Easter & Christmas Activity Ideas from AJ

Posted by  | Wednesday, September 30, 2009  at 12:00 AM  
Here's another couple of ideas shared by AJ. Thanks AJ!

Just wanted to share something all the kids do at Easter. We plant jelly beans the weeks before Easter and we take good care of our beans and on Easter morning they have grown lollipops for the kids to enjoy and they love the “flowers” their beans produce.

Also for Christmas we have a Food Network Type Challenge Called “Cunningham Court Gingerbread Houses” Each family gets a kit and we all bring things to decorate and we eat together and have a great evening of decorating and then we have judges announce the winners often we put pictures on our blog for people to vote as well.

Christmas Bark

Posted by  | Monday, September 28, 2009  at 8:13 PM  
Lori shared a really cute, fun idea for a Christmas activity:

I have a funny Christmas holiday tradition. Every year, usually during the first week of December, we make Candy Cane "Bark." Our five boys each have a ziplock bag filled with candy canes (or starlight mints), a hammer, and they all wear a santa hat. We line them up, sitting on the floor and they "bark" Christmas carols while pounding the candy canes to smithereens. Usually one round of Jingle Bells and part of Away in a Manger is long enough to fill the room with a minty smell. We follow it up with a Christmas movie and hot chocolate if it's cold enough for it. I take the pulverized candy canes and mix it with melted white chocolate, leaving some larger pieces of candy cane bits to sprinkle on the top for color. When it's dry, we eat some of it, serve some to guests and/or take it to parties, and give the rest away with gifts. The boys look forward to the silliness every year and it's a festive, easy treat for sharing some holiday spirit.

Thanks for sharing Lori!

Soon to Come: Holiday Traditions

Posted by  |   at 5:08 PM  
Hi Ladies! This week we hope to cover the topic of Holiday Traditions. I (Leah) am slated to start off the topic. Enter: The Problem. We don't have any holiday traditions in our family! So: The Solution. You! Do you have a holiday tradition you would love to tell others about? We're not just covering Christmas, either - any holiday/seasonal tradition counts. Please e-mail me a short bit about your tradition and attach photos if you like. You can e-mail me at leahpayne@hotmail.com. Thanks ladies! I look forward to hearing some great ideas and hopefully adding some fun traditions to our family!

Don't Make Me Count to Three!

Posted by  | Friday, September 25, 2009  at 7:00 AM  

We have often referenced Shepherding a Child's Heart in the past on POH. If Tedd Tripp's book is the "heart" (no pun intended), then Ginger Plowman's book "Don't Make Me Count to Three" would be the "how-to" of discpline. Sure, Tripp's book includes some of the practical applications - but this book really gives the details behind ways to train your child.
I had intended to do an extensive book review, but this week has become out of control for us! Will is healing from his tonsillectomy (and subsequent pneumonia) last Friday - on top of an unusually busy week for my husband and I. Instead, I did a quick google search to see if anyone else had reviewed the book and found a great review by a pastor's wife. To get an idea of the book, go and check out this review of "Don't Make Me Count to Three." (I feel that I should add a quick disclaimer: I know nothing about the church from which this review is coming. But from a quick read over of the review, I feel that its accurate.)
In addition, I'd like to point out another GREAT resource from Ginger Plowman that complements this book. "Wise Words for Moms" is a easy to read chart that you can hang up to give you a quick reference for scriptures to use with discipline and encouraging your child to "put on" the desired behavior. I have mine hanging on my refrigerator and can quickly glance at it for reminders of how to deal with heart issues such as whining, tattling and disobeying (these are biggies in our house right now!) I can't recommend this resource highly enough!


One church that I do feel confident in promoting is Covenant Life Church. This church was previously pastored by CJ Mahaney, husband of Carolyn Mahaney. (Remember the Girl Talk blog and our book club book?) Like many churches, they have an extensive collection of online resources. There are sermons and "talks" that are searchable by subject or scripture reference. The list of parenting sermons has been extremely valuable to me! I download these onto my ipod and listen while doing chores during naptime. Here are several specific ones that I have listened to. They have been a huge encouragement to me as I seek to "train up" Will and Adeline.

Training, Discipline and the Rod by Brian Chesmore

Biblical Principals of Parenting by Brian Chesmore

What a Mother Can't Do Without by CJ Mahaney

The Lord is in Your Boat by Carolyn Mahaney

Cross Centered Parenting by CJ Mahaney

I promise these are all worth your time! It is so easy to become discouraged during this phase of having young children in the house. And even if you don't have time to sit down and read a book, you can always find time to multitask and listen to one of these while finishing something else!

Any other recommendations for parenting helps, specifically discpline related - whether book, sermon or other resource?

Finding Their "Bent"....discipline

Posted by  | Thursday, September 24, 2009  at 5:00 AM  
Does God punish his children? No, the punishment of God was laid on Jesus at the cross. But does He discipline His children? Yes, He disciplines us to put us where He wants us and to teach us so we can be used for His glory. This is exactly how God has planned the parent/child relationship to be. Keeping the end goal in mind is essential in our discipline/training that we use with our children. What’s the goal? For our children to come to know Jesus, to love Him, serve Him and desire for Him to be glorified in their lives.

Proverbs 3:11-12 says, “My son, do not despise the Lord’s discipline or be weary of his reproof. For the Lord disciplines those he loves as a father the son in who he delights.”

Discipline is necessary as parents but what does the bible say about HOW we discipline. One of my favorite verses says,“Train up a child in the way he should go and when he is old he will not depart from it.” Proverbs 22:6. I believe this verse is one of the most misunderstood verses in all of scripture and is taught wrongly in most churches. Most interpret this verse to say that we teach our kids about Jesus, they will turn away, but then one day they will come back to Him. How many times have you seen parents raise their kids, teach them about Jesus, they ran the other way and then really never came back to Him? I know of many…so, what does this verse really say about “training our children in the way they should go?”

