FUD: Fear/Uncertainty/Doubt

Kids|Teaching|Parenting

 

Huh. July 17, 2010

Filed under: rambling anecdotes — Tracy @ 10:03 pm

Look, I found this blog that I left lying around under the couch.

 
 

Conversations with an Amy June 20, 2008

Filed under: rambling anecdotes — Tracy @ 6:05 pm

Just now.

Amy is being very chatty at the moment. I said to Mike, who just got home, “She didn’t even have a nap today!”

Amy: You said no nap, Mummy! Teachers said no too.
Me: That’s right, I said no nap.
Amy: Jae pushed me into the doors.
Me: Which doors?
Amy: The sleep-room doors.
Me: When? Today or yesterday?
Amy: Yesterday.
Me: And what did you do?
Amy: I tolded him STOP DOING THAT.

Ethan is in the University of Canterbury’s alumni magazine today. They have an article about multiculturalism in the classroom, and came to Ethan’s school and took a photo of his class, which has at least half a dozen ethnicities represented, maybe more. His face is half-obscured by another child but his face will be half-seen by, I’m guessing, one or two thousand alumni.

 
 

‘Ware! May 22, 2008

Filed under: rambling anecdotes — Tracy @ 7:38 pm

Dropping Amy off today at preschool, I noticed they had a big wooden castle set up complete with knights, dragons and royalty. Amy wandered over to investigate and found the dragon, which she waved threateningly at me before placing in the castle courtyard, inside the walls. I did the “ooh, a dragon, how scary” thing and she laughed before looking sympathetically at me.

“No, Mum, the dragon’s not scary,” she said in a teasing voice. I said yes, I was scared, so Amy picked up the dragon, placed it in a nearby wire basket, then picked up the basket and carried it through to the bathroom where she put it up on the highest shelf she could reach.

“You can’t see it now, Mummy, so it’s not scary,” she told me.

 
 

Let me explain, no, let me sum up April 30, 2008

Filed under: rambling anecdotes — Tracy @ 9:45 pm

* Placement starts next Monday. I am underprepared in terms of paperwork right now. Woo! However, I am well equipped wardrobe-wise, thanks to my mother.

* Over the past week we’ve had gas-powered hot water installed and ripped out an interior wall, as our new heatpump made the gas fireplace redundant. Renovation is fun, in an unexpected “oh crap, no one said there was a huge lump of concrete behind this wall” sort of way. Our bank account is unimpressed.

* Mike may be allergic to our new kittycat, who is tentatively named Kira. We’re going to hold on for a few more days. If things don’t work out (as in Mike doesn’t stop sneezing or wheezing), then she will hopefully return to her previous owners.

* I took Ethan to Horton Hears a Who today. He loved it. It was very spur of the moment and not conducive to my placement preparation [see first note, above].

(Renovation photos will undoubtedly follow.)

 
 

“There is something about the presence of a cat that seems to take the bite out of being alone.” - Louis J. Camuti April 20, 2008

Filed under: rambling anecdotes — Tracy @ 10:28 pm

We are currently three in our house, Mike being on a work trip to Rhode Island and Maine. I am amusing myself in the evenings by watching Sopranos DVDs, spending too much time on the internet, and doing laundry. Life sure is exciting! I have to limit myself to two episodes of Sopranos at most per evening because otherwise my adrenalin levels are so high I need to eat something just so I have dishes to wash.

Anyhoo.

I got us a cat! Poor Mike. A college friend has had kittens (well, obviously, her cat had them, she only feeds and shelters them), and had offered us a kitten a couple of months ago. I thought about it, and talked to Mike, and he thought about it, and neither of us was willing to make the decision. Getting a pet is a pretty big decision, really.

Going back a bit further, like, uh, to when Amy was about 18 months old, she developed a paralysing fear of animals. We went to a friend’s house one day for coffee and playtime, and Amy and Ethan ran to the door and rang the bell. The friend’s daughter opened the door without thinking and their large labrador cross leapt out straight into Amy, barking loudly and jumping excitedly all over us. He was just happy to see us, but he towered over poor Amy and she has never been the same since. It’s slowly getting better, but for a while she would see a dog across the road and start whimpering and trying to literally climb my legs to get away from it. Now she will stop and think, and sometimes she will try commanding a barking dog to BE QUIET! but if it turns towards her she does the whimper-leg-climbing thing again.

So I knew we needed to give her plenty of experience with smaller, gentler animals to help regain her confidence (obviously caution is good, but not in such great doses), and the kitten seemed ideal. But then there’s toilet training, behavioural stuff (kids and cat), what happens if we go on holiday, etc.

