3.26.2020

Puzzle Hacks : three tips to keep your toddler interested in the puzzles you've already got

Puzzles are big around here. My toddler enjoys puzzles and spends plenty of time working on them.


I try to keep the puzzles in a good rotation to keep them fresh and interesting for my two-year-old, but every once in a while he'll go through a phase where he just doesn't seem as "into it." He gets bored.  But I really like puzzle time, because anything that keeps those little hands busy and entertained independently is a win in my book. When he's playing independently, I can sit and drink a hot cup of coffee with my feet up.

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Did you believe me? Nah, I don't drink hot coffee or put my feet up. Come on now, let's get real. I do laundry.


In any case, I don't have unlimited funds to keep buying new puzzles, although I have had some great friends who have given us new-to-us puzzles, we've borrowed puzzles from friends, and I keep an eye out for thrift store or garage sale puzzles, too. Honestly, though, I don't love the idea of having nine thousand puzzles in my house, either, so I try to make sure that the ones we have are working hard to keep my kids entertained.

To keep puzzles fun and fresh, here are a couple things we do around here.

3.24.2020

One Tissue Box, Three Toddler Letter Recognition Activities



I'm just gonna say it : the best toddler activities are free toddler activities.

I'm all about finding ways to use the stuff I've already got to make fun learning experiences for my kiddo.

My toddler has been interested in his name for a while now- he recognizes the first letter of his first name. He often pipes up from his car seat, "E for EVERT!!!" whenever he sees an "E" on a sign in town. He also yells, "Kanga-burgers!!" whenever we pass Burger King, but that's neither here nor there.

Anyway.

Seeing as he's already shown some interest, I thought I'd come up with a couple fun activities to help him recognize the rest of his first name.

And I had one empty tissue box.

Here's what I did!

3.17.2020

Love in the Time of Coronavirus : showing honesty, humility, generosity, and kindness to our online neighbors



Well, here we are.

What a bizarre and exhausting two weeks it's been. There's been so much information, and so much of the information has changed drastically in the past few days, even. I don't envy our leaders as they scramble to try to determine how best to respond.

In stark contrast to the dramatic changes in lifestyle, circumstance, and responsibility around me; my God stays the same. A rock in the middle of a raging, confusing sea. And what a comfort that is to me.



As a Christian, I have been thinking hard about the way I, myself, should respond in all of this- especially in terms of how I'm using social media and the internet. 

I've spent quite a bit of the last week on my phone. I've been reading all the information I can find, and I've used social media to gauge how my friends and family around the country are being affected. Personally, I've got some "natural social distancing" going on. As a stay at home mama with children who are too young to be in school, living in a rural area, I don't get out much in a normal week, so not much has really changed in my own daily routines, but I'm watching. Through my phone, through Facebook and Instagram, through the internet, I'm watching.

Isn't it amazing how connected we all can be through the use of technology? I know that I'm grateful for the ability to talk to people even when we have to be apart. It's such a blessing to be in community in the midst of isolation.

However, all this technology? It's a double edged sword. A quick scroll through Facebook brings up nine different heated arguments, lots of differing information, and a whole slew of uncharitable comments.

It's really too bad, because as far as community goes, the internet and social media are what we've got right now. 

These are the meeting grounds, these are the forums, these are the support groups and the water coolers and the gathering places that we'll be frequenting in the coming weeks.

So as a Christian, how can I best show love on the internet in such a time as this? Here are a couple of my thoughts.

3.09.2020

Legacy

I'm sitting in my chair as I write this.

Koben is sleeping, Evert is outside with Trevor, off doing some serious work, no doubt. Getting the job done, as Evert likes to say.

The past two weeks have been a bit of a whirlwind, and I'm enjoying this quiet. The sunshine, the coffee, the blanket over my lap.

And I'm thinking about legacy.