Monday, April 25, 2011

Completely unexpected

Early last week I received a phone call from a friend.  I'm not sure to categorize her as a "close" friend or not.  When I initially met her, I somewhat thought we would become close.  However, the more I've got to know her, the more I don't "get" some of her actions and decisions.  Her underlying beliefs and views on many subjects are close to mine, but her inconsistencies I just don't understand.  Or some of her methods for expressing her beliefs and views.  Maybe her idiosyncrasies are the best way to describe why I just don't feel that close.  I was recently thinking about friendships and how we naturally drift away from people, and she specifically came to mind, and I thought that in the next 5-10 years, I bet we will drift apart and she will no longer be in my life.

I need to back up a little bit.  This friend has 3 boys.  One will be 8 in August, one will be 6 next month, and the baby is 5 months old.  The older two have some medical issues.  These issues require a very controlled diet, that at times is difficult.  The kids are homeschooled and do not have a lot of interaction with other kids.  Being honest, when I have seen them in groups of other kids, for the most part they are significantly older and they seem to struggle of how to interact.  My friend has mentioned how she needs to start to work on this in the next year or two.  She has also mentioned the fact that her kids don't like playing with other kids for the most part because other kids are too rough and not well behaved.  However, they love playing with my kids because they are "nice".  Personally, I don't see my kids as super well behaved.  They definitely like rough housing, particularly Pyrope.  My kids aren't mean, but they aren't angels by any stretch of the imagination.  What my kids have more than other kids (in my opinion) is to initiate trying to bring others into the play.  If one or two children are hanging around the edges, watch what is happening, or not talking in the conversation, one of my kids will try to lead them into playing or ask them a question to bring them into the conversation.  They both do it well, especially Pyrope at this point (I think mainly because he is 2 years older and just has more skills in general at this point but also because of his very sweet nature).  For Pyrope, this is something that was taught.  For Obsidian, it is something that was innately part of him or he picked up from me teaching Pyrope.  So her kids ask to play with mine.  My kids have fun with hers, but they are not requested or come up in conversations.  My kids interact with a lot of different kids (and adults).  Hers don't.

Back to the phone call.  I immediately knew from her voice when she said her name, that this was not going to be a typical conversation.  I couldn't quite figure out her... mood or really where this was going to go.  She started with "I have a question for you."  Which is not that unusual for her to start a conversation with that phrase.  I was slightly apprehensive because I knew something was out of the ordinary but I was not getting a sense of what.  If it was a positive or a negative thing.  She then launched into how this question was something for me and Jet to talk about and pray about, if I agreed to ask Jet.  I was getting really curious at this point where this was going, because I truly did not have a clue.  She seemed to be having a hard time figuring out how to even ask me what I was supposed to considering asking Jet, for us to then think, talk, and pray about.  Then it came.

Would Jet and I take care of their children if something happened to both of them?

As she then launched into details about finances, life insurance, health insurance, and other significant details I was only barely able to listen.  This was not a question I was remotely expecting to be asked.  My mind was temporarily jammed.  I got the very basics of the financial aspects she was going through but I was not processing things so well at that point.  By the time she got around to why she and her husband decided to ask us, I had recovered well enough absorb what she was saying.  All of the thoughts that were rolling in my head for the rest of the day were overwhelming.  I thought of this blog.  A space for me to gather and distill my thoughts.  A place to try to figure out what I'm thinking and feeling without another's influence.  Those were among the top reasons I started it.  I kept coming back to the thought that I needed to digest and think about this before I even bring it up to Jet.

