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BabyCon 2011

One of my best friends is having a baby next month and I got to throw her a baby shower.  I say “I” but really it was a committee planned event.  Way back in August our sci-fi/fantasy group from college got together and had a “family” reunion.  We were sitting around chatting about the forthcoming baby and the subject of a shower came up.  “Oh, my friend S is throwing one” said the baby mama.  A group of us looked at her in horror.  “WHO?!”  “My friend that I eat lunch with once a week.”  None of us knew her, and no offense to her, if WE didn’t know her, then she would not be throwing OUR shower.  And so the committee was formed.  I was asked to wrangle the group, as we live all over the place and we all have loads of obligations, but I at least don’t have a paying daytime gig, so I got to be the wrangler.  Whee!

So what do we sci-fi/fantasy/horror people do for fun?  We go to Cons (conventions for you Mundanes).  We decided that nothing would do better for our former Art Show Director than a mini-con baby shower.  We spent days and weeks discussing what our con would have and this, my friends, is what we ended up with.
BabyCon2011 Invitation

Our con had an Art Show, Dealers Room (the room with the giant gift table), Panels (about babies & child raising), Name Badges (random silliness), & Con Suite.  I made themed signs to show guests what each room was for (what’s a con without room signs?).

Panels included: Naming Your Geek Baby, Steampunk Your Baby, and Name that Celebrity Baby.
We listed our favorite weird names (best name “Awesome Danger”) aloud during the Naming Your Geek Baby game.  The people that got the most laughs from the GoH won.  Winners of both that game and the Celebrity Baby game got to take home the frames from the celebrity game.  We also spent quite a bit of time just talking about our baby & kid raising experiences.  The Steampunk game was mostly just something to do while the other panels were going on.  I’m going to make a little activity book out of the pieces of the steampunk game for the baby once he arrives.

Art Show had both an Amateur Track (art by me and my kids) and a Professional Track (art by our incredibly talented friend Kay).  We were going to have a silent auction and even put out bid sheets, but ended up doing a live auction with Monopoly money.  One of the kids that was there was really stiff competition.  He got most of my art.  He’s three. *sigh*



Con Suite had PB&J sushi rolls, several kinds of candy, cheese, crackers, Yoda Soda, and a giant Delta Psi Phi onesie cake & Converse booties.

Later, of course, there was time for gifts.  Some of the favorites were ones I made:   Baby’s First CosPlay Villain Mustache Pacifiers (idea from here)

and Baby’s First Con Shirt:

The Guest of Honor and her U.F.O. had a great time.  “Thank you, everyone! I was not expecting a complete, elaborate con. That was amazing and SUCH fun!”  🙂

End of the week & weekend

The first Thursday of the month with had a playdate after school with Greg’s pal E. and his brothers. We had 7 kids amongst two moms. It was great!
Ethan's mom says he hates to have his photo taken, which is why he's trying to escape Greg.

The next day we had a playdate at DSP with Greg’s friend Kya. There were only 6 kids amongst 3 moms this time. 😉 I’m always amused at the numbers, I don’t know why. They had all sorts of new stuff at DSP since the last time we went there, including robotic surgery arms, a new pretend restaurant, and a pretend courthouse building. The kids did not want to play in the courthouse, they wanted to play grocery and restaurant instead. 🙂

They have cool new robot-surgery arms at DSP!Townsend & Annabrielle ate all the play food they could!

Later that day we drove on down to College Station. We ate out at Cotton Patch Cafe (bad decision, such a long wait) and settled in. The next morning we took the kids out to the new skateboard park. We didn’t have skateboards, but we did bring the scooters and they absolutely LOVED it. All the ups and downs were enthralling to them. We have nothing like it in Tyler, as far as I know. They didn’t ever want to leave. They’ll probably go back again this morning as soon as they can drag someone out the door. p_00198Our family.  :)

Last night my dad and Nick had a whisky tasting. (In case you’re new here, I’ll mention that they do a couple a year, one in College Station so they can invite my Dad’s friends from the University and one in Tyler so we can invite our friends.) I spent all afternoon helping to clean and set up and getting food ready (I must have dipped about 50 strawberries in chocolate), but before it started I took the kids and headed out to Steph’s house for the evening.

