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Such a Time As This

Faith, Hope, & Love

07/22/2015

Picky Eating and Autism

Picky Eating and Autism

Picky Eating + Autism = You Need A Hug + Maybe Help

picky eating autism

 

Most moms are thrilled when their baby holds their spoon for the very first time.  Sure they are growing up but it is so exciting to see those babies change into little people.  Or when their little one year old eats their very first “meal”.  How about when they begin getting their own preferences and they tell you what their favorite food is?  These are happy beginnings.  Blessed milestones.  My oldest son has autism and other special needs including sensory processing disorder.  He was a wonderful eater as a baby and toddler.  I remember the thrill of beginning to feed him mashed sweet potatoes or his very first spoonful of butternut squash.  I always believed my children would be healthy eaters.  I shopped organic and bought healthy little snacks and tons of fruits and veggies for him.  I bought a baby book on how to make my own baby food and cooked, steamed, smashed, and blended all of his food into little ice cube trays and cups.  I knew that I would never deal with picky eating because I would model healthy eating for him… and he did eat anything I made for him.  All fresh fruit. Veggies.  Meat, eggs, breads, milk, feta cheese, broccoli – I mean just about everything.  Until that changed. In the months before he turned two years old he started gagging at certain meals.  He would proceed to vomit at the dinner table.  Sometimes in restaurants.  Sometimes when we were guests at other people’s homes.  This happened repeatedly but at first no cause was found.

picky eating autism

We gradually changed his diet to the foods in which he *could* eat.  Within months he became super picky.  He would only eat a handful of foods including chicken nuggets, goldfish crackers, pretzels, milk and cheese.  So many foods he once loved and enjoyed dimmed in the background.  Now his obsession with crunchy food and milk products grew as his sensory processing disorder took over.  About that time we found out he had some mild food allergies and sensitivities.  As the years went on we found out his allergies had grown.  He had many issues with his gut and later skin reactions, allergic shiners under his eyes, constant diarrhea.  My son went through a series of tests when we finally found out what we were dealing with.  His diet needed to be restricted once again in order for him to fight off and eventually heal from many of these allergies.  At times my son was shamed by others for not eating a healthier diet.  I, too, felt the weight of guilt for somehow allowing my son to eat what I knew he could for fear of going through more gagging, more meltdowns, more refusals.  I’m sure our story sounds much like yours or perhaps similar to a friend or relative’s child.  So many kids on the spectrum deal with food sensitivities, allergies, intolerances and at times simply “picky eating”.  The picky eating is not just stubbornness that needs stricter parenting, more rules, or just a “wait it out” mentality.  It most likely stems from Sensory Processing Disorder which effects how they use their muscles to swallow and chew and how food feels and tastes to them.  About 18 months ago, I spoke with his ABA therapist about including a food therapy program in his routine.  They not only agreed but completely helped me revolutionize the way A thinks about food.

picky eating autism

What we did for my son may or may not work for your child – depending on his or her stage of development and age.  There is hope, though, even if you are just beginning to walk this road.  Please speak with a Speech-Language Pathologist (therapist who deals with not only speech disorders but also feeding/swallowing disorders as well). He was around 10 or 11 when we started this.  The therapists and I picked one new food a week to focus on getting him to try.  Trying included touching it to his lips, tongue, taking a small bite, taking a bigger bite, eating a small sampling, eating it while incorporated into an actual meal.  We worked on waking up his mouth with brushing his inner cheeks.  He practiced biting more with his back teeth.  He need exposure to food that he was uncomfortable with being in the back of his mouth.  This was extremely hard for him.  Our therapists made sure we knew that this was ok.  He needed practice.  With exposure he would make it through this.  He tried more food than he had eaten in years.  Usually we followed the “a bite of his choice and then a bite of our choice of food” model.  Sometimes even different rewards other than food (think playing games while trying a new snack).

