I few days after I wrote about Asa, I realized I forgot to mention another of his cute, little stories. What parent can resist one more?
Right before Christmas, Asa had taken to traveling with an entrouge. Everywhere he went in the house, he had to drag along two blankets, puppy dog, baby tigger, plus his action figures of Batman and Superman. One day he hopped up on the couch to snuggle, complete with his travel fan club (including action figure Spiderman, making a suprise appearance) and sarcastically I asked "gee Asa, do we need anything else here?", thinking it would go over his head. He looked at me with those big, brown eyes and replied "a cookie?"
Hmmm, methink s my child is starting to understand what I say.
Monday, March 17, 2008
The Nerd Must Agitate
It is only March, and I have already read numerous articles on how to get your kids to read. I have no problem with this-it falls in line with my world domination plan to make everybody read books like I do. However, every single article I have read left out an EXTREMELY important part: there was no mention of role modeling for your kids and being a reader yourself.
My love of books is becoming infamous-I mention it all the time on my blogs. However, how many of you know that in addtion to being willing to steal bookshelves from my friends, I also used to get grounded from the library during middle school? My mom knew one of the librarians, the librarian introduced me to the staff, and when my grades dipped (which was often) mom would come in every Friday to check if I had been to the library. All the staff knew to ask me if I should be there. Everyone one wonders at what point in my young life I cursed my mother under my breath? This was time. Damn the woman for being so resourceful.
That is my background attitude towards reading, and I cringe when there are great articles about getting young children to read but what about older children? What about yourself? As a parent/aunt/uncle/adult in a child's life, you role model a hundred behaviors. We are advised to eat healthy, lay off the drugs and booze, watch our potty mouths, exercise, show kindness to others, etc. etc. Not one article I have read this year on READING has even mentioned the fact that if you want to raise readers, be a reader. ARRRRGGGGHHHHHH! Very loud internet scream.
So you aren't a reader? I find this incredible, but I know it to be true. So here is how to be a reader, or at least fake it really good.
1. Despite the nerd connotations, a lot of grown-ups I know wish they were readers, but think it is to late for them. Those adults books look long, and intimidating. So who says you have to start there? Hit the picture books. "Where The Wild Things Are", "Bear Snores On", and "Make Way For Ducklings" are classics in their own right and I have read them countless times-without Asa, even though I got them for him. Babar, Frog and Toad, The Bernenstein Bears, and Arthur have all been in my personal library for the last 8 years-Asa is 2. I read them again and again, and I feel no shame.
2. Feel free to self-graduate at anytime. Sure Harry Potter got all the press, but great Children's Literature has existed at least for 100 years, depending on your point of view ("The Wizard of Oz" and "Peter Pan" were written just for children). Some of my favorites that I own and re-read often are The Little House series by Laura Ingalls Wilder, books by Roald Dahl (of "James and The Giant Peach" fame) "Gentle Ben" by Walt Morey, and Encyclopedia Brown mysteries.
3. Okay, you can't fake reading. If you don't like it, you don't like it. Got a hobby? Get a magazine subscription. Kids don't import importance to the reading literature, they only see the actions, and I know this by experience. I was in middle school (of library grounding fame) before I realized my dad didn't read much. Could have fooled me-I always saw him reading...a magazine. Ohhhhhh. He has had subscriptions to 3-5 monthly, magazines at any given time and granted I can't sit and read about hunting, cars, or boats with the same passion, he did role model to me and my sister the act of Reading.
So what's the point? I mean, really, is reading that important once you graduate college, and prove you know your subject matter? Sure, kids who read, are less likely to do a host of bad behaviors and get better grades (unless it is me we are talking about) but I am past the years of peer pressure getting me to drink-I do it on my own now. So why be a reader? Well, forgetting all the great stories out there, when Nick and I went to the Grand Canyon, I researched the area and found lots of fun stuff to do. When I felt bad after Asa was born, a little reading got me to the doctor's for post-partum. When Asa looked funny, a little reading determined his problem was genetics and nothing serious (ha-ha). Seriously, we never stop reading. There is always something that maybe we need more info., whether it be a new career, a work related project, or the desire to learn for learning's sake. Wouldn't it be nice to set our kids up with those success skills?