Here’re the pictures I took before I left:
Getting ready for the whisky tastingSome of the food at the whisky tasting

We had a great time at Steph’s. She ordered pizzas for us and we got to try fancy homemade ice cream. We boggled at the entirely empty nursery. Our friend Sarah also came over with her baby. Sadly I didn’t get many photos at Steph’s house, as I left the camera at my parents house thinking they’d take pictures during the tasting (no, no they didn’t). The best one was this one:
Ren chases Greg in a crawling race.

Anyways, I have a big day ahead of me with Steph’s baby shower. It’s way too early in the morning, but I’m already jittery and excited about it. Must go shopping as soon as the stores open. Smile

Happy November!

Did I say that the other day?  I do love November, though.  It’s one of the nicer months of the year.  Here in Texas it is finally getting crisp and nice outside.  The boys and I spend as much time outside as we can.  I also like that for us, at least, it is one of those months that doesn’t have any family disagreements built into it, holiday-wise.  My in-laws do their Thanksgiving a few weeks after, just in time for their anniversary, so that just leaves us one family to do Thanksgiving with.  🙂  (Of course there are still multiple celebrations: my son, my niece, my sister-in-law, and my mother-in-law all have birthdays this month.  Whee!)

Catching up on life: We had a great vacation.  We went down to Galveston Island (about 5.5 hours from us) and stayed in a condo near the beach.  We got up later than we normally do and watched the sunrise on the balcony or on the shore every morning and went back out there again for the sunset.  We listened to the seagulls cry.  We walked nearly everywhere: restaurants, church, the beach.  We had time with friends.  We went to Schlitterbahn Water Park (just the indoor part) and Moody Gardens.  The weather was perfect.  I really did want to stay there forever, which never happens for me on vacation (usually I get more and more stressed and want to go home).  It was a delightful trip.

Since getting back home I’ve tried to work a little more of that laid back vacation attitude into regular life.  I head out onto the front patio with my tea in the morning and sometimes even make it back out onto the back patio in the evenings.  Nick and I made a joint decision to watch a little less TV than we had been, so we deleted a few shows off our DVR, just in time for the World Series.  So I’ve watched less TV, at least.  (Things we dropped: Raising Hope, Fringe, & some of the new stuff we’d recorded but never watched) I’ve spent that time reading or doing crafts, which I love.  I have a secret project I’ve been working on for a friend, so I’ll post about that after the gifting has been done.  I was hoping to add some more walking into my schedule, but that hasn’t worked this week yet.  After this week I’ll have more time, so maybe Greg and I can go take some long walks at the park trails.

Another new thing in my life is piano lessons.  I took piano from the time I was in 3rd grade until my senior year of high school.  I was considering going on to music school in college, but got extremely burnt out on everything and quit taking lessons and went on to be an English major instead.  But I’ve kept up with music; I sang in choirs at church, taught beginning piano and clarinet lessons for a bit while in college, played my clarinet in various community groups throughout the years, and have been doing piano duets with my mother-in-law at church lately.  I can still play well from sheet music, but I wanted to learn to improvise and accompany.  My kids piano teacher had mentioned that the system she uses with beginners (the kids will be starting it soon) had a corollary program for “professionals” and she also had a time slot open.  I figured out a way to fit it into the budget  (no more lunches out and no more fancy beverages pretty much did it; the added bonus is that theoretically that will help with weight loss, right?) and off I ran with it.  I started last week in David’s time slot while he was away at camp with a school program.  I’ve already managed to memorize 3 chords and their minors & 7ths, which had totally eluded me in the past (perhaps because while my teachers always told me what kinds of chords things were during lessons, the chords themselves weren’t what I was practicing, not in my mind).  I have my second lesson today.  I’m very excited.  🙂  Unfortunately all the practicing is making my hands more twingy and achy, but I’m trying to figure out the best way to deal with that and I think I’ll go back to doing my hand stretches in the morning again.

Good Morning!

Yesterday was a super busy one.  I got the first kids to school on time -which is early due to David’s violin lessons- then headed over to my parents house for coffee and to get Greg’s car seat (he rode in Ben’s since Ben is just one week away from No More CarSeat!).  We also got the base for the new-to-us TV, since we’ll be getting that this weekend after all the festivities are done.