 

At some point during this new form of therapy, we also created a food chart.  It consisted of fruit/veg/protein/grain.  It was made with printed pictures that were laminated and had velcro on the back.  Every morning it was A’s job to pick wise choices for breakfast based on what pictures he saw listed on the side.  This trick works because it left the choice of which food he was going to eat in his hands.  Giving the child the power works beautifully here.  It becomes less a battle of wills, but of his own will and his own choice.  We talked to A about how our bodies need certain nutrients to grow.  We taught him the different vitamins and minerals that are important to ingest.  We spoke of what protein does and what grains do.  After weeks and maybe months of us discussing this with A, he started to make decisions on his own without the use of the food chart.  We sometimes still remind him that he needs to try the meat with dinner because meat has protein or that milk has calcium to make our bones strong.

 

You can only imagine my enthusiasm when this boy can go to a cookout or to our family Bible study and make healthy decisions about dinner without a meltdown.  When he chose to eat the chicken leg or sliced cucumber I almost cried.  He recently tried fried fish for the very first time at a friend’s house.  He told me it was yummy and he wanted to try it again.  He now eats a much longer list of food including: carrots, peas, corn, cucumbers, celery, broccoli, green beans, watermelon, apples, pears, peaches, oranges, cherries, grapes, all kinds of berries, fresh cooked chicken, chicken nuggets, hamburgers, organic hotdogs & cold cut meat (nitrate-free),  fried fish, scrambled eggs, hard boiled eggs, cheese, yogurt, milk, and juice.  He still doesn’t like food to be mixed up on the plate.  He still needs a low key environment.  We don’t push.  We only encourage.  He has come so very far from the days of eating about 4 foods total with meltdowns and gagging.  My only wish is that we would have started food therapy at a much younger age.  He has been in speech therapy since he was 2 years old and feeding therapy was never once mentioned as a possibility or an option.  He has a lot of issues with speech and muscle control in his mouth and throat area.  With more deliberate work in that area he might have come further so long ago.

picky eating autism

If it is your friend whose son or daughter is a picky eater, please have compassion on them.  You never know until you walk that same road what it is like.  Some of my other children have gone through short “picky” phases at age 2 or 3 years old.  I have never again faced the obsessions or avoidance which A and our family faced as a result of autism.

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If your child has sensory processing disorder or is on the spectrum – believe me, I get it.  If they eat like a picky little bird, know that I’ve been there too.  You are NOT a bad mom.  You are doing your best.  It took a trained therapist to make a break through with our child.  I am thankful for how far our son has come but don’t for a second think that it was easy.  To me, this breakthrough felt no short of a miracle.  Changing habits is a scary and steep road.  Sometimes it feels like you won’t make it to the end, but with the right tools it isn’t as hard as walking into this challenge with no one to guide you.  We need all the tools and resources we can get our hands on.  If you are avoiding going out to eat or sharing a meal with friends, if you are facing unkind stares or fears of rude remarks, you need to pause today and realize that this won’t be forever.  But if this is you, call your SLP (or find one) or your ABA therapist and ask about feeding therapy.

picky eating autism

I’ve attached a form to fill in for your child.  This is to help you organize your own feeding therapy program.  Enjoy!  Please feel free to leave a comment below about your experience with special diets, picky eating, SPD and autism.

 

Get the password here:

Suchatimesubscriber

 

Filed Under: Autism, Printables, Special Needs, Uncategorized Sasha

07/21/2015

Into the Lion’s Den {The Story of Kent Brantly, God, and Us}

Therefore, I urge you, brothers and sisters, in view of God’s mercy, to offer your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and pleasing to God–this is your true and proper worship. Romans 12:1

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 God’s Calling On Your Life

It was a hot sticky July morning the day I first heard his name.  Kent Brantly was a missionary in Liberia.  He had lived there for about 10 months when he became infected with one of the worst viruses known to mankind.  Little did he know, when he accepted the call to be a medical missionary in west Africa, that he would be swept up in the worst outbreak of Ebola that the world has ever seen.  He moved to Liberia months before the outbreak even began.  He had no way of knowing what was in store for him as he made the journey across oceans and continents. He chose to stay, however, even once he knew the risk.  He would not back away from what he knew God had called him to.

