05.08.08

A Glimpse…

Posted in Braces, Cricket, Pumpkin, Sunshine tagged at 2:33 am by Anne

By four o’clock today the girls and I figured the day was a loss. The man of the house away and missed, some disappointing news, important mail that didn’t come, an orthodontic appointment for Sunshine, a dentist appointment to fill a cavity and add sealant for the Novocaine resistant Pumpkin, the rescue of a sun stricken baby possum, and a missed haircut due to the delay at the dentist, not to mention the house sorely unprepared for the move next week, had us all looking at each other and heaving a big sigh.   I had been eyeing the new Iron Man movie and decided that instead of going to work out at the Y, I’d see if we couldn’t redeem the day. 

I called the girls from the various and sundry areas of the house to which they had retreated and asked them if they wanted to go.  There was an unusually cautious response but a positive conclusion was reached with some encouragement and we set out for the theater.  Several hours later our moods were substantially improved.  The movie was a hit all the way around and we set off for the local pizza place amid post movie chatter since everyone was hungry and the massive quantities of Novocaine incapacitating the full half of Pumpkin’s face had finally worn off.  The pizza came and went… and as I sat waiting for Sunshine to finish her last piece I looked around at the animated faces of my four daughters caught up in the conversation.  Their faces were bathed in light as the day came to a close outside and time slowed as I caught a glimpse…

I’ve caught glimpses before you know, glimpses that take me back… kissing Pumpkin’s forehead goodnight I’ll occasionally get a whiff of that smell she had when she was a baby and closing my eyes see once again her tiny form making the mattress of her baby bed seem as big as a King size mattress.  Watching Cricket do her excited little hop reminds me of the hop Precious used to do when she was about two years old.  Little things that take me back to days gone by, precious memories of when my girls were small.  This glimpse was different…

This glimpse was of future days… days ahead when my daughters will no longer be teens and pre-teens, but beautiful young women in their own right.  Days when they are grown, with lives of their own, when we will get together and do things not just as mother and daughters… but as friends too, sitting around some future table making new memories or reminiscing over the old. I looked at their faces and saw, for just a moment, the beautiful women they will become and heard, for a brief second, the laughter of more mature voices and good times yet to be had echoing back through the years. 

As we drove home through the dark blues skies and greens hills of a late  spring dusk, country music escaped the windows and warm breezes whipped our hair around our faces.  Peeking in the rearview mirror, I spied smiling faces tipped up to the wind, eyes squinted against the strings of hair lashing their cheeks and thought how proud I am of them, how much fun we have together… We have had such an awful year, my husband and I agree that this has been the worst year in our entire marriage… not because of family strife, but due to outside events – many beyond our control.  Yet even now, at the end of such a year and with yet another move and many uncertainties ahead, the girls are able to find, to make, these shared moments of joy… They are happy… and my heart fills with joy at their happiness. 

I ignored the urge to prolong the drive home, to hold on to the moment just a little longer, and allowed this precious time to come to its natural close, buoyed by the knowledge that it would take its place in the hallowed halls of our family memories… and that here are many more to come… after all…

I caught a glimpse.

03.17.07

Pseudo Spring… Break, That is…

Posted in Cricket, Homeschooling, Precious, Pumpkin, Spring Break, Sunshine at 8:15 pm by Anne

This past week was spring break for the local institutional schools (public, university, and so on).  We do not follow the institutional school schedule. We are homeschoolers! (What can I say, it’s one of the benefits…)

 Ok, I have to stop here because Pumpkin was reading over my shoulder and choked out “BENEFITS!?!?!?!?”  I confess, my head swivelled. “You don’t consider taking two weeks off in the middle of October when all the other public school kids are slaving away to go to Disney in the sweet season BENEFITS????”  She rapidly rethought her position and began bobbing her head in agreement while muttering something about ‘thought you meant all the extra school work we get done’… ungrateful wretch that she is… harumph.  So I turned to her and said that for penance she could go make me a fresh cup of tea.  I’m pleased to inform you all that she burst out laughing. *big grin* (As it was purely amusement at the audacity of my request, and not disrespectful, I consider that an indicator of successful parenting.)  Once her mirth was under control, she said she WOULD make me a fresh cuppa, because she loves me. Awwwwwwwwwww.