(What am I reading now you ask? "Omoo" by Herman Melville. With a small kid running around, it takes a while. Plus I read the newspaper daily and 5 magazines-1 weekly and 4 monthlies.)
My love of books is becoming infamous-I mention it all the time on my blogs. However, how many of you know that in addtion to being willing to steal bookshelves from my friends, I also used to get grounded from the library during middle school? My mom knew one of the librarians, the librarian introduced me to the staff, and when my grades dipped (which was often) mom would come in every Friday to check if I had been to the library. All the staff knew to ask me if I should be there. Everyone one wonders at what point in my young life I cursed my mother under my breath? This was time. Damn the woman for being so resourceful.
That is my background attitude towards reading, and I cringe when there are great articles about getting young children to read but what about older children? What about yourself? As a parent/aunt/uncle/adult in a child's life, you role model a hundred behaviors. We are advised to eat healthy, lay off the drugs and booze, watch our potty mouths, exercise, show kindness to others, etc. etc. Not one article I have read this year on READING has even mentioned the fact that if you want to raise readers, be a reader. ARRRRGGGGHHHHHH! Very loud internet scream.
So you aren't a reader? I find this incredible, but I know it to be true. So here is how to be a reader, or at least fake it really good.
1. Despite the nerd connotations, a lot of grown-ups I know wish they were readers, but think it is to late for them. Those adults books look long, and intimidating. So who says you have to start there? Hit the picture books. "Where The Wild Things Are", "Bear Snores On", and "Make Way For Ducklings" are classics in their own right and I have read them countless times-without Asa, even though I got them for him. Babar, Frog and Toad, The Bernenstein Bears, and Arthur have all been in my personal library for the last 8 years-Asa is 2. I read them again and again, and I feel no shame.
2. Feel free to self-graduate at anytime. Sure Harry Potter got all the press, but great Children's Literature has existed at least for 100 years, depending on your point of view ("The Wizard of Oz" and "Peter Pan" were written just for children). Some of my favorites that I own and re-read often are The Little House series by Laura Ingalls Wilder, books by Roald Dahl (of "James and The Giant Peach" fame) "Gentle Ben" by Walt Morey, and Encyclopedia Brown mysteries.
3. Okay, you can't fake reading. If you don't like it, you don't like it. Got a hobby? Get a magazine subscription. Kids don't import importance to the reading literature, they only see the actions, and I know this by experience. I was in middle school (of library grounding fame) before I realized my dad didn't read much. Could have fooled me-I always saw him reading...a magazine. Ohhhhhh. He has had subscriptions to 3-5 monthly, magazines at any given time and granted I can't sit and read about hunting, cars, or boats with the same passion, he did role model to me and my sister the act of Reading.
So what's the point? I mean, really, is reading that important once you graduate college, and prove you know your subject matter? Sure, kids who read, are less likely to do a host of bad behaviors and get better grades (unless it is me we are talking about) but I am past the years of peer pressure getting me to drink-I do it on my own now. So why be a reader? Well, forgetting all the great stories out there, when Nick and I went to the Grand Canyon, I researched the area and found lots of fun stuff to do. When I felt bad after Asa was born, a little reading got me to the doctor's for post-partum. When Asa looked funny, a little reading determined his problem was genetics and nothing serious (ha-ha). Seriously, we never stop reading. There is always something that maybe we need more info., whether it be a new career, a work related project, or the desire to learn for learning's sake. Wouldn't it be nice to set our kids up with those success skills?
(What am I reading now you ask? "Omoo" by Herman Melville. With a small kid running around, it takes a while. Plus I read the newspaper daily and 5 magazines-1 weekly and 4 monthlies.)
