Truth in the Tinsel – Hands-on Family Advent Fun

Three things before we begin:

  1. This is last year’s review of Truth in the Tinsel, before we got into it much. I’m reposting this, because we really liked it, and I share things I like with you…because I like you.
  2. This post contains affiliate links. In fact, I think all the links are affiliate links. Whoa. Intense.
  3. If you want to skip my review and just go check out Truth in the Tinsel, I won’t take you off my Christmas list. (That was an affiliate link. And so is this next one…and the next one….and…)

Check out Truth in the Tinsel here!

I love Advent. I love Advent wreathes and Advent calendars and Advent activities.

Unfortunately, many of the Advent activities I see are either too deep for my younger children or involve far too much preparation and work on the part of the parent. And I’m definitely not doling out chocolate or gifts every day in Advent. I mean, I’ll eat chocolate every day, but I’m not doling it out.

Last year I was tempted to try Truth in the Tinsel. I had heard quite a bit about it, and it sounded great for my hands-on kids. Still, with a brand new baby, a very sick child, and a music mission to launch, I wasn’t going to tackle anything more than I already had. Instead I opted to feed all seven children and my husband three meals a day for the entire month of December. [Insert applause here.]

Now this December is rolling around and the Advent tickle has struck again. This time I have a plan. The plan is to let someone else do all the planning and work. Are you with me?

So I bought Truth in the Tinsel, and I’m telling you people, I don’t spend money easily…except on food. I buy a lot of food…and I eat a lot of food…but not as much as I buy. I digress.

Here’s what I love about Truth in the Tinsel:

The 24 readings are straight from the Bible. I teach my children the Bible by reading directly from the Bible–how novel. Why not keep teach the Christmas story from the Source? Why not? (That wasn’t rhetorical.) There’s no reason why not! It draws from both the Old and New Testaments. Even more novel!

Each lesson includes an ornament craft which is totally doable. If you don’t have the time or energy for crafts, because of, you know, life, you can still implement the program. Truth in the Tinsel now offers a set of printable ornaments for $3.99. Set out a safety scissors, the crayons, maybe some glitter (shudder), and you’re set! Or skip the crafts. (It’s not illegal…seriously.)

 

If you don’t get to it every day, it’s okay. It’s okay. Hey, it’s okay! Okay? There are alternative schedules for making it work for your situation, even if that involves squeezing it in at random moments…which means I totally could have pulled this off last year after all. The goal is not completing the program; the goal is focusing your family toward Christ.

 

Although it’s designed for “little hands,” it can include the whole family. All ages can participate in the Bible readings, and anyone who is interested can get crafty at their own levels. Discussion questions can extend to everyone as well. My firstborn is learning to drive and my seventh-born is learning to walk, so at The Simple Home, including a broad age range is a huge deal.

Truth in the Tinsel is also available in Spanish and as a group study for churches, youth groups, homeschool groups, uh, insert your group here.

Truth in the Tinsel

Amanda, the creator of Truth in Tinsel, has a real heart for children’s ministry, and that radiates through her work.

Okay, enough from me. Visit the site, check out the sample page, and, see if it will add to your family’s advent celebration. You can download it instantly and begin using it right away.

Buy Truth in the Tinsel here.

Oh, here’s another idea! Check out Crock On – A Semi-Whole Foods Slow Cooker Cookbook, one of my favorite e-cookbooks. Let your crockpot do the cooking while you enjoy Truth in the Tinsel with your children! Brilliant!

The Cure for Overwhelm

Sometimes life plays hardball, throwing curve ball after curve ball until you’re one strike away from throwing in the towel. Other times life piles so much on the plate that you barely have time to scratch your nose. Whether good or bad, life’s activity list can leave a person a little overwhelmed.

 Overwhemed

Case in point:

Currently we are on tour with my husband’s music mission. This is a full-time gig, meaning our home is primarily a travel trailer parked somewhere in this great country of ours, and never more than a week in one place. Yes, by “we” I mean all nine of us and the 125-pound dog. It’s an adventure. (You can read about it here.)

The great thing about adventures is that they are adventurous. The not-quite-as-great-but-not-altogether-bad side of adventures is that they leave little time for other things.

Everyone’s life is an adventure from time to time, and everyone gets overwhelmed.

I recently wrote about how to handle life when you just can’t handle life over at The Humbled Homemaker. Give it a read.

Read When You Just Plain Can’t.

And thanks for understanding on those days when simplifying at The Simple Homemaker means it’s a little quiet here for a time.

NOTE: Posts aren’t much fun without pictures, and my camera died, so, while I have several posts written, they are waiting for me to save up for a new camera so I can add a little post bling. Thanks for your never-ending patience as I use old photos, stock shots, or totally unrelated pics just to give you something to look at, and as I hold off on my how-to posts for a time. You rock…but you knew that.