After getting Greg ready and off to school (dropping off Ben’s library book along the way), I went shopping.  I tried three different stores, but none had the ribbon I was looking for.  Everywhere I look in blogland people are using supercute ribbons, but there are none to be found in my town.  So after three stops I finally  gave up and got something else for my friends baby shower.  I also remembered to pick up the shower supplies, like cups & plates & napkins because I’d totally forgot to put those on the list the other day when I was asking people to list what they were bringing.

At that point I got a text from my neighbor saying she was finally taking me up on my offer to let her kids use the now-too-tiny tricycles (which are only used when we’ve got spare little folk around).  So I rushed home, handed those off to her, talked with her kids about their birthdays, and completely ran out of time to eat lunch.  I had eggs cooking, got them made into a sandwich, ready to go, but knocked a glass of tea over and made a giant mess, so I was late for my volunteer job.

This fall I’ve been volunteering a couple hours (or more during book fair) a week at the library at the kids school.  I label the new books, shelve everything, check books in & out, help kids find stuff, and occasionally help in the computer lab.  Up until now I worked on Thursday afternoons, but I started taking piano lessons last week (using one of David’s lessons since he wasn’t there to use it) and my time slot is right in the middle of library time.  So I surprised the librarian by being in on my “off day (she forgot to write down my new schedule), and got to learn a new bunch of kids names, as the library helpers change by day.  Also have a different set of classes coming through, so more new names to learn there as well.

From there I left to pick up Greg and then turn around to pick up the other kids.  We had a quick snack & piano practice before leaving again for the kids piano lessons.  I brought craft supplies and worked on a secret project (all will be revealed next week).  Whee!    Lessons went well, came home to dinner nearly done (squash stuffed with sausage, carrots, onions, & seasoned rice).  Got kids showered and off to bed by 9.  I was so tired that I kept falling asleep during Terra Nova, but that was okay because we’re a couple weeks behind and had come to the one that was pre-empted by baseball, so there was only 9 minutes of it.  Woke up enough to watch the entire next episode before bedtime for me.  Smile

Nanoblowrimo?

Happy November!  I’ve decided this year, for the first time in ages and ages to just NOT try writing a novel in November.  I’m exhausted already and don’t need to add anything else to my overflowing plate of responsibilities.  That being said, I HAVE decided to participate in National Blog Writing Month.  I’m going to be posting every day, either here or on my RA blog, depending on my mood, my writing prompt, etc.  I’m using a book called “Writing from the Heart” for some of my prompts.

 

So watch out for more posting!  Smile

October already!

I can’t believe it’s already October!

School started for the kids back in mid-August, which meant I did lots of shopping and resting and shopping some more.  Then PTA stuff started back up.  I’m homeroom parent coordinator, so I’ve spent lots of time making a database of which parent is willing to help with which activity for which grade (as well as all the contact info, which flummoxes me a bit because the school already has most of that info in a database somewhere; why must I copy it?).  I started volunteering a couple hours a week in the school library helping check in and out while the librarian teaches classes.  I also help out with shelving (I bring in my own kneeling pad & am allowed to scoot around in the wheeled chair when my knees are bad) and in the computer lab.  It’s more fun and life-affirming than you can imagine.  My husband thought it might wear me out, but it actually has been energizing me because it gives me a couple hours out of my own head.  Plus I get to talk to kids about books!  What could be better?!

Let’s see, what else?  My sinus CT came back normal (I was on steroids and antibiotics at the time; of course it looked normal) so I’m keeping the suggested surgery at bay for a while longer.  I got a staph infection at the gym (I’m pretty sure it was there) the first day I went there.  They now have bleach wipes for everyone to use after using the machines.  Yay.

Once that was gone, I went back to my primary care doctor for a physical.  He said I was the healthiest he’d seen me in ages and that we should go ahead and do those vaccinations he’d been holding off on for a long while.  So I got a flu shot and a TDAP.  I immediately started feeling weak and dizzy, but I HATE shots, so I didn’t say much.  I told the lady doing my blood draw that I felt weird and she let me sit for a while first and eventually I was good to go.  Three days went by and while my flu shot side (the nurse labeled them) stayed small and red, the TDAP side swelled and swelled and was very hot.  I had a fever the first couple days, then it left and a stiff neck set in.  I called my doctor’s office a couple times but my doctor was out of the office & there was a holiday weekend involved, so I finally saw the doctor about a week later.  He said I’d had a really bad reaction to the vaccination and put me on another round of steroids.  (Even now, a month later, I can still feel a marble sized lump under my skin on that site.)

