Showing posts with label Memes Carnivals and Hops. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Memes Carnivals and Hops. Show all posts

Sunday, November 2, 2014

Celebrate St. Martin de Porres' Feast Day with an Easy Sensory-Smart Obstacle Course

NOTE:  This post contains affiliate links to Amazon and Holy Heroes for your convenience.  Should you make a purchase after clicking through them, we may receive compensation at no extra cost to you.  Thank you.

https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B6Lk1nwk2KPdU1JTcFFHNUVoTzg/view?usp=sharing

November 3 is St. Martin de Porres' Feast Day.  If you have never learned about this child-friendly saint, I encourage you to do so and to share his story with the children in your life.  

Over the years, my children and I have enjoyed listening to and reading these stories about St. Martin de Porres, such as:
 http://www.holyheroes.com/Glory-Stories-CD-vol-7-p/gscd7.htm?Click=9516
 


 
 


  MARTIN'S MICE - A Legend about St. Martin De Porres (which is so worth finding if you can!)

Some of the facts and legends we learned about in these stories inspired us to pick St. Martin de Porres as the focus for a Sensing the Saints class we coordinated and led last spring.


Sensory-Smart Fun!

At our kick off meeting, a favorite activity ended up being a sensory-smart obstacle course during which the children...



worked practical life skills by sweeping cotton...


got proprioceptive (tactile and olfactory!) input by rolling a lemon across the floor without using their hands or feet...




challenged their vestibular sense as they bent, stood and walked, carrying stuffed animals to "eat" around a steel bowl...



exercised further practical life skills, while working their proprioceptive sense, by carrying a laundry basket full of clothing and, then, received tactile input by wrapping a body part in a bandage...


and, finally, enjoyed some practical life fun by styling the hair of a doll before bringing a basket of food to feed the poor (dollies).


Please enjoy modeling your own children's obstacle course after the one we so enjoyed by using the free printable St. Martin de Porres ObstacleCourse Station Cards I am sharing today.  

Using them is easy, just choose which stations you want to do, set the materials up and lead children in fun!



What are some of your favorite ways to learn about and celebrate St. Martin de Porres?
 
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If you leave a link to a faith formation idea or a reflection relevant to raising young children in the faith in a comment here or on our Training Happy Hearts Facebook page, I will pin it on the Training Happy Hearts: A Call to Faith Formation in Young Children Pinterest board
 

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Sunday, October 26, 2014

How Do I Get My Ever-Active Kiddoes to Crash?


Okay, so I have taken some liberty with the photo above.  It was not taken right after praying the rosary together.  Rather, it is from the other morning.

I had gone into the children's room to check on the kids and found two of them sleeping ever so sweetly, whereupon I tiptoed out of the room, grabbed the camera and stealthily captured the moment to smile back on later.

The moment right now though - as I write this post to be published tomorrow morning - will not be captured on film.  For I dare not move!

On my left, the feet that tried to kick me today are woven through blankets, one atop my lap and the other nudging my side as a boisterous four year old who lies perpendicular to me gets some much needed sleep.  On my right, a sweet seven year old who offered her brother's earlier painful infractions up shortly before falling asleep lays cuddled into me.  If I move, I may wake one or both of them and this moment is just too peaceful for that to happen.

What brought on this moment?  Youtube rosary videos!

Yes, we've been continuing my newly forming nightly rosary habit here and, tonight, as they often do, Jack and Nina joined me.

Jack, who had caused a late afternoon and evening to be punctuated by moments that make "challenging" seem like an understatement quieted right down as we began praying the Joyful Mysteries online with video clips.  In fact, his behavior went from crazy to calm to kinked out.  Before we had prayed our third decade, he was asleep.

Nina was equally soothed by the rosary, but not to soothed to sleep right away.  Rather, she prayed the entire rosary with me and then delighted when I told her I was also going to pray the Coronation of Mary mystery.  We chose a video we had never viewed before to help us with this.  Between prayers, she commented on how beautiful the images in the video were and, then, when the decade was done, happily cuddled into me and was asleep in seconds.

