Crunch and Munch

It is recess time. I sit at my computer eating Crunch and Munch. I’m not happy that this huge can of Crunch and Munch is even in my house. I bought it to help support my sons’ cub scout troop. After weeks of sitting unopened in my living room, I finally caved last night and exposed the sweet joy contained therein. I told my husband, after I consumed half the can, that he was to take it to work with him today.

He forgot. I forgot.

So far, three of the kids have tasted the Crunch and Munch. Pete likes it. Fritz refused to try it, and I had to practically force one tiny piece into his mouth. He continued to believe that it was yucky. This demonstrates to me why some people can persist in believing something despite all evidence pointing to the contrary. It’s all mind over matter.

Jenny tried it after I used the word “candy” to describe it. She didn’t like it.

Katie just walked in and tried it. She doesn’t like it.

I called Billy in, and he likes it. If this child were not so bizarre in every other aspect of his personality, I would be thanking God that I had one normal child.

Unfortunately, I think I have none (it’s way too early to make the call on Petey).

Time to end recess. Still a good quarter of the can left to eat after lunch…now I have to fight Billy for it.

Movies, TV and vocabulary

I found a trackerball at eBay for cheap. It’s the same as my current one, so all I’ll have to do is pop the new ball into my old mouse and not deal with the mess of wires behind my CPU. Now I just have to wait for it to get here, and hope my hand doesn’t hurt too much.

A few minutes ago, Billy asked me what “affiliated” meant. I explained it to him and asked where he learned the word. He quoted some lines from The Incredibles, giving me yet one more reason to love this movie.

I enjoy movies as much as anybody, but have always considered life to be too short to watch them more than once. I’d rather read a good book five times than watch a good movie twice. However, when one has kids, repetition is forced upon you. If it’s not TV shows or movies, it’s books or songs over and over again. My mom had (still has, perhaps) The Cat in the Hat memorized. I used to recite The Big Red Barn to Billy as he impatiently flipped the pages of the book when he was Petey’s age.

But I don’t mind watching The Incredibles over and over. Perhaps it’s because I’ve never actually seen the whole thing from beginning to end without pause. I’ve seen the whole movie, just not all at once. {Insert grumbling about little children here.} But I just think it’s a really good story.

I liked it so much, I actually purchased the DVD which is not normal for me. Aside from strictly children’s shows (Thomas, Disney, even a Spongebob or two), the vast bulk of DVDs we own were bought by Bill. I assure you, I had no say in the decision to buy the complete collection of Mr. Bean. I’m happy to own the Lord of the Rings trilogy, but Bill gave them to me for Christmas. I don’t buy DVDs, but I also rarely have the time to watch them. Our Netflix rentals sit here for weeks.

Recently, I threatened the kids with removal of the TV from the living quarters (specifically, I said I was going to put it in the garage). The kids have certain times of the day they are permitted to watch TV: before school, during lunch, and after school. Rarely is the TV on after 6 pm. If friends come over to play, which happens frequently, the TV is usually off. If the weather is nice, the TV is off. On the weekends, the TV is on football, unless the weather is extremely nice and then I put my foot down and we all go outside. But those hours of TV viewing are sacred to my kids, and the idea of not having a TV was horrifying.

Billy suggested that I would be in big trouble with Dad if I put the TV in the garage. I probably would be! But I said I was willing to deal with his wrath. I also said that I could easily put our one TV in our bedroom and lock the door. {Idle threats: I really don’t want a TV in my bedroom – I may never conceive again!} Then he said that I would really miss the TV. I pointed out to him that I almost never watch it in the first place. I think this fact hit home, and his attitude became a bit more cooperative.

Now if only all the shows they watch would teach them 5 syllable words, I’d probably never threaten to remove that valuable resource. Alas for them, I’m confident that most of their new words will be ones they’ve heard me use or read in a story. Even if we have to read those books over and over again.

Hiatus

I’ll be taking a few days off from the computer. A few days ago, Pete and Jenny removed the ball from my Trackball and played catch with it. Since they aren’t very good at the “catch” part of catch, it fell on the porcelain tile (the one small bit of it in the entire house) and cracked the outer shell of the ball rendering it completely useless for anything, but most especially for use as a Trackball. I have a generic mouse, but using it makes my hand (and forearm) hurt really badly. Typing is okay, but clicking, highlighting and dragging and dropping really cause me problems that don’t stop when I walk away from the computer.

{Sigh}

Jenny gets in moods where the only thing I can expect from her is trouble. These moments can last for hours, but fortunately their frequency is diminishing to perhaps once a week. If one of her trouble-making sessions coincides with one of Pete’s nothing in the house is safe! The rest of the time, though, Jenny can be pretty amusing and charming.

Yesterday afternoon, she lay down on the kitchen floor and stretched her arms out toward her feet and over her head. How big am I, Mommy? This big? I assured her that yes, she was that big – a big girl.

