Jennifer Lambert

A Sacred Balance

Visit Us On FacebookVisit Us On PinterestVisit Us On InstagramVisit Us On Linkedin
  • Homeschool
    • Book Lists
    • How Do We Do That?
    • Notebooking
    • Subjects and Styles
    • Unit Studies
  • Travel
    • Europe
      • Benelux
      • France
      • Germany
      • Greece
      • Ireland
      • Italy
      • London
      • Porto
      • Prague
    • USA
      • Chicago
      • Georgia
      • Hawaii
      • Ohio
      • Utah
      • Yellowstone and Teton
  • Family
    • Celebrations
    • Frugal
  • Military Life
    • Deployment
    • PCS
  • Health
    • Recipes
    • Essential Oils
    • Fitness
    • Mental Health
    • Natural Living
    • Natural Beauty
  • Faith
  • About Me
    • Favorite Resources
    • Advertising and Sponsorship
    • Policies
  • Reviews

© 2025Jennifer Lambert · Copyright · Disclosure · Privacy · Ad

Military Children and Toxic Stress

This blog may contain affiliate links: disclosure.
Please see my suggested resources.

October 13, 2018 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

This post is done in partnership with Stress Health, an initiative of the Center for Youth Wellness, but the opinions expressed are my own.

For military children, toxic stress can be an ongoing threat.

I know there have been seasons when we’ve been under extreme stress, and I’ve done all I can to alleviate it to keep our family on an even keel. Sometimes, it’s just so hard.

Life comes at us fast. Marriage, babies, elderly parents with illness or death, moving around a lot — sometimes on short notice or being deployed overseas, losing jobs and career as I follow my husband.

It seems that we’ve done it all.

Some years, we test really high on the stress index. It’s been a roller coaster of fifteen years and counting.

You can take this ACE quiz to find out if you experienced the kind of childhood adversity that predisposes you to toxic stress.

Helpful: Hamilton Anxiety Rating Scale for ACEs (Adverse Childhood Experiences)

We are fortunate to have four very resilient kids.

Children may be at special risk from the stress of military life.

Living with high stress almost all the time can mirror symptoms of ADHD and PTSD (post-traumatic syndrome disorder). Behavioral and emotional issues can arise from living in perpetual flight or fight mode. It feels like constant anxiety.

Stress that Affects Military Families:

Permanent Change of Station orders (PCS)

Military life involves moving frequently. Moving is always stressful, even if it’s desired and exciting. There’s just so much to do.

Kids can get lost in the shuffle of organizing and packing, traveling and unpacking.

Taking some time to comfort and explain the moving process to kids helps them to work through their emotions. There’s a lot involved in preparing for a PCS. We each process our grief in different ways when leaving a new place and starting over.

We like to give our kids little jobs to help them own the process and feel more in control during this tumultuous time.

We purge our household goods every few years before each move and have the kids help, sorting through things they’ve outgrown. They can label their toys and choose which ones to take in their backpacks. They can put personalized stickers on their room’s boxes to easily recognize them for unloading and unpacking. They get to arrange and decorate their rooms in the new house.

Deployment

Having a parent leave for months at a time is stressful on a family.

It can be dangerous for the deployed spouse, depending on his job and location.

Communication is often sporadic – and never seems available when we need it.

Anything that can go wrong seems to go wrong during deployment – injury, illness, flood, cats dying, car trouble.

Helping kids through this difficult time is a priority.

We gave our young kids pillows with pictures of Dad during our first deployment. He recorded a little book that they looked at and listened to often.

The time difference is always an issue. We have a clock labeled with the time where Dad is located. We have a countdown calendar that I printed for our youngest to mark off each day that Dad is away.

The kids each have their own iPad minis, and they often message or video-chat with Dad now that they’re older.

It’s hard to balance events of home life when I’m basically acting as a single mom to four kids. They rely on me and each other, and there’s no one to help.

Sometimes, it’s lonely and a struggle. Weekends and holidays just suck.

Homecoming is also stressful.

The expectations just don’t match the reality.

We’re not really into posters and balloons and warm fuzzy videos.

We do get to meet him at the airplane gate: That’s a perk. He’s tired and greasy from maybe 24 hours or more of travel. We’re excited but feel trepidation for the reintegration process.

I feel that any joyful moments are stolen from us when commanders and coworkers arrive at the airport baggage claim to welcome him home. There’s no privacy. I hate feeling like all eyes are on me, observing my reactions too closely. We probably don’t look or feel happy enough. We’re all running on adrenaline.

At that point, we just stand aside, uncomfortable and awkward as the military members surround him to share their understanding of the deployment.

We feel lost and forgotten.

It can take weeks to get back to a routine and used to each other again. The kids don’t know whether to smother him or ignore him. Life has gone on for months in his absence.  The kids and I have all shared it, and we have our little memories and private jokes.

