Brave Ninjas

I am so proud of these two tonight!  They were so excited to go to their first karate lesson today.  The timing worked out such that we went to a 6pm class, which we won’t do often because that’s just too late for this family.  However, they were amazing!  Lex got a little nervous before we left and started saying he didn’t want to go, but we chatted and he remembered that he loved it on Monday, so he decided to try it again tonight.  When we got there they changed and walked right out on the floor with the rest of the group.  There were so many kids, yet Lex and Eve did wonderfully

IMG_0927

IMG_0929

IMG_0930

IMG_0932

IMG_0936

The teachers were patient and kind. The kids made mistakes, got a little lost, laughed and loved it!

Bursitis

We are past cute updates on little kid doctor visits and apparently moving on to old lady doctor visits.  :(  I have been in pain for a week and a half.  My knee started off with discomfort, but moved quickly to outright pain.  I tried exercising (first time in awhile!), icing, compression, etc, but nothing worked, so finally today I tried the doctor.  I woke up at 4am this morning in so much pain I couldn’t go back to sleep, so I figured it was time to get serious about fixing this problem.  The doctor said I have bursitis, which, according to WebMD is “the inflammation or irritation of the bursa. The bursa is a sac filled with lubricating fluid, located between tissues such as bone, muscle, tendons, and skin, that decreases rubbing, friction, and irritation.”  That makes sense and fits my pain progression accurately.  The course of treatment is just what I was doing already, lots of ibuprofen and regular icing.  Well, I had tried icing, but now I guess I’ll be doing it regularly for awhile.  She said to rest, ice, and elevate three times a day… I said I’m a mother and kindergarten teacher.  She laughed and said to try for at least mornings and evenings.  We’ll see how that goes.  I’ve been trying to figure out what caused it and unfortunately I think it’s my rapid weight gain and complete lack of exercise.  Add in frequent kneeling in kindergarten and I think you’ve got a recipe for bursitis.  Alan was complimenting me today on how well I take care of the children and the family, but I think it’s time I start taking care of myself again… if only I could add a few more hours to the day…

Karate

In an effort to get the kids more physically active this winter I signed them up for a karate introduction lesson. They both know several kids who do karate and Lex even went to a karate birthday party a few weeks ago. They were excited right up until the moment we walked in the door, then seeing all the people dressed alike and performing in unison (as much as a bunch of kids ever do), both kids shut down. They said they did not want to do it and they wanted to leave right away. I reminded them that we had made an appointment and we need to at least stay for the introduction lesson, then we could go. They grudgingly agreed and boy are they glad they did! The lesson was just the two of them and a teacher (sensi, I think, I need to study up on my karate lingo!) and they LOVED it. They were blocking and kicking and laughing. At the end they both eagerly asked if they could take lessons. So we signed them up. Uniform and all! We are encouraged to go three times a week, but I can’t see that happening in our world. We’re shooting for twice a week for starters. :)

image

Introduction lesson

 

image

All suited up.

image

Ready to go!

Artie

Eve’s class is studying penguins this month and as a special treat they have a friend named Artie who visits each student. Eve was overjoyed when she found out Artie was coming to spend the weekend with us! We had some errands to do after school, so Artie came along for the ride.

image

Artie came to the Co-Op with us.

 

image

Artie had fun at King Arthur Flour!

 

image

Artie and Eve built block towers together.

image

Artie joined us for dinner wearing a fancy hat and veil.  Artie likes reading Calvin and Hobbes.

image

At bedtime Artie put on Pjs…

image

… and shared giggly secrets with Eve.

image

Artie enjoyed the bedtime stories Eve read him.

image

The next morning Artie got dressed. Eve assured me that Artie likes pink polka dot skirts and flower crowns. :)  Her hair is wild in this picture! 

image

Artie came with us to CAOS at the Ava Gallery. Turns out Artie is very creative!

Dear Mrs. Burriss.  This photo was just staged and Artie came into no real contact with messy art supplies.  We took the utmost care of him. :)

image

Later that day Artie made a few phone calls and ran up quite a phone bill! Calls to the Antarctic are expensive!

image

We had a movie night Saturday night, but the kids chose to watch a NOVA episode about genetics instead of a movie. Artie was fascinated!

image

This morning Artie joined us for a playdate and got a sneak peak at a house he’ll be visiting later this month.

image

Four silly kids, a cat, and a penguin. What more do you need for a great playdate!

image

This evening Artie put on Eve’s paint smock and did some more (pretend) painting. Artie also helped Eve with her math homework, but I wasn’t around to take a picture of that.

image

Artie ended the weekend cuddled up with Eve and Alan, reading bedtime stories.

Eve has very much enjoyed her visit with Artie.  She was even in tears (put-upon tears) last night that she loved Artie so much and it would be just too hard to give Artie back.  We had a little conversation about all the other kids in her class who hadn’t had a chance with Artie yet.  She decided that seeing Artie in school each day would be enough.

Happy Birthday Alan!

