These are the recipes we included in the gift bags. Click on them to make them bigger.
Thursday, December 29, 2011
MERRY 10th BIRTDHAY, GINNY!
December 13, 2011
Today Ginny said good-bye to single digits! We celebrated with a Christmas theme.
Well, let me
back up ‘cause there was a lot of prep work involved. First, there were the (almost) 150 Christmas
cookies we baked and decorated.
He's eaten too much icing!
Then we made the cakes. A HUGE thanks to Jessika, our intern who
helped with the Christmas and birthday decorations and brought us candy canes!
This is the actual cake.
This is the “overflow” cake.
Next, we made and assembled the
treat bags. We included pumpkin bread
and the 2 types of cookies we made (sugar and gingerbread). I typed the recipes out on cute Christmas
recipe cards.
And put together a banner.
It worked out really nicely that
our SIM annual conference began the day after Ginny’s birthday, so most of our
team mates were in the city for her party.
We decorated with lights,
ribbons, tinsel and Christmas ornaments.
We grilled yule logs (hot dogs)
and ate red and green jello and red and green apples off of Christmas
plates. We drink red and green punch.
It was very festive and very fun.
These are the recipes we included in the gift bags. Click on them to make them bigger.
Monday, December 26, 2011
IT'S BEGINNING TO LOOK A little bit LIKE CHRISTMAS
For these I am thankful (#30)
The Christmas season
It is hot here.
Very hot.
Where we live there are no crowded shopping
malls, lighted houses, or stockings hung or decorated Christmas trees.
No one is checking off a gift list and running
to the mall for last minute items.
Christmas carols are not heard over PA systems.
It’s a Wonderful Life isn’t showing down here.
Newspapers, magazines and catalogs aren’t
bursting with “must have” ads.
Does it feel like Christmas?
Yes and no.
To us adults, we have spent 3/4th of
our life knowing only a North American hustle and bustle Christmas season. It is hard to switch gears.
But to our kids, this is what they are familiar
with. When it starts getting really hot
and the watermelons start showing, the kids get in the Christmas spirit.
And with all those distractions of lights and
parties and new dresses and bigger and better in North America, our children
are very content with a low-key season and I am so thankful.
In our house, we do put up a tree (no free ones
here), hang up our stockings and decorate the house.....somewhat. We bake cookies and breads to give away (and
eat ourselves). We will have a special
Christmas Eve dinner, light fireworks and watch a new family movie till
mid-night (as tradition). We were
thrilled to be asked by some new Paraguayan friends to spend Christmas Day with
them.
It's always fun pulling out the ornaments.
Christmas lights are the same no matter where you live!
When Julia saw herself in the Christmas ball, she began to clap and dance.
Saturday, December 24, 2011
WATER!
For these I am thankful (#29)....
WATER
December looks a bit different in Paraguay than
in North America. Instead of snow, we
have heat – like 100 degrees of it. The
weather isn’t too conducive to hot chocolate and sitting in front of a
fireplace. Instead, we eat watermelon
and sit under the shade of the mango trees sipping even more terere. Instead of jackets and boots, our children
are running around shirtless and shoeless and in search of water in which to
swim.
Because we are living in a land-locked country, we have
to look for creative alternatives to keeping cool.
Our dog LOVES water.
WATER GAME with our SIM TEAM
The kids waiting to throw
wet sponges at the adults. They were
ruthless!
Attack!
That's where my boys get it from!
Staying cool with watermelon.
Car washin'
Even Julia joined in.
Then she got tired and sat in the car washing water.
Friday, December 23, 2011
For these I am thankful (#27)...
MY CAMERA
As you have probably figured by now, I love my
camera and I love looking through the lens of a camera. I love being able to chronicle our daily
activities in pictures.
For these I am thankful (#28).....
SUPPORTING MISSIONARIES
I am so thankful that God has allowed us to
bless other missionaries all over the world.
It truly is more blessed to give than receive.
Thursday, December 22, 2011
For these I am thankful (#23)...
HOMESCHOOLIING
I have not always been a fan of
homeschooling. In fact there was a time
when I considered myself such a failure at it.
I couldn’t wait to put them in a school while on furlough. And I resented God a bit for “forcing” into a
homeschooling situation.
Wow.
So the fact that that I can honestly say that I
am so very thankful to be homeschooling my children is a HUGE testament to God
and his faithful patience with me.
I love spending time with my children. I love our flexibility. I love learning with them. I love bringing up everyday examples to
illustrate their lessons. I love being
able to teach to their individual learning styles. I love that they can go at their own
pace. I love that I get to read to
them. I love that we can all do history
and science together. I love that Jeff
can teach Ryan math. I love that Ginny
and Joshua do math on the computer. I
love being able to teach Godly character traits alongside their lessons. I love hearing my children memorize scripture
as part of class. I love having a daily
bible class.
For these I am thankful (#24)
GOOD
BOOKS
In my
down time, I really enjoy reading good books whether it is Christian fiction, a
biography, a classic children’s book or a homeschool how-to book. My children are also becoming avid readers
and I am so thankful that they can lose themselves in a story. Ryan and Joshua love mysteries and historical
fiction and Ginny loves animal stories.
As a family, we always have a family book we’re reading through. In November we read through a book of martyrs
and now (in December) we’re reading an advent story. Some of our very favorite family books are
missionary biographies. The Cross and
the Switchblade is next on our family reading list.
For these I am thankful (#25)....
MINSTERING as a FAMILY
One thing that I love about life on the mission
field is that we can minster as a family.
Our children come with us to mobile clinics, they sit with us at church,
they go visiting with us and they spend time praying for the salvation of those
we minister to. I am so thankful that we
have “jobs” that we can easily have them tag along. We have seen their faith grow as we pray
together for lives to be saved, people to be healed, friends to come back to
church and for our own finances. Missions
is so real for them and I am so thankful.
Tuesday, December 20, 2011
WHAT WOULD I DO WITHOUT FRIENDS?
For these I am thankful (#22)...
FRIENDSHIPS
There was a time in my life,
before moving to the mission field, when I believed I would shrivel up and die
without interaction with friends. I have
since been through many times of just plain loneliness and I have survived...I
have been sustained by Jesus. He should
be all I need, after all (oh the great many lessons I have learned on the
field!). Non-the-less, I am extremely
thankful for friendships: old and new, near and far, English speaking or
something else.
I am also thankful for the
friendships my children have.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)