Wednesday, May 6, 2009 in I Forgot To Pick A Category

Emma’s Day surgery

Just a quick update – Emma is having day surgery tomorrow on her hand. She has a “bad” mole on the back of her hand. She wasn’t born with it, it just grew there. It’s blotchy and uneven, so it has to come off. It doesn’t hurt her or anything, but it *is* the kind that will grow unto something nasty.

The surgery is pretty simple, takes about ten minutes the doctor said, and he gave me the choice whether to use a local or knock her out. I bet you can guess which one I picked. :)

They called today to confirm / remind AND to tell me they moved the time up from 10:50 to 7am. Now, I understand their reasoning; they want the children done first because they have to fast from midnight, it’s less stressful first thing. And there’s less waiting.

But, um. We go to bed late. We get up late. Plus we have a ONE AND A HALF HOUR drive to get there. So now we need to get up at o’dark o’clock and fall into the car and DRIVE. UGH.

Top that off with Sarah going to check out a few rooms for rent in town, and I think the actual hospital part of our morning is going to be the easy bit.

Emma’s not really worried or apprehensive (yet). We promised her a Webkins. :D

I have to go get ready for bed now and the sun is still setting. I’ll post as soon as we get back tomorrow.

Tuesday, May 5, 2009 in I Forgot To Pick A Category

Homeschooler’s shopping list

What is: a hydrangea plant, a Latin dictionary, and ice cream?

A homeschooler’s shopping list on a beautiful day, that’s what.

It was so gorgeous it was hard to stay inside, harder still to sit at a desk. So, as soon as we could (ie; after I wrapped up a long phone call to foggy San Francisco) everyone piled into the car and headed to the locally-run nursery.

We had decided to remove this ugly tree-thing in the front yard which was neglected for a good five years. Maybe if it had been regularly trimmed it may have looked not so bad, but when we decided to yank it out, all that was left to do was argue what to replace it with.

So I got to pick out a hydrangea. They had two kinds – bright red-pink and white. I wanted the PINK, Ron liked the white. We asked the kids:

Sarah: “Don’t care, I’m moving OUUUUT!”
Meaghan: “Mmmm, I like the.. white one.”
Emma: “I like the white one, it’s pretty”

Me: “FINE. We’ll pick the white one.”

Ron: “Happy Mother’s Day?”

The guy watering the plants must have thought we were crazy.

After that, we swung into town and hit up the local Dairy Queen – Sarah’s treat. Finally, we headed out some back roads to the local homeschooling supply place. Now, I forgot the name of the road they are on, and so did Ron, plus we were driving from a different direction – but we still found it fine despite remembering some vague picture of the intersection in our heads.

Then we saw a moose with two calves in the field. Ron not only stopped the car, he turned it around so we could all get a better look.

Finally, once inside Debbie’s place, breathing in the books – THE BOOKS – finding the hefty “pocket size” Latin dictionary Meaghan wanted, we headed home.

Sunday, May 3, 2009 in I Forgot To Pick A Category

Your life in a box

We’ve been reading chapter books to Emma at night now; it makes my voice scratchy and I never can read aloud without feeling out of breath, but her eyes are sparkling, her imagination piqued.

I hunted around for books I knew, and couldn’t find them. Today, I dug out a couple of unpacked boxes from the back carport. Aha! A gold mine treasure trove of friends she hasn’t met yet.

The to-read stack for Emma is quite large.

Then we foudn a box of her childhood – funny, since she’s eight. But in there, a lot of her favorite picture books, storytime with Daddy and even a few Meaghan exclaimed over. Ones we can recite by memory, the whole family. “Bear in bed. Bear OUT of bed. Bear at the window…”

I dug some more, just curious as to what I’d forgotten, and what was still relevant. Funny how stuffing things in boxes and leaving them there for two years highlights what you really need or miss.

At any rate, a pile of notes, a score of inventory sheets I’ll be glad to burn, a mess of instructions, some hastily scribbled sketches. “I used to own a craft store,” I tell people, “but it was just a little one”. Not terribly successful financially, but I suppose it’s only looking at all the paperwork left behind, I think I made a teeny difference to the people around me with nothing to do in the middle of a Tuesday afternoon. there’s a piece of paper listing every single craft class I taught – 62 the circled number says at the bottom. Sheesh, I’m tired just thinking about it. The dates are 1996, 1997 – a four year old, a six year old and a nine year old. How on EARTH did I do it? And we were homeschooling! Can I get that energy back?

I find some scrapbooks – newspaper clippings that Ron had saved and I have carefully placed in a scrapbook, as that is “what you do”. I find another with pictures of my grandmother’s quilts she made. Photos, notes, newspaper clippings. All going yellow.

Every time I lug a box back in the house, I walk by another pile of boxes with my grandfather’s kitchen in it. I still have to finish going through that.

It’s almost yard sale season, and we’re making a pile, but the things I’m keeping – the things with meaning, real meaning – to any of us, those things should be in some place of honor, or at least somewhere we can see them use them, have them participate *in* life. Not sit in a box.

Some things though are for sharing. Some things – the pictures, the notes, the important stuff with details people won’t remember 50 years from now unless somebody writes it down – those things I’ll scan and upload. Useful bits for some people, record keeping for family. Sharability.

I use my blog to remember, and sometimes I forget there was a before. But I can fill in a lot of that.