It feels so nice to sit down--finally--in a quiet house. It's been one of those days that has gone nonstop--full, but fun.
Toben was out of town, so I had bus duty this morning at 7 a.m. (can you believe it's that early for such little kids?) and then took Emma to school at 8, and then to Bible study at 8:30. Surprisingly, we all made it up and out the door this morning, dressed, clean, and with happy attitudes. We prayed hard for a good morning before we went to bed last night! If we have rough mornings, it always seems to be on Thursdays before Bible study or on Sundays before church. Crazy.
I had lunch with my friend Brenda, then ran to get Emma from school. We headed over to The Black Sheep for some Fiber Trends patterns I'd seen online last night. I bought patterns 206X (A Felt Flock), AC-64X (The Sheep Tote), CH22 (Animal Friends Felt Booties), and 213 (Braided Cable Tea Cosies). Can't decide what I'll make first--I'll have to look through my yarn stash and see if I have anything to use up that would work for any of these patterns.
I also bought a copy of One Skein by Leigh Radford. There are so many things I want to make from this book--and I love that they are all "quick" projects (as promised on the cover!). I hope my buttonhole bag will turn out a little like "The Clutch You'll Never Give Up" and I'm seeing some of the "Felted Bowls" in my future too.
I planned to run over to my friend Terri's house to say hi, but she wasn't quite home yet, so I had some time to kill. I thought I'd run into the Rustic Rooster, just to pass the time. This green cupboard is what I walked out with (and the two stacked metal shopping baskets on top!). Isn't it cute? (Although the photo doesn't do it justice; I need some photography pointers from my sis, I think!) It sits on a little wall between my living and dining rooms. I'm constantly carrying my sewing machine back and forth between the dining room and garage or else leaving bits and pieces of my current project strewn over the dining room table and floor and chairs. Now I have a place to keep my sewing machine a little handier, plus whatever project I'm working on close at hand, but also out of the way. Yippee!
The girls and I started reading The Lion, The Witch, and The Wardrobe yesterday. Someone sent Toben a pre-release of the movie already, but I'm not quite ready for the kids to watch it. We didn't take them to see it in the theater--we weren't sure if it would be okay for them or not. I think it would be, but I wanted the story to be firmly in their minds first. I wanted Narnia to be established in their imaginations first--before someone else's idea of it got put there first.
They are loving the story--Audrey especially--and I lose my place on the page now and then because I look up and they are staring at me, eyes wide in wonder. It makes me catch my breath and then I stumble over my words and have to go back and read a sentence again to find my place.
Tonight we read on the couch after dinner, and then I read them another chapter while they sat in the bathtub together. Sitting on the little step-stool reading to them, I had such memories of my parents reading to Kristen and me. I remember reading through all the books in the Chronicles of Narnia after dinner, of sitting at the table with dirty dishes piled in front of us, begging for "Just one more chapter, pleeeeeeease!"
Oh, how I want my children to love to read. I love this quote by Madeline L'Engle, from her book, Walking on Water: Reflections on Faith and Art:
"Creative involvement: that's the basic difference between reading a book and watching TV. In watching TV we are passive; sponges; we do nothing. In reading we must become creators. Once the child has learned to read alone and can pick up a book without illustrations, he must become a creator, imagining the setting of the story, visualizing the characters, seeing facial expressions, hearing the inflection of voices."
Yes! I want my children to become creators of the story along with Lewis--to help create and imagine and paint Narnia in their minds before they take a look at what someone else has created and imagined and painted Narnia to be. I think that's why I'm always disappointed in movies made from books I love. In my imagination, I have helped the author create the story, and the movie maker hasn't remained true to my part of that creation.