Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Pumpkin Waffles

2 1/2 Cups flours (I use wheat, rice and tapioca)
1/4 C brown sugar
1 Tbs. baking powder
1/2 tsp. baking soda
1/2 tsp. salt
1 tsp. cinnamon
1/4 tsp. ginger
1 tsp. nutmeg
1 Tbs. lemon juice
2 Cups milk (I use rice milk)
1-15 oz can Pumpkin
1/3 C oil
2 eggs

It's easy. Mix the dry ingredients. Mix the wet ingredients. Mix the wet and dry ingredients together.
Pour batter onto a hot and oiled waffle iron. Cook until done.
Serve with applesauce and syrup.

Thursday, October 8, 2009

Poem: Two Gifts

I love you exactly, precisely, completely
The way that you are, through and through.
No sinister attitude nor smug ingratitude
Can change that, for my love is true.

But 'round the next bend could come trial or friend
Who grants you less gracious esteem.
More, you may aspire to lay hold much higher
Of that which you now only dream.

Unbridled appetites soon become parasites,
Hindering all you can be,
So I'll give correction, an act of affection,
I learned from the One who loved me.

It's not out of spite or some secret delight
That I faithfully purge your dross,
But to spare you much grief and buy some relief
Against disappointment and loss.

It may not be pleasant, this discipline present
I offer, unbidden, to you.
Yet through all the strain,
As you loudly complain,
I will love you, as love you I do.

Monday, October 5, 2009

Holly's Chicken Sesame

4 Chicken breasts, cubed
(may cook separately, or sub tofu)
1 small onion, cut in strips
2 stalks celery, sliced
2 carrots, cut in strips
1-2 heads broccoli, cut up
oil for frying
1/4 C soy sauce
3 Tbs. honey or brown sugar
1-2 Tbs. rice vinegar
3/4 C water
2 Tbs. corn starch
2 Tbs. whole sesame seeds

Heat oil in large fry pan or wok on med to med-hi heat. Stir fry chicken until loses color. Stir fry carrot & onion briefly, then add celery and broccoli, stirring often until desired tenderness. Mix remaining ingredients and add to pan. Stir until darkened and thick. Serve over rice.


Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Poem by Fannie Stearns Davis: For a Child

Your friends shall be the Tall Wind,
The River and the Tree;
The Sun that laughs and marches,
The Swallows and the Sea.

Your prayers shall be the murmur
Of grasses in the rain;
The song of wildwood thrushes
That makes God glad again.

And you shall run and wander,
And you shall dream and sing
Of brave things and bright things
Beyond the swallow's wings.

And you shall envy no man,
Nor hurt your heart with sighs,
For I will keep you simple
That God may make you wise.

Thursday, September 17, 2009

Roy H. Williams Quote

"Growing up poor gives you marvelous advantages. The people who love you are unable to hand you the things your friends take for granted, so you develop quick resourcefulness and humble audacity. .... Priceless."

Read more Roy H. Williams at
www.mondaymorningmemo.com

Saturday, September 12, 2009

Reply to Insecure Homeschool Grad

The social insecurity of a homeschool graduate is the topic of an article in the September 12, 2009 issue of World Magazine: http://www.worldmag.com/articles/15814 It prompted these thoughts.

I question if homeschooling is really the cause of Alisa Harris's insecurity. After all, "becoming comfortable in (one's) own skin" is not exclusively a struggle of homeschoolers, though theirs is the advantage of gaining some maturity before wading into it.


Harris's reason given for wishing to homeschool her own children is to spare them being hurt, or robbed, or demeaned, a rather negative way to approach the question, I think. Perhaps she is too close to notice the forest for the trees?

The benefits of homeschooling are often not easily quantified and may be missed in a profit and loss analysis. That Harris has the confidence to write candidly
about her insecurities in a national magazine may actually be a testimony for her education.

It's hard to believe that being educated in one's home would prevent someone from knowing about Michael Jackson or some other element of pop culture. How many homes do not have a radio or TV in them? Internet access, a library card, or a daily newspaper ought to be sufficient to keep a willing learner abreast of current cultural trends.

Does homeschooling get an even hand in these debates? When a classroom child cops a 'tude, we shrug and say, "Well, kids are like that," but when a homeschooled child hits a social glitch, we say, "Well, he was homeschooled, you know." Would that instead, we said of the young person who resents authority, "Well, his education was farmed out to an institution, you know," and of the one awkward around the opposite gender, "Well, kids are like that."

Wednesday, August 12, 2009

Homemade Cough Syrup Recipe*

1 Lemon, whole
2 Tbs honey
2 tsp food-grade vegetable glycerine

Boil the lemon whole for a few minutes; cool.
Half and juice the lemon. (Boiling it softens the skin, making it easier to extract all the juice.)
Mix juice with other ingredients.

