Thursday, June 30, 2011
Brand New Bike Path
Our town has recently been paving and turning old railroad tracks that are no longer used into flat bike paths that wind through the woods. Yesterday we took advantage of the glorious weather and visited one. Anna rode her new bike that she got for Christmas and Sawyer happily enjoyed watching her from his stroller. It was so nice to get outside and get some fresh air with our little ones. (Please ignore the juice box on Sawyer's stroller. It's not his -Anna had put it there while she rode her bike -nothing but booby juice for the little guy!)
Wednesday, June 29, 2011
Homemade Ice-cream
Today Anna and I made homemade ice-cream in a plastic bag. It's a great summertime activity. You just pour your ice-cream ingredients (e-mail me if you would like the particulars) into a ziploc sandwich bag. Then you place that bag in a gallon sized ziploc bag that is filled with ice and salt. You shake this for approximately 10 minutes -it really cools your kids down on a hot day. And then, voila! Homemade ice-cream that was pretty darn good if I do say so myself!
Tuesday, June 28, 2011
Blessed
The other evening I was making homemade iced tea and I asked Anna if she wanted to go out to our garden to get some fresh mint for us. She loves this job and happily skipped down the steps into the yard. As I watched her from the window I realized how blessed I am. All of my life I wanted to be a mother. I now have two beautiful, healthy children -a girl and a boy! I get to stand in my very own kitchen and look out on a beautiful yard that I never thought we'd have enough money to own. My daughter loves to help out and never complains (well almost never!) and almost always has a smile on her face. My healthy little guy is full of smiles and love for his family. I have a husband who works hard daily so we can live here and so we have enough money to join the beach, take ballet lessons and buy ingredients to make smores on hot summer nights. I am very, very blessed.
Monday, June 27, 2011
Prison Ministry
I signed up last week to make lunches for our church's prison ministry. We live about 15 miles from a women's correctional facility and often times during the year, the children of the inmates go to visit their moms. Our church volunteered to deliver lunches for the children to eat while they had their visit and I thought it might be a neat activity for Anna and I to make the lunches together. We went to the grocery store and picked out items that would appeal to children -Anna had great input on this. Once home, we made the lunches together and Anna designed little notes to put in each brown paper bag (which she decorated as well). It brought about good discussion such as what is jail like? Can children go to jail? What will the children do there? It was a nice time together, her and I and I think we will sign up to do it again.
Friday, June 24, 2011
Naptime Fun
So over the last few weeks I've been putting together a basket of activities for Anna to work on while Sawyer naps in the afternoon. Now that she's home for the summer, I need to keep her busy (and quiet) while Sawyer naps for two hours in the afternoon. I don't want her vegging out in front of the television so I've come up with some ideas that I'll post her for anyone who finds themselves in the same situation.
When I was teaching I came across a great series of workbooks called Summer Bridge. They are filled with worksheets that review what your child has learned during the school year. They have a workbook for each grade level. They are divided into days so your child has a set amount to work on each day. Since Anna is already reading, I bought her the kindergarten-first grade workbook as well as the first grade-second grade book. She is happily working on them now.
I also bought her a journal to write in each day. Today she is going to make a list of things she would like to do this summer.
Sticker mosaics
Beading
Scratch art
Fashion Plates (I had these when I was a kid and found them online!)
Sewing cards
Weaving cards
Reading books on the summer reading list -she's presently finishing up one on Helen Keller.
Magnetic Pictures (from Grammy)
Puzzles
Hello Kitty Bingo
***I told Anna that we will also watch The Little House on the Prairie Series that Grammy had given her a while back as a gift. I also found a website that has some neat ideas on it -one of which happens to be making your own homemade ice-cream.
Let me know if you have any other suggestions we can add to our list. I'd love to hear them!
When I was teaching I came across a great series of workbooks called Summer Bridge. They are filled with worksheets that review what your child has learned during the school year. They have a workbook for each grade level. They are divided into days so your child has a set amount to work on each day. Since Anna is already reading, I bought her the kindergarten-first grade workbook as well as the first grade-second grade book. She is happily working on them now.
I also bought her a journal to write in each day. Today she is going to make a list of things she would like to do this summer.
Sticker mosaics
Beading
Scratch art
Fashion Plates (I had these when I was a kid and found them online!)
Sewing cards
Weaving cards
Reading books on the summer reading list -she's presently finishing up one on Helen Keller.
Magnetic Pictures (from Grammy)
Puzzles
Hello Kitty Bingo
***I told Anna that we will also watch The Little House on the Prairie Series that Grammy had given her a while back as a gift. I also found a website that has some neat ideas on it -one of which happens to be making your own homemade ice-cream.
Let me know if you have any other suggestions we can add to our list. I'd love to hear them!
