Tuesday, August 29, 2006

Mark Twain on the News Industry

I was looking for a different quote by Mark Twain about newspapers when I came across this little gem...

...one of the worst things about civilization is, that anybody that gits a letter with trouble in it comes and tells you all about it and makes you feel bad, and the newspapers fetches you the troubles of everybody all over the world, and keeps you downhearted and dismal most all the time, and it's such a heavy load for a person.
- Tom Sawyer Abroad


You can visit a whole site dedicated to Mark Twain quotes here: Mark Twain Quotations

International Philosophy: Germany vs. Greece

This is a very funny video. I think there's a lot more to it than I was able to hear.

Pessimism and Despair in Ancient Rome

Pessimism is not in being tired of evil but in being tired of good. Despair does not lie in being weary of suffering, but in being weary of joy.

(GKC - The Everlasting Man)

Monday, August 28, 2006

Twin Brothers ordained Priests

I thought this was a really nice interview with Fr. James and Fr. Joseph Campbell who were ordained earlier this summer. It's a wonderful thing to know that there are vibrant, faithful priests being ordained in our day.

I will always remember with great affection a pair of old Jesuit priests who were twins - one of them taught Latin to my brother and I and a few other homeschoolers when I was in high school. Coincidentally, about a year after he started teaching us, his brother was assigned to our local parish. They really enjoyed sharing this vocation and told funny stories from their seminary days. Similar names too - the ones I knew were Fr. John and Fr. Joseph Geary.

Sunday, August 27, 2006

Test-driving the Schoolroom

P0006535
P0006535,
originally uploaded by Chez VH.
This summer we turned my big messy office into a small organized schoolroom. ("Turned" isn't really very fair since I'm still in the middle of it - though making a lot of progress.) The doorway has a gate so people (especially little boys under the age of three) can be banished when necessary. We gave the kids a few minutes to check things out (perhaps whet their appetite for the upcoming school year) and it was quite a hit! The Tintin books and new Viewmaster slides (Space, Animals and Geography of all sorts) were really big hits. It's nice to have fun things as part of the learning environment, but it's also a practical matter of keeping these kinds of things away from the dog AND having a controlled area where I can help them work on those habits of putting things away when they're done. We still have another week before we officially get started.

Children we're praying for...

Jack is a little boy dying of cancer. Read more here

Nicole Grace is a beautiful little baby born 12 weeks early - on June 28 of this year.

Saturday, August 26, 2006

Chesterton on Ancient Rome

I just finished chapter seven of The Everlasting Man. This one emphasizes the role of the Romans in history, and, in particular, their battle against Carthage. GKC gives a fascinating argument, not only for our respect for Roman (and Greek) mythology, but even an appreciation we owe to them for making the world, in spite of its faults, a better place than it might have been. Here are a few of the interesting points he makes...
The ancient religion of Italy was on the whole that mixture which we have considered under the head of mythology; save that where the Greeks had a natural turn for mythology, the Latins seem to have had a real turn for religion. Both multiplied gods, yet they sometimes seem to have multiplied them for almost opposite reasons. It would seem sometimes as if the Greek polytheism branched and blossomed upwards like the boughs of a tree, while the Italian polytheism ramified downward like the roots. Perhaps it would be truer to say that the former branches lifted themselves lightly, bearing flowers; while the latter hung down, being heavy with fruit. I mean that the Latins seem to multiply gods to bring them nearer to men, while the Greek gods rose and radiated outwards into the morning sky. What strikes us in the Italian cults is their local and especially their domestic character. We gain the impression of divinities. swarming about the house like flies; of deities clustering and clinging like bats about the pillars or building like birds under the eaves. We have a vision of a god of roofs and a god of gate-posts, of a god of doors and even a god of drains. It has been suggested that all mythology was a sort of fairy-tale; but this was a particular sort of fairy-tale which may truly be called a fireside tale, or a nursery-tale; because it was a tale of the interior of the home; like those which make chairs and tables talk like elves.
I really like GKC's imagery here - especially the imagery of the home. He has more on this elsewhere in the chapter.

The details of the Punic Wars - particularly Hannibals invasion if Italy - are particularly fascinating...
It is common enough to blame the Roman for his Delenda est Carthago; Carthage must be destroyed. It is commoner to forget that, to all appearance, Rome itself was destroyed. The sacred savour that hung around Rome for ever, it is too often forgotten, clung to her partly because she had risen suddenly from the dead.
At the worst crisis of the war Rome learned that Italy itself, by a military miracle, was invaded from the north. Hannibal, the Grace of Baal as his name ran in his own tongue, had dragged a ponderous chain of armaments over the starry solitudes of the Alps; and pointed southward to the city which he had been pledged by his dreadful gods to destroy.
Hannibal marched down the road to Rome, and the Romans who rushed to war with him felt as if they were fighting with a magician. Two great armies sank to right and left of him into the swamps of the Trebia; more and more were sucked into the horrible whirlpool of Cannae; more and more went forth only to fall in ruin at his touch. The supreme sign of all disasters, which is treason, turned tribe after tribe against the failing cause of Rome, and still the unconquerable enemy rolled nearer and nearer to the city; and following their great leader the swelling cosmopolitan army of Carthage passed like a pageant of the whole world; the elephants shaking the earth like marching mountains and the gigantic Gauls with their barbaric panoply and the dark Spaniards girt in gold and the brown Numidians on their unbridled desert horses wheeling and dartling like hawks, and whole mobs of deserters and mercenaries and miscellaneous peoples; and the grace of Baal went before them.

