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The Big White Farmhouse

intentional living, little by little

January 5, 2021

No.471: Mother Culture // January 2021

Last fall threw me for quite a loop and I never got my Mother Culture goals up on the blog. A new year is as good a time as any to get back on track, right? I’ve decided to use my monthly Mother Culture list to also help with my larger 2021 goals, so it’ll be a little bit of a hodge-podge.  Here’s what I’ve got for January:

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

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

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

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

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

October 1, 2020

No.448: Mother Culture Commonplace Book // September 2020

This post contains affiliate links.

“Mother Culture,” an idea from Charlotte Mason and coined by Karen Andreola, simply encourages mothers to keep learning and growing, even while raising children.  Andreola describes it this way: 

Mother Culture® is a way-of-life, the skillful art of how a mother looks after the ways of her household. With a thinking-love she creates a culture in the home all her own. A mother does a lot of taking care, so she needs to take care of herself, too. Much depends on how she manages her life. 

I resonate with this encouragement because it feels like I have someone in my corner, someone looking out for me as I do the hard work of motherhood.  Taking the time to gain new knowledge/skills really fills my cup and I think my children notice.  So with that in mind, I’m committing to my own set of monthly assignments this school year!  September was a bit of a wash, but here’s what I did:  

✔ ASSIGNMENT #1: Start reading Home by Marilynne Robinson along with the Close Reads Podcast.
It’s been a long time since I’ve deeply pondered a work of literature.  Since I don’t belong to a book club, I usually just read a book at face value and move on.  Some effect me more deeply than others, but for the most part, I don’t take the time to hash out overarching themes and word choices and other literary things.  Reading Home along with the Close Reads Podcast has been a fun change of pace and I’m really enjoying it.  I read ahead and finished the book, but these are the two episodes I’ve listened to so far:





✔ ASSIGNMENT #2: Research edible plants that grow in my area.

Native fruit and nut trees can be grown to produce food for people and/or wildlife while protecting soil, water and air quality.  Because they are multifunctional, native fruit and nut trees and shrubs are prime candidates for agroforestry plantings and home landscaping.

I found a really cool resource from Virginia Tech describing some of the edible fruit and nut trees that grow in my area.  There’s everything from a black walnut tree to an Allegheny blackberry bramble to a pawpaw tree.  I hope to take this knowledge and use it to purchase specific species of plants that will thrive here.  Setting myself up for success! 


✔ ASSIGNMENT #3: Buy the supplies needed to learn how to crochet.
Learning to crochet is something I have wanted to learn for years and years.  To make things a little less overwhelming, I decided to break this task into tiny goals and this month was the easiest: buy some supplies.  I have no idea if this yarn is appropriate or even any good, but the price was right and the colors were pretty.

And the two assignments I didn’t get to:

✘ ASSIGNMENT #4: Discover and listen to another new musician.
✘ ASSIGNMENT #5: Learn about a new saint.



For October, I’m planning to circle back and finish the last two assignments.  I also think I’ll take this month to finish the top of my hand-sewed scrap quilt before starting in on crochet lessons.  One thing at a time, right?  So October: a month for finishing what I’ve started.  Here we go!

September 1, 2020

No.442: Mother Culture // September 2020

A new month and five new assignments!  Here’s what I’ve chosen for September:

Mother Culture Assignments for September 2020

⬜ ASSIGNMENT #1: Start reading Home by Marilynne Robinson along with the Close Reads Podcast.
⬜ ASSIGNMENT #2: Research edible plants that grow in my area.
⬜ ASSIGNMENT #3: Buy the supplies needed to learn how to crochet.
⬜ ASSIGNMENT #4: Discover and listen to another new musician.
⬜ ASSIGNMENT #5: Learn about a new saint.



I’ll be back with a post about what I’ve learned on the last Wednesday of the month.  Feel free to join in with any or all of the assignments or even create your own!  Let’s all seek the beautiful and good together.

August 27, 2020

No.440: Mother Culture Commonplace Book // August 2020

This post contains affiliate links.

“Mother Culture,” an idea from Charlotte Mason and coined by Karen Andreola, simply encourages mothers to keep learning and growing, even while raising children.  Andreola describes it this way: 

Mother Culture® is a way-of-life, the skillful art of how a mother looks after the ways of her household. With a thinking-love she creates a culture in the home all her own. A mother does a lot of taking care, so she needs to take care of herself, too. Much depends on how she manages her life. 