I recently heard a sermon from a pastor I highly respect and this is how he explained this verse. “The way he should go” comes from a Hebrew verb derived from a bow hunting term. It is a picture of a hunter trying to find just the right bow. The hunter used to go out and look at tree branches to find just the right one with the right “bend”, would study the grain and then would work that branch until it was the perfect bow so he could shoot his arrows in just the right direction that he wanted them to go. This is what scripture is referring to in regards to training (or disciplining) our children. We are to study them according to their “bent” so we can shoot them as arrows where God desires to use them for His glory. So, if we were to put the bow hunting term in that verse it would read, “Train up a child (according to their bent) and when he is old he will not depart from it.”

How do we know our child’s bent or the bent of each of our children? There is not one parenting style that works for all children. If you have more than one child, you know exactly what I am talking about. We all know that all children are different so it is so important for us to know what makes our child tick (or find their bent) when it comes to discipline. So, how do we practically do that?

1.We have to be hands on with our time….study them, learn their spiritual gifts, learn their love language, and know their likes and dislikes.

2.Study our kids…When we study our children we can teach them to take those gifts to make an impact on the world for Christ. When we train/discipline them according to their bent, they will recognize how God made them and will see where they fit into His plan. For example, one of my children has very strong, leadership type characteristics…you could say she is bossy!:) Now some would say that being bossy is not a good quality to have. But we are tapping into that, studying that and directing that leadership quality to be used for God’s glory.

3.Use right discipline at the right time. When we study our children we quickly find out what makes them happy, mad, silly or sad. If we are too rigid we will “break the bend” and if we are not rigid enough the “bend of the bow” will be flimsy and not be shot in the direction that God desires. Pray for wisdom each day to know exactly how and when to discipline.

Bending our kids in ways they weren’t meant to be bent is dangerous. This happens when we don’t really study and know our children….

God, give us wisdom with our children in knowing exactly how to train/discipline them. We know they are a gift from You. Help us understand our children and their “bend.” Teach us to spend quality time studying them so we can know how they tick. Help us not be too rigid or not rigid enough. God, we want to shoot these kids as arrows into Your perfect will for their lives to see You glorified!!!

Wordless Wednesday

Posted by  | Wednesday, September 23, 2009  at 12:00 AM  

Discipline

Posted by  | Tuesday, September 22, 2009  at 5:00 AM  
In the past, we have had some lively discussions on the topic of discipline. Most of it has revolved around the issue of spanking. While none of the POH authors use this method exclusively (very few probably do!) we all use it at times. And, while I can't speak for the other authors, I do want to address this form of discipine in our home.


"Train a child in the way he should go, and when he is old he will not turn from it."
- Proverbs 22:6


I want to focus on the word train. It doesn't say discipline, teach, instruct, etc. but train. To train a child really encompasses all of these things and it is much more challenging than just simply disciplining. To train a child means that we are always teaching, always looking for moments to share truth, and, when necessary, disciplining. One aspect of discipline, in our home, is spanking. We spank for willfull disobedience. When my toddler, who knows full well she should not do xyz looks at me and specifically does that very thing, she will get a spanking. Anything else and we look to other creative methods of discipline - at her age, this involves things like putting the current activity away, taking away videos or princess dolls, or working toward earning something when we are trying to start a pattern of consistently doing something that is a behavior change.


When we spank, we talk about what is going to happen first and then we spank with a wooden spoon on the bottom. When we are finished we talk again about why she got a spanking, what our expectations are, how much we love her, and, sometimes we pray together as well.


There has also been discussion on POH about how the authors are all advocates of Shepherding a Child's Heart (which again advocates spanking at times). It has been suggested we read books by Scott Turansky, such as Good and Angry. I ordered this book and am over a 100 pages into it (I had hoped to be finished with it before this week's topic but, alas, life keeps me busy these days :). So far, at least, I don't see contradictions between these two books and don't have a problem with Good and Angry. He advocates some fine methods of dealing with situations. He has not mentioned spankings so far into the book (and, thumbing through the rest, I'm assuming it doesn't come up). My perspective is this: creative discipline and spanking aren't mutually exclusive methods. In fact, you need both. As a former classroom teach (actually, all the POH authors are) we've all used creative discipline techniques in our classrooms and use them at home with our children as well. Yet, the way I discipline a two-year old is drastically different than a twelve-year old. A two-year old needs to learn to obey first; you don't reason with your two-year old. A twelve-year old is old enough to discuss the why's behind things, although, ultimately, you still expect obedience as a parent. Because, ultimately, if our children do not obey us as parents, how will they learn to obey God?! Turansky discusses ways to equip parents and children to deal with situations in godliness before it leads to situations you must discipline for: teaching children how to ask for permission to change something in a godly way for example. These are great things! But, the bottom line is this: when we have moments in our home where our children are willfully disobedient, we will discipline for this, as well as use this as a teaching opportunity to train our children what a better response would be for next time. I will not negotiate, beg, or ask over and over for my toddler to obey me. This is training and, I believe, a wonderful gift of freedom we can give our kids to learn that we as parents are going to be consistent and expect them to obey us right away, all the way, and with a happy heart (what we say in our home).


Finally, it has been said that we (the POH authors) are so close to attachment parenting ideas (many of us using cloth diapers, slings, natural births, etc.) yet when it comes to discipline we are totally the opposite. Maybe. I don't like to categorize myself as anything other than a lover of Jesus who wants to live my live to glorify Jesus and raise my children to passionately follow hard after Him. If this makes me an "APer" or not, so be it. My goal in training my children is simply to let them know that they are miracles, precious gifts entrusted to us for a short time; loved so much by their mommy and daddy that they feel the freedom to be what He has created them to be; and a longing to serve their Creator in reckless abandonment giving glory to Him in all they say and do. Training is hard work but oh it is also the most rewarding task the Lord has ever called me to!

Disciplining Five Boys

Posted by  | Monday, September 21, 2009  at 12:00 AM  
This week we are discussing discipline. I wanted to start off the week with a post by a guest author who is an amazing, godly mother to five BOYS (with another boy on the way in just a couple weeks!). She lives overseas and her children are well-behaved, well-adjusted, and a joy to be around. Here is what she had to say. . .

