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Monday, February 29, 2016

Product Review: US Art Supply Calligraphic Practice Pad

***Disclaimer: I received the following items for free for the sole purpose of an honest review. See Disclosure/Policies.***

Purchase: http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00PGBVNM2 (Calligraphic Practice Pad)



My thoughts:
I have wanted to try my hand at calligraphy for awhile, and have attempted to do it freehand. I had really wanted to use my ink and metal nibs to review this paper but unfortunately I cannot locate the pen for my nibs. I had to settle with using brush pens instead. 

Since I haven't done calligraphy before I looked up videos and tutorials online on how to hold the pen and the paper. With this having a slanted grid already, I think it makes it a bit easier to work with the paper. I'm not 100% sure of that because I don't know how others do it well. 

I need to practice more. 


Although it looks yellow, or cream, the paper is indeed a nice white. The grid is a dark gray so you can see the lines easily enough but they don't overtake the page. The pad of paper is landscape as opposed to portrait (so it is longer wide than tall). I think this is beneficial for practicing writing of any king, but perhaps more for calligraphy where you seem to need more width. It is 12x9 with 50 sheets lined on one side. The backing is a thick cardboard for sturdiness so you could use it without a table. I didn't because I need all the stability I can get! 


The paper didn't stay in the pad exceptionally well after I used it a little. I think this is both a positive and a negative. It is easy to tear out used pages but also I wonder if they would fall out on their own after awhile. 

The thickness of the paper feels about like printer paper, and it didn't bleed through with my brush pens but I think if I were to use my nib with ink, it might go through a little. 


Overall, I like the Calligraphic Practice Paper Pad from US Art Supply. It is simple but easy to use for practice. The paper is good for the price also.

Saturday, February 27, 2016

Product Review: CoQ10, NutriONN


***Disclaimer: I received the following item for free for the sole purpose of an honest review. See Disclosure/Policies.***

From Mayo Clinic: "CoQ10 has been studied for use as an antioxidant to protect cells from damage. CoQ10 has been used in combination with other antioxidants. Early study suggests that it may have antioxidant benefits in people with heart disease. More information is needed on the potential benefits of CoQ10 alone."

The label on this bottle states:
"Coenzyme Q10 is an antioxidant that is made in the human body. CoQ10 is needed for basic cell function. CoQ10 levels decrease with age and certain diseases. Some prescription drugs may also lower CoQ10 levels. CoQ10 in the body can be increased by taking CoQ10 supplements. CoQ10 supports heart function and promotes energy production in cells. CoQ10 can also provide benefits to people with high blood pressure.*

*These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or mitigate any disease."

List price: $69.99 (but at the time of this posting, it is on sale for $35.95)
These contain 120 capsules containing 200mg Coenzyme Q-10 (Ubiquinone), along with Cellulose (Vegetable Capsule), Rice Flour, Magnesium Stearate, Silicon Dioxide. The label states there are "Zero Artificial Ingredients," they are "100% Natural," and "Made in the USA." That last part, Made in the USA, hadn't caught my attention when I agreed to review these, but looking closer, they are distributed out of Portland, OR, my 'home' state!

My thoughts:
CoQ10 is a supplement I had long been meaning to add to my regime but the cost is often prohibitive. When this was offered for review, I quickly applied to be a reviewer. The bottle I received contains a 4-month supply; perfect to see how this will affect me. 

I have just started taking the recommended dosage of one 200mg capsule per day, with a fat-containing meal. The capsules are an average size, but they are orange. Unlike many of the vitamins and supplements I've tried, these do not have a disagreeable scent. They really don't smell like much of anything; if any, it's almost a citrus smell.

