Just Live Your Life With Your Kids
I wrote the following post several weeks ago, not knowing that yesterday our five-year-old would fracture her pelvis in two places, the result of hopping out of the van as I parked it in the driveway.  We have returned after 24 hours of ERs, ambulances, and hospitals to a month of rest for her (can't put a cast on a pelvis) and again, boundless thankfulness to God for preserving a child of ours yet again. One of the PICU doctors who treated Mighty Joe's Enterovirus this past summer visited us today before our little girl was discharged.  I don't know if this skilled man of medicine whom we have come to respect and appreciate greatly believes in the God of the Bible, but as we stood and talked today about the fact that two of our children's lives were spared in 2008, he said, "Thank God". Yes, thank God! --------- I've done a lot of thinking these past few weeks I haven't been blogging.  My husband and I have been mulling many things over, including our parenting, our children, and our family life. We've been homeschooling for 12 years now, and we've seen many things come and go.  We've jumped on a few bandwagons ourselves, some to our detriment, others to our benefit.  Here's the thing:  there is no one right method of parenting/homeschooling/churching for every family. Some of us get so caught up in a system, an ideology, or a paradigm that we can't just live life. Ever since Mighty Joe battled fiercely for his seven-week-old life, my whole entire perspective has changed.  I feel ill-equipped to give anyone advice.  Some of you have emailed me over the break asking for my opinion or wisdom and you know it took me weeks to reply.  I just don't feel worthy of that position.  You're free to continue emailing me, but do so with the understanding that I don't have all the answers.  Actually, I only have one: love God. And live your life!  Boldly!  With great joy!  Passionately! Because as my dear friend Heather whose husband Eric passed away a year ago this month will tell you, there are no guarantees.  Their family took up Point of Grace's How You Live as their theme song.  That never seemed so poignAnt as the night we knew Eric was not going to live another day on this earth. "Make peace with God, make peace with yourself.  Because in the end, there's nobody else..." Happy to be back sharing my life with you all- ~Kendra
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It's That Time of Year Again

Christmas 2006 --- It's true- they grow way too quickly

The annual break.  Because my brain can only hold so much info, and the details of Christmas and eight kiddos push everything else right OUT of my brain. May I ask a small favor?  If you are doing any Christmas shopping online, would you consider shopping through the Preschoolers and Peace Amazon Store? Whenever you do, the profits go toward the cost of maintaining the site.  And you don't even have to purchase anything from the store itself!  If you get to Amazon and decide to purchase something entirely different, Preschoolers and Peace still gets a referral fee.  That goes for any time you purchase anything through one of the Amazon links on the site. Have a wonderful Thanksgiving and Christmas, everyone.  See you in January! ~Kendra
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ResourcesKendra Comments
Realistic Christmas Expectations

What are your expectations for Christmas?  Do your expectations match reality? All of us want the focus of Christmas to be on Christ, and we tend to be appalled when our children tear through presents but sigh with sleepiness as we read through the story of Christ's birth.  But they are children. "When I was a child, I spoke as a child, I understood as a child, I thought as a child... Don't misunderstand what I am saying.  We don't toss the deeper meaning of Christmas aside and say, "Oh well.  Someday they'll get it."  We continue to draw the focus of Christmas back to Christ.  This is our holiday, not the world's.  We celebrate the coming of Christ because we as believers know the impact and magnitude of Christ's arrival most poignantly. We must also realize, however, that our children are just that: children. If we expect them to respond to Christmas like children, our expectations will meet reality.  Then we can joyfully lead them by the hand into a more mature understanding of the Gospel.  We can smile at them with the sweet knowledge that God has much work to do in their lives.  We can acknowledge that we adults, too, have but a vague, dimly lit understanding of the fullness of Christ's ministry while on earth. Enjoy those little ones.  Their wide-eyed wonder at our earthly celebrations will fully mature someday when they are struck by the gravity and meaning of the grace of God in the midst of their sin. ...but when I became a man, I put away childish things."  I Corinthians 13:11
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First-Time Obedience and Other Parenting Issues That Have No Quick Fix
Dear Kendra, I have three girls, a 5.5, 2.5, and an 11-month-old. My girls are good, but I have not been consistent with the first time obedience and things are frustrating around here. I was encouraged by your remarks on teaching obedience before school stuff and we will be officially starting that soon. I went to the Godly Tomatoes site and thought that all made sense and could be done. And I spent time in the Word, studying what God has to say about discipline. It is pretty clear He expects it. So I set out to "stake them" and had a few good days where I was really able to stay ahead and those were great days. But then I am not consistent for a second, it seems, and we are back to the beginning. I am just pretty discouraged. I know you don't know me and if I knew anyone around me that was doing this with their kids, I would be right there talking to them about it. But I don't know any families that are requiring first time, every time obedience, and I guess I am looking for a little encouragement. I wonder if you started requiring first time obedience from the beginning with your kids or if there was a time when you realized things weren't as good as they could be...do you have different expectations of a two-year-old in training (like when they get distracted with a toy, would you remind them to come if they were in the process of getting to you or would they get the swat then for not obeying?) I don't want to be a mean old dictator, but I feel like if I say it, they should do it. I know they are capable for the most part. Alicia B in MO Hi Alicia- We took a popular parenting class early on in our parenting that ruined us in one aspect.  The course communicated that if we just did A, B, C, and D, our children would be virtually trained and perfectly behaved by the time they hit six.  *snort* I remember having a young woman in my home after our fourth was born and I was whining to her about how much I repeat myself to the then 6, 4, and 2-year-olds.  She being one of ten children wisely said, "Oh Kendra!  It's precept upon precept".  Yes. It is.  And so we say things over and over and over during their short childhoods.  Over and over. But.  We do train them to respond immediately, and not because we want to be dictators, but because God does require children to obey their parents.  Period.  He is wiser than we are, and we as parents are wiser than our children are.  They need to trust us and obey us. There's the complimentary part to first-time obedience: trust. If we are loving on our children, responding in kindness, patient, and joyful, they will be trained to obey us out of their trust of us.  That comes with a little time and experience, though, so in the earliest years, they do need to be trained to immediately obey. I like to set up training opportunities, and typically one of the first training sessions is when we teach a little guy to come to us.  The older kids and I will sit in a circle and call the little one to us, one by one.  When I say, "Come to Mommy!" and the little guy obeys right away, we all cheer.  Then another child will say, "Come to me!", and we all cheer again when the little one obeys.  It's fun training, and it pays off.  A child that will come right away when called by his family is a safer child.  I always cringe when I see a child bolt after being called by his mother in a public place.  Inevitably the child laughs, the parents laugh, and then that little one is consequently trained to be disobedient. And run into danger, as the case may be. I don't want to discourage you, but I do see disobedience rear its ugly head every once in awhile in my older kids, too.  Seems sometimes the will to do as they please overtakes their desire to obey.  That sounds vaguely familiar, doesn't it? "For what I am doing, I do not understand. For what I will to do, that I do not practice; but what I hate, that I do."  Romans 7:15 (written by Paul, of course.  He was, incidentally, an adult when he wrote this.  Let's not expect more from our children than we do of ourselves.) Peace- Kendra
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On Field Trips, Nature Days, and Other Exciting Times With Little Ones in Tow

