Oct 31, 2010

Dressin' Up

If ever there was a weekend for dressing up, it would be this one, Halloween weekend, starting with Friday morning.   First we were firemen.



Then Saturday we suited up for Noah's last soccer game of the season. Noah scored the final goal of the game ... which may or may not have been deliberately set up so he could get one in.  We have loved our first Upwards Soccer experience and Noah will surely do it again next year.


After that we test drove our Halloween costumes at a Fall Festival.




Sunday morning, Anna dressed up for church by donning her psuedo-pillowcase dress that Aunt Emily made for her.  Not long after church, Anna fell in the driveway and ripped a hole in the knee of these pants,  whereby we dressed up her boo-boos in Hello Kitty bandaids.


After naps and an early dinner, it was on to the main Halloween attraction - trick or treating! 


This shot came right after Josh had to kill a bird that got stuck on a glue trap in our garage. So sad. Noah and Anna and I prayed in the kitchen that it would not feel anything and just as we asked, Josh said that critter's head came off quicker than he knew was possible.  So sad.  So disturbing.


Noah was fearless this Halloween.  He tore from yard to yard.  Josh walked Anna to most doors (slow going as she was) although she did do a couple on her own near the end.  I waited on the sidewalks with the wagon. Noah's "trick or treat" came out so clear this year as did his "thank you"s.  I was so proud of how he paused and looked every person in the eye to say thanks. Anna could only squeak out "Tweet" if she said anything at all. Well, that and "puntin!" for every pumpkin she's seen all week. The quote of the night came when one man called Anna a doll.  Noah corrected him and said, "No.  Her's not a daw.  Her's a fairy!"

Pirate and Fairy trick-or-treated til they could walk no more.  They were both pooped out. Anna was literally pooped.  Got that?  Literally pooped. So as it turns out she was lugging around more baggage than we knew all night! Gross.  Not as gross as our very own beheaded Halloween bird, but still, gross.


Back at home, Pirate and Fairy took inventory of their loot.  I went to work snatching out all the peanut ingredient candies.  Waste not, want not, though; those bad boys built Mommy and Daddy's candy stash.


Happy Halloween, y'all!
Bring on the holiday season!

Oct 28, 2010

Laying It On Thick


Home Work

Noah is struggling to show progress at school with any activity involving fine motor skills - coloring, copying letters and shapes, cutting, ripping, etc.  So I started researching preschool development and appropriate learning activities to suit those needs.  What I found was a great book full of great activities targeted to improve a preschooler's fine motor skills.  I am in love with it.  And it's not just because it will help my boy practice fine motor skills, build his confidence, and improve his work at school.  I am in love with this book because it taps into my former self - Mrs. Brown, the classroom teacher. I may not be in the classroom, but I have a student I adore, time to pour into him, and fun hands-on activities and centers and experiences to prepare and organize and implement.  What fun!  School is in session!  The book is called Mighty Fine Motor Fun and they aren't kidding;  I'm having a blast and we're only one activity in!


The first activity I chose for Noah (and Anna) was a sorting activity using the following materials. I had already gotten the beans for another fine motor skills idea I saw in a magazine.  When the cashier rang up all my lentils he asked if I was making some 8 bean soup I can't remember the name of.  No, I said.  A mosaic to practice fine motor skills with my son.  Ha!  You should have seen the look on the guy's face.  Not the answer he was expecting and we both got a good laugh out of it.


Noah couldn't get his hot little hands on the beans fast enough.  He was so into it before he even knew what we were doing.


He worked and worked. And then he tried a shortcut that missed the point altogether and had to start over again.  I jumped in and helped him along reminding him he didn't have to do it all in one sitting.  But he did.  You couldn't pull him away from his beans and muffin tin task.  He did relocate to the porch for a change of scenery though.


Look at those pincers go!  Great grasping form, Noah!


Mission accomplished.  Is anyone else melting at his satisfied and proud expression?


His reward for a job well done was a packet of Pop Rocks.  That was pretty fun, too.

Oct 27, 2010

Gimme a D, R, Y!

Noah, you are a full 4 1/2 years old by now.  I am not going to stress over or push you too hard to master nighttime potty training before your body is ready to handle it.  But I will challenge you to be sure about whether or not you are ready.  I think you are; Daddy does not think so.