Friendships

Maintaining close friendships is difficult with military life.

We’ve learned to jump in and try to meet people as soon as we arrive at a new location. We don’t have time to waste when we’re at a base for only two to four years.

We are transient, third culture people, and we are too quickly forgotten by friends and acquaintances once we move away.

Many people don’t understand military life and don’t want to invest in a temporary friendship.

It always hurts to be forgotten, and we sometimes build up a wall around our hearts so we’re not hurt. I’m saddened to see this in my kids as they grow up. They’re self-reliant and have few friends.

School and Activities

Kids experience stress with school and activities, and it just compounds when they have to find new ones every few years.

My kids show talent with sports, music, art, and other activities…but it’s hard to find new teachers and coaches every few years.

There’s no continuity.

Church shopping is no fun, either. We’ve all but given up on finding anywhere welcoming.

Retirement

So many unknowns loom during the end of a military career.

Lots of decisions have to be made in a short time period.

When the kids are still young and living at home, we want to include them and their needs in the process of retirement. We want them to feel safe, comfortable, and happy with where we choose to retire and settle down.

When nowhere and everywhere is home, finding somewhere to settle for good is just scary.

Military life has its benefits. We are perhaps more thankful for our freedoms and don’t take them for granted. The stresses we experience as a military family are just our life.

Resources:

  • This Is Where You Belong: Finding Home Wherever You Are by Melody Warnick 
  • Almost There: Searching for Home in a Life on the Move by Bekah DiFelice
  • God Strong: The Military Wife’s Spiritual Survival Guide by Sara Horn
  • Tour of Duty: Preparing Our Hearts for Deployment: A Bible Study for Military Wives by Sara Horn
  • Chicken Soup for the Military Wife’s Soul: 101 Stories to Touch the Heart and Rekindle the Spirit by Jack Canfield, Mark Victor Hansen, and Charles Preston
  • Faith Deployed: Daily Encouragement for Military Wives by Jocelyn Green
  • Faith Deployed…Again: More Daily Encouragement for Military Wives by Jocelyn Green
  • Faith, Hope, Love, & Deployment: 40 Devotions for Military Couples by Heather Gray
Share
Pin13
Share
13 Shares
You might also like:

Filed Under: Military Tagged With: mental health, military, milkid, milspouse, stress

Favorite Halloween Movies

This blog may contain affiliate links: disclosure.
Please see my suggested resources.

October 11, 2018 By Jennifer Lambert 11 Comments

Halloween was always my favorite holiday when I was younger.

I love fall.

Autumn is the new year for many cultures, so maybe that’s why my soul has a yearning for new things.

I love hiking in the woods and smelling the detritus and viewing the splendor of the leaves as they pass away. Theirs is a most glorious death.

There is something magical about that crushed leaf smell on the breeze and the cool mornings with warm sunny afternoons. I love seeing pumpkins on porches. I love lighting candles as the nights begin earlier and earlier.

And the mosquitoes are gone.

Now that my girls are older, they can watch some scary movies with me. We watch certain movies for the pop culture references, film history, and to discuss how these movies portray folklore, historical circumstances, and mental illness.

I don’t like movies about possession. A lot of the modern films make me nervous. I prefer the classics before CGI.

And I still love the sweet kids’ classics that the whole family can watch together.

Favorite Halloween Movies

20 Favorite Family Friendly Halloween Movies

  1. Hocus Pocus

    “It’s a full moon tonight. That’s when all the weirdos are out.”

  2. Ernest Scared Stupid

    If you don’t love Ernest, we can’t be friends.

  3. The Addams Family

    “Are they made from real Girl Scouts?”

  4. It’s the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown

    “There are three things I’ve learned never to discuss with people: religion, politics, and the Great Pumpkin.”

  5. Beetlejuice

  6. Practical Magic

    Always down for some midnight margaritas!

  7. Corpse Bride

    Honestly, anything and everything by Tim Burton, please.

  8. Ghostbusters

    “There is no Dana, only Zuul!”
    The new one is good too.

  9. The Haunted Mansion

    Eddie Murphy, y’all.

  10. Harry Potter series

    Perfect time of year for a movie marathon.

  11. Coco

    Such a sweet film and teaches about Mexican culture.

  12. Song of the Sea

    The sweetest Irish story and great animation and music.

  13. Hotel Transylvania series

    “I do not say blah blah blah!”

  14. Ella Enchanted

    Loads of fun!

  15. The Karate Kid

    It takes place at Halloween, ok?

  16. Spirited Away

    A sweet metaphorical story.

  17. Halloweentown

  18. Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit

    We love anything Wallace & Gromit!

  19. Mr. Magorium’s Wonder Emporium

    Magic and a great cast!

  20. E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial

    The first movie I saw in the theatre!

There are other great movies too, but I had to keep my lists concise.

What’s your favorite Halloween movie?

