Saturday, August 29, 2009

Menu Planning Step 1 – our family's favorite meals

The Happy Housewife is doing a Menu Planning 101 series.  I could definitely use some help in this area so I thought I would participate in her step-by-step process.  She asked us to list 15 meals; I decided to list as many of our favorite meals that I could recall in categories.  Here they are:
Beef:
  • Beef Roast (Crockpot)
  • Tacos
  • Tostadas
  • Shepherds Pie
  • Tater Tot Casserole
  • Carne Asada
  • Beef Stroganoff
  • Swedish Meatballs
  • Burgers
  • Meatloaf
  • Salisbury Steak
  • Taquitos
  • Hash & potatoes O’brien
Chicken:
  • Stir Fry
  • Teriyaki Chicken
  • Orange Chicken
  • Chicken Enchilada Casserole
  • Chicken Nuggets
  • Baked Chicken
  • Fried Chicken
  • Roast or Rotisserie Chicken
  • Chicken Enchilada Casserole
  • Chicken Mole
Misc:
  • The Best Beans (Mayocoba/Peruvian Beans) & Mexican Rice
  • Enchiladas
  • Egg Rolls (Chicken, Shrimp, Pork, Beef, or Veggie)
  • Chilaquiles or Entomatadas
  • Quesadillas
  • Chili & Cornbread
  • Loaded baked potatoes (chili, cheese, bacon, sour cream)
  • Kielbasa and potato skillet or casserole
  • Hot Dogs/Chili Dogs/Corn Dogs
  • Chorizo and Eggs
  • Pizza 
  • Frito Pie
  • Potato Tacos
Pasta:
  • Pizza pasta casserole
  • Lasagna
  • Macaroni and Cheese with Spam or Ham
  • Spaghetti
  • Cheeseburger Skillet/Casserole
Pork:
  • Ham
  • Carnitas (Roast)
  • Chuletas
  • Pozole
  • Gyoza (Japanese potstickers)
  • Pork Roast with chile verde (mild green chilies)
  • Ribs
Fish:
  • Shrimp & Bacon Fried Rice
  • Tuna or Salmon Patties
  • Tuna Noodle Casserole
  • Mexican Tuna Salad (diced onions, tomatoes, serrano chilies, lime juice)
  • Shrimp Tacos
  • Fish Tacos
  • Fried Breaded Shrimp
  • Fish Sticks/Filets
  • Pan fried swaii catfish or salmon
Turkey:
  • Roast Turkey
Soup:
  • Albondigas (Mexican Meatballs) Soup
  • Potato and cheddar soup
  • Pozole with pork stew meat
Sandwiches:
  • BBQ Rib
  • Philly Cheesesteak
  • Deli meat (Bologna/Turkey)
  • Soynut butter and jelly/honey
  • Chicken Patty sandwich
  • Spam and Egg Sandwiches

Friday, August 28, 2009

Work is a blessing

Have to pay the piper.  I’m still waking up at 6:45 a.m. even when I’m not going to sleep until 12:45.  Thankfully, I’m feeling rested and still getting up at a decent time.

I’m waking the kids up now and timing them to see if I make it a game whether they’ll do their morning routine more quickly.

Today, I’m going to establish homeschool opening exercises.  Here is the plan:

Prayer
Scripture Story
Songs
Pledge of Allegiance
Hugs

We’re also going to start Rick Fisher’s math program today.  I purchased the workbook "Mastering Essential Math Skills: 20 minutes a day to success".  I am hopeful that this method will help my daughters to make great strides in their progress in math. 

