Friday, December 17, 2010

A Great Homemade Gift for Kids

I always love to give a gift to children that doesn't require batteries, provides opportunities for parents to spend with their children in addition to allowing kids time to be creative. This holiday I decided to make a boredom box for some of our smaller relatives that will provide days of fun.

I purchased a plastic storage box from Wal Mart that could hold all of the materials. Included in the box was: play dough, Oobleck, shaving cream art, drawing dough, slime, white mud, and weaving. All of the materials, except the small paints and shaving cream, were dry ingredients that would require a little help from a parent. The directions for each activity was listed on the sticker. I know the box was a hit with my kids because they asked me to make them one.

to reproduce this gift, visit our website, click here, on Monday. We will have the stickers and directions available for downloading
For birthdays, the holidays or any other time, a boredom box is the perfect gift.


Thursday, December 16, 2010

Painting on an Unusual Canvas


Our Christmas countdown continues and today Peyton will demonstrate how to create a painted scene on a window.

Thursday, December 9, 2010

Find a Little Time for Snuggling This Season

I love reading with my kids, especially in the winter. We cozy up on the couch or in bed with blankets, snuggle close together and share a story. This time of year, many of our book selections are about the holidays. It gives us the opportunity to share our thoughts, traditions and meaning of Christmas.

Below are a list books recommended by Alison Mc Donald at No Time For Flashcards. Her recommendations are always fantastic and sure to be a hit with your kids. Check out her creative crafts, too.

Bring out the blanket, make a cup of hot cocoa and enjoy a holiday book with your special little child before the holidays slip away.

The Twelve Days of Christmas by Jan Brett
It’s Christmas by Tina Burke
Ho, Ho, Ho, Tucker! by Leslie McGuirk
Albert’s Christmas by Leslie Tryon

It's Snowing!

I went to a friend's house yesterday and thought I had walked into a snowstorm! She had watched our video on how to make simple snowflakes and decided to make them with her seven year old daughter. My friend told me that she had made these as a child and had forgotten all about the craft. Now her seven year old can't get enough of them. Their entry way and living room ceilings are filled with snowflakes and there are strips of tape nearby waiting to hang more. Thanks for sharing this, Lisa!

Monday, November 29, 2010

Add a Soldier to Your Holiday Card List

The holidays are such a busy time that we sometimes forget that there are many men and women serving our country in less than festive environments. They are far from their families and often enjoy the holiday season through their memories of traditions celebrated in years gone by. Your family can share your holiday spirit with a service person thousands of miles away by writing a simple letter. It only takes your thoughts and a 44 cent stamp.

Servicemen and women are stationed around the world in combat and non-combat situations and they all enjoy being remembered. There are two sites I like to use when my children write to service personnel. The first is through the USO (www.action.uso.org/action/sem-thank-you?sc=OM-gadw-p_Support-search_ThankyouLetter). This site allows you to simply send a general email to a service person, thanking them for their efforts.

If you would like to write a more personal letter or send a care package, using Any Soldier (www.anysoldier.com), is a great site to use. This is a non profit website and does ask for donations however, they are not required. Any Soldier allows you to select a military branch as well as request an address for a soldier serving around the world. The site offers a multitude of information about contacting soldiers and will answer any questions you may have. To send a holiday message, you will want to start this project right away because the mail can take a while to reach the service person.

Soldiers sometimes reply to letters they receive, depending upon where they are stationed. The children at our church sent letters and received handwritten replies from some soldiers they contacted. One soldier who responded was a mother, serving in Iraq, thousands of miles from her children. The children were thrilled to receive a reply, especially from Iraq, but, it was the mothers in the group who were moved to tears of gratitude for her sacrifice of service.

It doesn't take much to write a note of thanks to a brave soldier who voluntarily enlists in our country's military. We are blessed by their service which allows us the freedoms we enjoy this holiday season and everyday.

Saturday, November 20, 2010

Send Your Letter to Santa

Now that you've decorated your stationery, it's time to write your letter to Santa. Your toddlers can dictate their letter to you. Your preschooler and early elementary kids may want to give it a try on their own, but be sure to "translate" it when they aren't watching. Let your older kids write their letter on their own; you'll be surprised by what they say.

