BrimWood Press history and worldview curriculum for homeschool

Happy Birth-Day Mama Giveaway

0
It’s time to honor mothers! What are you getting your mama this year for Mother’s Day?

Well, we’ve got some stuff for you!

We have an amazing giveaway all week long, leading up to Mother’s Day with all sorts of mama and baby resources for you!

Be sure to scroll all the way to the bottom to enter both of these amazing giveaways!

And we have a Zulily maternity store gift certificate worth $100 – partnered with an Ultimate Homemaker’s Resource Library of 97 books {exclusive}!

Package #1

We are very excited to bless an expectant mother with a $100 gift certificate to Zulily Maternity & 1 Ultimate Homemaking eBook Bundle {which is no longer for sale}!

251416_Zulily 88x31 Banner

Click to see what is included in the Ultimate Homemaking eBook Bundle.
 

~The Zulily Gift certificate generously brought to you by the bloggers below.~
Happy Birth-Day Mama

a Rafflecopter giveaway

Package #2

 

This giveaway package has it all! Something for any mom, whether this is your first baby or your tenth!

mama giveaway

Lisa Jacobson of Club 31 Women donated her book How Did God Make Me?

Boys and girls love to know that they are special, and nothing instills a sense of uniqueness like the knowledge that they were known and loved before birth. Help your child develop feelings of understanding and closeness with the God who is intimately involved in our lives — even before we are born!

HDGMM

The Mission-Minded Child is a practical book to encourage Christian parents and teachers placed in the strategic position of impacting the next generation.

As a guide to world missions, The Mission-Minded Child is filled with facts, information, and tools for teaching. It focuses on the “why” of missions–including our Biblical basis, historical heritage, and the world’s need–and contains over 25 mini-missionary biographies, motivational mission stories, classic poems, hymns, and hundreds of easy-to-use ideas. The Mission-Minded Child will inspire teachers and parents to look for God’s potential in their child, “release” their little one to God for His purposes, and “raise” their child to fulfill God’s specific mission, whatever that might be. As a resource tool, this book will be referred to again and again.

The Mission-Minded Child

Heidi St. John donated her eBook The Busy Homeschool Mom’s Guide to Romance. Heidi blogs at The Busy Mom.

Homeschooling offers parents the best opportunity to shepherd their children both academically and spiritually. Yes. It’s worth it. But do you ever feel as if your life is “all homeschool—all the time?” Do you ever wonder where the girl your husband married went? This book is for every mom who has collapsed into bed at the end of the day, looked into the eyes of her husband and promised “tomorrow” she’d have time for him.Trouble is, tomorrow finds her more exhausted than the day before. If you have ever felt caught between the demands of homeschooling your children and meeting the needs of your husband, you’re not alone. Read and discover how even a busy homeschool mom can make time to nurture her marriage. It’s not as hard as you think—and more important than you may realize.

romance

Shoshanna Easling, owner of Bulk Herb Store donated their Making Babies set that includes the book and 3 DVDs.

Making Babies is a fun, informational, artistic, and colorful pregnancy book. Follow Shoshanna through her pregnancy and the birth of her daughter as she stays healthy and builds a baby. The book covers information that is in the DVDs volumes 1, 2, and 3, includes many deliciously healthy recipes, wonderful gluten-free recipes, grandma’s remedies, herbal concoctions, and need-to-know facts, and is packed with research about fertility, conception, morning sickness, pregnancy, birth, nursing, postpartum issues, losing weight, and more!

Blessings God’s Way donated A Celebration of Pregnancy DVD Combo {DVD + Guide}

This set enables you to feel confident and sure about hosting a Blessing God’s Way gathering in your community! This DVD is 30 minutes long . Watch this prior to hosting your own gathering or pass it on, along with the book, to friends and family that you can share our message with. What a blessing to know there is a God-centered instructional DVD and book for celebrating birth! May God be glorified!

 

The Joyful Giraffe donated one large snack bag and one large sandwich bag.

These are two great reusable products that will save you money and are eco-friendly too!Both have a waterproof lining on the inside and a zipper closure, so whether it has grapes or a sandwich, all messes are contained! Bags are handmade by a work at home mom.

joyful giraffe

Angie of Leaving a Legacy is donating a signed Redeeming Childbirth Package {Book & Growth & Study Guide}.

Childbirth is more than an event that makes a woman a mother. This journey was designed to be a spiritual milestone that draws every woman’s heart back to the only Deliverer.