We may have concluded our rosary praying for the evening with a decade in honor of Our Lady Queen of Heaven, but what we experienced, in quite a literal way, Our Lady Queen of Peace!  (Or, rather, both.)

I so needed Our Lady's intercession this evening.  I dare say, I always do.

I wonder if she is smiling down at my peace right now as I am doing at my children's?  Somehow, I think she may be.

Our Lady, Queen of Peace, 
Blessed Mother, pray for us.

 
http://traininghappyhearts.blogspot.com/search/label/Training%20Happy%20Hearts%20in%20Young%20Children

If you leave a link to a faith formation idea or a reflection relevant to raising young children in the faith in a comment here or on our Training Happy Hearts Facebook page, I will pin it on the Training Happy Hearts: A Call to Faith Formation in Young Children Pinterest board
 

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Monday, October 13, 2014

Get Your FREE Printable Sorrowful Mystery 3-Part Cards!

Note:  This post contains an affiliate link to our favorite rosary CD's from Holy Heroes for your convenience.

https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B6Lk1nwk2KPdWGN1eDlxX0gyZkE/view?usp=sharing


Last week I shared five tried-and-true strategies that I've used for getting children to pray the rosary.

This week, I am delighted to report that our strategies are still working.  Between youtube videos, audio CDs and a parish collaborative rosary event, at least one of my children has gladly joined me in praying the rosary each day this past week.  In fact, on more than one occasion, all three did, and, once, my children even requested a second round!  (Miracles can and do happen. Praise the Lord!)

I am hoping our habit continues this coming week, and, thinking it will as we look forward to an end-of-the-week cupcake rosary with friends.

For that rosary event, I plan to make a Montessori-inspired Sorrowful Mysteries Rosary Box to share.  Thus, I spent some time after the kiddoes got to sleep tonight making 3-Part Sorrowful Mystery Cards for the box and am sharing them now with you!

https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B6Lk1nwk2KPdWGN1eDlxX0gyZkE/view?usp=sharing

Please enjoy these cards, and offer feedback if you have a moment to do so.  For, I am trying out a new size with these cards and am wondering what you think about it.  Too big?  Too small?  Just right?  Let me know.  

I also made both an image- and a text-based card for each mystery based on someone's prior suggestion and, then, made versions of each of these cards with "cutting lines" and without since someone told me that they prefer control cards not to have lines on them.  (See, I do take constructive suggestions when folks are kind enough to offer them!)

Next week, I hope to share pictures of our finished Sorrowful Mystery Rosary Box!

Would you like me to make corresponding sets of cards for all the mysteries?  What other resources help you teach your children about the rosary or act as prayer aids?
 
If you leave a link to a faith formation idea or a reflection relevant to raising young children in the faith in a comment here or on our Training Happy Hearts Facebook page, I will pin it on the Training Happy Hearts: A Call to Faith Formation in Young Children Pinterest board
 

2014 Catholic Bloggers Link-Up Blitz

Saturday, October 11, 2014

Middle-of-the-Night Reflections on Bountiful Blessings


What's a Mama to do when she wakes in the middle of the night not feeling well but unable to get back to sleep?  

Reflect on another week of blessings and bounty, perhaps?


~1~
On little girls who demonstrate virtue and skill...


Building forts after football, a trees class and a walk in the woods is hungry work, apparently, as it inspired our Nina to request to go inside to prepare a snack for herself and her friends.

I was pleased and surprised when Nina came out carrying a fruit tray to share with everyone.  She'd gone in, selected produce, sliced it, tidied up and served us all of her own accord.


Then, as the boys continued to work, Nina decided it was time for a drink, so, demonstrating continued hospitality, she came out bearing homemade raspberry juice.


Little girls who take initiative in hospitality, hard work and play certainly bring a smile to a Mama's face!


~2~
On family who offer time and talent...

Three little curly heads walk into Accentuation, and when Auntie has finished sharing her time and talent with them, this is what comes out:


 Beaming babes so excited to show Grammy their new hair cuts (and to ask if they can help her pick grapes and begin a batch of homemade grape juice, a request that Grammy, of course, happily obliges.)

