Monday, August 19, 2013
First Day of Kindergarten
Today we left the nap roll at home, packed up his brand new backpack, and took Micah to his first day of kindergarten.
Because he doesn't turn 5 until September 12, he isn't allowed to attend kindergarten at the public school. Alabama is totally inflexible on that cutoff, so our only options were to have him repeat Pre-K or to do private Kindergarten/First Grade at his current preschool. Back in January, we asked his Pre-K teacher about having him repeat and she was pretty emphatic that NO, no he needs to move on. Her opinion hadn't changed by the time May rolled around, so here we are.
He's in a class with nine other children, some of whom are first graders and some of whom are kindergartners. He only knows one child, although he's met the teacher outside of school a few times. It's a straight-up for-real kindergarten class, with writing and math and weekly homework. They have pet geckos, assigned show-n-tell days, and are rewarded for good behavior with pennies. There's a bathroom pass, and he has to walk across the hall to use a full-size toilet (I foresee several accidents until he starts remembering to go pee BEFORE it's an emergency). He has work binders that we decorated with pictures of diesel locomotives. He'll be doing projects and taking field trips. They're throwing around terms like Fry words and DIBLES (both of which I had to google). It's kindergarten!
We've received a lot of well-meaning but critical commentary on the whole thing, none of which takes into account that 1) he only misses the cutoff by 12 days and 2) both his father and I were 4-year-old kindergartners, so we're well aware of the potential concerns and difficulties. We're both pretty confident that he's going to be fine. And once he starts reading...oh man, this kid is going to have a blast.
I'm very excited for him, but (like so many other parents this morning) I'm struggling a little with the feeling that time is going by too fast. Part of me wanted to keep him behind, just to keep him small a little while longer, just one more year. But that wouldn't be right for him, so this morning I smiled and took his picture and cheered him on.
Then I tucked his bear lovey into his backpack pocket, because he wanted Lubby there today so he could "talk to him a little bit about kindergarten." And it was a nice reminder that he's not grown up yet. There's still time to be little.
Sunday, August 18, 2013
Flashback
9 Days:
2 Years:
Around the middle of July we finally took the side off Aerin's crib, officially turning it into a toddler bed. Last week, I caught her climbing up her changing table, so we immediately moved it out of the room and replaced it with a low shelf for her toys and books. She's definitely not a baby anymore.
2 Years:
Around the middle of July we finally took the side off Aerin's crib, officially turning it into a toddler bed. Last week, I caught her climbing up her changing table, so we immediately moved it out of the room and replaced it with a low shelf for her toys and books. She's definitely not a baby anymore.
Thursday, August 8, 2013
Looking up
Last night, at Rosie’s, Aerin got her foot caught in her chair.
“Hep me! Hep me! My foo! Hep my foo tuck!”
I immediately unhooked her foot where she’d gotten it wedged between the bars, and she went back to eating.
“She told us!” I said to Todd. “She didn’t scream. She didn’t come unglued. She TOLD us!”
This is a huge turning point. Only a few weeks ago, getting her foot caught would have escalated into an all-out screaming fit faster than we could figure out what was wrong. When the girl is happy, everyone in the room knows; she is LOUD in her happiness. When she is hurt or angry, everyone within a five-block radius hears about it.
Things have been difficult with Aerin, that’s no secret. Some days it seems like we butt heads every five minutes, and the constant conflict has been so incredibly draining. Her temper, her stubbornness, and her sheer volatility are more than a match for me, and I admit I am not the best mother for a child like her. She needs someone with an even temper, the patience of a saint, considerable free time, and maybe more than a touch of hearing loss, NONE OF WHICH I HAVE. (Although give her another few months, and she’ll take care of the hearing loss.)
Last night, when she told us, clearly, what was wrong and what she needed, it was like the sun peeking out after months of storms. “Oh my god,” I thought, “we might have an actual human being here.” Suddenly, I feel like we might make it. It’s not over, these hard times, but maybe, just maybe, it’s about to get a little better.
“Hep me! Hep me! My foo! Hep my foo tuck!”
I immediately unhooked her foot where she’d gotten it wedged between the bars, and she went back to eating.
“She told us!” I said to Todd. “She didn’t scream. She didn’t come unglued. She TOLD us!”
