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Monthly Archives: December 2011

cubby kids

Remember those rainy holiday days when you were locked up inside and only had your siblings and imagination for company?

We would get all the sheets out of our linen cupboard and spend hours playing house.

cubby-house

One of us would be mum and we usually gave birth to one of our teddy bear babies so we could be a ‘family’.

Nothing is more fulfilling than to see your own children playing dress-ups or cubbies. It’s the best kind of play.

But then I stumbled across some seriously amazing cubbies, and wonder if the children who play in these houses deliver teddy babies?!

cubby1

cubby

treehouse

Posh tots - country road gas station

Source: Poshtots.com

They are so gorgeous, I wonder how long the children enjoy playing in them? Would the $10,000 + price tag be justified?

The sheets and towels will be coming out of our cupboards again this summer.

Hooray for imagination!!

9 days!

IMG_9806

(Source: Farmchicks website)

 

One day, I will enjoy a white Christmas! It’s on the bucket list.

But for us coastal Aussies, this is more like our Christmas day if we can get past the traffic on the roads to make the beach!

We eat this:

and sometimes still swelter in the kitchen to produce the hot lunch

We wear silly hats, tell the bon bon jokes over and over (there’s always one that cracks everyone up!) and then curl up in a quiet corner too full to move. Our day starts early, usually about 4.30am, when the youngest (and me!) get up excitedly checking for our names on presents under the tree. By late afternoon, we retreat to the beach, or a pool, to work off the excess pudding before cold leftovers later that night.

How do you spend Christmas Day? What are some of your traditions?

CHILDREN BELONG TO ALL OF US: consider fostering?

If foster care is something you have been feeling might be ‘your thing’, then here’s a list of some books that really sealed it for me.

The first is   “Another place at the Table” by Kathy Harrison.

Here’s an excerpt from her epilogue:

People still ask me how I stand it. How can I tolerate the misery and hopelessness of it all?….. “Doesn’t it scare you?” they want to know. “Wouldn’t you rather teach again or sell towels, for goodness sake? Anything but continue to do what you do?” The truth is, there isn’t anything I’d rather do. I think keeping a home and raising up children is a good and noble calling. I say I am a foster parent with my head held high. It’s hard work and not for the faint of heart. It is sometimes a job for a warrior.

And a piece from the beginning of the book:

“When children come to me they are shattered. In the course of a few short hours they have lost everything than anchored them to their sense of self. They are truly refugees from a war they can’t begin to comprehend. My job is to paste them together until they can start to make some sense of it all. I offer a small island of safety in an unsafe and terrifying world.”

When I read this book, I wondered how Kathy had gotten into my brain and written down exactly what I was thinking!

The next is “Mixed Blessings” by Deborah Lee

mixed blessings

This is what Random House Publishers had to say:

There are around 20,000 children in foster care in Australia, but how many of us would actually open our hearts and homes to help? With husband Cedric, Deborah Lee is one of the unsung heroes of foster care, having fostered scores of children, many of them so-called ‘difficult cases’. In Mixed Blessings, Deb tells her story. If you have ever loved a baby, you will love this book. Because every child deserves to be loved the Deb Lee way.

 

Definitely made me laugh…and cry. A great inspirational read. I will be reading this again over summer.

Then we move onto the harder books to stomach:

Dave Pelzer’s books: “A child Called It” and “The Lost Boy” are two books that will at times, literally turn your stomach at the atrocities inflicted on a child. But there is also hope, and the story of a courageous child that no matter how deep his wounds, has come out victorious.

dave pelzer

Melissa Fay Green’s “There is no me without you”

 

book2

and Cathy Glass’ books are all deeply disturbing. If you finish one of her books, and don’t feel compelled to do something, check your heartbeat!

book3

 

cathy glass

For deeper research as to the ‘why’ behind abuse, the authors of “Ghosts from the Nursery” produce compelling if not controversial evidence that violent behaviour is learned and cultivated in the first few months of childhood development. Even more startling, the authors Robin Karr-Morse and Meredith S. Wiley believe that a predisposition to violent behaviour can be learned before birth. A “chemical wash” of toxins such as drugs and alcohol, combined with a mother’s stress hormones generated from rage or fear can directly effect the babies brain development.

And one of my favourites – not specifically on the subject of fostering, but rescuing the ‘least of these’ – the children, is Wes Stafford’s book “Too Small to Ignore”

too small

Children are too important and too intensely loved by God to be left behind or left to chance. Children belong to all of us and we are compelled to intervene on their behalf. We must invest in children–all across the world.

Do you have any great reads to add to this list? Leave a link here, or comment and I will update the post as I hear from you!

Mother claus is coming to town!

I know my brother doesn’t get to read my posts much, and my little nephews and niece won’t see it, so I wanted to show you how clever my talented mother is! This is just one of the many presents she has hand-made this year. She definitely knows the meaning of giving from the heart.

She pours her time (and a lot of money!) into making precious keepsakes for our children. I appreciate it more every year as I have taken on the love of creating gifts for my family.

teepee

A tepee for the village chief! I can just imagine the hours that my nephews will spend in here, and the imaginative play that only dress-up time can provide.

indians

indian

I adore the beading on the dress! And the bright red and aqua are gorgeous.

My parents leave Queensland in a few days time, to head down south with their campervan loaded to the brim with presents for their grandchildren.

It will probably look something like this!

car

or this

car1

If you see something like this on the Princes Highway between the Gold Coast and Wollongong, say Hello to my parents! Dad will be the one wearing the long-suffering grimace and Mum will be the one with the tinsel earrings, flashing reindeer badge and singing Ho Ho Ho at the top of her lungs!

house progress #3

Crazy weather is hampering our effort to get our roof on. If it’s not raining, it’s super windy, which no roofer will work in…(even if I try and bribe them with home-baked jam drops!)

P1000937

But, our trusty carpenters continue on regardless! Jamie, the newest member of our building team, moved to the Illawarra recently from Bathurst, NSW. Another country boy with impeccable manners and great work ethic.

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I am in love with our turned balustrades! There is a lot more detail to go on here yet, with brackets, newel posts, and finials to add that country flair!

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All our decorative trim comes from TMP Group, who you can find here.

extrim1

This is the book I bought on a wintery day in a Southern Highlands bookshop which has been a great resource for me while designing our home. It has so many beautiful photographs focussed on details like chimney shapes, finials and post brackets, front gates and window decoration. A great addition to my design library!

villa2

villa2

Have a super weekend….only 23 days to go!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

(I bought this for myself for Christmas!! All wrapped and under the tree waiting for me to open it with a look of surprise at what a great present my husband bought me!!)

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