With Mike away this time for slightly longer than usual, and the kids being tired and cranky and sick for part of the time, I have been tired and cranky and stressed off and on as well. They’ve actually been great, really, but they have the usual periods of grump and fighting and whingeing and in the evenings I collapse, too tired to do much else but dread the next day.

So we got the cat, who is now about five months old, housetrained and children-trained. She has been here for just over 24 hours and we have only lost her once! This morning I made the executive decision to let her out to explore the section, and she immediately disappeared next door (who would’ve thought?). We went to find her and she turned out to be stuck up a cabbage tree and only came down in the end because the back-fence neighbours started a car right below her perch, which scared her half to death. She hasn’t been outside since. She is asleep beside me, and having a cat to snuggle with and pat and be nuzzled by, and for the kids to talk to and amuse, has given us all a much-needed distraction while Mike is gone. Amy is still nervous if the cat approaches her, but happily follows the cat around the house, making cootchie-cootchie noises at her. Ethan is putting into practice things he has been learning at school about caring for pets and reminds me that our cat needs food, water, sleep, and cuddles.

Kitty

 
 

More words from Amy April 12, 2008

Filed under: rambling anecdotes — Tracy @ 12:41 pm

It can work! No, it can’t work.
[What can't work?]
The heat pump can’t work.
[Why can't the heat pump work?]
‘Cos it’s, ‘cos it’s broken.
There’s two cars. ‘Cos two cars broke it. [How?]
‘Cos they’re naughty. They’re naughty, eh? ‘Cos their battery’s flat.
We have to fix them. We have to pull the batteries out.

(Roleplaying — apparently the aforementioned two cars are Mum and Dad.)
Mama. I don’t know. Dad, what are you doing, Dad?
I said what are you doing, Dad. Ummm, I’m doing work. Okay, bye.
I’m broken, Mummy.
Want a cuddle? (kissing noises) Good. Bye Daddy.
How was your work? Mum, how was your college? Good. No, I didn’t go, I’m at college.

[What are you doing?]
Um, I’m working. You’re the Dad, Mum. I’m the Mum.
What are you doing, Dad?
[I'm working at work. What are you doing, Mum?]
Um, I’m just driving. Mrrrooommmm. [Where are you going?]
Um, I don’t know. In the garage. Okay bye!

 
 

“I have never let my schooling interfere with my education.” (Mark Twain) April 4, 2008

Filed under: rambling anecdotes — Tracy @ 8:21 pm

Yesterday I had a parent-teacher meeting with the erstwhile Miss T (who is now a Mrs), to discuss Ethan’s first two months of school. Here’s the highlights:

* Scored perfect on the six-year sight word test
* Knows his alphabet and all the associated sounds
* Needs more work with numbers, especially counting backwards from twenty-something
* He’s a leftie! This was actually a surprise and is a fair indication that I have not actually looked at Ethan since he was born. Hence he has a terrible pencil grip and can’t hold scissors. Am trying to find a place that sells left-handed pencils online
* Thrives on routine, something we have taken advantage of FOREVER

The sad story that followed is this:
There is a huge influx of small children hoping to attend Ethan’s school this year. Huge. There are only two new-entrant classrooms, and a third opens up midway through term 3 when numbers in rooms 1 and 2 get too high. Miss T said last year before room 1A opened, she had a ridiculous 31, THIRTY ONE YES YOU READ CORRECTLY children in her class. This year is looking even worse, so the syndicate is hoping to pre-empt the overcrowding by sending some of the more competent kids up to a year one classroom.

When? I asked.

At the start of term 2, she replied. That is IN ONE MONTH.

But, she said, he’s academically ready, sure, but not really socially. I agreed most vehemently, but after consideration I have to agree that if anyone does have to move up, it should be him over someone who will be lost in a classroom with bigger children. I just wish we didn’t have to think about it already.

The upside is that some of his friends will go up too, so he won’t be the only new kid. He’ll be challenged and he’ll meet new children, and admittedly a lot of the room 1 kids are less mature and prepared for school than him, while room 3 kids are probably more on his level.

But we really, really like Miss T. Apparently the other day, Ethan went to her and said he had to give her a super-huge cuddle in case he ran out later, and did so. He adores her and she loves her room 1 kids. Children from other classes come to visit her. She has a great rapport with the parents and I enjoy hanging out in her classroom and doing little chores when I have free time, playing with her laminator and NOT SETTING IT ON FIRE OR DAMAGING SMALL CHILDREN.

