Reading is awesome!

Lex
Lex can read. Really, seriously read. Have I mentioned this lately? I tend to take it for granted since he’s been reading for years (what 5yr old hasn’t?!?) but every now and then it really strikes me. Like yesterday when he told me that saliva is another name for spit. “I read that in The Encyclopedia of the Human Body!” he tells me. Or this morning when he sat on the couch for quite awhile reading a Raggedy Ann book, a 93 page chapter book with very few pictures. He whizzed right through it. A few days ago we were sitting on the couch together and he was reading a Magic Tree House book while I waited for Eve to pick out a book for me to read to her. I started reading over his shoulder and I was barely finishing pages before he was turning them. Mind blowing! At lunch today he informed me that he is not color blind and that his tongue was playing tricks on his brain. He then gave me lots of details about color blindness and taste buds. Separate thoughts, of course. Awhile ago he stopped reading in the car and it was pure torture. I’ve always considered him a great traveler and it only sort of occurred to me that it’s because he reads. When he stopped reading in the car he whined and complained the whole way to my parents house. Fortunately we figured out the problem and he’s reading again. Whew!

The only down side to this is I have to be careful of the content he reads. I was going to buy him some books at a yard sale last weekend, but they are aimed at 5th and 6th graders and seemed to have some ideas that I don’t want him to have yet. Along the lines of school bullying, teasing, harassing the teacher, etc. Things that might be funny for 12yr olds, but I’m not ready for him to have that exposure yet.

I’m just so proud of him lately. He has been overcoming his fears and accomplishing some big things lately. Sitting at the table, eating a few things, learning to wipe himself, wiggling that tooth until it came out… all things that don’t seem monumental, but to him I know they are. He even asked me today what we’re having for dinner.  I told him and he said, “Don’t forget the carrots.  They are my favorite!” :)  He worked (and continues to work) hard and I’m so proud of him. I love the boy he is growing into.

Here are a few pics from our week…

Eve pouting

Eve pouting, playfully, at Walgreens

blueberry field

Our own piece of heaven, our new favorite blueberry patch.

Lex waving

"C'mon mom!" he calls to me.

Blueberry Eve

Happy Blueberry Eve

Eve checks out the hair dryer

Eve checks out the hair dryer while...

Lex gets a haircut

Lex gets a much needed haircut.

Climbing boy

Climbing boy

Climbing girl

"I can do it. I'm very strong!" she encourages herself, all the way up and back down.

Rockets in your pockets

Lex filled his pockets with rocks, with Eve's help, and then happily told me "Mom, I have rockets in my pockets!" He is big into rhyming these days :)

Rocks by the track

Those rocks, as well as a few we painted eons ago, made their way into the elaborate train setup covering my living room floor.

Bear hugs

We went to the science museum this morning and ended up taking a walk on the nature trails. It was fun.

BREAKTHROUGH!!

Oh what a day! Besides the obvious niceties (running errands, happy stories, a trip to the blueberry patch) Lex surprised me by joining us for dinner tonight! Alan said he joined them for dinner last night, but I wasn’t around so it doesn’t count! :) Tonight he ate about three full carrots and half a cucumber (cumbercue, he calls them, just to make me laugh) and he sat with us the whole time. He even smelled the rest of the dinner and asked what was in it. Oh happy day!

Then… to top off the evening, he got his tooth out!! All by himself! For the past few days he’s been letting Alan and I wiggle it and gently pull on it. Tonight he said it was really loose and while we read stories he worked on it. He figured out that he could push it in such a way that it seemed to get looser, so he did. While we were laying down (lights out, all settled) he said, “I think it’s out!” Lights back on, lots of cheering and jumping about. Yay! He has been so brave lately. I really admire him and I’m so proud of how rational he can be, when given the chance. We are working on big (for him) changes around here and he’s holding up really well. I think I need to go squeeze him now! :)

Irises

Check out my new garden work! I spent the morning transplanting irises (after spending two days digging them up and separating them!) I didn’t want them back in the same bed, so I put some in the front garden, some by the mailbox, and many, MANY more in plastic bags to give away! :) I can’t believe how many were packed into that tiny space.

pool full of irises

As I separated them I threw them into our kiddie pool. It filled the pool and then some!

mailbox flowers

New foliage around the mailbox.

front garden

There was a bare spot in this front garden (not sure why), so I put some irises there as well.

