On the first day of Christmas:
My true love gave to me money for a shopping spree!
We went to my mother and father in-laws’ home for a wonderful meal.
We rested.
On the second day of Christmas:
We decorated the lamppost.
On the third day of Christmas--
We cleaned:
--I organized the sun porch which had my telescope and all my astronomy paraphernalia piled around as well as all our school materials which were moved out of the bay window since the Christmas tree is now there.
We baked:
--Cappuccino Flats
--Peanut Brittle
--Falkenstein Peanuts
--Saltine Toffee
--Peppernuts
--Walnut Carmels
--Chex Mix
--Skillet Cookies
--Spritz Cookies
--Rocky Road
On the fourth day of Christmas:
We baked some more:
--Andes Mint Cookies
--Star Peanut Cookies
--White Nut Bread
--Boston Brown Bread
Thoughts from my big Green Chair
(Well, I really was sitting in a mauve chair nearer to the fire)
I don’t think I told you that I am now knitting a different prayer shawl. Knit 7 rows, pearl 1 row; repeat. I will give it to my nephew’s almost one-year-old when it is done. It represents all the prayers we prayed for my nephew and his family while he was in Iraq. He was wounded, but not as seriously as it might have been. We are grateful that he is now home. We continue to pray for my niece who is still there.

Did you know that Ishmael, Abraham’s son, had both a mother and a wife who were Egyptian? I’d missed that in my reading previously.
I'm writing about beauty in my notebook. Here is an excerpt:
Pause
We scurry; we scramble to finish. Everywhere we go, we drive as fast or faster than the law allows. Our thoughts are a jumble of appointments and schedules. Multi-tasking is a word that describes who we are. As we dash to and scurry from, suddenly we are startled. Our concentration is snatched away from us; we pause. Orion’s belt, perhaps, has caught our eye, and for one moment that is all there is. Or, per chance, we glance out upon a pink sky, brilliantly painted on the horizon, which pushes all else from our senses. Beauty holds us, captivates us; we sense that what we see so boldly states what we are missing and who we want to be.
Beauty is found in glorious simplicity. It trains our thoughts on things above, on our Creator. Beauty allows us to lay down our self-made importance and pick up a better perspective of who we are. Each time we choose to beautify our world—our homes, our selves, our minds, our spirits--we enrich our lives. Each time we give another person reason to pause, we have touched his life with a glimpse of the character of God.
Let us not forget to do what is important in the midst of doing that which is urgent.
On the Farm
Drive Me is still huge with calf. We check her several times a day to see if she has started labor. We assume that she is having twins since it is quite common in her family and she is bigger than normal.
Penelope seems to be upset with me. I’ve missed a few days of bringing her carrots, so she is not so willing to allow me to pet her forehead even when I do bring her a treat. Silly donkey.
The weather has been unseasonably warm. Although I miss having the snow and cold wind whipping through my coat, the warm weather does make farm chores a whole lot easier.
This week my hubby is working out of an office nearby, so he is able to be home each night. How nice!
And for those who love my kitties: How many are there in the photo below?


Blessings!
Jean