Free Online Quilting Class and How To Know If You Should Take on a New Project

I have wanted to quilt for…well, if I tell you for how long, you’ll probably do the math and figure out how old I am, and the unwritten, unbreakable code of illogical female behavior states that 39-year-old women must under no circumstances reveal their ages, so let’s just say I’ve wanted to quilt for a long time, and so have my girls. It’s finally time to begin quilting!

Free Online Quilting Class
Learning to use a sewing machine at a young age...and yes, it does work better with your tongue out.

Since I am obviously about returning to the basics, simplifying, and decluttering, you may be wondering why I have decided to take on something new, which leads to an interesting question.

How does a person know if adding a project such as quilting (or crocheting or scrapbooking or making jewelry or refinishing furniture or…) in this season of life is appropriate? Ask yourself these questions, and if you have solid, realistic answers, you pass!

How to Know If You Should Take on a New Project

Free Online Quilting Class

Have you decluttered all nonessential expectations, projects, and clutter? If you’re barely keeping your head above water, now is not the time to add more weight. There will be a time…it just isn’t now. Personally, I have whittled my life queue down to the basics and can take on one project with my children.  (One project, not 100.)

 

Free Online Quilting Class

Will you be sacrificing family time or personal sanity?  Because we incorporate handicrafts into our schooling, quilting will fit neatly. My older children can learn with me, while the younger set can work on related skills their siblings have already mastered. Plus, I always find a way for littles to help and learn.

 

Free Online Quilting Class

Is it realistic within your current skill set? This is a simple quilting class and a simple learning platform. In our case, our sewing skills are such that advancing to quilting is a logical next step, as opposed to trying to take on a large project without the previous ability to thread a needle or a machine.  My four older children know how to sew and have tackled smaller projects, so all of us working together on one quilt—no problem!

 

Free Online Quilting Class

Is this a beneficial use of your time?  In other words, is it better than what you would otherwise be pursuing? Regarding quilting, it’s never a waste of time to teach children a life skill.  Plus I’m cold, so making a big warm blanket is ideal!

 

Free Online Quilting ClassDoes it fit your budget, location, and schedule?  Our quilting lessons are free, online, and at our convenience.  The materials are also free, since we have scraps and fabric at our disposal from all those unfinished projects from my previous life as The Complicated Home Clutterer (The Simple Homemaker’s arch-nemesis).

 

What?!  Free?!!  You betcha!  Here’s the info:

Free Online Quilting Class

Craftsy, the largest online crafting community (at least that I’m aware of) has a free online block of the month quilting class.  The classes can be viewed at your convenience, with two blocks taught per month for ten months.  The last two months are dedicated to putting the quilt together, so you’re not stuck with what would essentially amount to 20 placemats.  Amy, the instructor (isn’t she cute?!) is fantastic and available for questions, and the price (free) is perfect!

Click here to check out the free quilting class!

Cheap Craft Supplies and Classes

Craftsy also sells discounted craft supplies…I mean seriously discounted.  If you have an Etsy or other business, want your quilt to look exactly like the Craftsy instructor’s, or simply love to knit, make jewelry, sew, (insert your favorite craft here), check out Craftsy’s online prices for fat quarters, organic yarn, and more.  Sign up to be notified of the deal of the day, or just browse. (I don’t receive a commission for what you buy, just so you know.)

There are also numerous other beginner, intermediate, and advanced online classes that Craftsy offers, each taught by professionals in the field. What?! No, you’re not too old! Our friend Jan the Pepper Jam Lady just learned how to do glass fusing and now sells her work…and she’s in her 80s!

See what I’m talking about by clicking here.

Cheap and Free Patterns

Craftsy’s newest addition is a pattern marketplace through which pattern designers can sell their patterns.  Because Craftsy does not charge the designers to market their patterns, prices are ridiculously low and sometimes free.  I like free.

Click here to check it out.

Joining Craftsy is free, too.

If your life is decluttered enough that you can comfortably add a class or project, if you need a more affordable source for craft supplies, or if you simply want to join a crafting community,  Craftsy is calling your name. Seriously, I can hear it.

If your life is cluttered, hectic, and overscheduled, put down your mouse and walk away. No, better yet, run!

Do you craft?

What You Can Eat on a Corn-Free Diet

It seems everybody knows someone who can’t eat something.  As I type, five people in my family of nine are on restricted diets for one reason or another, and the rest are allowed almost no processed foods because they have a mean mama. (Insert maniacal laugh here.)

Corn-Free Diet
My corny kids eating corn. (I know, that was a corny joke. And another one!)

Dietary restrictions (and a mean mama) have the potential of making life anything but simple.

Because of some of the dietary challenges affecting my family over the past couple of years, I was invited to post about a corn-free diet at The Humbled Homemaker.  While I am not a dietician, doctor, or nutritionist, I do have a couple unique perspectives on dietary restrictions.

