Donations & Service

(Originally posted July 2011.)

This is for C, after we read one of the stories last night in Zen Shorts he was really concerned. It tells of a man that’s visited by a robber and the man is poor and has nothing that could be stolen, but he offers the robber his cloak. C was really moved by this and expressed with some concern, we have so many things and there are people with nothing. He was clearly upset by this so we talked about what we can do to help others, through giving locally or abroad. Kit and I have made donations but we’ve really not talked about them much with the kids so I wanted to post links that we can explore to show the kids some of the organizations that we’ve donated to in the past or we are currently supporting. He seemed very relieved when I explained that we are trying to live on a budget so that we can give to others in need.

It’s a fine line to balance, wanting to meet the needs of our own children AND some of their wants but also realizing that we need to teach our children to give selflessly when there are so many with their most basic needs not being met. It was humbling, to have our son remind me that we can always try to stretch a bit tighter and give. I also explained that we are saving money (that we could donate, of course) in part because we want to make sure as the kids grow that they can go serve a mission and help others or pursue whatever goals they feel can better help others. And we talked about some of the research being done at my alma mater and how they are finding ways to create clean water for villages by using playground equipment, creating portable solar ovens for people without electricity, working in the food science labs to develop drought resistant crops. (As you enter BYU campus there’s a large sign that says, “Enter to learn, go forth to serve.” We use to make jokes about that but I do believe that is part of the mission of that university – training and teaching and providing a way to go and serve.) We told him that we are saving for his future and his education so he can take this desire to help others and make it happen, however he feels so impressed… maybe he’ll become a research scientist, maybe he’ll serve in the peace corps, maybe he’ll join Doctors without Borders, maybe he will be an incredible, dedicated father that adores his family. Who knows? 🙂 But whatever he does, he’ll make the world a better place.

Uganda.
Compassion International
Pennies for Peace
church humanitarian services and Latter Day Saint Charities
Spirit Horse Therapy
March of Dimes
Haiti earthquake relief through iTunes app store purchases!
Denton community food kitchen
Denton animal shelter
Backpacks for Japan
Every Mother Counts – sending medical supplies to South Sudan

When we make donations I do like to list the family name or the kids’ names so they can see their contributions – I snapped a photo for them of the donation scroll:

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I think for these charities far away/online it helps them feel a connection, that they can see their names and see they really did help make a difference. When we serve locally there’s a physical experience with gathering cans of food or putting together packages, but online is more abstract. They were excited to see ThadenPierce on the website. 🙂

Update: We donated to some of the above organizations for our holidays in 2011 and in 2012 we’re letting the kids pick a charity, earn money through chores, we’ll match their earnings and donate in their name. So far they’ve picked:

The Water Project to build wells in Africa
The North Texas Food Bank to feed local families throughout the metroplex
UNICEF to purchase high energy biscuits

All three organizations have 90% or more of their donations going directly to their projects. I also like that with a $30 donation the food bank sends you 5 cards which state you made a donation in someone’s honor – the kids are very excited to think they can do chores and donate in someone’s honor while also helping people.

This is the playground charity, and around 70% goes to the playgrounds being built with the around 30% going to research, development, and admin costs in the US: Empower Playgrounds.

Kit and I are also picking charities to donate part of our Christmas fund to, and we’ve made some local private donations to support individual families in need and I made some to places supporting birthing moms (something dear to my heart.) Remember even just joining an organization like ICAN or Birth Network is helping make a difference for moms and babies!

There are so many worthy causes and however small our contribution may be, it’s a blessing to us to know we are serving others. I also love the humbling reminder of how blessed we are, and it helps us keep the focus of the season on giving – not receiving.

Another update – if you are local then you’ll love supporting this organization here, helping provide heaters and fans for families unable to afford central heating and air. I love their shirts and bumper stickers!

Art Day

We’re painting green dinosaurs! And while we were focusing on that a little someone climbed the chair and pulled the Valentine Train down off the counter. 🙂

After Christmas we saw the gingerbread village and train were on sale dirt cheap – like $.52 each! So we bought one and dyed the frosting pink (and it came with red) and made a Valentine Village! Very fun, and cheap.

Three Kings Day

This year the Christmas decorations came down ON Christmas day, as our new floors went in the day after. Next year I plan to keep the decorations up until January 6th (three kings day.) To compensate for the lack of decorations this year we’re going to celebrate with extra food! 🙂

* orange cinnamon roll ring – symbolizing the crowns
* baklava – because it’s from the middle east and I want an excuse to make it.
* yule log – because the test run was so yummy!

