Jennifer Lambert

A Sacred Balance

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Winter Bird Study

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February 18, 2014 By Jennifer Lambert 10 Comments

Liz has gotten to be a rather good birder and photographer. She took these shots of the woodpecker and finches from indoors.

I just love this one!

We made pinecone birdie Valentines for the birds.

The gloves didn’t fit Alex so he did it bare-handed. You can tell he doesn’t like it.

Kate loved every second!

I love Tori’s reaction to the gooey-ness.

Kate loved her finished pinecone, ready to hang!

She picked a branch in our lone tree in our backyard.

We shook the pinecones in a baggie of birdseed and tied yarn to them.

Tori picked our shepherd’s crook to hang her pinecones.

Rubeus guarded the deck.

Recipe for Bird Pinecone Valentines:

  • Large open pinecones
  • Birdseed
  • Peanut Butter
  • Lard
  • optional: dried fruit, berries, dried corn, seeds, nuts

The kids loved it that our Bible reading for the day was from Luke 12:22-34 about the birds and flowers. Serendipitous!

And we also read a lovely poetry book: Birds of a Feather by Jane Yolen.

Bird sightings in our backyard so far this month: chickadees, sparrows, scrub jays, towhees, finches, woodpecker, magpies, crows

Later in the season, Tori and Katie practiced “sewing” popcorn and cranberries onto thread for the birdies. I was impressed they completed the strand without much help.

Threading Popcorn and Cranberries
Threading Cranberries

It was pretty!

Popcorn Cranberry Strand
Cranberry Popcorn Strand

They placed their strands on our lilac bushes.

Christmas for the Birds
Decorations for the Birds

Each girl got a pair of binoculars for Christmas so we can go bird watching more.

Binoculars

We haven’t noticed too many birdies.

So, for our December nature study…

We read about pine trees in the HNS. Tori is 5 and Katie is 4 so they’re not much interested in listening to that yet.

The girls have observed lots of winter weather. The temps have been in the teens so we haven’t been outside as much as we’d like! We can sure see our breath outside! We haven’t gotten much snow, but there were some amazing icicles a couple weeks ago. We got to go sledding once (Alex did not like it). The girls love the pattern of snowflakes. They’re a little obsessed with Snowflake Bentley right now.

And then there was the wind. It blew and blew!  It was scary for them to realize how dangerous wind can be. We had a shingle wedge itself in our stucco! Fences and trees fell down. The girls helped with cleaning up after the wind stopped. They respect the power of wind now!

We have observed some interesting tree situations, especially after all those winds. Several were uprooted and we got to see the whole tree and study the roots that didn’t hold it in the ground.

Katie drew the HUGE pine tree that uprooted across the street, in the neighbor’s backyard. She impresses me with what she sees and how she can transfer that to paper. She’s only 4! I hope to develop this talent!

Tree Study Notebooking Page

And it’s not often you can climb a tree that big, but the kids got all in it since it was laying on its side. We studied the pinecones at different levels of development. The bark was really papery in some places and hard in others. Of course, it smelled good: really piney, ha! We got to discuss roots and leaves and the differences in coniferous and deciduous trees.

We look forward to January and hope to have some snow!

Awesome woodpecker page and article here.

Check out the Great Backyard Bird Count info.

We love the notebooking pages at Productive Homeschooling.

Birds Notebooking Pages
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Valentine Conversation Hearts Math

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February 13, 2014 By Jennifer Lambert 18 Comments

I thought it’d be great fun to have the kids graph candy conversation hearts for Valentine’s math time.

I used a graphing page from a pack at 2 Teaching Mommies.

I bought a big bag of candy conversation hearts and gave each of my kids a handful of hearts.

They sorted them by color and loved reading the messages.

Candy Graphs

The kids got out their Montessori rugs and loved this graphing activity!

Montessori rugs graphing activity

Kate sorted the hearts into colored piles and then placed them on her graphing chart.