Where was I… So when my children heard it was spring break and all the public school kids were going to be out for the entire week they turned speculative gleams mom-ward.  It was MY turn to burst into laughter.  I am so not that easy. After informing them that we would certainly not be taking off an entire week thankyouverymuch, I granted that we might take a day off as nice weather was in the forecast. They thought this a lovely concession and went away happy discussing which day they would choose to take off. As if they would get a choice. HA.

Tuesday was lovely so we took the afternoon off (I had intended to do so provided we schooled in the morning and had nice weather) and all day Wednesday.  Both days were the peak weather for the week and by far the best weather we’ve seen since last fall.  Warm enough that the girls were out in shorts and bare feet, playing in the grass and the stream that runs through our back yard.  By Wednesday afternoon, they had used up a good bit of that spring fever and settled a bit. 

My girls aren’t your average girls, they aren’t the type who only think of boys and make-up and clothes. When they get out, they ride bikes, swing on a rope, play dart guns or soccer with the boys down the street, shoot bb or pellet guns/bows and arrows, try to get a thrown knife to stick every time, track animals in the woods and by the stream (for fun, we don’t kill them) etc… however the usual result of being shoo’d out of doors is that they end up reading books on a blanket or beach towel in the sun instead of inside. The cats joined them for some love and provided the occasional break from the books.

Thursday saw the return of cold weather. Despite the tentative shoots put up by bulbs, new growth on trees, etc, spring is still some weeks away.  It was back to the grindstone for us as well.  Lessons done while the weather is dreary mean lighter days when the sun beckons and warm breezes blow. Still, even though it wasn’t REALLY spring, it was a blessing and a nice break with hints of the glory to come.

02.13.07

Communication, 21st Century Style… aka The High Tech Beggar…

Posted in Books, Pumpkin at 8:34 pm by Anne

So I’m sitting here in front of the tv with my family and Pumpkin (dd 14 yrs old) has just finished a book she found in our library.  It is an allegory, and not one she knew we had. She loved it so much that she read it aloud to her sisters and accused me of ‘withholding’… She should know by now that if I BUY a book, it is WORTH reading… (other than the odd book that ends up a waste of a good tree anyway… which isn’t often) he. he. he.  Anyway, as the book indicated sequels she made for the downstairs computer to look them up on Amazon. Shortly, an IM window popped up requesting my attention. It was from Pumpkin… who was still downstairs on the other computer.  I know. We are sick people, IMing in the same house.  However, were we not sick people, I would not have this for your reading pleasure.  What can I say… the child IS creative… (Unfortunately, the smiley’s we used did not transfer…)  We did end up talking about yet another book she wanted from another series that is a family favorite and that is when things got fun…

Pumpkin: I am looking at
Pumpkin: a book that I have been looking for
Pumpkin: for a year and 8 months
Mom: title?
Pumpkin: I was told it was comeing out in july
Pumpkin: PLEASE MAY I TELL IT TO BUY?!?!?!?!
Mom: title?
Pumpkin:
Rangers Aprentice:The land of Ice and Snow, book 3
Mom: it is set up to purchase on that computer?
Pumpkin: What does that mean??
Mom: you had best let me do it dear
Pumpkin: Now????