So I merely offered a reward chart to motivate your nighttime potty efforts in case it is within your power to manage it.  When you make it through the night dry, you get a stamp.  When you get yourself up and go potty all by yourself, you also get a stamp ... even if you are wet in the morning.  The fact that you roused your sleepy head up and out of bed is a big step!  So at this stage of the game, an A for effort is worth as much as a dry pull up as far as I am concerned.  Once you fill the chart you get to cash it in for a brand new toy of your choosing. As I expected, you rose to the occasion.  It didn't hurt my cause either that we changed the rules for your video games - you can only play video games if you stay dry the night before.  Who knows, maybe that is where the real motivation lies for you. Suddenly, we have dry nights, and twice as many Noah solo night/early morning potty runs, too.  This tells me you are ready.  So we're keeping it up.  We even give you a head start by getting you up for one last potty run when we go to bed.  This sometimes means we practically carry you to the potty and back because you are so out of it and you keep stumbling around.

Nevermind all that, though. This week you finished your first nighttime potty training chart and you are so pumped about that accomplishment.  Here's how it looks filled to the brim with your hard earned stamps.


Now we are on to your new and improved chart, excusing Mommy's embarrassingly crooked lines:


For this next challenge, Daddy and I will not get you up for one last potty run when we go to bed.  That job falls on you now. My job will be coaching and cheerleading.  And crossing my fingers and toes and praying.

Give me a D!
Give me an R!
Give me a Y!
What's that spell?
Happy Mommy - I mean, Noah!

Go, Noah!  You can do it!

'Tis the Season

Tis the season for pumpkins.


Tis the season for leaves.


Tis the season for playing in the leaves.


Tis the season for dressing up.


Tis the season for being outside, enjoying the fall air.


Tis the season for runny noses and crusty faces.

Oct 26, 2010

What Are Little Girls Made Of

As I put on my make-up this morning, Anna joined me at the counter.  She climbed on the stool and peeked her eager eyes over the top to see as much as she could.  "Dat?" she asked as I put on my blush.  "That's called blush, baby.  Would you like some, too?"  Ah, hah, she said.  I stroked the brush lightly on both her cheeks (it is picture day, you know), and her reaction stole my heart.  She closed her eyes, lifted her chin slightly, grinned, and giggled.  It was like she believed she'd been sprinkled with fairy dust.  Her sweet manner got her a dash of eyeshadow, too (except not really - nothing was on the brush, but she didn't know that).  Her answer?  "More."

I better start drafting lessons for teenage make-up application now.

Anyway, I say all this to say:  What are little girls made of?  Sugar and spice and everything nice, yes!  But if you look closely, you'll see fairy dust from Mama's make-up bag.

Speaking of fairies, Anna test ran her Halloween fairy wings yesterday.  They got the thumbs up from us both.


Oh my word.  Fairy dust, indeed.

Oct 24, 2010

Feeling the Foliage

The past five days we have enjoyed the company of Josh's parents.  I love how family visits throw routines and schedules out the window.  I love the change of pace and the relaxed fellowship.  It's invigorating.  Our past few days have been sunny and bright, much like the fall foliage we are enjoying.


I mean, seriously, how lovely is this?  Quite.  Quite lovely.  I took this shot just in time. By twilight the next day the leaves were more brown than bright.  I should have sensed the foreshadowing.


I think my favorite trees in the fall are the ones that show the transition of the season the best.  I could just stare and remark and stare some more at trees like this. 


But today my mood is like my poor tree.   So depressing, isn't it?


 Me and my tree are kindred spirits.  I feel quite gloomy tonight. Josh's parents have gone.  Josh has gone too on another several days worth of traveling.  And to add insult to injury, the sun took off, the clouds rolled in, and the beautiful fall colors are halfway out the door.  It's a good thing there are sugary sweets and kiddos in happy costumes coming up on the schedule.  I need a pick me up already and it's not even Monday!

Memaw and Papa John

It's hard to not feel the love when Memaw and Papa John come to town.  They are experienced grandparents, you know.  They know the way to your heart.


They give tickles and kisses and hugs.


They teach you to make oatmeal the right way.


They come bearing gifts - this time in the form of a hand-me-down Barbie Power Wheels from some Florida cousins.  And when Mommy spots a great deal on a Power Wheels 4-wheeler, a good Memaw helps get it in the car and a good Papa helps get it assembled  ASAP! 


