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…a Special Easter Message for you….

April 3, 2010 By Laura 3 Comments

Our family’s Special  Easter Message for you….

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Filed Under: Celebrations, Faith, The Big Picture Tagged With: Easter, Easter wishes, Easter-message

How Doing Puzzles Benefits Our Brain

March 21, 2010 By Laura 2 Comments

Puzzles are not only a great deal of fun, challenging, and an enjoyable way to pass time, but putting together puzzles benefits our brains in numerous ways! For people of all ages. The brain can be so fascinating, as we all know, and learning the many ways in which doing puzzles help our brain health, is really cool.  I’m going to tell you the many ways as to how, in just a moment.
(And by the way,  I should also let you know that this post has a couple of affiliate links.)

puzzles-benefit-brain-3

Real quick first though, I wanted to show you a very different kind of puzzle, than we had ever done before.

1_esphera-sphere-puzzle

My father had this 540 piece sphere puzzle, and he couldn’t figure it out how to piece it together. So he brought it along when came to visit one weekend, to see if the kids might want to give it a try. It’s a very unique puzzle, in it’s spherical shape, which as you can probably imagine creates new challenges to assemble, as opposed to the more traditional flat table puzzles.

It is a puzzle that is a bit more complicated.  At first glance, the pieces look typical of any other puzzle.
However, they are actually plastic pieces, and have a slight curve to them.

puzzles-benefit-brain-4
puzzles-benefit-brain__5 But the backsides are where they really differ.   They all have a little number on them, from 1-540, which is of course, how many pieces are part of this puzzle.   This is where our 7 year old triplets were able to help the most.  They grouped the numbered puzzle pieces into their proper hundreds:  100’s, 200’s, 300’s, 400’s and 500’s.  And then got them more so in order from there.  Great educational help, from the triplets.
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puzzles-benefit-brain__007  But {A}(12), our oldest, really did most of the puzzle assembly.  You would think the numbers on the back of the pieces, really give away quite a bit, as to what pieces go where.  But if you think about it, each piece connects to at least 4 others.  So number sequence is hardly at play at all times.
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puzzles-benefit-brain-8
It really is a bit a tricky thing, to connect them just right too, as there is no table or hard surface, to press down on.  Out girl found her technique though, and you would, too. In addition to the typical challenges of a puzzle, you don’t have a photo of the puzzle on all sides for this spherical one.  Of course, you do have the numbers to help guide you somewhat.  Still, it does take some focus and attention.
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It’s a proven fact, that puzzles are good for one’s brain.  EHow offers these facts about why puzzles are so good for your brain:

• The brain is a highly complex machine that constantly forms and reinforces connections between its 100 billion cells. Performing mental exercises, such as puzzles, can help form new connections and boost long-term mental performance.
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Making Connections

• Connections between brain cells, and in turn the ability of each neuron to chemically signal the 10,000 or so other cells it connects with, are what form memories.

puzzles-benefit-brain-2

Strengthening Connections

• Memory retrieval and the ability to process new information is associated with brain health.
Puzzles can help with both of these important brain functions by strengthening the connections between brain cells.

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Giving Your Brain a Work Out

• Just as you exercise to build and maintain muscle mass, you can also strengthen your brain by exercising it.
Engaging in problem solving exercises creates new connections in the brain while strengthening old ones.

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Use It or Lose It, Baby!

• If you don’t give your brain a solid work out, your mental strength starts to deteriorate.
As you age, it is important to keep your brain fit through routine exercises.

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Continued Importance Throughout Life

 • According to one study in the Journal of the America Medical Association, elderly people who strengthened their synapses through ten sessions of brain-boosting exercises showed improvement in memory, reasoning skills and mental processing, “well beyond the specific skills the volunteers learned.”

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So we can only assume, that puzzles are a great mental exercise, for our kids!  Or anyone, at any age.