Friday, March 14, 2008
Another Day
We recently received news that Nick's uncle, Joe, passed away. I know family reads this, and I believe everyone grieves differently, but I don't think I am being to uncharitable when I say that not only was Joe a solitary man, but his recent drug use isolated him even further. Few people even had the chance to visit Joe in the hospital. It is a sad testament to a man from such a large, loving family. But it reminds me yet again, that we die as we live.
The funeral of my Grandpa was a very quiet affair. No more than 20 people present, with a simple gravesite service-Grandpa was also a solitary man and it showed. Nick's Grandma's service at the funeral parlor was standing room only-she was very social. Funerals, and life in general, are not a popularity contest, and both grandparents are missed, but this most recent passing reminds of who I want to be.
When my sister was investigating synagogue's to attend in the Portland area, she visited numerous different sites, looking for a good fit. One in particular was the synagogue my maternal Grandma had attended and over 40 years after her passing, my sister received compliments on what a wonderful woman she was and how much people miss her. 40 years later, she is still remembered. Will people say that about me? Will I be remembered for the kind gestures I did or the fact I won't wear white socks? Will my foul mouth and gossipy ways linger longer than my work with Girl Scouts? There is no right or worng answer-it is just a ponderous thought. The sad thing for Joe is that though he may have had kind gestures, what I will remember is the drug use-I only met him a few times, and drug use was a part of his life by then. I am sure the people who knew him as a little boy will remember something kinder.
I don't know the saying verbatim (do I ever know the saying verbatim?!?!?) but Maya Angelou has a quote made famous by the internet that talks about people forgetting what you said, but always remembering how you made them feel. I think it is important to mention that now, and to always remind myself how true it is.
May you rest in Peace Joe and find the solace you were seeking.
The funeral of my Grandpa was a very quiet affair. No more than 20 people present, with a simple gravesite service-Grandpa was also a solitary man and it showed. Nick's Grandma's service at the funeral parlor was standing room only-she was very social. Funerals, and life in general, are not a popularity contest, and both grandparents are missed, but this most recent passing reminds of who I want to be.
When my sister was investigating synagogue's to attend in the Portland area, she visited numerous different sites, looking for a good fit. One in particular was the synagogue my maternal Grandma had attended and over 40 years after her passing, my sister received compliments on what a wonderful woman she was and how much people miss her. 40 years later, she is still remembered. Will people say that about me? Will I be remembered for the kind gestures I did or the fact I won't wear white socks? Will my foul mouth and gossipy ways linger longer than my work with Girl Scouts? There is no right or worng answer-it is just a ponderous thought. The sad thing for Joe is that though he may have had kind gestures, what I will remember is the drug use-I only met him a few times, and drug use was a part of his life by then. I am sure the people who knew him as a little boy will remember something kinder.
I don't know the saying verbatim (do I ever know the saying verbatim?!?!?) but Maya Angelou has a quote made famous by the internet that talks about people forgetting what you said, but always remembering how you made them feel. I think it is important to mention that now, and to always remind myself how true it is.
May you rest in Peace Joe and find the solace you were seeking.
Monday, March 10, 2008
The Greatest Sports Moment Ever
This last weekend, I let Nick have the remote-no questions asked. Usually, no matter who has the remote, we try to compromise. I won't watch "Murder, She Wrote" and he won't watch IFC (The Independent Film Channel). But Nick has been sick for about a month now with the cold-that will-not-leave and I felt sorry for him. So when he turned on "The Greatest Sports Moments Of All Time", nary a peep I made. And it turned out to be better than I thought. I missed most of of it but I caught the top five and they are as I remember:
5. Lou Gehrig's good-bye speech when he retired from Baseball
4. Lance Armstrong's Tour de France rqce AFTER cancer
3.Jackie Robinson's entrance into Major League baseball
2.
