Scented Dough
There are lots of recipes out there for homemade play dough, and although we've tried several, we've never loved any enough to make the savings worth it to us. On top of that, I really, really don't like PlayDoh. Ever tried to get it out of carpet? To me, the mess isn't worth the play, but you might feel differently and that's entirely ok. I have a young artist friend and mom whose children create wonderful things every day, and she once asked me, "You aren't one of those boring Wikki Stix moms, are you?" Why yes, as a matter of fact I am. And I don't feel badly about it. I am also a kit-buying mom, so my kids do get some creative time and have produced enough art to blanket the neighborhood in drawing paper. Because of my PlayDoh-hating confession, you might feel as my friend Lisa did when I told her I have found a play dough I love. She was in shock. But it's true, and it just took a company that would add scent to make me love this stuff. Here it is:

Lakeshore Learning produces and sells this fruity scented dough and I am in serious love with it. I relegated two old jellyroll pans to the use of scented play dough, and when it had completely dried out by the end of last year, I thought, "Oh good! I can buy some new ones in the fall!"

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Kumon FUNbooks for the Littlest Preschool Crowd
Before we get to the questions and answers I promised, we're going to spend this week looking at a few resources for preschoolers. These are a few of my favorite things, items that work well in our home. Sitting here on my "to do" pile is a nice stack of Kumon workbooks designed for preschoolers. Now, I love the whole Charlotte Mason/Living Books/WholeHearted Child/Real Learning/Montessori approach to the early years, and you all know how in tune I am with the Bluedorn's Ten Things to Do With Your Child Before Age Ten. However, when you have more than one home educated child, you soon begin to see a phenomenon unique to homeschooling households. The younger ones want to "do school", too. I've seen this in my own household year after year, and I read about it on all of your blogs, too. What does a three-year-old mean when they say they want to do school? Workbooks. Pencils. Something worth erasing. And one can only color Strawberry Shortcake so many times, no? If I am going to sit with my little ones and crack open a workbook, I want it to be something that has some benefit, something that redeems their time and mine. Finding such a book for the really young ones (two to three-year-olds) can be really tough. Kumon to the rescue! Wow, I love these little books. Just right for the littlest set, and doing two to three pages per day seems to be the right amount of time before the attention is elsewhere. Here is our four-year-old's favorite:

Now, I have to say that I haven't ever actually taken the time to teach a little one to fold paper, and it really isn't a skill they just naturally possess. She had to ask me every time for help using her fingernail to crease the page. And when her little page was done, she had something fun to show for it- a crying child who becomes happy with a simple fold revealing a smile, a little boy whose clothes are changed as the result of a fold. Right up a preschooler's alley.

Kumon's First Step series is designed for ages two and up, so if you have a little, little one begging to "do school", you might find these books worth your investment. They'll feel like they're an official student and you'll be teaching them something useful in the process.

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Wild at Heart
I'm usually not a Top Ten Bestseller book reader, particularly if the top ten books fall under the category of "Christian". When Wild at Heart came out, we didn't pay much attention to it until my brother gave it to us for Christmas. "We'll crack it", we thought. My brother is a thinker and has three boys of his own, so we believed the book must have enough merit for him to have given it as a gift (unless he was just trying to unload it on us, which wouldn't really be like him. I think.) Want to know what I remember most about the book? The ability to let boys be boys. To let them test themselves. Push the limits. To not be a molly-coddling mom who freaks out at the sight of male blood. Or female blood, for that matter, but so far my girls know their limits and don't often test them. This trait comes in handy during moments like this:

Those are my second and third-born boys. If you're hoping for manly men for your daughters, you'll find them here. They might, however, come with scrapes, scars, and some really great adventure stories.

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Leaving the Older Ones in Charge
When we have to leave for a portion of the day, the older ones are happy to run things. Making a list or schedule helps them to know what to do, and it gives them the ability to tell a little one, "This is what Mom and Dad said you need to be doing". Everything runs much more smoothly, and we can call them at any given moment and ask where they are on the day's list. When we had little Joe two weeks ago, we left six of the seven at home with this list: GOOD MORNING! • Breakfast—French Toast Casserole • Breakfast Clean-up: H- clean up Ch, play with him, change his diaper N- counters and table J- dishes, including helping C put the high stuff away C- clear table and empty dishwasher A- floor (somebody help her!) • Pray together. H lead by reading the Proverb for the day. • Chores. DON’T SKIMP ON YOUR CHORES! Work as if you are working for God, because you ARE! • Math- C do your math puzzle, and only do the ones (1 + 3= 4, etc.). A with J (J do math, A do clay. Help her pick it up and put it away when she’s done). C with N. • C goes down for nap at 11:00 • PE- N lead this. • Everyone clean bedrooms except J. J- help the boys and do the hallway. You’ll clean your room after C wakes up. • Get C up at 12:30, change his diaper • Lunch- sandwiches on Schroeder bread, chips • Lunch clean-up: same as breakfast! • Quiet Hour. C with J. A on my bed with books. • C down for nap at 3. • After Quiet Hour, do the rest of your schoolwork. When it is finished: Boys- take turns with computer games Girls- Short video, then you may go to Grammy and PopPop’s • Make sure you talk to Grammy and PopPop about what they want you to do for dinner. • Get C up at 5! Change his diaper! We love you ALL! Pray for us, and for your new baby brother, too. Dad will be calling you throughout the day to make sure everything is ok.
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Be Kind to One Another

