FUD: Fear/Uncertainty/Doubt

Kids|Teaching|Parenting

 

Planning a spur-of-the-moment surprise April 29, 2007

Filed under: rambling anecdotes — Tracy @ 3:23 pm

I was lying awake last night thinking about all the stuff that’s going on in my life right now (assignments, school, kids, things I need to do or buy or organise) and got thinking about what we’d do today if it was a rainy day like yesterday. Yesterday we rented Happy Feet and settled down on the couch and watched a movie together. Today I didn’t want another day of TV and cabin fever, so I decided to make up a scavenger hunt and take the family to the museum.

I got up and had a look at the museum’s website for items to search for, and made a checklist with six things on it (and clipart pictures for visual aids): a moa egg, an emperor penguin, a penny farthing cycle, a samurai sword, a mummy and a gold nugget. Each item had a question for us to try to answer. I told the kids we were going on a surprise trip and got them and Mike into the car and we drove to the museum. Ethan was asking all the way there: “What’s my surprise? Is it the mall? Is it going over this bridge? Is it going to town? Is it seeing the fountain? Is it going to a park? Is it…” ad infinitum. We hadn’t been to the museum in so long that he didn’t recognise the building.

I gave him the list and explained what he needed to do, and we set off. The moa egg is literally the first display through the door so Ethan was delighted to be off to such a great start. He raced through every floor of the museum checking things off and answering questions (”How tall is a moa? Bigger than Dad!”) and when he missed a couple of things I expected him to miss, he learned two completely new things — the Egyptian mummy and the samurai sword. The displays were very kid-oriented with lots of hands-on activities, and Ethan was fascinated by a model of the various volcanoes that formed Banks Peninsula because volcanoes are just so cool. He got to sit on a (fake) horse and a real penny farthing, and play a cool game with bugs and use a brush to uncover fossils in sand. Amy patted a stuffed baby giraffe and a couple of sheep, and read books in the kids’ corner and pointed at the penguins and at the albatrosses mounted from the ceiling: “Bird! Sky!” Both kids had a ball.

We never did find a gold nugget though, and Ethan was quite disappointed not to complete the scavenger hunt. We’ll have to do it more often.

 
 

More about DorklandAuckland April 27, 2007

Filed under: photoblogging, rambling anecdotes — Tracy @ 10:10 pm

Auckland doesn’t really bring out the worst in me, I swear. On the first day I was cussing like a person without small children about the traffic, the hills, and the fact that I could not, at any time, tell what part of Auckland we were in or in which direction we were heading. North was south! East was west! Up was down! In was out! By Monday I was saying to Mike, “Well, I guess it wouldn’t be too bad, you know, if you never drove anywhere ever for any reason.” And he was nodding and agreeing and then I would say, “Nah. But yeah. But nah. But maybe.”

Sky tower

Anyway.

Friday we arrived in a blaze of perfect-parenting glory with our children and luggage intact. (Last night I watched Supernanny’s tips about travelling with kids. We had done everything she recommended, and more. Yes.) I amused the kids in the terminal (food! video games! Korean grandparents touching their hair and giving them lollies with unrecognisable writing!) while Mike picked up the rent-a-dent. We had predicted Amy would need a nap (see? perfect parents) and decided the best plan of action was a recon drive around the city to get our bearings and let her sleep in the car. We decided we didn’t need a map.

HAHAHAHAAA!

We didn’t get very lost.

We stopped at a petrol station off a motorway somewhere in the North Island to find One Tree Hill (I had said, “Eh, it’s a big hill with a big cenotaph on it. How will we get lost?”) and realised that we somehow were actually still in Auckland and somehow not far from where we wanted to be. It turns out that the hills in Auckland are not conveniently located in one small area like Christchurch but are rather inconveniently dotted about at random, so one hill hides another. Right! Behind it! I called Rache to arrange a meeting place and she said, “Well, I’m coming up [Random Street] right now,” and I said, “We’re coming up [A Road],” and she said, “Hey, I’m just around the corner,” as we literally passed each other in the middle of a city of over one million people.

Lesson: New Zealand is a small country. And full of people from Christchurch.

Caught up, took the kids to a really awesome playground at One Tree Hill Domain (I think), with very cool and funky play equipment including a ride-on train on a circular track.

Train

Mike collected his parents from the airport and we adjourned to the motel, where we threw the children in bed and opened the requisite bottle o’ wine and had another, proper catch-up. We felt this constant compulsion to tell people that, as parents, it is never wise to make concrete plans because something always, always goes wrong or otherwise changes. The great thing about telling people this in advance is that it means things will go right. If you prepare for the worst, you’re guaranteed to get the best. Parents and acquaintances of small children take note.

We drove all over Auckland the next morning in search of Botany Downs, because what sort of crazy person goes to the big smoke without shopping? I bought some art. The boys bought Dunkin’ Donuts. I swear Mike drooled all over the rental car when he saw the sign and we never got our deposit back. We bought Ethan a long-sleeved tee because when I packed his clothes I discovered that every sweatshirt he owns was wet on the line. We bought Amy a cute shirt because it was cute. We bought Ethan a pair of sunglasses because they were red. And had racecars. And they match his bucket hat with the flaming skulls, so, you know.

