Australia Says He’d Be a Burden

Does this make any sense at all?

A rural area of Australia badly needs doctors. A German doctor and his family fall in love with Australia while on vacation and soon move to that rural area, where he becomes the only internist available to 54,000 people. Everyone is happy UNTIL…..the doctor and his family apply for resident status and are turned down by the Australian government.

The locals protest this refusal, and people across the country chime in, but so far, the Australian government has not relented.

Their reason for turning down the good doctor’s request for residency? His teenage son has Down syndrome and is likely (according to the Australian government) to be a drain on its health care and education systems.

Good grief! In a world where we regularly hear about male teens overdosing on drugs, transmitting social diseases, getting girls pregnant, and knifing or shooting each other (all the while running up plenty of hospital bills), the Australian government blocks the residency of one young man whose risk of health problems is a little higher than the average teenager?

Sometimes it feels like the world’s gone crazy.

Saving Flower Seeds

I know it sounds silly, but I love going out to save seeds. It makes me feel like a good steward, I guess.

Today I picked all the seeds off my balsam plants along the front walk. (I bought a packet of balsam seeds from Baker Creek Heirloom Seeds (they’re homeschoolers!) last spring, and they grew very well —wish I’d taken a picture of them in bloom to share here.)

Balsam plants are fun because once they bloom, little seed pods form along the side branches of the plants, and in the fall you can pop them open over a cup and all the seeds come tumbling out. (When my kids were little, they loved doing this 🙂 )  I’ll let these dry in the unheated garage over the winter, and next spring I won’t need to buy more balsam seeds.

Other plants whose seeds I’ve collected in the past include:

Cleome (the long stringy pods under the blooms are full of tiny seeds)

Marigolds (the old blooms are seeds; save them once they’ve dried up)

Hollyhocks (the seed pods contain comma-shaped seeds)

Four o’clocks (the seeds are hard and black and found inside the blooms-they’re ready in mid-to-late summer)

Store seeds in a dry place where air can get to them and where they’ll get good and cold over the winter.

You don’t have to collect seeds; if you just leave them, they’ll come up again in the same spot next year. But by collecting seeds, you can scatter them where you want in the spring, plus you’ll have more than enough to share with friends and neighbors. Or, if you’re like me and think you might be moving, you can take the seeds along to the next house.

In recent years, most people bought blooming plants instead of planting them from seed. Most of the people who do grow flowers from seed buy new seed packets every year. Saving seeds is something people used to do when money was scarce. I think it’s going to be making a comeback.

 

Should Kids Be Able to Graduate After 10th Grade?

Just stumbled onto this thread over at Lucianne.com. The comments are quite interesting.

Two of my favorites:

A BA in sociology (Where you study poor people for four years then become one.)

Senior year is a waste of time. Like Newt Gingrich pointed out, it’s just a government subsidized social dating program.

What do you think?

(Note: comment threads at L.com disappear after 48 hours, so don’t wait too long to check this out.)

Getting Ready for Thanksgiving

When we lived in Illinois (i.e. near relatives), we often had Thanksgiving dinner at our house. I know it’s not a big deal—after all, someone has to do it—but when you have several children who do not leave the house to go to school each day, it’s not that simple. And if you prefer that pretty much everything be homemade, like I do, it becomes a project.

Women who work full-time can take personal time off to do the shopping and cooking before the relatives arrive, and even most stay-at-home moms send their kids off to school each day, so they can shop and cook in peace.

But those of us who homeschool have to accept that we can make Thanksgiving dinner, but it will take a fair amount of planning. One good thing about all of this is that we do have children to help us. The older they are, the more help they can be.

It looks like this year, there will be only six of us at our house for Thanksgiving dinner. My daughter and her boyfriend plan to come up our way, while our son and his wife (ten hours from here) will be with her folks, who live in the same city. I have to admit that I do miss the old days, crazy as it got sometimes, when all of our kids lived at home and I had a big family Thanksgiving to prepare.

Back when I was in the midst of the fray, lol, I set up a plan so I could manage all the work involved in getting ready for Thanksgiving. You’ll find the details in the feature article of this month’s “Imperfect Homeschooler” newsletter. It’s called “A Simple Homeschool Thanksgiving.”

(You’ll find the November issue here. Get your free subscription here.)

A Reminder

Martin Luther was prone to depression. One time when his bleak mood was at its worst, his wife Katie decided to dress all in black. When her husband questioned her about her appearance, she told him she was in mourning.

“God has died!” she cried.

Shocked at the blasphemous statement, Luther rebuked his wife, declaring that God was most certainly not dead. That’s when Katie responded that she figured God must be dead, based on her husband’s recent morose behavior.

Like Luther, we sometimes feel all is lost, especially when circumstances become hard to bear, and the future looks bleak. That’s why it’s important to remember that not only is God still here, but also that He’s still in charge, and He will use everything that happens for His purposes.

“And we know that all things work together for good to them that love God, to them who are the called according to his purpose.” (Romans 8:28, KJV)