clothes are overrated

I have been planning the Easter clothes I was going to make for a MONTH.  I got an Ottobre Design magazine, bought fabric to make my 4 boys jackets and pants and couldn’t find the right tencel linen blend for Brenna’s dress, so I was going to block print the fabric and sew a dress for her and a skirt for me.

Can you see where this is going?  I got my fabric design drawn and even carved, but not printed.  When I went to cut fabric for the boys suits I decided the fabric I bought wasn’t heavy enough, so I needed to buy more.  I never could get to the store.  I never could find a good enough stretch of time to print.  So, I ordered Easter clothes from Land’s End instead.  My husband took Thursday and Friday off this week, so I thought that I really could sew after all, but he took the big kids skiing on Thursday, Ian has been puking and pooping frothy diarrhea for 5 days, and Barry was gone with Scouts for 8 hours Saturday.

And the ordered clothes should get here today.

It was a good Easter anyway. I let go of the list of things to do for the holiday and just relaxed, listened to several Easter editions of Music and the Spoken Word, only went to one hour of church since I had a sick toddler, took a nap, talked to family on Skype, and spent the evening reading scriptures and singing with my sweet family

Clothes are so totally overrated.

(Now the puking thing has spread, so I will be parked on the couch watching movies over communal barf-catching bowls.  I just don’t have the energy to even post pictures today.  And it’s my husband’s birthday.  Poor guy.  I hope he doesn’t get this lovely gift, especial after all of his super-hero carpet cleaning, diaper changing, and laundry washing this past week…)

The baby is the lesson…

A couple of years ago, when Ian was a baby, I was talking to a friend from college who was far away, but sharing the same life of homeschooling little kids with a baby added into the mix.  We were commiserating about how little it seemed we really could get done in a day and then she said something that has stuck with me.  “I guess on those days, the baby is the lesson.”

The baby is the lesson.

That little phrase has been running through my mind a lot these past few weeks.  A new little person takes a lot of time, a lot of energy, a lot of love.  It’s given me a lot of opportunities to tell the other kids what they were like as babies, how I learned to read their cues and figure out what they needed, how I thought there never could be anything cuter and more precious than they were.  And, more often than I ‘d like to admit those math lessons are replaced by, “Will you please jiggle this screamer while I change the poopiest-poopy diaper ever made by a human 2 year old?!”

At first, when I’d think of this phrase, I was looking for ways the baby was the lesson for the kids.  And, naturally, there were lessons in seeing to another’s needs before your own, diaper changing, laundry washing, the miracle of a milk-making-mama-body, but this time I’m realizing there’s a lesson or two in it for me.

nap time

Seize the moment.  If everyone is sleeping in, sleep in too.  If the baby is peacefully napping and the bigger kids are happily playing, take a shower.  When brand new eyes focus on the mesmerizing ceiling fan and get the little guy to start cooing, get right over there and coo along.  When a fussy baby is hungry SIT DOWN, put your feet up, stare at his perfect little face while he nurses, and call another one or four over to snuggle along and read a chapter of a book.

Go with the flow. While it is important for me and the kids to have a routine rhythm to our days, it is okay if that rhythm slows down.  Instead of keeping time, we just flow through it.  That may mean that the morning song, prayer, stories, and scripture study don’t start until after lunch, and that’s just fine.  We flow with it, embrace it, no stressing out allowed…

brother lulaby

Think of reasons to say yes, rather than no.  Someone wants to do a “science experience” by mixing some of everything from every kitchen cupboard together.  The 2 year old wants the 4 year old to read his stories, rock him, and sing his song at nap time.  They all want to jump on the trampoline in the snow.  Why not?

I guess for all of us, especially the mama, the baby is the lesson.

cheeks and lips

Logan’s hat

Today I should be grocery shopping since the big kids are at their one day a week of school, but Logan and Ian are playing so well together and I finally got the fussy-fuss-bucket to sleep, so I’ll show you all what I finished during LDS General Conference this weekend.

new hat

I started this while I was hanging out in bed right after Hunter was born and have worked on it a row at a time since.  I was worried that it would have to be a hat for the cold weather next year since we had such a warm February and beginning of March, but the weather obliged my winter hat knitting and gave us some snow this weekend.

new hat

I got the pattern from ravelry which I was totally addicted to right before Hunter was born as I tried to find the perfect baby hat and booty patterns.  This pattern is the Rib-a-Roni by Jane.   I knit it up in super soft malabrigo kettle dyed yarn which I totally love.  The blue I got just for this hat.  The yellow was used for Julia’s hair.

I’ve got another homeschooling post or two in my brain, so that’s probably what the rest of this week’s post will be about.