Keeps in 'fridge for 1 week. Take by spoonful as needed for dry, irritated cough. Also good stirred into a cup of tea such as green tea for expectorant, or lemon balm and slippery elm bark for allergies.
*This recipe has worked for our family, but it is not intended as medical advice and should not supersede your own good judgment about what works for you.

Tuesday, August 11, 2009

Barbara Bush Quote Applies to Students

"If human beings are perceived as potentials rather than problems, as possessing strengths instead of weaknesses, as unlimited rather that dull and unresponsive, then they thrive and grow to their capabilities."
Barbara Bush

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Susan Wise Bauer Quote

"You must push back against an immoral ethic that says your worth as a person is measured by the visible results you produce in the world."

Monday, July 13, 2009

FDR Quote

"Any government, like any family, can for a year spend a little more than it earns. But you and I know that a continuance of that habit means the poorhouse."
Franklin Delano Roosevelt, 1932

Thursday, July 9, 2009

Multi-Grain Veggie Pasties Recipe eh!

This is a large recipe; it makes about 10 pasties.

CRUST:
7 C flours (2 rice, 2 rye, and 3 wheat)
1 1/2 Tbs. sugar
1 Tbs. salt

1 1/2 C oil
3 eggs
3/4 C water
1/2 tsp. vinegar

Mix the dry ingredients together, mix the wet ingredients together, then mix the two mixtures together, kneading with hands. Refrigerate crust while preparing filling.

FILLING:
4 carrots, chopped
2 small onions, diced
4 large potatoes, chopped
3 turnips (or 1/2 rutabaga), chopped
1/4 C oil
1 Tbs. dried parsley
salt and pepper to taste

Break off pieces of dough and roll into 8-inch ovals. Scoop about 1/2 C of filling or so onto dough. Fold in half and seal edges. Place on greased cookie sheet and bake at 375F for 40 minutes. Serve with sausage if desired.

Monday, July 6, 2009

Stealing Buddha's Dinner: Book Review

Stealing Buddha's Dinner served up a string of morsels reminiscent of my own memories of the 70's and 80's, and I had fun partaking of the nostalgia for the culture (or un-culture) of the time. There were other flavors too, ones with which I was unacquainted, from Vietnamese culture. By intermingling the two types of sensations, the author gave this Western reader a new perspective on her own society as well as a peak into a foreign one.

The story is a sad one on many levels, but the writing is done so poignantly that the telling of the story becomes its own vindication.

Sunday, July 5, 2009

Parental Rights Amendment

As a homeschooler, I am a big proponent of parental rights, believing they are among those implied by "among these are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness." Proverbs about mother bears come into my mind when I consider the infringements of governments and courts into family affairs and the increasingly institutionalized way in which children are being raised. So why won't I be signing a petition to amend the Constitution to delineate rights of parents?

First of all, the Constitution already retains for the people rights it has not spelled out: "The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people." -Amendment 9. I'm not a Constitutional lawyer, thankfully, but it seems to me that the spirit of this amendment would be weakened if further amendments were to follow it, enumerating various rights of the people. And where would it end? The right to choose one's own spouse, work, health care, dress? How many amendments would we end up needing? The principle is already there, and frankly, the political climate in our nation today does not seem conducive to making changes to a
document that has already stood the test of time.

A second but a more fundamental reason I won't be signing such a petition is that I don't look to the Constitution as the ultimate source of parental rights or securer of them. A parent's rights are of a higher, more basic nature, such that politically meddling with them can only weaken them. A funny thing can happen in the minds of free people when they place the confidence for their freedom in a person or a document; they can lay down their "eternal vigilance", which Thomas Jefferson said is the price of freedom, and become apathetic in their trust. Moreover, those entrusted with rights are just one election away from being replaced by those who would oppress. To my mind, a more potent course of action is for parents to assertively and gratefully embrace the rights that are theirs by divine right.

And so, instead of signing a petition for a Constitutional amendment, you will see me advocating homeschooling and other involved parenting. It's interesting to note that all of the terrifying anecdotes used to demonstrate the need for a Parental Rights Amendment that I have seen involve public school counselors or day care. One has to wonder, are parental rights being taken away so much as being given up?

Thursday, July 2, 2009

George Eliot quote

Enjoying this quote:

"For the growing good of the world is partly dependent on unhistoric acts; and that things are not so ill with you and me as they might have been, is half owing to the number who lived faithfully a hidden life, and rest in unvisited tombs."

-George Eliot, aka Mary Ann Evans