Here are some great websites to receive replies from Santa...

Email Santa This is a free site that allows kids to email Santa and receive an immediate reply. There are also some additional fun activities that your child can customize for him/herself.

Free Letters From Santa This free site allows you to customize a letter for your child then print it or have it emailed. the letters are cute and simple.

Santa Claus House This is the original Santa letter begun in 1952. Santa's reply comes in the mail, is postmarked North Pole, Alaska and has other trinkets from Santa for a small fee . There are several ways to customize your child's letter on the site. Your letter needs to be sent by December 10th to receive a reply in time for Christmas.

Letters by Santa This is another site that offers a Santa reply and for a short time, includes Santa phone calls.You can include information that will customize the letter for your child.

You can always write your own letter from Santa or have a friend do it for you so your kids don't recognize your writing. These sites can give you cute ideas to include in your notes. Make sure that if you "send" letter to Santa that you keep the original. As a mom with older children it's always fun to look at their letters from years past.

Enjoy keeping the magic of the season alive by corresponding with Santa.

Friday, November 19, 2010

Stationery for Santa


In our house if you don't believe, you don't receive. So if you are 3 or 30, this "Santa" needs a wish list ASAP which is why it is the first activity in our stocking on the countdown tree.

To start, we gather some art supplies we have around the house and sit down together for a 30 minute creative session to make stationery for Santa's letter. There is only one way to make the stationery and that's your child's way. You can give them a few ideas, but they will most likely know exactly what they want to do. Making your own stationery with them will also give them ideas without telling them what to do.

If your child is too little to create a letter for Santa, a hand or foot print is always a wonderful reminder of the holidays. Gather a sponge, paint, tap, heavy piece of cardboard, paper, paper plate, and baby wipes. Tape the paper on the cardboard and squeeze some paint on the paper plate. It's easiest to make the print while your little one is in their car seat as it is a familiar place. Sponge paint their hand or foot and place it on the paper. Wipe their hand or foot with the baby wipes.

The toddler or preschooler just like to stick stuff on
things. Lay out several cut up pieces of construction paper, wrapping paper, holiday stickers, stamps and stamp pads. Give them a piece of paper and glue stick and let them go for it. You can write on the back or make it a folded card.




Want something a little more challenging? Draw a box in the center of the paper leaving a border that your child can decorate with crayons,markers, stickers, stamps, glitter, etc. If your little artist gets overly creative and decorates inside the box, don't worry. Write on the back or glue another piece of paper in the center of the paper.





Up for a little bigger challenge for your older kids? Honestly, it's not that hard so you may want to keep reading. Try some stencil sponge painting. Use a file folder or index card and cut out a simple stencil like those in the picture.



Tape the pencil on a piece of paper. Use a small piece of a moist kitchen sponge and dip it lightly in paint then dab it inside the stencil. Remove the stencil and let dry. Your child can decorate the painting with stickers, paper, ribbons, markers, glitter and much more.


Your child may only take 5 minutes or 1 hour to create their stationery. When the decorating is done, be sure to write the date on the card and set it aside until you're ready to write the note to Santa.

Have fun with this project!



Thursday, November 18, 2010

Creating Family Traditions

I love the holidays! You can stop grumbling at me now because it's not the shopping, decorating, cooking, cards and everything that goes along with the holidays that I love. My favorite part of the holidays are our family traditions and how my children talk about them.

Even though we've lived in many different states, our traditions have stayed the same and the kids talk about them with a fondness in anticipation of the holidays. To me, this is the most heartwarming part of the holidays because there are many holiday traditions from my
childhood that I will always treasure. I remember how my mother always decorated the tree,
the homemade pajamas and a book we received every year, Christmas Eve with 60 of my relatives, dinner with my grandparents whom I loved dearly and many more. What I don't remember are the gifts that I thought were so important at the time but now, are meaningless.

If your children are young or old, you can always create family memories. Over the next several weeks, I will be sharing several ideas you may want to add to your holiday celebration. Please share your ideas so we can learn from each other.