The door of the Alps was broken down; and in no vulgar but a very solemn sense, it was Hell let loose. The war of the gods and demonds seemed already to have ended; and the gods were dead. The eagles were lost, the legions were broken; and in Rome nothing remained but honour and the cold courage of despair.

Why do men entertain this queer idea that what is sordid must always overthrow what is magnanimous; that there is some dim connection between brains and brutality, or that it does not matter if a man is dull so long as he is also mean? Why do they vaguely think of all chivalry as sentiment and all sentiment as weakness? They do it because they are, like all men, primarily inspired by religion. For them, as for all men, the first fact is their notion of the nature of things; their idea about what the world they areliving in. And it is their faith that the only ultimate thing is fear and therefore that the very heart of the world is evil. They believe that death is stronger than life, and therefore dead things must be stronger than living things; whether those dead things are gold and iron and machinery or rocks and rivers and forces of nature. It may sound fanciful to say that men we meet at tea-tables or talk to at garden-parties are secretly worshippers of Baal or Moloch. But this sort of commercial mind has its own cosmic vision and it is the vision of Carthage. It has in it the brutal blunder that was the ruin of Carthage. The Punic power fell, because there is in this materialism a mad indifference to real thought. By disbelieving in the soul, it comes to disbelieving in the mind. Being too practical to be moral, it denies what every practical soldier calls the moral of an army. It fancies that money will fight when men will no longer fight. So it was with the Punic merchant princes. Their religion was a religion of despair, even when their practical fortunes were hopeful. How could they understand that the Romans could hope even when their fortunes were hopeless? Their religion was a religion of force and fear; how could they understand that men can still despise fear even when they submit to force? Their philosophy of the world had weariness in its very heart; above all they were weary of warfare; how should they understand those who still wage war even when they are weary of it? In a word, how should they understand the mind of Man, who had so long bowed down before mindless things, money and brute force and gods who had the hearts of beasts? They awoke suddenly to the news that the embers they had disdained too much even to tread out were again breaking everywhere into flames; that Hasdrubal was defeated, that Hannibal was outnumbered, that Scipio had carried the war into Spain; that he had carried it into Africa. Before the gates of the golden city Hannibal fought his last fight for it and lost; and Carthage fell as nothing has fallen since Satan. The name of the New City remains only as a name. There is no stone of it left upon the sand. Another war was indeed waged before the final destruction: but the destruction was final. Only men digging in its deep foundations centuries after found a heap of hundreds of little skeletons, the holy relics of that religion. For Carthage fell because she was faithful to her own philosophy and had followed out to its logical conclusion her own vision of the universe. Moloch had eaten his children.


This is provides some really interesting historical perspective, but also reminds me a great deal of the Ballad of the White Horse. The part about "For them, as for all men, the first fact is their notion of the nature of things; their idea about what world they are living in." is also a powerful piece of the education puzzle, I think.

I'm thinking of using this chapter with my Latin class this year to help them understand some of the significance of studying Ancient Rome and its culture.

We owe it partly to their harshness that our thoughts of our human past are not wholly harsh. If the passage from heathenry to Christianity was a bridge as well as a breach, we owe it to those who kept that heathenry human. If, after all these ages, we are in some sense at peace with paganism, and can think more kindly of our fathers, it is well to remember the things that were and the things that might have been. For this reason alone we can take lightly the load of antiquity and need not shudder at a nymph on a fountain or a cupid on a valentine. Laughter and sadness link us with things long past away and remembered without dishonour; and we can see not altogether without tenderness the twilight sinking around the Sabine farm and hear the household gods rejoice when Catullus comes home to Sirmio. Deleta est Carthago.

Harold Lloyd and Silent Comedy


I never thought I'd say this about a silent film, but Harold Lloyd's Safety Last is one of the funniest movies I've ever seen. It's available from Netflix on disc 1 of the Harold Lloyd Comedy Collection. I saw a documentary on Harold Lloyd quite a few years ago, but it's only with the popularity of DVDs (and Netflix) that so many of these old movies are becoming so readily available. I also appreciate that this is a high-quality tranfer compared to the cheap-o editions of Charlie Chaplin and Laurel and Hardy I've seen. It does make some sense that the art of physical comedy would have been mastered during the silent era. Ask Father (which is also rolling-on-the-floor funny) only includes a few lines of dialogue.

The Quote Meme

Just found this on Karen E.'s blog and had to give it a try. You go to the Random Quote Generator and pick out the first five that speak to you...