This story hit me very hard.  Here we have a doctor who probably could live a pretty comfortable life in the USA. He decided to take his wife and two small children and leave the comforts of home to live in a country with much different living conditions than what he had known.  When danger arose, he wouldn’t flee, even when he had a chance to leave.  He stayed.  He knew the risks but he stayed anyway.

Later that hot July night I was driving in the car and a song started to play on the radio.  It was a song I had not heard before, but forever it would be the song ingrained in my mind connected with this Ebola outbreak and this man’s perseverance and faith.

As the music began the words hit me:

“Your love is like radiant diamonds
Bursting inside us we cannot contain
Your love will surely come find us
Like blazing wild fires singing Your name”

I paused to listen, my ears tuning to the lyrics of this song.  The words forming pictures in my mind.  The song and story go hand and hand.  It put words to what I was feeling about this tragedy.

“God of mercy sweet love of mine
I have surrendered to Your design
May this offering stretch across the skies
And these Hallelujahs be multiplied” (Lyrics by Needtobreathe)

For days and weeks after I first learned of Kent Brantly and another missionary, Nancy Writebol, who worked alongside him, I prayed for them when I heard that song play.  Their story gripped me.  Kent had only seen one of the patients that he had treated survive this deadly disease.  It was a hopeless and dire situation.  Kent wrote about telling his wife that he had contracted Ebola in an article for Time Magazine, “Though the rest of my family wept, I felt strangely at peace. God blessed me with that peace that surpasses understanding. Since we had started treating patients with Ebola in Monrovia, we had only had one survivor. I had watched too many people die from this disease. Amber and I were both at the disadvantage of knowing how this illness ends.”

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Nine days later, they were given an anti-viral medication that had never been tested on humans.  This experimental drug, otherwise known as ZMapp, had only been previously tested on 18 monkeys.  The control monkeys died within 8 days.  The monkeys that received the drug survived.  Each monkey received a total of 3 doses, 3 days apart.  Kent and Nancy received one dose of this drug total.  Later on, 2 more people, who were also infected with this despicable disease, later died after taking this same drug.  This was a time of living the unknown.  There was truly no way to tell what might happen as they suffered and as so many prayed.

Kent and Nancy were both flown to a hospital in the US and they eventually made progress.  They both survived.  Kent not only made a full recovery but then proceeded to donate his blood plasma to three other patients who later came to the USA inflicted with Ebola.  That’s not all, Kent also was able to share his faith in Jesus on national TV as a result of this ordeal.  He was interviewed on September 5th by Matt Lauer of NBC News.

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We might ask why he would risk his life in this way.  Some say why not do missions only in America and not risk his life and his family in Africa.  Ann Coulter wrote a scathing post about this on her blog.   Many may ask why God wouldn’t protect him from becoming sick in the first place.  I would like to propose a different question.  I would ask what is your role in God’s design?  What is God calling you to? What are you going to do once you find out?   Are you going to run or are you going to surrender?

 

It dawned on me as I watched the news coverage and read articles pertaining to this story how amazing this truly was.  This man essentially sacrificed his own life for those of others.  But not only for the lives of others, for their souls as well.  As he shared the message of the cross with those from west Africa, the message of the Gospel got aired all over the west as well.  Those of us who are not afraid of meeting deadly viruses in which we don’t have the medicine to cure, who are not afraid of being so poor we don’t know where our next meal will come from, those of us who have never had our family torn apart by wars which ravaged our land – we need to hear the Gospel, too.  In some ways we might be harder to reach.  We might need to be gripped by the voice of the news and social media before we will listen.  And that is just what happened.  Him risking his very life – giving it back to God in an act of obedience and sacrifice is a thing of beauty.  It reminds me of what Paul writes in Romans 12:1 “Therefore, I urge you, brothers and sisters, in view of God’s mercy, to offer your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and pleasing to God–this is your true and proper worship.”

 

It’s a thing that we don’t often see and it is a thing that many can’t comprehend.  Paul says it well in 1 Corinthians 1:18: “For the message of the cross is foolish to those who are headed for destruction! But we who are being saved know it is the very power of God.”  I saw a glimpse of truth and a glimpse of true love when looking at this heroic act.  I saw a glimpse of what it is to follow Jesus.

