Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Anne Frank Date

Dawson and I at the Pioneer Theater
So I made a deal with my voracious 2nd grade reader. If he read the Diary of Anne Frank with me, I would take him on a date to see the play. I was a little nervous at first, due to the nature of the book and his age, but he is mature beyond his years, and loves to read about real life events.

We read together, every chance we got, and had some really great discussions. We talked about everything from how to treat people, respecting cultural and religious differences, how our attitude can influence our everyday life, and how to learn from the past. It was incredible, how much he processed and would be an active participant in our discussions, with his own thoughts and ideas.

We started our date off at his favorite place in the world, Red Lobster, where he moaned and groaned with every bite of salmon. He loves fish more than pretty much anything in the world, and had all the tables around us laughing. Besides reading way way above his level, he also eats that way too, and finished everything on his plate and half of mine too!

We got to the theater a little early and Dawson became engrossed with the piano player in the lobby. We stood on the balcony above him, and just watched his fingers fly over the keys. It was beautiful and great for Daws to see what could be, if he practices. The play was just under three hours, but we thoroughly enjoyed it. Dawson was so tired when we got in the car, but every so often when he would startle awake, he would say, "thanks so much, mom."

He's very welcome.

We did have one slight problem, the next Friday. His Power Hour teacher had challenged the class to read 30 chapter books in March, and then they would get a party. Well, because Daws and I were reading Anne Frank, he missed the 30 books by a couple, and had to spend the party in a separate room, writing a paper on how he could become a better reader.

Are you freaking kidding me? The other kids are reading these thin little beginner chapter books and he is reading literature, and being punished.

Lovely.

Dyl

Mah Boy finally lost the first of his front teeth. This was an epic moment that we have been waiting for, for a very long time. He was so excited, but was really itching to have the other one gone as well.


So excited.


Luckily he didn't have to wait to long, though I am a little suspicious as to if that tooth came out when it was good and loose, or if it had a little extra help.



On a side note; Dyl really likes mushrooms, but of late he keeps asking me if the mushrooms we are eating for dinner are the poisonous ones. I asked him if he thought I would intentionally poison the family and he said, "Yes. Definitely."

We eat a lot of mushrooms, and I am getting the same nervous question every time as of late, so I have just started saying, "Yes. Definitely." But then he reluctantly eats them, so who knows what is going on in his wild little imagination. So if anyone, church leaders, school teachers, etc.. hear about the poisonous mushrooms that I force feed my family, please know they are of the baby bella, shitake, and sometimes cremini variety.

Saturday, March 26, 2011

Vernal Volleyball

I have the absolute best street ever. The girls that live next door to me, have become some of my very best friends. We have a lot in common, but enough NOT, in common to really have a great time together. We picked up a set of sisters from Francis to go play in a volleyball tournament in Vernal over the weekend and it was cathartic.

We left our families for a weekend of girl talk, eating, spooning, and 14 volleyball games in less than 24 hours, ending at 12:30 a.m. and starting the next morning at 6:00 a.m. We also did  a little sight seeing on the Res, (Fort Duschesne, mostly 'No Tresspassing' signs and wild dogs), and through Roosevelt where we saw a fake-out garage (had to be there), and got gas, also had to be there.

The tournament was really fun. We walked in pretty cocky, then got our Ayes kicked by some of the shortest, quickest, obees-ist, (like 10 pounds shy of needing a jazzy chair) women I have ever played against. It was like something out of the twilight zone.
A good lesson learner though, about judging books and their covers and the like.

Plus, I'd  never pass up a chance to spoon with Kelly!


Playing til' midnight-thirty, then  big mac's and fries, then our 6am wake-up call took it's toll on all of us.


Steph Folkman, Becky Dees, Denise Frazier
Kelly Woolstenhulme, Shanna Atkinson, and Moi.
Steph and Becky are sisters, as are Denise and Shanna, so Kelly was my honarary sister for the weekend.
Can't wait til next year!


Wednesday, March 23, 2011

My Son, the Piano Prodigy


Dawson won first place in his school for his piano solo, 'The Rainbow'




A lot of his friends at school won for different categories, science, art, writing...



I wish I could take some credit, but I just sign the check for the lessons. He practices and really loves to play.


A Square Hole

Every Wednesday I help in Dawson's class at school, with a project called Poetry Academy. I love Dawson, and love to see him during the day, but that is where the joy stops. Poetry Academy is a whole 'nother post.

Today I was reading poetry with one of Dawson's classmates when she whipped out a piece of paper and asked me if I wanted to see the poem that her grandmother had written to her. I, of course, did, and she sat there with an almost horrified look on her face while I bawled through the whole thing. Had she not snatched it from my limp, grieving hands, and hightailed it back to the classroom, I woulda made a copy. It was beautiful.

The poem was about all the things the girl would remember about her grandmother. The way it was written you could feel the grandmother's angst as she said that her granddaughter would probably not remember, when she was grown up, how much she liked it when her grandmother fed her peas, or spent hours outside building snowmen, or taking walks. She would only remember how tired, and wrinkly and old she was. The last stanza was very poignant when she writes that as a grown up, the granddaughter won't realize why she loves peas, or gets a warm feeling when it snows, or feels comforted by a walk; but the grandmother will have left her influence whether she remembers it or not. If I can get a copy of it next week, I will, and add it to this post.