Since I’m mostly doing all right lately, I’ve started a new food tracking program.  I’m using LoseIt.com to track my food and exercise (I used to use SparkPeople, but it felt so competitive and just like too much to do).  I’ve discovered a few things the past couple weeks (I tracked for a week without changing anything first, just to see what that looked like.): 1) After entering my age/weight/activity level and letting the program run its calculations, I found out that I apparently don’t eat enough, so my body’s been in starvation mode and b) once I started eating as many calories as I’m supposed to have, I started losing weight.  So far just a week of eating more (and making sure that that “more” was a healthy more, not a candy bar or soda more) and I’m down 1.7 pounds.  No extra exercise (although it counts weird things like housecleaning and music making as exercise) involved.  We’re going on vacation this next week, so eating well will be trickier, but I’ll also be moving around more, so that’ll even some things up.  Still, I’ll be trying checking out menus/nutritional values and trying to keep as close to on-track as one can while on vacation.

How’s the RA?  It’s coming and going.  When I’m being good and resting like I ought to it mostly stays pretty quiet.  When I’m running around like a crazy person (the last couple weeks: friends came to dinner, we went out to dinner, my kids birthday party, book fair at school, field trip for MDO, PTA movie night, playing a duet at church, family dinner night out), then it creeps up on me and unleashes its wrath: hot swollen ankles, knees, and hands; a painful back, shoulders, and elbows.  I’m hoping that this upcoming vacation week allows me to slow down a little and catch my breath and rest my limbs.  🙂

Book meme

…in lieu of the post that I’m actually still working on…
These are the ALA’s top 100 banned or challenged books from 2000-2009. Bold the ones you’ve read, italicize the ones you mean to.

