Friday, June 10, 2016

Paige's First Phrase, Service Friday, and Our Favorite Place

Paige woke up this morning and echoed Molly saying her first phrase.

"I want waffles."

HA!  Makes me laugh that was her first phrase....well, except "hi dad" and saying "hi" to anyone else she knows.  She doesn't say that much...understandably.  She babbles a lot and I think "Someday I'll understand what she's thinking."  She really only says, "Mommy", "Dada", "Eden", "Leila", "Molly", (a few other names of friends in our neighborhood), "apple", "amen", "ME!" (raising her hand to get called on to get something she wants or to say the prayer mimicking sisters), and maybe a few noises of animals and things.  But she stated clearly today that she wanted waffles.  She even said it twice.  I've never heard her say, "I" or "want" or "waffles" separately, let alone together in a sentence, until today.

Then the day went on...

School.
Chores.
Store.
Service Friday.

We (it ended up me and SEVEN kids but it really worked out well) made paper flowers and cards for Father's Day.  We are (hopefully) going to the Riverside Care Center to give these out to the people there to wish them a happy Father's Day and (late) Mother's Day.


Then....

Play Time.
Dinner.
And a trip to our favorite place....the "walking path".

I think it may be called the Line Creek Trail.  I'm not really sure because we always just call it the Walking Path.  But it is our favorite place and the girls have been SO excited for it to warm up enough to jump into that water.  (And it has DEFINITELY warmed up...too much in fact.)

Tyson actually took the kids home in the car and I decided to walk/jog home (the path leads right to our house and we decided to drive farther up, closer to this water area, instead and skip the walk this time).

Then off to bed.

Super warn out
....to wake up tomorrow morning to the start of swimming lessons
...and dad leaving for a 24 hour shift.

Thursday, June 9, 2016

Nature Books

Yes, Paige is only wearing a diaper.
Eden painting

Leila measuring an approximate size of a spider she found

We have NO lack of science in our curriculum since my girls love it so much.
So, science is slightly taking a back seat during the summer.

But, I did decide to buy them each a nature book where if they want to go out and explore or we decide to go to a walking path then we can pack up our books, paints, colored pencils, crayons, and rulers and observe, collect data, hypothesize why things are the way they are, and put our findings down in their book.

They only had to go out our front door (in their pajamas...or diaper) to find nature.

I love that while they are all looking at the same place, they see different things.

Eden drew pictures of birds, deer, and leaves.
Leila found a spider (that she kept having to stalk in order to observe and draw).
Molly just painted some flowers for fun.
....and Paige played at the playground and in the paint water.

Wednesday, June 8, 2016

No News is Good News

Sometimes it is nice to have nothing to report.

I have been told several times that when you are a mother, "no news, is good news".

So, today I guess I have good news.

Nothing really happened today.

School, chores, walk to the library for story time, ran into some old friends from homeschool co-op, lounged and watched Food Network's "Kids Baking Challenge".

I admit that we watched an unfortunate amount of Netflix today...but we also did a lot of reading (which is normal after a day at the library and the girls are intrigued with all their new library books).

So, I'm happy to report....nothing.

Tuesday, June 7, 2016

Summer School

Leila's fairy tale project for the month.  A pop-up version of a German fairy tale, The Giant Who Counted Carrots.

Summer school has begun.  There isn't that much difference in what I was doing previously and what I'm doing now.  The only real difference is probably that I'm focusing on weak points or things I simply want to solidify before moving on to a new year.

(For Eden)
Math is focusing on lots of practice with addition, subtraction, and multiplication.
English is focusing on handwriting, basic grammar, and adding details.
History was AWFUL this year, so I'm trying to do a mini catch-up.
Typing, we added in typing and Eden LOVES it. We found free online lessons we like.
Reading is simply to make sure they keep up.  But with the library reading program, they read plenty.

(For Leila)
Mostly reading and basic math.
We are doing a fun month project of fairy tales for English. I think she needed more fun in school.

(For Molly)
Test run with Learning to Read in 100 Lessons....

Summer school has been going well so far.
*fingers crossed*

Monday, June 6, 2016

Last Night

Last night...

Put girls to bed.
Mom and dad go to bed.
Eden has a bad dream...climbs into our bed.
Molly wakes up crying.
Put Eden back into her own bed.
Cuddle with Molly to stop crying.
Go back to bed.
Leila has a bad dream...climbs into our bed.
Eden woke up and can't go back to sleep....climbs next to Leila.
Dad is eventually pushed off bed.
Dad kicks out Eden and Leila.
Paige wakes up nice and early....

...of course, not ready to go back to sleep
...because she slept perfectly fine last night.

So, I make her breakfast.
Dad's alarm goes off shortly after to go to work.

*sigh*


Crazy morning.

But it turned out well.  Tyson had an extremely busy day at work and didn't get home until late.  I felt successful with school and chores, then realized my need to run errands.

Grocery store.
Post office.
Townhome office.
Another grocery store.
Get pizza.
Bedtime.

Eden and Leila are fearful that they have some medical sleeping condition that will not allow them to sleep and insist that they haven't slept for months.

Sunday, June 5, 2016

Nighttime Scripture Study


Scripture study with four littles can be rough.

Generally, I think we do pretty good.

We've rather developed a habit of bringing out a coloring book and crayons while dad reads (with the occasion stop with a Q&A session to help them understand what is going on or to find out if they are paying attention).  Eden is always the best listener and almost always answers the questions.  Leila, Molly, and Paige....not so much.  The coloring is often a good idea, but often a bad idea as well.  Sometimes they are nice and quiet while they color and their ears are open to listening.  Other times they are so interested in their coloring that they don't listen much at all.

