Thursday, November 14, 2013

Integrity- Attitude of Gratitude - Purple Personal Progress Party


Month: November
Value of the Month: Integrity
Color: Purple
Value Experience: Personalized #8 "Learn about the value of being grateful and 
keep a Gratitude Journal for two weeks.  
Write 5 things each day of what you are grateful for.  
Do not repeat any item on your list from day to day. 
You must think of something new."

Menu: 
Sugar Cookies w/ Purple Icing & White Sprinkles
Purple Hawaiian Punch
Purple Grapes



Everyone dressed up again!  We've decided to make this a tradition.  
Every month they dress in the color of the value experience! They love it.  

Here are the pictures of our girls, just to get it out of the way. :) 




Prior to the Mutual:  Ask the girls to bring their Young Women Journal. If they don't have one, you can build in making a journal (see below). Also, ask one of the girls to read the story of the Ten Lepers in Luke 17 and be ready to retell it to the girls.

Object Lesson: (From Mormon Share)... When the girls first arrived they were given a pebble to put in their shoe and a candy cane to eat while they mingled with the friends and during opening exercises.  

The girls mingled, we had Opening Exercises with the Young Men (Opening Song: Count Your Many Blessings), we took fun pictures... all while the girls were hobbling around with a pebble in their shoe and eating their candy cane.  The girls then all took their seats.

Gratitude Definition: I asked the girls what they thought the definition of Gratitude was...
Definition (from Webster's Dictionary): "the state of being grateful.... feeling or showing thanks to someone for some helpful act... appreciative of benefits received."

Ask these questions:
"Why is it important to be grateful?"
"Who does it benefit" (both people, you and the person/thing you are grateful to)

Object Lesson Define:  I asked them what were their thoughts about our object lesson at the beginning.  All their responses were how bad the rocks in their foot hurt and "can we pleeeease take them out?"  And not one of the girls said how good their candy cane was and how thankful they were.  I then pointed out that sometimes we cannot recognize our sweet blessing because we are dwelling on the "pebble in our shoe."

Sometimes we are like the pessimists of the world, only seeing the glass as half empty, rather than half full (You could actually do this as an object lesson if you want).  I explained how when we are grateful we receive more things to be grateful for.  

I asked them, "How do you feel when you have put a lot of work into a gift and when you give it to the person, they only nonchalantly thank you or don't even thank you at all?"  (They all answered, "That stinks!" Or "I'd be hurt.")  "Do you think you'd put as much effort into their gift the next time?" (No.) 

On the flip side: "How do you feel when someone makes a big deal about a gift you've given them?" "Do you want to keep doing things for them?"  (Yes!)  Well, that is how your parents, your friends, your teachers, random people on the street, and even God feel when you aren't thankful for all they've given you. If you aren't grateful for things, they don't want to keep giving to you.  If you are grateful, you will begin receiving more positivity and more from others and God.

The Glass is Half Full

Luke 17:  I had the girl tell about the story of the Ten Lepers in Luke 17.  Jesus had healed them all but only one came back to thank Him.  Jesus then said "There are not found that returned to give glory to God, save this stranger.  And he said unto him, Arise, go thy way; thy faith hath made thee whole).  

I explained to the girls that yes, even if you don't say thank you, life will go on.  You will still have positive things happen to you, but when you have faith in God and thank Him for things, you will be made whole.  If they are struggling at school, or struggling with depression or sadness, or confusion for their life, or any other problem.  If they can just be grateful for what they do have, and not focus on the bad too much, God and Christ will make them whole. They will help them find answers.  

Read this quote: "Like the leprosy of yesteryear are the plagues of today. They linger; they debilitate; they destroy. They are to be found everywhere. Their pervasiveness knows no boundaries. We know them as selfishness, greed, indulgence, cruelty, and crime, to identify but a few. Surfeited with their poison, we tend to criticize, to complain, to blame, and, slowly but surely, to abandon the positives and adopt the negatives of life." [An Attitude of Gratitude, Thomas S. Monson, Ensign April 1992]

Another quote from the same talk: "We can lift ourselves, and others as well, when we refuse to remain in the realm of negative thought and cultivate within our hearts an attitude of gratitude. If ingratitude be numbered among the serious sins, then gratitude takes its place among the noblest of virtues."

