Family Time


“Is today Friday?” asked the suddenly confused neighbor. Nick attends our Friday night Neighborhood Bible Study when he is in town, but he was certain it was NOT Friday, nor had it been all day. He was simply hanging out with Grey when the clock struck 8:45pm.  Each family member scurried to the den for “Family Time.” Children plopped on the couch, some sprawled on the floor to stretch, and others made a back scratching train, but each one waited for Dad to pull out the book.

Nick followed the crowd to the den with a befuddled look on his face which compounded when he saw me (Mom) sitting with my hair pulled tightly back into a pony tail with an inch of night lotions and serums soaking into my (very young) face--the look made complete with my oversized men’s pajamas.

I watched his face as he surveyed the room and I knew he was hoping that other guests were not expected--with me looking like I did. We explained to him that he is welcome any night of the week for our “Family Time” and it was indeed NOT Friday night—neighborhood kids were settled comfortably in their own homes.

“Family Time” before bed is one of my favorite times of the day. It pulls us together and puts a period on our activities. It is a main stay in our family that will be remembered in a few decades with great fondness.

Everyday is filled with such busyness and lengthy to-do lists. Provide your children and maybe some neighbors with a constant in your home that can be counted on daily. Whether it is warm food on the stove at the same time each day, or your own evening “Family Time,” seize the day with the ones you love, because today may be all we have.

Let The Baking Begin

My family and I are trying not to overdose on goodies this season. Since my girls like to bake and my boys like to eat, this is not a new challenge. It is just an accentuated challenge during the holiday season, because we are baking in volume for recitals and friends.

I keep our kitchen stocked with better choices for healthy substitutions, so we are off to a good start, but sometimes we just want to try something new: put the ingredients together differently for a change of pace. Shake things up.

Experiment.

However, I personally don’t like the girls to “experiment” without a basic math formula for proportions. If the recipe flops, I see dollar bills going down the drain, not food. So I love when a friend shares a new relatively healthy baked item with us. It saves us time and money.

Our wonderful violin teacher did just that. She put five ingredients together and made us a really good gluten-free, flour-free baked cookie. It’s not exactly an “on the wild side” cookie, but it meets my checklist, so it’s finding a permanent place in our cookbook. I’m not sure if she made it up or found it on a website, but here it is (Thanks Hannah):


Peanut Butter Cookie Balls

2 cups peanut butter
1 ½ cups or raw sugar (or whatever you use)
1 egg
1 tsp vanilla
2 tsp baking powder 

                               Cream ingredients together.
 Roll into balls. Roll balls into sugar. Bake 10 minutes on 350. 
Enjoy!

Woodlandsmommy.com



I had the privilege of meeting the creator of the amazing woodlandsmommy.com website, Karen Logan. I nearly ran her off the road trying to get a good look at her cool car magnet. A few weeks later I saw her van parked outside of the Madam Newten Einstein Science Academy where a few of my kids take science. It turned out that Karen's precious daughter was going to be in the same science class as my kids. Karen and I became fast friends with much in common. Since she is featuring me as her December Spotlight mom on her website, I am spotlighting her on my humble blog. I'm definitely getting the better end of the deal, but I wanted you all to meet her. If you live in the Woodlands take advantage of this informative site and the book she recently published called The Woodlands Big Book of Parties.

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