I am hot...

it just comes in flashes.

Mind if I Gripe?

Posted By on October 1, 2007

I’m at my wits’ end, and I wish I had some idea what to do. At this rate, there is reason to doubt that our three youngest will live to age 6. This is because three-year-old Hypertot, who is labeled as cognitively delayed, happens, also, to be a genius. Not your ordinary sort of genius, but the mad-scientist-mechanical-engineer sort. And a hyperactive one.

We’ve already given up on every safety device sold at Wal-Mart. He has outsmarted each and every one. He can open latches, unclasp straps, and open doors with doorknob covers effortlessly. He unhooks 6-foot-high eye hooks, removes tiny pins from hasps, and breaks right through locking cabinets, removing the doors from the hinges if necessary. He’s twice removed his bedroom door from the hinges. Childproof lids on medicines and bleach are a joke. The only two things that have ever worked were a backwards doorknob lock, and heavy duty magnetic cabinet locks. The backwards doorknob lock is simple: a regular lockable bedroom doorknob with a lock, the sort you can pick with your fingernail if you know how. He hasn’t yet figured out what we’re doing, but it’s just a matter of time. The magnetic lock is invisible from the outside, and requires a powerful magnet to be applied at the exact right spot to open.

My Charming and Patient Husband must, by now, be losing his patience. Saturday we spent the morning buying safety items at Home Depot. (Magnetic locks for the cabinets and a locking doorknob for the laundry room. The magnetic locks, by the way, are quite costy.) He spent the afternoon installing them, with no small effort. The doorknob was the first simple doorknob installation in this house, because all the doorknobs in the front of the house were a smaller size (older house) and he had to redrill the holes. But the magnetic locks are a bear. They’re worth both the cost and the effort, because everyone says the same thing about them: children who can break through every other safety can’t break through these.

But they don’t have a Hypertot. This afternoon, we discovered a puddle of bleach where he’d poured it out on the kitchen floor, and one-year-old Monkeytot locked under the sink.

Yes, he’s figured out how to open the cupboards with the UNBREAKABLE locks, without using a magnet.

Well, at least it’s been two days since he’s put her in the dryer.

Nice Matters

Posted By on September 30, 2007

Sharon at The Bird’s Nest nominated me for the Nice Matters Award. (Thank you, Sharon. This is the first time I’ve gotten anything like that, and you made my day.) I’m sorry for taking so long to respond; I was afraid that all the people I’d think of would already have gotten nominated, so I procrastinated about posting. Silly me, I finally realized I could just Google people to see if they’d already been recognized.

Here is the description she posted:

Here is what the Nice Matters Award is all about: “This award is for those bloggers who are nice people; good blog friends and those who inspire good feelings and inspiration. Also for those who are a positive influence on our blogging world. Once you’ve been awarded please pass on to seven others whom you feel are deserving of this award.”

I have to say it’s hard to narrow it down to seven people who have had a positive effect, not only on me but on many others. This past year has been such a challenging one, and the warmth I’ve seen in the Blogosphere has really helped me through some hard times. But here, if I must choose seven, is a short list. Know that a number of people I wanted to include already had posted, and I heartily endorse them!

1. Rob at Kyrie Eleison.
His posts inspire me to remember to see the good in the world and the people around me.

2. Julie at Happy Catholic.
She always reminds us all to pray. She is also very good at making people feel that they really matter.

3. Christine, at Ramblings of a Catholic Soccer Mom, and more specifically at Domestic Vocation.
I first started reading her at her Soccer Mom blog. It was one of my first regular reads, and I’ve always enjoyed it. But I can’t even express how much Domestic Vocation has helped me in times of trouble. God finds ways of using Christine’s posts to answer my prayers when I’m in need of guidance. And let’s face it, we all need reminders sometimes of the roles in our lives that are not merely choices but vocations.

4. Rebecca at Just a Little Bit of Something Extra.
She writes about Down Syndrome and a very beautiful little girl. If everyone could see this lovely child and this lovely blog, the world would be embracing children like this instead of fearing the diagnosis.