They share their birthday glory by letting you help blow out their candles. They also keep you stocked with chocolate, fudge brownies, ice cream, chips, Ginger Ale, and Cheese Nips.


Then they tickle and giggle with you some more.




We miss you already, Memaw and Papa John.  Looking forward to Christmas at your place. 

Oct 20, 2010

Amens: 1 Corinthians

Taken from The Message translation. 
  • 1 Corinthians 1:25 - Human wisdom is so tinny, so impotent, next to the seeming absurdity of God.  Human strength can't begin to compete with God's "weakness."
  • 1 Corinthians 1:30 - Everything that we have - right thinking and right living, a clean slate and a fresh start - comes from God by way of Jesus Christ.  That's why we have the saying, "If you're going to blow a horn, blow a trumpet for God."
  • 1 Corinthians 2:16 - Isaiah's question, "Is there anyone around who knows God's Spirit, anyone who knows what he is doing?" has been answered: Christ knows, and we have Christ's Spirit.
  • 1 Corinthians 7:17 - Where you are right now is God's place for you.  Live and obey and believe right there.
  • 1 Corinthians 7:20 - Slavery is no roadblock to obeying and believing.
  • 1 Corinthians 7:24 - Friends, stay where you were called to be.  God is there. Hold the high ground with him at your side.
  • 1 Corinthians 7:29,30,31 - Keep it simple - in marriage, grief, joy, whatever.  Even in ordinary things - your daily routines of shopping and so on.  Deal as sparingly as possible with the things the world thrusts on you.  This world as you see it is on its way out.
  • 1 Corinthians 8:3 - ...sometimes our humble hearts can help us more than our proud minds. We never really know enough until we recognize that God alone knows it all.
  • 1 Corinthians 8:7 - But knowing isn't everything.  If it becomes everything, some people end up as know-it-alls who treat others as know-nothings.  Real knowledge isn't that insensitive.
  • 1 Corinthians 10:6-12 - (lessons learned from the Isrealites mistakes in the desert) ... be on guard so that we never get caught up in wanting our own way...we must not turn our religion into a circus....We must never try to get Christ to serve us instead of us serving him...We must be careful not to stir up discontent.
  • 1 Corinthians 10:12 - Forget about self-confidence; it's useless. Cultivate God-confidence.
  • 1 Corinthians 13:8,9 - Love never dies.  Inspired speech will be over some day; praying in tongues will end; understanding will reach its limit.  We know only a portion of the truth, and what we say about God is always incomplete.

Amens: Genesis, Exodus

Taken from The Message translation
  • Genesis 1:1,2 - First this: God created the Heavens and Earth - all you see, all you don't see.  Earth was a soup of nothingness, a bottomless emptiness, an inky blackness.  God's Spirit brooded like a bird above the watery abyss.
  • Genesis 6: 8,9,18,22 & 9:1 (verses of namesake for my Noah, a heritage I would be proud for him to emulate)  - But Noah was different.  God liked what he saw in Noah. ... Noah was a good man, a man of integrity in his community.  Noah walked with God. ... "But I'm going to establish a covenant with you." ... Noah did everything God commanded him to do. ... God blessed Noah and his sons.
  • Genesis 15:6 - And [Abram] believed! Believed GOD! God declared him  "Set-Right-With-God."
  • Exodus 14:14 - GOD will fight the battle for you.  And you?  You keep your mouths shut!  (Also the NKJV - The Lord will fight for you, and you shall hold your peace.)

Stuff Said Around Here

Josh: (joking) Get that boy dressed already!
Me: (joking, but serious too) I don't know if you can dress a tasmanian devil.


Noah fell and hurt himself and came to me crying and making a bit of a dramatic scene. Chewie jumped up at the fuss and hurried to Noah's side. That's when I noticed Chewie was actually, excuse me for this, humping Noah's leg.
Me: (annoyed, grossed out) CHEWIE, NO! GET DOWN!
Noah: (adorably unaware) {sniff,sniff} I just fink Chewie be helping me calm down.
Me: Um, no. That's not what he was doing. Noah, when he grabs your leg like that you make him stop.


Me: Anna, what would like for breakfast?
Anna: Behfess!
Me: Ok. Would you like grapes? Or cheese? Or pancakes? Or cereal?
Anna: Or!


It's not uncommon for Noah to say this when he's eating: There's a party in my tummy!


