“Goodbye! Thanks! Have a fun time!” ~ Grace to an older gentleman as she ran off with her loot.
She got a big smile and wave in return. 🙂
The joy of a first Halloween.
“Goodbye! Thanks! Have a fun time!” ~ Grace to an older gentleman as she ran off with her loot.
She got a big smile and wave in return. 🙂
The joy of a first Halloween.
Tonight at supper Grace became very animated while telling us a story from China. I happened to have started a new novel tonight (I read out loud to the kids when Stephen isn’t home for meal time), The Mouse and the Motorcycle. Something about Ralph S. Mouse struck a chord with Miss Grace and she was off and running with a story that she had never told us before.
Apparently one day when she was still in China (at the orphanage), someone spotted a mouse.
And here is where I interject a little.
This mouse was actually quite large by the sounds of it.
(I’m thinking rat, at this point in her description.)
A couple of the grown ups came running.
One of them used an umbrella to try and hit it.
Another person grabbed a fire hose.
Again, I must interject that she was adamant that the hose was much larger than our garden hose and it was for putting out fires!
Then Grace proceeded to describe in great detail the antics surrounding the capture and killing of this mouse.
The story ends with a different grown up running to the kitchen for a pair of rubber gloves, bending over picking up the mouse by the tail and throwing it outside in some tall grass.
Seriously, I don’t know when the kids as a collective group have been so engaged in a story.
This girl’s got talent.
Or it might have been the, ahem, mouse.
😉
With the numerous interuptions and false starts we’ve had this Fall, today was finally the day I declared the official “Back to Homeschool” day. Somehow with all the physio appointments, homestudy visits, clean up after our various home projects, our first day kept getting pushed back. Our kids always start back a week after the rest of the local school kids return to class. Usually this is our “Not Back to School” celebration involving a trip to a very quiet mall in which to shop for fall clothes, one last trip to the beach or to Grandma’s pool in the middle of the week, and it usually gives me some extra time to get the rest of my straggling to do list all caught up.
Without further ado, here are the somewhat smiling faces of this year’s class of students to Beacon Rock Homeschool.
First, we have James. Entering Grade 10, at least a foot taller than last years photo and sporting a lot less hair, he has chosen his Star Wars Role Playing Guidebook as his favourite memorabilia item for this season.
Next up, we have Faith. Also showing that summer growth spurt, she has chosen her favourite pet, Sparkle, and the latest script that she has authored, a sequel to her first show, Hannah’s Doom.
Now we have our newcomer to the world of first day of “Back to Homeschool”, Miss Grace. Grace has been excitedly asking for us to begin for some weeks now, and she chose as her favourite item, not only her Princess dress, but also her fairy wings (courtesy of cousin E.). An elegant choice, don’t you think?
Last but not least, we have Garnet. This will be Garnet’s first year of full day homeschool with us. He is unsure if that is a good thing at this point in his career, but he is unwilling to let it get him down. He eagerly chose his Indiana Jones sword and his “frog gun” (it apparently turns all items in its path into… you guessed it, frogs. 100% for spirit and imagination, my delightful First Grader!
Won’t you join me in congratulating them?
It looks like a great year ahead!
Otherwise known as “tomorrow”, I will post the end of my very lengthy string of posts about our journey to Samuel.
Grace still has a pretty cute accent at times. And I just had to find a way to document her frequent use of that particular word. 😉
I’ve been playing at the absentee blog owner these days. But I’d like you to meet my new best friends:
Yep, 2 X-rays later and I’ve been pretty much off my feet for the past 10 days. It’s just a sprain, but it seems to be taking its time healing up as it is in a bit of a funny spot across the top of my foot. Darn flip flops, you betrayed me with your sporty cuteness.
On another note, Garnet has been up to his usual cuteness. He was looking a bit like Shaggy from Scooby-Doo. He’d look at us with his chin tipped up in order to try and see beneath his
bangs (Am I allowed to call them that on a boy?). Stephen took him to our friend’s to get a buzz cut. The whole week beforehand he spent telling us he wanted hair like Uncle S. (my brother who has buzzed his entire head to nothing but a polished sheen). Atractive though it may be, Steve told our friend to leave him a bit of hair so he wouldn’t have to deal with sunburn.