Tori and Alex picked the hearts one by one from their cup and immediately placed them on their charts.

I love how they work differently!

Sinéad decided to lie down in the middle of our work. Of course.

Kittiesmakemathfun.jpg

Alex was thrilled to get the most orange hearts!

preschool conversation heart sorting and graphing

The kids enjoyed eating the extras beyond #10. The girls went further with the math. Alex went off to play.

I wrote the numbers on the board for the girls to copy.

graph on the board

Then I made this little printable so the girls could figure the mean, mode, median and range.

Valentine Conversation Hearts Math Graph

We haven’t even gotten to division yet in our math lessons and the girls were fascinated and loved this lesson.

Happy Valentine’s Day!

Would you like to download your very own Valentine Conversation Hearts Math Page and use with up to 6 kids in a group?

Subscribe and get free printables!

 
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Music Study with Doctor Who

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February 5, 2014 By Jennifer Lambert 12 Comments

I thought it would be fun to do a Music Study with Doctor Who.

The kids certainly agreed so we set to researching together.

Music of Doctor Who unit study with free notebooking page!

50 years of great music. 11 (or 12) doctors representing decades (or millions of years) of history.

Doctor Who 50th Anniversary

Check out this performance, complete with video clips. LOVE!

I also love this series of shorts about the original composers of sci-fi music: – The history of science fiction program music! So full of win.

List of all music featured in Doctor Who episodes=awesome.

Study with Your Doctor:

1st Doctor: The Beatles – get a CD on Amazon or download it on iTunes (seriously, everyone should have some in their collection)

2nd Doctor: Bartók – Amazon CD or iTunes album

3rd Doctor:

  • King Crimson (I saw them perform at a tiny club in the ’90s! It was epic.) – get their CD on Amazon
  • Emerson Lake and Palmer – download a great album on iTunes
  • Berlioz – CD on Amazon or iTunes download

4th Doctor:

  • Debussy – Amazon or iTunes
  • Tchaikovsky – Amazon or iTunes
  • Schubert – Amazon or iTunes

5th Doctor: ’20s music – Learn how to dance the Charleston!

  • Savoy Havana Band and The Savoy Orpheans – Amazon or iTunes
  • Irving Berlin – Amazon or iTunes

6th Doctor: Fun ’60s music and beach tunes

  • The Beach Boys – Amazon or iTunes
  • Elvis Presley – Amazon or iTunes
  • Jimi Hendrix – Amazon or iTunes

7th Doctor:

  • Wagner – Amazon or iTunes
  • British composer Keff McCulloch – several tracks on the 50th Anniversary soundtrack on iTunes

8th Doctor: Puccini – Amazon or iTunes

9th Doctor:

  • Big Band, especially Glenn Miller – and practice swing dancing! Amazon or iTunes
  • David Bowie – Amazon or iTunes
  • Rick Astley  – Amazon or iTunes

10th Doctor: Program music by British composer Murray Gold – Amazon or iTunes

11th Doctor: Such a fun way to study the greatness of classic bands and artists:

  • Queen – Amazon or iTunes
  • Duran Duran – Amazon or iTunes
  • The Cult – Amazon or iTunes

Notebooking options – some free and some not:

  • Notebooking Fairy
  • SQUILT music appreciation curriculum
  • Productive Homeschooling
  • Music in Our Homeschool pages
  • In All You Do Notebooking Composer Pages
  • Practical Pages Music Appreciation Worksheets
  • That Resource Site Composer Notebooking Pages
  • Music Lapbooking from Homeschool Share
  • 123Homeschool4Me Music Lapbook
  • Orchestra lapbooking and notebooking from Homeschool Helper
  • Homeschool in the Woods composers lapbook

AND…Look what I made for you!

Doctor Who Music Notebooking Pages – with a T.A.R.D.I.S.!

FREE. Click to download. You’re welcome.

Doctor Who Music Notebooking Pages

So, like the good homeschool mama I am, I asked my kids the other day: what do you want to be when you grow up?

