Archive for November, 2005

Belated Thanksgiving


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Lovely morning and early afternoon with Tammy and Sam. We read the story of Thanksgiving (at least Tammy did while i ran about doing stuff!) then we did some crafts in the form of some DLTK cut and stick stuff. I was feeling rather less inspired than i had intended but it was okay.

Then we had a great Thanksgiving Lunch (thanks for bringing most of it Tammy) which included Pumpkin Pie… which is yummy :)

I think i might adopt Thanksgiving. Somehow it’s just a nice one :)

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Do you seem real and i seem fake?

Better day today.

Fran didn’t wake up till 9am (unheard of!) by which time i’d been down a while and got some jobs done. So we started well and it’s been a nice day.

First we read “A Farm through Time” which we all really enjoyed and was a rather fantastic everyone snuggled up to each other on the sofa under a fleece blanket moment. Good book, liked it a lot. Nostalgic somehow. Maddy and i played with a reading readiness set, Amelie and i sat at the table together and cut up paper (as you do), Fran and i did more Greek City Building together. She’s just achieved her first solo city of 1000 people. Quite an achievement. She also did a revision subtraction exercise perfectly.

So all in all, it feels good. Plus, having attempted to get myself together in a 2 week plan, i’ve acknowledged that my chemicals have gone a bit wonky (as has happened about a 9 months to a year after every baby so far, so i’d call that a pattern!) and done something about it. I don’t like experiencing over high levels of anxiety and paranoia because of chemical imbalances, so i’ve dealt with it. And thank you to the two people who have listened kindly and patiently over the last few days, especially given its been quite above and beyond the call of duty really. I’ve appreciated it and won’t forget it :)

Tomorrow we are doing Thanksgiving (Beans, i’m mailing you and not hearing back but assume you are probably not able to come anyway - feel free to say if you can) and Thursday is group. Suddenly life feels properly bright again. Thank goodness for self knowledge and a bit of experience. I think i like my 30’s.

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Right

Who’s been indoctrinating my daughter???? ;)

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She and Maddy are playing “scarf ladies” - Amelie is going for the total neat approach whereas Maddy is wearing her’s with style.

Lol.

And especially for Hannah, Maddy’s version :)

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What a 1 year old looks like


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Especially for Alison, when she returns :)
I found a photo of Amelie in this top at the weekend, she was nearly 2. Josie is all but grown out of it now. Chubbychops :)

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Those educational and parental ponderings then.

The one where Merry gets back to the point.

I think this year has been the most significant yet in terms of our HE life. It’s been the one where i let go of some things and picked up some others that i had shed because i listened outside before i listened inside, an acceptable side-effect of looking at all the ‘options’ of home ed before your children are really fully formed, or indeed your own parenting style is fully formed. It’s been significant because it has been the year i had least expectations of, yet it has been the year that most has happened in. It’s been significant because this has been the year in which i truly believe we have reached our HE ideal, one that suits us all.

Central to how i feel about HE now, is ironically a phrase bandied about regularly when we talk about LEA involvement: age, aptitude and ability. An odd one really, given that most people, and indeed i to some extent, feel somewhat negative about the LEA. But for me, it’s been useful, not only (in fact almost least) in terms of education, but also in terms of parenting style and the wider issue of parenting versus personality of child.

The key to life here is the rather enormous difference between my childrens’ learning personalities, something i have fairly clearly defined in my head now. Fran does not like to be pushed and i’m fortunate that my early fervour was lackadaisical enough not to have seriously damaged our relationship. I’d like to kid myself i was listening for her cues without realising, but in truth, i was just fervent but lazy ;) Maddy likes to be stretched but doesn’t want to acknowledge it but without a fair bit of guidence and chivvying, she atrophies and gets upset. It’s a fine balance with her; she is a bright girl, a sociable girl but one who finds it hard to take the first step into things. Amelie doesn’t only deserve to be stretched, she asks for it. She’s definitely bright, the only one to be asking at 3 to know how to write her name, or do sums and she’s as quick as water into a piece of kitchen towel, a proverbial sponge. Part of that, i daresay is simply sibling placement, part of it is her; i see a lot of my mum in Amelie. She is also disruptive at times, a bully at others, manipulative at best. Keeping her well occupied is undoubtedly going to be quite important because when i see her behaving in those ways, i can ALWAYS see that she is doing it to get attention and a reaction from me. Her behaviour is an excellent barometer for how family life is at any time.

