Showing posts with label homeschooling. Show all posts
Showing posts with label homeschooling. Show all posts

Friday, September 2, 2011

the day is here. the hour has arrived.

izzy has wanted to be a "ballewina" for as long as her big sister's been donning slippers for her weekly class.  and after an entire summer of asking if it was time to go yet, izzy's big day finally arrived and she had her first ballet class this week.

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i loved hearing abby encourage izzy and share in her excitement.  if only i had a nickel for each time i heard her say, isabel, only ____ more days until you get to start ballet!!

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but ballet wasn't the only first this week.  we were ecstatic to be asked to join in a homeschool co-op with a couple of sweet friends for this year, and yesterday was the kids' first day at "miss bwook's house". 

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(please excuse the direct-sun-freak-out my blue-eyed little ones are doing in that last photo.)  :-)

Tuesday, April 5, 2011

the past few weeks in 100 words or less

we romped around in the creek (read: muddy water) with the cobbs...

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and had an evil-knievil-of-a-time riding the monster truck in the backyard:

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the kids and i hit aldridge gardens for a science lesson (really we just needed a getaway for some good mommy/kiddie time):

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uncle bailey helped josh get the roof on the hand-me-down playset we got 18 months ago but just made it around to assembling (have i mentioned that josh is a total rock star for putting this thing together?  alone.  from memory.)  and all the dead grass?  see the monster truck blurp above:

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while the guys were working, the little lewis ladies and their sweet cousins cuddled a bit (brayden and jack must have been off alternately wrestling and playing matchbox cars):

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during the 7 minutes they were all well, some of the fanning crew came over to play on the aforementioned playset:

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and in an act designed either to exhibit great love for the newest fanning or to make me insanely jealous, josh spent 30 minutes doing this:

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the kids made giraffe sandwiches for lunch one day:

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and then, much to my delight, asked me to take their pictures:

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to be accurate, izzy requested a "sheshun":

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abby and izzy worked intently on their arts and crafts:

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and we had a night in with the taylors (the answer is no, i don't have a clue what abby and izzy were doing with their mouths or why jack was staring me down like i was interrupting some fine dining experience): 

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and finally, josh and i took a picture of our own to celebrate baseball's opening day:

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so maybe "100 pictures or less" is more like it, but there - i'm officially caught up with photo blogging.  i've got wordless wednesday ready to go for tomorrow, but i'm praying that with our agency's wednesday report from ethiopia will come some good news to trump it!

Sunday, March 27, 2011

that's what happens when you bite my daughter

you know that book about the "five love languages"?  i can't remember all of them, but there's something about acts of service, gift-giving, et cetera, et cetera.  well i'm convinced that abby has a love language all of her own, and it's wrapped up in picture drawing.  that girl whips out anywhere from 3 or 4 to sometimes 20 pictures a day that she's drawn for me, josh, one of the grandparents, a friend or neighbor, the mailman, the checkout lady at the dollar tree, or anybody else that comes to her little mind.  here's one of my recent gifts (apparently neither abby nor i was feeling so hot that day):


as an expansion of her love of picture-drawing, we've been working in school on writing with words as well.  typically it's been with an assigned topic or a suggested word bank, but not too long ago, abigail took to some creative writing all on her own.  i found this lying around a few weeks back:


can you read that darling six-year-old phonetic spelling?  i am special because god made me.  you are too.  and i love god like you.  god, you are holy and powerful. 

gracious lands, that makes this momma's heart leap for joy.

a couple of nights ago, abby took her notebook to bed with her and this is what i found written in it the next morning:


we used to have a cat.  her name is nala.  she kept eating chipmunks so we gave her away at the pet store.  oh by the way, nala bit me in the arm.  the sad part about this is that the next three pages were more stories about the dogs gracie, daisy, and belle that we "yoost to have". 

clearly pet-owning is not one of our spiritual gifts.

Friday, October 22, 2010

i had to chisel the dirt off my little people

we had a field trip today with our homeschool group to sunshine farms in somewhere far, far away, alabama.  now remember that i used to teach preschool special education...i've done the pumpkin patch/farm thing many a time in my life.  but never quite like this...


authentic was the name of this game, and we had a blast from the moment we drove onto the farm and saw a cowboy herding cattle until we said goodbye to the pumpkin-bales on our way home hours and hours later.


some of the highlights were petting the horse (mr. genuine cowboy offered abby a ride, but she responded with a look of terror, a quick-latch onto my leg, and a polite "umm, no thank you")...

milking the somewhat odd contraption otherwise known as a "cow"...
playing in the cotton bin (good thing the kids were up-to-date on their cotton lessons)...
wading through the corn pit...
riding the tractor-train...
and sliding down the ginormous inflatable slide...
plus, izzy enjoyed just vegging out in the grass watching the farm cat run around the field...
after all the fun we had at the farm, jack did some vegging out of his own when we got home...
 sleep tight, little people.  sleep tight.

