First Haircut

Yes, I’ve already posted about Bryant’s first cut.  But Ceili Rain, in her two years of life, has not had a haircut.  It was growing really slowly.  I finally realized last month that it was getting scraggily and very uneven.  So, when the boys had their haircut, we went to town on hers as well.

It’s fun cutting a little girl’s who was too excited to sit still.  Not really…but it was interesting.  I think she was more excited about wearing the cape and getting to sit on the big stool.  She really wanted me to use the clippers but I draw the line on those with my sweet girls hair.

So, basically, all  I did was even it up in the back.  She had long hair from birth and then another layer of new hair. 

Almost done!
Ta da!  It ain’t exactly professional, but it’s done!

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Ta Da!

A couple of weeks a go I warned everyone that I was going to be refurbishing my china cabinet.  The fabric was ordered and we were just waiting for an opportunity where I could work some magic on that baby.

Labor Day weekend seemed the best time to do it (considering we have something planned for almost every other weekend).  We headed out Saturday, got the paint and scored some knobs for 99 cents each.  They weren’t the vintage glass knobs I was hoping for but they were 99 cents.  And that is cheap!

Oh, oh, and I also got a palm sander for my very own!  I’m so excited!  My next big projects are going to include sanding down the spots on the kitchen table and chairs that is peeling AND sanding the front door and repainting it.  The bumpy front door is the result of Mark and I realizing that we can not successfully strip paint.  We have neither the patience or the skillz and we totally could not stand the chemical smells.

Anyway, here’s the project.  I didn’t do a step by step but would it help if I said I thought about it several times throughout working on it?

This is what it looked like before.

A big brown beast looming on the wall by our kitchen table.

Here’s the after-minus the drawers and stuff.

It’s no secret that our home is not formal in any way shape or form.  So, painting it white really toned down the formal of having a china cabinet.  Well, it’s not really white, it’s winter’s mood.  And it’s my favorite white look alike.  I knew I didn’t need nor want a bright white so I actually had the paint guys mix up paint that was, well, okay let’s face it, it’s white. 

We tried out the new Olympic One from Lowe’s (and I paid for it…wish they would have given it to me to review…but they didn’t…that’s my disclaimer).  It’s supposed to have primer and paint in one.  Of course trying it out on a china cabinet covered in veneer that was mostly sanded off probably wasn’t the best way to test it.  It took three coats plus some touch up.  There was still some peeling on places I couldn’t quite get the sander.  We’ve used Olympic paint on pretty much every wall of our house because it’s cheap and for the price it fairs pretty well against our crew.  I’d like to see the Olympic One match whits with one of our colorful walls.  But, that’s for another time.

I basically sanded down every inch I could of the cabinet.  That means that veneer dust was all over the house.  I’ve made a mental note to purchase a mask to do the door. The most challenging part was trying to paint the shelves which, for a veneer covered cabinet built in the 1950s was solidly stuck in there.  I didn’t want to mess with the integrity by trying to pull them out.  These shelves are holding some precious stuff.

Anyway, the backing is the fabric I purchased online.  The pattern is a little bigger than I originally thought, but I think it worked well.  To get it in, I purchased the heavy duty adhesive spray from JoAnns.  My super duper engineering husband got the exact measurements of what I would need for the back and cut it out of some trifold board that had seen better days.  Originally, I was just going to put the fabric directly on the back.  But, the more I thought about it, I realized that it could get messy, smelly, and look a bit ragged.  The trifold board was perfect because it folded making it easy to pop in.  I did the spray adhesive thing (outside) and wrapped the edges around the board.  I also sprayed the back of the board before bringing it in and wedging it in place.  If it decides to start falling (not sure how it can with the tight fit I had on it), we’ll just put in a couple of nail brads in the corners and it should hold.

And, here’s what it looks like with all our stuff in it:

Pretend that the knob on the drawer is painted. I had to run out and get another one and hadn’t gotten it painted yet.  It’s on the list to do tonight.

That china is over 40 years old.  It was my mom’s wedding china.  When Mark and I were engaged, mom had mentioned that I would get their wedding china.  So, I never bothered to register.  Of course, we lived in a tiny one bedroom apartment on a social worker’s income when we first got married so china was the farthest thing from my mind when we registered for wedding gifts.  But, it still felt good knowing that one day I would have this beautiful china. 

