Bouncing Into 2012

In the great cycle of holiday rotation it was our turn to host Christmas, which was good considering the fact that this year the whole extended family went in together to purchase the kids a trampoline. Now, we have hauled an amazing amount of things back and forth across this great state, but I think strapping a 14-foot trampoline atop the vehicle would have put us in an entirely new category of questionable decision-making. Alas, it was a huge hit and continues to be the place the kids run to directly after school. On a related note, every muscle in my body has filed official complaint with the trampoline company.

Steve’s birthday was a great success and his new race-car grill (also a gift from the entire family) was used in the making of this year’s birthday dinner selection of wings and burgers. The Haws and Bakers joined us, the kids ran amok, and once everyone said their good-byes and went home to tend to their own Christmas Eve preparations, the men at 111 set about assembling the trampoline. Wagers were being placed on how long it would take and how many injuries would ensue, however Steve was bouncing on it within an hour and a half. They were justifiably smug about their accomplishment.

I was beyond bad at taking photos this year, but thankfully my parents decided to purchase themselves a new digital SLR as an early Christmas present, and my mom did an excellent job of taking up the slack. I put together a very quick slideshow (my criteria was to constrain the selections to what could fit within one song). If you are interested in all of the gory details, you can find complete sets over on Flickr.

May this be the last Christmas song you have to hear for the next 11 months….

Happy 8th Birthday, Stella!

Dear Stelly,

Happy New Year! Happy Birthday!….a month late.

Why so late this year? Well, partially it has to do with the fact that within a period of 4 weeks our family pulled off two major holidays, a dance recital and two birthday parties. It’s like somehow our entire year’s activities get squished into the end. But, if you want the real truth about why this has dragged out so long, it’s that these posts are just getting harder and harder to write. You are more grown up than ever, and it is difficult for me to find the balance between enough and too much when it comes to sharing details of your life. On the Internet. Where growing populations of your peers are surfing the Internet from their phones.

Kiddo, this is your life, and you should be the one who gets to decide how much of it you want shared with the world. And man oh man were there some hum-dingers in there this year. But, I’ll just do my best to hang on to those for a more private time. Like when your first date comes to pick you up. For now, I’ll stick to the basics.

LOL, OMG, Totes, J/K!!

So, it seemingly took you somewhere between 15 and 20 years for you to get ready this morning. Those 6 different pairs of earrings weren’t going to try on themselves! Then, after fidgeting with your hair, and trying on three different pieces of outerwear, you stomped out to the bus stop at the 11th hour half sighing, half whining that your boots TOTALLY didn’t work with this outfit.

Your musical tastes have, thankfully, evolved along family lines. You listen to (and enjoy) a little bit of everything. Unfortunately, “little bit of everything” also includes things like Katy Perry, The Biebs and pretty much everything on the local top 40 station. And, like every child who has come before you, repetition and volume know no limits.

We have officially landed on the planet Tween – a trip I thought was going to take a couple more years. Apparently, not so much.

War and Peace by Age 9

I have mentioned more than once that you eat books for dinner. And lunch. And Breakfast. And snack on magazines. To say you are an avid reader is like saying The Beatles were this sorta popular group in the ’60s. It would take an entire bag of exclamation points and underscores to really make the point any more clear. For Christmas this year, your grandparents got you a box of books. Yes, a BOX. And no you didn’t roll your eyes or yell “Next!”. You squealed with delight. I know this will seem completely backward and make no sense, but many of our arguments are about the fact that I am constantly asking you to “PUT THE BOOK DOWN and [insert desired activity here].” And, although you have a library that rivals the county archive, I do appreciate the fact that you consume books for enjoyment and not for sport. You reread books all the time, and dive wholeheartedly into the stories and lives on those pages.

True story: One day last fall, after a flaring of tempers, you stormed off in a fit of tears. It was only later that evening as you and I were walking the dog that you told me that you had gathered up a flashlight and an apple, and had hiked across the street to the horse pasture, where you had secured a secret spot under the trees and planned to spend the night. As you shared with me the details of your plan and showed me your spot, you explained that part of the plan was getting away because you were mad, but mostly, you just wanted to have an adventure like Henry, Jessie, Violet, and Benny (The Boxcar Children). In the most honest and sincere voice I have ever heard, you explained in great detail how much you loved that they were always having adventures and how they were always helping people. I think it ranks in the top 5 of the sweetest moments I can remember. And, it is this story I will flash to when you announce you are joining the Peace Corps.