Pumpkin: I’ll beg
Mom: that could be interesting
Pumpkin: Shall I start
Pumpkin: ??
Mom: oh please
Mom: I am not sure that it is possible
Pumpkin: Oh thou merciful mother, who bore me in thy body….
Pumpkin: And has fed and nourished me…
Pumpkin: and probably has quite a few gray hairs on thy head because of me……
Pumpkin: I BESEACH thee…..
Pumpkin: Oh please take note that…
Pumpkin: all the money and effort you have spent on me…
Pumpkin: from teaching me to read and not bite thee…..
Pumpkin: to getting me braces so that my teeth wilt not sprouteth from my ears……….
Pumpkin: may yet go to waste….
Pumpkin: for if I do not get this book before the next month is up…
Pumpkin: I shall probably die…
Pumpkin: of anticipation…
Pumpkin: for now that I know that It is out………
Pumpkin: and that I do not have it my body begins to waste………..
Pumpkin: I beg of thou, oh most merciful and compassionant majesty…..
Pumpkin: to grant me a repreive…..
Pumpkin: so that I may live….
Pumpkin: and thy money and effort shall not be in vain…
Pumpkin: So To make a long tale short
Pumpkin: I beg of you …
Pumpkin: buy The Icebound Land (Ranger’s Apprentice, Book 3) by John Flanagan NOW
Pumpkin: Lest I fall down and die at they wonderful non-stinky feet
Mom: awwww and you were doing SO WELL…
Pumpkin: I can start again
Mom: oh no… that will be QUITE sufficient… for this book anyway
Pumpkin: If it please thee to grant the humble wish of the un-worthy and VERY stinky bunny-keeper…
Pumpkin: and If she were to pay for it..
Mom: oh well, one does have the ability to redeem ones begging self, doesn’t one…
Pumpkin: woulds’t thou also get the 4th book wich I justnoticed at the very bottom of the screen???

Mom: you are SO good…
Pumpkin: Shall I start again?
Mom: no, that is quite sufficient. boon granted.
Pumpkin: I thought it best to take it slow
Pumpkin: and THANK you
Mom: yw.
Pumpkin: Oh merciful One

Pumpkin: we are drooling all over the key board down here
Mom: we?
Pumpkin: Yep
Pumpkin: Still in shakesperian type mode
Mom: ah ha
Mom: uh dearest?
Mom: you DO realize this is a PRE order?
Pumpkin: Noooooo
Pumpkin: I didn’t
Mom: ordered anyway as a pre order
Pumpkin: but I’ll settle for that
Pumpkin: THANK YOU
Pumpkin: AM DOING CARTWHEELS
Mom: yw
Pumpkin: ON THE CEILING

What can I say? The child can beg with such class… heaven forbid she realize how fun that was and decide she wants yet more books…

02.10.07

Tutoring Does the Trick…

Posted in Homeschooling, Pumpkin at 8:14 pm by Anne

Don’t remember how long we’ve had the tutoring going now… but it is going well.  The troublesome semester is successfully behind us and duly celebrated with a pizza party.  The subsequent semester is ALSO successfully behind us and was completed in one short month! Pumpkin is now hurtling head long through the current semester and the tutor anticipates this semester being completed in a single month as well which puts her starting Beginner Algebra at the beginning of March. 

11.14.06

A Major Milestone…

Posted in Homeschooling, Pumpkin at 4:36 am by Anne

Thinking about it, this shouldn’t be quite as big a deal as it is.  After all, my children have taken swimming lessons and music lessons from other people, as well as participating in religious ed. classes… but for some reason, today feels like a first.

Today, a math tutor walked through my front door.  She wasn’t here for a visit.

In my ten years of homeschooling my children, this is the first time anyone has taught one of them academics of any kind other than myself. 

My eldest, Pumpkin, has been struggling with her math for about a year. She flunked a semester of math because she wasn’t motivated to do it, preferring to read instead of expend energy on academics. (The dual blessing and cursing sides of the homeschool coin.) Oh, she turned in paper with lead on them… but not consistently accurate enough work to pass the course, much less maintain the ‘A’ average of which she is capable. I reiterated to her the necessity of academic excellence and gave her the opportunity to remediate that semester.  Last week, we discovered that despite a more serious effort, she still had not managed to pass the course. 

