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1. July is Anti-Boredom
Month - Have you heard the words, "I'm bored," already this
summer? I am always surprised that a child who so vehemently
protests going to school also vehemently protests having
unstructured time on his hands. Most amazing, even after what I
consider an exciting weekend (going to Wales and riding horses along
the coast then paintballing with his dad), my son still protests on
the car trip home, "I'm so bored. I'm not getting to do anything
fun!" ARRRGGGG!
- Photo Idea - Snap
a shot of those glum faces protesting terminal boredom.
- Journaling Idea -
Do you remember being bored over summer vacation? What did you do to fill the
long summer days? I recall reading tons of books because we had so few
television channels. I made fairy houses under the roots of trees, an activity
that gave me great creative outlet.
- Page Idea - Make a
page title that announces, "I'm So Bored." Add the sullen photos. List
possible activities that have been rejected. (I said, "How about going
swimming? Inviting over a friend? Starting your new book? Painting your
models?" No, no, no, and NO THANKS. Lordy, I'm such an idiot. How could I
possibly have suggested such STUPID things to do?)
2. And July is
also Ice Cream Month, and July 23 is the official birthday of the
ice cream cone. We once lived near an ice cream parlor
that offered "doggy" ice cream. The cup of ice cream came with a
small bone-shapped dog biscuit plopped right in the center. Needless
to say, our entire family loved going out for ice cream on hot
summer nights.
- Photo Idea -
What are your family's favorite ice cream treats? In St. Louis, we visit Ted
Drewes and I chow down on TiraMizzou, Ted's version of tiramisu in ice cream
form. (Mizzou is a nickname for Missouri University.) My husband loves
banana splits, and my son likes his ice cream with a hard chocolate shell.
Be sure to take a photo of your family members tackling the drip problem.
- Journaling Idea
- Create a list of your favorite places to buy ice cream. Do you have just
one haunt? Or do you visit several spots? Do you go alone or do you go with
other families? Is there a special time/activity that you always celebrate
with ice cream? We always met at a local drive-in ice cream shop after my
son's baseball games. How about you?
- Page Idea - Add
a touch of history to your ice cream page. The ice cream cone was born in
1904 in St. Louis, Missouri, when Charles E. Minches filled a pastry cone
with two scoops of ice cream. The next year, the ice cream cone was
introduced to the public at the St. Louis World's Fair.
3. July is
National Recreation and Parks Month. What a super time to visit
a National Park.
- Photo Idea -
Take a picture of your family enjoying a local National Park. Be sure to
include photos of the park signage. Often the signage is a perfect way to
"locate" your photos without adding extra work and while keeping with the
theme of your page. Photos of signage are also useful for giving you great
information you can use in your journaling. Hey, it's faster to push a
button on the camera than it is to copy done all the verbiage.
- Journaling Idea
- George Catlin could rightly be called the creator of our national
parks because it was he who worried about the impact of America's westward
expansion on Indian civilization, wildlife, and wilderness. They might be
preserved, he wrote, "by some great protecting policy of government... in
a magnificent park.... A nation's park, containing man and beast, in all
the wild and freshness of their nature's beauty!" Later, the idea of
adding "living history" programs brought the past alive for future
generations. Today there are 379 areas designated as part of the national
park system.
- Page Idea -
Why not start a list of all the national parks your family has visited? Or
use a map to mark your visits? If you have the chance, encourage a family
member to participate in a "living history" moment. Seeing your child or
husband struggle to churn butter is a memory worth preserving!
Hip Tip:
Keep your memorabilia in
zipper closing plastic bags. I group all memorabilia by subject, with such
groupings as paintballing, visit to Victoria and Albert Museum, country walk,
and garden. Before stuff goes into the baggie, I pare it down to essentials. In
other words, I won't put in the entire brochure from a hotel, but I will cut out
the photos of the room or the pool or whatever. Often the memorabilia stuff
doesn't make it onto the scrapbook page, but it does help me in my journaling or
color selection for a page. --Joanna
Joanna's new book Adventures
in Journaling is available in stores now! Look for it at your local
scrapbook retailer or at my-memories.net.
Joanna Campbell Slan is a professional author and motivational speaker. She is the author of
Scrapbook Storytelling, Storytelling with Rubber Stamps, Quick &Easy Pages, One Minute Journaling,
and I'm Too Blessed to be Depressed. Buy these books online at my-memories.net.
Joanna can be reached by e-mailing savetales@aol.com.
LEGAL STUFF:
Scrapbook Storytelling (R), Story Starters (TM) and PhotoStarters (TM) are trademarks of PaperDolls of St. Louis.
These Story Starters are used by permission and are (c) 2001 PaperDolls. All rights reserved.
If any Story Starter mailing sparks new ideas that you have, please share by sending them to me at
savetales@aol.com. Be
sure to check back for new installments of this monthly column by Joanna here on
About Scrapbooking!
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