5. Ms. Kitty at Ms. Kitty’s Saloon and Road Show.
Ms. Kitty continually amazes me; we come from such different perspectives on so many things, yet her insights always inspire me to think more deeply, and she is ever urging all of her readers, myself included, to look within ourselves to see if we are being as kind as we are able. Plus, I happen to know personally, that she’s as genuinely nice in real life as she comes across in her blog. In fact, more so.

6. Stacey at Housewife in Flip Flops (Because “thong” is too controversial a word.)
She very consistently makes me smile. She not infrequently makes me laugh. Out loud. And I tell you, laughing is nice. Very nice.

7. Angelmeg at Transcendental Musings.
She has a way of wrapping faith and her personal humanness together into one package that uplifts others, I suspect, more than she realizes. It is, in my opinion, the most effective kind of testimony, because it is real life, not a formula.

Thank you all, and those who were already nominated by others, for your inspiration.

Note to Hypertot

Posted By on September 30, 2007

I don’t care what Simon says, I am not going to pick my nose.

Start Them Catholics Young

Posted By on September 25, 2007

Hypertot to me:
“I’m going to pray to Mary.”

Hypertot to God:
“God, please make Mary feel better.”

His bus driver, Mary, had a substitute today, and we suspect she was sick.
I’ve really got to work on those prepositions with him.

edit: Silly me, first I should work on my own prepositions. Actual conversation quote now corrected.

Argh!

Posted By on September 25, 2007

Movie piracy, as many newly purchased DVDs will remind us, is a crime. I have no problem with that message; but what really bugs me is when I’ve spent the money and bought the movie, and then I’m forced to sit through the nagging reminder each and every time I view it. You can’t forward past it; and it seems to chew you out, as though you were a criminal. Don’t they get that if you were a movie pirate, you would have edited out the anti-piracy nag? They are, in essence, chewing me out for doing it precisely because I didn’t do it. With that in mind, I really loved this clip.

Time to Heal

Posted By on September 23, 2007

There are some things it’s always time for. Healing and forgiveness in particular.
Today’s first reading told us this:

Hear this, you who trample upon the needy
and destroy the poor of the land!
“When will the new moon be over,” you ask,
“that we may sell our grain,
and the sabbath, that we may display the wheat?
We will diminish the ephah,
add to the shekel,
and fix our scales for cheating!
We will buy the lowly for silver,
and the poor for a pair of sandals;
even the refuse of the wheat we will sell!”
The LORD has sworn by the pride of Jacob:
Never will I forget a thing they have done!

And memories, unhappy ones, came flooding back. I’m not proud to admit that my first thought was “Oh, good. I want justice.”

It was 1997, and I was going through a divorce. I had driven 2,000 miles to get home, in a Geo Metro, with three kids and whatever possessions we could fit in the back of the car. It was a complete leap of faith, because the “home” to which I was returning wasn’t a house or an apartment; it was a state, where my family lived. But I did not have a home waiting. My sister and her husband put us up for as long as they were able, but the price of housing was higher than I’d anticipated, and I couldn’t find any apartment in the county that cost less per month than my welfare income. Child support had not yet been established, I found myself homeless with three young children. Finally, at the last possible moment, I got someone to rent me a house, and although the situation was far from optimal, at least we had a roof over our heads. The downside was that the owner of the house dropped by whenever she wanted, and always brought with her a sense of darkness and fear that I could not dispel. She would criticize me for having food out (“inviting critters”) while we were eating dinner. She judged me harshly for having clothes on the bedroom floor, although she’d neglected to make available the dresser she’d promised. All of this was worth tolerating, though, for a sense of safety for the kids, and a chance to make new beginnings.

Then, after four months, the situation got ugly. The landlord had decided she’d make more money during the summer by renting the house out as a summer cottage for tourists, and she appeared on the last day of the month to tell me I had to be out by the following day. What could I do? I started packing. By this time, we had a lot of stuff, because my ex had mailed package after package to me in an attempt to prove good will. I had also just done my monthly grocery shopping, and filled the refrigerator with the last of my month’s food stamps.

