Showing posts with label Feast Days. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Feast Days. Show all posts

Monday, January 14, 2013

January

My snow babies!

Watching "The Very First Noel" after eating our Rosca de Reyes on the Feast of the Epiphany.

I gave our learning cabinet a liturgically appropriate makeover after packing away all of our pretty Advent/Christmas decorations.  Since we celebrated the Solemnity of Mary, the Mother of God on January first,
I went with a Marian theme.  :)

Just a pretty sky pic.  I love the time of day during which this was taken.

Thursday, December 06, 2012

A visit from St. Nicholas

Dining room table set with our pretty Christmas table cloth and dishes, and little monogrammed stockings filled with real gold dollars (!!!), chocolate coins, and candy canes.  We also had clementines, hot candy cane cocoa, and
Butter Braid pastries that I specifically ordered from the kids' school fundraiser for this morning's breakfast.  :)

Our St. Nicholas statue, and a new wooden sign I bought at Hobby Lobby.  Love it! 
Also:  St. Nicholas DVD and (not pictured) some appropriate Christmas books.

Austin held up his candy canes and said, "Look, Mommy!  A heart!" 

The kids were so happy to wake up this morning and find all their goodies.  Over breakfast, Dylan sighed and said, "I wish we didn't have to go to school."  With one look at each other, Darren and I made the unspoken executive decision to let them stay home.  We wrote notes to their teachers that we were keeping them home today for personal family reasons, which is true!  I'm so happy to share this special day with them.  We're listening to the David Archuleta Holiday Pandora station right now while deep cleaning their bedroom.  I've promised that if we can get it done today I'll take them after school tomorrow to buy a Christmas tree of their very own to set up in the big bay window of their shared room.  They don't realize it, but failure is not an option here!  Even if I have to do most of it myself, their room WILL be clean by tonight, because I am in love with the thought of Darren reading them their nightly bedtime Christmas story by the glow of Christmas tree lights.  Happy St. Nicholas Day! 

Tuesday, February 09, 2010

Along the Alphabet Path: Highlights from "O" week

I feel the need to hurry and post our "O" week before we've finished "P" week, especially since my mom will be here TOMORROW (!!!) and I don't know how frequently I'll be blogging during the month she's here! So, quickly, here's the abbreviated version of what we did:

St. Odilia and Orchis Fairy coloring pages


Oceans
Tuna fish sandwiches and ocean cups, examining our sea shell collection from Nonny!





Fun with Cheerios!
The Cheerios Play Book and Cheerios bracelets!





Owls and Oil Pastels


I think these are the only things I managed to get pictures of. Other topics that week were the Feast of the Presentation of the Lord, for which we made Oatmeal Pancakes from our Alpha-Bakery cookbook. Crepes might be more traditional, but I read this in The Catholic Home: "...all Christmas ornaments, decorations, and anything else not taken down on January 6 must be packed away until next year. You can easily offset any reluctance to do this with the promise of a pancake breakfast. Pancakes and crepes are traditionally eaten for Candlemas because of their sunny color and shape." I totally went with the pancakes. :)

We read The Our Father and Hail Mary, and The Owl and the Pussycat, and other assorted storybooks. We had fun with Ocean Math, Ocean word worksheets, and...I guess that's about it. Doesn't look like much now, but it was a fun week!

Friday, October 02, 2009

Celebrating our Guardian Angels

What a beautiful day to celebrate our guardian angels! This morning we read two sweet stories of Wupsy, a guardian angel, from the Catholic Children's Treasure Box books we're borrowing from my generous sister-in-law. (We've not yet gotten to Angel in the Waters, Pascual and the Kitchen Angels, or the guardian angel story in Devotional Stories for Little Folks, but the day's not over yet!)

We also did a really neat art project with colored bubbles (for "B" week!) which, when dry, made beautiful backgrounds for some guardian angel drawings! Meghan didn't want to draw on hers, but here are Dylan's (on the left) and Caitlyn's. So pretty!


Early this morning I started a batch of Angel Kisses, so they had plenty of time to bake while we read and worked on our angel pictures! They made a lovely snack before lunch, and they are just so easy to make! Many thanks to Dawn, again, for sharing this lovely idea!


Tonight we're having angel hair pasta for dinner, and then I'm off to work, but only until one! Yay! The rest of the weekend promises to be filled with family fun, and I'm really looking forward to enjoying every minute of it! Happy feast day!