Mom surprised me a year after my wedding.  They were moving and she was trying to scale down so she sent her china….now my china home with me.  The design is beautiful and so different than other wedding china out there (meaning it’s totally me).  It’s got a silver rim and the black edging has roses etched in to it.  I think it’s gorgeous and the fact that it belonged to my parents who are still married makes it even more gorgeous. 

And now, I think this new(ly re-done) china cabinet just helps to accent the beauty of it!

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Seven Update

A friend said we should name the baby Seven in honor of a Seinfeld episode where George decides that his first child will be named Seven.  Go youtube it.  It’s totally there.

So, #7 will be nicknamed Seven until he/she gets a name which will hopefully be in about six weeks.  It works for a boy or a girl, see???

I had a checkup today and had to go it alone because a plague was attacking the kids and we didn’t want to share it with anyone until we felt we might be in the clear.

I’m just going to confess.  A dear friend let us borrow her doppler to listen to the baby’s heartbeat.  We tried it at 12 weeks and again on Monday night (at 13 weeks).  We both felt dumb as dirt because we were both certain the baby was still in there but we couldn’t find him/her.  We really weren’t too worried that something was wrong because, well, because I’m 13 weeks and still having a bit of nausea.  And it’s not fun.

I just knew that Dr. J’s nurse or Dr. J himself would be able to find the heartbeat and I was already to focus on the location so I could do the same at home and let the kids listen at their leisure.

Dr. J’s nurse tried and tried but just couldn’t find it.  She thought she heard it a couple of times, but then couldn’t get a good reading. So, since it was late in the afternoon, she checked to make sure the tech was in (because if she hadn’t been, I totally was going to demand that someone else do it and do it quickly).  She was.  And, because Seven was acting up, I totally got a sweet ultrasound, which I secretly wanted anyways.  Who doesn’t love seeing their baby on screen?  Especially since the last picture I had was a kidney bean with legs.

Baby was there, moving, wiggling, kicking his/her legs.  And the heart was just a going at 164 beats per minute.  And that is, I do believe, the highest little heartbeat we’ve seen in any of our kids (and I had not had any caffiene before I got there).  But, as the ultrasound tech put it, it was perfect.

It was a quick ultrasound but right as she was finishing up, she snapped a picture of this:

That would be that the baby just decided to take a rest and plopped himself/herself right down to get all cozy and snug.  Mark said it looks like the Dreamworks fishing kid at the intro of all their things (it’s on youtube as well).  Either way, I just think it’s adorable and we are all getting so excited that our baby looks like an actual baby.  

And, if you’re wondering, the hematoma is still there but very, very small.  I know where it is, but it is hard to see if you don’t know what you are looking for.

We rejoice that God’s blessed us and are looking forward to a fun second trimester!

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A Day in the Life, Homeschooling 2011-2012

It seems that every minute of every day we are reworking our schedule but the big overhaul comes when we start our new curriculum.  So, here’s how I homeschool all of this bunch AND maintain a resemblence of  sanity.

Breakfast time:  Before I got pregnant my goal was to have breakfast on the table at 7:30.  Now, we’re blessed if it gets there by 8.  And no one is complaining.  The first rule of the day is GET DRESSED.  That was taking up the biggest chunk of our morning.  Getting dressed after breakfast would consist of me telling, disciplining, telling, discipling, yelling, and finally they would be ready for the day.  Now, every one is dressed and ready to go when we sit down at the table.  Which turns out to be a good thing because at breakfast is when we start school.  After I finish eating we crack open the books and they are free to continue eating or to sit still in their seats and listen and comment when necessary. 

At breakfast we do Bible, journaling (we have one family journal and everyone contributes what goes in), History, Science, calendar, and poetry (for Liam but everyone listens).

After breakfast we do quick chores including brushing teeth, putting away laundry, emptying the dishwasher, sweeping and mopping, dressing toddlers and brushing their teeth (those are my chores).

Morning time:  Zoe and Ace work on their schoolwork.  They each have a checklist that they run through each day and then we go over their work as needed.  I work with Josiah, Ceili Rain, and Liam through their school work.

Lunch:  After I finish eating lunch we read, I select one fiction book and one non-fiction book.  Right now we are enjoying The White Knights by W.E. Cule and The Adventure of Missionary Heroism by John C. Lambert.

