Jennifer Lambert

A Sacred Balance

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5 Days of Homeschooling Essentials {Day 3: Know Your Enemy}

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January 22, 2014 By Jennifer Lambert 12 Comments

We need to plan.

We need to know ourselves, our strengths and weaknesses.

We need to know our enemy.

And sometimes that enemy is ourselves or our loved ones disguised as good will. And I know it’s hard. It hurts. But we need to protect our families.

I’m sure Satan loves nothing more than to steal our joy.

It’s hard not to compare. We’re terrible about looking at the haves and have nots. We even disguise as praying for people.

Don’t compare your homeschool or children to anyone else.

So what if their child is reading and yours isn’t? It’ll happen, eventually.

So what if their child is accepted into {insert whatever prestigious extracurricular or academic activity here}? Do you really want to drive/pay/deal with/stress over whatever that may cause your family?

So what if their child’s handwriting is illegible and they can’t spell or write a complete sentence? That child may be gifted in art or music or math or anything else.

Know your enemy.

Understand your insecurities for what they are. Stop placing blame on others for your feelings and issues. Love is a verb. 1 Corinthians 13 and all that jazz. You are responsible for your reactions. Don’t resort to being ugly back. Golden rule, remember? I know. It’s hard. I bite my tongue or inside my cheek all too often.

For we do not wrestle against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this age, against spiritual hosts of wickedness in the heavenly places. Ephesians 6:12

If you have friends or family members who are naysayers or who criticize your every move, then you need to deal with that as delicately and politely as you can. It may mean fewer interactions to maintain your family health.

Surround yourself with health and happiness. Remove the ugly from your life like the cancerous tumor that it is.

If you have friends or acquaintances who steal your joy, pray for them, but avoid their company and seek healthier relationships.

Life is too short.

Quit comparing.

Live free. Laugh loud. Love bold.

The whole series:

Day 1: Planning

Day 2: Know Yourself

Day 3: Know Your Enemy

Day 4: Supplies

Day 5: Let Go

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5 Days of Homeschooling Essentials {Day 2: Know Yourself}

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January 21, 2014 By Jennifer Lambert 7 Comments

Sure, we need to plan.

We also need to know our strengths and weaknesses.

All the mamas and the papas and the babies have different personalities and that makes for fun-filled days with all those dynamics at work. How do you cope?

We need to know ourselves.

We need to constantly reevaluate ourselves and our purpose and homeschool.

We need to know what our recipe for success is. For ourselves personally, and for each of our children. We need to know what sets us on edge and do our best to eliminate those triggers.

Pray. Always. Unceasingly.

Run a smooth(er) homeschool.

Consider learning styles for each child and how that works with your teaching style, mamas. I have to force myself out of my comfort zone to teach my children the way they best learn and that’s often difficult for me. Is it more important that I check off that box or that my child has a great learning experience?

Check out my post on learning styles.

Create a learning space for each child and a sanctuary for mama. Small spaces make this tough, but you can make or buy a privacy shield to allow children to work independently behind a barrier and that helps many focus. I often work alongside my kids and this is comforting for all.

Consider the flow and dynamics of a typical school day. How could it go more smoothly? Do the kids need an outdoor recess or vigorous indoor activity to get the wiggles out midmorning? Do you need to reinforce a rest or quiet time in the afternoons for the evenings to play out more calmly? Does the schedule need to be revamped to be more successful? I alternate days with history and science since it’s a lot of reading and notebooking.

Homemaking Helps.

What can you do to improve the ebb and flow of your home? Be proactive.

I recently subscribed to eMeals to help me with meal planning because I.am.terrible.about.meal.planning. Too many afternoons have passed me by and nothing made its way out of the freezer to thaw for dinner and we had to scramble or grab takeout or rush to the store. We like to eat and we often have a freezer and fridge full of lovely food, but I’ve been lazy lately about getting it prepared and on the table on time.