Then…can I have gum?

Her heart’s desire is to be big enough to be allowed to have gum. And too soon she will be.

Friday

Since Bill was home on Friday, I reduced the boys’ already light workload to just math.

And since Bill was home on Friday, I left him in charge of school and went to the grocery store. Bill sat the boys down, told them to do their work, and walked away. Several minutes later, he returned to check on them and discovered they had accomplished very little. Billy, though, was very proud of his doodle of the Flash that he had made on his math worksheet. Bill was so frustrated that he grabbed an eraser and removed all traces of Billy’s artwork!

The math pages eventually got done. I’m not sure if the boys learned anything new to add to their expanding knowledge of math, but I think they learned one thing: Dad is one substitute teacher you don’t want to have!

Friday afternoon we went to Gunston Hall which had been the home of George Mason. George Mason wrote the Virginia Declaration of Rights which is strongly echoed in The Declaration of Independence and was the basis for the U.S. Bill of Rights:

That all men are by nature equally free and independent and have certain inherent rights, of which, when they enter into a state of society, they cannot, by any compact, deprive or divest their posterity; namely, the enjoyment of life and liberty, with the means of acquiring and possessing property, and pursuing and obtaining happiness and safety.

George Mason was one of three delegates to the Constitutional Convention who refused to sign the Constitution because of the lack of a bill of rights (as was later added). Gunston Hall is a much smaller historical site than the nearby Mount Vernon, but the intimacy of the property and it’s lesser fame gives one a greater access to the wealth of knowledge contained therein: in other words, there were no lines.

We didn’t stay long: neither the children nor ourselves were up for a long visit. But we got a good enough flavor of the place to feel it was “done,” and left enough to warrant a future visit the next time we live in the area. As we were driving off the property, Bill slowed the van to a crawl and pointed to two deer – one on each side of the car. Since they were standing perfectly still, it took a bit for the girls to spot them. Finally one started moving, and Katie asked why.

Me: I guess he doesn’t feel we are a threat any more.

Fritz: What’s a “threat?”

Me: A danger.

Katie: Why would a deer think we were a danger?

Fritz: Some people kill deer!

Billy: Yeah, they eat it!

Fritz: They eat the meat!

Billy: That rhymes!

Fritz: Eat…meat! It rhymes!

Me: It’s quite a feat, to eat, the deer’s meat.

Fritz: Sweet!

Bill: What a treat! How neat!

Of course, the backdrop of this rhyming game is the look of horror on Katie’s face now that she knows Bambi could be dinner.

Veteran’s Day

Yesterday was Veteran’s Day Observed, and Bill had the day off work.

Today is the actual Veteran’s Day, and Bill has to work. I’m a bit grumpy about it, but I’ll offer it up for all the soldiers, sailors, airmen and marines who fought for our freedoms or served our country in the armed forces especially my own Dad (Air Force), my Mom (an officer and a gentleman in the Navy), and my Father-in-Law (Army). Thank you all for your many sacrifices.

Bill is attending a ceremony in Missouri honoring four Medal of Honor recipients:

The Stars and Stripes Museum/Library will honor four deceased Medal of Honor recipients from the Southeast Missouri area: Sgt. Darrell S. Cole of Flat River, Pvt. Billie G. Kanell of Poplar Bluff, PFC Richard Wilson of Cape Girardeau and 1st Lt. George K. Sissler of Dexter. Ceremonies begin at 2 p.m. with the celebration of the Stars and Stripes newspaper’s 145th anniversary. A ceremony honoring the Medal of Honor winners will follow at 2:30 p.m., with Dexter native Lt. Gen. Clyde Vaughn, deputy director for operations for the U.S. Army National Guard, as the featured speaker.

Bill’s sister, Margaret, will be coming over tonight for dinner and cake to celebrate her birthday. Hopefully, Bill will be home before she leaves.

Be sure to thank a veteran today. If you don’t know anyone, you can always send an email to a deployed soldier.

To Dad

My sister, Elisabeth, said it best when she declared, “My Daddy stole fire from the sun!” My other sister, Barbara, and I agree completely. Our first and best hero ever is Dad, and today is his 60th birthday.

There are some things Dad taught me for which I am grateful. For one, Dad taught me to have a very healthy and generous amount of disrespect for authority. Lots of people talk about not trusting government or big business as a theory; for me, though, it is a tenet that these entities must be warily monitored at all times. In fact, I stopped supporting the death penalty – not because of the exhortations of Pope John Paul II (I was very very sad that I disagreed with him) – but because, in 2000, columnist George Will successfully argued (to me) that government by its very nature was incapable of making an error-free judgment, and, in the case of capital punishment where you can’t ever assign monetary reparation in the event of a mistake, it was grossly unfair to allow someone to be executed by mistake.

