Happy Veteran’s Day!
Happy Veteran’s Day to all the men and women who serve our country, have served our country, or will serve in the future to protect our freedom. Without you, we would not have the same opportunities and freedom we enjoy today. Thank you from the bottom of our hearts!
We are a military family, live on a military base, and move every few years at the military’s whim. Our each and every day is engulfed in the military lifestyle. Still, it’s great to take the time to consider what we’re truly thankful for. It’s important to teach the kids about the sacrifices their fellow Americans made so that they could live as they do today. We talked about what Veteran’s Day means throughout the day. What does it mean to you?
November 11th, 1918 marked the end of World War I, an incredibly destructive time in human history. In 1926, the US Congress proposed making November 11th to be a legal holiday. The purpose of Veteran’s day was to commemorate the sacrifices the soldiers made with thanks and prayer, and to perpetuate peace and goodwill. It became a legal holiday in 1938, and was known as “Armistice Day.” In 1954, Armistace Day became Veteran’s Day, a day to honor American veterans of all wars.
For more information, check out: http://www1.va.gov/opa/vetsday/vetdayhistory.asp
My children are still quite young, so we haven’t gone into much depth about wars and casualties yet. However, we did talk about what we should be thankful for on Veteran’s Day in basic terms:
1. We’re thankful for our mommies and daddies in uniform, who work so hard every day to keep us safe from bad guys.
2. We’re thankful that these mommies and daddies sacrifice time with their families to keep us safe.
3. We’re thankful for the families of our servicemen and women who keep life going on the home front and provide love and support for their uniformed family member.
4. We are proud to be American and of our flag. We’re thankful to live in a country where we can vote and have freedom of speech.
5. We understand the dignity in military service and appreciate our family’s military heritage. We talked about the many generations of service members in our family tree, and a little about the wars in which we thought.
One of our favorite websites, www.enchantedlearning.com, has many crafts, worksheets, and activities related to Veteran’s Day: http://www.enchantedlearning.com/crafts/veterans/. It’s really a phenomenal resource!
Veteran’s Day reminds us to show our thanks and reignited our patriotism. We should be thankful for our veteran’s every day of the year.
What do you teach your kids about Veteran’s Day?
Happy Halloween! Trick-or-Treat!
It’s already that time of year! It’s time to dress the kids up in cute outfits, ask for free candy, and give the munchkins too much sugar too late in the evening. Halloween! It only comes once a year and we love it. The scary stuff isn’t for us, but the excitement and the dressing up is timeless fun.
Trick-or-treating on base is a blast. We feel safe, know most of our neighbors, and don’t feel wary about going door-to-door. I didn’t feel comfortable with traditional trick-or-treating out in town because we didn’t know most people in our neighborhood. Who knows who is out there. In base housing, it’s a totally different story. It’s homey and most people are friendly and welcoming.
The kids have been counting down the days until Halloween and were thrilled when October 31st finally arrived. Friends began to arrive around 4:30, and shortly after 5 we were out of the door and on our way to a sugar high. By the evening’s end, the kids had four gallon-sized plastic ziploc bags full of sugery treats! We’ll have plenty of “reward treats” for quite some time!
This Halloween was particularly special because Hubby was able to be here. He was deployed last Halloween and I believe he was on a training mission the one before. Nevertheless, the kids were thrilled to have him around and he was happy to make memories with us.
Alex dressed up as Cinderella, Ethan as a pilot, Derek as a frog, and Bella as a chicken. She was NOT happy about the chicken outfit and broke two buttons off by the time we left. When we got home, only one button remained, her foot and leg was out of the costume, and we were calling her a “Grumpy Chicken.”
Overall, the evening was a great success! It was sunny and mildly warm. There were lots of costumed kids out and about and plenty of residents passing out candy. This is the stuff that childhood memories are made from.
Are We Broken? If China is the Future, I am Scared For Mankind
A 2-year-old girl recently wandered in front of oncoming traffic in China and was run over twice. The drivers fled the scene. If that wasn’t bad enough, what happened next will make you sick to your stomach. Rather than helping the bleeding, severely injured child, more than 18 people passed her by and ignored her. A woman picked the child up and threw her aside like trash. The sweet, innocent baby was left for dead. A garbage collector found her and got the rescue process started. Only then did her mother claim her. Last I read, the girl is in a coma and if she lives is likely going to be in a vegetative state for the rest of her life. What in the name of all that is good is wrong with modern society? If China is the future, then I am scared for mankind.