It's a work in progress.

Saturday, June 4, 2016

The Blog Post You Can Ignore

Seriously.

I'm going to tell you about today.

And it is me talking to me.

I could tell you nice, flowery things...but I'm kind of not in the mood to flower up my feelings right now. It just sounds deceiving and quite frankly, exhausting.  Anger is exhausting.

So, anyone reading (if I have any readers)...go ahead and skip this post.

Right now Molly is crying, talking, and making excuses in her bed because she doesn't want to sleep.
Eden keeps saying "Molly! Go to sleep! I am exhausted!"
Leila is still awake, probably with her head under her pillow.

(And I'm making Tyson deal with it because I'm in no position to handle the situation at hand...it would definitely end poorly. This is simply the end of a day filled with fighting, meanness, lying, stubbornness, yelling, tattle telling, complaining...and grounding.)

The current sleeping dilemma is the fairness of letting Molly stay up because she's not letting the other girls sleep but then she gets exactly what she wants and the bad habit will continue night after night.  Or else Tyson continues to stay outside their room trying to keep her calm and quiet (and in her bed) while playing primary songs.  That seems the best option I suppose.

Paige is asleep on our bed because she fell asleep while I read her stories.

The reason she is nicely asleep is because she all of a sudden developed this hate for being put to naps and bedtime in her bed. She does a bloody curdling scream in her bedroom that lasts for long enough to cause problems for the other kids to not go to bed at their regular times from the noise. She often does this if she wakes up in the. Night as well...luckily she is often tired enough and the other girls are such heavy sleepers that the screaming doesn't last long before falling asleep.

My dilemma, I hate hearing her scream. It makes me feel bad.  But I also don't want her to develop habits where Tyson and my sleep and quiet time suffer. Trust me, we are not very happy people when we lack sleep and alone time.  Although, articles and thoughts run through my head about the negative affects of having your child "cry it out" or feeling selfish or that I'm just not understanding my child's needs or that I'm simply lacking in love and patience during this short time when the kids will be little and that one day, this time when my kids actually want to be with me, will be over and I'll feel ashamed for not having cherished the childhood moments with them and the "simple problem" that I face now will seem like nothing compared to larger problems that come as they grow older.

But then the problems are deeper than that.

Molly has recently developed a stubbornness that lasts all day.  She has her plans, her ideas, and her likes and dislikes.  She does not easily change those plans.  I debate, "Perhaps she is too young to force her to have chores?"  "Perhaps she is too little to force her to sit at the table to eat at least a bite of her food?" "Perhaps the problem is ME trying to FORCE anything on anyone?"

So, I try not to force. Gentle persuasion.

But gentle persuasion takes time. I hate time. 

How much time do I spend with a child before it becomes unfair to the other children? "She get one-on-one time with mom because she isn't doing what she is supposed to?" That logic doesn't seem right.  Not to mention that I simply have other obligations. The kids have school, the kitchen is permanently dirty but at some point I need clean pots, pans, and dishes to eat on, the doctor isn't going to postpone the appointment simply because I ask nicely, and Tyson doesn't deserve to come home to a late dinner inevitably followed by a late bedtime.

Then the other side, no persuasion or forcing.  Just let it go (let us all be more like Elsa). She's little. No chores and food is optional.  But what about teaching social responsibility and she's already been overly tested by the doctor because she is so small (and when we pushed more eating on her it did have an impact on her growth).

Hmmm...maybe I could create a plan....I always say, "with privilege comes responsibility" (trust me, my kids know this phrase and many rolled eyeballs have come with it).  The problem is making it fair amongst the ages of children. Each responsibility gets a privelege. You choose to do or not to do them but you are also choosing to do or not do the privelege. Realistically, we already have this plan at our house.  There are certain responsibilities that need to happen in order to get your priveleges but Molly is a bit of an exception at times for various reasons.  I think I need to make some slight changes so it pertains to Molly more.  OK, this venting is good.

Next issue, Paige is following suite. She's developed an anger in her soul. Perhaps at her age it isn't anger as much as a learned response. I guess the answer is right there.

I deal with anger.

I admit it. 

I hate it.

And I can see it cause a chain reaction with my children instantly.  If I yell, they yell.  If I get angry and frustrated, they get angry and frustrated.  Often the good reactions also lead to good reactions.  But it is more like, "If I can let go of my anger and be completely patient and understanding for 'X' amount of time ('X' being dependent upon which child I am referring to....some take longer and some shorter) then eventually they learn patience and good reactions and love for me in return."  

P.S. I hate saying things like "...for me in return". I feel that I am being selfish and only doing these things so they will do things for me in return. I should just love them and do things simply because I care for them, not to get something in return...like "I now deserve children who help me clean, listen to my requests, follow what I ask of them, you know...be "good" children (at least according to the world's view) because of what I have done for them!" Very unloving.

Anyhow, that's another is problem I have...with myself.  I've got a long list of those that somehow need to be dealt with as well. Haven't figured those out.

I've now grown exhausted just thinking and making this internal list of problems in my head.

I know my problems are few.

I think that may be another solution. A solution that I have come to often but then fail to absorb in my life.  Life is not an exhausting list.  It just wears and eats at me.  It is simply living in the present. Listening to God. Listening to my body (which God gave me already fully incorporated with the ability to recognize my needs and other's needs). 

Alright, I'm going to try it (again).

And I'm going to create a revised responsibility/privilege chart for my children.

I'll have to think about the bedtime situation. I need some quality kneeling time for this one.

Blog, thanks for giving me a way to find hope again.