 

Maybe God is calling you to be a missionary, too.  Maybe you have resisted.  Maybe He is calling you to have another child.  Maybe you are scared.  Perhaps to homeschool.  You are worried.  Maybe he is calling you to adopt an orphan.  It seems like too far a reach.  Perhaps to help the poor or the homeless in your city.  Or the women’s shelter or crisis pregnancy center.  These things may seem too much.  A step too far.  They are too scary.  Perhaps we feel that what we do won’t make a difference anyway. God has given us reminders in many, many books of the Bible.  We are not to live for ourselves.  We are not to live to keep us safe, healthy, and rich.  We are to share, to sacrifice, to give.  There are multiple verses about helping the poor, the widow, the oppressed, the homeless, the orphan – sharing what we have with them.  We ARE called to love them and not from a place of pious obligation or a legalistic spirit, but out of a place of true worship.  Knowing what God has called us to – to follow Him.

“Feed the hungry,
    and help those in trouble.
Then your light will shine out from the darkness,
    and the darkness around you will be as bright as noon.” Isaiah 58:10

I encourage you to take the advice found in James 1:22, “Do not merely listen to the word, and so deceive yourselves. Do what it says.” Sometimes, we over here in North America long for our quiet, safe lives.  We don’t want to risk anything because risk equals loss.  Risk takes courage in the face of the unknown.  We long for our shelter, for our life.  But, the needs are great in our world.  This reminds me of a verse from Luke 10: “The harvest is great, but the workers are few.  So pray to The Lord who is in charge of the harvest; ask him to send more workers into his fields.”  These were Jesus’s words.  We must pray for more workers.  If we are believers, we should all be workers and we should pray for more and more to step up and act. 1 John 3:17 says, “If someone has enough money to live well and sees a brother or sister in need but shows no compassion–how can God’s love be in that person?”  If we say we are a believer, a follower but we sit on the sidelines, what does that say about our life?  James 2:15-17 says, “Suppose a brother or a sister is without clothes and daily food. If one of you says to them, “Go in peace; keep warm and well fed,” but does nothing about their physical needs, what good is it? In the same way, faith by itself, if it is not accompanied by action, is dead.”

 

Not everything we do, as followers of Jesus, will look like Kent Brantley. Some “callings” might make the evening news.  Some may be written about in books for years to come.  While others might be private, small steps that you don’t even acknowledge as a call from God.  They may seem mundane to others and all the while God is using you.  The important thing is that we don’t back down in fear when God speaks.  We rise up.  We live to glorify Him.

 

I think of the story of Daniel in the Old Testament.  Daniel would not bow down and pray to any other God even though there was a law that would put him to death if he did not.  He could have hid and he could have backed down.  He could have thought that God would forgive him for giving in – it meant life or death after all.  He would be put to death if he didn’t obey the law of the land and pray to their idol.  He did what he knew was the only right thing, he continued to pray and worship God.  He was then thrown into a den of lions which was then sealed with a large stone.  That is not the end of the story.  God saved him and closed the mouths of the lions.  When the king saw that he had survived, he then issued a decree that the Lord God of Daniel was the true and living God. He said,

 

“For he is the living God
    and he endures forever;
his kingdom will not be destroyed,
    his dominion will never end.
 He rescues and he saves;
    he performs signs and wonders
    in the heavens and on the earth.
He has rescued Daniel
    from the power of the lions.” Daniel 6:26-27 

Had Daniel run away and hid, or followed the order to stop praying to God, King Darius would never have seen the power of God.  God was known and glorified through this story of an Old Testament Prophet and he was known and glorified through the story of this modern-day missionary.  What are you going to do today?  Has God called you into something – something you are slowly but surely backing away from out of fear?  Making excuses and justifications for your actions or your lack of actions?  Think again before you walk that road.  “For God has not given us a spirit of timidity, but of power and love and discipline.” 2 Timothy 1:7

