Wednesday, 21 December 2011

Household Hints just before Christmas

Because I can never for my life remember most household tips, I made notes from a library book and recorded them here for future reference.  Who knows, you too may pick up a tip or two!

Some of these may very well be old hat to you.  I have included vehicle-tips, because as the wife of a precious husband who does all the car-jobs, I have not the first inkling of  the most basic and elementary checks needed.  It can only be a good thing, to up the knowledge from naught to two.

So, here is the harvest of my reading and note-taking while on the bus or waiting for a bus between Hatfield and St Albans. I hope there will be an idea or two you could add to your own repertoire!
  1. When doing the dishes. add vinegar to rinse water.
  2. For shine-as-new, soak glass-ware in warm white vinegar.
  3. Rub half a lemon around plugholes to help remove lime scale deposits.
  4. Keep a damp cloth handy to wipe up spills.
  5. Sprinkle spills in the oven with salt and wipe off when your oven is cool.
  6. Treat stubborn spills with a paste of bicarb and water.  Leave for 10-15 minutes.  Wipe with soft cloth.  Only do this when your oven is cool.
  7. Clean and deodorize your micro-oven like this:  Place 3 or 4 slices of lemon in water.  Leave for one minute on high.  Wipe inside.
  8. Pour out water in your kettle after use to prevent lime scale.
  9. Sprinkle the bin with biacarb.
  10. Soak the shower head in a bowl of vinegar. Scrub holes with an old toothbrush.
  11. Use foamy oven cleaner for grout – open the windows! Spray, count to 3, wipe and rinse straight away.
  12. Prevent mould in the bathroom by once in a while wiping a little baby oil over the bathroom walls and ceiling.
  13. To shine taps, use a little bit of toothpaste and wipe with damp cloth.
  14. Use washing up liquid to clean baths.
  15. Clean plughole by pouring in one cup of washing soda and then a kettle-full of boiling water.
  16. Clean and tidy as you go.
  17. To get grease on upholstery off, mix 2 teaspoons vinegar and 250ml luke-warm water.  Wipe.
  18. Clean windows on a dry, dull day.
  19. Pick up slivers of glass by using a slice of bread.
  20. Cheap and effective window-clean: Add a good dash of vinegar to water:  it cuts through grease and keeps flies away.
  21. Very dirty windows:  1 teaspoon household ammonia and 1 tablespoon methylated spirits in 2 cups of water.  Decant into a labelled spray bottle.
  22. A few drops of glycerine on a cloth  - wipe – this will stop mirror or windows from steaming up.
  23. Or….run the cut side of a potato across windows or mirrors (also for car)
  24. Clean your washing machine as follows:  Run 4-4 litters of white vinegar though your machine on a warm water setting, followed by a rinse cycle.
  25. Check your washing machine fittings from time to time.
  26. Pre-treat collars by rubbing them with soap or make a paste of bicarb and white vinegar and give them a good scrub with an old toothbrush.  For oily marks, use shampoo.
  27. Stains – soak clothes in cold water.
  28. Use 1 part glycerine to 2 parts water – apply to stain – leave for an hour.  Wash.
  29. For anti-perspirant stains, rub with a toothbrush a paste of biacarb, salt and water.
  30. Spray cotton wool with your favourite scents.  Let it dry and pack amongst your clothes.
  31. Banish smelly shoes by filling old socks with cat litter and stuffing shoes with those.
  32. To deal with lime scale in an iron: fill it with white vinegar, turn up the heat to the steam setting. Switch off, cool down and pour out.  Refill with water and repeat until all the residue is removed.
  33. To save electricity, turn appliances off at the sockets.  The computer screen uses the most electricity of the whole c computer.
  34. Find out how to foil-back your radiator.
  35. Thermostat on hot water:  60 degrees are enough.
  36. Make your own sandwiches.
  37. Talcum powder sprinkled into the joints and gaps between floorboards can stop creaks.
  38. Silence squeaking hinges with a bit of washing-up liquid, a pencil or a bit of washing-up liquid.
  39. Check under the car for fluid leaks.
  40. Bodywork damage – get fixed asap.
  41. Change windscreen wipers once or twice a year and check for splits and tears.
  42. Check oil once a month.
  43. Check oil: pull the dipstick out, wipe clean. Make sure the oil level is above the minimum mark.  Top up with the correct grade of oil –see your car manual.
  44. Car oil should be clear and the colour of honey.  If not, go to the garage.
  45. Under-inflated tyres can use up toe 3% more fuel – so check.
  46. Ensure correct pressure – check your handbook.  1.6mm/0.06 inch of tread is legal.  Change your tyres at 3 mm.   Worn tyres kill.
  47. Get a friend to help you check your lights, including those of the number plate.
  48. Brake-plates – it’s worth paying for the service.
  49. Don’t ignore dashboard warning lights.
  50. Check the battery connections: are they tight and free from corrosion.
  51. Slugs and snails:  smear petroleum jelly on the outside of the container or WD40.
  52. Ants.  Locate the nest and sprinkle lots of talcum powered around and on the nest.  Spray vinegar around doors and doorsteps.
  53. Serve cheese at room temperature.
  54. Omelette and scrambled egg turns into restaurant servings when a splash of sherry is added.
  55. Ripen avo’s in a plastic bag with a banana skin.
  56. Buy the dirtiest celery you can get and wash it when you need it.