Someone Has Found Her Holy Grail

Summer Vacation 2011

Ivanhoe Summer 2011

Reading...again

Stella, Reader

Stella's 8th Birthday

Box 'O Books

Oscar & Felix and their other brother Felix

You and your brother. Hm. No delicate way to launch into this one. You two are the Odd Couple. I’ll leave it up to you to figure out which one you are. To be fair though, our whole house is kind of a study in contrasts. There are many jokes that have swirled around over the past year about how we should be renamed The Lastwordigans, or the Loudersons, or The-Always-Have-to-Be-Right-Even-When-I’m-Clearly-Wrong-smiths. No one in this family is shy about voicing their opinion. Or controls the volume at which they do it. Let’s just say that when it comes to the roles in this family, the concrete has set. And as fate would have it, there is definitely some alignment of personalities from parent to child going on. In one corner we have your father and your brother. Their corner is a series of piles of stuff and things and more stuff and it is organized in a methodical fashion that we are prohibited from touching because of its supreme importance. In the other corner is you, although we can’t see you because you are buried under a chaotic pile of everything you own, and you are probably reading a book. I am somewhere in the middle shaking my head at the lot of you, making a sarcastic remark and pouring another glass of wine.

Here is a set of photos I took during Christmas dinner this year:

You look like you extracted your crab by haphazardly smashing it repeatedly with a hammer, with speed-metal playing in the background.

A Scene In Opposites

Your father, on the other hand, looks like he used a scalpel and forceps, while a nice Beethoven concerto wafted through the air.

A Scene In Opposites

Oscar, meet Felix. You’re both crazy.

The Quilts

We completed a complete full cycle of “firsts” without your Uncle Scott this year. Each holiday and birthday and anniversary of this or that was insanely tough, and will no doubt continue to be. It is amazing how this grief cycle works. For weeks, we are fine, then either your Dad or I will have an odd day, or an especially vivid dream, and we feel like it all just happened. This year, your Grandma Judy embarked on the emotional journey of making a quilt for each of you out of Uncle Scott’s shirts and jeans. In addition to the quilts, she built a book that compiled the quilt-making process from beginning to end. I can think of no better way for the two of you to keep him close as the years inevitably whittle at your memories.

Quilts

Quilts

Family is family, is family, is us

I think it is important to point out that the 4 of us have really come a long way over the last year or two. We are figuring each other out, and exercising a lot more understanding for the idiosyncrasies and quirks that we all bring to the table. I have watched you do some pretty amazing things when it comes to understanding your brother’s intensity or the needs of your friends. Or even the needs of others, for that matter. In lieu of birthday gifts, you asked all your friends to bring food that you could donate to the food bank. Pretty awesome, Stel.

You are so very different from your brother, which has made it more challenging for me to be sure I am giving you both what you need, as opposed to giving you what it appears you need. Your brother wears his needs on his sleeve, whereas yours are a little more buried. I find that I often overlook them because I don’t see them. But that is something I am working on – trying to be more patient with you, when you are not yourself. You’re tough and resilient, which often masks the fact that you are also vulnerable and sensitive. You will always be the older sibling, and I will always have expectations of you that seem unfair. But that is our lot in life, us older siblings – I know, I’m one too.

So Happy Birthday my goofy, creative, outgoing and intelligent daughter. I know I say it every year, but you’re one-of-a-kind, and I wouldn’t have it any other way.

Love,
Mom

Stella

Xmas Tree Gathering

Girl with Pumpkin

2nd Game, Soccer 2011

First Day of 3rd Grade

WonderTwin Powers, form of a Pink Highlighter!

Big Bang

Buckethead

Avec Parapluie

Stella

Top 'O Tollhouse

Beachy Stelly

Skyward

Stella

Please sign here, here and here. Oh, and initial here.

Somewhere along the line, our renovations here at 111 took a very odd turn. We started so simple. From the wood-floor-over-wood-floor exercise to The Great Berry Abatement of ’07, and the gargantuan 2-piece built-in, plus the infamous Man-Shed, but that was not to be outdone by the Passion Vine & Cup ‘o Java Facelift. And on and on the list went. But then. Then came the Militia-Styled Turret, and the Ladder of Peril. Add this to the pre-existing concrete trip-hazard – otherwise known as our front steps – and you can see why we are going to hand all guests who enter our property a helmet and a liability waiver.

First, a little more background on our newest additions. We had earnest and thoughtful ideas when these more recent projects began. Honest, we did! The main motivation being that we wanted to expand the access to our topographically diverse property. Except that more times than not, when Steve – someone who terms his planning process as “organic” – begins work, you end up with the kind of projects that give building inspectors migraines.

So, first came phase I of what Steve has coined The Skywalk. It all started when we were in the midst some routine tree thinning. At some point after almost taking out a window in The Man-Shed, but before fully removing one of the trunks, I actually saw a lightbulb appear above Steve’s head – never a good sign. Next thing I knew it was a harried scrabble of wood and saws and tree logs and we ended up with this:

The turret

It’s about this time when I started writing the first draft of the liability waiver.

From there it has been this odd evolution of fits and starts that make no discernible sense to anyone other than Steve. Somewhere along the line I finally put my foot down and demanded he build railing on all the outcroppings and bridges-to-nowhere.

Skywalk

Let’s take a little tour, shall we?

First you encounter a haphazard set of steps that are only accessible to people under 5 feet tall (otherwise you smack your head on the turret platform.)

Skywalk

If you pay particular attention to the steps you notice that they are hanging onto the hillside with invisible tape.

