Thursday, April 30, 2009

A Decorative And Healthy Dessert


I don't often post recipes, many of you know why this is - I'm not the most creative or capable cook. As I often put it: I CAN cook. I DON'T cook.

Or bake for that matter
, though I DO make birthday cakes each year and managed a strawberry chiffon pie a few weeks ago. But usually I am one to just whip something together and place food on the table, in no particular fashion.

My son, it turns out has other ideas. perhaps he has spent to much time in Japanese restaurants, where presentation matters. Or maybe he is just a bit more creative.

Either way, one night he requested a glass, some skewers and a variety of fruit and "made dessert".

Who can argue with perfection - healthy, tasty and pretty too!


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Sunday, April 19, 2009

A Birthday Party Craft - Eco Art


Though I recycle, recently I have been trying to reuse before I recycle. This has resulted in a huge pile of boxes, egg cartons, plastic trays, paper towel rolls, plastic bits and bottles and a wide variety of bits and pieces in my playroom designated for “crafts”.

It has gotten a bit out of hand.


So, I borrowed an idea from my friend Prism and included an eco art station at my son’s birthday party this year.


The set up was simple. I pulled out and organized my boxes of crap recycle items and set up a table with glue, pom-poms, pipe cleaners, markers, scissors, some bits of fabric, buttons and beads. I eschewed the Glue gun and instead supplied Tacky Glue and some old bottles of colored and glitter glue. I also skipped the paint as I thought party guests’ parents would be less than appreciative.


It was, fortunately, a hit. Rather than give them direction (I had considered showing them how to make a diorama) my son and a friend made a few samples of various things that could be done and left them on the table. No more direction needed.


….which meant while children happily glued and cut and pasted, I could enjoy the party.


Added bonus- now all of those boxes, rolls and various bits and pieces of recycle stuff adorn my guests’ parents’ homes…not mine!





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Tuesday, April 07, 2009

Raising a Bibliophile


I've been asked to review two books targeted at the youngest bibliophiles. (You can read the review here.) Perhaps it would be better to say that they are targeted to those interested in creating bibliophiles from of our newest members of the planet – of which I am one.

With all of the screen time activities available for both children these days, an interest in reading has all too often taken a back seat to more passive activities involving a screen. I know, I know, video games are hardly passive, but it’s a rare screen activity that both provides information and develops imagination. So, I’m a reading buff.


I tried to instill that love in my son at the very earliest age…that is when he was an infant. I spent those hours and hours of down time, in between nursing and frantically trying to squeeze in my work, reading everything I could about child rearing. I discovered that whenever I read a brightly colors book with pictures of babies, he was happy to “read” along.


This lead to months of reading board books to my infant and then longer and harder books. It has lead to my haunting library book sales, yard sales and used book stores trying to find books on every subject under the sun. it has lead to a house filled with children’s books.


For years he would spend hours at a time (OK. Not hours, who am I kidding?) leafing through the stacks of books that lie in every corner of the house. Now he reads by himself, but…also just looks at the pictures.


This has lead to my not always subtle query, “Did you read it or just look at the pictures?” Often the answer, is, “I just looked at the pictures.” This, I must say, frustrates me.


But, I’ve come to terms with it. My goal was perhaps not necessarily to create a bibliophile, but to raise a child who loves books – or is that the same thing? If a child loves to look at the pictures as well as read, is that bad or is it a sign that he knows information is be found there? And perhaps that’s a good thing. It sure beats relying on the often misleading information on the web.


When he finally does start doing research on the web, I’ll have to instruct him, as I do the college students I teach, that there are facts, opinions, gossip and blatant untruths on the web…and how to tell the difference.



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