"I have never met a man so ignorant that I couldn't learn something from him."
Galileo Galilei (1564-1642)

"I would not waste my life in friction when it could be turned into momentum."
Frances Willard (1839-1898)

"To be mature means to face, and not evade, every fresh crisis that comes."
Fritz Kunkel

"The real hero is always a hero by mistake; he dreams of being an honest coward like everybody else."
Umberto Eco (1932-) Travels in Hyperreality

"
Humor is a rubber sword - it allows you to make a point without drawing blood."
Mary Hirsch

Thursday, August 24, 2006

The Seven Habits of Highly Effective New School Years:

This is for Maureen's neat project at Trinity Prep School. Willa's contribution could have been written for me (i.e. exactly what I need to work on). Here I'll just include the little tidbits that are most helpful to me in having the right attitude towards my children and learning.

1. Remember that regular learning and effort are far more important than one child, one subject, one year, one textbook.

2. Don't do for children what they can reasonably do for themselves.

3. With children we need to think "effective" rather than "efficient" (with another hat tip to Steven Covey)

4. Achieving a balance is key in so many areas (structure vs. flexibility, "In the world but not of the world", etc.)

5. Cultivate a love of the good and a desire for the truth - our goal is to have our children choose these for themselves.

6. Knowledge and virtue are both important, but they're not the same thing.

7. Age quod agis. This phrase, which means "Do what you are doing" helps remind me to not be in such a hurry or get frantic about all that needs to be done. Focus on the thing at hand and don't drive yourself crazy.

A Tale of Sunscreen and Two-Year-Olds

Even if you're always very careful about locking the car doors because you're afraid the kids will close themselves in there, you might allow your four year old to take the keys to open up the car when you're preparing to go somewhere and your very boyish two-year-old just might sneak in and discover that squirt bottle of baby sunscreen sitting in a little holder in the console and carefully squirt it on every button, knob, handle, lever, mirror and lock that he can find. Every single one. And a few seats too. And some windows. Just maybe.

Wednesday, August 23, 2006

I have a new niece!

what a cutie
what a cutie,
originally uploaded by mystical_rose84.
She's way too beautiful not to share. Born this morning at 5 am. Congrats to my big brother and his family.

Monday, August 21, 2006

Sunday, August 20, 2006

Thanks to Masstimes.org...

My husband doesn't have to miss mass today due to his travel back from Taiwan AND we get to see him an hour and a half sooner than if he had gone to the one Sunday night Mass in the area that we were familiar with (though it's ALWAYS a nice thing to know that he's safely back in the U.S. even though we have awhile longer to wait to see him).

I also want to mention that I'm very grateful that some parishes do offer Sunday night masses, especially in an area that they are so hard to find. I'm sure it's a lot of extra "trouble" for priests - especially in parishes that have only one or two - but these masses are so important for travelers, those who HAVE to work on Sundays, etc.

Masstimes.org

Ah, the Joys of Modern Life

At what other time in history could you experience such joys as attempting to have a normal conversation with your husband through a Skype video conference (direct from Taiwan) with a lapful of kids fighting over the microphone and loudly laughing because he's chosen the form of a cartoon cat. (The eyebrows were to die for.)

You might find yourself wondering what effect this form of technology is having on your children when the two year old kindly explains that Daddy's not in the microphone, he's in the computer - and your husband obligingly acts as if he's trying to pull himself out.

Friday, August 18, 2006

Homeschool Meme

I'm allowing myself to consider myself tagged by Becky at Farm school since I'm in the mood and it's awfully quiet around here with John still in Taiwan...

Homeschool books I actually enjoyed reading:
For the Children's Sake by Susan Schaeffer Macaulay
Designing Your Own Classical Curriculum by Laura Berquist
Homeschooling with Gentleness by Suzie Andres

Resources I won't live without:
A CD player, or three. (I'm outright copying Becky on this one - audio materials have been a HUGE blessing around here!)
Bethlehem Books
Chesterton
The booklist from the back of A Landscape with Dragons
Vision Series
Henle Latin
Google
New Advent
Lyrical Life Science
Faith and Life Series

Resources you wish you had never bought:
Audiomemory Math
Teach Your Child to Read in 100 Easy Lessons

Resources you enjoyed last year:
IEW's Phonetic Zoo
Linguistic Development Through Poetry Memorization (hate the name, love the program)
Chesterton
Blogger

Resources you'll be using this year:
Math-U-See - after a 5 or 6 year hiatus (in which I still used a lot of the manipulatives and teaching ideas) we're jumping back into this for the 1st thru 5th grade bunch.

The Baltimore Catechism on audio - which my father-in-law is recording for me and which I will share on love2learn when it's ready. My kids seem to do really well with memory work on audio.

The Compendium Catechism of the Catholic Church.

Resources you'd like to buy:
Stanley Jaki books
Leonardo da Vinci's notebook
Tintin books
Rosetta Stone German

One resource you wish existed:
A Rosetta-stone type Latin program with ecclesiastical pronunciation and lots of cultural, historical and musical components. AND beautiful illustrations and reproductions of classical art.

Homeschool catalogs you enjoy reading:
Emmanuel Books
Catholic Heritage Curricula
Michael Olaf Montessori
Sophia Institute Press

One homeschooling website you use regularly:
Various Catholic homeschool blogs - most of the sites I visit aren't strictly aimed at homeschoolers.