I’d like to be clear here.  Pumpkin did not fail because she is lacking in intelligence.  She did not fail because she didn’t understand the material or was incapable of doing so.  She didn’t fail because the program was incompatible with her learning style.  She didn’t fail because she was bored at having to do an excessive amount of the same type problems. She failed because she decided that until she figured out what she wanted to do with her life, she didn’t see the point in wasting time or effort on her math when she’d rather be reading instead. (I know this not just because I am MOTHER, her TEACHER, and one of her constant companions… though I did know it, she TOLD me that in so many words!) However, despite that, when my husband finally got involved in the discussions, more than one of the above excuses were offered by himself, a serious questioning of my judgement, ability to competently teach our children, and a body blow for which I was unprepared. A placement test over that material proved that this was not boredom, but proved out the true lack of knowledge of the material.

Once you’ve ‘clocked out’ so intensely for such a long time, ‘clocking in’ doesn’t happen immediately, kwim? Bad habits are much easier to acquire than to overcome.  Being almost halfway through 8th grade, time to address this issue before it becomes part of her permanent high school transcript is waning.  Thus, serious discussions were undertaken, a contract containing expectations, goals, rewards, and penalties was drawn up, signed, and a tutor hired.

I must admit that having to hire a tutor is one thing.  Having to hire a math tutor is something else entirely. I love math. It is one of my great passions. One of my big, hairy, audacious life goals is to go back and get my degree in Mathematics with a teaching certificate once the children are grown. I’m not a bad math teacher either – despite not having a degree, often answering questions and explaining concepts for friends or friend’s children, even over the phone!  So on top of feeling like I’d failed my daughter (I know, I know, it’s a leading the horse to water issue…), I felt even MORE a failure for having failed at teaching math!

So, it was with resignation, and many mixed feelings that I greeted our new math tutor at the front door. A very neat lady and quite the kindred spirit (loves to read, loves math), she came in and tackled the situation with grace and good will.  She looked at the test, looked at the material Pumpkin failed to pass, looked at the materials I had switched to in an effort to work through the problem areas, and gave her approval of them and they were off. (The approval of my choice of materials was a balm to my savaged teacher’s soul.)

I had another obligation and so had to leave part way through the tutorial. Upon returning home, I was met at the door by Pumpkin who was eager to share how the experience went.  She enjoyed it!  She got along very well with the tutor - who fed the book-monster with discussion after getting the business done… and Pumpkin told me that she was very impressed with this tutor because of how she dealt with her.  Pumpkin said that she half expected the tutor to schmooze her, say how it really wasn’t that bad and yada yada, just taking the money and saying what we wanted to hear.  She said she really liked it that the tutor was honest with her. The tutor sat down, looked the stuff over, and said that I (her Mom) was RIGHT, that she really thought Pumpkin could’ve done this material if she had just applied herself and that she had done this to herself but that she thought they could get her caught up if she’d apply herself and it not be nearly so hard as Pumpkin had anticipated.

**Pardon me while I do a major happy dance.**

I can’t stress enough what a burden this problem has been. How frustrating, how demoralizing.  My self confidence had been badly shaken, not to mention the soaring concern over character flaws I perceived in my daughter which allowed this problem to flourish. Pumpkin appeared to be understanding the seriousness of the situation, but she’s appeared to do so before to no avail.  I was desperate over how to reach her and almost at my wits end. To have someone like this tutor, a bonafied math teacher and school counselor in her own right, come in and agree not only with the materials I was using, but also agree with my assessment of the situation was a blessing beyond what I am capable of describing beyond admitting that I am teary just at thinking of it. To have my daughter admit that this was true, to appreciate the honesty and agree that the tutor was right, and to be relieved in her own right at the prospect of being able to remedy her problems and attain the goals set for her and rejoice in the solution was huge. The relief and lightening of my spirit is substantial as well.