Bethany Learn of Fit to Be Us is donating a 6 Month Membership to her online exercise site.

Fit to Be Us films and streams workout routines that are fun, easy to access and non-threatening. We specialize in diastasis-aware and tummy safe moves! Mission Our mission is to make fitness safe, fun and accessible without intimidating you. We want to bring our living rooms to yours, inviting you into an intimate view of holistic wellness. Company Overview We are an online fitness studio featuring wholesome home workout videos that you watch on the web. We specialize in workouts that are safe and inspiring for those dealing with low back pain, diastasis, disabilities, stress incontinence, busy schedules, crazy kids, and more! No boot camps or x-rated stuff here. Just family friendly fitness at the click of a mouse! We blend Pilates and Yoga into beautiful, high-def, high quality sessions for everyone from beginners to advanced exercisers.

 

Screen shot 2013-04-30 at 7.37.36 AM

Juju Band is donating one Baby Belly Binder.

Baby belly binding has long been used in various forms by many different cultures. The ancient art of binding has been made easy and quite cute by the Juju Band. Its design is simple and made to accommodate even the busiest of parents! The Juju Band has been a family tradition for over 100 years. It is a tradition still used today in our family. We hope that you will join our family tradition and try the Juju Band on your newborns and infants. Juju Bands are used for 2 different purposes. First, it is used on the Newborn as a shield to protect from constant contact of diapers and clothing. This helps reduce the likelihood of irritation and infection. The Newborn Navel Protector also helps give your baby the perfect “innie” belly button. Second, the Infant Belly Binder helps relieve colic and soothe fussy babies. The snug fit calms and comforts even the most finicky infants.

Juju Band

Jennifer Lambert of Royal Little Lambs {That’s me!} donates a Gentle Babies book and Gentle Baby essential oil.

Combining two decades of professional knowledge with tried-and-true techniques and first-hand testimonials, the author Debra Raybern has compiled this insightful and easy-to-follow guide benefiting both experienced and first-time mothers. In addition, Gentle Babies book contains an introduction to therapeutic-grade essential oils and applications and provides safety information and a section on discerning the quality of essential oils. Every family taking proactive steps to better health should have this resource in their home library. Gentle Baby™ essential oil is a soft, fragrant combination of essential oils designed specifically for mothers and babies. It helps calm emotions during pregnancy and is useful for quieting troubled little ones. It is also soothing to tender skin. Many of the essential oils in this blend are used in elite cosmetics to enhance a youthful appearance.

  Picture1                                  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

a Rafflecopter giveaway

G is for Grace

Do you offer the “grace of presence” to your children?

Are you an intentional parent?

We Christians hear lots about grace, but do we offer it to our children? Do we model Christ’s grace in a way that they understand it?

Grace-filled family leadership is all about turning mistakes into opportunities for growth.

~Lead Your Family Like Jesus

I know there are too many times that I am “too busy” for my children. I get frustrated, tired, lazy, overwhelmed. I homeschool all four of them and I feel I deserve a break every now and then.

I must remind myself to rely on His strength.

When the devil baits me with my children’s disobedience {or because of my own lack of diligence and consistency as a parent}, I must respond with grace. I must trust in God to speak the right words and show the right actions.

It takes so much more effort to answer my children {and their behavior} patiently and kindly and seize the teachable moment, but it really pays off in the end.

I am too often reminded by gentle nudgings from my Father…I sometimes try too hard. I sometimes forget. I sometimes stop trusting.

trusting.jpg

When I stray from His path, then I get tired and lazy and full of self.

By trusting my God for answers in everything, especially parenting – because that is my number one priority – I am modeling for my children to trust me. I want them to trust that I have their best interests at heart, just as Jesus has our best interests in His heart. Children don’t always understand the why’s, and we don’t always understand His will, but we must trust and model that trust for our children.

We also must model grace.

If I am constantly harsh and unyielding, then it’s going to inspire rebellion and not obedience. I have to be a “yes mom” sometimes. I have to offer grace sometimes. I have to realize that sometimes natural consequences are more than sufficient for teaching a lesson. They don’t further need me to heap coals on their heads.

I want to be a fun mom who does the fun things and not the mean mom who always says no.

To extend grace, I must be intentional. I must be present. {Present means undivided attention – not on the computer while in the same room.}

I must know my children. I must know their hearts and desires and likes and dislikes. I must teach by example.

