Jennifer Lambert

A Sacred Balance

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Learning to Worship

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July 14, 2014 By Jennifer Lambert 2 Comments

I don’t like church.

I didn’t grow up in church.

Some people have expressed to me that they didn’t know I didn’t grow up in church. Does that point to my complacency like many other born-into-church Christians I know? If so, I want to stand out differently.

Learning to Worship

Most churches make me uncomfortable and I don’t understand all the Christianese and acceptable appearance and behavior. Lots of churches say they accept sinners of all sorts but they really don’t. They stare at the newcomers who don’t have on the suit and tie or a dress that covers well.

I have friends from all sorts of religious backgrounds: Orthodox Jewish, Messianic, Catholic, Pentecostal, Baptist, Lutheran, Presbyterian, LDS, Islam, and all over the spectrum.

Each denomination has its prescribed recommendations of what is acceptable for its members.

Liz has attended so many different kinds of churches, she doesn’t know which doctrine to subscribe to. I have dragged her to numerous churches: non-denominational, Church of God, Assembly of God, Lutheran, fundamental independent Baptist, Presbyterian. I even attended a Church of Christ once, but it was confusing to me that it traveled to a new venue each week. Too stressful to have to remember where to go.

I attended a church for years that had brochures in the lobby that listed Scripture to define appropriate clothing choices for Christians. I was anxious and stressed every time I stepped foot in that place. Were my shirt sleeves covering my shoulders completely? Was my skirt hem well below my knees even when I sat down? And were Liz and my toddler girls dressed that “right” way too? It was exhausting.

Church shouldn’t cause unnecessary anxiety and stress. We should feel convicted from the Holy Spirit, not other Christians.

I just want to love Jesus and my neighbor. I don’t particularly want to throw my hands in the air like I just don’t care or holler unintelligible phrases in front of people. I don’t want to fall asleep from a worship order that never changes or leaves room for the Spirit either. I just want to sing pretty music and pray and see people who smile with their eyes and their lips.

I don’t just want an emotional experience or entertainment each week. I want solid Biblical teaching without bigotry or prejudice. I’ve been to churches that didn’t accept brown people or men with long hair or jewelry.

One fundamentalist mom I knew years ago almost strangled her young son yanking a toy from around his neck when he called it a “necklace.” She informed me after I witnessed this horrific scene that males don’t wear jewelry and she homeschooled every other year so he wouldn’t turn gay from being home with his sister.

Jesus.

I don’t rely on a church to educate my children. It’s not a school’s job to teach my kids; it’s also not a church’s job to instill character and spiritual development. Ultimately, I am responsible to teach my kids all that and more.

Lately, I’ve noticed people commenting that they yearn for Jesus to return soon. Rather than sit on our hands, feigning helplessness, It’s a nice sentiment. Sure, the world can be ugly, but we can shine a little beauty. Why can’t we love others more? Help others more?

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Filed Under: Faith Tagged With: church

Summer Reading

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July 9, 2014 By Jennifer Lambert 1 Comment

I am blessed that I don’t have to bribe or coerce my kids to read at any time of year. All four of my kids love books and love to read and be read to. We are raising readers.

We’ve always had lots of books and we go to the library weekly and come home with bags full. We maxed out the prizes at our summer reading program and there’s nothing more to do but continue reading. The prizes were awful anyway.

It’s becoming increasingly difficult for me to straddle a fence of popular fiction and classical literature with my teen daughter, Liz.

I remember the trash I read at her age and I don’t want to just give her free reign to read whatever she sets her eyes on.

When lessons slow down or we take a summer break, teens have more free time to read for fun…and I struggle to find appropriate reading material for my teen that doesn’t feel like school.

Summer Reading for Teens

Luckily, my kids are kinda nerdy and love reading schoolish books for fun. They have lots of freedom during summer and school breaks to read what they like and I am so thankful that they choose educational reading. I have few worries.

I love the reading lists at Ambleside Online. I enjoy the reading assignments with Tapestry of Grace and Story of the World. I feel that Shakespeare, poetry, naturalist reading, and biographies are very important. Living books are so much better than textbooks or dry non-fictional accounts.

I love discussing the books Liz reads. I try to preview everything she reads, but sometimes I go on reviews and pray it’s ok since I can’t keep up with her! She keeps a reader notebook and we discuss topics and themes together. Reading helps with vocabulary building.