Tuesday, April 13, 2010

a lesson of a different kind

abby was doing some independent schoolwork up on the deck while i was pushing the little two on the swings.  suddenly, i saw something brown and fluffy hopping through the flower bed (aka "the weed pile").  i went over for a better look and found this precious little guy:


look really close.  can you see what my kids call his "crazy hair" sticking out of his head?  how cute is that?!?  anyway, we spent the morning -- really, the whole morning -- watching the process of him bouncing around the yard, getting lost, cheeping for his mommy and daddy, them finding him, feeding him, and then starting all over again. 


we talked about nests, hatchlings, fledglings, and all things science.  it was a homeschool mom's dream.  for most of the morning, i couldn't have pried the kids away from their new little friend if i tried. 

at one point while we were up on the deck, two pairs of birds took advantage of the fact that the baby bird's parents were off looking for more bugs and worms, and they started to dive down and peck at the tiny ball of fluff and feathers.  his parents must have heard him crying, though (and trust me, he was making all sorts of terrible sounds), because they came flying out of nowhere to boldly and loudly defend their baby.

and maybe, just maybe, they got a little help from a broom-wielding crazy lady who kept screaming, "go away, red bird!  go away!!"

anyway, despite the onslaught, the little guy settled down and eventually started hopping around the yard again.  we finally came inside for a bit but we kept a close eye on the back yard to make sure the bird's mommy and daddy were still taking good care of him.  at one point, i started noticing that they had been gone for a really, really long time, so i headed back out to check on things.  after a few minutes of searching, i found the tiny bird laying under a bush and his breathing was really fast and labored.  his mouth was open, his eyes were closed. 

i jumped on the phone and called my friend, angel, because i was sure she could tell me what to do.  she reminded me about the wildlife rehabilitation center at oak mountain state park, so i gave them a ring and asked what i should do.  they told me to go ahead and bring him in because it sounded like he might have been injured. 

i raced around the house gathering up the needed equipment to transport a baby bird the size of a tangerine, all the while barking out orders related to tying shoes and visiting the potty.  i wasn't really sure why i was panicking the way i was, but i felt an enormous urgency to get out the door.  we live right across the street from the back entrance to oak mountain, so we booked it the few miles back to the center.  when we got there, i threw the car into park, frantically unbuckled everyone from their car seats, threw izzy on one hip, the little bird's basket on the other hip, and we took off as fast as we could toward the door of the "ER".  i peeked into the basket as we walked in, and my heart sank when i saw that the little guy was laying over on his side.  and i couldn't see him breathing anymore.

we rang the bell to get someone to help us, and when the girl i had talked with earlier on the phone came out, my voice cracked as i said, "i don't think he's alive anymore."  she took the baby bird in his basket back to another room, and we sat there and waited anxiously for several minutes.  again, i thought, "seriously, allison?  this is certainly sad, but your heart is racing.  you're about to throw up.  you have got to settle down." 

finally, she came back out and said, "he's barely alive.  i don't think he's going to make it."  we filled out some paperwork and left.


on the way home, abby kept talking about how upset she was that the baby bird had died; then at one point she said, "i bet his mommy and daddy are going to be so, so sad."  that's when i lost it.  why, you ask, was this whole business about a little bird so upsetting to me?  yes, i love a fluffy animal as much as the next girl, but i finally realized that it was about a lot more to me than just a bird. 

yesterday i found out about a family here whose two-year-old daughter was killed in a terrible accident at her house this weekend, and my heart has been so heavy and burdened for those parents ever since.  and just hours after i learned about their story, something eerily similar to the situation that ended their daughter's life happened to us. 

and it involved two-year-old isabel.

the whole thing just makes me sick to my stomach, so i haven't talked much about it to anyone.  but my mommy heart has been in serious overdrive ever since.  last night i couldn't hold izzy close enough as i thanked the lord for her and prayed for his protection over her and our other children.  and as hard as i was praying for izzy, i think i prayed even more fervently for that grieving family. 

because i know that they're so, so sad. 

i've been praying psalm 34:18 over them: "the lord is close to the brokenhearted and saves those who are crushed in spirit" as i've asked god to hold them up through their unimaginable pain. 

this is one of those blog posts that probably sounds somewhat erratic and meaningless to those of you who are reading it, but i'm not writing this one for anybody else.  i've learned a few things over the past couple of days, and i want to remember them whenever i look back on this little story.