May 28, 2019

How May Killed Us

May killed us by taking all our money to pay for really boring grown-up things like a tankless water heater, AC maintenance, a new vacuum, a new handheld vacuum, school curriculum for fall and CHET tuition, pool deck building supplies, and ordering carpet for the stairs and entire upstairs. Blah!

Also, $200 surgery for a $5 female bunny that turned out to not be female.  Don't even get me started. After a brief trip in early June, I am afraid of what the checkbook will show once the dust settles. Reallife!

Memorial Day Weekend

I think 3-day weekends are moving really high up on my list of favorite things.  They always seems to hit the spot.  That extra day makes all the restful and recreational difference!  
 

This particular Memorial Day weekend, we nursed a groggy Shade bunny after his Friday morning neutering, bless his heart. We kept him in the kitchen til Sunday night, once he seemed to be back to his usual personality and was starting to get into trouble in the kitchen. Ha!  He will stay hutch-bound and away from the other three bunnies til next Monday when he gets the staples removed. 
 
 

Saturday we enjoyed such a mellow evening at the Graffs with the Jeffs along, too. 
 
 
 

Sunday was for church and swimming again (Josh lowered the water level for Lasa this time, so she could touch for a change) and backyard garden and rabbitat fixes all day. Noah went to a youth group cookout and volleyball game later that night.  As well, on our Summer Bucket List is the idea of a new board game.  I did us one better and pulled out a board game we already have that I had yet to introduce the kids to - Pente.  This brought back so many memories of playing this as a kid.  Noah and Anna were HOOKED within minutes.  So fun!
 
 
 
 

Monday, Memorial Day, we did more yard and swim and Pente stuff at home and then went to a cookout at the Seavers with the Seals, the Kings, Lucy, and Molly.  It was another great mellow night! Molly capped the night off by introducing the kids to Snipe hunting. 😆
 
 
 
 
 

Now, it's Tuesday and my people are back in the pool.  
 
 
It's hot as blazes again as it has been for the past week.  We are about to watch the hockey game we DVR'd last night as soon as Lasa goes down for a nap, I have a cold generic root beer in my hand (a new fave for all of us), I started a good book last night, and I have supper club to look forward to tonight.  Summer is off to a sweet and simple start!

Also, pretty baby grapes coming in!

May 27, 2019

Thoughts for Thinkin' On


  • Some stuff and nonsense could be fun.  ~Mary Poppins Returns

Some lengthier quotes from a book I read recently, Courage, Dear Heart
  • During's Christ's time on earth, John got close enough to hear his heartbeat.  He felt God's warmth.  He head God's voice.  He listened to him breathe.  Seeing this intimacy makes me grieve for John.  How hard it must have been for him to stand at the food of the cress, watching his best freind's blood drip upon the dust - the same blood that he had heard thrumming through Christ's arteries and veins.  This apostle said, "The Word became flesh," because he had leaned against that flesh, and he had seen it suffer and die.  Imagine watching the surprise on John's face when he finally put two and two together, realizing that the teacher he loved so dearly was actually a God who held the whole law of Moses inside a single human body.  Thousands of years of festivals, prophecies, and sacrifices all complete in one divine person!
  • Examine the "believe in yourself" doctrine closely, and you will find Eve longing for a forbidden piece of fruit - not because one pear can ever be as lush as an entire garden, but because one pear is tiny enough to clutch in the palm of one small handThis single pear represents all self-trust, an eternal folding inward, an eternal reduction.
  • Alongside every disaster of human pride, attributes of the holy one also flicker.  His threads are woven into the fabric of all disciplines.  His sovereignty resounds in the symmetry of the mathematical world.  His paradoxes stand in the unreconciled gap between quantum physics and Newtonian physics.   Biology teaches us his music.  His promises are tucked into the peony.  His poetry is written on the back of the barred owl.  His mysteries hide with the snapping turtle who sinks down into the black deeps.  A choir of fog angels resigns to the morning sun, and I long to obey.
  • Twitter is my rage candy.  Whenever I'm incensed with the latest political debate, I can tag any charlatan in America and blast away at him.  I don't mean to imply that exhortation is always out of place - sometimes a stern word is fitting.  It's important to call out evil where it has taken root. But too often, I don't fight in the Spirit.  Too often, I fight in disgust, in disappointment, in cynicism - operating entirely out of my own power.  The Lord will usually let me run a while on this leash, but after an hour or two, I'm exhausted.  Why do I feel so awful? I wonder. Well, because the greatest battles of this world weren't meant to be conquered by human effort.

May 23, 2019

Wrapping up 4th/6th Grades

These super short pencils we have left (and their even shorter erasers) tell the truth - we have worked hard and we are finally at the school year's end!  Hooray!  Anna's 4th grade year and Noah's 6th grade year were great!
 

I have only to report grades and attendance now and to crank out this school year wrap-up post before I can mentally check out for the summer.  Ha!  So here's that!  

