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The Simple Living Mom

Thrive

Creating a Home Your Family Loves

Home is so much more than four walls and a roof. It’s where our children learn what peace feels like. It’s where conversations happen around the dinner table, where laughter echoes down the hallway, where traditions are born, and where weary hearts come to rest after a long day.

A haven isn’t about having a perfectly decorated home or keeping every surface spotless. It’s about intentionally creating a space that reflects the way your family wants to live, a place that welcomes, comforts, restores, and nurtures everyone who walks through the door.

Begin With Your Family’s Vision

Before organizing a room or buying another storage basket, take a moment to ask yourself:

How do we want our home to feel?

Maybe your answer is peaceful. Cozy. Joyful. Welcoming. Simple. Restful. Full of laughter. Whatever your vision is, let it become the filter through which you make decisions about your home.

Every item you bring into your home either supports that vision or distracts from it.

Instead of filling your home with things simply because they’re on sale or because everyone else has them, choose possessions that serve your family’s values and the life you’re building together.

Everything You Bring Home Requires Something From You

One of the most freeing thoughts is realizing that every possession comes with responsibility.

Everything you bring into your home requires your time, your energy, your attention, and your care.

It needs to be cleaned, stored, repaired, organized, dusted, maintained, or eventually discarded.

That doesn’t mean we shouldn’t own beautiful or useful things. It simply means we should choose them thoughtfully.

When you become more intentional about what enters your home, you’re also protecting your time and preserving your peace.

Ask yourself:

  • Do we truly need this?
  • Will this make our home more peaceful or more cluttered?
  • Does this support the kind of family life we want to cultivate?
  • Is it worth the time it will require to care for it?

These simple questions can help keep your home from becoming filled with things that don’t truly matter.

Let Your Home Reflect Your Family Culture

Every family has its own unique culture.

Maybe yours loves reading together, baking cookies on Saturday mornings, playing board games, gardening, making music, or spending evenings talking on the porch.

Your home should support those rhythms.

Instead of filling shelves with things that rarely get used, fill your home with items that encourage the life you actually want to live.

If your family values quiet evenings together, perhaps that looks like a cozy reading corner with soft blankets and favorite books.

If hospitality is important to you, maybe it’s keeping a welcoming dining table that’s always ready for a shared meal with friends.

If faith, gratitude, or reflection are central to your family, create spaces that naturally encourage those moments.

Our homes quietly teach us what we value.

Create an Atmosphere of Peace

Peace isn’t created only by what we remove, it’s also created by what we intentionally add.

Small touches can completely change the atmosphere of a home.

A softly glowing candle in the evening.

An essential oil diffuser filling the room with a comforting scent.

Fresh flowers from the grocer.

Natural light streaming through open curtains.

Soft blankets waiting on the couch.

Gentle instrumental music playing in the background.

A record player spinning favorite albums while dinner is being prepared.

These little details invite everyone to slow down.

They tell your family, “You’re home now. You can rest here.”

Give Everything a Home

One of the simplest ways to maintain a peaceful home is making sure every item has a place where it belongs.

When everything has a home, cleaning becomes easier, tidying takes less time, and everyone knows where to return things when they’re finished.

It also helps to keep items in the rooms where they’re actually used.

Laundry supplies belong in the laundry room.

Cleaning supplies stay where they’re most practical.

Outdoor equipment has its own designated storage area.

Kitchen tools stay in the kitchen.

Craft supplies have their own space.

When our belongings are organized according to how we live, our home works with us instead of against us.

Hide the Visual Clutter

Even when a room is technically clean, too much visual clutter can make it feel overwhelming.

One simple habit is storing everyday items behind closed doors whenever possible.

Toys can be tucked into cabinets, baskets, or storage benches when playtime is over.

Electronics can be stored inside cabinets instead of remaining on display.

Charging cords, gaming accessories, paperwork, and miscellaneous items all create visual noise when left out.

When unnecessary items are hidden away, the home immediately feels calmer.

Our eyes, and often our minds, are able to rest.

Build Habits That Protect Your Haven

Creating a peaceful home isn’t something you accomplish once.

It’s something you maintain through gentle, consistent habits.

Small routines often matter more than occasional bursts of deep cleaning.

A few minutes spent putting things away each evening can prevent hours of overwhelming cleanup later.

Returning items to their proper homes after using them.

Putting laundry away instead of letting baskets pile up.

Resetting the kitchen before bed.

Clearing countertops.

Tidying shared spaces together as a family.

These simple rhythms become acts of care, not just for your home, but for the people who live there.

Choose Less So You Can Enjoy More

Sometimes we think adding more will improve our home.

More decorations.

More gadgets.

More toys.

More storage containers.

But often the greatest gift we can give our home is less.

Less clutter.

Less excess.

Less distraction.

More room to breathe.

More room to gather.

More room for meaningful conversations.

More room for peaceful moments.

When our homes aren’t overflowing with clutter, they have more space for the things that truly matter.

A Haven Is Built With Intention

A peaceful home isn’t created in a weekend.

It’s built one thoughtful choice at a time.

One item you decide not to purchase.

One drawer you simplify.

One habit you practice consistently.

One room you intentionally make more welcoming.

Over time, those small decisions create something beautiful, a home that reflects your family’s values, supports your daily life, and offers rest to everyone who enters.

At the end of the day, your family won’t remember whether every room looked picture-perfect.

They’ll remember how your home made them feel.

May your home become a place where peace is felt, where love is freely given, where joy is shared often, and where every member of your family knows they belong.

That’s the kind of haven worth building!

Thrive

Making the Most of the Time We’ve Been Given


There is something beautiful about a home that isn’t rushed. Not a perfect home. Not a home where every chore is always finished and every calendar square is color-coded. Just a home where the people inside know what matters most and choose to spend their time accordingly.

Time is one of our greatest gifts. We all receive the same twenty-four hours each day, yet how we spend them shapes our families, our relationships, and even our memories. While we can’t add more hours to the day, we can become better stewards of the ones we’ve been given.

Over the years, I’ve realized that simplifying our schedules doesn’t mean we’re missing out. In many ways, it allows us to experience more of what truly matters.

