10.22.2015

The Inspired Readers Book Club: New Book

Our new pick, which I'm reading with pen-in-hand!

So it's time for a new book since we finished The Winter of Our Disconnect, & this time, I'm leading!  I am super excited, but also very nervous.  The book is All The Light We Cannot See by Anthony Doerr, which has been on my list to read for months.  It's 530 pages, which, I'll admit, is daunting... But I'm jumping in with both feet!

If you are a reader without a book club (aka "a lonely reader") please join us!  We have a Facebook page where once a week we post discussions about whatever book we're working through, and it's so fun to have all kinds of feedback from women from all walks of life.

I take my job as book club leader verrry seriously!

The schedule for this new book is as follows:

October 26th {Week 1} : Chapters Zero & One
November 2nd {Week 2} : Chapters Two & Three
November 9th {Week 3} : Chapters Four & Five
November 16th {Week 4} : Chapters Six, Seven & Eight
November 23rd {Week 5} : Chapters Nine, Ten, Eleven, Twelve & Thirteen


I hope you can join us!

10.21.2015

Disconnecting

My book club just finished reading The Winter of Our Disconnect: How Three Totally Wired Teenagers (and a Mother Who Slept with Her iPhone) Pulled the Plug on Their Technology and Lived to Tell the Tale by Susan Maushart.  I am hopeful that I'm forever changed.  I loved this book so much.  It stretched my knowledge on media, challenged me to take a hard look at my own use of screens, and made me determined to guide my children well through these same waters when their time comes.

Basically the book is about a journalist who kicks all technology (television, tablets, cell phones, computers, internet) out of her house.  She and her three teenagers spend a lot of time cooking, visiting, reading and sleeping during their six month fast.

Mixed in with her personal experience, she presents a ton of research on the topic of technology-- phone use, television exposure, and the like.  She presents it in a very readable way, and I can't tell you how many pages I marked or underlined in my copy of the book.

First off, it makes me want to read Thoreou's Walden Pond, which inspired her journey.

Second, I want to re-approach my life with Monotasking (or uni-tasking) as my goal.  All the studies show that no one (seriously. no one.) does multi-tasking well (which I found offensive because I was sure that I was good at it) and I want to work harder to be in the moment I'm in, not scroll through my phone in an effort to avoid it.

Maushart also talks about our inability to read anything deep or lengthy.  I find this to be totally true of myself.  Getting started on a really large or challenging book, or truly reading (and comprehending) a long article are far more challenging to me than they used to be.  I think this is because our screens now spoon-feed us our information.  We don't have to work as hard as we used to.

Along those same lines, she presents the argument that we are raising currently a generation that is used to getting what they want when they want it with minimal effort.  I myself am entirely guilty.  I wait in line furiously tapping my foot as I wait my turn.  I pull through the drive through, irritated that it takes eight minutes to get my meal.  I roll my eyes and groan when my Facebook page doesn't pull up instantaneously on my laptop when I click the icon.  The list goes on.  We have become an impatient generation.

We're also, despite all the connectivity, a really disconnected generation.  It seems the more we "connect" online, the less connected we actually are.  Studies have shown it.  And my life is proof.  Despite the fact that I had: Facebook, email, Skype and my blog to stay connected to my loved ones while I was in rural Alaska, I ended up anxious and depressed, suffering from feelings of loneliness.  Nothing is the same as face time.

Which is exactly what Sharon Turkle, TED Speaker, says.  How do we rectify these disconnected connections?  It is as simple as making real conversations a priority again, she assures us, and making some areas technology free.  The areas I'm choosing are: Meal time, homeschool time and bedtime.  I believe that by making these areas phone & TV free, the boys will know that they are my top priority.  Not having it at the table during homeschool should be easy.  Same with bedtime.  But leaving the phone upstairs during meal times? That one's going to be a challenge.  But with that, I think some real connecting will start going on, and that will make it worth it.

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Another important point that Maushart makes in her book is that boredom is self diagnosed, first of all, and not actually bad for you, second of all.  It's not my job to be an activity coordinator. Yet if I eliminate screens, that's exactly what ends up happening.  From the book I learned that kids LOVING the screens, and claiming they gain true happiness from them, doesn't mean they are good for them. In fact, they're bad for them.  And a little boredom? Might actually do them some good.  Might promote some creativity.

So then, with all this information, what is the answer?  Be choosier about friends on Facebook or Instagram?  Get rid of everything?  Become a tech tyrant and berate all your friends and family into joining you on a six month break from all things with screens?

I tend to be  black & white thinker, but when it comes to technology we really must look at it in shades of gray because it can enhance our lives (like online bill pay, FaceTime when your husband is 2500 miles away, or ordering groceries when you live in rural Alaska...) but it can also hurt us (ie cause us to ignore people, lack human connection & waste valuable time).

I think for me, the first answer is: Awareness.  Just being aware that cell phones, tablets and televisions can put distance between people is a start.  Just being aware that real conversations are important and people need to feel heard is a start.  The second answer is: Be Choosy.  With three kids, and another on the way, I need to be choosy about where I spend my time online.  And the third, as I mentioned above is: Put It Away.  There needs to be times when I'm unavailable.  It's good for my psyche.  And it shows my kids that they are more important than my 8th grade best friends' Facebook status update.

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In addition to the TED talk, I also loved this article I shared on Facebook.  