Anyway, there is no shortage of grandmother-ly influence on my life. If I t'wer ever to forget, I also have my Gram Beth's name, as does Em. In addition to her name, I also chose nursing as a career, have a terrible time masking my emotions, (specifically disgust), like to write, love to cook, and have little, to no sympathy for non-life threatening illness or injury, even if it is my own child.....

A trait that may have skipped right over my genes, but not my young impressionable mind, was my Gram's gift of generosity. She was always doing something for someone else, and I spent a lot of time delivering her special cinnamon rolls, and watching countless people come in and out of her back room at home, where she practiced a lot of neighborhood medicine, giving shots, consultations, and free mental therapy.

A couple of weeks ago, I came on to a shift at the hospital, and being a little tardy, I inherited the "unsavory" patient load. This included an older, but not elderly man who lived in a storage unit and would be needing a bath before his discharge. Baths are not something we typically do in the emergency room, unless you've got bugs, or we are trying to decon chemicals, but this man smelled so horrible, that I insisted and helped him get clean. It was not glamorous, and the humidity alone nearly robbed me of my breakfast. He happily chatted away whilst we cleaned, but not really being a natural conversationalist, especially when  scrubbing strangers' crevices, I could not wait for the ordeal to be over with.

After the shower, I ransacked the 'Homeless Closet' for some warm clothes. I was lucky, and found some snow pants, a heavy coat and some nice shirts for him to take "home", along with a boxed lunch; and when I presented them to him, he was appreciative and once again, extremely chatty. I tried to redirect him towards his medical care but he insisted on repeating all of the stories I had heard while showering. There were a couple about lawsuits he was about to win (on a side note: you never want to find yourself without a witness, scrubbing down a naked stranger, on wet slippery floors, in the hospital, especially if said stranger has multiple medical lawsuits pending...) The conversation was irritating at best, and I am ashamed to say, I was quick to do my biz and get out.

A few years ago, we were required to have a project at work. I decided to start a 'Homeless Closet', which is basically a collection of donations for our indigent population. Gram went nuts when I told her about it, and donated some of my Gramp's coats and things, and then got busy making these wild colored yarn snow hats. She made a ton of hats, all in bright, crazy colors, that I recognized when a recipient would come back to the ED, and even once on the side of the road in downtown Salt Lake.

As I printed off the last of the Storage Unit Man's discharge instructions, I rounded the corner and there he sat all padded up for the trek home. The thing that stopped me in my tracks was the hideously bright orange, and green and black yarn hat sitting on his head. A hat my Gram had obviously made.  Hats that died away, long even before Gram did, and it was such a shock to see one.  I immediately felt the shame wash over me, as I thought about Gram, and how she always had time for me, and my trivial needs. That even when she was younger and working at the clinic, I would ride my bike by to get a sucker or a hug, and she would make time for me. That, if she were here today, she would be sitting at the side of the bed, intently listening, and actually helping heal something in this man, instead of shoving food and clothes at him, trying to cover a square hole with triangle patch.

My opportunity  passed that day, to make things right, and I have reflected on it many times since. Although I don't love peas, and I hate winter, there are many things that make me think of the love I was given, and the traits that I would like to emulate of hers.

Thursday, March 17, 2011

Milo Update

Milo jumps on the tramp with the kids. The second he thinks we aren't looking he jumps right on and lets them bounce him. Then when he hears the sliding glass door open he bails right off.

Still wishing we would have gotten Nintendo. It sounds harsh, but this is an indoor dog whose hobbies include, rolling in poo, eating poo, draggin poo up to the porch for us to enjoy, and did I mention, eating poo. With acres and acres of horse pasture surrounding us, there is never a problem finding some.

He is not shy, and naps stretched out wherever is most inconvenient for everyone.

The Hoodlums love him and he is never to far from them. Even if it means they have to eat with their legs folded up in their chairs, or resting on back.



Milo loves to watch old home videos of his kids, and will actually sit still for a minute.
*He is still a humping maniac. So much so, that the kids are immune. Dyl came wandering into the kitchen the other day with a book in his hand, wondering what a word meant. I though nothing of it, until he came a little closer and I noticed two paws wrapped around his waist, and Milo hopping along behind him. In two months we can have him neutered, and hopefully that will "fix" the issue.

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Family Night


Tonight we loaded up the Hoodlums and headed down to the Joesph Smith Memorial Building to watch the movie there. It was incredible, and I would highly recommend it to anyone wanting to know about the history of the church.


The cold and raining so we didn't get to wander around the temple grounds at all, but the Hoodlums were in heaven at the Lion House Pantry where we gorged on rolls and pies and mashed potatoes and soup.


Tried to pose for one last picture after dinner, since it had stopped raining. Dawson "ripped one" at the last minute and then we were lucky to get this picture, where Daws is the only one that knows what's coming.