How to organize a fabulous Farmgirl Sisterhood Chapter in your community.


If you're a farm girl at heart, you've probably discovered MaryJane's Farmgirl Connection, a wonderful on-line community where you can chat and connect with other farm girls, no matter where you live. I happily stumbled on to this site a while back and fell in love!

Click here for the Farmgirl Connection site 

It wasn't long after I found this amazing beehive of farm girls, that I made my next happy discovery: The Farmgirl Sisterhood. A bit like Girl Scouts for women, the Sisterhood offers a whole program of projects you can do, for which you can earn Merit Badges--fun hexagon shaped fabric patches you embroider and collect on a tote, apron, jean jacket, or something. How fun! Right away, I signed up. Farmgirl Sister #5290, that's me! 

Then, not long after joining the Sisterhood, I wished to connect face-to-face with like-minded girls in my own community. That's where the local Farmgirl Sisterhood Chapter comes in. There's two ways you can join a Chapter: Find and join an existing one, or start one of your own. I chose to start one. We call ourselves the Fearless Farm Girls.
Find out about Mary Jane's Farmgirl Sisterhood.
Click here for the
 Farmgirl Sisterhood site

Signing up to start a Chapter is easy. Knowing what to do in your Chapter is where it gets interesting. They leave it up to you to do what you want. You can get as creative as you like, design things in a way that work for you and the members of your group. But where do you begin? How do you get a group of girls to want to meet? What should you do in your meetings? In other words: What's the best way to get organized?

I'm sure there are many successful Chapters out there, with plenty of good ideas for starting up a local gathering of Sisters, but here's what the Fearless Farm Girls did. 

Meeting Binders


When I signed up to start a Chapter, I felt unsure. It was just little ol' me not knowing what to do next. But soon, through the Sisterhood website, a fellow farm girl contacted me and expressed interest in joining the Chapter I'd registered. (Gulp--I was not feeling fearless!). We exchanged emails a few times until I asked my farm girl sister if she wanted to help me get this Chapter up and running. (There's nothing like a friend cheering you on, right?) She said yes (yay!) and now we've become good friends--one of the many blessings that come of this thing called a Sisterhood.

We decided to create meeting bindersThe first six binders were prepared ahead and presented at the first meeting (free of charge, of course) to the girls who came (six girls exactly, whew!). Having the binders ready made it easy to explain "the program." Plus, who wouldn't get excited about the pages of scrapbook stuff included in the Project Journal section? 

I know what you're thinking: You must be crazy! You're going to make a binder for every girl that joins your Chapter? The answer is yes, but it's not so hard when you think team-work, girls. 

Team-work is a totally farm-girlish principle. Here's what we did. Shortly after our first meeting, the first six members of our Chapter gathered for an event we called "Binding Together." We hung out, ate homemade pizza, and gabbed while we each made one binder for a future member. Now we can double in size, no problem. See? Team-work is the way to git 'er done!

So, what do you think? Would you like to make binders for your Chapter too? Well, you're in luck! I'm going to help you do just that. The chart below lists everything we put into the eight sections of our binders. On the left side of the chart, you'll find the divider title, and on the right you'll find a link or information on what we included in that section. You can use exactly what's provided here, or feel free to alter any of our Word docs once you download them. 

(Please note: When you click the link to a Word doc, you'll be taken to a Google drive that contains the document. When you open the document in the Google drive the font does not appear in the nice cursive we used, and there may appear to be minor formatting differences. But don't worry, once you download and open the document as a Word doc, it will appear in cursive, and all the formatting should be correct. You can then alter it as much as you like.)

8 Dividers titled as follows:                     Links / Information on what goes in
                                                                 each section
Sister Contact Information
Click for: Sister Contact Information pages for binder.
In our Chapter, we update our Sister Contact chart as new members join. With each girl's name, we include information about each person's interests. This helps the group members know who to pair up with when working on a particular Merit project.
Farmgirl Reads
Click for: Farmgirl Reads pages for binder.
We use these pages to record the titles of farm girl related books, blogs, or magazines the girls have read and want to share with the group.
Project Journal 
I think this is everyone's favorite section. Here, we included several clear sheet protectors filled with fun scrapbook materials. (We color coordinated these with the color scheme of the binder cover). This is where you can have a lot of creative fun. The girls can use these pages to journal and place photos and memorabilia. These become pages we can share with the group in meetings, showing Merit Badge activities we've worked on in the past month. We'll provide more pages to the girls with more scrapbook materials as they use up what originally came in their binders.
Tips & Tricks
Click for: Tips & Tricks pages for binder.
We use the Tips & Tricks pages to record links shared in the meetings. Girls can also bring printed articles, or write-ups of instructions for any tip having to do with the kitchen, garden, laundry, cleaning, crafting, you name it. These can be collected, 3-hole punched, and kept in this section.
Recipes
We have the girls bring printed recipes for any food item they make and share with the group at meetings or events. These can be collected and kept in this section.
Badge How-to
Click for: Merit Badge How-to. Just print the info from the MJK Sisterhood website and place in this section of the binder.
Merit Badge Checklist
Click for: Merit Badge Checklist pdf. Just print the checklist from the MJK Sisterhood website and place in this section of the binder.
Merit Badges 
Click for: The Merit Badge projects pdf. Just print the pages from the MJK Sisterhood website and place them in this section of the binder.

