A Tribute To Our Mother

by Jodie Palmer on May 13, 2012

We’ve hijacked our mother’s blog for a surprise Mother’s Day Tribute. We wanted to share with all of you, her dear readers and friends, how honored we are to be her daughters and what she means to us. We are grateful for your joining with us to celebrate our mother and yours. We hope you enjoy this song HERE, in celebration of our mothers as you read.

By, Kate Housten

I remember one of my favorite things when I was living at home was sitting in our “library” with you talking about our love for books. You taught me to hunger for knowledge.

When I was young you showed me how to make a meal out of almost nothing, how to grow a beautiful garden, and how to REALLY clean. You taught me how to be a homemaker.

The summer I wanted to study abroad in Europe and we had no money, you spent the whole summer baking cakes and selling water bottles with me. You taught me how to work for what I want and be creative doing it.

When I wanted to be a varsity cheerleader my senior year of high school, even though I had NEVER cheered before, you were right there the day of try outs to make sure I stuck it out until the end. You taught me how to dream, and dream big.

Growing up you loved to teach us how to make sugar eggs, ginger bread houses, and frosting flowers for cakes. You taught me the importance of cultivating my talents.

When you were in your 40’s, you had seven children, an incredibly busy life and yet you finished your masters degree. You taught me the value of education.

When times were tough and family life was especially hard I’d walk past your open bedroom door and ALWAYS see you on your knees. You taught me how to have a relationship with Heavenly Father and Jesus Christ.

Mom, it’s easy for us to look back on our time as a mother and wonder if anything we did gave our children what they needed to be successful in their life. Sometimes we look back and feel discouraged because as far as we can see, what we did wasn’t enough. But it’s the little things, the daily things you taught me that made all the difference. Because you were the person that you were, I am the person that I am today. Through your service to others, you taught me how to serve. Through your example of forgiving and being patient, you taught me how to forgive and be patient. Because you grew and blossomed, like the flowers out back in our garden, you taught me how to grow and blossom.

Now I’m getting ready to take my first steps into motherhood and because of you I am not afraid. You have already walked the paths down this unfamiliar road and through the wisdom you have gained, you will teach me what it truly means to be a mother. Thank you mom.

 

By, Marie Henry

Dear Mother,

There are so many things that I have learned from you but there are two things in particular that have forever changed me and how things have gone in my life. The first one was prayer. I remember always walking in on you praying. I knew Heavenly Father was your friend and that you trusted him.

When I decided to come back to the church I knew what to do. I knew I could talk to him about everything. That is was okay if I was angry, even at him, as long as I talked to him about it. That even if I sat their and said nothing at least I was in the right place. I knew I had to build up trusting him but I trusted you so I knew I would get there and that it would be okay. The second thing was to never ever give up, that change is possible and that it is very real. That you need not give up hope. There is a way to return to happiness, and it is through Jesus Christ.

The past 13 years have been quite the journey for me and my family. There were times I didn’t think things would ever turn around or feel differently, but then I would pray and get through the day. I knew from watching you that no matter what you don’t ever ever give up. You continue to fight even if the answer takes years to come.

Now look where I am at. I finally am loving being a mother, I feel content and peaceful with me and how things are going in my life, and I have the greatest man as my husband. There are many things I get to pass on to my children but the two things I continue to tell them about is to always pray no matter how you feel and to never ever give up, that Heavenly Father is there for us and no matter what you fight to stay on his side.

I know that one day you were praying, in the kitchen I believe, and you said to Heavenly Father that we would have all been better off if he had just sent us to someone else. He said to you that may be true but he sent us to you. Well I am proud that he did. I am very grateful to have you as my mother.

Our lives here on earth are meant to have trials in them. I left your home knowing how to make it through and come out the other side being a better me and closer to the Lord. Having less trials really doesn’t matter. That I know how to make it back home to Heavenly Father is what I came here to learn and learn it I did. I am grateful for the family I have and PROUD I get to say you are my mother. I love you

Love,

Marie

 

By, Jenny Johnson

I really love my mother. And it is one off those interesting loves; the bigger the love gets, the bigger my heart gets, and the more it makes me love the entire world. Amazing!

I remember being a child and mom would take all of her 7 children with her to the nursing home on Sundays just to visit the patients who weren’t getting usual visitors. It was the family’s volunteer work. That is how I now kind of define my life. I prioritize (highly) having volunteer work in my life that serves the geriatric population. Also, I just finished the endeavor of earning my Master’s degree. I will now start working as a professional in the skilled nursing home to serve the geriatric population with different modes of therapy. I feel so happy and grateful because I know that working in this environment and serving this population is really going to feed my life, daily! She has taught me that despite possibly never bearing children, there is a viable way for me to mother this world! I serve…and it makes me happy. It is how I run my life. This is the legacy my mother has left in my life. An ocean of thanks to you, my sweet mother.

