Tuesday, April 27, 2010

Book List

Several of the blogs I have been following lately have come out with their "favorite books" or "current books" or just "recommended" book lists. I have decided to do the same. The following are some books that are my all-time favorites, and some that I have read recently and are quite good.
*Pride and Prejudice- Jane Austen
*Les Miserables- Victor Hugo
*The Belgariad Series- David Eddings
*These is My Words- Nancy Turner
*Freakonomics- Steven Levitt and Stephen Dubner
*The Sword of Shannara- Terry Brooks (and as many of the subsequent books as you like)
*Romeo and Juliet- William Shakespeare (not technically a book, I know)

Children Are An Heritage of The Lord


One of my favorite scriptures comes from the book of Psalms in the Bible. It is Psalm 127:3 and reads : “Lo, children are an heritage of the Lord...” I love this scripture! It reaffirms everything I feel as a mother, and perfectly explains the special feelings a parent has for his/her child.

Today has been an average day. Nothing incredibly remarkable has happened and my baby girl has not done anything amazing. In fact, right now she has just woken up from her nap and is unusually grumpy. But I love her so :) Today and every day I am grateful for every second I have with her. She brings a smile to my heart every moment of every day. I will be forever grateful that I have been blessed to be a mother. People think I am crazy when I say that I want to have a lot of kids, but really, I would rather do nothing else. Even if I have to sacrifice a career and beauty and fashion and prestige and all the other things that the world says make women worthwhile, I do not care. I am a mother :D

Monday, April 26, 2010

Mmmm...Cake

Today is my birthday! So Happy Birthday to me! (and my twin sister, Krysta!) One of my favorite things about birthdays is the cake. In fact I like cake so much that I started following a website called Cake Wrecks, it is hilarious! Click here for the link. Anyway, I decided to just look around the world wide web and see what I could find about birthday cakes and I found this:

The service of a birthday cake is often preceded by the singing of Happy Birthday to You in English speaking countries, or an equivalent birthday song. In fact, the phrase "Happy Birthday" did not appear on birthday cakes until the song Happy Birthday to You was popularized in the early 1900s.”

There you go! Random birthday trivia and a link to a great site that will keep you laughing for hours! Think of it as my Happy Birthday present to you :)

Thursday, April 22, 2010

A Lesson In History

Yeah, I know what you're thinking: BORING!!! As a kid, I really didn't find history very interesting. It was all about a bunch of dead people that wrote and said things in a very stiff language that was hard for me to understand, or follow for very long without my attention wandering. If I remembered any kind of historical event or anything about a historical time period it was for one of two reasons: 1) I saw it in a movie (real accurate I'm sure), or 2) it was about Egyptians or some kind of exotic ancient civilization. American History was absolutely boring to me.

The reason for this is the way History is taught in our schools. With a few exceptions, it is incredibly boring. Children don't learn about how radical the ideas of the founding fathers were. They don't learn that, by signing the Declaration of Independence those men were signing a death warrant for themselves if the King's men ever got their hands on them.

Children don't learn the real reason for the original Boston Tea Party: Taxation Without Representation. I know I heard that phrase when I was younger, but I still thought people poured the tea into the harbor because they didn't want to pay any taxes at all. That is a major issue in perception. It turns the Boston Tea Party from citizens demanding their rights in governance into a bunch of lawless rabble-rousers. Children don't learn any of this because all they are taught are long, boring words from a textbook. They are not given any context, in today's words and perspectives, how the events that have shaped our American history would have been viewed at the time. Because of this, American children aren't really learning history.

Some people might say, “we don't need to know every fact of American History. It is all in the textbooks and online and we can look it up whenever we need to.” To me, this is sad. Attitudes like this are incredibly prevalent among the younger generations of our country and it is causing a real problem: Americans don't know what we are fighting for anymore, so they aren't fighting at all. I don't mean “fighting” like the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, though those wars are definitely relevant. I mean fighting a moral battle to keep The United States of America strong and prosperous.

As a result of our poor education in history, the young people of our country have come to take our rights and freedoms for granted, and to not understand that these blessings don't just inherently manifest themselves on all Americans everywhere. Since we don't understand the value of our system of government, we have become increasingly apathetic towards it. We put it in other people's hands with little thought and leave it to them to run things for us.
What happens when we leave it to them to run things for us

We don't know much or care much about politics and how government works, because we were completely turned off by how boring it all was in school.

Americans have had a very successful system of government, so far, because of thought, effort, and care put in by our country's leaders who knew they were accountable to the American people. Now, Americans run a great chance of losing that form of government (and freedom), so carefully and prayerfully thought out and protected since its origination, simply because we can't remember our history. We let corruption run rampant through offices that should be held with respect and decency simply because we did not care to look at all at what was happening. However, there is hope for us yet.

Despite America's love of having a hero to be able to worship and praise, our hope is not one person. Our hope lies in many people. It lies in all the people who are finally waking up from our stupor of years and calling for rightness in our leaders. It does not even matter that there are different ideas of what is right. What matters is that the American people are caring about it, starting to think for themselves what they feel is right, and are demanding that representation in Washington, D.C. Where before there were masses willing to be told by their representatives what is right, now there are masses telling their representatives what is right. Not only are the people saying that, they are also telling their reps that if the people aren't being listened to, the reps will be replaced. Bye-bye nice cushy job in Washington, with lobbyists wooing you, and being able to pass every bit of legislation in your own personal favor.

Perhaps my perspective is a little bit different from yours. Perhaps you don't see any of the changes that I do. That would not be surprising, really, because I am a college student. I go to school with the same people day-in and day-out, and we all think pretty similarly because, well, we are all being educated at the same place. But a few internet searches will tell you that I am really not far off-base. There are people now who are taking the time to learn the important lessons of history that we failed to learn, for one reason or another, in public schools. If you are like me, you may feel like there has been A LOT going wrong with the United States of America and its government lately. However, my years spent in higher education have been invaluable to me for more than my (eventual) degree. They have taught me that there is a change in the wind. Hollywood may be trying to convince us all that we have no morals left, and Washington may be the prime example for their argument, but I don't believe that is true. Many of the people I go to school with and many of the people I am taught by don't believe it either. I believe that the “average Joe or Jane” American has a value system and lives by it. Clearly they are not all the same, but that is not what matters. What matters is that we, the people, have not forsaken our morals, and we demand that our government does not either. We know that there is a difference between right and wrong, now we just have to educate ourselves about what that difference is. We need to re-learn our history lessons so we can be familiar with what our country means to us and what must be done to keep it healthy, prosperous, and free.