I hope everyone enjoyed our double take deals last week! Thanks to everyone who participated - we had fun.
So this week my kids headed back to school. I have a five year old who just entered all day kindergarten which makes me proud and scared all at the same time. Also I have a second and fourth grader. Which means that I have a child in the BIG KID HALL. It's totally weirding me out - - hence the need to tell you all.
Also, I dropped an armoire on my foot on monday afternoon and so I've had elephant foot all week. As in, my foot looks like an elephant's foot in size and color. Which merits laziness and lots of time in front of Netflix with my elephant appendage on a pillow.
ALSO also, I want to ask you guys to do me a favor while getting our freebie this week. Head on over to yourLDSradio's blog and grab this free 8x10 printable with a quote from Russell M. Nelson, and while you're there browse the blog a little and leave a comment or two. Because I've been blogging for them for a few weeks now and NO ONE ever comments. It's embarrassing. So yeah. Help me out. Pretty please. Just think about poor little me and my weirded out elephant foot, then comment out of pity.
Showing posts with label free printables. Show all posts
Showing posts with label free printables. Show all posts
Friday, August 24, 2012
Freebie Friday: Free Printable
Labels:
free LDS printable,
free printables,
freebie friday
Posted by
melissabastow
at
6:00 AM
0
comments


Tuesday, July 24, 2012
Free Pioneer Printable
I loved this song as a kid, and now my kids love singing it too (you can sing "and walked..." over and over and over, to see who's the most obnoxious - it's great).
Enjoy the free 8x10" printable, and I hope everyone takes a few minutes to remember and honor our pioneer ancestors!

Saturday, April 28, 2012
Fill Your Mind with Truth: Free Printable
This was also one my favorite spiritual things said at BYU Women's Conference (so many great things were said that I don't know if I'll ever be able to make printables for everything I heard, plus my printables somehow don't seem to do the words justice since the conference was so amazing).
Anyways, you get your own "Fill Your Mind with Truth" printable:
Anyways, you get your own "Fill Your Mind with Truth" printable:
Labels:
BYU Women's Conference,
free LDS printable,
free printables
Posted by
melissabastow
at
7:00 PM
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comments


We are All Sisters: Free Printable
"We are all sisters in the cause of Christ."
This was one of my particular favorite quotes from BYU Women's Conference. I guess you could say that it speaks to my spirit. That sentence was so corny it almost hurt me to type, although it is true.
Here's a free printable with the quote:
This was one of my particular favorite quotes from BYU Women's Conference. I guess you could say that it speaks to my spirit. That sentence was so corny it almost hurt me to type, although it is true.
Here's a free printable with the quote:
Labels:
BYU Women's Conference,
free LDS printable,
free printables
Posted by
melissabastow
at
6:22 PM
0
comments


Friday, April 27, 2012
The Errand of Angels: Free Printable
Last night at BYU Women's Conference the congregation was singing the song "As Sisters in Zion". It was the second verse when the words hit me hardest, and now I don't think I'll ever forget or ignore them again.
Get the free printable:
Get the free printable:
Labels:
BYU Women's Conference,
free LDS printable,
free printables
Posted by
Melanie Millett
at
3:01 PM
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comments


Like What you Do: free printable
I heard this quote during a BYU Women's Conference class yesterday, and just couldn't leave it alone until I made a printable of it.
Labels:
BYU Women's Conference,
free LDS printable,
free printables
Posted by
Melanie Millett
at
2:27 PM
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comments


Choose Joy: Free Printable
I've heard this quite a few times during BYU Women's Conference. We get to choose how to respond, act, and feel. Wouldn't it be great if we all choose joy? (And if it were easier to do in all situations?)
Get the printable for free:
Get the printable for free:
Labels:
BYU Women's Conference,
free LDS printable,
free printables
Posted by
Melanie Millett
at
1:55 PM
1 comments


BYU Women's Conference Theme: free printable
The theme for this year's BYU Women's Conference comes from 1 Nephi 14:14, it says "And they were armed with righteousness and with the power of God in great glory". It's a powerful message.
You can get this free printable with this scripture:
Labels:
BYU Women's Conference,
free LDS printable,
free printables
Posted by
Melanie Millett
at
1:24 PM
0
comments


Perspiration-Free Shortcuts to Heaven: free printable
I love this quote from BYU Women's Conference: "I have not seen any perspiration-free shortcuts to heaven". And since I'm posting printables today (stay tuned for more) here it is!
Labels:
BYU Women's Conference,
free LDS printable,
free printables
Posted by
Melanie Millett
at
12:22 PM
0
comments


Free Printable: Rely on Miracles
"I don't believe in miracles, I rely on them." This was said during BYU Women's Conference, and I like it. You can get a free printable of it right here:
-- All free printables are for personal use only. --
Labels:
BYU Women's Conference,
free LDS printable,
free printables
Posted by
Melanie Millett
at
9:29 AM
0
comments


