Wednesday, November 26, 2014

I am Thankful

I have so many things to be thankful for in my life. My family, my home, my friends, and especially my readers.

I'm so incredibly thankful to all of you who have bought the books, shared the books, and commented on the books. Without readers I would not be a writer.

I appreciate the thank you notes I have received and the reviews people have shared. I write not only to entertain, but also hopefully to inspire and empower others to follow their dreams, whatever their dreams may be.

I'm so excited about the new books I will be releasing this next year and want to make sure all of you fantastic and wonderful people out there are getting updates before anyone else, so if you haven't done so already sign-up for my newsletter. All you need to do is enter your email and confirm you want to be on my list and I will get those monthly updates to you, plus special sneak peeks.

Have a very blessed holiday and thank you again for reading!

Wednesday, November 19, 2014

Turkey Time!

As Thanksgiving approaches we are seeing turkeys everywhere.

Today, during our homeschool time we took a few minutes to create one of my favorite Thanksgiving art projects, Handprint Turkeys.

I have been doing the project for years, first as a kindergarten teacher and then as a homeschooling mama.

These little turkeys make a cameo in my novel, The Teacher, when kindergarten teacher Emma Hewitt is stapling them outside her classroom. So, here's a little peek at the project. I've included written as well as video directions. They are so simple and so fun, because the kids love getting the paint on their hands!!

How to:
Paint the palm and fingers with kids' washable, non-toxic paint. Then, press the hand print to the paper. When the turkey is dry add an eye, a beak, some legs and any other features you'd like to include.

Check out this video link to see the project:


Here's the final project with all the eyes and feet in place:
 
 

Wednesday, November 12, 2014

I am beautiful when I choose to smile...

I love to see my kids smile. I love to see my husband smile, my friends, my family, my neighbors. And I love to smile. It lifts me up when I give a smile and receive one in return. That's why I think it is one of the best ways to show off our beauty and say, "Look at Beautiful Me". It is one of our most attractive qualities.
 
A smile is the most inexpensive, easiest, and most powerful gifts we can give to anyone, including ourselves.
 
Need proof? Check out Ron Gutman's talk--which is very good and very short. So, even if you don't need science as back up to the benefits of smiling it is still a worthwhile video--about the power of smiling.
 
I believe in the power of a smile simply based on the evidence in my life, like the time I heeded the advice to give everyone I met a smile, because it might be the only one they get all day. Yeah, think about that. Have you gone through a day with no one smiling at you? Or you not smiling at anyone else? Yuck, huh? That's just a recipe for stress and icky feelings all the way around.
 
And I'm not lying when I say I've stood in the longer line at the super market just to be helped by the more smiley checker or chosen one service provider over another based on the fact that I could hear the smile in their voice when I talked to them on the phone. It is so simple and yet so overlooked in our society, because we make up excuses all the time--too busy, too tired, too much work, too into my problems, too much effort.
 
I get it. I'm an introvert and smiling gregariously and initiating interactions with strangers is hard for me. But that's not what I'm talking about. I'm talking about receiving a person warmly. Bullies shut us down with their hideous scowls and fake smiles--smirks and jerks, who needs that?
 
A lot of times our self-consciousness drives us to smile less when we think our teeth aren't white enough or straight enough. Or that our lips look funny, but that's us being too critical of ourselves, and if someone does judge you on that then that's their shallow problem.
 
So, don't miss out on a chance to share your beauty with the world because you think there is something a little off about the way your lips curve or because smirky-jerky over there is leveling you with a scowl. Bring on that smile and show off that beauty.
 
How to teach it:
 
Model it: I will say it again, your children are watching you and they will see how you interact with people. And be sure you aren't short-changing your little ones with the beauty of your smile. Even if they've tipped over their cup at dinner for the hundredth time this month and they're ten. It's okay. Smile. If they feel the power of a smile they'll know how important it is to share it.
 
Follow their example: Honestly, kids are way more likely to smile than us adults. They still haven't been tainted by all those frownies out there yet! Which is good, so watch your children engage. I'm always amazed at how our daughters so openly offer a smile to someone new that they meet and I see how good it makes others feel. It makes me want to be more like them.
 
Hop on over to my Facebook page and join the smile campaign I'm starting. See the beautiful smiles from my life and share some of your own.

Wednesday, November 5, 2014

I am beautiful when I choose to be kind rather than mean...

This is the first line of my Mom's Choice Award-winning book, Beautiful Me. It is basically the premise for the whole book. When the wild idea to pen a book for young girls about inner beauty popped into my head I first had to decide what beautiful looked like.

Google (notice how Merriam-Webster is no longer our go to these days) defines beautiful as something that is "pleasing to the senses or mind aesthetically". Now, to me that means more than just a pretty face. Anyone can doll themselves up and put on a beautiful mask, but as we all know that artificial beauty doesn't last long nor does it "aesthetically please" the mind for very long.

So, I sat down with my bright idea and did what any sensible writer would do, I brainstormed. (I say sensible here, because I have been known to lose my sensibility while writing and forget the power of brainstorming when I enter that dreaded zone writers fear called, "writer's block".)

When I took a moment to really think about the beautiful people in my life or those people that I just genuinely gravitated toward, they were people who showed kindness. It is authentic kindness that I believe is at the root of true inner beauty. Show me a kind person and I will show you a flock of people attracted to that person.

Kindness can be hard to come by in this world. Why else do random-acts of kindness make such huge headlines in our newsreels? We seek kindness from others, because it makes us feel good, makes us feel valued.

Where kindness is absent, ugliness spawns. It is where malice, fear, and defensiveness brew. This is where parents jeer the other little league team that wins the game against their child's instead of extending a heartfelt congratulations for a game well-played and an experience shared. Kindness is absent when we refuse to tell the woman next to us that she looks fabulous in her $700 dress because you feel inadequate in your $40 bargain bin frock--when in all reality does it really matter what the price tag is???

Kindness is simply a choice. A conscious choice to be made and shared with the world. I would love to live in a world that blossomed with kindness, wouldn't you?

How to Teach Kindness:

Model it: You will hear me say this a lot. Parents and caregivers are children's most immediate teachers. If they see you acting with kindness they will likely follow suit. If they see you help the neighbor take out her trash, they will more likely grow up to help their neighbor take out the trash. And don't be afraid to teach your kids that they can help a neighbor or a grandparent without getting paid, to simply do it because it is the kind thing to do.

Talk about it: Bring attention to a moment when someone was kind to you that your child observed and let them know how that made you feel. Try to help your child talk about times when they felt someone being kind to them or when someone was not kind to them. This teaches empathy and helps kids to realize the impact of their actions.

Be patient: Young children are developmentally at a stage where their world's are all about them. This egocentric phase is normal and makes unselfish behavior less of the norm, but that will change and when their eyes open to the world around them all that teaching you have been doing about being kind to others will start to sink in. Don't give up hope if your little one isn't ready to share her mittens with another child right away. This takes time and consistent modeling.

Please share a story about how you have witnessed kindness from the beautiful people in your life.