Why did I want to try this supplement? The list on the front label of the bottle pretty much sums up the areas I hope to have benefited: 
  • Hearth Health (I've had racing heart and palpitations for quite a few years- these had all but gone away when I started eating the THM way; now they come and go)
  • Antioxidant
  • Energy and Stamina (really, who doesn't need that?)
  • Cognitive Awareness (my memory and general ability to do mental tasks has sometimes had me a little worried; it's like there is a disconnect somewhere)
  • Healthy Blood Pressure (my mother and grandmother had problems with blood pressure)
So far this is working just fine. In terms of results, I don't think that the short amount of time I've had it and taken it will accurately portray the benefits. For now this is what I can tell you about this product. I am happy with it and will continue to take these- and if results are positive, I will buy another bottle.



Friday, February 26, 2016

Book Review: Peace Like a River

***This post contains an Amazon affiliate link. See Disclosure/Policies.***


So many books, so little time. But not just that there are so many books is the fact that there are so many books that are no good.

This is a good book. 

I've included the preview up there so that others might get a taste of what the writing is like in the book and decide if it is one that might be worth picking up. The first I heard of this book was in the Literature Reading List put out by The Institute of Reading Development (2010). It didn't sound like a book I'd want to read. {Looking at it now, I do see I put a dot by it; meaning I wished to at least have a look at it.} Here's how the Institute describes the book:
In this tale of family tragedy and redemption, Reuben recounts the remarkable events of his 11th year, telling us to "Make of it what you will." When Reuben's big brother Davy commits a crime and flees his Minnesota home, Reuben, his sister Swede, and their father set off in pursuit of him, as does the law. Reuben's father is no ordinary man, and the family's trip to retrieve Davy becomes a spiritual quest with a surprising outcome. ~p. 11
It just doesn't grab my attention, that simple annotation.
The back of the book is a bit better:
Leif Enger's best-selling debut is at once a heroic quest, a tragedy, and a love story, in which "what could be unbelievable becomes extraordinary" (Connie Ogle, The Miami Herald). Enger brings us eleven-year-old Reuben Land, an asthmatic boy in the Midwest who has reason to believe in miracles. Along with his sister and father, Reuben finds himself on a cross-country search for his outlaw older brother who has been controversially charged with murder. Their journey unfolds like a revelation, and its conclusion shows how family, love, and faith can stand up to the most terrifying of enemies, and the most tragic of fates.
The reviews under the description are so accurate. Here's one that sums up what we find in the book:
Once in a great while, a book comes along that has such wonderful characters and marvelous prose, that you read it as much for the pure joy it offers on every page as to find out how it ends. ~Tom Walker, The Denver Post
On the front cover it has a simple statement by Andrew Roe from San Francisco Chronicle:
Peace Like a River serves as a reminder of why we read fiction to begin with.
I cannot tell you how the book ends, of course, but there are many twists and turns in this that are not expected. But what really captured me from the start was the writing. My favorite book {to this point} is A Tree Grows in Brooklyn by Betty Smith. I love that book so much because of the writing: It takes you to the place; it puts the feelings of the characters into you. But at the same time, the writing is easy going, it takes you by the hand and gently leads you along.

It is the same with this book.

Based on the back cover, and that bland description by the Institute, we are made aware of four main characters, which is right. But the secondary and tertiary characters are just as important to this story, I think. There is one that we only see once, a six-year-old boy who has a snotty nose. And others that are brought in every so often (like Bethany Orchard and Lurvy) that lend life to these characters for us the reader.

Well, this turned out to be a rather shallow review. "It's a good book, you should read it." I feel I can't really tell much of what's in the book without giving away the joy of finding it for yourself when you read it. This book lifted my heart from a gloom I didn't even know it was in. The way the boy, Reuben, adores his father, his brother, and his sister is so real. The way the every day bits are described is so real. But also, the way the faith of Reuben's dad is portrayed is so real. It is the kind of faith I have seen in just a couple people in my life. To read of Reuben's view of his father's faith and his thoughts on it, reminds me of what it is to be, shall I say, on the outside of such faith. But it wasn't in a way that made me feel ashamed to not have such a faith. Rather it made me want that kind of faith. It is something to strive for.
What allows Peace Like a River to transcend any limitations of belief and genre is its broad, sagacious humanity... ~Dan Cryer, Newsday

Thursday, February 25, 2016

In Search of {Good} Books That Need A Good Home

***If you have books you'd like to donate to this growing lending library, please send an email to bbookslending@gmail.com Thanks!***

Have you heard of a lending library? Not those little libraries that are popping up outdoors, where one can take a book or leave a book. Those are really neat but I mean a house, or other building, that houses books that are from a personal library but can be checked out by others.

