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Kay in Cal

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Posts posted by Kay in Cal

  1. I think it's great! People die every day, and caskets are SO expensive... that's a real deal. There really are families that just can't afford a funeral, and anything that saves a couple of thousand dollars is a blessing in my book. Some mortuaries require you to buy thier caskets (at an expensive mark-up) so I wonder how Costco does around here.

  2. In light of the discussion about missing the old board and how hard it is to read "everything" here, I'd like to start a thread for you to tell your favorite funny story that happened to you. If it's a "classic" from the old board, so much the better! Cut and paste, or retell it in your own style...

     

    And if you have old favorites (c'mon Peek, tell us about those "strawberries" again!, oh--and who tells about the "good shoes"?), request them so we can all share.

     

    OK, my favorite Insane Story About Kay:

     

     

    The Barking Dog, or Be Very Very Scared of the Postpartum Mom

     

    When my first ds was born, we lived next to a family with two dogs--one medium dog and one of those small yipping dogs. They left them outside all night, every night. They barked constantly--at the wind, at cars, at anyone passing by. We installed one of those sonic dog-barking things (it makes an inaudible noise when they bark) which helped some... but not much. Mostly I used earplugs and just tolerated the dogs.

     

    Then the baby was born, I was lost in that normal mother of a first new-born haze. He nursed constantly, slept almost never, I hadn't yet learned how to sleep and nurse him, so I would sit up in the rocker and nurse him to sleep for the first couple of weeks. I also had some serious complications post-partum (retained a large piece of placenta, which kept me from walking properly for three weeks--but that's another story) that kept me in constant pain. I was a mess.

     

    One night, the baby had been very fussy. Dh had walked him for a long time, I had been nursing him, and after several hours finally got him calm and to sleep. I laid him down in his bassinet at about 4 am, give or take. We still hadn't really started co-sleeping yet (oh, but we learned for number 2!), and I was just... exhausted. Wiped. I slowly eased back to our bed, and fell in a heap upon my pilllow.

     

    Then the dogs started barking. Again.

     

    I don't know if it would have woken up the baby, but I didn't wait to find out. I totally lost it. I jumped up in my nightgown, and ran outside, through both yards--no shoes, no robe, just me in my nighty--and started pounding on their front door with both fists.

     

    "SHUT THEM UP! MAKE THEM SHUT UP! I JUST HAD A BABY! STOP THE BARKING!" Etc. Ad nauseum. When I didn't get an immediate response to the door (perhaps they were sleeping? Terrified? Considering calling the police?), I moved on to pound on all the available front windows "I JUST HAD A BABY! MAKE THEM STOP! SHUT UP THOSE DOGS! MAKE THEM STOP! I JUST HAD A BABY!" I was stumbling through their flowerbeds from window to window, pounding with my fists on the glass and yelling at the top of my lungs. I was so crazy mad...

     

    By this point lights were going on on the other neighbors' porches.

     

    I don't know how long I pounded and screamed... long enough to get a bit of an audience, and my dh to slink out of our house looking confused. Finally, the front light went on and a window slid open and a pale face appeared. A quiet voice said, "Ok. We'll bring them in. We're sorry."

     

    "GOOD! I JUST HAD A BABY!" I stomped back home, exhausted.

     

    After that (we only lived there 6 more months), the dogs still barked... but never at night! I'm sure they tell this story from the other perspective... "Let me tell you about our crazy neighbor lady, who would stumble about in our yard screaming about her baby..." Ugh. Hormones.

  3. This was the second year my ds watched the spelling bee on TV with me, and this time it really captured his imagination. He's started asking "Language of origin?" and "Would you please use it in a sentence?" when we do our SWO pretests. He's actually a good natural speller, IMHO. We'll be halfway through SWO D at the end of 1st grade, and he doesn't miss very many words on those pretests.

     

    So, does anyone here actually do competative spelling?

    How would you get into it--start at what age, and where?

    And how would you study to make it possible to compete in a few years?

    Are there "prep books" or what?