So in the end, what I anticipated as a serious blow, a failing, the proverbial finger in an already burgeoning dyke, has become a blessing.  Not only are we dealing with the problem and working not only actively but successfully toward the solution and desired goal, but I think some real healing has taken place in my daughter, in myself, and in our relationship with each other.  This has been good for my daughter because an impartial observer has given a ‘ruling’ and didn’t sugar coat it. She understands that she IS being held accountable in the same way I have, but by that impartial observer.  She understands that I was on target in both my expectations and my assessments of her academic ability and efforts. Her confidence in me, and mine in myself, has been renewed. Best of all, we are both looking at this situation as a bump in the road again, instead of the Everest it had become, and we are partners again instead of adversaries… no longer bound in mutual feelings of despair, failure, and bondage.

God is so good to have put friends in place who encouraged me to engage this tutor, who recommended her, introduced us, and understood when I could not, that this did not have to be a mark in the ‘con’ column. I am so grateful that God does not expect me to be perfect, but to do my best, and when I have exhausted myself to that end, steps in and carries me. I pray this experience helps me to strive all the more to be a better mom and teacher for my children… and that in the end, God would not hold my failures in either endeavor to their accounts.

08.09.06

Two days down…

Posted in Homeschooling, Pumpkin at 2:06 am by Anne

Two days down, two hundred to go… give or take a few.  I sit on the couch with the family piled around having finished our second very successful day of the year.  The break was good for all of us and the girls have plunged into the new school year with enthusiasm and endurance.  The discussion we had at the end of last year about grades, grading scales, averages, and GPA’s has stuck with them and they are actively assessing the grade on each paper as it comes back to them.  Pumpkin is also figuring up her daily average and determining whether or not  it was a ’successful’ day in her opinion which is a massive step in the right direction.  Our days are a bit longer than I’d hoped and we haven’t gotten Latin going yet, but that is fairly normal and hopefully will settle down a bit as things get more familiar and into a groove. Part of the length may be due to a later start in the morning… so once we’re getting into bed on time and up on time that may help. It’s a good start. I pray that it will end up being a good year as well!

06.29.06

Girl Speak/Boy Speak…

Posted in Books, Pumpkin at 11:07 pm by Anne

So my eldest has found a book in the ‘grown up/great literature’ section that doesn’t look boring… and finally found one of my favorite authors… Alexandre Dumas.  The book is The Man in the Iron Mask.  We happened to have it taped, so watched the movie last night.  She is definitely hooked. Dh and I teased her about her not liking it, so why didn’t she let US have a go… to which she instantly assumed ‘penitentiary meal position’, book clutched protectively to her chest, shoulders hunched, eyebrows furrowed ferociously… entire posture screaming TOUCH MY BOOK AND DIE.  To which I responded, but Pumpkin, the GROWN UP section doesn’t HAVE any GOOD books! (quoting her own words back to   her of course)  Did you KNOW that you can exaggerate the above posture?  It takes GREAT talent and skill, and a substantial helping of Pubescent Hormone Therapy, but it IS possible. I have witnessed it. 

Fast forward to poolside today, the neighbor boys are playing in the water with the girls, and Pumpkin, in true enthusiastic bibliovore fashion, inquires if this young man, a few years her junior, has read The Man in the Iron Mask.  To which he replies, “The comic book?” The discussion went downhill from there, until I finally had to step in and explain to him that she meant a REGULAR book and that she wasn’t simply confused re: comic book titles, and to HER that there were comic book titles somewhat similar. I could tell that Pumpkin was somewhat frustrated… he was a BOY after all, and this was a really fabulous book with lots of heroism and chivalry and battle and stuff… SURELY he had read it… In the end, no, he hadn’t read the book. End conversation. 

