20 Years of Homeschooling a Houseful
14 August 2007

The Perfect Purple Planner

Posted in Organization

For years I was constantly in search of the perfect organizational system.  Somehow, somewhere, I was certain that I would find the key to keeping it all together.  I tried various systems each one more complex than the previous.  All of them seemed to work…for awhile.  And honestly, the systems that were the most involved to set up and implement seemed to serve me for the shortest amount of time.  Slowly God showed me several truths in this area.


The first was that I was the mother of many children.  At that time, I was the mother of many young ones.  For many years I had at least 4-5 children under 7 years old.  Looking back, those years were simply harder than when you can have some older helpers.  Now, it isn’t impossible to feel peaceful, rested and blessed but it takes different expectations, focused planning and good old-fashioned hard work.


Next, I had to accept that there was no magic system.  While different techniques and strategies can sometimes seem to be “just what the doctor ordered” at some stage in our mothering careers, for the most part, the best system is one that I could easily use and maintain.  I recently lost a lot of weight and everyone asked me how I did it.  However, no one really wanted to hear the answer (which is…I ate very little and exercised like a crazy woman).  This same simple principle is true for most situations I find myself in.  This truth for me is somewhat disappointing.  I still want there to be some elusive magical entity that if I can just wrap my fingers around, will change my whole life.  Alas, other than the transforming power of salvation, all else pales by comparison.


Finally, I had to admit (at least to myself) that I was in love with the idea of organizing and planning.  I like to mess with my schedules and homeschool plans and how to rearrange my house.  I can easily while away the hours “planning” instead of “doing”.  If I wasn’t careful, I would rework the homeschool plan more than I was homeschooling the children.  Part of it was escapism on my part.  I was secretly lonesome for other adults and though I loved my children and my calling as a wife and mother, thinking and writing allowed me to feel more intellectual again.  Let’s face it, there isn’t a lot of intellect that goes into diapering and vacuuming up Cheerios.  Whenever I was working on the “perfect” organizational system, I felt intelligent and in control!


Upon realizing and embracing these truths, I hit upon the idea of the Purple Planner.  Almost perfect!  Now, I had to spend all of that time introducing the concept, because it will take all of one paragraph to explain its high-tech usage!  The purple notebook is a one-subject, 10 for a dollar, spiral tablet.  Now, I do prefer the ones with the tear out pages, but any will do. It wouldn’t have to be purple, but at my house, I’m the only one who can have purple.  I like a standard 8 ½ x 11, but you could choose a different size.


In all of my years of looking for the perfect planner, I could never find categories that were exactly what I needed.  I also realized that while many of my categories remain constant, I have projects that are ever-changing especially during different seasons of the year.  I simply write everything in this one notebook, and each “topic” gets its own page.  If I finish a page, I tear it out.  If I run out of pages in the notebook, I look back over all of my notes and file what I need or copy it into the next notebook.  That way none of my projects go stale for too long.


Now, since I’m sure you are probably curious, I will tell you what some of my topics are.  Yours could be wildly different.  I have a page with my husband’s name at the top, as well as each of my children.  I also have a page with my closest friends’ names and my mother.  When I think of something I want to talk to them about, I write it down.  If I see an academic, character or prayer need in a child, I jot that down.  There are pages of lists: Walmart list, buying club list, grocery store list, library books to request, children’s sizes, Christmas idea list, prayer requests, errands to run, and phone calls to make.  I make lists of people’s phone numbers and addresses and type them into my computer all at once.  I write down websites I want to check out.  Right now, I have a huge section devoted to the planning of the upcoming school year.  There are pages of quotes, inspirations, and funny things that my children did or said.  I keep track of milestones.  Now, I’ll admit that I sometimes have to hunt for the right page, but I know it’s in that notebook.  In a pinch, I just start a new “people to call” page, and I don’t sweat it one bit.  Some days I know I need a “to do” list, and I make one in the notebook.  At the end of the day, I simply tear it out.  I take the planner with me when I leave the house, and write my personal data in the front cover with a “reward offered if found” statement.