Corn-free Diet 1) I hate ’em.

Corn-free Diet 2) I approach them as simply and realistically as possible.

And that is what I share with you over at The Humble Homemaker today–not so much the hating part, but the simple approach to tackling a corn-free diet.

You can thrive and keep life simple with dietary restrictions.  You truly can.

Pop on over to The Humbled Homemaker.  You’ll love that gal!  She’s a gem!

Click here to Visit The Humbled Homemaker.

 

Free or Nearly Free Tools for Getting Organized

Is getting organized on your list of to-dos for the new year?  Need a hand?  Enjoy these free or nearly free tools for getting organized in the new year.

But…before you start going download crazy, heed this caution.   Do not overwhelm yourself with the process of preparing to organize, such that you never actually do it.  (Says experience.)  Don’t overclutter your life with “helpful” tools.  Keep it simple.  Say it with me: simple.

Free or Nearly Free Tools for Getting Organized

getting organized Vista Print freebiesVista Print is offering six free products, including two types of calendars.  The personalized post-it notes and note cards would be a hit in someone’s Easter basket. (I know, it’s barely past Christmas.)  Plus Grandma (or The Simple Homemaker) would love a personalized calendar.  Shipping fees apply.  I have had good experiences with Vista Print.

Visit Vista Print Here

Getting OrganizedGet Organized Wizard is selling the 2012 Organize-in-Five Diary for only $4.95.  That’s a discount of 87% for a limited time only. It also comes free with some of their other products.  Nice, eh? The diary gives you one organizational task a day, each slotted to take about five minutes.  I own this, I like this, ‘nuf said.

Visit Get Organized Wizard Here

 tools for getting organizedGet a free Kindle version of the book Organize for a Fresh Start: Embrace Your Next Chapter in Life by Susan Fay West.  It addresses how to organize your home and manage your time within the home.  If you do not have a Kindle, you can download a free e-reader app for your computer at Amazon.  Prices change, so check the cost before buying. (I have not read this book.)

Get Your Free Copy Here

 tools for getting organizedDownload a free 2012 declutter calendar from My Simpler Life with a mission a day throughout the year.  Beth of My Simpler Life is also the author of 365 Days to a Saner, Simpler Life which you can download for $4.95. (I have not read this book, so cannot recommend it personally.)

Download Your Free 2012 Declutter Calendar

Buy 365 Days to a Saner, Simpler Life

Download a host of free resources from Money-Saving-Mom.  This links to six of them, but follow her links from there to find more.  I believe we’re due for another reminder not to go download crazy.

Download Your Free Resources Here

Getting Organized in 2012Subscribe to The Simple Homemaker’s newsletter to get weekly inspiration and ideas for managing your home as simply as possible, eliminating complications, and enjoying your family and life to the fullest.

Subscribe in the Right Sidebar

What am I using to help me stay organized in the new year?  A calendar, scrap paper and pencil (for my ultra-simple lists), my computer for my long-term lists, the 2012 Organize-in-Five Diary (which is something new I’m trying this year), and, of course, my subscription to The Simple Homemaker!  (I must run.  I’m late for my meeting of Self-Promoter’s Anonymous…although by definition none of us self-promoters are anonymous.)

Have a great time getting organized in the New Year!

Simple Ways to Decorate With Scripture

You’ve heard the expression “Out of sight, out of mind.”  It only follows, then that whatever is in sight is on the mind.

For that reason, we try to keep what is important and what we want our children (and us) to remember in view.  In our case, that is Scripture, although we have also used some of these approaches to help the children memorize poems, songs, math facts, and, most recently, their new little sister’s name.

Following are some of the ways we “write Scripture on the doorframes of our houses and on our gates.”  From the elaborate to the simple, all keep what is important to us at the forefront of our minds.

Simple Ways to Use Scripture in the Home

The most obvious approach to decorating with Bible verses is using purchased items or gifts, ready to hang or display.  Here are two of my favorites:

100_3918This plaque I purchased as a reminder to, well, be still, particularly when suffering from worry.  It sits on the family desk right next to the computer.  ‘Fess up—you know you need to be reminded to “Be still” when the computer acts up!

The set of prints below is from my grandparents and hangs in our bathroom—good reading material for family and guests. (Yup, we put the TP roll on over, not under. It’s the only way to go.)

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Homemade gifts are always a joy and more affordable than store-bought. This was a Mother’s Day gift from my husband which probably totaled around $10. (Yes, two children are missing.  Don’t tell them.  They haven’t noticed yet.)

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Other homemade Scripture displays include this “Our Father” by a child who had just learned cursive, and these two pictures we printed off the Internet and framed back when our walls were bare.