Choose the Big Rocks First

One of my favorite ways to think about time is to imagine a large jar. If you fill it with sand first, there’s no room left for the big rocks. But if you place the big rocks in first, the smaller things naturally fit around them.

Every family has different “big rocks,” but ours might include:

  • Faith and family time
  • Marriage and quality time together
  • Rest and a good night’s sleep
  • Healthy meals and regular exercise
  • School and learning
  • Time outdoors
  • Reading and creative hobbies
  • Meaningful friendships
  • Unhurried evenings at home

When we know our priorities, it becomes much easier to decide what deserves a place on the calendar.

Give Your Children Room to Thrive

It’s easy to believe that more activities equal more opportunities. But sometimes, less really is more.

Instead of signing each child up for multiple sports, clubs, lessons, and activities all at once, consider focusing on one extracurricular activity each season and perhaps one musical instrument at a time.

This doesn’t limit your children, it gives them space to truly enjoy what they’re doing.

It also means fewer evenings spent racing from one activity to the next, more family dinners together, and a calmer pace for everyone.

Children don’t always need fuller calendars.

Sometimes they simply need more time to be children.

Be Mindful of Screen Time

Technology can be a wonderful tool, but it can also quietly steal the moments that matter most.

A few small changes can make a big difference:

  • Put phones away during meals.
  • Create screen-free evenings each week.
  • Read together before bedtime.
  • Play board games.
  • Work on puzzles.
  • Take family walks.
  • Sit on the patio with a cup of coffee while the children play outside.

The goal isn’t perfection. It’s simply creating more opportunities for genuine connection.

Let Your Calendar Reflect Your Values

One practical habit that has helped many families is keeping one central family calendar in a place everyone sees each day.

A kitchen workstation, family command center, or bulletin board can become the heartbeat of your home.

Use it to keep track of:

  • School events
  • Work schedules
  • Appointments
  • Birthdays
  • Family gatherings
  • Meal plans
  • Important deadlines
  • Vacation plans

When everyone knows what’s coming, life feels much less chaotic.

A shared calendar also helps avoid overcommitting before saying “yes” to something new.

Ask One Important Question

Before adding anything to your family’s schedule, pause and ask:

Does this fit our family values and our current season of life?

Sometimes the answer is yes.

Sometimes the answer is not right now.

And that’s perfectly okay.

There are seasons for trying something new, and there are seasons for protecting margin.

Not every good opportunity is meant for this season.

Giving yourself permission to wait can bring tremendous peace.

Build Rhythms Instead of Constant Busyness

One of the simplest ways to reduce stress is by creating predictable routines.

Instead of reinventing every day, establish gentle rhythms that serve your family well.

Daily Rhythms

  • Morning routines
  • Family meals
  • Quiet reading time
  • Evening cleanup
  • Bedtime routines

Weekly Rhythms

  • Grocery shopping
  • Laundry days
  • Family movie night
  • Date night at home
  • House cleaning
  • Library visits

Monthly Rhythms

  • Budget review
  • Family meetings
  • Meal planning
  • Decluttering one area of the home

Seasonal Rhythms

  • Organizing closets
  • Preparing for holidays
  • Planting a garden
  • Back-to-school preparation
  • Family traditions

Yearly Rhythms

  • Family vacations
  • Goal setting
  • Health appointments
  • Celebrating birthdays and anniversaries
  • Reflecting on the year together

These routines become gentle anchors that keep family life flowing more smoothly.

Protect Your Marriage

In the middle of raising children, working, and caring for a home, it’s easy for marriage to quietly slip to the bottom of the list.

Yet one of the greatest gifts we can give our children is seeing their parents continue to invest in their relationship.

Date nights don’t have to be elaborate.

Sometimes they look like:

  • Sharing dessert after the children are asleep.
  • Watching a favorite movie together.
  • Drinking coffee on the patio.
  • Playing a card game.
  • Cooking dinner together.
  • Going for an evening walk.

Small moments, enjoyed consistently, strengthen a marriage over time.

Don’t Forget Yourself

Taking care of yourself isn’t selfish, it equips you to care well for the people you love.

Make room for the things that restore your heart.

Perhaps that’s:

  • Reading a good book.
  • Exercising.
  • Gardening.
  • Knitting.
  • Painting.
  • Baking.
  • Journaling.
  • Spending quiet time in prayer.
  • Meeting a friend for coffee.

These simple moments refill our cups and remind us that joy often grows in ordinary places.

Leave Room for Relationships

Some of my favorite memories were never written on a calendar.

They happened over slow conversations, backyard gatherings, cups of coffee shared with friends, and evenings spent laughing around the dinner table.

When every minute is scheduled, there’s little room left for the unexpected blessings.

Leave a little margin.

Those unscheduled moments often become the memories we treasure most.

A Simpler Life Is Ofter a Fuller Life

Our culture celebrates busy schedules and overflowing calendars.

But a full calendar doesn’t always mean a full heart.

Sometimes the richest life is the one with space to breathe.

Space to sit beside your spouse after dinner.

Space to notice the little moments that become lifelong memories.

At the end of the day, our children likely won’t remember how many activities they participated in. They’ll remember the conversations around the table, the bedtime stories, family walks, laughter in the kitchen, weekend adventures, and the comforting rhythm of a home where they felt loved.

May we use our time wisely, not just by filling every second, but by filling our days with the people, moments, and priorities that matter most!

Thrive

Creating a Family Mission Statement That Guides Your Home

Have you ever found yourself wondering, Is this something our family should do? Maybe it’s another activity to sign up for, another commitment on the calendar, or a decision that just feels…unclear.

As parents, we make hundreds of little decisions every week. Sometimes it can feel like we’re simply reacting to whatever comes next instead of intentionally building the kind of family life we hope for.

Years ago, I was introduced to the idea of creating a family mission statement, and it completely changed the way I think about family decisions. The concept comes from Stephen Covey’s The 7 Habits of Highly Effective Families, and it’s one of those simple ideas that has a lasting impact.

A family mission statement is just what it sounds like: a few meaningful words that describe who you want to be as a family and what matters most to you.