Only Jesus can fill us, but surely parents {more than anyone else} guide the way and help children accept Him. I want to witness my kids’ spiritual growth, as well as their intellectual and physical growth. I want to grow leaders for Jesus.

This is why we homeschool.

Grace.

Happy Momni Day! – WHAT?!

Do I hear girls’ weekend?

Or romantic date weekend?

Any weekend without the kids?!

That’s my kinda Mother’s Day weekend.

So…

Omni Hotels & Resorts is running a Mother’s Day Pinterest Sweepstakes called “Happy Momni Day“!

Pin your tribute to your Mom (or yourself!) for your chance to win!

Y’all know I love me some Pinterest. Check out my Happy Momni Day board here.

 

I remember growing up that Omni ran the events center in Atlanta…I still called it “The Omni” after it changed advertisers, like, three times. And I have no idea what it’s called now. It will always be “The Omni” in my mind. Apparently, they’ve rebuilt it as a new venue near the CNN Center. yay

Library of Homemaking eBooks

Instant access to 97 eBooks – and other resources!

It will be for sale for ONLY 6 DAYS!

What’s Included?!

Home & Property {Cleaning, Organizing & Decor}
31 Days to Clean
Getting it Together: Your Guide to Setting Up a Home Management System that Works
Pulling Yourself Together: Implementing a Cleaning Routine that Sticks
Simple Living: 30 Days to Less Stuff and More Life
NOT a DIY Diva
One Bite at a Time: 52 Projects for Making Life Simpler
28 Days to Hope for your Home
Organizing Life as Mom
Clean Enough: Simple Solutions for the Overwhelmed Homemaker
10 Steps to Organized Paper
Handmade Walls

Education {Homeschooling & Spiritual Teaching}
Princess Training
The Armor of God
My Bedtime Learning Book
Think Outside the Classroom
Raising Rock Stars–Kindergarten Bundle
The ABC’s For Godly Boys Curriculum
The ABC’s For Godly Girls Curriculum
K4 Curriculum
Write Through the Bible: Philippians 2, print
Write Through the Bible: Philippians 2, cursive
Balcony Girls–books 1 & 2 (a mentoring curriculum for teen girls)
Easy Peasy Chores: An Easy-to-Use Chore System That Brings JOY Back Into Family Chores
The Dig for Kids: Luke (volumes 1 and 2)
Music: An Essential Ingredient for Life

Budgeting {Money & Time Management}
From Debtor to Better
Tell Your Time
The Homemakers Guide to Creating the Perfect Schedule
Your Grocery Budget Toolbox
Finding Financial Freedom
Become a Frugalista in 30 Days

In the Kitchen {Recipes and Cooking}

Crock On
Wholesome Mixes
20-Minute Meals
Restocking the Pantry
Money Saving Mom’s Guide to Freezer Cooking
Simply Summer
Do the Funky Kitchen
Real Food Kids: In the Kitchen
Real Food, Real Easy
Seasonal Menu Plans on a Budget
Just Making Ice Cream

Pregnancy & Baby Care
First Bites
Confessions of a Cloth Diaper Convert
Stress-Free Baby Shower
Unbound Birth
My Pregnancy Journey
My Buttered Life Baby Edition
The Minimalist Mom’s Guide to Baby’s First Year
Redeeming Childbirth: Growth & Study Guide

Holidays & Special Events

Festive Traditions
Holiday Mixes: Gifts in a Jar
Flourishing Spring
Family Camping Handbook
Truth in the Tinsel
Plan a Fabulous Party
iPhone Photography: The Visual Guide

Spiritual Growth
Pursuit of the Proverbs 31 Woman
The Best of Visionary Womanhood
God’s Word in my Heart: A Scripture Memory Learning Guide with Verses {all 4 versions}
Kept
Love like Him

Marriage/Romance

Rekindling Romance
Good Wife’s Guide
31 Days to Build a Better Spouse
31 Days to Great Sex for Married Couples
Entangled: Recognize Your Emotional Affair

Motherhood
The Heart of Simplicity
True Christian Motherhood
Hula Hoop Girl
When Motherhood Feels Too Hard
Mindset for Moms
From Cube to Farm
4 Moms of  35+ Kids Answer Your Parenting Questions
That Works for Me!

