Wednesday, September 24, 2014

Snowed Under in September



   It's not yet October and I feel like I've been plowed under and snowed over by 6th grade. It's been awhile since we've home schooled and I forgot how all consuming it is. It's so much more fun to be the field trip coordinator than the main teacher. I keep reminding myself how rewarding teaching is, but not feeling it yet. And truly, I see myself as more of a facilitator. Is that me shirking responsibility again? I'm acutely aware that if we hold her back from her potential for learning it will be my fault alone. She is raring to go and ready to learn. She's an easy, generally early riser, and usually has a book in hand by 8 a.m., though sometimes we have to redirect from Calvin and Hobbes. She's loving Latin, while I have yet to dust off the text book.

    I did finally get those books ordered, but made the mistake of having Amazon “bundle them”, so we wait. School has been adjusted already and this week is school a bit lite with LONG play practices at night. She has FLL robotics; we are so excited about our focus on architecture this year. She also has Latin and IEW once a week and it's great someone else is teaching; she stays motivated to get the work done. She wrote about Robert Grosseteste this week. Who knew? 

    We are working through math while at the same time, trying to regroup. She's doing a bit more online at Khan Academy right now, though I believe in the value of paper seat work, while I assess a few different textbooks. We registered for MATHCOUNTS.

    Spelling? What's spelling? We have been consistent with Grammar, but reviewing world civilizations has been BORING. We are no longer at the builds models stage and make fun hand puppets, so how does one review the ancients in meaningful ways when you don't have a week to build a small scale replica of a pyramid or city walled in by watery moats/ponds to collect water? Though, we get the water/moat thing this week with the rain having arrived. I'm going quiz her on the ancients next week and see where we need to bulk up on our review before moving on to other subject matter. I'm torn between the Middle Ages to early Modern Times which is what Veritas studies and American History, Modern Americas, and Modern Times which is the focus of What Your 6th Grader Needs to Know. We are working through plate tectonics and also not having much fun, but we have objectives and we are working through them. She keeps reminding me she wants to blow stuff up. She wants to mix iron and nickel and make a molten core. Lovely. Anyone have ideas of where a 6th grader can blow stuff up for science? They have watched to many videos on the University of Nottingham Periodic Table site. Unfortunately, our own doing, but I did catch her reading Extreme Biology today. Maybe we can just focus on pond bugs asap without the bugs. Like I said, I have decided to test early this year to see where we need to focus most and see what she has a good handle on and where we can move on. It feels like we are flying by the seat of our pants, but there's a plan people. Really. Still working to find it, but He promises to put us on the path!

    Robinhood is making an appearance in town this week. No, not the world premiere we saw last year at OSF, but none-the-less Robinhood. Sister is one of the merry band and brother is a forester and the play shall go on. Ready or not, here we come.

    I fall into bed by 9:45 each night. Well, except tonight. Here's to that 6 a.m. casting call. Anyone for life unleashed early in the morning? Not without coffee, thank you.

    The rain has come and now I must mow the summer's weeds and burn piles of left over limbs from a bunch of woods work we had done at the house. Maybe we can light stuff on fire this weekend?

    We are praying and pondering Safe Families. We are pondering and praying what kind of future car we may need to carry possible littles. Humbly burying my head in the sand and proceeding naively and with faith God will guide the path. This vision is definitely bigger than us. It will burst our bubble. If we do this. If He calls. If we hear. If we get brave. Pray with us? Pray for us?

    Brother too, is busy with school. He's not quite the same chipper early riser, but he's yet to have a bad day at school. He loves school. He loves soccer. He wasn't so sure about Robinhood. He shed tears about missing soccer when play practice arrived this week, even though I had cleared this with him ahead of time and he was originally excited. But Monday arrived and he realized he was going to miss games and practices with his buddies and he was checking back tears and still a few fell. He went to the audition intending to do his worst, “so I won't get a part in the play and can play soccer.” He still got cast as a forester. (It runs in the family.) AND THEN, he came home shedding tears that he didn't get Robinhood. How does a parent say, “I'm sure you did your best at the audition,” while sharing, “well, I thought you said you were going to do your worst so you could play soccer Saturday instead?” What a catch-22. He's getting over it, but he's tired tonight. He's enjoying the chance to put his extensive play acting to use, i.e., various Calvin and Hobbes situations to try on his play mates when he has a chance to improvise.