It isn’t about being perfect. It’s about having a shared vision.

Why create one?

Every family has values, whether they’re written down or not. Taking the time to put those values into words helps everyone see the bigger picture.

A family mission statement becomes an anchor when life gets busy.

It reminds you:

  • What kind of people you want to be.
  • How you want to treat one another.
  • What your family wants to be known for.
  • What deserves a “yes”, and what might deserve a thoughtful “no.”

When new opportunities come along, you can ask, “Does this fit with who we want to be?”

Maybe your family values unhurried evenings together. If adding one more activity means everyone is exhausted and disconnected, your mission statement gives you permission to say, “Not this season.”

Maybe your family values serving others, hospitality, or spending time outdoors. Those values can help shape the decisions you make throughout the year.

It’s amazing how much clarity comes from knowing what matters most.

How to create a family mission statement

The best part is that this doesn’t have to be complicated.

Gather everyone together, yes, even the younger kids! Their ideas are often the sweetest and most honest.

Ask questions like:

  • What do we love most about our family?
  • How do we want people to feel in our home?
  • What words describe the kind of family we want to become?
  • What do we want our children to remember about growing up here?
  • What values matter most to us?

Write down every idea without worrying about making it perfect.

You might hear words like kindness, joy, laughter, generosity, honesty, faith, curiosity, adventure, forgiveness, patience, or love.

Once everyone has shared, look for common themes. Then work together to create one or two simple sentences that capture your family’s heart.

It doesn’t have to sound fancy.

In fact, the simpler, the better.

It might be something like:

“In our family, we choose kindness, work hard, laugh often, and help others. We love God, love one another, and keep growing together.”

Or maybe:

“We encourage each other, tell the truth, welcome others, and make time for what matters most.”

We used a template from the book Organized Simplicity by Tish Oxenreider to create our family mission statement, which is, ‘We believe that our purpose as a family is to live intentionally and make the most of the time we’ve been given. We will accomplish this by being good stewards. We will make our home a place of patience, warmth, and joy, prioritizing kindness, loyalty, and lightheartedness, while making memories together and interacting with each other in a spirit of love.’

There’s no perfect mission statement, only the one that support your family.

Let it grow with you

Your family mission statement isn’t meant to be tucked away in a drawer.

Write it on a chalkboard, frame it, hang it on the refrigerator, or keep it somewhere everyone can see it.

Read it together once in a while.

Come back to it when you’re making a big decision.

And don’t be afraid to revise it as your children grow. Families change over the years, and your mission statement can grow right along with you.

The greatest gift

More than anything, creating a family mission statement gives your children something incredibly valuable: a sense of identity.

It tells them, “This is who we are.”

Not because we get everything right.

Not because we’re perfect.

But because these are the values we’re choosing to grow toward together.

In a world full of distractions and endless opportunities, having a shared vision helps keep your family focused on what truly matters.

And sometimes, those few carefully chosen words become the gentle reminder your family needs to keep moving in the direction of love, joy, and purpose!

Seasons

Christmas in July: A Little Holiday Cheer in the Heart of Summer

There’s something about the middle of summer that makes the thought of Christmas feel especially comforting. When the days are long, the temperatures are soaring, and we’re all searching for a little relief from the heat, the idea of cozy sweaters, twinkling lights, fresh-baked cookies, and cool December evenings can be a welcome escape. That’s one of the reasons I’ve always loved the tradition of Christmas in July. Growing up, I remember hearing people talk about it every summer, and it always brought a smile to my face. It wasn’t necessarily about exchanging expensive gifts or recreating Christmas exactly as it is in December. Instead, it was about capturing the joy, generosity, and togetherness that make the holiday season so special and remembering that those feelings can be shared all year long.

The tradition of Christmas in July has been around for many decades. While there are several stories about how it became popular, many communities, summer camps, churches, and neighborhood groups embraced the idea as a fun way to brighten the middle of the year. It became an opportunity to gather with family and friends, enjoy a festive meal, sing familiar songs, decorate with a little holiday cheer, and even organize service projects or charitable giving. For many people of faith, it also served as a gentle reminder that the messages of hope, peace, generosity, and love we celebrate at Christmastime aren’t meant for just one season, they’re values we can carry with us every day. At the same time, Christmas in July has grown into a tradition that people from many different backgrounds enjoy simply because it brings smiles, nostalgia, and a reason to celebrate together.

Today, Christmas in July can be whatever you want it to be. Maybe it’s pulling out your favorite Christmas movie while enjoying the comfort of the air conditioning. Maybe it’s baking a cake or a batch of cookies, even if it’s too warm for hot chocolate. It could be listening to your favorite holiday music while you’re cleaning the house or grilling dinner, adding a few ornaments to a porch plant or backyard tree, or gathering with family for a meal that mixes summertime favorites with a little holiday fun. Children often love simple activities like making ornaments, writing letters to Santa just for fun, or reading a favorite Christmas story before bed.

One of the nicest ways to celebrate, though, is by sharing kindness. Christmas has always been about caring for others, and there’s no reason that spirit has to stay tucked away until December. Visiting a neighbor, donating to a local charity, volunteering your time, sending an encouraging card, or surprising someone with a thoughtful gift can remind us that compassion is always in season. Sometimes the smallest gestures become the greatest blessings.

Fun Christmas in July Ideas for Parents and Children to Enjoy Together:

  • Watch a favorite Christmas movie together, even if it’s just for the fun of seeing snow while it’s hot outside.
  • Have a “summer Christmas” dinner or picnic, mixing traditional holiday-style treats with fresh summer foods.
  • Do a simple craft together like making homemade ornaments, paper snowflakes, or decorating jars with festive colors.
  • Bake cookies or a simple dessert together and decorate them with both Christmas and summer themes.
  • Read a Christmas story together at bedtime or during a quiet afternoon inside where it’s cool.
  • Play Christmas music while doing everyday things like cleaning, cooking, or spending time outside in the shade.
  • Set up a small “mini Christmas tree” using a plant, patio decoration, or small tabletop tree and let kids decorate it.
  • Write cheerful notes or “kindness cards” to neighbors, friends, or family members.
  • Have a small gift exchange where the focus is on thoughtfulness rather than cost.
  • Spend time talking together about favorite Christmas memories or traditions from past years.