Set up a cleaning schedule or chore chart for the kids – and for you. Lots of moms use Fly Lady or zone cleaning. Find something that works for your family. Tori is my cleaner. I can just let her go and she does whatever it is above and beyond my standards. Alex and Kate are pretty cheerful about helping but Liz really doesn’t care to help. It’s not optional. Teach the kids to help early on. Servant leadership and great life skills!

Have only littles? Find a family with an older child in training to be a mama helper. This can be for pay or on a barter. This older child can help with laundry or cleaning up or watching the kids to give you a little breather.

Ask your husband what can be let go. My husband is pretty laid back but it drives him nuts to have toys all over the floor. The laundry piling up? He’d pick his clothes out of a basket forever with no complaint. He helps with cooking. He cares for the lawn and snow shoveling. He’ll vacuum or steam clean if I ask. Most everything else he overlooks. Awesome.

We need to maintain our health as best we can.

Sleep is important.

We make sure the little kids are in bed by 8 PM. Our eldest typically goes to bed by 9. Generally, they all wake up naturally between 6:30-8 in the morning. If we have a rare appointment in the morning and have to get up early, it’s grumpiness all around. Sleep and rest are important and I am happy to allow for their growing bodies to regenerate and grow and heal.

Eat well.

I get up every morning and make a hot breakfast. It took me too many years to get that this is important. I never used to eat breakfast. Even still, I often don’t get anything after the kids have swooped down. I either have a smoothie or hardboiled egg (I keep a supply of HB eggs in the fridge and I make twice as much smoothie as I need so there are leftovers of that as well). I have noticed since feeding my kids a good breakfast, their behavior is much improved and our days run more smoothly.

Exercise.

We need to stay fit to be healthy. The kids and I play the Wii, shovel snow, take hikes or walks, do Family Time Fitness or Fit2Be  or yoga together. My husband frequents the gym almost every day. Liz has to take a physical training test monthly for Civil Air Patrol. I get to the gym when I can. Fresh air and exercise are great mood elevators and keep our bodies working properly.

Natural care.

We use essential oils and cod liver oil and drink lots of water to keep our immune systems healthy. We don’t use OTC or prescription meds. We also diffuse focusing oils to help our brains function at their best. We’ve limited microwave use and I would get rid of the thing altogether, but we’re not quite there yet. We use less plastic and Thieves® Household Cleaner to clean, well, everything.

The point is, we all have strengths and weaknesses. We’re all different. We have different personality traits and it’s not worth trying to overhaul that and be someone we’re not. Find something that works to help streamline your life so everyone is at peace with it.

The whole series:

Day 1: Planning

Day 2: Know Yourself

Day 3: Know Your Enemy

Day 4: Supplies

Day 5: Let Go

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Filed Under: Homeschool Tagged With: back to school, homemaking, personality, schedule

Galapagos Islands Book Review

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January 20, 2014 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

I’m a Mom of MasterBooks! For our first selection, the kids and I reviewed Galapagos Islands: A Different View  by Georgia Purdom from New Leaf Publishing Group.

Almost thirty Creationist scientists, ministers, and authors created this gorgeous book of the miraculous Galapagos Islands. The photography is stunning and my kids are all quite obsessed with these islands and their animals. Every picture of an iguana and tortoise got oohs and aahs. We enjoyed reading about the conservation efforts there.

We discussed volcanoes and botany. We watched BBC videos on YouTube. We remembered living in Hawaii for three years and looked at our pictures of when we visited the Big Island. We love that pahoehoe lava is photographed and mentioned (that’s a Hawaiian word! basaltic lava forming smooth undulating or ropy masses.)

We discussed why it was so clear to view the night sky and celestial bodies in Galapagos. We’d looked at some constellations and the moon recently with the naked eye, binoculars, and telescopes here in Utah. They understand the lack of city lights and pollution there on the islands allow much more visibility.

Were studying some chemistry basics in science and the girls love the mention of the gases discovered in the lava and submarine gas release from magma under the earth’s crust. They remember the odor of sulphur from Hawaii Volcanoes National Park and Yellowstone. Now they want to take a field trip to Galapagos!