"When we have kids, we'll NEVER do...." These were the conversations we had early in our marriage, before we had any kids. It's not that we thought we had all the right answers, we just observed our friends and family and tried to learn. We'd come home from an evening with friends and talk about our friends' parenting style and their children, especially if the kids were unruly or just plain bad!

We realized there were some people's kids we actually enjoyed being around and others' whose kids kind of stressed us out or ruined the evening because of their horrible behavior. Their parents were often embarrassed or sometimes indifferent! "Kids are kids! What can you do?" We soon started taking mental notes about which kids were well behaved and what their parents did to achieve that goal. We started asking questions: What books do you recommend? How do you get your kids to do such and such? What do you do when xyz happens?

Our philosophy of parenting started to take shape well before our first baby was on the way.

We enjoy our children, but do others?
One of the first things we realized was that we wanted to have our friends spend an evening with us and return home to talk about how polite, well-behaved, obedient and fun our kids were. We knew that if we had conversations about the children's behavior and parenting style of others, surely others would be talking about our children, too. Naturally, we wanted to enjoy our children, but we also wanted others to enjoy them, too. From our own experiences and observations we knew this would mean more work for us.

Training vs. discipline
When we were expecting our first baby, some friends recommended a book by the Ezzos called Preparation for Parenting. (It's also published secularly as BabyWise.) It seems to be a book people either love or hate. Our friends said following the principles were worth it if only to get your baby to sleep through the night sooner than later. An added benefit was that the "eat, play, sleep" routine recommended for newborns helped Mom and Dad, too. You could plan your days and nights to accomplish a few more tasks than just babycare. I'm a big fan of a good night's sleep, so it sounded good to me... and these friends had some of those well behaved children we enjoyed being around, so we listened.

Well, several things stood out to us in reading about those principles for sleeping through the night earlier.

1. Zachariah, our first, was "a welcome member of the family, but not the center of it." To some extent, your lives do tend to revolve around a newborn baby because of the amount of care they need, but life doesn't need to stay that way. When I became a mom I didn't stop being a wife, friend, co-worker, daughter, sister, etc. I still kept those identities when I became a mom.

2. Our baby was like a blank slate. We could "write" whatever way we wanted and it could affect him for good or bad all his life. "Train Up a Child" means in every way - spiritual, physical, mental, etc.. We realized we could train Zach to eat a certain way (routinely) and eventually even train him to like nutritious foods over junk, memorize verses, keep his toys neat, you name it.

3. "All have sinned." Yes, even our precious, sweet tiny baby has a selfish, rebellious sin nature. Training helps combat this sin nature before he understands what sin is. Discipline is correction when understanding already exists.

When Zach was about one year old, some other friends with very well-behaved children recommended another book by Michael and Debbie Pearl called "To Train Up a Child." (NoGreaterJoy.com) It has now become such a favorite of ours that we buy extra copies to give away. We are about to welcome the sixth boy into our family and we still review it frequently. It contains lots of helpful hints, some of which have shaped our thinking and parenting ideas I've listed below.

Consistent, Loving and Firm
Consistent! Sigh. It's so important and often so hard. But, the saying goes, "Give them an inch and they'll take a mile." If I want one of the boys to learn not to do something, I can't let them get away with it even once or they'll keep testing me to see if this time they can get away with it. A friend of mine once caught her young son trying to touch the stove top. Though it wasn't hot at the time, for his own safety, she wanted him to learn not to touch it. In the end, she told him no and flicked his little hand 36 times before he gave up trying to touch the burner. He learned it was truly a "no no". (Remember that rebellious sin nature I mentioned?!)

Loving... I often have to examine my motives and refrain from anger. A small child doesn't disobey to get back at me. He disobeys because it's his nature. I can become angry when I know he understands that his action is wrong but chooses to disobey me anyway. If I am loving in training and discipline, I don't take it personally, but lovingly correct and correct and correct and correct, as many times as it takes. If I had a nickel for all the times I've said... (you fill in the blank.)

Firm means I am the parent and the authority. Young children don't need to be reasoned with. They need to learn to obey first whether they understand why or not. Understanding and reasoning will come later as they mature and develop a conscience.

The Punishment Must Fit the Crime
In our house, we use a switch for correction. It's a small dowel rod we bought at a do-it-yourself store. We know that it stings - we have tried it on ourselves! If a punishment is to be an effective deterrent of wrong behavior, it must be memorable. We chose to use a switch because it is memorable and it is not as big as a hand or belt or paddle and less likely to bruise or injure the spine, etc. Pain works when understanding and reasoning don't.


When the boys were very young, we would flick their hand with our finger and tell them no as punishment. When that became ineffective, we would switch the back of their hand once. As they progressed in their understanding and willful disobedience was evident, they would get a swat on the thigh, then perhaps two or three swats, depending on the amount of disobedience and how many times before they had disobeyed in the same matter.

Let me just say here, too, that a repentant heart also comes into play, but more on that later.

Switching is not, however, the only form of discipline we use. With our older boys (7, 9 and 11) it is often more effective to take away a privilege or give extra work or both. If our boys are whining and complaining about chores or doing homework, we often will reduce or take away Wii time, which is already limited to non-school nights. We also reward them for good behavior and good attitudes... a special treat like ice cream or staying up a little later than normally allowed.


Remember their age
I touched on this a little bit above, but discipline does vary by age. Our two year old does not deserve the same reaction as our nine year old if he spits food out onto the kitchen floor. The two year old gets training not to do that, and the nine year old gets discipline and correction. Clearly, he knows better than to do something like that.

Willful Disobedience and Rebellion
There is a difference in how we discipline and correct and train our children when they disobey for the first time and when it is clearly an act of willful disobedience and rebellion. The first time our two year old flopped himself down on the floor because he didn't want to come to me when I called, I simply got up, went over to him, took his hand and helped him stand up. I calmly told him, "No, don't flop on the floor. Come to mommy when I call you," and then I led him to where I had been seated, showing him what I expected. After a few more times of this same training process, I knew he understood what I meant when I said, "Come to Mommy." From then on, whenever he flopped on the floor or refused to come, he got a swat on the leg accompanying the same instructions. Now if he sees that I have a switch in my hand, he comes immediately when I call. Soon, my words alone will be enough.