Another object lesson: (We didn't have time for this but it's a great one if you want to do it.
Web of Gratitude
KRISTIN W. BELCHER
Ensign June 2006
________________________________________
We feel it is important for our family to visualize the many things we are grateful for. A simple activity that helps us to remember our blessings is called “the gratitude web.” One person holds a ball of yarn or string and identifies one thing for which he is thankful. Holding onto part of the yarn, he then tosses the yarn ball to someone else in the circle. That person then repeats the process, also holding onto a portion of the yarn. The activity continues until everyone has had at least one turn. Depending on the size of your family, you may want to play several times until a web is formed, connecting the group.  Sometimes life’s challenges can hinder our ability to focus on our blessings. Activities and lessons that help us realize how much Heavenly Father loves us can bless us individually and as families.


Gratitude Journal
This concept of a Gratitude Journal is one that I first heard of from Sarah Ban Breathnach but I have seen many times since.  I read to them from her book Simple Abundance, A Dailybook fo Comfort and Joy.

"While many tools I give you will help you become happier and more content and will nurture your creativity, this first tool could change the quality of your life beyond belief: it's what I call a daily gratitude journal.  I have a beautiful blank book and each night before I go to bed, I write down five things that I can be grateful about that day.  Some days  my list will be filled with amazing things, most days just simple joys."


I then told them, this is your value experience mission… Your task is to keep a Gratitude Journal for 2 weeks.  Each night write 5 things you are grateful for.  Easy, right? The catch? You cannot repeat anything you've written down.  Why do you think this is? (Let them answer). Then say something like “because once you get the typical, but still great, things you are thankful for (family, friends, church, school, house), you’ll have to start getting really creative and seeing the little things you are grateful for, things you might normally overlook.  What are some things you think you are grateful for but you might overlook each day? (Some of our answers were: mom making dinner, the flowers, the bus driver, toilet paper). After the 2 weeks, write online or in your journal how you felt about this activity, whether it changed you and then bring your Gratitude Journal to show one of your leaders.  Then you will get your jar.

Having an attitude of gratitude is a complete attitude shift.  Sometimes it’s really hard when things are going wrong. But choosing to have a happy attitude about things is something that will change your life 


We had asked each girl to bring their camp journal because they already had one, but if you needed your Young Women to make a journal, this is what I did.  It’s the typical Composition Notebook covered with paper then print the words “Gratitude Journal”, cut it out then paste it on the front.  On the inside I pasted cutouts of gratitude quotes you’ll see below. I've made these for my Visiting Teachers but I forgot to take a picture.

At that time, we had them write their first entry.  They each took a few moments to write 5 things they were thankful for.  

End with this Quote and Bear Your Testimony:

Gratitude unlocks the fullness of life. It turns what we have into enough, and more. It turns denial into acceptance, chaos to order, confusion to clarity. It can turn a meal into a feast, a house into a home, a stranger into a friend.
Melody Beattie



Keep Calm & Have an Attitude of Gratitude

Gratitude is what turns what we have into enough.

The More you are Thankful, the More You Attract Things to Be Thankful For

Attitude of Gratitude

Never Let the Things You Want Make You Forget the Things You Have.

Start Each Day with a Grateful Heart

Gratitude is heaven itself.



Saturday, September 21, 2013

Stand in Holy Places, Our Day at the Temple


During one of our trips to the Frankfurt, Germany temple, our Young Women's President wanted to get individual pictures of each girl in front and then photoshop the 2013 theme to give to each girl as a present at Young Women In Excellence.  Not everyone was at the temple, and there was not enough time to get all the girls together a different time, so we bagged it. However, we were able to get my girls and a couple of other ones. The above picture is what our President sent to me (since I wasn't there) to show me her idea. I totally loved her shots!  Maybe one day I'll enlarge them. 
One of my twins, Xoe

Both twins, Xoe & Xanthe

One of my twins, Xanthe



Mailee & Xoe

Thursday, September 12, 2013

Personal Progress-Individual Worth #3- Our Colored Jars





Yay!  My first post back will be reporting on something a lot of  people have asked me to post.  I belong to the Mormon church and serve as one of the leaders in our Young Women's group.  We have been trying to get them interested in Personal Progress again (a program that helps them become a better person.)  We are focusing on one value per month and then as a group we are working on one "Requirement."  The Value we chose for the month of September was Individual Worth, which is represented by the color RED.

