Sunday, February 28, 2021
Kitchen Chicken
Saturday, February 27, 2021
The Horrors
Friday, February 26, 2021
Into the Dark, Finding the Light
Thursday, February 25, 2021
Some Sort of Social Something
When I got to school today to pick up my son, he wasn't at the classroom. I talked to his assistant teacher and she told me he was currently talking with the teacher outside. Greyson loves his class and especially his teachers, so I was surprised when he got in the car and Michelle told me he was getting physical with another student.
It wasn't much, but it counted. My son went on in the back seat about how he has no friends, well, except for these three friends, and that there were only three people who were nice enough to like him as a friend. The classroom and its students had become "a toxic environment"
Michelle and I talked to him for a while with her standing outside in conversation with just my son. He had, she told me afterwards, gotten physical with another student. The details of the actual incident were never conveyed to me. He shoved or pushed or did something.
The problems he's having are social in nature. He's getting offended and then getting upset and not interacting positively with the other students. He's likey imagining insults and then retaliating. He's causing most of the problems with how he interacts with people'
She and I talked about it, along with my son, to see if the change in medication might have been a factor. He's had screens taken away for a while now, so I don't know if that has any bearing on the situation. He has a lot strong feelings about not being accepted and belonging to before, but this seems like it's something underlying thats's causing hin to have so much anger
The Big Boy Update: My son was up at eleven-thirty last night, not tired at all because he'd been listening to his audiobook in his room. I took the Alexa away and he fell straight to sleep. Without screens and Alexa he's been doing a lot of artwork.
The Tiny Girl Chronicles: The first day of the Braille Challenge was over fairly quickly. My daughter thought she did well so far. Tomorrow is the second half of the challenge. We'll find out later if her scores are high enough to advance her to the next level of competition.
Wednesday, February 24, 2021
He'd Be Right
Tuesday, February 23, 2021
When You Assume
Monday, February 22, 2021
Enraged
My son is upstairs losing his mind. He is furious. Enraged. Angry. Mad. He had thought if he waited me out that I would just give in and return screens to him. After school he tried in his nicest voice, telling me how he'd done drawing and listening to audio books and doing things in his room and there really wasn't anything more he could do and he was bored and I said...
That's the tricky part. He was going with the bit where you said, "but you said..." and thinking that would work. When I explained that I hadn't said that, and that that's not how things were going to work, he got mad. He yelled at me and told me I had lied to him. I was, "A LIAR!" he said. He appealed to me, saying when I was at his bed the other night before bedtime and was talking to him about screens that...
I'm not entirely sure what all his arguments were because he was standing at the top of the stairs to the basement wearing his mask from school still and mumbling. He did take off his mask eventually, but by then he was yelling and furious at me.
The fact remained, I told him, that he had not read three books. The "real" books, which meant chapter books. He asked me if certain books counted. I told him he could bring them to me and I'd let him know. And no, a Choose Your Own Adventure book wouldn't count because you could finish that type of book in only a few pages. I expected him to read three age- and grade-appropriate books.
My son was deciding for himself which books would count. He does that, decides what something is or will be to his distinct advantage. I told him I didn't want him to waste his time so he'd better bring the books he was thinking of reading to me because if it didn't count, he might be upset at having to read an additional book.
He screamed and yelled and was unhappy when he saw me recording the tantrum on my phone. He was pretending I'd changed the rules on him when he'd had conversations with his father about the three book requirement. He was trying to play the situation to his advantage. Only it didn't work.
I told him he also needed to understand that just because he read the three books, I wasn't guaranteeing he would get screens back. He had to read three books before I would consider it. That was the minimum to start. After that, if his behavior merited it, I would consider letting him have some screen time.
I've been trying to be clear about things. But I'm also taking a very hard line this time. He's gone overboard on some things related to screens that my husband and I aren't completely happy about. This is the first step into getting screens back. He will have to continue to show good judgement and behavior to maintain any access to screens going forward.
My husband is home and he's talked to my son, who has apparently magically finished one book already. This is what happens when he won't let me confirm what books will, "count" towards his three books. He's going to continue to rage. And I'm going to continue to hold his computer mouse, iPad, Switch the television remotes under my control until he proves he's actually done the work to earn some screen time back.