Angel of God, my guardian dear, to whom God's love commits me here,
ever this day, be at my side, to light and guard, to rule and guide.
Amen.

Wednesday, September 30, 2009

Feast of Saints Michael, Gabriel, and Raphael, Archangels


I have to preface this post by saying that it pains me greatly to not have any photos from yesterday. I took a bunch, too, but lost them all last night! I kept getting a "file error" message while trying to transfer them to my computer, and finally the only thing I could do was just reformat my memory card, losing, in the process, all the photos I had taken during the day! Sniff! I'm sure I don't have to tell you how sad that made me. :(

However, despite my lack of pictures to prove it, we really did enjoy a lovely feast day yesterday! It's one of our favorites! This beautiful image of St. Michael is one I printed, trimmed, and laminated to use as a cake topper for the delicious devil's food cake we made for dessert last night. Get it? Because Michael battled the devil? Okay, that's probably pretty obvious. ;)

For breakfast we had St. Michael's Waffles, and, because "it is a tradition that blackberries are no good to eat after September 29th because 'the Devil spat on them when he was cast out of Heaven into Hell on Michaelmas'!" we topped ours with warm blackberry jelly! They were so yummy!

We read the stories of Sts. Michael, Gabriel, and Raphael from our books of saints, and Dylan did a wonderful job of copying the St. Michael's prayer onto this gorgeous image of St. Michael battling Satan! He and the girls also did a splendid job of coloring the images shared by Charlotte for this special feast day!



Hope you all had a lovely feast day, as well!

Sunday, June 07, 2009

Trinity Sunday

I was feeling particularly motivated one day last week and decided to start a liturgical planning guide in the notebook I use to organize my thoughts.*

I made it only so far as July, but I was excited to have a few definite plans in place, first being for Trinity Sunday...today. I just love the Women for Faith & Family website, and really liked some of their celebratory dinner suggestions. But, when I realized that Darren wouldn't even be here to dine with us, I decided to scrap the whole idea. I mope a lot when he's gone, and the thought of all that work no longer really appealed to me. However, while we were at the grocery store yesterday afternoon, I impulsively decided that I would go ahead with my plans; the children and I still had every reason to celebrate!

So today we reviewed our catechism lesson on the Holy Trinity (Dylan and Caitlyn needed little review, but Meghan was really cute with some of her responses!) and we spent a lot of time in the kitchen on dinner prep.

Our theme was three, for the Holy Trinity, so, with our barbecue chicken, we had three bean salad and clover leaf rolls, and for dessert, we had triple berry shortcakes. It was all so yummy, and I'm so glad I changed my mind. The kids kept saying how delicious it all was, and they had so much fun helping me make the rolls and shortcakes! :)



*And, okay, so I just have to share this story, too: While I've thought for a while that a liturgical planner would be a great idea, I never took the time to think one through until very recently; until Pentecost, actually. Because, in the days preceding Pentecost, I had actually considered making this lovely cake (can't say it enough--love that Women for Faith & Family!) but then forgot to check if I actually had any of the necessary ingredients. At around 4:00 that Sunday afternoon, I finally decided that I would see what we had, and, sure enough, it wasn't enough. But, with stubborn determination, I decided I would make that cake, and just used what was on hand! Hahahaha! I didn't have nearly enough powdered sugar for the frosting, so I just poured the soupy mixture over the top after spreading a thin layer between the cakes, and my candles were all wrong. I didn't have red frosting, so cherries were our hearts. But, you know, it still tasted divine, and, in fact, it really was rather lovely in it's own charming way. Dylan said it looked like "a vintage birthday cake" and thought it was just the most beautiful thing ever. Really, it was quite nice. But I decided that day that from then on, I'd be a little more prepared for upcoming feasts. :)

Thursday, April 23, 2009

Cupcakes!


Meghan helped me make cupcakes this morning to share with her lovely speech therapist, who visited today for what we thought would be the last time. (Although it turns out we will get to see her again at the beginning of May! Yay!) We had a sweet little party near the completion of her session today, though, complete with some really cute Dora plates, cups, and napkins that Darren had picked us for us a few days ago.


And, since we had so many cupcakes, we decorated the rest this afternoon with a St. George theme! Last year we made our own version of Charlotte's amazing dragon cake, but I knew I just wouldn't have time this year and besides, I just didn't think I would be emotionally up to the task. I say that with a wink and a smile, but really, it's true! I was crying to Darren at the dinner table a few nights ago that I couldn't believe it was already nearly a year since the last St. George's Day. (It's a very good thing that my dear, sweet husband is, by now, so accustomed to my moods.) But I was remembering how my mom had recently arrived in town then and what a big help she was that day and how awesome it was having her here for those two months! I miss you, mom!

