Christmas Letter, 2015

December 6-8, 2015

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Dear Friends,

I keep waiting for just the right moment—a quiet household, a burst of creativity, and flash of inspiration—to write our annual Christmas letter. And this is why I will never actually get around to writing anything publishable. But I should have thought of that before I decided to homeschool. Or have Wesley. Or get out of bed. However, I do have some ready material so let’s see what that and a glass of limoncello will do as a stand in for the muse.

It’s lucky I can write this at all. Last spring, the cats brought their first snake into the house. The fortunate part was that I ran to the neighbor who disposed of it for me instead of the neighbor (ahem, Kelsey), who would have advised me to burn down the house and start again. And I probably would have done it. So, thanks, Mark, you saved Christmas.

2015 was memorable, as we did one of our first family vacations together, which was not a disaster (at least, not after the first bit). We rented a motorhome and meandered around Oregon for two weeks. A few notes about RV rentals. Cons: the previous renters may be days late returning the vehicle, leading to a chaos and loss of beach reservations. Pros: the 16 things that stopped working on the RV while we had it are not our problem. But if motorhomes weren’t so expensive and inconvenient to store, I could totally go for a moving tent with indoor plumping, microwave and a lockable door between adults and children. We liked going down the road, reading books aloud and dumping out toys everywhere, just like at home.

Dwayne spent his first summer as a homeowner not building any stone walls. Instead, he managed to aggravate[1] me much more efficiently than his usual brick building spree. We had some alders taken down at the cabin, and rather than pay $700 to grind down the stumps, Dwayne was determined to dig them out himself. After weekends that turned into months, and an amount of money > $700, those stumps found themselves at the dump. A pyrrhic victory, and lesson learned. He’s on year 18 at Microsoft, and has made me happy for about 13.1 years of our 13.4 years of marriage. Yep, should have ground down those stumps, Babe.

DSC_4843After spending the last few years trying to tutor Kyla after school, this year I decided to tutor Kyla instead of school. It’s working out much better than most of my schemes. We had a breakthrough a few weeks ago when Kyla asked to keep her light on so she could read more Harry Potter. (The chance I’d say no is similar to me refusing to buy overpriced kale at the farmer’s market when the kids beg for some.) At nine, she’s old enough to leave at home with some work while I volunteer in the other kids’ classrooms, and her worst crime is to play hooky and listen to another book. Well, her worst crime is more destructive than that. She’s probably not the sole responsible party for breaking furniture, ripping cushions, scratching floors, bending curtain rods, and hiding contraband where I’d like to store the dust bunnies, but she’s the first I ask. Kyla is the kid Dwayne and I will probably have fitted with a GPS microchip as our little explorer doesn’t even realize when she’s wandered a mile away from us at the beach, and loses track of the time when she’s playing out in the woods down by the stream—the same backyard where we have had our first bear and bobcat sightings this year. But she’s also the kid I can take to art lectures and science talks and she can wax pedantically all the way home…if she doesn’t get lost on the way back to the car.

IMG_0063Piper must be trying to impress Santa, because I’ve never witnessed her so cooperative, responsible, and helpful as these last few weeks. This last summer, I read aloud the nonfiction How to Scratch a Wombat. It became an instant guide to understanding Piper. If, instead of regarding her as human, you think of her as an Australian marsupial in mismatched children’s clothes, she’s much easier to figure out. She recently described to our babysitter that wombats are like angry tanks. In fact, when she’s rampaging we give out the Mad Wombat! alert, and it not only gives fair warning to innocent bystanders, it cheers her up considerably. Piper still loves Mama, animals, and art (not necessarily in that order) and she has begun the tradition of making me omelets on Saturday mornings. And they are good—with no amendment needed “for a seven-year old”. She’s also the one local Need who is a morning person, a concept Dwayne and I can recognize but not grasp. She uses this unusual power to cheerfully and quietly do her morning chores, so it’s possible early risers are not spawns of Satan.

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I was never going to put Wesley in school full-day until 1st grade, just like his sisters. But you know by now what happens to the best laid plans of mice and moms. So this year, he’s in full-day kindergarten and is doing much better than I ever imagined. Statistically, he has even odds of being dyslexic, and it’s difficult to pull him away from playing Power Ranger-Robot-Castle-Storming-Lightsabor-Duelist-Puppy to figure out if he has all his pre-reading ducks in a row, but I think he’s going to be fine, and perhaps even a wonderfully average kid. He has lost two teeth from unnatural causes, refuses to sleep alone (which is why Kyla and Piper have an extra bed in their rooms), still sucks his fingers, and is my one child who loves to play board games with me. He also was the full instigator of the worst day our household had in the last 365 days, just before he turned 5, but I blogged that out of my system ages ago.