Tuesday, 20 December 2011

A Christmas Idea for Young Children: Christingle

Christingle orange

 

Christingle……..a word we’ve never heard until we emigrated from South Africa to the UK.   With the heightened awareness of being new to a country, we watched families walk to church under tall skeleton winter-trees in Virginia Water, Surrey.   So unlike summer Christmases in South Africa, the little girls were dressed in coats and boots – and scarves and hats and gloves were the order of the day.  The occasion was the family Christingle service at Christ Church.   Inside the old church, the children’s expectant faces lit up in the glow of many small candles.  Loved it!


Fast-forward more than a decade.  Michael, Isabelle, Josie and Evie are due to arrive from Germany in London early Friday morning.  I’m racking my brain for Christmas ideas applicable to pre-schoolers and for showing us all something about Jesus, our Saviour.
Christingle!  Easy to assemble and explain and we can’t wait to see how our little granddaughters respond!  Wish we could kidnap our New Zealand family and 2 grandsons, Joshua and Jesse!


I've surfed the net, but sadly couldn't find an advertised Christingle service in the many London churches.  Could that be because there are more unmarried young adults than families?  Maybe.  Be it as it may, we are going to have our own Christingle at home - and it should work just fine.  


Isiah 9:2 The people walking in darkness
   have seen a great light;
on those living in the land of deep darkness
   a light has dawned.
John 8:12  When Jesus spoke again to the people, he said, “I am the light of the world. Whoever follows me will never walk in darkness, but will have the light of life.”
 What follows is a short description of Christingle, kicking off with a brief history, the symbolism and how to assemble the Christingle.

Christingle In 1749 in a church in Germany a Bishop started a Christmas tradition that is loved by children and adults, and enjoyed in Britain today and around the world. His name was Bishop John de Watteville and he led worship among the Moravian Congregation in Marienborn, Germany. He was the creator of the Christingle service. Christingle means "Christ-Light."

The Christingle service is a gentle way to share with our children or our grandchildren the bigger picture of the incarnation of our Lord Jesus Christ and why He came from heaven.

 The simple candle service remind us that Jesus brought light into darkness. The looped red ribbon gives opportunity to tell that Jesus shed his blood and died for our sin and salvation. The service is based around explaining the symbolism in the Christingle and as each part in explained the Christingles are assembled. When all is assembled the lights in the church are dimmed and the candles lighted. The candle light on the excited children's faces is a beautiful sight. In John de Watteville's day it is recorded that the children tried to keep their candles alight the whole way home.
How to make a Christingle
  1. A sweet, juicy, shiny orange represents the goodness of the earth that God created.
  2. Four sticks (cocktail sticks or tooth picks) are put into four corners of the top side of the orange. These represent the four seasons of the year.
  3. Onto each stick is threaded dried fruit like sultanas or raisins. This represents all the goodness of the fruit of the earth and the richness of animals and birds that God has provided on his earth. Sometimes we use small jelly sweets or candy.
  4. A red ribbon wrapped around the orange and fixed in place with a pin represents the blood of Jesus who died for the salvation of the whole world. In the Moravian tradition today a ribbon is looped around a candle at its base.
  5. The white candle is placed in the very top of the orange into a pre-prepared hole. Sometimes some foil is used to help fix the candle into position. This candle represents Jesus, the light of the world, God's son. In the Moravian tradition it would be made from beeswax and would also represent Christ's purity, as this type of candle burns cleanly.
A modern British Christmas is secular in so many ways. Christingle, reading the Christmas story by candlelight  are two of many other ideas to show our children the Light of the World.