I rented a storage unit, and a friend rented a U-Haul trailer to bring my things there, but it would take two trips because we’d gotten the smallest trailer. On the way out, I ran into the landlord, and warned her that I had cancelled two of the checks that were awaiting her in her post office box: I had cancelled the check for next month’s rent, since I would not be there, and I had cancelled this month’s check which she had not yet cashed, because I had paid first, last, and deposit when I moved in, so she had already been paid for this month. Obviously, I was going to need that money to get a new place.

She accused me of “pulling a stunt” and got very angry. Evidently she had counted on having an extra two months of rent from me. When I returned to collect the rest of my things, she had changed the lock. Eventually she toted about half of my remaining things to my sister’s house and dumped them on the lawn. She kept the most expensive items, though, and literally all of the food. I was now without food for the next month, with no place to live, and with threats of legal action against me. All of this with no warning at all.

Things eventually worked out. We got a one time “homeless benefit” from the state which helped us pay for a motel and helped us with move in costs when I finally found a low cost apartment in another county. My mother and sister helped out with meals until the next food stamps arrived; and we eventually ended up in a secure and attractive apartment that, miraculously, cost an amount I could barely afford. But in these ten years I’ve still found it difficult to forgive someone who put us on the street and stole from us while we were homeless. I got over the loss of the Revereware that had been a wedding present pretty quickly, but the loss of the lifelong collection of family photos was a lot harder to forget. Greed I can understand; but stealing the food from the mouths of small children is much harder to understand. The maliciousness that inspires the destruction of someone’s childhood memories cannot even be explained by the desire for personal gain.

I hope you’ll pardon me for my relapse here. I needed to unburden myself of this story for what I hope will be the last time. These, though, are the memories that flooded back as I heard today’s first reading.

Then the choir began.
If today, if today you hear the voice of God, open up your heart and listen to his Word.
If today, if today you hear the voice of God, harden not your hearts, harden not your hearts.

And I knew. He wants us not to harden our hearts. He wants me not to harden my heart. Not just to Him, but to anyone. It is time to forgive, and to let go of the hurt and anger from all those years ago. I doubt I will ever see this person again in this world, and it is time to stop hoping not to see her in the next.

I have all I need, praise God. I have the love of an amazing man and an amazing family. What ingratitude to allow a loss ten years ago to make me think any less of this beautiful life God has given me.

Review of "Good Luck Chuck"

Posted By on September 23, 2007

Don’t. Just don’t.

When Did Will Smith Learn to Act?

Posted By on September 17, 2007

My kids and I just saw Pursuit of Happyness (yes, that’s how it’s spelled)the day before yesterday, and now Joel is halfway through it, with me rewatching it. I have to say I think it’s one of the finest pieces of drama I’ve seen. Spoiler alert: I’m not going to tell you how it ends or anything, but there are some themes in it that I can’t ignore.

Some of the themes that are very touchingly and honestly portrayed are single parenthood, work ethic, and homelessness. Having been a single parent, and having been homeless, I was truly impressed by how well both are expressed. Being married to a man with a very strong work ethic, I appreciated how positively the movie presented this never-say-die attitude.

Another thing that I thought the movie got across extremely well is the importance of mutual support in a marriage. When spouses stop acting like they are on the same time team, they can only survive if external forces cooperate, filling in the gaps in the couple’s relationship. If external forces do not cooperate, there is no strength to draw upon. Where is a husband’s strength but in his wife, and where is a wife’s strength but in her husband?

The language is pretty clean, the morals are consistently good. There is one scene where the main character does something wrong and apologizes the whole time, because he has no alternative, but that’s about as immoral as it gets. It is a heavy movie, though, and I’d exercise caution about showing it to anyone under, say, 10 or 11. And by the way, if you look at the credits you’ll find that the boy who plays Will Smith’s son in the movie is his son in real life; and boy, can this kid act! So, for that matter, can his dad. I never would have expected such depth from the Fresh Prince. I highly recommend the movie.

Put down your coffee if you value your nose.

