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The Big White Farmhouse

intentional living, little by little

February 3, 2021

No.485: Five Reasons to Send a Letter in February

This post contains affiliate links.

If you’ve read here for any length of time, you know that I am a passionate supporter of keeping snail mail alive!  This is a monthly series that I hope will inspire you to start putting thoughts on paper.  There’s nothing like finding a handwritten note among the piles of bills and junk mail.   

February 4 // National Thank A Mail Carrier Day 

I don’t know about you, but my mail carrier has been working SO hard since last March.  If it’s been awhile since you’ve thanked yours, now may be the perfect time to do so.
A few cards created by small businesses:

  • Postal Thank You Card by Joylark Studio
  • Printable Watercolor Mail Carrier Appreciation Card by Penelope Love Prints
  • Printable Letter Carrier Gift Card Holder by Sophia’s Things
February 14 // Valentine’s Day

Regardless of how you feel about this sometimes silly and materialistic holiday, I’m sure there are many people out there who could use a little love and encouragement.  This past year has been hard for so many.  Letting someone know that they are seen and loved would be a welcomed and appreciated action.
A few cards created by small businesses:

  • Watercolor Penguin Card by Cami Monet
  • French Bulldog Valentine’s Day Card by Lily Kao Design
  • Hey Valentine Card by Honey and Bliss Co.
February 19 // National Caregivers Day

Caregivers have the important job of caring for loved ones who have chronic illness, disabilities, disease, or old age.  They are unsung heroes!  This month is a great time to say thank you for their hard work.  There are a ton of great options at the shop, Senior Shower Project.

February 23 // National Banana Bread Day

Do you make a delicious banana bread?  Today might be a good excuse to drop one off on a neighbor’s doorstep or someone who may need a little pick-me-up.
A few cards created by small businesses:

  • When Lockdown Sends You Bananas Card by Kind of Simple Designs 
  • Banana Bread Muffins Recipe Card by Quill and Copper
  • Banana Watercolor Note Card by Sunniest Side Up Shop
February 26 // Tell a Fairy Tale Day

Let’s end with a fun one to round out the month!  Write a story of your own (the more imaginative, the better!) or maybe mail a beautiful anthology to a friend?  This would be a fun one to add to your homeschool day too.
A few cards created by small businesses:

  • Tea Time with the Dragon Card by Astrid Sheckels Art
  • “Little Red Riding Hood’s Secret” Greeting Card by Cozy Cards Corner DE
  • Princess Kisses a Bear Fairy Tale Notecard by Katy Dids Cards

IF YOU LIKED THIS POST, YOU MAY LIKE THESE TOO:
  • 30 (Mostly-Flat) Things to Send Your Penpal
  • Mail Tag // 10 Questions to Ask Your Penpal
  • Five Reasons to Send a Letter in March

February 1, 2021

No.484: February Readathons and More Literary Fun

This post contains affiliate links.

I’ve been watching a lot of “Booktube” lately while I fold laundry or wash dishes because it’s a happy escape and most importantly, non-stressful and non-political!  There are so many interesting people out there with such a wide range of favorite genres.  Not only do these channels gush about books, but they also share lots of unique ways to read books.  For February, I’m joining in on the fun!

Historathon

Historathon is a month-long readathon featuring historical fiction.  The hosts created a Bingo board with nine different prompts and I was able to find five that fit out of the books I already own.  (I did splurge and buy the group read book.)  Here’s what I’ve got:

  • Book About a War That is Not WWII – The Girl You Left Behind by Jojo Moyes
  • Group Read: The Yellow Bird Sings – I found a copy of this on Book Outlet!
  • A Historical Fiction Sub-Genre – The Woman in the Trees by Theoni Bell (I consider this a religious/historical fiction mix.)
  • A Book With No People on the Cover – Beneath a Scarlet Sky by Mark Sullivan
  • A Book Set During Winter – The Winter Station by Jody Shields
  • A Book With a Person’s Name in the Title – The Personal History of Rachel DuPree by Ann Weisgarber
The Booktube Spin

Another fun one that I couldn’t resist!  With this challenge, you pick 20 books from your TBR and list them by number.  I tried to pick my list with books that have been on my shelves for awhile:

  1. Better Off: Flipping the Switch on Technology by Eric Brende
  2. The Barefoot Bandit by Bob Friel
  3. My Italian Bulldozer by Alexander McCall Smith
  4. Far from the Madding Crowd by Thomas Hardy
  5. He Leadeth Me by Walter J. Ciszek
  6. Welcome to Lagos by Chibundu Onuzo
  7. Death on the Nile by Agatha Christie
  8. Complications: A Surgeon’s Notes on an Imperfect Science by Atul Gawande
  9. The Privilege of Being a Woman by Alice von Hildebrand
  10. The Couple Next Door by Shari Lapena
  11. The Girl in the Green Raincoat by Laura Lippman
  12. Fatherless by Brian J. Gail
  13. What She Knew by Gilly MacMillan
  14. Can’t Hurt Me: Master Your Mind and Defy the Odds by David Goggins
  15. My Brilliant Friend by Elena Ferrante
  16. This Side of Paradise by F. Scott Fitzgerald
  17. Animal, Vegetable, Miracle by Barbara Kingsolver
  18. Anne of the Island by L. M. Montgomery
  19. Moloka’i by Alan Brennert
  20. An Everlasting Meal: Cooking with Economy and Grace by Tamar Adler

The creator of the challenge spun a wheel and the arrow landed on…number 15!  The challenge is to read this one book by March 31.