We’re studying Darwin in history and the pages discussing his work was a fun surprise for the girls. A great overview with Bible verses to dispute his theories but also the legacy he left science is discussed.

With the pictures and video of lava bursting into the air and ocean, profound wisdom from Tori: “Stuff that’s dangerous can still be pretty.”

My husband and I were fascinated with all the (almost 30) contributing authors’ education and background. Great people put this book together for the glory of God.

The six sections of the book reveal God’s Creation:

  • Beginnings (has direct verses from Genesis…a fabulous intro!)
  • Stones and Stars
  • Climate, Currents and Colonization
  • Life and Legacy
  • Flora and Fauna
  • Reflections on the Galapagos

This lovely hardback has 104 pages and is $18.99. Digital copies are $9.99. And you can purchase on Amazon. I think it’s well worth it.

Watch a great 1 minute trailer about the book:

There’s a really gorgeous preview you can download (scroll down to “related downloads”) that shows how stunning the images really are.

We also want to check out the Grand Canyon book in this series! We’re planning to go there in the spring.

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5 Days of Homeschooling Essentials {Day 1: Planning}

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January 20, 2014 By Jennifer Lambert 6 Comments

5 Days of Homeschooling Essentials.

Sure, we need to plan.

We need to know ourselves, our strengths and weaknesses.

We need to know our enemy.

We need supplies. But more than paper and pencils, books and crayons.

And sometimes we need to know when to let go.

Planning. I am SO great at planning. Not so much at implementing.

In a way, I’m an unschooler at heart. I love the idea of schedules, but I really like to just gather lots of papers and books and resources along a theme – weekly, monthly, semesterly (Is that a word? Well, it is now!).

But for all homeschoolers – beginners and veterans and everyone in between – we need planning and evaluation at the start, midpoint, and end of each year.

In addition to all the homeschool planning we do (and that’s the easy part, I think), we need to plan out our spiritual goals for our children. It’s much simpler to plan out curriculum, complete with projects and field trips, than it is to plan out heart training.

Do you know when there will be a snow day or sick day or day-where-the-hot-water-heater-bursts-and-leaks-all-over-the-cellar? Do you know when you will have to stray from the lesson plan to teach about bullies because a child at church made fun of her or begin preliminaries for The Talk because your child heard something disturbing on Christian radio news?

Of course we can’t plan for those events. But we can be prepared.

Mamas, we need to be proactive and plan ahead for surprises and the inevitable. Our babies are growing up, underneath our very noses, despite our efforts to shelter.

They are not our own. We cannot control them. Give them to God and pray.

What is the purpose for your homeschool? What do you purpose to accomplish in your children before they reach adulthood?

Set goals with your endpoint in mind. Math and reading and this science experiment and that art project are all secondary to heart training.

What good is it for someone to gain the whole world, yet forfeit their soul? ~Mark 8:36

Almost all curriculum comes with a schedule and a plan and now common-core alignment. God has a plan for each of His children. Does your homeschool align with Him?

Plan for their character development. In which direction do you want your children guided? What regrets do you want your kids not to have?

I recently conversed with some moms about how our parents taught (or didn’t teach) about sex and the lack of biblical education in this area was saddening to me.

I know I want my kids to be the ones who step up proudly to say that they were taught well from Scripture and biblical principles. I want to protect their worldview and show them Jesus in all we learn in our homeschool.

It’s all about planning. What’s your scope and sequence?

Tweetables:

  • Forget common-core. God has a plan for His children. Does your homeschool align with Him? 
  • What regrets do you want your kids not to have? Which direction do you want your children guided? 
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Abortion

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January 19, 2014 By Jennifer Lambert 4 Comments

Apparently, there is a day called Sanctity of Life Sunday. I don’t know if I ever knew there was such a thing.

I have acquaintances who frequently post rather graphic images, videos, and quotes on social media about pro-life and anti-abortion and special needs kids (who all deserve life, despite doctors recommend terminating pregnancies if tests reveal any disorder).