Well, our little guy hopped out of her salon chair rather perturbed! He wanted hair like his Uncle and that was that! That’s all we heard about for those first few days and then one day he bent over as I was talking to him and what did I see?
Oh yeah. He’d tried to take matters into his own hands! LOL
The funniest bit was the fact that he didn’t hardly miss a beat. He wasn’t even embarrassed to be caught (not like him at all!). He just kind of sighed the long-suffering sigh of a five year old.
In hindsight, he did wake up that morning claiming to be Curious George!
All in all we’ve been up to purging the house with a few ice cream breaks.
One of those gems I have been unable to part with finally ended up at the Sally Ann.
These are my two boys’ favourite movies from when they were preschoolers. I think I could still recite every word of them!
Wiggle Bay was beloved by Garnet since the week he came home & Fred Penner was watched so much that even though it got fuzzy in places, it was still the top pick movie of any given week by James between the ages of 3 and 5. Good memories.
Faith and Garnet took some time to dance the other day.
And here’s a beauty shot of our ice cream lovin’ princess.
And a HUGE thank you to everyone who’s fetched my crutches, watched my children, schlepped me around (thanks Mom!) and generally taken care of me.
Especially my dearest, oldest boy James, with his new title of Chief Cook and Bottle Washer!
Thanks Son!
Now, I may be a bit controlling at times (Yes, I know. No one in my real life is surprised.) I may even be a bit of a freak of nature. But a control freak parent? I never thought so.
Let’s have a little English lesson, shall we?
/kənˈtroʊl/ Show Spelled[kuhn-trohl]
Stephen and I had really and truly hoped that when our two youngest finally were united, they would find fulfillment in the shared experiences of their early years.
Today I saw it fulfilled.
There they were, in their fort under the school table. Chatting away over Garnet’s photo album about “Their China”.
It was all I could do not to shout, “Yippee!”.
Oh, not the one most parents would think of. No birds or bees here. Well there was some of that, but – oh whatever.
The talk I’m referring to is the story of my youngest daughter’s beginnings. She was baby role playing with me (a normal thing for her and I that I believe is giving her a chance to catch up so to speak.) and I had the opportunity to take it one step farther and once again bring up her birth parents.
Before now she would always look at me with that look. You know the look. The one that says, “Haha, aren’t you a funny Mommy. I like make believe, but can we move on to a new subject?”
But this time, I again recounted as much of her story as I have been told and I took it a step farther. I drew pictures. Ahem. So I’m not a brilliant artiste. She really engaged with me in the drawing. She helped me with details, asked me questions and then we had an opportunity to talk about her coming to Canada, her feelings, the works. But the best part? The fact that she and I were finally able to talk about it.
You see, I had broached the subject previously. I’d rehearsed openly with her as she was in the early stages of English Vocaulary development. I’d spoken of other babies in our family. I’d used all the correct (or should I say, consciously chosen)terminology in front of her. And then all of a sudden, tonight she had that curious sort of look that said, “Tell me more, Mom.” Finally she got it.
And you know what she told me? No one had ever told her this story before.
While I am delighted to be the one to engage her on this level, I am pretty sure that she has a variety of ideas as to how she came to the orphanage. I’m sure she heard plenty. Was it her own personal story though? I doubt it. Did not knowing about the fact that her life is on a path and that her destiny was to be more than the orphanage life as she knew it affect her determination not to want to meld with our family? Yeah. I’m pretty sure it added to it.
But (and this is a big BUT), I am so glad that I got to be the one to talk to her about God’s bigger plan for her. God didn’t create the trauma in her life, but he is definitely the redeemer and the ultimate healer of wounds. I can’t be the balm she needs, but I can keep leading her back to the One who has a special plan for her.
It was a good talk.
Thanks to this post on Rumor Queen, many of us in the China IA world have been racing around the web in order to locate new photos of our kids.
Here’s a new one of Garnet.
At this point, this is probably the youngest photo we have of our little man. Would I normally be joyous over a simple photo of a regular old exam? No. But, this is post surgery. This is his history. And I am delighted to see it.
We’ve also found a few photos of the baby rooms in each of the kids’ orphanages. Both kids have had a lot of questions about their babyhood lately and I’m so pleased to have the photos to show them.
I’m so thankful for the internet and for the generosity of the many other IA parents we’ve met or been exposed to over the internet.
Off to search some more…
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