan who is also one of my La Leche League Leader friends told me about this place. She lives in Huntsville and invited us up a few winters ago, with the offer of using ice skates she has collected from D.I. That’s what I call keeping the Christmas spirit all through the year. She could have not told anyone about this great recreational opportunity and kept it to herself, but instead, she spread the news and also started stocking sizes of ice skates for people besides her family. It makes me wonder, what are the resources I know about that I could be letting people know about.

We took Bugsy’s booster seat and chair and pushed him around on the ice. Everybody had fun! The little ones got tired and more cold before the big ones did so my fun got over sooner too. We piled them in the car to get warm and I drove around town. Here’s a photo of President David O. McKay’s home in Hunstville, a few blocks away from the ice sheet.

Of course I was just itching to know if KeeNan had her baby. She was due with #6 on Dec. 18. I didn’t want to call her to bug her because I hate that when people call me when I’m overdue with a baby to see if I’ve had the baby yet. I decided to swing by her home to see if there was a sign up announcing the birth. Turns out, her husband and kids were in the front yard as I drove by and shared the happy news that the baby had been born a few days before, at home, as planned. I was so happy for KeeNan.

We came home and had our supper by candlelight and then cleaned up. I also served pumpkin pie (long story as to why I had it be dessert for a Bethlehem supper). As luck would have it the dishwasher had broken that morning, but the normal kitchen cleanup people for Saturday night hand washed.

We built our fire in the fireplace and acted out Luke 2, with me playing the piano while we sang to accompany some of the story. Then the little kids got out carrots for Santa’s reindeer and a piece of pie for Santa and we tucked them into bed with one page of me reading aloud A Christmas Carol.

We broke with tradition this year and let the older ones stay up and help Santa. It was nice to go to bed before 2 AM because of their help. The next morning we went to church at 9 and then came home and started the festivities. It was nice to have church to help me focus my thoughts on the Savior. During the passing of the sacrament I had this overwhelming feeling of love come over me. It was a special witness to me of how much God loves each and every one of us, as manifested through his baby boy, Jesus Christ. I thought of KeeNan’s recent baby being born and just marveled at the gift of life we each have.

Cowboy and Princessa each got a bike. They were super happy about that! I tried to do the three gifts of the Magi this year for each kid (the gift of wonder/gold, the gift of need/myrrh. and the gift of frankincense/meaning) but it didn’t quite work out exactly because my husband wanted to get the kids who needed bikes bikes and I had other plans for the gift of wonder. So I guess the bikes were gifts of need, but I had already picked something for the gifts of need. Oh well. So far nobody has stopped to count how many presents each one got. Every year I learn to somehow strike a balance between what I want and what my husband wants, and between planning way ahead of time and waiting for surprises to happen, like getting some gift cards anonymously given to us that would allow us to get a bit more. Of course, some planning and work has to happen or no gifts would appear.

I made Christmas a lot simpler a long time ago by not baking much or doing neighbor gifts or getting tons of stuff to fill the kids stockings. They each get a clementine, candy, nuts and one gift in their stocking that is not a trinket but something useful. Eventually I want to get to the point of having each child draw names and fill that person’s stocking so that each person gets to be Santa to someone else, and keep it a secret. That’s what my friend Michele does in her family. This year I decided that each sibling would just give to one person by drawing a name. In the past my husband has insisted they each experience the joy of giving by giving to all the siblings. I appreciate his desire. I feel like though it makes it hard for me to help all the little ones pick out something that is useful, not just junk, and the shopping with all the kids can be a nightmare, so I started doing it all for them, with their consultation, online. I would love to help them each make handmade gifts or buy them at  KeeNan’s holiday marketplace she does with her daughter. We are slowly transitioning to that I think.  It just takes more time and planning ahead, which is something I am still working on. Big surprise I know.

Later in the day we had Christmas dinner at Dan’s mother’s home with one of her other sons and two of her friends. It was supposed to be the year we have Christmas at his mom’s home and Thanksgiving dinner at my parents’ home, but because of a long story, we had both dinners both times at his mom’s home. We also had a supposed-to-be-Christmas-Eve-dinner-but-it’s-really-the-22nd-of-December dinner at her home. So three dinners at my inlaws but none with my side of the family. I kept the grumbling to a minimum by reminding myself that we have almost monthly Sunday dinners with my side. It would have been fun to linger longer there and delve into the dinner table conversation topic of the Crusades and the Muslims but the kids were itching to go to my side of the family where they would have cousins to play with.