Final Thoughts:

Whether you celebrate Christmas in July every year or this is the first time you’ve thought about it in a while, I hope it brings a little extra joy to your summer. In a world that often seems rushed and chaotic, taking a moment to reflect on gratitude, hope, generosity, and time spent with the people we love is never out of season.

And who knows? Thinking about Christmas while it’s 95 degrees outside might just make the summer heat feel a little easier to handle!

 

 

Seasons

July in the Kitchen: Fruit Sparklers & Our Favorite Books for July

July always seems to invite us to slow down just enough to savor the little things. The kitchen fills with bowls of juicy berries, sweet watermelon, and ripe summer fruit, while open windows let in the sounds of chirping birds, children laughing outside, and the occasional hum of sprinklers on a warm afternoon. It’s the season of backyard picnics, neighborhood celebrations, family cookouts, and simple traditions that become some of our favorite memories.

I love how July reminds us that joy doesn’t have to be complicated. Sometimes it’s found in a plate of fresh fruit shared on the porch, a stack of beloved picture books waiting to be read together after lunch, or an easy kitchen activity that little hands are excited to help create. These small moments often become the ones we remember most.

One of our favorite July traditions is making what we call Fruit Sparklers. They’re colorful, refreshing, and so much fun for little hands to help create. Best of all, they look festive without requiring any special ingredients.

Whether we’re celebrating the Fourth of July or simply enjoying a sunny afternoon together, these fruit sparklers always disappear quickly.

Fruit Sparklers

Prep Time: 15–20 minutes
Servings: Makes about 8 fruit sparklers

Ingredients:

  • 1 small seedless watermelon
  • Green grapes
  • Red grapes (optional)
  • Strawberries
  • Blueberries
  • Raspberries (optional)
  • Bamboo skewers
  • Small star-shaped cookie cutter

Instructions:

  1. Slice the watermelon into 1-inch thick rounds.
  2. Use a small star-shaped cookie cutter to cut watermelon stars.
  3. Wash and dry all of the fruit.
  4. Carefully thread grapes, blueberries, strawberries, and any other favorite berries onto each skewer.
  5. Finish each skewer by placing a watermelon star at the very top.
  6. Arrange the finished fruit sparklers on a serving platter and keep chilled until ready to enjoy.

A Friendly Kitchen Reminder

Since these fruit sparklers are made with bamboo skewers, they’re best assembled with the help of an adult. The pointed ends can be sharp, so be sure children are supervised while making and enjoying them. Younger children may also enjoy the fruit removed from the skewer and served in a bowl instead.

These are such a simple way to celebrate the season, and they’re always one of the first things to disappear from our July table.

Our Favorite July Books

One of my favorite ways to slow down during July is to gather a stack of beautiful books and enjoy a quiet afternoon reading together. These stories celebrate America, summertime, adventure, and the simple joys of the season.

The Fourth of July Story by Alice Dalgliesh

A classic picture book that tells the story behind Independence Day in a way children can easily understand. It introduces young readers to the events that led to America’s independence while celebrating the meaning of the holiday with warmth and clarity.

How to Make a Cherry Pie and See the U.S.A. by Marjorie Priceman

This delightful adventure follows a young baker across the United States in search of the finest ingredients for a cherry pie. Along the way, readers discover fascinating places, geography, and a wonderful appreciation for where our food comes from.

America the Beautiful by Katharine Lee Bates, illustrated by Wendell Minor

The beloved patriotic poem comes to life through breathtaking illustrations that showcase the beauty and diversity of America’s landscapes. It’s a wonderful book for inspiring gratitude for the country’s natural wonders and rich history.

Hello Lighthouse by Sophie Blackall

With stunning illustrations and lyrical storytelling, this Caldecott Medal-winning picture book follows the life of a lighthouse keeper and his family through the changing seasons. It’s a peaceful, beautiful story that celebrates family, dedication, and life by the sea.

One Morning in Maine by Robert McCloskey

Join Sal as she spends a memorable summer day along the coast of Maine. Filled with charming details and gentle storytelling, this timeless classic captures the simple adventures that make childhood summers unforgettable.

Time of Wonder by Robert McCloskey

This beautifully illustrated classic celebrates the changing seasons on the Maine coast, with a special focus on the joys of summertime. From sailing and exploring to watching storms roll in, it’s a wonderful reminder to notice the beauty of everyday moments.

John, Paul, George & Ben by Lane Smith

This humorous picture book introduces children to four of America’s Founding Fathers through playful stories about their childhoods. Filled with wit and engaging illustrations, it’s a fun way to spark curiosity about American history while sharing plenty of laughs.

Closing Thoughts

However you choose to spend July, I hope it’s filled with sunshine, fresh fruit, wonderful books, and plenty of moments gathered around the table with the people you love.

Sometimes the sweetest memories come from the simplest traditions, a platter of colorful fruit, a favorite story, and a little extra time together!

Seasons

A Month of Fun: July Edition

As summer settles into its sweetest season, July invites us to slow down, soak up the sunshine, and treasure the simple moments that often become our favorite memories. The days seem to stretch a little longer, the sunsets glow a little brighter, and life naturally slows down just enough to savor the little things. It’s the season of backyard barbecues, fresh-picked berries, fireflies dancing at dusk, barefoot adventures, and popsicles that melt a little too fast. Whether you’re spending your days at the lake, exploring your hometown, or simply enjoying afternoons on the patio with a good book, July invites us to embrace joy in the little things. If you’re looking to create meaningful memories with your family this month, this July Bucket List is full of fun ideas to inspire your summer adventures.

July Bucket List

1. Watch a Fourth of July Fireworks Show

Whether you attend a community celebration or watch fireworks from a nearby hill, this classic July tradition is full of excitement. Pack a few snacks, bring lawn chairs or a blanket, and enjoy the colorful display lighting up the summer sky together.

2. Make Homemade Ice Cream

Nothing says summer quite like a bowl of homemade ice cream. Whether you use an ice cream maker or a simple no-churn recipe, everyone can help choose mix-ins like chocolate chips, fresh fruit, or cookie crumbles for a fun family treat.

