Wednesday, September 24, 2008
Painting Mental Pictures-Trees: Outdoor Hour Challenge #31
I love oak trees. This oak is standing in a meadow in Yosemite Valley. I know this beautiful oak is not in our backyard but it was just such a perfect little scene of things that I had to capture it for my memory book and share it with you too. Charlotte Mason speaks in her writings about memorizing scenes to recall at a later time. This is one that will stick in my memory for a long time. The autumn light and the yellow-green of the grasses made this a perfect painting in my mind.
"The ability to take a mental picture of the beauties of nature is so fulfilling that it is well worth teaching our children how to do it.....Have the child look thoroughly at some landscape, then ask them to close their eyes, and bring up the image in their minds.....In the beginning the children will need help to get them started. So the mother might show how it's done by saying, 'Look at the trees reflected in the water. What do the leaves remind you of?' until the children notice the main details. She should memorize a couple of mental images and impress her children by closing her eyes and describing it from memory."
Charlotte Mason, volume one, pages 48-49
"Imagine what a treasure they will find when, years later, they are able to pull out memories etched in full detail of the beautiful scenery from their childhood home!"
Charlotte Mason, volume one, page 47
What a wonderful aspect of our outdoor time with our children! We can seize opportunities to instill in them a love and respect for nature as well as give them the gift of wonderful memories.
"Mental picture painting is a game that children enjoy, although it takes a good bit of concentrated attention and is therefore tiring. It should only be done once in a while. Still it is good to have children memorize some scenic landscape images because, while making the memory requires effort, the habit of looking more closely at detail is learned as an unconscious by-product when children are asked to make detailed mental images every now and then."
Charlotte Mason, volume one, pages 48-49
Barb-Harmony Art Mom