WARNING: Viewer discretion advised: http://www.nydailynews.com/news/world/2011/10/18/2011-10-18_video_shows_2yearold_girl_in_china_being_run_over_by_van__and_ignored_by_at_leas.html
Is this what happens when countries modernize and enter the 21st century? When people become materialistic worshipers at the church of “Self,” others are forgotten. It sadly doesn’t surprise me that the baby was left to die. Rampant and state-sponsored forced or “coerced” abortions, sterilization, and the strict one-child policy have dramatically devalued human life in China. What is a baby’s life worth if it can be taken without a second thought? What is a baby’s life worth and she is born female? In China, not much.
While mankind progresses into unknown territory, human nature seems to be steadily regressing. It’s not just China. We live in the age of “Me.” We care about ourselves and our own pleasure and material gains above all else. In China as in the United States, too many young people are growing up without morals. In our quest to be politically correct and all-accepting, we’ve turned into a civilization that believes in nothing.
A new kind of human is forging ahead into the future. This human has a very sketchy idea of right and wrong. Fidelity, honesty, compassion, and civility are not important to this self-serving creature. This human doesn’t love his neighbor as himself, nor does he help those in need. If something doesn’t benefit him immediately or if it causes any discomfort, he won’t do it. The Chinese bystanders didn’t want the hassle of getting involved. Their nonchallant non-reaction makes them no better than animals. Is this truly the result of thousands and thousands of years of human evolution? If so, it’s a sincere tragedy.
I’ve noticed this deprivation in my own neighborhood. Not to the same extent to be sure, but there is something vitally wrong. The elementary-aged girls at the parks we frequent are nothing like those I played with as a child. Instead of playing with dolls and being kids, they compare their diets and pretend to be exotic dancers at a bar. They curse like sailors and are so mean to other children it’s disgusting. They’re sexually active at increasingly young ages. They do what they want, when they want, with no apparent fear of consequences. Where do they learn this garbage? More importantly, where are the parents?
As late as the 1950’s, children learned about the Ten Commandments in school. Today, there is no such guidance. Teachers cannot offer any moral guidance in public schools, and many parents don’t provide this guidance at home. Children are growing up lost. Too many parents are absent. They too are too busy serving their self-interests to notice or care that anything is amiss.
I’m not saying that there’s one belief system that would make this problem disappear. Christian values are a foundation of our home and family. My children learn to be polite and courteous, to tell the truth, and to have no false gods (money, clothes, celebrities) above God. We don’t evangelize our beliefs. We don’t tell others how to live. HOWEVER… kids do need to have something to believe in. This secular, anti-religious culture is doing so much harm. I don’t care if you are Christian, Muslim, Jewish, or anything else. We all believe in the same Higher Power. Please, for the good of mankind, teach your child values. Teach them to be loving, compassionate people. Teach them to value human life and to help those in need.
There has been much news this past year about China being the way of the future. I don’t believe it. Sure, they may have an economic advantage for a while. But if they don’t figure out a way to fix their culture and learn to value and respect each other, they will self-implode. They have already doomed themselves with their long-standing contempt for female infants. As of 2009, there were 32 million more Chinese males than females. This gap is increasingly annually. How long can this really go on?
My fellow Americans, we have a ways to go as well. If we want to be the leaders of the future world, we need to get our act together. This atheist, anti-religion, hyper-sexual, immoral popular culture has to go. We have to rediscover our humility and our humanity. We need to learn that there are much more important things in life than having the largest television, the most fashionable clothing, or the most expensive car. We’re broken and lost, but not irrevocably hopeless. America, we can lead the way into tomorrow. We just have to step up and have the courage to be politically incorrect and teach our kids that life is a gift from our common Creator, that life must be valued and protected, and that we must care for and love one another even if it means a little self-sacrifice. What is truly so radical about that?