Something to be noted is that this looks like a lot of words but I'm posting full stories so you can have them here.  But we only had 45 minutes and we got through this whole lesson.

Here's what the "experience" says:  Individual Worth #3.  Read Doctrine and Covenants 18:10 and 121:45. Do all you can to build others and make them feel of worth. Every day for two weeks, notice the worthwhile qualities and attributes of others. Acknowledge them verbally or in writing. In your journal write what you have learned about the worth of individuals and how your own confidence grows when you build others.

RED PARTY!
To introduce the concept, we had a RED party!  We had all the girls dress up in Red.  Some girls didn't get the message, so I brought a whole bunch of red accessories.  Then I made Red Velvet cupcakes with white frosting, red sprinkles and some red candies to top it off.

Here is how we got the girls there... "This week's activity involves the color red, a bucket and shovel, a starfish, and possibly a can of dog food.  Wear your best red!!! A special treat to those who wear the color red! 7:00 at the church."

When we got there, everyone had fun taking pictures and chatting about why we were wearing red.  Many of our girls had not started much personal progress.  Here was my lesson...

1.  Ask the girls-- "Why do you think we're wearing the color red?"  Answer: It's the color of Individual Worth.  All the Personal Progress values are represented by a color.

2. Read to them the requirements for Individual Worth #3.  Have someone read D&C 18:10 and have another person read D&C 121:45.  Ask them what they think that means?

3.  Print this out and have someone read this excerpt from the book "Others" by Brent Jorgenson.  "Gifts. Whenever one person comes in contact with another, how-ever briefly, they each give the other a gift. It may be large or small, intentional or otherwise, but the gift is still there. You receive many of them daily, you give away many yourself at the same time. Have you considered what kinds of gifts you are in the habit of giving?"

4.  Read the story "Have you Filled a Bucket Today?"  (I've pasted it below so you can have the text but this is a link of a pdf version with pictures. I skipped over a lot of the juvenile wording too.)  http://www.oldbridgeadmin.org/MadisonPark.cfm?subpage=805645

I had a bucket with sand in it and a dipper.  Every time we read a story about a bucket filler, I put more sand in it, and vice versa with the bucket dipper to explain how the concept worked.


Filling a Bucket Story
This concept is being used around the world in schools and in homes, and I remember even doing this activity at a Girls' Camp in Utah 25 years ago.  It's been changing lives for a very long time.
All day long everyone in the whole wide world walks around carrying and invisible bucket. 
You can’t see it, but it’s there. Your bucket has one purpose only. Its purpose is to hold your good thoughts and good feelings about yourself. You feel happy and good when your bucket is full and you feel very sad when your bucket is empty.  
It’s great to have a full bucket and this is how it works. Besides our own self love, you need other people to fill your bucket and other people need you to fill theirs. 
How do you fill a bucket? You fill a bucket when you show love to someone when you say or do something kind or even when someone gives you a smile.  That’s being a bucket-filler.  A bucket-filler is a caring person that does or says nice things that make someone feel special.  When you make someone feel special you are a bucket-filler.
Bucket filling is fun and easy to do. It doesn’t matter how young or old you are. It doesn’t cost money. It doesn’t take much time and remember when you fill someone else’s bucket you fill someone else’s too.
But, you can also dip into a bucket and take out some good feelings. You dip into a bucket when you make fun of someone, when you say or do mean things, or even when you ignore someone.
That’s being a bucket-dipper.
A bully is a bucket dipper.
A bucket dipper says or does mean things
that make other feel bad.
Many bucket dippers have an empty bucket.
They think that they can fill their own bucket
by dipping into someone else’s…
But that will never work.
You never fill your own bucket when you dip into
someone else’s.
But guess what…
When you fill someone’s bucket, You fill your own bucket too! You feel good when you help other feel good.

All day long, we are either filling up or dipping into each other’s buckets by what we say and what we do. Try to fill a bucket and see what happens. Tell someone you love them.  It fills their buckets right up.

