Gleanings on Memorization…

Jacob Tu Tu’s father was right on the money when he said “do it until you get it right, then keep doing it until you can’t get it wrong.” He inspired me to keep playing the hymn I was learning on the piano. Even when I couldn’t get to it for several weeks, it was always in the back of my mind, and when I sat down at the piano to play I practiced the same hymn. Many times it was boring, yes. And many times I just wanted to start playing something else. But I was determined to memorize this hymn if it was the last thing I did.

Well, I am happy to report success. Not perfection, mind you. But I can play it many times through without a mistake, and how it thrills my soul to be able to worship the Lord without distraction on the piano. Another benefit is that I can work on technique without having to worry about which keys to press. It is so freeing! Also, I have already noticed that playing other songs is easier. Maybe because my brain is more easily recognizing common intervals. For the record, my goal is not to become a concert pianist, but merely to be able to easily play hymns and perhaps to compose simple worship songs.

Memorizing scripture gives the same benefits. When we take the time to commit His word to our minds, it is easier to focus on what He is saying to us. It is also easier to understand His word, for the scriptures interpret themselves when you have other related scriptures coming to mind as you read. When you are well-nourished, it is easier to enjoy the presence of the Lord :-) .

Much like the habits in the physical world bring a certain automation to our activities, memorizing written material brings automation to our minds, and memorizing music brings an ease to playing heretofore unknown. It is like a groove which is whittled deeper each time you pass over it. Soon it is no longer a chore to move the same way. Eventually it is difficult to go any other way. You are hemmed in and able to enjoy the activity.

I am convinced that mentally there is really no difference between memorizing a song on the piano, and learning discipline (or teaching it to a child). Until a person is constrained to obedience and self-control, he is really not free to enjoy his life (or activity). Just as a young child who is being allowed to disobey or break rules is unable to be truly happy for the mental tension which is present in his little heart, so the child of God is unable to be truly happy if God is not the ruler of his spirit. Indeed he will not be happy until he is hemmed in by the author and perfecter of our faith; walking in the Spirit with all diligence.

Posted in Family Journal, Homeschooling | 1 Comment

Crazy for Critters

Lately, when my little girl Deborah goes outside to play, she has one thing on her mind: catching frogs. The toads and frogs are abundant this year, and they seemed to have moved into the large stump in the front yard, as well as into the landscaping rocks beside our house. I’m afraid they don’t stand much of a chance with Deborah around, for she has a really sharp eye. Here she is with a lovely tree frog she caught last night.

DJ & Frog
Here is the same frog, on top of the baby’s head :-) .

Jonathan Frog

Over the weekend, Deborah found a baby bird beside the house. She promptly brought it inside and we wondered what to do with the fuzzy little fellow. We learned from our research that we should leave it near where we found it and clear away all of the hoopla, observing from afar to see if Fuzzy’s Mama would return for him. We were concerned that she wouldn’t want him for the essence of Deborah, which surely clung to his fuzz. The ornithology site we visited assured us that birds have a poor sense of smell, so she would likely still want him. Here is a picture of Fuzzy. Isn’t he cute?

Fuzzy

Well, after observing from my bedroom window and giving him a nudge closer to his Mom, whom we found was searching in the wrong place, we had success! They found each other, and the mother was able to get her little baby to waddle off after her :-) .

I don’t have any pictures of the critters my son Joshua brought into the house. We found his shoe in Daddy’s office, full of pill bugs. But I do have a picture of some pill bugs that the children played with in the dollhouse earlier on in the spring.

Pillbugs

Life with children doesn’t get much more interesting, does it?

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Journeys Around the Sun…

Today, my dear husband Nathan joins me in the land of 35 rotations.  The way I see it, he is now half-way done, so to speak, in the oven of life.  Of course, if you add our years together we are already complete.  That is, numerically, if the number 70 means anything at all! (Biblically, 7 is the number of completeness and 10 (according to this source) means the completeness of order).  Anyway, 35 times around the sun means nothing at all if you do not have the Son.  For “in him was life; and the life was the light of men” (John 1:4).

