Wednesday, March 31, 2010
Kids' CD Player
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
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
Sleepy Girl
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
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
Friday, March 26, 2010
Do You Have Some Dressing?
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
Diaper Bargain
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
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
Monday, March 22, 2010
A Serving of E. Coli With That Bath Toy?
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
New Resident
Sunday, March 21, 2010
Early Bird Gets the Worms
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
St. Patrick's Day 2010
Saturday, March 20, 2010
Mr. Fashion
Yes, we let him go out in public that way.
Friday, March 19, 2010
Consignment Sale Spring 2010
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."Thursday, March 18, 2010
Increasing Attention Span
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
Tuesday, March 16, 2010
Mary Learns More Words
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]