The library teen reading lists have nothing worthwhile and the covers of the books are disturbing. Men kissing girls with torn shirts. It’s no better than Harlequin and there is no place for that in our house. And we don’t subscribe to Oprah’s reading list or any other celebrity-sanctioned books.

I worry about Liz’s peers who are obsessed with vampires and the occult and how they devour all these dystopian books about teens in a post-Apocalytpic world.

I love it that Liz enjoys Dickens (especially since I do not). I’m encouraging her to read Anne of Green Gables and Little Women as part of our history studies. Her tastes are different than mine and I love to hear what she likes and dislikes, her favorite parts and characters, what makes her angry or sad. I pray to keep conversations going through the teen years and books offer great discussion jumping-off points for life topics.

Liz is a great example to her younger siblings. They see her reading and love to read too. They beg her to read to them and she’s really great at doing voices and sound effects.

My life is easier than most since I have a degree in English literature and taught middle school, high school, and college English for almost ten years.

We still do family read-alouds every morning and evening. School books are in the mornings and a fun family classic is before bed. Alex even reminds me if our evenings get crazy and I forget or try to skip it!

I look forward to our reading assignments this year as we move into year 4 of our history cycle. We’ve never worked through year 4 completely before. I couldn’t bear to teach World War II when Liz was so little. I couldn’t expose her to all that yet. But now that we’re living here in Germany, it’s so much more important.

Did you know that swastikas and raising a right hand in the “Heil” are illegal in Germany? They don’t tolerate hatred or intolerance here.

I look forward to having discussions with Liz about our brave new world. This is the era when science fiction became popular and I love that I can raise geeky kids.

See what our homeschool high school looks like.

Check out other Crew members writing about teen reading:

Summer Reading for High School Students
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Filed Under: Homeschool Tagged With: reading, summer

Learning to Love

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July 8, 2014 By Jennifer Lambert 2 Comments

Jesus calls us to more than just rest; He calls us to an entirely different way of living.

Are you a reed swayed by the wind? Do you just live your life to please others? to make them more comfortable? to tell them what they want to hear?

I’ve struggled with this. And it pains me when my kids ask me why people lie or tell them something and never follow through.

Idle words.

“Every one of these careless words is going to come back to haunt you. There will be a time of Reckoning. Words are powerful; take them seriously. Words can be your salvation. Words can also be your damnation.” Matthew 12:36-37 The Message

It really just all comes down to Love.

All We Need is Love

Liz asked me today why all the songs and movies and books are about Love.

The truth is that humans need Love and most of modern first world society has everything we need, everything that money can buy, but we can’t buy Love, and we seek after it, pursuing it, idolizing it, craving it in all its impure and fleshly perversions.

I explained that people long for Love, but modern society has twisted it to be perverted and unhealthy and the media doesn’t portray real Love.

The teen books, shows, and music teach that everyone needs a boyfriend or girlfriend to be accepted and worthy in our society.

The Bible teaches a different Love and it’s my job as a mother to revitalize that education and make sure my kids understand the difference.

Am I modeling Love? Am I practicing hospitality? Am I lovely? Do my words portray Love? Do my actions show Love?

We’re all so worried about competition that we overlook Love. We compete for the attention and recognition of others in all we do. We even compete to appear more Christian than others.

Does my home look like something from HGTV before I can invite others over so I can love on them? Do my kids have to dress like Gap models before we can go out to witness? Does my hair and makeup look like that of the supermodel on the cover of a magazine before I can be charitable?

Why do we deny the Exodus? God tried to teach us that things don’t matter. People matter.

Why do we thwart the Gospel? Jesus teaches Love. Love before anything else.

How can I minister to others with where I am right now?

Jesus sent His apostles out with nothing. Why must we hide behind our stuff? We are of so little faith that we can’t offer Love to anyone since we don’t trust Him or accept Love ourselves.

Love your neighbor for real and the world can change.

Shake up your status quo.

Loving others isn’t supposed to be comfortable.

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Filed Under: Faith Tagged With: Jesus, love

Learning to Balance

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July 7, 2014 By Jennifer Lambert 3 Comments

God speaks to me in themes. In the books I read, in the music I hear, in conversations with people – Christian and not.

The theme for this season is about balance and love.

Learning to Balance

I’ve been forced to slow down these last few months with no mobile phone or Internet. For a girl who was previously plugged in 24/7, when that came to a grinding halt, it was rather a shock. I developed anxiety that I was supposed to be doing something.

God whispered to me to be still.