I'm sure I'm missing some - I may add more later. I tag 1st grade Mom, Maureen Wittmann, Mrs. Darwin, Ana and Nutmeg. If they happen to see this post. :)

Death Comes... A Beautiful Scene

There was one chapter in Death Comes for the Archbishop that particularly moved me. I want to preface this by saying that, although Latour is a great character, Cather makes him very personal; someone we can really relate to. One December night, during a time of coldness and self-doubt,

"he was lying in his bed, unable to sleep, with the sense of failure clutching at his heart. His prayers were empty words and brought him no refreshment. His soul had become a barren field. He had nothing within himself to give his priests or his people. His work seemed superficial, a house built upon the sands. His great diocese was still a heathen country. The Indians travelled their old road of fear and darkness, battling with evil omens and ancient shadows. The Mexicans were children who played with their religion."


Wow - who could't relate to that? Moms in particular, I think, tend to really knock themselves out and yet always feel guilty in many of these same ways. Isn't it easy for us to think that our job is very small and we still can't seem to succeed? What a beautiful, comforting picture to see that self-doubt is a normal (at least in the sense of common) part of attempting to accomplish what is actually an enormous job (remember Chesterton here too, of course).

But this is only the beginning of this beautiful segment. Father Latour felt a longing to go to the church to pray and yet fought it for a time before "despising himself" for avoiding it just because it was cold. It turns out there was someone waiting for him - an old Mexican woman who was a slave in a Protestant American home. Her owners were very hostile to her faith and wouldn't allow her near a church or priest. But in the winter, she slept in the woodshed and this once she got up the courage to go to the church. He brought her into the church to pray and learned that it had been nineteen years since she had been inside a church. Cather beautifully portrays her deep devotion and faithfulness and the impression this makes on Latour. You have to read this chapter yourself as it is impossible to do justice in a summary, but here is a little more to leave you with for now.

Never, as he afterward told Father Vaillant, had it been permitted him to behold such deep experience of the holy joy of religion as on that pale December night. He was able to feel, kneeling beside her, the preciousness of the things of the altar to her who was without possessions; the tapers, the image of the Virgin, the figures of the saints, the Cross that took away indignity from suffering and made pain and poverty a means of fellowship with Christ. Kneeling beside the much enduring bond-woman, he experienced those holy mysteries as he had done in his young manhood. He seemed able to feel all it meant to her to know that there was a Kind Woman in Heaven, though there were such cruel ones on earth. Old people, who have felt blows and toil and known the world's hard hand, need, even more than children do, a woman's tenderness. Only a Woman, divine, could know all that a woman can suffer.

Not often, indeed, had Jean Marie Latour come so near to the Fountain of all Pity as in the Lady Chapel that night; the pity that no man born of woman could ever utterly cut himself off from; that was for the murderer on the scaffold, as it was for the dying soldier or the martyr on the rack. The beautiful concept of Mary pierced the priest's heart like a sword.

Thursday, August 17, 2006

Death Comes for the Archbishop by Willa Cather

It's funny how busy family life can sometimes be quite complimentary to reading a book somewhat slowly, but savoring and appreciating it. This week John is in Taiwan again (on very short notice), Gus went to Hannibal, MO (Mark Twain's birthplace) with his grandparents and in the midst of this, those left at home had a wonderful, if brief, visit from the Henebrys. (I have met Ana, who is on my love2learn board, before, but we finally got to meet the whole family and we felt like old friends in no time - our common Portuguese background didn't hurt - finally someone in the Midwest who knows what Linguica is!).

Anyway, these busy times seem to be good for my enjoyment of good books as well. A little time to chat about favorites with friends over a glass of wine, a little quiet time after the kids are in bed - whatever it takes.

I seem to be reading a string of books about priests in the wilds of the Americas lately. First Graham Greene's The Power and the Glory and I just finished Death Comes for the Archbishop yesterday. Now I'm already digging into John O'Brien's Saints of the American Wilderness, which is looking quite good (readable and with good scholarship from what I can see so far). I want to write more about The Power and the Glory later (so much to write about, so little time - and so much more I'd like to read), but for now I want to remember some of my impressions from Willa Cather's wonderful story about Bishop Jean Marie Latour, the first bishop of New Mexico.

Latour came to New Mexico in 1851. He arrived in his new diocese after nearly a year of travel - starting in Cincinnati, down the river to New Orleans, by boat to Galveston, across Texas to San Antonio and into New Mexico along the Rio Grande valley. At this time, a decade before the Civil War, the railroads ENDED at Cincinnati! His journey was filled with accidents and injuries and when he finally arrived in Santa Fe after all of these difficulties, the Mexican priests refused to recognize his authority!

Thus begins the long and interesting careers of Bishop Latour and his faithful friend Father Joseph Vaillant.

One thing that struck me about the book was the remarkable connection between the author and Bishop Latour in their love and appreciation of what is good and beautiful about this wild and untamed land and its native people. This gives the book a wonderful flavor and fullness that makes it unique and .... persuasive.

Here is a sample of this "flavor" that I so enjoyed...

In New Mexico he always awoke a young man; not until he rose and began to shave did he realize that he was growing older. His first consciousness was a sense of the light dry wind blowing in through the windows, with the fragrance of hot sun and sage-brush and sweet clover; a wind that made one's body feel light and one's heart cry "Today, today," like a child's.