A handful of years ago, when I was in a severe car accident and wasn’t walking, my mother flew to California and took care of me for 4 months. I mean REALLY was taking care of me. As if her 30 year old daughter was 3 again. Feeding me, cleaning me, helping me move from point A to point B, etc. That was such a wonderful blessing given to each of our lives because what came out of that intimate tragedy was that my mother became one of my dearest friends. I feel so supported, loved and valued and that, again, strengthens and augments my desire to serve and support this entire world, and it makes me love this world even more. A canyon of thanks to you, my sweet mother and friend.

What my wonderful, beautiful, vibrant mother is teaching me now about being a woman is that personal evolution never stops and it is never too late to become 10 times more than you have ever been. Beauty, wisdom, self-love, personal manifestation, grand service – these are things I am learning from her and really beginning to value because she is performing these things and becoming these things and mastering these things and it is all so amazing to watch! She is painting such a colorful masterpiece across the canvas of her life. She is leaving such a mark, and I feel so honored and blessed to be apart of it. I love you mom, to the moon and back! A universe of thanks to you for everything.

Jenny Rebecca

 

By, Jodie Palmer

I turned 40 years old a few weeks ago. It’s sort of a surreal experience for me, because it’s the only age that I distinctly remember my mother being. She gave birth to her last child at 40, and so have I. I am now where my mother once was, a place I remember her being.

A fascinating thing has happened now that I’m standing in the shoes I remember my mother wearing. She has suddenly transformed into something more than my mother. I’m connecting with her as a woman.

It’s been hard to try to put this transformation into words, or describe what it means to finally see my mother as a woman.

I hate to admit it, but my mother has never been a “real” woman to me. She’s been . . . my Mother. Something different than, “a woman.”

Through my life I’ve been walking these antipodal paths of both discovering who I am as a woman, and consciously putting myself together into who I want to be. But the change that has happened for me is that I am beginning to see my mother in the context of who I am as a woman—this complicated mixture of contradictions and messiness, grace and beauty, vices and flaws, backbone and tenacity, soft and tender places, guarded and hidden places, confusion and wisdom, fullness and emptiness and so much more all wrapped up in one heart.

I find myself feeling so tender towards her, not in a reminiscent way, as is usual for Mother’s Day, but in this current, primal, female, connected, Red Tent sort of way.

As I was attempting to write this tribute to her I came up with my usual celebrations of memories, the ones that have informed my whole worldview and way of being with the world. Like the time she packed us all into the car to return something that had recently been purchased because we needed the money. On the way out of the parking lot there was a man holding a sign asking for help. She rolled down the window and gave the man part of the change we had just received. She shared and gave, even when it hurt.

Or the time when she washed the body of a woman who had died who had no one in her life to give her that one last loving honor. She is a rememberer of the forgotten.

There are so many other memories that have served as the elements taken up as food by the beautiful garden of my life.

But, today I want to honor my mother differently than I have ever been able to before. I want to honor her as a woman. I want to honor her complicated, contradictory, messy, deeply beautiful, wise, lovely self. All of it is beautiful to me, and so needed by me, as a woman. All of her is so needed by the world. And the world is better for it—the little worlds of her children and grandchildren, the little worlds of her client families, the little worlds of her neighbors, and the strangers that cross her path. All these little worlds collide together in one big bang of goodness and beauty for all the rest of us.

That’s the beauty of women, we are wombs and birthers of beauty and goodness in the world through the complicated mixture of who we are. We are good for the world . . . And the Lord God looked and said, “It is good.”

I am honored to a woman born and grown from this woman. I am honored to have her blood and her bone, her spirit and her heart living in me.

I am grateful for these new eyes that have allowed me to not only see her differently, but see my daughters differently. I newly see, and feel, that we are sisters, we are friends.


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How we made Learning Inspiring!

by Mary Ann on May 10, 2012

Books, books, books. The center was full of them.

The three year old walked into the room the second day, stopped and said, “This is awesome!”

A mom stopped me at the door to tell me her nine year old couldn’t sleep all night because she had been so excited to come back the next morning.

At 9:30 on Sunday morning the phone rang. On the other end of the line I heard a woman’s voice saying, “I know its Sunday but I just couldn’t wait to call you. My two kids haven’t stopped talking about the center since we left yesterday. In fact they woke me up early this morning to talk about it some more. We have been playing with their screaming balloons.”