I’m sure they mean well as their results show, with lots of comments and likes showing agreement.

I have friends who wear pro-life T-shirts and probably feel like they’re changing lives with the messages written across their hearts.

And maybe they are.

At women’s conferences, pro-life orgs proudly set up tables amidst the charities, Etsy shop vomit, and various vendor alley.

And what they do is well and good, I’m sure.

But aren’t they preaching to the choir?

Their profiles proudly state the number of children they’ve birthed. Some list the number of miscarriages as a “babe in heaven.”

Why don’t we talk about that?

If the embryo never breathed air, is it a child?

Does a heartbeat equal a viable person?

If a child is never named, is it a person?

If a baby is stillborn and isn’t baptized, what then?

I smile when they spout self-righteousness, but the smile doesn’t reach my eyes.

Because they don’t know.

They don’t realize how they’re turning that knife and carving out pieces of my soul with every word.

I’ve read various heart-wrenching stories of teen girls being coerced into an abortion by their families, their church, their culture.

I could’ve been that girl too.

But I was twenty-two. And I was married.

Too old to use the excuse of “she didn’t know any better.”

Right?

This is proof that you never know what someone is going through or has been through.

Don’t judge until you’ve walked a mile in my shoes.

So many excuses could’ve been laid out there.

The devil loves excuses.

I read all these fabulous adoption stories and something wrenches inside me. My baby could’ve lived and had a loving home. Maybe I could redeem the whole ordeal by adopting a baby. I’m horrified by women experiencing infertility and I long to comfort them somehow, some way, but who am I?

But that’s not the answer.

There was no real coercion. I was simply dead inside and followed to my doom. Sure, there were oodles of options. I even filled out a form for whatever state aid was available to me. I had planned to have that baby for a minute. No insurance. No job. Separated from my husband. No hope. Lost.

I turned to my parents – who should have protected me, who are supposed to know what’s best.

When I blindly trusted and obeyed, I could have rebelled and run away, far away, even if it had been to have my child in secret squalor, in love.

My parents led us like lambs to slaughter.

But it was ultimately my choice.

My decision.

The hardest decision that I’ve ever had to make.

But my life would be vastly different if the decision had been different.

I wouldn’t be married to my husband now.

I wouldn’t have four brilliant kids now.

So, for the good and juicy? Because that’s why you’re here.

I can’t bear to relive the details, much less type them out here.

It sure wasn’t glamorous.

I still remember the smell of the clinic.

I expected to see picketers outside like I’d seen on the news.

The nurse showed me an ultrasound of the seven-week old embryo and made sure I realized there was a heartbeat on that monitor. It was the law.

I saw.

I turned away from the flickering image, sick in body and soul.

And then I did the unthinkable.

I was quietly put to sleep while they sucked that precious little life out of me.

That heartbeat stopped.

Recovery felt like a dream, a void, a time lapse. Had I just been to the dentist or something? I was rushed out as soon as I was awake and able to walk.

My body recovered easily and quickly.

I pushed the experience away, to the depths of my being, to not be remembered.

The shame. The blame. The soul-sickness.

Only mine.

It was never spoken aloud. When I tried to express something, once, I was hushed with a harsh word and a harsher expression. So, I clammed up and moved on.

It’s never been expressed.

I thought my mother would understand my loss, my pain, my hopelessness.

Perhaps it was hers too, but she didn’t know how to cope or comfort.

So, silence.

I realize now that I’ve never even really grieved. It is a nameless, sexless child in my future memory. A nonbeing.

I never received any post-care. It’s unspoken.

People seldom ask questions. I occasionally fill out forms where I have to write in how many pregnancies – how many to term and how many not, and I pause in pain over those form questions.

I don’t feel forgiven because I can’t ever forgive myself.

Society and the church and the government has taught me to hate myself for my decision.

I am still amazed that God has blessed me with four perfect children.

