Jesus is risen! Happy Easter with love from my family to yours!
Author: Diana B.
Holy Week in Pictures
12 Helpful Resources for Preschool at Home
A few of my friends with young kids have asked for help finding books and other materials for preschool at home. So here’s my quick list of 12 helpful resources!

1. Crafts and activities for preschoolers abound at Danielle’s Place. Some pages require a subscription.
2. For teaching preschoolers to read, I used How to Teach Your Child to Read in 100 Easy Lessons with Linnea at age 5, and we both loved it. I will be starting it with Laurel this summer. I also like the learning to read ideas from Jessie Wise, co-author of The Well-Trained Mind.
3. My favorite bible for preschoolers is The Jesus Storybook Bible by Sally-Lloyd Jones. The illustrations are rather unique, but what I love about it is how the hope of Jesus is part of each story.
4. Another great book for the spiritual training of preschoolers is Leading Little Ones to God by Marian Schoolland.
5. A few years ago, I ordered several learning toys from My Father’s World. I especially love the rubber crepe puzzles by Lauri.
6. Peaking at the blogs of other homeschoolers can be helpful. Since my homeschool blog tends to be a tad “girly” at times, moms of boys might also enjoy Tons of Sons. The Well-Trained Mind also offers this overwhelmingly long list of homeschool blogs to peruse.
7. For helpful articles on homeschooling, check out Homeschooling Today. Be sure to click on the tab for “Get Started Homeschooling.” And be sure to check out their upcoming May/June issue because I have an article running in it!
8. Another fantastic site for all sorts of homeschooling tips, encouraging words and inspiring ideas is Heart of the Matter.
9. To download printables for learning letters, numbers and colors, visit Heart of the Matter Preschool Printables.
10. Tap into the variety of free downloadable homeschool forms and other printable resources at Donna Young. They are fabulous and very helpful!
11. Another extensive list of links to free online resources for homeschooling preschoolers is available at Homeschool Diner.
12. One resource that I have heard great things about but haven’t yet used is Five In A Row. I plan to investigate it further soon.
UPDATE: A reader asked me to add her blog to my list of resources for preschoolers. I checked it out, and Homepreschool and Beyond looks like it’s packed with helpful ideas from author and child development expert Susan Lemons. I especially like this article on what a 4-year-old should know. Thanks for the tip, Susan!
An Update on Kind Hearts
“Religion that God our Father accepts as pure and faultless is this: to look after orphans and widows in their distress and to keep oneself from being polluted by the world.” -James 1:27 (NIV)
If you recall this post from a while ago, you already know that our family is sponsoring Dawit, a little boy at Kind Hearts Orphanage near Addis Abba, Ethiopia. We just recently received the March 2010 newsletter from Kind Hearts, and it was full of wonderful pictures and encouraging news of how the children there are being fed spiritually and physically through the sponsorship program coordinated by Children’s HopeChest.
In the newsletter, Ato. Wendimagegnehu Mecha, the executive director of Kind Hearts, says, “Children’s HopeChest is a guide in a time of crisis and a gift from God. Our hope flourishes through this organization. We are grateful for your support and we require further assistance to ensure the proper survival and holistic development of the children. Thank you.”
There’s much work yet to do, more children will be enrolling at Kind Hearts soon, and Children’s HopeChest is currently developing another location with nearly 100 children that will need sponsors. If you would like to sponsor a child, please contact Karen Wistrom at kjwistrom@yahoo.com.
For more about Kind Hearts, I encourage you to follow this blog by Karen Wistrom at Family From Afar, or download the Kind Hearts newsletter PDF by clicking here: Kind Hearts Newsletter March 2010.
Thanks for your consideration. May God bless you!
Easter Thoughts
I’m knee-deep into a feature story I’m writing this week before Holy Week, but my brain needs a quick break from all things beef-retail-related. So I thought I’d escape by sharing some random thoughts about Easter.
I love Easter, and one tradition we added a few years ago is telling the passion story with the help of resurrection eggs from ChristianBook.com. (With a little work, you can also make your own.) Our daughters really look forward to opening each egg. I took the eggs to church last year and opened them with my Pre-K/K Sunday School class, and they also were captivated by what was inside.