Just remember that everyone carries an invisible bucket, and think of what you can say or do to fill it.

Me talking now (I was sort of summarizing):
"Here are some ideas for you.
You could smile and say “Hi!” to the bus driver.  He has a bucket too.
Invite the new kid at school to play with you.  He has a bucket too.
Write a thank you note to your teacher. Offer to make dinner for your mom. Or tell the mailman he has cool shoes.  Guess what? They all have buckets too!
Buy someone a gift. Tell a stranger you think they are awesome. Tell a friend you like their clothes. Invite a new friend to hang out with your friends.  Did you guess?  They all have buckets too."

(The girls were really giggling at this point)

So, why not decide to be a bucket filler today and every day? Just start each day by saying to yourself, “I’m going to do something to fill someone’s bucket today.”
And the end of the day ask yourself, “Did I fill a bucket today?”


5.  Story Time
I have a few stories for you and you decide if these people were bucket fillers or bucket dippers...


Dog Food Story (From the book The Others by Brent Jorgenson)
(I printed out the story and cut two paragraphs apart and had people take turns reading the story.  It helped keep their interest.)

  "In a testimony meeting I attended not long ago, at the, very end of the service, a girl arose and made her way to the front of the room where she stood for long moments in silence, her lips trembling and her eyes overflowing. At last, when she had her emotions under control, she related to the congregation the following experience: "Some three years previously, while her father was stationed with the military in Germany, he had made a thorough study of the principles of the gospel and at length had joined the Church. Within a year he was transferred back to the States, and his family settled in Maryland, where they immediately affiliated with one of the local wards.

"This young woman, in her teens, found that there were four other girls in the ward her age, and with great expectations she looked forward to a close association with them as they all grew in the knowledge of her so-recently reemphasized gospel. "Yet she was to discover, quickly and painfully, that the girls in her new ward had a totally different idea about things. They were a close group, their families were long-time residents, their fathers held important ward and stake positions, and they could see no need to disrupt their unity and established pattern of living by becoming friends with an 'army brat,' as they called her.

"At first the girls were subtle in their persecutions, snickering when she was brave enough to make a comment in class, ignoring her when she spoke to them, and turning as a group and walking away laughing whenever she approached.  "For a time she tried to ignore their rudeness, assuming that it was because she was new in the ward. She felt that with a little time they would all become good friends. It seemed, though, that she was wrong. Time seemed merely to aggravate and intensify the problems.

"A strong girl, she was initially able to handle the situation emotionally, but after a period of weeks and months she began to wonder what was wrong with her and even to feel that she was the one who was at fault.  "To eliminate the snickering and giggling when she participated in class, she stopped taking part. To keep the girls from pointedly ignoring her when she spoke to them, she quit speaking, at first to them and then almost altogether.

"At school it became the practice of the four girls to call out and jeer in derision whenever she appeared, and it wasn't long before she was slumping down and hiding her face simply so the girls wouldn't notice her. At home her mother worried about her poor posture, but the pattern was established and was not easily changed.

"For a year this ridicule and persecution continued, and it was so intense and so constant that it had a severe impact on her image of herself. If they thought of her as nothing, how could she be anything else?  "Her parents, of course, did all in their power to correct the situation. They went to the parents of each of the girls and talked it over with them, and those parents agreed to help. Yet when they confronted their daughters the girls denied their guilt. And the situation remained unchanged. 

"At length, realizing that their daughter was being destroyed emotionally, the girl's parents decided that they would send her west to live with her grandmother. She agreed, and soon the word was around that she was leaving.  "On her last Sunday in the ward, following another rough experience in Sunday school, she went to sacrament meeting as usual.  During the meeting she noticed that a counselor in the Relief Society presidency was having trouble with her baby, so she took the child and tended it out in the foyer, thus freeing the woman to listen to the service.

"As the meeting ended and people began filling up the foyer the four girls ran breathlessly up to her. They were all smiles and cheer and bubbly enthusiasm, and as she searched their radiant faces and listened to their expressions of sorrow that she was leaving she found it difficult to contain her emotions.  "Was it possible?  Could it be that after a whole year they were finally changing?  She held the fussing baby and wondered aloud that they were suddenly interested in her.  "The girls giggled and assured her that of course they were concerned. They felt badly about Sunday school and had all gone in together to purchase her a going-away present. That, if anything ever could, would prove their concern for her, and tell her how they really felt about her.

