Painting – With Cars

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On my own, I never would have thought of taking Becca’s cars and running them around on paper… after running them through paint.  But there is a really neat place here in town called Artworks Studio that has a great “open art” play time.  Our MOPS group went to it and one of the activities was painting with a car.  Becca LOVED it.  So, I decided to recreate that activity at home with some of her cars – and her monster truck.  Note that yes, we did use acrylic paint, and yes, some little bits of it stuck permanently to the cars. That wasn’t a problem for us.  If you want to maintain your cars, be sure to use something washable like a fingerpaint.  We had a really great time with this, and then were able to take one of our sheets and immediately turn it into something super useful – I punched flowers and butterflies out of one of the pages and ran them through my Xyron Create-a-Sticker Sticker Maker (aff link – thank you!) and Becca was able to use the stickers on a birthday card to send to my grandma.  So it was really neat to mail out some of her art the next day afterward.  Usually we keep it around to use for our 2016 calendar.  Here are a few pictures of our fun… and yes, Becca painted her hands.  I just didn’t fit those pics into the collage.  This silly girl… can’t paint anything without totally painting her hands!

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I’d love to have you follow my Facebook page, where I share fun ideas from lots of bloggers, as well as run a special series each day at noon where I share favorite books to help build your home or classroom library.  Please note that the way Facebook selects pages to view on your timeline is based on your interaction with that page.  Be sure to click on over to my page frequently to see what Facebook might not be showing you, and click “like”, “comment”, and “share” on my posts to ensure that Facebook will show you what’s going on on the page!  The more you interact, the more that should show up on your news feed!  www.facebook.com/butterbeesandbumbleflies 

Teaching Your Child To Pray

Many of my posts are simply applicable to any preschool parents.  I realize that this post might not apply to your faith or your religion, but here’s what we’re doing in our home based on our beliefs.  I hope it is helpful to those who are of similar beliefs.

It begins simply – with a prayer before a meal.  Once she could speak, we started having Becca say the blessing.  It’s very basic.  “Dear Jesus, Thank you for our food.  Amen.”  It’s not anything other than a basic realization of the need to stop and say thank you.

As she has grown, the prayer over her at bedtime went from a silent prayer in my head while feeding her her bottle, to a spoken one, to now one that she actively participates in.

So how do you do this with your kids?  It depends on their ages and also their level of vocalization and understanding.  I started simply by having her think of anything or anyone she wanted to say thank you for.  It’s important for the concept of saying “thank you” to be introduced BEFORE telling your child they can ask God for things.  We are all selfish beings, but children don’t understand their selfishness or have an ability really, to control it.  So before you equip them to ask, equip them to THANK.

It’s easy for little ones to quickly think of THINGS to be thankful for, so after a few weeks of merely saying thank you for one thing, prompt your children to think specifically of PEOPLE they are thankful for.  Rotate different nights whether you have them think of a thing or a person, and if you’re working on counting concepts, maybe have them think of TWO things or TWO people.  Once this concept is fully grasped, you could easily combine them – Thank God tonight for two people AND two things.  Becca loves for me to hold up my fingers and then fold them down when she has said one.

Once your little ones have grasped the things and people concept in their thankfulness, add in thanks for an activity they got to do that day.  It helps them to think back through their day, and decide something that they really enjoyed that was special.  Then add your people and your things as well.  A sample prayer might sound like ours last night (1 activity, 2 people, 3 things):

Mommy: “Dear God, thank you that we got to______”
Becca: “Color pretty pictures today.  And…. two people… thank you for Mommy and for Daddy.”
Mommy: “And please help Daddy to feel better and his tummy not hurt anymore.”
Becca: “And thank you for my pirate ship, and my rocking chair, and my lamp.”
Mommy: “And thank you for Becca, and for Baby Grayson.  Please help them to sleep good tonight and have sweet dreams and keep them safe all night long.  In Jesus Name, Amen.”
Becca: “Amen.”

Then, as you begin to roll into asking God for things, explain to your child that as you’ve been modeling (I always say the last part of the prayer the same), we can ask God to help us with things.  We can ask God to help us to sleep good, to remember to be kind to our siblings, to remember to use respectful words, to help us to obey Mommy and Daddy even when we don’t really want to, etc.  It’s important that a child knows they can ask God for help, and that He will listen.  We won’t hear an audible answer, but He will be there listening, and He WILL provide us the help and encouragement we need just when we need it.  That’s an important concept for children to understand.

It’s important to explain to children who then understand the concept of asking God for help, that God isn’t like Grandma and Grandpa or Santa Clause.  We don’t  ask him for THINGS.  He isn’t the genie in Aladdin’s lamp.  We don’t just pray and ask God for STUFF.  And sometimes when we ask him for something, the answer might be “no,” or “not right now.”  For example, if we pray for healing for someone, they might not get better, or they might even die.  That doesn’t mean that God doesn’t love us or that person.  It just means that His plan is WAY bigger than we can understand, and His timing is very different than ours.  It could mean that his way of healing them was to make them not ever have to suffer anymore – at all.

Obviously this concept is really tough.  As an adult, I struggle with it.  But I think you’ll be amazed – children have faith that can move mountains.  They dream big.  They imagine.  And many times their faith can be strong because they have the ability to pretend and to believe.  Becca went running all over the house two days ago looking for God because as she said “Mommy, I hear a voice.  I think God is talking to me.  I have to go find Him.”  That’s faith.  I told her “God is everywhere.  Maybe you need to just stop running around and just sit down and listen.”  (Zing.  Turn those words right around at myself.  How often do we as adults go running around, when really we just need to sit down and listen?)