Afternoons are reserved for playtime outside, rest time, and finishing up any work that had not been completed in the morning.  As the months go on, I’m hoping to work with Zoe on teaching her how to sew and learning stitchery (her choice, not mine).  The boys listen to our daily Bible reading in the afternoons and Zoe will read her Bible first thing in the afternoon. 

And that’s how we do it.  It sounds simple when I type it out but if you were to come to my house you may find a two year old looking for someone to play with, a five year old who is hanging upside down reading, a seven year old who is looking for an excuse to stop working, an eight year old who is tolerating the distractions and doing her best to finish her work, and a four year old who is playing with trains.  Oh, the one year old is still taking naps in the morning and when he’s not doing that he’s usually running around the house with a ball.  Trust me, there is order even if my house doesn’t look like it.  I think.

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This is How We Do It…Homeschool 2011-2012

Yep, another year is upon us.  Actually, it’s already started.  To keep sanity and limbs from being lost, we continued on with school in June and July.  Now, lest you think I’m a homeschool nazi, we did not do that much school.  If you’ll remember June was the month of strep which carried over into July and crossed over into pregnancy blahs and friends visiting.  So, all total, we may have had school for possibly twenty days total.  So, don’t judge people.  It was for my own sanity’s sake.

Anyway here’s what we’re up to this year:

Bible
All Ages:  After reading A Love that Multiplies by Jim Bob and Michelle Duggar, and listening to my children yell and scream at each other, I decided that memorizing Matthew 18 would be a great place to start our Bible time.  We are through to verse 23.  As we memorize, we are also discussing what it means.

After we finish Matthew 18 we’ll start into a more structured Bible time from Lamp & Quill.  I’m looking forward to this curriculum as it is written for all ages from Bryant all the way through to me.  We should gain a lot out of it.  Of course, this does not and will not replace our family worship time during the evenings.  This is a little extra that we’ll be doing along with that and our daily Bible reading (we’re reading/listening through the Bible chronologically)

Language Arts
Pre-K/K:  I rebelled this year.  We’ve stepped back from Abeka and are now trying Institute for Excellence in Writing’s Primary Arts of Language (PAL).  Can I just say I love it?!  We started this month and the first month is very teacher intensive.  Knowing this, I was glad we waited until the others were set on their routines.  We’re almost through with the most teacher intensive part and we should be heading towards more learning independence.  Liam is the primary student for this with Josiah and Ceili Rain playing the games and listening in at times.  This is right up Liam’s learning alley because it moves quickly from one activity to another.  So, it holds his attention and he’s starting to read at a slow pace.  This PAL program includes both reading and writing and will include spelling later in the year.

2nd Grade:  Primary Language Lessons by Emma Serle-I used this last year and enjoyed the easy pace of it for Zoe.  So, it’s nice and easy going for Ace who doesn’t seem to want to go too fast.

3rd Grade:  Easy Grammar: Grade 3-Zoe seems to be picking up on this and she’s getting her daily dose of grammar without her head exploding diagramming sentences.

2nd & 3rd Grade (Writing):  Institute for Excellence (IEW) in Student Writing Intensive Level A (SWI).  Last year we used Writing Strands and having never taught writing, well, it didn’t go so well.  Zoe and I survived, barely.  We got the Teaching Writing Structure and Style (TWSS) and the SWI.  The TWSS really is a teacher prep course and I have to say, I am prepared!  We’ve been doing this through the summer and it is going so much better!  Zoe is getting it and so is Ace.  Ace will go through the first two units while Zoe will complete the whole level (this was per the conversation I had with the IEW people at the convention).  I can see her brain starting to work and realize that she can enjoy writing!  One of the best things about IEW is that if you purchase your material from them and are not fully satisfied at any time you can return it! They also have a great yahoo group which offers super support.  And, if you’re not sure where to start your child, request a catalog and there is a grade graph showing where to start what and when.

2nd & 3rd Grade Spelling:  Spelling Power-We used this last year and given Zoe’s test results last year, we’ll continue with it.  It’s simple and takes about five minutes a day and includes everything I need from grades 2 through 12th grade.

Math
PreK:  Saxon Math K-Josiah will start this.  We are waiting to start until we get a good routine going for our PAL program.  Once that is set, I’ll start it.  I’m in no rush although Josiah’s doing a great job with his critical thinking skills.

K:  Saxon Math 1-Liam started some of this during the summer but when we started up PAL, I decided to put it on hold until it gets more student independent.  At five, Liam can’t really take a full day of mommy’s attention focused completely on him.  I can totally understand.

