3 Creative and Easy Ways to Spice Up Your Christmas Celebrations

“I bring you good news that will cause great joy for all people. Today … a Savior has been born to you … the Messiah, the Lord.” —Luke 2:10-11 NIV

 You’ve invited your family and your friends and their children to your home to share your Christmas joy. You’d like to celebrate the birth of Jesus with something other than people sitting and standing around counting off the minutes until they can politely leave. You’d like to keep the cost down and the joy up. You’d like your preparation to be easy and uncomplicated.

Here are 3 tips that will send your guests home with ideas for their next Christmas celebration because they had so much fun at yours.

Penguins too cute to eat?

Penguins too cute to eat?

Tip 1. Serve one hors d’oeuvre that’s so cute it delights adults and children and starts icebreaker conversations.

Sign on to Pinterest if you’re at a loss for an idea, or use the super easy penguins John and I made last Christmas.

It’s okay that people don’t like their ingredients and don’t eat them or you catch them wrapping them in napkins and stowing them in their purses, like my sister did. She brought a penguin home and showed it to me. I went out and bought jumbo and small black olives, cream cheese, and carrots to make penguins to delight my children and grandchildren during our celebration.

Tip 2. Provide a fun activity to get the children’s wiggles out before sitting down to dinner or simply to expend their sugar-induced energy.

Aim, ready, fire, laugh.

Aim, ready, fire, laugh.

The activity you choose must cause the children to use their large muscles. One that’s perfect when it’s too cold to send them outside is a friendly indoor snowball fight using snowballs made from white panty hose or tights and polyester fiberfill. I’ve used them for years with preschoolers and no child was ever hurt when bonged in the face with one of these snowballs.

If you don’t have a playroom or large area free of fragile or dangerous items, back your car(s) out of the garage. Make sure you have a low barrier like wrapping paper roles or yardsticks laid end to end, which teams are not to cross. I suggest you have at least one adult on each team. Usually ten to fifteen minutes is a good length for a friendly snowball fight.

Tip 3. Offer a craft activity that gathers people around a table to chat and laugh while making something to take home.

A winner.

A winner.

One that’s good for older children, teens, and adults is making graham-cracker houses using icing for glue and candies for decorations. As an alternative, your group could construct the little town of Bethlehem with flat-roofed tall and short buildings.

Another craft activity I’ve enjoyed with family and friends of all ages is making ornaments from inexpensive prepackaged kits. Usually, even the craft humbuggers will join in for a simple craft.

What have you done that spiced up your Christmas celebrations?

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How to Transform Your Dream into a Vision and Then into a Reality: Part 2

“Let us not grow weary while doing good, for in due season we shall reap if we do not lose heart.” —Galatians 6:9

IMG_0491

Last Thursday, we focused on the dream and the vision. Today, I’ll show how I transformed my vision of a church library into a reality.

Treat the execution of your vision as a process.

 1. Get Permissions.

I invited the Director of Education to my home. After serving her lunch, I sat her in an armchair in my library (a prior dream come true). Then using visuals, I presented my vision to replace our tiny, archaic church library with a larger, modern library. She promised to secure the go-ahead and permissions to revamp the abandoned youth room.

I think my success resulted from my preparation and passion.

 2. Do the Research.

  • My dream hatched from experiencing a Christian community library. The librarian gave me a tour and answered my questions for months.
  • I purchased cataloging reference books and read them.
  • My knowledge of Christian publishers helped me populate our shelves with Christian fiction and nonfiction.
  • My son suggested an inexpensive, excellent online cataloging service, LibraryThing.100_1270
  • I learned from long-term church members that hardwood floors lay beneath the soiled carpet.
  • The music director told me where to buy inexpensive area rugs.
  • My sister had a list of children’s books she maintained from her story time ministries.
  •  I gleaned favorite Christian books in various genres from members of a writers’ group who shared such lists on our email loop.

Taking time to listen to people who showed interest in my vision provided my best research.

3. Gather Resources.

  • My husband, my best resource, helped remove layers of soiled carpet and refinish the hardwood floors. He built a desk in the closet, creating the library office.
  • 100_1614The adult Sunday school class housed in the room helped us paint the room.
  • People inside and outside the church donated books.
  • Two like-new armchairs appeared from elsewhere in the church.
  • A gentleman who loved carpentry, built 9 bookcases and donated a child’s table.
  • The pastor moved reference books in his office to the library for everyone to use.
  • The supportive church secretary had a donated computer and Internet access installed in the library office.100_1612
  • The church’s women’s group bought many new books from my children’s list.
  • I sold duplicate donated books to fund new books.

When people saw and heard what I was doing and how I appreciated assistance, they supplied needed resources.

