Wednesday, March 31, 2010

Kids' CD Player

After the accidental success of "Peter and the Wolf" and subsequent ideas from friends, we bought a children's CD player (very rugged so preschoolers won't damage it). The idea is to give John some independence to play music and books on CD.

In the last few days, I introduced two items to the kids: One was "Carnival of the Animals," given to us at Christmas (thanks again, Lynn!) when John was on the cusp of being old enough. He is interested now! The first time I played it, John sat very quietly, which I mistook for perhaps a lack of interest, but I should have remembered that John is a quiet and observant fellow. He then asked to listen to it a second time and this time was jubilantly identifying the animals with the music!

I also introduced the book "Caps for Sale." This CD has a chime which rings when the child is supposed to turn the page. After teaching John for a few pages to do that, he got the hang of it and was so proud of himself. That story, too, has been a winner. Little Mary stands nearby and says (and signs), "hat! hat! hat!"

L'il Scarface


Scarface School Play - Watch more Funny Videos

This video should not be watched by young children.


This video of very young children producing a school play of "Scarface" pairs nicely with the humorous article about home schooling I posted just yesterday. While "Scarface" is an extreme example of the outright destruction of innocent souls being perpetrated by some institutional schools, I personally hear so many stories (from actual friends, not just news pieces) of morals being taught in our tax-funded schools that are opposed to what Chris and I believe. It's quite terrifying to us. This is a good reminder to me (as I've been feeling down about my vocation this week) that even when I'm not actively teaching anything to my kids, I am protecting them from bad influences by simply being present.

Edit: It is possible this video is not from a legitimate school, but was produced by professionals. In that case, other adults than teachers are devastating innocent children. I want to make full disclosure, but, nonetheless, I think my point still stands based on the many stories I hear regularly from plain old moms I know in real life about what goes on at their children's schools.

Tuesday, March 30, 2010

Catholic Bookworm

You know he's a Catholic bookworm when . . . your three-year-old pulls the biography of St. Fr. Damien off the shelf and asks his mama to read it to him.

I explained that it was a "grown-up book," but John replied that he still wanted me to read it to him. He began looking at the various pictures inside and asking me what they were showing. So I sat down on the couch and told him the story of Fr. Damien being a missionary-priest in the islands of Hawaii, how the people there got a terrible disease called leprosy and had to live alone so other people wouldn't get their germs, how Fr. Damien decided to go live with them so he could take care of their bodies and souls and bring them the Mass, even though this meant that he would get their germs and, indeed, some years later he died of leprosy, having given his life for them. John was hanging on my every word.

So, then I was done telling the story.

Right?

No, John then insisted I read him the book. "No, Mama, now read me the book." Alrighty then! As an experiment (to see how long he'd last) I began reading straight from the book, which led to a lively discussion about how the Hawaiian islands were formed by volcanoes, which were active when dinosaurs were around, and dinosaurs are a favorite topic around here . . .

School-Homing One's Children

I think there is enough humor poked at homeschooling families that we can poke some back at those who use institutional schools: see this witty piece by the inimitable Onion.

Sleepy Girl

You know your child is sleepy when she fall asleep silently and peacefully in the middle of breakfast.

Sometimes Chris and I (privately) call Mary the "anti-John" because her personality and physical nature as so different than his as a baby. For those who knew us then, you know that with John's great sleep difficulties he never fell asleep at the table because he always needed a tremendous amount of help to fall asleep and stay asleep. After I took the above photo, I picked up Mary, carried her upstairs, and deposited her sleeping into her bed: again, more evidence of her being very different from her big brother!

Mary Speaks and Speaks and Speaks

I am reminded of the theme song to the cartoon "Martha Speaks," about a talking dog Martha who "speaks and speaks and speaks and speaks and speaks . . ." Mary's language development is exploding and I just love this babyhood phase. I won't post her current list of words and signs because I am trying to post it only once a month, but I'll just say that when I posted it 14 days ago, Mary spoke 20 words and made 21 signs, but now she is up to 35 words and 27 signs. With John I was able to track his language acquisition through 18 months old when it became too rapid for me to keep writing down, and I just hope I can last that long with Miss Mary!

Monday, March 29, 2010

Dressed for Rain


The weather was a bit rainy this morning and, upon learning that I don't have a rain coat for John, he put together what he thought was a really good rain outfit: a lovely lady's hat, his corduroy Mass coat, and cowboy boots (four sizes too big).