I’m thinking with all of benefits for our brain, I could really stand to join my kids doing a few puzzles, or 1,000, myself.  Perhaps the younger kids start enjoying puzzles, the more their brains can benefit from them.    I think I’ll be encouraging doing more puzzles for my own kids, as an activity for those rainy days, or an after-dinner wind down before they settle into bed for the night.  I already know that they love to do crossword puzzles, and the more structural type.  But we need more old fashioned puzzles to put together around here! What a great idea for Christmas present, come to think of it. And putting together puzzles can be a great family-time activity, as well!

Here are some more ways in which kids doing puzzles benefits their brains:

• Hand-Eye Coordination     • Fine Motor Skills      • Gross Motor Skills      • Problem Solving
• Shape Recognition    • Memory    • Setting Small Goals

I haven’t been able to find this fairies design sphere puzzle online yet. But some of you homeschoolers may also love this other Esphera spherical puzzle (540 pieces) that is a world globe, which of course would not only be fun, but a great geography learning as well.

puzzles benefit brain
But if you and your family prefer traditional puzzles, they are just as fun, and of course give you all the benefits, too!

puzzles-benefit-brain-1

All in all, I think the likely perks of doing puzzles now and then, can be great for anyone.  If nothing else, it’s a leisure and relaxing activity, that exercises patience and persistence as well.   But as we all know now, there is so much more in it for all of us, than that!

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Filed Under: Elementary Homeschooling, Games, Homeschooling, Middle School Homeschooling, Science, The Big Picture Tagged With: brain-development-activities, educational-games-for-kids, homeschooling, how-puzzles-benefit-our-brain, puzzles, puzzles-develop-brain, puzzles-increase-memory, puzzles-make-you-smarter

Palm Cross

March 20, 2010 By Laura Leave a Comment

how to make a palm cross

With Palm Sunday almost upon us once again, we thought we would re-post this tutorial which we had in the Big Picture section last year, on how to make a nice cross for your home, with the blessed palms you bring home from mass on Palm Sunday.  We hope you find the instructions and photos helpful, and the craft enjoyable, in making a beautiful palm cross for the walls of your home.

how to make a palm cross

First, take 3 sets of 2 palms each, and at least one good palm wisp.

how to make a palm cross

In the area the intersection of the cross is, put the ends of one set of palms alternately layered in between 2 of the others, going in the opposite direction of course.

how to make a palm cross

Then takes the last set, and layers those for the other side.

how to make a palm cross

Pinching it all together at the intersection, take one side of the palms and makes a loop with them to the back of your cross.

how to make a palm cross

Securing that with your fingers to the middle as well, and then do the same with the other side.

With the formed cross in hand, take the wisp of palm you had set aside, and start wrapping the intersection of the crossed pieces, to secure them tightly.

The below collage, to be viewed left to right in rows top to bottom, is not every single move. It just gives you a general idea of how it is wrapped around, crisscrossing, and going up and down as well.

how to make a palm cross

how to make a palm cross

When you only have about 2 inches left, turn the cross over,  place it on the table, and holding the wrap tightly, take the remaining end and feed it under the wrap a couple of times, and then just pull it tightly. The front of the middle of the cross then looks like the last square in the above collage.That’s it!

how to make a palm cross

We hope you have a happy and peace filled Palm Sunday !



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Filed Under: Celebrations, Crafts & Creations, Faith/ Catholic, Holiday Crafts, The Big Picture, Traditions, Tutorial Tagged With: blessed-palms, Catholic, Catholic-holy-week, Catholic-palms, Easter, Holy Week, palm craft, palm cross, palm cross how-to, palm-cross-tutorial, palms, plam sunday

Tuna Pea Wiggle

March 18, 2010 By Laura 49 Comments

Tuna Pea Wiggle recipe

When I was a kid, my absolute favorite meal, was Tuna Pea Wiggle.  Honestly, I thought maybe my mother or grandmother made up the name for this recipe.  But no, it turns out ‘wiggle’ is a real term, for ‘cream sauce’.   I think that just having the word ‘wiggle’ in the name of this dish, is enough to intrigue any silly kid.  Having crackers for dinner, may be another plus. At least, that’s how we make it. There are other variations I’ll mention after, but my kids and our whole family, LOVES Tuna Pea Wiggle, just as much as I do.   As Catholics, this is a great meatless meal for the days of abstinence of Lent, and we often have it on those days. But that doesn’t keep us from eating it the rest of the year!