Anyway, we improvised...and I'm so glad we did! Some super simple cupcakes (white frosting with red crosses) were enhanced with a cute little display configured from Dylan's Lego and Playmobil sets! Brave St. George with his sword, shield, and flag, a couple of horses, and one of Cait's Polly Pockets even made an appearance as Princess Una, from the beautiful book St. George and the Dragon! (We just love that story!) :)


Hope you all had a great day, too!

Sunday, October 05, 2008

Celebrating in our Domestic Church

"Isn't it awesome," I said at the dinner table last night, "that our faith is so rich in history and feasts and traditions?" One of the most delightful and unexpected benefits I've discovered in home educating our children, in fact, has been celebrating the liturgical year with them. It's sequence and rhythm provide such a beautiful foundation upon which to build every other component of our learning. And fall, my most favorite time of year, is filled with such an abundance of wonderful occasions to celebrate! Here are a few pictures of our most recent festivities:


This was a spectacular celebration. So simple, really, but so significant within our family. Dylan loves St. Michael the Archangel, and Caitlyn has a special fondness for St. Gabriel, so we spent the day coloring Charlotte's beautiful coloring pages, reading about the Archangels, and we even made a cake! It wasn't angel food, which would have been nice, but chocolate, which was what I had on hand. After dinner, we read a prayer for each of the three Archangels, and as we did so, each of my three older children placed a candle on the cake. I had read in The Catholic Home that the color orange is often associated with St. Michael, blue with St. Gabriel, and yellow with St. Raphael, and, as luck would have it, I found in one of my kitchen drawers an old package of birthday candles with polka dots in those very colors! (And, hey, polka dots are in, right? Maybe?)




Our old kitchen angels were resurrected for this special day! They had been hiding in my closet, and two were missing this year (having sustained permanent damage at the hands of our resident two year old) but we are so happy to once again have these whimsical fellows gracing our dining and learning area! We read angel stories: Pascual and the Kitchen Angels, of course; Angels, Angels Everywhere; and Angel in the Waters. We served "Angel Kisses" at tea time (with many thanks to Dawn for the lovely idea) and angel hair pasta for dinner. Dylan copied an appropriate bible verse on some storybook paper I created for him, we again delighted in the handiwork of that ever talented Charlotte, and we did a simple little angel craft with a few items from our craft cabinet.







We read a beautiful book we had checked out from the library earlier in the week. We have several other St. Francis books of our own, but this was one we had never read before and we loved it so much that we'd like to add it to our collection! We colored pictures. I wanted to make bird feeders, but took a nap instead because I was supposed to work that night. Darren made a deliciously rich Italian pasta dish for dinner and, because I hoped that St. Francis, the good natured Italian friend of animals, would appreciate the gesture, we served Gelato on Zoo Pals dishes for dessert. :)



I realize, of course, that it is simply not possible to "do it all". (Saint Thérèse of Lisieux, for example, was sadly overlooked this year. But next year? I'm thinking these sacrifice beads would be just lovely.) It is my humble hope, though, that any effort, however small, will help illustrate for my children the importance and beauty of our faith, and that, as they grow, these traditions will be ones that they, too, will freely choose to observe. I pray they will always remember a faith filled, love filled home.

Tuesday, September 16, 2008

Blessed

Darren has taken this entire week off from work, in the hopes that we may actually accomplish a majority of the herculean tasks topping our mighty to-do list. And yet, given all that we have to do, he still gladly makes time to participate in the children's school day, joining us for circle time, praising their efforts, and supervising their studies for me while I indulge in such luxuries as unhurried showers! How my heart rejoiced at the sight that met my eyes as I emerged from the bedroom this morning:



Lessons were smoothly moving along in full swing, and he had even brought in a thematic jar of leaves and caterpillars from our garden as a center piece for our learning table! And yesterday, if it bothered him at all that I was inside cutting out hearts and swords for Our Lady of Sorrows, instead of helping him clean out the storage shed, he uttered not a word.



Nor did he complain when, while he was busy excavating the garage, I, too, was busy...snapping photographs of the gardens during the children's "recess".














How blessed I am to be married to such an incredible man.