Answer?

The Doctor’s Companions.

For the win.

Check out my other cross-curricular unit study here.

Famous Composers Notebooking Pages
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Winter Nature Hike

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February 4, 2014 By Jennifer Lambert 6 Comments

I sure got out of my comfort zone and wrapped up the kids and went on a snowy nature hike.

They were thrilled.

They came prepared, with magnifying glasses, compasses, and their nature journals.

Snowy Nature Hike

Alex liked looking at the lichen and moss on the trees.

Studying Moss and Lichen

We noticed the different layers of snow and ice on our walk, where the wind and shade affected it.

The girls looked for birds and studied the seeds and buds on the trees.

We spotted a bird’s nest!

The keepers of the nature center help the fallen trees create habitats and keep the paths clear by sawing the logs. We noticed the rings in one.

Winter Plants Study

Look at that view! The ponds and creeks were frozen.

Frozen Creek

We noticed different kinds of scat near the creeks and the keepers make sure to provide feeding areas for birds with seed.

We spotted lots of deer prints in the snow!

Evidence of Animals in Winter

Towards the end of our hike, just as we were getting a little bored and pretty tired, we spotted a small herd of deer, quite close. There were about five does and they’re weren’t worried about us at all.

Deer Grazing in the Snow

We collected a few treasures from the ground for our nature box and notebooking. We completed notebooking pages for our journals after we got home and warmed up.

I am so impressed with Tori’s twig drawing. I even got Alex some notebooking pages. He really dislikes drawing, so we did a snowy sensory page.

Nature Notebooking

Check out the Outdoor Challenge.

How do you learn about nature in winter?

Nature Study Journal Notebooking Pages
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Celebrating Chinese New Year

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January 29, 2014 By Jennifer Lambert 2 Comments

Chinese New Year celebrations traditionally end after 15 days, starting on Chinese New Year’s Eve and continuing till the Lantern Festival. 

This new year usually coincides with the spring equinox.

We usually try to celebrate the first evening with crafts and yummy food – either takeout or homemade.

Each Chinese year is associated with an animal sign according to the Chinese zodiac cycle, which features 12 animal signs in the order Rat, Ox, Tiger, Rabbit, Dragon, Snake, Horse, Goat, Monkey, Rooster, Dog, Pig.

Chinese New Year traditions include: putting up decorations, offering sacrifices to ancestors, eating reunion dinner with family on New Year’s Eve, giving red money envelopes and other gifts, firecrackers and fireworks, and watching lion and dragon dances.

Lucky food is served during the 16-day festival season, especially on the New Year’s Eve family reunion dinner. Fish is a must as it sounds like “surplus” in Chinese and symbolizes abundance. Dumplings shaped like Chinese silver ingots are shared as a sign of the family unit and prosperity. People eat Niángāo (glutinous rice cake) to symbolize a higher income or position as it sounds like “year high.” 

Don’t lose the luck!

  • Don’t sweep up on New Year’s Day, otherwise you’ll ‘sweep all your luck away’.
  • Don’t eat porridge for breakfast, otherwise you’ll ‘become poor in the upcoming year’.
  • Don’t wash your clothes and hair (on New Year’s Day), otherwise you’ll ‘wash fortune away’.

So thrilled about how these Dragon Puppets turned out for Chinese New Year!

Dragon Puppets:

  • Paper bag
  • Construction paper for head
  • Construction paper for eyes and nostrils
  • Streamers for the tail
  • Glitter and Sequins (optional)

What to do:

  1. Fold sheet of construction paper in half and glue to top of paper bag (where it folds up) to make the head of the puppet
  2. Attach streamers under the back of construction paper head for the tail
  3. Cut out eyes and nostrils in desired shapes – semi-circles for eyes and teardrops for nostrils
  4. Draw lines for mouth and nose with dark marker
  5. Glue eyes and nostrils
  6. Draw on eyeballs in dragon shape
  7. Draw on eyebrows and facial expression (optional)
  8. Glue on glitter and/or sequins to make pretty patterns (optional)
Drawing Dragon Faces for Puppets

(I think it would be fun to attach an accordion tongue with a strip of red construction paper so it pops out of the fold…)

Kate preferred to make hers look like a lizard.