Thursday, April 26, 2012
Trail Blisters Free Printable: BYU Women's Conference
Labels:
BYU Women's Conference,
free LDS printable,
free printables
Posted by
Melanie Millett
at
4:31 PM
0
comments


Teaching Children There is Joy in Every Job: BYU Women's Conference
My next class today was about teaching children to have joy in working. Which we seriously need to work on at our house. (and not just the kids either.)
Here are my favorite parts about this class:
Saying "Go clean your room" is overwhelming, but saying "LET'S GO clean your room" sounds better to little ears.
No one likes to be told what to do, "Never let a job to be done become more important than a person to be loved" (see printable below). Tell your kids the chores they'd like to do in advance so they can think about it before they need to have it done - then they can decide themselves to do it. (Or in my children's case, NOT do.)
Simplify family life by prioritizing what's really important, what you can't give up. Be flexible, keeping rigid schedules never works for families because there's always SOMETHING that will get in your way. Work together - a team will accomplish something faster than when you're by yourself. Offer praise, make it personal, give pride in a job well done (or just a job done).
How you ask your children to do a job makes a difference. Let them do short amounts of work as a team - you'd be surprised how a 5 minute cleaning session can really get stuff done.
Don't give kids whatever they want. If they have to wait for it and earn the money themselves through chores, they'll learn respect for their things, they'll value them more, they'll learn to work for what they want.
Not all jobs need to have earthly rewards - thinking of all that Christ has done for us will help us appreciate the things we need to do. Knowing how hard Christ worked, will help us feel joyful about the amount of work we have. Also a reward can be knowing that you did the job, be satisfied by your work, and being motivated to be helpful in the future.
As children learn about Gospel Doctrines, they will feel more responsibility and a greater desire to work in the home.
Making sure your child feel totally loved (5 love languages) will make them be much more willing to do jobs and chores. It also helps with self-esteem and all that good stuff, but this class is about work.
Don't criticize someone after doing a job. They get enough of that from the world, they don't need it at home. And even if you do it light heartedly or jokingly your kids will still figure it out - they're pretty smart.
Look at work as an opportunity and not a drudgery. Everyone should have a choice to work, and not be forced. Patience must be practiced when dealing with kids on this concept. LOOOOTS of patience.
Goal: Try to do chores WITH my children instead of forcing them to do them alone. Think of short jobs. Give more praise and choice.
And here's an awesome free printable to go along with this class:
Here are my favorite parts about this class:
Saying "Go clean your room" is overwhelming, but saying "LET'S GO clean your room" sounds better to little ears.
No one likes to be told what to do, "Never let a job to be done become more important than a person to be loved" (see printable below). Tell your kids the chores they'd like to do in advance so they can think about it before they need to have it done - then they can decide themselves to do it. (Or in my children's case, NOT do.)
Simplify family life by prioritizing what's really important, what you can't give up. Be flexible, keeping rigid schedules never works for families because there's always SOMETHING that will get in your way. Work together - a team will accomplish something faster than when you're by yourself. Offer praise, make it personal, give pride in a job well done (or just a job done).
How you ask your children to do a job makes a difference. Let them do short amounts of work as a team - you'd be surprised how a 5 minute cleaning session can really get stuff done.
Don't give kids whatever they want. If they have to wait for it and earn the money themselves through chores, they'll learn respect for their things, they'll value them more, they'll learn to work for what they want.
Not all jobs need to have earthly rewards - thinking of all that Christ has done for us will help us appreciate the things we need to do. Knowing how hard Christ worked, will help us feel joyful about the amount of work we have. Also a reward can be knowing that you did the job, be satisfied by your work, and being motivated to be helpful in the future.
As children learn about Gospel Doctrines, they will feel more responsibility and a greater desire to work in the home.
Making sure your child feel totally loved (5 love languages) will make them be much more willing to do jobs and chores. It also helps with self-esteem and all that good stuff, but this class is about work.
Don't criticize someone after doing a job. They get enough of that from the world, they don't need it at home. And even if you do it light heartedly or jokingly your kids will still figure it out - they're pretty smart.
Look at work as an opportunity and not a drudgery. Everyone should have a choice to work, and not be forced. Patience must be practiced when dealing with kids on this concept. LOOOOTS of patience.
Goal: Try to do chores WITH my children instead of forcing them to do them alone. Think of short jobs. Give more praise and choice.
And here's an awesome free printable to go along with this class:
Labels:
BYU Women's Conference,
free LDS printable,
free printables
Posted by
Melanie Millett
at
1:45 PM
0
comments