As a teenager, my Mom would often muse that perhaps my blondish hair and blue eyes might have spared my life in Nazi Germany (we’re not German, she was just using this as an example), but surely my lack of respect for authority would have had my head on the chopping block. Since I’d have much rather died than collaborated with that regime, I would have had my Dad to sincerely thank for my premature death.

But Dad is pretty clever, and I’d like to think he taught me a thing or two about not getting caught. Perhaps, had I lived in Nazi Germany, I might have done much good (if I could have managed to keep my mouth shut). “If you ain’t cheatin’, you ain’t tryin’, ” is one thing my Dad always said. I think he must have driven my poor Mom nuts. I cheated once in the 5th grade, and I didn’t get caught, but my cohorts did. I never ever cheated again, and if I had, I think my Dad would have been really disappointed in me. Dad’s lesson wasn’t so much that one should cheat to get through life, but that sometimes you have to do what you have to do regardless of the rules. And sometimes, it is better to not be overt about not following the rules. Those who publicly ranted about the Nazis found themselves in Dachau; those who were quietly opposed sheltered Jews and saved their lives.

My Dad also taught me everything I know about courage, loyalty, and standing by my convictions all the time. When my friends got caught cheating and I didn’t, I stepped forward and confessed my role (Dad’s probably cringing over that: I think men have a different code whereby the fewest number of guilty parties hang as possible and the others chastise them for getting caught and commend them for not ratting the others out). My teacher was so overwhelmed by my actions, she (female teacher of course, I doubt this would have worked with a male teacher) wagged her finger and told us to go and sin no more.

Perhaps Dad would have behaved differently in that situation, but it is his behavior in other smaller things that is reflected in my loyalty to my friends that day. I have never in thirty-five years heard my Dad issue an oath stronger than “Jiminy-Christmas!” or “Criminy!” Dad was in the Air Force, and he was a para-rescueman. He has stories about bar-fights. I can’t imagine that he didn’t curse when he was a younger man. But at some point, perhaps when he became a Dad, he must have decided that swearing was inappropriate, and he stopped. Forever. If it’s wrong, it’s wrong all the time.

Dad isn’t Catholic, but he vowed to raise his children Catholic. By golly, he stuck to that vow. Never in my teen years could I get him to agree with me that the Church was wrong about some point. That would have been counter to his vow.

When I went off to college, Dad started going to Mass regularly. Years later, I observed him abstaining from meat on Fridays and giving up things for Lent. At some point, he told me he believed in the Real Presence. I just couldn’t understand why he didn’t convert, except that perhaps he felt that Catholic rituals were optional unless he converted, and then they would be mandatory. Dad is finally going through RCIA now, and will receive the sacraments in April. I fully expect to find my own observation of the Catholic faith challenged for the better as he strives to follow the faith he vows to follow, and I see my own shortcomings in the shadow of his commitment.

But the greatest thing my Dad ever taught me was about love and respect. The more dysfunctional people I meet, and the more functional people from dysfunctional families I know, the more I become aware how lucky I am to have had a mother and a father married and raising their family together. I’m not saying Dad is the perfect dad or the perfect husband, but he honors and respects my mother, and his behavior toward her and the tone he set in our house growing up has been the benchmark by which I have judged my own husband and home life. It’s hard, sometimes, for my husband to compete against the man who stole fire from the sun, but he’ll be judged by our daughters, not by me.

Happy birthday, Dad. I love you.

Time for prayer

A few days ago, I began mulling the need to pray extra hard for a particular prayer intention. This special intention would be a long-term prayer commitment, and I thought that a daily rosary would be the best way to do it. It’s a serious matter, and really needs the weight of many many rosaries to be offered up.

I don’t pray the rosary daily. I have tried many times to commit to this. I know that world peace (and the liberation of Russia!) hangs on my daily rosary, and I am ready to have the whole war in Afghanistan and Iraq blamed on my failure to do it. It’s all my fault – and yours too, if you don’t pray the rosary daily. If only we all prayed the rosary daily, there would be no war, right? As my husband once said when pondering all the many chaplets and prayers that one could say daily plus daily Mass and other sacrifices one could make for the salvation of one’s own soul: if you spend that much time in prayer, you would most certainly go straight to Heaven, since you would have no time to commit any sin. But I digress. And my particular intention is not world peace, although that is certainly a lofty goal and does happen to be in my daily prayers as a matter of routine.

In the back of my head is this desire to pray the rosary daily and an internal argument with myself about the practicality of this commitment. And so I sat while I ate my lunch and happened across this discussion at Danielle Bean’s website about making time for prayer. I’m not too happy with some attitudes in some of the comments: some people seem to condemn those of us who aren’t spending hours a day in formal prayer, and some people seem very willing to forgo formal prayer as impossible. Neither attitude is particularly helpful to those of us struggling with this issue and seeking ideas on how to improve.