Health & Fitness
100-pound Loser
Honoring the Rhythm of Rest
42 Days to Fit
Healthy Homemaking
Personal ePlanner
Nature’s Superb Superfoods: Lose Weight & Revitalize Your Body

Beauty
Frumps to Pumps
The Cottage Mama’s DIY Guide
Simple Scrubs to Make and Give
The No-Brainer Wardrobe
Embracing Beauty
Reuse, Refresh, Repurpose

Working from Home/Blogging

Your Blogging Business: Tax Tips and Tricks
The Bootstrap VA
How to Grow Your Blog and Manage Your Home
How to Have Your Cake and Eat It, Too
Simple Blogging

eCourses

Learning in Love: The Preschool Years
Homeschooling from the Heart: Ages 5-8
Grocery University
Vibrant Living Strategies for Moms
You Can Do This! The First Five Steps to a Real Food Kitchen

Also some amazing freebies!

Click for FAQ’s.

{I get a FREE bundle if I sell 5. No pressure or anything.}

 

If you’re not into eBooks or have no idea how to read one, check out this brilliant post How to Read an eBook from my friend Erin.

Mamas have tantrums too

Tori was so excited to run her first 5K with Dad Friday afternoon. She got dressed right after breakfast and asked me if it was time to go yet. all. day. long.

So, imagine my disappointment when we arrived at the destination for her run and my husband stood there.

quite alone.

It was canceled.

Due to weather.

It was cool and partly cloudy and had been sprinkling earlier.

But canceled?

I was so upset.

Tori was just fine about it and asked to run laps anyway.

She’s our sweet and compliant one. She is so sensitive to others’ needs and rarely causes problems. She didn’t care as long as she got to run with her daddy.

I’m sure that should teach me something, but I’m still upset.

She was running her fourth lap when I left for home. Dad stayed with her.

I was seething.

It just made a bad day worse.

Having a defiant three year old doesn’t help anything.

It’s one of those days when I didn’t thaw anything out for dinner and we have to get takeout and the budget’s maxed and payday is still almost two weeks away.

My husband mentioned right before I pulled out of the parking spot that I shouldn’t snap at him just because I’m frustrated with the kids and the race being canceled.

Hrmph.

Yeah, so things didn’t go as planned.

And apparently a seven year old girl can handle disappointment better than I can.

Did I mention I hate “I told you so’s”?

Check out the rest of the Crew.

Photobucket

Dealing with Defiance

He just turned three.

And with this birthday comes an undesirable.

Defiance.

I plan to nip it in the bud.

I noticed it and feared it when we were potty training a month or so ago.

We took the Pull-Ups away during the day. We bought cute Diego and Cars underwear.

It was time, I said.

I didn’t want a three year old still in diapers.

Yet he still wet his pants.

He had tantrums about sitting on the toilet, with a little Cars potty seat insert, even going toward the bathroom. We even bought a plastic urinal. Yes, we did. He wouldn’t use that either.

He understood the whole concept of where the waste goes: in the toilet.

When questioned about why he still wet his pants, he answered defiantly:

“’Cuz I said yes. ‘Cuz I want to.”

OK, little boy.

I prayed. I cajoled. I bribed. Nothing doing.

Then, a couple successes and the cheers and hugs and kisses.

He seemed embarrassed by the attention.

But he decided it was better than the previous battle.

Whew!

And now, this last week…

Me: “We keep our shoes on at church. Say ‘yes, ma’am.’”

Alex: shakes head. sticks lip out and tucks chin on his chest.

Me: “Say ‘yes, ma’am,’ please.”

Alex: “I don’t want to.”

Me: “Say ‘yes, ma’am’ so we can go eat and play.”

Alex: shakes head. lip out. “I don’t want to!”

So, I take him into the sanctuary. I ask him questions.

Me: “Do you love Jesus?”

He shakes his head.

Me: “Do you see that up on the wall?”

He nods.

Me: “Do you know what it is?”

He nods. “Cross.”

Me: “Do you know Who was on it?”

Alex: “Jesus.”

Me: “Do you know why Jesus was on the cross?”

He shakes his head. (and apparently I need to step up his Christian education!)

So I explain the Gospel to Alex.

I know it must be difficult to understand because many adults struggle to comprehend.

We hold hands. I pray aloud in the dark sanctuary, alone, with Alex and Jesus. I pray for His help to soften Alex’s heart, to help him be obedient, to love Jesus. I pray for His help in parenting, for patience and for me not to crush this little boy’s spirit over a pair of shoes.

He still won’t say “yes ma’am” to me.