3. Create a Summer Time Capsule

Gather a few favorite photos, write down your family’s favorite memories from the season so far, include small mementos, and tuck everything into a box or container. Open it next summer and relive all the fun you’ve shared.

4. Visit a Sunflower Field

If you have a sunflower farm nearby, spend an afternoon wandering through the bright yellow blooms. It’s a beautiful way to enjoy nature, take family photos, and appreciate one of summer’s happiest flowers.

5. Have a Water Balloon or Sponge Toss

Beat the July heat with a little friendly competition. Water balloons, reusable water balloons, or even soaked sponges can provide hours of laughter without needing an elaborate setup.

6. Make Fresh Lemonade From Scratch

Squeeze fresh lemons, stir in a little sweetness, and enjoy a refreshing homemade drink on the porch. Let everyone customize their glass by adding strawberries, blueberries, mint, or raspberries for a fun twist.

7. Visit a Local U-Pick Farm

Many farms offer more than berries during July, with peaches, flowers, vegetables, or other seasonal produce ready for picking. It’s a fun outing that supports local farms while giving everyone something delicious to take home.

8. Have a Backyard Campfire Evening

You don’t have to camp overnight to enjoy the magic of a campfire. Roast hot dogs, toast marshmallows, tell funny stories, sing songs, or simply enjoy the peaceful glow as the sun goes down.

9. Make Nature-Inspired Crafts

Collect pinecones, leaves, flowers, sticks, or smooth rocks and turn them into creative crafts. It’s a wonderful way to combine outdoor exploration with an afternoon of hands-on creativity.

10. Watch the Sunrise Together

Most families don’t often get up early just for fun, which makes this feel like a special adventure. Bring blankets, hot chocolate or juice, and enjoy the quiet beauty of a brand-new July morning before the day begins.

10 More July Ideas to Try:

  • Build a bird feeder.
  • Paint kindness rocks.
  • Visit a local botanical garden.
  • Make friendship bracelets.
  • Try a new summer recipe.
  • Feed the fish at the local zoo if permitted.
  • Have a backyard breakfast picnic.
  • Learn a simple magic trick.
  • Create a family summer playlist.
  • Make homemade bubble solution and giant bubbles.

Final Thoughts

July is filled with opportunities to celebrate the beauty of summer and the joy of spending time with the people we love most. Whether your adventures are big or small, every shared laugh, quiet sunset, and simple tradition helps create memories that will last for years to come. Here’s to making the most of every sunny day and embracing all the little moments that make summer unforgettable.

May your July be bursting with sunshine, laughter, and memory-making adventures around every corner!

Thrive

Making the Familiar Feel Magical Again

Have you ever had one of those rare days off where everyone is finally free, the weather is nice, and you think, “Let’s go do something fun!”…only to immediately draw a blank?

Not because there isn’t anything to do. Because you’ve already done it.

The park? We’ve been there a hundred times.

The zoo? Love it, but we’ve seen every animal enough to know who’s usually asleep.

That favorite restaurant? The food is still good, but somehow it doesn’t sound exciting anymore.

After living in the same place for years, or even decades, it’s easy to reach a point where your hometown starts feeling a little too familiar. It doesn’t mean you don’t appreciate where you live. It just means the excitement of discovering something new has faded.

I don’t think people talk about this enough…

It’s almost the opposite of cabin fever. Instead of desperately wanting to get out of the house, you find yourself thinking, “I guess we could go somewhere…but I don’t really want to.”

If you’ve ever felt that way, you’re definitely not alone.

Sometimes It’s Not About Needing More- It’s About Seeing Things Differently

When we’ve visited the same places over and over, our brains start putting them on autopilot. We stop noticing little details because we’ve convinced ourselves we’ve already seen everything there is to see.

But sometimes changing how we experience a place makes it feel brand new.

Instead of going to the park just to let the kids play, turn it into a photo scavenger hunt.

Instead of eating at your usual restaurant, let each family member order something they’ve never tried before.

Visit your favorite walking trail at sunrise instead of the afternoon.

Sometimes a small change creates a completely different memory.

Become a Tourist in Your Own Town

This might sound silly, but pretend you’ve never lived there before.

Search online for “Top 20 Things to Do Near Me” and see if there’s something you’ve overlooked all these years.

Visit the local museum you always assumed you’d get around to someday.

Stop at that little shop you’ve driven past hundreds of times.

Walk through a downtown area without being in a hurry.

Sometimes the places we’ve ignored the longest become our new favorites.

Make the Destination Less Important Than the Adventure

Instead of asking, “Where should we go?” ask, “What kind of adventure do we want today?”

Maybe it’s:

  • Finding the best ice cream in three different towns.
  • Driving until someone spots an interesting antique store.
  • Visiting every playground within 30 minutes over the next few months and ranking them.
  • Looking for the prettiest sunset spot nearby.
  • Trying one new local restaurant every month.

The fun doesn’t always have to come from somewhere new. Sometimes it comes from having a new mission.

Say Yes to Small Road Trips

Not every outing has to be a vacation.

Pick a town 30 to 60 minutes away that you’ve never really explored.

Walk around their downtown.

Eat somewhere you’ve never heard of.

Browse a bookstore.

Visit a local coffee shop.

Sometimes just seeing different streets, different stores, and different scenery is enough to reset your mood.

Create Family Challenge Days

Kids love a challenge, and honestly, adults do too.

Try things like:

  • Spend only $20 for the entire day’s adventure.
  • Everyone gets one stop they get to choose.
  • Visit three places you’ve never been.
  • Have a “No Chain Restaurants” day.
  • Find the funniest attraction you can.

Suddenly the day becomes about the challenge instead of the location.

Bring the Fun Home

Sometimes the answer isn’t leaving at all.

If nowhere sounds exciting, maybe your house can become the destination.

Have a backyard picnic.

Camp in the living room.

Make homemade pizzas together.

Set up a family game tournament.

Watch a movie outside with a projector or even a laptop.

Build the world’s biggest blanket fort.