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Filed Under: Faith, Uncategorized Sasha

07/18/2015

So-Long Supermom

So Long, Supermom

Saying Good-bye to the Lie We’ve All Been Sold

Supermom.  Have you seen her?  Have you met her?  It sure seems like she is everywhere these days.  I don’t know about you, but there is no way I can live up to her standards.  I see her posts on Pinterest.  She’s the one collecting dozens of recipes for the perfect birthday cake.  And then she has actually creates them!  I’ve seen her on my Facebook feed.  She lives a near perfect life.  No.   She lives literally a perfect life.  Or so it seems.  Her house is always clean, neat, tidy, organized.  Her kid’s hair is done perfectly.  All the time.  Their outfits are color coordinated in the newest styles straight out of the Gymboree catalog.  Her kids eat ONLY organic everything that is freshly grown from her very own garden which is growing in her backyard.  Speaking of meals – they are all gourmet.  Nothing comes prepared at her table.  Somehow all of her young kids are just perfect.  They don’t throw temper tantrums.  They potty train at 18 months.  They don’t sneak around the house and get into trouble.  They are tiny little angels.  And the birthday parties.  The birthday parties are extraordinary.  Bounce houses, clowns, barn animals, cotton candy.  You name it – she has hosted it.  Pure perfection.  Yup.  That is the Supermom I know.

Maybe Supermom’s kids are grown.  That doesn’t matter because she loves to remind you of how perfectly her kids behaved.  Or maybe how perfectly she dealt with their imperfection.  She knows everything there is to know about motherhood.  Her children might be 25 years old but she has all the answers and you don’t.  You can’t possibly know how to handle your kids because right now your kids are a mess. And hers?  Well, they aren’t.  It doesn’t matter that life has changed drastically each year since her children grew out of diapers.  We have the tummy time, side to sleep, the back to sleep, formula is best, breast is best, bassinets, cribs, slings and swings, hard sole shoes, soft sole shoes, solids at 6 weeks, solids at 4 months, solids at 6 months, no car seats, infant seats, boosters until age 8, backwards facing until they can hold a conversation and beg to be turned around, cloth diapers, disposable diapers, cloth again.  The information thrown at mothers is ridiculous.  And it is always changing.  You may have two babies 15 months a part and I can almost guarantee you that the information they share with you at the hospital on how to take care of your new infant will be slightly different between the two children.  The world is always turning and what is considered “right” or “best” in parenthood is too.  How can we keep up?  What’s more: how can Supermom?  But she can – she always will.

Here is the problem with Supermom:  It is impossible to compete with her.  Want to know a secret?  Sometimes my toddler screams and yells in public.  Sometimes even in the grocery store in the middle of the checkout lane the toddler throws a temper tantrum.  We’ve had those days where at least one of my kids got in the car and forgot to wear shoes.  To church.  I’ve had days of backwards clothes, mismatched socks, hair that was not brushed, and one too many frozen pizzas from Costco.  It’s not easy to compete with her because my life is busy and hectic and though I try my best, I’ve gone to bed with a sink full of dishes even as the piles of laundry grow.  I’ve had to handle 4 sick kids at 9 months pregnant and dealt with more sleepless nights than I can remember.  Life as a mom is messy.  It doesn’t matter if your kids are 2 months old or 12 years.  You are going to have bad days.  You might have a whole string of bad days.  You might be in a busy season where the crazy days leak into restless nights.

 

Here is another problem with Supermom.  You can’t believe everything she says.  She lies.  Her Facebook page is an illusion of what really happens in her life.  Sure, she has some good days.  Don’t we all?  She has bad days too – she’s just not sharing that piece of information.  She might tell you stories of how she knows the best way to change a diaper, the best age to start solids, why you shouldn’t use that brand of pacifiers,  the cleaning products that are all wrong, why her kid’s extracurriculars are superior to your’s  and even what dog is the best to own.  She’s not sharing her opinion but she’s pushing it.  Not in kindness but in arrogance.  She is kidding herself, if she truly believes she has figured it all out.  As James warns us,

