Saturday, February 5, 2011

Valentine's Day Gifts


Oh will you be my Valentine, my Valentine, my Valentine,
Oh will you be my Valentine and wear my big rose heart?
Oh yes, I'll be your Valentine, your Valentine, your Valentine
Oh yes, I'll be your Valentine and wear your big rose heart!
(sung to the tune of the "Oh do you know the Muffin man?")

Valentine's Day brings a breaking with the contraction of winter, a stirring of life filled hope for Spring with lambs preparing to give birth and birds seeking mates for their springtime nests. The birds are singing here despite the deep snow. The depth of matter being penetrated by spirit shifts to a stirring, towards a flowing out of the Cosmic breath. Mother Earth is awakening at the surface even though she has been busy deep down in the earth :

Little dwarves so short and strong
Heavy footed march along
Every head is straight and proud
Every step is firm and loud

Pick and hammer each must hold
Deep in earth to mine the gold
Carefully flung o'er each one's back
Hangs a little empty sack

When their hard day's work is done
Home again they march as one
Full sacks make a heavy load
As they tramp along the road

Singing oh so merrily:

Crack, crack
The rocks we hack
Quake, quake the mountains shake
Bang, bang
Our hammers clang
In caverns old
We seek the gold

Valentine's is a day of fun and a day of whimsy. Children often love to make Valentines for each other. I remember making mailboxes in first grade, of cardboard boxes, paper bags, lace, ribbon and construction paper, for our Valentines. Remember the smell of the glue served up on the corner of a used torn up sheet of paper with a wooden ruler?

I remember anxiously awaiting that moment in the day when we were able to set up our mailboxes on our desks and go around the room and "mail" our Valentine's to each other. And then later to take time at home to sit down and go through them one by one and examine each gem.

The weeks leading up to Valentines are usually full of the Valentine making for friends and classmates, use those beautiful wet on wet watercolor paintings, take out the ribbons, lace paper doilies, snippets of paper "bits and edges" from past projects, glue and scissors.

This year we are making, by request, the woven Valentine and marble painted Valentines.

Over the years I have come up with a little dish for each child that comes out goes on the bedside table a few days before Valentine's Day. That usually involves some musing about the last year. One child has a Valentine Babouschka:


Another has a silver heart:

What matters to our children is not so much that it be silver or a certain design but that we find something special for them, imbue it with our love and return to it each year, making it a tradition through repetition.

I make them each a Valentine and leave it along with a simple gift and something chocolate and sweet in or on the heart. Last year I left these glass hearts. One year I left heart shaped musical chimes. Another year it was pink quartz hearts.

For breakfast I bake heart shaped scones, recipe is here. We have not had a regular Valentine's Day meal. This year I am going to make fondue as I am inspired by Cypress, over at Cypress Space, who shares her family's Valentine's traditions which look beautiful, delicious and fun here

If you want to make a little wool heart pendant for your child, it is simple to make one with wool felt and a ribbon. I like to tuck a lttle crystal inside like this:


This is also a simple project for a five or six year old or older to make for a friend. Pretty stones, crystals and chocolates make good surprises inside.

Attach a ribbon and it becomes a pendant:

Thursday, February 3, 2011

The Year of the Rabbit!

Oh my goodness! It is the New year, the Year of the Rabbit!

Thank you Pip and Sarah!

My hold on nature does not want to let go of the past. Better do some extra sweeping today!

My apolpogies.

Lisa

The Year of the Rabbit!

The Year of the Rabbit began with the new moon nine hours ago and celebrations of Chinese New Year will continue for fifteen days until the Lantern Festival on the fifteenth day with parades and lanterns in communities that celebrate the new year.

I am inspired by my friend Denice to explore Chinese New Year this year as a family celebration.

Special deeds are done on certain days of Chinese New Year Celebrations.

To prepare for the new year, we begin with sweeping out the house (the old, the bad luck) to clear way for the New Year. This is a time for new clothes, new shoes (maybe we can repurpose that old red sweater into something new) and a new hair cut. A pretty bowl of tangerines, oranges and pomelos is set out for wealth and good luck. The house is decorated with Fook and Couplets.

Explanation of some of the symbols and images of Fook and Couplets for Chinese New Year here
For a Gung Hay Fat Choy (Happy New Year) song with gestures, via my friend Denice, here

We can draw couplets and hang them on our homes.

