This Is The Most Fun I Have Ever Had Part 3

by Mary Ann on May 23, 2010

In this mornings blog I said that I was going to really think about what fills my bucket. I actually began thinking about that a day or two ago when my daughter told me about her “garden” experience. Today I remembered something I had forgotten. I remembered a painting class I took. I wasn’t a child but a busy mom with lots of children.

I had a friend who was a painter and gave lessons. I decided to take some classes. I went once a week to her studio. I LOVED it. I am not sure what it is that I love about it. But I love painting. I am a mediocre painter at best. I may never be very good but I don’t care. I like the feeling of putting color on a blank canvas.

Only a few short months after I started taking lessons my friend moved away. I tried painting at home but I was using oils at the time and invariably a child would touch it to see if it was dry and then wipe away the evidence of their discretion on whatever was closest. I eventually just gave it up.

A few years ago one of my daughters was hurt very badly in a car wreck. I went to live with her for about five months while she healed and learned to walk again. During that time I searched for anything that would help her brain heal as she had sustained some injury to that part of her body. One of the things I choose was painting. A picture I painted at that time was of a lake with trees and a cabin and sand and large boulders in the foreground. It was just done on a small sheet of paper.

It has been in my closet for about four years now. Recently I got it out and thought I would put it into a small frame and hang it in my bedroom, not because it is good but because I painted it and I had so much fun doing it.

My husband, bless his heart, had it enlarged, really enlarged, and framed for my birthday. It now hangs on the main wall in our living room for everyone to see. Yikes. You can now see all the little imperfections. He doesn’t care, he loves that painting. He said it reminds him of me and the cabin he wants to have. I love it too because whenever I look at it I remember how fun it was to paint it.

So now I know that occasionally I should paint because it makes me happy, it is exhilarating and I love it. We all need to know what fills our bucket. We don’t have to be good at it, we just have to love it.

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This Is The Most Fun I Have Ever Had Part 2

by Mary Ann on May 23, 2010

Yesterday I wrote about my daughter’s experience with building a raised bed garden and walk way. She said “While I was building it, it was exhilarating. It was so exciting and rejuvenating”. Building that garden gave her a wonderful sense of “this is the most fun thing I have ever done!”

Yesterday I related this story to The Spark Station and the experience that we want our children to have as they are learning new things. Today I want to relate it to “filling our own buckets”. If you have ever taken a workshop on finding your purpose or having a happier life and the like, many times they ask you to go back to your childhood and think about what really made you happy. Maybe they do that because children do what they like and love. Parents work and stress and stop dreaming. It is a malady that these workshops are trying to help us over come.

Recently a mentor of mine asked me “What do you really love. What fills your bucket? What rejuvenates you?” I couldn’t really answer her. I have a number of things that I enjoy. I like to read and bake, sometimes. I like to weed and plant, sometimes. I usually do those things when I need a break from work. Can anyone relate?

But thinking about what I really love doing, what makes me feel joy and happiness, that fills me up, that was a tough assignment. I haven’t figured it out yet because I haven’t taken the time. However, in relation to the story about my daughter I have decided to take the time.

The reason for that is because when she had that remarkable sense of daily exhilaration she felt more whole, more satisfied, more happiness. Now she has a busy life. Her little ones are up early and require her all day long. Add to that keeping house, tending pets, taking care of a husband and her business and by the end of the day you have a very tired woman. This happens to men too.

So as she was telling about this experience she said that she really thought about the joy of building the plane and the joy of building the garden and walkway. She realized that what she loves to do is build, with a hammer and nails and a saw. She likes building things. She knows that she doesn’t do much of the very thing that builds her up and gives her joy. So her job now is to figure out a way to add that element into her life. When she does, no matter how long or stressful the day, she will manage better because she can look forward to the rejuvenation and happiness that come when she builds something.

As I have thought about this I can see the value in it. If we had opportunities when we truly felt joy, exhilaration and excitement we would be better mothers, fathers, grandparents, neighbors, friends and people. It would really enhance our ability to problem solve instead of blowing up or becoming depressed. It would ease the stress of modern life. It would add to our patience and our ability to reach out to others, to forgive and to love. But the key is in knowing what brings us this feeling.

Maybe you think I overstate the case but I have lived a good many years and I don’t think so. So I have made a decision to really think back. To do the work to remember, so that I can figure out how to better fill my bucket. Then I can give more to you, my family, my friends and my community. And above all the quality of my life will be so much better. Someone once said that life is not a dress rehearsal. This is the real deal so lets find ways to live a life of quality and fulfillment.