The Big Boy Tiny Girl Pencil Stabbing Discovery: This weekend after my husband and son left to go skiing I went upstairs and saw on the floor of the bonus room several sheets of paper with hundreds of pencil stabs through them. I thought it was possibly my son doing the damage, getting out his anger at me for the removal of screen time. My daughter happily told me that no, she and he had done it together. I couldn't get out of her a reason why, other than it had been fun.
Sunday, February 21, 2021
Balance, Adorableness, and Delicacy
My son has to read three books before I will consider letting have screens back. He has told his father he's thinking about, "waiting me out." My husband told him he wasn't going to succeed because I wasn't going to give in. But my son seems to want to wait instead of actually reading three books, something he could easily do.
He went skiing today with his father. They went to my parents in the mountains without stopping to interact with anyone to be safe. My parents have had both vaccines. Then today they went on the mountain and did some skiing for the day. Tonight they're home in time for school tomorrow.
Yesterday before they left my son called me up to his room, saying, "Be prepared for balance, adorableness, and delicacy." When I came in the room he had done this:
He had looked all over to find every stuffed animal in the house. He'd even stolen some from his sister's room. He told me you could see every single stuffed animal. He was very happy about how he'd arranged them.
Saturday, February 20, 2021
The Things We Do For Children
I was never a doll person as a child. I had a few when I was very young, of particular note the one that you fed and then the food came out into her diaper a short while later. It seems like her name was Betsy Wets and something but that could be way off. Barbies I didn't spend much time on at all. What I do remember though was the hair. Doll hair was dreadful. Ir started out long but little hands with little scissors performing stylish haircuts made for a nearly bald doll not much time later. There were only so many stylish haircuts you could do before you had no hair left.
The other part about doll hair was the fallout. I just didn't stay in well. The brush would get filled with unbending, stringy hair that got all over the floor and was internally hard to pick up. These days, doll hair is very good at staying put so that problem has gotten better. The hair is denser and can be styled more easily. Unfortunately, children aren't the most gentle with hair and with synthetic hair being more damage-prone, the long hair turns into a frizzy mess fairly quickly.
I found a solution to this, and it does fix the problem of frizz and knottiness, but it takes a bit of time. Which is why tonight, after my daughter had gone to bed, I wondered why I'd ever told my daughter hair reparations were even possible as I held down a nake doll and flat ironed her bright, golden blonde hair.
The doll is waiting for my daughter at her breakfast table. Still naked, but with calm, smooth hair, ready for some more styles and subsequent damage.
The Big Boy Update: My son and I like ice cream. But lately, what we love even more is Cool Whip. He and I would gladly have a bowl of cool whip over ice cream. We're going through large tubs of it because it's so light and fluffy and, well, delicious.
The Tiny Girl Chronicles: My daughter is doing something I did for a long time as a child. She's going around walking on top of her toes, having them curled under. She's doing this even on the hardwood floors. She says it feels comfortable.
Friday, February 19, 2021
Necklace Removal
Thursday, February 18, 2021
No Rain, Rain
Wednesday, February 17, 2021
Distrust
Tuesday, February 16, 2021
The Message Adventure
Monday, February 15, 2021
Four Feet of Snow
Sunday, February 14, 2021
Nanable
My mother-in-law became a writer at the start of COVID-19 lockdown. She and my father-in-law went to their Florida winter home and there was a lot less to do, so she started writing stories for the children. The children loved them. There was a storyline with Buster the dog and his adventures for my daughter and Jackson, the superhero child, and his friends for my son. When we would see them, my mother-in-law would read her latest stories to them.
Sometimes she would send stories up for us to either emboss for my daughter or print out for my son, but it was always a special thing when Nana would read them to the children herself. She's created quite a collection of stories at this point, grouping them into what may become a published book in the future. My sister-in-law suggested she even record them like an audiobook might be done. She and my brother-in-law thought they were great.
The only trouble was, how to do that while stuck in a house. My husband worked with her so she could record on her tablet and the recordings would be stored in the cloud so he could access them. Today, while I was working on something else, my husband came into the room and said, "Alexa, ask Plex to play Jackson chapter three". The next thing I heard was Alexa announcing, "Jackson chapter three by Nanable" and then I heard Nana's voice.
