Archive for October, 2008
It is a very fun and rewarding task if you decide to create your own homemade greeting card for someone special in your life. Imagine the surprise the recipient will get when he or she opens the envelope to find a beautiful card, so painstakingly made in your own home created just for them alone! First, you need to find what their interests are. Who is the recipient to you?
The next step to making a greeting card is to decide if you want it to be funny or sentimental. A funny card can be created using cartoons and to be frank – you will be spoilt for choice. Whereas a sentimental theme might require you to prepare cut out flowers and some dazzling rhinestones. If you can draw your own graphics, that’s even better but of course not everyone is an artist!
Don’t forget you have to have a reason for sending the greeting card. Is it a birthday, anniversary or maybe because you just care? For instance, if it is a birthday, a picture of a cake is usually acceptable! If it is to commemorate Independence Day, then use the American flag.
The next thing you have to do is write the copy for your greeting card. You can choose a poem you like or one that you know the person getting the card will appreciate or for true individuality, you could write your own poem. When another person’s poetry is used, the items cannot be sold. For personal purposes, they are permissible, providing you aren’t selling the card.
Now that you know who the recipient is, the occasion and the interests of the recipient, you can go ahead and start making the greeting card. You can now start collecting the necessary materials you need to make the card, plus of course – some inspiration. Try adding some lace and ribbons and see the effects for yourself.
In essence, when making a greeting card, there are no limits to what you can create! The only limit to what you can do is your own imagination. Now is the time to let go of your limits, and leave no space for fear as you explore new ways to decorate the card. This little act of kindness will be more meaningful when both of you look back and see the card being kept safely by the recipient as a memory of the occasion.

Former students would probably attest to the fact that few things tried my patience as much as did the statement, “This is boring!” As I reflect back on my many years in the classroom, I can’t help but feel a tad bit sorry for the first kid who made the mistake of uttering those words each year. Well, classes aren’t Electronics.
The sermon went something like this. “Nobody is BORED in my classroom. I work hard to plan fun and interesting activities that will allow you to learn. When you finish your work earlier than others, there are many choices of quiet things to do. You may use the book nook, puppet theatre, computer, writing center, art center, or the manipulative math corner. Now please, do NOT let me hear the word “bored” again!”
I suspect that each school year’s first offender felt like Calvin in one of my favorite Calvin and Hobbes cartoons. In the first two frames Calvin is sitting at his school desk looking totally bored, but saying nothing. In the third frame Calvin screams, “BORRRING!” In the final frame Calvin is heading for the Principal’s office muttering, “Yeah, yeah… kill the messenger.”
Although not many kids made the mistake of verbally uttering the “B” word a second time, I suspect they thought it (or mouthed it to their friends) more than once. Why do all teachers hear this complaint on a somewhat regular basis? Is it because most kids find the day-to-day classroom work too easy? Not hardly.
Contrary to popular opinion, the “bored” child is not always the academically gifted child who is not being challenged. As a matter of fact, that is rarely the case. More often than not, the “bored” student is one who is frustrated because he is not really understanding the material being presented, or does not yet possess the skill that he is being asked to demonstrate. (None of us like to admit that we aren’t up to doing a task that we’re expected to accomplish, or that we haven’t the foggiest notion about what is being explained to us. And for most of us, it’s easier to say, “I’m bored” than it is to say, “I’m struggling.”)
When a student of any age says he is bored, he oftentimes means something quite different. He is really saying, “This isn’t fun. This is work and I don’t want to work. I want to be entertained! Furthermore, I don’t understand what she (the teacher) is talking about or what I am supposed to do. ” In the mind of the student (albeit subconsciously), his cry of boredom shifts the blame and the responsibility from himself to the teacher.
If the child is unlucky, the “boredom syndrome” will give the parent a hook on which to hang criticism of the teacher, and no one will win. The parent blames the teacher, the teacher reacts defensively, and the child continues to flounder. An opportunity for helping a kid gets lost somewhere between the pointing fingers of the parent and the defense mechanisms of the teacher. The realities of parenting and education.
And what do I suggest you do if your child says, “School is boring”? Run (forget walk) to the telephone and request a conference with your child’s teacher. Advise the teacher of your concern. Assure “him” that you are not requesting a conference to assign blame to anyone, but rather to get his opinion as to what is really going on in the classroom that might prompt a declaration of boredom. I can assure you that your child’s teacher will appreciate your concern and do everything possible to work with you to determine the cause, and work toward a solution.
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When a new baby comes to visit we all naturally become excited and want to do something special for that baby . On the surface it would seem as though there are as many potential unique baby gifts as there are babies born every day but when it comes time for us to select that one special gift for the new baby we sometimes suffer from a mental block. Usually what we need to get past that mental block is just a few general ideas.
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One of the very first obvious gifts that comes to mind is a christening gift for the newborn. While the parents or grandparents or godparents may have the exclusive rights to purchase or make that christening gift there is absolutely no reason why you cannot have a professional photographer come to the house and take a series of photographs of the baby in his or her christening down. These professional photographs along with a view appropriate picture frames can make an exquisite gift for the new baby.
Fresh and original baby boy gifts.
In a different vein, homemade baby toys are always a big hit with baby and the parents. You can find online doll cradle plans, were plans to make a wooden building blocks and other plans for soft cuddly toys that even an infant can derive pleasure from.
Baby costumes can be a tremendous hit with family and friends at any time. It does not have to be only boring the hollowing season. A simple costume for baby that seemingly transforms the newborn into a baby rabbit or a squirrel or Angel is always cute.
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