Our kitchen is decorated as a kid-friendly space and our advent tree is the highlight for the kids. We have a small artificial tree that the children decorate with old Mardi Gras beads, lights, small stockings and homemade ornaments.

At the beginning of the season we hang 24 stockings on the tree. In each stocking is an activity for holidays. Each idea gives children a simple fun activity to do with you or for someone else.





The stockings are simple pieces of felt glued or sewn together. You can embellish them anyway you would like or not at all. Each stocking is labeled from 1-24.





On December 1st, the first stocking is "opened" to discover the holiday activity for the day. The stocking is replaced by a simple, kid-friendly ornament the kids have made or been given.





The following are some ideas that I include in the stockings.

1. Decorate stationery to write your letter to Santa

2. Write your letter to Santa

3. Bring cookies to a fire station and thank the firemen and women for all they do.

4. Paint a winter snow scene on a window in your house.

5. Make snowflakes.

6. Write a letter to a soldier overseas.

7. Bring a neighbor some cookies.

8. Make a Christmas ornament.

9. Read a story about Christmas.

10. Tell someone about your favorite holiday tradition.

11. Make a present for your mom.

12. Sell hot chocolate and donate the money to a cause.

13. Make a present for your dad.

14. Be extra helpful to your teacher or friend.

15. Make a present for a sibling.

16. Donate a gift to a child in need.

17. Make some decorations or color some holiday pictures to bring to an assisted living or nursing home.

18. Learn a new Christmas song.

19. Find out how Christmas is celebrated in another country.

20. Pack a lunch or two and give it to homeless people you pass on the street.

21. Ring the bell for the Salvation Army.

22. Visit a local animal shelter and spend some time playing with the animals.

23. Fill a stocking with a piece of candy or small toy for each child.

24. Do something nice for someone without telling them.

25. Make a paper chain to decorate your home.

26. String some pop corn and hang it on a tree for the birds.


Be sure to include your own ideas that work for your family, faith, and are age-appropriate for your kids. Most importantly, create a tradition that celebrates the real reason for the season.

Each day, we will share instructions and ideas for the activities listed above and sites you can visit for information on other activities on the list.

We hope this will help you create or add traditions to your families holidays.



Thursday, November 4, 2010

Does Size Really Matter?

What do you say when your 9 year old daughter wants to play basketball? In our house, our mouths say, “Go for it!” but our hearts say, “Don’t you want to try something else?” Of all the sports she wants to try, basketball is definitely not the first sport we’d encourage her to try.

Let’s just say our daughter is no Lebron James or Yao Min when it comes to stature. She just reaches three and a half feet tall and the scale barely tips at 47 pounds. For those of you who don’t know how big a 4th typical fourth grader is, let’s just say she is on the extreme petite side.

She’s always been small, but her personality, self perception and voice have always been huge and made her seem larger than life. Ever since she was a little girl she has been perceived by others to be several years younger than her chronological age and have treated her as such. This has been a source of many tears for her and heartache for us. Through all of this though, she has never doubted her abilities; but at times, we have and this is one of those times.

Over the years we have encouraged her to try dance, gymnastics, swimming, golf, musical instruments and tae kwon do; all activities where size doesn’t matter. She didn’t really take to any of them, but we had her continue tae kwon do for exercise, socialization and it was something she could do year round. As a parent, I would say she doesn’t put a lot of effort into her practice and it’s frustrating because I see dollar signs being wasted every time she works out.

So, when she said she wanted to take up basketball because she wanted to play basketball with the boys at recess, we considered her size and her lack of effort in other activities and we said, “Okay”. Yes, we said, “okay” and then for the next two months we began worrying how her self-esteem would be damaged from this experience and how it would be another waste of money. To provide her with a little head start, we enlisted our older children to play basketball with her at the neighbor’s hoop before she started on her new team.

Last night was her first practice. When I walked into the carpeted gym and saw the hoops hanging 9 feet off the ground and her teammates who were six to twelve inches taller than my daughter, my heart sank. She didn’t know any of these girls but, in her usual bigger-than-life style, she trotted over, basketball under her arm, to meet her new coach and teammates.