I hesitate to put it in writing, but if homeschooling continues to go well, Kyla will return to school for 4th grade, so I can finally have my well-deserved year of reading fantasy novels, eating bonbons, and finding new places to hide dust bunnies in between spa treatments. I have a few schemes up my sleeve, none of which involve housework. The overarching goal is to not let everything I’ve learned about literacy and struggling learners only be useful to Kyla. I’d like to start a charter school for dyslexic learners someday, but currently I’m struggling with the motivation to start dinner, so I’ll settle for helping other families navigate learning challenges.

Finally, for those who found the font on the photo card a bit small, I will do my first 2nd edition:

Pine needles scattered, presents all shred,

Feral children not nestled in bed.

All through the house, not one inch undamaged,

As we all sigh at last, “Mischief Managed!”

We wish you a very Happy Christmas and a tolerable election year.

Love, love, love,

Denise & Dwayne, Kyla, Piper, and Wesley


[1] This was edited for language in the final draft.

Merry Christmas! (Family Came!)

We had Christmas Eve on our own, but then hosted 15 others for Christmas afternoon.  Dwayne did all the cooking our house contributed, and created a perfect prime rib. 

Cousin Cecily, at 3, is the youngest, meaning all the kids had far more fun away from the adults, and if the reverse were true, I will let you decide yourself. 

For the record, that’s Parker (possible Peter Parker).

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Wesley loved his new Superman Snuggly.  It’s odd it took so many years to make a kid version.

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Julie created a “cocktail” Christmas gift for Dwayne a few weeks earlier, and Dwayne made good use of it (though several people may not remember, especially if they had one of his White Russians). 

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Aw, family.

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We had done presents a few weeks earlier, Santa dropped off all his gifts earlier, so there was a manageable about of presents throughout the day.

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But it’s the people.  We had so much fun being together.  Merry Christmas, everyone!

Merry Christmas (Christmas Cafe)

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Sometimes, the kids really surprise us.  Christmas morning, they were excited to see presents (books) at the foot of their beds and in the living room, but began by donning aprons.

First, Wesley brought me this: a mug of water, an orange, an apple, one soggy Ritz cracker (see earlier mug of water), and one regular Ritz. 

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Piper had boxed up everything she wanted to use to set a table for Dwayne and me the day before.  Using her favorite blankets and my good china, she created this.

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Then she went through her cookbooks and created a menu of items that the cookbooks said she could make.  (She never checked if we had the ingredients, or made calculations of how much time any recipe would take.  I understood this and ordered accordingly.  Dwayne had to revise his order a few times until he ordered something he could realistically have.  It came down to toast, french toast, and scrambled eggs.)

But it was a very special way of giving to Mama and Daddy!  Thanks, kids!

Merry Christmas! (Santa Came)

What the house looked like at midnight, just after Santa came.  (The large pile in the middle is for me. Dwayne had gotten me new drawers for the refrigerator, which the kids delight in breaking every January.)

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These two little Who’s were sound asleep in front of our bedroom fireplace.

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This is what that same living room looked like 10 hours later.

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Christmas Eve

In all my memories, I’ve never not had plans on Christmas Eve with family and friends.  But this year, we had an early family Christmas and Dwayne and I were hosting Christmas at our house.  So the Eve was unaccounted for.

IMG_3613We first when to our small church’s Candlelight Service and then headed to Bellevue Square to celebrate with approximately half of the 425 area code residents Snowflake Lane (note: we will probably take the next several years off from Snowflake Lane after this year). 

The lights are spectacular.

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The costumes, characters, and bubbles, eye-popping.

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The crowds, overwhelming.  And the (male and female) drummers that started this entire celebration were completely overshadowed by pretty girls in matching wigs and skimpy (Denise’s POV), fully-covered (Dwayne’s POV) snowflake costumes.  Fun, but, um, we could hear the drummers, but we couldn’t see them.

The crowds may have had something to do with it.  Let’s just say it took us an hour to get out of the parking lot.  And if anyone in the family wasn’t cranky before, we were then.  Sigh. I need some practice getting Chrismas Eve right. 

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The Great Office Clean Up

Most of the house was clean (enough).  But the back two rooms were behind closed doors, for good reason.  The guest room had become Santa’s Workshop.  But the office is a place I deliberately designed exactly as I wanted it, and I basically only go in it to drop off another handful of paper or other “to deal with later” crap before moving on to another chore.  Dwayne uses it almost every evening, but neither makes nor organizes any mess. 

I began by realizing that if I cleaned the office, the rest of the house was going to be torn apart by Children on Winter Break, and made my peace with it.  Then I made goals, texted pics and goals to a friend also struggling with a messy room. 

