I decorate a little. Since we live so far away from most of you friends and family and I don't get to have you over for coffee and sugar cookies, here's a tiny Christmas tour.
I love to give and receive Christmas cards, and I display them joyfully. This year, mine were sent out in batches. Um, I'm still working on getting that second batch out. I know. It's a splurge, but please don't stop sending Christmas cards just because you can just more easily FB or txt or email or digitize a greeting or because it costs more in postage than the card itself! Christmas cards are very special. I even love receive the late ones!
I even put a sprig of merry around the oil painting Rob's mom did of my kids. Don't they look festive? Have I ever shown this painting to you? Isn't it gorgeous?
The entertainment center gets a little holiday makeover as well. Just a little. Nothing over the top. I really like bringing in a bit of red to my spaces. It's only for a month. It makes me happy. Our Nutcrackers were especially appropriate since the kids and I got the opportunity to see the ballet performed here this year. It was as wonderful as I imagined.
Okay, okay, this isn't simple either. But Lily was really concerned about how Santa was going to come down our chimney...if we didn't have one. So we made a fireplace out of corrugated brick paper and taped it to the half-wall separating the kitchen and dining room. Caleb crafted the log and fire. You can almost hear it crackling and feel its warmth. We needed a place to hang our stockings anyway, right? A stocking for each of us six, one for the dog, and one for:
Right inside the front door. Baby Jesus shows up at first and then...goes missing. I wait for the kids to notice. And then we talk about how Mary had to wait for his birth, how God's people waited thousands of years for a Savior, how we're still waiting for him to come back.
I think I did manage to keep Christmas simple this year. At least here in our home. Our schedule flurried with activities, from homeschool partying, Christmas caroling--which comes with cookie and cocoa making, field tripping to the Nutcracker and the museum, more cookie baking and giving away, Christmas carding, post-officing, budgeting, shopping, children's choir concerting, and planning for the Christmas Eve service, in addition to all the other responsibilities we are already blessed to keep. I'm sure you all experienced similar surges in your schedules. I hope your homes and hearts were able to find joy and peace and simplicity in the midst of it all.
Christmas Eve we led a candlelight worship service at our little chapel. No one caught the old hymnals on fire, not even Seth when he bent down with his candle over the hymnal pocket. The service was lovely. Then kids performed in a nativity play, whose purpose was two-fold: 1.) Tell the story of Jesus' birth, 2.) Allow parents to take adorable pictures of their kids.
Christmas Eve we led a candlelight worship service at our little chapel. No one caught the old hymnals on fire, not even Seth when he bent down with his candle over the hymnal pocket. The service was lovely. Then kids performed in a nativity play, whose purpose was two-fold: 1.) Tell the story of Jesus' birth, 2.) Allow parents to take adorable pictures of their kids.
After the Christmas Eve Service and Nativity play, we delivered 300 cookies to various commands around the base who had servicemen and women on duty Christmas Eve and Day. Then we dressed the kids in their PJ's and headed out to Rob's aunt's home, 30 minutes away, where she hosts an annual Christmas Eve open house. Lots of merry-making, and we enjoyed Rob's uncle's original Louisiana style gumbo.
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Hang in there, you've almost made it through to the very end of this post, which is as long as the month of December. Christmas morning, we enjoyed our usual homemade cinnamon rolls and stockings and giggles and torturing the children by making them wait to tear into the gifts. I'll leave you with just a few images from our Christmas morning:
Hang in there, you've almost made it through to the very end of this post, which is as long as the month of December. Christmas morning, we enjoyed our usual homemade cinnamon rolls and stockings and giggles and torturing the children by making them wait to tear into the gifts. I'll leave you with just a few images from our Christmas morning:
I hope you had a wonderful Christmas! God bless you! (And if you haven't gotten a Christmas card from me and you usually do...batch #2 will go out soon!)
3 comments:
Thank you, Jody. That was beautiful. Love you!
I felt like I got to spend a little Christmas with you.It looks like you had a wonderful--simple yet full--season!I didn't want your blog to end. (Don't wait two months for the next entry!)I love you!
Hi, Jody! So nice to hear from you. You are always so generous with your kind words. Thank you for your encouragement this morning. I was just asking Jeny about you this past weekend. Glad to see your beautiful GROWING family here on your sweet blog. Isn't it amazing how fast they grow? Your Christmas seemed perfectly sweet and simple...just enough of special, but not over the top. It's just how we try to do things so Jesus doesn't get lost. :)
About Tapestry...I do like Tapestry a lot, but it is a little different than I initially thought. Maybe it was a dumb mistake on my part, but I didn't realize how much of the material we are told to read is from an eclectic mix of books that you will need to buy or find at the library. Not that I don't like this method--because I DO love using different books to get a wide view on a subject--but this year I was hoping to really cut costs on books. But other than the challenge of trying to gather the material every week, we have loved how well the curriculum ties together history, literature, geography, and writing. It even throws church history in there some weeks and the recommended books are wonderful. And when I can't find the recommended book (or can't afford to buy it), our library usual has something I can supplement.
I did buy the digital edition and love that I only print a handful of sheets out each week. The best aspect is teaching the same subject to all of your children at different levels. Madelyn is doing the Upper Grammar level this year and Chloe is doing Lower Grammar. I would recommend purchasing the writing aid book too. To teach writing has been one subject that has overwhelmed me in the past, but their method keeps it simple and has really worked well for Madelyn, especially. I bought the MapAids also, but haven't been as impressed with it....seems like I could just as easily download these maps from National Geographic's site for free and they would be just as effective. So overall, yes, I love TOG. It is the best curriculum I've used thus far and I think I'll do it over again next year. I hope that is helpful, Jody. It has been good for me to evaluate it.
God bless you and yours. May He show you just what is best for all of you.
Much love, Christine
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