Age (this is more a parenting one) - well, call me old fashioned but i’m going back to the old version of childhood and i’m not going to worry about it. I fretted so much about playing with toys at 10 (and at 15) when everyone else was having sex and smoking (so it seemed.) Since my children have an opportunity to do it at their own pace without peer pressure, i’m going to let them. I’m not going to hold them back, or seal them off, or keep them in age order even, i’m just going to let them be their age. THEIR age. So if Fran is still happily watching CBeebies now, i’ll let her. She knows where the other channels are and she doesn’t bother. It’s no longer a case of not letting her watch things, or vetting her viewing - she seems to have no interest in them. Likewise with lots of the rites of passage which seem to be so immediate for other kids i know. At HESFES, at other camps, it’s not been a case of me not letting her go places, or stay out late; she hasn’t really asked. She got the full level of her requirements at HESFES, she never once asked to stay out late and i didn’t hold her back from anything she asked to do, even if i had to gulp hard to do it. She went as far, for as long as she asked and she never once asked to do more. I still have to persuade her to speak to people in shops, or go out of sight for this or that, though she seems perfectly able and confident when she does. She isn’t afraid, she simply doesn’t seem to have an urge. I know that at 7 i was pestering my mum to be allowed to walk to the local shop; Fran has never asked and in fact, she did it once at a friends house and then the next time, she saw the friends go and didn’t want to go with them. I don’t know why, but she doesn’t really want to. She’s still very much a self-contained, little, child. Whether nature or nurture, i have no idea, but i’m going to trust her to give me the cues. Certainly Maddy does, she is much more gung-ho about things and as soon as i can rely on her to remember her name/my name/ a direction/ a basic set of rules/two instructions in a row, i daresay she’ll be doing all sorts. At the moment, most of those things are quite difficult enough; she completely lacks the common sense that Fran has and would fail to operate in an emergency of any sort, even just a “I’m lost in a shop” sort of one.

I know perfectly well that my own first trip into town alone at 14 was too late; i’ve no desire to replicate that, nor the frustration i felt with it, but i think i can say with confidence that they, and i, will know what is right when it is right. It doesn’t have to be the same for everyone. Just like there is no set age for reading, or getting interested in adding up, there are no set ages for needing to be out after dark. I’m only just coming to not feel internal threat about it. My children are really different to the child i was. Perhaps it’s because they know i probably wouldn’t say no, within reason. Perhaps it’s because they know they have to cross 3 major roads to get to the nearest shop; perhaps it’s because i’ve been honest and said “I trust you, i’m not sure i trust everyone else.” I think, if i lived in a little village where they felt safe and comfortable and so did i, they’d be popping down the road for milk by now, and learning the lessons that would give them. Sadly, we don’t. It’ll have to wait.

Aptitudes or their interests; Fran’s so clearly historical and her ability to empathise with characters moves me. I’d like to think she gets that from me, but others might disagree ;) Maddy’s draws like i’ve seen no one else but my mum draw in our family and loves making numbers work. Pattern , including words and letters, is how she makes sense of her world, she is 100% in need of visual stimulus to comprehend life. Amelie is still unclear, but i suspect her imagination and creativity are going to be her strong point and she has a definite interest in science and how things work. I’m sure that is why she gravitates to my mum so much, she does it in a way unlike any other child i’ve seen in the family.

And this is where i finally get back to the point. I think quite a lot of people, unless they already had very clear ideas in their head, go through various phases in HE development. In nearly 5 years of list life, i’ve seen them happen to loads of people, myself included. There are various patterns, (give or take this and that and with no slurs intended on anything) and this is the one i’ve followed.

Wooooah… how can we do this?… we can’t, we can… i neeeeed a method… i’ve found a method and its Montessori/Steiner/Wardorf…. we can do it we can do it…. oh bugger they don’t really get it… bugger again this child won’t do what its suppose to…. argh…. all methods and curriculums are crap…. autonomy is the way to go… autonomy autonomy autonomy…. (followed in my case by a period of “go away and entertain yourself)… we can do this we can do this….. arrrrgh…. kids don’t really seem happy…. it’s not happening…. argh… maybe a curriculum then….. but.. but…but… okay, maybe some books from a curriculum… maybe 3 curriculums… but no maths scheme… never ever a maths scheme………wooooaaaaaaah…. okay… maybe a maths scheme…. bugger these children. How can they like maths?

And that, currently, is about where we are at.