I expected punishment. Do I deserve those perfect children? I live in constant fear in the back of my mind that they will be taken away, like I’m living in some dream of what could be, should be, an alternate reality – and because I didn’t appreciate nor protect that one innocent life, I will eventually awake and realize my punishment of childlessness.

This is my self-inflicted tragedy and I don’t expect anyone to understand it. Sure, you can quote Bible verses and suggest recovery groups or studies to “set me free,” but I don’t agree with those.

There’s a gaping hole that nothing can fill and I live with ambiguity.

It’s not my proudest moment, but it’s my history. It happened. This event propelled me to the life I live today.

People can scream on both sides of the political issue and that’s fine.

I hope and pray that those who feel so self-righteous about a woman’s body, her uterus, her choices, her future…I hope you never have to face that decision.

I hope it’s not you, your daughter, mother, niece, aunt, granddaughter, friend.

I hope you have it easy.

But no one gets to make that decision for us.

Because it’s so easy to spout self-righteousness and think it’s us vs. them, others who have these decisions to face. It’s about so much more – controlling women, brown bodies, socio-economics.

There is no black and white. No absolute right or wrong. It’s not all only pro-choice or pro-life.

Anti-choice rhetoric generally falls into three categories:

1. Extremely oversimplified and totally subjective (“Life begins at conception.”).
2. So incendiary that all who disagree are immediately marked as evil (“Abortion is murder.”).
3. An oxygen-less loop of tautology (“Life begins at conception, therefore abortion is murder.”).

The pro-choice movement, on the other hand, has never figured out an effective way to counteract anti-abortion propaganda because the omnipresence of that propaganda has terrified the vast majority of people who have abortions into silence and because for decades we have constantly been allowing ourselves to be drawn into a bad-faith debate over a fundamental human freedom that is not debatable. As soon as we are baited into correcting our opponents, it legitimizes their argument. Once you are arguing from the defense, you’ve already lost. ~Lindy West

Don’t just say that abstinence is best. Don’t condemn healthy and complete sex education. Don’t tell me there is adoption and foster care.

Don’t tell me that you’re pro-life if you don’t care about inmates on death row, immigrants seeking asylum, children who are living in poverty and hunger, uninsured people who need medical care and medications, police brutality towards minorities.

Don’t tell me what’s best for me.

I want the church to stay out of my uterus. 

I want the government to stay out of my uterus.

I want lawmakers to stay out of my uterus.

I fear for my daughters. I fear for women. I fear for those who have a uterus. Don’t get raped. Don’t get abused or assaulted.

Protect yourself. 

The government will not help you.

They just want to control you.

Only the embryo is important? Not the woman? Why doesn’t her decision, healthy, future have any weight?

https://twitter.com/celia_bedelia

Why doesn’t she matter?

Why are we punished for having a uterus?

I’ve spent twenty years thinking I’m a bad person because society and the church and Christians and the government told me I am a bad person.

I don’t have to apologize to myself every day.

You don’t have to apologize to anyone for your decisions about your body.

Make amends to yourself now. We do this every day for lesser things.

April 10.

When azaleas bloom and the world awakes to a new beginning.

One life went to sleep.

Why are these stories untold?

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Cast Iron Cookware

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January 15, 2014 By Jennifer Lambert

Cast iron cookware used to be more popular than is it today.

The cast iron from a generation ago was lighter and smoother than what we can find today. It was cast with a different quality of iron.

eBay has some lovely vintage options: Griswold, Wagner, and fun shaped roll pans. The prices are high, but worth it if you don’t have any handmedowns. Thrift stores and yard sales are also good options.

Somehow, cast iron lost popularity. Maybe because it’s bulky and heavy. Also, not dishwasher friendly. It’s ok to use water, but not soap. There are even chains and scrubbies specific for cleaning and seasoning.

Cast iron is an investment compared to some cookware at big box stores that’s cute and pretty, but needs to be replaced often.

Maybe it needs more storage space?

Cast iron has lots of great benefits and we should use it more often.

Why use cast iron?