Inspect What You Expect
Children can live up to our expectations if we follow through. For example, we expect our children to sit in their seats during a meal without getting up and running around. If they want to get up from the table, they must ask permission unless it is to go to the bathroom. (We don't want any accidents if for some reason they are trying to wait for an appropriate pause in the conversation to ask to go.) We expect them to ask to be excused when the meal is over. We begin this training process when they are still in a high chair with two words "Excuse please." Eventually, this becomes a whole sentence; "May I be excused please?" When they first make the transition from high chair to regular chair, we are constantly reminding them to stay in their seats. (We can't leave the table either!) Once they understand we expect them to stay seated, they are disciplined if they don't obey. Now, if I happen to leave the table during a meal, inevitably, one of the boys will come find me to ask if he may be excused!

Grace and Mercy
Our boys know the definitions of grace and mercy from personal experience. Grace is receiving a gift you don't deserve. Mercy is not getting the punishment you do deserve. As parents, we do have mercy and we do give grace sometimes. I do actually pray for wisdom, at times even while in the act of correcting and disciplining one of the boys (and sometimes all of them at the same time). If I see evidence of a repentant heart, I can sometimes choose to be merciful if I feel they have learned their lesson. Sometimes the boys will ask, "Could you please have mercy this time?"

Once when I was about seven, I was left at home for a few hours with my 13-year-old brother as babysitter. He was trying to make me eat my vegetables and I absolutely refused. As he was chasing me around the table, I grabbed a fork and jabbed the wooden top twice, leaving 8 very neat, very deep tine marks. My brother forgot all about the veggies and for the next hour and a half took great delight telling me how much trouble I was in and how I was going to get it when Mom and Dad returned home. I was scared stiff. The moment they walked in the door, before my brother could even say a word, I burst into tears and confessed. My parents, of course, were disappointed and even angry, but they had mercy. In that wilfully disobedient and rebellious incident, I learned more through their mercy than I think I would have otherwise.

(sort of) Wordless Wednesday

Posted by  | Wednesday, September 16, 2009  at 7:17 AM  

Just a little background - Margaret doesn't know I posted these. I stole them from her blog! Her son, Jonathan, is quite the character. These pictures make me laugh so hard everytime I see them - especially the faces of both Margaret and Jonathon in the second picture!
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Health Foods. . . Part 2

Posted by  | Tuesday, September 15, 2009  at 3:44 PM  
Thanks Christina for filling in for me! Our internet has been out the past few days. . . but we are back online and I have a few minutes this evening to get my post up and running.

There's so much I'd like to talk about, but I'm going to stick to highlighting three things: milk, cod liver oil, and fat.

Raw Milk
Let me start by saying, it needs to be clean, raw milk. And this is the only milk we drink. (We don't have access to clean raw milk at this point so we simply don't use milk. Instead, I make kefir and we get dairy from plain yogurt, kefir smoothies, and sometimes cheese. I substitute coconut milk in desserts calling for milk and try to not make other recipes that call for milk where I can't substitute an alternative such as fermented dairy.)

Ultrapastuerized milk and cream (most of the cream you buy in grocery stores) is absolutely terrible for you (actually, you should really stear clear of all ultrapastuerized dairy). This is milk that has been heated to such a high temperature that it doesn't even have to be refrigerated until you open it - think about it, milk that can sit on a shelf for months?! Don't be fooled, most stores still put this milk in the cooler section so it will sell; you have to read the label carefully.
Clean, unpastuerized whole milk is really the only healthy source of dairy we can put in our bodies.


There is lots of evidence and resarch for this, however let me just leave you with these thoughts on skim milk, pastuerized milk, homogenized milk, and raw milk (from The Milk Book by William Douglas Campbell):


"When animals are placed on skim milk with the vitamins lost from the cream replaced, the animals develop very poorly. But when 4% butter fat is fed to similar animals, they develop normally. The vegetable oils now being pushed on the American people by organized medicine and self-styled nutrition experts will not work as a substitute for cream. Skim milk-fed animals develop testicular atrophy with complete sterility." pp. 36-7.


"Do you know how a pig farmer fattens his hogs? He feeds them skim milk." p.35.


"Steinman studied rats. The decay process in rats' teeth is biologically identical to that in human teeth. He divided his rats into several groups. The control group received a standard nutritious rat chow and averaged less than one cavity for their entire lifetime. The second group received a very heavy refined sugar diet. . . averaged 5.6 cavities per rat. The third group was fed homogenized grade A pasteurized milk and they had almost twice as many cavities as the sugar-fed group - 9.4 cavities per animal. (Add chocolate to this milk and the cavity rate quadruples over that of a sugar diet.) If processed milk does this to your teeth, what does it do to your other high-calcium organ - your bones? How does it affect calcium metabolism in the soft tissues of the body such as the blood vessels? Remember that your teeth are a window to your body's physical condition. " pp. 41-42.


"But with the increase in consumption of pastuerized milk came a dramatic and steady increase in arthritis, heart disease, crib death, and stroke." p. 43.


"Want to live to be a hundred? Eat mostly raw animal protein, and you may make it (if industrial pollutants, an 18-wheeler, or modern medicine don't get your first)." p.229


These are just a few quotes from one source. . . there is a plethora of information out there that is overwhelmingly in support of clean, raw milk. Even the reason we ever began pastuerizing milk will blow your mind (you can read about it in The Untold Story of Milk by Ron Schmid, M.D.). Also, here's a link for the real stats on clean, raw milk - it's true, more people get sick each year on pastuerized milk than clean, raw milk!


I really encourage you to read more on this topic, especially if you think it is simply crazy to drink unpastuerized milk. Your family's health is worth the extra research!


Cod Liver Oil
Is rich in fat-soluble vitamins A & D and helps with proper function of the brain and nervous system. It has been shown to improve brain function, memory, stress response, allergies, asthma, learning and behavior disorders, cancer, and heart health to name a few. It also strengthens bones. It's especially great for pregnant/nursing moms and young children. It improves breast milk to help brain development and helps to fight infections. For more information, and dosing information, check out the Weston A. Price Foundation.

