It was SUCH a good year for swimming; but as September wore on we had no choice but to close the pool.
The boys and John then sealed the deck for the first time.
I dare say it looks as nice now as it does while in use!
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Month: September 2015
The homeschool room(s)
I remember when I was one of the new homeschool moms having conversations with other new homeschool moms. Many talked about setting up a room of their house as a homeschool room. We never had the luxury of doing that. Some rearranged bedrooms, and others transformed dining rooms. We just piled up the school buckets in the dining room and had at it.
Now – some TEN years into our homeschool journey and I am tickled to report that we don’t have a homeschool room. We have a homeschool house.
Johanna worked on her workbook in her bedroom, while Katriel played nearby.
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I found Stewart reading under the bunk bed (the sun was shining under the far end illuminating the pages of his book.) And I caught the rare moment Nigel was actually sitting at his table and not doing his work on the floor!
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Marie utilized the dining room table. While Tab reclined in the basement.
I can’t remember now which one I called in to work with me at the table in my bedroom. I love all the industry and how we enjoy every bit of the space God has given us.
Movie moments
I did not get very many hours at work for the month of September. It ended up making for some fun (but – gulp – expensive) weekends.
After my dinner with Marie at Red Lobster, we headed home to watch the movie Cinderella with the family. We let the little girls stay up to watch it, and Katriel even dressed for the occasion.
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The movie didn’t end until almost 10! I can’t believe they little girlies managed to stay awake for the whole thing. But it was such a lovely movie, I don’t blame them for working hard at it.
The next night, the boys, Kelly, and I went to Tinseltown to see Everest in 3D. I’m not super big on 3D but I figured a mountain climbing movie was a lot safer than, say, a dinosaur movie. This movie was pretty good, if you didn’t mind the lack of a feel-good ending.
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And it did feel good to get out with my fellas. Can you see us?
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Hard news and endless shrimp…
You may remember Marie broke her toe on June 8th in Oregon.
And you may remember we had it diagnosed on July 30th.
You may remember that she has been out of her freshman modified soccer season.
Well, today was follow-up day with the orthopedic PA. At first glance at the first XRay it looked completely healed, BUT another view showed there was still a part of the fracture that had yet to heal. On one hand I was overjoyed to hear that FINALLY some healing had taken place. BUT it was devastating to my darling Marie. She was composed as we finished up the visit, but her very real disappointment manifested itself in the car and made for some of the most gut-wrenching driving I’ve endured in a few years.
Good conversation. Reminders of God’s goodness. Remembering that she and I still had our evening date to look forward to.
I treated her to Red Lobster’s Endless Shrimp.
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A lobster pizza appetizer.
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We most certainly did NOT eat our veggies!
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The coconut shrimp were her favorite. The time together was lovely. The other kids were wholly supportive of our outing.
Mama’s new coat!
For a few years I wore a winter coat I found at a garage sale for $1.
It’s the same color as my bathing suit.
I like to be easy to find?
How we sleep and how we play.
(Sleeping with her friends.)
We do have to remind her when we put her to bed that she can’t talk to her friends. They need to sleep.
She is such an amazing sleeper. It is hard to believe how painful it was her first 8 months!
Got squash?
College drop out??
I took a photo of Stewart on his first day of college. It was a beautiful sunny day and his Nan said to him as we left for the campus, “You are about to do something I never had the chance to do. I’m very happy for you.” I told him I would not post it anywhere, but just save it for when he graduated.
And off we went to start Stewart on his path to higher education.
14 days later I was filling out the “Drop” form.
What happened? Well, it was called ENG 101 – English Composition, and as of day 4 they had not yet received any instruction on composing. They’d had one assignment, but even it was changed after it was assigned. He never got to hand it in.
They didn’t even get their syllabus until the fourth class. By that point we’d found an old one online, and I completely fell apart. As a matter of fact, my first reaction was to utterly blame myself for his lack of readiness for the assignments. I won’t actually cut-and-paste it here, because I don’t know if I am allowed to. But it contained stuff such as, “Generate a fictional conversation with your favorite postmodern philosopher;” and other such stuff. As a matter of fact, four of the five graded assignments deal with philosophers. And seeing as how you can write what Stewart (and I) know about philosophy on a matchbook, he wasn’t prepared. I’m fine with the notion of needing 9 hours out of class for a 3 credit class. But I can’t get excited about knowing we’d need another how many hours educating ourselves on philosophy.
It took me a solid day (and the response of a good friend) to recognize I hadn’t failed him at all. No one would assume a knowledge of philosophy was going to be required for ENG 101. Pft. John and I managed to get our Masters Degree without any knowledge of philosophy, “post-modern” or otherwise.
However, after reading the syllabus and having my come-apart, we dug into it deeper with Stewart. What HAS the professor been teaching? What have you been learning about in class? MLA? APA? Improving unity and coherence in paragraphs?
Um. Nope. They’ve been reading stuff (essays, songs, etc.) in class and trying to ___________________________ ? Again, both John and I read the papers and looked at each other like, “What in the world?” I shared the papers with others, most of whom said things I won’t repeat here. All but one said it was garbage.
“i couldn’t pull my kiddo out fast enough!”
”I’m sorry this happened. In my humble opinion, I think it would be best to drop it.”
”RUN.”
”Well I don’t blame you… atheist garbage classes.”
I learned other things about the professor, and my concern grew. Then I found the professor’s facebook page.
At first I was Really Mad that this happened. So many other kids in our homeschool community have had great experiences with these type classes. I wondered how this atheist teacher was selected for a homeschool-kid class? Is it conspiracy on the part of the college? On the part of the professor? WHY would it center on philosophy? Are we really the only family in the Finger Lakes without a solid knowledge of philosophy?
Then my heart softened. A lot. This professor was raised by solid Christian parents whose hearts must be grated raw at what their son now espouses. They see their grandchildren being lied to, and their son following the father of all lies.
I’ve committed to pray for this professor and his family. I’m very prayerful that as he is the professor of this group of kids, that maybe even one of those kids will write something that chips away at the professor’s false towers. I am prayerful that God will use this for good.
And if not – Woe to him. “If anyone causes one of these little ones–those who believe in me–to stumble, it would be better for them if a large millstone were hung around their neck and they were thrown into the sea.” Mark 9:42.
Summer’s Last Swim
We swam neatly into September. And we had a rare evening with no activities, and all eight of us home, to take what was presumably the last swim of the summer.
Stewart was a bit jazzed up, as he’d just learned he was hired as a job as a lifeguard at the local aquatic center. Well, that and the fact he is always goofy. 😉
Tab took the same multi-ring plunge. She looks like the hungry caterpillar.
This from kept showing up on the deck and in the pool, even after Stewart relocated him.
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