So we went to my parent’s home and got to open presents there and play with cousins, until we peeled ourselves away from the fun at 9:30 PM. It was a lovely day. Not a perfect Christmas day (there were still parts of my house dirty, it was stressful as usual to have lunch, clean up, and fix food for dinner later on basically at the same time so we could leave for the hour and fifteen minute drive to the family dinner. I also didn’t give all the gifts I had planned to give) but lovely enough. Happy Birthday Jesus! Thanks to Thee I have my life, the promise of peace in this life and eternal life to come, and many more Christmases, I hope,  to give more of the gifts I want to give. And one of these years I think we will just stay home and actually relax on Christmas Day.

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Dance the Night Away

I love Christmas time and I love balls! This event combines the magic of both. I found the most beautiful description of a ball in Tolstoy’s Anna Karenina. It makes my heart long to go to a ball. Well, here’s one coming up. Every year my children’s ballroom dance teacher hosts an evening of elegance and dancing magic with her “Strictly Ballroom Holiday Ball.”

It’s Thursday, December 29, 6pm – 11pm at the University of Utah Union Ballroom. (Google that for directions). Tickets at the door are $12  for youth and $20 per couple

Dress is formal if you want or Sunday best.


Hope to see you there!


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My Christmas Gift to You!

Wednesday night we did our annual watch of A Muppet Christmas Carol. I love the song in there about “When you feel love that’s Christmas!” Then last night we did It’s a Wonderful Life. I’ve watched that movie at least dozen times, and every time I watch it I notice something new. This time it was a little plaque on the wall of the office of the Bailey Building and Loan that said, “The only things that you can take with you are what you’ve given away.” Every time I watch that movie I get teary-eyed at the end. This time I noticed the role of Mary more. It was her leadership at the end of the story that brings forth the outpouring of love and money from George’s friends. May we all be that kind of partner to our husbands when they are in need, and for those of you not married, may you attract that kind of “equal partnership” marriage. Maybe Clarence would not have gained his angel wings if it hadn’t been for George’s angel wife.

Two nights ago we finished A Christmas Thief by Carol Lynn Pearson. if you haven’t read it, I urge you to do so! It is the sweetest story about the transformation Jesus can have on people. It’s a short story, you could read it one night to your kids.

My Christmas gift to you all is this short story retold by Leo Tolstoy. I have become fascinated by him. He was wealthy and gave up his wealth when he converted to Christianity. I’ve been reading Tolstoy’s Anna Karenina and love it, especially the description of the ball. Anyway, this is another “sweetest story” (there are so many) about sharing the love of Christ. May we each be transformed by Christ and treat our family and neighbors as He would.

Papa Papanov, a French folktale retold by Leo Tolstoy

It was Christmas Eve and although it was still afternoon, lights had begun to appear in the shops and houses of the little Russian village, for the short winter day was nearly over.  Excited children scurried indoors and now only muffled sounds of chatter and laughter escaped from closed shutters.

Old Papa Panov, the village shoemaker, stepped outside his shop to take one last look around.  The sounds of happiness, the bright lights and the faint but delicious smells of Christmas cooking reminded him of past Christmas times when his wife had still been alive and his own children little.  Now they had gone.  His usually cheerful face, with the little laughter wrinkles behind the round steel spectacles, looked sad now.  But he went back indoors with a firm step, put up the shutters and set a pot of coffee to heat on the charcoal stove. Then, with a sigh, he settled in his big armchair.

Papa Panov did not often read, but tonight he pulled down the big old family Bible and, slowly tracing the lines with one forefinger, he read again the Christmas story.  He read how Mary and Joseph, tired by their journey to Bethlehem, found no room for them at the inn, so that Mary’s little baby was born in the cowshed.

“Oh, dear, oh, dear!” exclaimed Papa Panov, “if only they had come here! I would have given them my bed and I could have covered the baby with my patchwork quilt to keep him warm.”

He read on about the wise men who had come to see the baby Jesus, bringing him splendid gifts.  Papa Panov’s face fell.  “I have no gift that I could give him,” he thought sadly.

Then his face brightened.  He put down the Bible, got up and stretched his long arms t the shelf high up in his little room.  He took down a small, dusty box and opened it.  Inside was a perfect pair of tiny leather shoes.  Papa Panov smiled with satisfaction.  Yes, they were as good as he had remembered- the best shoes he had ever made.  “I should give him those,” he decided, as he gently put them away and sat down again.