Nature Day, September 2008

Have you been blessed to meet older, wiser women who blog and write online?  Barbara McCoy is one such mentor for me, and last month her daughter Amanda (creator of the fabulous craft and nature kits) presented a nature day for the families in our church.  Barb, Amanda, and I all got to meet one another and I just loved soaking up all Barb's answers to the questions I asked her about home education. A few weeks later, Barb posted a series of photos from a trip to Oregon's coast. I kept thinking about how I'd love to do such a trip with my own kids, but can't imagine the trickiness of doing so with the babies accompanying us.  So I did what I typically do: I emailed Barb and asked her how one accomplishes such a wonderful adventure with little ones.  I knew her helpful reply had to be shared, because I know I'm not the only one! Thoughts on my travel and how you could do it with your family: 1. Planning. I spent hours on the internet looking for places that would fit our family's interests. We are studying marine biology right now and I wanted to find something for us to do that would enhance our academic book type learning. I found places that provided access to tidepools and to interpretive centers and that narrowed it down. Our trips are nearly almost tied to our school studies so it makes it more real and relevant....we went to Hawaii to study volcanoes, we went to the Channel Islands earlier this year to see marine mammals, and this trip was to study invertebrates and sea birds. 2. Try to keep driving time at a reasonable distance each day. Even with our roadtrips, I know that I can only have one really long travel day and then we need to plant ourselves in one place for at least two nights before taking another stretch on the road. This trip: Day one: long driving day from our house to Humboldt Day two: short drive to Patrick's Point Day three: short drive to Coos Bay and then spend two nights Day five: short drive to Newport and then spend two nights Day seven: long drive to Grant's Pass Day eight: long drive home (we had planned on staying two nights in Grant's Pass but it was COLD and we were ready to be home) 3. Prepare the kids ahead of time for what you are going to do on the trip. I nearly always make a "field trip binder" for the boys so they have an idea of what is expected of them on the trip. This time they were fairly free to just explore as we went along and I made sure to have some down time each day where they could play on the beach or take hikes around the campground. The big packet that they completed was something we printed off from the Oregon Coast Aquarium website and it had them looking at the exhibits in the aquarium (at Newport) for specific things. It was a huge success. When we took school to Hawaii a few years ago, the binder had things to do every day even it was just a reading assignment or a coloring page. It kept the boys focused on our purpose in being there. 4. For your family if you are not big on camping, Oregon State campgrounds have yurts you can rent and they would probably be ideal for your situation. It is still like camping but you have a place to get out of the weather and you don't have to haul a lot of equipment around. We are thinking about taking a yurt vacation next year. 5. I noticed that there were families traveling with lots of kids and those that seemed to be actually enjoying themselves had the littlest ones occupied in a way that was appropriate. Lots of backpacks and front packs on the trail...we used to use a backpack with the boys until they were well over two and then we just trained them to walk with us and it never was a big deal but we do a lot of hiking as a family so it seemed natural for them to transition. I know when we used to camp when the boys were little, I had a few strategies that helped keep my sanity. Bring a few small toys for them to play in the dirt with...it was always a hit. Bring lots of thrift store type clothes so when they got really dirty, I just threw them away instead of trying to bring home a 25 cent pair of pants to wash. Feed them well was always a good strategy too. Lots of good snacks that they could put in their own pockets and they usually carried their own water too either in a backpack or a bottle on a strap. 6. This is not the kind of trip we have always taken....we never would have attempted this with the kids when they were all young. It would have looked differently. We used to go to Yosemite camping with the understanding that if I got overwhelmed we would just pack up and go home. We went home early once in all the years we went but it was always nice to know it was an option. I did take all four children on a roadtrip by myself to Yellowstone when they were 3, 5, 10, and 13. I put down strict ground rules before we left and it is still one of our favorite roadtrip memories. (Looking back now, I was crazy.) Traveling is always an adventure and I try to keep that in mind each time we head out. You can not plan for everything but that is part of the fun. I was telling someone yesterday that if you hold all the cards and squeeze the life out of everything, no real learning takes place. Barb If you, too, appreciate Barb's wisdom, head on over to her nature blog or her fine arts blog and drop her a note.  And check out the sidebars-- they're filled with helpful ideas that will keep you very, very busy!  Thanks Barb!
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