I am so thankful that I have a husband who desires to serve the Lord, and to be a good husband and father.  Recently, I wrote him a note and put it in his lunch.  Here is an excerpt…It really captures my appreciation for him :-) .

“Shiny!” I say as I peer through the window of life’s glass, at the soul of my beloved.

He wipes dishes,
scratches itches,
moves at the wishes – of his dear ones….

This exhortation from Philippians 2 often reminds me of him…”Let nothing be done through strife or vainglory; but in lowliness of mind let each esteem other better than themselves. Look not every man on his own things, but every man also on the things of others.”  Truly I am blessed to be able to say such things!  Thank You Lord.

Humorous Anecdote:  I often pull multiples out of birthday years (or special meanings, such as when we turned 33).  Once I was doing this for my mother-in-law, as she was turning 51.  She looked at her husband with a raised eyebrow and said “I’m three 17-year-olds!”

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Loving & Serving

Well, the week without David and Joshua was quite a rush! It went by fast, and it has been so nice to be together with the girls and little Jonathan. We played and read and spent an afternoon sewing with our wonderful sewing teacher Linda. Actually I sewed and the girls did “fabric art” with Linda – they had so much fun! We also had friends over and guess what? I painted the school room! It is a lovely warm brown color (mostly) with some bright yellow accents – so relaxing. My dear Nathan gave me an entire evening to paint, and then I finished up on two separate early mornings before the children woke up. The problem is that now I am excited about painting, and I don’t want to stop painting :0. The original paint on the walls is flat, and any touch or smudge on the walls is sooo vivid. I can’t wait to get color and shine, both to hide dirt and make the walls easier to clean. Easter weekend was spent with family in Illinois, where we “chilled out” and retrieved the boys.

I wrote earlier about working on some heart issues with the children, and the Lord zeroed me in on the importance of loving and serving each other throughout the week. This article by Beka Pearl has some great ideas, including Hero Cards, which we have begun to implement this week. The concept is simple. The child who is focused on loving and serving his siblings/family may be awarded a “Hero Card” for the day. If they earn 5, they are to “take out” the family for ice cream. Of course the family gives much praise to the “hero” who made such a wonderful treat possible :-) . Rebekah Joy is so excited about the whole thing, and has already earned one!

I have found such joy in speaking to the children about our purpose, which is to love and serve each other and bring glory to God! Each and every action that we take should be to this end, and liberty from the bondage of self is surely found in this steady undertaking. Really thinking about the reason for our activities is such an excellent activity for our minds; sloughing away the drudgery and making way for the true blessings of the Lord. When I speak to the children about this, I am speaking also to myself, and this focus is so needed for me right now. Camilla wrote an excellent article which gels perfectly with these thoughts. You’ll have to read it to find out why, but I can’t get the picture out of my head of a robot chanting mechanically, “What about me? What about me?” I am also challenged to come out of me and get behind the child as a servant, meeting his perceived needs instead of giving him what I think he needs.

In closing, I sing…

“For by him were all things created that are in heaven, and that are in earth visible and invisible, whether they be thrones or dominions or principalities or powers, all things were created by Him and for Him.” – Col. 2:16

Posted in Attitudes, Childtraining, Family Journal | 1 Comment

It’s quiet here

Grandma took my boys away and boy is it quiet here!  Well, I still have the littlest boy, but he is a piece of cake.  Raspberry flavored, dimpled and sprinkled with joy!  So I have a baby and two little girls who need extra training from Mom.  Hmmmm.   Dare I seek to change their little hearts of habit?  We will pick up the boys on Weester Eekend.  In the meantime, there is the organizing, the painting, the sewing, the baking, the cleaning… distraction stands knocking at the door, waiting to shred togetherness to pieces.  I’ll not open the door.  Instead, I am going to go to bed.  I’ll write more when I have my wits about me:-)

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So Responsive…

Recently I’ve been pondering the way I have trained each of my children. Here are my thoughts for each child:

1st Born: Disiplined with diligence; yet given far too many “rules” and “no’s”. He was not technically trained, for I remember wondering over and over again, “does he really understand? Maybe not.” And so he was likely nearing 2 by the time I got my butt in gear. In many ways he fell through the cracks due to my own ignorance. How different it may have been if there had been a Godly woman who understood training to mentor me at the first. At this point I had been through the class “Growing Kids God’s Way”, but had not read any other childtraining materials.

