The date I tentatively expected to wrap up my Facebook fast has come and gone. A funny thing has happened this time. I am in no hurry to rejoin the conversation, which does not appear to have become less abrasive nor more edifying in the time that has passed. Perhaps it isn't quite accurate to say I am 'away' since I still pop over to share something in our little family group or to leave a birthday wish. There was an actual feeling of withdrawal when I first deleted the app. The same thoughts flitted through my head as I have heard so many others voice:
How will I keep up with the news?
Who will I talk to? (bigger question if you are home based)
What about morale? Stimulation? Rapport?
Well, the best way to find out is to just press on. Worse case scenario you just jump back in.
What have I noticed? First, it's true. You'll be out of the loop. I was already pretty close to the edge anyway lol. You won't hear about who did what – either on your small screen or on the big ones – until it is old news. Or maybe not at all. It is true that if you turn off the TV (which happened years ago) and you also sign off social media you will have to make a concerted effort to follow the news. Or maybe you will go whole days without following it. You might forget to be upset about things you can do absolutely nothing about. If you have an engaged circle of curious and thoughtful people around you, however, you will be hard pressed not to be abreast of the breaking news and can readily investigate whatever seems to require your attention.
Will your world then go silent? On the contrary. I have enjoyed some wonderful private conversations the past several weeks. While the Facebook feed has been increasingly draining, the Facebook messenger app has been such a blessing.
Did I get bored? Oh my word, no. We have had such successful school days, days so full we have a backlog of home/art/food/book/music ideas. Even with those hours reclaimed from social media there is still not enough time in each day to do all we would like. There is more than there was, though. More importantly, each activity is leaving me energized and motivated to do other interesting things. As a friend said, we do math (and all the other challenging tasks we do here) because there are solutions to those problems. Few things boost morale like actually solving problems, even if they are small.
Some of the online time I had has been rerouted to reading longer articles and revisiting favorite blogs. It turns out many of us have come to that same conclusions. Slow reading and slow writing, as my friend Susan says. (Consider replacing some random scrolling with one of Susan's essays. It is SO good to have her back.)
I have gathered up a few of the articles about all this:
These are a smattering of the notebook pages the kids have created this month. Not perfect, but perfectly delightful to me.
So one of my favorite lessons grew out of our recent thrift store find of Classic Poems to Read Aloud. We memorized All Things Bright and Beautiful last week. It was actually memorized in a matter of hours once I bought packs of gum as a reward. I am nothing if not pragmatic, y'all. So after that I had pulled out Hillaire Belloc's Mathilda for a hilarious contrast. They thought it was a little gross and creepy so we discussed satire, parody, and cautionary tales. They recorded the definitions and we found the rest of his tales here. Each picked out one to record in their notebooks. They still they are gross and creepy and I am still amused.
Some math pages:
We print out the free puzzles of the week for each grade level from Critical Thinking Press. I truly believe that never before has critical thinking been more………critical. These puzzles sometimes hurt my brain but they get everyone talking and working together, especially this week when they DID NOT INCLUDE A SOLUTION. Don't worry. I'm not bitter or anything. We are just still hashing this one out. Go ahead. Download. Then tell us who you think stole the headphones 'k?
And some random real life practice finding nouns in a magazine article. It is often easy to figure out a pattern in a language exercise book. Then they are at a loss when faced with actual text someplace else. This practice got us discussing abstract nouns since the mid elementary student who underlined in blue found most of the concrete things quickly, but missed the abstract – which is totally age appropriate per the whole Trivium age group delineations. This was a quick game and isn't perfectly checked either btw. There are more anchor charts and grammar pages to help springboard discussion over on my pinterest board here.
This next page just makes me laugh. Every time. (yes, I know it is misspelled)
Your life lesson of the day is right there. That "slightly downhill' part? It's a concept to live by if ever there was one hahaha! Working hard on that over here. Just gonna leave that there and wrap up now lol.
“That old September feeling, left over from school days, of summer passing, vacation nearly done, obligations gathering, books and football in the air … Another fall, another turned page: there was something of jubilee in that annual autumnal beginning, as if last year's mistakes had been wiped clean by summer.” – Wallace Stegner, Angle of Repose
I began to put out the autumn decor a bit prematurely, when we cleaned the storage room after the fire evacuation. It was still in the 90's then. It was a few weeks before that I snapped this photo of the baby acorns. Then, very suddenly, last weekend, it became fall. Autumn, when it came, descended very definitely and without hesitation. It is now chilly, cold actually. We are scrambling to find our sweaters and socks after a summer in sandals.
It is sort of wonderful, this new season. A time of gathering – new titles to explore, (see above) new texts begun, new seasonal recipes, the promise of Christmas at the end of this glorious indulgent semester. My favorite time of all is autumn. So full of promise. Perhaps because my life has long revolved around the academic year, September is our new year.
