Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Musings

Fear, desperation, and hope, all play an important role in the book Lord of 
the Flies. (I am not finished yet...so far I have enjoyed it.)  From the 
beginning, Mr. William Golding (the author) has faithfully painted a bizarre 
background to his book.  While the main characters are young boys, the 
author is trying to get at something deeper than youthful actions.  I believe 
that Golding wisely chose to utilize the boys as 'innocent' characters who display a darker under-lying theme.  
From what I have read so far, Golding uses these marooned British boys as tools for a greater message; he 
provides the reader with a glimpse at the horrible reality of this life.  Without any parental supervision, the boys 
must maintain a healthy balance between leadership, independence, chaos, order, hostility, and union.  It is most certainly a good reminder of the fallen state of mankind!  Without a Savior, we would be ravenous animal-like creatures.  Just like these young men, we would be fearfully lost.

"But if it is by grace, it is no longer on the basis of works; otherwise grace would no longer be grace...So I ask, did they stumble in order that they may fall?  By no means!  Rather through their trespass salvation has come to the Gentiles..."
Romans 11:6, 11

Monday, February 11, 2013

Fashion Post

Has anyone besides me been enjoying the weather?  It has been great!  The sunshine and breeze feel wonderful after the harsh cold.  Anyway, I thought I would do my first fashion-post.  Do you like these outfits?  What part(s) of them are your favorite?  What would you change about them?

Summer

Next up is an outfit I named "Cowgirl Style"  :)   I absolutely love the earrings!  


Cowgirl Style


And finally, some vintage...


Simply Vintage

Have you figured out what style of clothes you like to wear?  What colors complement your skin and hair color?  Do you sew most of your own clothes yourselves?  

Have a blessed day!
  

Thursday, January 31, 2013

Feeling Pretty Hopeful

          As we drove in the car headed toward Marion, Indiana, excitement and adrenaline coursed through me.  With the trailer in tow behind us and a 3 hour drive ahead, my trainer, my mother, and I were on the path to somewhere that we had never been to look at a horse.  It had been a few months of looking before I had found her ad:  Pretty Hopeful a.k.a. "Hope" is a red dun Quarter Horse mare, 15.2 hands tall.  The ad included a video of her jumping; any novice could tell Hope loved her job.  Well things were looking pretty hopeful :) until we pulled up onto the owners property.  At first my heart fell like a rock.  The place looked kinda run down: I had been expecting a nicer facility.  But, we had driven three hours, so I was going to look at this mare no matter what the outside of the barn showed.  Upon entering the barn, I was most pleasantly surprised.  The barn was wonderfully kept: complete with wood stalls, a locked tack room, a wash-stand stall, a stall for tacking up, and catwalks for the hay above the stalls.  All was clean and swept, the mark of a organized horse woman.  The owner lead us to Hope's stall.  When she walked her out, Hope was certainly cute.  With a white blaze, and dun stripe down her back, and more red stripes on the inside of her legs, Hope was most definitely a dun-colored horse.  My trainer asked the owner if she would lunge Hope, and the mare did well.  Then the owner tacked her up and rode her western.  She said that Hope had been used as a Western Pleasure horse but had been riding hunter/jumper for the last 3 years.  The mare was clearly built as an up-hill English horse :).  I hopped on her and my trainer gave me a mini lesson, complete with a small vertical (a type of jump).  After much discussion in the barn's heated arena-viewing room, we decided to take the horse home on trial.  Long story short, we trailered Hope home (we boarded her) and gave her a try for 2 weeks before making our final decision   After the end of the first week, we knew that we had a unique mare on our hands.  Hope is an extremely willing and CALM 6 year old.  Mares are often 'crazy' at times, but Hope is one-of-a-kind.  So, all in all, the choice was a hard one.  Size.  Silly, silly, size.  That seemed to be the only thing that was going to be a large factor in our decision   Hope is 15.2 hands tall (we measure her at her original home in Indiana), but I am a tall girl (my father is 6.5 ft).  Yet Hope gives me confidence, just the confidence I need when I jump.  She clears the jumps with elegance and ease, but she doesn't gallop off on me or get TOO excited.  Thus, after vet-checking her (she came out 'clean') we bought her.  So, now I have a wonderful horse that I love to death :)

*Hope's show name is Pretty Hopeful, that should explain the title of this post*

All I have to say is, "Thank you, God!"