Share
Pin39
Share
39 Shares
You might also like:

Filed Under: Family Tagged With: Halloween, movies

Korea Unit Study

This blog may contain affiliate links: disclosure.
Please see my suggested resources.

October 8, 2018 By Jennifer Lambert 6 Comments

We hear a lot about Korea in the news lately.

There’s so much more to the history and culture than what the news shows us.

I want my children to understand Asian history in our chronological studies of world history.

Our {evangelical and expensive} history curriculum was a little disappointing after WWII, so I had to research and find my own material to teach my kids real history and culture.

Korea Unit Study

I grew up watching M.A.S.H. with my parents and we own the complete DVD collection.

I want to learn real history along with my kids, not just an American perspective.

Korea Unit Study

Topics:

  • Communism
  • Korean War

Activities:

Eat in a Korean restaurant
Learn to read and write in Korean
Watch Korean cartoons or films
Visit a museum to view Korean art

Printables and Lessons:

South Korea unit
Studying South Korea
Resources about Korea
How to Study Korean
Studying Korea (scroll down)
South Korea Unit
South Korea Homeschool Unit Study for the Winter Olympics 2018
South Korea For Kids
Read Around the World with South Korea
Winter Olympics Unit Study Resources…And Free Notebooking Pages

Book List:

So Far from the Bamboo Grove
Echoes of the White Giraffe
Year of Impossible Goodbyes
When My Name Was Keoko
Seesaw Girl
A Single Shard
The Korean Cinderella
My Name Is Yoon
Yoon and the Jade Bracelet
The Name Jar
Halmoni’s Day

Films (use discretion):

Heartbreak Ridge
Pork Chop Hill
Battle for Incheon: Operation Chromite
The Long Way Home
Welcome to Dongmakgol
71 Into the Fire
The Front Line
Tae Guk Gi – The Brotherhood of War
Last Princess
Red Family
Princess
Masquerade
Snowy Road
Manshin
The Royal Tailor
Ode to My Father
The Manchurian Candidate
In Love And War
A Little Pond
Steel Rain – Netflix original
Northern Limit Line
My Way

Have you traveled to or learned about Korea?

Country Study Notebooking Pages

Share
Pin53
Share
53 Shares
You might also like:

Filed Under: Homeschool Tagged With: Asia, geography, history, homeschool, Korea, military, unit study

How We Do Music

This blog may contain affiliate links: disclosure.
Please see my suggested resources.

October 1, 2018 By Jennifer Lambert 8 Comments

Music is very important to me.

I want my kids to understand and enjoy all kinds of music.

Music is such an important part of our lives. We use music to celebrate, worship God, hum to comfort ourselves, and to express sorrow. Nature creates wondrous music with insects, birds, and babbling brooks.

“Without music, life would be a mistake.” ~Friedrich Nietzsche, from Twilight of the Idols

How We Do Music

How We Do Music

Music History

We learn about concepts and themes and innovations in music as we study our chronological history.

I like to learn about music history. I love teaching my kids various musical genres that go along with our history studies. We listen and discuss and find new likes!

This is an important music topic that must be addressed and discussed thoroughly and delicately. We can’t just sing folk songs without knowing where they came from and how they are offensive. They are not just cute little kids songs. These songs have a history that cannot be ignored.

Music Appreciation

We listen to all kinds of music. I don’t like censorship. Music is a form of performance art that should be heard and I want to expose my kids to it all and we discuss it as a family.

We’ve attended operas, ballet, symphonies, musicals, and concerts as a family. I think it’s important to attend live musical events as often as possible, as early as kids can sit still quietly throughout the performance, perhaps about age 5 or 6. We love matinees.

Many venues offer freebies or discounts to military families, homeschoolers, during dress rehearsals, or other special field trip events. Our city has free weekend concerts at parks in the summer.

I feel it’s important to expose my kids to world music, and all the genres of American music. Music is so emotional, and plays a huge part in culture and history.

We love almost all kinds of music.

Music, of course, helps with math.

Favorite Books about Music

We love getting biographies from the library about musicians and composers.