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By the time I was done, I had one full bag of landfill garbage, an almost full recycling bin that had been empty earlier that morning, 3 boxes of books set aside for resale, and years of my life put in one of those 3 categories.  (I decided that I didn’t really need all my grade school report cards or postcards I got as a child or my entire collection of books of quotations that I love but don’t use since the advent of the internet.)

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Tada!

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Of course, this what the hallway looked like after all that cleaning.  But that’s another day.  Christmas is almost here!

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Cabineering—Living up to a New Verb

Once Dwayne and I got some skateboarding out of our system, we headed over to the cabin to kick off Winter Break.  We took separate cars, because that’s what we do, and Dwayne worked on Monday. 

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(Doesn’t it look cozy?  That’s Piper’s finger after the rest of her sticky hands found my camera.)

I had barely brought in our bags when Dwayne and I started in on the yard—after some major windstorms that actually left our neighbor’s house with a tree-sized dent from one end of the house to the other—we were grateful to just be picking up heaps and heaps of branches.  It took enough time that somehow dinner didn’t a chance to thaw, so Dwayne had to take us to dinner.

[Dining note: With a great atmosphere that only falls short of Gordon’s on Blueberry Hill and food that matches, we recommend Glass Alley Cafe in Freeland.  It had reopened under new management the week before.]

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When Dwayne left us on Sunday, we just had a hours to wait for Jen to drop Aubrey off for the next few nights. I wouldn’t know what to do with myself if I only had my own 3. 

This is what the ended up doing:

Piper playing XBox.

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Wesley napping next to Piper playing video games.

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Kyla shut in her bedroom listening to audiobooks.  (Not pictured, as she prefers.)

My working theory is that’s its usually a good idea to break up the siblings with someone who they haven’t fought with for 24 hours. Also, it’s an inexact science, but the more kids, the less, they need me.  Which is why Eli came around most of Monday.

I took the 5 kids down to our beach and saw a first for us—the tide so high that it covered the entire beach, all the way up to the log that is usually our last hurdle to the shore.  (Yep, that is where we repel down to the beach.)

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And Kyla is the first to fall in the drink.  No surprise, as she might be the kids most like me.  She was cheerful until she got back to the cabin by herself and couldn’t remember the combo to get inside.  Sorry, kid, I forgot how hard remembering random numbers can be for you. 

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With Jen back with us on Monday, our time quickly filled until Tuesday afternoon when we had to leave to be back in time for yet another repairman at home.  (However, now every appliance at both places is working.  Knock on wood and throw salt over my shoulder.)

Opposite Day

We were heading to the cabin, but with the freedom of winter break, we didn’t have to be in a hurry.  So after Dwayne and I packed the car, we got out our new rip-sticks (like a skateboard) and played out in the street while the kids stayed inside playing videos games. 

It’s like snowboarding, but warmer!  Love it.

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Books, Books!

Two of my favorite authors have released new books this season.  If we have similar tastes in fiction (fantasy, magic, strong female characters, intrigue, a suspenseful frollic that looks nothing like my life), then you may enjoy these as well.

Jim Butcher writes the very popular (and very good) Harry Dresden series, but I fell for him in his Codex Alera series, a consistant Must Read on my top 10 list.  Here is his first in a new series:

Celebrity endorsements are usually fairly meaningless, unless the celebrity is a far more famous fantasy writer (who really needs to be near the top of your list).  Patrick Rothfuss writes this about The Aeronaut’s Windlass:

So Jim Butchder is writing futuristic dystopian steampunk?  You had me at Jim Butcher, actually.  But the rest is cool too….great action scenes, a fascinating world, a characters of a sort I’ve never seen before.  Yup.  This is everything I’ve come to expecct from Jim Butcher, but in a delightful new flavor.

Outside of Rothfuss, the only other fantasy writer who truly gives me tingles and “Book Buzz” is Michael Sullivan, who I’ve raved about before.

Currently, I prefer Sullivan’s Riyria Revelation  trilogy over Rothfuss’s Kingkiller Trilogy, but it’s not quite a fair comparison since Rothfuss hasn’t published the 3rd book yet.  However, the Riyria Revelations had such a marvelous completion that it still gives me thrills to think about it.  I’m currently reading the second book, Rise of Empire, aloud to the entire family.  The kids got addicted to it by second-hand smoke—I always read it aloud to Dwayne when we drive somewhere. 

The trilogy was so perfect that it couldn’t be added to without ruining it, so he began writing really good prequels.  This is the third book of the Riyria Chronicles, and it just opened up a wormhole to another series he’s writing, taking us back in time 3000 years before Royce and Hadian accidently save the world.  It comes out next June, and I’ve already preordered my summer time buzz.

 

Happy Reading to you in 2016!

Love,

Denise