Every now and then we have the opportunity to do something wonderful! I just had that experience with the Love of Learning Center. Last year it was new and I learned some things. This year was practically perfect!!

Designing a space for over 130 children, for two days, that will really be inspiring, is a challenge and I and a staff of about 35 other moms and youth took it on.

under 3 station at love of learning center

I have to say that I had the most amazing staff! It was such a delight to watch Dave Schugk in the under 3 station for a whole day! He is a natural – patient and fun. The littles just loved having him there.

We couldn’t have done it without our youth in the baby station. Grey Boyce, Maryn  Taylor and Natalie Good rich played and played and played! I also want to thank two young men who just showed up and then stayed. Thanks guys, I wish I knew your names!

My hat goes off to Penny Robinson and Jodie Palmer who managed all these people and babies. These are amazing moms!!!

Our true blessing both days was Amber Wright who managed the bathroom duty and had her own staff of youth to get it done. Sara Rast, Chloe Tippets, Deija Schugk and Madison Boyce were terrific! Also Brittany Baron was huge help on Friday. With 135 kids you can imagine that they just about wore a trail into the carpet to the bathroom and the drinking fountain.

One of the most loved stations was the Performing Arts. Belinda Ballentyne and Beverli Haroldson were magnificent. They had children running, dancing, imagining and playing puppets. It was a blast.

performing arts station at the love of learning center

Music and imagination go together!

Another station that really rocked for the kids was the Games station. Here is where kids were able to let off a lot of steam playing Red light Green Light, Hopscotch, Button Button and Duck Duck Goose among other games. Nate Pack and Carol Cripps were perfect in this station – high energy and fun!

Did you know that this year is the 100 anniversary of the Cherry Blossom Festival in Washington DC and that the trees were a gift from Japan? Well it is. The children had the help of Britta and Carter Schugk to make a Japanese painting of cherry blossoms and also experiment with origami.

We were also only one week away from Mothers Day so of course we had to have a Mothers Day station. Kelly Tippets and Penny Robinson helped the children make two beautiful cards for their mom or grandma.

making mother's day cards pics

Making a Mothers Day card

Do you know how many batches of play dough it takes to make enough for 130+ kids for two days? Well we in the center know. It takes a lot. Niki Brown and Beverli Haroldson helped the children make some cute creations from play dough, beans, macaroni, wiggle eyes and beads. Little guys that looked like the green monster in Monsters Inc were very popular.

Making play dough creatures.

Science was big in the center. We had a station that dealt with the senses. Ever heard a screaming balloon? We have and it is fun. That little project taught us all about friction, centrifugal force, sound and so forth. The kids also made their own kazoos with tape, newspaper and toilet paper tubes. They had a ball and made a mess experimenting with a bucket full of confetti. If you stop spinning it the confetti falls out. I have to hand it to Gordon and Melinda Boyce and Heidi Sorensen for their ability to stay on their knees demoing how to clean up confetti and keep smiling.

screaming balloons pic

The screaming balloon was a BIG hit.

Another science station dealt with color. Spinning color wheels and color magic lava were a big hit. Ginger Silveira and Leah Cluff kept the eruptions in check and food color off the floors. Way to go guys!

My personal favorite was the coloring station. We had a plethora of markers, crayons, colored pencils and some of the most amazing pictures you can imagine to color. I might mention that the fabulous pictures and free coloring pages came from the Dover Free Sampler which I have praised before.

Sara Pack handled that station on Friday like any mom would – orderly, neat, with great picture results. On Saturday we had Aaron Hart with us and I have to say that the coloring morphed into some fabulous airplane making and flying. The difference between guys and gals!

Kym Peavoy, Suzanne Hanks and Savanah Hanks taught the children how to make their own books with needles and thread. The books were easy and turned out great. They also taught them to make monsters, germs and other unsavory creatures by blowing paint around with a straw.

making books picture

Binding our own books.

In one station we had some very old art going on. I did these things when I was a girl in the 60’s. Joanna Maymon and JuliAnne Zabriskie helped the children to make pictures from crayons, erasers and toothpicks. AMAZING!

Its amazing what you make with broken crayons and tooth picks!

Another really amazing center was run by Monica Minney and her son Lee. They taught the children to draw on their own slates just like in a one room school. Lee was a real trooper for two days and did a ton of drawing.

My hat goes off to Rebecca and Nathan Dilts. They also did a couple of olden day crafts which took a huge amount of time to prepare. I do not know how many hundred straws and how many hundreds of bits of construction paper were cut. Rebecca’s mom and Rebecca had busy hands in front of many TV shows!