The most important aspect of the first day of Chinese New Year is the family, and that all the extended family spend time with the oldest members of the family.

Gung Hay Fat Choy!

Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Chinese New Year



"Gung Hay Fat Choy!"

In China, every girl and boy
Celebrates the New Year
in a very special way -

With fireworks and dragons,
colored red and gold -
They welcome in the new year
and chase away the old!

- Helen H. Moore

If you wish to preview Celebrating the Rhythm of Life with Children in February, a monthly guide for those with children, in exchange for some honest feedback,

please e-mail your request to

Monthlyguides(at)yahoo.com


Tuesday, February 1, 2011

Tea Time and Gratitude


When we show reverence and gratitude by our actions, children absorb it into their bodies and they too will learn to express gratitude from deep within, for the young child, under the age of seven, learns by modelling the behavior of the adults around him and absorbing what lives within the adult. Rudolf Steiner stated, in The Education of the Child in Light of Anthroposophy:

“There are two magic words which indicate how the child enters into relation with his environment. They are: Imitation, and Example. The Greek philosopher Aristotle called man the most imitative of creatures. For no age in life is this more true than for the first stage of childhood, before the change of teeth. What goes on in his physical environment, this the child imitates, and in the process of imitation his physical organs are cast into the forms which then become permanent. ‘Physical environment’ must, however, be taken in the widest imaginable sense. It includes not only what goes on around the child in the material sense, but everything that takes place in the child’s environment — everything that can be perceived by his senses, that can work from the surrounding physical space upon the inner powers of the child. This includes all the moral or immoral actions, all the wise or foolish actions, that the child sees. "

It is not moral talk or prudent admonitions that influence the child in this sense. Rather is it what the grown-up people do visibly before his eyes.

Wash the dishes,
Wipe the dishes,
Ring the bell for tea,
Three good wishes,
Three good kisses,



Thank you for my tea!

Have a cup of tea! The guides are coming. I am manually entering your e-mail addresses for all of the test readers. Thank you all. I am so grateful for all your kind words and enthusiasm and willingness to jump in and help out.

Warmly,
Lisa


Monday, January 31, 2011

Feast of Brigid


Working away to get this guide out, on the eve of the Feast of Brigid, which is the day she is said to have died ( Saints are celebrated on the day they died) I came across this lovely verse:

The dandelion lights its spark

Lest Brigid find the wayside dark.
And Brother Wind comes rollicking
For joy that she has brought the spring.
Young lambs and little furry folk
Seek shelter underneath her cloak.


Winifred Mary Letts (1882 - 1972)


from Rebecca Chesney, who has a particular interest in dandelions, over here at her blog Dandelions, where she examines the dandelion connect to Brigid.



Dandelion is the flower of the spring fire goddess, seems fitting. And such a transformative flower too.

Rhythm in Our Home :: Wet on Wet Watercolor Painting Tutorial





We are working hard to bring you the February guides today. Here is a sneak peak into the painting tutorial.

Create beautiful Valentines with paintings. Wet on wet watercolor painting brings children an experience of color that is truly their own and beautiful as well. Make it a part of your weekly rhythm. I like to paint of Friday which is Venus' day.



  • It includes:
  • how to set up for painting
  • what simple materials are needed
  • what mood and gesture to bring
  • what age this suits
  • how to include the younger siblings or children in care
  • verses, song and story to bring with painting

The tutorial is here on The Wonder of Childhood Magazine.

For even more support with wet on wet watercolor painting, join my Homeschool Curriculum Program, this is a lively, interactive way to bring daily, weekly and seasonal rhythm to your home and to delve more deeply into activities that nurture wonder and imagination in a magical way.  Click here for more.

Blessings!

February Monthly Guide


Dear Reader,

Almost here. Today they will launch!

I am working hard to bring you the February Monthly Guide to Celebrating the Rhythm of Life with Children. The guide includes celebration ideas for Saint Brigid's Day, Chinese New Year and Valentines Day with stories, songs, verses, recipes and craft ideas as well as support for finding a strong rhythm in your day, week and year.

The guide will be released today to those who sing up and are willing to offer some feedback in exchange for the guide. If you'd like the guide and are willing to offer comments, e-mail me at Monthlyguides(at)yahoo.com today so I can add you to the list.