Top 100 Banned/Challenged Books: 2000-2009

1. Harry Potter (series), by J.K. Rowling
2. Alice series, by Phyllis Reynolds Naylor
3. The Chocolate War, by Robert Cormier
4. And Tango Makes Three, by Justin Richardson/Peter Parnell
5. Of Mice and Men, by John Steinbeck
6. I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings, by Maya Angelou
7. Scary Stories (series), by Alvin Schwartz
8. His Dark Materials (series), by Philip Pullman
9. ttyl; ttfn; l8r g8r (series), by Myracle, Lauren
10. The Perks of Being a Wallflower, by Stephen Chbosky
11. Fallen Angels, by Walter Dean Myers
12. It’s Perfectly Normal, by Robie Harris
13. Captain Underpants (series), by Dav Pilkey
14. The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, by Mark Twain
15. The Bluest Eye, by Toni Morrison
16. Forever, by Judy Blume
17. The Color Purple, by Alice Walker
18. Go Ask Alice, by Anonymous
19. Catcher in the Rye, by J.D. Salinger
20. King and King, by Linda de Haan
21. To Kill A Mockingbird, by Harper Lee
22. Gossip Girl (series), by Cecily von Ziegesar
23. The Giver, by Lois Lowry
24. In the Night Kitchen, by Maurice Sendak
25. Killing Mr. Griffen, by Lois Duncan
26. Beloved, by Toni Morrison
27. My Brother Sam Is Dead, by James Lincoln Collier
28. Bridge To Terabithia, by Katherine Paterson
29. The Face on the Milk Carton, by Caroline B. Cooney
30. We All Fall Down, by Robert Cormier
31. What My Mother Doesn’t Know, by Sonya Sones
32. Bless Me, Ultima, by Rudolfo Anaya
33. Snow Falling on Cedars, by David Guterson
34. The Earth, My Butt, and Other Big, Round Things, by Carolyn Mackler
35. Angus, Thongs, and Full Frontal Snogging, by Louise Rennison
36. Brave New World, by Aldous Huxley
37. It’s So Amazing, by Robie Harris
38. Arming America, by Michael Bellasiles
39. Kaffir Boy, by Mark Mathabane
40. Life is Funny, by E.R. Frank
41. Whale Talk, by Chris Crutcher
42. The Fighting Ground, by Avi
43. Blubber, by Judy Blume
44. Athletic Shorts, by Chris Crutcher
45. Crazy Lady, by Jane Leslie Conly
46. Slaughterhouse-Five, by Kurt Vonnegut
47. The Adventures of Super Diaper Baby, by George Beard
48. Rainbow Boys, by Alex Sanchez
49. One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, by Ken Kesey
50. The Kite Runner, by Khaled Hosseini
51. Daughters of Eve, by Lois Duncan
52. The Great Gilly Hopkins, by Katherine Paterson
53. You Hear Me?, by Betsy Franco
54. The Facts Speak for Themselves, by Brock Cole
55. Summer of My German Soldier, by Bette Green
56. When Dad Killed Mom, by Julius Lester
57. Blood and Chocolate, by Annette Curtis Klause
58. Fat Kid Rules the World, by K.L. Going
59. Olive’s Ocean, by Kevin Henkes
60. Speak, by Laurie Halse Anderson
61. Draw Me A Star, by Eric Carle
62. The Stupids (series), by Harry Allard
63. The Terrorist, by Caroline B. Cooney
64. Mick Harte Was Here, by Barbara Park
65. The Things They Carried, by Tim O’Brien
66. Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry, by Mildred Taylor
67. A Time to Kill, by John Grisham
68. Always Running, by Luis Rodriguez
69. Fahrenheit 451, by Ray Bradbury
70. Harris and Me, by Gary Paulsen
71. Junie B. Jones (series), by Barbara Park
72. Song of Solomon, by Toni Morrison
73. What’s Happening to My Body Book, by Lynda Madaras
74. The Lovely Bones, by Alice Sebold
75. Anastasia (series), by Lois Lowry
76. A Prayer for Owen Meany, by John Irving
77. Crazy: A Novel, by Benjamin Lebert
78. The Joy of Gay Sex, by Dr. Charles Silverstein
79. The Upstairs Room, by Johanna Reiss
80. A Day No Pigs Would Die, by Robert Newton Peck
81. Black Boy, by Richard Wright
82. Deal With It!, by Esther Drill
83. Detour for Emmy, by Marilyn Reynolds
84. So Far From the Bamboo Grove, by Yoko Watkins
85. Staying Fat for Sarah Byrnes, by Chris Crutcher
86. Cut, by Patricia McCormick
87. Tiger Eyes, by Judy Blume
88. The Handmaid’s Tale, by Margaret Atwood
89. Friday Night Lights, by H.G. Bissenger
90. A Wrinkle in Time, by Madeline L’Engle
91. Julie of the Wolves, by Jean Craighead George
92. The Boy Who Lost His Face, by Louis Sachar
93. Bumps in the Night, by Harry Allard
94. Goosebumps (series), by R.L. Stine
95. Shade’s Children, by Garth Nix
96. Grendel, by John Gardner
97. The House of the Spirits, by Isabel Allende
98. I Saw Esau, by Iona Opte
99. Are You There, God? It’s Me, Margaret, by Judy Blume
100. America: A Novel, by E.R. Frank

So I’ve read nearly half.  I didn’ t count the series that I’d read just one or two books out of, but there are two series in there that I’ve read one of (the Captain Underpants books and the Super Diaper Baby books – mainly because I volunteer at an elementary school library and those are frequent check-outs and I just had to know why).  Most of the books on this list I read in high school (a few in college for children’s or YA lit), though a few were after my time there.  I italicized none of them because I don’t see anything on there that calls out to me as Must Reads, but I admit to not having heard of most of the ones I haven’t already read.  🙂

 

 

July catch-up

Hello hello! I know, you’d nearly forgotten I blog here.

When last I updated it was still early July… July was fun!

digging for geodes at the library

The first Thursday of the month, David got to do his class with the Gem & Mineral Society at the library and it was completely different than Ben’s, which was great! They saw different kinds of rocks & minerals and dug for geodes instead of colored stones. They were handed out hammers & safety glasses and let loose. It was fabulous! David’s geode broke into many pieces, but he liked it all the same.

