Hope-Filled Fiction

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Trip to the Countryside

September 25, 2012 by Carey Jane Clark

Well this is a long-overdue post. Things went from busy to busier, with all the happenings here which I can’t wait to share.

First, we had our first overnight trip to the Chinese countryside. We thoroughly enjoyed the trip, from the local market, to the warm hospitality of our new friends. We were invited to the home of the father and mother-in-law of a friend of Brian’s. After our girls made a stunning performance in their wedding as flower girls

we were invited to visit the bride’s family at their farm, two hours outside of our city. The scenery was incredible.

The food was abundant.

They even killed the fatted calf–er, rooster.

And I  had a chance to “bao” (fold) “baozi” (a kind of dumpling) with the ladies at the home of the relatives we visited.

As we hiked up the mountain, Sweetpea leaned in and said, “The city is boring.” I understood exactly what she meant. However, there are certainly more coffee customers for JavaMan in the city ;) and we are blessed with our wonderful home here.

All in all, it was a wonderful trip we will remember for a long time to come.

- Carey Clark

Menu Monday

September 10, 2012 by Carey Jane Clark

Well, the official first day of school came and went and it does not bode well for the organization of the upcoming school year! I won’t be discouraged, however.

We had guests all weekend and our girls were flower girls in the wedding of some friends. The same friends invited us to her parents’ farm, and as plans go in China, things have been rather last-minute. There’s also the issue of a certain too-teeny kitten that we are hand-raising (don’t even ask)!

So the morning dawned late and when I arrived at the homeschool room discovered that the day before, everyone had gotten into everything and the room was completely disorganized and messy!

So the first day back to school became the first day to organize instead. We accomplished much, and the kids now know where everything in the room is supposed to be put away. I’ve made chore cards so they can keep up with things that will be distributed at the end of the school day to break the tasks into easy jobs like putting away the pencils, sweeping the floor, etc.

The menu plan, obviously, will be thrown out the window this week, but this is what we planned on eating:

Monday

Breakfast: Leftover Homemade Granola

Dinner: Crockpot California Tamale Pie

Tuesday

Breakfast: Pumpkin Muffins (make double batch and freeze the second batch)

Dinner: Crockpot Tandoori Chicken

Wednesday

Breakfast: “Buffet Oatmeal”

Dinner: Crockpot Paprika Chicken

Thursday

Breakfast: Toast with Gluten-Free Bread & Scrambled Eggs

Dinner: Country-Style Veggie Soup with Fresh Salsa

Friday

Breakfast: Breakfast Apple Crisp (this isn’t the recipe we use–ours has mainly yogurt–but it comes close)

Dinner: Homemade Pizza

Saturday

Breakfast: Pancakes & Real Maple Syrup

Dinner: Orange Chipotle Wings

Sunday

Dinner: Lamb and Cilantro (This is a recipe from one of my Chinese/English cookbooks, and I should post it here because it is a HUGE family favorite. If we get back in time from our trip,  and our internet is working again, I’ll post it here.)

Don’t forget to look up last week’s post for the printable meal planner.

- Carey Clark

Friday Fiction Fix: The Homeschool Experiment

September 7, 2012 by Carey Jane Clark

Friday Fiction FixYou may have noticed that for a couple of months there I was a little overwhelmed and didn’t post as much as I had been. So I’m catching up a little in terms of the reviews I’ve promised to people. As homeschool starts up again, I thought it was an appropriate time to review The Homeschool Experiment by Charity Hawkins. What’s that, you ask? A fictional book about homeschool?

In fact, yes. And it’s a wonderful read. Part chick-lit, part manual on homeschooling, part sage mothering advice, this book is a gem that I’ll probably read again. When it comes to novels, I want to be awed by the way the author puts words together, and I was not disappointed. But perhaps the most disarming thing about this book is the main character, Julianne Miller, and her very real life. Any mother who’s ever compared herself to others (and what mother hasn’t?) will relate to this down-to-earth character.

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The story follows her journey through a year of homeschooling, from her wide-eyed impressions of a homeschooling convention, trying to choose curriculum for a first-grader through to the last, somewhat victorious day of the school year.

At the beginning of the story, Julianne is clearly overwhelmed. She has good plans and intentions, even seeks the advice of others, but things quickly spin out of control. By the end of the story, she has found balance and is more sure of the reasons she wants to homeschool, although she’s still unsure about exactly what that will look like until the end of school or even whether or not she thinks their family is complete.