 

Dear Kendra, I have been wanting to contact you for a while, and I am sure you will be very busy to reply with your new little one coming so soon. Actually, I am due about a week after you, so I do understand if you can't reply. However, the reason I have been wanting to contact you is I wanted to ask you if you have experienced your children being less than pleasant with each other, and I don't mean verbally or physically mean but just snappy or impatient with each other, and if you have how have you worked on the problem? I have usually very kind and happy children- they are 11 1/2, 10, 6, and 3. As you will know how horribly uncomfortable you feel in the last few weeks of pregnancy, I just haven't had the energy, patience or the ability to jump on their behaviour, which is then getting me down because it is not how I want my children to be with each other, although I do try but somedays it just seems to go right over their heads and nothing I say is sinking in, even when I ask them, "What do you think Jesus would be thinking of this behaviour?" I do think it is because I have not been consistant with them in working out a way to deal with it at the time, due to tiredness and just plain frustration. Bless you and your family, I will be praying for you for the safe delivery of your wee babe, and will be checking in on your site for a photo when he arrives. Kind regards and God Bless, Angela Dear Angela- The short answer is, "Yes". As I got to thinking about what the long answer might be, I realized that at its root, the unkindness we see exhibited in our children is simply sin. After more than 15 years of parenting, I don't know why I am still surprised when my children's sin manifests itself in the myriad of ways that it does. I do know that I need to dish out heaps more sympathy than I do, because after almost 38 years of dealing with my own sin, I still get weary of battling my flesh every day. So, when I can see their impatience with one another, their snippy words, their unkind put-downs, I have to deal with the root of everything. When I don't know what to do or say, my husband reminds me to always rely on Scripture. He reminds me of verses like Hebrews 4:12-- "For the word of God is living and powerful, and sharper than any two-edged sword, piercing even to the division of soul and spirit, and of joints and marrow, and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart." God's Word will not return void, and it will convict their hearts. Isaiah 55:11-- "So shall My word be that goes forth from My mouth; It shall not return to Me void, But it shall accomplish what I please, And it shall prosper in the thing for which I sent it." We begin and end with Scripture. In the middle, however, we do some practical things to correct and admonish, always attempting to remember the sin that lies underneath the behavior. And prayer. Lots and lots of prayer. One of our common Circle Time questions is, "What are you working on?", to which each of us shares a struggle we are having and then we pray for each other. A little over a year ago I answered another reader's question on the same topic. I'll take the newborn baby excuse to simply cut and paste here, because I don't think my answers on practical application have really changed. I will, however, tell you that we are still working on these things in our home. Little by little, precept upon precept we are plugging away. From the post entitled, "How Do You Get Them All to Get Along?": "Recently Lisa (my best friend) and I were discussing the unkind words our children exchange with one another. She told me she’s been addressing the offending parties with the following question, “Were you being as kind as possible?” That tends to get to the heart of everything, and I find that the answer is usually, “No”, from all parties involved. From there we can move on to addressing other attitudes and wrong actions, and then set to work apologizing and working to solve the problem, like perhaps making all guilty parties work at cleaning up the mess together (or whatever the issue was). But we are also extremely proactive, or at least we try to be. From the day each baby is born, we tell the children that they are best friends. We watch for outside relationships that might take a child’s heart away from his siblings, and we even put the kibosh on friendships that have developed that take precedence over sibling relationships. If they are being kinder to a friend than to a sibling, we take a serious hiatus from the friendship. We also do a lot together. School, reading aloud, projects, family movie night… Our desire is that our home be a place that is so exciting, so fun, and so attractive to our children that they won’t be looking around for someplace else to be those things to them. Or worse, looking around for friends to validate and love them because they have ample validation, love, and acceptance from their parents and siblings. And we do observe a daily quiet hour in which no one is allowed to be near anyone else. We all take a book or two and find a couch, bed, hammock, or floor where no one else is. At the end of the time alone, we are usually refreshed and ready to enter into life together again. I have asked adults I know who have healthy, dynamic relationships with their siblings and parents what their years growing up were like. Were they always best friends? Did they squabble a lot? What did their parents do to foster a close bond between them all? Many have answered that no, they weren’t always as close as they are now, yes they did argue, and yes, their parents regularly communicated that they were going to be best friends. Their parents also put family above their own friendships and worked hard to make their family circle very close. Sometimes when I feel I am growing weary of refereeing squabbles, I try to envision our lives in 10 to 20 years. I like to see a barn filled with our adult kids, their spouses, their children, and close friends. Thanksgivings, Christmases, and summer bashes have the potential of being riotously fun, but those things don’t just happen on their own. Left to our selfishness, we would be a family marked by strife, irritation, and solitude. By the grace of God, we are working diligently on our personal areas of sin and on not allowing those sins to consume us or our friendships with each other. And our greatest goal is that our family brings glory to God!"
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