My children don’t really like being left to it. Well, actually Maddy does, but it mainly involves her eventually going and wrapping herself into a blanket and twiddling her hair till i have to go and find the weeping child completely meshed in home grown keratin. *I* don’t really like it because it considerably narrows my retail therapy options, never mind my website browsing options. What we like, in this house, is a flexible approach to education, with a variety of ways of learning maths, a variety and ever changing way of learning to read, lots of books, lots of making stuff, vaguely organised into projects for a bit of cohesion, lots of trips out, lots of friends and lots… LOTS of holidays. And lots of time to play; play still makes up the majority of our day.

Flexible. I like flexible. I like child-led, no-one is ever forced to learn anything. Cue-based. Charlotte Mason when it comes to cohesion and little and often. No time table, no rigidity, lots of options, lots of time together. Lots of me thinking ahead about what might be interesting next, but not getting too hung up on whether we do it all. Skill acquisition based on need to know and usefulness, with a fair bit of “can we frankly be bothered or will it be easier to learn in a year?” I can’t think when the last time we struggled and fretted over a skill was - reading for Fran was a great learning experience. i needed her to be able to read, she desperately wanted to be able to. It was worth the effort, but i doubt i’ll go that way again. I sincerely hope not.

There is one ideal i read, a long time ago, that i hold very close to my heart. It’s as close to a philosophy as i come. It’s a Charlotte Mason ideal and it’s one i appreciated very much during my junior schooling. Its the notion that a child can be taken anywhere if you read to them and that no child need be limited by the skills they have so far acquired. I’ve overcome my dislike of reading aloud mainly because i want my late readers to be able to enjoy the books i was consuming avidly at Fran’s age, while they are still young enough to throw themselves into a Narnia game for hours at bedtime.

Books, holidays, skills and play. Is that a decent philosophy for life?

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Beadmerrily…

…will post its 600th parcel since turning into the new version of shop tomorrow, which is just slightly less than 9 months is not bad going really i suppose, especially when you think its been closed for 6 weeks of that and i’ve not yet done a December with the shop either.

Feel very proud of it and really must try to make next year, which will take me into its 4th tax year of existence, something worthwhile.

Then i will become a famous novellist, buy you all chocolate, and go off to live a semi-reclusive life in Devon ;)

Got to say a big thanks to Jax for helping me get so far with it; she really did do a fine (and endlessly patient) job.

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Mr Blunt is speaking to me

I’ve learned all the lyrics, will someone do a duet with me?

This one, Tears and Rain, is my favourite, just at the moment. Every time i hear these words:

“Like Dorian Gray, I’ve heard what they say, but I’m not here for trouble “

i keep thinking i must get back to my Big Read - i’m sure Dorian Gray is on the list ;)

But that aside, nothing to report. Not a thing. Not one. I think we might be back on holiday.

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BBC NEWS | South Asia | Indecency guide for tourists to India

BBC NEWS | South Asia | Indecency guide for tourists to India

Okay… you could be forgiven for forgetting that kissing isn’t on, but what was with the Finnish woman??????

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The answer…

…in case anyone wonders… is no. She didn’t sleep. She woke up at 11pm and didn’t go back to sleep until 3am, by which time i had reluctantly started on “put her in her cot and leave her there” as an option. :(

Still, i guess this is one particular flogging rod i can now break over my knee; i always assumed Fran’s noctural habits were due to poor parenting style, not being breastfed, general incompetence, being pregnant again and her consequently hating me. Turns out some babies are just noctural then, because whatever else, i’ve been spot on brilliant as a parent to Josie since the moment i was fit to look after her.

Guess she’s going to pay me back for all those perfect new baby nights then.

Mind you, last night i discovered she can sing Row, Row Row your Boat - brilliant for someone not yet 13 months but perhaps a little grating in the witching hours :roll:

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The Weekend.

