So Every Day.

– embracing the ordinary –

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Ordinary work, which is what most of us do most of the time, is ordained by God every bit as much as is the extraordinary. All work done for God is spiritual work and therefore not merely a duty but a holy privilege.
- Elisabeth Elliot

  • Book Reviews

    Folks, This Ain’t Normal: A Book Review

    September 12, 2013 /

    Perhaps I was pre-disposed to like this book. The author – Joel Salatin – is a Virginia farmer.  A good old country boy who attended college in South Carolina but returned home to his Shenandoah Valley roots and his family’s farm. He’s a Southerner with an education, a passion for real food and a vision to show people there is a way to manage land and animals appropriately and with good stewardship. And he loves Jesus. That’s my kind of guy. I waited about two month’s on our library’s interlibrary loan system to get a copy of Folks, This Ain’t Normal in my hands. It’s a popular book and it’s…

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    Keep Reading . . .

    45.

    May 1, 2019

    I’m over here …

    November 3, 2020

    Five Finds Friday (boots, of course, and pretty drinks and a book update)

    August 6, 2021
  • Book Reviews,  HomeSchooling

    Abigail Adams: Witness to a Revolution — Book Review

    June 11, 2013 /

    Reading is a cornerstone to our school here. (Speaking of school – did I ever share a photo of Riley’s diploma?  Someone somehow remind me to do that one day.  Kevin did a fabulous job on it – it looks like a lovely work of art.  And the official name on the official document?  After much deliberation and various suggestions, we landed on Wildwood Halls of Ivy.) But back to my original subject. Reading. With Ambleside Online, assigned read-alouds make up a large portion of our curriculum base. This term our history focus has been the Revolutionary War period and the beginning of democracy in America. We’ve read through Natalie…

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    Keep Reading . . .

    connections. relationships. education.

    April 20, 2020

    weekend ramble (fishing, manicures and Noonday)

    February 18, 2019

    hi.

    December 18, 2019
  • Bergen Hawkeye,  Book Reviews,  HomeSchooling

    book reviews, other blogs, helping hands

    April 25, 2012 /

    I’ve been singing the praises of our favorite children’s museum  for as long as we’ve been living in South Carolina. We’ve been visiting Hands On! with friends and alone for years now. And I’ve often joked that they should pay me to support them. In fact, I make that joke a lot with any company/brand/organization of which I am overly fond.   (Keen.  Nalgene bottles.  You name it.) But this time, my joke is sort of working out. I’ve been partnering with Hands On!  since February to help promote the museum through social media. (Yep – be my pal and hop over to their Facebook page and like them.  And, if…

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    Keep Reading . . .

    Five Finds Friday (a new look, a story that stands the test of time, a t-shirt London designed)

    May 15, 2020

    morning song: a poem

    April 25, 2019

    one of those . . . weeks

    September 8, 2021
  • Book Reviews,  HomeLife

    Book Review: The Help

    October 7, 2011 /

    So I’m late to the party. I just finished reading Kathryn Stockett’s novel The Help. I know, I know already. It’s a movie. It’s in the theatre right now. Oh well, I’ve never been a bandwagon girl.  Everyone knows that – right? So maybe I put off reading the book until now. (Actually, I never heard of the book until after it became a movie so I really never made a conscious choice about it in any direction at all.) One sentence: I adored this novel. It made me cry. And maybe I am a glutton for punishment – that is possible – but I love a book that makes…

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    Keep Reading . . .

    these days ….

    December 7, 2020

    just recounting a day . . .

    June 20, 2017

    Five Finds Friday (last first day, a giant sweatshirt and tomatoes)

    August 14, 2020
  • Bergen Hawkeye,  Book Reviews,  HomeLife

    Henry Huggins: A Book Review

    September 23, 2011 /

    Aren’t there just a few authors from back in the day that just seem to stick? A few names that everyone was reading in fourth grade? I don’t know who your names were, but a few of mine were Judy Blume, Cynthia Voigt and Beverly Cleary. Beverly Cleary created that pesky little icon Ramona. The kids and I have listened to loads of tales from Ramona while traveling in the car. For school Bergen Hawkeye and I read out loud to one another from various books.  We take turns reading each paragraph. (I love hearing his inflection and watching him laugh when he gets a written joke.  Plus, I am…

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    Keep Reading . . .

    back of a book, on the porch

    October 2, 2019

    single and other conditions

    January 22, 2019

    that musical everyone loves.

    July 13, 2020
  • Book Reviews,  HomeLife

    Mozart – The Wonder Child: A Book Review

    September 2, 2011 /

    The School of Keigley is back in session. (And we still need a better name I think.  It just hasn’t been a priority.) I know I’ve mentioned that we use Ambleside Online as our primary curriculum guide. Each year we study three composers.  (One per twelve-week term.) Last year one of our three guys was Beethoven.  (Remember London’s terrific artwork?) And this year we kick it off with Mozart. We listen to Mozart and we try to read a handful of books about the composer – if they’re available. And it’s often pretty hard to locate great kid reading material about dead composers that doesn’t read as if it’s dead…

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    Keep Reading . . .

    Lake Jocassee with the Boys

    August 29, 2019

    five finds friday (the right ice, a great kid, gorgeous views)

    June 14, 2019

    These Is My Words: A Book Review

    November 4, 2019
  • Book Reviews

    Book Review: Bird by Bird

    April 26, 2011 /

    It has been over a month or two since I have finished any book my hands have touched, not counting novels the children and I are reading for school. So it is with great enthusiasm that I announce, I have finally completed Anne Lamott’s Bird by Bird: Some Instructions on Writing and Life. This was a book that everyone in the world seemed to know about except me. And when I was amongst writing folk and mentioned that I had never read this work, I was treated as if I earned my degree from Sears Roebuck or from a dude named Cappy’s. After cracking this book open and spending the…

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    Keep Reading . . .

    current plans. current mood.

