Paint the Window

When you have a 2 year old and a 3 year old you can never get enough paint. There’s the squishing and the experiencing to the full that is a mandatory part in all toddler and preschoolers’ play. But if you’re like me, sometimes you just don’t want to do the whole mess of paint thing.

So we did this:

Used: Ziplock/Hefty Storage bag, 1+ colors of paint squirted in, tape it to the window or play at the table.

 Rachael wrote letters in it. 
It lasts about 3 days on the window before looking “less fresh”. 😉
 We even used our feet!
(Love their creativity)

And we adored every second of it.

Little Guy

We had a little guy for respite the past nine days (thanks, Matt, for the math). I can’t give out a whole lot of details about him, but I can tell you that he was tiny enough to utilize all of Hannah’s “new baby” things and sleep for the majority of the day and night (bonus!).

We weren’t given more than a handful of sentences of vague instructions on him so Matt and I studied him to figure him out. Since we weren’t given a general bedtime for him, the first few nights were very trial and error oriented. But we eventually fell into a “normal” routine with him.

The girls adored Little Guy, enjoying his “real life doll” qualities and returning him when their attention spans moved on. “Where baby go?” was a common phrase from Abi as she suddenly came to the reality throughout the day that she hadn’t checked on Little Guy recently.

She was always ready to hold him, 
never turning down a single offer. 

 Look at her little Mommying. =) She was so preciously gentle with him.

Little Guy just snuggled right into our family and provided (Matt and I joked) “training wheels” for our soon-to-be addition of Hannah. I even got to play with cloth diapering Little Guy when he ran out of disposables a day and a half early of his pick-up date.

Little Guy… I don’t know if we’ll ever get a chance to meet you again. But I won’t forget your snuggles. And the way you scaled my shoulder, from the outside in, a few days after you met me until you were comfortably nuzzled in my neck. Thank you for trusting me.

Trust may not come easily to you. Most babies your age are more entertained by faces, studying them and wanting to interact with them. It took you a while to watch my face for more than a glance-by. You studied objects and flocked to fluorescent lights. Maybe faces were too inconsistent for you. Maybe you were guarding yourself. Maybe the lights reminded you of the NICU. Who knows. But thank you for getting to the point of studying my face for a few minutes by the end of your stay. Your eyes spoke volumes.

Precious boy, if I can leave you with nothing else, I want to leave you with the hope you listened to me singing with the congregation on Sunday morning. With your ear to my heart you heard:

” How sweet to hold a newborn baby;
And feel the pride, and joy he brings;
But greater still the calm assurance,
This child can face uncertain days because He lives.
Because He lives (you) can face tomorrow;
Because He lives all fear is gone;
Because I know He holds the future,
And life is worth the living just because He lives.” 
 (“Because He Lives” by Gloria & William Gaither copy write 1971)

And
“I need no other argument, I need no other plea;
It is enough that Jesus died,
And that He died for me.”
(“My Faith has Found a Resting Place” by Lidie Edmunds & William Kirkpatrick to a Norwegian Folk Melody.)

I sang these over you throughout the week. And I prayed over you that you would one day see that despite the pain and loss and uncertainty, Jesus is more than enough. No other argument than Jesus is needed in this world and because of His hope, tomorrow is able to be faced.

Thank you for the opportunity to love you, sweet Little Guy, and if we never meet again, I take comfort in my prayers and my family’s prayers for you not falling on deaf ears.

I loved you like my own, Little Guy, even if we only had you for a week.

How you blessed us.

– Thank you, Jesus.

To Do and Done

So in efforts to communicate trust, encourage autonomy AND teach isolation of tasks as well as responsibility to clean up after the isolate tasks, I stumbled across this idea and of course modified it to fit our needs.

With a three year old and a two year old (plus the reality of one on the way soon), I was trying to find a way to offer them choices (within my ability and personal reigns) of activities throughout the day.

So I came up with this idea spurred off of the other ideas I saw on pinterest that were modified chore chart ideas.

I got three small metal pizza-baking sheets from Walmart for $0.92 a piece. I made sure that a magnet would stick to these trays before purchasing them. 😉

Then I bought a roll of magnetic stick-on tape for $2.99 from Joann Fabrics.

Then I got a roll of painters tape because we didn’t have any for $2.00.

After finding colorful clipart pictures of all the 31 activities I can currently offer our children to do in our household or in our yard, I pasted those activities into a word document. Since we have non-readers, I used bright, colorful pictures and put the words underneath the image to describe the tasks. I decided to print off two copies of the four pages of pictures (one for each child) since some activities I wanted to offer both the girls to do at once. I also added in age-appropriate helper tasks into the mix as well (ex. washing the table, helping with laundry, making their bed – I don’t mind what it looks like-, helping with dishes, setting the table, etc.).