  1. Generally inexpensive for long lasting cookware.
  2. Cast-iron skillets conduct heat very well and can go from stovetop to oven with no problems.
  3. They last for a really long time.
  4. A well-seasoned cast-iron pan is virtually nonstick so you need very little oil to cook.
  5. They get and stay really hot which is great for searing.
  6. You can avoid the harmful chemicals found in most nonstick pans.
  7. It can leach some iron into your food, and that’s a good thing.
  8. Cleaning is easy. Keep them seasoned with oil. Use boiling water to clean and never use soap or wash in dishwasher!

I can’t wait for the weather to break so we can go camping! We’re learning how to bake in cast iron dutch ovens.

What’s your favorite cast iron item?

I really, really want the iron wok!

A favorite is Lodge Cast Iron.

Here are some we love:

A Dutch Oven

Great for stews and pot roast and baking sourdough

A Grill Pan

Versatile for grilling breakfast meats or steak!

The Classic Skillet

Great for everyday uses from eggs to frying chicken.

Bakers Skillet

Perfect for biscuits and cornbread

There are fun specialty items like woks and pizza pans too!

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Filed Under: Health Tagged With: castiron, cooking, giftguide

Gingerbread Unit Study

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December 20, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

Gingerbread is yummy.

We made scented gingerbread paper crafts, read books, made scented playdough.

Gingerbread activities:

  • Make gingerbread or cookies
  • Gingerbread playdough
  • Gingerbread crafts
  • Gingerbread books
  • Gingerbread printables

We love all the holiday Jan Brett books.

Bubba really got into the Gingerbread stories and these fun printables.

Make gingerbread playdough with spices!
gingerbread playdough

We did a fun gingerbread sensory craft.

I printed gingerbread boy outlines on brown paper. (I Googled for the outlines.)

I had the kids paint white glue on the gingerbread kids.

gingerbread craft gluing
glue gingerbread craft
gingerbread craft

And then decorate the gingerbread men with beads, sequins, etc.

And then sprinkle on spices.

Lots of spices.

and that wasn’t enough!

He who controls the spice controls the universe.

The finished “cookie”

scented gingerbread paper craft

We had fun with this sensory craft!

Gingerbread resources: 

  • Prekinders
  • Stay at Home Educator
  • Kidzone
  • DLTK
  • Kids Activities
  • Living Montessori Now
  • The Educators Spin on It
  • PreK Pages
  • Homeschool Creations
  • A Little Pinch of Perfect
  • Life Over C’s
  • Teaching Hearts
  • Every Star is Different
  • Play to Learn Preschool
  • Royal Baloo
  • 123 Homeschool 4Me
  • Natural Beach Living
  • Homeschool Share
  • Jan Brett

Books:

  • Richard Scarry’s The Gingerbread Man
  • The Gingerbread Boy
  • The Gingerbread Girl
  • Gingerbread Friends
  • Gingerbread Christmas
  • Gingerbread Baby
  • The Gingerbread Cowboy
  • The Gingerbread Pirates
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Shadows of the Pomegranate Tree Review

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December 17, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

Shadows of the Pomegranate Tree: A Novel, of The Islam Quintet, book 1 of 5, tells an exquisite historical tale.


I have always been fascinated by the Spanish Inquisition. I wrote a research paper on the psychology of these events in high school. My teacher, a sports coach, probably didn’t read it or understand it because I got a perfect 100. This novel brought me a fresh perspective of these historical events. I knew the broad textbook and encyclopedia version of the events, but this book brought emotion and something more personal to it. The Spanish persecuted not only Jews, but those who practiced Islam. The book explored some of the politics behind the persecution and this was enlightening to me. While I am a Christian, I certainly don’t support intolerance or forcing people into the faith. Many people of that time lived in peace for generations despite religious differences and the political upheaval was a bit of a surprise as family members turned against each other. While many stories romanticize the events, it was war and ugly and heartbreaking. Many converted in outward appearance to save themselves, their families, and their businesses. This book helps to put it all into perspective. It’s accurate enough that I could use this to teach this period in history and literature when my kids are older.