Beautiful surroundings, the society of learned men, the charm of noble women, the graces of art, could not make up to him for the loss of those light-hearted mornings of the desert, for that wind that made one a boy again. He had noticed that this peculiar quality in the air of new countries vanished after they were tamed by man and made to bear harvests. Parts of Texas and Kansas that he had first known as open range had since been made into rich farming districts, and the air had quite lost that lightness, that dry aromatic odour. The moisture of plowed land, the heaviness of labour and growth and grain-bearing, utterly destroyed it; one could breathe that only on the bright edges of the world, on the great grass plains or the sage-brush desert.

Wednesday, August 16, 2006

Celtic Spring - a remarkable story

I never even heard of NBC's America's Got Talent show until last Friday when my in-laws passed this story along to us ...

A Catholic homeschool family from California - with six children - play Irish fiddle and do Irish dancing together. Even Mom and Dad are part of the act and play music with them. They made it to this NBC caller-voting talent show and will be in the final round tonight.

In their semi-final round, which they won on audience approval, they went before the judges and something amazing happened. You really should see the video. One of the judges said that if they wanted to win the million dollars, the five older kids should "sack mum and dad and baby brother". The children protested and the audience positively howled. Another judge agreed that it wasn't worth the million dollars to split up the family. Check out this interesting interplay (and their remarkable talent) here. We'll be watching and voting tonight.

Monday, August 14, 2006

Picture Summer Toes

I found this wonderful flickr photo group through Lilting House (whose post today on "lessons learned" - relating to chocolate - is terrific, by the way) and contributed the photo of Frank on the swing (photo by Ria). My favorites are the infant toes basking in the sunshine and the two little feet in the big flip-flop. I'm a sucker for kid pictures.

1928 Joan of Arc Movie

I just saw the 1928 French Silent film The Passion of Joan of Arc last night. It's beautiful: amazing and powerful. Suitable for teens (certainly acceptable for anyone mature enough to watch the Passion of the Christ).

Some discussion is recommended on the historical position of the Church's relationship with Joan of Arc and the intentions of the filmmaker who, focusing on Joan's trial and death, might be viewed as having some degree of an agenda. It would also be fair to remember the controversies surrounding the Passion of the Christ for providing a similar focus.

I've almost finished going through the film a second time with the commentary which has been very interesting and helpful so far. I love how this Danish film expert refers to her in the familiar French/Danish Jeanne (sounds like Shen) in this English commentary.

The Passion of Joan of Arc was listed on the Vatican list of best films.

A Post I Had to Share...

Love the title...

"The Beatles never sang I want to hold your dead fish"

(One geology PhD's argument against holding hands at the Our Father)

Saturday, August 12, 2006

Ecce Agnus Dei

My photo posting doesn't seem to work since I started blogging from Flickr, but I wanted to share a beautiful half-finished drawing by my very talented niece MK. MK has done a bit of art work in the Catholic world - including for John Paul the Great University and Catholic Answers.

Click here to see the drawing.

My Kids Must Love My Way of Thinking...

You probably know that I was homeschooled for high school, but you may not know that my husband attended a top-notch classical academy for junior high and high school. (It's been quite interesting to compare both of our experiences while planning for our own family's education.) Anyway, I was going through some of his old papers yesterday (trying to sift out some portion of it for the circular filing cabinet) when I found a project he had written on the 17th century English poet John Donne. I felt a twinge of jealousy that he got to study Donne in high school, but my mind immediately turned to happier thoughts of creating literature assignments for Ria. She'll thank me some day. :) (Actually, I suspect she'll like the reading, though not necessarily the writing.)

Friday, August 11, 2006

Wednesday, August 09, 2006

Favorite Places - Southern California

Here's an additional contribution to the field trip thing; in honor of Lissa's move and because John and I spent four years of college and two years of married life in various parts of Southern California (I'm sure there are lots of people who have a much more thorough knowledge of the area - but you might as well start somewhere).

These were in fairly "lean" years, so these tend to be thrifty places to visit (or ones REALLY worth getting a season pass for). Never made it to Disneyland. We especially miss shopping at Trader Joe's. The Huntington and the Wild Animal Park are especially favorite places that we've returned to numerous times and always enjoyed.

Los Angeles Area:

Huntington Library, Gardens and Art Museums, San Marino, California
Lacy Park, San Marino, California
The J. Paul Getty Museum
Mission La Purissima Concepcion, Lompoc, California
Ronald Reagan Library, Simi Valley, California

San Diego Area:

San Diego Wild Animal Park, Escondido, California
San Diego Zoo
Mission San Juan Capistrano
Lake Poway

Tuesday, August 08, 2006

More Backyard Nature

Robbie
Robbie,
originally uploaded by Chez VH.

Today it was a bird that we think fell out of its nest. Bernie found it in the grass (thank goodness no one stepped on him) and at first we thought he might have been attacked by an animal. More likely he was just stunned from the fall.The children were all delighted when, after not finding him where they first discovered him (they had marked the spot so no one would step on him), they found that he was hopping about the yard, enjoying himself immensely.

UPDATE: Ria posted her sketch of Robbie here.