2nd Born: Okay, my firstborn, who had been doing very well, was suddenly testing his boundaries. I had a hard time keeping him in line, and I unconciously became lax. When questioned by my husband as to why I seemed to be less diligent with her, I realized that I had come to the conclusion that it hadn’t worked with David, so why try with Deborah? My second-born played alone very well, and it was easy to leave her to play while I got on with “life”. (ha!) There was some degree of emotional manipulation, but I didn’t know yet how to deal with it. I still had no mentor, and no further instruction regarding childtraining.
3rd Born: Once Rebekah Joy came along, things were becoming a little chaotic. By the time she was a year old, I was beginning to come apart at the seams. I remember falling on my face before the Lord and crying out to Him in desperation. After a long time praying I settled down at my computer and began to do some searching online. This was the first time I had thought of such a thing,oddly enough, and the Lord lead me to a website (I’ve since lost the link) of networked ladies who shared all kinds of wonderful testimony. There were several ladies there who shared sweet testimony as to the joy of living their days in close communion with the Lord (in retrospect maybe that is what He wanted me to hear, way back then, because this is what makes a mother joyful, and training without joy is less effective). They also shared resources that have helped them in their parenting. So I purchased “To Train Up a Child” and some other training materials which had less of an impact. Rebekah began to be trained with a switch at about 15 months. Several weeks into the training we were absolutely amazed because we had a different family. The children were responsive, obedient and happy!

4th Born: By this time, I was determined to squeeze all I could out of the training time. My will was set – absolute consistency. I remember that I would ALWAYS get off the couch to correct – even when I was nursing. Joshua responded beautifully to training. But there were some times when I feel I drew battle lines when he really needed to know he was loved. I demanded more of him when I should have gathered him close and loved on him.

5th Born: Jonathan just turned one, and so far he is truly the “baby”. Everybody loves him and he is always joyful and so much fun to be with. He receives much gentle instruction, and very few “no’s”. One “no” has been for electrical cords. Another “no” has been for my plants in the kitchen. Little flicks on the hand have been more than sufficient, and definitely enough for him to realize that it’s much more fun to be in fellowship with Mommy. The other day he was in the living room and he stood with a hand holding the phone cord which hung down from the table. I said his name calmly from a few feet away, and he craned his head around to look at me. I said “no” calmly. He immediately dropped the cord and toddled forward. This was very impressive to me, because his last “no” training had been at least a week ago.

I’ve come to the conclusion that it is so much better to have fewer boundaries that hold firm, than it is to have lots of fences all over the place. The many fences are too difficult for any parent to maintain, and likely to become points of disrespect.

I realized that he truly understood the word “no”, and that I could expect him to obey me now. Yet I know that I must choose my battles wisely. If I’m going to say “no”, I’d better be putting down my dishtowel immediately – prepared to win the battle. For instance, if my baby is moving to turn over the trash while I am in the shower, I’d better be prepared to get out of the shower and deal with it right away. If I choose to stay in the shower and say “no!” in ever increasing volume until he looks my way in amazement, then I have introduced a new game, where I am the puppet and baby pulls my strings and watches me dance. It is so ap-parent to me as a parent (I think lots of things become trans-parent in this occupation – is anyone else hearing this echo?) – the truth in the Proverb about a man who lacks self-control being like a city with it’s walls broken down. A city with it’s walls broken down is powerless, because another has been given the power. We can choose to give the power to our children, some other person, or to the Lord. Whom do I trust more? Hmmmmm… let me see. The answer is obvious, but in the thick of life, our trust is fickle.