Healthy Fats
These are healthy: butter; lard, beef and lamb tallow; chicken, goose, and duck fat; coconut, palm and sesame oils; cold pressed olive and flax oil; marine oils. These are not: all hydrogenated oils; soy, corn, and safflower oils; cottonseed oil; canola oil; all fats heated to very high temps in processing and frying. Here is an excellent resource to learn more about what oils to use. . . and how (for example, extra-virgin, cold-pressed olive oil is fine IF you don't heat it).

And a few more tidbits- with links for more research.

SOY is BAD for you!

Vegetarianism is NOT healthy. . . we need some animal protein in our diet!

Please, please stay away from anything with High Fructose Corn Syrup!

Want to know more about why MSG is so bad? (Seriously, it numbs your taste buds to healthy, God-given foods like the yummy sweetness of fresh fruit so that you have to have more and more JUNK!).

Health Foods

Posted by  | Monday, September 14, 2009  at 4:26 PM  
First of all, I should state that I was not scheduled to start this week out. I am the least qualified and have really learned all that I know from the other ladies here. When I first met Margaret, she really challenged my view of what "health foods" were. I envisioned tofu, soybeans, bran muffins and margarine. Ha! The only one of those that I'd consider "healthy" now is bran muffins - provided they aren't a prepackaged mix full of sugar!

The only reason I'm posting now is because Krista's internet is out, Margaret is moving out of the country, Hollie just had a baby and Leah is still healing from surgery. And my kids happen to still be napping at the moment. I hope that Krista especially is still able to post this week - stay tuned for more!

Our original intent was to provide some detailed posts highlighting a few health foods we've mentioned here before. I'm not exactly sure which ones Krista planned to highlight - but they would likely include cod liver oil, whole grains, "good" fats, etc.

Here is a quick list of the changes I've made to our foods in order to be more healthy (I included links to some articles that explain why!):

- making bread from fresh ground wheat (I also use fresh ground wheat for other baked goods as well.)

- subbing white sugar with honey or honey granules (sucanat) whenever I can

- limiting prepackaged foods

- avoiding unhealthy hydrogenated oils and trans fats, cooking mainly with olive oil when possible.

-buying organic for the most important items

-avoiding "ultra" pasteurized milk (I have found that Harris Teeter brand carries an organic pasteurized milk and that is usually what I buy. The BIG brands - Horizon, Stoneyfield, etc. are all "ultra pasteurized.")


The other ladies here have so much more to offer this week. I really hope they can chime in. In the meantime, here are some websites that come highly recommended if you want more information. I promise - you'll be amazed at how many misconceptions there are about "health" foods.

Weston A. Price Foundation - a super comprehensive look at all of these issues and more!

Health Begins with Mom - a GREAT place to start. On the left sidebar there are links to some very helpful posts to start reading if you're just starting to research.

Breadbeckers - my current source for grains, honey and honey granules.

One last note, for the sake of full disclosure. These things I listed are all goals. I am certainly not perfect and do not adhere to these things 100% of the time. They are my goals and I would say they occur about 75% of the time. Any mom is just as busy as I am and the balance between healthy foods, your budget and convenience is often a challenge. I don't always succeed.

For example, tonight we are having Tuna Helper for dinner! Oops.

Payneful Birthday Memories

Posted by  | Thursday, September 10, 2009  at 8:56 PM  
Samuel's First Birthday was SUPER low-key. We had cupcakes and ice cream with the neighbor kids. There wasn't really a theme or decorations because he had no idea what was going on. The cupcakes were a chocolate cake mix and a can of pureed pumpkin - they are super moist and delicious. The presents he got from the neighbors were a few hand-me-down toys (which we still have!).


Samuel's second birthday was celebrated with a friend. But since the party wasn't until a few days after his actual birthday, we had a little celebration at home. I asked Samuel what he wanted to have for his birthday, and his answer was "Ice and Abbie". We had his friend over for lunch at our house and used some left-over decorations from a party we had had earlier in the summer! Then for the birthday party, we had a luau-themed party with our church family in our pastor's backyard. We bought some beach decorations, had a surfing competition for the adults (a board balanced on a rolling pin), and filled the kiddie pool with water.


Samuel's 3rd birthday was just this past month. I let him pick the theme this year - Dinosaurs. I bought invitations and decorations at Party City (I had a $10 off a $30 purchase coupon that worked out nicely!). His party was the weekend after I got home from my surgery, so I wasn't able to do much. My mom helped A LOT! We cut up fresh fruits and veggies, grilled hot dogs & ate cake and ice cream. My mom and I made his cake after looking up ideas on-line.

Joel's 1st birthday was celebrated with the other two boys in our church family who are about 1 month older than him. We had a birthday party with our church family at one of the boy's houses. Our theme was "Jungle". One mom decorated, one mom made the little cakes for the birthday boys, and I made the party cake. We had a baby picture contest - everyone brought their baby picture, we taped them up on a wall, and then everyone voted for different categories. I won "Grooviest Baby" and Samuel won "Messiest Baby". There were a lot of fun categories and everyone had a good laugh.


And since Joel's birthday didn't until a couple weeks after his party, we celebrated the day by taking him downtown to the zoo and then to Ed Debevic's for lunch and ice cream.

Wordless Wednesday

Posted by  | Wednesday, September 9, 2009  at 11:14 PM  

1st and 3rd Birthday!

Posted by  |   at 8:00 AM  
In 2009, we have already celebrated Adeline's first birthday and Will's third birthday! First up was Adeline in March. For first birthday parties, I think its best to just have a gathering of family and friends for a meal and, of course, cake!! I do minimal decorations with only a few balloons or other handmade items (see below).

Following in that tradition, Adeline's party was held at her Gigi's house (bigger than ours!) and we had a cookout. I included many kid friendly food items including cheese cubes, fruit salad cut small, goldfishes and juice boxes. Here is Adeline with her cousins, friends and Grandaddy. :)

My big birthday girl enjoying her gifts.