Here’s how to make it:

tuna-pea-wiggle-recipe * Participating Ingredients:

  • 2 cups milk
  • 1 tsp. butter or margarine, and add to milk above
  • 3/4 cups peas (we use frozen)
  • 1-2 cans of tuna
  • salt & pepper
  • 2 Tbsp cornstarch, mixed w/ 1/4 c. milk
  • saltine crackers

*  We double this recipe, for our family of 6, and we eat it all in one meal. Everyone has seconds.  For a doubled recipe, we use 2 cans of tuna. We like it a little saucier.

recipe-1

Add 2 Tbsp. of cornstarch to1/4 cup of milk, and mix to dissolve with fork.

milk-base-in-pan2  In a medium saucepan, heat the milk and butter/margarine until bubbles form around edge of pan.         
DO NOT BOIL!

Stir in the cornstarch and milk mixture.   Cook until it thickens.

tuna-pea-wiggle-recipe-3 Add tuna and peas.

tuna-pea-wiggle-recipe-4 Mix it all in.

tuna-pea-wiggle-recipe-5 Add salt and pepper to taste.

tuna-pea-wiggle-recipe-6 Stir and let thicken a bit more.   It’s just a visual thing. There is no amount of time, right, or wrong way.

saltines-7 Spread saltine crackers on a plate.

tuna-pea-wiggle-recipe-10 Ladle Tuna Pea Wiggle over the saltine crackers.  Salt and pepper a bit more, if desired.  I desire.

tuna-pea-wiggle-recipe-8 Enjoy every-single-bite.

Don’t be afraid to have seconds.

Now, here are a few variations:

– My cousin told me she has always had ‘Salmon Pea Wiggle’.  She has never had it with tuna. Interesting!  The opposite is true for me.

– I’ve heard of people adding cheddar or Velveeta cheese to the sauce.   I love cheese, but not with tuna and peas, personally.

– Tuna Pea Wiggle can also be served over toast, biscuits or boiled potatoes.   But I have always, always had it over the saltine crackers.  Because I’m still that silly kid.

Have you ever had Tune Pea Wiggle?  Does your family eat other variations of it? Do you call it something else?
(Update – You’ll enjoy reading the comments on this one, as much as we have! This post has been so popular, from ‘Tuna Pea Wigglers’ all over the world! Lovin’ it)

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Filed Under: Faith/ Catholic, Main Dish, Recipes Tagged With: Catholic-blogs, Catholic-families, Catholic-Lent-meals, Lent-meatless-meals, meatless meals, old-fashioned-recipes, tuna pea wiggle, tuna recipes, tuna-pea-wiggle-recipe

5th Basketball Season, Slam-Dunked!

March 12, 2010 By Laura 4 Comments

basketball-and-sneakers

{A} just finished up her fifth basketball season with the Plymouth Girls Basketball League, and what a season it was!

Last year as a player on the junior league, she had a really great playing year, with all of her acquired skills finally coming together, gelling, and showing out there on the court. This year, she started with the senior league, and she was really looking forward to it. Of course, she really loves this game.

Try-outs were at the end of October, and she did really well there. We heard she was one of the first girls drafted by one of the coaches, who we were not very familiar with because he was a senior coach.