  • The Gift of Music by Jane Stuart Smith and Betty Carlson
  • The Vintage Guide to Classical Music by Jan Swafford
  • Great Musicians Series
  • Mike Venezia books
  • Iza Trapani books
  • Do Re Mi: If You Can Read Music, Thank Guido D’Arezzo
  • Story of the Orchestra
  • Welcome to the Symphony
  • Poppy books by Magali Le Huche 
  • Polar Bear, Polar Bear What Do You Hear?
  • Blue Moo! and others from Sandra Boynton
  • The Real Mother Goose
  • Peter and the Wolf
  • The Story Orchestra: Four Seasons in One Day
  • The Carnival of the Animals
  • Moonlight on the Magic Flute
  • Zin! Zin! Zin! A Violin
  • 88 Instruments
  • The School of Music 
  • Can You Hear It?
  • The Jazz Fly
  • Squeak, Rumble, Whomp! Whomp! Whomp!: A Sonic Adventure
  • Mozart: The Wonder Child: A Puppet Play in Three Acts
  • I, Vivaldi
  • Becoming Bach
  • The Music in George’s Head: George Gershwin Creates Rhapsody in Blue
  • Ada’s Violin: The Story of the Recycled Orchestra of Paraguay
  • Never Play Music Right Next to the Zoo 
  • I Know a Shy Fellow Who Swallowed a Cello
  • M is for Melody: A Music Alphabet
  • Tito Puente, Mambo King/Tito Puente, Rey del Mambo: Bilingual
  • When the Beat Was Born: DJ Kool Herc and the Creation of Hip Hop

Notebooking and Unit Studies

Writing about music and composers helps us to understand their importance to history and societal influences. Notebooking a great way to synthesize information we learn.

  • The Stories Behind the Music
  • The Music of Doctor Who
  • Nursery Rhymes
  • Preschool Music Math
  • Singalong Time

Music Appreciation Lessons

  • Zeezok
  • Harmony Fine Arts
  • SQUILT
  • Easy Peasy Music
  • Maestro Classics

Listening

We stream lots of music as we do our studies.

We create Spotify playlists. My middle daughter would win at Name That Tune!

We often listen to classical or instrumental music during cleaning, meal time, or quiet work.

  • Maestro Classics
  • Classical Kids: Collection 1 and 2 overviews
  • Classical Kids – composers
  • Beethoven’s Wig: Sing Along Symphonies – 5 volumes
  • Wee Sing!
  • Putumayo Kids

Playing

My husband can play piano and trumpet.

I never learned an instrument and I regret it.

When my kids were babies and toddlers, we did KinderMusik and Music Together. I think it’s super important to expose young kids to music and allow them to make their own and explore sounds.

Two of my girls have taken piano lessons for years though we’re on hiatus with that right now.

My middle daughter took guitar lessons for a year.

My teen daughter is teaching herself electric guitar.

I can barely play the radio.

How do you teach music in your home or homeschool?

Famous Composers Notebooking Pages
Share
Pin6
Share
6 Shares
You might also like:

Filed Under: Homeschool Tagged With: homeschool, Music

Cosmetic Dentistry Treatments

This blog may contain affiliate links: disclosure.
Please see my suggested resources.

September 28, 2018 By Jennifer Lambert 7 Comments

When Is the Right Time to See a Cosmetic Dentist?

Have you noticed how important having a beautiful smile has become in your professional as well as your social life? In a recent study conducted by the American Academy of Cosmetic Dentistry, nearly three-quarters of respondents stated that they believed having an unattractive smile could set a person back in his or her career. Whether it’s fair or not, people judge you by your teeth, and when your smile is less than perfect, people notice. Thanks to innovations in cosmetic dentistry, however, these days, almost everyone can have a dazzling smile.

Cosmetic Dentistry Treatments

Cosmetic dentistry is a catchall term for dental procedures that focus on improving the appearance rather than the functionality of your teeth and gums. Many people think that you have to leave your current dentist to see a cosmetic specialist. This isn’t always the case. With a dental office like Lasting Smiles of Highland Park, you can have the luxury of your normal dental team providing you cosmetic options in addition to general preventive dentistry.

Popular cosmetic dentistry solutions include teeth whitening, porcelain veneers, dental bonding, crowns, braces and invisible aligners, laser gum treatments and implants.

Teeth whitening: If you drink beverages like coffee, tea and red wine, or if you smoke, chances are that your teeth have developed a yellowish cast. Teeth whitening involves the use of bleaching products to remove these stains from your teeth. Sure, you can buy do-it-yourself whitening solutions at your pharmacy, but they’re not likely to be either as effective or as long lasting as a treatment you have done in your cosmetic dentist’s office.

Porcelain veneers: Porcelain veneers are another solution for discolored teeth. Veneers can also help correct problems like slightly misaligned teeth, cracks, chips and worn enamel. Veneers are ceramic shells that are custom-designed to address your specific dental issues. With proper care, they can last as long as 10 to 15 years.

Dental bonding: In dental bonding, your cosmetic dentist will apply composite resin to your teeth to correct problems like chips, fissures and small spaces between your teeth. Bonding is also used to attach porcelain veneers. Bonding materials can be expected to last between 3 and 10 years.

Crowns: A crowns is an artificial cap that is fitted over one of your natural teeth. Crowns can be fabricated out of tooth-colored porcelain if you want them to blend in seamlessly with the rest of your smile, or they can be made out of gold. Crowns typically have a lifespan between 10 and 15 years.

