Archive for » 2010 «

Aug
24

“It’s good to feel the rush of something nice coming.” – Samuel Smiles

New school curriculum. Do you feel the “rush” of it? The excitement as you look over the new material causes you to smile. Oh, your children are going to be little geniuses as they delve into the wealth of information that you’re going to pour into their little brains.

Aesop said: “Don’t count your chickens before they’re hatched.”

Reality sets in about day three of the new school year. Our kids whine a little, misbehave a little, and are certainly NOT geniuses (must be the genes from the other side of the family!). But take heart! They ARE gaining ground.

The time that you spend with your children this year is a time that you’ll never get again. There are no do-overs in child rearing. Relish every day. Discipline, hug, instill and smile. Something nice IS coming! Wonderful young men and women of God because of the time that was spent being taught at their mother’s knee.

Jul
23

The heat seems to have slowed the growth of everything in my yard except the weeds.  I planted ornamental grasses again this year. Nothing growing there. The hostas are turning brown, the ivy is at a stand-still. However, the weeds are thriving!

Once again, I am amazed at the resilience of weeds. They grow unwanted, untended and with great vigor. Since I am not a gardener and cannot recognize a weed from a healthy plant, I tend to let everything grow until I can see what it will become.  By doing this, I’ve learned that some of those things that I thought were weeds actually were beautiful plants.  Sorry to say, some of those things in my garden that I had great hope for, turned out to be great disappointments.

My yard is such a great mirror of my spiritual and home life. Those things that need to be removed – left unattended grow at a great rate (especially in times of spiritual dryness). Things that I want to grow only do so if I nurture them.

I have one pot of beautiful flowers sitting on my front porch. I’ve fed them, I water them daily and I pull off the spent blooms. Sometimes, I can only concentrate on one area of need at a time. I pour my energy into one area of growth while I watch the weeds and pull them out as soon as I recognize them for what they are.

What’s growing in your life today?

Jul
20

I have lived a blessed life, largely due to God, and my family. A quote I find particularly inspirational was noted by Allan Bloom: “Education is the movement from darkness to light.” I grew up in a God-fearing, loving, communicative, ambitious family, who always inspired me to move forward in my calling.

I believe my calling, specifically, is to reflect back to others what God has given to me. As such, I find myself doing it in the best way I know how – by using my almost-completed Master’s degree in Mental Health Counseling to minister to those who hurt. My homeschooling background set me on a path for an aptitude of high achievement. However, I firmly believe that God and my parents made sure that I had not only a sense of achievement academically, but also a firmly entrenched desire to give back to those in need.

I believe that we can never fully understand what drives a person unless we at least take a small look at what molded them when they were young. I believe, as Mr. Bloom’s quotation exemplifies, that my being Homeschooled did in fact set me on the path, of moving from the dark into the light. In fact, it moved beyond that – I have seen the Light of God; and I have obtained the divine calling to reflect that very Light on to others. It is this fact, I believe, that makes life worth living.

By Meg

Category: Everyday Life  Comments off
Jul
19

“Gardens are a form of autobiography,” Sydney Eddison

I wonder if you read that quote and thought (as I did), ‘If that is true, then my life is a mess!’ I am NOT a gardener by any stretch of the imagination. I really don’t like worms and bugs. I know that they have their place in our world, but I don’t want their place to be on me! So, my gardening expertise is pulling weeds and trimming bushes. Until recently…

I was reading a devotional that was written by an avid gardener. He talked about the need to cut back good plants. It made me think about the growth that has been happening on a hill at my church. Somehow the lot has fallen to me to weed this hill. So I gear myself up with everything I will need to keep the critters off of me. Tall red rubber boots (may as well cause people to smile when they see me), long jeans tucked into the boots, long sleeved shirt and rubber-coated gardening gloves. As I survey the hill, I see a lot of good plants running amuck. These vines have overgrown the whole hillside. The only things that poke through are some very prickly weeds. I wonder if the good plants should be cut back.

I begin my plan of attack on my knees. I may as well pray while I’m down here! No sense in having a bad attitude when there’s a job to be done.