Related Sources:
NY Daily News: Video Shows 2-year-old girl in China being run over by van- and ignored by at least 18 people: http://www.nydailynews.com/news/world/2011/10/18/2011-10-18_video_shows_2yearold_girl_in_china_being_run_over_by_van__and_ignored_by_at_leas.html
The Washington Post: Video of Toddler Twice Hit By Cars and Left for Dead Sparks Outrage in China: http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/asia-pacific/video-of-toddler-twice-hit-by-cars-and-left-for-dead-sparks-outrage-in-china/2011/10/17/gIQABRLvsL_story.html?wprss=rss_world
NY Times: Chinese Bias for Baby Boys Creates Gap of 32 Million: http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/11/world/asia/11china.html
Related articles
- Toddler left dying after hit and run prompts soul searching in China (guardian.co.uk)
- Toddler hit-and-run raises painful questions in China – Sydney Morning Herald (news.google.com)
- Toddler is left to die; China disquieted (cbsnews.com)
- Toddler Hit-And-Run Sparks Outrage in China (time.com)
- After toddler is left to die, China disquieted – CBS News (news.google.com)
- Toddler Hit-And-Run Sparks Outrage in China (time.com)
- Hit-and-run toddler death sparks outrage in China (seattletimes.nwsource.com)
- The video that shocked and shamed China – The Independent (news.google.com)
From Crayons to Condoms: Do You Really Know What’s Going On At Your Kid’s School?
I was bored Friday night and needed to something new to read. After a bit of digging around in the education section on Amazon.com, I found Steve Baldwin and Karen Holgate’s “From Crayons to Condoms: The Ugly Truth About America’s Public Schools.” The title intrigued me and it got good ratings, so I downloaded it to my Kindle and dug right in. What I was about to read shocked the socks off me.
We all know how much of today’s culture is steeped in political correctness, but do you really know how much that affects your child’s education? This book is an intriguing collection of parent and teachers stories about extreme political correctness (agenda pushing, gay education, sexuality, morals, religion, atheism, etc) in America’s public schools. Parents often run into problems with their child’s school, but when they try to talk to the school about it they’re bullied, intimidated, or told they’re the only one who has an issue with the subject. They aren’t taken seriously in some cases and in other cases are treated very poorly. We ran into that problem at Ethan’s old school. This book proves that you’re not alone. This book wasn’t written to attack specific schools or to promote homeschooling, but instead to point out a growing trend in today’s schools. Parents: listen up.
America’s schools were once a world standard. Today students are promoted and given A’s to help their self-esteem without being taught the basics of reading, writing, and arithmetic… not to mention American history and government. More time is spent on teaching kids “politically correct” attitudes and values than real academics. Our test scores show just how much good that did. Our schools aren’t performing well because they don’t focus on academic achievement. Instead, faddish educational practices (cooperative learning groups with group grades, inventive spelling, whole language instead of phonics), self-esteem programs, and social engineering occupy our kids.
Here’s an interesting quote from the text from one of the stories, “It is apparent that academics are no longer the primary focus of today’s public education system. The following quote from our former superintendent, in our school newsletter, shows what educators consider important for today’s student:“The skills employers most desired were behavioral and social skills. The least important skills were academic basics like math, science, computer literacy, and foreign language.”
Here’s another passage that stood out: “Today, parents dare not assume that books their children read are okay just because they are approved by the school or sent home by the teacher. Parents need to monitor what their children bring home. They may be surprised or even shocked. Because we couldn’t find other parents to help us, the district now requires high school students to read books describing the rape of virgins, spousal abuse, suicide as a peaceful solution to problems, extramarital affairs, transvestites, the occult, prison rape, and murder.” Many of the stories shared by parents included experts from their kid’s middle school and high school English class books that were vividly sexual. WHAT happened to the classics?
When it comes to sex education, what are your kids really learning? Here’s what one teacher told her 13-14 year-old students: “If you have sex, do it with zest and enjoy it!” That’s definitely get hormonal young teens to keep it in their pants, don’t you think? Another class learned about the “joys of gay sex” and had bulletin boards displaying pornographic gay magazines in their school’s halls, as well as information about gay centers and parties. Parents brought this to court in California, and the judge ruled that these materials were educational. Educational? Hmmm… I think I’d rather have my kids learn calculus instead of how two consenting adults enjoy time together. That information is not only inappropriate, but in no way prepares them for life.