My husband comes in and admonishes Alex and offers to take over, but this is a battle about shoes for Alex’s soul and I will win it.

He still won’t say “yes ma’am.”

I ask my husband to please carry Alex to the van.

On the way out, I tell Elizabeth to go to the van too, since she lied about completing her daily assignments. Oh, I’m working out everything tonight! No one is getting away with misbehaving anymore!

We get home and Liz and Alex change into their pajamas. I lay out the dinner that my husband quickly had packed for me from the church.

We sit in silence.

Alex still won’t say “yes ma’am.”

At least Elizabeth is contrite about the assignments. She had completed one the second she walked in the door. She finished another two after we ate. {Then I realize she lied about other assignments. No more trust. This is another story.}

I can see Alex itching to pick up his fork. I calmly watch him. He tucks his chin and mumbles, “yes ma’am.”

We may eat.

hungry boy

He was so compliant and cheerful the rest of the evening!

I am glad I didn’t get angry. I remained calm to teach his this lesson. I won’t have rebellious children. I am fighting a spiritual battle.

“I am the true vine, and my Father is the gardener. He cuts off every branch in me that bears no fruit, while every branch that does bear fruit he prunes so that it will be even more fruitful. You are already clean because of the word I have spoken to you. Remain in me, as I also remain in you. No branch can bear fruit by itself; it must remain in the vine. Neither can you bear fruit unless you remain in me.

“I am the vine; you are the branches. If you remain in me and I in you, you will bear much fruit; apart from me you can do nothing. If you do not remain in me, you are like a branch that is thrown away and withers; such branches are picked up, thrown into the fire and burned. If you remain in me and my words remain in you, ask whatever you wish, and it will be done for you. This is to my Father’s glory, that you bear much fruit, showing yourselves to be my disciples.

“As the Father has loved me, so have I loved you. Now remain in my love. If you keep my commands, you will remain in my love, just as I have kept my Father’s commands and remain in his love. I have told you this so that my joy may be in you and that your joy may be complete. My command is this: Love each other as I have loved you. Greater love has no one than this: to lay down one’s life for one’s friends. You are my friends if you do what I command. I no longer call you servants, because a servant does not know his master’s business. Instead, I have called you friends, for everything that I learned from my Father I have made known to you. You did not choose me, but I chose you and appointed you so that you might go and bear fruit—fruit that will last—and so that whatever you ask in my name the Father will give you. This is my command: Love each other.

~John 15:1-17

Some of you may disagree with my parenting methods. But I realize that my leniency with Elizabeth is coming back to bite me now. I also know that training Alex while he is young will make everyone happier later on. He’s just a little boy. But he will soon be a big boy and then a man. I don’t want him to be disrespectful or a slacker. I want him to grow up and do radical things for God and he needs to learn a love for Jesus and obedience to his parents now. Something told my spirit that the silly little battle over his taking off his shoes was a milestone in his behavior training. I do pick and choose my battles. Often things don’t matter, but absolute defiance is inappropriate and needs to be pruned.

If some of the branches have been broken off, and you, though a wild olive shoot, have been grafted in among the others and now share in the nourishing sap from the olive root, do not consider yourself to be superior to those other branches. If you do, consider this: You do not support the root, but the root supports you. You will say then, “Branches were broken off so that I could be grafted in.” Granted. But they were broken off because of unbelief, and you stand by faith. Do not be arrogant, but tremble. For if God did not spare the natural branches, he will not spare you either.

Consider therefore the kindness and sternness of God: sternness to those who fell, but kindness to you, provided that you continue in his kindness. Otherwise, you also will be cut off. And if they do not persist in unbelief, they will be grafted in, for God is able to graft them in again. After all, if you were cut out of an olive tree that is wild by nature, and contrary to nature were grafted into a cultivated olive tree, how much more readily will these, the natural branches, be grafted into their own olive tree!

~Romans 11:17-24

I want to lead my family like Jesus. I recommend this book. I teach it to my Sunday school class. It’s full of great stories from real Godly parents who desire to teach their kids Godly values just like us. There is but one priority: to glorify God.

D is for Doctor

Hello, Sweetie.

If you’ve been following me (especially on Facebook or Twitter or Pinterest) for a little while or know me at all, you know I’m rather obsessed with The Doctor.

Doctor Who?

Exactly.

So, you may have missed my post last autumn about The Doctor and River Song and Rose and The Dalek and The Empty Child…and all that timey wimey stuff…

So, enjoy!

