All Things Hold Together

A blog about cooking, crafting, faith, family…you know, the good stuff.

Hey there Blogville! Sorry that posting has been so dreadfully light this week. I threw my back out on Monday and have not been able to sit at the computer for longer than a couple of minutes. (That’s why I need that pink laptop, Bob, if you’re reading.)

It is feeling slightly better, but not enough to sit here long. I have to make pies and bread to bring with us tomorrow to my parents-in-law’s house for Thanksgiving, anyway.

Hey, it snowed a little bit here the other day. It snowed quite a bit in other parts of the state, but Burlington is in the lower elevation, right by the lake, so even thought nearby towns got a couple of inches, we got just a dusting.

Still, it was enough to make the first snowman of the season on Tuesday morning. Meet Humphrey.

IMAG0009

He’s just a small muddy ball now, and it’s raining, but he meant a lot to us while he was here.

Have a wonderful Thanksgiving, everyone! We will be traveling, but I hope to be back to blogging when we return!

You know I like to share recipes, and I have a few good ones coming up, along with some gift ideas, crafts, and other Christmas awesomeness. For now, though, I will leave you with my recipe:

Charity

- 1/4 cup of sensitivity
- a scoop of caring
- a scoop of honesty

Blend together quickly and serve.

‘What is your personality recipe?’ at QuizGalaxy.com

Want your own recipe, go here.

Hat tip: Comfy Denim

I have to get back to my novel, but I had to share this.

The D is in his room playing his favorite songs really loud on the CD player. In between songs, his voice bellows out something like, “And that was Thousand Foot Krutch. Next we have DC Talk with ‘In the Light’.” Sometimes in between songs, he reads today’s Bible verse, which he selects. It’s so cute.

Ugh, I am way behind on my novel. You can read about that here, if you’re interested. (Yes, I have another blog. I have been holding out on you.) Okay, back to it… Actually, I have to go feed the kiddos first.

Oh, and I have still not heard back from the doctor about The D. I will share when I do. Thanks for your prayers.

“And now for the Mystery Song. Call 802-123 if you can name this song…”

I love - love - Crayola. We use a lot of art supplies and I have found theirs to be of the best quality, when it comes to children’s art supplies. And their innovation is amazing. They are always coming up with new, fun children’s art and craft supplies. And their website is full of awesome project ideas.

And, no, I am not getting paid for this.

Recently, I e-mailed the company with reference to the recent toy recalls, asking if any of their products are made in China. Here is the reply I received.

Dear Charity,

Thank you for your recent inquiry.

Providing quality, safe, kid-friendly products is our #1 goal. We source a small amount of our products from China. All Crayola(R) products, including licensed products, must be produced in compliance with our rigorous safety standards and specifications. This procedure ensures the materials supplied to us meet or exceed U.S. and European regulations and standards specific to our industry.

Our products undergo independent laboratory testing in Asia, and many are tested again in Europe, which has some of the highest standards for toy safety in the world. In addition, our art material products also undergo third-party toxicological testing by the Arts and Creative Materials Institute (ACMI) and carry the AP (Approved Product)(R) seal.

We are confident that we have the processes and systems in place to ensure the safety of Crayola products. Your comments and concerns are welcomed, and we appreciate the opportunity to assist you.

Colorfully yours,

Christine Mann
E-Mail Response Representative
CRAYOLA

Take it for what it is worth. I just wanted to share this.

Colorfully yours, how cute is that?


I don’t know if you have this problem, but my husband and I often get our pillows mixed up. The kids come in our room to watch Reading Rainbow in the afternoon, and for some reason they switch our pillows.

The differences between the two pillows are so subtle that we often can’t tell whose is whose, but they are significant enough that if I sleep on his pillow, I have a back ache the next day and if he sleeps on mine, he has a sore neck.

This was starting to become a problem. Fortunately, around the same time, I decided to pick up embroidery. So, I decided to embroider a “C” on the edge of my pillow case. Now we always know whose is whose.

And that works for me.

(I apologize for the blurry picture. I know it is tough on the eyes, but I really wanted a picture and my batteries died before I could get a clear shot. You understand.)

Check out other Works-for-Me Wednesday tips over at Rocks in My Dryer.

Most of the things that Little E knows, he was not taught. I mean, he just sort of picked them up somewhere. I have never really sat down and taught him anything intentionally.

I decided this week that I would take some time each evening to sit down with him and teach him something.