Looking cute (and examining contraband spaghetti she took from the pantry)

Sunday, March 28, 2010

Palm Sunday 2010

Holy Week has arrived, catching me a little unawares because I'm still unaccustomed to following the liturgical calendar in our domestic church, as the Catholic Church teaches every family is. Late Saturday and at the crack of dawn Sunday, I was online looking at gorgeous blogs of other homeschooling families with their myriad crafty ideas and prayer suggestions for how to teach children about the Passion.

Before John came downstairs this morning, I had three books of children's Bible stories out, each bookmarked with the story of Jesus' entry into Jerusalem. John ate his breakfast, then saw me casually sitting down with these books and he fell for my lure: "What are those books, Mama? Will you read to me?"

So, we read about Jesus' entry into Jerusalem, although I confess frustration that John didn't seem to be paying attention and he asked me to read him other Bible stories, which I did.

However, when we got to Mass, what little reading and chatting we did paid off. I also reflected on how Mother Church knows that her children (of all ages) need "props"--tactile and visual elements--to remember and understand special solemnities. Lex orendi, lex credendi. John's eyes bugged out to see hundreds of people gathering outside our church, holding palm fronds, ready to process. "Can we hold palm branches? Maybe we can ask somebody for permission!" With what joy John held his palm frond high in the air and we whispered back and forth about how the people in Jerusalem, children included, did the same thing as this when Jesus arrived on the baby donkey. Then we began processing and the choir began singing and I pointed out to John, "Look! There's that unusual word again: Hosanna!" Learning about Hosanna ("God, save us") earlier that morning had led to yet another of John's tough questions for Mama: "God, save us from what?" (And following was our first discussion of heaven and hell . . .)

During Mass, I was absolutely delighted to have John asking questions, indicating for the first time that he was listening to those zillions of words over the course of an hour I assumed he was tuning out (making me think of the teacher in "Charlie Brown"). When the first epistle of the Prophet Isaiah was read, John perked up: "Mama! A prophet! She said 'prophet'! Like the prophet Jonah! What is she talking about?" I told him he was right, had good ears, and he should listen more to hear what the Prophet Isaiah had said.

Then when the priest was giving the homily, he mentioned something about yelling. John tugged at me, "Now do we get to yell?" He'd been so hoping that we too could yell at today's Mass, the way that the people yelled Hosanna! when Jesus entered Jerusalem. Little Boy was disappointed to learn that he still could not yell.

Then during the Canon, John heard the name of John the Baptist and said, "John the Baptist! He's in my heart!" Yes, he is one of your patron saints, honey!


In the afternoon, we shrouded many of our holy images at home in black cloth (as I had no purple cloth handy). When I see the statues in our parish shrouded at this time of year, I miss seeing them, but I was quite startled to feel a real sadness in my heart to now look around our home at all these black shrouds. It feels like some good friends are gone! Or maybe even dead! I really had no idea how much comfort I take in the holy images with which we've decorated each room in our home.


Friday, March 26, 2010

Tricycle Train

One creative father + duct tape = two very happy children!



Do You Have Some Dressing?

Scene: quiet domestic scene, the dinner table

John (3): "That stuff in that bottle, that's what you need."

Mama: "What, this?" [touching bottle of Ranch salad dressing]

John: "Yes, that white stuff in the bottle."

Mama: "Dressing?"

John: "You need that dressing in the car."

Mama: "In the car?"

John: "Yes. You need it in the car."

Mama: "Why would I need dressing in the car?"

John: "Because you need it!"

Mama: "In the car?"

John: "Yes!!!"

Mama puzzles this for a few moments. "Do you mean an address?"

John: "Yes. An address. You need that in the car."

And Mama remembered how many times she had the kids loaded in the van and said, "Oh! I forgot my address! I'll be right back!" And then she ran in to write down an address on a Post-It Note. So then followed a little lesson for John on what an address is.

Feast of the Annunciation 2010

Happy Feast of the Annunciation!

The day snuck up on me this year, but I still managed to make waffles for breakfast (apparently a Swedish tradition) and got "red carnations" on the table (made of foam and pipe cleaners by mama in the dark at six in the morning). After dinner we enjoyed an ice cream cake to honor the feast day (no special symbolism in an ice cream cake--simply that I didn't have time to bake the traditional seed cake!). Daddy made it to a 9:00 a.m. Mass while I was at my La Leche League meeting and I had the privilege of attending our parish's first Missa Cantata (sung Mass in the old rite) at 7:00 p.m. without the children.