My husband said, "your daughter is upstairs in her room listening to chapter one right now." He'd done something crazy cool and fun. Nana had become her own Audible, her stories available over Alexa. Go, dad.
The Big Boy Update: My son is listening to YouTube creators that are a little older and saying things he doesn't understand but is willing to repeat because he thinks it's funny. We're trying to balance the line of not keeping him completely sheltered while also not condoning content that is confusing and inappropriate for his age. Fortunately, he doesn't like headphones and listens to things on the computer beside us, so it's fairly easy to gauge.
The Tiny Girl Chronicles: I came upstairs after lunch today finishing up a long stint in the basement from early morning. A package had arrived and was on the kitchen island. I commented on its arrival and my daughter said, "Oh, that's been here forever. Some people never look up."
Saturday, February 13, 2021
Bored, Not Bored, Busy
Friday, February 12, 2021
Jabbed
Some days I have a lot to talk about. I would say most days I have more to talk about than not. Some of it isn't interesting to put down here, though. I debate sometimes on if something is, "blog-worthy". And then some days not a lot happened. Today feels like one of those days.
My back has been in terrible spasm for a while now. I had a steroid injection in my spine about two weeks ago, which has helped in the past, but this time things only got worse. I've been struggling with a ring of pain around my trunk that was ramping and causing me to have difficulty being functional—which is rather important when you have children who need and/or want you and your time.
I saw my P.A. today and told him about the troubles I'd been having. He got a needle and jabbed me with great kindness all over my back. There were so many trigger points he went back and got a second round, putting the short and medium-term numbing everywhere we could find, in the hopes it would help the trigger points release and relieve me of some of the discomfort.
He put me on a short round or oral steroids, something I haven't done in years, in the hopes we could get things to resolve and get me back to where I was prior. He had said last month he thought I might have a bulging disk in my spine causing the trouble. I have been anxious all month I might be on the way to surgery in the future. Today, he said he didn't think I had anything to worry about. I am hugely relieved because I really don't want to have another spine surgery if I don't have to.
I came home and helped my daughter with some of her school work, got my son from school and then lay down to get a bit of rest (thanks again to my husband and children for understanding, as always. I hate that I have to do so.)
The Big Boy Update: My son wanted to understand about my spine and how I was hurting when we were riding home from school. He had all these ideas of what could be invented to help people with spine injuries and prevent them from happening in the future. I loved his ideas, although they were naively impractical, they were good ideas nonetheless. I told him if he could invent those things, he would help a lot of people.
The Tiny Girl Chronicles: My daughter has a new, large, plastic Paw Patrol toy. She described it and we didn't think it existed but my husband saw it at Target today. It was expensive but we would let my daughter buy it with her money if she wanted. When I told her about it after hanging up she practically jumped out of her seat, saying, "YES! Yes yes yes yes! I will absolutely buy it!" Suffice it to say, she is thrilled with this big plastic thing we're not sure where to put. It is on the dining room table right now.
Thursday, February 11, 2021
Igpay AtinLay
My daughter is very verbal. She talks all day long. In the car, she wants to play verbal games, have a conversation with you, tell you a story, anything that involves talking. Sometimes I need a break and I ask her if we can listen to a song or audiobook. She listens to audiobooks when she's alone, and just like all children, she likes the attention of her parents whenever she can get it.
Tonight we were running late for bed and the children were overdue for a bath. My husband was marshaling my son into the shower in his room while I headed to my daughter's room to oversee her shower. We got to talking and for some reason, it occurred to me to speak to her in Pig Latin.
It annoyed her because she didn't know what I was saying and after only a few sentences from me, she barked at me to stop talking to her in words I knew she couldn't understand. I wasn't trying to trick her, typically people can pick up what you're saying in Pig Latin fairly quickly, even if they can't speak it themselves.
I explained again, but this time more slowly, how it worked, how to rearrange the letters to make a Pig Latin word. She listened while she washed her hair and then asked me to say certain words. She was understanding it, but she had to think hard about each word and it still wasn't easy for her to understand me after she'd gotten out of the shower.
I told her I had high confidence that by tomorrow night, she would be able to speak it without thinking and that with only a little practice, I knew she could master it, rattling off Pig Latin conversation just as easily as she spoke normally.