The practice started with running, high knees and sliding. So far, so good, from my point of view. In fact, she was more coordinated and some of the girls. Next, dribbling and passing. Her dribbling could use some work but her passing wasn’t too bad. Whew! Now it was time to shoot some baskets into the hoops hovering nine feet in the air. First shot…she made it! Not one, not two, but lots of shots! She could actually shoot the ball high enough to make a basket. I started to watch her more intently and I could see muscles that I never realized she had. One of the coaches even asked me if she was also a gymnast because she was so strong. I told him, “No, she does tae kwon do.” That was it! Although she appeared to be lackadaisical in her tae kwon do classes, she had been building strength, endurance and coordination I never knew she had!

After practice I told my daughter about my previous concerns and how proud I was of her effort, coordination and how strength. Her face beamed with a smile that reached from ear to ear and her little chest puffed out in pride. She never doubted herself or her abilities despite her small size. But I did.

My daughter taught me more about her in one hour than I could have learned in a week. I am so proud of her and I will never underestimate her abilities again. She taught me that it isn’t about size, but all about heart.

Tuesday, August 24, 2010

I've never been one to hide nutritional nuggets in my kids' food to improve their dietary intake ...until now.

Our nine year old daughter is very small for her size and is often asked if she is in kindergarten or first grade. Now, I'm no giant, but it's clear she is quite small and her height is a very sensitive subject with her. We have visited an endocrinologist, been through growth hormone testing and tried drinking milkshakes with every meal. So far, we've discovered that she does not have a growth hormone deficiency and that she really doesn't like milkshakes as much as I do. And, although we let her eat whenever and whatever she wants, as prescribed by her doctor, my husband and I decided to limit the sweet intake and try to get her to eat better. After six years, I think we're finally getting somewhere and it didn't take me hiding fruits and vegetables in her food.

I'm a firm believer in children knowing what they eat, what it's called and what it looks like. But now, I've broken my rule and have been hiding tofu in many of our family meals unbeknownst to my entire family. I've made tofu/fruit smoothies, added it to fried rice, sprinkled it in pasta sauce and any other way I can disguise it. The funny thing is, my family has been raving about my cooking lately! So why should I continue to keep this a secret? Why shouldn't I? My daughter is getting some needed lean proteins which I hope will benefit her medically, and my family is also eating healthier. Isn't that what a mom is supposed to do?

We will continue to monitor our daughter's growth and we'll see if the tofu makes a difference. Will I disguise other foods? Probably not because she has a pretty good intake of fruits and vegetables already.




Monday, August 16, 2010

Back-to-School Letters

My kids start school on Wednesday; a day we all look forward to after the first blissful week of summer vacation is over. It's not that we don't like being around each other, we all just love structure in our day even if it includes scheduled lazy time. It's just our personalities and we function better with a routine.

Now that the day is fast approaching and we've done the school shopping, the kids know who their teachers are going to be, we've decided what breakfast will be on the first day there's still one thing I like to do at the beginning of each school year...write a letter.

Because we moved so much when our children were young, it seemed as if they were in a new school every year so I began the tradition of writing a letter to their teacher on the first day of school. Now I know most of the teachers probably didn't even read the letter because they thought I was a pushy parent or they wanted to make their own assessment of my child, and I was okay with either reason. Since I had been a teacher for many years, I made certain that the letter was not pushy or caused the teacher to think that I had an agenda. However, the most interesting thing about the letter was that writing the words allowed me to get a clearer look at each of my children and their year-to-year accomplishments. It also turned out to be a wonderful way to see how each of my children grew each year and how our lives changed with new additions to the family, moves, and every day life.

Teachers do not expect, and may not even want, a letter from you on the first day of school. But, if done correctly, you will find the simple act of writing a letter to be one of the most rewarding acts of parenting.

My letter included paragraphs on the following information:

  1. Welcome back to teacher
  2. Information about where your child fits in the family and their personality
  3. General information about your child's academic abilities (be honest, but don't go overboard)
  4. Hobbies or activities that your child enjoys
  5. Information about my husband and me (jobs, how we could help in or out of the classroom, our belief that the teacher is in charge and our expectations for our children's behavior in the classroom)
  6. Wishes for a successful year and contact information