Wednesday, June 22, 2011
One More Day
Well, Anna has just one more day of kindergarten. Its hard to believe that the school year is coming to a close. It seems like just yesterday I was putting her on the bus for the first time, watching her wave at me as it pulled away. I'm happy to say she still waves each day and even signs "I love you" despite the little boys that ride with her and tease her about it. Those creeps! She has come so far in just a few short months. She's transitioned beautifully into sharing the spotlight with her baby brother and is more independent than ever. All of the worries and concerns I had when she began have disappeared. Were looking forward now to a long, lazy summer. We've signed up for several activities at the local library as well as swimming lessons everyday. Our town has opened up a brand new bike path as well that we'll be taking advantage of. I'll post "Last Day of School" pictures tomorrow.
Monday, June 20, 2011
My Greatest Joy
Sunday, June 19, 2011
We Own a Sunsetter Awning!
Our Father's Day/Mother's Day gift to one another was an awning for our deck. We LOVE our deck but after having Sawyer, my thermostat has been permanently stuck on hot so we haven't been spending as much time out there as we would like so a few weeks ago we ordered a sunsetter awning. This weekend my dad came over and helped Ron put it up. They always act silly so we got a couple of pictures. There is one of Ron pretending to hold the awning by himself. We also have one of it being opened for the first time. And then the final product. We LOVE it!
Friday, June 17, 2011
Rolling All Over
The little peanut today has figured out how to roll over from back to front. He's done it once or twice over the last month but today it kind of clicked that he could do it whenever he wanted to. It's so funny to put him on his back to play only to come back a moment later to find his little head bobbing around smiling at you. This little guy is irresistible.
Thursday, June 16, 2011
Sawyer's Big Sister
Since day one Anna has been AMAZING with Sawyer. She has never shown an ounce of jealousy and just loves him unconditionally. She laughs when he pulls her hair, giggles when he spits-up on her and just can't get enough of him. She is also very careful and gentle with him. Today however, she accidentally hurt him. I'm not sure exactly what happened because I had been washing a cupcake-batter filled bowl but I heard him howl. Then I heard nothing but silence -the kind where they are crying so hard they don't make a sound and you just know when you hear them again it is going to be really loud. I dropped what I was doing to pick him up and see what the damage was. Apparently Anna had tried to hug him while he was doing tummy time. I don't know if she smushed a finger or hugged him too hard but after some cuddling and rocking he calmed down and had the most pitiful tears in his eyes while his little lip quivered.
Anna was by my side the whole time but after he calmed down she began to cry and said "Mommy when I grow up, if I accidentally hurt Sawyer, I'm just afraid that he'll tell me he doesn't want to be my brother anymore". Now is that not the most adorable thing you ever heard?
Tuesday, June 14, 2011
Anna's Kindergarten Show
Here is one of the songs Anna and her classmates sang last week at her kindergarten show.
Monday, June 13, 2011
Why Being a Toddler Is Hard
I read this article online today and am posting it here to come back to when Sawyer hits this "glorious" age.
Why Being a Toddler is Hard
The real reason for those tantrums and meltdowns
By Melissa Sher
One morning, my then one-and-a-half-year-old son unlocked the child-safety latch of our bottom bathroom drawer. Upon finding my makeup, he began breathing heavily with excitement and staggering around. What a haul! What loot! Imagine his disappointment when, just as he was about to pry the shiny cap off a red lipstick, I picked him up and carried him out of the bathroom. I didn’t congratulate him on his discovery. I didn’t point him in the direction of the hallway’s white walls and say, “My home is your canvas. Go forth and create.” Instead, I ruined everything.
Before I had children, when I’d go to the grocery store and see a little kid in the cereal aisle screaming and crying, I’d shake my head. Why was it that every time I saw a toddler, he or she was throwing some kind of fit? What could be so difficult about spending the day playing, napping, and eating? Now, after living among their kind, I should apologize. Not to you, but to them. Here’s the sad truth: for toddlers, the world is a rough place full of squelched mysteries, restrained freedoms, and nonsensical commands. I think I’d rather be fourteen again than be a toddler.
What does an old, forgotten Goldfish cracker from the bottom of a car seat taste like? What kind of pattern does yogurt make when it splatters onto the floor? What sound do cookbook pages make as they are torn in half? These and many other great discoveries are often stopped by us, the big people in our toddlers’ lives.
What if you sat down to read the newspaper when suddenly — out of nowhere — some giant swooped down and plopped you in front of a pile of plastic blocks? You’d holler your tush off.
How frustrating! What must it be like to get stopped by a security guard time and time again? To be constantly redirected and rerouted as you tried to go about your day, without an understanding of what you had done wrong? What if you sat down to read the newspaper and drink your coffee when suddenly — out of nowhere — some giant swooped down and plopped you in front of a pile of plastic blocks? You bet you’d protest. You’d holler your tush off.
So what’s the reward for a toddler’s natural curiosity? A little freedom and encouragement? No, just the opposite. Oppression! We pin them to furniture all day long: the stroller, the car seat, the high chair. All of the straps! All of the restraints! How maddening it must be to sit, captive, in front of a tray covered with food you can’t identify or don’t remember liking. No wonder it’s so often tossed to the floor.