Braces and invisible aligners: Braces have come a long way from those uncomfortable metal brackets and wires you may remember from your own adolescence. Braces are no longer just for teenagers, either: According to the American Association of Orthodontics, almost 800,000 adults wear braces on their teeth. If you‚Äôre considering an orthodontic solution to your malocclusion, you’ll be able to choose among ceramic, tooth-colored braces; clear plastic aligners; and braces that are fitted on the back side of your teeth. These options should greatly cut down on any embarrassment that‚Äôs associated with wearing braces as an adult. You will probably need to wear your braces for between 18 and 24 months.

If you’re self-conscious that your gums are too prominent when you smile, you may be interested in contouring treatments that can shape your gingival display. A cosmetic dentist may be able to do perform this treatment using laser surgery though in more severe cases, you may need to consult a periodontal specialist.

Implants: Implants offer a permanent solution for the loss of teeth. An implant is a two-part procedure: First, a titanium post is implanted into your jaw; next, a crown is attached to the head of the post above the gum line. Over six months or so, the titanium post will actually fuse to your jawbone, which makes this a permanent solution even though your crown may need to be replaced in 10 to 15 years.

When Cosmetic Dentistry Is Also Restorative Dentistry

Certain cosmetic procedures actually enhance the functionality of your teeth.

Crowns are used to protect the functionality of teeth that are extremely damaged. If decay has claimed so much of a tooth that the tooth’s structural integrity is compromised, a dentist will often opt to put a crown on that tooth rather than to fill it. Implants, too, can be looked upon as a procedure whose purpose is both restorative and cosmetic since missing teeth are not just an aesthetic issue. Missing teeth can cause your remaining teeth to shift their position in your mouth, which can seriously affect your ability to chew.

When is the right time to see a cosmetic dentist?

Practically anytime when you want your teeth to look better, and you want to have healthier teeth and gums.

Share
Pin
Share
0 Shares
You might also like:

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Dayton Art Institute

This blog may contain affiliate links: disclosure.
Please see my suggested resources.

September 24, 2018 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

The Dayton Art Institute is a great beginner art museum for people of all ages.

It’s small and doesn’t take long to go through. There are some important examples of art for every era.

For military families, DAI is FREE all summer long. Students and kids are always FREE.

My teen daughter and I visited to check it out.

We were a little silly.

Some of our favorites:

Visit DAI:

REGULAR HOURS
MONDAYClosed
TUESDAYClosed
WEDNESDAY11 a.m. – 5 p.m.
THURSDAY11 a.m. – 8 p.m.
FRIDAY11 a.m. – 5 p.m.
SATURDAY11 a.m. – 5 p.m
SUNDAYNoon – 5 p.m.
  
Leo Bistro is now open!

MUSEUM ADMISSION
Suggested general admission to the museum’s collection galleries:

  • Adults: $8
  • Seniors, Groups & Active Military: $5
  • Members, Students, & Youth: FREE

NOTE: Special exhibitions, programs and events may carry an additional admission charge.

Share
Pin5
Share
5 Shares
You might also like:

Filed Under: Ohio Tagged With: art, field trip, museum, ohio

HVAC Hazards

This blog may contain affiliate links: disclosure.
Please see my suggested resources.

September 18, 2018 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

Childproof Your Home From These 5 HVAC Hazards

Parents who want to keep their children safe at home often overlook their heating, ventilation, and air conditioning (HVAC) systems.

There are numerous ways children can get injured in connection with these complex systems, but the following five are some of the most common.

1. Improperly Secured HVAC Vents

Vents that are not properly secured can be a very real hazard to children of all ages. Sometimes the vent grates aren’t installed correctly. Toys can easily be dropped through them, and little hands can get caught in them or cut on them. Make sure vent covers are adequately secured.  Repair any bent, broken, or missing vents.

Image via Flickr by DaynaT

2. Outdoor HVAC Units 

Outdoor HVAC units are a danger to young ones. They’re full of sharp edges that can cut and scratch, wires full of high-powered electricity, and vents that can snag.  Make sure outdoor units are either fenced off or surrounded by shrubs, and let children know not to play on or around HVAC units, especially during repair, installation, or service. 

3. HVAC Unit That Needs Service or Repair

HVAC units in need of repair often pose the greatest risk to children. Some units might look old or battered. Some might have been damaged in an accident. There are often numerous signs that a unit is in need of repair or malfunctioning, ranging from strange rattling sounds or pools of standing water or a strange smell like gas. Any of these signs should be a wakeup call to get in touch with a professional for service immediately. If you see a unit like this, make sure to let everyone, especially children, know to stay away from them until the issues are repaired.

4. Poorly Installed Window Units

Improperly installed window units are a common cause of accidents in the home. If they’re not properly braced underneath, they can topple over if pulled from the outside. And if they’re not installed correctly with the right support, they can easily be pushed out from the inside by even little hands. It’s also imperative to determine whether a window unit is draining correctly. Otherwise, it could be causing serious structural damage to the building or create a potentially lethal situation with a pool of electrified standing water.