A few weeks ago I purchased a new Easter book called The Sparrow’s Easter Song, which we’ve already read a few times. It’s a wonderfully written and illustrated story about a sparrow who witnesses Jesus’s death and resurrection and tells all the other animals about it.
Another favorite Easter book just for kids is The Parable of the Lily by Liz Curtiz Higgs. It paints a beautiful picture of forgiveness and is especially fitting for little girls.
Linnea, Laurel and I are working through a book/music CD called Passion Hymns for a Kid’s Heart to help them learn some of my favorite Easter hymns. This week they’ve been learning “Up From the Grave He Arose,” which has such a lively tune. Hearing it brings me right back to the pews of the Methodist church where I grew up.
I also have a new favorite Easter hymn, one I just learned last year. It’s “Jesus Paid It All,” and I absolutely love this version of it by Kristian Stanfill. You will, too! (Side note: This hymn is not one of those included in the book Passion Hymns for a Kid’s Heart.)
Also, just for fun, check out my cute little snow bunnies in the Good Friday post I wrote two years ago: Whiter Than Snow. They’ve grown so much even since last Easter!
Spring Reading Thing
Since it was 50 degrees and sunny here last week, natives will joyfully tell you spring has arrived in Minnesota!
But transplants like me think this “spring” looks more like a warm winter day anywhere else. The grass is matted and brown. The lakes and ponds are still covered with chunks and sheets of ice. Big piles of muddy, sandy, black snow litter the parking lots. And folks from most any other state would still be wearing jackets on days like this.
No. This is not true spring. For me, true spring — the kind with green grass and budding leaves and blooming flowers and 70-degree weather — usually seems to arrive here in
v-e-r-y
s-l-o-w
m-o-t-i-o-n
coming to a full and complete spring sometime in May and often lasting only three days before summer arrives. Sad but true.
So meanwhile, as I await the days of true spring/summer — days of frolicking in flowers and fresh-cut green grass — I’ll finish some writing assignments and keep my nose in a few books. I’m doing this Spring Reading Thing going on at callapidderdays.com.
Here’s a list of my personal reading goals for this spring. (I’m not including any of the home school-related books, except one.)
The books I plan to finish reading this spring are:
- Financial Peace by Dave Ramsey
- So Long Insecurity by Beth Moore
- On the Banks of Plum Creek by Laura Ingalls Wilder (aloud to Laurel and Linnea)
- The Bobbsey Twins Adventures in the Country by Laura Lee Hope (aloud to Laurel)
- Shepherding a Child’s Heart by Tedd Tripp
- Passion Hymns for a Kid’s Heart by Joni Eareakson Tada (this includes listening to the music CD)
The books I plan to begin reading this spring are:
- The Excellent Wife by Marth Peace
- Bringing Up Girls by James Dobson (coming out in April)
- Feathers From My Nest by Beth Moore
I’ll report my results right here sometime in June, and I may even include some book reviews.
Please do tell, what books are on your nightstand this spring?
I Love Forms
Did you get your U.S. Census forms in the mail today? I did. And I am one person who actually likes filling out forms. It’s strange, yes, but very true. Must be because I am a “rule follower” at heart. I especially like forms that ask for you to use pencil. There’s just something very satifisfying about writing with a nicely sharpened Ticonderoga pencil. But that’s another story entirely.
I also like creating forms. A few weeks ago I re-created a form from the back of a book our small group used for Bible study. It is a Bible Reading Highlights form. I enlarged it and tweaked it a little because there were just a few tiny things I didn’t like about the original.
Anyway, since it is a PDF, I thought I’d share it below, just in case you share this same strange love for filling out forms.
Happy Bible reading!
Orchestrating the Swans
“Faithful is He that calleth you, who also will do it.”
– 1 Thessalonians 5:24
As the ice and snow struggle to melt here in the “spring” of Minnesota, the lake near us valiantly strives to resume its liquid form. That’s when our restless family piles into the minivan and takes a meandering drive all the way around the lake. Just to see what we can see.
Seeing the lake through the trees before they begin budding out — it can be fascinating. Sometimes, before the green leaves obstruct the view, sometimes, for a just short while on the open water, sometimes, we see swans.