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Graffiti, while illegal in some places, is not altogether undesirable in this instance.  One of my daughters carved a powerful verse in the side of her nightstand, and another wrote meaningful verses and affirmations on the bunk bed slats above her bed.

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Dry erase markers for the refrigerator and bathtub crayons for the children’s bathroom allow for verse changes (and similar messages) as life directs.  (And, yes, we’re working on that I before E issue.  That child’s skills lie in areas other than spelling.)

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We have at least eight calendars on display.  They are an affordable way to put Scripture on the walls and counters.  Whether daily or monthly calendars, the verses are read on a regular basis and are visible in many different rooms in the house (which also helps this space cadet remember which day of the week it is).

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Open almost any cupboard or peek at the walls by beds and desks, and you’ll find little reminders of our faith and focus.  Here are three, an interior kitchen cupboard, the wall above my son’s bed, and our cookbook cupboard.  It ain’t pretty, but it’s always a good reminder.

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Labeling the children’s toy buckets with contents and a Scripture verse not only helps them stay more organized, but makes memorization effortless.  I like organized.  I like effortless.

 

 

 

 

Sometimes, less is more.

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There are moments in life, such as during minor household catastrophes like shattering a glass cooktop, when a simple reminder of the providence of God is appropriate…even written in marker on duct tape.  (Yes, that’s a shattered glass cooktop under all that tape.  Now there’s a story of God’s providence for you!)

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Last, because it deserves a really long drum roll…

If you are blessed to have someone in your life as insanely talented as my mother, perhaps you also have a handcrafted work of art* like this hanging in your home.  This is the view from my bed.  The verse with dove, hand painted and accented in gold leaf by my mother, has been a buoy during times when I have battled anxiety.  It is the perfect last image before closing my eyes at night and a wonderful first reminder to start my day.  Thanks, Mom! Love you!

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For some great products to help keep Scripture in front of your family’s and guests’ eyes at mealtime, swing over to Scripture Plates.

For a variety of decor and gifts for your home that highlight Scripture, check out Dayspring.

How do you use Scripture in your home?

Linking to Doorposts, where you can find many other ideas for decorating with Scripture.

*original painting copyrighted and image may not be used without permission

 

The Cooktop Saga – A Story of Providence

Sometimes simple living is a mindset, looking at things from a different perspective.  Keeping our eyes alert to God’s providence takes the stress out of life…a huge step toward a simpler life.  Here is a recent example from our home.  Enjoy.

In mid-October, my music man husband was away performing at a church festival across the mountains in Las Vegas.  Due to the heat and one child’s health, I was left home with my oldest daughter and the three smallest.  The two middles went with Daddy to man (or girl) the CD table.

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Those of us who stayed home were quite excited to surprise the others with the amount of work we accomplished while they were away, including cleaning, organizing, and baking two special treats.  (We won’t contemplate here why we get such a large amount accomplished when Daddy’s away, but it does offer food for speculation.)  When we got the call that they were headed through the mountain pass, we started getting a hot dinner ready for our weary crew.

 

CRASH!

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That was the sound of me—not a small child, not a teenager, but me–complicating life by dropping a cast iron skillet on our glass cooktop.  I don’t know if you’ve ever seen a glass stovetop shatter, but it is a rather impressive sight.  Depressing, surreal in that slow motion sort of way, but impressive.

When I called my man to share the news, he did what any husband would do who has had the kind of “one thing after another” year that we’ve experienced.  He laughed.

When my music man arrived home and finished duct-taping the stovetop to keep the glass from further spreading, he shared a few discoveries…not mentioning the obvious–that his graceful bride can be a bull in a china cabinet, which we already knew.

First, he told me that the church where he performed had paid him $100 extra—no explanation, no comment, just $100 extra.

Second, he mentioned that CD buyers who said “Keep the change” had added an extra $20 to the till.

Third, he told me about a five-year-old unused $100 Lowes gift card he had just found in his “just a bunch of stuff” drawer.

Do the math.  That’s $220 that we neither had nor needed the day before.

Last, my man checked out the cost of replacement stovetops at Lowes.  I don’t need to tell you how much the cheapest stovetop cost, do I?

 

$220

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In the same week I received a $24 rebate and sold an article for $18 and change.  That gave us exactly enough money to get the model that was one step up from the cheapest, and would work better for our heavy usage.

When we arrived at Lowes last week, three weeks after our stovetop’s demise, the model we had in mind was marked down to $250.  It was a mistake, but the store honored the price anyway.

That left us with just enough money to buy my patient husband a little gift—a new Christmas CD to replace the 15-year-old CD that his graceful wife and charming children play incessantly for three months out of every year and which my husband would have been quite willing to shatter himself if he didn’t love us as much as he does.   An unexpected blessing.

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“Your Father knows the things you have need of before you ask Him.”

~Matthew 6:8