Ethan’s not allowed to know about it yet because it’s not foregone, only a possibility right now. I think he’ll be quite upset when he finds out, at least until the excitement of a new classroom and new teacher and bunch of kids kicks in. And he’ll have been very lucky to have had such an awesome teacher for his first term at school.

 
 

A six-week catch-up. January 29, 2008

Filed under: photoblogging, rambling anecdotes — Tracy @ 9:28 pm

Ask me what we’ve been doing, go on ask me ask me ask me!

Actually no. Don’t, because it’s not as exciting as such an enthusiastic buildup would imply. But we did leave the house for a while there, which for us these days is as exciting as wandering around Mexico was ten years ago. Also up there for excitement is the return of House to TV tonight. I can barely focus on my typing, such is my exvcwfvvwhuhtement.

What did we actually do that filled us with joy and fulfillment? Um. We…um. I forget. Wait! We went to Blenheim! For Christmas! Before that we did some pre-Christmas stuff here, like cut down a perfectly healthy tree and prop it up in our dining room. And we had the kids’ preschool end-of-year breakup, which had a fancy-dress theme:

The robo-boogie
As you can see, Ethan was a fairy.

Superman! I frying!
And Amy went as a rubber chicken.

We headed to Blenheim a couple of days before Christmas, where it turned out we were inducted into the local builders’ union and indentured to build chairs.

I still have all my digits and both eyes, although I can’t say the same for our children. At least they look happy!

Christmas was awesome. Amy and I got a doctor set:

And we got snow!
Snow in summer!

We spent an afternoon at Marfells Beach, past Lake Grasmere and the saltworks (a network of ponds where seawater is left to evaporate and expose the salt), and the kids chased seagulls and threw rocks and collected shells and ran around a lot. And I took my favourite photo of the trip:
Confrontational Amy

We came home for a pretty uneventful January (I went to summer school) and then Ethan turned five on Saturday. We threw him a pirate party.
Pirate party
It went well.

 
 

Thistle-toe and Whine December 15, 2007

Filed under: rambling anecdotes — Tracy @ 7:00 pm

Today, being as close to Christmas as we can get without it actually being Christmas, we finally got our tree. I have been putting off the purchase of a fake tree for a long time, because although fake trees always have that nice symmetrical look and would probably actually look stylish and attractive given my haphazard decorating and non-matching ornaments, I actually enjoy the whole process with a real tree. Everything from the trudging out to tag the one we want in mid-November to collecting it, figuring out how to get it home, setting up the darn stand, and cleaning up dead pine needles for weeks after, it’s all symbolic of Christmas to me and I want to keep it that way for Ethan and Amy. So yeah, no fake tree for us again this year; instead another wonky, bedraggled-looking branch of a much larger tree with sagging twigs and castoff needles everywhere. Love it. Its look is much improved by the addition of a multitude of homemade decorations from bread dough, shiny cardboard, and popsicle sticks, all with some amount of glitter. No, really, I love it.

This year the kids have also celebrated, in a minor way, Hanukkah. Their preschool provided a menorah and dreidels for the children to see and play with because one of the girls is Jewish. It was a novelty for me as much as them because I don’t know any observing Jewish people and so what little I know of Hanukkah is academic.

The other day I mentioned that of the six Christmas cards we’d received to date, only one had any religious imagery (we’re not at all religious, but still). I said something to Mike about the lone card with Sweet Baby Jesus being held by Mary, which led to Ethan’s very serious explanation about God being real and Jesus being God’s son and his friend at preschool told him so, ergo true. This ties in nicely with Ethan’s first Easter service last year from which he returned to tell us that Jesus was old and lived in a cave with dinosaurs (Jesus + cave + old = dinosaurs, obvs).

Amy’s newest and weirdest sentence structure to date is “I can want to [fill in the blank]!” When we go somewhere: “I can want to come too?” When she wants us to watch her jumping: “You can want to watch me!” I keep telling her that sure, it’s okay to want to, but that doesn’t mean nothin’, but she just looks at me like I’m the crazy one.

 
 

High art November 21, 2007

Filed under: rambling anecdotes — Tracy @ 6:11 pm



Mum by Ethan

Originally uploaded by tracicle.

Every morning I make sandwiches for the kids’ lunchboxes and wrap them in paper (good for the preschool’s worm farm), and I usually draw something on the wrapper that’s relevant at the time — at the moment, it’s a bike for Ethan and a teddy bear for Amy. Ethan likes to take over this critical job whenever I let him, and this was his drawing a few weeks ago.

 
 
 

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