UPDATE #2: The Robbie story had a particularly happy ending The girls coaxed him into an abandoned bird nest we happened to find a few days ago. He contentedly slept in there while they loving carried him around until it was time to find a safe place for him for the night. John managed to afix this same bird nest to a branch of the tree and the mother bird was back and taking care of Robbie within minutes. Hurray!

More Toads - Easy Nature Study

Smaug swimming (toad #2)
Smaug swimming (toad #2),
originally uploaded by Chez VH.
We've had several toads come to visit us for a short while now - Blog, Smaug, Bog and then Blog again. This is a picture of Smaug (who is QUITE small) swimming in the kiddie pool. I think they all appreciate being temporarily relocated from their natural habitat since there's no significant water source nearby.

One thing I've noticed is that having all the gardens this year (most of which have little stepping stone paths through them that the kids LOVE) have caused lots of close encounters with nature since the kids like to spend so much time in the gardens (very little of it weeding, of course). So we've really been enjoying the toads, grasshoppers and other critters that went unnoticed before (or perhaps never even showed up - is it just that they like the gardens too?).

Monday, August 07, 2006

Have You Heard About...

the Father/Son triathalon team?

video here
official website

Some details on the website remind me of something I've heard of in other instances too - such as the movie Awakenings (which is quite good) of people who weren't able to communicate at all who, once they were given an "outlet" ended up communicating much more complex thought that anyone dreamed possible.

hat-tip New Advent

Book Meme

Got tagged by Maureen

1. One book that changed your life.

Friends of God by Josemarie Escriva. When I was in college, a lady from Opus Dei came once a month to lead a discussion group for women. She read aloud parts from this book (I'm pretty sure it was this book) and we discussed them. It was an important time for me.

2. One book that you’ve read more than once.

The Iliad by Homer Yes, it was even better the second time around.

3. One book you’d want on a desert island.

The Self-Sufficient Life and How to Live It by John Seymour (no I don't have it - I just looked it up on Amazon)

4. One book that made you laugh.

Leave it to Psmith by P.G. Wodehouse

5. One book that made you cry.

Karen by Marie Killilea

6. One book that you wish had been written.

There's No Place Like Rome by Archbishop Levebvre

7. One book that you wish had never been written.

His Dark Materials Trilogy by Philip Pullman

8. One book you’re currently reading.

Down to the Bonny Glen by Melissa Wiley

9. One book you’ve been meaning to read.

Kidnapped by Robert Louis Stevenson - this keeps showing up on my list and then something happens. One of these days!

Oops - I forgot to tag people. I tag electroblogster, Ria, Gilbergirl, mysticalrose_84 and any other relative or friend who might actually desire to be tagged.

Sunday, August 06, 2006

Idea: A Field Trip Meme, Sort Of

[cross-posted from Love2learn Blog]

Caddie Woodlawn's House, Menomonie, Wisconsin

All you Catholic homeschoolers out there with blogs...

I had an idea. What if everyone made a post listing favorite places (presumably kid-friendly) that they've enjoyed visiting in their home state/city/general locale and linked to it in an easy-to-find spot in their sidebar? With the Catholic Homeschool Blog directory organized state-by-state (foreign countries welcome too!), other families would have easy access to places that are worth stopping for on road-trips.

You can see mine in the side-bar under "Odds'n'Ends".

Putting on False Faces

I'm back to reading Death Comes for the Archbishop by Willa Cather. I thought the following was interesting, particularly after seeing the movie Crash...

The truth was, Jacinto liked the Bishop's way of meeting people; thought he had the right tone with Padre Gallegos, the right tone with Padre Jesus, and that he had good manners with the Indians. In his experience, white people, when they addressed Indians, always put on a false face. There were many kinds of false faces; Father Vaillant's, for example, was kindly but too vehement. The Bishop put on none at all. He stood straight and turned to the Governor of Laguna, and his face underwent no change. Jacinto thought this remarkable.

9th Grade Reading Lists

I'm finally figuring out how to use LibraryThing to organize my reading lists for school. These aren't all requirements (though some will be), just a starting point for organizing things. Suggestions welcome!

Religion
History and Literature (American)
Saint Stories for High School
ChesterTeens

[more lists coming later this week]

Saturday, August 05, 2006

Saint Benedict Still Rocks!

You might not want your kids to click through to the article, but I had to share this amazing story of five men whose lives were changed forever through participating in a Reality TV show in a Benedictine Monastery.

hat-tip Godsbody

It's Kind of Neat...

to find an empty bird's nest built of twigs, grass, mud and a long piece of plastic twine that we vaguely remember leaving outside when we were doing Euclid propositions in the sandbox earlier in the year.

Friday, August 04, 2006

Ria's Religion Materials

I'm actually working on a Religion list for Ria and Gilbertgirl, some of which they'll study with others in their co-op class as well.