Me: Noah, stop shining that flashlight in people's eyes.
Noah: It OK. I just a powice offifer! I gonna catch somebody!


When the oven timer rings, Anna: Didder weddy! (read - dinner ready)


While I prepared him a plate of cantaloupe, Noah said, "Not give me too much, Mommy. Might give me diaweeyah."


Noah tried to say Pinocchio the other day. It came out "Punkyochio."


Noah is missing his Power Wheels car. We've been keeping our eye on sales, stores, and Craig's List looking for a good deal. Noah and I were discussing his options yesterday.
Me: I think the police car one will cost too much. What about the four-wheeler. I like that one for you.
Noah: Four-wheeyer? Ok. You get me dat?
Me: Maybe, if we can find a good price. Or maybe we will wait and see if Santa brings one?
Noah: No, I want you get me one.
Me: Me?  Why me?
Noah: Because I wuv you.
Me:  Ha! Is it because you think I'd get it sooner than Santa?
Noah: (duh mom tone) Santa can't not bwing it every time.  You need to dis time.
I guess he has a point.  Santa did bring him the first one two years ago.  And we have been saying a lot lately that he can put this or than on his list for Santa.  I thought it was a good deflection tactic, but apparently Noah has been keeping track of the tally.

Oct 19, 2010

Taa Daa: Spackle and Tackle

These past two weeks, besides finishing Anna's room and the guest room and besides spackling, sanding, and painting over small holes we had in a number of walls from the previous owners still, I also tackled two other small home improvements.  First, the playroom flooring. The rug in our playroom was looking pretty rough. Kids, sippy cups and mud will do that to a piece of bound carpet.  If I hadn't gotten it for free in a barter with my parents before we moved, I think I would have cried over having to let it go.  This is best pic I could find to show a "Before" shot, but if you click on it, you will surely see the stains and spots that haunted me.


This new rug in the playroom is one we have had since our AL days.  It was our living room rug there but we have not used it since moving here.  It felt so good to pull it back out (freeing up more storage space in the process) and to see it work out great in the room.  A real upgrade.  And free!


Second, I improved upon our front entrance space.  The two long windows flanking the front door really left me feeling unnerved at night, especially when Josh was out of town. So not long after we moved here, I bought those temporary paper blinds you just stick up and clip to the length you want.  It's not the greatest pic but you can see what we had going on on each side of our front door. 


Two years later, I finally had enough of the temporary fix, the cluttered, paper accordion look, and the little clips that Anna kept stealing and hiding.  So when I saw Sabrina Soto (my fave HGTV host) spray windows with a can of window frost (not the Christmas snowy stuff) to maintain privacy for the homeowner but still allow light to come through, I was sold!  After a little hunting, we finally tracked down a can of that stuff at Lowe's.  The frosted windows keep a much cleaner line and Josh and I are so pleased to have finally wrapped that up.

Oct 18, 2010

Going Nuts: A Pity Party

Learning to live with a child with a peanut allergy has a learning curve.  Somehow, after 4 years, I am only now rounding that curve.  I guess it has to do with Noah being involved in more things and being around more people with the start of school, soccer, trying new churches, and definitely my joining two moms groups that involve many playdates.

It was at one of these playdates recently that I pretty much got my hand slapped for asking if we serve the 15+ kids something besides PBJ.  And it's not because I think no one should get to eat peanut butter if Noah can't.  It's because if the peanut butter is on any kiddos hands and comes in contact with Noah, or even a toy that Noah then picks up, the allergic reaction could be life threatening.  Life and Death, here.  I'm talking about a life-threatening allergic reaction. Sort of a big deal. Turns out I was mistaken to think that should matter among friends.  I was answered with how difficult that would be to know what else to feed the kids.  I was also told that the time for me to be specific about Noah's peanut allergy would be if I hosted my own playdate.  And oh, by the way, we had another mom with a kid with food allergies and she just didn't come to playdates if those foods were being served.

Ok.  Ouch.

What I took from that was that they would rather eat the pbj and have me take a hike with my kid.  Nothing says welcome to the group like "we prefer peanut butter over people."