All photos taken and edited by the Vivacious Shutterbug
Me and Hope cantering

 Walking out

 Hope is very quite in the cross-ties!

She didn't even bolt at the frightening mattress or giant smiley-face ball!  

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Thus, I am looking forward to showing Hope competitively this year!  (Primarily English - Hunter/Jumper)
To God be the glory!

Wednesday, January 30, 2013

Literature - Is it important?

 IMAGINE A WORLD, a place, a time, without fictional literature.  Children would not receive the opportunity to explore new worlds, sail uncharted waters, and fight with beasts of old without the quality literature that it available for our consumption today.  People’s imaginations would begin to falter and then fail if fictional literature just disappeared and remained unappreciated.  In Gladys Hunt’s (author of Honey for a Child’s Heart) perspective, “Well-chosen words need only be few in number, but they help store away the pleasure of the adventure.”  Periodically, reading quality literature is important not only because it stimulates the imagination, provides historical information, and it can improve or enhance writing skills.



(This picture was taken by the Vivacious Shutterbug and is sole property therein)
Children’s imaginations come alive when they read fiction.  Readers of fiction can visit any place in the world, or even beyond the boundaries of the world in the comfort and safety of their own home.  For instance, C.S. Lewis’s Chronicles of Narnia series provides an imagination pathway that entertains its readers with a new, dangerous, and enchanted world.  Young readers draw their own pictures, depicting the words they read and developing their own ideas of how characters and places look and feel.  Similarly, my ten-year-old brother recently read Blackthorn Winter by Douglas Wilson, and all he enjoyed talking about was “pirates and buccaneers.”  It provides a way of escape from the work and business of this world and exercises his imagination in a healthy and safe way.  Fortunately, readers like my brother can imagine what it might feel like to have dangerous pirates in their homes without actually facing them down, and this grows their analytical skills, as they problem solve the best solutions, using their imaginations.  Ultimately, reading fiction provides adventures that spark a child’s imagination in ways non-fiction never could, so of course, fiction is a profitable pastime.

While intriguing, entertaining, and imagination building, fiction can also serve as an educational tool.  Many valuable fiction books are based on true historical facts and events.  Often textbooks deliver dry facts where historical fiction conveys facts through engaging stories based on the cultures or backgrounds of a certain time period.  Such books provide flavorful educational truths.  Similarly, the book Moccasin Trail by Eloise Jarvis McGraw enables its readers to follow a family across new territories in the time of the westward expansion and gain interesting facts about the everyday life of a pioneer.  Engaging literature assists the reader to remember the facts of a particular time period rather than simply reading the same details from a workbook or textbook.  For example, Across Five Aprils by Irene Hunt overflows with important facts about the time of the Civil War in the U.S.A. while its readers enjoy following a nine-year old boy as he grows up in the four years of the Civil war.  His family remains strong through strife and persecution for their support of the Northern states.  Since we can gain new and flavorful facts when reading fiction, reading this type of literature is a profitable pastime because it provides its readers with valuable facts in a flavorful and meaningful way.    
Enhancing writing and grammatical skills is important in the study of English and can be accomplished through the reading of excellent literature.  What readers expose their minds to will influence how they write, talk, think and behave.  Since our means of communication come in the form of written and verbal words, phrases, and sentences, the author of any short story or book should work hard to make it/them clear and glorifying to God our Father.  In modern society, one rarely finds quality literature read and appreciated.  Near faultless fiction exists in the world; consider reading the highly regarded classic book Black Beauty.  It tells the story of a horse as he’s traded off to different owners and meets a variety of horses and people, some of which grown up with him.  Anna Sewell’s Black Beauty abounds with description and flavor and can assist its readers to write and talk with correct grammatical structure.  Likewise, in describing the book The Titan’s Curse, one can label it as a “candy book.”  Candy books can be acceptable to read at certain times, but we should always strive to read the best quality fiction obtainable.  Unfortunately, if one reads too many poorly written books (similar to “candy books”) that lack quality words or correct grammatical structure, they will not speak and write as correctly as they might if they had chosen to read valuable classics.    Even though the two books remain very different from each other because they were written at different times, they give us a glimpse of modern literature and classical literature writing styles.  Although regarded as ‘wonderful’ to read beneficial books that fill one’s mind, heart, and soul with things that help in everyday life scenarios, one should strive for the best fiction available.  Books like Black Beauty can assist one in the reading of quality fiction, which will then help others speak with correct grammatical usage and can improve or enhance our writing skills.
Thus, reading quality literature is important because it stimulates the imagination, can be historically informative, and can improve or enhance writing skills. Since reading fictional literature is important and can be significantly influential in the lives of others, one ought to grasp the opportunity to read and understand any type of fiction that remains faithful to the scriptures, provides its readers with information on a certain time period, and can provide flavor and depth to our writing.  Such fiction can be examined and observed as important to our lives and the lives of others since it can draw us into worlds unknown, teach us about days past, and provide greater tools for our writing and speech.  