If I misplace a notebook at home, I know it will turn up and I simply start another.  This summer with my daughter’s wedding, I had one purple planner just for that event.  I know it seems silly, but this method absolutely works for me and I continually get comments about how I manage minute details.  The wedding probably had 5000 tiny details, and they were all remembered thanks to the 10 cent Mead purple lifesaver.


The only other item in my organizational arsenal is a (purple) binder that holds information I don’t want to leave our home.  It has emergency phone numbers, a photocopied page of our social security cards, credit/check cards and medical insurance cards, a pocket with take-out menus, sports calendars, the permanent phone/address list, copies of school and chore charts for each child, and account numbers and online passwords.


So, there it is.  Complete organization in a couple of hours for under $10.  I probably should package it up and market it!  You get the “free” pilot program.  Let me know if I missed anything!

 

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11 September 2006

The Breakfasts of Champions

Posted in Organization
I will never forget when I once read a book by a mother of a large homeschooling family.  I was so excited to glean tips about how to "do it all".  In the first couple of chapters I learned that her family ate nothing for breakfast except sugary cold cereal.  My bubble was burst.  First of all, my husband would have to take on another job!  Secondly, I'd be fighting sugar-induced rioting by 9:30 a.m.  And, finally, my little frugal gourmets would organize a mutiny!  They are not picky eaters, but they have come to expect a good meal  (at every meal...::sigh::)

One of the ways I make this much easier on myself is to have a planned breakfast (and lunch) menu.  That way I can still be creative at supper time, but not feel like a slave to the kitchen.  I really worried at first that they wouldn't want to eat the same thing every Tuesday, but after realizing that many children eat cereal and toast EVERY morning, I felt secure that they have it good! 

For this year, I am truly fortunate in the fact that my oldest daughter cooks all of the breakfast before she leaves for work.  As other children are ready to eat, they just reheat if needed.  The days of all of us sitting down for a leisurely weekday breakfast are gone.  Enjoy togetherness if you are still in that season! 

The 2006 fall/winter menu is:
Monday - Hot Cereal (usually oatmeal or farina)
Tuesday - Eggs
Wednesday - Yogurt & Granola
Thursday - Pancakes or French Toast
Friday - Cold Cereal (o.k., I didn't make it out without one day!)
Saturday - Homemade Muesli
Sunday - Breakfast Bread (scones, muffins, cinnamon rolls, etc.)

Toast, bagels, and English muffins are usually available in addition.  I don't allow juice as a general rule, but occasionally we have it at breakfast.  Fruit is always available.  My husband loves "big breakfasts" that include eggs, potatoes, bacon, sausage, and biscuits & gravy so we try to have a big brunch on Sundays after church.  I also incorporate some of those kinds of breakfast meals into my supper menu.

There have been times during pregnancies where I couldn't even bring myself to enter the kitchen in the mornings.  During those periods, I used a plan called 9x13 breakfast ideas.  They were breakfast casseroles that you put together the night before.  I still utilize many of the recipes, and we occasionally do that if we anticipate a busy morning. 

I'm sure that's plenty to "chew" on, so I'll leave lunch for another post!

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About Me

When I was a young mother and homeschooler over 20 years ago, I searched for a mother of many as a mentor. I found a few women along the way that helped me with parenting, but I was blazing my own trail for the most part with homeschooling. I see now how God used that situation to draw me closer to Him. It also forced me to develop my own vision and legacy of homeschooling, rather than simply copying the plans of another. Other than simple teaching experience, I have been mostly heavily influenced by the philosophies of Charlotte Mason and Thomas Jefferson Education (Oliver DeMille). I have read extensively about all kinds of homeschooling, and have enjoyed or endured brief forays into other methods. Later, as more books were available, and especially when I went online in 1993, many doors for fellowship and sharing ideas were opened. Now that I have moved into a new stage of mothering (no babies or toddlers, children moving out and marrying), I wanted to capture some of those things I most wished I had known when I had a houseful of small children. I want to encourage other moms to "stay the course". I have never regretted these years spent homeschooling. It was the best decision I have ever made. I now know that choosing a philosophy and curriculum need not be the basis for educating my children. God gives the vision, and we just need to get out of the boat and start walking toward Him.

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