The Power of Story

Our week in Acadia brought some challenges for Lou. She meets physical challenges with a great deal of resistance and on our first day had to turn back after getting part way up a trail (which turned out to be a very good thing).

When we decided to bike on the carriage roads, we really wanted her to succeed. We chose what we thought would be a fairly flat 6-mile trail around the lake in the photo above, but it turned out to have a long, steep section.

As we reached the steep part, Lou and I began to walk our bikes. Tears were starting. Frustration was setting in. And then I began the tale of The Forgotten Garden based on a book I had been reading all week.

The story begins with a little girl who is left on a ship in England, told to hide, and is found several weeks later sitting alone on a dock in Australia. It's an enchanted, layered book tracing the lives of a mother, daughter and grand-daughter.

As I re-told the story tears dried up, steps picked up, and our carriage road became a foggy cliff path by the sea in England. Suddenly we were at the top of the mountain with the story unfinished and with a girl proud and eager to keep biking.

The tale of the forgotten garden continued throughout the week as we hiked. Each time we set foot on a path, Lou eagerly looked to me to begin where we had left off and was always surprised when she had made it to the top easily. She ended the week so very proud of herself.

Our children love it when we tell stories. They love stories about when they were babies, stories about our childhoods, and stories such as the one I told all week in Acadia. What they love is that they are stories from the heart. The stories connect them tightly to us and carry them away from feeling lonely in bed or from the challenge of a climb.

It's easy to think that there are no stories inside to tell. But, they are there and waiting for you to spin them out to a little soul who needs them. Don't worry, the story will be just what the little one needs.

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August in New Hampshire is....

Cousins checking out the big fish under the raft....and the boys in the sailboat


Cousins going round and round with fits of giggles

Crafting on the porch after dinner. Necessary supplies for a lake house include...duct tape, hemp, a macrame book from the '70s, old buttons. Of course a slingshot is also important.












more tatted necklaces...

I work on a new project--a yarn-sewn rug. I sew a bit. Tend to important problems. A lost tatting needle. Finding the perfect stone. No beads for the hemp necklace. Will buttons suffice? Such problems. They are the only problems today.


Diving into moon-light speckled water....a shivering run up to bed. Ahh. It's the end of summer.

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Tatting

Tatting has become an obsession at our house. After being completely stumped by a tatting shuttle, I picked up this needle tatting book. I finally figured out what I had once learned in 6th grade.


The girls then tried it and have barely stopped ever since. While I really had no idea what to do with the tatting once I made it, they had no such problems.


They are making wishing stone/good luck necklaces. After making 2 or 3 round, lacy bits of tatting, they are placing stones inside.

We are off to our family's lake house where there are lots of big stones. I look forward to the creativity expanding.

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What matters

We're settling back into home after our vacation--trying hard to not dive deeply back into work, but to take time with the girls. It has been a summer of too much work. This became clear as we sat together to craft on Sunday. They were so happy to have us *present* with them rather than off in our computer worlds.



The little man was inspired by our time at the seashore in Florida--we tried to figure out how to attach the shells to his cloak, but nothing looked right.






And this fellow came from the colors of Acadia. His cloak is covered with swirls of blue. We were into wild hair on Sunday!









While I'm not sure if I really like these little guys, it almost doesn't matter. The act of making them was what mattered. We sat together (in 90 degree heat) and worked the wool, chatted, and slowly together these forms emerged. I'll treasure them just for the reminder that what our girls need most is our active presence.

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On the Edge




We just got back from a week in Acadia. We hiked, biked, kayaked, and took in the beauty of the park.

This summer, for some reason, I was much more of a nervous nellie with the girls. I had a terrible time watching as the girls disappeared over the edges of cliffs and mountains.





Hels, of course, picked right up on this. She took pride in getting as far away from me and as close to the edge as possible. Here she is up at Bubble Rock.

And here she is down by the edge of the water.

Here she is with about 700 feet of thin air behind her. I tried very hard to let her get to the edge, let her go and smile as she looked back, partly to see how nervous she was making me and partly to see if I was still there.

Sometimes vacations can be growing and turning points. I feel that way with Hels as she prepares to enter her last year at Waldorf School.

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Sanibel Dice

We have recently returned from a visit to Grandparents in Florida. It was a so hot--especially for us Vermonters who have barely seen a day above 80 degrees this summer.

Sanibel Island is well-known for its amazing shells and we managed to brave the heat at the beach to collect some. What to do with lots of shells? We are planning a couple of needle felting projects, but, in the meantime, we invented a dice game called Sanibel Dice.

I adopted this from a dice game I found online that involves counters. In this case, our counters are shells.

The aim of the game is to be the last person to hold a counter. Each player can throw a single die to see who goes first. Upon starting each player throws both dice- trying to avoid throwing aces or 6's. If an ace is thrown, one counter is put into the kitty in the middle of the table. For two aces (snake eyes) both counters go to the kitty. For each 6 that is thrown a counter is passed to player on the left. As each player runs out of counters he/she is temporarily out of the game. 
The last person left holding a counter must make three throws of the dice without rolling a 6. If a 6 is thrown then the counter is passed to the left and that person now attempts to do the same. Play continues until someone is able to roll three times without a 6.

The idea is similar to last year's Thunder Hole Dice. Hels and Lou are growing out of many nature crafts. No more fairy houses for us. My answer has been to start creating games using things we find in nature. It has been quite successful!

Now we're off to Acadia for a week of camping. Who knows what we'll find!

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Tutorial: needle-felted figures

tutorial: Balloon Lanterns

tutorial: neede-felted advent spiral

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