     

    Edited to add: You can now take the prelimary round test on the web site just for fun: http://www.spellingbee.com/

  4. I bought CW for next year, all the books, but I think I'm just going to use the core, as it turns out. We're doing GWG4 and SWO (which are working very well), so I see no need to have an additional set of those subjects. We'll basically be doing just the writing part of the program, but I have high hopes! I was one of the weird ones--I liked the core book itself, but the teacher's guide and student guide didn't do much for me. Next year I'll just buy that, at least to start...

     

    Let's compare notes next year and see how it's going!

  5. I find the Activity Guide very useful, if you don't have that already. It also has some suggestions for library books to read, some of which would be a good supplement because your children are older. Do you have a good library in your area? I might do the timeline with both at that age, but I think you can jump into outlining or not depending on their writing/comprehension ability. He'll get a lot out of it either way!

  6. Lol! I just think he disagrees about the "not so hard" part... not that there shouldn't be acadmics as well. He finds housekeeping VERY hard. Science, math, writing, teaching, not so much. But he can be reduced to a small pile of jelly by a large pile of laundry.

     

    But yes, I think if he had more training as a child, he wouldn't find it all so challenging today. And yes, he expects our kids (including girls if we ever have any) to be headed to college...

  7. Well... my dh is a comic book geek.

     

    How much? Well, about ten years ago now they sold Kraft mac n cheese in "superhero" shapes. It had lots of superhero shapes all mixed up, and dh had once lamented in passing that they didn't sell them individually so you could just buy your favorite hero. So as a birthday gift (funds were tight!) I bought 20 boxes or so and hand separated them by superhero. So he could eat Superman macaroni and cheese, or Flash macaroni and cheese, or Wonder Woman macaroni and cheese. It took hours and hours... but he loved it! Best gift for my dh under $15 ever!

  8. Well, feedback is a whole different ball of wax! I'm not crazy about it, but particularly the Neg Rep ability, from which I choose to abstain.

     

    But I think here there are more people having more conversations, making it easier to jump in. On the old board you might find a post like "It's like when the UPS man sees you naked--did he notice your booKs or your nice shoes? Lol!!!" A whole group of people would be laughing and responding, but a newbie might be thinking... "Huh? What the heck are they talking about?" There seems to be less of that here.

     

    I just love the old stories. Who was it who had a family member mistake thier frozen placenta for frozen strawberries when they wanted a smoothie? Oh, the good old days....

  9. Hmmm... we do both and I think it depends.

     

    We read modified versions of The Illiad and the The Odyssey, and a picture-book format Gilgamesh as read alouds this year. But children's classics--Treasure Island, The Hobbit, classic fairy tales--we stick with the original. In the case of using abridged classics, our goal was familiarity and interest.

     

    However, in addition to reading some abridged versions for next year (Chaucer, Beowulf, as well as Shakespeare), I think we'll also read aloud at least one Shakespeare play as written, and some sections of Beowulf as well (I love the Seamus Heaney translation). In general I prefer modified versions that use original language where possible, but perhaps not all of it. Though most of these works are in translation already, in reality!

  10. Dh made dinner tonight--macaroni with meat sauce. It was good, but I realized that I don't really like macaroni. Don't know why... it tastes the same and all, but it just isn't... as good. We generally have a multitude of pasta shapes in the pantry at any given time, and we all have different favorites: Dh likes macaroni, older ds likes rotini, younger ds likes spaghetti, and I prefer fettucine.

     

    So how about you? Do you have a favorite?

  11. Yeah.. I kind of miss the way you could skim down the board and feel like you were part of EVERY conversation. No missing the funny threads... here if it isn't on that first line of the first post, it's easy to not "hear" about something.

     

    I do also miss the crazy late-night board flipping discussions. More like a chat room than a board, really.

     

    That said, I think this format allows more people to participate, and is far more welcoming to newcomers because there IS less of that "insider" feel.

     

    And I love avatars. And subscriptions to threads. Etc.

  12. I was just thinking the other day that I would NEVER tell my kids about one of the things my best friend and I got up to in 6th/7th grade.