Thursday, December 27, 2012

Christmas, Advent, and popular movies

I apologize for not posting anything in a long while; I have been quite busy lately!

One of the things that my family does every year, is advent.  Not only does advent remind us of what Christmas is really about, but it walks us through the history of the birth of Christ and the salvation that we have through Him; starting in the beginning.  While our advent is certainly not the regular 'advent' that many people think of, it is helpful during the anxiety and excitement of the Christmas season.  In our advent, we start with some of the early patriarchs and prophets of the Old Testament and study the prophesies of Christ's birth.  Then we sing a portion a O Come, O Come Emmanuel that pertains to the subject of that evenings Scripture.  Then, strangely enough, we dip our fingers in 'sand' and vinegar to signify our longing for a Savior and the bitterness of our sin.  Finally, on Christmas day, we do our last advent; this time, we sing Joy to the World and eat mini chocolates instead of 'sand' and vinegar, signifying our salvation from sin.  Thus, as odd as this advent may seem, it is a vital reminder of the value of Christ's birth.  :)

Well, I had a wonderful Christmas Day full of hope and joy.  Our family has many Christmas traditions (some of which include sweet rolls for Christmas breakfast and memorizing/reciting Luke 2).  After a yummy breakfast we retire into the living room where we begin by opening presents (usually in order from oldest to youngest).  When all the colorfully wrapped boxes are torn open and the joyous treasures inside are carefully put away, we relax as a family, reading or simply resting.  So, does your family have any special Christmas traditions?

Oh, and the snow!  Even though it was not a white Christmas, Wednesday was a beautifully grey and snowy day.  Today some of my family took advantage of the fact that we have snow, a quad, a new sled, and daring children...you can imagine the rest.  ;)

Now on to the topic of movies.  Before going to see The Hobbit myself, I heard many mixed reviews from various friends.  However, after going to the theater and watching it, I absolutely loved it.  The music soundtrack was compiled of a balanced amount of songs from The Lord of the Rings and the dwarves theme.  In addition, the superb acting of all the dwarves (and hobbit and wizard:) combined with the superb footage made this film a success.  Even though Peter Jackson added some elements to the movie that are not in the book, I believe that the talented director did a fabulous job of shaping all of the characters in different and unique ways.  As for Le Miserables, I cannot say much as I have not even seen the movie myself :). Have any of you watched either of these movies.  If so, what did you think?

I hope your Christmas was filled with the love and hope of our loving Heavenly Savior!

Merry Christmas and a happy New Year!
Glory to God in the highest!


-Lily