5. Failing to Keep Up With Routine Maintenance on HVAC Units

Make sure your HVAC unit is not leaking potentially lethal carbon monoxide gas — get your unit inspected by a licensed professional annually. Carbon monoxide poisoning is one of the most common HVAC safety concerns.  More than 150 people a year die from non fire-related carbon monoxide poisoning. It’s easy to prevent — simply make sure that you have a working carbon monoxide unit in your home, and remember to test it as recommended by the manufacturer.

Most of the common HVAC hazards are quite preventable.  Use common sense, and make sure everything looks, sounds, and smells right. Make sure that your HVAC unit receives preventative maintenance regularly by a trained professional.  That will ensure that you won’t run into any nasty surprises.

Share
Pin
Share
0 Shares
You might also like:

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Creating Community

This blog may contain affiliate links: disclosure.
Please see my suggested resources.

September 17, 2018 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

Making Communities More Hopeful and Neighborly Places

You have most likely heard many older people reminiscing about how their neighborhoods were so different when growing up. They recount neighbors visiting over fences, parents watching out for everyone’s children and sharing glasses of lemonade on the front porch. If this does not sound a thing like the neighborhood you live in, you can still experience a positive neighborhood experience with a few simple changes. Everyone, including you, can have a vital role to play in your community.

Creating Community

How Can We Create Community?

Be Willing to Volunteer

Rather than just talking about all the things that should be happening in your community, you must be willing to volunteer yourself. There are many places and ways that you can volunteer. Some of them may use passions that you already have while others may pique your interest in new life missions. Consider befriending an older neighbor, helping a neighbor with yard work or becoming a mentor to someone younger. These personal relationships are where good community starts.

Support Your Local Businesses

Local businesses provide much of the tax revenue for your community. When there are plenty of thriving businesses in the area, the community itself will prosper and have the money it needs to better itself. Try to buy as much of your groceries, clothing and consumables from local businesses rather than traveling to a larger city or shopping online.

Support the Arts

While there are many variables that go into making a community great, the arts, including music, handicrafts, theater and artwork, are what really speak to people’s hearts. Help your community get involved in local theater projects, or start your own Art Walk with local artists every summer. Other fun ideas include painting art on the sides of buildings, supporting local dance troupes and investing in some citywide street pianos.

A thriving community is good for you, your neighbors, local businesses and tourists. You do not have to rely on city council to make changes. Instead, you can be the difference for your community.

Share
Pin
Share
0 Shares
You might also like:

Filed Under: Uncategorized

How We Do Art

This blog may contain affiliate links: disclosure.
Please see my suggested resources.

September 17, 2018 By Jennifer Lambert 9 Comments

Art is very important in our home and homeschool.

My parents discounted and disapproved of my love of art and I was only allowed to take one semester in 10th grade. I still have that portfolio.

I loved and still love viewing art, but I believed that creating was a waste of time because my parents drilled that into me for years. I’m learning to overcome that now.

I want my kids to appreciate and understand art, and love creating.

We often hike in nature to celebrate the artistic beauty of creation. We learn art history, visit museums, read books about art and creativity, take classes, and create some of our own projects!

Art History

We learn about the major art themes and techniques along with our regular history studies. It really helps tie everything together for us.

My eldest is considering majoring in art history.

Art Appreciation

Like literature, I want my kids exposed to art and learn to appreciate it. Some we love and others…we just don’t.

We celebrate the human body and achievements of great artists.

We go to lots of museums. My kids beg to go to museums. Almost all our European travels revolved around viewing art and churches.

  • Städel Museum in Frankfurt, Germany
  • Paris
  • Florence, Italy
  • Rome
  • Venice
  • Netherlands
  • Greece
  • London
  • Ireland
  • Bruges, Belgium
  • Dayton Art Institute in Ohio
  • Art Institute and City Art in Chicago

25+ favorite books about art and creativity:

We buy books at the museums we visit so we can remember our favorite pieces.

I collect art history textbooks (there’s a free bin at our library).

We love living books about art and artists and often check them out at our library.

Picture books often have stunning illustrations.

  1. Draw Write Now series
  2. Draw and Write through History series
  3. ARTistic Pursuits series
  4. The Story of Architecture
  5. Sister Wendy Beckett art books
  6. The Annotated Mona Lisa: A Crash Course in Art History from Prehistoric to Post-Modern
  7. Gardner’s Art through the Ages: A Global History 
  8. David Macaulay books
  9. Art: A World History
  10. A World of Art
  11. The Usborne Introduction to Art
  12. The Children’s Interactive Story of Art
  13. Child’s Introduction to Art
  14. Discovering Great Artists
  15. Art Lab for Kids and Drawing Lab and Paint Lab
  16. Drawing With Children and Drawing for Older Children & Teens
  17. Storybook Art 
  18. Great American Artists for Kids
  19. Ed Emberley drawing books
  20. Catherine V Holmes drawing books
  21. Global Art
  22. The Day the Crayons Quit and The Day the Crayons Came Home
  23. Monsters Love Colors
  24. Mouse Paint
  25. Little Blue and Little Yellow
  26. The Dot
  27. Herve Tullet books
  28. Anholt’s Artists Books For Children
  29. James Mayhew books
  30. Mike Venezia biographies

Notebooking and Unit Studies

Of course we love notebooking and this is a great way to synthesize our knowledge about art and artists.

