Go the direction of your own spinner

Go the direction of your own spinner

spinner

Each year I assign a board game project to my 9th grade English class. The students are put into groups. Each group is to design a playable board game based on the short stories and vocabulary from our fiction unit.

For this assignment I provide a cardboard flat box, note cards (cut in half), one long-pronged brad (to make a spinner), and dice. Most groups simply rely on the dice to establish player movement but some groups are daring enough to create their own spinner with the brad. Almost every group that has ever attempted the brad spinner has made their own hands and poked a hole through so that they spin around the prongs under the head of the brad. This year I had one young man who used excessive creativity. His name is Noah.

Noah turned his brad upside down and colored one of the prongs so that the player would spin the prongs already attached to the brad head. His spinner worked very well and was revolutionary to the spinner development of all our groups.

After attaining success with their spinner, Noah’s group sought to find other methods for making an exceptional version of Shoots and Ladders. Their excitement was contagious to the other groups and lead to some terrific submissions for the project.

This new method for creating a board game spinner inspired me to encourage others to use everyday things in remarkable new ways. Make the most of the things around you. Find new ways to use what has been provided for you.

Put your energy into discovering “new spinners” and you will find purpose way beyond your expectations.

By: Melanie A. Peters

The Most Happiest = Prettiest – Wise Words Wednesday

The Most Happiest = Prettiest

The Prettiest Girls

Audrey Hepburn has become one of my idols because of her grace and candor. Her statement about the prettiest girls rings home for me this week. I have spoken to a number of my students, colleagues, my daughter, and myself about the benefits of being happy lately.

It is so true that the most attractive people do seem to be the happiest.

Find happiness in your life today and you will find beauty.

By: Melanie A. Peters

Happy Haiku Day and other imaginary holidays

Happy Haiku Day and other imaginary holidays

For one full decade
students have written poems
Haikus for my class

It has become known
as our Happy Haiku Day
an annual feast

Composing outdoors
Nature inspires writers
Haikus flow freely

Happy Haiku Day!
Invent your own holiday.
Spark new tradition.

Intend your purpose
to share energy kindly.
Inspire new joy.

By: Melanie A. Peters

 

Sweet Stuff From the Cafeteria

Sweet Stuff From the Cafeteria

For all of my academic life I have been a fan of lunch ladies. My admiration is rooted in my love of food and their dedication to ensuring that I have food (well, me and the hundreds of other people at school.) Every day I greet the ladies in our cafeteria with, “Hello lovely ladies of the lunchroom.”

I am pretty sure they took about six weeks to get used to this, but after a while my salutation began to grow on them. After five years of this morning routine, they have joined me in singing or at least calling out a kind hello.

They love me enough to always have hot coffee ready (well me and the rest of the faculty at school.) They love us enough to offer chef salads with a side each week (I get especially excited about the cabbage soup!) Continue reading “Sweet Stuff From the Cafeteria”

Storage Bins – Treasure Tubs

Storage Bins – Treasure Tubs

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I have three sisters and between the four of us we have 11 children. That’s right 11. And they are all aged 8 and under.

I know what you are thinking, “Do they keep the kids in the tubs?”

No. We keep their clothes in the tubs. ALL their outgrown-of, “I’m not wearing that,”  and too-big-for-now clothes, for every season and occasion, we keep them in tubs. Lots and lots of tubs.

I spent four hours this past weekend separating the clothes from my kids’ dresser drawers. It involved pulling out things that are too small, things that are for the wrong season, and things that I have NO EARTHLY IDEA where they came from and then sorting them into storage tubs and clearly labeling the tub.

My sisters and I have perfected the art of tub swapping. We know every time we get Continue reading “Storage Bins – Treasure Tubs”

“Don’t wish away your days” – Wise Words Wednesday

“The trick to enjoy life. Don’t wish away your days waiting for better ones ahead. The grand and the simple, they are equally wonderful.” – Marjorie Pay Hinckley

Don't wish away your days

As the school year winds down, students start suffering from severe senioritis.