There was so much to relate to in this book!

Why You Should Read It:

If you’re a homeschooling mom, you’ll find so much comfort and wise advice from Julianne, but also from the network of friends who advise and help her through this year of homeschooling. You’ll see yourself on the pages, and you’ll LAUGH. A lot. Like me, you might even shed a tear or two. (But mostly you’ll laugh.)

If you’re not a homeschooling mom, but you’ve ever wondered what on earth is up with those strange folks who do and their wild “unsocialized” children, you’ll find a rare window into what the daily realities of homeschooling really are: the self-doubt, the frustrations, the rewards.

A lot of what Hawkins writes about applies not just to homeschool moms, but to any mom. What mother hasn’t felt like this?

I tried to make Daniel and Joy do math at the kitchen table, but they kept distracting each other, and I kept sending them to Time Out.

This is where I should have given up, but I didn’t. I kept heedlessly plowing full-steam ahead, ignoring any warnings of impending doom, like a smaller and crankier version of the Titanic.

But there’s also the profound and beautiful as Julianne stumbles her way to a better understanding of what homeschooling should look like for her family:

Homeschooling is a lot like my garden. It’s messy. My method seems haphazard. I am learning as I go. It rarely turns out exactly like I planned and the results are unpredictable. At some point along the way, I feel like a failure. But somehow the roots go down deep; the tender plants grow strong. And every single spring, every single summer, I am awed by the harvest God brings.
The author calls the book a novel, but admits that the story is biographical.

About the Author:

Charity Hawkins is a pen name, because the real author wrote candidly about her family’s life and wants to protect their privacy, because she doesn’t want to be famous, and because no one can pronounce or spell her real name. She does actually exist, however, and lives with her husband and three actual children in Tulsa, Oklahoma. They are in their fourth year of homeschooling.

The Homeschool Experiment is a definite recommended read. You can find out more about it at www.thehomeschoolexperiment.com or www.familymanweb.com.

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Buy After the Snow Falls

Menu Monday

September 3, 2012 by Carey Jane Clark

I am determined to get this year off to a good start. I’m excited about the fact that we’ll be spending the whole year in one place and in our beautiful new (soon-to-be-furnished) homeschool room! I’ve taken a lot of steps to getting things off on the right foot. Today, I spent the day printing out all my printables for the first few weeks of school: copywork, Bible memory plan, math worksheets and some grammar review. I also made some chore cards to simplify tidying the homeschool room at the end of the day. I’ll share those in another post this week.

One of the biggest hurdles for me staying organized is meal preparation. So I’ve made a complete September menu plan, heavy on slow cooker use, and I’ll be sharing that here, one week at a time on Menu Monday. Wherever possible, I’ve hyperlinked the recipes. For our family, breakfast is almost as big a deal as supper. Eating gluten-free involves coming up with a lot of alternatives to baking gluten-free bread constantly, so our breakfasts are pretty varied.

But in order to get breakfast eaten and start homeschool at a decent time, a lot of planning ahead is required. Here are this week’s meals, breakfast and dinner:

Monday

Breakfast: Leftover Sweet Potato Oatmeal Breakfast Casserole

Dinner: Indian Butter Chicken

Tuesday

Breakfast: Banana Muffins (make double batch and freeze the second batch)

Dinner: Crockpot Stuffed Peppers

Wednesday

Breakfast: Homemade Granola with homemade almond milk

Dinner: Chicken & Mango with Ginger-Curry Topping

Thursday

Breakfast: Toast with Gluten-Free Bread & Scrambled Eggs

Dinner: Country-Style Beef and Green Pepper Soup

Friday

Breakfast: Bircher Muesli (this isn’t the recipe we use–ours has mainly yogurt–but it comes close)

Dinner: Sushi

Saturday

Breakfast: Mexican Breakfast Casserole (this is my own creation–a variation on this recipe with salsa added to the eggs and fried up in the electric skillet–oh yum!)

Dinner: Vegetarian Southwestern Soup

Sunday

Breakfast: Orange-Date Muffins (make double batch the night before and freeze half)

Dinner: Thai Chicken with Basil and Coconut Milk

To make this work even better, I downloaded, printed and laminated the poster below for our fridge. Now I’ll never have to wonder about the answer to the question, “What’s for dinner?” I’ll be able to simply point to the chart! To download this poster yourself, click on the image to be redirected to the designer’s site.

- Carey Clark

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