1.1980 Olympic Hockey team win-"Miracle On Ice"
Number 2 is blank-I just cannot remember what it was.
As much as all those moments are great, and to be admired in their own right, I was really disappointed that after all was said and done, the number one, all time, greatest moment ever was a hockey game. I understand it was the cold war, and few people love the Olympics more than me but really-this is what people find inspriational? A bunch of white guys triumphing against a political system-the commies"? Or was it the underdog beating a powerhouse-yet again? Sports is fun and all, and I have seen it contribute lots of good things-from keeping kids busy in a safe atmosphere (usually), to inspiring us to achieve things we never thought possible. But put it in a human world-what would be the number one triumph of all time? What one moment in the History of Sports made you cry? Inspired you to look beyond what was possible? To shout out loud even though the sport itself was less than moving?
I am biased, obviously, but every time I see clips of Jesse Owens winning Gold (in a sport I have ZERO interest) at the Berlin Olympics, I get teary eyed. That one moment just said so much for so many people, and proved so much for sceince, that I look at it as more than SPORTS.
It showed Hitler that his little policy of "The Master Race", was a bunch of scientific shit.
It was a small dent in the racist policies back home in the US: African-Americans WERE NOT, ARE NOT, inferior.
It was a small ray of hope for Jews that an American and not a German, hand picked Nazi stooge won the Gold Medal, in front of the entire world.
And last but certianly not least, it was a huge step for humanity. Jesse Owens beat his German rival, and then went on to treat his adversary as a friend. I can't remember the rival's name, and I cannot say they became the best of friends, but they did meet numerous times after the infamous race and they did have at least a very friendly professional relationship. That two men, from such different places, under such adverse conditions could grow to like one another and be friends, says a lot to me, and makes this THE best moment in sports.
5. Lou Gehrig's good-bye speech when he retired from Baseball
4. Lance Armstrong's Tour de France rqce AFTER cancer
3.Jackie Robinson's entrance into Major League baseball
2.
1.1980 Olympic Hockey team win-"Miracle On Ice"
Number 2 is blank-I just cannot remember what it was.
As much as all those moments are great, and to be admired in their own right, I was really disappointed that after all was said and done, the number one, all time, greatest moment ever was a hockey game. I understand it was the cold war, and few people love the Olympics more than me but really-this is what people find inspriational? A bunch of white guys triumphing against a political system-the commies"? Or was it the underdog beating a powerhouse-yet again? Sports is fun and all, and I have seen it contribute lots of good things-from keeping kids busy in a safe atmosphere (usually), to inspiring us to achieve things we never thought possible. But put it in a human world-what would be the number one triumph of all time? What one moment in the History of Sports made you cry? Inspired you to look beyond what was possible? To shout out loud even though the sport itself was less than moving?
I am biased, obviously, but every time I see clips of Jesse Owens winning Gold (in a sport I have ZERO interest) at the Berlin Olympics, I get teary eyed. That one moment just said so much for so many people, and proved so much for sceince, that I look at it as more than SPORTS.
It showed Hitler that his little policy of "The Master Race", was a bunch of scientific shit.
It was a small dent in the racist policies back home in the US: African-Americans WERE NOT, ARE NOT, inferior.
It was a small ray of hope for Jews that an American and not a German, hand picked Nazi stooge won the Gold Medal, in front of the entire world.
And last but certianly not least, it was a huge step for humanity. Jesse Owens beat his German rival, and then went on to treat his adversary as a friend. I can't remember the rival's name, and I cannot say they became the best of friends, but they did meet numerous times after the infamous race and they did have at least a very friendly professional relationship. That two men, from such different places, under such adverse conditions could grow to like one another and be friends, says a lot to me, and makes this THE best moment in sports.
Friday, March 07, 2008
Asa Stories
People seem to like hearing about Asa, maybe because he doesn't live with them? Here are a couple things he has done recently that I found...typical kid and kind of cute, or at least memorable.
