100 Things to Do this Summer

After a wonderful week of spring break, all of our eyes are turning toward summer. Our last co-op class meets this week with a celebration party next week. Daniel turns 18 on Wednesday (WOW!) AWANA and our online TPS classes end in May. Rachel and Joshua will have finals the first and second week of May. We’ve already enjoyed a day at the beach with friends.

If we can just finish strong, there is a great summer ahead of us.

Peace!

Peace!

After lunch today the boys went off to play frisbee while Sarah stayed home with Tim. I snuck off to Starbucks for a wonderful mentor visit. Good sharing time, encouraging words from God’s Word and a friend who treated me to coffee. That’s what I call a delightful Sunday afternoon.

While I was gone, Sarah spent most of her time working on a project. She’s been thoroughly bitten by the Pinterest bug and has been known to get lost in the myriad of pages and creative posts. This is what she created this afternoon. I LOVE it!!! What a great idea. 100+ Things to Do this Summer

Which one is your favorite?

Which one is your favorite?

Dear Sarah,
I like you. You are beautiful and fun and thoughtful. Your creativity is contagious. You are diligent and patient when you set your mind to a task, and you encourage me. You are helpful in so many ways – laughing, bringing music into our home, helping with the never ending chores, creating beautiful art projects, coming up with unique ideas for gifts and ways to love others, serving the family, and loving us when we’re not always loveable. Thank you for sharing your heart with me and telling me stories and not keeping secrets. Thank you for reading the blog and (almost) always leaving comments. Thank you for pointing me to Jesus and being an example of how to love Him. I LOVE your poster. Let’s do ALL of these 100+ things this summer (and more).

I love you – Mom

Project 365 – Day 102
Kathy

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Bargain Hero

Most normal husbands don’t like to shop, especially for groceries. But I am not a normal husband.

(Some of you are rolling your eyes. You know who you are. Please stop — I’d hate for you to injure yourself, or cause you to lose a contact.)

For some reason, I get a fair amount of joy out of being the provider for our family; being the one who (quite literally, sometimes) ‘brings home the bacon’. As a salaried employee with direct deposit of my pay, I sometimes feel there isn’t much of a connection between my work and meeting the needs of my family. Grocery shopping is my chance to be an active part of meeting those needs.

I especially like getting bargains on meat. So when the local WinCo reduces the price on meat with a sell-by date of tomorrow, I’m standing near the cart, ready to snap it up. Tonight I found five such bargains.

The price-reducing man (he probably has a fancy title, like ‘butcher’) loves to help people find bargains. He will ask what you are looking for, and he’ll prioritize his price-reducing to give you what you’re wanting. Last year, they used to allow him to reduce it to 50% of the original price, but now the management keeps him to a strict 30% reduction.

Stew meat, a little roast, and some steaks for Daniel's upcoming birthday ...

Stew meat, a little roast, and some steaks for Daniel’s upcoming birthday …

Of course, another reason I like grocery shopping is that I can add all kinds of contraband items to the cart. Little Debbie snack cakes, pop tarts, even the occasional carton of full-fat ice cream finds its way home when I help do the shopping.

“How could that have gotten into my cart?” I exclaim, in surprise.

I think I have them all fooled.

Project 365, Day 101
Tim

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Student Government Campaigns

If you managed to brave the mess in my garage – climbing over empty boxes and stacks of curriculum, dodging toys and Christmas decorations – you might stumble (literally, sorry) on my high school yearbook. To say that I was an extra-curricular activity junkie is painfully accurate – president of the French Club, secretary of National Honor Society, involved in Students Against Drunk Driving and the anti-smoking drama club, editor on the literary magazine, student government rep, blah, blah, blah. Looking back, it’s a wonder I did any actual school work.

High School Prom - quick picture with Dad

High School Prom – quick picture with Dad

So, I guess it’s not totally surprising that life would circle back to throw me into a Student Government class. This time it’s with our homeschool co-op, and I get to teach, guide and encourage the next generation of leaders. It is an honor and a privilege. We study, brainstorm, learn, and do a LOT of laughing. I should pretty much pay them for letting me teach.

The culmination of our government class is rapidly approaching. Very exciting! The elections are next week. We’ve got 8 students running for the different positions. The campaign process has been so interesting to watch. Oftentimes I feel we have a very precise, orderly, well laid out plan we’re following, and at other times I feel like we are just making it up as we go. Which might just be the story of my life!