As I overcame my anxiety and quieted my spirit, I noticed my babies more. I sang songs to them at night. We prayed together. We did art. We played and read books. We laughed and the entire mood of the household started to change over a period of a few days. I observed my family. I was intentional and present.

I can preach and teach to my children, but they are swayed more by actions than words.

Wisdom is proved right by her actions. Matthew 11:19b

God’s rhythm is different than ours.

And there was evening, and there was morning… Genesis 1

Do you plan for your day’s success the night before?

Since our rhythm has been a bit disrupted lately and we’re working to develop a new and improved routine…

Sometimes, being quiet is the best (and hardest thing) I can do.

I want God to be in control, not me. I want to be calm and content.

And I want to make time to play in the rain.

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Filed Under: Faith Tagged With: faith

PCSing OCONUS with a Vehicle

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July 3, 2014 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

When we PCSed to Hawaii, we didn’t ship a personal vehicle.
We sold both our cars since we needed a larger one for our growing family and we figured we’d only need one vehicle while living on base.

When we PCSed to Germany, we shipped our van at the latest possible moment.

The email said 20 June as the latest possible date for the arrival of my minivan in Germany.

We had waited as patiently as possible for almost a month, renting a car for Memorial Day weekend to find a house.

We prayed fervently and quickly purchased a second vehicle for Aaron to drive to and from work. It’s a 5-seater Audi A6 – and we crammed those kids in the back to go to church on base for a couple Sundays.

New Audi

Of course the website for the POV shipment was down all month so we couldn’t check the status. Did the boat sink? When would I get my van?

Thursday afternoon, my husband emailed the contract carrier, asking for a status report.

Nothing.

Nothing all day Friday.

What’s the point of a due date if it just passes us by?

Saturday, we went to the library so I could use the wi-fi and the kids could get their weekly reading prizes.

When my husband checked his email, there was one alerting us about the arrival of our van. Sent at 5:30 on Friday.

It wouldn’t have mattered if we had received that email immediately. The offices were closed by 4 or 5 on Friday.

Monday morning, we were up bright and early (way early for me – 0600!) and headed out to begin the paperwork to get my van.

We proceeded to jump through all sorts of hoops in order to get my minivan. (We’re thankful it’s paid for. It’s a 2007 Dodge Caravan. We bought it new in Hawaii and it’s served us well. We pray it lasts through this tour here in Germany.)

Because it’s really my T.A.R.D.I.S., remember?

My TARDIS

Three different buildings, luckily for us, they were all back to back to back. We were worried we’d have to drive all over base to get all the paperwork completed.

At the vehicle registration office, we had to show proof of ownership, the shipping documents, my military dependent ID, German USAREUR driver’s license. I expected them to ask for a pint of blood and rights to my firstborn. Forms were filled out and payment was made.

We were issued temporary license plates. We had to go to the shipment office to verify ownership and check it over for damage. One back taillight was chipped.

Then we had to drive to the next building over for vehicle inspection. We had heard horror stories of how picky they could be and would often fail vehicles for very minor cosmetic damage. I have a tiny chip in the windshield and the corner of the rear bumper has a little rust and dent. And that chipped tail light. We prayed.

They checked over the exterior, they drove it to check the brakes, lights, and horn. They viewed the undercarriage.

They informed us we had to remove all stickers (we still had an inspection sticker and base ID label from Hawaii) and to monitor that chip in the windshield. If it gets more than 1/2 inch, we have to replace the windshield.

They provided us with a razor blade, and we gladly scraped off those stickers in a hurry.

We passed. Whew!

On to the vehicle registration office (a different one beside the inspection building) to get our permanent license plates. We paid and then drove off to get our gasoline ration card.

At the Shoppette, we showed the registration to a clerk and received an Esso gas ration card (that only works for us in Germany) – it looks like a debit card and allows us to buy gasoline tax-free. We are allotted 400-600 ℓ each month. Each time we buy gas, we have to take this card from the pump into the Shoppette to pay with our ration card. Unleaded gas this week on base is about $3.92/gallon. Off base, it’s about E1.67/ℓ. We also can load the card with Euro to purchase at Esso stations throughout Europe for tax-free, but we still must remain under the ration amount.

The Vogelweh Shoppette has regular unleaded for about $3.92/g but the Ramstein Shoppette has only mid-grade and premium.

Guess where I get my gas?

So, we’re ready to roll now!

Now to become an expert in backing into tight parking spots and maneuvering my big American vehicle on these narrow German roads.