Our "Mom's Day Out" annual shopping trip officially started here

Friday Nick’s mom, sister, and I headed out to Dallas, sans-kiddos, and went shopping. We hit Sam Moon first, where I spent nearly half my money. Then we started hitting thrift stores. The first one was way out of our price range ($100 skirts, no thanks) and the second wasn’t even on our list: Thrift World of Dallas. It was actually pretty awesome, despite its lack of dressing rooms. We wandered onward to several Goodwills before finally stopping for “lunch” quite late at a combination A&W/Long John Silver’s. Not our first choice place, but we were in disagreement about whether there was food ahead and I lost (I thought all the “good” food was behind us…it was, hence the fast food stop). Anyway, it was a really fun day! 🙂

Thomas & Titus visit

The next week was full of appointments. One kid went to see Dr. Hoover, I forget why now. I saw my neurologist, who told me some of my test results got lost and the other ones came back normal. Anti-climatic, it surely was. Wednesday the Rochleau kids came over to play (they are my kids cousins other cousins). Thursday Ben got to go see a movie and go out to lunch with his friend Logan. David spent a couple days at Nana & Pa’s and Greg and I just hung out.

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The next week was Art camp in College Station. The kids and I all went down while Nick stayed in Tyler and worked. I got to see Steph twice in two days, once for lunch with her and her husband and once all by ourselves for girl time over dessert at Sweet Eugene’s House of Java. Love that place! I also gott o spend time with my friend Sarah and her baby.

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The older two kids got to go in and do art 2 hours every day. Ben took a stitching class and made some pretty things and a stuffed doll by the end of the week. David took a mask making class and make a bunch of different kinds of masks. They both had a fabulous time! 🙂 Greg followed me and his grandma around here and there, shopping or window-shopping. We spent the afternoons beside/in the pool. It was a very nice trip.

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We came back just in time for UCG’s Youth Day Camp. The kids had three afternoon/evenings at church with their friends doing arts/crafts/service projects.

DSCN3113We weren’t a “host family” but I did help out a lot with the kids. DSCN3210 Once it was over, I went back to the doctor for another sinus infection. Yay infection. Nick and I also got to go out and see the last Harry Potter movie. I cried nearly the whole way through. Can’t believe it’s over.

We finished up the week with another trip out to Dallas, this time me and Nick and the kids, to go to Legoland. That should be a whole separate post, shouldn’t it? I’ll pick up there tomorrow. 🙂

There are, as ever, more photos to be found on flickr.com.

Summertime, summertime, sum-sum-summertime, summertiiiiiiiiime!

I can’t believe it’s already July! I’ve been horrible about keeping up the blog, I know. I’ve been horrible about keeping up with anything at all this summer, really, so you’re just lucky I’m typing this at all right now. I’m not going to even bother trying to post photos today because that’s what’s kept me from updating in the past. I have two cameras, a cell phone, and the iPhone full of photos that need offloading, re-orienting, & labeling, and I’m just not up for that. Nope, nope, nope.

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My last update we were dealing with end of school stuff. (May 20-June 5) The kids had all sorts of rehearsals for their Pentecost program at church, I was having rehearsals for women’s ensemble (I was both singing and playing flute) & training for cub scout day camp, and Nick was continuing with his overtime at work. It was ridiculously busy. Then school ended,and we went straight from there to a weekend campout at Lake Texhoma with a church group out there.

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There was canoeing, swimming in the lake, foosball, ping-pong, group meals, dorm style sleeping arrangements. It was great!

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Then we had a week of nothing but laziness & kids visiting (David & Ben each have two friends moving this summer). It was lovely. We also got to go to my nieces ballet recital.

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David got to see his new orthopedic doctor, summer piano lessons started (more casual than regular lessons), and my sister visited!

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We also got to go to an adoption party for some friends that finally got to adopt the children they’ve been loving on for the last two years. 🙂 It was so very happy! 🙂

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Pentecost came and went, with me playing with the musical ensemble, and the kids performing their presentation. It all went really well. Unfortunately we also had some trouble with lawn vandalism (the police said it was bored teenagers), so I ended up moving lots of lawn furniture around to the backyard, overdid it, and flung myself into some sort of RA flare & sinus infection combo.