Here she is discovering her cupcake! You'll see from Will's party below that I'm a HUGE fan of cupcakes! I love to bake and make cakes, but when they're young - cupcakes seem SO much easier to dish out. So far, its what I've done for all four birthday parties I have under my belt.

For Will's birthday, we had his party about a week after his actual birthday. So, on his actual birthday we made it special all day long. He got to use the (Mom-made) special plate! Dad left him a card and he opened a few presents. We generally just made it a big deal all day long!

Will's birthday is in June - so it is the perfect month for a POOL party! We have been blessed with having a great "third set" of grandparents for Will (and Adeline). Sherry was Will's babysitter while I worked and she, along with husband John, love Will like their own. They offered for us to have Will's party at their house and use the pool. We said, YES!

Since it was a pool party, we went with general pool/beach things and bright, beach ball-like colors. This bucket was our "dirt" cake. Except, I made the top layer to look like the ocean and sand. The "dirt" thing didn't really fit the pool party - but we love dirt cake, so this worked!


I also made some cupcakes for those that may not like dirt cake. I feel like I'm a little slow on this one, but I (finally) learned that you should make WHITE cake if you want the colors and/or design of the cupcake liners to show. I usually do chocolate, but it ruins the cute colors of the liners. This time the paper was bright thanks to white cake!

This year, I made each kid their own birthday garland. For Adeline's, I used pink and green patterned fabrics. Will got bright colors. My intention was to use iron-on letters to spell, "Happy Birthday." But I never got around to it. It worked, because each kid now has their banner hanging in their rooms! I love how they turned out.

One last birthday tip - this is the first year that I've ordered paper invites for any party. I usually use a service like Evite, but decided to change it up this year. For both Will and Adeline, I was able to get plenty (at least 20) of these adorable invites, plus envelopes, for about $15 shipped. I almost couldn't buy cards and print it myself for that cheap. The website is VistaPrint and I highly recommend it!



Birthday Parties

Posted by  | Monday, September 7, 2009  at 8:00 AM  
I love birthday parties and have found it so much fun to plan them for my children. Just as each child is different, each party has been different. Starting a few weeks or so before the event, I begin thinking of a theme that fits their personality or what they are “into” at that point. We just had a princess themed party for my three year old daughter and it was a lot of fun. I also had a dirt themed party for my son when he turned one. Although it has really be unnecessary (because we’ve only invited our families to our parties), I have crafted a simple invitation relating to the theme and sent it to their grandparents, aunts and uncles. This gives them a clue as to what the party might be about and also sometimes helps them with knowing what sort of things my children are interested in. When my brother received the princess party invitation, he took it upon himself to come to the party dressed like a princess! Everyone thought it was hilarious! When my kids are older and we are inviting unsaved playmates, I got the idea from my cousin (in-law) to include a note in the invitation that we will be reading a favorite story about Jesus at the party. This might be helpful in making sure no parents would be offended or caught off guard.
Once I have the theme and invitation completed, I decide on the cake. I love making homemade creations for my kids. There are lots of ideas in library books and parenting magazines for homemade cakes, with no decorating experience required. Another option is to look into taking a Wilton Cake Decorating class, offered at local craft stores. I have never taken one of these, but they look like so much fun! My husband’s mother makes an incredible ice cream cake for every birthday. She bakes a regular cake mix and cuts the two 9” rounds in half and layers them with ice cream (chocolate chip is everyone’s favorite). Then she frosts the whole cake with a fudge icing, tops it with a few sprinkles and freezes it overnight. All of her kids (and now those of us who are her kids through marriage) request this cake for birthdays and it has become a much anticipated birthday tradition.
I usually decorate our dining room for the party and like to do it while the kids are napping or asleep at night, so they wake up to a party scene. I use crepe paper streamers (so cheap and lots of options) and balloons. For Meredith’s last party, someone gave us a helium tank. It really made the party a lot of fun. She loved all the balloons. These are available and local party stores, and WalMart, I think. Christina has also crafted lovely birthday banners that she uses with her kids. What a great way to incorporate birthday tradition. One of our birthday traditions is measuring the height of the birthday kid and taking a picture of them so they can see how they’ve grown from the previous year. Doing this on their birthday ensures that I don’t miss anyone too! I mark their heights on a large ruler I made out of scrap wood since I knew we’d be moving frequently and didn’t want to mark on the wall and have to leave it behind. You can see it in the background in this photo of our Dorothy the Dinosaur themed party. I have also been meaning to make a special birthday plate for the birthday kid to use all day, but I haven’t had access to one of those “paint your own pottery” places where I live. When they are older, I’m considering using my fine china on their birthday (when else am I going to use it?) I also fulfill the birthday kid’s request for a favorite breakfast and/or dinner.
Birthday parties can be a lot of work and as we (Lord willing ) add more children to our family, I may not be able to do a party for every child every year, so we may eventually go to every other year or something. But, we will celebrate, even just as a family. I know from my childhood I have forgotten many of the everyday things that we did as a family, but special events (like my own birthdays) stick out in my memory. I can remember the cakes my mom lovingly made for me and my brothers and I want to do the same for my children. Be creative, use the internet and other moms as a resource and tailor the party to fit the child. They’ll love it!

Birthdays are for Cake!

Posted by  |   at 12:00 AM  
I just love celebrating our children's birthdays. We take tons of pictures, I blog about the day (so that I can always look back and remember), and it's just really special to take that day (month really - once I turn the calendar and see their birthday coming I'm thinking about it all month) and praise the Lord for the amazing miracle and blessing He has entrusted to us. We try to make the day really special and have a small party later in the afternoon.

As far as birthday traditions, on Lydia's first birthday I decided to make a cake with a design. Now, I'd never made a cake before that wasn't in a 9 x 13" pan or sheet cake. I was living overseas and couldn't go to Michael's and pick out a cake pan and I definitely didn't have a clue about icing a cake. I got online and found a Moo Cow Cake that I could make from things I already had in my house. I decided to go for it. I had so much fun making this cake that I decided I was going to make a cake for my children for each birthday thereafter.