Simple moments with extended family are such a blessing!

~3~
On Daddy's that risk thumbs and appreciate family time...

One complaint I could never make is that my husband does not engage with his children.  In fact, Daddy gets right in there with his kids, even risking his thumbs at times, as he did last Saturday when he chose accompanying the kids and me to a Home Depot workshop over catching up on some much-needed sleep.


And - bonus for me - Mike enjoyed time with the kids while I went out on a rare Mom's Night with a fellow Signature Moms blogger, where we got to try our hands at our first (free!) paint night ever.  Thank you, Signature Healthcare, The Pour Artist and Mike for the fun time out!


~4~
On helpful community events...
 
It's hard to believe that this eight-year-old who was completely engaged by playing in a forest fire truck, moving through a "smoke house" and more this past weekend used to struggle so much with such outings.

Attending a local annual fire safety open house first started paying off for Luke a couple years ago, when sensory overload began to abate.  Now, curiosity and imagination are king!


All three children engage, learn and enjoy...
 

While Mom and Dad smile almost as big as Jack.  (But not quite.  Oh, how that boy can smile!)

~5~
On girls being girls and boys being boys...


Sandwiched between boys, it can be tough for a girl to find girl time.  

Yet, after coming to the end of the rope (or yarn, as the case may have been during the kids string walk at Eco Science club this week), Nina found time for girls to just be girls...

Hanging in a tree with a best bud away from the fray of her brothers for a bit...


...and setting up a "salon" on a boulder in the sunshine, where her friends and her did one another's hair before inviting Moms to come over to get their hair done, too, complete with stick combs, twisties and braids.


Meanwhile, the boys were boys...  Climbing trees...


Rolling abandoned tires about...


...and exploring the trails, with the boys in the lead and Mom following a bit behind for safety and snapshots!

Life is so good when friends hang out after events to enjoy gorgeous autumn days!

~5~
On quiet family time...

(Disclosure:  An affiliate link to Amazon is included in this portion of the post for your convenience.  Should you choose to click on it to make any purchase, we may receive income at no cost to you.  Thank you.)


While being out often brings adventure, being home can bring fun, too, especially when you are trying out a new game like Snake Oil - Party Potion.  It was so much fun this week to spend quiet time playing this game on the couch with the kids.
  


Of course, once we got Daddy into the game, "quiet" no longer described our time.  Indeed, the children's rapt attention to Daddy's sales pitches became punctuated by raucous laughter and ridiculous groans.

I wonder if the kids will remember these simple family times when they grow up as much as they do all our adventuring...

~7~
On Self-Directed Learning

  
One reason we choose to homeschool is so our children can learn at their own pace, maintaining their love for learning and inquisitive natures.  Part of our choice, then, becomes letting the children lead a large amount of their "schooling" activities, such as when Nina made herself a "learning center" this morning in the hallway and, then, proceeded to select word cards to build sentences with all of her own accord.


Or, when Jack takes out dry-erase cards to practice letters with on his "Montessori" rug.


Or when the science lesson of a morning comes from simply noticing what's going on inside or butterfly habitat.  

The children were so excited to see our second caterpillar had gone into j-form and had begun to make a chrysalis this morning, but, then, so disappointed to admit later in the day that something had gone awry.  The little guy never finished his chrysalis and seems to have passed away mid-try.

The other monarch we are fostering seems to be doing well still, though.  We are hopeful that we'll have a butterfly to tag and set free soon!

We love books here, but there is just nothing like learning about life, death and cycles through real life experience.

Real life, even with headaches and sleep interruptions, is incredibly blessed.  Thinking about the past week again proves that to me.  At home, out and about, one-on-one or in a group, my children, my husband and me continue to know and appreciate the fullness of life. 

What bounty of blessings have you experienced this week?



Sharing at My BJs Wholesale, Conversion Diary, Pebble Pond, and Home to 4 Kiddos.

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