Saturday, February 25, 2006

Going Down to South Park...


Whether you love South Park or hate it, I thought this web site was too funny. Scott and I created our own "likenesses" as South Park characters.

Well, we aren't actually going to South Park, but are going to Colorado to see Aunt Janet and Uncle Philip. This will be Aden and Danielle's first plane ride and first time on skis. The last Colorado ski trip Scott and I took was in '98, prior to being parents. Now we get to go as a family.

I'll be sure to post pictures and tell you all about the trip when we get back.

Tuesday, February 21, 2006

Dead Presidents

Forgive me while I brag about my boy. I find both my children are exceptional and I’m not just saying this because I’m their mother.

Earlier in the month Aden surprised us on the way home from daycare by reciting the first 20 Presidents of the United States. My jaw dropped. He’s only 4-1/2 years old! We knew he had learned who George Washington and John Adams were, but the first 20 Presidents in order. Wow! Apparently, his class has been learning them a few at a time for weeks - probably in preparation for Presidents’ Day. He can now recite them all the way to Calvin Coolidge before he needs help. I have to admit that Scott and I have to look at a cheat sheet when he starts to recite. Sorry, memorizing dead Presidents is just not a skill I took with me past the fourth grade. [The picture is a recent "craft" that came home from daycare.]

Our Montessori daycare also teaches Spanish and sign language for ages 3 and up. Aden loves to show us new signs he’s learned, so I’ve been looking around for basic American Sign Language books (not for babies) for us to have at home.

It is amazing to me how much earlier kids learn things than when I was growing up.

Sunday, February 19, 2006

Mary Lou Who??

Danielle is now in Aden’s gymnastics class at the local recreation center. For months prior to her birthday she had been talking about going to “nymnastics with Ayan” when she turned three. She’s so proud to be a big girl.

Aden has been in gymnastics for nearly 18 months. A gymnastics company would come to his old daycare while we were at work. Very convenient for us. Danielle was a mere toddler at the time, but was also in the daycare gymnastics class. When we switched daycares, gymnastics was not offered as an extra activity. Luckily the rec center is close by. The same teacher who traveled to different daycares in the area, taught there once a week. Again, very convenient for us as far as location.

Weekly class is at 4:30 in the afternoon. Those days are our early days – meaning I have to be at my desk working by 7:15 in order to leave at 4:00 and get them to gymnastics on time. However, all the credit should be bestowed on Scott for making this possible. To save money we’ve carpooled since Aden started daycare. Scott “encourages” me to get up and out of the door in the morning. Without his help, I would never be able to accomplish our morning tag-team routine. (Scott, Danielle and Aden are “morning” people – I am not. I cannot be that cheerful that early in the morning. To my co-workers’ cheerful “Good Morning” greetings, I am barely able to utter more than a monotone “Morning” reply prior to 9:00. Being up and at work that early is not “good” in my opinion.)

When we started at the rec center about a year ago, we enrolled both kids. After a few months it was apparent Danielle was too young for the format geared toward older kids. She didn’t want to stand in line, wait her turn, listen, etc. (She definitely marches to her own beat.) Since the class is only 45 minutes, Scott and I usually stay during practice. We found we had become wranglers for Danielle, making sure she didn’t hurt herself or others while the instructor was busy. Danielle is definitely a tough one and can pretty much hold her own with the bigger kids, but we had to take her out of the class while Aden continued. This was quite upsetting for her, but we promised she would be able to enroll again when she was older and could listen (meaning age 3). There is still a little bit of wrangling involved, but it’s much better than what it was last May.

This gymnastics class is more organized play than anything else. They still use rings, parallel bars, mats and mini trampolines, but the class geared more toward hand-eye coordination, balance, building muscle tone, and having fun. After 18 months, Aden can’t do a perfect cartwheel, headstand or a gymnastics routine you would expect from a more structured class, but making an Olympic hopeful is not really the point. They teach skills which will be useful when the kids start mandatory Phys. Ed. in school. Hopefully, this will get them “sports ready” and they will want to participate in organized sports and enjoy it much more than I did as a child.