Back to the motel for naptime and lunch and to meet Rache and Dale, who brought more goodies for the kiddies. Ethan got a kurta with churida (traditional Indian shirt and trousers):

kurta

When Amy woke up we madly raced off to Auckland Zoo, where we saw more animals than you could shake a stick at, whatever that means. We certainly didn’t shake sticks at any animals since most of them would have eaten us. Amy was fascinated by the hippo and elephants, and the hippos were certainly doing interesting things; having a feed beside the water before plunging in, climbing out, wandering in again and having a swim along the jetty. The hippos in a separate enclosure were having fisticuffs over a chunk of log they had evidently been given for Christmas or something — a perfect chance to teach the kids a vital life lesson about sharing your goodies with hippos.

We finally escaped from the zoo at closing time with a stack of free ex-calendar photos of the animals to occupy the kids on the drive back and a plethora of animal noises to be made. Kids slept like logs. Logs untouched by large hippo teeth.

The grownups did stuff on Saturday night; probably it is better left unsaid. Suffice to say dinner was tasty, belly dancing was witnessed, karaoke was not, and Mike and I are old and retired before we could turn into pumpkins. Certain others of the party were still recovering 18 hours later. Suckers!

On Sunday we did some quiet things because of the aforementioned suckers. We brunched at a cafe on Onehunga Mall, which is a fantastic low-budget street packed with bazaar-style shops all called some variety of “Just a Buck” or “One-Two-Three Dollars” and filled with a mix of trash and treasure. Also the most amazing secondhand and rare book shop I have ever seen. The apparently homemade stairs were dodgy but presumably legal and you could almost guarantee that that book you remember your nana reading you that used to belong to your dad when he was four would be found somewhere in that shop.

Back for Amy’s nap (I am not complaining about this; I would love it if she naps until the day she starts school, and maybe even until she’s thirty), then we split up to see various parts of Auckland. I went to Takapuna with Rache, Mike stayed with Amy and his broken cellphone, Ethan went with Nana and Grandad — whom Amy has named something like “Brad-Brad” — and they went to the museum! which was on fire! and had, like, a zillion firetrucks! wow! Apparently the alarms went off, the trucks came screaming in, and no one could turn the alarms off so they had to close the museum just after Ethan arrived. It’s like they knew. So they played it safe and went to the Sky Tower, which Ethan ADORED AND WON’T STOP TALKING ABOUT THANKS A LOT NANA AND BRADBRAD. And, um, Dale slept a lot.

Somehow we all (minus the aforementioned poor old sucker Dale) managed to meet in the same place at Mission Bay despite Mike having no map and no cellphone, and had a peaceful afternoon on the beach building castles and canals and burying Aunty Rachel up to her neck in sand. Then we sadly said goodbye to Mike’s parents who flew back to Blenheim and packed up to go back to the motel to once again throw children in bed and open a bottle of wine. What? It’s not like we do that every night. Sometimes we drink beer, or tequila slammers, or snort lines. We did make the mistake of putting Ethan and Amy in the same room on Sunday night, which made for entertainment when they kept talking to each other. It’s not like Amy has much to say, but somehow they conversed long past bedtime.

Closet

(Please excuse the redeye; I forgot to edit before uploading.)

Monday we (perfect parents) were already packed and had clothes out for the kids, so we were breakfasted and out of the motel by about 8am. We went to One Tree Hill and let the kids enjoy the view and proved to Ethan that no, the Sky Tower did not actually go into space and that no, it wasn’t taller than a mountain and no, it wasn’t the tallest thing in the whole wide world. Dreams shattered! A boy’s fantasies crushed! You can feel the pain:

Mr Pointy

(Yes, desperate need for haircut, I know.)

Then down the hill! To Butterfly Creek! Great place! Except not. I’m sure it is a great place when the A Team are working, but we evidently got, uh, the F Team. We bought tickets for the kids to see the farmyard and ride the Red Admiral Express! a little train that chugs around the complex. There’s also a butterfly aviary-thing (what the heck do you call a butterfly enclosure?) that is supposed to have, oh I didn’t read the signs, the most butterflies in a large enclosed area in the entire galaxy or something. Anyway, the kids saw the farmyard while I waited for Rachel in the cafe (evidently Dale survived the night, well done him!) and I think the farmyard was met with apathy, because the kids just! wanted! the train!

So we waited for 11:30 which was the next departure time. And no one came to drive the train. We waited. And no one came. And we had a 12:50 flight (hrm, more on that soon), so we needed to get going. So I had a chat with the receptionist, who responded with a blank expression and a rude “Huh?” and then said she’d talk to someone. We waited. And waited. And then we had to go, so we forced the kids’ clenched fists from the train’s gates and hauled them up the ramp to the exit, when the receptionist came out and asked us to wait, someone was coming. Through gritted teeth and over screams I said no, we had a plane to catch. But wait! she said, just a couple of minutes! And I, rather more irritated than I generally get (I’m all about the internalising of rage, you know) used a rather angry voice with her and said no. we. are. leaving. and she just…vanished. And we never saw her again.

