We're heading to our ranch tomorrow for the fist time this year. Paige made a list of all the things she'll need while she's there.
Friday, June 28, 2013
Friday, June 21, 2013
Wax On, Wax Off
We've always had a rough time trying to get Curtis to go to bed. It's not unusual to see him wandering around at 10:00, 10:30, 11:00 at night. But finally, a few months ago, things started to get better. We'd let him play the iPad in his bed for a couple of minutes and then he'd go right to sleep. Miracle.
But now that summer's here, he's started wandering again and we're back to square one. Whenever he comes out of his room, he always has a demand.
Me: Curtis, you need to go back to bed.
Curtis: Not unless you make me a floor bed (meaning let him sleep on our floor).
Or
Curtis: Not unless you let me watch or show.
Or
Curtis: I'm not ever going to bed until it's morning.
We've heard each of these requests a million times. But last night it was something new.
Me: Curtis, you need to go to bed.
Curtis: No. Not until you watch Karate Kid with me for 10 minutes.
Karate Kid?! Well, now we have a deal.
Labels:
Curtis
Thursday, June 20, 2013
3:1 Kids to Dad
Pictures have the magical ability to capture a moment--like these three minutes of bliss on the little train at the Bees game.
When will I learn that I can't really take all three of my kids to a sporting event all by myself?
Friday, June 14, 2013
Their Father's Fantastic Genes
Traci calls me on the phone and says the following:
Curtis is upstairs on our bed, watching a Sports Center thing about Tim Tebow.
Paige is downstairs listening to Daft Punk on the computer.
I'm glad that I have absolutely no influence on our children.
Labels:
Kids
Sunday, June 09, 2013
No Longer a First Grader
We went to Paige's end-of-school-year program the other night. The kids sang and danced and, to her ultimate delight, Paige's class got to tell knock-knock jokes. (Paige is the queen of Laffy Taffy-esque zingers, always making up her instant classics, e.g., "What kind of ghost does a football squad like? Team spirit.) I loved watching Paige sing her little heart out (she's the kid that sings about 20 decibels louder than everyone else), but my favorite part was at the end.
The theme of program was "Because I Knew You." Each of the first graders wrote a little paragraph on the theme. They were hanging on the back wall. Paige wrote an ode to Curtis:
"Because I knew Curtis I can always know when to laugh. It makes your life a more joyful thing. Laughing makes others lives more joyful and it makes you happy. Because I knew Curtis I am filled with laughter."
Pretty sweet. (When we read it to Curtis, he simply shrugged his shoulders, as he tends to do.)
She also made this self-portrait, holding her favorite book, which is (apparently) High Tide in Hawaii.
--
We were happy when we found that Paige had tested into the Advanced Learner program after kindergarten. But we were also a little apprehensive about sending her to a new school.
We shouldn't have been nervous. She loved first grade and it's been good for her to be surrounded by other little nerds who love reading and spelling and telling their parents that they are smarter than them (probably true, but still not okay to say).
We only had one little problem. Always worried about Paige's social world, I tend to ask her more about who she sat by at lunch than what she's been learning in class. In the winter, I could tell something was up.
"Paige, who'd you sit by at lunch today?"
"Um, I don't...exactly...know."
"You don't know who you sat by? Who did you play with at recess?"
"I mostly just played by...myself."
[The sound of my heart breaking] "Really? Why?"
"I...just wanted to."
"So what did you do exactly?"
"I just played in the snow."
"With the other kids?"
"No. Just by myself."
We went through this for several weeks. She went out of her way to tell me that it was by choice that she was all by herself, and that she really didn't mind being alone...and that she didn't really want me to keep bugging her about it.
We couldn't tell if she was being left out or she'd been mean to the other kids or she was being weird to be weird. But I didn't like it one bit. Traci and I talked about all different approaches we could take to the problem--from calling other kids' moms to encourage their kids to play with Paige to sitting at recess with her so she wouldn't be alone. We finally decided to talk about it with her teacher. (Which was the approach we should have taken in the first place.) But right as we did, the problem corrected itself. She was back to playing with friends and we haven't had any problems since. (We never found out what the original problem was, though.)
It's been a good year. Though she (regularly) drives us crazy, we've got a pretty great, smart, beautiful little girl.
A Boy and His Truck
Don't think for a second that Tate chooses to drive a truck because it's cool or trendy. No, my friend, it's about functionality. He was adamant that we load his trike in the back (which is nearly the size of the truck). 'Cause that what trucks are for. Hauling stuff.
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