  • Michelangelo
  • Bernini
  • van Gogh
  • Art Journals
  • Creating Books
  • Impressionism Study
  • Leaf Nature Study

Projects and Crafts

We’ve done some arts and crafts to go along with our science and history studies. We also create just for fun sometimes.

We’re all about the process.

As soon as kids are past preschool age, I recommend purchasing the best supplies you can afford so kids get used to using real art tools.

  • Tie Dye Shirts
  • Writing Cuneiforms in Clay
  • Illumination Initials
  • Dragon Puppets
  • Henna Hands
  • Ancient Greek Vases
  • Birds Nest Chalk Pastels
  • Spring Chalk Pastels
  • Scrub Jays Chalk Pastels
  • Leaf Critter Crafts
  • Leaf Rubbings
  • Fall Tree Crafts
  • Halloween Crafts
  • Exploring Texture with Paint
  • Rain Painting
  • Ice Painting
  • Snow Painting
  • Abstract
  • Snowflake Resist Painting
  • Winter Nature Drawing

Classes

Sometimes, outsourcing education is the way to go. Yes, it’s expensive and time consuming, but my knowledge and abilities are limited. Also, I don’t have to gather supplies or clean anything up.

I taught stART (Story+Art) one year at a homeschool co-op in Utah.

My eldest took some amazing art classes at ARTWorks in San Antonio, Texas, for our first two years homeschooling.

We’ve been taking classes at SPARK Art Studio in Kettering, Ohio, the last couple years.

Local YMCA and community centers often offer art classes.

My kids like the Notability app. They love playing with the Home Design app.

Computer programs: Inkscape, Tux Paint…all the Adobe creation apps and programs (I haven’t paid for yet).

Drawing and Painting lessons from Easy Peasy Homeschool.

This art curricula list from The Homeschool Mom.

Drawspace – 15% of the content on Drawspace.com is free.

Atelier art lessons online. Arts Attack Publications has stood for superior quality in art instruction for decades now and is exclusively devoted to developing and publishing high quality, easy-to-teach, video-based visual art lessons for children.

Homeschool art from Schoolhouse Teachers.

Sparketh offers different levels of online art classes.

Art curricula reviews from Cathy Duffy.

You Are An Artist online lessons:

Artist Clubhouse Video Art Lessons Sampler

How do you study art in your home or homeschool?

Famous Artists & Picture Study Notebooking Pages
Share
Pin17
Share
17 Shares
You might also like:

Filed Under: Homeschool Tagged With: art, homeschool

9/11 Unit Study

This blog may contain affiliate links: disclosure.
Please see my suggested resources.

September 11, 2018 By Jennifer Lambert 1 Comment

I hesitate to write what I really think and feel about today.

I don’t like that it’s called Patriot Day. I don’t like what the word patriot has come to mean.

Living in Europe the last three years changed my perspective on what it means to be an American. Often embarrassed to be associated with American politics, I dread being considered a loud and arrogant fool that many consider Americans to be. The last couple years, events in the USA have further upset me and my family and we don’t want to fly Old Glory over our garage or wear Old Navy Tshirts with flags.

We’re not proud.

Everyone on social media, TV, the radio is talking about where they were the morning the towers were hit with airplanes.

I was in my classroom, preparing to teach English to 10th graders.

I remember my thoughts flew immediately to my parents, working in the FORSCOM federal government building in Atlanta, then to my daughter, not quite one year old, in daycare.

What would I tell my toddler when she grew older and could understand? What do I tell my four kids?

It was surreal.

I am poignant.

I am so grateful and proud of our first responders. I am so heartbroken with those injured and lost and the families who mourn.

But I’m also angry.

I’m angry at terrorists and our own politicians and officials.

Our nation reacted.

Many flocked to places of worship, embraced family and friends, cried out in sorrow for those lives lost, for families in agony over lost ones.

Too many closed their hearts, expressing hatred for an entire race, nation, religion, blaming anyone and everyone associated with it for a tragedy, an act of terrorism.

Our nation returned evil for evil. We’re still at war.

The events of September 11, 2001, are woven into the American tapestry. It is our history. It affects our future.

Every individual who lived to remember that day has a choice to make. A choice to love and move forward and forge bonds or a choice to hate, fear, and sever ties.