River and The Doctor

My Homeschooling with The Doctor post

Tori’s T Shirt does have a Union Jack on it!

I made Katie’s Dalek costume.

Alex has on a bowtie suspender T Shirt and still loves his Doctor Shoes…

We found a box of gas masks in the cellar (Utah Red Dawn stuff, I tell ya!)

Homeschooling with Doctor Who

The kids and me all dressed up. Thank God our van is T.A.R.D.I.S. blue…

Even Dad wore a Fez. Cuz fezzes are cool.

Fez

So, we own two sonic screwdrivers because they’re…sonic.

We have 2 talking Daleks and a plush whooshing T.A.R.D.I.S. toy. We even have a cute and squishy Adipose.

I really NEED a Vortex Manipulator, but that’s really more of a Captain Jack/Torchwood sort of thing. Not that there’s anything wrong with that. But River has one too…wonder where she got it?!

We love it that Doctor Who episodes stream on Netflix.

Lead Your Family Like Jesus

I am so pleased to be a part of the Launch Team for Lead Your Family Like Jesus: Powerful Parenting Principles from the Creator of Families by Ken Blanchard, Phil Hodges, and Tricia Goyer.

Lead Your Family Like Jesus

This is a leadership book.

This is a child-training book. A book on parenting.

And I love how those two things are meshed together and help me to analyze and express how I want my family to look in the future.

It’s all about goals, vision, values, priorities.

You need to see that future picture of success for your family to know what you must do now to get there.

 

An important question for family leader to ask is, “What do we want to influence?”

The key is specifying what carrying out your priorities looks like.

~Lead Your Family Like Jesus p. 67

By examining your future picture, you can make a plan to implement for success. Jesus must be the foundation for your goals.

 

A wise man noted that it was only in the past century that the word priority went plural. Jesus had one priority: glorify God.

Everything Jesus did was about…Exalting God Only. It was an act of worship…He pointed those around Him to God.

~Lead Your Family Like Jesus p. 63, 33, 34

My husband, Aaron, and I have been using this book to teach our Sunday school class for a while now and we’re enjoying it and learning so much about leadership from Jesus! We’ve all had some lively discussions. We’re convicted to “put our egos on the altar” and align our attitudes. I adore having some older couples agree with the book’s teachings and describe how they raised their children.

 

A parent’s attitude, I realized, is the foundation for how every day is lived out. And those days are the building blocks of childhood memories.

~Lead Your Family Like Jesus p. 93

What memories will your children have? Do you need to make some changes in your attitude to reflect your family goals?

believe

We’ve all heard “Do what I say, not as I do.” But we are the examples to our children and actions speak so much louder than words. Does what you do and say match what you believe?

 

Life, family, and leadership are all about choices. What do you stand for? How have you chosen family activities to match?

~Lead Your Family Like Jesus p. 65

The book has four parts – The Four Leadership Domains – that all interact like a flowchart {Indeed, I made one for my Sunday school class}:

  1. The Heart: The character and the values
  2. The Head: Your viewpoint and beliefs
  3. The Hands: What you actually do
  4. The Habits: How you continually refocus your desire

LYFLJ flowchart

 

Throughout the chapters, there are Pause & Reflect sections that invite discussion and real deep down thinking of your motives as a parent.

For example, in the first chapter, we’re asked:

What is Temporary Stuff? What is Important Forever? It encourages us to keep everything in eternal perspective.

Great quotes from other Christian books help drive points home. The authors tell stories of how they dealt with difficult circumstances, how they trained their children, how they modeled Jesus’ upside-down Kingdom values.

At the end of each section are reviews over the Leadership Domain – Points to Ponder. Great summaries!

I believe this book especially appeals to men, to dads. It’s a leadership book. I know my husband’s only reading material is online…or leadership books. This book really targets dads in ways they can understand, especially if they’re not regular readers – with bullets, flow charts, pyramids, headings…all this makes it easier to read and comprehend the material.

It’s a call to action for men to step up and lead. But we wives need to learn to let them and support them, even if we may have a different (not necessarily better!) way. We need to clamp our mouths and listen respectfully to our husbands’ points of view. See Tricia’s video clip below!

Big World

Do you help your husband feel comfortable leading your family? Tricia has lots of edifying videos! Subscribe to her YouTube channel so you don’t miss a one.

What’s your family’s vision? It must say who you are (your purpose), where you’re going (your picture of the future), and what will guide your journey (your values). {paraphrased from p.48}

Write it down in your dining room or family room. Get it pretty-fied and frame it!