Lesson learned.  After I cried in fury and outrage at the simpleton thinking and the insensitivity I perceived, I began brainstorming where I went wrong.  Maybe there is an etiquette that I missed.  It's not impossible that I need to be told that it is rude to ask a hostess to alter the menu.  Ok, then.  It's possible I am the problem.  While I don't think it's a lot to ask to have jelly sandwiches instead of pbj, I guess it steps on toes and that is just something I have to accept.  And the more I think about it, I would rather accept that than put myself out there to be offended at every turn.  So next time I will just have to RSVP "no" if peanut stuff if going to be around.  Or offer to bring something myself  for all the kids to eat that doesn't involve peanuts.  I realize that could get to costing me more, but I'd rather do that than miss out entirely or put people out by asking them to consider my son.  And to be fair, he is mine.  So his peanut allergy is my concern, not the world's.  I get that.  If I'm being honest, before Noah I am pretty sure I would have selfishly thought that same thing - "Why is it my problem that your kid has a food allergy?"  I am sure my self-righteous logic would have seen it that way.  Now that I see it from the other side, I see how ugly that take on the situation looks.

What can you do?  Get mad at everyone?  No.  I can't live that way.  So I just have to get creative and find gracious way to educate people about the severity of Noah's peanut allergy.  And I have to be ready to be counted out when others don't want to have to consider that. And I have to prepare my heart to do so without taking offense.

It just sucks to have to think so hard for something that most other people don't bat an eye at.  Noah's teacher called me from school today to see if he was allowed to have the birthday cookies the rest of the class was having.  The ingredients indicated that there may be traces of peanut.  I had to tell her Noah could not have them.  It's just too risky.  And I could picture his sweet face waiting for Mrs. Cindy to get off the phone only to hear, "No, Baby, you can't eat these with your friends."  I told Mrs. Cindy that Noah would be fine with it and that he is used to not getting to eat what everyone else eats.  But still I sigh with discouragement for him.  And my eyes well up at what a big boy he is about being different in that sense.  I told Mrs. Cindy I'd bring a box of special treats to keep at school for Noah to have when there are b'day snacks and stuff that he can't eat.  Really, I should have thought of this idea already. 

See?  Now I am crying about it.  Why am I crying?  Look - I threw myself (and my baby) a pity party!

It's not a big deal.  It's just that today, this week, this month I am just tired of having to be the downer, the reality check, the party pooper at school, at playdates, at church, at soccer games, at parties.  My checking every morsel of food for peanuts is just a killjoy for others.  I know that.  But it's not like I can stop.  It's not like I can make the allergy go away.  And it's not like I can rest easy in his not eating risky foods.  I have to be vigilant about how others eat those foods in his presence.  That's where people get annoyed by it, I'm sure.  That is the point where I have become an imposition on them.  But my hands are tied.  We are talking life and death here!  Over a silly peanut, I know, people.  But it is what it is.  Should we just hole up and never be a part of a community?

Today, I am just tired of anticipating and experiencing the bristling irritated responses people can get when I have to bring it up.  It just sucks.

So I guess now I have to pick myself up and try to focus on the good.  The kind people and friends who have considerately arranged for Noah's peanut allergy to not have to exclude him from his friends and the fun.  The open-minded people that do check ingredient labels and make choices based on them just for Noah's sake.  Noah's soccer coach's wife, the team mom that brings snacks after the game, HCA for having a peanut free zone (although clearly today, another parent ignored that), a parent in Noah's class last year who often brought snacks, Sunday school teachers, family members (mostly), his teacher who will scramble today to find him a special treat in place of the cookies.

Noah, you are such a good boy about your food limitations (and your allergy shots, too, for that matter).  You don't pitch a fit or cry or pout.  You just accept it and don't make a big deal out of it.  Can you teach me that trick?  I thought I had it down pat, but today I feel a little weak.

Oct 17, 2010

"Bonfire?" says Noah

Bonfire?


What bonfire?


There was a bonfire last night?


And family and friends and marshmallows and smores and chili and weenie roasting?


Sorry.  I must have missed all that.  All I remember were the cats!


Poor, poor cats, muttered mommy.


I do remember hearing a lot of "DO. NOT. GRAB. HIS. NECK." Mommies are silly like that.


Mrs. Angel let the cat out of the bag at night's end by telling us that this particular cat, a Russian Blue, is hypoallergenic.   "Can we keep him?"  came to mind.

But mommy distracted me with a cup of coke or 5 and reminded me we have a Chewie waiting for us at home.  That made me smile at just the right cheesy moment. 


Yay for bonfires, friends, family, and furry four-legged treasures.