Diaper Bargain

I just got a great bargain on diapers, which I'm sharing here for any mom friends who are interested.

I ordered 176 diapers for Mary and 26 "pull-up" style diapers for John (who wears them for sleeping, but is waking up dry more often than not), so that is one month's worth of diapers.

By spending more than $50, I got free shipping. I used a referral code from somebody else, so I earned $10 off. There was a coupon for the generic diapers for 50 cents. And because I was a first-time purchaser from www.diapers.com, I get to use this rebate for $14.97.

My total result: 11 cents per diaper! (For those not in the know, brand name diapers tend to be about 25 cents per diaper and generics, which I buy, are about 15 cents per diaper.)

If any of you want to capitalize on this great deal, feel free to use the referral code KATH3356 for $10 off (plus then I will get $5 in credit for each of your purchases).

Thursday, March 25, 2010

Warm Afternoons

We sure are enjoying the spring weather and daily afternoon hours spent in the back yard! Most days, John isn't even remembering to ask to watch television in the afternoons.






John was running fast back and forth across the yard, so I videotaped one of his trips.

Tuesday, March 23, 2010

More Feats on Tricycles

John asked if Mary could sit on the back so they could ride double.

I overheard John riding around saying, "I think I can, I think I can, I think I can." Then he came and got me, asking me to hook together two tricycles to make a train. At that Mary shrieked in excitement and jumped onto the "train car" being pulled.

Montessori Color Matching

Montessori manipulatives are expensive. Some of them are worth purchasing (like the sandpaper letters I just bought) for those of us who aren't highly skilled at crafts and woodworking, but others are so easy to make. Today I introduced the color matching activity, having collected free paint chip samples while at Wal-Mart this morning instead of buying Montessori color tablets.

At first I set out too many colors. John took one look and said, "I just can't do it!" I quickly took away the basket and set out only six colors. John proceeded without hesitation. Mama's lesson learned.


"I did it!"

Monday, March 22, 2010

A Serving of E. Coli With That Bath Toy?

Watch this four-minute video if you'd like to learn more about the vile, disgusting germs growing on children's bath toys. Thank God we threw away all our bath toys with holes in them more than a year ago. Now I am going to walk upstairs and disinfect the toys we do own. I've lost my appetite!

Getting to Know Moses

John is learning many Bible stories, but not in any particular order. We have several Catholic children's Bibles around the house, plus many books with solitary Bible stories in them (meaning, a book that is only the story of Jesus feeding the 5,000 or The Rich Man, etc.). I have often wondered how children start to grasp the arc of the timeline in the Bible when they're learning stories in a random order.

This morning, with John and I eating bagels alone at 6:30 in the morning while Daddy and Mary still slept, John launched into telling me the story of Moses. To my delight, he has pieced together almost all the stories he knows about Moses and strung them in the right order! He talked me through covenant with the Jews ("when we shake hands and say that it's a deal"), Moses talking to Pharaoh and leading the Israelites out of slavery, the plagues of Egypt (when I explained the locusts eating all the crops, John said it would be okay because God would send manna from heaven to the Egyptians!), the forty years in the dessert (where God did send manna), receiving the Ten Commandments (Moses being mad, the silly golden calf, Moses being mad, the rock breaking), and coming to the Promised Land. I was overjoyed and so surprised. Now I want to remember to talk him through plugging in the other Moses stories he knows (baby in the basket in the bulrushes, the burning bush, the parting of the Red Sea, etc.).

Feats on a Tricycle

Chris taught the kids how John could ride the tricycle with Mary standing on the back.





Until now, John has ridden the tricycle in the sun room or at the flat top of the driveway, but today I took him on a ride around the neighborhood. What fun! Sweet John seemed pretty nervous and wanted me to keep my hand on the safety pole because he worried that he'd fall over or "go down a steep hill" (we don't have any in our neighborhood).

Two in Overalls





New Resident

Mary has taken up joint residence in the Learning Tower. I took photos of the kids eating peanut butter and chocolate chip "smiles" on graham crackers because it was one of those neat moments to me: I don't have just a little baby anymore, I have two kids who stand together at the Learning Tower and eat snacks! Wow!