Other things you'll need to make your binders:
1) MaryJane's Farmgirl Sisterhood header from the official website. 



2) Vintage chalkboard pic where you can place your own Chapter name and motto.

Click for: Sisterhood header to put on binder cover. Print the page, cut out the header, and paste it on the binder cover as shown in the layout below.

Click for: Vintage Chalkboard image to place your Chapter name and motto on front cover.
"How to make your own DIVIDERS..."--a how-to tutorial.

Divider titles to cut and paste onto your homemade notebook dividers.
(We pasted these on ruffle-edged 4.5 X 6.5 die cut scrapbook paper and then pasted these to the card-stock dividers).
Divider tab labels to cut and paste on the tabs you make.
Click for: Divider Tab Labels. (You'll find labels for the 8 sections as described above).
Meeting Time Snapshot for back cover of the binder.

(Feel free to alter this word doc to suit your needs). 
 A list of binder supplies you'll also need (per binder):
1. (1) 1-1/2 inch white binder with clearview cover (Avery is a good brand, and the shiny clear plastic looks better than the frosty plastic).
2. (8) pieces of 8.5 X 11 card-stock in the color(s) of your choice.
3. (8) pieces of 4.5 X 6.5 ruffle-edged, die-cut scrapbook paper to mount the divider titles on. 
4. (4) pieces of 4.5 X 6.5 card-stock in the color(s) of your choice for the divider tabs.
5. (1) white legal pad to slide into the pocket inside the back cover, used for note taking during meetings.
6. (2) sheets of 12 X 12 scrapbook paper for front and back cover, and spine. (You can paste the name of your Chapter on the piece that slips into the spine). Also, for the cover, you'll need a couple other pieces of complimentary scrapbook paper, a label tag of some sort where the person's name can go, and something cute to go beneath the label (see layout below).
7. Several glue sticks (Avery makes a good one that's acid free and photo safe and also adheres well).
8. A good paper cutter, because you'll use it a ton!


Here is what the whole layout of the front,
spine and back cover looks like.

How the binder is used as the basis of our Chapter meetings

Our Chapter meets once a month for a general meeting lasting about an hour and a half. In our meetings, the binder is the basis of our sharing time, which we call Gather and Cluck (to borrow some terminology from MaryJane's Farmgirl Connection site). Below, is our Meeting Time Snapshot, which we display on the back cover of our binders (this is a useful tool for showing a friend what one of your Chapter meetings looks like, plus it gets her looking at your binder, which is a great way to pique her interest!):

Notice how we use sections in our binders during the Gather and Cluck time...
__________________________________________________________
Fearless Farm Girls

Meeting Time Snapshot
(We meet: The last Saturday of the month from 6:30 to 8:00 PM).

Girl Gab: (20 minutes)--Arrive, visit, grab something to drink.

Gather and Cluck: (20-30 minutes)--This is a time in which you can...
·       Share from your Project Journal--could be merit work you've been doing, or any farmgirl endeavor you've been working on. Share with the group--
ü  What you did
ü  Who you did it with (if anyone)
ü  Any problems you faced
ü  What you enjoyed about the activity
ü  How your project turned out...(We love photos! You might like to pass around your scrapbook pages from the Project Journal section of your binder).
·         Share new merit badges you've earned--let us congratulate you!
·         Share Tips & Tricks--could be...
ü  Farmgirl finds, current bargains or sales, u-pick info, good farms to get products from...
ü  Tricks you've discovered in the kitchen--garden--on the farm--doing laundry--sewing--you name it. Feel free to bring handouts for the Tips & Tricks section of our binders--something you typed up, or just share a link we can write down to look up later. (If you bring hand-outs, try to 3-hole punch them if you can).
·         Share Farmgirl Reads--could be...
ü  A new blog you found
ü  A great farmgirl related book you've read

Announcements: (5 minutes)--Next scheduled meeting, events, group invitations...

