First of all, THANK YOU for the amazing response on Truth in the Tinsel! I am absolutely overwhelmed! I literally had butterflies in my stomach all day yesterday because of your comments, shares and facebook likes. There are almost 500 likes on the Truth in the Tinsel page! Unbelievable. I saw the almost-finished-final-copy of the book today and it looks SO good! Cannot wait for Black Friday for y’all to see it!
Since the 31 Days to Impress Your Kids, my whirlwind Relevant Conference and my jet-setting adventure to New York City, I feel like I haven’t done any “normal” Impress Your Kids kinda posts. In fact, I don’t feel like I’ve done a lot of normal stuff around our house! We’re chugging away with home school but it really takes some time to insert the specific Bible activities into our day.

My main avenue of teaching God’s Word the last few months has been by copying what our church is doing. Remember our
Super Sunny Day this summer? Well, now that Lydia is in the elementary department (*sniff*) she has monthly themes in her class. A few months ago was a MONSTER theme. Sound kinda weird for church? It was, in fact, one of the best things I’ve ever seen.
The big idea was self-control. The theme verse was one I’ve been wanting to teach Lydia for a long time:
Like a city whose walls are broken down is a person who lacks self-control. Proverbs 25:28
And the monster connection is that when you lose self-control you are letting a monster run wild. Wild enough to break down a city’s walls. So, the whole month was about “taming the inner monster”. I just love that visual!
The first week they sent home a talking-point card (including that cute giant paper clip). We kept it on our kitchen table and read it when we eat dinner. So, we talked about different kinds of self-control: talking too much,
letting our anger run wild, eating too much, playing and not working, etc.
Then, the next week we came home with a blue cricket cage. Yeah, like you use to keep crickets in! But instead of crickets we had these little suction-cup-pop-up monsters. And each person in our family got their own monster! We were instructed to put the monsters in the cage at the beginning of the day and if anyone “let their monster out” by losing self-control, they would literally have to take the toy monster out of the cage!

Well, my kids LOVED this. If one of them would cry, whine, refuse to obey or throw a fit, at the end of it, they’d say (in contrite little sniffling voices),
“I need to take my monster out of the cage, huh?” And they’d take it out so everyone could see. Usually at dinner we’d all discuss if the monsters were out of the cage. The best part of this is that my husband was on a diet then. So, he wasn’t drinking any soft drinks (which is super hard for him). If he had bought a drink that day he’d come home and say, “I have to take my monster out of the cage. I didn’t use self-control.” And it was such a beautiful picture for our kids to see how even adults have to work on self-control! (And that kids should get that “monster” under control now, so they aren’t struggling with it for 30 years!)
We had so many great conversations during this month because of those little monsters! When Lydia went to Camp Primo, she even took her monster with her to remind herself to have self-control. I was so impressed!
I wanted to do some monster-themed activities at home during that month, I even started a Monster Pinterest Board. But for whatever reason (maybe because they started a new theme the next month?) we never got around to the monster crafts. I think I might save them and then pull out some monster crafts next time we need to work on self-control! You could totally take this same idea and do it at home—find a little cage, make some funny little monsters and make an active step toward paying attention to controlling that “inner monster”. I really feel like Lydia will remember that picture the rest of her life–I know I will!


additional photos by Upstreet
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10 Comments so far
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It sounds like you use the same curriculum that we do at our church. I love the monster cage.
Madonna´s last [type] ..Pick and Draw {Review}
By Madonna on 11.16.11 2:11 pm | Permalink
That’s a great idea. I wonder if it would work for my family? Honestly, I think my dad would completely fail if we use this one!
isabella´s last [type] ..hand
By isabella on 11.17.11 10:17 am | Permalink
I’m a behavioral specialist and often work with little kiddos along side a “Angry Monster Workbook” that gives them lots of activities about controlling anger. This is an absolutely wonderful idea and will be adding it to that workbook for the next kid I work with, and can’t wait til my daughter is old enough to use it in our house! Thanks for sharing!
By Laurel on 11.17.11 1:53 pm | Permalink
I found those suction cup monsters on the Oriental Trading website and am going to use this in my children’s church class after we finish our Christmas lessons next month. Thanks for the idea!
By Megan on 11.17.11 9:55 pm | Permalink
Great idea! Thanks for sharing this to us. I gave me an idea as well!
CorinneC´s last [type] ..forex journey
By CorinneC on 11.19.11 2:19 am | Permalink
COOL!
By ohamanda on 11.21.11 8:01 am | Permalink
This post is really cool!!Thanks for sharing it..
abegail´s last [type] ..door awning
By abegail on 11.22.11 10:00 am | Permalink
LOVELY!! Really simple and effective. I could use this idea straight away with my two foot-stampers! thank you
Anna @ The Imagination Tree´s last [type] ..30 Days to Hands on Play Challenge: Small World Play
By Anna @ The Imagination Tree on 11.25.11 4:30 pm | Permalink
Love this! Our little monsters need some visuals. This is great!
By Suzanne on 11.27.11 6:49 am | Permalink
this is the best websight ever, being here in Australia with a blended family it gives me inspiration.
By Loise Njuguna on 05.04.12 3:30 am | Permalink
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