2nd & 3rd Grade:  Teaching Textbooks 3-This came after a bit of a struggle last year.  Zoe was ready to move a faster pace than Ace.  Ace needed more reinforcement of some concepts but could move on, although more slowly than Zoe, onto others.  They had started out on the same math because I learned a year too late that Saxon Math is usually set at a grade below what it’s actually teaching.  So, much research was involved and we felt that Teaching Textbooks would be the way to go.  It gives Zoe that independent and quick learning that she needs and allows Ace to practice and re-practice, if necessary, concepts he can’t quite get.  It also gives me a break from having to instruct daily math (at which I’m not very good at) lessons for older kids.  All the lessons are included on the software.  They get about 30 minutes a day on math and at the end of the day, I review how they did.  If they didn’t do too well, I can erase the lesson record and they are required to do it again.  There have been zero tears of the math lessons although the fact reviews have brought a bit of tears.  With this being our third month, Zoe is on her third of four Cds, which means she is more than halfway through with the lessons.   When she finishes, she’ll start in the Life of Fred series.  She’s super excited about this as we’ve already done quite a bit of research on it!  She’ll pick back up with Teaching Textbooks when we start the next school year (can’t have her get too ahead of her peers now can we???)

History
All grades:  Mystery of History Volume II-I’ve scaled down my expectation on history and we are still loving this curriculum.  Zoe and Ace are continuing to work on Memory Cards with it and we are including a geography lesson (that is included in the back of each week’s lessons) with it.  It’s awesome and we’re now studying my favorite part of history…the Middle Ages.

Science
All grades:  Apologia Science, Zoology 1, Flying Creatures of the Fifth Day-This has been a great text so far.  Included with several of the Apologia Science books are journals.  We are using the journals this year and it’s been great to have everything we need right there.  Incidentally, if you are using Apologia Science the best place to get lab kits (with all the stuff you’d spent a week collecting at various stores) is Homeschool Science Tools.  It’s also the cheapest.

Other stuff
Zoe is taking dance.  Ace is doing something else, but we’re not sure what.  They are all doing gymnastics (it’s a homeschool gymnastics that meets twice a month).  Zoe and Ace are both still doing piano although Ace’s may change after this winter.  We’ve got handbells and art and other fun things to do in case they finish the above and are board.  We also are planning on expanding our missions work around our area.  The older kids are getting older and we’re all learning that we need to show Christ’s love to those around us.  I’m looking forward to opportunities to do that!

I will also say that almost everything we are purchasing now or have purchased in the past is non-consummable, or is in ebook form so we have the rights to print off as much as we need for the time we use it.  A lot of what we purchased this year was a bit expensive but taking into account we’ll not need to purchase as the next child goes through it, well, it gets cheaper as we go (and the more kids we have).  And that’s one of our minor goals!

So, stay tuned for tomorrow, when I’ll let you know how we do all this during a day.  Well, at least how we’re supposed to do all this in a day.

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Finger Painting

It’s 5:30 am on Wednesday.  Yeah, I’ve been up since 3:30 due to being hot, bathroom run, itching (more on that later), and sinus infection.  I have to be up up by 6:15 and ready to get kids up because for some reason I scheduled their dentist appointments for 7:45 in the morning.  My brain is totally fried.

So, I thought I’d post, seeing as how I missed yesterday, have read all my facebook statuses, and am now up to date with blogs I don’t follow.  Priorities you know.

Liam and Josiah are using a new phonics curriculum.  I’ll post more about our homeschool stuff later but I wanted to share this first.  The curriculum suggests using different tactile things to encourage writing letters, etc.  One of the suggestions was finger paint.

So, I grabbed a box of pudding, mixed it up and sent the kids outside with it, plates, and swimsuits on.  They enjoyed it for about ten minutes and then wanted to play in the sprinklers!  They barely even ate the pudding (more for me…yippee!).  As you can see, Liam got a lot out of the tactile letter writing and made a guy.  With a sword. 

Josiah made a river and mountains.

I think we’ll just stick with the whiteboard and paper from here on out.

Ceili Rain thought it’d be fun to just smash her hand in it.  And lick.  I wholeheartedly agreed with her.

And Bryant, well, he still prefers a morning power nap and was down for the count when all the mess occurred.

Now that that is done.  Let’s see if I can catch a thirty minute snooze before time to get up and go.

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We Like to Rock!