Trumpeter swans briefly pause here every spring. For a native Minnesotan, seeing swans might not be a big deal. But for a transplant like me, seeing swans out in the wild is one of the most prized aspects of living in the Frozen Tundra. It brings back words and pictures in my head from one of my favorite books, The Trumpet of the Swan by E.B. White. If you’ve never read the book, stop reading this blog at the end of this sentence, find the book at your nearest library, take it home, and read the book aloud to any small person within arm’s reach. It’s a captivating story.
But back to the swan sightings. Last year, through the bare branches, we caught a glimpse of a flock of swans on the lake’s north side just as the sun was setting. We counted more than two dozen birds in that flock. Oh, I truly will never forget that glorious sight! It was surreal and dreamlike, especially the way the sunlight made their pure white bodies appear so radiant. One or two swans would have been impressive enough, but 26 swans? ‘Twas a God-sighting indeed.
Recently I had another swan-related God-sighting, but this time it wasn’t anywhere near the lake.
We were in week 20-something of our 34-week curriculum, and I found myself fighting guilty feelings for not being as far along in the curriculum as I originally planned to be. Any other homeschool moms with me on this one?
I blamed week-long trips to Oklahoma and Florida for our being behind. Even though those were educational, first-hand experiences that enriched our studies. I also blamed a week’s worth of sick days. Sickness is to be expected in life, of course. But it wasn’t in my planner. So I felt guilty and doubted my planning abilities.
God was responding to my prayers, though, because just when I was feeling glum and guilty about the timing of our school work, He sent just the lovely piece of encouragement this homeschool mom needed. He’s good like that.
In our music curriculum we were continuing our study of Tchaikovsky’s works by listening to a few pieces from the ballet Swan Lake. According to my written plans, we were supposed to do this on a Tuesday a few weeks earlier, but for whatever reason, we didn’t fit it in until this particular Wednesday. So we listened to the music and we read the story of Swan Lake — which none of us had ever before read — and then the girls dressed up in all white and danced around pretending to be swans.
Since we were going to a concert at Orchestra Hall that Thursday, I also introduced the girls to Camille Saint Saens’ “Carnival of the Animals.” They enjoyed figuring out which animal went with which music, and they also enjoyed pretending to be those animals as they danced to the music.
Then off we went the next day to Orchestra Hall, fully expecting to hear only the pieces from “Carnival of the Animals.” But to our delight the orchestra played five other classical pieces first. And, as God planned it, two of them were from Swan Lake! To top it off, Minnesota Ballet Company dancers performed on stage throughout both pieces, dressed all in white with feathers in their up-do hair. What a lovely surprise!
Some homeschool moms might have sufficiently planned the timing of such an experience. Others might say it was lucky coincidence for us. But as I sat there listening to the orchestra play “The Waltz” and watching the dancers float across the stage, I knew. I smiled. I sort of know my weakness and needs, but God really knows my weaknesses and needs. And I am certain He alone orchestrated the timing of our studies and this performance.
During that lovely moment of encouragement, God reminded me that His timing is perfect. He is sovereign and He watches over every little detail of our lives, even the tiny little details in our homeschool planners over which we can so easily fret.
During that lovely moment of encouragement, God also reminded me that when He called me to homeschool my children, He promised to be faithful and promised to do it also.
“Faithful is He that calleth you, who also will do it.” – 1 Thessalonians 5:24 (KJV)
God alone is the ultimate homeschool planner for our family. My job is to not lean on my own plans and my own understanding, which so often lead to fretting and feeling guilty. My job is to trust in Him and follow His plans. My job is to be flexible. My job is to prayerfully and daily lay my imperfect plans before the Lord and ask for His guidance and direction in rightly aligning them with His perfect plans.
If I am flexible and committed to following God’s plans for our days, I am more likely to see His hand at work in the day-to-day of family life. When I follow His plans, I can be confident that He who began this good work in me — including the work of homeschooling our children — will carry it on to completion (Philippians 1:6).
I want to follow His plans. I want to migrate to the right place at exactly the right moment. I want to be a swan on the lake, peacefully resting with others in the timing of His perfect plan for us, washed pure white and blameless, and reflecting the radiant splendor of the Son’s light.
Good Humor
“Our mouths were filled with laughter, our tongues with songs of joy… The LORD has done great things for us, and we are filled with joy.”