    Did I tell you he put a water balloon under the toilet seat recently? He didn't get me, but got J good. They have a new club, he and she. They call it POP: Pranks on Parents. And the notebook is full of pranks to prepare and execute. And summaries about how actual events took place and went down.

    Did I mention I'm tired of Calvin and Hobbes? Though I must say the other day, when I read the one where Calvin burps enormously at the table and his mother says, “WHAT DO YOU SAY?” and he Calvin says, “A BARGE COMING THROUGH!” I laughed. Thank you, Bill Watterson for a laugh when I want to dislike you so much. Some days I'm sure the sass is entirely your fault.

    Brother is pondering talking to God ALOT right now and wondering if he is worthy. I am so tempted to talk him through these moments with mom talk when what I need to do most is pull out the WORD and read with him. Tonight, we talked and prayed and read Mathew 5, “those who hunger and thirst for God's righteousness shall be filled.” He wants to know what hearing the voice of God is like. He's not sure if he's hearing. He's not sure if he's worthy. Oh, the questions we ask, so young, but aren't they just hard wired into us? The searching for truth, and grace, and love to wrap ourselves in? I hear his very big heart wanting to understand God and yet trying to wrap his mind around something that any one of us can just barely contain and yet understand and sometimes it's not for us to know. Can our human minds really comprehend the vastness of God's love when we most need it? I believe so, but it requires a great stillness. It requires a great hunger. We don't like to be hungry, thirsty, or still. The questions are big, but not for God. But sometimes it's not even the questions we are asking, it's the love we are seeking. We prayed and talked and prayed some more and chose to plant some feet in faith that those who knock on the door shall be answered, and that perfect love casts out fear, and then he fell asleep. Rest.

    The Rover is in the shop. This Rover Girl dislikes her rental intensely, all while reminding herself to be thankful for something to steer her through life. It's brand new. It smells. It has zero visibility, but it's much faster. Much faster is not better. Rover Girl needs to go slower, so she can see the hawks and doves on her drive. Thankful for very old wheels back, come Friday.

    As for the house, the mess has caught up with me, and I cannot catch up with it. The piles seem to renew each day with people in the house busy learning and mucking things up!

    Then there's this new rain thing after months of dry. During September, the pets have become simply pets. Sister keeps reminding me to spend time with the dog. I booked him a hair cut, does that count? Now, I find two sets of paw prints and 8 feet to wipe and mud in the garage, which invariably comes in the house. Two pets and eight feet, that's enough. But, then Jack brought home a shrew this morning. Then there were 12 muddy feet to deal with. Lovely. Just lovely. Then the added guilt of not giving the poor shrew a proper burial weighed on me today and knowing if kids knew they would be disappointed in you.

    We have escaped for a few hikes, but I've forgotten my camera for coloring catching. Tonight, while the kids are at play practice, I escaped to my least favorite mall, keeping in mind, that I don't like malls, only to find that the Macy's discount store had closed. Boo. So I went to the coffee shop to write. At least that's something. I reworked a Land Rover article vetoed by mon amore. Maybe my grim editor will like the new one.

    But maybe, I re-found the written word within tonight. I've been reminded that words come with prayer and time for creativity. Alone. With God. One writes from reservoirs not emptiness. I only write from a place of fullness and when the brain is on drain and the body is tired few words come. I need to rest, renew, and re-look at the world with new wonder. Working on it. Slowly. One day at a time. Sometimes, being snowed in helps you do that.

(And no, I didn't edit this one. At all. We'll survive the mess. We shall.)

Monday, September 15, 2014

Smoke and Fire

The land is hot, parched, and thirsty. 
Windows shutter.
A sweet scent deceives, portending death, where blows it thick. 

The sheriff's office calls.
Don't call us. Call for flames. The fire is north.

Gravel crunches. A generator runs. A cricket chirps. Melancholy?
 A barely blue hovers above the tree line. Lazy firs sway, ever sanguine.

It's time for rain. Doesn't Nature know? 
She does, but we desecrate her.
 Her nature. Altered. 