Happy birthday to the big man today! We had to do some math to figure out his age this morning. He says he keeps track because he knows if it’s an even year he turns an even number. It’s good to have a system. We eliminated 36 and 40, and settled on 38. I get to call him old man for the next 10 months, then I’m right there with him. Eeek! He celebrated by taking the day off from work, exercising really hard (yes, this is how he celebrates), getting a massage, eating massive quantities of Indian food and watching five hours of TV. Then we came home with cookies and cuddles.

birthday hugs

Birthday hugs!

Happy Birthday Alan! We’re lucky to have such an amazing hubby and daddy!

Mindsets

Have you heard about the idea of mindsets? Namely “fixed” or “growth” mindsets? I first read about it in an article UVEI gave me last August, then I saw a TED talk about it at a teacher in-service day this fall. Last week at UVEI we had a guest speaker who talked about mindsets a lot as well. I think the idea is fascinating, so I finally bought the book.

Carol Dweck, the author, defines a fixed mindset as “believing your qualities are carved in stone.” The idea that you are born one way and can’t change. You are smart, or artistic, or athletic. You are great or you are not. However, the “growth mindset is based on the belief that your basic qualities are things you can cultivate through your efforts.” With a growth mindset you believe that “everyone can change and grow through application and experience.”

I’m on page 39 and so far the book doesn’t thrill me, but the idea does. She’s given tons of examples on fixed mindset versus growth mindset, and each example makes it sound like a fixed mindset is a horrible thing and that fixed mindset people are awful to be around. The book starts off as a grandiose self-help book, right from the subtitle of the book, “How we can learn to fulfill our potential.” I hope it gets a little more substantial as it goes along, although it’s not even until the very last chapter that she talks about how to change your mindset. She does promise it’s possible.

When I first heard of the idea I thought, “of course I’m a growth mindset!” Obviously. I am confident that I can do anything I set my mind to, and the idea that we are capped mentally or physically and are completely unable to improve ourselves is ridiculous. It wasn’t until David Grant, the speaker at my UVEI seminar, said that it’s possible for a person to have different mindsets in different areas, or to be mostly one mindset, but sometimes the other that I started thinking, “hmmm…” Professionally I have no doubt that I have a growth mindset. I am confident that anything I strive for, I can achieve, and do well at. I have always done very well and been very highly regarded at every job I’ve had. Not to brag, but it’s true. My biggest doubt usually is whether or not I’ll be happy with the career I choose.

However, this weekend I got to thinking about the diet and exercise side of my brain. I see people who are more fit than I am and think, “I could look like that if I tried.” But I don’t try. “I could lose this weight (again!) if I just set my mind to it.” But I don’t set my mind to it. Instead I walk around in an fog and eat more cookies. I think I could lose weight and be more fit if I just decided to make it happen, but maybe there’s a layer down in my subconscious that says otherwise. Maybe I do have a fixed mindset in this area. Maybe somewhere inside I’m thinking I’ll probably just fail again and that would be embarrassing (ok, I’ve had that thought many times!) so why bother trying. As long as I’m busy with kids and work and life, then I have an excuse to not try.

I was talking to Lex last weekend about mindsets and he immediately decided he was a growth mindset because he loved to learn new things. I didn’t argue with him, but as I thought about it over the next few days I realized that he likes to try new things as long as they are within his comfort zone. New computer apps, new books, new Lego projects, bring it on! New food? Nope! New extracurricular activities? Rarely. Even at school he often gets stuck and frustrated when the teacher asks him to do things differently than how he already knows. Maybe this is because he has a fixed mindset, at least in some areas. He has always been smart and everyone tells him so. Alan and I have been working hard on praising his efforts, not his brains, but he’s heard us bragging about him through the years. Everyone else does too. Even his classmates constantly tell him how smart he is. We found a note from a classmate back in first grade that said “Happy Valentine’s Day. You really know math. You are really smart Lex.” That’s the translation anyway, from first grade spelling. :) Even back in first grade his friends were complementing his intelligence. So now when his teacher asks him to look at something differently, to try something in a different way then how he’s comfortable with, he balks and refuses.

Tonight we were playing Spit (a card game) and I asked if we could play one-handed, the way the game is supposed to be played. He loves playing Spit and always plays two-handed. He’s pretty good at it, but when I suggested one-handed he shut down. We talked about mindsets a bit again and he said he didn’t want to try one-handed because he wouldn’t be any good at it. We talked about what would happen in that case, which of course is nothing. I said it would be challenging for both of us, we would take the game a little slower, and we would both improve our skills. He ended up in tears and refused to play the game. It made me hurt to see him so stuck.

Dweck says, in her article,

“we found that students with the two mindsets had radically different beliefs about effort. Those with a growth mindset had a very straightforward (and correct) idea of effort — the idea that the harder you work, the more your ability will grow and that even geniuses have had to work hard for their accomplishments. In contrast, the students with the fixed mindset believed that if you worked hard it meant that you didn’t have ability, and that things would just come naturally to you if you did. This means that every time something is hard for them and requires effort, it’s both a threat and a bind. If they work hard at it that means they aren’t good at it, but if they don’t work hard they won’t do well. Clearly, since just about every worthwhile pursuit involves effort over a long period of time, this is potentially crippling belief, not only in school but also in life.”