In Matthew 18, the disciples were fishing for a complement.  They asked Jesus in vs 1, “Who, then, is the greatest in the kingdom of Heaven?”  Don’t you know they were waiting for Him to say “well, you are because you are my disciples.”  But that is NOT what He said at all.  Instead, he called a child.  “And he said: ‘Truly I tell you, unless you change and become like little children, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven.  Therefore, whoever takes the lowly position of this child is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven.  And whoever welcomes one such child in my name welcomes me.'” (18:3-5).   A child-like faith is IMPERATIVE to enter Heaven.  So don’t EVER underestimate your children and their ability to understand God’s promises for them, or their ability to communicate with Him.  You just need to guide them along the path so that they’ll learn how to begin that communication process.

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An additional note:
If you’re looking for a fabulous way to introduce your kids to the Bible, you’ll definitely want to purchase this book (aff link) The Jesus Storybook Bible: Every Story Whispers His Name.  It’s a fabulous version of the Bible that you can truly start in the beginning and read a story every night to your child and walk them through the Bible.  It’s a fabulous lead-in to your prayer time.  I’m so thankful that my best friend got it for our kids!!!  

 

Geology 101: Rock Sorting

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This week our STEAM subject is Science, specifically, Geology – the study of rocks.

I love blogging activities that I’ve come up with to do with our kids.  But, I really love getting to blog about fabulous ideas Cody has come up with and done with them.  I love watching him interact with both of the kids, but he and Becca definitely have a very special bond.  This particular day was cold and just yuck… not a day for going outside.  So Becca pulled out her rock box, and Cody suggested “how about we sort your rocks?”

They proceeded to study each rock.  Here they are shown sorting them by size – and putting them in order.  But they also lined them up darkest to lightest, sorted like color shades together, and found other ways to group them like “sparkly” vs “not sparkly” rocks.

If your child has a rock collection, this is a fabulous, easy activity that doesn’t require any prep!  Just pull it out and use it when they are playing with their rocks the next time!  Note: it easily killed 20-30 minutes if you’re looking for a FREE, NO PREP time killer! 🙂

Need an idea for what to keep your rocks in?  Check out how Becca made her rock box here.

 

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Wacky Wednesday

  • “I’m gonna unload the dishes.  It’s gonna be loud.”  She hears me say this frequently, so she said it when she unloaded her pretend dishwasher – she had opened the oven first… 
  • “I can’t reach it!”  “Well how can you get it?”  “I could move my stool and climb up and then i could reach the top!”  And she did!
  • “I was sad but then I read books.  Books make me happy, Mommy.” 🙂  LOVE!!!

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The Importance of Family Playtime

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I’m sure you’ve all read those stories about how to set up the perfect movie night, or how to start having a family game night in your home.  If you’re like me, you’ve filed those ideas away for later – when the kids are older.  Those ideas sit in your little folder in the “picture perfect middle school family” file cabinet that your brain refuses to realize may never happen, because the “picture perfect middle school family” might just be a pipe dream.

But what are you doing now?  RIGHT NOW with your baby bees?  I know how hectic the evenings are.  Daddy heads home from work, Mommy starts dinner, sometimes family mealtime happens, or maybe you’re frantically finishing feeding the kids when Daddy walks in the door.  Or maybe you are a single Mommy who works and when you all finally pile into the house in the evening after a long day of work and day care, the last thing you want to think about is anything other than bath-bottle-bed kinda stuff as you long for a few minutes of “me” time.

Might I just challenge you with this post to set aside 30 minutes.  Just 3o.  Goal would be every evening, but goals aren’t always attainable.  So shoot for every other evening to begin with.  And have a family play time.  Not only is this good for your older kiddos, it’s VITAL for your Baby Bee.  Baby Bees learn best through observation.  They’re learning how to move, how to laugh, how to speak, from YOU.  So in amongst all the crazy evening schedules, we have worked to build in 30 minutes with our kids.  We put our phones away (although Mommy often snaps pictures!), the four of us go into Grayson’s room, we close the doors to contain the savage beast (ha!), and all four of us play on the floor together.

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We get to monitor Big Butterfly as she learns to carefully play with Baby Bee, and we also get to interact all four of us together – whether it’s playing with his big Fisher Price train, or reading books, or working puzzles, or building with his tool set, we are in the room with HIS toys that are all safe for him, and we are just hanging out.  Both of our kids have benefited from this time all together so much.  They often end up snuggling up to us, and wanting to be close.  Becca loves to get to play with Grayson’s toys, and to show him how they work.  It is a time of the evening that I have come to cherish – when time almost stands still.  When the stress and worry of the day gets left at the door, and we just go and laugh with our kids.  I hope and pray that you will take time to stop, and start smelling the roses.  Don’t miss the opportunity to spend time with your kiddos.  IMG_2665

Just keep in mind that your Baby Bees are watching.  And learning.  Fill up their little love tanks while they’ll let you… and maybe, just maybe they’ll continue to want that play time with you so that you really can become that “picture perfect middle school family.”  Because before you know it, it’ll be time to start planning those perfect movie nights, and family game nights will no longer be Memory and Candy Land, but Monopoly and Life and Ticket to Ride.