She would be playing for team Liberty, and she realized very quickly though, that this year was going to be different for her.  After the year she had last season, it was a tough pill to swallow.  If anyone knows {A}, she’s just a happy-go-lucky kind of girl.  A very sunny disposition. The kind of person people say to “Do you ever stop smiling?”.  She is very sociable, friendly, self-confident, and loves to joke around and have fun with people of all ages.  Even her coaches.  She’s serious about playing well, but she’s really light-hearted about it all too.  She just likes playing hard, but having fun doing it.

Well, it’s safe to say she stopped smiling quite a bit this season. Especially early on in the season. Because she realized at her very first practice, that her coach this year was all business.  He’s all about the game, teaching the girls to use their skills properly, and make them better players. He wants certain things done, in certain ways.   He’s tough, direct, and not the least bit hesitant about being loudly vocal to anyone who doesn’t follow his exact directions.  What a clash for our Little Miss Sunshine!

We knew she had a rough year ahead of her. Unexpectedly rough.  But as her parents, we thought it was a great thing for her. Why?  For one thing, this guy was an excellent coach, and we knew she’d come out of the year,  even a better player.  He knew this game well, and he was passionate about defining the skills of any girls on his team.   Teaching them proper form, thinking ahead, “looking around”, and “being smart”:  terms we heard him shout frequently this season.

It was also an opportunity to build her character.  A way for her to experience, how the world is filled with people with very different personalities than her own, and there will be times in her life, when she’ll need to find a way to work with such people in her life, gracefully. To respect authority in certain situations. There was much to learn this year, that would go far beyond the game of basketball.  She would grow not only as a player, but as a person.  It could only be a good thing.

01

Coach just passed out shirts at the start of the season, and she was none to pleased to see she was number 1.  “No pressure.”, she said.

Practices were a bit of hard work, with a lot of skills drilled,  and strategies taught, and {A} never missed one.  As tough as Coach was, it was easy to see all season, that he knew what he was doing, just looking at the score boards. They had an excellent season of 10 games, with 8 wins and 2 losses, only by a point or 2.  I didn’t take photos all season, but {A} was finding her groove, and learning how to handle Coach,  a little more every week.   She was out there on that court every game, always sporting her crazy big sneakers, and only sometimes, her smile.

Last weekend was play-offs, and the Championship game, for the teams left standing.  Our team, Liberty, won their first play-off game on Friday night, 26-4.  Play-off game 2 on Saturday was another win of 12-19. {A} played awesome those 2  games, on offense, defense, and shooting as well. They made it to the Championship game scheduled for noon on Sunday.

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Here they are pre-Championship-game on Sunday, huddled down the school hallway, listening to Coach.

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10 Warm-ups.
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Game time, playing against the Monarchs . . . .

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12 Catching the rebound.
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13 Coach was all about his marker board.  He used it to explain every thing, whether it was a bad call on the girl’s part, or a plan when they got back on the court.  It was an excellent tool, that really helped the girls who benefited from a visual to clearly understand.

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15 #2 was one of our boys ‘other’ favorite players, besides their sister.
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03 It was surprisingly tense game.  I am super competitive, and one of  ‘those’ moms, cheering, hooting, hollering, or screaming from the sidelines, making a scene.  You have no idea.  By half-time, the score was 10-8, with Liberty leading.  Too close for me.

In the end, the Monarchs won by 6 points, with a final score of 13-19.   The other team simply played a better game that day. (That’s me, practicing sounding like a good sport.).

I need the practice, because next year, the boys, {JM} and {S},  start playing basketball too.  We’ll be living at the gyms  every year during basketball seasons,  from then on out.

04

The crowd was only on one side of the gym – the side I was shooting from.  {A} was the first called up, to receive congratulations, and her trophy.  They had both learned to appreciate each other, for their strengths and weaknesses, as they both saw it.
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05 The whole team: Liberty.   There she is on the far right, smiling.

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There is no shame, in being runner-ups!
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07 But our girl is still #1, to us.

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Filed Under: Life In General, The Big Picture

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