    January 2, 2020

    This Week. Feeling ALL the Pressures.

    December 28, 2020

    spring madness. it has descended upon us.

    April 21, 2021
  • Book Reviews,  HomeSchooling,  Keiglets

    The Burgess Animal Book For Children: A Book Review

    March 9, 2011 /

    The majority of books that I read to the kids for school purposes come from a list on Ambleside Online – our primary homeschool curriculum source. Last year we read Thornton W. Burgess’ Bird Book for Children so I was already familiar with this author’s style. Burgess creates animal characters and a storyline for his creatures. In The Burgess Animal Book for Children the woodland animals gather each morning to attend school with Old Mother Nature, who serves as the teacher for both the animals in her school and for the readers of the novel. Each of the forty chapters covers several animals in the same family group and describes the habits and characteristics…

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    Keep Reading . . .

    When Buying Local Is So Cute

    May 5, 2020

    five finds friday (oatmeal cream pies & a little explaining about “that” photo)

    March 12, 2021

    weekend ramble (the wrong date. the wrong time. the right pants.)

    April 22, 2019
  • Book Reviews

    The King’s Christmas List: A Book Review

    November 22, 2010 /

    After I finished reading and reviewing Dave Ramsey’s The Money Answer Book, I hopped on over to booksneeze and had them send me another little tome to ponder. This time it was a children’s book entitled The King’s Christmas List by Eldon Johnson. Even holding the book in my hand, I felt like it was going to be a hard sell kind of book. 1.  It is published by Tommy Nelson. 2.  It is promoted on the back cover by blood:water mission and World Vision. I really wanted to like this children’s story about a little girl offering true and pure gifts to a king. I mean, the gold sticker…

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    Keep Reading . . .

    five finds friday: Dickens and Twists and a cake baker and a cuddler

    February 15, 2019

    two decades. the last was the growing up. the next will be the growing out.

    January 22, 2020
    hawk

    Otto Meets a Hawk

    July 21, 2021
  • Book Reviews,  HomeLife

    Dave Ramsey’s The Money Answer Book: A Book Review

    September 9, 2010 /

    (Above you will see the progression of my attitude toward the book I am holding and am currently reviewing now.  It’s okay if you laugh.  In fact, please do.) Let me tell you what I know about Dave Ramsey. His face is plastered on a huge billboard I drive by at least weekly.  He’s grinning on the sign but I always feel as if he is shouting at me and judging me and that he somehow knows the amount of money I waste on Tostitos. My friend Nate Rector thinks Dave Ramsey’s pretty great and even loaned us a gargantuan set of Dave Ramsey cds for our listening pleasure.  I…

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    Keep Reading . . .

    soundtrack of my mind

    February 10, 2021

    five finds friday: Dickens and Twists and a cake baker and a cuddler

    February 15, 2019

    weekend ramble (from morning Clemson adventure to evening fancy adventure)

    March 4, 2019
  • Book Reviews

    Book Review: A Year Without “Made In China”

    July 1, 2010 /

    Remember that sweet adventure I was able to take with Beth? I brought a book with me. Because I thought I might actually be able to read it. And – you know what? I did read it. I really did. It literally jumped out at me from the library’s shelf.  I was looking for a novel – some escapist literature, if you will, for an escapist trip. But I picked up Sara Bongiorni’s A Year Without “Made in China” instead. In the end, I am really glad I did. Bongiorni is a reporter and a mother and a label checker.  She and her husband made jokes for years about the…

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    Keep Reading . . .

    Grill. Master.

    July 7, 2020

    Lists: The Only Way I Ever (Sometimes) Get Stuff Done

    August 26, 2020

    parenting advice: for you & me

    April 1, 2021
  • Book Reviews

    Crazy Love: The Book Review

    April 12, 2010 /

    I’m not a bandwagon girl. I’m more of a if-everyone-likes-something-then-maybe-I-won’t-like-it-just-to-be-different girl. (I’m not saying that’s a good thing.  It probably isn’t.) That tendency, however, explains the reason why I am just now finishing Francis Chan’s book Crazy Love. It was really popular.  Last year. So I didn’t want to read it last year. I think there’s a reason why I read it now, instead of then. The full title is Crazy Love: Overwhelmed by a Relentless God. And I have been discovering something about God’s pursuit. Because God works like that – you know? I had to plow through the first sixty pages or so before I was involved in…

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    Keep Reading . . .

    Noonday Trunk Show

    February 11, 2019

    cliff’s edges.

    March 1, 2021

    five finds friday (ankle boots, shaved ice, another great book)

    May 17, 2019
  • Book Reviews

    I Like To Read: The Red Pony, A Book Review

    March 4, 2010 /

                              I like to read. (And I wish I had more time for it.  One day, right?) Left to myself I would read primarily fiction – my favorites are Lee Smith and Sharyn McCrumb, Ron Rash and Appalachian authors in general. But as a former English major in college and current English teacher I feel an obligation to keep up my reading of classic literature. Actually, it’s less an obligation and more a simple desire to keep my mind working in some other direction than diapers and Cheerios and the easiest way to clean my filthy oven. So, I…

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    Keep Reading . . .

    my social dilemma

    September 16, 2020

    five finds friday (ukuleles & queso)

    January 10, 2020

    Raising Girls: embracing help through Awaken

    August 20, 2019
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