And then I read one comment: who doesn’t have the time to offer up a 15 minute rosary? Holy cow, I thought, a 15 minute rosary? How do you say a rosary in 15 minutes? I try hard to be reverent, to really meditate on the mysteries and imagine the sights and sounds, to conjure the emotions I would have felt had I been there and the significance of the event. It takes me 20 to 25 minutes to say a rosary! I rarely have that much time to myself, except when the kids are sleeping. And if the kids are sleeping, and I sit quietly for a few minutes, I am at serious risk of falling asleep myself!

And then I realized my mistake: I’m trying to say the perfect rosary. Without practice. Even after 10 months of running, I can’t run a mile in 9 minutes (or 2 miles in under 19 minutes), but I don’t expect to do so. In running, I seek daily improvements, always challenging myself, but never setting unrealistic goals. Why would I expect my prayer life to be any different? How can I expect to achieve 30 minutes of serious meditation if I haven’t tried to do 10?

And so, I finished my sandwich and went to my room. It was a good day to start a rosary for my special intention. Pete was napping, and Jenny had also fallen asleep on our way back from voting. The other kids were getting their daily dose of TV, and I had 15 minutes until the show was over and we’d be back to the school grindstone. I quickly lisped out a rosary in the quiet of my bedroom. I prayed fast and it only took me 11 minutes. No, it wasn’t perfect. But I was able to focus better on the mysteries (since I only spent 90 seconds on each one), and I did complete the entire thing without dozing off – a miracle in and of itself.

Is perfectionism holding you back from a more fulfilled prayer life? Consider joining me in a daily rosary if you don’t already. World peace (and the liberation of Russia!) depends on it.

Jesse Tree

Advent is coming faster than you can blink. I almost always scramble every first Sunday of Advent getting the Advent wreath out and trying to find candles. Today, I am going to make sure that I have everything I need to avoid the unholy scene that will unfold without proper planning.

Yesterday we received another Leaflet Missal catalog. I love this company, but don’t know why they have to send us another catalog every 3 weeks, especially when I don’t often have a chance to sit down and peruse it! I literally dropped my jaw when I saw this Jesse Tree project. YEARS ago I made my own very very similar Jesse Tree. So similar in fact that I am highly suspicious of which friend may have told which person about it and turned it into this project. My Jesse Tree is a banner with a green felt Christmas tree on a dark blue starry background. But my symbols were photocopied from a book, colored by my little kids, and mounted on felt. These symbols are beautiful! I really think I’m going to ditch my homemade one for this one, at least to replace the symbols (seriously, a few of the symbols were colored by the 3 and under crowd – you can hardly see the symbol under the scribble!).

If you’ve never done a Jesse Tree, I highly recommend it, and this kit is good for those who don’t have the space for a three-dimensional tree (often a bare tree branch is used to hang ornaments). I truly believe that we each, every day, have chances to say “Yes!” to God, to offer Him our own Fiat. The Jesse Tree uses symbols to represent people who also offered their Fiat to God: Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Moses, David, Ruth, Daniel, and, of course, the perfect Fiat of Mary. I like to use the Jesse Tree as another countdown to Christmas, adding one more symbol every day. It gives us a chance to read some great stories from the Old Testament and to ponder anew the magnificent Divine plan for our salvation.

Reunion

The kids couldn’t stand the idea of a photo being taken without them in it. Even this head shot of us had Pete standing on a chair right next to me.

Pat and Jenny.

Bob and Gina.

I realize that many women who read this blog are, like me, Catholic homeschool mothers of many. At the risk of offending you by stereotyping, conjure in your mind an image of what a Catholic homeschool mother of many looks like. The first adjective that springs to my mind is dowdy. I see glasses, long hair pulled back, long skirt or jumper (denim, of course), and sensible flats. And, except for the jumper (which Bill has strictly forbidden), I think I’m looking in a mirror! So I tried hard to not look that part. Check out that skirt: you can see my calves! Whoa! That’s practically a mini! And those shoes? Can you tell? They’re flimsy little strappy ones. A reflection of my inner wild child, I tell you!

I must have done a good job of projecting a more polished image than usual; most people were suitably shocked when we said we had 5 kids and homeschooled. Keep in mind that my husband attended a Catholic high school. I don’t think anyone else there had more than three kids. Sad.

I think Bill had a good time. Too late, but in preparation for the 25th, Jenny and I plotted amusing scenarios such as pretending to be someone from the class (or better yet, maybe a younger classmate) or suggesting that we come to the reunion with each other’s spouses and then leave with our own (in an attempt to create scandal). It sounds funny…but maybe next time, Jenny and I will stay home while the boys go. I don’t mind that Bill wants to attend, but I have serious doubts about ever attending one of my own. I just don’t know if I want to open up all those doors to safely locked memories…