Resources:

  • Third Culture Kids 3rd Edition: Growing up among worlds by Ruth E. Van Reken, Michael V. Pollock, David C. Pollock
  • 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

You might also like:

  • PCS to Germany
  • Best and Worst KMC
  • 13 Best Restaurants in KMC
  • Shopping in Germany
  • German vs. American Bacon
  • What to Do with Clothes
  • Gartenschau Dino Park
  • Kaiserslautern Volkspark
  • Kaiserslautern Wildpark
  • REAL Store Tour
  • Karlstal Hike
  • Burg Nanstein
  • Hohenecken Castle Ruins
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Filed Under: Germany, Military Tagged With: Germany, military, PCS

Homeschool for Free

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July 2, 2014 By Jennifer Lambert 2 Comments

You don’t have to spend lots of money to homeschool your kids.

You can homeschool for FREE.

I wasted so much money and time in the beginning on manipulatives, curriculum, books, toys, mostly from insecurity.

I was trained as a high school English teacher. Having preschoolers was terrifying! Homeschooling was scary.

So I spent money on curriculum, lessons, extracurricular activities, anything to get that responsibility off myself and onto others.

It took me several years of trial and error to gain confidence in our homeschool. We purged many unneeded items. We do still have lots of books and manipulatives that we’ve collected, but we’re so much more liberated in our education now than in the beginning.

So where can you get resources to homeschool for free?

Preschool

Enjoy life with your babies. Just include your preschoolers with everything you normally do as a parent. Cooking, cleaning, playing. None of it has to cost a thing beyond what you would normally do. Babies and preschoolers don’t need any formal education. They need a family to love and guide them. Let them play. Go outside a lot. Read a lot. Check out my preschool resources.

Follow Jennifer’s board Preschool on Pinterest.

Elementary

There are oodles of free courses online, books on public domain, and printables (we love notebooking.) I love how unschoolers learn and love life. Let your kids explore what they’re passionate about. I don’t stress about writing or much formal seat work. I want my kids to love learning. See how we homeschool.

Follow Jennifer’s board Notebooking on Pinterest.

Upper Grades

High school homeschool for free? Sure, just get creative! Use the library for literature, science, and history. Enter blog giveaways, do blog reviews for awesome curriculum, join a homeschool co-op and pool your teaching resources with other parents. Even do sports and PE at the YMCA or with other homeschooling families for course credits. I am so excited that my daughters are reaching the high school years and since we school year-round, she has so much freedom to learn what she likes and opportunities to do so many interesting things like Civil Air Patrol, theatre, Red Cross volunteering, and extracurricular activities.

Follow Jennifer’s board High School on Pinterest.

FREE Home Learning Ideas:

  • Amazing Educational Resources Google doc
  • Princess Awesome and Boy Wonder Google doc
  • Homeschool for Free Series from Only Passionate Curiosity
  • How to Homeschool for Free website
  • Pioneer Woman Free Homeschool resources
  • Easy Peasy All in One Homeschool – 1st through high school!
  • Ambleside Online – a great Charlotte Mason free education
  • An Old-Fashioned Education – with some Canadian resources!
  • Free Homeschool Deals
  • Homeschool.com Free Homeschool Curriculum and Resources
  • Under the Willow Tree Nature Notebooking Printables
  • Resources from Money Saving Mom
  • Resources from The Happy Housewife
  • Virtual Museums
  • Virtual Berlin Symphony
  • Classics for Kids
  • SQUILT Music
  • Masterpiece Society online art lessons
  • Chalk Pastel
  • Art for Kids Hub
  • Khan Academy videos online
  • Homeschool Math Worksheets
  • Education.com has freebies and a membership site
  • abcteach.com has free printables and a membership site
  • Confessions of  Homeschooler Printables
  • Homeschool Creations Printables
  • Starfall Reading and More Online
  • Currclick has freebies and newsletter sends a free product weekly
  • Ask for museum memberships and educational subscription boxes for birthdays and other gift-giving holidays.

Don’t confuse virtual schools that are run by your county or school district with homeschooling. While it may not cost you much or any money, you’re at the beck and call of the public schools and their standardized testing and regulations. If you like that idea, great, but be aware. I prefer freedom.

Don’t fear homeschooling your kids and being confident in your education choices.

Do you have any great free learning tools?

Check out the other Crew members and their free homeschool ideas.