I resonate with this encouragement because it feels like I have someone in my corner, someone looking out for me as I do the hard work of motherhood.  Taking the time to gain new knowledge/skills really fills my cup and I think my children notice.  So with that in mind, I’m committing to my own set of monthly assignments this school year!  Here’s what I did in August:   

✔ ASSIGNMENT #1: Crack open a classic novel.
Back in 2019, I started reading The Well-Educated Mind and was so pumped to start the “The Story of People: Reading through History with the Novel” reading list.  I ordered a beautiful hardcover copy of the first book, Don Quixote, aaaand…read the first few chapters and put it away, ha!  In August, I decided to tackle it again.  This book is a brick (over 800 pages!), so I gave myself the goal of reading just 50 pages for the whole month.  Sounded easy enough!  As of this writing, I’m on page 87, so about 10% finished.  I definitely don’t find it a page turner, but it is a good one for reading a chapter or two a day.  I actually think the writing is somewhat humorous!  Who knew?

✔ ASSIGNMENT #2: Discover and listen to a new type of music.
I popped around the Internet for some inspiration on this one and ran into Mildred Bailey, a Native American jazz singer during the 1930s.  A few fun facts about Mildred:

  • She grew up in Washington, but often visited relatives on the Coeur d’Alene Reservation in Idaho, where her mother was an enrolled member.  (Her mother was also a devout Catholic.)  
  • She was known as “The Queen of Swing” and “The Rockin’ Chair Lady.”
  • This little tidbit made my smile: “Whatever the reasons may have been, superstardom eluded Bailey. The singer blamed her plumpness for her lack of commercial success, while others suggested that it was really Bailey’s temper and sharp tongue that were her undoing. There’s plenty of evidence that Bailey felt especially bitter towards better-looking female vocalists, many of whom she felt lacked her talent. Throughout her life, Bailey blamed her obesity on a glandular condition, although many of her friends attributed it instead to her great love of food.”
  • She suffered from diabetes and died of a heart attack at only 44 years old.
  • She had many popular songs, including “Rocking Chair” and “Thanks for the Memory”, but I loved (and could relate to!) another of hers called “It’s So Peaceful in the Country”.  All three songs are below!







✔ ASSIGNMENT #3: Read and reflect on one poem.

For this one, I pulled out a beautiful old book from 1957 called Favorite Poems Old and New: Selected for Boys and Girls by Helen Ferris.  This is the poem I chose for August:
“Leisure”
by William H. Davies
What is this life if, full of care,
We have no time to stand and stare?
No time to stand beneath the boughs
And stare as long as sheep or cows.
No time to see, in broad daylight,
Streams full of stars, like skies at night.
No time to turn at Beauty’s glance,
And watch her feet, how they can dance.
No time to wait till her mouth can
Enrich that smile her eyes began.
A poor life this if, full of care,
We have no time to stand and stare.
Fun fact: W.H. Davies was a Welsh poet who spent a significant part of his life as a hobo.


✔ ASSIGNMENT #4: Learn something interesting about nature.

I went back to The Lost Art of Reading Nature’s Signs and was excited to discover that I was on the chapter about stars.  Reading the sky is interesting to me but I have very little experience.  One fun fact that I learned:

It is commonly believed that the North Star is the brightest in the night sky, however it’s actually neither very bright not very dull… if you see a very bright white object shining more brilliantly than anything else in the night sky, it is very likely to be the planets, Venus or Jupiter, or the brightest star, Sirius, but it will definitely not be the North Star. (p.152)

✔ ASSIGNMENT #5: Memorize something: a prayer, a poem, or the lyrics to a song.
We’ve been attending the Latin Mass and the chanters have been singing the Salve Regina after Holy Communion.  I knew parts of the song, but never the whole thing, so in August, I practiced!  This video was helpful.

Salve Regina

Salve, Regina, Mater misericordiæ,
vita, dulcedo, et spes nostra, salve.
Ad te clamamus exsules filii Hevæ,
Ad te suspiramus, gementes et flentes
in hac lacrimarum valle.
Eia, ergo, advocata nostra, illos tuos
misericordes oculos ad nos converte;
Et Jesum, benedictum fructum ventris tui,
nobis post hoc exsilium ostende.
O clemens, O pia, O dulcis Virgo Maria.


August 3, 2020

No.431: Mother Culture // August 2020

August brings in the new school year here at the farmhouse and for me, it’s also going to bring in a chance to start again.  I’m tired of the funk I’ve fallen into and I want to counter all of the fear and negativity in the world with things that are beautiful and good.  So I’ve created a little monthly challenge for myself that I’m calling “Mother Culture” with five simple assignments.  I will probably vary the topics every month, but we’ll see.  One day at a time!  Here’s what I’ve chosen for August:

Mother Culture Assignments for August 2020

⬜ ASSIGNMENT #1: Crack open a classic novel.
⬜ ASSIGNMENT #2: Discover and listen to a new musician.
⬜ ASSIGNMENT #3: Read and reflect on one poem.
⬜ ASSIGNMENT #4: Learn something interesting about nature.
⬜ ASSIGNMENT #5: Memorize something: a prayer, a poem, or the lyrics to a song.


I’ll be back with a post about what I’ve learned on the last Thursday of the month.  Feel free to join in with any or all of the assignments or even create your own!  Let’s all seek the beautiful and good together.

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