Sunday, March 21, 2010

Early Bird Gets the Worms

I haven't been posting much of Mary lately, so, by request, here are some mundane domestic videos of Mary at 16 months old. They're definitely "grandparent videos," nothing dramatic or exciting!

I call this collection, "the early bird gets the worms." Mary woke up earlier than her brother, so got to play with the new toys from the consignment sale without duking it out with her brother.


Video #1: Mary might be trying to say 'baby.' Mary kisses her dolly.



Video #2. Mary says 'book' and 'truck,' maybe is trying to say 'baby,' and signs KITTY. Mary kisses her dolly.



Video #3: Mary vacuums with the $1 vacuum I bought at the sale.



Video #4: Mary tries to say 'baby.' I encourage her to sign ASLEEP, which she does not do. Mary kisses her own reflection. Look how sweetly Mary holds her doll! She's holding it like a baby much of the time, not like a toy to be dragged around.

Missy and Mary

Mary is in love with Missy, our 15-year-old cat. On this morning, Mary was playing a funny sneak-up game on the hapless cat, who was patiently waiting by the kitchen door to the dining room so she could escape upstairs to sleep under the bed all day. Mary would stand flush against the front of the refrigerator, looking down at the floor (because if she's not looking at Missy, then Missy must not be able to see her). Then she'd shuffle her feet and squeeze around the corner of the refrigerator, always keeping her back flush to it and her eyes cast down. She'd get around the corner and then "surprise" the old cat.

Here I caught on film the end of Mary signing KITTY.


Amazingly, this very crotchety old cat has never scratched either of the kids.

St. Patrick's Day 2010

We're not big celebraters of St. Patrick's day. I was aware of the day, but forgot and dressed both John and myself in orange. We certainly don't go out drinking or party. But this year I did cook a somewhat traditional meal of corned beef and roasted vegetables (and macaroni and cheese to be child-friendly) and we told John the adventures of the bishop of Ireland. I was to myself that, as much as I dislike that secular society has distorted St. Patrick's feast day, I am grateful that secular society still celebrates the day at all. There are few Catholic holidays still celebrated: Easter, Christmas, St. Patrick's day, St. Valentine's day. Any others?

John wasn't being a pest. Mary was simply crying because she was really hungry and I was delaying feeding her by taking a photo and saying grace.

I tried to make a neat recipe in honor of the green day: brownies, with a layer of mint frosting, then a layer of chocolate. The original recipe called for creme de menthe frosting, but many commenters to the online recipe said that they simply used peppermint extract. I didn't want to waste money on a whole bottle of liqueur, so I looked for peppermint extract. I couldn't find it, but did find mint extract--and that's probably the same, right? So, St. Patrick's day was the day I got to learn that "mint" means spearmint! And spearmint tastes like toothpaste! Plus it is not green, which is the whole fun point of this dessert. So I served the dessert with a forewarning, then I peeled off the frosting layer, reapplied the chocolate layer, and ate the mangled brownies like that. Meanwhile, John was too young to know that spearmint wasn't the right flavor, so he scarfed down three brownies happily!

Saturday, March 20, 2010

Mr. Fashion

Yes, he did choose his own outfit today.

In John's mind, it was warm enough outside that he wore short overalls and sandals without socks, but cold enough outside that he should wear his corduroy coat (with leather elbow patches!). I bought him his first belt at yesterday's consignment sale and John wore it proudly, "to hold my jacket on."

Yes, we let him go out in public that way.

Friday, March 19, 2010

Consignment Sale Spring 2010

Today was one of my cyclical domestic highlights: I got to shop at our city's twice yearly children's consignment sale. It is held in a giant exposition hall and it was advertised that more than 100,000 items were for sale. My friend Meghan joined me this morning, which was so much fun for me. I had hoped that Chris could watch both children this morning, as these kinds of sales are an absolute zoo, with aggressive mothers (one woman seems to have stolen an item I put on reserve today) and huge crowds. But Chris couldn't watch the kids today--which is why I get to give a glowing report of John's behavior!

I was at the sale for four hours, and you've got to realize that I had a one-year-old on my back and a three-year-old walking next to me, facing an entire exposition hall filled with tables as far as the eye could see covered in thousands of colorful, enticing toys. I did let John touch toys as we viewed the wares, but then we'd have to move on and couldn't just sit and play. John set the toys back every single time I said that we would not be buying such-and-such. He never threw down a toy in anger. He never complained, or even asked to go home. He did not throw a single tantrum. He carried his snacks in his little backpack and let me know when he was hungry. He had no pottying accidents. The checkout line alone took an hour and while other children around us screamed in anger or wept, John played fairly quietly. Now, this wasn't easy on my part. I was doing a tremendous amount of mother-work to keep him calm and entertained, but, still, John was responsible for the bulk of his good behavior. This was really one of those mother moments of seeing hard work pay off! The light at the end of the tunnel!