I thought it would be helpful (ie, this blog serves as my memory and journal) to highlight the steps we’ve followed thus far (feel free to steal or share any of our ideas):

1) Nomination Forms – the first step was completing the necessary paperwork
Application
Instructions, Student Support & Teacher Recommendation

2) Posters – each candidate was required to do 1 poster the first week and up to 2 additional posters as the campaign progressed.

David used Publisher, changed the custom paper size to fit a poster, and printed the pages in a tiled manner. So this poster printed on eight pages, which we trimmed and taped together.

Shhhh- don't tell.  I'm definitely voting for David!

Shhhh- don’t tell. I’m definitely voting for David!

Other students hand painted/drew their posters. Some printed out their slogans and glued them onto poster board in block form. The creativity, design, and format of the posters was left up to the candidates. And I can’t lie, they turned out great!

3) Campaign Videos – each nominee had to make a 30 to 45 second long video.

I was most concerned about this aspect of our campaign, but today’s teens are tech-savvy and the kids were undaunted by the assignment. In class we watched a sample I found online, discussed what they needed to include in their video, and set the rest of the parameters.

Here’s a look at David’s video on YouTube

We showed the 8 campaign videos at the beginning of lunch today at co-op. Creative, unique, some funny, others serious, all of them utilized music in their production. Basically the videos were fantastic! The other students cheered, laughed and applauded for the candidates. It was a great display of student spirit!

4) Meet the Candidates – a lunch time Meet & Greet time with all the nominees.

We hung all of the campaign posters on the wall directly behind some tables, swathed in patriotic bunting. Most of the kids had a giveaway, treat or sticker of some kind. There were individually wrapped Smarties, golden chocolate coins, and even homemade baklava. Several of the candidates used printable labels to make campaign sticker “buttons.” And one girl designed a small “dollar bill” with her face and name on it. Love the creativity!! “Just mint to be the Treasurer!” it said, and she stapled on a green candy mint to give away.

The students were required to meet at least 5 people they didn’t know (shaking hands and introducing themselves). All of the candidates took it seriously and spent most of the lunch period talking to people.

5) Speeches – next week we will do short, live speeches during the opening of co-op.

The candidates are required to share three things:
a. Why they want to run
b. Why we should vote for them
c. What they are going to do for the co-op

6) Election – we will run our elections next week over the lunch period (more on that to follow)

Can you "earn" a vote with some Jelly Beans or Skittles?

Can you “earn” a vote with some Jelly Beans or Skittles?

It’s been a growing experience for the class, the candidates, and the rest of co-op. I can’t wait to see how the elections turn out. Stay tuned!

Project 365 – Day 100 (Wow – the 100th Blog Post of 2015!!!!)
Kathy

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Training Begins

Yesterday Daniel picked up his work uniform (slacks – check, shirt – check, shoes – too small). Today he began training for his new job at Chick-Fil-A. It’s exciting enough that this part of Washington is finally getting it’s own famous chicken restaurant, but to have it also coincide with a job for Daniel? Wonderful!

Can't pose for pictures when I'm getting my shoes on.

Can’t pose for pictures when I’m getting my shoes on.

We are all so pleased and proud of Daniel getting hired on the spot after his interview. It’s been several months since his last regular job ended. He’s been living off of side jobs and yard work (and driving my minivan) to pay the bills. I know he has been frustrated not to find work. How kind of the Lord to open the door for Daniel to work for such a god-honoring establishment.

It will be interesting to watch how things unfold. Daniel is a diligent, hard worker, so I know they will be glad they hired him. He’s had his afternoons and evenings mostly free for some time now; it will be a challenge to give that up for a demanding job. At the same time, I also know he’s ready for the squeeze on his empty wallet to end. He’s eager to start earning money again. Daniel has such a big heart – he is generous and likes helping others. Last month he signed up to sponsor a Compassion International child. And earlier this week he wanted to give money to AirOne’s radio fund raising drive.

That smile says I'm going off to work!

That smile says I’m going off to work!

We are praying for you, Daniel! We are proud of you and are your biggest cheerleaders.
“Goooooo, Daniel!!”
Next week you’ll turn 18 AND start your new job. Wow!! Changing times. We love you!

Project 365 – Day 98
Kathy

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The musings and ravings of a bloggart family