Buzzword Reading Challenge

The prompt for February in the Buzzword Reading Challenge is “a color” and I’m planning to use Beneath a Scarlet Sky by Mark Sullivan (mentioned above) for this.  Win/win!

24in48 Readathon

So the question remains: how can I make the time to get to all of these great novels?  The 24in48 Readathon may be helpful!  This is a two-day reading “sprint” where you aim to read 24 out of 48 hours.  There is no way I’ll be able to read anywhere near that number, but I do think it would be fun to put the screens away for the weekend and dig into a pile of books.

Linking up again with Rosie!

January 29, 2021

No.483: Mother Culture Commonplace Book // January 2021

ASSIGNMENT #1: Read The Heritage Guide to the Constitution, pages 1-26.

When I was in high school, my Honors Government teacher was rumored to be an alcoholic and often came to class hung over, if he showed up at all.  (We had a lot of substitute teachers that year.)  Needless to say, I didn’t exactly receive a quality education in this area, so I’m coming to this book with just the barest bones of knowledge.  And it’s fascinating!  These first pages include the overview and introduction and I’ve already taken pages of notes.  Just a few more pages to finish up before I start the deep dive into each article.  

ASSIGNMENT #2: Finish the frame stitching on the “Winter” cross-stitch. (100 Little Thing #36)

I’m embarrassed that this little pattern took me so long to finish.  (I found this old post mentioning it all the way back in 2015!)  Glad to have it complete and I’m so ready to move on to something new.  

ASSIGNMENT #3: Finish the Bible Reading Plan. (100 Little Thing #61)

I started this plan on August 1, 2018 and I am finally done!  Highly recommend, whether you complete it in a year or not.

ASSIGNMENT #4: Discover a new musical artist and listen to some songs.

I like to keep this assignment really random and fun, so I browsed a list of 1940s musicians and stumbled on The Andrews Sisters!  Goodness knows we need a little something light and happy in our lives right now.  A few facts about the Andrews Sisters:

  • LaVerne (the oldest), Maxene and Patty Andrews were three sisters who formed a singing act as teenagers and performed around the Midwest. 
  • Their fame peaked during World War II and were nicknamed “America’s Wartime Sweethearts.”
  • Sadly, despite their success, apparently the sisters were constantly fighting and had a strained relationship.  Patty Andrews said in 1985, “The Andrews Sisters really had only one big fight.  It started in 1937 and it’s still going.”

ASSIGNMENT #5: Go through my closet, pull out unneeded pieces, and create seven casual outfits. Bonus points for listing some of the extras on Poshmark/ebay.

I’m giving myself partial credit for this one.  I did go through my closet and pulled out a handful of unworn pieces to sell….and that’s where I stopped.  Hoping to finish the second half of the assignment soon.

January 28, 2021

No.482: What I Read in January 2021

This post contains affiliate links.

#1. ONE BY ONE by Ruth Ware
★★★★☆

This was my fourth Ruth Ware novel and while it took me a few chapters to get into it, I really enjoyed it.  The story takes place in a chalet in the French Alps where a group of tech company employees come for a corporate retreat.  Tensions are already high when a terrible avalanche cuts the group off from civilization and one by one, the group starts dwindling in number.  This book definitely had an Agatha Christie feel and even though I had a pretty strong idea of whodunit (and was right in the end), I still felt it was a solid thriller.  Three and a half stars, rounded up.         

#2. THEOLOGY OF HOME: FINDING THE ETERNAL IN THE EVERYDAY by Carrie Gress, Noelle Mering & Megan Schrieber
★★★★☆

We can open our lives and homes to people placed in our path from other walks of life and world views.  With a greatly diminished number of people actually practicing the faith, it becomes more likely that our homes are a rare opportunity for someone in our acquaintance to be invited into the intimacy of Catholic family life.  To do this well we must first and foremost be constantly drawing from our Lord so that he might be reflected through us.  We bear a great responsibility to represent him well. (p.146)

Unless we are Lord or Lady Crawley, we will likely spend a lot of our time laboring at a job, in the home, or at school.  Whatever it is that we’re doing, dull or glamorous, in doing it for love of Christ, it becomes an extension of our prayer life and a vehicle for sanctification.  If we cannot find Christ in our work where we are now, we will have a hard time finding him anywhere else. (p.161)

I’ve had this book on my wishlist for awhile, so I was thrilled to receive a copy for Christmas!  (Thanks, Mom and Dad!)  It’s so much more than home décor inspiration – the bulk of the book consists of theological essays on the elements of home and the domestic Church.  I found many things to ponder, especially in the area of hospitality.