     

    You see, we had this old-fashioned (well, probably new at the time) hard side suitcase, and we caved one side in so that it was concave. Then we would pour small amounts of various fluids in it and light them on fire. Perfume mostly. Other toiletries. Cleaning products. Yes, quite the dangerous chemical exposure.

     

    Oh yes, we did all this in her bedroom.

     

    Finally, over the course of the year the hard plastic of the suitcase got all bubbly and warped from so many uses as a pyrotechnic lab, and eventually caught on fire itself for real... we managed to put it out, open the windows, and were never "caught". My best friend was completely unsupervised at her house, for the most part, and it was a huge house.

     

    These are some of the reasons I like being with my kids. I know what I got up to... scary stuff.

  13. I think we were well "prepared", but that doesn't actually mean it's easy, right? We were in our early 30s, had been married almost a decade, before we had children. We were prepared in that we knew it would be a huge lifestyle change that we couldn't predict, we wer willing to make whatever sacrifices being a parent takes, and we longed to welcome a child in love... isn't that really what it takes?

  14. I need to add a comment from my SAHD dh:

     

    "I totally disagree! I don't know how to do these things (homemaking), and I'm pretty bad at these things! I don't think they should be taught to the exclusion of academics, but I feel like I was never taught "life skills" and wish I had been."

     

    So, he thinks *everyone* should learn homemaking skills in a very intentional fashion--but not just women/girls. I don't think he ever thought he'd be a stay-at-home-dad who homeschools his children, and his mom did everything for him as a child. She's a "super homemaker", but didn't pass those skills along, ya know? Dh's sister is a banker (major executive) and she just pays people to clean her apartment. Neither of them every learned to cook/clean/etc, and dh has had to play catch-up for the last 6 years.

  15. Well, we are a Christian family that places family togetherness as one of our primary values. I'm a bit uncomfortable jumping in because I always feel a bit uncomfortable around "keepers at home" threads (clearly I believe I am called by God to my vocation), but I work full time, much of it at home, dh is at home full time, plus a pt job that is his "break" for the week, and would guess we are NOT together as a family a maximum of 15 hours a week, on average. Church time is work for me... but still family time, and God time in addition. We live a totally urban life, so we aren't returning to anything, but I think we've done a fair job of melding all our spheres of activity into one happy, busy, life-affirming whole. The fact that we aren't in "typical" roles doesn't mean we aren't honoring the bible...

  16. My son has SID (sensory integration disorder) and is "sensory seeking". He likes more intense sensations, touch, sound, etc, and then has others that he finds overstimulating. When he was very young he used to twist and rip his nipples--ouch! Yeah, I know... Anyhow, we basically trained him to keep his shirt down always, and then he started chewing on his shirt collars. He'd ruin a new shirt in a week or less.

     

    We decided to "feed" his oral fixation... I bought latex tubing (like for a fish tank) and made a necklace for him out of it--just tied it in a circle large enough to fit over his head. I think it's a fairly common OT thing, but I first read about it on the old board. I used blue, his favorite color, and anytime he'd start to chew on anything I'd remind him he had a necklace to chew on. Worked like a charm! He hasn't ruined a shirt for months and finally stopped wearing the tubing fairly recently.

     

    He still bites his nails, but I'm not quite so worried about that...

  17. One thing I did before we were "official" homeschooling age was to connect with a group of homeschoolers. There was a local "young homeschoolers" group for parents of kids who were K age and younger. We started attending, at least sporadically, when my ds was 2. He's 6 now, and having those connections has stood me in good stead.

     

    I also wouldn't buy curriculum, but I do believe in expanding your home library. We've collected childrens and adult classics en masse over the years, and it is wonderful (IMHO) to have a home full of great books. We use the library a lot, but I want our kids to have instant access to Narnia or Oz or Middle Earth.

     

    One good predictor of future reading is the number of books in the home... http://www.ncte.org/about/research/articles/110444.htm

    You can be poor (ahem) but if your house is full of books, your kids will read and be better educated.

     

    Hanging out on the boards doesn't hurt either... I can't imagine having tried to pull together my resources for K & 1st if I hadn't already read so much about all the options.

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