for my good

 

"The practice of the presence of God really consists in making strong efforts to keep God always present in our mind and heart, even when we are engaged in our daily tasks."

How? we ask.

"(I can)consider my duties as so many manifestations of the will of God, and so unite myself to this divine will as I perform them. Further, I can make it a practice to view all the circumstances of my life in the light of faith, and therefore arranged by divine Providence for my good. This will incline me to accept them and to repeat continually to my heavenly Father:

"I am content with everything You do for me."

-Divine Intimacy


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gently… down the stream

 

"…there were real, silent haunts where a prayerful soul could become absorbed in recollection and praise."

Story of a Family

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Moira and I were walking this foggy afternoon, so still we could hear our own steps on the ground.  We spotted something in the distance in the water.  At first I thought perhaps it was trash that had fallen in.  Then no.  As we approached we could begin to make them out, three swans gliding so silently you could barely register movement.

I have thought about them since, slowly moving downstream, making no big splashing scenes.  No upset or feathers flying. Just fully possessed of themselves, recollected. This is the image I have held in my mind.  A goal. When concerns arise, the to-do list grows, when the life waters get choppy, not to fight it but to float along with it.  I tend to fluster better than float, but this is what I keep returning to. 

 

 

the work He needs you to do

 

 

“Do whatever falls to your hands,
in your circle and in your situation–
and believe that this is and will be your true work;
nothing more from you is expected.
 

It is a great error to think that you must
undertake important and great labours,
whether for heaven, or, as the progressives think,
in order to make one’s contribution to humanity.
That is not necessary at all. It is necessary only
to do everything in accordance with the Lord’s commandments.
 

Just exactly what is to be done? Nothing in particular,
just that which presents itself to each one
according to the circumstances of his life,
and which is demanded by the individual events
with which each of us meets.”

– Theophan the Recluse

 

Dessi sent me a link to a recent post which spoke deep into my heart. It is a grave temptation to assume heavy burdens never meant for us.  Ironically, assuming those burdens often causes us to neglect the work that was set aside for us specifically. What we consider virtuous often becomes vice for us this way. This is a lesson that I have had to relearn many times over the years.  

A similar message from Elisabeth Elliot:

"…the ordinary transactions of everyday life are the very means of transfiguration. It is the common stuff of this world which, because of the Word’s having been “made flesh,” is shot through with meaning, with charity, with the glory of God…

"So if you wish that you had time to be holy, remember that you have to love God first, love your husband next, and love your children thirdly. And of course, your neighbors and your enemies. Come down from the mountain of vision with all the urgency of the love of Christ, and do the work He needs you to do."
 



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Today I am keeping these words close, reminding myself that these many chores are both exactly what I should be doing and "shot through with meaning."

hands on geography fun

 

Our homeschool group's history/geography fair was this week which triggered a pinning blitz for me on pinterest. That netted some great ideas which tied in perfectly with the littles' geography studies.  

The first was our take on the Me on the Map project I saw several places. (based on this book)  The children cut their own circles from old cereal boxes so they are a little wonky but really sturdy.  They are going to make awesome manipulatives for some time.  

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Konos has a similar project but they used envelopes in graduated sizes which fit inside one another.  A flip book works too.  Any way you choose to do it you begin with a picture of the child and his home then add layers (pages, larger envelopes etc) of the following: his street, city, state/province, country, continent, world.  

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Then because I tend to overshoot they were so darn cute we made a set of continent cookies.  Actually this project was spearheaded by Moira and Aidan and was their contribution to the fair.  

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The hardest part (I mean of course the hardest part aside from finding the project and deciding to make it the day of the fair. ; )) ended up being finding a set of continent templates that were the right size but still sorta to scale. Our world puzzle was too large.  We ended up using maps from montessorimaterials.org.  Aidan cut them and used them as a guide to cut the cookie dough. (recipe here)

They cookies held their shape well so the outlines stayed fairly true. We iced them in traditional Montessori colors and used this recipe which dried nice and glossy and firm.  They were a big hit and the kids were proud of themselves.  