She ended the night saying words and listening as I corrected her pronunciation, saying that all words ended with the 'aay' sound, even if it didn't sound that way in her mind when she'd rearranged the letters. Knowing her, tomorrow morning when we get up, I'm betting she greets us in Pig Latin.
The Big Boy Update: My son doesn't like making his lunch and loaths to do it at the end of the night before bed. I tried a different tactic today, saying if he wanted, I'd help him make his lunch when we got home and that way the task would be done and he wouldn't have to hurry at the end of the night. We had a nice time, me cutting up a mango for him while he unpacked today's lunch bag and restocked everything else for tomorrow. I don't want to help every day because it's his responsibility, but it was a good opportunity to try and change making lunch into a more positive daily job.
The Tiny Girl Chronicles: My daughter worked very hard on the 2020 Braille Challenge materials as practice for the upcoming 2021 competition. She did very well, making some mistakes that were due to hurrying and not thinking slowly. But for the most part, she would have scored very highly. I think she was encouraged because she's going to work on the 2019 practice materials this weekend so she'll be as best prepared as possible.
Wednesday, February 10, 2021
Out With The Old, In With The Additional Effort New
Tuesday, February 9, 2021
Where Does the Busy Come From?
Monday, February 8, 2021
I Don’t Need You Anymore
Sunday, February 7, 2021
Make It a Short Vlog
32, 25, 49, 6
It's been a full day of 3D printing here. And things related to 3D printing. I print a lot of things that are pretty, fun, interesting, and that my daughter can use related to her blindness. One of the things people sometimes ask me is, "What do you print that's useful?" I think it's a reasonable question. The models I like to showcase 3D printing technology to people are usually interesting, but not necessarily useful. And while I do print out a lot of things that don't do anything other than look pretty, I also spend a lot of time printing out things I use.
My daughter's pill every morning along with her eye drops are in a 3D printed container in the shape of a low poly skull. I have a candy dish on my desk beside me that is both beautiful and functional (and frequently refilled as my son and I frequent it.) I have a smattering of small containers I use to hold various little things and I would go so far as to say one of my favorite things is to print out containers that are just right for a thing I need to store.
Today, I needed something to keep the Micro SD cards organized. I went online and found several free options that people created and uploaded which people can print for free. There are millions upon millions of free objects available for printing.
I created a logo of a children's modeling site and printed one of them out for each of the students in my son's class, sort of like a 3D printed business card. Today was all about helpful things I needed relating to the filament I print with.
Filament typically comes in a 1Kg spool, but you can sometimes get samples, which come twist-tied in a bundle. For shipment, that works well, but when it comes time to print, the bundle will tangle itself up or droop down into the print area without some filament management. I looked around and found some small filament sample spools and have been using my filament to print filament spools. Little spools that fit just that small sample amount.
It's been a long day and I'm looking forward to going to bed, but I'm waiting for the printers to finish their last jobs of the day so I can turn them off for the night. The number of minutes remaining one each printer before their jobs are done is 32, 25, 49, and 6. A few minutes less now since I've started typing this post.
I don't know if the printers are tired, I know I sure am. They never seem to complain about being asked to work long hours.
The Big Boy Update: My son was playing with some things in his bedroom the other night when I came in before bed. He looked up and told me, "Hey mom, do you know what I used to do for a living? Pokemon card organization. I would take them all and lay them out and put them in order by [insert organizational scheme description that I can't remember] and then I'd mix them all up and do it again." This is exactly what he would do. He was obsessed with Pokemon cards for a long time.
The Tiny Girl Chronicles: My daughter came into the bedroom and was chatting with me late in the afternoon on Thursday. She said, "Sometimes I wonder if my whole life is just a dream. I can't imagine how long I've lived. Alexa, how many is three-hundred-sixty-five times nine?"
Friday, February 5, 2021
The Lesson In The Rain
Thursday, February 4, 2021
The Saddest Sadist
Wednesday, February 3, 2021
Guess How Much I Miss You
My daughter loves audiobooks, but today she made a different request. I think in part she was avoiding doing the reading and summary work she had to do for her asynchronous school day. Couple that with the fact that when she followed her father and me into her brother's closet as we were putting a table into a storage room beyond, she remembered all the children's books stored on the shelves there.
