Sunday, November 25, 2012

MAKING A LIST AND CHECKING IT TWICE


MAKING A LIST AND CHECKING IT TWICE
     The Christmas holidays sometime catch us unprepared either financially or else we’ve forgotten something important. The following list can help us remember things that are traditionally done, can serve as a list from which we might set a budget for, or help us determine what we already have and can use again. I know that this year, I will run very short of Christmas cards. I have quite a few “cute” cards, but since I’ve determined to keep Christ in Christmas this year, I will have to buy additional cards that reflect this. My list of people to whom I will send cards is relatively small, so one box of really nice cards is included in my budget.
     Since my daughter and son-in-law’s birthdays fall on the 24th and 25th their gifts are also included in my holiday budget. Yes, and this year I have to buy more wrapping paper. I’ve pretty well used up a supply that I had over the past years and also used up all of my gift bags.

     This list will bring to remembrance things that you may wish to include in your holiday planning, to calendar them into a busy schedule, I’ve alphabetized the list. If you find that I’ve left anything off please send me a message or comment so that it will appear here and help others.

Topic                                                     Already Have   Don't Have    Budgeted Amount
FAMILY
Caroling
Door Adornments
Garlands
Gift Bags
Gift Giving (itemize per person)
Gift Wrapping
Holiday Craft Fairs (for arts and crafts gifts)
Holiday Flowers
Holiday Food and Drink
Homemade Gifts
Lights in the Yard
Lights on Your Home
Mantle Decorations
Music
Nativity Scenes
Parties
Photographs
Porch Decorations
Remembering the Poor and Needy
Stockings Hung with Care
Table Settings and Centerpieces
The Christmas Story
The Spirit of Christmas
The Christmas Tree
Traditions (itemize specifically)
Visiting Santa
Window Paintings
Wreaths
Yard Displays

If you must plan for your business or job, the following list may help:
BUSINESS
Business Greeting Cards to Send
Decorating the Office
Gifts to Give (itemize)
Holiday Parties or Events
Christmas Dinner, Potluck or Buffet
Gift Wrapping
Music
Remembering the Poor and Needy
Traditions
Window Painting

PLANNING TO ATTEND COMMUNITY EVENTS
Holiday Parades
Neighborhood Holiday Displays
Arts and Crafts Festivals
Feeding the Hungry and Homeless
Stuff the Bus
Donating Toys to Tots
Visiting Santa

WATCH FOR OTHER COMMUNITY ACTIVITIES   
     Watch for other special activities such as coloring contests and sporting events such as walk-a-thons, bicycle or toboggan races, ice skating, etc. in local newspapers and TV news stations. If you are a member of a community organization, don't forget to look on their newsletters.
PLANNING SPECIAL EXCURSIONS AND TRIPS
     I like to attend the Tournament of Roses Parade in Pasadena, California every few years. It is sort of a family tradition because I designed the Downey Rose Parade Float in 1976, one of the last independently designed, volunteer constructed floats left in this huge annual parade. When my daughter was 16 we spent the week before in Downey so that she could help decorate the float with flowers. They we joined the bust trip up to Pasadena to view the parade on Colorado Blvd. from specially reserved seats. A great experience for our family. So if you are planning a trip be sure to include this in your budget and place it on your calendar.


 

 

 

 

Friday, November 23, 2012


HE DID IT FOR ME
     Christ died for me. This is my testimony. He gave me the greatest gift of all, forgiveness and eternal life.