I choose love.

I love this prayer for the 9/11 anniversary. A wonderful perspective on 9/11 and the aftermath.

9/11 Resources

9/11 Resources

Book list – something for every age:

Nine, Ten: A September 11 Story by Nora Raleigh Baskin
Fireboat: The Heroic Adventures of the John J. Harvey by Maira Kalman
Eleven by Tom Rogers
Bullyville by Francine Prose
Time Riders by Alex Scarrow
The Memory of Things: A Novel by Gae Polisner
Towers Falling by Jewell Parker Rhodes
All We Have Left by Wendy Mills
What Were the Twin Towers? by Jim O’Connor
Saved by the Boats: The Heroic Sea Evacuation of September 11 by Julie Gassman
America Is Under Attack: September 11, 2001: The Day the Towers Fell by Don Brown
The 9/11 Report: A Graphic Adaptation by Sid Jacobson
We’ll Always Remember the 11th of Septemberby Jamie Franklin Rowe
I Survived the Attacks of September 11th, 2001 by Lauren Tarshis
My Dad Survived 9/11! by Baby Professor
The Survivor Tree: Inspired by a True Story by Cheryl Somers Aubin
September 11, 2001: Then and Now by Peter Benoit
The Man in the Red Bandanna by Honor Crowther Fagan
Sirius, the hero dog of 9/11 by Hank Fellows
Just a Drop of Water by Kerry O’Malley Cerra
The Little Chapel that Stood by A. B. Curtiss
September Roses by Jeanette Winter
14 Cows for America by Carmen Agra Deedy
Shooting Kabul by N. H. Senzai
Falling Man: A Novel by Don DeLillo
Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close by Jonathan Safran Foer
with their eyes: September 11th: The View from a High School at Ground Zero by Annie Thoms
Small Wonder: Essays by Barbara Kingsolver
With Every Mistake by Gwynne Dyer
Against All Enemies: Inside America’s War on Terror by Richard A. Clarke
The Looming Tower: Al-Qaeda and the Road to 9/11 by Lawrence Wright
Jesus for President: Politics for Ordinary Radicals by Shane Claiborne
9-11: Artists Respond by Will Eisner
911: The Book of Help (Authors Respond to the Tragedy) by Michael Cart
On That Day: A Book of Hope for Children by Andrea Patel
We All Fall Down AND United We Stand by Eric Walters
September 12th: We Knew Everything Would Be All Right by Masterson Elementary School Students
The Man Who Walked Between the Towers by Mordicai Gerstein
Each Kindness by Jacqueline Woodson
Be Kind by Pat Zietlow Miller
One Green Apple by Eve Bunting

Resources:

  • Brainpop
  • 9-11 video
  • How to talk to your kids about September 11: An age-by-age guide
  • Scholastic lessons
  • 9/11 resources from The Homeschool Mom
  • 9/11 Memorial Website and lessons
  • Homeschool library of links
  • PBS lessons
  • Teach Mideast
  • Apples 4 the Teacher
  • Edhelper
  • Living Montessori Now
  • Ben and Me Middle School Resources
  • His Mercy is New

What do you say to your kids about 9/11?

Let’s not confuse nationalism with patriotism.

Share
Pin58
Share
58 Shares
You might also like:

Filed Under: Homeschool Tagged With: 911, book list, patriot day, unit study

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 37
  • 38
  • 39
  • 40
  • 41
  • …
  • 137
  • Next Page »
Suggested ResourcesRakuten Coupons and Cash Back

Archives

Popular Posts

10 DIY Gifts with Essential Oils10 DIY Gifts with Essential Oils
Natural Remedies for HeadacheNatural Remedies for Headache
10 Natural Remedies to Keep on Hand10 Natural Remedies to Keep on Hand
Henna Hands CraftHenna Hands Craft
Homemade Turkey Divan CasseroleHomemade Turkey Divan Casserole
This website uses cookies to improve your experience. We'll assume you're ok with this, but you can opt-out if you wish.Accept Reject Read More
Privacy & Cookies Policy

Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies to improve your experience while you navigate through the website. Out of these, the cookies that are categorized as necessary are stored on your browser as they are essential for the working of basic functionalities of the website. We also use third-party cookies that help us analyze and understand how you use this website. These cookies will be stored in your browser only with your consent. You also have the option to opt-out of these cookies. But opting out of some of these cookies may affect your browsing experience.
Necessary
Always Enabled
Necessary cookies are absolutely essential for the website to function properly. This category only includes cookies that ensures basic functionalities and security features of the website. These cookies do not store any personal information.
Non-necessary
Any cookies that may not be particularly necessary for the website to function and is used specifically to collect user personal data via analytics, ads, other embedded contents are termed as non-necessary cookies. It is mandatory to procure user consent prior to running these cookies on your website.
SAVE & ACCEPT