Breakfast:  Cereal
Late Lunch:  Kielbasa on hamburger buns
Dinner: Turkey and Cheddar SW and red grapes
Snack: tangerines

Today I do bookkeeping at a client’s office.  I need to leave by 10:30 to get home by 2:30 for a 3 hour shift and 3:30 for a 4 hour shift.  I’ll try to work as efficiently as I can so that I can be back between 2:30 and 3:00.  Otherwise, I’ll cut time too short and DH will likely stress about getting to college.  (He drives 100 miles round trip Monday through Thursday in commuter traffic)

I left for work at 10:45 and started work at 11:45 after making a stop to mail an ebay package and picking up lunch at Stater Bros grocery store.  I left work at 2:15 and returned home around 3 p.m. after returning a bunch of books to the library.  The kids had eaten tangerines for a snack while I was away, but were quite hungry when I got home.  DH had to study for a quiz and didn’t get around to preparing lunch.  So as soon as I got home, I tried to get the kielbasa on the table and DH college snack brown bagged before he had to leave at 4 p.m.  Note to self:  ALWAYS HAVE LUNCH PREPARED FOR THE KIDS BEFORE LEAVING FOR WORK.

Baby Zilla  is sick, but he is still a bundle of energy.  I came home to find that he had drawn in red ink all over the refrigerator door!

Thursday, August 27, 2009

You Exasperate Your Children When You...

Today I was up at 6:45 a.m.  I’ve been catching up on my homeschool journals and filling in a few missing things.  I’ve got my 3 year old on my lap and its now after 7:30.  It’s not easy to get stuff done especially on the computer when you’ve got a squirmy toddler on your lap.  It is still hot – I hope this heat wave dissipates soon!

This list came from Spirittibee’s blog.  She couldn’t credit the original author, so I can’t either.  Spirittibee says,  "As a perfectionist and an analytical thinker, I admit that I have been less than a perfect roll model of love and acceptance 100% of the time with my children. I tend to expect too much, lecture too much, get upset too quickly, and be too critical."  Oh my gosh – I think she was describing me.  So here is the list:

You Exasperate Your Children When You…
1. Never admit you are wrong.
Instead, tell your children you have made a mistake and ask their forgiveness and God’s if you sin in your actions or attitudes.
2. Model hypocrisy (say one thing, do another)
3. Fail to keep promises.
Be cautious with your words. You may not think you are making a promise, but your children may interpret your words or actions as promises.
4. Demand too much of them.
Don’t expect them to act like adults. Be reasonable in your expectations of their actions, attitudes and how much responsibility you expect of them. Try timing your workflow to see if what you are asking is even possible (if you tend towards overloading the schedule).
5. Over protect them.
Don’t bail them out of problems – let them learn the hard way now. The cost will be less now than later in life when you aren’t there to pick them up.
6. Batter them with words.
Use your words sparingly! Be consistent and let your yes be yes, your no be no, and your words be solid in action.
7. Abuse them verbally.
Never call names, add explanation marks to their names or predict failure. Find ways to compliment and praise them instead. Tell them all the things they do well – not a list of their shortcomings.
8. Make discipline too severe.
9. Show favoritism.
Don’t compare children in their achievements, abilities or grades. They are each unique gifts from God.
10. Embarrass them.
Be careful and cautious with how you speak about them to others – especially when they are present.
11. Give no time warnings.
Don’t come in a room and tell them to stop immediately unless they are doing something that will harm them or others. Give them a few minutes to adjust to your expectations. Tell them ‘bed in five minutes’ or ‘we are leaving in ten minutes, so please finish and clean up’ – then follow through!
12. Try to be their buddy.
You are the parent. Time for friendships is later in life when they are parents themselves.
13. Withhold firm discipline and proper training.
If you tell them dinner is ready and they don’t come, no dinner. Don’t debate. You are the parent. Train them in the way they should go and always remain calm and prayerful in your decisions. Then stick to it!
14. Discipline inconsistently/use different punishments for the same offense.
Each child should receive the same punishment for the same crime. Being tired is no excuse for inconsistent punishments. Keep a journal to ensure consistency.
15. Are weak with your authority.
Don’t let the children ask you repeatedly to have or do something. Don’t allow them to even TRY to wear you down. If you make a decision, stick to it.
16. Consistently believe evil of them.
When you are suspicious of them, making accusations of wrongdoing, you are deflating their trust in your unconditional love and acceptance of them. Be happy with them and know that you are blessed to be their parent. Your trust and acceptance can encourage them to make right choices.
17. Do not listen to them.
Let them explain their frustrations with you and be honest with you about how they feel – even if it upsets you. They should be polite and respectful, but they should always be allowed to come to you with their feelings.
18. Continually criticize them.
"A child can only take so much gloom." – Little House on the Prairie
19. Communicate to them that they are unwanted.
If you tell them it would be easier to go to work than take care of kids at home and they will think you would rather be there. Don’t tell them what you are giving up to raise them or they will think you would rather not be their parent. When you are frustrated, pray – do not speak hurtful things you will regret.
20. Threaten them with rejection.
If they are not doing what they should, discipline them. If they refuse to obey, let them sit outside on a bench in your back yard because you will not allow willful disobedience in your home. Don’t threaten them with empty threats. Only say what you really mean after you have time alone to pray about the issue. Ask for help if the disobedience spirals out of control. Maybe an objective mentor can give you ideas you haven’t thought of to curb the problem.
21. Never communicate your approval of them.
If you only take time out of your day to correct them and not ever to encourage them, you are teaching them to seek your attention through negative actions. You are also making them not like themselves – which will make them seek approval in others by doing things to get attention from their peers.
22. Neglect them.
Don’t allow the phone or your own private duties to interrupt your time together. Make time to build a relationship with them. Take time to listen and communicate with them. Get to know them as a person. Keep a prayer journal for them and make notes about time you have spent talking with them. Remember what it was like to court your spouse? Love them with your whole heart. The house cleaning can wait.
23. Overindulge them.
Don’t allow them to be part of your decision making when you are making parental decisions and don’t spoil them with material things. Don’t allow too much screen time or ‘twaddle’ or they will develop a taste for ‘the easy life’ and balk at hard work and deep thinking. They will expect things to be given to them and not want to put out effort to achieve them.
24. Reward insolence, sass, pouting, anger, or disrespect.
A child should never raise his voice at his parents unless he is calling you from afar. Do not allow a disrespectful tone to be rewarded by acknowledgment. Cease the conversation and discipline. Bad attitudes are a symptom of a clouded heart. The bible talks about the heart’s wickedness. A great book on discipline and heart issues is "Shepherding a Child’s Heart" by Ted Tripp.
25. Cease a time of chastisement before it has produced humility.
Don’t stop in your punishment of bad behavior until you see the fruit of a changed heart. If the actions AND attitudes change, you have succeeded in your objective as their disciple. If there is only an action change, and yet their countenance is still angry, you have only taught them that lip service is all you are asking of them. Their heart is the root of the disobedience. Your job is not to weed out bad behavior, but to till the soil of the heart until GOOD can grow there.




Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Sweating the Small Stuff - Don't!

Today was hard.  I worked at one of my side jobs for 2 hours and still managed to have completed much of the homeschool lesson plan.  I need to add more fun to homeschool:  more projects, art, science experiments.  In the first week back to school, we’re focusing on the main subjects right now.  Time flies in this house especially when the kids take an hour just to eat lunch!  


I lost my temper with Captain and Princess during the math meeting this morning.  Of course, I admitted my wrong doing and asked for their forgiveness.  I’m not like my parents in that way – when I break the family rules , I own up to my actions and try to make amends.  The rule I broke was from "The Original 21 Rules of this House" by Gregg Harris:  “We always speak quietly and respectfully to each other”.  I don’t want my kids to ever think that they “deserved” it.  They know that mom is human and that I  make mistakes and bad choices and must repent just like everyone else.


I am recommitted to being easier going from this point forward.  I get upset too quickly which is probably why Richard Carlson’s books like “Don’t Sweat the Small Stuff” and Don’t Sweat the Small Stuff for Families” are read and re-read.  I need constant reminders to focus on the eternal perspective and not let the little things get to me.  I am really hard on myself to the point of self-deprecation at times.  As I look at this closely, what I have come to realize is that my high expectations for myself are not limited to just me.  This was an awful realization.  Nothing I did as a child was “good enough” for my parents, and I was sure that I wasn’t going to go down that road with my kids.  Unfortunately, I am not always the perfect example of unconditional love and acceptance.  Like I said, I can transfer much of my issues to them:  I can be too easily annoyed, too critical, and lecture them into a coma.  Its an area I will continue to improve.

Followers