"She was so astounded that she stood mute while they handed her a gift, beautifully wrapped, and then scurried away. She was still standing silently, gazing in awe at the present, when the counselor came after her baby.  "She too noticed the brightly wrapped gift and so stood excitedly near as the girl carefully untied the bows and unwrapped the paper. And as she unwrapped it she was struggling with her tears. It was incredibly wonderful that the girls had finally changed. She had waited so long and had tried so hard and had been rebuffed so many times, but it had finally worked out.

"At last she had the paper open, and as she gazed down into the box she could hold her tears back no longer, and they fell freely as she stood quietly and sobbed out her feelings.  "The Relief Society counselor, silently wondering at the girl's burst of emotion, leaned over so that she might also observe, and there she saw, carefully placed in that beautifully wrapped package, the girl's gift from her friends, from her Latter-day Saint friends.  "And she too felt the tears start in her own eyes, for inside the box the girl was holding was a can of dog food." 

Boy who was not baptized (From The Others)
Now to the other young man, a slightly built fellow who said little and was not well, socially adept. In fact, he had one or two habits that were most assuredly anti-social, or at least seemed calculated to drive any well-mannered person away.  Yet in seminary one morning, when this boy was absent, a beautiful girl, one of the sweetest in the class, stood in devotional and challenged the whole class to overlook his offensive habits and go out of their way to treat him as a special person. The class enthusiastically followed her lead and example, and the balance of that year was a very special one for all involved.

Then, on the last day of school, as the students were standing and expressing their feelings, this boy stood up also. For a moment or two he struggled with his emotions, and then quickly he thanked the class for making him feel so good and well-liked during the year.  And then, in a quiet voice, he made a statement that no one in that class will ever forget. He said, "In fact, it is because of you kids that I decided last night after my personal prayer that I want to be baptized."

Isn't that interesting? No one in the class, including the seminary teacher, had the foggiest idea that he wasn't a member.  But you can bet that there were some thankful sighs that they had influenced him for good rather than otherwise.  Because of the efforts of one girl and a willing class who cared enough to give the gift of friendship, that young man is now almost through with his own mission.

Johnny Lingo Story
(Read this story from this link. It's a movie that was made about an ugly girl who heard all her life she was ugly. Then a man named Johnny Lingo came into town and offered more than anyone expected because she was so ugly.  Then the movie ends where the father visits at the end and Johnny Lingo explains the concept of making someone else feel beautiful makes them beautiful. Explanation from imdb--"Johnny explains that by paying eight cows he proved that she was worth more to him than any other woman on the island. He gave her a great gift, that of self-worth. ")  http://www.mormonchannel.org/video/johnnylingo

6.  Words Are Powerful whether Positive or Negative!  

SHARE RICE EXPERIMENT— My friend had read about a rice experiment that has been going around.  Make a batch of a rice and split a cup of it into clean jars.  Write on a piece of tape "Ugly" and attach that to one of the jars.  Then do the same to to the other jar and write "Beautiful". Place them far enough apart where the rice can't "hear" (or feel the positive/negative energy from what you're saying). From there on out every time you walk past each jar, say ugly or beautiful things to the corresponding jars.    She did the experiment 3 times to test it and each time they came out with the same results.  See the picture below (I shared this with the girls.)   (See the link here and scroll about halfway down for a longer explanation... http://ourmagnumopus.wordpress.com/about/the-rice-experiment/)



7.  You Can Make a Difference!
Seeing others' individual worth and acknowledging it is powerful not only to you, but to them as well!