Exactly halfway through the 1990's a young woman found herself transplanted to Texas from the midwestern state that had been home to her young and growing family for seven of nine years of married life. She had a new baby. Her husband had a new degree and a new job. Together they also had three rambunctious little boys who had been born within 47mo of each other. And an aging cat. And a new puppy – because just what you need in such a situation is another incontinent, unpredictable creature or two added to the mix. She was working very hard to keep all her plates spinning but you could say there was some china breakage going on.
Down the street there was another family of four, a few years older, who had befriended them. Their simply furnished, spacious home was positive, upbeat. It was the sort of place you could sit back and take a deep breath. Unpretentious. Welcoming. Non-judgemental.
Those little boys kept that momma on her toes….and on her knees. Their dad worked long hours and there was a baby to care for, a puppy to housebreak, boxes to unpack. So many boxes. Things occasionally got the best of her.
There was one particular day when one errant little man was scolded and sent inside much to this momma's embarassment. The neighbor mom down the street knew all her frustration without having to be told. She had been there too. Without elaborating or getting preachy she offered a few words that stuck:
"You know, what helps most is trying to remember we are a team."
This was the 90's. We had just begun seeing some offices hanging posters of sweeping landscapes with inspirational sayings like, "Together Each Achieves More" and "There is No I in Team" There was no Pinterest yet and pithy slogans still made you stop and think.
Those little boys and the children who came along after them played basketball and football and later soccer every year, often with their dad coaching. Sports analogies were relatable. Long after the sayings got overused and tired, one or another – often the momma and later the others – would exhort the rest by saying, "same team." That became a code to remind everyone that we were not just a chaotic mass of competing goals and desires. We were supposed to be playing on the same side, even when it didn't feel that way. Let's be honest. It doesn't always feel that way. A mother can look at a naughty child, a husband can look at a wife, a brother can look at his siblings and any of them can begin to feel locked in battle of wills against instead of with those humans.
It's been a lot of years since I was that young woman. My plates spin a little better today, but I keep a broom and dustpan handy just in case. I look at those boys all grown up with so much gratitude. I see the younger sisters and brothers who followed. I see a marriage that has been up and down and all over the map. Somewhere along the line those cheesy sayings stuck. No matter how frustrated we get at times there is a sense deep down that we are a team. We have deeply held opinions and incredibly unique and different temperaments but we have a shared goal – to thrive and grow together. No matter how we have sometimes upset or disappointed each other, so far that goal has trumped the rest.
It is clear when I see older brothers pacing the sidelines. You hear it when one mentions something another one said about a topic in question. We read books and watch programs because one of us has insisted the others simply MUST. Then we compare notes and debate endlessly. There is shared applause when someone goes big – a wedding, a graduation, a relocation, a promotion. There is hushed solidarity and earnest prayers over infertility, relationship woes, miscarriage, job or finance trouble. And we have had all those things. The victories are better together, however, and the valleys a little less lonely when you have someone willing to come up alongside and navigate them with you.
Do we always perform ideally? Are we perpetually good sports? Not by a long shot. It is at those times we have to dig deep though and remind ourselves we are not a collection of random individuals, fiercely protecting our own agendas. We are a team, the best sort of team, and we need to act that way. Sooner or later we tend to come around. We back down from unsustainable positions, we soothe over misunderstandings, we forgive. It is hard, hard work. To me though, this is winning.
Our first "official" field trip of the new school year was to the television and radio stations in Salt Lake City. This ended up being a very cool day. Even if it involved driving to the city. And parking there.
Still…..there was the peacock!
the lifestyle program sets….
They were on the radio briefly….
and the noon news broadcast…
Can I just say that was a LOT of trust to place in a group of school aged children but they didn't make a peep.
Saw newsie stuff…
And in general had a grand time. We followed up by getting lunch for our bunch in town. Here's to getting out there!
People talk about it hypothetically – the things you'd grab in a fire. For most of us that remains an intellectual exercise, the kind of thing you muse over when you are feeling particularly introspective. It became a very real and concrete discernment for our family this week.
We often sleep with our upstairs bedroom windows open when we can catch a breeze on summer nights. We opened them wide and fell into bed Monday night. We had been on the go all weekend, staying up late and busy each day. A good night's sleep seemed promising as the wind picked up some. Before long however the canyon gusts began to howl, forcing my husband to go down and secure the patio furniture. The ruckus outside kept us sleeping with one eye open.
When morning finally came we hit the lights and noticed they were dim. We were groggy from the restless night and started to explore other rooms to see what was happening. Every fixture was at half strength. We were beginning to gather in the kitchen sorting things out when the power cut entirely. This has happened before during windstorms, annoying, but temporary. My husband opened the laptop to check our power company website to get an idea of the scope. I was kicking myself for not having powered down my computer the night before.