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Filed Under: Homeschool Tagged With: back to school, frugal, homeschool

What to Do with Clothes in Germany

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July 1, 2014 By Jennifer Lambert 1 Comment

Most German houses don’t have closets. They have to buy Schränken – wardrobes. Some are simple cabinets with a shelf and rod to hang clothes. Others are monstrous wall units with drawers, shelves, cabinets, and a place to hang clothes.

schrank

We are allotted seven wardrobes from FMO (Furniture Management Office) during our stay here in Germany. We are more than lucky that our master bedroom has this huge walk-in closet. But I am allotted seven, so you know I found use for every single one of them. Two in the girls’ room, one in Alex’s room, one in Liz’s room, one in the hallway for coats, one in the laundry area for towels and whatnot, and one in the schoolroom to cram everything I can out of sight and out of reach of little hands.

Coat Closet
Washer and Dryer

I had to come all the way to Germany for the awesome washer and dryer of my dreams.

These lovely brand-spanking-new laundry units are mine on loan from FMO (Furniture Management Office) for three years.

They sing to me when they’ve completed a cycle. They’re sweet like that. All the settings are in German, so I just play with it until it feels right. Google Translate is our friend. I do know the difference between wool and cotton. I seldom wear wool (Wolle), so that’s easy.

Washer and Dryer Settings

The washer has to drain water into a sink since there’s no connection for a drain hose. So that’s special.

Washing Machine Drain Hose

The dryer is a condenser which means that it collects all the water from the wet clothes and has to be emptied after each load. There is no big metal vent that connects to the wall like with American dryers. I just use it to water plants.

Dryer Condenser

These units are just plug and go. It seems simpler and efficient.

This is a Flügeltrockner. It means “winged dryer.” It folds up flat for storage. It has two “wings” that unfold to hang clothes to dry. All utilities are more expensive here, so if we don’t have to use the dryer, the better. I basically just use the dryer for underwear and towels.

Clothes Drying Rack

And, just so you know, that’s my band name. Flügeltrockner.

My bathroom is like a greenhouse. I can’t wait to stock it full of orchids and plants.

It’s huge and has a toilet, two pedestal sinks, a shower, a jetted tub, urinal, and bidet. No storage! No cabinets. No shelves.

You might also like:

  • PCS to Germany
  • PCSing OCONUS with a Vehicle
  • Best and Worst KMC
  • 13 Best Restaurants in KMC
  • Shopping in Germany
  • German vs. American Bacon
  • Gartenschau Dino Park
  • Kaiserslautern Volkspark
  • Kaiserslautern Wildpark
  • REAL Store Tour
  • Karlstal Hike
  • Burg Nanstein
  • Hohenecken Castle Ruins
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Filed Under: Military Tagged With: Germany, laundry

Moving On

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June 30, 2014 By Jennifer Lambert 6 Comments

I love having conversations with friends about God because it helps me to work out issues and learn more about myself and God.

That whole iron sharpening iron thing.

Sometimes I just need to be affirmed by other Christians.

Winds of Change

When someone says or does something and I think it’s mean, my first reaction is to withdraw, second-guess, question what I did to deserve it.

A few months ago, someone said something inappropriate and mean on my personal Facebook wall and I wallowed in self-pity for a week.

Several of my bloggy friends messaged me to tell me they are sorry for that person’s poor behavior and they are praying about it and the relationship.

Another friend replied on that thread, explaining the way it should be. It left no room for argument.

I felt loved, having so many friends rally to my aid, affirming me, and I had the victory that I didn’t lash out or retaliate (like I kinda wanted to).

I didn’t even reply, because I didn’t trust my words to be edifying. I would have just made the situation worse.

This hasn’t always been the case.

I grew up being taught to look out for number one. It’s been a long hard road to relearn Christ’s way: to turn the other cheek, pray for enemies, move on.

We love because he first loved us.

1 John 4:19 ESV

I know I have a different life, moving around with the military, living on social media and in the blogging world. Many of our friends and most of my family don’t understand or care. Some are even resentful. They don’t comprehend affiliate links or how it would help me and they choose not to pay attention to it at all. They say they feel offended when I post about homeschooling and natural health.

That’s just their own guilty conscience because I never post an attack on anyone. I share posts and write about what matters to me and to educate others.

I respect teachers. I was a teacher before God led us to homeschool. I used to trust all doctors and medicine but now we use essential oils and alternative health with an improved diet.

Sometimes, we just have to move on from toxic relationships and let God sort out the pain and heartache.

Here are some books that have helped me.

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Filed Under: Health Tagged With: mental health

Diligent Parenting

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June 26, 2014 By Jennifer Lambert 4 Comments

I let down my guard for a few days.