-from Psalm 126:1-3
Learning about each of the 50 states is one great part of our homeschool this year, and last week we reached the state that is hi in the middle and round on both ends.
Any guesses?
Yep.
It’s Ohio.
O-HI-O.
Ha-ha! That little riddle was in our curriculum and I couldn’t resist sharing it.
One piece of trivia we learned is that Ohio is where the Good Humor Company first created ice cream on a stick. Hooray for Good Humor for inventing the concept! (And hooray for Dove for perfecting it!) Can you guess what we had for a mid-morning snack?
Yep. I am the coolest mom ever. Well, maybe not. But at least we felt cool eating ice cream on a random morning in March. Who says homeschooling isn’t fun?
And wouldn’t you know? After about two bites, Linnea’s Good Humor ice cream bar actually fell off its stick. It landed squarely on her napkin, fortunately.
But then she had to have a bowl and spoon anyway.
Likewise, Laurel needed a bowl and spoon for hers because she was eating slowly and her hand was getting tired of holding the stick. Evidently, ice cream weighs more than the popsicles they are used to eating.
Groan. I was really starting to think maybe this ice cream on a stick concept was not such a great idea.
But then I ate my Dove bar.
The LORD has done great things for us indeed.
What do you think? Is ice cream best on a stick, in a dish, or on a cone? Share your comments just for fun!
Short and Sweet
“How sweet are your words to my taste, sweeter than honey to my mouth!” -Psalm 119:103
After re-living my Florida vacation online, I’m tired! And I imagine you, my dear readers, are ready for something short and sweet.
So here it is.
Hershey’s “Perfectly Chocolate” Chocolate Cupcakes
http://www.hersheys.com/recipes/recipes/detail.asp?id=184
- 2 cups sugar
- 1-3/4 cups all-purpose flour
- 3/4 cup HERSHEY’S Cocoa
- 1-1/2 teaspoons baking powder
- 1-1/2 teaspoons baking soda
- 1 teaspoon salt
- 2 eggs
- 1 cup milk
- 1/2 cup vegetable oil
- 2 teaspoons vanilla extract
- 1 cup boiling water
- chocolate frosting (recipe follows)
2. Stir together sugar, flour, cocoa, baking powder, baking soda and salt in large bowl. Add eggs, milk, oil and vanilla; beat on medium speed of mixer 2 minutes. Stir in boiling water (batter will be thin). Pour batter into prepared pans.
3. Bake 30 to 35 minutes or until wooden pick inserted in center comes out clean. Cool 10 minutes; remove from pans to wire racks. Cool completely. Frost with “PERFECTLY CHOCOLATE” CHOCOLATE FROSTING. 10 to 12 servings.
VARIATIONS:
ONE-PAN CAKE: Grease and flour 13x9x2-inch baking pan. Heat oven to 350° F. Pour batter into prepared pan. Bake 35 to 40 minutes. Cool completely. Frost.
THREE LAYER CAKE: Grease and flour three 8-inch round baking pans. Heat oven to 350°F. Pour batter into prepared pans. Bake 30 to 35 minutes. Cool 10 minutes; remove from pans to wire racks. Cool completely. Frost.
BUNDT CAKE: Grease and flour 12-cup Bundt pan. Heat oven to 350°F. Pour batter into prepared pan. Bake 50 to 55 minutes. Cool 15 minutes; remove from pan to wire rack. Cool completely. Frost.
CUPCAKES: Line muffin cups (2-1/2 inches in diameter) with paper bake cups. Heat oven to 350°F. Fill cups 2/3 full with batter. Bake 22 to 25 minutes. Cool completely. Frost. About 30 cupcakes.
“PERFECTLY CHOCOLATE” CHOCOLATE FROSTING
1/2 cup (1 stick) butter or margarine
2/3 cup HERSHEY’S Cocoa
3 cups powdered sugar
1/3 cup milk
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
Melt butter. (I only soften mine so my icing stays fluffy and easier to decorate with.) Stir in cocoa. Alternately add powdered sugar and milk, beating to spreading consistency. Add small amount additional milk, if needed. Stir in vanilla. About 2 cups frosting.





