First, our main curriculum this year - our third year using GeoMatters: Trail Guide to Learning.  This year's path was Paths of Progress and it covered the part of American history involving inventions and progress in science, technology, and industry.  I thought these topics would kill me, but honestly, this was my favorite year yet.  Who knew?!  Anna said the same.  And Noah was naturally into it.  We followed the 6th grade level work for both kids - middle school stuff!  We will continue with Trail Guide in the fall with the last year's path - Journeys into the Ancient World.

Full year's worth of student notebook pages for each kid.

This year's science topics included simple machines, forces, work, the systems of the human body, and related agricultural and engineering topics that went with all our inventors, pictured below.  Y'all, we are at a learning level that has me learning all this along with them.  It's such neat stuff!

All the inventors we studied this year. So many!

We kept right on trucking with our beloved and so impressive RightStart Math.  This year Noah's math had him reading the lessons for himself.  That was a real challenge for him and his language impairment.  I would say he made it through a full lesson himself about half the time? The other half I would have to intervene or assist or yell and shout in frustration.  But the kid learned SO MUCH.  Like, SO STINKING MUCH.  And like, really hard MUCH.  He is doing stuff I didn't do til high school.  So he gets credit for that in my book.  And he finished the year with an 85 on his cumulative test, and we all know what beasts cumulative assessment can be.  Ouch!  Proud of him!  Anna breezed through her year, finishing early in April.  So I gave her a week off math to celebrate and then started her in next year's level to finish the year. 

Along the way, I supplemented with some deductive thinking/logic puzzles and Fix-It Grammar drills for Morning Work, 

and our own vocabulary practices from words we'd come across all year, along with an online vocabulary program I adore that builds from greek and latin roots and words parts entirely, WordBuild.

We finished a second year of IEW for formal writing lessons using the Continuation Course.  Can't rave about Pudewa and this writing program enough!  We'd do about two lessons/videos a month.  Anna is a natural writer and Noah has simply blossomed in his writing skills with this program.  All the props to IEW.  We will continue this course next year, possibly moving slower and testing our writing wings without the intensive lessons as often.

And for Bible we completed Our 24 Family Ways from Clay Clarkson.  I highly recommend this guide!  I would sell you mine now that we are done, but Josh and I wanna keep it to do with Lasa.  I love how each way was organized among main themes:  authorities, relationships, possessions, work, attitudes, choices.   I wish I had had this resource several years ago for Noah and Anna honestly.  We had SUCH great talks about these disciplines and their scriptural instruction and applications.

And that's that - 2018/2019 school year is a wrap!  We had our last day of school breakfast out with milkshakes and we will not be looking back!

I can't believe I have been homeschooling for SIX years now! Anyway, I offer only a quick pic of a few things the kids will do all summer for morning work along with lots of reading.  Other than these, our brains will vegetate.  See ya in the fall, school stuff!

Anna, Cards, Verses, CAMP

Anna is going to her first ever overnight camp this summer with our church.  She is super pumped about it!  Trouble is, it's not cheap.  We were willing to pay for it outright as we did for Noah's first ever overnight camp several years back.  But still, $300+ is a lot!  So we were thrilled when our children's ministry director worked out a fundraiser the kids could do to help cover some of the cost.  It was through Usborne Books & More - boxes of really nice, hand-crafted greeting cards.  Anna made a video that I posted to FB and Josh shared at work.  

That video worked wonders and she sold 20 boxes total ... earning almost the entire amount needed to pay for camp.  Momma likes!  We delivered the last two boxes last week.

Here she was writing thank you cards to each person who ordered. 

Our church also awarded a little stipend toward camp to any campers who memorized a big chunk of verses - John 17:1-11.  Anna tackled it and got it done early, in fact.  Proud of her.  I never did this sorta stuff as a child.  This is impressive to me and such a worthwhile discipline and study! Here at 40 I am doing it for the first time myself, in fact, the whole first chapter of Ephesians ( almost done!), so I know how hard these long chunks from memory are!

Between the cards fundraiser and the memory verses and a couple donations that came in as well, Anna actually earned MORE than enough for camp.  The extra money she earned will be given to her to use at the camp store that week.  What fun!!  So excited at how the Lord provided for this expense ... not just enough, but overflowing provision!

Lasa + Princess Tiana

Hitting up the local Barnes and Noble Storytime this weekend.  Lasa was so excited and dressed up in her Tiana gown and a tiara and a bun.  But once Tiana came around, Lasa froze up.  It was hysterical ... and annoying.  We had to FORCE her to sit there without being held.  We coaxed her into it by having Anna join her eventually and promising Daddy would sit right behind her; that helped immensely.  She warmed up slowly, but warmed up enough to stay.

Learning some dance moves.  Lasa did eventually stand up for a few once Anna did it beside her.

Getting more acquainted.

Storytime!

Look how much she warmed up here ... sat forward all by herself.  Wonder of wonders!


Personal hellos and pictures afterward.

Lasa gave her this flower from the yard.  Tiana was so darling in how she flounced back down to Lasa's level to talk about it with her. You can tell Lasa was nervous but sort of excited too because she drops her mouth wide open like this every time. 


Good morning! First ever princess encounter!