I read this article about teens and their development while waiting for Sam and Sophie at the dentist’s office. We don’t currently have a “teen”. I think we’re on the cusp of having a “pre-teen”. Anyway, the article in this month’s Smithsonian Magazine was very encouraging to me as a mom. It appears that not everyone thinks the teen years have to be bleak and angst filled. The title of the book written by Richard Lerner The Good Teen probably gives more info than you’ll find in the article. If you’re a parent, check it out and be encouraged!
Author Archives: Chloe
My New Favorite Rice
As if the tremendous number of cookbooks I already own isn’t enough, I have purchased yet another one. We will see in the weeks to come if the “new” Ultimate Southern Living Cookbook is in fact the ultimate.
Sadly though, this recipe comes from and old 1995 or ’96 issue of Southern Living that I have moved 3 times and finally disposed of after removing any helpful information. This issue and many others were finally harvested a few weeks ago. This recipe is wonderful and wonderfully easy. You can make so many versions by changing one thing or another, but the basic recipe is GREAT. Try it. The rice doesn’t even stick to the pan!!
Good Luck!
Mark’s Zoo Trip Photos
Our Dad is Great!
Mark is getting ready to leave for his annual convention this week. Some of you may already be panicking on my behalf. Not to worry, he surprised me today. He took the afternoon off and has taken the three older children to the zoo for the day. What a great guy!! I’m off to feed the baby and fold laundry in peace…..
New Puzzle
Okay, well this doesn’t happen everyday. I got an email this morning offering us a free puzzle if we passed on the info via blog or email. I was a little bit skeptical, so I watched the YouTube infomercial about the “Pieceless Puzzle” from Ceaco (Parent Company of GAMEWRIGHT). It’s VERY cool. Click the link here to watch the short movie about this nifty invention the Pieceless Puzzle.
As you can see, we use puzzles frequently for school projects and studies, and often just for fun! Check it out! I think we’ll be trying this new kind for sure.
Pumpkin Patches and Corn Mazes
We always enjoy at least one trip out to a local farm for apple picking, hay rides, pumkin choosing, petting zoos and more. And yes, we always take a lot of allergy medicine. I found this website that lists local farms all over the country with Fall Fun for the entire family. Hope you can find one near you!
Select a Presidential Candidate for 2008
If only it were this easy. Take the test and see which candidate meets your criteria. Click the link below. I had to read a little about mine since I hadn’t heard of him. Mark says he may not have a chance and I should have a back-up plan, ha ha. Have fun!
Choose a candidate for 2008.
Sisters
Your selection does matter….
There are so many reasons why we homeschool. I added another one just this week. I realized on Saturday just how completely my mostly public education failed me in the area of reading and literture. I know that my parents tried to compensate, and I’m not sure that the elementary teachers are really to blame. The books I remember reading and enjoying the most were read during those early years.
I ask you, how can a person finish a “Survey of British Lit” without even reading one chapter of Jane Austen? any Jane Austen? Charles Dickens? Sir Walker Scott’s “Ivanhoe”? This is the book that brought me to this realization. I’m now reading “Ivanhoe” so that I can discuss it with my 4th grader. Sadly, he’ll probably finish it before I will. I told him that if he wasn’t careful he’d grow up to be a bibliophile, to which he replied “I already am a lover of books”. There’s just something about a well told story.
Two books we will never read in this school: The Heart of Darkness and The Lord of the Flies.
What will we be sure to cover in the coming years: Jane Austen, Alexander Dumas, James Fenimore Cooper, Sir Walker Scott, Gene Stratten-Porter, Louisa May Alcott, Mark Twain, Tolkien, C.S. Lewis, Hans Christian Anderson, Aesop, The Brothers Grim, Charles Perrault, Padraic Colum, Longfellow, Emerson, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Lewis Carroll, Pearl S. Buck, Robert Lawson, Tennyson, Ian Flemming, GA Henty, A.A. Milne, James Daugherty, Frances Hodgson Burnett, Richard Atwater, Eleanor Estes, Lois Lenski, Elizabeth George Speare, E.B. White, Rudyard Kipling, Booth Tarkington, Jules Verne, Edward Lear, Elizabeth Montgomery, Gary Paulson, Ester Forbes, Laura Ingles-Wilder and more of the Bible…. this should keep us busy until middle school.
What have we already read? Robinson Crusoe by Daniel Defoe, Island of the Blue Dolphins, Black Beauty, several Marguerite Henry books, the Hobbit, Strawberry Girl, Red Sails to Capri, Betty MacDonald (Mrs. Pigglewiggle), Elizabeth George Speare, Rudyard Kipling (Captain’s Courageous), versions of Jules Verne, Robert Louis Stevenson (Treasure Island), Jean Lee Latham (Carry on Mr. Bowditch) – a wonderful book for all ages, a beautifully illustrated copy of Gulliver’s Travels by Swift, countless picture books and the Bible.
We are currently reading “Swiss Family Robinson” by Johann Wyss. In parting I leave you with this poem.
A Book by Edgar Guest
“Now” – said a good book unto me –
“Open my pages and you shall see
Jewels of wisdom and treasures fine,
Gold and silver in every line,
And you may claim them if you but will
Open my pages and take your fill.
“Open my pages and run them o’er,
Take what you choose of my golden store.
Be you greedy, I shall not care –
All that you seize I shall gladly spare;
There is never a lock on my treasure doors,
Come – here are my jewels, make them yours!
“I am just a book on your mantel shelf,
But I can be part of your living self;
If only you’ll travel my pages through,
Then I will travel the world with you.
As two wines blended make better wine,
Blend your mind with these truths of mine.
“I’ll make you fitter to talk with men,
I’ll touch with silver the lines you pen,
I’ll lead you nearer the truth you seek,
I’ll strengthen you when your faith grows weak –
This place on your shelf is a prison cell,
Let me come into your mind to dwell!”
Can it be?
Rock, Paper, Scissors… Oh My!
My sister-in-law had this neat little on-line “personality” test on her web site today. YIKES! Can it be that all my work to soften the edges of my Type-A personality over the years has been for naught?
You Are Rock |
![]() Powerful and overbearing, you intimidate people with your presence. People know they can’t push you around, and they respect that. Deep down, you are calm, confident, and unmovable. You take everything pretty seriously, and you think deeply about all aspects of your life. You tend to feel smothered by paper people. You don’t mind crushing the spirit of a scissors person. When you fight, you: Use all of your strength. If someone makes you mad: You’re likely to throw something at them. |
This last part is totally not true! I haven’t thrown anything in years. And I’m not a spirit crusher!!

