I Never Realized the Hittite Empire Was Shaped Like an Elephant
My hubby just sent me this: 5000 years of history in 90 seconds. Whoa.
My hubby just sent me this: 5000 years of history in 90 seconds. Whoa.
I just saw an email in my inbox titled "A Note from the Real Hanna" and I was all, OH MY GOODNESS! The real Hanna Andersson must have come across my post about my Hanna book, and now she wants to be best friends and also send my children free clothes for the rest of their lives!
It was, of course, just a holiday mailer.
Well, hmph. I already have a best friend anyway.
You know that thing you do (you KNOW you do) when you’re picking up the house, and you never finish a single room because you pick up the socks on the living room floor and carry them to the bedroom, and while you’re there you notice laundry you didn’t finish folding, and when you’re putting your kids’ clothes away in their room, you are walloped by the mess in their closet, and you hunt them down to make them come clean it up but they are in the middle of a craft project and there are bits of colored paper all over every flat surface in the craft room, so you order someone to start sweeping and you’re still standing there with folded laundry in your hands which is now mixed up with the dirty laundry you started to pick up from the kids’ closet floor before deciding to make them do it themselves…? You know that thing?
Well, there’s an internet version too. Boy howdy, isn’t there.
(Evidenced by the, I’m not kidding, 368 emails in my in-box—AFTER the deletion of all spam, billing reminders, and VistaPrint ads—awaiting a reply. I would answer them, but I’m still holding the laundry.)
Do you use del.icio.us? I was just meandering through my list of del.icio.us bookmarks, and wow is there some good stuff there. Like this link, which I flagged with the intention of sharing it, and now I can’t remember if I ever did, nor whom to hat-tip:
Every time I remember about del.icio.us I wonder why I keep forgetting to use it. It really is a handy way to keep track of links you want to bookmark—instead of bookmarking on your computer, you’re bookmarking on the del.icio.us site so that you can access your links from anywhere.
The tags feature makes it easy to group links by topic. For example, I created a tag for links I want to blog about, and another for posts I think Scott would enjoy. You can create public tags and private ones. Very useful.
If you’re a del.icio.us fan too, send me your username so I can add you to my network!
Beanie, unloading the dishwasher, holds up the cheese slicer.
"Mommy, where do I put this deadly ray gun?"
Heard about this site on the Ambleside Online yahoogroup and had to share: The Toymaker’s instructions for making paper toys. My girls are going to GO NUTS over this. Fairy furniture, pinwheels, all kinds of neat stuff.
And Michele Quigley of Family-Centered Press is very kindly posting step-by-step instructions for making your own baby sling. See how lovely hers is? And isn’t her new baby too scrumptious for words? Congratulations, Michele, and thanks for the sling how-to. Too cool.
"Mommy, how do you spell the middle of ‘Huh’?"
This recent article in The Patriot Ledger presents a positive look at unschooling. Even the obligatory balance-it-out quotes from "experts" pose fairly reasonable questions, though I had to laugh at the patronizing remark from the Boston U School of Ed’s dean. (‘‘It probably doesn’t do the children any harm,’’ says he. What a ringing endorsement!)
I quite liked this quote from a parent of unschoolers (and author of a book on unschooling):
"Unschooling is ideal for all children, but not for all parents,’’ said
Kream, of West Bridgewater. ‘‘Unschooling parents need to be
enthusiastic about life and learning themselves, they need to want to
be very actively involved in their children’s lives and they need to be
caring, supportive and respectful parents. They also need to believe
that the desire to learn is intrinsic to human beings.’’
Rue Kream is right on the mark here; this quote speaks to the difference between unschooling and "unparenting," a brush with which unschooling is often erroneously tarred.
Remember all those great songs Pa Ingalls played on his fiddle? Ever wished you could hear them? A very kind reader just sent me the link to Arkansas Traveler, a program airing on NPR which features songs and stories from Laura’s Little House books.
A Prairie Home Companion‘s regular Riders in the Sky and other
Nashville artists provide musical performances, and actress Cherry
Jones reads selected stories from the books. Hosted by Noah Adams.Songs Heard In This Show:
- "F.C.’s Jig" – Mark O’Connor’s Appalachia Waltz Trio
- "Darling Nelly Gray" – Thomas Hampson (baritone) and Armen Guzelimian (piano)
- "The Arkansas Traveler" (arr. David Guion) – Eugene Rowley (piano)
- "Money Musk" – Pa’s Fiddle Band
- "The Girl I Left Behind Me" – Pat Enright and Pa’s Fiddle Band
- "Arkansas Traveler" – Pa’s Fiddle Band
- "The Irish Washerwoman" – Pa’s Fiddle Band
- "Old Dan Tucker" – Elizabeth Cook and Pa’s Fiddle Band
- "Amazing Grace" – Mark O’Connor
- "Summer" from Harvest Home Suite – Jay Ungar and Molly Mason
- "The Blue Juniata" – Riders In the Sky
- "The Gum Tree Canoe" – Buddy Greene and Pa’s Fiddle Band
- "Uncle Sam’s Farm" – Riders In the Sky
- "Cold Frosty Morning" – Butch Baldassari and David Schnaufer
- "The Devil’s Dream" – Butch Baldassari and David Schnaufer
- "Happy Land" – Peggy Duncan Singers and Pa’s Fiddle Band
I pecked out many of these tunes from The Little House Songbook several years ago, after which "Bonny Doon" (a song not included in the radio program, alas) became one of my favorite sweeping-and-scrubbing songs. (Right up there with "Loch Lomond," which my poor children have heard me belt out so many times that they probably shudder at the mere phrase "take the high road.") But I never learned "Nelly Gray"—wasn’t that one of Laura’s favorites?— and I hope I can get my computer to cooperate and let me listen to the radio show. Right now it’s being obstreperous.
Thanks so much, Monica, for the heads-up on this!