 

Rank-ordered values alone won’t accomplish your family’s purpose or turn your picture of the future into reality. You need to translate those values into behaviors.

~Lead Your Family Jesus p.61

Read the interview with the authors:

Download and print out this press kit to take to your pastor or Christian ed director. This book is perfect for a sermon series or parenting course! {And I hear they’re working on a curriculum for it right now!}

Check out the Lead Your Family Book Website for more free resources!

Ken, Phil and Tricia will be on the Focus on the Family radio program Monday, March 25, and Tuesday, March 26! You can listen to your local radio station or click the link above.

The book is available now! Purchase your copy of Lead Your Family Like Jesus: Powerful Parenting Principles from the Creator of Families here. It retails for $19.99, but sells for $13.59 on Amazon right now, or $9.99 for Kindle. Download a Sample Booklet to see how amazing it is!

Here’s a great review and giveaway from HEDUA.

Join Tricia Goyer and Tracey Eyster for a Live Webcast event on April 16 at 8 pm EST: Lead, Momma, Lead. Be encourage to “Be the Mom” & “Lead Your Family Like Jesus”! You can register and set a reminder on the Facebook banner below.

Lead Momma Lead

And Tricia has joined Good Morning Girls. There’s a Living and Leading like Jesus study going on right now! Register and join me as we read through Luke.

disclaimer

Life School

Here’s what I’ve been doing this week and why I have been AWOL

  1. potty-training Bubba. This is no easy feat. It involves hysterics, lots of silly books, Smarties, peppermints, a Cars toilet seat, essential oils, a remote control dump truck, stickers, prayer, Gatorade, and tag-teaming with big sister Elizabeth. I could write a series about this if it’s a success. So far, he’s peed in the toilet 3 times today. We won’t talk about the misses.
  2. Reviews Reviews Reviews…I am on the Schoolhouse Review Crew and I am rather swamped right now with all the fun activities we get to try. As I snap picture after picture of my darling kiddos using said fun things, I realize I have virtually nothing left over with which to write a current blog post. But I have some amazing stuff to show you starting next week!
  3. We’ve been sick. I am just now feeling the upswing of this cold that has been knocking me back for about two weeks. I can’t imagine the magnitude of what could have been if I had not slathered myself and the family with essential oils. Raven, RC, Frankincense, Myrrh, Peppermint…we smell yummy.
  4. Bible Study. I am participating in Hello Mornings. Being sick hasn’t helped, but I have diligently jumped out of my bed earlier than the kids every weekday morning since I began. I know my attitude is better and I’ve made breakfast every morning which helps everyone. My goal is to start including an exercise routine when my body is fully well again. I have been reading Abounding Hope from the Hello Mornings team as well as Soul Detox on YouVersion Bible app. I am also going through Beth Moore’s Breaking Free, which my mentor recommended.
  5. I have no other real excuses. We’ve been in survival mode. I haven’t been motivated to write about anything remotely optimistic due to the above issues.

Ain’t No Party Like a Time Lord Party

Cuz a Time Lord party is not bound by typical temporal parameters and thus cannot stop.

The kids and I are quite the Whovians, much to the chagrin of my husband. I have the T.A.R.D.I.S. text tone and 10th Doctor theme ringtone on my T.A.R.D.I.S. blue iPhone. My minivan is T.A.R.D.I.S. blue and really needs some stickers and a cool license plate cover (hint,hint). I have T shirts and other geek paraphernalia on my Pinterest and Amazon wish lists. Hoping I get some for my birthday or something, ya know? (That’s in March…)

So, after seeing a post on Star Trek and homeschooling, I thought I better add my sonic screwdriver bit to the Interwebz.

Homeschooling with Doctor Who

I think Doctor Who is a cross-curricular mega lesson, folks. It’s got a little bit of everything, and with a sexy British accent, too! It just doesn’t get much better than that!

So, let’s break it down for how we can teach the little ones using the new Doctor Who episodes. (Because, to be honest, I need to ramp up my efforts on watching the old episodes myself.) Now, some episodes are wee bit scary. Use caution. Always watch episodes before letting your kids loose in a dark basement to watch Daleks and Cybermen and other monsters wreak havoc in the universe. And always converse with your children about the show. We love discussing the what if moments.

So here are my ideas for a Doctor Who unit study. I break it down by subject.