There’s a lesson in this, still for us, today.

The writing is poetic, combining storytelling and poetry with history and philosophy. Of course, there are love stories and intrigues. The characters are complex and I love this one and hate that one, as I, the reader, am supposed to. I love sympathizing and getting “into” a story! It’s everything a great novel should be. Some of the plot was told in flashback as memories of the characters. I expect some of the mysteries to be explained in the rest of the series. When I realized the book was over, I was upset! I wanted more. Instant gratification.

Here are the other four novels in the series. I can’t wait! (That’s the sign of a great writer. When I can’t put the book down and can’t wait to finish a series!)

About the Author

Tariq Ali is a novelist, journalist, and filmmaker. His many books include The Clash of Fundamentalisms: Crusades, Jihads and Modernity; Bush in Babylon: The Recolonization of Iraq; Conversations with Edward Said; Street Fighting Years: An Autobiography of the Sixties; and the novels of the Islam Quintet. He is the coauthor of On History: Tariq Ali and Oliver Stone in Conversation and an editor of the New Left Review, and he writes for the London Review of Books and the Guardian. Ali lives in London.

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How to Have a Debt-Free Christmas

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December 16, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 11 Comments

We changed our focus and priorities to have a simple, debt-free holiday.

Christmas should be about family, experiences, Jesus. Not stuff. {Tweet this}

How to Have a Debt-Free Christmas

How can we have a debt-free Christmas?

Pay cash.

We don’t do adult gifts.

If we don’t have enough money, we don’t buy it.

Stick to a budget. Plan for the holidays year-round by putting a portion of income each month into a savings account.

We’ve prepared the kids that we well have smaller Christmas than in the past. We don’t do Santa. We don’t do that ridiculous Elf or any of its cousins.

We don’t have piles of gifts like our parents provided us. I shop sales and have been very careful. I find great items year-round and store them away for the holidays.

Planning is key. I keep an Amazon wishlist updated throughout the year and watch prices with Honey.

Set a standard.

I only buy a few gifts for the kids.

I send my parents a gift card because they have more stuff than they could ever use and they like to eat out at restaurants.

My husband and I don’t give presents to each other or extended family.

If you have to do gifts with others…Organize some kind of swap with extended family, like a name drawing. Send money to a charity in family’s name instead of a tangible gift. Be creative.

We don’t watch TV.

By not being exposed to commercials, we don’t have cases of the gimmes.

It almost makes gift buying difficult and I have to be more creative and search for the perfect things. We’ve downscaled a lot. We’ve simplified. We’re picky.

I prefer quality over quantity.

I love this gifting plan:

  • something they want

  • something they need

  • something to wear

  • something to read

But, for us, there’s very little we need (such a blessing!) and I don’t often buy clothing for Christmas gifts.

We don’t know what the “popular” toys are. When someone asked if my girls wanted a particular toy for Christmas since it was “all the rage” at her daughter’s school, I had to Google it. My girls probably would enjoy it, but not because it’s popular. But then they would discard it too soon or it would break.

We don’t strive to keep up with society and it’s so much more relaxing not to have to compare.

We focus on the meaning of Christmas: Jesus.

We read through Advent studies each day. We love the books by Ytreeide. This year we’re reading Bartholomew’s Passage. We light candles and pray and sing carols and we’re together.

We read about and celebrate St. Nicholas day on December 6. The children know this is the base for the legend of Santa Claus.

We learned about and celebrated Hanukkah during our Ancient Studies history and it has become tradition now.

We decorate simply.

Our house doesn’t look like it’s out of a magazine or store catalog. No Anthropologie or Pottery Barn here. We live here; it’s not a museum.

We have an artificial tree. We have a lovely Advent wreath and a new Jesse Tree this year! We’re making do with what we have. Alex wanted the outside of the house decorated and we managed to do it well with lights we bought on clearance years ago. Win!

