Quote du jour
"The work will teach you how to do it" - Estonian proverb
I hope those of you with kids at home had a fabulous school vacation week. Even when I work, school vacation week is a break from carpools, homework angst and the rush to get dinner prepared and served before the next activity. If you were able to have some vacation time of your own with family – so much the better! And if you don’t have kids at home any more, then the abrupt appearance of spring weather and blooms was timed well! There was certainly plenty of good cheer on Sunday. And pollen. (Sniffle, sniffle, Sneeze, sneeze)
This week continues our countdown to Religious Education Sunday. If your group is not interested in a group contribution, please let me know. We have plenty of other roles to fill. Greeters, ushers, readers, etc. There’s room for all sorts of contributions and comfort levels. If I did not stop in and check in with you on Sunday, I will do so sometime this week.
This just in – Francie Fitch and I are going to dive in and offer an intergenerational performance opportunity to members of the UUCGL community. We are inviting any and everyone to sing and act in the musical “Children of Eden”. This is the book of Genesis set to music and it’s great fun as well. My own kids and I were part of an interfaith/intergenerational family theatre that produced this one year. You will enjoy it, as participant or observer. And if you can’t sing or act, there are lots of other ways to be involved. Francie will be putting our a rehearsal schedule soon. The children will be working on their parts during Sunday morning RE time, AFTER this years Religious Education program comes to an end. The show goes up in mid-late June. Stay tuned for more details.
And finally, what do you do when spring fever takes over a group of kids? Or adults for that matter! There are a number of things I do with the space itself. Turn out the lights, light a candle or two, sound a chime. There are other more interactive focusing things to do. Two of my favorites are below.
1. The leader claps their hands once and says quietly “if you can hear me, clap once.” The kids close enough to hear will do so. Immediately repeat the sequence with a double clap. Repeat again with any clap/finger snap number or combination. I usually find after two or three sequences you have the group’s attention again. This works for all ages, except the very young.
2. One Duck! Have the group form a circle and say the sentence One Duck Fell in the Pond – Ker Plunk. Once they have repeated the entire sentence, you go around the circle and each person takes a word in sequence. If you start off “One”, the next person says “Duck”, the next “Fell” and so on. If a word is repeated or lost, you start from the beginning. On the second round, the word is repeated twice by each person. “One, One” “Duck, Duck”, “Fell, Fell” and so on. Start over if words get lost, spoken out of sequence or repeated only once. (Speed it up to make it even more challenging). If you’re really committed go for a three word iteration. This works for most groups, although if you have fewer than 6 people in the room, it’s not very challenging. And the smallest children may not get the concept.
3. If you have a smaller group or an older group, try a Zen Count. Without coordinating, have every one in the room take part in counting to 20. (If that seems like too much of a stretch – start by counting to 10) The rules are simple, everyone must speak before anyone repeats. You cannot go in any order and you cannot say a number at the same time as someone else. If two people start to speak at once, start again from ‘one’. This is particularly useful with a group that is having a hard time paying attention to each other.
Happy focusing!
I’ll see you in church.
This week continues our countdown to Religious Education Sunday. If your group is not interested in a group contribution, please let me know. We have plenty of other roles to fill. Greeters, ushers, readers, etc. There’s room for all sorts of contributions and comfort levels. If I did not stop in and check in with you on Sunday, I will do so sometime this week.
This just in – Francie Fitch and I are going to dive in and offer an intergenerational performance opportunity to members of the UUCGL community. We are inviting any and everyone to sing and act in the musical “Children of Eden”. This is the book of Genesis set to music and it’s great fun as well. My own kids and I were part of an interfaith/intergenerational family theatre that produced this one year. You will enjoy it, as participant or observer. And if you can’t sing or act, there are lots of other ways to be involved. Francie will be putting our a rehearsal schedule soon. The children will be working on their parts during Sunday morning RE time, AFTER this years Religious Education program comes to an end. The show goes up in mid-late June. Stay tuned for more details.
And finally, what do you do when spring fever takes over a group of kids? Or adults for that matter! There are a number of things I do with the space itself. Turn out the lights, light a candle or two, sound a chime. There are other more interactive focusing things to do. Two of my favorites are below.
1. The leader claps their hands once and says quietly “if you can hear me, clap once.” The kids close enough to hear will do so. Immediately repeat the sequence with a double clap. Repeat again with any clap/finger snap number or combination. I usually find after two or three sequences you have the group’s attention again. This works for all ages, except the very young.
2. One Duck! Have the group form a circle and say the sentence One Duck Fell in the Pond – Ker Plunk. Once they have repeated the entire sentence, you go around the circle and each person takes a word in sequence. If you start off “One”, the next person says “Duck”, the next “Fell” and so on. If a word is repeated or lost, you start from the beginning. On the second round, the word is repeated twice by each person. “One, One” “Duck, Duck”, “Fell, Fell” and so on. Start over if words get lost, spoken out of sequence or repeated only once. (Speed it up to make it even more challenging). If you’re really committed go for a three word iteration. This works for most groups, although if you have fewer than 6 people in the room, it’s not very challenging. And the smallest children may not get the concept.
3. If you have a smaller group or an older group, try a Zen Count. Without coordinating, have every one in the room take part in counting to 20. (If that seems like too much of a stretch – start by counting to 10) The rules are simple, everyone must speak before anyone repeats. You cannot go in any order and you cannot say a number at the same time as someone else. If two people start to speak at once, start again from ‘one’. This is particularly useful with a group that is having a hard time paying attention to each other.
Happy focusing!
I’ll see you in church.