Now, lest any of you assume I am a paragon of virtue where training is concerned, I must disappoint you. I absolutely LOVE training my kids; especially when they are very little, and so responsive. However, we have some areas which need help. For instance, we have not licked whining. It is a habit with some of the kids. I wonder if I have grown used to it and occasionally give them what they are asking for, or if they have just done it for so long that they don’t know how to stop. When I hear it, I make sure that they don’t get what they are whining for, or that they must still do what I have told them to do, and sometimes more. To be honest, it is a bit overwhelming to “return to the standard” when things get out of whack with 5 kids. Truth be told, I am not presently where I need to be with the Lord (do I smell the sweetness of a sister praying for me?). So I just “keep on keepin’ on”. And I am so thankful that “He gently leads those that have young.”

Posted in Childtraining, Family Journal | 1 Comment

Update

Wow! When I fall away from blogging, time flies :-) . Here is what has happened since last I blogged…

  • Grandpa passed away – we attended his funeral in S. Illinois. We were blessed to have chosen a visit a few weeks earlier to say good-bye. We will so miss his cheerful presence, and we are so glad that he is with the Lord.
  • We survived Daddy’s classes! He took classes on Monday & Wednesday evening and all day Saturday one week, and the next week he had classes on Monday & Thursday evening. The following weekend he was gone all day Friday, Saturday and Sunday too at a Java Conference. We missed him so much.
  • I purchased my very first sewing machine! It was a pretty good deal on ebay – I saved $100 off of the Sears price. After quite a bit of research and reading many sewing machine reviews at Patternreview, I decided on the Kenmore 1631, and I have not been disappointed. It sews beautifully, is easy to use and best of all, it has a turtle/rabbit slider control (aka speed control) – a great thing for beginners and for children learning.
  • I took a sewing class (actually the last class is coming up this Tuesday night), and I discovered that I really love to sew! So far I’ve made a beautiful apron, a towel which matches and attaches, and a pillowcase for my son. I’m revved to make dresses and coverlets next. It is so exciting! But the best part is that my instructor is a neat Christian lady, an excellent seamstress and a fantastic teacher! She considers it a ministry, and I can tell you that she has already ministered to me :-) . God is good.
  • We have made some advances in the health/nutrition department… In 2003, after reading the Nourishing Traditions cookbook, I purchased my first raw milk from a local Amish farmer. It was the most delicious milk! So creamy and smooth. Then Nathan was laid off from his job, and I shelved our healthful ambitions while I packed things up and prepared to move. Well, recently I’ve picked up the book again and I’ve finally taken the time to find another raw milk provider. We have been purchasing raw goat’s milk from a wonderful Christian family nearby, and everyone loves it. It feels so good to be able to give my one-year-old milk (though I am still nursing him) that contains life-giving nutrients and enzymes, and does not contaminate his little body with pesticides, soy, hormones or antibiotics. Next month I will purchase Kefir granules and possibly a Kombucha mushroom. We have also begun our search for local grass-fed products and located a wonderful family farm nearby who provides natural grass-fed beef twice a year. Now if we can just get a freezer.
  • We have planted tomatoes, peppers & Forget-Me-Nots in little Jiffy pots indoors to get them started before planting them in the garden. It is quite a rush to walk into the kitchen and see my little green plants thriving under their long fluorescent light! Knowing they are right there in the midst of our busiest area ensures that they will not be neglected. They are my little green “babies” :-) .
  • Jonathan has begun to toddle around! My baby is growing up :-( . His training has also begun…more on that later.
  • These are the highlights. I hope to blog again soon on something more deep and meaningful.

    Posted in Family Journal | 2 Comments

    Yay!

    Well, after grinding away every spare moment the last week, I have finished our family newsletter!  It was so time intensive because I finally went through all of the family pics we had taken last year.   I printed it from Publisher to pdf files and now I am trying to find out the most economical way to print it out.  The newsletter was set up to go on the front and back of an 11 x 17 page, with an insert, but our local printer won’t print that large of a sheet and they suggested Office Depot.  Office Depot wants $1.77 per copy, so now we are thinking of actually splurging on an ink cartridge for our old printer after all.  Yikes!

    This weekend we are taking a quick trip down to Southern Illinois to see family, so I am packing pajamas and toothbrushes (with a few extras for the little ones:-).  I am excited because the laundry is done, the house is relatively clean, and we are on top of our schooling schedule as well!  Now I can just enjoy everyone this weekend :-) .  It’s easy to praise the Lord when all is going well, and praise Him I do!