The chances of something happening to both of them are slim.  Very slim.  But it can and does happen.  I know the majority of parents, do not set up something specific in case of that event.  Jet and I have, we just recently changed ours (another post, or few posts).  When we first got married, we talked about how if anything happened to my parents, that I would have responsibility of my siblings that were under 18.  He said "Of course".  When my dad was diagnosed with his cancer, we knew that we would be moving back to the area where my parents lived to help with not just my parents but the raising of my siblings.  There was talk of me immediately returning, and Jet to follow later.  It was seriously considered (I stayed with Jet, until the need was too great for me to be back, but that happened 9 months later, and he joined me 3 months after that).  We have talked about if anything happened to his sister, how we would take responsibility for his nieces.  So the idea and the conversation is not completely foreign to us.  However I did not (and I'm guessing Jet as well) did not see the possibility of being asked that for a family that are new friends (under a year).  And in all honesty, not that close to us.  If it was family, the answer would be yes.  With no hesitation, and little thought.  We would make it work if we needed to.  Very close family friends, the same (the only two families that I would categorize as such, have others that would become their children's guardians).  This is different.  They are friends, but not that close.  There is hesitation.  And a lot of thought.  Lots and lots of thought.  And prayer.  And discussion.  With some more thought and prayer.

I do understand their reasoning for asking us.  For choosing us.  The reasons are both humbling and ego boosting.

The idea of potentially having a minimum of 5 sons with an age range of a little over 7 years is daunting.  The door is not completely shut for Jet and I having another child.  He doesn't want another, but nothing has been done to permanently prevent it from happening.  And I still feel that 3 children is my destiny.  Our friends openly say how they hope God blesses them with more.

The main reason Jet does not want more is the extra activity and chaos another person in the house would create.  The chaos of bringing at least 3 boys, 2 with medical issues (that the 3rd might have as well, but he has not been tested for yet), that have been up until that point raised in a different house, that would have some serious emotional issues at that point due to the circumstances of them become part of our household concerns me how Jet would react.  I think if he choose to accept that, he would make it.  The majority of the chaos would be on my plate.  My whole plate for a period of years would be simply raising our children and theirs.  My limited time for activities of my choosing would be virtually eliminated.  My plans for taking a photography class, cake decorating class, possibly a quilting or knitting class (or group), getting my MBA, or a specialization certification for my job would be on long term hold.  Blending their children into our different ways of discipline (and they are large and significant, we pretty much have the same rules and standards, but how we react to negative behaviors in particular is vastly different) would be my problem.  Finishing their kids education would become my problem.  Jet would help, but it would be my decisions, my choices for the most part.

As I think all of this through.  The basic thoughts that keep forming are
  1. This would really not be something I would elect or choose to do
  2. This would be very hard and drastically change the our family fabric
  3. God told us to take care of the widows and orphans.  Not the widows and orphans that are related to us, but widows and orphans in general.  As an active Christian, I need to follow this command when called upon.
  4. Their reasons for asking us over others they know are sound reasons.  From what I understand, I do see how our family would be the first choice.
  5. I don't want to think about the amount of food I would go through in a day, much less a week for a certain number of years.
  6. At the end of all conversations I have with God about this, I come to the same answer.  It would not be the easy thing to do, but it would be the right thing to do (morally).  Their kids and ours would adjust.  So would Jet and I.
Now to tell, discuss, and pray with Jet over the issue....

Thursday, April 21, 2011

Thankful Thursday

  • That spring has to be coming.  I have bulbs coming out.  It has not snowed in a week (it has been cold enough, but it hasn't precipitated at those times).  We will be outside soon.
  • Our plans for the summer are coming together.  And we are taking a vacation.  Part of it will be alone.  Which has not happened since Pyrope was 15 months old.  Part of it friends will be joining us.  Which will be fun as well.
  • Pyrope is doing so well learning how to read.
  • Obsidian's objections to his daily shots now consist of stating "No shot today" when I announce it is time to get into jammies.  No crying.  Rarely a whimper.  Just the nightly statement.  I wish we didn't have to, but I will be grateful if it turns out that he has one of the very few forms of dwarfism that has a treatment that is more than a reaction to complications.  I'm grateful he has adjusted so quickly, and really is accepting of it.
  • Farmers' Markets.  The one that sells my lemon cheese reopens this coming Saturday.  There is going to be a new one much closer to my house, but it doesn't start until late May.  If the lemon cheese people are there, I might be in trouble.
  • There is not supposed to be any thunderstorms today.  This is a first for 5 days.  My kids aren't afraid of thunderstorms, but it puts them into a funk.  A serious funk.  Don't ask about Friday and the weekend.
  • 3 more weeks of ice skating then we are done for the summer.  I don't know why, but that is the lesson that is most tedious for me to take my kids to.  If Pyrope didn't love it so much, I would so not be doing it.
  • That I started a blog.  Writing, or even preparing in my head what I would like to write, is comforting.  Particularly for complex issues that I don't know what exactly my view is, or how or who I would like to discuss it with in real life.