Skywalk

Once you have successfully made it past danger level 1, you are ready for your grappling hooks.

Skywalk

From here you have to maneuver your way up through the ivy. I don’t know about you, but the thought of walking through something where you can’t quite see your feet is more than a little unnerving – not to mention it is uneven and steep. Bon Voyage!

Skywalk

Okay, so we have made it past the stairs of doom and the ivy incline, dodged the deer poop and have arrived at the rickety gangplank! Yay!

Skywalk

Skywalk

The “railings” (and yes that word is in quotes on purpose) are made up of various tree-cuttings that are screwed to the gangplank. He may has well have used popsicle sticks and thumbtacks.

Assuming you have made it down the gangplank (and didn’t fall headfirst into the ivy), you have now reached the genesis of this entire project: what I now refer to as The Turret (see photo #1). Take a moment to marvel in its wonder. And take note that if you wiggle your feet back and forth, it no longer wiggles with you. (You’re welcome.)

Skywalk

Oh, but you are not done! There is still more! Now you get to travel the most prized wing of the Skywalk. The bridge-to-nowhere-with-railing-only-down-one-side. I KNOW! Those poor folks who had to turn back at the stairs because they gave themselves a concussion – they will never experience this joy.

Skywalk

Skywalk

Sadly, that concludes our guided tour of the Skywalk. But don’t despair, there are more inexplicable and dangerous renovations and add-ons in our future. If Steve gets his way, there will be some sort of death-trapeeze between here and the big apple tree – or what I will affectionately refer to as Clause 3.7.

Please exit the way you came, or just jump off the end and scale your way back down the hill, making sure to avoid the hornet’s nest by the big Rhododendron. For the rest of you, shall we go visit the newly installed Ladder of Peril? Then follow me!

Forest

Forest

Forest

Forest

Forest

Forest

Forest

Annnnnnd, we’re here!

Forest

Take note that Stella voluntarily opted to wear her bike helmet…

Forest

This is the property directly abutting the back edge of our property. We have co-opted it as our own and have now become brazen enough to actually begin renovating. We have built trails and cleared brush, and then there is The Tree. We have always referred to as the Elephant Tree, and lore has it that it has been this way forever. From what the neighbors tell us, the kids that lived in this house 40 years ago used to play in it, and there are even old remnants of perches and pulleys. And now it has a ladder (aka Clause 3.8).

It is quite amazing how even though nestled back in the forest, from this vantage point you still have a filtered view of civilization.

Forest

Forest

Well folks, I guess that concludes our tour for today. I hope you have enjoyed yourself. Oh, and on your way out be sure not to miss the cow/deer/horse/dino (coworsdino) skeleton we have assembled from our various forest excursions! It’s a must-see!

Dow, Ceer, Cow-Deer, Or Maybe A Horse?

And feel free to drop your helmet by the gate as you exit!

Leaving the Nest

So it started with Kindergarten orientation – no, wait – make that soccer – no, no, no back that train up. Make that day camp. Day Camp is when we started seeing the writing on the wall. The writing that said “Oh Here Go Hell Come”.

The last couple weeks with Little P have broken down like this:

Day Camp:
1st week number of days signed up = 4
1st week number of days actually attended = 2
Through some miracle of I-don’t-know-what, we seemed to figure out just the right combination of clicks, whistles and twirls that got us through the remaining weeks without incident.

Soccer:
Number of practices attended = 2
Number of practices participated in = 0
Number of games = 1
Number of games participated in = 0
Number of times the uniform has been on his person = 0

Current Theory: He may have more of a future as the team photographer.

Team Photographer

Team Photographer

Kindergarten Orientation:
Number of minutes it took to put on the nametag = 20
Number of pictures the teacher’s aid was allowed to take of him for the bulletin board = 0
Number of pictures I had to take of him for the bulletin board = 1
Number of times he was more than 6 inches from my body = 1

Here is the singular photo I was able to take of him while attending orientation (it was the only time he was far enough away from me that I could actually focus the camera to get a shot):

Kindergarten Orientation

First Day of Kindergarten:
Number of times we barely averted chaos before leaving the house = 2
Number of hours I anticipated being late to work = 2
Number of times I expected to receive a phone call once at work = 5
BUT…..
Number of minutes it took to put on the nametag = .0025!!!
Number of whines and/or leg clings = 0!!!
Number of photos taken = 11!!!
Number of hugs/kisses/waves goodbye = 1, 1 & 3!!! (respectively)
Number of phone calls to work = 0!!!
Number of tears shed (by either of us) = 0!!! [I felt so much relief and joy that I was, literally, unable to feel sad or sentimental.]

And as for that other girl of ours, well 3rd graders tolerate their mothers for about 5-7 minutes before giving them the side-eye and telling them to move along already. At least that is my first-hand experience.

And so there I was – watching the one who I had to gently scoot from the nest and the other who bolted at a dead run. I can’t help but wonder if this is how it will always be.

First Day of Kindergarten & 3rd Grade
(click the photo to see the entire set)