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Saturday, September 17, 2011

punkin boston cream pie!

We went to this great little bakery the other day that has all of these fantastic little pastries, The Rhinelander Bakery in old town Arvada. They have beautiful cakes in a display case, with a door where the customer can open it and take one out to pay for. In that display case, they had a Boston cream pie with fondant poured over it, among many fantastic and pricey cakes, along with plastic "Happy Birthday" cake toppers surrounding the cakes. I'm not sure if you can see this one coming or not, but, let me tell you, I was blindsided, as was grandma! As we longingly gazed at the pastries, Punkin, you were busy sticking those cake toppers right into that beautiful fondant so that they were sticking into the cake by the letter "y." Fortunately, they didn't make us buy the cake, but were able to pour a little more fondant over the holes. I told you that we don't decorate other peoples' cakes, but couldn't really punish you, as I always let you decorate our cakes at home. You were upset, anyways, as you always are when you see that panicked look on my face, so I think that was punishment enough. We bought a mocha cream horn and a cookie, as well as drinks and sat out in the wonderful fall air to eat them. All in all, it was pretty funny, even right when you did it. I'm just glad they didn't make me buy the cake!

Thursday, September 8, 2011

Peace

A friend came over the other day and was amazed at how quiet and happy you girls are and how peaceful our home is. Punkin was "reading" a book, Apple was asleep and Blueberry was sitting and smiling happily in her chair. Just to be clear, this isn't always the case. However, it usually is. It's not by chance, either. There are several contributing factors. In Zechariah 8:16-17, it says, "This is what you shall do.... give judgement in your gates for truth, justice and peace." I love these verses in their entirety. I do my best to institute this one in our home. Our peace is directly related to following God. In order to have a peaceful home, we don't watch much television. The drama on every show, used to create excitement, forces an excitement level in the home that I don't want. I play music almost constantly, but I'm very careful about what it is. I play classical, jazz, kid's songs, Spanish kid's songs, audiobooks read to music, worship music and sermons. I also do my best to not get excited when things go wrong. For example, if you break something, Punkin, like you JUST did, I tell you to stand still and I pick you up and put you elsewhere. Then, I clean it up. After that, I ask you what happened. If it was an accident (like it always is), I tell you what not to do next time. If it was done purposefully (which has never happened thus far), I'd tell you that we don't do tat and you'd stand in the corner for a few minutes. But I do my best to never raise my voice. The only loudness is Bob barking or kids playing. If it gets too loud, I'll send you outside to play. I think that peace in our home, though it may sound boring, is incredibly comforting to you. You still get excited, but you control yourself more and unleash when it's more appropriate, like outside. The peace helps you to learn more, too. You are able to cure your boredom yourself with exploration (like how you're putting dogfood in the dog's water right now....) and you're able to concentrate on puzzles or whatever you're doing a lot easier than in a loud or over-stimulating place. I hope you all grow up to be peaceful girls!

Friday, September 2, 2011

Managing our busy life

I get asked a lot how I manage to go to school, raise you girls and do all the other stuff we do. Well, today seems to be a slower than usual day (or I'm running faster than usual due to all the coffee I drank this morning), so I'll explain.

I am a firm believer in doing chores. So, our morning goes something like this: change (and bathe babies) and feed everyone, read my bible, make beds, unload the dishwasher, put a load of laundry in, briefly clean bathrooms, exercise, then shower and/or bathe Punkin (usually babies eat while Punkin and I exercise, then fall asleep, giving us time to shower). This takes until around 10:30, depending on the day. Around 12, we all have lunch. At 12:30, Punkin watches cartoons and I put the babies to sleep. You all usually sleep until around 2:30. During that time, I fold laundry and do homework. Computer time is usually interspersed throughout the day, mostly when I get tired of working. I try to limit it to ten minutes at a time, tho, or I'll get behind. In the afternoon, we go to the store as needed, pick up the house, make dinner and load dishes. At night, we eat dinner at 6:30, change into  jammies and feed babies around 7:00, put babies down at 7:30 and put Punkin down at 8:00. We wake up around 6:30-7:00 and start all over.

It's really not that hard. We're pretty scheduled, tho. You go to sleep faster when you know what to expect. While I'm working around the house, the babies will roll around on the floor and Punkin will play with whatever school project I put out that day. A lot of things we will do outside, such as eat breakfast or lunch, read the bible or I do my homework (if it doesn't need exclusive attention on my part). A lot of those things, like cleaning the bathroom or picking up the house, go super quickly when I do them every day, leaving us with time to explore outside or go to the Apex to swim or play.

Anyways, that's how your days go, girls!

Thursday, September 1, 2011

Pasta and oral exploration schools :o)

Punkin- Today, you went to pasta school :o) ! Well, you didn't really go anywhere. You played with Wacky Mac, which consists of four different pasta shapes (wheels, spirals, penne and shells) in four different colors. First, you sorted them. Then, you weighed each different shape. Then, you poured them from one container to another and back again, including through a funnel into a jar. Finally, you glued them to pieces of sponge to make stamps. We haven't used the stamps yet, but we probably will tomorrow.

Apple and Blueberry- You orally explored some plastic chain linking toys and looked at the three different colors of them. It doesn't sound super exciting reading about it, but you both really seemed to be learning a lot. Maybe we'll try something squishy tomorrow. Unless you find something else you'd rather explore ;o) !

Lists for homeschooling


Things to help guide our homeschooling. I'm sorry so much has to do with homeschooling lately. I'm on a bit of a roll right now.

Our Five Priorities in homeschooling:
1. Relationship with God.
2. Relationships within family.
3. Character qualties.
4. Work ethic.
5. Academics.

Learning percentages:
-90% retained through teaching it to someone else with immediate application of what they learned.
-75% retained when practiced.
-50% retained when discussed in a group.
-30% retained when seen in demonstration.
-20% retained through audio-visual teaching.
-10% retained through reading.
-5% retained through lecture (so I probably won't lecture you often ;o) )