Food Fare: Eat, hang out and visit...Please bring printed recipes to hand out for the food items you make and bring to meetings--we love to collect them in the Recipes section of our binders!
__________________________________________________________

So, that's how our meetings go. It works good to have this on the back cover of our binders, because everyone has it front of them when we meet. It helps keep our meetings on track.

Concluding Thoughts

Starting a Farmgirl Sisterhood Chapter can be a super rewarding experience. Maybe you've been thinking of doing it, but haven't known where to start (like how I felt in the beginning). I hope sharing this information has been helpful to you, or at least sparked some ideas of your own. Whether you're thinking of starting up a local Chapter, or you already lead or belong to one, I'd love to hear from you in the comments below.  

Until next time...

Joy--Fearless Farm Girl,

"Farm girl: it's a verb, because it's what you do." 

Four ways to cope with hardship: Finding inspiration in a season of CHANGE.

"Autumn is a second spring when every leaf is a flower." --Albert Cumas.

Autumn. My favorite season. A time of sapphire blue skies draped behind crimson, orange, and liquid gold colored trees. Breathtaking. Every time I look outside, autumn's brilliance grips me. I stop and catch my breath. These times are little gifts. Opportunities for awe. A chance to whisper gratitude. I need these little blessings. They remind me to pause. Breath. Admire. Give thanks. They are the beats of rest in the otherwise frenzied tempo of life. 

Autumn is a season of change. Even our lake is in a state of change. Every autumn our big blue lake is drained until all that's left is a thin silver river running through the lake bottom. 



An entire hidden world becomes exposed: grassy hills and glades with creeks running through them, pebbled beaches, and sandy plateaus. Vastly changed. George and I love the lake when it's drained as much as when its waters lap at the shoreline. For several months the sound of speed boats is replaced with peace and quiet. We go exploring. We search the beaches for small treasures, like quartz crystal and obsidian, things we would never discover except for the emptying of the lake in autumn.

People's lives go through seasons, too. Mine is in autumn right now. I'm going through change on many fronts. It can feel overwhelming. Both boys are back home for a time. This change is huge. George and I are parents again, facing challenges we've never faced before. The outcome is unknown. The not knowing is scary. 

It's like I'm walking through the empty lake bottom of life. This is not only a time of hardship, but also a time of discovery. It's times like this, when the fullness of life is emptied away, when my heart is laid bare through trials, that I uncover spiritual treasures. Like hope. Hope is my companion these days. Sometimes hope swells. Other times it falls. It swells. It falls. But in the end, hope is enlarged in the soul. I learn to cling to it. In difficult times, one must feed on hope, just as a maple leaf is nourished by the sap drawn up from the deepest places of the tree. Was hope there all along? Yes, like a stone on the lake floor buried under thirty feet of water. It was always there. Available. It just took an autumn of the soul to make me appreciate its value.

Seasons come and seasons go. Autumn can be particularly difficult. Change is not easy. 

Here's four ways I've found to help me cope while I cling to hope: 


Don't go it alone. Talk. A lot. When we're down, we can easily want to crawl into a hole somewhere and hide. But when we withdraw, we only isolate ourselves. This can quickly lead to depression. We need the support and perspective of others. Do you know someone who has gone through a similar situation to yours? Don't be afraid to talk to other people. My friends and family have been a great a support to me. But sometimes it takes more than that. You might want to find a support group. There's nothing more validating than when you discover you're not alone. You're situation is not unique. Others know what you're going through. These people can be a rock when life gives you mud to stand on in the lake bottom.

Be transparent. Don't beat around the bush when you're reaching out for support. When we're afraid to tell it like it is, it's often because we feel shame about whatever we're dealing with. Nothing sets us free faster than when we just get it out there. Our honesty can help us discover the people who can relate to our situation. Likewise, it's just as important to be honest with yourself. Don't be afraid to feel whatever you feel, or to talk about your feelings. Ignoring them won't make them go away. It's when you look them in the face that you can deal with your feelings and begin to move past them. 

Create time for yourself. Down in the lake bottom of life, we need time to explore, to process our experience, to find the spiritual treasure we need to get us through. We need time to reflect and pray. During an autumn of the soul, try to remove from your plate anything that isn't truly necessary. It will take time to glean from your experience whatever you're meant to take away with you. Give yourself that time.

Embrace change. It's much more difficult to move on to a different season if we resist the changes life brings. The purpose of the autumn season is to nourish the soil so it can support future life. Change is a part of life. What feels like death now, will become life in spring. If we can come to embrace the change we find difficult, we will move much more easily through it.  

If you're going through a difficult autumn of the soul, my heart goes out to you, dear reader. I'm right there with you. While in your autumn, may you cling to hope. Spring is coming. 

Joy--Fearless Farm Girl,

"Farm Girl: it's a verb, because it's what you do."