Here's the list I have so far:

Catechism of the Catholic Church Part I: Profession of Faith
Saint Thomas Aquinas: The Dumb Ox by G.K. Chesterton
The Case for Christianity by C.S. Lewis
selections from The Hidden Stream by Ronald Knox
A Map of Life by Frank Sheed
Refuting the Attack on Mary by Father Mateo (Catholic Answers)
Pope Benedict XVI: God's Revolution, World Youth Day and Other Cologne Talks
Thoughts of Saint Therese (TAN)
Young and Catholic: The Face of Tomorrow's Church by Tim Drake

I'm generally planning on having them read the entire Bible over the following three years, but might pick out a few Epistles to read this year. I'd like to pick out one more Chesterton title (since they both like Chesterton a lot) that would be relevant and reasonably accessible. Any suggestions?

School Plans: Initial Take

Time to make sure we've got our act in order - usually my biggest problem is planning too much. This is an overview, I'm still fine-tuning the "additional living books" reading lists.

Ria: (age 13)

Science: Biology the Easy Way + experiments, lab reports at co-op + living books

Religion: The Map of Life by Frank Sheed, Catechism of the Catholic Church Part I, Compendium Catechism of the Catholic Church Part I + living books

Math: "Key To" Algebra Series (already in progress)

Latin: Henle I (continued), Cambridge Latin Unit 2 + supplements at co-op (prep. for National Latin Exam Level 2)

History: Christ and the Americas (selections - already in progress) + living books

Language Arts: Some combination of Correct Writing - Loyola Press and The Institute for Excellence in Writing (in co-op) , finish up the Phonetic Zoo

Literature: Flowers from Heaven: Thousand Years of Christian Verse edited by Joseph Pearce,
reading list not yet finished

Gus: (age 11)

Lyrical Life Science (continued) with Janice Van Cleave's Plants
Math U See
American History - Our American Catholic Heritage (selections) + living books
Spelling: The Phonetic Zoo
Cursive Connections
Latina Christiana II
CHC Grammar
Linguistic Development Through Poetry Memorization
Faith & Life Book 5, Friendly Defenders, etc.

Terri: (age 8)
Faith and Life Book 3
Lyrical Life Science
CHC Spelling & Grammar
Math U See
MCP Phonics
Prima Latina
Linguistic Development Through Poetry Memorization

Bernie: (age 6)
Math U See
MCP Phonics
Lyrical Life Science
CHC Spelling
Faith and Life Book 1 & 2
Catholic National Readers Book 1
Linguistic Development Through Poetry Memorization

Thursday, August 03, 2006

In Case You've Always Wondered...

...what's on our fridge, Ria posted our current Magnetic Poetry offerings on her blog. We had them put away for a long time and just remembered to take them back out a week ago or so. Various people will create sentences which grow and change (sometimes mysteriously) over time. It's a lot of fun. Usually Ria and I will get caught playing with it when we had intended to just get a drink of water before bedtime.

Wouldn't It Be Neat... (a significantly rambling post)

if someone had a database of famous people in which you could easily discover, compare and contrast what their educational backgrounds were? Maybe even their favorite books too.

I was thinking about this last night (actually VERY early this morning) when I was thinking about C.S. Lewis' classical background and how that might have impacted his writings. My train of thought brought me somehow to the idea of great men (in the general sense of mankind, not restricted to masculine of course) and how they might think of themselves. Truly great men certainly don't describe themselves as great and probably don't even think of themselves as great. C.S. Lewis wouldn't have said - "I have a classical background and look at how great I am - that's what you should give your children." Maybe he would have spoken in a reflective way about how he thought he benefited from that. It's a substantially different thing.

Which brings me back to Chesterton again. I'm continually in awe, not just of his wisdom but of that combination with his incredible humility. The humility, it seems to me, shows up especially in his attitude toward other people. You never get the sense that he feels himself superior to others for this or that reason or that he's "putting them down" even when he has some fun with some of their ideas. There is an amazing amount of respect and appreciation for what is good in that person and for their dignity as a human being.

Another reason I was thinking about this was that Ria was talking about blogging about a sign outside a local "church" proclaiming the topic for the next service as "Beware of Dogma". The conversation was interesting, though, as we explored the distinctions between a) making fun of people or acting superior with b) criticizing or even finding humor in their ideas. I don't know exactly how to explain or define that difference but I've seen it and I know that it exists. I guess it's mostly about our attitude towards other people. (On a side note: When a church advertises a sermon that is clearly meant to criticize the beliefs of others, they do leave themselves particularly open to criticism.)

It reminds me of a conversation about a conversation I had with a friend of mine in college. He had been talking with another student about courtesies we use in our speech with others. This other student thought that if someone owed you something, it wasn't appropriate to say thank you when they gave it to you (I don't remember the precise argument made). My friend and I disagreed, though (as does society in general, from what I've seen), and we decided that it had something to do with the dignity of the other person. I'd like to think about this concept more.

It seems to me that some of Chesterton's respect for other people came from his deep appreciation of the wonders of the world and God's creation that we so often take for granted. He (Chesterton) seems to be arguing in the Everlasting Man that it is partly this sense of wonder that makes books like The Iliad (and I think The Phantom Tollbooth too) worthwhile. Personifications of nature and concepts can give us a better understanding and appreciation of what they mean (in the Phantom Tollbooth, you have characters like the "Threadbare Excuse" while Homer gives us personifications of Anger and Hate - of course not all of the personifications are evil - I'm still in awe of the river in the Iliad that rises in protest to attack Achilleus for an evil deed). Here's Chesterton's actual quote:

"The point is that the personality perfects the water with significance. Father Christmas is not an allegory of snow and holly; he is not merely the stuff called snow afterwards artificially given a human form, like a snow man. He is something that gives a new meaning to the white world and the evergreens; so that snow itelf seems to be warm rather than cold."