     Last November and December, my husband gave me a gift too. I had always wanted him to grow a beard and “play” Santa to my “Mrs. Claus” but he wouldn’t do it. He was a Princeton graduate, a serious scholar and he just didn’t do “Play.” For the first years of our marriage he wore his shirt and tie at home after work. It took moving to Kwajalein in the Marshall Islands for his job to get him to dress casual, and he never went back to formal. Last year when his health declined at age 81, about November he became too weak to stand in front of the mirror to shave. I suggested that he might grow a beard. After all, his beard was white, it would be great to have him with a full beard in time for Christmas photos with grandchildren. HE DID IT FOR ME!
This small act of kindness brought me such joy. This is what the Christmas season is all about.
BEE IN THE DESERT
     Before I present a list of ideas on how to keep Christ in Christmas, I want to relate to you how moved I was during General Conference by a talk given by an apostle of the Lord. He gave such wise counsel, but it seemed he was talking about me. In his talk, “Be Anxiously Engaged,” Elder M. Russell Ballard spoke on how “Honeybees are driven to pollinate, gather nectar, and condense the nectar into honey. It is their magnificent obsession imprinted into their genetic makeup by our Creator.” I too, as BEE have been obsessed to write this blog to share the pollen I have picked up over the years. He tells us how the individual bee only produces 1/12 teaspoon of honey during its short life. It takes the entire hive of 20,000 to 60,000 bees to make a pound of honey. The bees depend on each other, each faithfully doing their part.

     The beehive has always been an important symbol of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints. It was used to inspire the cooperative energy necessary among the pioneers to transform the barren desert wasteland into the fertile valleys we have today. I am a BEE (those were the initials of my maiden name) in the desert (of Tucson, Arizona) and am trying to do my 1/12th teaspoon, contributing to the building up of the kingdom of God upon the earth, preparing for the Lord’s second coming. Thus this blog.
     “The beehive symbol is found in both the interiors and exteriors of many of our temples.” I love the temple and search for my ancestors so that I might give them  the opportunities and blessings they did not have when they lived here upon the earth. The Lord loves all of his children and he will give them all of the same opportunities that have come to members of his church in these latter days. Our leaders recently taught us at Stake Conference that, “Through us shall all nations of the earth be blessed,” both the living and the dead.
     Elder Ballard continues, “All of this symbolism attests to the fact great things are brought about and burdens are lightened through the efforts of many hands “anxiously engaged in a good cause.” (D & C 58:27). Imagine what the millions of Latter-day Saints could accomplish in the world if we functioned like a beehive in our focused, concentrated commitment to the teachings of the Lord Jesus Christ.”
He quotes Matthew 22:37, 39-40 that teaches that the first and great commandment is:
“Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all they mind….
“And the second is like unto it, Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself.
“On these two commandments hang all the law and the prophets.”
     Elder Ballard goes on to explain, “The Savior’s words are simple, yet their meaning is profound and deeply significant. We are to love God and to love and care for our neighbors as ourselves. Imagine what good we can do in the world if we all join together, united as followers of Christ, anxiously and busily responding to the needs of others and serving those around us- our families, our friends, our neighbors, our fellow citizens.”