Our church has an ornament exchange so each of my children gets a new ornament each year. They love it. And their hearts are better than mine that they’re never disappointed in the ornament they receive.

We just don’t go shopping.

It’s really that easy.

My mom used to love to go shopping as entertainment. I don’t. I don’t need retail therapy.

I don’t subscribe to store emails. We don’t get newspapers.

We stay home on Black Friday. We don’t go online all weekend long. We find other stuff to do.

We have a budget and are doing better sticking to it. I go to the grocery store when we need to stock up (and honestly, this is where most of our money goes! We like to eat well).

We go to stores when we need a particular item.

I do most of my buying online long before November. If we don’t go to stores, we’re not tempted. But I’m also learning to get offline when all the sales start. That’s becoming a temptation too. Just because it’s a deal, doesn’t mean we need it.

We read lots of fun and meaningful Christmas books.

I keep books with the holiday decorations and we get more from the library.

A favorite this year is The Dinosaurs’ Night Before Christmas. The accompanying CD is a parody of Christmas carols with hilarious dinosaur fun. The kids love it.

I hope to do some useful crafts and homemade baking projects to share with friends this week. The kids love that and it fits in with our servant leadership goals. We don’t eat many sweets, so these are fun and frugal gifts.

Check out this Essential Guide to a Crap-Free Christmas.

Resources:

  • Debt-Proof Living: How to Get Out of Debt & Stay That Way by Mary Hunt
  • 31 Days to Radically Reduce Your Expenses: Less Stress. More Savings by Kalyn Brooke
  • Slaying the Debt Dragon: How One Family Conquered Their Money Monster and Found an Inspired Happily Ever After by Cherie Lowe
  • 31 Days of Living Well and Spending Zero: Freeze Your Spending. Change Your Life. by Ruth Soukup
  • Unstuffed: Decluttering Your Home, Mind, and Soul by Ruth Soukup
  • Clutter Free: Quick and Easy Steps to Simplifying Your Space by Kathi Lipp
  • The Spender’s Guide to Debt-Free Living: How a Spending Fast Helped Me Get from Broke to Badass in Record Time by Anna Newell Jones
  • The Year without a Purchase: One Family’s Quest to Stop Shopping and Start Connecting by Scott Dannemiller
  • The Year of Less: How I Stopped Shopping, Gave Away My Belongings, and Discovered Life is Worth More Than Anything You Can Buy in a Store by Cait Flanders
  • Make Room for What You Love: Your Essential Guide to Organizing and Simplifying by Melissa Michaels

How do you stay of debt during the holidays?

What are your priorities?

You might also like:

  • How We Save Money
  • How to Set a Budget
  • 5 Money Tips
  • 5 Frugal Tips for Buying Kids Clothes
  • Losing Control
  • A Frugal Birthday
  • Shopping in Germany
  • Obstacles to Being Frugal During the Holidays
  • How to Have a Debt-Free Christmas
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Filed Under: Frugal Tagged With: Christmas, debt, finance, frugal, money

Elementary Chemistry and Physics Demonstrations

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

December 13, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 1 Comment

The kids have been loving Apologia Exploring Creation with Chemistry and Physics for science this year.

Tori especially loves the coloring pages and copywork in the Junior Notebooking Journal.

coloring

Kate just wants to do experiments all the time.

We worked on water displacement with pinto beans. I think the winner was over 500 beans!

displacement

Most experiments and projects are simple enough that Alex joins in.

displacement with beans

I love his expression. The surface tension fascinated him.

water displacement

Review time! I wrote the definitions on the board for the girls to add to their notebooking journals.

science vocabulary

It combines all the greatness of notebooking with very little effort. The girls love the colorful foldables and lapbooking components.

science notebooking

I usually set up the items for the girls to complete so there are no mishaps with cutting or gluing.

notebooking in science

The girls loved making water molecules with candy (gobstoppers and nerds).

water molecule activity

What are you learning in science?

NotebookingPages.com LIFETIME Membership
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Filed Under: Homeschool Tagged With: elementary, notebooking, Science

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