He was feeling tired now, and the further he read the sleeper he became.  The print began to dance before his eyes so that he closed them, just for a minute.   In no time at all Papa Panov was fast asleep.

And as he slept he dreamed.  He dreamed that someone was in his room and he know at once, as one does in dreams, who the person was.  It was Jesus.

“You have been wishing that you could see me, Papa Panov.” he said kindly, “then look for me tomorrow.  It will be Christmas Day and I will visit you.  But look carefully, for I shall not tell you who I am.”  

When at last Papa Panov awoke, the bells were ringing out and a thin light was filtering through the shutters.  “Bless my soul!” said Papa Panov.  “It’s Christmas Day!”

He stood up and stretched himself for he was rather stiff.  Then his face filled with happiness as he remembered his dream.  This would be a very special Christmas after all, for Jesus was coming to visit him.  How would he look?  Would he be a little baby, as at that first Christmas?  Would he be a grown man, a carpenter- or the great King that he is, God’s Son?  He must watch carefully the whole day through so that he recognized him however he came.  

Papa Panov put on a special pot of coffee for his Christmas breakfast, took down the shutters and looked out of the window.  The street was deserted, no one was stirring yet.  No one except the road sweeper.  He looked as miserable and dirty as ever, and well he might!  Whoever wanted to work on Christmas Day – and in the raw cold and bitter freezing mist of such a morning?

Papa Panov opened the shop door, letting in a thin stream of cold air.  “Come in!” he shouted across the street cheerily.  “Come in and have some hot coffee to keep out the cold!”

The sweeper looked up, scarcely able to believe his ears.  He was only too glad to put down his broom and come into the warm room. His old clothes steamed gently in the heat of the stove and he clasped both red hands round the comforting warm mug as he drank. 

Papa Panov watched him with satisfaction, but every now and them his eyes strayed to the window.  It would never do to miss his special visitor.  

“Expecting someone?”  the sweeper asked at last.  So Papa Panov told him about his dream.

“Well, I hope he comes,” the sweeper said, “you’ve given me a bit of Christmas cheer I never expected to have.   I’d say you deserve to have your dream come true.”  And he actually smiled.  

When he had gone, Papa Panov put on cabbage soup for his dinner, then went to the door again, scanning the street.  He saw no one.  But he was mistaken.  Someone was coming.  

The girl walked so slowly and quietly, hugging the walls of shops and houses, that it was a while before he noticed her.  She looked very tired and she was carrying something.  As she drew nearer he could see that it was a baby, wrapped in a thin shawl.  There was such sadness in her face and in the pinched little face of the baby, that Papa Panov’s heart went out to them.  

“Won’t you come in,” he called, stepping outside to meet them.  “You both need a warm by the fire and a rest.”

The young mother let him shepherd her indoors and to the comfort of the armchair.  She gave a big sigh of relief.

“I’ll warm some milk for the baby,” Papa Panov said, “I’ve had children of my own- I can feed her for you.”  He took the milk from the stove and carefully fed the baby from a spoon, warming her tiny feet by the stove at the same time.

“She needs shoes,” the cobbler said.  

But the girl replied, “I can’t afford shoes, I’ve got no husband to bring home money.  I’m on my way to the next village to get work.”

Sudden thought flashed through Papa Panov’s mind.  He remembered the little shoes he had looked at last night.  But he had been keeping those for Jesus.  He looked again at the cold little feet and made up his mind.

“Try these on her,” he said, handing the baby and the shoes to the mother.  The beautiful little shoes were a perfect fit.   The girl smiled happily and the baby gurgled with pleasure.

“You have been so kind to us,” the girl said, when she got up with her baby to go.  “May all your Christmas wishes come true!”

But Papa Panov was beginning to wonder if his very special Christmas wish would come true.  Perhaps he had missed his visitor?  He looked anxiously up and down the street.  There were plenty of people about but they were all faces that he recognized.  There were neighbors going to call on their families.  They nodded and smiled and wished him Happy Christmas!  Or beggars- and Papa Panov hurried indoors to fetch them hot soup and a generous hunk of bread, hurrying out again in case he missed the Important Stranger.

All too soon the winter dusk fell.  When Papa Panov next went to the door and strained his eyes, he could no longer make out the passers-by.  most were home and indoors by now anyway.  He walked slowly back into his room at last, put up the shutters, and sat down wearily in his armchair.