This is a huge turning point. Only a few weeks ago, getting her foot caught would have escalated into an all-out screaming fit faster than we could figure out what was wrong. When the girl is happy, everyone in the room knows; she is LOUD in her happiness. When she is hurt or angry, everyone within a five-block radius hears about it.
Things have been difficult with Aerin, that’s no secret. Some days it seems like we butt heads every five minutes, and the constant conflict has been so incredibly draining. Her temper, her stubbornness, and her sheer volatility are more than a match for me, and I admit I am not the best mother for a child like her. She needs someone with an even temper, the patience of a saint, considerable free time, and maybe more than a touch of hearing loss, NONE OF WHICH I HAVE. (Although give her another few months, and she’ll take care of the hearing loss.)
Last night, when she told us, clearly, what was wrong and what she needed, it was like the sun peeking out after months of storms. “Oh my god,” I thought, “we might have an actual human being here.” Suddenly, I feel like we might make it. It’s not over, these hard times, but maybe, just maybe, it’s about to get a little better.
Monday, July 29, 2013
Summer so far
Visiting splash pads
Picking strawberries
Splashing at home
Traveling to visit family
Being superheros in Target
Reading books until we fall asleep
Slip n slides for grownups (and kids)
Getting new haircuts
Getting kissed
Fourth of July fun
And the occasional botched jump into the pool
Monday, June 10, 2013
Monday couldn't come soon enough
I can make it sound like our weekend was a good one. A morning spent at the Botanical Garden. Playing outside with the hose. Cinnamon rolls for breakfast. Watching fish at the pet store. Friends coming over to play. Jumping up from dinner and running outside to see a beautiful rainbow. All these things actually happened and it makes it sound like we lived the kind of weekend you might see on Pinterest.
In reality, let me just say that no parenting awards were earned this weekend.
Todd decided late Friday night (after a less-than-encouraging update) that he’d go back to Tallassee on Saturday to visit his sick grandmother. I already had plans that we were all going back to the Botanical Garden Saturday morning, but I encouraged him to go. What I disagreed with was taking the kids. I have very strong feelings on taking small children on long road trips just to visit unresponsive people, and by "visit" I mean look at the person, get freaked out, and try to eat goldfish off the hospital floor “oh my god put that down NO SPIT IT OUT NOW.” I convinced Todd to leave me with both children and make the 7-hour round trip by himself. (And since he got stuck in a massive traffic jam on the way back, that was the best decision for him ever.)
So there I was. Outnumbered, with two children who were, for various reasons, being total assholes. In a house that had passed “messy” about four days before and advanced to “nightmarish and definitely unsanitary.” It was bad.
I tried. I really did. And things were good that morning! Jessica met us at the Garden and helped me wrangle both kids. We saw butterflies, touched turtles, splashed in water, played in a giant sandbox, and generally had a good time. And with Jessica’s help, I didn’t lose Aerin even once.
No, it was lunchtime where everything went downhill. And stayed there. And kept digging.
Lately, I’ve tried to eliminate shouting from my discipline techniques. I prefer things like time out, or taking toys, or dumping a tantruming toddler directly into the baby cage crib and shutting the door, really ANYTHING other than yelling. But ooooooh did I do a lot of shouting this weekend. Also, shrieking, angry sputtering, and death glares.
Like when I discovered Micah using my camera bag (and the SLR, lenses, and video camera in it) as a stool. The only words my brain could formulate were, “GO AWAY. BE SOMEWHERE ELSE. NOW.” I’m not sure it was intelligible, what with the gritted teeth and all, but he took off and was quiet for a whole five minutes, so I guess the meaning was clear.
Or like when Aerin spent a solid hour whining at me and yelling at her brother, and I finally just gave up. I ordered pizza, took her room and put her in her crib, went back outside, told Micah to enjoy playing in the hose but not to talk to me, and surfed the web on my phone from the back of my truck until Dominos showed up 30 minutes later.
By the end of the weekend, we were all just DONE with each other. No one liked anyone anymore.
On the upside, I didn’t beat anyone, the house was eventually cleaned, and the children were only a bit neglected. If I couldn’t be nice, at least I didn’t do any lasting harm, I guess.
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