Wishing for spring!!

the social thing

One thing that is so hard about writing is that you can only say one thing at a time.  I feel like my decision to home-school spills into every other area of my life.  It’s this big spherical complex thing, but I can only go at it from one angle at a time leaving out what’s on the other side and leaving my explanation incomplete.  But you know that as you read, right?  Obviously my personality played a big role in how I perceived my public school experience.  There was potential there for me to really have a rich learning experience, and I did at times ( it is hard to sum up 13 years in one paragraph) but I ended up learning HOW to learn on my own, and much later in life than I wish.

I think the way public school is set up makes it primarily a socializing tool.  People get that– I can tell by the concerned questions they raise.  “Aren’t you worried about your kids’ social skills?” or in other words “Aren’t you scared your kids will turn out really backward and weird?”  I hardly ever get asked “Aren’t you worried about your kids getting the academic learning they need?”  A lot of responses run through my mind like, “When was the last time a real person did real work in the real world and they were segregated by age, the 31-year-olds in one room, the 45-year-olds in another?”  and “Kids generally turn out to be like their parents.  There are backward and strange kids in public school and out of it.”  To me it seems the most real world, natural place for kids to be, especially young children, is in a family.

For young children, school sets up competing authority figures.  What if the teacher says one thing and Mom and Dad say another?  Who’s right?  How is a child to decide, especially at such a delicate stage where they are figuring out who they are, what they’re good at, what’s right and what’s wrong?  School can also put children in social situations they aren’t mature enough to handle or understand.  I think of Robert and Kevin, twin brothers in my elementary school classes who were mercilessly teased.  We knew it was wrong to pass “cooties” around after someone touched one of them.  It was not okay in any way, but no one was there to know, intervene, and help us think through the consequences of our actions.  As we grew older the teasing ended and we were full of more compassion, but what had been said in earlier years could not be taken back and I’m sure have had lasting impact on those boys forever.  Misunderstood social situations can happen in the early years, but what about those irrational hormone drenched middle school days?  I know for my brothers and I that was a dangerous time.  School was almost purely social– with concerns of poplarity and fitting in paramount, and immature decisions made that proved pretty disastrous.

I know that there are positives about the social structure of school, some very positive things, but as I have envisioned and prayed about what I want the feeling and relationships in my family to be like I just couldn’t get sending my kids away to spend so much of their waking hours away from their sibblings and parents to sit right.  I love that the “peer group” they’ve got is each other, so Jonah will read and read so Brenna will think he’s cool and they can discuss dragons and hobbits and oompa-loompas.  I love that Logan will work really hard to make a Lego jet so that he and Jonah can really play together.  I love that they are each others role models and best friends. I love it that the cool things to do are read, draw, build, ride bikes, collect sticks and rocks and seedpods.  I know some will say we could have created a family culture centered on the things Barry and I love and value while sending our kids to school, but it sure has been easier without that huge amount of interference.  It is perfectly described in this post here.

Now, a little about boys.  I have quite a few of those in my house and I grew up with 4 of them too.  School doesn’t seem to be designed for little boys and so much of what happens in the earliest years totally flies in the face of how kids really develop.  Little kids, particularly boys, need to jump and dig and throw and cut themselves with pocket knives and bang their thumbs with hammers (on accident), not sit in a desk doing busywork for hour upon hour.  When a little boy doesn’t fit the mold, asks too many questions, wiggles too much, or is forced to learn to read before his brain is really ready to tackle that, he doesn’t learn how to learn.  He learns that school is torture, that learning is too hard, and that he must be dumb.  Pushing kids so hard when they are young and compliant is easy, but it isn’t helpful.  Let kids focus on their strengths when they’re little while they’re forming their idea of who they are and what they’re worth.  If they’re best at doing flips and crazy ninja moves then get them books about num-chucks and a trampoline.  Don’t force academics and make him feel like a failure.  That is no way to create a talented, confident, knowledgeable contributor to society.

So, here are some books that say it better than I do:

Leadership Education: The Phases of Learning  It starts with a wonderful discussion of child development and educational theory based on writings of guys like Dewey and Piaget.  I wrote a little bit about it here (I refer to it as “The Recipe” because before the child development stuff was in book form it was just an article called “The Recipe for Success”)

How Children Learn  and How Children Fail by John Holt.

Dumbing us Down: The Hidden Curriculum of Compulsory Schooling by John Taylor Gotto who was an award winning New York public school teacher who resigned from teaching with his acceptance speech for the Teacher of the Year award.  That speach is in this book.  Gives ya something to think about.

The Minds of Boys: Saving our Sons from Falling Behind in School and Life  This book is aimed at helping traditional schools change to meet boys needs, but is a good discussion about what schools have become, how that affects boys, and what boys need.

Okay, I promise the next post won’t be so long.  And it will have pictures.