Now for the day three update. Tired of this potentially never ending story yet? I got Lex to look at the table tonight before he scurried upstairs. I made the most basic kid-friendly meal possible – Annie’s DW mac & cheese, steamed broccoli, and fried tofu, with carrots and cucumbers on the side, both veggies he normally eats, but he wasn’t interested. Oh well. He was quiet upstairs and went to bed without much fuss. Though he did say “I’m ready for this new meal plan thing to be over with soon!” :) I told him it would not be over with anytime soon and once again encouraged him to work with me to find meals he might be willing to try. Guess what he said?! NO! Sigh. At least the rest of us are eating well. Eve loved the mac & cheese, which in the past she would never taste because he wouldn’t either. She ate that and broccoli and was happy.

However, the lack of dinner doesn’t appear to be affecting his brain power. Check out the train setup he made today. It’s the first time I’ve seen him raise the station and build tracks under it. Cool, huh?! Earlier today he was elevating all of the tracks with random things, like flipped over cars and monster truck tires. It was awesome to watch him experiment. He even put the station on the end table at one point and had hills going over the arm of the couch and down to the cushions. He was excited about that, but took it down when I told him he couldn’t leave it that way over night. Where would I sit?! :) So he rebuilt on the floor.

tracks from the front

tracks from the back

Day two

Tonight’s meal went much the same as last night’s with one small exception. I explained to Lex (again) that family meals are so we can all sit together as a family and spend time together. I told him that he doesn’t have to eat, but I would like him to join us at the table. Unfortunately I cannot force him to sit at the table, so I gave him the choice of joining us (eating or not), or being alone in his room. No playing. Guess what he chose? A good book in bed. Sigh. At least he didn’t fight about it and didn’t mention once tonight that he was hungry. When I was laying in bed with him at the end he said he wasn’t going to eat any dinner until it was something he liked and there was nothing on the menu that he liked. I told him that I would be happy to work with him to find dinner ideas that he likes, but cereal and yogurt (breakfast foods!) do not cut it as a family dinners. Sometimes they do, of course, but not for now. :) So we will try again tomorrow. At least he made it through the night last night, slept until a reasonable hour (6:30am, which is great in our house!) and didn’t even want to eat the minute he came downstairs.

Thanks all for the advice and support. Much appreciated and I’ll incorporate ideas as I can.

Family meals

The moment you’ve all be waiting for. Tonight was night one of our family meals, in other words ONE meal and everyone eats the same thing (minus the meat issue, I’m not wavering on that one!)

I decided last month that I’m tired of catering to Lex’s ever diminishing meal requests. For awhile he ate enough variety, but lately it seems to be less and less. Things he used to eat (grilled cheese, for example) he will no longer eat. I think I can count on one hand the things he’ll actually eat. That’s annoying. It’s not healthy for him and it’s bad for Eve because she WILL eat lots of things, but only wants to eat what he is eating. When he eats poorly so does she, when he’s not around she eats much better.

place settings

For arts and crafts today we made placemats showing proper place settings. I'm hoping to get them involved with the dinner process by having them set the table.

I’ve been reading a book called How to Get Your Kid to Eat: But Not Too Much, by Ellyn Satter. Her overall advice is good but I’ve really latched onto her core concept about division of responsiblity. She says it’s the parents’ job to provide healthy meals on a regular schedule in a calm and pleasant environment. That’s it. It’s the child’s job to decide whether or not to eat and if so, what and how much. She recommends serving meals family style with empty plates and letting the kids pick what they want, with the assumption that everything on the table is healthy. When left to their own devices children are excellent regulators and will get enough of what their bodies need. They may eat nothing but carrots one night, but will make up for it another. That’s the theory (from her book and many others). I like it and I definitely see how nagging and pressuring a child to eat inevitably backfires and just ends up frustrating all those involved.