 So it had been just a dream after all.  Jesus had not come.

Then all at once he knew that he was no longer alone in the room.

 This was not dream for he was wide awake.  At first he seemed to see before his eyes the long stream of people who had come to him that day.  He saw again the old road sweeper, the young mother and her baby and the beggars he had fed.  As they passed, each whispered, “Didn’t you see me, Papa Panov?”

“Who are you?” he called out, bewildered.  

Then another voice answered him.  It was the voice from his dream- the voice of Jesus.  

“I was hungry and you fed me,” he said.  “I was naked and you clothed me.  I was cold and you warmed me.  I came to you today in everyone of those you helped and welcomed.”

Then all was quiet and still.  Only the sound of the big clock ticking.  A great peace and happiness seemed to fill the room, overflowing Papa Panov’s heart until he wanted to burst out singing and laughing and dancing with joy.

“So he did come after all!” was all that he said.



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Focus on the Family Radio Theater link

8 years ago when we lived in Provo our daily schedule always included turning on the Christian radio station at a certain time for story time!  When we moved to Vernal I thought we were saying goodbye to that forever.  We have been lucky enough to find a few FOTF productions in our local library, but when I finally hit on the fuzzy Christian station at the right time of day, there it was!!  AND they mentioned online listening–what an idea!  Of course they have Adventures in Oddessy and their radio theater online!!  Hooray!

http://www.focusonthefamily.com/popups/media_player.aspx?Tab=Shows&subcategory=RadioTheatre

 

Another fun audio source online is www.jonathanpark.com  They play one episode each week.  These are very fun to listen to and teach creation-based science in a way the whole family will love.

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We Should Do this More Often

So after we watched the Mormon Messages for the FHE lesson (see previous blog post), my 10 year old fireball of energy suggested something I really wanted to do for the activity (which is rare): have a fire in the fireplace. Of course you can’t have a fire in the fireplace without sitting by it, and that just begs for stories. So even though we had just had a lesson, I was able to sneak more “lessons” in by reading stories. Love it! By the end of the day, I just want to sit and read. 

We have had a fire in the fireplace a lot since the windstorm, when we did it out of necessity to keep warm with the power outage, thanks to my fireball. I have never built a fire in the fireplace, always leaving it to my husband to do or my older son. Well, this fireball proved to me that he was old enough to do it with my husband gone. My husband used to think it was a real chore to do a fire but now with my son leading out and helping, I like to think he doesn’t think it’s so bad. We had a fire on Saturday night after our Christmas shopping to Smith and Edwards and dinner on Saturday, then we did it Sunday night, and then last night.

It is so fun! I love the way the house smells all smoky and the snuggly feelings of rest and relaxation and warmth, and the reminder that Christ is the source of all light and warmth, contrasting with the dark coldness outside.

Sunday night we listened to the LDS Church’s production of “A Christmas Carol” (http://mormonchannel.org/a-christmas-carol) and then Monday night the kids actually preferred me to read more of the actual text to them. The Church’s production is very well done, but I find my mind wandering when I can’t read it and I then I don’t know what is going on. I also wonder if the fully dramatized version was too scary for the kids, it’s so well done, especially the ghosts.

I also read them a story from the book The Gifts of Christmas, published by Deseret Book. It’s a collection of short stories mostly by LDS authors. Linda Eyre tells a story in there about her family’s trip to Bolivia one year that was their Christmas. They helped a village dig trenches to pipe water from wells into their village center. I wondered what the Eyres have been up to lately and Googled them. They were my heroes when I was growing up and I eagerly looked forward to the day when I would have a houseful of kids like Linda. I have loved reading her books. I delightfully found their daughter Saren’s blog, with a blog post about sitting around the fire/and or Christmas tree lit up,  listening to stories! You can read it here http://looslifamily.blogspot.com/2011/12/above-all-else-mothers-tell-little-ones.html

I really like what she shared, a quote from Emmeline B. Wells, from 1901. It still applies today!:

“The olden times were the days of comparative seclusion from the outside world, and we had to depend mainly upon our own resources for amusement…In those far-off days, however, the children were as much on tip-toe with expectancy as in the present day when Santa Claus time comes round. Then we had to tell them stories to make up for the things we lacked. Now there is so much to occupy the time that mothers have no moment to spare, evidently, to tell them stories at all. They depend on church and the kindergarten teachers to do all this for them while they, the dear blessed mothers, lose all the sweetest hours life can bring. To sit at evening round the fire and listen to the children’s prattle and sing them the old-fashioned carols and tell them over and over the stories they long to hear, makes one forget care and trouble, and draws the mother and children closer together with ties inseparable that can never be wholly broken apart. The mother, who denies herself this privilege for the sake of some outside engagement, or even to do extra household work, is doing herself as well as the children an injustice….