4. Manage the Work.

  • When the time to complete your vision seems endless, re-imagine its benefits and do the next thing. The library was useable in less than a year, but my vision took about two years.
  • When you hit roadblocks, turn to a different task. While I waited months for the room to become available, I set up in another room and cataloged books.

    100_2037

    To donate a children’s book, choose one of these “binders” and purchase the book or place the “binder” and a check in the envelope.

  • When you’re overwhelmed, break jobs into tasks. I had stacks of boxes of books to go through and decide what to reject and what to catalog. I applauded each empty box.
  • When peoples’ ideas threaten the vision, be tactful. Some wanted to use the comfortable library for meetings and Bible studies. When I explained that would prevent people from browsing and checking out books, the church limited extraneous uses.
  • When others’ ideas improve the vision, incorporate them. I reserved a shelf for the women’s reading program books.
  • When people help, let them know they matter. Several appreciated people became champions of the library.

I viewed quitting not an option.

5. Bring closure.IMG_0492

  • During the process, I wrote a library manual, which I used to train my successors.
  • Celebrate. The pastor held a consecration ceremony in our library.

What helped you transform a dream into a reality?

To CONTACT ME use the form. To LEAVE A COMMENT use the COMMENT option below the form.

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How to Transform Your Dream into a Vision and Then into a Reality: Part 1

“All our dreams can come true—if we have the courage to pursue them.” —Walt Disney

Image courtesy of iconmac at FreeDigitalPhotos.net

Today, we’ll focus on the dream and the vision. Next Thursday in Part 2, I’ll give steps to convert a vision into a reality.

My dreams that have come to fruition are those I’ve worked hard to make happen. Because they were labors of love, I was energized to do the work.

When is it time to transform a dream into a vision?

For me, I know it’s time to pursue a vision for my dream:

  1. When my dream will help others;
  2. When I’m confronted constantly with things and people that spark possibilities and ideas for my dream;
  3. When God nudges me through scriptures and prayer that it’s His will.

Prepare Yourself First

  1. Visualize the experience your dream will create for others.
  2. Picture people using and enjoying your dream’s benefits.

    Image courtesy of Ambro at FreeDigitalPhotos.net

    Image courtesy of Ambro at FreeDigitalPhotos.net

  3. Envision people changing for the better and helping others because of it.
  4. Believe in your dream so much that its fruit outweighs the costs.
  5. Adopt a just-do-it attitude. Many good works don’t happen because we want others to approve and shoulder our dream.
  6. Embrace that you will sacrifice time, money, and energy for your dream.
  7. Garner courage and determination to complete the good work.
  8. Refuse to entertain subtle or blatant discouragements.

Steps to convert a dream into a vision.

Image courtesy of Kenneth Cratty at FreeDigitalPhotos.net

  1. Enlist a supporter who truly believes in you. Ask them to be willing to listen to your ideas, challenges, and progress reports.
  2. Mind-map everything about your dream that enters your mind in a brainstorming session—how the experience should look, the benefits, the tasks, the resources, materials, and permissions needed.
  3. Prioritize the elements of your dream as laid out in your mind map. Some items may be extraneous or too expensive.
  4. Brainstorm with your supporter alternatives for some of the expensive dream items. Pare down others.
  5. Write a paragraph describing the vision of your dream.

Creating a Christian Library – Dream to Vision 

A Christian Community library hosted my workshop. The library captivated me. Having taken a library cataloging course and having worked in a branch library, my mind started churning. Wouldn’t such a library benefit our community?

Our church library lived in a tiny room and offered mostly ancient books. Often, the hand bells were stored there, hogging browsing space. How sad.

Among other dream igniters, every time I drove by a small house for sale near our church, I envisioned a Christian library inside it.

Finally, my prayers led me to turn my dream into a vision.

Image courtesy of -Marcus- at FreeDigitalPhotos.net

I brainstormed a mind map and trimmed my dream from a community library to a new church library. I decided forming a committee would only hinder forward movement. I had some money I could use. I’d secure permissions and just do it.

My husband and the church Education Director believed in me.

My vision: Refurbish the large, abandoned youth room, using its closet for an office. Keep two sturdy existing bookcases and add several new ones. Add comfortable armchairs. Find a table for the children’s area. Purchase a cataloging program and link the catalog to the church website. Use the Dewey Decimal System and catalog and label books. Develop rules for what goes on the shelves. Acquire modern books from donations and used bookstores. Once the library proves worthy, ask for donations of new books or money. Train assistants.

What dream would you like to turn into a vision?

To CONTACT ME use the form. To LEAVE A COMMENT use the COMMENT option below the form.

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American Christian Fiction Writers

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