Within a couple of minutes back in the car, John was sound asleep, his treasured new insect book on his lap and one fast food chicken nugget: "I'm keeping it here just in case I get hungry, Mama."

The poor boy was absolutely exhausted by his big day and sleeping only 15 minutes in the car as his "nap." The above photo is how Chris found him at 6:30 at night, after he'd gone up to the bonus room to read by himself.

Thursday, March 18, 2010

Increasing Attention Span

Yesterday, my Montessori sandpaper letters arrived. I am so excited! John saw them on the counter top and wanted to play with them (use them to build a house and as stepping stones across the kitchen floor), misusing them as they're not toys. Finally I had to ask that he put them away, saying I'd show them to him the next day when we did some school time. So this morning he woke up before six a.m. and within about three minutes asked me, "Is it school time yet?" I didn't know what he was talking about until I realized that he wanted to be introduced to those sandpaper letters! I introduced two different sounding letters ('s' and 't'), plus I spelled his name for him (j-o-h-n). I asked him why we want to know the sounds of letters and he didn't know: "If you know the sound of a letter, you can know the sound of a word, and then you can read your own books." This idea thrilled the boy and then I offered to read to him from a new big boy book I had purchased: James Herriot's "Treasury for Children."


I have been purchasing some classic children's works in the last few weeks, but when this one arrived in the mail I thought to myself that it was too advanced for a boy three-and-one-quarter years. The chapters are long, the language at an adult level, and the dialect foreign (British).

Boy, was I wrong!

Ultimately, John sat riveted through two-and-a-half stories, for a total of forty-five minutes of reading time. I saw that after half an hour, John was becoming fidgety. He would leap up from the couch and do a few somersaults, so I'd ask cheerfully, "Do you want me to keep reading or are we all done?" He'd say, "Still reading!" and jump back onto the couch. I've learned that method because, of course, I (perfectionist melancholic) want him to sit still "properly" and listen to a whole story, but sometimes (usually) he can't. So rather than try to scold him into lasting longer than he can last at any given age, I just quietly close the book and ask if he's all done. And in my heart I force myself for it to be okay for him to be all done, to be uninterested in this story that I think is so wonderful and edifying. But, most of the time, John does want to keep reading, or he wants to run in circles around the room a few times, then keep reading.

It was during this reading session that, for the first time, John asked me to point to the words as I was reading them. "Which word are you reading now?" I think it was a direct result of his new understanding from working with the sandpaper letters.

A bookworm like me, raised on beautiful literature, is in rhapsody to realize that John's attention span and interest level are now such that I can read him classics and true children's literature. I will be enjoying the things I read to him! No more dross and prattle! Below are two examples of the lovely paragraphs I read in James Herriot this morning:

"I had driven about ten miles from home, thinking all the time that the Dales always looked their coldest, not when they were covered with snow, but as now, when the first sprinkling streaked the bare flanks of the fells in bars of black and white like the ribs of a crouching beast."

"I had driven through and, streaming-eyed, was about to get back into the car when I noticed something unusual. There was a frozen pond just off the path and among the rime-covered rushes which fringed the dead opacity of the surface a small object stood out, shiny black."

John has already put in an order to listen to "Peter and the Wolf" again today (after listening to it three times yesterday) and to have me read him the Treasure Box books again (we own only numbers one through four, so now I'm an eager beaver to buy five through twenty!).

I promise I won't detail future children's learning development in this level of detail. It is simply so delightful for me this first go-round!

Wednesday, March 17, 2010

Battling the Television

Chris and I have long talked about becoming a TV-free family. It has so many benefits, we know it, we don't dispute it. But it's really hard. Interestingly, I think it is even harder to cut back on television because I am a stay-at-home mother (I don't get a break, I don't send my kids to daycare/preschool); also, John, in particular, happens to have a tremendously high desire/need for interaction. He has never played independently and only now, at three years old, will play for ten minutes alone (really, with Mary, so he's still not alone) a few times per day. In contrast, my 16-month-old happily plays alone much more than her big brother--quite different temperaments!

