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Summer with Your Kids

It’s the end of the school year! No more homework tantrums or sports practices. No more rushing every morning to make it on time to school. Freedom is here! Oh, wait–there are two words that kids tend to repeat during the summer break: “I’m bored!”  Whether you’re a working woman or a stay-at-home mom, you might encounter a day when you don’t know how to entertain your kids while they’re out of school.
Consider a few of the following ideas to enjoy during the summer with your kids. It’s important  to consider the age range of each child, because some activities might be boring for the older kids while the simpler ideas prove positively fantastic for the younger ones.
Plan ahead
If you don’t spend most of your time at home, we recommend keeping a calendar listing the activities you want to try.  That way you can prepare ahead of time. You and your children can sit down together and discuss the kinds of activities they want to experience. If you’re on a budget, it’s essential that you limit your activities to the ones that are home-based or don’t require too much
out-of-pocket expense.
Attend a “story time” at your closest library
Almost every library in town hosts book readings; children of all ages enjoy learning about different subjects.  Take advantage of their natural curiosity and check out books for them. Allow older kids to choose one or two for themselves. This summer fun experience will help them develop good reading habits in the future.
Catch a movie at the dollar theater
There always seems to be one movie that you and your children didn’t get around to seeing. Take advantage of a matinee during the week when flicks are less costly…and splurge on some popcorn to share!
Sprinkler Day
This can be the perfect excuse to get the bathing suits out and have fun jumping through the sprinklers on a hot day. This means you, too, Mom! You can water the garden while the hose is on and take some time to talk to them about water conservation and other conservation topics.
Make homemade play-dough
This activity is fun even for adults.  It’s a form of relaxation because of the waythe dough is kneaded and pounded–and it even serves as aromatherapy! Working with Play-Dough can help calm anxiety and teach children that crafts don’t have to come from a store to be fun (see recipe).
Bake a cake: Kids love sweets!
Why not have them cook their favorite cake and surprise mom or dad when they arrive home one afternoon?
Play entrepreneur
Plan a garage sale inwhich your children sell their unwanted items, or set up a lemonade stand. You can get together with some other parents to help with the sales.
Go bowling: Bowling is one of those activities that can bring family together.  Invite your friends and family!
“Table games” day: Many kids don’t realize how to play games without a computer.  Break out the old-fashioned board games, including memory games, poker, chess and others.
Volunteering: Lots of organizations in our city recruit volunteers over the summer. For example, the El Paso Museum of Art is accepting applications from teens 14 years and older.
Play “My Favorite Rock”: Use the rocks in your back yard as craft items. Take children on a rock hunt.  Have them pick a rock they like and decorate it with acrylic paint in the color of their choice. You can use them as patio decorations.
These are only a few activities that you and your kids can try. You’ll think of even more as summer marches on. Remember that what’s most important is the love you give them and the time you spend together.

summerIt’s the end of the school year! No more homework tantrums or sports practices. No more rushing every morning to make it on time to school. Freedom is here! Story continues…


A Colorful Labor of Love

Have you ever wondered how blind people dream? Well two women did and their curiosity led to the inception of “Do You Dream in Color?” a documentary film about visually impaired children’s waking dreams.
The project was started by USC graduates, Abigail Fuller and Sarah Ivey Dickerson about two and a half years ago. When El Paso native Norma Saldivar moved to California, Fuller and Dickerson invited her to join them on this life-changing labor of love.
At the age of four, Norma Saldivar asked her parents if they could all move to California; they didn’t budge. At the age of eleven, she’d walk around imagining scenes out of a movie on every street corner, her sisters called her weird. Norma light-heartedly defended her oddities by saying, “my weirdness will get me somewhere.” By 18 she was already on her way.
Norma studied film at the University of Texas at Austin, where two of her short films were accepted at South by Southwest, a widely recognized music, film, and interactive conference and festival. Soon after, Norma moved to California (with only 15 dollars) where she worked as a production assistant on ABC’s hit show “Brothers and Sisters.” For many, things don’t always fall into place so perfectly, but for Norma her life flourished when she became involved as the Line Producer for “Do You Dream in Color?” “I have experienced a few things but I’ve learned from them. Nothing’s perfect or easy. Having a good attitude is so important. You have no idea how much that’s helped me.  Everyone has to find their own passion, their own drive,”
stated Norma.
The intention of “Do You Dream in Color?” is to bridge the gap between the blind and sighted worlds by animating the dreams of blind kids. “We are animating dreams of visually-impaired children to interpret how they see the world. We’re intertwining that with their waking dreams over the course of a high school year,” explained Saldivar. The film crew met over 300 children and personally interacted with each and every one of them. They narrowed it down to seven visually-impaired children who showed extraordinary ambition, but most importantly, didn’t see their blindness as a disability. “These kids were very ambitious,” stated Norma, “some even more ambitious than sighted people.”
“Do You Dream in Color?” starts off at Camp Bloomfield, a camp for blind teenagers based in Malibu. Over the course of the year, the film crew will follow each teen in their respective city, as they overcome adversities, struggles but most importantly, live their lives. Working with blind children has opened Norma’s eyes–an impact she hopes the film will have on the rest of the world. “These kids don’t let anything stop them. It’s nice to see that inspiration considering they’re visually impaired. At first I would get sad, because I felt bad. But the more I hung out with them, the more exciting it was. They’re not dwelling; it’s not a disability, it’s an ability. It has opened my eyes to the whole world and not automatically assuming   that because someone’s blind, they’re sad,” stated Saldivar.
The film crew will follow the seven children until June of 2010. Viewers will experience fun and touching stories from one student named Hannah, who was born in China and adopted at age twelve by American parents. Hannah’s purpose throughout the film is getting reacquainted with her past. Another student named Carina is a second generation Mexican-American and the first in her family to graduate from high school and attend college. “Do You Dream in Color?” is set to release in January of 2011 and the crew remains hopeful on premiering the documentary at the Sundance Film Festival.
If you would like to make a donation or get involved in the “Do You Dream in Color?” project you may
e-mail Norma Saldivar at DoYouDreamInColorDoc
@gmail.com.

Dream2Have you ever wondered how blind people dream? Well two women did and their curiosity led to the inception of “Do You Dream in Color?” a documentary film about visually impaired children’s waking dreams. Story continues…