Also a BIG thank you goes to Kate Houston and Carrie Chouquette who weren’t even part of our staff. They cut straws and Carrie’s entire family spent a lot of time taking the paper off of crayons among other jobs. Thanks guys!

I can’t forget the wonderful people who came and did special presentations for us. Bill Peavoy who taught the kids to juggle and gave them crazy voice lessons. Ten year old Luke Sorenson who taught us all about raising bees and 16 year old Julie Robinson who taught us some Polynesian dancing. We had another youth Shannon Hess who taught the kids how to survive in the wilderness and our own Britta Schugk who taught us about bones and things in nature. These moments away from the stations was a blessing to the kids and to the adults.

Learning a Polynesian dance.

Helping kids to love learning takes just a few things –

• Being present
• Being Consistent
• Offering Variety
• Keeping it simple and
• Making it special

We were able to do that in the Love of Learning Center at the Salt Lake City Family Forum and it was a tremendous success.

If you need help making your Spark Station or learning time or even family time inspiring then the Rockin Closet Idea Packet can help. Check it out.

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Earn a Mentor Package with the Home School Coach

by Mary Ann on April 25, 2012

What has happened to the Home School Coach? Where has she been the last couple of months? Did she stop writing, having Grandma School? Where in the world has she been?

You may have been asking those questions. For over two years I have been really consistent in posting new information on this site and in having and reporting on my Traveling Closet, among other things. Well, the last two months I have been really busy putting the Love of Learning Center together for the Salt Lake City TJED Family Forum. It has been a labor of love for sure. And just like real labor their has been pain and joy in the process. I am more than excited about the results, my fabulous staff and the many children that are coming. We are going to have a truly memorable time this year!!!

I also have a booth at this years Forum because I have a fantastic NEW MP3 download that I want to give away FREE to anyone who stops in and chats for a minute. I also have two amazing specials that will be offered at the booth. SO……I want to make sure that anyone who stops by is taken really good care of.

My handsome and really great "other half".

My handsome and creative “other half” is going to be there to take care of this issue for me. However, our newest son in law is graduating the same weekend as the Forum. I, alas, will not be able to see him walk across the stage and get that coveted diploma but my husband Don will do the honors for both of us. That leaves me with my current problem. Who can I get to replace him for a few hours at my booth?

Of course I thought of all of you! I am looking for someone who would like to meet and greet the terrific people who come to the Forum to become better and more skilled parents, students and people. I need someone who is really familiar with the concepts of the Closet, has atteneded any of my classes, lectures, or workshops and who would like to mentor with me.

If you fit that description please email me and we will talk. [email protected]

What does the mentoring package look like you ask? Well, here you go.

We will talk about YOU and YOUR family: something I can’t do on a CD, from stage, or in a workbook.

This coaching package is an $700 value!!

I will help you take a deeper look at:

  • Being Present
  • Structuring time
  • Hearing and responding to your children
  • How to enjoy being with your children more
  • Using the Family Chunk Clock to get a handle on your day
  • Overcoming the sensation of overwhelm!
  • How to stop yelling at your kids
  • How to re-script for more successful relationships with your children
  • The necessity of relationship before teaching
  • How to play at 100%
  • The difference between 1% improvement and the 100% devil that keeps tripping you up
  • And much more that relates to YOU and YOUR family

Stop feeling guilt. Stop being overwhelmed every day. Stop blaming your kids for your chaos, stop losing your cool. Love being with your children!

This coaching package is an $700 value!!

So if working with me one on one interests you come and “work” with me for a few hours at the forum. Email you desire to [email protected]. I am looking forward to hearing from you.

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My assistants, Matthew and Jacob Plain

Today is April 18 and time for the drawing for the awesome  Character traits curriculum/activities by George Rogers.

Do you see that picture up there? Those are my neighbors, Matthew and Jacob Plain. They agreed to assist me to draw out a winner. I wanted you all to know that I actually wrote your names on slips of paper and I had a drawing.

The winner is….Leah Spencer. If you know Leah then give her a call and check out the books. Congratulations Leah!!!

This is a really supper give away because the curriculum is just so good. The two books, one for  Grades 2-6 and one for grades 5-9 are together $59.90. George has them on special right now for $44.90 but he is giving all of you great parents out there a 25% discount  at his website. That makes them $##.75 if my math is any good. (Sometimes it is and sometimes it isn’t!) The promotion code to enter at checkout is MAJ. If you haven’t gone to George’s site and taken a look at what he is teaching then now is a wonderful time to do it.

George Rogers is the the founder and President of ChoiceSkills™.

PS I am NOT being paid to tell you about this curriculum. I just like it and I like George too. : )

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