Friday, September 12, 2014

One Hour Unfiltered

One hour. Unfiltered.
Read Breaking Stalin's Nose for Middle School Book Group.
Work on discussion guides for book group.
 Roast a tray of eggplant, zucchini, onion, and tomatoes.
Learn to conjugate "amo" in Latin.
Pay bills. 
Grade daughter's Saxon Math 8/7. Realize she's doing all of it mentally.
Put the scientific calculator she wants for Christmas on the "list".
Weed wack the yard.
Work on the wood pile.
Pick remaining veggies from a very dry garden.
Dehydrate plums and apples.
Send a card and picture. 
Work on a proposal about beauty.
Practice spelling and math with a 9 year old. 
Work on a car book series for kids.
Make homemade lactose free yogurt.
Decorate the porch for a dinner party.
Pick flowers and the last of the blackberries.
Kick a soccer ball with a boy.
Visit with loved ones.
Listen to How to Eat Friend Worms at bed time.
Pick a bucket (or four) of apples. Give away.
Clean the fridge.
Process and freeze vegetables.
Listen to this sermon series on Friending. (Excellent)
Read sections of the Gospel of John for morning devotions.
Email exchange student friend and request a get together.
Watch soccer practice.
Diagram some sentences. Do some grammar.
Watch a history video on Mesopotamia.
Attend a co-op meeting. 
Swim for one hour with daughter. 
Bus a few tables at community dinner.
Work on a book about an obscure botanist/ornithologist.
Talk on the phone with your sister.
Attend Writing Critique Group. (Oops, that's 3 hours.)
Visit library. Pay fines.
Make changes writing critique suggested. Groan. Work it out.
Run on the creek while a child bikes.
Apply Biofreeze
Make dinner.
Map the 12 main tectonic plates.
Smash a Snickers bar together. Understand tectonic plate movement.
Read the Encyclopedia of Earth and make diagrams.  
Doctor appointment.
Show up on time.
Feed chickens, check on bees, feed pets.
Make gluten free/dairy free chocolate chip cookies.
Sleep. 
Rise. 
Write.
 Breathe. 
Time is precious.
Tell a story. 
Live a story. 
Make a memory.
Live the small moments. 
Small moments make a life.

Tuesday, August 26, 2014

Ramblings from the Two Track

We made it into the wilds, but barely.
She struggled some, but still offered us smiles.
Waiting with an attitude of gold for medicine to arrive so we can depart Bend.
   It's breezy here. The cottonwoods clatter, and ripple in the wind. Ratcheting sprinklers run all day as the lush grass attests. I hear the doves. Their presence is a never ending source of comfort. Like a familiar cloak on a cold starry night, holding me close, they remind me of the vastness of Your love.

   Her stomach is off again this morning. What can we do, but wait and trust? The baby calves suckle at their mama's teats. How I wish I could feed her and food would just fix it. You alone can nourish her right now Lord. Will we make it out on the trail this year?
In Rome, Oregon.  A little sagebrush and Singapore math. (She's a bit math obsessed.)
   Nothing has changed: we are still packed to the rafters, but the gear doesn't tumble out quite so often. Kid list of essentials: survival pack, water bottles, books.
Oh yeah, & a snorkel mask and soccer clothes, for every day of the week.
   What will the desert demand of us, and why are we always so thirsty? Do wild springs fill men more deeply than rural ones? We embark into the desert with some who are yet strangers to us, like a caravan, headed off to trade in foreign lands. Will we be bound by the land or return with a bounty of inner treasure? 
Headed down there!
   In a chaotic, noisy, loud, and fanatic world the rover affords us trails where we find rest. The noise of a cracked culture gives way to the cricket. 
    Clustered on the bank of the river, they surely looked like children's toys to the fighter jets screaming overhead. 
A pristine spring. Not unvisited, but undamaged by mankind. Unusual.
  Riverside, the breeze was just enough to keep the mosquitoes at bay. Overhead, rock formations loomed large. At sunset, young antelope averse to our curiosity, crested up and over canyon walls.
Three Forks cascading into the Owyhee River.
Rovers down low. Three Forks to the right. Stretching our legs.
There is just you Lord, in the sunshine and the heat, and the drum of a child's feet. 
Up and out. I prayed the whole way!
Willow Hot Springs, near Fields, Oregon
    We crawled into our tent as dusk settled on the land. I couldn't sleep, my mind buzzing with the days activities. Alive with the day's heat, the crickets kept up their chirping, to match my chattering mind. The rustle of the tent flaps broke my concentration, or was it a coon in the garbage bag hanging outside? The abnormal chatter, all the noise, portended the 2 a.m. party that would arrive at Willow. What a racket of a night!
Sunset at Willow Hot Springs, Whitehorse Ranch
 
Breakfast in Fields, Oregon. A sweet treat. We licked our plates clean.
4 days without a shower, not to shabby, but we ain't gonna zoom in!
 Home again, a little worse for the wear, but it was worth it!
 Rovering Responsibly

   We take safety seriously, for us and God's creation. We pack, plan, prepare, and pray when we go into the outback, especially with our kids in tow. We go with others. We don't go it alone. We go with great people who also prepare. We prepare for fire, injury, and vehicle issues, because stuff happens while you are busy living life! This year, we were blessed to have a Search and Rescue Coordinator in attendance, a state highway patrolman, a variety of engineers, experienced explorers, and even an experienced Mazama, along for the ride. (The trip coordinator also took time to appropriate and rent a satellite phone. Just in case.) 