As I start to hack away at the vines, I discover that there are some evergreen bushes under them. Surprised, I chop and pull at dozens and dozens of the vines to find more beautiful evergreens.  Who knew?

I immediately saw the analogy to my own life. I have a lot of very good things in my life. Now and then, a weed pokes through that I attempt to pull up by the root. Meanwhile, some other “very good things” are getting buried and are suffering.

As mom’s, we have many good things in our lives. There are some that I prefer to concentrate on and others I choose to ignore. By ignoring some, my life gets out of balance and some very good things soon disappear. If I’m not careful those good things can suffocate and die.

What am I allowing to grow in my life? Am I working on my relationship with the Lord? Am I being the woman of God that my husband and family need me to be? Am I ignoring some things because I don’t want to deal with the ‘pests’ that are there?

I doubt that I’ll ever be a gardener. But I am working on those things that are growing in my life…on my knees…pulling weeds…and cutting back on the unnecessary.

Category: Everyday Life  Comments off
Jun
30

The Winner of the Travel Bingo is is Comment #1 Dania Lee.  Congratulations!

How do we chose? The winning comment is chosen using a randomizer software.

Thank you to everyone that posted a comment.

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This week at KristensTwoCents.com, the official “mommy Blog” of PennywiseLearning.com, we’re giving away a Melissa and Doug, Flip to Win, Travel Bingo.  This Giveaway is great for travel!

BINGO on the go! Choose an appropriate theme among the eight provided, slide a card into each game boards and pay attention to the passing scenery! Includes two game boards and four double-sided game cards. There are no loose pieces and everything stores conveniently in the board.

TO ENTER TO WIN IT!!!

Just click on Leave a Comment (below) and tell us how you plan to spend your summer break.

EXTRA ENTRIES!!

- Become a Fan of PWL on Facebook – 1 ENTRY
- Sign up to receive PWL’s Newsletter – 1 ENTRY
- Follow PWL on Twitter – 1 ENTRY
- Tweet about the giveaway – 1 ENTRY DAILY
- Facebook about the giveaway – 1 ENTRY DAILY
- Blog about this giveaway and include the URL – 1 ENTRIES

Then be sure to click on Leave a Comment (below) and tell us that you did it.

RULES!!

- Contest will close at 9:00 p.m. EST on Monday, July 5th, 2010!
- One ENTRY will be randomly chosen.
- Contest open to U.S. residents only.
- Void where prohibited.
- No purchase necessary

Jun
30

Our UPS man is like a member of our family.  He has been coming to our place, rain or shine, twice a day for the last 7 years.  When Elijah was born last year, he bought Eli a UPS outfit as a gift.  This is Eli meeting UPS at the loading doc.

Category: Everyday Life  Comments off
Jun
30

I can’t tell you the number of times

-  I have been at craft shows and said, “I can do that for a lot less money!” Only to find out that I can’t.

-  I see a dress that I love and say, “I can make a dress better than that!” Only to see that my imitation is not nearly as nice.

-  I watch the Food Channel and attempt to tweak the recipe to make it my own… Only to realize that “my own” wasn’t such a tasty idea.

There is nothing like walking in the shoes of someone else to get a new perspective.

My husband and I recently returned from a 4,300 mile road trip. We’re at the stage in our lives when we can relax on the road (no kids on board!) and experience our beautiful country.  The trip gave me a better perspective of life in America.

Here are a few of our observations.

1.  it’s easy to hide in the crowds of NY, but there is no place to hide on the plains.

2.  America is patriotic, as observed at the base of Mount Rushmore with dozens of former service men and women standing proud.

3.  Life on a mountain-top is not for the faint of heart or short-of-breath.

As you plan your new school year, consider giving a new perspective to your children. Open your doors to people that would love to share their story (a veteran, a missionary, a sick child). Plan field trips that will take you to places that you’ve never been (a children’s hospital, a historic landmark, a shelter).  Consider road trips to places that are very different from your surroundings.