This idea saddens me, but also encourages me to read all the way to chapter eight where Dweck talks about how to change mindsets. For now Alan and I are (and have been for some time) working on the idea of praising behaviors, not abilities. The same applies to discipline/criticism as well. Comment on the behavior, not the person. This idea is popular in the parenting world, unrelated to mindsets, but it aptly applies to both. When you notice and comment on the effort a person puts into a project, instead of just the outcome, you are rewarding them for trying hard, not for being smart. That is the goal, continued growth and effort for all of us!

Unexpected free time

I have two hours to kill this afternoon, unexpectedly.  I thought a blog post was in order. :-)

I signed Lex up for a Lego Robotics class that started today. The class is for ages 9-14, so I had to get an age exception for him, but he was excited and I was interested in getting him involved in some extracurricular activities.  Eve and I dropped Lex off and he immediately settled in at a desk.  There are nine other kids in the class with him.  After a few minutes, Eve and I decided to wander around the art gallery and figure out what to do with ourselves for the duration. 

This is a gallery that I took the kids to a few times a long ago.  Eve and I went for a walk and I was going to show her the art studio. As we walked down the hallway a woman stepped out and asked if we were there for the Pour.Drip.Spin class.  I said nope, just visiting.  She started talking about the class and Eve got excited.  Apparently the class is for 5-8 year olds, so I left her.  I went down to the office and registered her for the class while she found herself an apron. 

image

So here I am with an hour remaining to entertain myself.  I’m sitting outside his classroom and laughing at myself. I have been frustrated with the amount of screen time the kids have had lately, now here I am paying good money to have Lex AIT in a dark room, in front of a computer!  I had envisioned more of the group Lego building activities, nor so much the programming activities.  Silly me.  I’ll be curious to talk to Lex at the end of class, and three days later, about his thoughts. From what I’m hearing it sounds like they are walking through how to use the program, something Lex has already been doing for years. I was worried he would be too young and therefore behind, but now I’m wondering if he’s going to be bored! 

Next week I’ll bring a book, or some UVEI homework!  Today I spent the day in kindergarten. It was fun, but definitely different!  I didn’t have to open a single lunch or tie a single shoe in 5th grade. :-)

Final Christmas Cookies

image

Eve remembered this morning that her art teacher wasn’t there the day before Christmas vacation and didn’t get the cookies Eve brought in. She was very concerned that day that her art teacher would have no holiday cookies. :-)  She has art today and insisted on bringing her teacher cookies.  Fortunately I still have a batch of peanut butter cookies in the freezer. I think her teacher will be surprised!

New Year’s Eve 2013

I’m only four days late with this post! New Year’s Eve was a bit different for us this year, but super fun nonetheless! For the past few years we’ve celebrated at the bowling alley with cosmic bowling until the late hour of 7pm. (2010, 2011, 2012) Then home for a fairly regular bedtime. This year, sadly, the bowling alley is closed. They went out of business quite suddenly one day during the summer. I hoped they would reopen by now, because what else do you do with a bowling alley besides reopen it?, but they have not.

This year my parents were also in town, so we decided to have a nice dinner and a family game night.

living room

While I made dinner, Mema and Grandpa Tom kicked off the evening with the kids.

sleeping

Eve promptly fell asleep! Fortunately she work up later to join us for the rest of the evening.

Apparently I didn’t take any pictures of dinner, but it was lovely and delicious. Zesty skillet ravioli, big salad, fresh bread. Yummy! After dinner we played a rousing game of Jenga for awhile.

jenga p1

Jenga!

jenga p2

Eve likes to pull the tricky ones first. :)

jenga p3

Not surprisingly, she gets a lot of this!

jenga p4

That looks stable.

dancing

What’s a party without some dancing in the kitchen?!

My parents decided that they didn’t really want to stay up until midnight, so they went back to Popcube’s house and we continued with the games. Well, with one game. Lex set up an EPIC game of Lego Minotaurus that lasted nearly three hours! I came to the game late (cleaned up dinner first) and still won! Yay me. :)

minotaurus

An EPIC game of Lego Minotaurus!

The game ended around 11:30pm. The kids brushed their teeth and settled on the couch. Alan put on the live coverage from Times Square. We don’t have broadcast TV, but we found a live streaming of it. Unfortunately, we discovered at midnight that they don’t actually show the ball drop! They instead show the clock. I wonder if a network owned the exclusive rights to it or something. The kids were a little disappointed, as were the grownups, but we celebrated anyway.

cuddling

I didn’t think this would last for the remaining half hour, without both kids drifting off to sleep, so I pulled out one more game!

countdown

Final countdown!

hny

Happy New Year!

family

Our family at 12:00am on January 1st, 2014.

Then went to bed.

Happy 2014! May it be a wonderful one for all.