And does anyone like being forced to perform for strangers? “Blow a kiss. Clap your hands. Wave ‘bye bye.’ Give Aunt Lisa a high five. Touch your nose. No, not your toes … your nose. Okay, now touch your toes. Blow another kiss. Let’s turn on some music. Dance. Dance!”
Do I need to even mention the language barrier? How much can these chubby-cheeked kids actually understand? Twenty percent? Thirty percent? Two percent? They don’t really understand us. We don’t really understand them. Every day must feel like an endless, torturous game of The $100,000 Pyramid. Anyone can see how badly toddlers want to communicate with the outside world. Does a day go by without a toddler picking up some object and holding it to his or her ear like a telephone? “Lo! Lo! Lo!” my son used to yell into a toy truck. Who was he calling? Was he trying to get help?
Of course, in the end, we parents still have to be the bad cop again and again — and again. Toddlers have to eat. They have to sleep. They can’t run into the street every time they notice an open door or scribble with indelible green marker all over the sofa. But I just want the record to reflect that I feel for them. And, in about fifty or so years, I want the toddlers of today to remember my solidarity with their cause and please treat me with care.
Why Being a Toddler is Hard
The real reason for those tantrums and meltdowns
By Melissa Sher
One morning, my then one-and-a-half-year-old son unlocked the child-safety latch of our bottom bathroom drawer. Upon finding my makeup, he began breathing heavily with excitement and staggering around. What a haul! What loot! Imagine his disappointment when, just as he was about to pry the shiny cap off a red lipstick, I picked him up and carried him out of the bathroom. I didn’t congratulate him on his discovery. I didn’t point him in the direction of the hallway’s white walls and say, “My home is your canvas. Go forth and create.” Instead, I ruined everything.
Before I had children, when I’d go to the grocery store and see a little kid in the cereal aisle screaming and crying, I’d shake my head. Why was it that every time I saw a toddler, he or she was throwing some kind of fit? What could be so difficult about spending the day playing, napping, and eating? Now, after living among their kind, I should apologize. Not to you, but to them. Here’s the sad truth: for toddlers, the world is a rough place full of squelched mysteries, restrained freedoms, and nonsensical commands. I think I’d rather be fourteen again than be a toddler.
What does an old, forgotten Goldfish cracker from the bottom of a car seat taste like? What kind of pattern does yogurt make when it splatters onto the floor? What sound do cookbook pages make as they are torn in half? These and many other great discoveries are often stopped by us, the big people in our toddlers’ lives.
What if you sat down to read the newspaper when suddenly — out of nowhere — some giant swooped down and plopped you in front of a pile of plastic blocks? You’d holler your tush off.
How frustrating! What must it be like to get stopped by a security guard time and time again? To be constantly redirected and rerouted as you tried to go about your day, without an understanding of what you had done wrong? What if you sat down to read the newspaper and drink your coffee when suddenly — out of nowhere — some giant swooped down and plopped you in front of a pile of plastic blocks? You bet you’d protest. You’d holler your tush off.
So what’s the reward for a toddler’s natural curiosity? A little freedom and encouragement? No, just the opposite. Oppression! We pin them to furniture all day long: the stroller, the car seat, the high chair. All of the straps! All of the restraints! How maddening it must be to sit, captive, in front of a tray covered with food you can’t identify or don’t remember liking. No wonder it’s so often tossed to the floor.
And does anyone like being forced to perform for strangers? “Blow a kiss. Clap your hands. Wave ‘bye bye.’ Give Aunt Lisa a high five. Touch your nose. No, not your toes … your nose. Okay, now touch your toes. Blow another kiss. Let’s turn on some music. Dance. Dance!”
Do I need to even mention the language barrier? How much can these chubby-cheeked kids actually understand? Twenty percent? Thirty percent? Two percent? They don’t really understand us. We don’t really understand them. Every day must feel like an endless, torturous game of The $100,000 Pyramid. Anyone can see how badly toddlers want to communicate with the outside world. Does a day go by without a toddler picking up some object and holding it to his or her ear like a telephone? “Lo! Lo! Lo!” my son used to yell into a toy truck. Who was he calling? Was he trying to get help?
Of course, in the end, we parents still have to be the bad cop again and again — and again. Toddlers have to eat. They have to sleep. They can’t run into the street every time they notice an open door or scribble with indelible green marker all over the sofa. But I just want the record to reflect that I feel for them. And, in about fifty or so years, I want the toddlers of today to remember my solidarity with their cause and please treat me with care.
Friday, June 10, 2011
Kindergarten is Cool
Anna had her kindergarten show yesterday at school. They have been practicing for weeks and we have enjoyed hearing her sing at home each day. It was 95 degrees outside and it felt much hotter in the gym but we survived. Anna did a great job and we were so proud of her. Grandpa joined us and then we all went out for ice-cream to celebrate (and cool off). Sawyer was good too -sleeping through the whole show.
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