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This Is The Most Fun I Have Ever Had

by Mary Ann on May 22, 2010

This is going to be a two part blog. The experience I want to share demonstrates two important ideas. Over the last two weeks my oldest daughter has built the most beautiful, little raised garden bed by her back gate. It was just a dirt pile that the doges had been digging in for years. It was very unsightly. So this year she determined to create something in that space.

The bed is about 5 feet by 3 feet. She had to figure out how to measure and cut the wood. Then she had to decide how to hold the pieces together. After the bed was made and filled with soil she marked it off in one foot squares and built a wonderful fence to keep the dogs out. She planted lots of herbs, tomatoes and peas for the kids to eat. She planted a watermelon and a pumpkin and then figured out how to trellis them so they will grow up. She added a metal baby robin and a fairy statue. Just looking at that orderly spot of green is restful and joyful!

She said, “It took me two weeks to do a one day project”. That was because she is a mother of three children under the age of four and one has cerebral palsy. It was a bit frustrating. Yet despite the frustration over how long it took to complete the project she said, “While I was building it, it was exhilarating. It was so exciting and rejuvenating”. Building that garden gave her a wonderful sense of “this is the most fun thing I have ever done!”

After the garden was done she built a walk way of bricks from the gate to the patio, just a short distance. She said that the feeling she had was that she wanted to get it done before her husband came home because she didn’t want the fun to be taken out of it by being criticized or told how to do it. She wanted to do it herself.

My daughter was a bit taken back by the absolute joy and desire to figure it out herself that she was experiencing while building this garden and walk way. She thought a lot about it and realized that she could only remember one other time when she had felt this particular sensation. As she retold the experience to me I remembered it vividly.

She was about 4 years old and she found two pieces of wood on the front porch. She decided to make a plane. So she asked for her snow pants because every builder needs overalls. Right! She wanted a hammer and nails. Then she proceeded to make that plane. I didn’t help her at all. She did the whole thing. I think I did suggest that she paint it which she did. It didn’t really look like a plane, just two sticks nailed into a T. She thought it was grand! I didn’t think anything about it at the time. I didn’t know how thrilled she felt, how exhilarated. I am glad I didn’t take that away by telling her she was too little to use a hammer or by helping her do a “good” job or by hovering just to make sure everything was ok.

Have you ever engaged in a project that took a long time? Maybe you could only work on it in bits and smatters. Maybe it was hard and you had to learn as you went. Maybe you made a lot of mistakes and had to fix them but as you were building, crafting, cooking or whatever it was, you were just thrilled to be doing it. Working on that project made you excited and you couldn’t wait to get back to it.

When your children are working on items from your Spark Station that is how you want them to feel. You want them to frequently say and feel that “this is the most fun thing I have ever done!” There are some elements that have to be present for this type of feeling to be generated.

It is vital to remember the Five Rules of Engagement. Rule one is to structure time, not content and to be consistent. There needs to be enough time set aside to work on something, to learn about new things. Don’t help your child just to move it along or to get it done. When you are doing something out of The Spark Station it might take a day or two, or more because this special family time doesn’t last all day.

Of course we want our family to be learning all the time but experience has shown me that despite our good intentions, if we don’t set aside a specified time each day the world crowds in and we don’t have a family learning time, reading time or activity time.

Your child may add elements to the project that you didn’t anticipate or that you think are unnecessary. Let them. That is the second part of rule one, structure time but not content. Remember my daughter putting on the snow pants. To me it was work to haul them out. To her it was “necessary” for building. It added to her sense of excitement and joy. After all what we are ultimately seeking is that our children experience joy as they learn. That is what love of learning is all about.

The second rule is to be present. To be present means to be with your child or family mentally, emotionally and physically. It means not talking on the phone, doing laundry or cooking dinner. It means you are studying yourself or assisting when asked; only when asked. Even my adult daughter didn’t want someone else telling her how to do her project or criticize how she was doing it.

You need to stand back and wait to be asked for help even when they seem to be messing it up. Let them try. Let them experiment and experience the work necessary to do the job. Help only when asked and then only assist in what they need. Sometimes when parents are asked to help they take over and never give the project back. Remember, the outcome may matter to you but to most children the process of creating matters more. A heightened sense of confidence comes when a child figures out what they can, does the work and then is praised for their efforts, not when a parent does the work in the guise of “helping.”

The third rule is that this wonderful, structured family time where The Spark Station is available doesn’t last all day. I know that some will disagree here but anything that is always available loses value. When there is something in our lives that we have to wait for we anticipate it, we desire it. This is no different. My daughter couldn’t just work on her project. She had to put it away to be a mom. So each day the anticipation of having time to build grew.