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

Merits of difficulty

I am a person who likes a challenge.  If I can not do something on the first try, or the fifth try, it doesn't stop me.  I don't mind hard work.  I like it.  I like a challenge.  Obsidian is very similar to me in that way.

Then there is Pyrope.  And Jet.  And the family culture that Jet grew up in.  If it is hard, they don't like it.  A significant amount of the time, they don't try or work to improve their abilities.  I remember giving my niece an "I Spy" book.  I was asked if I could return it and get a different book by my SIL (my niece didn't even realize what it was at that point) because "Those books are so hard, I can't do them.  I don't even want to try to help her."  Growing up, if something was hard, all it really meant was our parents expected, or rather demanded, we try harder to gain more skills in that area.

The first time I really did battle with Pyrope over his lack of trying for doing something that was difficult was riding his two wheeler last spring.  I had been aware that he did not like, and really actively avoided, trying to do anything that was difficult for him to do.  He was ready to learn how to ride a two wheeler.  He had the basic skills.  However, when I tried to teach him, he started crying and saying it was hard and that he just would ride his tricycle because it was easy.  He sat on the grass and refused to try.  I then took away his tricycle.  In protest, he would ride his bike 4-5 feet and then just stop pedaling and put his feet on the ground (he rarely fell, I could probably count the times he hit the ground when he was learning how to ride).  And then cry it was harder than a tricycle so he didn't want to try.  I would give him a specific distance he had to try, and if he was not trying, we would repeat that distance until he tried the whole time.  Within 3 days, he was riding his bike with only a push to start.  In a week, he was riding on his own.  Pyrope was over the top happy and proud of this.  Not to mention he loves to ride a bike.  You can do a lot more on a bike than you can on a tricycle.  During the first couple days of Pyrope and my battle, Jet was of the opinion to just let him ride the tricycle.  For me, it wasn't the skill itself, but the idea of just taking the easy way out.

Recently, Pyrope started to show a real interest, and has the basic prerequisite skills, to learning how to read.  So I started to use a program to teach him about a month ago.  This program is a fairly well researched and developed program that has 100 lessons that build on each other.  Theoretically, this program has long term positive effects on reading and academic performance.

It is going well, and it is going terribly.

It is going well in regards to Pyrope's progress.  He is learning a lot, the difference is very noticeable to those who are around him.  My mom  and Jet are the ones who seem to notice it the most.  I don't notice it as much as I am the one doing the teaching, so I see the progress in such small increments, it is hard to see how far he has come in the last month.  He is so excited about reading on his own.  It is now a routine occurrence to find him in a room by himself trying to read a book.  He never did that before.  He liked reading before, but never showed an interest in doing it for himself.  Even to get him to look at a book without you reading it was hard.  Now, he does it all of the time, all day long. 

It is going terribly in the sense that each time we get to the current difficult task he cries.  (Which the difficult task of even a week ago is now easy, but as one thing gets easy, the next step is added.  By the point the task is very easy it is dropped.)  When I say he cries, he would say he "cries and cries and cries", that is probably a more accurate description.  He starts with telling me it is hard so he doesn't want to do it.  Then he tries to tell me that I'm hurting his feelings so we should stop.  Then he goes back to crying.  Then he tells me he is mad at me and that I'm not his friend (my reply is no, I'm your mother).  I sit with him until he stops crying and tries.  And we practice until he completes the task.  At some point, usually a day or two into the new task, he has an "Ah ha!" moment.  Something clicks, and he "gets" the task.  The pride, joy, and excitement he has each time is amazing to watch.  The new skill is then shown to Daddy, Grandma, and whoever else captures his whimsy to tell in the next day or two. We might even get through a lesson or two with no tears.