I don't honestly know where the idea first was presented to me, but perhaps when I went to CMI and sifted through the crates and boxes of books that Kerry Forney had brought. Or listening to the Cottrills talk about their library.

However the idea was planted in my head, it is there and growing. Now I need books to fill the library! I have been making book purchases here and there when I can but now I'm in search of those who would be willing to donate the books to this endeavor. You can see our growing library (which is not open yet) at Libib.



Why would someone want to have a lending library out of their home? It's a good and legitimate question. Where I live, the library system is really good. Really good. I can get a book from just about anywhere in the state. But something I am noticing is that the older books are disappearing from the library shelves.

Have you noticed as well?

It's not to say that there are no good books at local libraries but it seems that too often it is 'out with the old, in with the new.' On a Yahoo Group I am a part of, I found a letter detailing why someone started a lending library. Here, in paraphrase, is just a small bit of why it's a good idea to open a lending library.

Public libraries are not the "archives of all that is good in literature." According to the letter writer (an individual who had researched extensively about children's literature) the libraries actually make it policy to discard fiction books at the five year mark and non-fiction at two years. It appears holding onto these books perpetuates obsolescence. Another note is that during a period of time many good books were written (what she refers to as the "Golden Age of Children's Literature"): 1930-early 1970s. These books are definitely way past the keep date of libraries.

Going back to the paraphrase and that "Golden Age of Children's Literature:" During this relatively short span, the books were written from a Judeo-Christian perspective even if the author was not himself professing to be a Christian. Books written from this perspective rightly put man in a wonderfully different position in life. Books today are from evolutionist mentalities, putting man next to monkeys or simply chemical reactions. Where the former stirred the hearts and minds to noble things, the latter simply attempts to speak to the brain, and logic, to move the reader. It doesn't drive one to do what is right. The difference of these books, those written in that Golden Age and those written more recently, is also evident in the writing style and visual appearance of the story. Older books were truly stories; today they are textbooks and facts filled with bright colors. The older books reached the reader through a true story that engaged; newer books simply are filling up a fact sheet.

I have been browsing on the Children's Legacy Library blog for suggestions and ideas (and talking with Robin). On the site, there is a page that shows other lending libraries "near you."

I think I will end with that bit but I do think I will be back soon to talk more about why I want to open a lending library. 

Friday, February 19, 2016

The Innocence of Father Brown {Back to the Classics Challenge}

This is the first book I finished for the 2016 Back to the Classics Challenge. It falls into the Classic Detective Novel (there you can read others' postings of their choice for this category). Admittedly I struggled and skimmed much...or zoned out when I was listening to it. Most of my 'reading' was accomplished on the librivox recording but goodness, the guy who read it was... um, I did not choose wisely to listen to this on audio.

Father Brown is small and unassuming, so naturally many find him to be a very unlikely detective. His stature and demeanor aren't helped by his vocation as a priest. Really, how many would think a priest would be a likely detective. He's an unlikely detective.

He is a Catholic Priest which made for some references with which I wasn't familiar. If you'd like to know more about the background of Father Brown, I found the wiki article to be helpful.

Some of the stories were downright amusing, others were just strange; all did have suspense and mystery. I did not always understand how Father Brown was able to solve the mysteries. Even though I've finished this book, I really feel like it went in one eye and out the other. Much was lost on me unfortunately. My favorite was the first story, "The Blue Cross," because of the silly antics of Father Brown to get noticed by the police.