Not every memorable family day requires a packed schedule.

Give Yourself Permission to Stay Home!

Here’s something I’ve been reminding myself lately.

It’s okay if nothing sounds exciting today.

You don’t have to force an outing just because it’s your day off.

Sometimes we put pressure on ourselves to “make the most of the day,” when what we really need is a slow morning, a good meal, and time together with family.

The memories our kids hold onto usually aren’t about how many places we visited.

They’re about how they felt while they were with us.

Maybe It’s Time for a New Tradition

If everywhere feels “been there, done that,” maybe the answer isn’t finding a new place.

Maybe it’s creating a new tradition.

Saturday breakfast at a different brunch spot every month.

An annual family photo in the same place every season.

A mystery drive where no one knows the destination except the driver.

A monthly “Yes Day” where the kids each get to pick one activity.

Traditions have a way of making ordinary places feel special again.

Final Thoughts

Living somewhere for a long time is a blessing. It means you’ve made memories, found favorite places, and built a life there.

But it’s also okay to admit that sometimes your surroundings stop feeling exciting.

If that’s where you are right now, don’t worry. You don’t necessarily need a bigger vacation or a more exciting town.

Sometimes all you need is a fresh perspective, a little creativity, and the people you love beside you.

Because at the end of the day, the best adventures usually aren’t about discovering a brand-new place.

They’re about discovering a new way to enjoy the place you already call home!

Fun

Homemade Play Dough & Sensory Fun: Simple Recipes for Creative Little Hands

One of the happiest sounds in any home is the chatter of children completely absorbed in their own little world of imagination. Give them a handful of homemade play dough, and suddenly they’re baking pretend cookies, building tiny gardens, creating colorful creatures, and dreaming up adventures all their own. The best part? The laughter, storytelling, and creativity often last much longer than the dough itself.

One of my favorite things about homemade sensory play is that it doesn’t have to be expensive or complicated. With just a few pantry staples, you can create hours of hands-on fun while encouraging creativity, fine motor skills, and imaginative play.

Today I’m sharing our favorite homemade play dough recipe, along with a few other easy sensory recipes and lots of playful ideas to inspire your next afternoon at home.

Our Favorite Homemade Play Dough

This recipe makes soft, smooth play dough that lasts for weeks when stored in an airtight container.

Ingredients:

  • 2 cups all-purpose flour
  • 1 cup salt
  • 2 tablespoons cream of tartar
  • 2 tablespoons vegetable oil
  • 2 cups water
  • Food coloring (optional)
  • A few drops of vanilla, peppermint, lemon, or lavender extract (optional)

Directions:

  1. In a saucepan, combine the flour, salt, and cream of tartar.
  2. Add the water and vegetable oil, stirring until smooth.
  3. If you’d like colored dough, add food coloring before heating.
  4. Cook over medium heat, stirring constantly.
  5. Continue stirring until the mixture thickens and forms a ball.
  6. Remove from the heat and allow it to cool.
  7. Knead until smooth.
  8. Store in an airtight container or zip-top bag.

Fun Add-Ins:

Try mixing in:

  • Fine glitter for sparkling fairy dough
  • Cinnamon or pumpkin pie spice for autumn play
  • Cocoa powder for chocolate-colored dough
  • Lavender buds for a calming sensory experience
  • Tiny biodegradable confetti for celebration dough

Easy Moon Sand

Moon sand feels soft, fluffy, and moldable, almost like magic.

Ingredients:

  • 8 cups flour
  • 1 cup baby oil (or substitute vegetable oil)

Mix together until evenly combined.

Want colorful moon sand? Add a few drops of food coloring to the oil before mixing.

Hide seashells, toy dinosaurs, gemstones, or alphabet letters inside for little explorers to discover.

Cloud Dough

Cloud dough has a wonderfully silky texture.

Ingredients:

  • 8 cups cornstarch
  • 1 cup hair conditioner

Mix until smooth. Different conditioners create slightly different textures, so have fun experimenting.

Children love squeezing, rolling, and sculpting with this soft dough.

Baking Soda Dough

Perfect for creating ornaments or keepsakes.

Ingredients:

  • 2 cups baking soda
  • 1 cup cornstarch
  • 1¼ cups water

Mix together in a saucepan over medium heat until thickened. Allow to cool before kneading.

Shape ornaments, handprints, or tiny sculptures and allow them to air dry.

Homemade Gak

Gak is a stretchy, squishy sensory material that’s somewhere between slime and putty. Kids love pulling, stretching, and squishing it!

Ingredients:

  • 1 cup white school glue
  • ½ cup water
  • Food coloring (optional)
  • ½ teaspoon baking soda
  • 1 tablespoon contact lens solution (one that contains boric acid and sodium borate)

Directions:

  1. Pour the glue into a bowl and stir in the water until well combined.
  2. Add a few drops of food coloring if desired.
  3. Mix in the baking soda.
  4. Add the contact lens solution and stir until the mixture begins to pull away from the sides of the bowl.
  5. Knead with your hands for a few minutes until it becomes smooth and stretchy. If it’s still sticky, add a few more drops of contact lens solution.

Fun Variations:

  • Add fine glitter for sparkling Gak.
  • Mix in small foam beads for a fun crunchy texture.
  • Swirl together two colors for a marbled effect.
  • Add a drop of vanilla or another child-safe scent for an extra sensory experience.

A quick note: Gak is intended for play, not for eating. Adult supervision is recommended, especially with younger children, and it’s a good idea to wash hands before and after sensory play.

Rainbow Rice Sensory Bin

Not exactly a dough, but always a favorite!

You’ll Need:

  • Uncooked rice
  • Vinegar
  • Food coloring

Place rice in a zip-top bag, add a splash of vinegar and food coloring, shake well, then spread on a baking sheet to dry.

Use scoops, funnels, measuring cups, toy trucks, or small containers for endless sensory play.

Nature Dough Creations

Take your play dough outside and collect treasures from nature.

Children can decorate their creations with:

  • Leaves
  • Twigs
  • Pinecones
  • Acorns
  • Pebbles
  • Flower petals
  • Feathers

Suddenly, simple dough becomes fairy gardens, forest homes, bug hotels, or dinosaur landscapes.