The February guide includes how to weave a Saint Brigid cross, a recipe for Valentine's day heart baking with children, simple sewing for a Valentine's pouch, beautiful Valentines making with a wet on wet water color painting tutorial, and 15 ideas for the celebration of Chinese New Year with Children.



The guide also includes something for baby and tips for bringing a harmonious flow to your day with toddlers. Child care providers will find tips specific to child care work as well.

Sign up to receive the free guide today, if you are willing to offer feedback.

Warmly,
Lisa

Friday, January 28, 2011

Free Monthly Guides


Dear Readers,

Have you used or thought about using a monthly seasonal guide to inspire your time with children?

Parents, childcare providers and preschool teachers wanted to test read/use February guide which is designed to provide a deeper understanding of Waldorf education, self knowledge, rhythm, strength, nourishment, fun and community in the task of caring for young children.

In exchange, you'll provide some honest feedback.

Includes stories, verses, finger play and ring time activities, outdoor activities, handcrafts, meal plans, meal blessings, tips for caring for the self, tips for caring for the space, toddler tips

If you are interested, e-mail me at: Monthlyguides(at)yahoo.com

Thank you,

Lisa

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Beeswax Candle Dipping Preparation


As we prepare to dip candles we gather the components:

Beeswax ~ a wheel


or chunks


a pot ~ one that can be dedicated to wax melting



a large can to put inside the pot ~ this one held pineapple juice



wicks


a dowel or branch to hang the candles as they dry


Warm the beeswax in the can in water in the pot



Waiting for the beeswax to melt



We'll continue when wax is melted......stayed tuned...until tomorow

Feast of Brigid

The Feast of Brigid began as a pagan celebration of Brigid, the Celtic Goddess of fire, healing, childbirth, poetry and unity, often with the entire month of February dedicated to Brigid. (So no worries about missing the day, it's a season as are all festivals.) She is known by many names, including Bride, Brigit and Saint Brigid.
The Celts regarded Brigid as a triple goddess; this notion of three deities in one is also very ancient and has its origins in the ancient goddesses. So beloved by her people of Ireland, she was later made a saint, after Christianity arrived upon the shores of Ireland. She is now known and venerated as Saint Bridget and Saint Bride. Brigid is the patroness Saint of Ireland, good harvests, healthy babies, poets and inventions and held is high esteem alongside Mother Mary in Ireland.
It is said that nine priestesses kept an eternal healing fire at her shrine in Kildare and that Brigid was a great healer, able to give sight to the blind and heal wounds considered hopeless at her sacred wells.

What intrigues me about Brigid is that she is an ancient goddess who has endured through the ages, through the old meeting the new and she persists with her history intact, she is not a distortion of the ancient divine feminine. For me, Candlemas needs to include Brigid. For more on her remarkable survival and evolution from pagan goddess to Catholic saint read more here.

Candlemas is the name given to the day, February 2nd, by the Church, to mark the presentation to the Temple of the Holy Child by Simeone, who declared the Holy Child to be "of light" (Book of Luke.)


Candlemas is a feast of initiation, of possibility, of light, of the old meeting the new and the old giving way to the new, the frozen earth giving way to the stirring of new life. Candles are blessed in churches this day.

To celebrate Brigid, a poetry festival is here .
For more on the poetry festival here.

Stories of Brigid from The Baldwin Project,with a little tweaking, each makes a fine story for a young child or a second grade story. Together the stories provide inspiration to paint a picture of her:

Saint Bridget of Kildare, here
Saint Bridget, here
Saint Bridget and the King's Wolf, here
Saint Bridget also known as Saint Bride in the Catholic Church here

More on Brigid, here

And lots more, Brigid as Goddess or Saint? here
Saint Brigit and Saint Patrick, here
Song of Brigid here

What is giving way in you? What is being born? What is there to let go of? What to bring forth? What is giving way in your child? What is emerging, coming forth? How can we parents step aside and let go of the old and herald in the new developments of our children?

Bright blessings on you and yours.

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Jack Frost is about!



Look out! Look out!
Jack Frost is about!
His silvery powder he'll shake
And, all through the night,
The sweet little sprite


Such wonderful pictures he'll make!
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