I allowed the children to play with a boy they met in the village. He is American and I think the kids and he were excited to meet and be able to speak easily to each other.

I was happy they met a friend and were getting out of the house. I want them to be children and to play and have fun and explore.

How much trouble could they get into riding bikes and scooters and playing at the village playground?

Village Playground

Then they went to his house one afternoon.

I walked the trail around our village and went back to pick them up.

Liz had gotten on their Internet and broken my rules. The irony is that the boy tattled on her to me the moment I walked through their door.

Then, while I chatted with the woman, the boy played a violent video game in front of my younger three kids.

I think I caught on in time since I heard the TV blaring and excused myself to go investigate and called my kids to come. I don’t think they saw much.

The boy argued that there was no blood. Like that’s the least of my worries.

He backtalked his mama and me. He snapped at Kate.

I snatched up my babies and left.

His mama apologized to me as I walked down their steps and started down the sidewalk to home.

It was too little, too late and I wonder how sincere it really was. Mere moments around them informed me of their priorities and values.

I should have been more careful.

A framed marriage prayer on the wall doesn’t make anyone a Christian, but the lack of parenting certainly was blaringly obvious to me and I don’t want my kids influenced by them.

I must remain diligent at all times.

I get so worn out meeting new people, getting excited about potential friendships, just to get disappointed and hurt that they have such different standards and lifestyles.

Diligent Parenting - I must remain diligent at all times.

Personally, I am tolerant of so much, but I cannot allow my children to be exposed to anything contrary our worldview.

I am reminded of Matthew 10:16:

“Look, I am sending you out as sheep among wolves. So be as shrewd as snakes and harmless as doves.”

My kids didn’t even question me when I told them they were not to go back to that house.

I know my younger three kids were a little disconcerted. Liz was ashamed, perhaps more at getting caught than what she had done.

Luckily, they’ve met a few German kids who seem nice, but I will be more careful before they go inside any other houses.

Updates: The boy came to the house the next day when I was out. Liz answered the door because he was so loud and obnoxious: ringing the bell, banging on the door, and hollering for them. He wanted to apologize to me, but I wasn’t there. So he apologized to Liz and then asked if they could come out to play or if he could come inside. Liz obeyed my rules and said that they could not leave the house nor could he come inside while I wasn’t home. He got huffy and left and we haven’t seen him again.

Weeks later, the mom confronted Liz at the village park. She demanded to know why our family wouldn’t accept their friendship.

No adult should ever bully a child.

This mom has never come to my house. She has never asked to speak to me directly. Liz stumbled over some excuses. This woman frightened my teen daughter. Inexcusable.

They have since moved out of our village. Their house is vacant and for rent.

If you were bullied when you were younger, the reason you freeze at genuine compliments is because fake compliments were a prelude to an attack.

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Filed Under: Family Tagged With: antibullying, parenting

Nature Trail

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June 25, 2014 By Jennifer Lambert 2 Comments

I discovered a trail that circles our German village. It’s about 3 miles at its shortest. It meanders through the forest, with wild strawberry and blackberry patches offering up their fruit to hungry hikers.

Wild Strawberries

The canopy of trees overhead all but blocks out the bright sun and makes the temperature feel much cooler.

Wooded Path

Horses and riders, cyclists, runners, and walkers share the wide path. A few couples must have thought I am that crazy American taking pictures of every odd wildflower and lizard I came across.

Apparently, everyone in the village knows who we are, what our names are, that we live over the GetränkeShop.

So, I don’t want the villagers to think ill of us. With all the windows open all the time, I constantly urge the kids to be quieter. I know their squeals and singing carries down the street.

In the woods, it was quiet except for birdsong and bees and the occasional squirrel running along branches or lizard scurrying through the underbrush.

I love the views from the trail of the village rooftops.

I was taken with the various wildflowers.

I absolutely love these!

purple foxglove

These little black beetles are everywhere.

Purple Thistle

I caressed the mossy old trees.

Mossy Old Logs

I felt like I was in a fairy tale. Magic could happen in this forest.

Cobbled Walkway

Towards the end of the trail there is a little babbling brook.

Babbling Brook

I look forward to the changing seasons here. Early summer is gorgeous, cool and sweet in the morning and warm in the afternoon sunshine, and promising to bring wild blackberries soon!

Nature Study Journal Notebooking Pages
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Filed Under: Homeschool Tagged With: Germany, nature study

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