Oooo
Am I to be riding the train now? Am I?

So we bid a sad farewell to Rache, who went and did, I don’t know, work or something. And we made our way quickly to the airport, running late for our 12:50 flight. We had planned to be at the airport at about 11:50, but left Butterfly Creek at 11:50 so got to check-in at about noon, still with the rental car to drop off. We looked at the departures board.

There was no 12:50 flight.

We looked at our itinerary, which Mike had written down. As we rummaged through my bag he muttered, “I’m sure it’s 12:50. I wrote down 12:50.” We found the note. It said 12:30. “Huh,” he said. “How did I get that wrong?” And as he spoke the first boarding call for our flight came up. I grabbed my and the kids’ boarding passes, grabbed the kids and left for the gate. Mike took his boarding pass, crossed his fingers and took off to return the car. I waited until last to board at 12:20 and told the ground crew that my darling husband was stuck on a matter of life and death and might be a wee smidge late for the plane and please hold the whole plane for him, ta. They said the flight crew hadn’t arrived yet. Heh.

We got settled on the plane without incident and waited. And waited. And the door to the gate was finally closed and the flight crew (who had already arrived, like, ages ago) were closing the overhead bins and stuff that you do when you’re cabin crew. But wait! Guess who they had to open the door for at exactly 12:30?

Yay.

airport

And so we made it home alive, with one extra sock (which I think we found under the motel room couch. Ew) and all limbs and luggage and children intact. The kids flew like a dream. Ethan was mildly petrified when we left Christchurch because he was worried his ears might explode or implode, depending on ascent or descent, and his brain might leak out all over his LeapPad. On the flight back south, the first thing he did on the plane was tell the flight crew proudly, “I’m not scared of flying any more!”

Amy just liked the clouds. “Cowwwwd!”

Mike just liked not having Amy’s milk bottle leak all over him. Bad luck, that. I just liked when the kids didn’t eat my entire caramel slice. Also with the bad luck.

 
 

We’re back! April 24, 2007

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tracy @ 9:58 pm



March 2007 Auckland 139

Originally uploaded by tracicle.

Auckland was great! Amy said “Oooooo!”

 
 

Ethan, gifted in kicking my butt. April 11, 2007

Filed under: darndest things, rambling anecdotes — Tracy @ 8:54 pm

Ethan’s favourite neighbour, Hannah, and her family are leaving tomorrow. They’re going to live in Austin, TX, for two years. We invited them over for one last lunch together today and Ethan helped me make a banana loaf to share and kept me company while I prepared foodage. To give him something to do while I stuffed mushrooms, I asked him if he’d like to write a letter to give to Hannah. I fetched him some of my paper and a pen (he’s just learned the proper pencil grip, something I was mildly paranoid about because I didn’t want him forming bad habits before going to school), and asked him what he wanted to write. He told me, and I spelled it out letter by letter while he wrote industriously.

“Dear Hannah

I hope you have a nice time in America

From Ethan xxxx”

I also showed him how to put his fingertip at the end of a word to mark the space between words, which I remember learning at school when I was five and continuing to do in my usual pedantic manner until I was about eight. I don’t have my camera at the moment so I didn’t take a photo but suffice to say that Ethan’s writing is pretty darn good for someone who just turned four.

To add to my extreme pride in my kids, Ethan and Amy have both had doctor’s visits this week. Amy visited an eye specialist yesterday because, at 21 months, she still has a partially undeveloped tear duct which gunks up whenever she has a cold. Since it hasn’t bothered her much, I put her on the DHB waiting list for a specialist appointment, and it so surprised me that I don’t think I’d go public again. The clinic was a dingy, grubby-looking building with two-year-old magazines (and lovely, lovely nurses who clucked over Amy and offered me coffee) and obviously short on funding. The three waiting areas were packed and even though we were running ten minutes late, we sat for about half an hour — when I called the clinic to say were were late, they told me not to worry because they’re always running behind — and Amy was an utter angel. She smiled and looked around at the other patients. She sat, ankles crossed, in her own chair and flicked through a book, then played quietly on the floor with a toy. She played peekaboo with another baby, then when she’d had enough of all the people she came and snuggled on my knee and we played “name the parts of my face” for ten minutes.

The appointment itself, all two minutes of it, was positive. A follow-up in four months.

Today Ethan had to go for his four-year booster shots. We arrived at the doctor’s office five minutes early and the kids played quietly with the toys, read books, talked to other people. The nurse was running behind and we waited for half an hour (annoying since we were the only people there, and Ethan was already nervous) before we went in. Ethan sat next to me and we discovered that he was getting two needles, one in each arm. He snuggled into my side and we asked him to find the bananas in a big poster of fruit and vegetables, and he was so busy looking that he didn’t feel the first needle at all. Woo!

The second time he was more aware because it was the side nearest me and he couldn’t snuggle in, but he didn’t cry at all. He moaned once and tried to pull away but as soon as it was done, he was fine. He was very brave.

 
 
 

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