Rule four is if you put something in, take something out. In this case I want to remind you that it is important to have all the necessary materials available. You might just have information about what is needed if it is for older children and you want gathering the materials to be part of the project.

The fifth rule is to plan ahead. You need to listen for sparks and watch your children so that you can put into The Spark Station what interests them and what you think might interest them.

Let me recap in light of my daughter’s experience as it relates to The Spark Station. When you remember the Five Rules of engagement The Spark Station, as an educational tool, can build the kind of excitement that my daughter felt. It helps parents provide inspiration to their children so that they can venture out into new realms of learning.

When we remember the rules we won’t squash someone else’s desire to figure it out, work on it and finish by themselves.  As your child learns about new things, builds, creates, writes, and acquires new skills won’t it be an amazing thing to watch if they feel like my daughter when she was four and again at thirty nine! “This is the most fun thing I have ever done!”

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Replace Yourself – Let Children Lead Out

by Mary Ann on May 22, 2010

Any time we can encourage creative exploration we are on the path to leadership education. Even a child’s party is a perfect venue for implementing leadership education. In that model parents inspire their children to learn and do new things. The goal is for children to master skills that will help them in life and help them serve others.

My mom gave me some amazing parties. I recall in my 7th grade year I had a taffy party. I had seven or eight friends over and my mom taught us to make pulled taffy. It actually turned out. It was so much fun. We had a really good time and each girl had a gift, a plate of taffy, to take home.

I followed my mom’s footsteps. I gave my kids great parties. One year we had a dress up party. I collected dress ups from thrift stores for a few weeks prior. When the children arrived they all choose bits and pieces of clothing and put an outfit together. Then we had a wonderful parade all around the block. We ended with a few games and treats.

Another time we made sugar cookies from scratch and frosted and then decorated them with small candies, raisins, etc. Then they were packed into small boxes to be taken home.

When my youngest daughter was turning eleven we had a formal “tea” party. The guests came in their best dresses and were served by some mom’s who had been enlisted to help.  The ice cream was cut into slices and then a tea pot cookie cutter was used to make a tea pot slice of ice cream. Each girl had her own miniature cake. They were encouraged to “converse”. They got the hang of it and soon there was an ample amount of giggling and chatting going on in the living room. Each girl went home with a miniature tea set purchased at the dollar store. Kate said this was her favorite party.

One year my son had a “relay” party. All the activities were relay games. We found lots of ideas for relays by asking his grandparents about games they remembered, games I recalled from my school days and books from the library.

These were all wonderful times for the children who attended. However, remember I said that my mom gave great parties and then I followed in her foot steps. None of the parties I planned would have been too hard for one of my children to plan. What I really wanted was for them to learn adult skills and become independent. Allowing them to have the experience of planning and implementing the plan would have gone a long way in that direction. Think of all the learning that could go on if the child and parent worked together on a project like a party.

Food is planned and a grocery list is written and food stuffs purchased; then the food has to be prepared and eventually served. There is an invitation list to be made and invitations to write out (the computer is a wonderful tool but can steal opportunities from a child to learn to write). A theme needs to be decided on and then how to carry out the theme and then games and activities are chosen that follow the theme.

The ultimate goal of parties should be to help our children learn how to play, socialize and create with their peers and other adults; to celebrate together. We eventually want them to plan and execute their own social functions. I once read that the greatest teachers replace themselves. We should want to replace ourselves. That is the Thomas Jefferson model, that children feel courageous and excited to venture out and learn new things and then implement that newly gained knowledge to bring joy to others and serve in some way.

That is the great benefit of this type of home made party. You allow your children to practice creating and thinking along with you. They don’t need to have it created for them via a DVD or other premade outlet. Eventually they take over and do it for themselves. Anytime that we can foster the skills of creation, thinking and problem solving we are helping our children and youth on the path to leadership.

One of the reasons that we frequently “do” things for our children is that we want to guarantee the outcome. We want it to be a certain way, our way. We want it to be successful, adult-like, so to speak. Remember that I have mentioned before that much of what we do in the guise of helping our children is really about us not them. That is a tough habit to break.

Take the time to recall all of the parties that were special to you. Ask your husband about the parties he remembers. Ask your mom and dad, grandma and grandpa. Then write their ideas down. Let a son or daughter plan a party just for the fun of it. They can invite a few other families or friends to attend.  Go over the list of possible party ideas with them. Let them choose one or come up with one of their own. Then teach them how to execute it.

Tip: One of the best places to find party ideas is in outdated library books on parties. You can find them at thrift stores and used book stores. They are worth the few cents they cost to buy.

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