Creative Play Ideas

Sometimes children simply need an invitation to play. Here are a few ideas to spark their imagination:

Open a Bakery

Roll cookies, bake pretend cupcakes, decorate birthday cakes, and “sell” treats to family members.

Dinosaur Dig

Hide small dinosaur toys in moon sand and let little paleontologists excavate them using paintbrushes and spoons.

Garden Party

Roll flowers, butterflies, bees, vegetables, and tiny garden creatures.

Build a Zoo

Create animals, habitats, ponds, and fences for an entire imaginary zoo.

Alphabet Adventure

Roll snakes into letters, spell names, or hide letter beads inside the dough for children to find.

Construction Zone

Use toy dump trucks, rollers, and cookie cutters to create roads, bridges, tunnels, and construction sites.

Fairy Village

Build tiny homes from sticks, leaves, stones, and play dough. Add miniature fairy figurines if you have them.

Treasure Hunt

Hide buttons, beads (for older children), gems, or coins inside the dough and let children discover them.

Pizza Restaurant

Flatten dough into pizza crusts and decorate with pretend toppings made from more dough.

Animal Tracks

Press toy animals into the dough to make footprints, then guess which animal made each print.

Simple Tools That Add Big Fun

You don’t need fancy supplies. Many kitchen items work perfectly:

  • Cookie cutters
  • Rolling pins
  • Plastic forks
  • Measuring spoons
  • Muffin tins
  • Garlic presses
  • Silicone baking molds
  • Plastic knives
  • Drinking straws
  • Craft sticks

Even muffin liners and cupcake candles can transform play dough into a birthday celebration.

A Few Safety Reminders

  • Always supervise young children during sensory play.
  • Store homemade dough in airtight containers to keep it fresh.
  • If your child has food allergies, adjust recipes accordingly.
  • Most homemade dough recipes are intended for play, not eating.

More Than Just Play

It’s easy to think of play dough as “just a craft,” but so much learning happens while little hands are busy creating. Children strengthen the muscles they’ll later use for writing, practice problem-solving, explore textures, build language skills through storytelling, and gain confidence as they turn simple ingredients into amazing creations.

Some of the sweetest childhood memories aren’t made from elaborate plans, they’re made around the kitchen table with flour on the counter, colorful dough in little hands, and imaginations running wild.

So gather a few simple ingredients, invite your little ones to help mix, roll, squish, and create, and enjoy the wonderful mess that comes with making memories together.

After all, childhood is meant to be colorful, creative, and just a little bit messy!

Thrive

You Never Really Leave Home Behind

Like many people who move away from where they were raised, there are moments when I feel a little homesick. Sometimes it’s sparked by something as simple as a familiar accent, the smell of fresh-cut grass on a summer evening, a pasture of horses, or a conversation that reminds me of home. Those moments remind me that while we may leave the places that raised us, those places never completely leave us.

After living in five different states, I have come to realize that home is about more than a place on a map. It’s the values, habits, and quiet lessons that become part of who you are. Those don’t disappear when you cross a state line. In many ways, I think I appreciate the Midwest even more now than I did when I lived there because distance has helped me recognize just how much it shaped the person I’ve become.

Growing up in the Midwest taught me things that I didn’t realize were unique until I lived somewhere else.

Everyone Deserves Dignity and Respect

One of the biggest lessons was that every person deserves dignity and respect.

It didn’t matter whether someone was the CEO of a company, the cashier at the grocery store, the farmer working before sunrise, the mechanic keeping your car running, the teacher in the classroom, the custodian cleaning the building after everyone else had gone home, or a stay-at-home mom. Honest work was honorable work. People weren’t judged by their job title but by how they treated others.

I’ve tried to carry that belief with me everywhere I’ve lived.

Humility

Another Midwestern value that has stayed with me is humility.

Many Midwesterners are uncomfortable bragging about themselves. You work hard, do your best, and let your actions speak for you. Success isn’t something you announce every chance you get, it’s something you’re grateful for. If someone compliments you, you’re just as likely to say, “Oh, it was nothing,” before changing the subject.

That quiet humility can sometimes be mistaken for a lack of confidence, but I see it differently. It’s the belief that no one is above anyone else.

Kindness

There’s also a practical kindness that’s hard to describe until you’ve experienced it.

It’s stopping to help someone change a flat tire. It’s checking on an elderly neighbor after a snowstorm. It’s bringing over a meal when someone is sick without waiting to be asked. It’s helping someone move because they need an extra pair of hands.

It’s not making a big production out of helping someone, you simply do it because that’s what is done.

Assuming the Best About Others

In many parts of the Midwest, people also tend to assume the best about others until they’re given a reason not to. That doesn’t mean being naïve. It means beginning with trust instead of suspicion. It means offering a smile, making eye contact, saying hello to strangers, and believing that small moments of kindness help build stronger communities.

One thing I’ve noticed after living in different parts of the country is that these little habits aren’t always universal.

In some places, life moves at a faster pace. People may value efficiency or independence more highly. That’s not wrong, every region develops its own culture based on its history, geography, and way of life.

But when you grow up in the Midwest, it can feel unusual to walk past someone without acknowledging them or to live next to neighbors for years without getting to know them. In many Midwestern communities, a conversation with a stranger at the grocery store isn’t considered unusual. It’s just part of everyday life.

Reliability

Another value I cherish is reliability.

If someone says they’ll help you on Saturday morning, they show up. If they promise to bring something, they bring it. If they tell you they’ll pray for you, many genuinely will.

Keeping your word matters because your reputation is built one promise at a time.

Community

The Midwest also taught me that community isn’t just an idea, it’s something you participate in.

You support local businesses.

You cheer on local teams, even if you don’t have a child playing.

You attend fundraisers, church dinners, fairs, and community festivals because they remind everyone that we’re connected to something larger than ourselves.

Practicality

I also appreciate the Midwestern tendency toward practicality.

Problems are meant to be solved. You fix what can be repaired. You don’t waste what still has value. You prepare for winter before the first snowfall because everyone knows it’s better to be ready than surprised.