Occasionally, we’ll turn on some good Christian praise music and have at it.  And this is what the kids do:
He’s four ya’ll.  I’m no guitar expert but at four, I didn’t know how to hold a guitar…and he even plays chords on it and strums up and down.  Do they make guitars small enough for a four year old?

Ceili Rain getting down!

And Bryant just thinks we all flipped our lid.

This rockin’ out session was provided by NeedtoBreathe who’s music we’ve been enjoying on their website (and they didn’t pay me to say that and I have no idea why NeedtoBreathe is all one word but it is.  I’m goingtostartrightinglikethat  Okayit’slate.).  I will also say that our favorite songs are “Slumber” and “The Outsiders.”

Speaking of Rockin’ Out.  Mark caught Josiah on tape doing Just Dance Kids!  Let’s just say it’s fun-ny!

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In Sight

I can tell the first trimester blahs are getting close to being over.  I’m starting to brainstorm creative ideas.

And today, for the first time in over six weeks, I actually got to my sewing machine and started creating.  Of course, I had to have an afternoon nap first and then clear out the mass of stuff that had accumulated on and around my craft area the past six weeks.  But, I got there and got in some quality time with my machines.  It does a heart good.

During my brainstorming and nausea and “restricted activity” and Zoe’s bought with a virus (thankfully, not strep but two more times and those tonsils are gone!), I also watched HGTV Design Star.  That just made me crave a big project (well, that and pregnancy always seems to bring a big project).

So, my next big project is going to be our china cabinet.

Mark and I found it about two to three years ago at a used furniture store.  I love it.  But, it’s stained.  And nothing is stained in my kitchen.  Well, the floors are but that doesn’t count.  So, it kind of just sticks out like a big brown box on my wall near the dining room table.

So, thanks to Pinterest, I’ve put together what I’m going to do to overhaul the china cabinet.

First, paint.  My dad is going to flip but it’s paint or nothing…and here’s what it will look like:

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Happy Birthday Ace!

Ace got to celebrate his birthday a week early when his cousins came to visit with Ge and Granddaddy.  Granddaddy and Ge totally knocked the birthday gift out of the park.  They got Ace a pair of real walkie talkies.  They were in heaven for over a week.

Now, Ace’s birthday party was the same day as Bryant’s birthday.  That may seem cruel but Bryant didn’t seem to mind (or even realize).  Ace’s birthday is three days after Bryant’s thus the thought to double up for a little while.  I was not pregnant when we planned his party but it just so happened that I was.  Several months before his birthday, our local daily deal site ran a deal with Putt-Putt.  It was much like Liam’s bowling party in that it included stuff for up to six people.  So, we grabbed two of them.  For as long as they could stand it Ace, his siblings, his daddy, and his friends had a blast in the game area (20 tokens for each kid), putt putt (in 100+ degree weather), bumper boats, and laser tag.  It was awesome!  And cheap!  I was happy about the cheap part.  Basically, we spent about an 1/8th of the cost of actually renting a party room and doing it through Putt-Putt.  I know that is cheap but it so worked!  After not finding some friends for an hour, everyone gathered together and had a good time.  They even outlasted the parents and we ran the Crimson Caravan Commuter after the kids were all pooped out.

Ace requested a carrot cake.  I found these cute laser tag printouts for cheap on etsy.  Yeah, I could have made them, but the baby in my growing belly said to just buy them.  So I did.  And luckily for us, none of the kids liked the “spicy” birthday cake…so it was all ours…and yummy!

 The laser tag teams.  Papa’s team lost but all the kids could talk about for a long time was Papa playing laser tag with them.  They thought that was pretty awesome!
He had such a good time!  And that was our goal.
I have no idea what it was but it was worth catching flies over!
Thanks Papa and Grandmere!  Our new car trip family favorite (and rest time too)…Jonathan Park!  We love it!
Mark’s Buddy!  Just ignore the food in Mark’s mouth.  He was chowing down.

Bumper Boats!  They shot water which was perfect for finishing up Extreme Heat Putt Putt.
 Bryant got to watch from the sidelines.  Upside down.  (Not really…sorry about that).
Any guesses how old Ace is now?
On Ace’s actual birthday, he got to skip school, open gifts from family, have pj day, and watch a movie.  I didn’t get a picture of what we actually gave him but I will at some point.
Happy Birthday my sweet Ace-Man.  Our gift from God!

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