Tuesday, February 16, 2016

Reading List on the Net {I read too much, do too little}


I posted the first Reading List on the Net for me last week, with just two links. Here is the list that I mentioned in that post about others that I've not gotten to read yet...but I mean to. This is how I put them in a post:
  1. http://thecommonroomblog.com/2015/03/in-which-the-dhm-kicks-herself-for-not-practicing-what-shes-preached.htm/
  2. http://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2010/08/how-to-write-in-700-easy-lessons/308043/
  3. http://www.charlottemasoninstitute.org/draw-your-own-conclusions-by-dr-donna-johnson/
  4. https://www.circeinstitute.org/blog/two-views-math-three-kinds-math-students
  5. http://www.theimaginativeconservative.org/2015/10/the-bbc-writing-christianity-out-of-history.html
  6. http://www.liberty.edu/online/index.cfm?PID=29040&blogpid=28541&id=853375
  7. http://www.theimaginativeconservative.org/2015/12/timeless-essays-t-s-eliots-christianity-and-culture.html
  8. https://4beautyinthechaos.wordpress.com/2016/01/01/cm-open-house-form-1/
  9. https://draxe.com/borage-oil/
  10. http://www.mnn.com/lifestyle/arts-culture/blogs/7-cultural-concepts-we-dont-have-in-the-us
  11. https://www.circeinstitute.org/podcast/commons-3-angelina-stanford-legacy-celts
  12. http://healthycures.org/neuroscientist-shows-what-fasting-does-to-your-brain
  13. http://www.onepeterfive.com/a-screwtape-letter-for-the-unappreciated-mom/
  14. http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2010/12/13/the-truth-wears-off
  15. https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2016/02/160211141337.htm
  16. http://sageparnassus.blogspot.com/2016/02/parts-and-passions-what-to-look-for-in.html?m=1
  17. https://www.circeinstitute.org/blog/lord-flies-evil-recognized-redemption-begun
Looking at the long list, I realize I read too much and do too little. Pshaw, right? Can't read too much. Well, I suppose that would depend on what the purpose of reading is in the first place. 

My son woke up this morning- or rather got out of bed- rather late. I'm torn on the whole get-em-up-early or let-them-get-their-needed-teenage-sleep. That's perhaps a topic for another day. But he got up late because he had an idea that 'had to work itself out completely' before he could get up. He had to let it play out in his mind, come to fruition, for use in something he will do later today or this week. Some point.

When he told me why he got up late I questioned why he didn't just get up right then and do something with the idea. It had to work itself out completely. Ideas beget ideas...

I'm noticing -keep noticing?- that I intend to read a lot, and sometimes I actually get to read what I intend. But what do I do with what I've read? Fortunately I do not read cleaning magazines or how-to manuals. If I read those sorts of things I am sure there would be the realistic expectation of something to show for that reading. 

But that's my point- there should be something to show for all that reading. What of *my* reading? What should be the output from all of that? 

I don't have an answer at the moment.

Friday, February 12, 2016

Reading List on the Net {first of 2016!}

I do have another post, in draft, that has way too many links that I have kept but not completely read through. Today, though, I came across two bits on the internet that I didn't want to just leave waiting in that post. I will get back to the other links soon... I hope.

Gravitational Waves Detected, Confirming Einstein’s Theory

As I put this here, I've been following the links in the original linked article, and find that this was discovered in September 2015.

LIGO of Louisiana and Washington detected a sound, a chirp, that finally confirmed Einstein's prediction of gravitational waves. Two black holes many light years away converged into one, creating a massive amount of energy that created waves. These waves rippled through the space-time, and were detected, by sound, last year. Einstein's theory of relativity "describes space-time as a kind of sagging mattress where matter and energy, like a heavy sleeper, distort the geometry of the cosmos to produce the effect we call gravity, obliging light beams as well as marbles and falling apples to follow curved paths through space."

My son and I have been reading through various physics related books and much of what is being presented now are not theories that have been conclusively proven. They are all 'hopefuls', or well, theories. They are uncertainties. It makes me wonder how much more will scientists come to 'know' about our world and the universe. But unfortunately, the number who attribute this wonder to God, and instead credit an accident, are still so small.