I often think (bitterly) of myself as running a preschool, except that instead of lasting two to three hours, mine lasts about 15 hours per day (5:30 a.m. to 8:30 p.m.) and I don't have the ability to focus only on the children, but simultaneously must run a home, cook, clean, and so forth. When one child is asleep, the other is usually awake. And there is very little time when they are asleep at night and I'm still awake. Thus, I end up relying on television as a babysitter, particularly after breakfast so I can clean the kitchen and use the computer, and later while I cook dinner. Chris and I don't watch television while the children are awake.

Chris and I recently listened to "Parenting as a Means to Holiness" by Colleen Hammond, in which she cites study after study (all secular) about the serious physical damage done to the child's developing brain by watching television, even briefly. All issues of morals and damage to the soul aside (and they should be enough reason!), the secular scientific studies are terrifying. And I'm not just being scared and manipulated by academic studies: I can see the results. I can see that John becomes more and more aggressive with the more television he watches. I can see that he is continually nagging me to watch television and says he does not want to play with his toys, read his books, or go on fun adventures.

As longtime readers of this blog know, I've talked about going TV-free multiple times. We are reinvigorated to try again to cut back dramatically the children's television consumption. I have to admit, though, it is an exhausting venture.

We do a lot of arts and crafts around here. John needs so much interaction that, unless he's glued to the television, he's next to me, talking to me, asking me questions, wanting to do a project or play a game with me. Even if I take him outside, he wants me to toss the ball with him or pick up sticks with him or look at something he found. That all sounds fun and idyllic until you think about doing it for five or six hours in a row, two shifts a day. He just doesn't play on his own and, if I try to force him to play alone, he hits his sister, which is a whole other subject that I won't get into in this blog post.

Yesterday, among the many projects I set up for John, we made a lady bug out of a nut I found in the yard, as described in the fantastic, I-can't-recommend-them-enough Maryknoll Treasure Box books.

Today my heart was pierced to witness the above scene. The DVDs are on a shelf John can reach with a stool and lately he has been obsessed with pulling down DVDs and looking at the pictures on the outside or in the pamphlet. My children have a wonderful, edifying library full of gorgeous, classic, age-appropriate books, which I read to them many times per day (easily a dozen books a day), yet my three-year-old would rather sit and study Hollywood DVDs, peppering me with questions about the stories inside them. That is not okay with me!

So I moved the DVDs into a cabinet so John won't glance at them all day, being reminded of his beloved DVDs. I put in that spot our CDs that are classical music or Gregorian chant, as well as a delightful series of Catholic radio plays. Up there I keep a photo of a statue of the Holy Family to remind me to keep our viewing and listening holy.


While rearranging, I came across my beloved CD of "Peter and the Wolf," so I popped it in because I wanted to listen to it while I did chores. A few minutes into it, John began asking questions and I realized it was a "homeschooling moment" I needed to grab, so I stopped my chores and really focused.


I would interpret the music for John, explaining to him how this music was the sound of this character, that music was the sound of that character. I showed him how to listen to what the storyteller was saying so he could follow the story. I'd repeat the words the storyteller said to train John how to listen. I even marched around the kitchen, acting out all the characters and animals for John.


John was gripped! He could hardly wait and would ask with a twinkle in his eye, "What is happening now?!" He began to recognize the instruments and would tell me that such-and-such character was back. Chris came home from a meeting in the midst of our listening and, as soon as he opened the door, John burst out shouting, "We are listening to 'Peter and the Wolf'! The wolf ate the duck! Peter caught him with a rope around his tail! They are going to the zoo! The bird was flying around!"


Then we listened to "The Young Person's Guide to the Orchestra." As each instrument was played, I'd pull up an image of it on the Internet to show John. John would make interesting commentary, such as that a certain instrument sounded like the wolf, or sounded happy, or "this is big music!" (said of the brass instruments).


After listening to probably 45 minutes straight of classical music without moving off his Learning Tower, standing in rapt attention, John asked me if we could please, please listen to it all again right away. He also then drew the comparison that this story of "Peter and the Wolf" "is similar to 'The Cross Country Cat'"--a book given to me by my Aunt Sarah when I was two years old and to which I introduced John this week--"because the cross country cat skied into the woods and the sun went behind a cloud and it got lonely and a grey wolf tried to eat him!" My bookworm's heart soared at that moment!