Dragon Girl

Tori asked me to draw cool eyebrows on her dragon.

Dragon Puppets

Alex used TONS of glue stick. Then he asked me draw his dragon face and I really like how it turned out and his compliments made my day. Then he pretended to fly around with it.

We’re preparing to celebrate Chinese New Year with lots of red and gold, horse pictures and crafts, yummy food…and I searched my files and found pictures of the Chinese New Year celebration we attended when we lived in Hawaii.

And I get a clean house out of it after I told the kids that tradition. Score!

We cleaned out the library of all the Chinese New Year storybooks. Liz really likes having Big Sister Storytime. Karen Katz is a favorite author. Love her illustrations!

Chinese New Year Storytime with Sister

Resources:

  • Mask crafts from Better than Mummy
  • Learn more of the Chinese language with Mango Homeschool
  • As my kids get older, we watch movies in Chinese and about Chinese culture and history
  • Eat Chinese Food: We’ll explore flavors, colors, shapes, and the aesthetic beauty of Cantonese cooking. My kids love Chinese food and we like to try new recipes and techniques. Our Asian turkey wraps are always a hit! I need to break out my bamboo steamer and try to make some steamed dumplings…Also easy recipes are lo mein and fried rice. Slow cooker Asian ribs are a crowd pleaser.
  • The Five Chinese Brothers by Claire Huchet Bishop 
  • Moonbeams, Dumplings & Dragon Boats: A Treasury of Chinese Holiday Tales, Activities & Recipes by Nina Simonds
  • Lunar New Year by Hannah Eliot
  • Goldy Luck and the Three Pandas by Natasha Yim
  • How to Catch a Dragon by Adam Wallace
  • Lanterns and Firecrackers by Jonny Zucker
  • Hiss! Pop! Boom!: Celebrating Chinese New Year by Tricia Morrissey
  • My First Chinese New Year by Karen Katz
  • Bringing In the New Year by Grace Lin
  • Dragon Dance: A Chinese New Year Lift-the-Flap Book by Joan Holub
Chinese Feast

I will try my hardest not to watch Mulan. Seriously.

Gong hei fat choy 恭喜发财

Xīnnián kuàilè 新年快乐

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Crystal Unit Study

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January 27, 2014 By Jennifer Lambert 5 Comments

We’re loving the lessons in Apologia Exploring Creation with Chemistry and Physics! 

Snow

We’ve been blessed (ahem) with an abundance of snow…that refuses to melt and go away.

Purge me with hyssop, and I shall be clean; Wash me, and I shall be whiter than snow. Psalm 51:7

We went on a snowy nature hike to view the snow formations.

Snowy Nature Hike

We saw icy snow, fluffy soft snow, ice, and the pond was frozen! We saw the patterns in the snowdrifts from the wind. We haven’t been able to view too many snowflakes this year, but we have pictures and we’ve seen the crystal formations in the ice on our sidewalks and windows.

Salt

The kids were really fascinated by salt.

“You are the salt of the earth. But if the salt loses its saltiness, how can it be made salty again? It is no longer good for anything, except to be thrown out and trampled underfoot…” Matthew 5:13

We went to Dad’s lab to use the cool microscope! (ah, the benefits of having a lab officer husband!)

Cool Microscope

We viewed table salt, salt we found at the Great Salt Lake (in the yellow bucket), raw sugar, and pepper.

Science Labs

The table salt is processed so it formed almost perfect cuboids with few impurities, but the salt from the Great Salt Lake was all jagged and had lots of impurities, as did the raw sugar. The pepper was too opaque to see real well.