Last night, I introduced him to the lowercase alphabet. He already knows the upper case one, and he is learning the letter sounds and showing other signs of reading readiness, so I figured that I would teach him the lowercase alphabet, which he will need to be able to read books.

I wrote out the uppercase and lowercase letters side-by-side, then I asked him to tell me the similarities and differences between them. I wanted him to recognize that while some letters look the same (like S and s), some letters do not look anything alike (like G and g).

After, I wrote out a few lowercase letters and “quizzed” him. He did well.

Tonight, I went for something a little more lighthearted - “I’m a Little Teapot.” He thought it was pretty funny.

After we sang it a few times, he asked, “Why does it say ‘tip me over and pour me out’?”

“Because when the water is hot you pour it out,” I replied, somewhat confused, since he is very familiar with tea drinking. (Bob and I are big tea drinkers.)

“You pour the water out. You don’t pour the teapot out!!!”

I love this age!

With all this talk about the Homeschool Blog Awards going on around the homeschool blogging world, I realized that I have not done a homeschooling post since October 11th! (Excluding posting the link to the Carnival of Homeschooling.)

The first reason is that I was going to start a new blog with homeschooling tips, one that would only contain homeschooling tips, resources, etc., and no personal stuff, so I was doing HS posts over there. I decided that I didn’t want to do that, though. I think that would stretch me too thin. As it is, I started doing political blogging again and I feel like that is already stretching me too thin. (And not the kind of thin I want to be, either.)

The second reason is that I tend to blog in bursts. I might do a lot of faith posts for a while, then I might do a lot of cooking posts. I was doing a lot of frugal posts recently. I just haven’t felt like doing homeschooling posts.

The final reason is that we took a little break from formal lessons. We had a lot going on around here and we have been out of the books for a while. That is probably why I have not done homeschooling posts lately.

I think that I should make it a point to do at least one post about homeschooling per week. That will keep my focus on what I am here to do. (Here meaning at home. Not here on this earth. I am sure there is more in store for me than homeschooling. Not that that isn’t a good enough calling or anything. You know what I’m saying, right?)

Speaking of the Homeschool Blog Awards, can you believe that this blog is young enough to be nominated for Best New Homeschool Blog? I can’t believe it, but I only started this blog on April 13, 2007. Wow!

[Edit: Just to clarify, I was pointing out that this blog is young enough to be nominated. Nominations are still going on until 11/17.]

I guess it just seems like I have been blogging since, like, February of 2006. (That’s when I started my first blog.)

Don’t worry if you already nominated someone else. Just having you as a reader is worth more than any award.

I feel like I am going crazy. My stomach is in knots. I am waiting for a call from the pediatrician about The D. I have been fearing this call almost his entire life. But this time, it is imminent, and therefore more fearsome.

See, The D has some… issues. When he was little, he was very active and, for lack of a better word, aggressive. Only, he wasn’t aggressive in a malicious way, he was just active and clumsy and kind of plowed through other people on his way to get something. Like he didn’t know his own strength and didn’t know other people were there, and didn’t feel it when he bumped something.

The daycare he was in recommended that someone come in and evaluate him there, and my insurance would cover it. She (the evaluator) recommended occupational therapy. And the occupational therapist said that he had sensory processing disorder, which was called sensory integration dysfunction back in those days (eight years ago, when he was almost 3).

She also said that we were lucky because he was exceptionally bright, which is not always the case for children with this disorder, so he would likely outgrow it, in the sense that he would be able to learn how to deal with it. In the meantime, the childcare center, which had another SID/SPD child, learned some techniques that would help the children get centered.

Right before he entered kindergarten, I had him re-evaluated by the OT and she saw improvement and said that he would not need any kind of assistance in school. This was huge. Just a year prior, I had experts telling me that it was inevitable that he would need an aid in school.

That was pretty much the last time we thought about The D’s sensory issues. Each year, he seemed better able to regulate himself. The OT was right; he was learning to deal with it.

He continued to have social issues, though. I worked with him at home and his kindergarten teacher and guidance councilor worked with him at school, and he slowly improved. The fact that he was so bright and so eager to learn new things did go a long way toward mitigating his social and emotional deficiencies, and the fact that he is a really fun kid kept him from being the class reject. He progressed along alright.