"I will celebrate nativity - it has a place in history -what is that to me?
Till by faith I met Him face-to-face, and I felt the wonder of His grace,
then I knew He was more than just a God who didn't care....."

Sunday, 4 December 2011

Happiness and Expectations

The two  motivations behind this short post are:
1)   a  friend’s question on face-book this week: “Christian, could you be happy with heaven if Christ was not there?”
2)  All the December-happiness-hype.


So then let’s start with motivation #2 illustrated by  a few random copy/paste twitters to get us going on a strand of happiness-hopes.


imagesCAY2NHK4

  • MissHoneypenny Miss Jane HoneypennyIt is December 4th and I have done my very first happy-because-its-snowing-wiggle-dance for this season
  • Happy December 2 everyone!!!
  • Happy #25Days of Christmas!! 
  • Now that it’s finally here, you can see The Santa Clause at 7/6c and kick-off December in the merriest way!
  • Happy December beautiful people! Hope it's an amazing month for everyone.
  • It's officially the most wonderful time of the year! Happy December, loves! How are you all doing today? Feeling in the holiday spirit
  • happy december :) this is the beginning of lots of christmas movies & yummy hot chocolate!
  • December is such a happy month..
  • Dear December, please make my wishes come true. Sincerely, me. Happy December everyone! :D
 
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It’s 4 December 2011 today – and it’s no secret that we are and will get bombarded with Christmas-expectations in the next 21 days: oh, the hype!   The buzz, the build-up are quite nice.  But do the hopes of these days and and the reality of 25th December measure up? Well….
Let’s ask the same question about Jesus and heaven:  will the hopes held out for the Christian be met in the reality of heaven.  Infinitely more than our highest hopes!

Back to Stephen’s face-book question: 
“Christian, could you be happy with heaven if Christ was not there?” 

I have a few notes on heaven, Jesus and happiness and gladly share them with you.


  • Heaven is where the glory of Jesus Christ is exalted above all things and where reality is the all-satisfying.
  • The most exhilarating, adrenaline-rushed experience on earth will be dead-tame in comparison with gazing at and talking to Jesus Christ.
  • Overwhelmed by God’s magnificence, we are going to embrace Him and eat with Him – walk and laugh with Him! We will never lose our fascination with Jesus and beholding His face.
  • For now we have to strain our imaginations. The majesty and magnificence of Jesus stagger the most creative imagination!
  • We are going to go face-to-face with Jesus. Seeing Him in “high definition”, maximally blessed. 
  • Who will steal the show millennium after millennium? Jesus. Jesus clothed in pure majesty, glorious in holiness, God on full display. 
  • The redeemed are going to be eternally awe-struck by His excellence as we marvel at the high and lifted up greatness of God. (In your imagination, hear the Italian redeemed boom, “Manifica!” Viva Jesus! )
  • What a sight it’s going to be: seeing Jesus Christ, the Lamb slain for sinners in all His beauty, seeing Jesus exalted at the right hand of God with the scars of battle in His hands.

Heaven is… total, uninterrupted, incorruptible, happiness and bliss with the Trinity, redeemed and angels.   Happiness in heaven without Jesus? Not a chance!

a) Happiness as in December-hype?
b) Happiness as in heaven with Jesus?

Gordon and I vote for “b” with every confidence.  Of course we live in time and do not write off the hope  to taste something of that future lasting happiness during the build-up to Christmas 2011.  Of course there is no guaranteed ban on post-Christmas-blues and disappointments!

So at the beginning of Christmas,  while we are enjoying the twinkling lights, food, gifts, people and buzz,  we also deliberately remind ourselves/warn ourselves not to lean too heavily on December-happiness for joy.   There’s much too much evidence that it does not deliver according to expectations and promises.  To lean totally on Jesus and the promised hope of heaven will end in  a happiness that busts all imaginations – a hope that will deliver and not disappoint.