DSCN2787By the time Cub Scout Day Camp came round (June 13-17) I was too sick to work. I ended up dropping David & Ben off at camp every day, coming home to plop Greg in front of the TV, and going back to bed. Camp was lovely for the kids, as they’d moved over to the bigger college campus in town, just down the road from my house. They had a better location (around a small lake), better things planned (due to reasonable ease of travel from activity to activity), and best of all, a big shaded area for the kids to rest between activities. Greg, at home, learned how to start his own shows both on Netflix and on the DVR. I only had to get up to feed him, really. (Nick was, of course, out of town for a couple days this week)

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For Father’s Day, we went down to CS, where surprise-surprise we got to see my sister again! It was a Father’s Day miracle! We got to eat out at Gattiland and visit the new trails at the park down the way from my parents house. DSCN2829

Father’s Day morning we got up, had breakfast with my parents, and headed out to visit the Grapeland Drive-thru Safari (Nick’s big Father’s Day joy) on the way home. They had llamas, zebras, bison, goats, and other assorted things to feed. The kids were not as impressed as we were, but it was a fun time nonetheless. DSCN2840

The following week (June 20-26) the kids and I started studying Japan as part of our summer theme plan (geography & world culture). DSCN2891

We also visited the library, had another piano lesson, had the cable company out to fix my bedroom outlet (it’s been about 5 years since I’ve had cable in there), and just hung around the house doing fun things like making bento lunches, carp kites, and other Japanese related things. On Saturday the Women’s Ensemble sang (& I played my flute for the first time in public). The youth group had their lock-in that night, which Nick and I helped chaperone. It really is fun to stay overnight in the church building. 🙂

The week of the 27th through July 1st started with the kids and I getting ready to go to Colleyville for Kelly B’s birthday. We drove up around lunchtime, hung out with the family for a while before going up to their church for a night of VBS. DSCN2900

The kids went off to their various classes and I hung out with Kay in the storytellers room. The kids played in the park afterwards, then we hit Wal-mart before heading back to the house. The kids went to bed in their various cots & nests (Greg went to bed in a giant teddy bear) & we adults stayed up watching ridiculous 80’s movies. The next morning we played Quirkle (which I really must find so we can play at home) and got ready for the party.

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The party was held at the local sprayground (or splashpad as they call it up there) and Kay was way overprepared for party activities. Mostly the kids just played on the sprayground and then ate cake, took their goodies, & left. There were lots of games & stuff we did later at the house, just the 5 kids and us. We finally loaded up and left in time to make it home for bed. The next day we took for a rest day, reading up on India (our country for the week), and being happy we didn’t have to be in the car. Thursday we hit the library for Ben’s class by the East Texas Mineral & Gemology Society. DSCN2947

They let Greg participate, too, since some kids hadn’t shown up (& we’re library regulars – they love us). They got to dig for gems in big swimming pools filled with sand. It was lots of fun for them. 🙂 I don’t remember Friday at all, but I’m guessing it was probably filled with laundry & dishwashing & swimming in our little pool. Saturday we had church & then a party for the Sabbath School kids (I’m starting to think that they’ve decided that pizza is the official food of Sabbath school). After that we had our sorta-monthly family dinner with Nick’s family at his parents house. We attempted making homemade ice cream, but either the mix was bad or the timing wasn’t right or something, but we ended up with very sweet milkshakes instead. Sunday my parents came to town so we hung out with them at their house for a while, then had them over for dinner later that night.