History: Pompeii episode, one of our favorite episode series is during the London Blitzkrieg and Part II, another episode of WWII with his buddy Winston Churchill – “Victory of the Daleks,” killing Hitler (or putting him in the cupboard), The Great Depression (an American episode!), kissing Madame Pompadour in The Girl in the Fireplace.

The Doctor is called “Caesar” in the episode “The Pandorica Opens.” makes sense, no?

The fictional history of Gallifrey. a list of historical instances (fact and fiction) in Doctor Who episodes

Math and Science: lots of technology and physics, relativity and time travel, astronomy, science…yet he struggles to simply count to 4…listing of science topics mentioned in Doctor Who episodes

Religion/Philosophy: alien life, the devil, aliens with god complexes, Lazarus scientists, The Ood, angel statues, The Silence…it all sparks conversation no matter what your belief system. We like to talk ‘round here and I am not afraid to introduce philosophy and discuss what other people believe and why. Apologetics at its finest!

The Time Lord Victorious as a god?

(Source: ThetaKoshei)

Here are two interesting articles here and here discussing this inner turmoil and the ramifications for the universe. I don’t necessarily agree with everything here, but it’s interesting nonetheless.

(Source: mockingheartbeat, via devianta)

The Doctor’s nickname is Theta Sigma, used in the New Testament Greek as an abbreviation for God.

(source: Pearsecom)

The Master vs. The Doctor. ‘nuff said.

The Doctor as a Messiah figure? Read this article.

He regenerates and wakes from his coma just in time to save the day in the “Christmas Invasion.”

And look at this scene from “Voyage of the Damned.”

(Source: fiftyshadesoftennant, via mcelise)

The Impossible Astronaut” (2011) kicks off series 6 with a pretty big and obvious allegory: the last supper.

  • Doctor Who invites all his most trusted “disciples” to a last evening meal
  • prominently featuring wine
  • and then insists that they do not intervene in what follows
  • His death is even attended by two women and a centurion!
  • And a mysterious stranger even shows up to help with the disposal of the body
  • The stigmata
  • The crucifixion position, which I think has been a feature of regeneration since 2005
      here’s a short list of

religion

      in Doctor Who episodes…he’s playing the psychologist in

our Christmas special “The Snowmen

    .”

He was being kind. All the power that The Doctor possesses and doesn’t utilize. Think about this for a moment. He can travel through space and time. All the changes he could make, but he maintains rules that he shouldn’t interfere. He does save people. Ordinary people who won’t disrupt the status of the universe. In The Waters of Mars, The Doctor realizes his potential and it is his downfall.

(Source: queencersei, via tennantsbluebox)

The idea of family. The Doctor needs companions. He’s lonely and they keep him in check. loving Rose. strong and smart Martha. important yet forgetting Donna. ordinary and expectant Amy and powerful romantic Rory. enigmatic Clara. His adventurous “wife” River. His lost “daughter” Jenny. He lives with the guilt of failing. But he must carry on and love the people of Earth.

Humor: great opportunities to teach about sarcasm and lofty British humor. I usually have to explain the jokes to my kids. Perhaps this is why my husband doesn’t like it. He can’t understand their speech or their humor. Oh well.

life lessons from Doctor Who article

Literature: “The Shakespeare Code,” Agatha Christie episode: “The Unicorn and the Wasp;” allegories to great sci-fi lit and shows: such as in episode “The Empty Child.”

He explains he’s like Gandalf in episode “Meanwhile in the TARDIS.”

List of literary characters mentioned in Doctor Who episodes. Mention of real books in Doctor Who episodes. Study the science fiction genre!

Writing: fan writing competition lessons (scripts)  

Art: van Gogh episode. Brilliant. “Vincent and The Doctor.” And they didn’t really change a thing. or did they?

image

(Source: The Ultimate Ginger via Velaroye)

a not very good list of art mentioned in Doctor Who.

Here are some printable Doctor Who foldables and coloring pages here. All sorts of flashcards at Quizlet. made by all kinds of people, so I dunno.

River and The Doctor

Set your sonic screwdriver sights on these resources:

article 20 historical figures in Doctor Who

definitive list of Doctor Who serial episodes on Wikipedia. or the official BBC episode list here.

Fun and Games from BBC

My daughters said I should make a tot or preschool pack for Doctor Who? Interested? Tell me in the comments what you’d like to see in there and I’ll get busy!

tardis

Apps

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...