    Posted in Family Journal | 1 Comment

    Organic Choices

    Our area coop representative sent out this great list, and I wanted to post it because I’ve been looking for information like this for awhile! But the time to research it has eluded me. Right now I am making plans for our garden this spring; we will be jump starting it this year by getting some seeds started very soon. After reading this list, I’ll be making some changes :-) . The list came from Newsmax, but I haven’t been able to locate the article – perhaps it’s in their archives?

    More Americans than ever are worried about carcinogens from pesticides and fertilizer in their food, and they are adding organic foods to their food carts. When the FDA and USDA ran tests on more than 100,000 samples of food, they found pesticides known to cause cancer, damage to the brain and nervous system, and birth defects. But if you don’t have a lot of money to add to your food budget, but still want to expose your family to as few chemicals as possible, where should you put your valuable food dollars?

    Here’s a list of the most contaminated food products:

    Meat. Beef, poultry and pork have higher residual levels of pesticides than any plant food. Chemicals accumulate in the animal’s fatty tissue and go straight to the dinner table.

    Milk, Butter, and Cheese. Pesticides are concentrated in milk. In addition, growth hormones and antibiotics are also found in non-organic milk, butter and cheese.

    Strawberries, Raspberries and Cherries. Strawberries receive the most pesticides of any crop grown in America. Thirty-six pesticides are applied to strawberries and 90 percent of berries tested have pesticide contamination above levels considered safe. Raspberries and cherries don’t rate much better.

    Apples and Pears. The FDA detected 36 chemicals in apples. Half are neurotoxins which cause brain damage.

    Tomatoes. A tomato’s thin skin allows the more than 30 pesticides used on conventionally-grown crops to seep through the entire tomato.

    Potatoes. Heavily contaminated with both pesticides and fungicides, the FDA found that 79 percent of potatoes had levels of several pesticides that were deemed unsafe.

    Spinach. Spinach is the vegetable most often contaminated with the most powerful pesticides used on food. The FDA found that 83 percent of spinach had dangerous levels of pesticides. Other greens are also heavily contaminated.

    Coffee. The pesticides that are so dangerous they’re not allowed to be used in this country are shipped overseas where they’re used on crops and shipped back in our foods. Coffee is one of the worst.

    Peaches and Nectarines. 95 percent of peaches and 97 percent of nectarines tested were contaminated from the forty-five pesticides used in conventional orchards. Don’t think you can avoid the pesticides by peeling; their thin skin allows the pesticides to soak deep into the fruit.

    Grapes. Thirty-five different chemicals sprayed on grapes are showered on several times during their growth. Testing found 86 percent of grapes were contaminated with pesticides. Imported grapes have even more pesticides, with those from Chile having the most.

    Celery. 94 percent of celery was found to have dangerous levels of pesticides.

    Red and Green Bell Peppers. Bell peppers, doused with 39 pesticides, also have high levels of chemical residues. In addition, peppers are often coated with unhealthy wax.

    Posted in Family Journal, Health | 2 Comments

    Saturdays

    Saturdays for us have been a bit of a different routine for the last few months. We wake up when the kids do :-) .  And then go to work, cleaning. This is a time to focus in on training the children to do important jobs, like cleaning bathrooms and cleaning their rooms. My 7 and 8 year olds are expected to more and to do it better now; things that we don’t do as often during the week now in our effort to school the children in a more excellent way.

    When they are finished with their designated jobs, we have brunch and watch a few select cartoons that we enjoy. Then the children are free for the afternoon to play, build pillow houses, play some games on the computer and whatever other activities tickle their fancy.  Right now David is playing Command & Conquer and the others are wrestling with Daddy in his office.  I am about to start work on our family newsletter.  It is long overdue, but I hope that it will be mailed out by Valentines Day.

    For us, the family newsletter is a great way to flush out the memories of the year in a tangible way.  It is so great to be able to pluck out old newsletters and see where the family was during that year.  Since my scrapbooking time has had trouble getting started; this is the next best thing.  I’d better get started!

    Posted in Family Journal | 1 Comment