Sleep Reading

We’ve all heard of sleep walking and what kind of problems it can create. I have the interesting phenomenon of sleep reading. Reading makes me sleepy no matter what the subject may be. Text books are snooze fests, of course, but even when I was reading my recent favorites my eyelids would get so heavy I’d have to take a little break to “rest my eyes” during the read.

I have to read a lot to Reagan for history. They’re not usually text books so they’re never dry, but I just can’t help getting sleepy. Reagan can tell when I’m getting sleepy too. My speech will slow down and I’ll start to slur words. I swear I don’t drink during homeschool, y’all. She’ll nudge me and say, “Mom, are you getting tired?” This is usually my cue to cut it right there and end history for the day.

Today we were reading about Winston Churchill. I could tell I was getting tired so I started opening my eyes wide, forcing myself to pay attention to the words. Nothing would help. Now, Churchill led an interesting life, but for the life of me I couldn’t stay awake. This day I didn’t start slurring my words or slowing my speech. I just started sleep reading.

What I was supposed to read:

I suggested that we should immediately, pending further news, rush a dozen great ships crammed with provisions into Hamburg.*

Instead, what I sleep read was:

I suggested that we should immediately, pending further news, rush a dozen shrimps covered in bread crumbs…

and then I “woke up”. I could tell something I just “read” wasn’t quite right.

I asked Reagan, “what did I just say?” And she repeated the shrimps quote. We both busted out laughing. Ah yes, never a dull moment during history class at our house. Who knows what Reagan learned today about Winston Churchill. She’ll forever think he’s got some kind of shrimp fetish.

*Winston Churchill: British Soldier, Writer, Statesman by Brenda Haugen

Thanksgiving Randomness

My phone has become my instant gratification in more ways than one. I love taking pictures on it, especially after downloading the Hipstamatic camera app on our 13+ hour drive down to Georgia. Here are some random shots from the weekend. Some with the Hipstamatic, some regular.

Since I am posting this after a 13+ hour ride back home you get Lazy Vicki’s version of Thanksgiving photos. I hope to get the real camera out of the bag tomorrow and download the pictures I took on it. Sadly, not many Thanksgiving related ones…I need to get better about actually capturing memories…

P.S. “Beauty and the beast!” (sung in my best operatic voice)

Mood killer

We had finished dinner and were having a nice relaxing family-style evening in the living room. It’s our desire to get a new Christmas album every year so I was forcing Du to play guess the artist by searching through Amazon MP3 albums and listening to snippets of songs. We found country albums, pop albums, even a Christmas album by Annie Lennox, which actually wasn’t that bad. The girls were enjoying listening to the different songs and were so amused that the voice of Annie Lennox was indeed that of a girl.

Then I saw it. The 80’s Christmas Album of various artists with a huge ol’ picture of NKOTB* on the front.

I just had to know what kind of 80’s holiday songs would be on there, and even better, I just had to know if Du could correctly guess the artists. There was everyone from Bruce Springsteen to RUN-DMC to the Pretenders to Dolly Parton to Joan Jett and of course NKOTB. There was also Bryan Adams. For all 100% of you that don’t know or don’t remember, at our wedding we danced to the song Heaven by Bryan Adams.

I hit the play button and Bryan Adams belted out a snippet of Run, Rudolph, Run. Du couldn’t guess who was singing. I played it again (Amazon only gives you 30 seconds to listen to a song). Nothing. So I pulled up YouTube and searched for the song he would definitely recognize. When it started playing Du immediately knew who was singing, and then we had to explain to the girls why we were getting all mushy and holding hands and staring at each other. When they heard that was a song we danced to at our wedding (weddings are magical things to young girls) they jumped up, ran to each other and started dancing with each other. It made Du and me cry even more.

Emotions were running high. The love was palpable. Tears were flowing. I was taking pictures as quickly as I could with my phone. Then all of a sudden Reagan stopped dancing and asked:

Did somebody toot?!

Screech! Record scratched while music is halted.

Ashlyn looks up at her big sister and admits, with a big ol’ smile:

I did!

And so it goes. Romantic moments are just never the same once kids are involved.

*For those of you who weren’t female tweens in the 80s, New Kids on the Block were, like, it. If you didn’t have a crush on at least one of those boys then you were, like, Amish or something.

Screw the next generation?

If you are breathing right now you undoubtedly notice a difference in the way you acted as a child and younger person and the way kids and young people today act. A friend of mine posted this article yesterday on Facebook:

Generation Whine: Why I’m relieved not to be a Millennial

And people used to make of my generation: Generation X. We look like hard-working overachievers compared to how the article presents young workers today. I was going to say that we seem to be adjusting well to middle life, but after looking around me and after reading the following article by John Rosemond, we may be adjusting well ourselves (which, now that I think about it, I actually would argue against) but we’re not doing any favors to our children.

Living with Children

If today’s young workforce is having issues fitting into adulthood what in the world are we doing to the generation behind it? There seems to be a huge paradigm shift happening in American culture whose effects run through not only pop culture, entertainment, and socializing, but also to the workroom and bedroom and classroom. We’re dumping the concept of others first and replacing it with the narcissistic idea that our personal worlds should revolve around ourselves. And this translates to child rearing with the idea that if our children are unhappy then somehow we are parenting wrong and we fear we look bad to other parents. We’re teaching our children to put themselves first as well. I will readily admit I do not think this societal change is a good one, for individuals or America as a whole.