Lydia's first birthday cake


For her second birthday I became a little more adventurous and experimented with icing a cake with tips and colors. My goal for decorating the cake was for Lydia to be able to recognize Nemo. My heart melted when she saw it and declared, "Neeemo!"

Lydia recently turned 3 and this was her cake. She talked about her cake for at least two months before her birthday and had a hard time deciding which princess she wanted. It was so special when she finally saw her cake on her birthday. There was so much excitement and anticipation - and it brought her so much joy to have her very own, very special birthday cake.

In our home, I think cake is definitely going to be associated with birthdays. . . which made me recently realize I'm probably going to make a cake on Christmas as well. Another exciting cake tradition to think about!

PS - This is the chocolate cake recipe I used for her 2nd and 3rd birthday:
6 oz. semi-sweet chocolate (I used ghiradelli)
3/4 c. boiling water
1 1/2 c. butter
1 1/2 c. raw honey
6 eggs, separated
1 1/2 t. real vanilla extract
3 1/2 c. fresh-milled soft flour
1 1/2 t. baking soda
3/4 t. sea salt
1 1/2 c. buttermilk

Melt chocolate in boiling water; cool. Cream butter and honey. Beat in egg yolks. Stir in vanilla and chocolate. Set aside. Mix flour, salt, and soda. Add to flour mixture, alternating with buttermilk. Beat egg whites until stiff; fold into batter. Butter/four cake pan(s). (I used Spectrum-brand organic palm oil shortening for the pan - it is a healthy alternative to Crisco.) Bake at 350 degrees for 30 minutes or until toothpick comes out clean. (I didn't beat the egg whites separately and it turned out fine.)

It tastes great, came out of the pan easily, and is definately a cake recipe I can live with us eating on special occassions.

Why I love being a mommy of 4 under 3 (3 biological and 1 adopted)

Posted by  | Thursday, September 3, 2009  at 8:00 AM  





The oldest of my four children is 2 1/2 (Josh) - yes, that's right - that's my OLDEST of 4, and he is quite content to let you know of his superior age and experience :). He is the expert in all things for his siblings, and usually when they cry, it's because they are missing their Daddy and then whatever the real problem is. After that, comes my adorable identical twin girls who are now 16 months old. When we went in for our initial check-up/ultrasound I was 8 weeks along and they told me that I was going to have twins. My initial response was to burst into tears right then and there because I couldn't imagine how in the world I'd be able to handle 3 under 3 (Ha! The irony). The patient doctor reassured me and told me he had a set of twins, it would be okay, to which my response was - was your first 8 MONTHS OLD when you found out and he said "no" and I continued to cry until my husband asked me which of our children was I going to tell I didn't want, and I sobered up from the pregnancy hormones, walked around in a daze for 2 weeks, and then started getting excited. They are a joy. After that, comes my precious 1 month old - Isaac. When the girls were 6 weeks old, the Lord would not let me get away from the concept of adoption. So, I approached my husband, warned him that I had to be going through some weird type of baby blues, but that I thought we were supposed to start the process of adoption. He looked at me a little stunned, but prayed about it for the next 2 days, and we felt called to start the process. God is AMAZING at his timing too.

Most people think we're crazy to have 4 under 3, and it's not like when we got married and said we wanted kids, we planned on having them this close together, but that was what God told us to do - and yes, they were all planned :) - for each of them we felt God's prompting to begin to try for another one. Does that mean that we are pretty tired right now (we also moved a week after we came home with Isaac) and that errands with our adorable brood can be a challenge (shopping consists of what I can fit in the bottom of the stroller with my newborn strapped to me)? Of course it does. But I think so many times in life we miss out on the wonderful blessings that God has for us because we allow the god of comfort to slip his way into our lives. Is our life "comfortable" right now at this exact moment. Yes and no. It's extremely comfortable because we have a roof over our heads, food on the table, etc. But, no, it's not comfortable and full of ease the way a mom who has her kids a little more spaced out is right now. But, that wasn't God's plan for our lives. And like I said, his timing is amazing. We received Isaac literally on the exact day when he had to enter our lives or we would have had to wait several years before we could continue to process - that's too long a story to go into here.

So, that's who we are. But, why do I love being a mommy to my 4, and how do I love being a mommy to boys, girls, twins, and biological vs. adopted children? First of all, both genders are amazing. I was not excited when I found out that the girls were girls. Not because I never wanted girls, but I was having such a blast as a mom to a boy, that I couldn't imagine how being a mom to girls could ever be as fun. But I was SO wrong! Each gender has it's own fun idiosyncrasies that bring such joy. The girls crack me up as they practice being a mommy to their dolls - something I never had to teach them. And Karissa is going to be my fashion diva. She has a costume that she's created on every day. Kathleen is totally different - even though they are identical twins. God definitely gave them different personalities. It's not all in the genes :). It's been amazing to watch them be polar opposites from day one. God's little sparks of life that he breathed into them were precious to each of them uniquely. And my eldest boy - is all boy with such a tender heart. I love his obsession with all things that have wheels, and his utter fascination with noises and sounds. He is my little protector, especially of Isaac. He will stand guard and defend his little brother from the excessive loving of his sisters.

And then, there's Isaac. There is a whole gamut of reactions that adoptive moms feel when they bring a child home. I was blessed to receive a newborn this first time around. And I was so blessed because I weaned the girls 2 weeks before we brought Isaac home and was able to transition seamlessly over to nursing him. So, there was an instant bond with him the first night. I know for a fact that this is not always the case, and it's not realistic to expect it to always be like that. Adoption is very, very different in ways that you just don't expect. There is anticipation that a baby is coming, but it does not feel like a baby is coming. You go from living your life to boom, the next day literally, you bring a baby home. And if it's a domestic adoption that baby is not truly yours until the waiting period after the mother terminates her rights is over. So, you have a tug of war emotionally during that waiting period which places guards up within your emotions. Those I felt at least prepped for if not prepared for, but I wasn't ready for the fact that friends and family have that anticipation phase short-circuited too. It's just as hard on them because they don't have the time before hand where you are certain a baby is coming and you prepare yourself. Also, parents who adopt older children have a much harder time bonding with them, and children who are older when they are adopted have a harder time attaching to their new parents. There is a trust that has to be built slowly between them that cannot happen overnight the way it can with a newborn.