Posted By on September 10, 2007

Thanks to Therese at Aussie Coffee Shop for this one.
(And by the way, if you haven’t checked out her blog yet, do. She’s utterly charming.)

Classical Education Theory and The Well-Trained Mind

Posted By on September 10, 2007

Robin at Heart of Wisdom made a good point. In the comments, she referred to her post on the subject of classical education, which discusses some criticisms that I believe are worthy of consideration. Chiefly, she criticizes an emphasis on the Greek and Roman classics, which tend to focus on mythology, philosophy, and a very humanistic approach to wisdom.

I have to agree with her that an approach that glorifies Greek and Roman thought may well have its spiritual dangers, and at the very least can detract from our time spent studying the great wealth of literature that either directly or indirectly presents us with the beauty and wisdom of Christian truth. I would go so far as to add that the glorification of ancient civilizations and their thought can also rob us of the opportunity to read many of the great later works that, although they may not address Christianity in any direct way, do lead us to analyze, support, or challenge more modern societal trends. I would hate to think of a reader getting so caught up in a twelve year Roman and Greek study that they never get to know Jane Eyre or Huck Finn.

What I want to point out is that I share a certain discomfort with the idea of an ancient, pre-Christian focused education; and this is precisely the reason I love The Well Trained Mind. In all of my previous exposure to classical education, I’ve seen reading lists that cover Homer and Plato ad nauseum, but never allow a child to move toward the pinnacle of wisdom, Christian teaching and literature, and the society that has grown out of it. The Well Trained Mind is the first introduction of classical education I’ve seen that took the ideas of classical education and moved beyond the study of Greek and Rome. It is one of the first popular works that stresses the method over the assumption.

The assumption is that classical education is about classical civilization, and that nothing less than 3,000 years old has anything to teach us. The method, rather, is about the learning and developmental stages that a child goes through when learning all about the world and civilization, not merely the origins of so-called “Western Civilization.” When done properly, classical education does not rest on the laurels of the Greeks. It seeks to give as complete a historical education as possible, so that children can learn not only the events of history, but the context of those events, in their chronological time. It is this extensive historical examination that forms the foundation of the concept of classical education as presented by the authors of The Well Trained Mind. To focus on just the Roman and Greek civilizations is to miss the entire point.

The method is a theory of the development of the child’s mind, based on solid observation. Yes, it was inspired by the trivium of ancient learning; but the ideas will ring true to any genuine observer of childhood. In the grammar years, children love to learn. They learn by music, by memorization, by play; most of all, they soak up information like little sponges. As they move into the middle years, both their abilities and their interests change. Now they want to understand what they’ve learned. No longer are they delighted to memorize; they want to satisfy their curiosity. They no longer want just to learn: they want to learn about. By the time they reach the high school years, they are ready to learn to think like adults: to take what they’ve learned, and come to understand, and discover how to analyze it for a greater depth of understanding. It is time to learn to put even their most complex learning to real use in life, applying their own interests, theories, and applications to discover a newfound relevance to what they learn.

As you see, in this model of education, the content includes all of history, and the method seeks to place the knowledge into a format that is right for the child’s age. In The Well Trained Mind‘s model of education, the child is not instructed to stagnate with twelve years of Virgil and Sophocles, but is required to study as much of history as time will allow. Although the classical period is included, it is only a part of ancient history, which also includes the Old Testament, the ancient Orient, the Native Americans, and the early Church. The goal is not to glorify the Greeks, but to give a child an idea of where all of mankind stood during a particular period of history. With this background, the child is far better able to understand the significance of the events that follow, because they have a context. What did it really mean to mankind when Christianity was legalized under Constantine? The student who understands what Pagan Rome was like has a far greater comprehension of the significance of such a tremendous event.

I want to thank Robin again for bringing this subject up. I think that as Christians who also work to be well-educated, it can be easy to fall into the trap of trendiness, and of reaching for an education that seeks to impress, rather than seeking to help us grow as people and as Christians. This is a good time for all of us to ask ourselves what we are doing to enrich whatever gifts God has blessed us with. The things I do to grow, or to help my children grow, are they for God’s glory or for ours?