Poetry Teatime – Creating A Language Rich Environment

Yesterday the kids and I had teatime with Shakespeare. Then they moved on to reading some Pygmalion, followed by a bit of Les Miserables. Well, my daughter got interested in the last bit; by then my son had lost his interest. (After all, the tea and shortbread were gone!)

For us, reading these bits out loud are a great help to our comprehension of what is written. How often can you read a poem (or any passage really) and just not get it. Read it out loud though...and wow! it is clear!

We weren't tea drinkers until there was a challenge on the AO Forum* for having a month of teatime. *You'll need to register to see the thread. It was February 2014.

Here's a delightful look at teatime shared by Larkrise on the forum: A Home Tea

But there, the original post,
To Create a language rich, literary environment in our homes, it often means pushing past the ‘formulaic study’ and making room for the flow and freedom of reading, doing life around piles of living books, celebrating the snuggling and gathering of children around a story and the delighting in the incredible gift of words.
And she quotes CM:
Let them get at the books themselves, and do not let them be flooded with diluted talk from the lips of their teacher. The less the parents ‘talk-in’ and expound their rations of knowledge and thought to the children they are educating, the better for the children…Children must be allowed to ruminate, must be left alone with their own thoughts – Charlotte Mason 

Wednesday, February 10, 2016

Product Review: Lunch Boxes by Orgalif



I received a set of 5 Orgalif Bento Lunch Box Containers for the purpose of this honest review. See Disclosure/Policies.

These are made from BPA free food grade plastic with separate compartments for different parts of a meal. I suppose these would be really good for portion control. They remind me of the microwave dinner trays I used to buy the kids when they were little, with the chicken nuggets in the large section, mac & cheese or applesauce in another, and a cookie or brownie in the last little section. 

A small 1/2 cup of applesauce, that hasn't been opened, will fit perfectly in the 3/4 cup spot. The measurements of the boxes: Large section-2 1/2 Cups, Smaller section-3/4 cup, Smallest section-1/2 cup. Inside of the largest compartment is approx. 4.5" x 5" Inch and 1.75" deep. Overall, each container is 9.4" x 6.1" x 2" inches.


I thought it worked really great for salad container, to keep the items separate until lunch time. In the empty section I did put a hardboiled egg. 


My only complaint about these is that they are NOT leak-proof! They do state this in the Amazon listing. The lids come off easily, so you cannot put liquids in these. You might notice the red item in the second photo above. That is a little cup of French salad dressing inside a ziplock bag to prevent it from spilling out. But it works just fine for dry or slightly moist foods. I'd say if you need to put a liquid, or very moist food in this, put it in a sandwich bag first. Or even a smaller container to be put inside of this. 

I do like these containers although I am very much not a fan of plastic. The ease of use is one reason I like them. The colorful lids is another. I can now easily pack my husbands lunch without many varied sized containers. It fits perfect in his little cooler bag. I could even stack a few in there if we were going on a road trip or out for a day-long errand. My daughter is really into making bento lunches and she is sure these will work perfect for that!

Monday, February 8, 2016

Product Review: ThinkFun Stratos Spheres



Woohoo!! Games. We love games here. I'd show you our collection of board games and my bordering-on-too-many decks of cards collected from just about anywhere that sells/gives cards, but this is about the newest one we have been introduced to. 

This one here is from #ThinkFun and it's super easy but not as easy as you might at first think. I have yet to win. 




Stratos Spheres™

2-Player Strategy Game
It’s the classic 4-in-a-row game without the restrictions of the 2-D board. In fact, there’s no board at all because you build the game as you go. Using 3-dimensional spheres, carefully strategize and get four in a row in any dimension to WIN!

Age: 8 and Up
Players: 2 Player

MSRP: $9.99

Purchase at Amazon: http://www.thinkfun.com/products/stratos-spheres/

**Disclaimer: I received this product for free for the purpose of an honest review. See Disclosure/Policies.**