Unfortunately, The D had another parent involved, who did not so much have The D’s best interest in mind, unless it was convenient for him. During his kindergarten year, his bio-father decided to come in and out of his life without any semblance of consistency, until he ended up moving out-of-state altogether.

After that, The D went downhill fast. The school recommended therapy, but that did not help much. Things got pretty bad for him.

Things eventually evened out and improved. For first and second grade, he did pretty well, and his first year of homeschooling, he did excellent.

Then that summer, summer of 2006, I made a choice that I will regret until my dying day. I let The D go and visit his bio-father, believing that he had gotten his act together. Big mistake.

The D came home a wreck. He couldn’t even talk about it for months. I mean, like 6 months went by before he even breathed a word about what it was like there.

Apparently, it was just really chaotic. There were no rules. His father’s other three children, a girl the same age as Big E (imagine that), and two boys 2- and 4-years younger than her, are allegedly very out of control. They listen to rap music with bad language (something that for some reason The D is very sensitive to - he even gets upset with me if I swear). And they watch things on TV that are “not appropriate for children,” his words, not mine (bless his heart).

There was inconsistent discipline that ranged from some bad behavior being ignored completely to the opposite extreme, such as the then 4-year-old being spanked several times with a belt for not turning the TV off when told the first time.

And the latest thing that was revealed, yes - more than a year later there are still things trickling out, The D overheard his father on the phone several times getting into heated arguments with people that involved swearing and threatening.

The kid came home a total wreck and has only gotten worse as time has passed.

Then, when our neighbors, who we spent time with every day, moved away to Seattle, his whole world collapsed. He became depressed, aggressive, disobedient, defiant, and just plain awful to be around.

To make matters worse, he refused to go to his councilor. (The one he started going to in K.)

We did start going to a family counselor through the counseling center that was set up by our church. We couldn’t make him go to individual counseling, but we could make him come with us. That has helped, but not enough. He has been in a free-fall for months. There have been days where things begin to look up, but the downward spiral is still in motion.

Then someone suggested that I take him to his pediatrician. I had to bring Little E for his 4-year check anyway, so I called her and told her what was going on. I had no idea that a pediatrician could help diagnose a mental health problem, but I am so glad that someone knew because she has been awesome. And she has the same philosophy about medicating children that I do - she opposes it because of the potential negative effects on their developing brains, but recognizes that there is a very small percentage of children for whom it is necessary and who cannot be helped any other way.

Now, back to the reason I am anxious about her call. She had me fill out a questionnaire that is used in diagnosing mental health disorders in children and it was sent out to be analyzed. She should be calling me today or Monday with the preliminary results and we will go from there.

It has been absolutely gut-wrenching to sit here and wait for the doctor to call and tell me what is “wrong” with my little boy. I have feared this moment for so many years. In the back of my mind, I always knew that it could come to this. Even though we worked through issue after issue with him, and he always got better, I knew that he was fragile.

So, I sit and I wait and I pray that everything is going to be alright. I mean, I know it will be alright, but I don’t know what darkness we will travel through to get there.

This has tested my faith like I never thought possible. I have run to God. I have run from God. I have cried out to Him. I have screamed at Him. I have been amazed that even after I turned my back on Him, even after I selfishly rejected all that He did for me as if it was not enough because He is letting me go through this pain, He is always there to take me back into His arms when I am ready. I am amazed at what a truly loving and forgiving God we have.

The toy Aqua Dots has been recalled after two children in the US and three in Australia were hospitalized after ingesting the dots. The toy is called “Bindeez” in Australia.

The toy beads are sold in general merchandise stores and over the Internet for use in arts and crafts projects. They can be arranged into designs and fused when sprayed with water.

Scientists say a chemical coating on the beads, when ingested, metabolizes into the so-called date rape drug gamma hydroxy butyrate. When eaten, the compound — made from common and easily available ingredients — can induce unconsciousness, seizures, drowsiness, coma and death.

Just the day before yesterday, I was looking at these in a sale flier and thinking to myself, “These look cool, but there is no way I would buy them. If the beads fuse together when sprayed with water, I don’t even want to think about what kind of nasty chemicals they are made out of.”

Well, now I know: Date rape drugs.

Remember the post, What To Do With Butternut Squash, where I shared a recipe for a slow cooker soup using butternut squash and an Indian spice blend called garam masala?

Of course, you do.

Well, last night I tried the recipe again using a pumpkin from my garden in place of the butternut squash.

Delish!