Candy Lessons

Do you have a lovely stash of goodies at your place? We practice the law of candy consecration. 🙂 Everyone’s goodies go into one big pot, we remove anything that’s taboo (choking hazards, stuff that rips out dental fillings) and put the candies with egg in another pot. I also pull out some candies for St. Nicholas shoes and Christmas stockings because it saves me money and they don’t need this much candy all at once. Then what’s left the kids can pick from – one piece a day. They learn to prioritize what they want!

For lessons we had them inventory the candy (language, handwriting, reading) and then catalog it (counting, and teaching our 5 year old how to use tally marks, comparing the survey results.) Then they each got their one piece. (We won’t discuss how many the adults get a day.) 😉

If they got something special (glow bracelet, cupcake, bubbles, etc) then we let them keep that, of course. But the rest goes into the communal pot and I’m surprised no one has protested yet. It avoids comparing/complaining about amounts and fights over trades and they each get a chance to pick their top priority every day so they know they’ll get stuff they like. So far it’s working!

Passover

Helpful site and we’re looking at vegan Seder platter options – plastic egg instead of boiled? Several sites say a beet instead of the shank bone.
Another great site for novices like me!

Haroset Recipe (using grape juice instead of wine)

6 apples – peeled, cored and chopped
1 cup finely chopped walnuts
1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1 teaspoon sugar
3-1/2 teaspoons honey
1/3 cup sweet red wine (grape juice)

Cooking Instructions
Place the apples and walnuts into a large bowl. Mix together the cinnamon and sugar; sprinkle over the apples. Stir in the honey and sweet wine. Serve immediately, or refrigerate until serving.

We’ll see if I manage to coordinate it this year… if nothing else we’ll read Miriam’s Cup and talk more about it on Monday during Family Home Evening.

Making Easter more Christ Centered – and Chocolate

(Old post bumped!)

Ideas from the Ensign on how to focus on the sacred and less on the goodies. 🙂 Some great suggestions…

And here are pictures from our egg hunt with one of our homeschool groups. We had the hunt, tons of treats & lunch, and fun at the park. Kit found some cardboard boxes left by a hill and the kids tried out box sledding for the first time and loved it – they said it was the best part of the party.

We know Ben has light sensitivity issues but apparently so does Christopher:

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Emy’s first egg hunt, she realized there was candy involved and took off:

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Bennett also realized there was candy and was not amused by the 12 egg per child limit when there were clearly still eggs left on the ground for him to capture! 🙂

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And here are the second try on the homemade version of Cadbury Cream eggs and some homemade Reeses Peanut Butter type eggs. Both are DELICIOUS and I think homemade candy for baskets will be a new tradition:

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Bunny-Tangram.

Have the kids sew these adorable beanbag frogs.

Paper baskets. Make those with the kids’ art and fill with goodies to give away?

And hot cross buns and other goodies I miss that involve egg. 🙁

April Fool’s Fun

Recipes.

So the kids are excited by the idea of April Fool’s but I never manage anything. It’s sad. I decided to plan ahead this year and we are hoping to pull off this!

For lunch we’ll do real grilled cheese (made in advance and packed up for a fieldtrip) and fake grilled cheese!

Cake (I’ll make in a bread pan) and orange frosting – the coconut oil frosting gives a nice shine like the processed cheese. 🙂

For dinner we’ll do fish & chips, two varieties – real and these:

The “fish” are sugar wafer cookies covered in peanut butter and crushed cornflakes (though I’ll do Joseph’s with crushed rice cereal.) The french fries are breadsticks cut thin and rolled in sugar crystals. Both are served with seedless strawberry jam – I’ll just blend some frozen strawberries with lemon juice and sugar and then strain it, that’s easy to make in advance. The peas in that photo are taffy but I’ll make some of our butter mints and those need to be made in advance. So the day off will be quick and easy to serve up. FUN! We’ll set out their plates with the fake foods and let them try it then set those aside until they eat their real food. 🙂 (Or we’ll just let them eat dessert first, I’m pretty flexible.)

I’m excited, those look really fun and simple.

The kids also asked if they could prank their swim teachers Friday morning – I think we’ll make up some more of the potato candies but we’ll do a half batch so I don’t eat them all:

4 oz cream cheese
1/4 c butter (I did 3 T)
pinch salt
1 t vanilla

Cream all, then stir in:
4 c powdered sugar
2 1/2 c coconut OR
1 c diced pecans & 1 1/2 c coconut

We did the coconut & pecans after toasting both.

Mix all together and chill if needed, or if it’s stiff enough dough then scoop (I used mini ice cream scoop) and shape into potato-ish lump. Then I rolled them in powdered sugar and cinnamon and then sprinkled more cinnamon over the top to make them more brown.

They are so cute!!! And painfully delicious.