 Therefore it says, “God opposes the proud, but gives grace to the humble.” James 4:6

 

Here is what we need to remember.  Whether or not Supermom is the complex we have imagined because of our own perceived weaknesses or the truth that we see coming from others,  we need to be truthful.  Honest.  We need to be transparent with one another.  Looking up the definition of transparent, I found the meaning to be “allowing light to pass through so that objects behind can be distinctly seen.”  We need to be so transparent in our daily life that God can shine His light through us so that other’s may see what is keeping us going.  We need to show other’s Jesus.  People that truly know me, know that I’m no supermom.  I try my best – but my best will never be good enough on its own.  I’m thankful that God, because He will give us much more than we can handle, is equipped to carry us through whatever trial we are currently facing.  Psalm 68:19 says,

“Praise the Lord; praise God our savior! For each day he carries us in his arms.”  Psalm 68:19

How profound!  He has been carrying me through this journey called motherhood.  I could not have walked this alone.  The more children I’ve had, I’ve learned that it is not about me.  It isn’t me at all.  It is God using my brokenness to fulfill His purpose.  That is a beautiful thing.  Homeschooling and keeping up with 6 young children is hard work.  Having a child with a disability is incredibly difficult.  Juggling the day to day activities that my children are involved with while maintaining a pristine home and homeschooling them is a feat not for the faint of heart.  There are plenty of days when I’m defeated.  Truth be told we all are.  We are not meant to carry this weight on our own.  So we run to God.  But we must also share our burdens with our sisters in Christ.  Galatians 6:2-3 says, “Carry each other’s burdens, and in this way you will fulfill the law of Christ. If anyone thinks they are something when they are not, they deceive themselves.”  Let’s be honest with each other.  Let’s show others what has us down so that they may lift us up in prayer.  We need to say good-bye to the Supermom complex – both in being her and in thinking we know her.  Because both are untrue.  We’ve been sold a lie.  So, first let’s face that reality and then let’s show ours.  Let’s meet others with the love of God. And as Paul writes in 2 Corinthians 10:17, “Let the one who boasts, boast in the Lord.”


Read my follow up here: Mommy Wars Mayhem.

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Filed Under: Family Life, Uncategorized Sasha

07/15/2015

The Wonderful World of Qubits

(In the spirit of full disclosure, this post does contain amazon affiliate links, which means that I may get a commissions if you decide to purchase anything from the following links. I only recommend products that I use and love myself!)

The Wonderful World of Qubits

This Summer has been a scorcher.  Day in and day out the outside temp is pushing 100 degrees.  We find ourselves spending more and more time in the cool of the air conditioned house.  Typically, we pull out the play-doh or the bin full of Legos.  Something has changed this year.  My 10 year old Lego loving boy has asked for a new creative toy.  A toy where he can make anything he can imagine.  What is this fantastical toy that stole his heart, you might ask?  The answer: Qubits.

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I knew little of this “new” toy except what I had seen on Shark Tank many years ago.  I had no idea that it had been created into a toy that is now being sold on Amazon.  After my son took one glance he decided he wanted that to be his new toy to use for his creative time.  He ended up saving up money that he had in his choremonster account and money he was currently earning from lemonade stands and chores to buy his very own set of 72 Qubits.

Here are some of his creations.

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a miniature chair

 

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a chair for a stuffed lamb

 

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A Qubit dog and a real one

You can see in the pictures that they are much different than the typical building toy.  These are made of only two shapes.  The flat shape that connects and pops together and small “bridge” pieces.  Many different 3-D objects can be made with these things.  These objects can be quite large, as well.  Many have been close to 4 feet.  I imagine if we had two kits the things he could make would be taller than he is.

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dog

 

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a bike

I like that these are made out of USDA Food Grade Plastic and they are made in the USA.  They seem well made. They encourage him to use his imagination.  He is not making any of this with instructions – other than how these things lock together.  He created everything from his imagination.

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a sphere

 

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some sort of contraption

 

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A Qubit Man

 

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A toddler talking to the Qubit snowman

I believe these truly encourage engineering and architecture skills.  It also helps him with problems solving.  I’m encouraged that he has found such a good use of his time this Summer.