I announced this grand plan in the beginning of July, with little to no excitement from either child. Nonetheless I persevered and discussed with them along the way how it would work, how they could be involved, what happens if they don’t eat, etc. Last week I asked Lex if he wanted to help me choose recipes for the week (NO!), help with the grocery shopping (NO!), this morning I asked if he wanted to pick a meal from the list (NO!), help prepare dinner (NO!), you see where I’m going with this? :) Eve picked pizza bagels from my prepared menu list (I’m starting pretty basic here, nothing fancy!) and by this afternoon Lex was doing pretty well with the idea. He even said he would eat carrots and applesauce (my chosen side dishes) and might even try a bite of bagel. I was thrilled that he was even considering it! I made a fantastic dinner, as far as pizza bagels are concerned, with several different options, and Eve happily came to the table. Lex on the other hand hovered around the edges, but would not sit down, instead choosing to play in the living room. Not the outcome I was hoping for, but no real surprise either.

pizza bagels

Yummy dinner!

happy Eve

I think Eve is really going to like this new eating plan. She didn't eat much, but she did eat happily. She actually chose, and enjoyed, a pesto bagel with tomatoes and mozzerella. Yum!

What did surprise me was that he didn’t fuss or fight at meal time. He also behaved very well for bath and bed time! I was sure that a tired and hungry boy would put up quite a fight. So sure, in fact, that I’ve been mentally preparing myself for it all day! He did get upset a few times that I wouldn’t give him any food (But mom, I’m hungry!), but each time he managed to keep himself under control and make smart decision that led to a happy (albiet hungry) bedtime instead of a fight. I’m proud of him for that. He fell asleep quickly, as he has been doing lately with no naps, and now I just hope he makes it until morning. Then we begin again :) I haven’t made changes to breakfast, lunch, or snacks, just dinner, so he should be happy again tomorrow… until he sees beans and rice on the dinner table! :)

Dear Google…

One happy boyWhat makes the wind? Why does it blow? These are the questions Lex asked me this evening as we read bedtime stories. One of his books mentioned “suddenly a gust of wind came” and apparently it brought with it a few questions. My answer… “That’s a very good question and I’m not sure of the answer.” Tomorrow is the first day of summer vacation and we will be hitting the Google machine to answer that question. Who needs school when you have Google and an inquisitive child?!? Oh wait, we do, otherwise he still would hide from grownups and have no friends. Ahh… school :) Seriously though, today was his last day of pre-k, which I guess makes him officially a kindergartener now?!? He woke up happy and had a good day. The teachers loved their gifts (of course!) and Lex told me at pick-up that he would miss his teachers the most. Now we are going to enjoy a summer with few plans. A trip to the country, a trip for mommy to sin city, and lots and lots of pajama days. Although… after declaring tomorrow a PJ day, Lex said that he was thinking about trying on a few new shirts for summer. Imagine that?! Keep your eyes on future photos to see if you spot new shirts :)

Parting gifts

I have been debating for awhile about end-of-year gifts for Lex’s teacher and para… educator? I don’t even know if end-of-year gifts are necessary or expected. So much to know with this school thing. Anyway, I had a few fun ideas that didn’t pan out, but when we made strawberry jam the other day it seemed like an obvious gift. Especially since Lex so eagerly helped with the strawberry crushing. Today he picked out fabric and ribbon and drew pictures on cards for his teachers. He also picked out two books he wants to put in the classroom for next year’s preschoolers. He is so sweet! I hope they like their gifts. Tomorrow is his last day!

Basic assumptions

We went grocery shopping Sunday morning and on the way we passed two police cars at a gas station. There were also two police officers hand cuffing a person on the ground. I’m assuming it was a guy, but really all I saw was back fat and butt crack. Lovely, huh! I didn’t comment on the scene, just kept on driving. A minute later Lex said, “Mom, at the gas station I saw…” and proceeded to describe the whole scene. Then he asked me what the policemen were doing with the guy. I tried to explain that they were handcuffing him (and then explained what handcuffs are) because he did something bad and probably he was fighting with the policemen. He thought about that for a minute and then said, “Or maybe the guy fell down and hurt his hands and the policemen were trying to help him.” Umm… yep, that sounds good to me! Certainly better than drunk and disorderly conduct at 9am on Sunday morning. I love that his basic assumptions are so good, so pure. I wish that could last forever.

Adventurous boy

Lex says to me yesterday, “Mom, guess what?! I’m going to try a new shirt tomorrow. It’s just like my black shirt only it’s brown.” He’s such an adventurous boy! :) And sure enough, he put on the brown shirt and proudly told me that he now has four (!!!) shirts that he likes. Whew! We may make it through this summer after all! :)