Starfish Story 


As a man walked a desolate beach one cold, gray morning he began to see another figure, far in the distance. Slowly the two approached each other, and he could make out a local native who kept leaning down, picking something up and throwing it out into the water. Time and again he hurled things into the ocean. As the distance between them continued to narrow, the man could see that the native was picking up starfish that had been washed upon the beach and, one at a time, was throwing them back into the water. Puzzled, the man approached the native and asked what he was doing.
"I'm throwing these starfish back into the ocean. You see, it's low tide right now and all of these starfish have been washed up onto the shore. If I don't throw them back into the sea, they'll die up here from lack of oxygen."
"But there must be thousands of starfish on this beach," the man replied. "You can't possibly get to all of them. There are just too many. And this same thing is probably happening on hundreds of beaches all up and down this coast. Can't you see that you can't possibly make a difference?"
The local native smiled, bent down and picked up another starfish, and as he threw it back into the sea he replied, "Made a difference to that one!"

8.  SMILES!!!
One of the best things you can give a person to make them feel happy is the gift of a smile.  Think about it.  If you were walking down the hallway at school and someone you knew, or didn't know, smiled at you while passing by, it would make you stop for a second.  It would at least get a reaction.  First I think I'd be thinking, "Uh oh.  Do I have food on my face?"  Then knowing I don't, I'd wonder why they smiled at me and do they really know me?  Smiles have a profound impact on someone.

Smile right now.  First of all, make the biggest frown you can possibly make, then, switch it over and smile the happiest smile you can spread across your face. Can you imagine the difference in your feelings from the frown to the smile? And if you feel that way, then think how someone else, a friend, a family member, or even Just a stranger, must feel when they see you smiling or frowning at them.

Now turn to the person next to you and smile at them (I usually get a giggle from them.)  Now turn to the other person next to you and smile at them.  (And then I get some full out laughters.)  And then I say, "See, even just in the matter of two seconds there is a room full for girls laughing and feeling good, all from your own smiles.

9.  Requirement--We talked again about the experience for Individual Worth #3.  Do all you can to build others and make them feel of worth. Every day for two weeks, notice the worthwhile qualities and attributes of others. Acknowledge them verbally or in writing. In your journal write what you have learned about the worth of individuals and how your own confidence grows when you build others.

I held up the tiny little buckets I got for them.  Super cheap and I had attached a printout to a popsicle stuck.  Then inside each bucket there were 14 little pieces of paper.  I told them this:

"We are going to start intentionally filling buckets.   Place this bucket on your nightstand and place the papers next to it, outside of the bucket. Every day for two weeks you need to do what the experience says.  Notice the worthwhile qualities in others.  And then acknowledge them.  Then each day, after you've done so, write it on a piece of paper and place it in this little bucket.  You'll notice the papers dwindling down and when you start getting to the end, you'll know it's been two weeks.  At the end of two weeks if you do this requirement, you will get a fabulous jar full of red items."

Here's the link to the sign.   https://docs.google.com/file/d/0BzbzHaNolwxmNTA2YzJkMWEtN2FkOS00ZmJlLWE0MjAtMDMyNmE4NTc4ODg0/edit?hl=en_US
.
 The Reward (2 weeks later)
10 of our 11 girls earned the reward.  They had so much fun doing it.  I didn't give them each what was in this picture.  I made it according to their personal styles. Some like fingernail polish and some would rather have chapstick.  I put maybe 2 big items ($1.00 each) and then filled the rest with candy. It's a good thing this was done in October.  Mini sizes.  Some other ideas were red pens, red gum, red Sharpies, red lipgloss, etc.  I raided the dollar bin.


For the jars I had saved my spaghetti sauce and salsa jars.  (I use these all the time, by the way, I have tons.  We use them for parties to drink out of or for spooky decorations for Halloween.  Definitely start saving all your glass jars.)


I couldn't leave it with just the spaghetti/salsa jar lids so of course I had to paint it.  It'll probably come off anyway but that's okay.  I just used normal craft paint and it covered pretty well. I did a second coat just to make it thicker.




I like how they turned out. The girls have been ecstatic to get their jar to see what prizes were there.  A cheaper way is to have a big jar fill of different prizes and they could pick out of it one thing but I felt like for the beginning our girls needed a little more incentive.



When they were finished with them, in order to get their jars, we had an M&M Party where their moms were invited and we taught them how to record their personal progress online. None of them could say they didn't do one.  We sat with them and helped them physically enter it in.  I'll post more about this party later.  But it's a good chance to get them to see how easy Personal Progress Online is.

Next Month: Virtue-- Gold