Then we went up to the bonus room to play and were reading some books. John went to the corner bean bags to "read" a book all by himself. He turned each page and, to my utter astonishment, invented a four-line poem for each picture (four or five of them), saying it with a sing-songy voice and ending the second and fourth lines with a rhyme or near rhyme! It seems that my reading poems to the children has been worthwhile after all.

God, thank you for piercing my heart with conviction and for giving me a mother's reward so early in my efforts yet again to rid our home of too much television. Please give me the strength to continue in this effort and be merciful when I stumble.

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Mary Learns More Words

I last posted what Mary could communicate at 15 months: 20 signs and 7 words. Now, one month and four days later, Mary makes 21 signs and 20 words. The language explosion is beginning! What fun!

Mary Genevieve (16 months)

SIGNS (21)

BRUSHING HAIR [which she also applies to washing hair]
BRUSHING TEETH
CAT
DADDY
DIAPER
DOWN
EAT
FLOWER
GRANDPA [used when Pop-Pops was visiting]
HELLO / BYE-BYE
I HEAR SOMETHING
MORE
MUSIC [same sign she uses for TELEVISION]
NURSING
OWIE [sign she made up, tapping her head]
PHONE
POTTY [noun, verb]
SIGN OF THE CROSS [at this point, she taps her right shoulder three times]
SLEEP
WANT
WATER

WORDS (20)

Nouns
Ball
Banana
Bird
Book
Brop-Bop [brother]
Crocs [for Crocs, shoes in general]
Cup
Dada
Diaper [sounds like dop-dop]
Dirt Down [our “family word” for construction vehicles]
Hat
Kitty
Mama
Poop
Pop-Pop [Chris’ dad]
Truck

Verb
Jump

Exclamations
Bye-Bye
Hi
Ta-da!
Woof-Woof! [sound dog makes]

Saturday, March 13, 2010

Spring Approaches!

You know spring is approaching when the kids don their new off-brand summer "Crocs"!

I know they're silly but I love these accidental photos of John running because they show an active boy.

Two sweet siblings taking a stroll

Today we went to a clothing store clearance sale and spontaneously bought this real coonskin cap for John (for only a few dollars). He absolutely loves wearing it, even though he doesn't understand what it is.

Thursday, March 11, 2010

John Talks Dinosaurs

John cannot get enough of the Scholastic: A First Discovery Books I bought at the used bookstore, particularly the dinosaur edition. I continue to be amazed at how the human brain grows: from babbling to baby talk to how well John enunciates dinosaur names now (at three years three months). And, despite his answering every "do you know?" question in the below videos with "no," he does know those answers. Just this morning I'd been driving the kids on errands and John was "reading" his dinosaur book in the back seat to himself, correctly pointing to and identifying all the dinosaurs.

I don't expect most people to be so interested in watching the lengthy videos below (4 minutes and 6-1/2 minutes), but I was just so happy finally to catch John being animated on film. I call these "grandparent videos" because it's mostly grandparents who will have the most interest!






Bonus Room Rearranged

I rearranged the furniture in the bonus room yet again. (I really enjoy changing furniture arrangements and my sweet husband puts up with it and does the heavy moving for me.) I arranged it so the bonus room is somewhat divided in half, with the rear half being a "school room" and the front half being a play area.



I'd like to be watching on CraigsList or other used furniture markets for a rectangular shaped work table and chairs, quite possibly a low one that is sized for children. (Homeschool moms: What kind of work surface do you like in the early years? One large table or individual desks? Small for children? If so, does mom just sit next to it in an adult-sized chair?)


I moved my stash of empty cardboard boxes to the top of the television armoire so the kids will stop spreading them around so often.

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

Early Spring Hiking

It is early March and spring is approaching! On Monday the temperature was approaching 70 degrees and there was were delightful spring zephyrs in the air!

I took the kids for a walk at the nature preserve. Mary fell asleep in the car, so John and I had a picnic "just you and me" on a bench next to the car before waking Mary to put her on my back for a walk.

We ate under this tree.


I think this outdoor xylophone is a new addition--John really enjoyed it.

Visiting the toads

John was so cheerful and confident, running ahead of me full speed ahead. (Often he trips once, falls apart into wailing, "I just can't do it!" and then he can't be cheered, so we go home in sadness.)

I taught John how to play Poohsticks on the bridge.



John exploring fungus on a log--on this walk we also explored moss, an animal burrow, and a fallen tree.