“Children do not have too much love not even at Christmas, no, not that, but they very often have too many toys and sweetmeats. How many children there are in the world who long, more earnestly, for real love than they do for aught else. There is no comfort or luxury that will supply its place even in the heart of a little child. There is more happiness because of love than from any other gift…

“Above all else, mothers, tell the little ones stories at Christmas…”

It makes it easier for me to just have have everyone bed down on the floor by the fire and lie down to listen and fall asleep while I read. (We did stick the toddler in front of Barney downstairs because he was being way to rambunctious).

So here’s a list of what we read at Christmas time (if you want some pictures, click on Saren’s link above and you will find some pictures of books):

We like the following for picture books: I’ve starred the ones that are more Christ-centered. That means they focus on the nativity story or on characters who are giving and consciously striving to follow Jesus,  instead of just getting or talking about Santa Claus. The ones that are written by an LDS author have LDS next to the title.

A Night Without Darkness: A Nephite Story of Christmas*, LDS
Room for a Little One*
The Christmas Miracle of Jonathan Toomey* (watch the movie after you read it, it’s so sweet)
How the Grinch Stole Christmas
The Little Fir Tree
A Christmas Dress for Ellen*, LDS (President Monson)
A Christmas Bell for Anya*, LDS
Christmas Oranges*, LDS
The Last Straw*, LDS
The Legend of the Candy Cane*
The Christmas SweaterT (based on the chapter book below), LDS (Glenn Beck)
Christmas for a Dollar*, :LDS
A Candle in the Window*, :LDS
Christmas Farm
Cobtown Christmas
On Christmas Day in the Morning* by Pearl S. Buck, (illustrated by an LDS man, Mark Buehner. The LDS Church has a video based on this story, made by BYU, called The Gift, I think.)
Snowmen at Christmas

For chapter books I love:

Holly Claus (this one is soooo long, 544 pages! but it is a great battle between evil and good, where good triumphs. Holly is Santa’s daughter. It’s a delightful fantasy. We actually read it almost all after Christmas when we had a lot more time.)
The Christmas Thief* LDS  by Carol Lynn Pearson (very cute story)
The Christmas Sweater* LDS by Glenn Beck
The Christmas Jars* LDS by Jason Wright
then there are the chapters on Christmas in the Little House books that show how sweet and simple Christmas can be.

I don’t read all the chapter books every Christmas, maybe just one or two, by reading a chapter every night for a bedtime story.

Please share your ideas! I love the proliferation of Christmas books. We read some after Christmas, which I love, because it stretches out the season. January doesn’t seem so dull with these bright Christmas books.

Maybe we can keep this up all through the winter with non-Christmas stories. It sure makes bedtime more inviting.

One of my favorite ornaments that was given to us as a white elephant gift and then a naughty child put marker to it. It’s still pretty though!

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What We Did for FHE Last Night

Last night was one of those FHE nights where I just dread doing it. I know FHE is important, but sometimes I just feel like I want everybody to go to bed so I can have some alone time. I must admit, sometimes when one of the children does the lesson, it is not as inspirational as I want.

Well, to cut to to the chase, we got most of the dishes done (and the one child who dawdled had to keep doing his work after FHE started) and then we watched three videos of Mormon Messages for the lesson, at my urging. If you ever want a no-preparation-on-your-part and highly inspirational lesson for FHE, use one of these. Here’s one of the videos  we watched.

Merry Christmas!

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Visiting Teaching Gifts

I got a copy of the book, Daughters in My Kingdom, a few months ago! Did you get yours? It is so fun to discover the treasures in its pages. In this book on p. 3 Elder James Talmage is quoted as saying “The greatest champion of woman and womanhood is Jesus Christ.” I love that! You can go here to get pretty bookmarks with that quote on it for your visiting teachees. What a great Christmas gift! http://visitingteaching.net/blog/2011/09/relief-society-bookmark/

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