Avoiding the Entitlement Trap: BYU Women's Conference
"Entitlement is a big part of our world and it's getting bigger."
I really enjoyed the class on entitlement and hope to use the information I got in my house with my kids. And probably with my husband too. :)
These are my favorite parts of the class (basically, they're my notes):
If we could rely on the atonement as much as we rely on our phones and computers and ipads, think about how our lives would change. But how do we overcome entitlement. When someone is offering free lunch, don't we just go for it without thought? (I DO.) But if we continually check our perspective, we'll see when we're being selfish. (although getting free lunch when it's appropriate is totally cool.)
Sometimes we get so close to the situations we're facing that we can't see the whole picture. We just need to step back and see the entire eternal perspective to see what's most important. That way we don't get caught up being overwhelmed or too focused on something. Even when it's something that seems important or right, getting a full perspective will help us sort worldly things from eternal consequences.
Work, Gratitude, and Service will help us stay away from the trap of entitlement. Work brings self-confidence, purpose and fulfillment. So often we are too focused on the future that we never look at the present. But being content in what we have RIGHT NOW will help us feel gratitude. As we serve we'll feel REAL joy, not the counterfeit happiness that worldly possessions gives us.
This generation is the age of "why not"? If we want to communicate by only using our thumbs, why not? But we have the responsibility to keep from becoming greedy. We aren't entitled to do things and have things just because we can. We need to choose what is necessary, and not what is based solely on need.
All that we have now has come from God. Without His help, we would have nothing. But we have been given stewardship over our bodies, lives, and homes. We just need to make sure that we're good stewards.
Satan wishes to reign over us with greed and enmity. He wants us to diminish others to build ourselves up. God wishes we could help lift others with our talents and acts of kindness. It is the opposite of entitlement and greed.
Children can benefit from expressing gratitude even when they receive things or service from daily life, things that are expected. Just expressing gratitude daily will help gratitude grow. It might eventually help keep the "gimmes" away. They should also learn early to help in the home. To be responsible at home with chores or services.
We must teach our children that winning isn't of ultimate importance and that it's ok to not be the best at anything. They may feel entitled to being the best, and if they can't be the best then it's not worth it. (This is a particularly hard thing at our house - we must work at this....a lot.)
My goal: start with myself, then teach my kids to feel less entitled....right after I get some kind of amazing prize and award check, because I DESERVE that. JUST KIDDING.
I really enjoyed the class on entitlement and hope to use the information I got in my house with my kids. And probably with my husband too. :)
These are my favorite parts of the class (basically, they're my notes):
If we could rely on the atonement as much as we rely on our phones and computers and ipads, think about how our lives would change. But how do we overcome entitlement. When someone is offering free lunch, don't we just go for it without thought? (I DO.) But if we continually check our perspective, we'll see when we're being selfish. (although getting free lunch when it's appropriate is totally cool.)
Sometimes we get so close to the situations we're facing that we can't see the whole picture. We just need to step back and see the entire eternal perspective to see what's most important. That way we don't get caught up being overwhelmed or too focused on something. Even when it's something that seems important or right, getting a full perspective will help us sort worldly things from eternal consequences.
Work, Gratitude, and Service will help us stay away from the trap of entitlement. Work brings self-confidence, purpose and fulfillment. So often we are too focused on the future that we never look at the present. But being content in what we have RIGHT NOW will help us feel gratitude. As we serve we'll feel REAL joy, not the counterfeit happiness that worldly possessions gives us.
This generation is the age of "why not"? If we want to communicate by only using our thumbs, why not? But we have the responsibility to keep from becoming greedy. We aren't entitled to do things and have things just because we can. We need to choose what is necessary, and not what is based solely on need.
All that we have now has come from God. Without His help, we would have nothing. But we have been given stewardship over our bodies, lives, and homes. We just need to make sure that we're good stewards.
Satan wishes to reign over us with greed and enmity. He wants us to diminish others to build ourselves up. God wishes we could help lift others with our talents and acts of kindness. It is the opposite of entitlement and greed.
Children can benefit from expressing gratitude even when they receive things or service from daily life, things that are expected. Just expressing gratitude daily will help gratitude grow. It might eventually help keep the "gimmes" away. They should also learn early to help in the home. To be responsible at home with chores or services.
We must teach our children that winning isn't of ultimate importance and that it's ok to not be the best at anything. They may feel entitled to being the best, and if they can't be the best then it's not worth it. (This is a particularly hard thing at our house - we must work at this....a lot.)
My goal: start with myself, then teach my kids to feel less entitled....right after I get some kind of amazing prize and award check, because I DESERVE that. JUST KIDDING.
Labels:
BYU Women's Conference,
free LDS printable,
free printables
Posted by
Melanie Millett
at
12:44 PM
0
comments


Opening Thursday Session: BYU Women's Conference
The first session of BYU Conference started with a video message from Sandra Rogers about conference etiquette. It was her final message (after years of skits) and it was hilarious. She, and her sidekick, were pioneer women with a handcart trying to get to the Marriot Center, but were distracted by things like brownies and rocks. It was great!
The first speaker was Sister Burton, the new President of the Relief Society General Presidency. It was a short message, but she seems amazing.
Then Ruth Todd spoke to the huge crowd of women on being armed in righteousness. She was funny and inspiring and every one was focused on learning how to use prayer, service, and staying strong to keep us armed and ready for any and all situations.
"Women make the biggest difference in the world."
Here's a free printable from her talk:
Labels:
BYU Women's Conference,
free LDS printable,
free printables
Posted by
Melanie Millett
at
11:39 AM
0
comments


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