   As for our interactions with nature, the primary objective is to leave no trace. The Pacific Coast Rover Club is focused on enjoying nature safely in a way that nurtures nature for future generations to enjoy.  
Rover Girl aka no make up girl.

Friday, August 22, 2014

Sounds of Summer Ending

Meditation empties me, but prayer makes me full. 
    Noticing life is slowing, slowing, slowing in preparation for school. Fall soon upon us. The leaves on the trees will die and drop. Energy will amass in the trunk, the very core, of the vine, tree, perennial. Plants seeking to add strength and growth in inward most parts.

    Our family is quieting now in preparation for school, even as the busyness of another season nears. School backpacks are not yet ready. A desk awaits paint. Chairs have yet to be found. A bedroom paint job begs to be finished. I haven't ordered books quite yet. When I do, I will not hit rush. I will not be rushed.
    It the past, a new school year has always felt like a new year. All the preparation, planning, and idea pondering marking a major shift of time, but not this year.
 
   Much of this year has been focused on health issues, and what we've gained from these circumstances. I refuse to say lost. I refuse. We have gained much, and we are hard at work healing. A story for another day? Because I dream of writing how we navigated in and through an ulcerative colitis diagnosis. God. How we walked through strong. Came out well. But, that's not today's story. Seeking stillness is my story.

    Slowing down time. Learning to let some things die and some things drop, in order to work on our core as a family. Our inner core as a child of God, with a soul that needs to breathe, think, ponder, learn, love, and listen. This requires stillness. We work hard at intentionally living slow. Sometimes that slowness looks busy: friends, play dates, sword fights, but is not real face time with others slowing down life? Let us slow, soften, be a silhoutte for true beauty in the world. 
Circadian rhythms call and change. Me.
Star gaze under black opalescent sky. 
Campfires.
Books.
Adventures. 
Slow. Time.
  Something to Ponder?

Friday, August 15, 2014

Willamette Shakespeare's: Twelfth Night

  I want to shine the light on Willamette Shakespeare's Twelfth Night. There's still a few performances to be had this weekend. Don't miss it! J and I headed to Montinore last Sunday night and thoroughly enjoyed the performance, company, and quiet date night. Just in from the Owyhee Canyonlands, I didn't want to drive for over an hour for Shakespeare (or anything), but it was well worth the time as this company always does a great job.
   I've had How To Teach Your Children Shakespeare on the coffee table for a few weeks, but I've only cracked it open for a cursory glance or two, because Shakespeare can be intimidating. No? Today, I found Sarah's interview with Ken Ludwig and he makes Shakespeare accessible for the likes of me. I rowed, listened, and learned a lot. I will definitely be returning my library copy and buying this book.  I won't bother to list other Shakespearean resources, as her blog lists the really good ones for you.
   Having honeymooned in Ashland, Oregon, home to the Oregon Shakespearean Festival, I'm slowly growing more acquainted with the Bard as we add years to our marriage. J has a much greater appreciation and comprehension of Shakespeare than I, but I'm working on it. We try to return every year or two to enjoy a play, a nice dinner, and the lovely parks. Last year, the kids took in their first play at OSF. We all had a blast.

   We haven't visited on one of their Family Days, but you don't have to visit OSF on a Family Day to get decent play pricing. Section C tickets are reasonable all season round, but must be purchased early in the season. They sell out quickly. 

   As for Shakespeare and kids, we've learned to call ahead and find out more about the play and the company before taking the kids along for the ride. We took them to Comedy of Errors last summer at Oregon State University and that didn't go well. The production was Comedy of Errors meets Jersey Shore. Literally. It was too bawdy for us! It was of little comfort, that it was flying over brother's head, because sister didn't miss a line. We ended up leaving early. Something about the balloon boobs and bums was a bit too much for this forty year old. Checking ahead is good. Very good. Don't say, I didn't tell ya!

  Want to see Twelfth Night? Head over to Ponzi this weekend. Shakespeare is a lot of fun, and free is fabulous. More resources are available on Ken's website. I can't wait to listen with the kids and discuss this book, and yes, maybe even memorize!