We raised our daughter this way. She spent many days as a patient in a children’s hospital, and eventually volunteered there. She sat at our kitchen table with people from around the world, she traveled (she says…) to every historical place on the east coast and she served at camps for people with disabilities. She has experienced the best and the worst of life’s situations. Her perspective: “I have been saved for a purpose!”

My road trip gave me a new perspective; it broadened my horizons and helped me to realize that I have so much more to learn.

Category: Everyday Life, Homeschooling  Comments off
Jun
25

Your little guy is a unique student. He already works very hard internally to be able to focus and learn. A lot of trial and error may be needed on your part to find his learning style and the curriculum choices that will best meet his needs. Be creative, lean on the Lord for insight, don’t worry about failed attempts, just move on and try something else, be flexible, and lighten-up on yourself. Kids with special needs (ours/autism) are ‘tough nuts to crack’. You will be blessed by the experience more than you can imagine (we have been). No doctor can tell you the extent of his potential, only God knows HIS own plans, and our God is a BIG God. Our son is an ‘A’ student in college now, and a young man with a deep faith in the Lord! Enjoy your boy, enjoy your journey, talk to others on the same path (it helps you feel connected, understood, and normal).
One last note… have fun, * I used to teach my other student her math lessons and go over her errors with a hand-puppet as the instructor (use a fun voice accent it really makes correcting and re-teaching a child less threatening).  Love in Christ, Joan

This post was submitted by a reader in a private message and reposted with permission.

Category: Special Needs  Comments off
May
21

The Winner of the Gobblet is Comment # 20 Debbie.  Congratulations!

How do we chose? The winning comment is chosen using a randomizer software.

Thank you to everyone that posted a comment.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

This Week we’re giving away the Game of Gobblet.

Gobble up, line up and win!

Gobblet is the Award-Winning, Fun Game of Strategy. As easy as Tic-Tac-Toe, Gobblet can be learned in a few seconds and is fun to play again and again. Beautifully crafted, Gobblet is entirely made of wood and includes a great box with self-storage for all pieces. With irresistible fast moving play and astonishingly simple rules, Gobblet is a fun game for the whole family!

Ages: 7 and Up  – 2 Players  – A few Seconds to Learn – Time to Play: 5 to 20 Minutes

TO ENTER TO WIN IT!!!

Just click on Leave a Comment (below) and tell us the #1 reason you choose to Homeschool.

EXTRA ENTRIES!!

- Become a Fan of PWL on Facebook – 1 ENTRY
- Sign up to receive PWL’s Newsletter – 1 ENTRY
- Follow PWL on Twitter – 1 ENTRY
- Tweet about the giveaway – 1 ENTRY DAILY
- Facebook about the giveaway – 1 ENTRY DAILY
- Blog about this giveaway and include the URL – 1 ENTRIES

Then be sure to click on Leave a Comment (below) and tell us that you did it.

RULES!!

- Contest will close at 11:59 p.m. EST on Wednesday, May 26th, 2010!
- One ENTRY will be randomly chosen.
- Contest open to U.S. residents only.
- Void where prohibited.
- No purchase necessary

May
21

It’s that time of year again; the time when we evaluate how things have been going with our children (and ourselves!) through the homeschooling process. We wait by the mailbox for the return of the national test scores and sweat as we pull open the seal. Did they keep up with their peers? Did they do a good job? Did WE do a good job?

My daughter is 23 now and I still hate this time of year. You see, she is still evaluated. Due to her multiple physical disabilities, we have to go through the evaluation process year after year. Is she meeting the “normal” standards? No. Has she improved since last year? No. Do we expect her to improve? There is no place on the form to write: ‘Only by the hand of God’.

However, I can step back at this time of year and remind myself of a very important thing. My daughter loves the Lord with her whole heart.

Why do we homeschool in the first place? Well, we all do it for our own reasons. But, no matter why you began this process, the hope of raising your children to love the Lord and live for Him is the best benefit. That is something that no nationalized test can score; but you can.

Does my child know Jesus as her Savior? Yes. Is she a woman that desires to live for Him and serve Him with her life? Yes. Then the rest of the tests carry far less weight in life.

May God bless you as you direct your children towards the goal of a life lived for Jesus.