If i could bottle a time and then bring it out for a quick pick-me-up every so often, i’d do now. It’s great :) I feel like we’ve reached a high as a family and i like it. The big girls are biggish, the little ones are pleasantly little and life is busy but ultimately do-able. If we could only be settled in our own home, somewhere we wanted to live, life would be perfect. Oh well, you can’t have everything and renting has its perks i guess. :roll:

I’m trying to think what we’ve done this weekend and the answer is really “nothing much”. We’ve had to put a stair gate up, for the first time since Fran was a baby as Josie is just an unstoppable climber. Maddy completely refused to climb stairs as a baby and Amelie’s only fall that i can remember was a particularly acrobatic one i don’t really mind her climbing, though the stairs are long and steepish and have a hard basket and radiator at the bottom, but i do mind losing her and finding her choked to death upstairs at some point. It’s a bit of a pain really, but there you go. She’s cut 2 new teeth this weekend, top and bottom on the right and she’s also learned to say “hiya,” play giving and taking games, nod her head and wave. Clever girl then :)

Fran has been reading lots; the Usborne “How Babies are Made” book and an Usborne Encyclopedia of Animals. It’s great to see her enjoying accessing information for herself now, takes the pressure off me hugely for one thing and i just find it an unrelenting joy to see her gaining the skill all by herself now. I don’t suppose i’ll ever quite fathom out how we got here; certainly none of it seems to apply to Maddy. So that’s useful then!

Having sat and talked to Kate the other day, i have a new game plan for me and Amelie - which is to give her so much attention that she becomes completely sick and tired of me ;) So yesterday she and i had an afternoon shopping; which was lots of fun actually. We got presents for her party this morning (best nursery friend Georgia) and the gate etc - she was quite keen on buying a playpen for Josie (”we could put it upside down and she could be like in a zoo mummy”) :roll:

Maddy has been doing loads more DWN, including some rather fab monkeys, brought on by watching Tarzan. i adore her drawing, it is the only time i see her completely at ease with herself and albe to move on/try again/ relax about her skills. Granted, no one else sees her quite in the same light as i do (well, except Max) but i know when she is stressed and stretched. it’s lovely when she isn’t. Actually DWN is a challenge forh er as she finds any imperfections in her own copies hard to cope with, even things like drawing the steps right, but out of order mean she has to start again. But she does and oh, her persistance…. :)

Fran has spent lots of today playing Masters of Olympus - a town building game based in Ancient Greece. She has picked it up really well and frankly, i think my work here is done. There is so much to be learned from games like this that i’d be happy enough if she used them for a year solidly and did nothing else i think! Reading, maths, cause and effect (!), forward thinking, history, IT - blah blah blah - today we did the tutorials together and then let her loose on a town - after a while she came and said she was stuck so together we worked out what had gone worng (too much too fast) and wrote up a list of the basic necessities of life for settlers in the order they need it - home, water, food, health, law, entertainment, luxury goods… and then she tried again with great improvement. You can’t beat it - how better to learn about life ;)

Finished off with swimming, joined by friends which was lovely. I need to merge my daughters i think - Maddy is all strength and no buoyancy and Fran is the opposite! They had fun though and Fran was doggy paddling half a width by the end.

Wonder if Josie will sleep tonight? She fell asleep face down in her roast earlier, so there is hope :)

And now i MUST go and pack parcels - snowed under again :)

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MP3 Players

Can you get them with radios built in?

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I’m just a little bit proud.

And well done to Kris too, who finished a few minutes before me, by the look of it :)

Of course i haven’t really finished, it turned into a monster and is only half way through. Max is hoping i’m secretly a genius and he’ll be able to retire on my literary millions. Bless ;)

5000 words in one evening. Must be the only bloody thing i haven’t been trying to finish off with 30 seconds to go in my entire life.

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Let it snow, let it snow, let it snow….

What have we done today?

Nothing, other than cancelling group. Too many sick people. In the event though, a couple of people turned up at the hall and rang me, so they came round for a while and braved our germs. Very brave. My throat is really sore. other than that, it’s been pitiful - a bit of half hearted drawing, a bit of story listening, some Cbeebies website, some Dora (jn French) but nothing meaningful. It’s too cold (1c outside atm, but no further snow beyond the flurries this morning) and i feel too sore in side of neck. Annoying to only be sick in one place. *thinks savage thoughts at tonsils* Made everyone get bathed and nit combed them, but haven’t uncovered anything alive. Am completely paranoid mother about nits now - horrid sodding things.

41000 words, only the new maxi and mini kits left to upload to BM - have just taken a further armful of parcels up to the PO; good to be busy. Must take Halloween thing off site :roll: Sore tummy… why has cycle reduced itself to 24 days after 18 years of being bang on 28? It’s been getting shorter by a day a month since we went to Devon? Surely menstrual cycle not affected by temporary latitudinal shift? (Surely? :shock: )

Off to go and grind Kris into the dirt as she persistantly beats me on word count every sodding night. Have banned her from all further camps.. ever… in the world… universe… god.