A LIST OF 32 IDEAS TO KEEP CHRIST IN CHRISTMAS
     Because we have been given the gift of an extra week to focus on the Christmas season, I've listed one idea for every day. Of course, some will take more than a day to accomplish, but you will find much food for thought as you read through these ideas:
1.  Pray each morning to recognize the opportunity to serve another person
2.  Keep a daily journal of your spiritual insights, service given and joy felt
3.  Plan 25 Days of Christmas "an act of service each day"
4. Decorate your home together with all the family, reviewing the memories behind each ornament, wreath or Christmas stocking
5. Sing in the choir
6.  Find an ancestor to take to the temple
7.  Tell the story of Jesus' birth by use of book, film, scripture reading
8.  Set up a nativity and teach the children the meaning of each piece in it
9.  Contribute to a local food bank or toy drive; serve meals to the homeless
10. Wrap little "gifts" including a bit of money if possible, to give out to beggars or the homeless that you encounter (keep a bag of these in the car)
11. Go Christmas caroling with a group
12. Make treats (cookies, candy, little homemade jars of jam) to give to friends
13. Share your testimony of Christ with another person
14. Share your testimony with a family member, especially your child or grandchild
15. Continue throughout each day with a heart full of faith and love, looking for someone to help
16. Organize your family with clear, simple family rules and expectations during the holiday season and its different "look" in your home; keep safety foremost
17. Develop wholesome family traditions and rituals
18. Discuss "family economics" where children have household responsibilities and can earn allowances
19. Help children/grandchildren learn to budget, save and pay tithing on the money they earn
20. Pan an extra offering either for fast Sunday, or other project near and dear to your heart that is noted on the tithing slip
21. Attend tithing settlement as a family
22. Take a little gift you've made to the Bishop and other beloved church leaders, teachers within your ward, stake or school
23. Actually write and send some Christmas Cards to special friends and family; they'll appreciate the time you took to write instead of emailing
24. Find a person in your circle of acquaintances to send the ward missionaries to visit; this is a gift to the missionaries as well as the friend
25. Give a Book of Mormon, inscribed with a message from your family, to friend, an acquaintance, or even, if prompted, to a stranger
26. Take a family photo portrait in Christmas attire
27. Help focus on the Christlike example of Santa Claus, rather than on "What'll he bring me," on being nice rather than naughty little boys and girls
28. When selecting an overarching theme for your holiday celebrations, as yourself, "Would this please the Christ child?"
29. Attend the ward Christmas party
30. Support and attend uplifting community events such as plays, musicals, Messiah performances, parades
31. Become a secret Santa to a widow or family less fortunate that you know about
32. Gather into the care and go see neighborhoods where they have decorated their years with holiday lights; have cocoa and cookies afterwards
I am sure you can add more ideas to this list, so so write to me and share them for inclusion on another blog. Next time I will talk about budgeting and list some things  that you might want to remember. Over the years I've made many lists...and this is the accumulation of those lists.
 
