Archive for » April, 2010 «

Time Warp

Yesterday stretched out before me with possibilities. I had plans. Things that I could get done in the hours I had at home. The hours were set aside for me to work and grade papers.

A phone call changed that quickly. I was soon up and out the door. No problem. It was still early. I would be able to get things accomplished still. And then I had a text message. My two oldest children had an away game, and they needed food. I wouldn’t be going to the game, so I needed to get the food before they left on the bus.

I went home after my errand, did a bit of work, and then it was time for me to leave if I wanted to get the food in time. I delivered the food, and it was now 3 p.m. and time for our Battle of the Books meeting.

And suddenly, on a day that I planned to work and accomplish from home, it was 5 p.m., and I was driving home wondering what we would have for dinner.

And more importantly, I was wondering where my empty day with all of the unclaimed time had disappeared to, and when would I have time to finish my grading?

Category: Life with Linda  Tags: , ,  Comments off

Conversations with the Sherwoods

My family sometimes has a different perspective on things that makes me smile. Here are a few examples:

Me: Her prom dress was 50 percent off.
Hubby: It better stay 100 percent on.
Daughter: It will; I promise!

***
Hubby: Do you know what today is?
Me: No. Wait. Earth Day?
Hubby: No.
Daughter: Happy Weed Day!
Hubby: See, she knows.

***
Middle daughter showing off her newly pierced ears to her dad.
Daughter: And I got this bottle of stuff to clean my ears.
Dad: Did they give you such a big bottle because you have such big ears?
Daughter: They aren’t big! (She actually proved this. Her ears aren’t big. In elementary school, she measured her ears and a friend’s ears, and the ears were the same. My daughter’s ears just stick out more.)

***

Edited to add: Hubby’s comments are so amusing that the oldest child submitted a couple of them to CrazyThingsParentsSay.com, and a couple of his comments were posted.

Friendly Fire

Yesterday, my son was carrying a full tray to a lunch table to sit down next to his friend when a sixth grader came along, knocked him down and took the seat. The food my son had been looking forward to eating “it was my favorite” was now on the ground.

And my son’s friends were laughing at him. As he told me about this incident, he did a lot of description about the food and then the friends’ laughter. He was surprised his friends were laughing at him. He barely even mentioned the boy that knocked him over, and I thought that was weird, but I soon realized it was because my son didn’t know the kid and wasn’t offended by that kid as much as he was about his own friends’ reactions.

OK, they are boys in the 10-11 range, so I can see how laughter was the first reaction, but OH! Why did my kid have to be hurt by his friends?

And then, later in the day I picked up my young daughter, and she is texting. Two of her best friends are fighting, and she was trying to be a peace keeper. Apparently S said something mean to E, and now S was saying she didn’t remember doing it, but S apologized to E as well and wanted E to say “OK.”

E, however, has put up with a lot of crap from S. This child of mine seems to attract a lot of friends who just love to create drama. I’ve seen E’s comments on social networks where she was basically indicating she was in a lot of pain because of meant things friends were saying and doing to her and to people she cared about. S’s name was usually involved.

So I asked my daughter why she felt the two girls needed to be friends again? As it was, my daughter was now on the outs with E who was one of her very first friends. And it was because she wanted the two girls to be friends again. In the meantime, there is another girl, one that for a long time didn’t get along with my daughter because they fought over E. The 3 girls were finally getting to an age where they all got along pretty well. But the other girl backed E and Maxine was trying to be peacekeeper, so she was being perceived as being against E.

So I tried to offer some advice. I tried to let my daughter it was OK to not intervene with the two girls. She could be friends with both without forcing them to be friends with each other. I reminded my daughter of how S had treated E and suggested that E needed the time away from S and maybe the experience would teach S to be a better friend. And I asked my daughter to think about her friends and the way they treat her and what she values.

And that’s when my daughter started crying, and it was another lunchroom incident. My daughter said normally she sits by S and E at lunchtime but yesterday, E walked right by my daughter and sat down at a different table. My daughter talked about how she was afraid to join E at the other table because she wasn’t sure she would be welcome because the girl that was supporting E (and thus very mad and vocal about it to my daughter) would prevent her from sitting down.

And I know my two other kids are dealing with friends stuff (minor and major), and I just want to wrap them all in bubble wrap.

So hopefully, things will be better in the lunch room today. I shared with my daughter about her brother’s own struggles in the lunch room that day. Her first reaction, “If it had been my friend, I would have stood up for him.” She wanted to know which sixth grader had knocked down her brother. She was ready to take names and unleash fury. And I am sure a friend or two of my son’s will be hearing an earful from her today about their laughing.

I don’t have answers, and I so with I didn’t get the reminders of how hard that time in the school lunch room can be. Bubble wrap all around.

What’s the Point?

Yesterday was a gorgeous day, and as I drove through Houghton Lake, I enjoyed the view of the lake. The water’s color was so many different shades of blue, and you could see the buds of spring. It was gorgeous.

And then I drove around the curve by Kmart and saw the old guy with the lakeside home, sitting in front of his garage staring at the road.

Why?

This man owns a home next to a beautiful lake. It was a gorgeous day, and he chooses to sit in a position where 1) he can’t see the lake at all and 2) he sees cars go by.

I get the appeal of people watching, but this man makes this choice all year around even on days when the lake is full of boaters and swimmers and offers plenty of people watching opportunities.

When I muttered about his poor choices out loud, one of my daughter’s friends chimed in. She had also noticed the guy’s odd preferences to watch traffic.

And while I shake my head and wonder why, I also have to look at my own life. Are their times when I’m giving up a beautiful view to watch traffic when I don’t have to?

Electronic Education

In an effort to update my blog more often, I decided to combine all of my blogs into one place. This means my Girl with the Curl blog that was mostly about parenting is now also my Fat Man’s Daughter blog and my teaching blog. My teaching blog is often just linking to other places that I find interesting or resources I feel the need to check out. And today is that kind of blog, but I hope you enjoy the link.

I plan to get a PhD, and when I do, I want to study digital rhetoric, which is the way communication takes place online (both successfully and unsuccessfully).

But now I might not have to because CollegeHumor.com broke it all down so well that there is no need for anyone else to do it ever again. (But that won’t stop us, right?)

It is a link definitely worth checking out.

An Honest Facebook Political Argument:

http://www.collegehumor.com/article:1803025

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Category: Digital Rhetoric  Tags: , ,  Comments off