Table Salt Under a Microscope

Our Sunday School teacher taught on covenant and salt a couple weeks ago and she mentioned a great experiential lesson about making pickles, so we plan to buy some cucumbers and discuss how the salt changes them into a new creation – along with Matthew 5:13.

Gems

We looked at pictures of different precious stones online and in books and viewed the few rings, earrings, and pendants I have with magnifying glasses to see the facets.

I would love to take a field trip to a jewelry store or mine, but that will have to wait. I don’t feel comfortable taking them to a jewelry store I don’t know and the local mines are closed for the season. So, we’ll plan on that later.

Blessed are those who find wisdom,
those who gain understanding,
for she is more profitable than silver
and yields better returns than gold.
She is more precious than rubies;
nothing you desire can compare with her.
Proverbs 3:13-15

Choose my instruction instead of silver,
knowledge rather than choice gold,
for wisdom is more precious than rubies,
and nothing you desire can compare with her. 
Proverbs 8:10-11

Who can find a virtuous woman? for her price is far above rubies. Proverbs 31:10

The girls really loved my grandmother’s ruby ring. I thought it a perfect teaching prop for the Bible lessons in Proverbs too.

ruby ring study

The girls learned the 4 C’s: cut, color, clarity, and carat. They loved learning about the different grades of jewels.

They love the Junior Notebooking Journals that make assessment easy for me.

They drew jewels and the salt images from the microscope viewing in their notebooks. They love science!

We have some other fun experiments in the works this week – rock candy, salt flowers, borax crystals.

Linking up at Living and Learning at Home,  Chesnut Grove Academy, Suzy Homeschooler, Kids Activities Blog

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Preschool Listening Skills

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January 24, 2014 By Jennifer Lambert 3 Comments

I’m not really all that metacognitive about teaching my kids listening skills. I’m sure it works better some days than others despite the fact that I don’t actively incorporate this into our school time.

I recently have had some lightbulb moments when I noticed my son was learning on his own how to listen actively.

I want to to practice Listening Skills in our homeschool.

And I love his interpersonal skills. He often reprimands me, but kindly: “Look at me, Mama!” and then he tells me or shows me what he wants. This is a great skill that my husband and I should really have mastered with four kids. In this age of rampant ADHD and behavioral disorders, many parents and teachers would rather treat the symptoms instead of solving the problems that cause these disorders, whether imaginary or real chemical deficiencies.

I am learning to be a better listener with my children. I know they require my undivided attention and deserve my respect when they speak to me. By looking directly at my kids while they speak, I am teaching them to respect others who are speaking – and that’s a great life skill.

I am so pleased that my children are learning to listen so well and I vow to be more diligent to keep them active and attentive listeners as we continue to practice these skills.Preschool Listening Skills

Preschool Listening Skills with Games, Nature Study, and Learning

My three-year-old son, Alex, really did well with listening to directions with Funnix Reading and Math this week. I love how it offers clear directives and teaches listening and following directions just as much as reading and math skills. He has his little pointer and follows what the “teacher” tells him. It’s like a dialogue and he did wonderfully for his first lesson. We’re also thoroughly enjoying All About Reading Level 1!

Funnix listening

Alex and his six-year-old sister, Kate, played so sweetly together with the light box and rainbow blocks. They usually power struggle with each other, but they took turns and listened to each other well. I was a proud mama.

light box play

We practiced being quiet and listening to the birds, wind sounds, and the crunchy snow beneath our boots on our snowy nature walk. He whispered so he didn’t scare the birds and deer we saw on our hike. He pointed out lichen and leaves and the frozen pond to me with dancing eyes.

Listening to Nature

More fun ways to work on listening skills:

  1. Simon Says games
  2. Directed coloring pages (Alex likes the ones from 1+1+1=1)
  3. Narration with or without props (like puppets!) – we also like to discuss and review body parts at bathtime with bath puppets.
  4. Following directions with chores
  5. Helping in the kitchen (with kid-sized tools!)
  6. Q&A after Bible lessons
  7. Montessori sound matches and studies
  8. Music, instruments, and composer studies (we like to discuss the high and low notes, fast and slow tempo, and different instrument sounds)
  9. Looking speakers or teachers in the eyes and repeating what is said so it is understood and then completing the direction
  10. Go on a Letter Walk and point out things that begin with a certain letter

Do you have any tips to improve preschool listening skills in your kids?