 
 

 

 

Thursday, November 22, 2012

Creating a Memorable Christmas
     What a wonderful time of the year it is. And we've been giving a unique set of circumstances to create a truly memorable Christmas for our families. As I write, millions of people are participating in the shopping phenomenon known as Black Friday, but it isn't even Friday yet. So is it Black Thanksgiving? What a contradiction in terms. That's what life is today. A contradiction in terms.
     Yes, we are thankful for our blessings that allow us to sit at the heavy laden table to feast with loved ones; thankful for the jobs that we have that allow us to buy such things as a 20 lb turkey with all the trimmings, including green bean casserole, stuffing and pumpkin pie; thankful we are alive and have survived a year of tornadoes, hurricanes, a presidential election with its accompanying avalanche of negative political ads and a slumping economy. We are all wondering what's next? What's 'gonna come next? We may even be holding our breaths.
     Now, as "Daughters in Zion" we must make some quite giant decisions about this upcoming holiday season. Are we going to indulge in the frantic shopping that begins tonight at many stores that are requiring their employees to work on a day, when in past years it was sacrosanct as a day off to be with family, OR are we going to be sensible, sane, spiritual and to walk in the light?
The Special Gift We've Been Given this Year
     I won't beat around the bush and keep you in the dark one more moment. The gift we've been given is an extra week! 
     So, if you made a bad decision and realize you've got caught up in the materialistic world of Black Friday, you can repent. Isaiah tells us in Chapter 1: 18
"Come now, and let us reason together, saith the Lord: though your sins be as scarlet, they shall be as white as snow; though the be red like crimson, they shall be as wool."
The next verses tell us, "If ye be willing and obedient, ye shall eat the good of the land; But if you refuse and rebel, ye shall be devoured with the sword."
BE WILLING AND OBEDIENT
    How do we translate this into a MEMORABLE CHRISTMAS? As Michael Jackson would say let's, "Look at the man in the mirror, and ask him to change his ways." CHANGE. Let's together, change, and the results will amaze you.  Are we WILLING to take a stand for our family's sake and make this a truly remarkable and spiritual Christmas? What have we got to lose? Indeed we have much to gain. For God says, "I will turn (in Hebrew this means return; i.e. repeatedly chastise) my hand upon thee, and purely purge away thy dross, and take away all thy tin; And I will restore thy judges as at first, and thy counsellors as at the beginning: afterward thou shalt be called, the city of righteousness, the faithful city. Zion shall be redeemed,,,"
     Let's be OBEDIENT. Let's do what all the prophets, ancient and modern, have told us to do. Keep the commandments!
     The Lord told us at the beginning of this, "Come now, let us reason together." So let's you and I reason out how we might use our gift of an extra week, and plan out how to make this a Christmas our families will never forget.
PRAY FIRST FOR THE SPIRIT TO BE WITH YOU
     GOD is behind us in our efforts and he will inspire us exactly how to begin organizing or creating a memorable holiday period.  We have a full 32 days to do it.  Begin each day with a prayer that you may remember HIM, Jesus Christ in all of you plans, and that the Holy Spirit will direct your thoughts and actions.
     "Relieve the oppressed, judge the fatherless, plead for the widow." In other words, each day do small act of kindness and teach your children that they, too should do this. It will make the season truly Christlike.
     Elder D. Todd Christofferson said, "Service will be your solution against selfishness and sense of entitlement that more and more afflict societies around the world...Your service will bless others, but it will also perfect you."
PLANNING A MEMORABLE CHRISTMAS
     Keeping in mind the things I've just spoken about, let's follow Christ's example when He created this wonderful earth. Step by step I will lead you through a process that will help you create a memorable Christmas. God had a PLAN. It started long before the physical world was built in six creative periods.
To create a plan ask yourself the following basic questions:
How important is Christmas to me?
How important is Christmas to my family?
Why do I want to celebrate Christmas? Some reasons might include, tradition, your children or grandchildren, an annual social event, to win a neighborhood prize or recognition, your religious convictions, fond childhood memories, to feel good or joyful, or to learn new skills,  to teach/share skills with others, etc.
     You now, after thoughtful consideration and prayer, at least know WHY you are WILLING to spend time and energy to reach your goals of a successful Christmas celebration. You have a choice of how much time and money will be spent on the various phases of this plan. Hopefully you have not overspent on Black Friday because the step three includes a budget. But even this is not fatal; I have suggestions on how to reverse those impulsive actions including returning some of the gifts you bought when they don't fit into your plan.
Keep Reading My Blog
Tomorrow I will list all of things you may wish to review before you set a budget in Step 3.
I am thankful to all my family and friends who so enrich my life. This blog is an opportunity to give back and share some of the things that I've learned over the past 40 years. Christmas was always special to me. My mother helped show me how to creatively celebrate. Long before my daughter was born on Christmas day, I came to love and revere this season of joy.
May God bless you