Story 1
We have a lot of big fir trees at our house so we ALWAYS have dirt on our floor. Pine needles, weird seeds, etc. Asa loves to pick these up and hand them to me saying "garbage". So the other day when he came to hand me some small piece of dirt I didn't think twice about it until I got it in my hand and he points to his nose. It was a booger! Gross!!!!!! I don't care who's mom I am, I don't want that!!!!!!
Story 2
We are lucky in the design of our house that our family room is a dead end. So when I shut the baby gate, Asa is locked down there and I don't worry about him getting into chemicals (he can work all baby locks). Nick and I have been sick this week-he with the worst cold he has ever had and me with a mild case of food poisoning. One late afternoon, exhausted, we locked Asa up with us and took naps on the couch. I awake to "mommy, mommy, mommy mommy, mommy", repeatedly. If I speak, he knows I am up so I try to wait him out. No going this time, so I open one eye and say "yes baby?" "Shhhh, daddy sleeping", complete with finger to the lips. Why did he wake me for that?!?!??! And why didn't he wake daddy, to tell him mommy was sleeping?!?!?
Story 3
Asa was taking a bath and I can't remember the entire conversation but Asa said something along the lines of, he liked something. So I replied, "me, too!" Asa responded by going "three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten." It took me till five to realize that 'me, too" was a lot like "me two" when you are his age.
This last story isn't about Asa but I found it funny. A friend of my sister's, "Bertha" and I have sons one month a part in age. Comparing notes, we discovered that both boys are going through a hitting phase that is driving us insane. Bertha's son, "Lester", got in trouble at day care for hitting and as the teacher spoke to him about it, he got sassy. So the teacher had to continue the discusion a little further and finally Lester looks at her and says "this is bullshit". Of course Bertha was embarassed but I thought it hilarious to think of a 2 year old saying that. And of course he could have heard that word anywhere, since I have never heard Bertha mutter anything stronger than "damn", and only in extreme situations. Oh the joy of a 2 year old.
Story 1
We have a lot of big fir trees at our house so we ALWAYS have dirt on our floor. Pine needles, weird seeds, etc. Asa loves to pick these up and hand them to me saying "garbage". So the other day when he came to hand me some small piece of dirt I didn't think twice about it until I got it in my hand and he points to his nose. It was a booger! Gross!!!!!! I don't care who's mom I am, I don't want that!!!!!!
Story 2
We are lucky in the design of our house that our family room is a dead end. So when I shut the baby gate, Asa is locked down there and I don't worry about him getting into chemicals (he can work all baby locks). Nick and I have been sick this week-he with the worst cold he has ever had and me with a mild case of food poisoning. One late afternoon, exhausted, we locked Asa up with us and took naps on the couch. I awake to "mommy, mommy, mommy mommy, mommy", repeatedly. If I speak, he knows I am up so I try to wait him out. No going this time, so I open one eye and say "yes baby?" "Shhhh, daddy sleeping", complete with finger to the lips. Why did he wake me for that?!?!??! And why didn't he wake daddy, to tell him mommy was sleeping?!?!?
Story 3
Asa was taking a bath and I can't remember the entire conversation but Asa said something along the lines of, he liked something. So I replied, "me, too!" Asa responded by going "three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten." It took me till five to realize that 'me, too" was a lot like "me two" when you are his age.
This last story isn't about Asa but I found it funny. A friend of my sister's, "Bertha" and I have sons one month a part in age. Comparing notes, we discovered that both boys are going through a hitting phase that is driving us insane. Bertha's son, "Lester", got in trouble at day care for hitting and as the teacher spoke to him about it, he got sassy. So the teacher had to continue the discusion a little further and finally Lester looks at her and says "this is bullshit". Of course Bertha was embarassed but I thought it hilarious to think of a 2 year old saying that. And of course he could have heard that word anywhere, since I have never heard Bertha mutter anything stronger than "damn", and only in extreme situations. Oh the joy of a 2 year old.
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