Oh yeah. Started Prince Caspian, much better story. My favourite.

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Local Group

Cancelled for today.

Everyone is sending in sick apologies, us included.

Trying to get in touch with anyone i can :)

Comments off

Was she really so little?

Been flickring this evening (novel and tax displacement!) and found this…

Can hardly believe she was ever so small :)

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Draw Write Now stuff


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Kids are enjoying these books at the moment so i thought i’d make a set up i could add to at times and see how they progress. It’s been interesting watching them over the last couple of days, especially Fran who is much less inclined to draw than Maddy or Amelie. i think Fran really did herself proud with the one of her cat.

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Sniff

Bleurgh. So much snot :roll:

Good job we postoned the Thanksgiving thing today we had planned with Tammy and the Beans as none of us we up to a lot. We have done piles of drawing, entertained Auntie kate, and Fran has read a book, but now we are firmly into the realms of geomags, gamecube and mess.

My jaw is thumping with some infection in the gland by my tonsil. Something weird going on there, its the same one that got completely impacted with the abcess earlier in the year i think and it hurts. Desperately trying to avoid antibiotics as i have only just cleared up the side effects of them, but wondering if i am going to get floored by tonsilitis again sometime soon. That would be annoying; it’s no fun being ill when you can’t just retire to bed and sleep for a week. Mind you, i said something similar in irritation at Max being permanently ill a couple of years ago and got my come-uppance in the full year of hospital strength tonsilitis - so i think i’ll be careful what i wish for ;)

Anyway, Maddy has made a museum of solid shapes in geomags, Fran is getting annoyed with Animal Crossing because she can’t solve the harvest Festival thing, Amelie is making geomag jewellery and Josie has abandoned all pretence of being a baby and refused to have a midday nap. What’s a girl supposed to do?

Where’s my book?

(Oh, and 38000 words and counting… NO ONE mention the tax return!)

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Nothing much that needed fixing.

I think it must just have been the heaped up crud, cold and sleepiness that did it yesterday. Today has been much better. Still, one of the things i like about blogging is looking back and seeing how good life is, as a general rule, so it is honesty to me to write up the less good days, so i can see they are fairly few and far between. I look forward to one day (i just spelt that ‘wonday’ :roll: ) reading this blog back, which is why i keep it, and seeing the truth written up as a record of life; knowing it is true because it has ups and downs of ordinary, real life in it.

Anyway - i’ve got a horrid tonsil, but i think it is gonig to stay under control, Josie is streaming with cold and Amelie is very much at the end of her tiredness tether really. Fran and Maddy are in good form though and have had a nice day.

Fran has:
spent ages working on a 3 bears picture from DWN
Read a story out of a story collection about famous bears (full pages of writing.)
Done a page of maths. Now seeing that my method of old does have it’s ups - it is neater when you have to carry over more than once.
Tidied her room without being asked and wrote a “Mum, do not come in my room” sign.
Listened to SOTW and answered questions on last weeks.

Maddy has:
Drawn a fab DWN cat, twice, learned to colour in differently and done a tractor too.
Done some measuring maths and worked out on her own she could use rods to measure with.
Done loads more words for her “word grass” and read me a Tom and Kate book.

They’ve both just been playing Downfall; am really enjoying suddenly having much bigger, more able children. They’ve also just demonstrated ably how different they are by playing hopscotch; Fran is quick, accurate and fast, Maddy has no idea how to make her legs do it but knows she can still win the race by just running instead ;) Made me laugh anyway ;)

Something Barbara was saying last week struck a nerve with me, about remembering the non-HE/non net friends in our lives, something i am a bit of a failure at, among other things. I’ve got 2 good Pboro friends from toddler days, and one i hadn’t spoken to for ages, so yesterday i phoned her for a good chat which was lovely. Today i managed to briefly catch up with Kate, after i found myself thinking about what a fab friend she is last night. We’ve been friends for 7 years, seen each other every week and never once fallen out. That is definitely something to be very grateful for and i am - i think the world of her and everything she stands for.

Off to pick up Amelie; she is back into nursery wobbles now; the whole thing just makes me feel tired and a bit helpless. I don’t know what to do for the best. Since she isn’t unhappy there, i am going to persist till Xmas, just to hopefully get her to see something through, since she made such a fool of me a couple of weeks ago. Think i might well just quietly drop it after Xmas though. :roll:

EDIT: Josie has just discovered the joys of posting things into the video player. Marvellous :roll:

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