There’s a quiet wisdom in that mindset that extends far beyond the changing seasons.

Every Community Has Strengths

Of course, no region is perfect. Every place has its strengths and its shortcomings. Since leaving the Midwest, I’ve met wonderful people from every part of the country and learned valuable lessons from each place I’ve lived. Different communities emphasize different strengths, and I think there’s something worthwhile to appreciate wherever you go.

But I also believe it’s healthy to recognize the values that shaped us and intentionally carry the best of them forward.

Our hometowns influence us, although they may not determine where we spend our lives. Still, the values we choose to keep become part of who we are, no matter where our journey leads.

In a world that sometimes feels rushed, divided, and increasingly disconnected, treating everyone with dignity, showing humility, keeping your word, helping your neighbors, respecting honest work, and believing that small acts of kindness matter still seem like pretty good principles to live by.

Those may be the values I first learned in the Midwest. But they’re really values that can make any community stronger.

Home

Whether your roots are in the Midwest, the South, the Northeast, the Northwest, a small town, a big city, or somewhere halfway around the world, every place leaves its mark on us. We carry pieces of home with us wherever life takes us. The challenge isn’t holding on to every tradition exactly as it was, it’s choosing to keep the values that made us who we are.

So while I may never live in the Midwest again, I’ll always be grateful that it’s where I learned what it means to be a good neighbor, to work hard without expecting applause, to treat every person with respect, and to remember that character is built in the ordinary moments of everyday life.

You can leave home, but if you’re fortunate enough to have grown up with those values, you never really leave them behind!

 

 

 

 

 

Food

Fresh & Easy Summer Meals the Whole Family Will Love

Summer is the perfect time to gather around the table and enjoy fresh, simple meals that bring the whole family together. The longer days, warm sunshine, backyard barbecues, and fresh seasonal produce make it one of the best times of the year to gather around the table. Summer meals have a way of feeling lighter, brighter, and easier, which is exactly what busy families need during a season filled with vacations, outdoor adventures, and making memories together.

One of the things we love most about summer meals is that they don’t have to be complicated. With so many delicious fruits and vegetables at their peak, simple ingredients shine all on their own. Whether you’re grilling outside, tossing together a colorful salad, or enjoying dinner on the patio, summer is all about keeping things fresh, flavorful, and fun.

Why We Love Summer Meals

Summer meals are a favorite because they’re simple to prepare, full of vibrant flavors, and perfect for spending less time in the kitchen and more time enjoying the season. Fresh ingredients make every meal taste incredible, and many recipes come together quickly with minimal cooking.

Family dinners also become more relaxed in the summertime. From picnics at the park to backyard cookouts, every meal feels like a little celebration. It’s the perfect season to try new recipes, while still enjoying classic family favorites.

Delicious Foods That Are in Season During the Summer:

One of the best parts of summer cooking is taking advantage of all the fresh produce available. Seasonal ingredients not only taste better but are often more affordable, too.

Some summer favorites include:

  • Sweet corn
  • Tomatoes
  • Zucchini
  • Cucumbers
  • Bell peppers
  • Green beans
  • Summer squash
  • Watermelon
  • Strawberries
  • Blueberries
  • Peaches
  • Cherries
  • Blackberries
  • Cantaloupe
  • Fresh herbs like basil, parsley, and cilantro

Adding these fresh ingredients to your weekly meals makes every dish colorful, nutritious, and bursting with summer flavor.

Five Days of Easy Summer Dinners the Whole Family Will Love:

Monday: Grilled Chicken with Corn on the Cob and Watermelon

Keep the week simple with juicy grilled chicken served alongside sweet corn on the cob and fresh watermelon slices. Add a simple green salad for an easy, balanced meal.

Tuesday: Taco Night

Build-your-own tacos are always a family favorite. Serve seasoned ground beef or shredded chicken with lettuce, tomatoes, shredded cheese, salsa, avocado, and tortilla chips. Everyone gets to customize their own dinner.

Wednesday: BBQ Sliders with Fresh Fruit Salad

Serve barbecue chicken or pulled pork sliders with a colorful fruit salad made from strawberries, blueberries, grapes, and watermelon. Add baked beans or potato salad for an easy side dish.

Thursday: Lemon Garlic Pasta with Grilled Vegetables

A light pasta tossed with lemon, garlic, olive oil, and Parmesan pairs perfectly with grilled zucchini, bell peppers, and cherry tomatoes. Add grilled shrimp or chicken for extra protein.

Friday: Homemade Personal Pizzas

Set out pizza crusts or flatbreads along with sauce, mozzarella cheese, pepperoni, summer veggies, and fresh basil. Let everyone create their own pizza before serving with a fresh Caesar or garden salad.

Simple Summer Snacks the Whole Family Will Love:

When everyone is spending more time outdoors, easy grab-and-go snacks are a must. Here are a few family favorites:

  • Fresh fruit kabobs
  • Watermelon wedges
  • Yogurt parfaits with berries and granola
  • Cheese cubes and crackers
  • Veggie sticks with ranch or hummus
  • Frozen grapes
  • Homemade trail mix
  • Popsicles made with real fruit
  • Apple slices with peanut butter
  • Smoothies made with fresh summer fruit

Summer Meal Planning Tips:

Meal planning doesn’t have to be complicated. A little preparation can make your week run much more smoothly.

  • Plan meals around seasonal produce to save money.
  • Grill extra chicken or burgers for easy leftovers.
  • Prep fruits and vegetables ahead of time for quick meals and snacks.
  • Keep simple pantry staples on hand for busy evenings.
  • Choose one or two no-cook meals each week to stay cool on hot days.
  • Let kids help choose a meal or prepare simple ingredients to make dinner more fun.
  • Keep freezer-friendly treats and easy snacks ready for busy afternoons.

Final Thoughts

Summer is the perfect season to enjoy fresh flavors, simple recipes, and meaningful family meals that bring everyone together. With a little planning and plenty of seasonal ingredients, dinnertime can be easy, delicious, and filled with joyful moments all summer long.

Here’s to sunshine, smiles, and unforgettable family meals all summer long!

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The Simple Living Mom

The Simple Living Mom

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