(Senioritis n: student’s innate desire to be a graduating senior)

Every day I find myself saying, “Don’t wish your days away.” My students just shrug me off or rudely comment back (in most cases) and do not realize that I speak from experience. I was a terrible teenager. My teen angst was almost completely self-imposed and I had no clue why I was in such a hurry to get out of high school but I was dead set on getting out of that place and away from everything that had to it. I wish I could have some of those times back and dedicate a much more positive outlook on what life had to offer. I would have gotten so much more out of high school and its lessons.

As a mom of young children, I often have to remind myself to not wish away these days. My babies are only young once.

If you are a student, parent, teacher, or struggling professional, do not wish your days away. Enjoy the simple things that are available to you now and embrace the experiences that present themselves daily.

Don’t wish your days away. You can’t get them back!

Put your energy into appreciating the now, store your cherished moments in your heart, and you will find that your purpose and intentions will have a much grander meaning.

By: Melanie A. Peters

 

Spring fever is a real disease.

Spring fever is a real disease.

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Itchy eyes, twitchy legs, trouble with concentration, and a desperate need for fresh air are some of the basic symptoms of spring fever. Deeper effects are found in our inability to complete normal tasks, such as writing or grading papers, doing laundry, finishing anything necessary for our employment or education (even though we know it HAS to get done.)

Unfortunately it can also lead to crabbiness and short temper. Last week I had to take a walk with my 7 year-old daughter because she and her classmates were feeling the effects of the spring fever bug. (I might have also felt a touch of it coming on, which resulted in our decision to take a long walk.) My little girl explained to me that the kids in her class were not being nice to one another, and even though she tried to make them be nice, she could not stop them from picking at each other. I listened carefully and remembered well Continue reading “Spring fever is a real disease.”

Sunday Night Stress Out in Monday Morning Hindsight

Sunday Night Stress Out in Monday Morning Hindsight

Most every Sunday evening I find myself in a funk. I am sullen and overwrought with ideas and worry about the busy week ahead. More often than I care to admit, my husband has wiped away tears because of my Sunday Night Stress Out.

This morning I am feeling the effects of another Sunday Night Stress Out. My sleep was listless and my dreams bizarre. My husband, as always, took my stress with stride and slept like a baby (a baby that sleeps, not like my babies who don’t sleep.) 🙂

I used to think I was the only one who suffered from Sunday Night Stress Outs but a few weeks ago at the teachers’ lunch table my friends Charlotte and Debbie were discussing stressors and Charlotte said she frequently freaked out on Sunday nights about the week ahead. She admitted to a desperate need to clean and organize. I, too, have these same impulses on Sunday evenings. She conceded that she worried about how they were going to fulfill their demanding schedules and how their daughters are doing in school socially. I, too, worry about our ridiculous schedule and how my kids are going to make it in school. I was not alone in my Sunday Night Stress Outs! Continue reading “Sunday Night Stress Out in Monday Morning Hindsight”

The Fears We Don’t Face Become Our Limits – Robin Sharma — The Seeds 4 Life

Today let’s face a fear. Demonstrate to ourselves the strength of our resolve. Expose fears illusion and strip away the deception of importance it feeds the mind. Just for today, make a conscious choice to be fearless. Today, live from a place of positive possibility instead of anxiety. Today, focus on your dreams not your…

via The Fears We Don’t Face Become Our Limits – Robin Sharma — The Seeds 4 Life

Don’t let Your Arms Cross Your Body (a running post – sort of)

“Don’t let your arms cross your body.” – Marcus Bridges

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As stated in a previous post, I have gone through periods in my life where I dedicated my energy to running. I like running. I am ok at it. I would like to be good at it.

It is common in the winter months to see people running through the hallways of our school. I was one of those people running in the halls because it was too darn cold to run outside. My school has an amazing cross country and track coach by the name of Marcus Bridges. He coaches even when it’s too darn cold outside.

As Coach Bridges was shouting out encouragement and advice to his runners, he shouted out to me one day, “Don’t let your arms cross your body.” Continue reading “Don’t let Your Arms Cross Your Body (a running post – sort of)”