What book did she want me to read to her? This is a tough question to a child who can't tell what any of the books are about. She can tell thickness and size, but that's about it. Fiction? Non-fiction? Toddler book or a collection of stories to be read to children? She had no idea. She hedged nicely by saying, "I want you to pick."
I called out a few books and then happened upon a rather large book Titled, "Guess How Much I Miss You?" I remembered this book. It was large because there was a recording device in it. Someone could record what each page of the book said and then the child could press play after changing the page and the book would read aloud in the adult's voice the next part of the story.
My mother had recorded this particular book and had put a note to my children at the beginning. Unfortunately, the battery had died after sitting on the shelf for so long. I told my daughter I'd read the book to her now and we'd see if the recording was still there with a new battery later.
I read her the book and described the pictures. It's hard to read a story that is a single poem, divided up into a number of pages. A sighted child will follow along with the pictures while you read the words. I needed to describe what was happening to the bears in the book so my daughter would have a better mental picture of what was going on. Adding extra descriptions doesn't help with the cadence of the poem, but I used different intonations in my voice and tried to make it work.
While I read, she claimed up into the top bunk where my son used to sleep. She curled up and I thought she was asleep when I got done with the second book, coincidentally about the town my parents live in and another gift from them. She was quietly listening though.
I'd forgotten what it was like to read stories to the children, rocking in the rocking chair my mother gave us for their room. Sitting on the cushion she gave us that is more material than a cushion. But it looks nice. Maybe I'll add some stuffing to it and pick back up reading to them at night before bedtime.
The Big Boy Tiny Girl Playing Together Conflict: My son wanted to play with his sister tonight. He was upset because, "she never wants to play with me, she just wants to make the LEGO with dad." I told him she felt a lot the same way about him when all he wanted to do was play Minecraft. She did come up (he refused to play with me, saying it was a special game they had going) and I left to do some work in the basement. My daughter came down crying in just a few minutes. Her brother had moved the coffee table and then (innocently) told her to run around faster to try and find the various things he had placed on the floor (soft items like sofa cushions and pillows—he was thinking about her.) When she had barked her shin on the coffee table, she yelled at him, and then he yelled back, she left and he told her to not come back, he didn't ever want to play with her again. I told her he was upset. He hadn't meant for her to get hurt, but when she yelled at him he reacted badly. I talked to him later and that's exactly what had happened. I had my son run around his laundry basket with his eyes closed as an example. Sometimes we need to see the world the way she does (or in this case doesn't) to understand how we can best keep her safe.
Tuesday, February 2, 2021
Awake and In Trouble
This morning my husband went upstairs to get my son up for school. My daughter, as always, was already up and had made herself breakfast. She was back in her room, thankfully letting us sleep until the alarms went off. When my husband got to my son's room, it was empty. He wasn't there.
Where he was, was asleep on the floor in the basement with an open Sprite can at his computer, popcorn strewed on the floor, and a YouTube video about Minecraft playing on his screen.
He was in trouble. "Big-time" as my mother would say. I heard my husband storming up the stairs with a wailing yet sleepy child preceding him. Screens were removed for the rest of the school week. My son balked and made demands about how he wasn't going to school and he was going to do screens all day (or some other such nonsense) and my husband, who rarely loses his temper, said he lost screens for Saturday. Did he want to go for Sunday?
We sent him off to school and didn't tell his teacher why he might be tired. We decided to let him field this lesson himself. He told me somberly in the car he was going to tell her (at my suggestion) that he hadn't slept well.
I picked him up after school and he was in a chipper mood until I reminded him about the events of the morning. I had talked to my husband in advance about his possibly getting some of the privileges back for the weekend. We both agreed we were okay with that, but only if he changed his attitude. I was playing "good guy" and told my son I thought he might be able to earn some time back, but only if he didn't pester his father—in any way—about screens until the weekend had arrived. Then and only then we could see if his father had changed his mind.
And tonight he complained about being bored only once. He's spent a nice day with his friend outside and then with his sister inside. They are screaming and playing upstairs as I write this.
The Big Boy Tiny Girl Boat Rope Tiedown: My son and daughter pulled out the ropes we used to practice knots before going on our boating adventure and the pommel Richard had made for them to practice on. They were doing complex child bondage experiments gleefully after dinner. When I came downstairs to write this my daughter was sitting quite still while he tied her feet and legs into knots.