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You can totally teach geography without these.  Totally. But I think some version of the Me on the Map project is really worth the time to do to help give more concrete understanding of what are often really abstract concepts of place and scale. 

sounds like a…

 

Wow.  This last week has knocked us out. So much packed into everyday. I have pictures of some really fabulous school and food projects, but am too tuckered out to link tonight after having made it all. : )  It's coming though, sometime after sleep and my husband's work shirts getting ironed.  If you have emailed me in the past several days, and heard me mention that, you might be thinking to yourself, "Good golly, is that woman STILL ironing?"  Well, no.  I haven't actually gotten started.  

We did get a new car worked out, had a history/geography fair, an Irish dance workshop, and a few sick kids.  Therefore the wrinkles are still waiting for me.

They're good like that. 

Grateful tonight for a set of littles who find life as fascinating as I do and are so easy to amuse, entertain, and educate.  Such an easy trio they are. 

 

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edited to add: The bird song bird is here and only reasonable used it appears. 

The sport of kings

 

The older girls and I ventured down to Newmarket the other day while the weather was bright and sunny. Newmarket is the birthplace of thoroughbred racing and home to a national museum dedicated to same.  Records dating back to the 1100's indicate this was the earliest racing venue in the post-classical world. Thousands of horses still train in the area.  They do this in the morning.  We were there in the afternoon.  Hence, of those thousands, we actually saw two. 

You win some, you lose some. : ) 

Up side? After 1pm you can walk out onto The Gallops which are the training tracks. We did wander around all of that and thought you might like to talk a virtual look around as well. 

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7 Quick Takes

 

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1. First week of lent coming to a close.  It's gone by fast all things considered. I feel we are in better shape than we were a week ago. I had a long talk with myself this week and made an honest assessment of what needed tightening up and set about doing it.  I saw this list of cooking habits and one point in particular seemed relevent to other household and homeschool tasks – have all your ingredients (supplies) laid out before you begin the steps.  Yes.  As in, Kim, do not go get an idea off the net during the day and attempt to implement it right. then.  Don't.  

So with that mantra ringing in my ears I am stepping back, NOT making a lot, and working on the infrastructure – craft supplies and kitchen supplies.  I know it will make us more productive later. Right now its making me itch to DO something.  

Else. 

2. There is a delightful elderly woman in our chapel who adores our children and has clearly looked for ways to bless them.  This past Sunday she brought us a neatly handdrawn chart on graph paper which she used with her own children many, many years ago to track lenten sacrifices and the journey to the cross.  It may be one of the dearest things we have ever received.  So dear, I cannot find the photo of it. Being straight with you. See #1 above. 

3. The boys and I have been going through their history and art appreciation together which has led to some incredible (short, sweet, thankyouwiki) rabbit trails.  This week it was the Reign of Terror and the uprising in the Vendee.  I admit I am getting a lot more out of homeschool lessons these days than I did the first round or two of kids.  Guessing that sleeping through the night has something to do with it.  This has been seriously fascinating though and somehow just having me read it with them is making it pretty amazing for them too. 

4. The incredible Snickers cupcakes. Oh my.  So, Alannah had her first work function that required bringing food.  No one had signed up for cupcakes.  Score! She was determined these had to be like, world class cupcakes.  I think they were that. She has graduated to making her own cake batter from scratch with all her quirky special additions.  Then she filled them with a caramel/candy filling. Topped them with a nougat copycat type frosting, chopped candy bars, and melted caramel sauce.  People are still coming up to her.  In fact my husband took some to work and people have stopped her in the halls to discuss them.  

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I say all this because what this did for her was to validate her progress over the past few years.  She had a pretty good idea she was developing some mad kitchen skills but that outside objective affirmation helps you know when you are solidly out the gate with a hobby. It just makes me happy for her. It's not about the cupcakes, know what I mean? 

5. Speaking of which, I saw this Ira Glass quote a while back.  Then again last week when a friend who is a digital artist shared it with her response to questions like, "How do you do that?"  It reminded me of a quote poster I have seen which says, "Don't compare your beginning to someone else's middle."  The most important piece of the puzzle whether in a craft, hobby, skill, – knitting, baking, photography, home organization, parenting you-name-it is experience.  Lots of it. Lots of time.  Lots of experimentation.  Lots of messing up.  We shouldn't be discouraged if people who have been doing a thing for a lot longer are doing it better.  Anything you stick with will become exponentially easier as years go by.  This is what I tell myself as well because while some things are infinitely easier these days, there are also things that 30 yo women are proficient at which I am just now getting around to figuring out since I was broke and knee deep in diapers and military life when I was that. So lets read it again together:

“Nobody tells this to people who are beginners, I wish someone told me. All of us who do creative work, we get into it because we have good taste. But there is this gap. For the first couple years you make stuff, it’s just not that good. It’s trying to be good, it has potential, but it’s not. But your taste, the thing that got you into the game, is still killer. And your taste is why your work disappoints you. A lot of people never get past this phase, they quit. Most people I know who do interesting, creative work went through years of this. We know our work doesn’t have this special thing that we want it to have. We all go through this. And if you are just starting out or you are still in this phase, you gotta know its normal and the most important thing you can do is do a lot of work. Put yourself on a deadline so that every week you will finish one story. It is only by going through a volume of work that you will close that gap, and your work will be as good as your ambitions. And I took longer to figure out how to do this than anyone I’ve ever met. It’s gonna take awhile. It’s normal to take awhile. You’ve just gotta fight your way through.” 
― Ira Glass

6. On that same note a word about Pinterest.  I love it. I have read a lot of Pinterest bashing lately.  It shows beautiful things.  Apparently if you cannot recreate the beautiful things, just as beautifully, you will sink into the depths of depression. Phooey, I say.  When I look at a Rembrandt I don't cover my head in shame comparing myself.  I admire.  I analyze what it is that works in the piece and try to see if that applies to other crafts – the way light falls, the color palatte, the mood.  Ditto Pinterest.  I may never make everything I have pinned.  That isn't my goal. I might not create that gray and orange living room with the chevron pillows (which I love) for instance, but those elements would make a great outfit or an awesome binder set.  That's just how my brain works though.  

7. Some several happy minutes were passed over here this week.  Just go and soak up the joy.  And see this beautiful space.   I am totally using these ideas.  You know, after the infrastructure stuff is done.  I promise. 

Downton Dreaming

 

A houseful of teenaged girls, around here at least, means there is going to be a day of dressing up and indulging in old fashioned elegance.  I had been thinking we would do a Les Mis project while our lovely guests were here. In the end it became more of a Downton Abbey theme, probably because the props were pulled from the corners of our house which is definitely all about that. 

These dear friends are back in Germany now and by fall they will be an ocean away. I am so glad we got to capture these moments before that happens. 

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5 a day

 

Or more : )  

I had proclaimed around New Years' a year ago that it was the dawn of the Year of the Vegetable.  But, it wasn't really. It was perhaps a year of not-terribly-bad-choices but with too-many-compromises. There were many reasons for that, not the least of which was that my stomach was quite unhappy and unsettled coming off the hospitalization.  As lent began this year however, it felt like a good time to redouble my dietary efforts, to return to a largely grain free plan for me and to a produce-rich menu for all.  

Our landlord has been a huge help in this project, as he has been keeping us supplied with the surplus veggies he trades with local farmers.  The local farmers often drop off extras at each other's doors.  Whatever they can't eat our landlord brings to us.  

Blessing, you say?  HUGE blessing. 

This is what was left in the conservatory last week. 


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This is a typical breakfast of late.  One egg cheese omelette, grapes, peppers (which ended up with Tess because my stomach still doesn't like them) and a smoothie. 

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Lunch today was tomato soup with cottage cheese and an apple.  Chai latte. 

Dinner tonight was simple roast chicken (2), roasted carrots and parsnips, brussels sprouts, and rice.   

So far so good.  Hopefully that was nutritionally impressive enough to share Alannah's latest cupcake adventures later this week.  She brought two incredible creations to her potluck at work after which her coworkers demanded to know what the heck she was doing working THERE lol.  We picked up a wonderful patisserie instruction cookbook and are beginning to assemble the tools for working through it. There are a lot of tools, but she seems to have a good handle on which she has, which she needs, and why. Will share more when it is not so late.  

love is….

 

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Checking the tights to make sure you've got the ones with the seams that lay just the right way. 

You can rush through.  You can argue.  You can loudly proclaim that it ISNT A BIG DEAL and those are the only tights that match and just wear them please! Or you can get the ones that don't make tears in the early morning and take ten seconds more to straighten them out across tiny toes.  Exactly even.  And then wait five seconds more so she can do the test step or two.  Just to be sure.