I was going to list an example or two, but I have so many. I actually should try to find examples of people who aren’t living for themselves and who aren’t raising their children to live for themselves. And we all tend towards the new parenting style because we have organizations like the NAEYC who we’ve given power to by believing everything they tell us and relinquishing our own power to instinctively know what’s right for our children.

I could go on and on. Parents, use your instinct and judgment. Please think about how your parenting style is affecting your children. Not their temporal happiness and “self esteem”, but their character that is being developed to help shape the adults they become.

Tax dollars at work

As a woman in her childbearing years certain things happen each month on which I must keep tabs. Keep this in mind.

Scene opens: a woman and her two daughters are gayly meandering through a beautiful park in DC. It is a gorgeous day. The girls are happily playing with their Barbies and mom is quite taken with taking creative pictures for her photography class. They slowly make their way towards the botanical gardens where the girls will participate in their botany class.

Plot twists: one of the daughters mentions that it is necessary for her to use the bathroom before the class begins because, as it goes, her body is not tied to a clock that determines when the most convenient potty times should be. Her body must take after her mother’s. As the family enters the bathroom the mother notices a sign above the paper towel dispenser, “feminine hygiene products are available at the Visitor’s Center”. “That’s so nice of them.” she thinks, “Good thing I have that handy iPhone app that tells me exactly when I’m due for ‘the visit’, which is in a week.” She decides to “try to go” too as an example to her offspring that they should always try to go if they have the option of using a nice, clean bathroom while in the city.

Plot pretzels: Uh oh. The mother realizes that contrary to what her iPhone has told her, Aunt Flo is indeed preparing to visit sooner than promised. She has nothing on her to prepare for the visit. It is 10:27. Class starts at 10:30. So as not to cause alarm she exhibits no shock or fear but quickly ushers her daughters to their botany class. She debates with herself. Should she ask the room full of mothers and female instructors for what she is sure one of them must have? Or should she excuse herself to the Visitor’s Center and secure one of what they promised to have? To the Visitor’s Center she goes.

Climax (or not so much): The mother approaches the Visitor’s Center counter, hurdling a velvet rope along the way so as not to have to maze through the gardens just to get over there. Of course, the security guard sees her and as she is approaching the counter where two men leisurely sit he gets on to her for not going around. Swallowing pride and harnessing that “I don’t give a crap if you’re a guy and I’m asking you for a pad, this is real life and if you’re a real man you know how life works” attitude that she picked up at the women’s college she attended, she meekly mentions, “there is a sign in the bathroom that says the Visitor’s Center has feminine hygiene products.” “Eh?” Asks one of the men. All three men are looking at her. She repeats herself, a little more forcefully. “It does?” asks the man after finally hearing the question/statement. He proceeds to check one drawer, then another, then another, then another, then another, then the first one again, then the second one again, then the third one again, then the fourth one again, then the first one again. Nothing. The mother is now wishing she would have chosen the all-female option in her self debate.

The man does go beyond the call of duty that most employees in a customer service job would do nowadays. He goes into the offices to see if he can find more stock of the promised feminine hygiene products. Meanwhile the mother stands around whistling, shuffling her feet and smiling at visitors as they enter the botanical gardens, with the two other men still halfways not looking at her. He comes back with a woman who checks the first drawer, then the second one, then the third one, then the fourth one and then the fifth one. She gets on the phone to talk to the Wizard of Oz who seems to be everyone’s last hope in knowing where the flipping promised feminine hygiene products are.

Denouement: The woman enlists the help of the guard (who got on to the mother) to help access the promised feminine hygiene products. The mother follows because, well, at least that’s better than standing at the front entrance whistling and shuffling feet and feeling awkward. And she knows the handover won’t be at the entrance to the gardens in sight of all newcomers. The guard does apologize for admonishing the mother over the velvet rope hopping. He admits that it is just company policy and she looks like she’s agile enough to not trip over the rope. The mother follows them into the storage room, and is surprised that she is not told to keep out of there for company safety reasons. When they realize that the promised feminine hygiene products are in a rubbermaid bin at the top of the highest shelf the woman offers to give the mother something from her own stash. The guard insists he can get them down speedily and in deed does. The mother takes part in handing off six or seven boxes of promised feminine hygiene products and feels accomplished that she was able to help solve the problem. But yet, she still has her own problem to deal with. Thanking them both profusely she hurries away to that nice, clean bathroom where she once saw a sign promising feminine hygiene products at the Visitor’s Center.

NB: This mother is grateful for seeing her tax dollars at work in two ways:
1) that a national museum/park offers free classes for her children to take (many of them do in DC) (although pushed to admit it she would say that in a time of financial struggles things like free classes at national museums should be the first to go)
and
2) that they provide “necessary” items free of charge to women in dire straits.

Everyone there was so helpful and nice. The whole situation was just comedic and deserved telling. Or at least the mother thinks so.

Going postal

Lately it seems I’m losing my inhibitions when it comes to losing it with people. Poor Washington Post customer service rep didn’t know she was going to get the psycho customer from Hades when she went to work the other day. I kinda lost it on her. I wish I could say I was speaking my mind about the fact that their “journalists” speak their minds instead of just reporting the news. Sadly, they were only messing with the price of my paper.

To celebrate my coming out as an irrational screamer the girls and I headed to the US Postal Museum with Gretchen (who I think I’m going to christen, G-Love) and her boys.* Here are some shots:

Ash slept through most of the museum.

Great interactive features for the kids.

Bus ride home

I think I may make you throw up with all of the editing I’m going to be doing on my photos.

*We really went just to hang out together and have fun with the kids. Made for a good story though didn’t it.