Essential Oils to help with attention:

  • Vetiver
  • Cedarwood
  • Lavender
  • Brain Power
  • Frankincense

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5 Days of Homeschooling Essentials {Day 5: Let Go}

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January 24, 2014 By Jennifer Lambert 4 Comments

Sure, we need to plan.

We need to know ourselves, our strengths and weaknesses.

We need to know our enemy.

We need supplies.

And sometimes we need to let go.

We live our lives so tight-fisted that it cramps our fingers to open them. To stand palms open is uncomfortable for us. We want to grasp, hold tight.

I never know what to do with my hands. It’s awkward.

It’s in my nature to be a control freak. I began homeschooling to have control over what my daughter learned and how. It’s against my very grain to relinquish control to a tutor for outside lessons. She’s had a few piano teachers because music isn’t my thing. But I realize that my kids need to learn from others too. Many people have lessons I can’t teach and God will bring lovely people into their lives to help them learn in ways I can’t understand.

I want my kids to learn to be independent. Isn’t that success? Adulthood? But I also want them to know I’m always here, waiting, watching, praying. With open hands.

And, mamas, as those babies grow up and out, remember what you poured in, and let go.

Let go.

A little at a time.

Let those birdies fly.

They will flutter back and forth to the safety of the nest, and then try, try again, swooping and scraping. But eventually, they will soar.

And it’s in those proud mama moments when we listen to that quiet whisper of God’s reassurance that our babies will be alright and they are! They really are! He holds them in His palm, loosely. And we can always be right here, waiting for those triumphant returns to the nest to share in the joys and sorrows.

It’s a huge responsibility to help create a child’s memories. Be intentional and present for your babes. Don’t wait. Do it now. All that other stuff can wait.

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 4: Supplies}

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January 23, 2014 By Jennifer Lambert 6 Comments

Sure, we need to plan.

We need to know our strengths and weaknesses.

We need to know our enemy.

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

We need God. We need God’s Word. We need prayer.

He is our ultimate supplier.

Select a verse from the Bible as a foundation for your homeschool, for your family, for your marriage. Tie it into your mission statement, visions, goals.

I recommend the book Lead Your Family Like Jesus to help you work out all that. It’s really brilliant and it helped my husband join me in leading our family by setting those goals.

How can you get supplied?

  • pray
  • Bible study
  • Scripture memorization
  • sing or listen to Christian music and hymns, or even classical
  • read the Word
  • listen to the Word online, on CD, podcasts, or sermons (or have kids read aloud!)
  • set Bible verses to music or get some fun CDs that do that already (Seeds Family Worship, Hide Em In Your Heart, and Songs for Saplings are favorites)
  • watch Christian videos on Netflix or DVD (What’s in the Bible?, Veggie Tales, Nest, Friends and Heroes)
  • fellowship with other like-minded Christians

Mamas, make sure you’re well-supplied.

I know it’s hard to wake up early and go to bed late. I know it takes so much energy and emotion to care for our families and homeschools. If we don’t care for ourselves, we won’t be able to continue. Make sure you care for yourself spiritually too.

Be in the Word and show your kids that it’s important. Have family Bible time where you study, read, pray, and worship together. If your husband isn’t interested or available, do it anyway. Make it a part of your homeschool day. Pray, pray, pray for your husbands, yourself, your marriage, your children, your homeschool, your kids’ future spouses and babies.

You can never pray enough or too much.

Like social media is always “out there” so too should our prayers be.

Make prayer an ongoing conversation in your lives. Teach your kids by example.

Have a life of prayer.

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 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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