Other parents wrote about rap music played during math class. Kids in one school are evaluated for math levels, then put in cooperative groups with much lower-performers and given group grades.. what happens to their drive and determination when they get C’s in math due to classmates not pulling their weight? Ninth graders performed plays using obscene language. Kids were assigning books about female genital mutilation. Kids were surveyed about how much money their parents make and who their parents’ friends are, as well as about their own personal sexual habits (9th grade). No wonder Johnny is learning anything! Do you really think he’ll be able to complete with his Chinese peers in the competitive business world when he grows up? No. He can’t comprehend what he reads or do basic math without a calculator. But at least he knows why Carlos has two daddies and what those daddies do in bed. Some things are important after all.
This book is for every parent. It doesn’t matter if you’re a republican, a democrat, or somewhere in-between. You need to be aware of what’s going on behind closed doors and the impact it’s having on the next generation of Americans. Some of the stories made me irate. Others were great examples of what parents can do if they step up, work together, and fight injustices in their schools.
Check it out on Amazon.com or at your local library. I can’t wait to hear about what you think!
Explosions, Manatees, and Pteranadons Too
Where’s one place where you can watch artificially created lightning bolts, dig for fossils under a sky full of Pteranodons, learn about all the functions of the human body, walk next to a blue whale, and spend an hour playing in a climb-able tree-house? MOSH, the Museum of Science and History in downtown Jacksonville, Fl, at 1025 Museum Circle, is one of our favorite places to hang out in Jacksonville. Whether you live here or are just passing through, MOSH is one of the best things this city has to offer.
We try to go on an educational field trip each Friday, which also happens to be “$5 Fridays” at MOSH. This is a great break for the wallet, considering that admissions usually run $10 per adult and $8 per child. That gets expensive quickly! $5, however, is more than worth the price. After a morning of piano practice, French, and phonics, we were ready to get out and have some fun with hands-on science!
We met our homeschool group at the front of the museum and learned that we were just in time for the Extreme Science Show in the JEA Science Theater. We thought we’d give it a chance and I’m sure glad we did! A scientist performed hands-on, interactive experiments in the center of the auditorium. Alex was one of the many children to volunteer and had a blast. They did experiments with static electricity, “Old Sparky” an electricity machine, balloons, sound, and much more. My kids were enthralled and paid attention the entire time (except for the baby… that’s a whole different story… shudder). The show lasted 30 minutes and left them pumped up with excitement. It ended with a big boom…. Literally (a sonic boom). Cover your ears!
The human-body exhibit—The Body Within– is always a winner. There are interactive exhibits for different bodily functions, such as noisy nerves that light up when you touch them, a digesting stomach that made Derek run in fear, and interesting pictures too. Alex loves this exhibit because you have to walk through a giant mouth to get into it. Ethan enjoyed the boxes where you stick your hand inside and guess what you’re feeling. Derek just peaked inside first, then felt it and proudly proclaimed his “guess.” We went through this area several times because there were so many things to see and buttons to push. My kids really like to push my buttons.
The Savage Ancient Seas: Dinosaurs of the Deep was just plain awesome. Although a little on the small side, it’s a dinosaur-lovers dream. Six-and-a-half-year-old Alexandria is my budding paleontologist and is crazy about fossils, so her eyes lit up when we walked in. There were Pteranodon hanging from the ceiling, a gigantic sea turtle fossil, and lots of creepy, sharp-toothed flesh-eating fish. Derek thought the monster shark jaw was scary but the marine reptiles were pretty cool. The hands-down winner was the dig pit in the center of the room, where the children used brushes to dig away the sand and discover fossils. It was busy with about a dozen “paleontologists” vying for space and brushes, but totally worth it. My children were “thrilled” to be pulled away after 30 minutes or so and walk through Currents of Time, a journey through Jacksonville history. They practically ran back into the dinosaur area as soon as we re-emerged.
The play area was busy today but we stopped by to climb the tree-house and play in the water exhibit before heading outside to Friendship Park. This park has been totally redone and is now absolutely awe-inspiring. There are three sets of fountains within a giant circular pond and they are synchronized to music. We walked around it twice, then found a nice bench and watched the show again. Wow! The view of downtown Jacksonville is amazing from Friendship Park and the water show is really great. Ethan says that was his favorite part of the entire trip.
Now the kids are nice and tired and sleeping soundly. Alex is busily coloring in her free MOSH coloring book and talking non-stop about the things she learned. The boys are excited to get up from naps and color theirs as well. What a great way to cap off a week of fun and learning adventures. I just wished I’d remembered to grab my camera! For $5 a person I think we’ll head back again sometime soon… with the camera.
