Staring Ahead: A Classical School Year for 6th Grade

   I will post pictures of rover excursions. But first, I must wrap my mind around the vast expanse of pictures from our trip. I think I can, I think I can, I think I can.  That's its own mountain to climb!

   Meanwhile, planning for school seems much easier! Below is the school year plan for sister and I. The year ahead is finally starting to gel. There will be some give and take, and we won't get it all done, but we'll work hard and have fun. The goal is for rest. Yep, rest. Lively and engaged rest. 

6th Grade Curricula

To Do
Notify State.
Buy Saxon Math book.
Determine Grammar.
Buy Philosophy books.
Buy Singapore Practice Books 6.
Buy bigger white board.


Art
2 hours a week at art class (Someone else teaches.)*
Work on Beautiful to Me graphic design
More sewing / quilting classes?
Fall theatre camp - one week

Bible

History Lives fiction series on church history
Daily devotions

Field Trips

The Hult for ballet and music
OBT education shows
Oregon Symphony education shows
Corban Theatre/Plays
PAM
Oregon History Museum
Teen Pact
See Science Classes

Math

Saxon Math 8/7*
Singapore 6 Practice Books*
Khan Academy Online 

Writing
IEW Continuation  (someone else teaches), one paper every 3 weeks.*
Submissions to Pockets and/or Stone Soup, Readers Digest, Letters for Literature
One essay a week from 642 Things to Write About.*
One book report a month.*
One piece at the end of the year on a subject from history. Three pages?
One written piece on Jane Austen. Two pages?
Classical Composition, Writing Fables from Memoria Press (Just for fun, when we have time or need a break from other writing. Keep in mind this kid likes to write!)

Grammar
Rod and Staff 5 or 6*

Science

First Lego League Robotics 2 hours each week*
Outdoor School
OSU science classes
Evergreen Aviation classes
Immune system, cells, neurons
Diagram and outline pond life with microscope.
GF Science classes
OMSI classes
She'd like to do 3-D design
Maker Faire
Life of Fred Physics*
Life of Fred Biology*
Visit Energy Lab
Volcanoes study
Hatfield Marine Biology Classes

Language

First Form Latin (someone else teaches)*
Mango Languages or Rosetta Stone at home or library?
Meet and Greet Spanish Group (once or twice a month)?

Spelling

10 words a week. She teaches us. Material: English 1 Vocabulary Cards*

History Readings and Discussion
A Little History of the World by Grombrich*
Hillyer's History of the World for Children*
Middle Ages review (We've previously done Story of the World Middle Ages)
Begin Story of the World Early Modern Times, will listen to the CD's.*

Geography

Begin with review of states, continents, oceans, latitude, longitude
Mapping and tracing of Europe and locations of books we are reading onto smaller maps, then putting on a large world map that hangs in the school room.*

Philosophy

Philosophy for Kids*
The Art of the Argument*

Phys. Education
Irish dance drop-ins
Swim lessons continued
Rock climbing class
One hike a week, when weather good.
Birding

Student Reading Lists
Veritas School*
SonLight Core F Books*
Classical Conversations Cycle 3 Books

   We will aim for 1-3 chapter books a week, family reading time in history, and 3-5 picture books a week, all from the various lists. Some we'll discuss such as history or philosophy, but many books will simply be for focused pleasure reading. They know I'm intentional about keeping good books in the house for them, and that I've a bit of an agenda for their reading. They don't care. They just like access to good books! Sometimes they will not pick up a book I want them to read. We let it go at that.

   You might be tempted to believe I'm type A and just a tad detail oriented. No kidding! For us, I've found it's better to aim high rather than low in education. It creates more stress for me not to plan, than to plan and have goals that we intentionally work to achieve. We won't get through it all, but the goal is to complete the main curricula packages and then everything else is a perk! Because life is for learning, and learning is for life.

* Main Curricula to be completed

   Brother will be pulled from school for various excursions, but the plan is for him to be in a chair elsewhere this year. We are excited for him. He's going to have a great teacher and he will be working hard and playing hard. Soccer has begun and school is just around the corner!

"Now Lord, we ask that you bless this year. Because the plans of man amount to nothing without your grace and goodness blessing it all. Your world is intricate and beautiful and we desire to learn more about you and your children through our studies this year. We desire to think about, what it is we think about. We seek to honor you with our studies. Please bless this year. We can do nothing apart from you, but through you we can do all things."