Wouldn't the world be a better place if people like this were able to look at the world in a different way - a way in which they could look with awe and wonder at a sunset or a starry sky or the face of child? I think that really is a childlike way of looking at the world - in the same way that Jesus talks about us becoming "like little children".

As a side-note to the above linked article (about a woman who freely admits to being bored by her children): I don't know any adults who find their children a total joy 24/7 and I hate it when people argue from some imaginary extreme (a.k.a. a "straw man argument"). We're fallen and jaded and we have to remind ourselves to look at the world in the right way. Like love and joy, it's not something that just comes to us and remains; it's something that we choose for ourselves.

By the way, in case you missed it last time, I really like this quote from Chesterton on great men.

Speaking of C.S. Lewis and the Ancients...

(in the comments under "More Homer"), I need to re-read Lewis' Introduction to St. Athanasius' On the Incarnation.

You can read it here.

Good stuff!

Wednesday, August 02, 2006

Tuesday, August 01, 2006

More Chesterton on Homer (et al)

I really liked this quote from the chapter "Man and Mythologies" from The Everlasting Man (still plugging my way through this book - I'm glad it took me this long since it's been so exciting to read it alongside the Iliad - which I finished yesterday, by the way)...

The crux and crisis is that man found it natural to worship; even natural to worship unnatural things. The posture of the idol might be stiff and strange; but the gesture of the worshipper was generous and beautiful. He not only felt freer when he bent; he actually felt taller when he bowed. Henceforth anything that took away the gesture of worship would stunt and even maim him for ever. Henceforth being merely secular would be servitude and an inhibition. If man cannot pray he is gagged; if he cannot kneel he is in irons. We therefore feel throughout the whole of paganism a curious double feeling of trust and distrust. When the man makes the gesture of salutation and of sacrifice, when he pours out the libation or lifts up the sword, he knows he is doing a worthy and a virile thing. He knows he is doing one of the things for which a man was made. His imaginative experiment is therefore justified. But precisely because it began with imagination, there is to the end something of mockery in it, and especially in the object of it. This mockery, in the more intense moments of the intellect, becomes the almost intolerable irony of Greek tragedy. There seems a disproportion between the priest and the altar or between the altar and the god. The priest seems more solemn and almost more sacred than the god. All the order of the temple is solid and sane and satisfactory to certain parts of our nature; except the very centre of it, which seems strangely mutable and dubious, like a dancing flame. It is the first thought round which the whole has been built; and the first thought is still a fancy and almost a frivolity. In that strange place of meeting, the man seems more statuesque than the statue.

What Your 18 Year Old Needs to Know

I love ideas like this (and have started some lists of my own at various points) - really every homeschool parents should make one (and each one, rightly, will be at least a little bit different). Read DarwinCatholic's list here.

#6 Discovers A Favorite Game

It happened something like this last night (I shouldn't have been surprised because each of the other kids bumped into this sort of game in the same way - but it's still delightful each time it happens). Bernie had been playing with our art memory game that we've had since Ria was a preschooler. The box is battered and not all the cards have their pairs anymore. She forgot it on the couch (grrr) and I didn't notice until long after she was in bed (Frank had taken a nap and so was up quite late). I started to put it away and Frank immediately complained and reached out for it. I told him that if he sat down at the coffee table he could play with it right there, but that he had to be really nice and not scatter the cards all over (this is a necessary reminder with our little bruiser).

He proceeded to lay the cards out very carefully, face up, one-by one and was delighting at finding two different dogs, which he put together as a pair. Well, this started a full-on game of match-the-pair going. (It took a little scrambling to set up a pile with one of a set and keep the other on the table since he was inclined to start his own piles in the middle). He proceeded to play three full games of picture-matching with the sort of delight and enthusiasm that only a 2 1/2 year old can display.

When my kids have been introduced to this sort of game at this very young age, they've always hungered for more. It's great for their brains and forces some fully-present Mommy (or older sibling) time; which is an excellent thing.

Thanks for the memories, Maria Montessori. :)

More on Homer

It seems that my statement about the Iliad being warmly embraced by Catholic tradition might not be as accurate as I thought. I've been reading up on the Iliad in the writings of the Early Church Fathers and they have some pretty negative things to say about it. The ones I've read so far (primarily St. Augustine and St. Justin Martyr) are arguing against the Theology of it to those who might still be swayed to the Roman religion, so the context is substantially different from that in which it would be studied today. Still it does make you think further about it.

I also came across a reference in a Sermon by Monsignor Ronald Knox on St. Ignatius Loyola regarding the dangers of Greek influences on the Jews at the time of the Maccabees. Here's the quote: "Gentile influences began to creep in - the Greek tolerance of false worship and of superstition, the Greek cult of beauty, the Greek contempt for morals."

So I'm still working to further understand the context in which we study the Iliad and the reasons for studying it.