"You shall love the LORD your God with all your heart, with all your soul, and with all your strength. And these words which I command you today shall be in your heart. You shall teach them diligently to your children, and shall talk of them when you sit in your house, when you walk by the way, when you lie down, and when you rise up." Deuteronomy 6:5-7



Wednesday, April 13, 2011

A-Share

"Most of us are tactful enough with other adults not to point out their errors, but not many of us are ready to extend this courtesy (or any other courtesy, for that matter) to children." - Holt

I really like this. I enjoy the sweet mistakes of my children.

When my Emma was still in preschool, they had show and tell every Friday. Each week they had to bring an object that began with a certain letter of the alphabet. For some reason my daughter thought it was called "A share" instead of "share" (and she didn't pronounce it as the article "a" but as the capital letter A).

Each week she would say, "Mom, I need to take something that starts with a __ for A-share this week!"

It was so cute.

My girls call high heel shoes "heel high shoes"

Emma used to call my chapstick "leetstock"

Miley still asks me to "holdge" her and she still calls my hair her "taggies."

Instead of counting how many days until some event, they count how many "naps" until that event. And the naps aren't even real naps; she means how many full night sleeps. Recently we counted how many naps until our talent show.

These are all beautiful examples of things that I don't want to correct, just yet. My children will learn them as they grow. I don't want go around telling them that their pictures don't look just right, that their dance moves aren't perfect, that they sing the words wrong, etc. I want to celebrate that she rolled the bowling ball down the lane, that she kicked the ball somewhere, and that she tries to pull her bed sheets up to her pillow all by herself.

I want to let them just be children.

Twenty and Ten

We finished this book a few weeks back and I just had to post about it.

This book is stunning!


Twenty school children hide ten Jewish children from the Nazis occupying France during World War II.

During the German occupation of France, twenty French children are sent to a refuge in the mountains. When 10 Jewish children are brought to the school, hiding them seems like a game -- until the Nazis arrive, and ten lived depend on the cunning and courage of twenty. An astonishing, beautiful tale based on a true story.