#3. THE PARASITIC MIND: HOW INFECTIOUS IDEAS ARE KILLING COMMON SENSE by Gad Saad
★★★★☆ 

I learned about this book after watching an interview on Youtube. I was intrigued by his wit and his completely countercultural understanding of the world today. He’s in the same vein as Jordan Peterson in that he comes to reason from a non-religious, but logical perspective. I don’t agree completely with everything he says, but it certainly was refreshing to hear counter-arguments for some of the more nonsensical things we’ve had pushed down our throats lately. It gave me a lot to think about.  3.5 stars, rounded up.

#4. THE SERMONS OF ST. FRANCIS DE SALES: FOR ADVENT AND CHRISTMAS
★★★★☆ 

Thus, it is a very good prayer simply to present one’s needs to Our Lord, place them before the eyes of His goodness, and leave it to Him to act as He sees fit, convinced that He will answer us according to our needs. (p.110)

This was my religious book for Advent and Christmas.  In all, there are nine sermons from Saint Francis de Sales included and they were so good and relatable.  Hard to believe they were written in the early 17th century!  I really appreciated the analogies he used to describe some of the harder theological concepts.  


#5. THE THIRTEENTH TALE by Diane Setterfield
★★★☆☆

We all have our sorrows, and although the exact delineaments, weight and dimensions of grief are different for everyone, the color of grief is common to us all.  “I know,” he said, because he was human, and therefore, in a way, he did. (p.389)

The Thirteenth Tale was described to me as a type of gothic suspense novel that contained a story within a story and had a bookish/library element.  I was intrigued!  I flew through the first half, but the story lost some steam for me after that.  The end was a complete surprise and I never saw it coming.  All in all, a solid three star read.  (P.S. There is a bit of vague scandalous behavior in parts, but nothing explicit or vulgar.)

#6. THE BEAN TREES by Barbara Kingsolver
★★★☆☆

This is the story of a girl named Taylor who sets out on an adventure to get away from her poor, rural Kentucky hometown.  She ends up in Tuscon, Arizona and meets a handful of loveable, really unique characters.  This book hit on some hard issues (the back of the book says that she “meets the human condition head-on”) and gave me things to think about.  I like books that do that.  (This was also my 1988 pick for the 20th Century in Books Challenge.)

#7. BEHOLD THE DREAMERS by Imbolo Mbue
★★★☆☆

I didn’t intentionally mean to read two books about immigrants back to back, but here we are!  I actually was browsing through “Booktube” (Youtube channels about books) and stumbled on a Buzzword Reading Challenge.  January’s prompt was “dream” and this book was the only one I owned with that word in the title.  It’s been on my shelf for awhile, so I was excited to finally read it.  The book is about a young Cameroonian family trying to make it in New York City at the beginning of the recession.  A thought-provoking read.  


#8. THE MINIATURIST by Jessie Burton
★★☆☆☆

This book was…weird.  On one hand, it was really compelling and I had a hard time putting it down.  The writing was great and the descriptions of Amsterdam in the 1600s were captivating.  BUT.  I just couldn’t understand how all the moving pieces, all the themes, and especially all of the magical realism connected together.  Too many of the most important parts were unexplained.  Just an okay read for me.  (P.S.  Definitely a PG13+ read in some parts.  I had to skim some of the more racy sexual scenes.)    


#9. SAINT JOHN PAUL THE GREAT: HIS FIVE LOVES
by Jason Evert
★★★★☆

Young people didn’t make the trips to see him because he was simply a good man, but because he was capable of revealing to them their own capacity for goodness. He saw something in the youth that perhaps they didn’t even see in themselves. As one attendee of World Youth Day remarked, “He showed us to ourselves.” John Paul did this by directing them to the person of Jesus Christ. In his words, “Without the Gospel, man remains a dramatic question with no adequate answer.” The youth wanted answers, and John Paul never vacillated in offering them. He knew young people well enough to understand that they don’t want a watered-down version of the faith. They want to be presented with the fullness of the faith. They want to be presented with the fullness of a message, and then be given the freedom to accept or reject it. He knew this, and reminded teens in Madison Square Garden that they are “approaching that stage in your life when you must take personal responsibility for your own destiny.” (p.94)

After picking up and putting down this book for months, I finally finished!  An inspiring read – I have a special love for JPII.


#10. ANIMAL FARM by George Orwell
★★★★☆

ALL ANIMALS ARE EQUAL.  BUT SOME ANIMALS ARE MORE EQUAL THAN OTHERS. (p.134)

This little book is definitely a well-known classic and I finally got a copy!  Boy oh boy, was this a timely read.  This analysis/summary post was interesting and helpful to explain the history and flesh out the ideas.  You could make the argument that we are seeing some of the same things today.   (This was also my 1945 pick for the 20th Century in Books Challenge.)

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