We started to make adjustments to our morning routine to get ready without electricity. I was lighting the stove manually and trying to get some coffee figured out when my husband called me outside. "Doesn't that look like smoke moving in?" Well, it did. But in the West there are often hazy skies when the wind picks up. It carries in smoke from distant fires. During dry seasons it sometimes kicks up a lot of loose surface dirt into the air. When you live with a military man you learn to consider all the logical explanations and most importantly you don't panic. So I didn't.
A few minutes later he had checked the front of the house. "It's definitely smoke over in the canyon," was his first thought. "It's probably not as close as it looks," was the next. I walked to a higher window while he went down the culdesac. It was in fact as close as it looked. But I was still not supposed to panic. We heard sirens. They probably had it under control. Might be a house fire which the wind was aggravating.
While we reassured ourselves with that thought there was a knock at the door. At that point my stomach gave a lurch. A runner was out early morning and said there was a fire spreading up the mountain and while there was no official emergency response in the neighborhood yet he was waking everyone up and spreading word.
"Should I start to pack things?" No, my husband said. He would go investigate. I got up the rest of the children however and had everyone dress and find shoes while he went to talk to the neighbors again. He came back shaken up. The fire was spreading rapidly given the high winds. We should stay calm, but begin to start moving essential items "just in case." I grabbed the important paperwork from the safe. Then started to unplug hard drives and put photo albums into boxes. He didn't return but the children were watching over the ridge out back and bringing back all sorts of bad news. A house had caught fire and had burnt before their eyes. The church was filling with cars.
I brought the little girls up to the house. Our incredible view was turning into a horror show and it was too much for them. The dogs were also getting frantic with the smoke. We kenneled the little dogs and stuck the kennel in the truck. Husband came in and said fire crews were working their way up the hill and we should seriously gather anything else we needed. Abbie Rose clutched her bear and held tight to Archie's leash while her eyes began to well up. Tess was working very admirably to be "big" and not freaked out. The others were silently packing their bags.
I made another round through the house. The problem with filling a home with only things that have personal value to you is that everything then feels important. I looked at the walls, the drawers, the counters, filled with items which were used by my grandparents, my mother, my inlaws. Things my children grew up with. Things my husband and I grew up with. Things we bought at different duty stations. It all meant something but it could not all go. I made some quick decisions about what precious items could fit in the cars.
The next thing we knew there were bull horns outside and another knock. Evacuate. We had a little bit of time but we should start heading out. We stopped for a moment and reached for a holy card a priest had given us earlier this year. Pestilence and…fire? We repeated the words of the prayer and put the children in the cars. Four cars, six kids, three dogs, a cuckoo clock, our crucifixes, several hardrives, and countless albums. Then my husband and I walked back in. We each took a jar of holy water and went to opposite ends of the house sprinkling each room. I set the holy card down, crossed myself, and we looked around one last time, making peace with whatever we might return to.
We all drove off together and traveled to a grocery store parking lot where we stood stunned as the cloud grew behind us. What should we do? Where should we go? That question was answered when old friends called and said to go to their house to wait. With lunch in tow we detoured around the road closures over to their place, got the children settled in the basement away from windows to play pool, and the older set of us watched our mountain burn from their deck. We would see smoke die down only to reappear in another spot or a huge burst of black billow up as a building was struck. The ebb and flow was wrenching.
We started calling around for hotel rooms when finally the fire crews began to get the blaze out of the residential areas. In time a few streets were permitted to return. Ours was one of those. We were lucky. Many did not go back for days. Six families have no homes to return to. And of course we know how truly fortunate we are to be in the midst of an isolated tragedy of relatively limited scope in comparison to the devastation happening around the country. Should the worst have hit we have insurance which wouldn't replace the memories but would have prevented homelessness for us. Many worldwide are not so lucky.
In the end we were spared the worst case scenario. We left our things near the door in the event the fire once again expanded with the expected coming wind. It did not come however. The air and ground crews have worked every day since. We watch them with gratitude and awe. We also look at our neighbors with similar respect and thankfulness. They were clearheaded and pulled together. Before we all left people were opening their swimming pools. Helicopters used them to refill water buckets to battle the blaze. It was incredible to see everyone pull together.
It is hazy in the evenings and, although the ground is charred in places, it is still a wonderful place. We are grateful to be at home with our familiar things in place. They are held loosely though. At some point all of us will be required to let them go – maybe sooner, maybe later. We aren't taking any of it with us either way. So we are catching our breath and hopefully taking a quiet weekend to put it all in its place again, gratefully, and focusing once more on what really matters – those people who traveled out of this neighborhood with us. Together we pray for those who are or soon will be facing their own worst fears as storms rage this weekend and earthquakes shake the ground. It's all so fragile. And its probably important we never forget that.
Tess took her first sewing class away from home this month. She made a notebook cover with pockets and ribbon tie. Her overall impression was that there was a lot of pinning, cutting, and ironing involved and it was worth it.
Following this success she and her little sister are enrolling in the full semester course starting soon. It is so very exciting for me to see which directions each child goes creatively and to be able to accompany them on their way.