Still, I know that if not in today's reading lesson, then tomorrow or the next day's, he will be crying and begging to not try, because it is "hard" and "hurts his feelings".  All I have are my words that not everything in life is easy, that we need to try to do hard things, that there are great benefits to learning how to read, how happy and proud he is when he learns something new, and ultimately, it is not his choice to quit.  He can choose to sit and cry about it, but he will be not playing and doing things he wants to do until he does his lesson for the day. 

Jet's view of this is interesting.  In the beginning, he was somewhat leery of this whole exercise.  Pyrope is not old enough that we are required to teach him this skill (or for him to be hopefully taught it in school).  Pyrope is not one to like a challenge.  On the other hand, even a few days into it, Jet saw the pride and joy that the new skills were giving Pyrope.  And an air of confidence that really has spilled over into other areas.  He is now of the philosophy I should continue with the lessons and that I should preserve with the lessons because in addition to teaching him reading skills, it is working on instilling the value and merits of trying to do something that is difficult.  But Jet says he could never teach Pyrope.  As it would be too hard.

Thursday, April 7, 2011

Thankful Thursday

  • we are finally beginning to have more spring like days and less days with snow or temperatures that never rise above freezing
  • Obsidian screen for the schools is done.  He does not qualify with the 2 year old standards, he is close enough to qualify for the 3 year old standards she is recommending to have him screened again in August.  My goal was (before he turned a year old) that he wouldn't need any services by the time he was 3.  He is close.  He is still delayed gross motor wise, but he is close to being considered to not have a "educational disability"  (Um, don't ask about the cognitive portion, my dear child (and I do mean mine as it is something I would have done as a child, but Jet never would have) failed the 2 year old cognitive part as he was playing games but passed the 3 year old screen without missing a single item (until he refused to participate))
  • 10 years ago today I met Jet.  I spent the night in an ethics class.  One of the topics (which came up several times) was how/why it was unethical to date a student you are supervising.  In our dating and early marriage, this was an issue for us that we had to be mindful of (although when we were both in the same workplace, people were amazed to find out that we knew each other much less were dating outside of work).
  • that I really like Pyrope and Obsidian's pediatrician.  It really does mean a lot to have someone I really like in that position.
  • that I had nothing better to do for 2 hours on Saturday morning other than to go to the toy store and let the kids do whatever they wanted to.   And for my Nook to keep me amused.  I can only look at Thomas trains and Hot Wheels so long (which is significantly a shorter time than my kids).
  • that our family vacation is booked.  Last year, we weren't able to take one.  The year before we spent it visiting with family (which is fine).  This year, we have 7 nights, in a rustic cabin (i.e. it has 4 walls, a roof, a set of bunk beds, a double bed with a bunk over it, and electricity... no water, no toilet, no refrigerator) that is close to a large train museum.  Read previous statement of I'm glad I have my Nook.  It is coming fully loaded.  All will be happy.
  • I'm taking Pyrope to his first synchronized swimming show this weekend.  I'm thinking he will like watching it.
  • Pyrope is doing well with the reading lessons we have been doing.
  • Obsidian swam for the first time just using a noodle without anyone touching him (his teacher was a hand's breadth away, but she was not touching him)
  • to see the joy of Pyrope and Obsidian seeing the Cars from the Cars movie.  And the sense of amusement I got from taking pictures of people and couples in their 60's-70's with their camera phones so they could text them to their grandkids (it amuses me to see older people fully embrace technology, I don't have a camera phone, but senior after senior did... and were using them)