But, as far as my love for my youngest son. There is truly no difference between him and my other three. And other than catching myself looking in his face to see who he must look like in the family and then remembering he wasn't born biologically into it...there's no difference (you'd think that the darker skin would clue me in, but my husband and I have talked about it - except when we are intentionally noticing it - as a parent you truly do become color blind. What an amazing testimony about how God must feel about all of our different skin tones). He is my son, my precious one. I love him because he's my son, but I also love him because God used him to teach us some amazing things. God squeezed and pressed and disciplined us in the year leading up to his arrival in ways that were so difficult and refining. We both had to give up things that meant so much to us in order to pay for his adoption. Every penny spent became one that didn't go towards adopting him and we began to realize idols in our lives that had crept in with those expenditures. So, I love being Isaac's mommy not just because he's my son, but because God used him to bring me closer to him in ways I never would have dreamed of or imagined.

I love being a mommy to my children because it teaches me to be selfless in ways that I could never have been otherwise. I am a naturally very independent person, and I am much more likely to give you the advice of pick yourself up and get on with it than I am to give you sympathy, so God uses the current ages of my children to remind me to have a heart of service. And who couldn't love it when you hear your 2 year old singing almost every word to "Mighty to Save." And I love hearing my eldest three dying laughing in their room at night (currently they are sharing a bedroom because Mommy and Daddy and Isaac are sharing the only other one available - the joys of moving :)). And I love watching Kathleen learning how to be a Mommy by taking care of Isaac in her own little one year old way. And I love watching them tear off towards the door when Daddy comes in. And I love my sweet Karissa's cuddles. She's a mommy's girl if I ever saw one. If you're looking for her, just look two feet away from me, and she'll be copying my every move :). Being a mom to my four is easy in that they are almost in the same stage. They discover things together. Oh, how I love my kids. I can't believe how precious they are, how they've taught me so many things, and turned my life into utter blissful chaos. I love it. Yes, others might call us crazy, but we love it - and it's just what God had for our family. There are moments of being overwhelmed, but in general I just remember - "this too shall pass" (thank you Suzi Brummett for those words of wisdom about having twins). The stressors of the moment pale in comparison to the riches of the day. What a joy and a blessing being a mom is.

We interrupt this program...

Posted by  | Wednesday, September 2, 2009  at 9:31 AM  
Hey mamas! What a great week to ponder why we love being moms. Thanks to the ladies who have shared so far.

I am interrupting our scheduled discussion to draw your attention to the Blog Frog community discussion group on the left-hand side of the blog. Melissa has asked a great question that I know a lot of other moms have asked before - how do you sleep to small children in the same room? If you have experience with this, or you are interested in the answer, please check in over at the Blog Frog and see if you can help. Thanks!!

Wordless Wednesday...

Posted by  |   at 5:00 AM  
13!

Treasuring and Pondering

Posted by  | Tuesday, September 1, 2009  at 9:18 PM  

Hello! My name is Mary Straits, and I am honored to be a guest author again on Prayer of Hannah! Our son Noah is 2 ½ years old, and we are expecting our second son this January. You can visit my family’s blog here.


Before I elaborate on why I love being mom, I have to confess that I didn’t ever dream of being a mother as a kid. I had three younger brothers, and as one of the older sisters, I had a mothering role to them. I felt like I knew what to expect when it came to pregnancy, baby care, and little boys because those were such big parts of my childhood. I did not know, however, the tremendous way that being a mother would change me and teach me. Because we have to go through major fertility treatment to have children (you can read about our journey to our first son here and our second son here), I learned before I actually had a baby what a gift having children are—mainly because it was a long, expensive process for us. After I held Noah and began our journey together, however, I really “got” what being a mother is all about. Here are my thoughts on why I love being a mom~

1. I totally understand the scripture that says, "Mary treasured up all these things and pondered them in her heart" (Luke 2:19). I have some precious, precious memories that I will never forget: the first flutterings of arms and legs, the sound of an eager heartbeat through an ultrasound machine, those first cries, watching my sweet newborn sleep, Noah calling out, “Mama!!!! Uv yoouuu!” (Love you!). There are so many moments I don’t have pictures or videos of, but my heart remembers them all clear as day. This is probably what I love most--moments that you know you will treasure and ponder forever!

2. Being a mom has taught me dependence on God like never before. Each phase has its own challenges: praying desperately for a tiny newborn to latch and nurse correctly, for strength during cry-it-out, for health after a series of ear infections, for peace and comfort in the ER with a 104 fever, for help in knowing how to handle tantrums and vegetable strikes, for patience, for our children to know and love God, for them to be protected from evil influences and people, etc. The list is endless. I have seen clearly that I am not perfect and that I need God desperately for wisdom and protection for my babies.

3. Being a mom has taught me to trust myself. It is SO TRUE that you know your babies and when something is not right. The times that I’ve ignored my “mom instinct” or listened to others instead, I have regretted it. Noah had a broken wrist for days—I didn’t feel right about it, but everyone kept saying, “He’s using it just fine. He’d be crying if it were broken. He’s OK!” Well, he wasn’t, and I knew it all along. I felt so, so guilty. Trusting ourselves as mothers is a gift and protection to our children!
4. I love experiencing life through my son. Things that I would normally not enjoy (ie—a musical show of Thomas the Train or parades or bugs or the beach), I have a new love for because of the joy my sweet boy has for such things. I have noticed ants, birds, bumble bees, butterflies, etc. that I would normally ignore. I love that God has given me “eyes to see” the beauty and fun in the world again through my sweet boy! 5. Being a mom has also gotten me through one of the hardest experiences of my life: the loss of one of our twins in my current pregnancy. God used my sweet Noah to minister to me, and I can't think of a sweeter gift. Here is what my firstborn did for me. I love seeing God use the tiniest people to do His work!

I could probably go on and on about all the things I love, but I encourage you to comment with some of your favorite mommy moments--the moments you treasure and ponder! Thanks for letting me share with you!
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