And they say we TEACH these differences… Too Funny

06.22.06

All four are ’strung up’…

Posted in Homeschooling, Music, Pumpkin, Sunshine at 5:03 pm by Anne

No, I have not finally ‘gone and done it’.  The children are all fine.  However, the two who were NOT taking a string instrument are now… ’strung’ as well.  Precious and Cricket, the two middle girls, took up violin lessons last January.  First recital completed earlier this month, the other two girls  have decided to take the plunge as well, except these two are taking viola lessons.  One instrument loaned to us by the teacher, another purchased and winging it’s way to the house, and music lessons for four on multiple instruments have given me renewed appreciation for all my parents did for me in my own musical career of sorts.  The instruments, the lessons, cost so much money, and take up time as well.  I am so grateful that they invested in me musically.  Music has been such a rich and important part of my life… even now when practice is all too rare, the ability and knowledge is there… a blessing which may lie dormant for a time, but is capable of blossoming once again to provide joy and pleasure in due season.  I pray that my children will be similarly blessed… that they will come to know the beauty and joy of music as I did… In the meantime, I listen with great pleasure to the attempts of neophyte musicians and if I close my eyes, I fancy I hear otherwordly accompaniment faintly in the background. Music lessons are not unlike parenting… we teach, seeing and hearing not that which is before us- unpolished and raw- but seeing and hearing instead the possibilites of what gem might be hiding therein, and trying to help THEM see it as well… 

06.16.06

Book Fever

Posted in Books, Pumpkin at 5:47 pm by Anne

I went in to tuck my oldest daughter in for the night last night and got an unusual response to my usual ‘Sweet dreams’.  She muttered,”Not likely.”  Pouty  I, of course, questioned such melancholy only to find it due to a BOOK!  Here I’m wondering what slipped through the safeguards that would give her such trouble… after all, this child watches movies all the time that would give another nightmares with no trouble at all.  The book was second in a new favorite series (loosely based on the Rangers from Tolkien’s LOTR series), recently released.  She had come to the end of the book only to find a cliffhanger of an ending.  This was a hardcover and there was a blip on the author along with a picture in the back flyleaf.  As Pumpkiin was wailing about the long wait until the next book came out and how awful it was going to be, and how she wasn’t going to be able to sleep for thinking of what might happen next etc et al… She all of a sudden interjects a new problem.  She said, “I’ve SEEN this author (the pic), and he’s a STORYTELLER (our family’s term for a person of senior citizen type age as a result of their being a wonderfully inexhaustable fount of stories)!!! WHAT if he DIES before he finishes the next book!?!?!?! THEN where will we be????”  Mumbling something conciliatory,  I picked up the book and headed to bed myself.  First thing I did upon opening the book to read it, was turn to the back flyleaf and check out the author’s picture.  I like the series too, just how close ARE we to that horrid possibility of author’s death?  Shouting with laughter I hollered across the hall to her room, “PUMPKIN! That poor man isn’t any older than your FATHER!” I heard some sheepish mumbling reply… and I do think she got to sleep… eventually.

06.06.06

Summer begins…

Posted in Homeschooling, Pumpkin at 2:30 am by Anne

So it is summer yet again.  We know this because the public school kids on the street were out in force this morning during school hours.  My children didn’t bat an eyelash until Pumpkin got out of the Orthodontists office and HE had asked her if she was out of school yet.  She replied that we homeschooled and that school wasn’t out for the summer until her mother got tired of grading papers!  ROTFL  She kills me… Of course, at the end of sharing this exchange with me, this very nearly 14 year old crossed her arms and gave me a ’so what about it Mom’ look.  I used the whistle and when everyone was assembled made the relevant proclamation.  We ARE going to have school this summer! But being the lovely mother I am (ie I have some work that will go better if you don’t interrupt me every two minutes) I will let you have the day off and if you work HARD for me this summer, will give you other days off during the summer at appropriate intervals.  Those poor wretches… They THANKED me! As a result, they played outside, Nancy (our neighbor) and I took them swimming at the pool, we went to  QQ Buffet with Joe for supper, and then ended the day with a family walk which put me (finally) at over 10,000 steps in a day for the first time in a very. long. time.  Unfortunately, I did NOT get to do the work I had planned for the day.  However, I think the day of good hard play will set us up nicely for contented seatwork tomorrow… and perhaps,Lord willin’ and the crick don’t rise, even for the rest of the week.

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