In it, the author says, "You need to suppress your empathy "gene" in order to participate fully in the mobile revolution." I feel this so fully.  And I have so many times felt "half listened" to and ignored by other people on their phones.  And, if we're being honest, I've also been the one "half listening" at times...

We don't have rules or etiquette.  There's no way to say to someone, "Dude, can you put that away? You're making me feel small and unimportant."  But that's what we want to say! We want to be more important than Facebook or that text from someone else.

So what should the rules be?  When you're with another human being, put your phone away, not on the table between you.  When you have a chance for real interaction with other people, let yourself be fully immersed in it.  It's the only way to fully live your life.

As my friend Ashley said, 
"Screens shouldn't become an escape from reality, but should compliment reality."

I couldn't have said it better myself.
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10.20.2015

All Our Pumpkins

My parents invited the boys to come carve their Very First Pumpkins (Ever!) at her house, 
and we happily accepted!!!  

We did it with our cousins, Ferris & Milo, which just made it even more fun!!!

I loved Logan's pumpkins' face.  It looks just like him!  
Missing teeth, glasses and all!

Wyatt instructed me to draw triangles for eyes and the nose, 
and to give his pumpkin three teeth. Only three!

His was the first one ready to be opened.

Love this pic of Milo peeking at what's inside.

Then he got to open his own.
Eww! Guts!

Ferris' face says it all- he was so excited!

Seriously, the whole day, I couldn't get over Logan's pumpkin.  
The glasses kill me.

Milo's pumpkin

Jack drew his all by himself, too.
(How much do you love those dimples?
Never in a million years did I imagine I'd have babies with dimples.)

Pumpkin chandelier anyone???

Thank goodness my dad was there, too, and willing to dig in...

because of all the kids, only Jack was willing to put his hands in there!

So us grown ups got lots of pumpkin guts up to our elbows!

But the end result was totally worth it!

How cute are those five little pumpkins?


And this little pumpkin?
She's my favorite one of all.


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After carving pumpkins my sister let Logan help her make pumpkin seeds.

He loved helping.

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What a great, great day!
Happy Fall!

10.19.2015

Homeschool: First Trimester

First Day of School Pictures!
2015-2016 School Year

Logan Henry
Age 7
Second Grade

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Jack Sawyer
Age 7
Second Grade

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"The big boys"

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Wyatt Nathanial
Age 4
Pre-Kindergarten

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First Day of School where we homeschool at the table in the boys' oversize bedroom

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We are a good three months into school now, and I am so happy to have that routine in place.  When Josh first left, we struggled to get ourselves under control.  Adjusting to school after spending the summer footloose and fancy free was super challenging.

Once we got started, I found that "life" was the worst part of homeschooling.  I learned, very quickly, that my hardest job was going to be protecting our time.  It was crazy how appointments would sneak into our mornings and blow our whole schedule right out the window.  Now that I've figured out to schedule activities and appointments in the afternoons, things have been running far more smoothly.  

These were challenges we didn't face in rural Alaska, so it's odd to be four years in, and just now navigating them!

Our curriculum still looks like this:
Daily Journal + Picture
Handwriting Practice
Saxon Reading Lesson
Read Aloud:
-"I Survived" chapter books
Saxon Math Lesson
Sign Language flashcards

And with Wyatt I am working on 100 Lessons to Read. He's already read quite a few sentences, and it's so adorable to see his little eyes light up when figures out the word.

Next trimester, I want to work on:
Daily Oral Language
More Art & Projects
Character Traits
Firming up our Science curriculum
and making time for reading aloud to mommy

And getting Wyatt to write his name consistently.

It's so exciting to look back and see the progress I've made just since August. I can't imagine how it will look at the end of the school year!


10.18.2015

Cousin Love

Back in Alaska, we sent out a lot of mail.  One day Jack made himself a list of all the people he was going to send notes to.  I love his "guess & go" with names.

Ferris (followed by a double check)
Milo (followed by a single check)
Isaac
Alvin (spelled correctly!)
Ethan

Gisele (followed by a single check)
Gustav (followed by a single check)

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10.17.2015

Summer Livin' at the River

I truly can't express how awesome our summer weather was.  I mean, it was insane. It only rained TWO DAYS the entire time Josh was here. (From mid May to mid August)

So much good weather meant we spent a lot of time at the family swimming hole.  
It was so much fun!
One for the money...

Two for the show...

Three to get ready...

And four to go!

Watching them jump in never gets old!  I can't believe how brave they are.  I didn't swim out to the rock and jump in until I was probably 12 or 14!

The second favorite activity at the river is scuba diving with papa's scuba gear.  They love looking at all the crawdad's and searching for agates.

Even Wyatt likes to try on the goggles and look at rocks!

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10.16.2015

Singleton vs. Twins






This summer I took Wyatt with me to an open house for a friend of mine.  At four years old, bringing him to something by himself is just so easy!  I couldn't help but compare him to his brothers.  (See? I'm as bad as anyone when it comes to comparing. ;) When they were four, taking the two of them somewhere was so.much.work!  Wyatt is far mellower than his brothers and because there's only one of him, he's somewhat easier to entertain.  He can sit quietly and play with some cars on a table top, or jump on the giant trampoline with nary a fist fight or tantrum.  With the twins, there was constantly this competition between them-- for the coolest car, the best spot on the trampoline, or the attention of those around them.  Having one after having two shows me just how challenging that competition made parenting!
I'm happy to report that it's much easier to take them places now, and even going places with all three of them can be done peacefully.  But when they were younger, they for sure gave me a run for my money!

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