After printing those off onto a cardstock heavy paper, I cut them out in small squares. Then I laminated them (I used clear packing tape because I had it around the house and didn’t have any laminating sheets. This required a significant amount of more work, by the way. But I didn’t mind since I was in no rush to get the project finished). After laminating them, I put a small piece of magnet on the back of each task.

The play activities available.
The chore/helper activities available.
We store all these pieces in a hefty bag. 
I put the chores in a separate bag in the hefty bag so I can easily find them.

I wrote  “To Do” on one side of two of the trays and “Done” on the other side of the same two trays, dividing the areas with a line of tape. Then the third tray poses as an options list for the girls to pick from.

With a little bit of sticky tack, all three trays were easily mounted to the wall at “kid height.”

Each morning I pick out the tasks that I am offering the children to do for that day, allowing me to rotate through some of the tasks they forget about because they are not actively in front of them. I also put up on their “to do” lists two responsibilities per day. The girls then get to pick from the 6 or so items on the options list and move them onto their “to do” part of their lists.

 Rachael’s list (arranged by Rachael)

Abi’s list (arranged by Abi)
The “choices” tray that the girls pick from.
We store the choices in a hefty bag with a magnet 
attached to the back so it hangs onto the microwave. 😉

We keep the lists by the kitchen table. 

When the girls finish one task, they get to decide what they want to do next. After one task is completed and cleaned up completely, they get to move the magnetic picture to the “done” side of the list.

The results of this project?

  • The girls are THRILLED to pick from the tasks and have control in the planning of their day.
  • Things get cleaned up right then and there, not accumulating for a long and exhausting clean-up time at the end of play. 
  • The girls are THRILLED to help out around the house and often pick to do those tasks first. 
  • Creativity and Imagination is fueled by playing with isolated groups of toys (ex. the toolbox saw was used to give “haircuts”) that the girls would have otherwise walked by on the way to their “normal few” toys. 
  • There is more cooperative play due to the variety and newness of toys/activities. 
Completing the Helper Chores on the List: 
 Rachael making her bed
 Abi living up making her bed. hehe, look at her smile.

 Not too bad finished product. 
(I seriously couldn’t care less what it looks like).
Washing the table – oh what fun!
And the chairs too?! Yes please!!!

I have chosen not to limit the play to the “to do list” activities alone (sometimes dolls just have to be a part of the lego play because I have two little “Mommies”), but I have found that the things I thought the girls “needed to play with” each day has grown in variety and their creativity is really blossoming.

I also enjoy about this new way of doing things that I can always adapt the “to do list” options as they grow older. It’s simple to print off a few new choices, laminate them, put a magnetic strip on the back of them and add them to our rotation of activities offered. I like the flexibility, as well, of offering tasks based on the day’s weather, my level of pregnancy restrictions, and the level of mess involved. For example, I coupled painting with washing the table one day. It was nice to have helpers cleaning up in more ways than one. =)

Hopefully this idea is helpful to you too. It has added much joy in accomplishment and independence to our household while allowing Mommy some free time (which will soon all belong to Hannah. hehe) to get some “Mommy only” housecleaning done. 

Total Cost:

$7.75 (excluding cost in ink/paper to print colored pages – since I already had this- and excluding laminating costs – since I just used the tape we had) and about 5 hours from researching the clipart pictures, printing them off, cutting and applying lamination (my method would take longer than laminating them through a machine), putting the tape on the trays and then mounting them to the wall.

Total Items Needed:

  1. 3 flat pizza or cookie trays
  2. Painting tape 
  3. 4-8 cardstock pages for clipart signs
  4. Colored Ink/Printer
  5. Lamination (packing tape or actual laminating sheets)
  6. Roll of tape-backed magnets
  7. Scissors 
  8. Sticky Tack
  9. Ziplock/Hefty or sandwich bag
  10. Time and patience. 😉

I also used the lamination time to pray for my little girls and ask God for help in encouraging their individual likes/dislikes and blooming character more in our daily lives.  This provided a nice opportunity to thank God for the blessing of serving my little girls as well. =)

– Enjoy!

Cheap and Easy Done Right

Had the joy of making my dear friend, Kassie, a nursing cover last week. I got so excited after making it that it was hard to contain my joy in getting it to her.

The project cost a total of $12 ($6 to Kassie for fabric and I grabbed a $6 cost for the D-rings and the boning).

$12 total is much better than the $30 that these things sell for. Plus, we got to custom pick the fabric and the dimensions for Kassie.

It was fun to see something, think “I could do that”, find an easy and free pattern WITH PICTURES online and then make it in 2 hours from gathering supplies to calling Kassie for a drop-off time.

Starting materials:

Finished nursing cover (as modeled by bear):

=D

It was a fun and relaxing project done after the girls went to bed.

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