Wednesday, November 14, 2012

Daughter of Zion
    I've been pondering Isaiah 1:8. This verse comes after the Lord laments how having nourished and brought up his children, that they have rebelled against him (1:2). How the land has become desolate, overthrown by strangers and devoured by those strangers, thus describing the situation that exists for this verse:
"And the daughter of Zion is left as a cottage in a vineyard,
as a lodge in a garden of cucumbers, as a beseiged city."  Isaiah 1:8
    I pondered the domestic references of the words cottage and garden of cucumbers, in juxtaposition with vineyard. Normally this word is used symbolically with the Lord's people and how on earth can those two references be linked with 'a beseiged city.'
Here is what I've come to conclude:
The Scene has Changed
    The Priesthood are usually referred to the watchmen on towers protecting the vineyard. Well, they've got to live somewhere, don't they? So they've left their wives in the cottage in the vineyard while they are off doing their work. But the economic and political situation that Isaiah describes in the first verses of this chapter indicate that the watchmen and their families no longer live in a protected place anymore, but the enemy (strangers) has overcome the children of the Lord and they've become stricken, and faint, and have rebelled from the Lord's ways.
    The daughter of Zion verse is followed by the Lord being thankful that He saved a "very small remnant" or else we'd have become like Sodom and Gomorrah. Thus we see the daughter of Zion and her small remnant as a city besieged.
Our Cottages are Under Bombardment
    Our homes are under bombardment of evil from the onslaught of mass communications. Our current day idols are Cell phones, Ipods, Ipads, Computers, Mini pads, laptops, downloadable movies and music from a million sites including Netflix and Crackle, etc.
Walking on the Dark Side
    As daughters of Zion, if we are not very very careful and diligent, we've given our young children permission to enter thru the door into pornography, bullying, malicious gossip and horror movies. They learn about the dark side of the world such as black fantasies of werewolves, vampires, the walking dead, and gothic images. I told a young LDS friend to try on the vanilla look instead of dark chocolate. The taste is more subtle but just as deliciously satisfying. But the young seem to be addicted to this dark chocolate look. They prefer black backgrounds on their FaceBook pages, painting their rooms black and wearing black clothing with designs of dark fantastical meanings parading on their chests and backs like badges of honor. They are assaulted with images and movies on the media that encourage tatoos, body piercings, sexual deviations, and glorify fornication, adultry, bestiality and homosexuality. Now, having been surrounded by this food of images for several years as "entertainment," they honestly think that same sex marriages are okay and are the typical "modern family." They don't see the insidious rot and decay of the family defined as the Lord ordained it in the world. (See the Family Proclamation to The World)
Come Walk in the Light
    So the daughter of Zion's kitchen garden of cucumbers, her children, are in jeopardy. Her cottage home is being threatened by subtle hidden strangers lurking in cyberspace. She does live in a home that is like a city besieged, but at a very intimate and personal level.
I looked up the meaning of besieged, because the first thing that came to my mind was cannon balls being lobbed over the city walls, guns and bombs type of attack. But the words in Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary, eleventh edition give only these three more subtle meanings:
1. To surround by armed forces
2. To press with requests
3. To cause worry or distress to
    These actually are less action oriented than I anticipated, and more accurately describe our modern homes or cottages.
Lust No Longer After the Things of the World
    Following verse eight, the Lord says don't just come to give me thought on Sundays and holidays, because He just can't endure it! And when we come to plead with him in time of need for help, He will hide His eyes and not hear our prayers. This is a pretty dangerous position to find ourselves.
T    he Lord then says (1:16) repent and cease to do evil; (1:17) lean to do well, seek justice, relieve the oppressed, watch out for the orphans/fatherless and plead for the widow.
    Even though our sins are as scarlet they can be as white as wool (1:18) if we are willing and obedient (1:19) we'll eat the good of the land. But if we rebel we'll be devoured by the sword (1:20). Yikes!!!
    He says that the faithful city has become a harlot lusting after things of the world and they have become murderers (abortion?) and the young Priesthood holders (the princes) are rebellious. (1:21-2)
    He then describes our modern world only too accurately in verse 23. Merchants defraud consumers, and money/silver has become as dross (waste or foreign matter). In our day silver is worth little and money is now held captive by foreign debt payments. Our young people love gifts and follow after rewards whether they earn them or not. They don't think of the fatherless or widows nor give service to the poor and needy.
    The Lord God of Israel, Jesus Christ, will avenge himself and his people against the enemies of God. He will purge the dross and take away our sins. And he will restore judges, counsellors and afterwards we'll again be called the city of righteousness, the faithful city:
    "Zion shall be redeemed with (justice) judgment, and her converts (sound familiar) with righteousness."
    Then those that have sinned and repented NOT will be burned or as a mighty oak in drought will fade just as does a garden that hath no water."
The Daughter of Zion is the Tipping Point: A Fulcrum
    The verse 8 has become the fulcrum or tipping point in Isaiah's opening chapters. Think this is for us in our day? The Daughter in Zion is the caretaker of the cottage and garden and although besieged on all sides by wickedness and evil, must bring the living waters of the gospel to her daughters and young princes, who will one day bear the Royal Priesthood, so that they may overcome the world and be nourished, walking in the His light and serving Him by serving others.