 

 

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A Qubit Snowman

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A Qubit Rocket Ship – bigger than the 4 year old!

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Qubits are available for purchase on Amazon.com: Click Here.  Have you used Qubits?  What has your child created?  Leave a comment below!

Filed Under: Arts & Crafts, Family Life Sasha

07/14/2015

How to create your own Charlotte Mason Homeschool

Get Your Kids Excited About Learning

How to create your own Charlotte Mason Homeschool

 

When I first started homeschooling, I didn’t realize how many styles of homeschooling existed!  There are quite a few.  You have classical, unschooling, lapbooking, unit studies, Montessori, eclectic, DVD/internet based and Charlotte Mason methods to name a few.  My first year was eclectic, I suppose.  I followed a variety of advice from my closest homeschooling friends.  Advice which I was very grateful for as I navigated these uncharted waters.  As my first year drew to a close, I started to realize that there were these other approaches to teaching and I found the one that most resonated with me: The Charlotte Mason Method.

charlotte mason homeschool

Charlotte Mason was a teacher from England during the late 1800s.  She later formed a training school for people working with young children. According to Simply Charlotte Mason, “Charlotte was nearly fifty when she moved to Ambleside, England, in 1891 and formed the House of Education, a training school for governesses and others working with young children. ” She wrote many books on her philosophy of education.  Eventually, schools began using her approach to teaching children.  How does a woman who lived during the turn of the 20th century relate to how we teach our children at home?  Her philosophy translates beautifully into the world of homeschool.  It is wonderful, especially, for young children and those with special needs!

charlotte mason homeschool

Simply Charlotte Mason’s Picture Study.

She believed in educating the whole person – unlike other educational mindsets which places more emphasis on facts and knowledge.  She believed in keeping good habits and teaching through living.  She kept her lessons short  – not overwhelming children with too much information all at once.

 

charlotte mason homeschool

Enjoying a living book.

charlotte mason homeschool

Using Simply Charlotte Mason’s “Visit to Europe”

There were many parts to a Charlotte Mason Education – including crafts, music, and nature study.  She used “living books” which the opposite of dry textbooks.  These are books that allow the reader to be transported into the time period for history or what they are studying for science.  She believed in narrations over worksheets or workbooks.  There were deep studies of famous artists and their works of art…composers and their music.

charlotte mason homeschool

Using Simply Charlotte Mason’s “Visit to Europe” mapping book.

How does this apply to us homeschooling our children today?

 

1. Choose Quality Living Books for History and Science

2. Choose passages of these books for spelling and handwriting & allow daily “copywork” (copying a passage in neat handwriting)

3. Focus on dictation (when ready) – formal grammar not introduced until grade 4

4. Take weekly nature walks as part of  science

5. Study real artists and their work

6. Listen to classical music and study the composers

7. Have children “tell it back” after you read them a passage

8. Short math lessons with objects and material they can manipulate

9. Reading poetry and sharing their own

10. Mapwork for Geography

11. Studying the Bible, Scripture Memory

12. Outside time – time in nature, free-play

13. Handicrafts – teaching children to use their hands to create (also good for fine motor skills)

14. Focusing on doing their best work – quality not quantity

15. Get your kids drawing or creating their own art and playing musical instruments

Some websites that have helped me are www.simplycharlottemason.com and www.amblesideonline.org.

charlotte mason homeschool

Ready for her naturewalk!

I created a few documents to help you organize your own Charlotte Mason Style Homeschool.  Free to download here:

My Charlotte Mason Week Planner and Charlotte Mason Year Planner.

Filed Under: Autism, Dyslexia, Homeschooling, Printables, Printables, Special Needs, Uncategorized Sasha

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Hi There! I'm so glad you're here! I'm Sasha, wife to my best friend and mama to 7 kids. My passion is homemaking, homeschooling, and encouraging parents of kids with special needs. We are all on a journey. Find what you were made for with some hope and encouragement on the way. xo Sasha

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