Independence DayJuly 4th was a weird day. We had breakfast with my parents, then chatted with the neighbors while the kids played for a while, and then watched the movie Independence Day, which despite the title is not terribly patriotic. Then I took the kids home for a while for swimming and patriotic music and making some decorations. Independence DayMy parents came back over later for our traditional July 4th dinner: hamburgers, potato salad, baked beans, etc. Independence Day After dinner they went home and we drove out to the next town over for fireworks. Well, about an hour into the festivities (sno-cones, food, drinks, a playground, etc), the organizers started making announcements about the bad weather that was coming our way. All I could see was blue skies, soft fluffy little white clouds, and sunshine. Haha. The storm was sneaking up from behind me. Eventually they told us to evacuate to either the gymnasium or our vehicles. So we moved our chairs & stuff back to the van and let the kids play catch in the parking lot until the rain became too heavy to ignore. Independence Day - once the rain started we got into the car & played car games like 20 questions and Name That State. Then we sat in the car for over an hour while it poured rain & the wind blew the van back and forth & we played Name the State and Twenty Questions. Eventually the hour grew late and the kids grew tired and the storm became less scary enough that we were able to drive home. Everything was drenched until we got a block away from home: our house got no rain whatsoever. We watched the Macy’s 4th of July broadcast fireworks and then the kids went to bed. A very weird night. (According to the piano teacher, they eventually did a miniature fireworks show an hour after we left, but since there were still bursts of rain they just did a few finale-style bursts of fireworks.)
Tuesday we got up and went over to the garage door selling place. Our doors haven’t ever really worked well, not since we moved in really. One opened and closed, but the automatic opener didn’t work (and there was no locking mechanism other than the opener). The other had a working opener, but the door itself was very broken. (The only reason the one door opened at all was because I combined all the good parts and put them on one door.) Anyway, we got two new doors and one new opener. They came out and measured right away. 🙂 We spent the rest of the day moving things around in the garage so they’d have room to work. Yesterday they came out bright and early and installed them. It looks beautiful out there now. our new garage doors It’s hard to stop opening and closing them, though. We’re addicted to pushing the buttons. 🙂 Yesterday was also the day of my latest RA appointment, but that’s a post for the other blog. 🙂 My father-in-law came and watched the boys while I was gone. Then after lunch we had another piano lesson, wherein Ben finished his first set of books. Yay for Ben!

That brings us up to today. We got up this morning, watered the plants, ate some muffins, then headed out to further rearrange the garage and to prepare for our yard sale. The kids dug through their boxes of Get Rid Of & made one smallish garbage bag of stuff to trash, two storage boxes of stuff to sell, and one grocery sack of stuff that needs to stay because it’s part of other stuff we’ve kept. We brought our bikes back from my parents garage, consolidated the Spring decor into one storage bin, and loaded the van with the rest of the sellables, for traveling over to my parents house (to be closer to the multi-family yard sale that’s happening over on that block this weekend). Then the dirty, sweaty kids flung themselves into the pool, I dragged the computer over here to where I could watch them without getting wet, and Nick came home for lunch (to be ignored in favor of blog updating, poor Nick).

And now you’re all caught up. 🙂

Catch up post

I don’t entirely remember when I left off, as it’s been really busy lately, so I’ll start where I start and end with whatever I get to before I fall asleep.

DSCN2372I missed a whole bunch of Joseph & the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat rehearsals the last week before the show, as they were all rescheduled to start 15 minutes after school was over, and school there ends before school here ends, so I would have been about an hour late every day, and the rehearsals ran an hour and a half, so there was very little point in going.  Friday was Ben’s Track & Field Day.  It was supposed to rain all day long, but it held off until after they were done.  He had fun doing all their little events, Greg had fun playing with all the other younger siblings on the school playground, and I had fun talking to the other moms out there. I didn’t have a camera with me, but several moms offered up photos, but I never followed through in getting them, so I have only a couple little camera phone photos of the whole event.

Saturday was church, lots of meetings afterwards about several things, and extra bonus meetings as well.

Sunday was the first performance of Joseph.  Nick and the kids came to see it.  It wasn’t great, but we did okay.  Monday we spent the day cleaning.  The 2nd performance of Joseph was better by a large margin.  Tuesday was supposed to be a lunch date, but my friend graciously rescheduled so I could have time to rest before the last performance.  That performance went nearly flawlessly, but was, sadly, the last one.

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Wednesday Greg and I had a playdate at the community center nearby with our friends Sj, MJ, & CJ.  We had lots of fun; in and out and in and out and in and out of the play area.

Thursday was Greg’s last day of MDO.  I ran a bunch of errands and brought Greg’s teachers gifts and all that.  Friday I don’t remember anything about right now.  Saturday & Sunday I don’t remember either.  Hmm.  Perhaps it is time to stop typing because I don’t remember anything else right now either.  Goodnight!