Tuesday, June 30, 2009
Monday, June 29, 2009
Rodanthe, North Carolina
UPDATE:
Since this post, the house has been moved to a new location. You can read and watch it here.
Home again, Home again, juggidy jug...
When we got into the hotel near DC, Lauren, Andrew and Noah went for a swim while Megan and I went to a grocery store to get some supplies and back to Pizza Hut to pick up a pizza for supper. While out, Lauren called and said for us to come quick that Noah had fallen by the pool and hit his face and head and we were going to have to take him to the emergency room!
What a way to start a vacation. By the time we got back to the hotel, he had calmed down and we realized that he was okay except for a busted lip and a little bump over his eye...Thank God it wasn't anything more.
I use to think I would love to live in a large city. In fact, years ago, before I married, I had the chance to go to DC and work, but I chose to get married instead. And at the time Andrew was in the military and couldn't go anywhere, so I didn't go to DC to work...
Now, I don't like big cities...to many people, to much traffic...I prefer the slower, easier path. It is enough of a challenge for me to drive a few miles in afternoon traffic to get to Wal-Mart or Food Lion, I am not interested in long commutes and long traffic delays. I think that people who fight that traffic day after day probably age quicker than the rest of us do. That is just a theory of mine, I don't have research to back it up, but just country folk observation...
So when we decided to change our destination after DC, I found us a room on the beach. As we made our way south from the DC area, once we reached Newport News, Virginia, I could feel the difference in the air. I could smell the salt water. After going through the Hampton Bay Bridge tunnel, and arriving in Virginia Beach, the stress of the city was all but gone. I felt so relaxed. Driving onto the Outer Banks, where the living is easy and slow...I felt totally at ease and felt right at home...
After getting settled in at the hotel, we headed to the beach, only to find rough waters and we found out that someone had drown earlier that day, and they had not recovered the body...
While everyone else enjoyed the pool, Noah and I played in the sand and I just listened and watched the waves crashing onto the shore. Such a wonderful relaxing sound...
Megan and I rose fairly early and looked for shells along the beach and we took late evening walks after the tide came in. We came home with a bag of ocean treasures...
I was again reminded that I would love to live where I could get up every morning and walk along the shore searching for shells. I didn't take many pictures while there, I was hesitant about taking my camera out in the sand, so I only have a few to share. I did take some in DC and will be posting some of those later.
Now that we are back to the daily hum of life, I need to get up and go to the grocery store, so I will stop this post here. I will post photo's and more bout the trip another time.
Saturday, June 20, 2009
Free Falling...
Friday, June 19, 2009
Victoria Magazine love...

Tuesday, June 16, 2009
Tuesday's Tidbits
Trying to get ready for Lauren's arrival on Saturday. Doing a little house cleaning and rearranging so she will have a place to put her stuff.
Also planning our vacation. I am trying to find hotels and make our itinerary. We are doing a two cities tour. We are going to DC for a few days and then on up to NYC for a couple of days. Since our time is limited to only a week, we are choosing just the things that we really want to see while in both places. We aren't going to try to take it all in. So I am working our list down to a manageable amount of sightseeing.
Last week I went to the farmer's market and bought some veggies. Last night I made a wonderful tasting asparagus dish. Although it wasn't exactly the healthiest of recipes, it tasted good. I don't have any photo's but I put four pieces of bacon on the bottom of a skillet, put the washed and trimmed asparagus on top with some garlic, pepper, and sea salt on top. I drizzled some olive oil over the asparagus and covered it. I let it cook down until the asparagus was soft, ( I like it better that way). When it was finished I placed the asparagus in a casserole dish and chopped the bacon in small pieces and sprinkled across the top, added a little salt and pepper and enjoyed.
I had also purchased some leeks from the market and I made Potato and Leek soup with those. I was so good and nourishing. The only thing I will do differently next time is to puree the whole thing and eat it as a cream soup. It had such a soothing taste to it. I will definitely be having that again.
Today I am cooking some Banana Walnut Bread. I had some bananas going bad and hated to throw them away, (that is my excuse anyway!). So I found a recipe that includes crushed pineapples. I can smell it in the oven now. I am going to enjoy a little and freeze the rest until Saturday when Lauren gets here. She loves banana nut bread. That way, I don't trash my diet by eating the whole loaf today!
It is a rainy, lazy day today. I don't feel much like doing anything. I haven't done much all day.
I am still loving Curves. I injured my ankle and knee on my right side last week, and didn't go Thursday or Friday. I went back Saturday and they are closed Sunday. I didn't go yesterday because my ankle was swollen some and hurting. I guess I won't go this week, because I need my foot and knee to be okay by the weekend because we will be doing a lot of walking on our trip. Although I hate to miss this week I would rather be safe than sorry. I don't want to go to DC and NYC and not be able to enjoy the trip.
Well that is about all that is happening in my little world today. There are a few other odds and ends but nothing I want to write about anyway.
Friday, June 12, 2009
A Little About Homeschooling
When in fact, those are secondary in the whole scope of homeschooling issues.
I know there are varying views regarding homeschooling...and homeschoolers have very different reasons for homeschooling...
My reasons were different in the beginning when I took Lauren out of public school after she finished third grade. Moving around became the main reason for homeschooling though the years. I didn't want to have to move my children in and out of different schools systems across the country. But there are other reasons that went along with that...
There were many times I questioned whether I was doing the right thing or not, but so often had no real choice. It was better than the alternative. Now that Lauren is almost 20 and Megan is 14 I can look at them and know that I did do the right thing...
That even on a bad day with homeschooling it was better than most of the school systems I had experience with. Not just the educational aspects of it, but everything taken together...
I was in public school all of my life, and I knew that my kids were getting better than I got, without what I call, the side effects of public school. Don't get me wrong, I am not condemning anyone for sending their kids to public schools. Maybe it works well for you...I am not one of those people that thinks my way is the only way, or the best way. Everyone is different, every situation is different...I can only speak from my experiences, and my understanding.
Yes, there are areas that they could have done better than I was able to do for them...Algebra for instance...I hate algebra, and I can't really teach it...But I took it in public school and in college, so goes to show you it doesn't matter who teaches or where you learn it, somethings just aren't your area of expertise...we can't all be great at everything...but I managed to get through it and I have a college degree to prove it...whatever that is good for.
When I started homeschooling, I ordered the "school in a box" thing. Lauren was enrolled in Calvert homeschool. It is one of the oldest traditional homeschool programs out there. It was more expensive but I felt it would be worth it. You see, I kept thinking homeschool would be just like school only at home. And that worked well for Lauren, because she was geared that way. She had been trained from K-3rd in public school, so she knew the drill, and was good at it. She loved to read, did great in writing and Calvert required lots of both. She always hate math, just wasn't her thing.
As we went along, I begin to see the fallacy of thinking homeschool should be like school only at home. So I begin to expand. With Megan she had only gone to Kindergarten in public school, so she had not been trained in the ways of traditional school. Because we all know Kindergarten is not at all like traditional school. She started out with Calvert, but I soon discovered that she wasn't a traditional learner. She like to learn by doing. She didn't like to sit for hours and do book work. She liked to read by not so much. She loved to make up stories and has from the time she was a very young child, but she hated to sit down and write them out on paper. She wanted someone else to write for her. When she did write, she was a perfectionist about it. If she messed up one thing, she wanted to throw away the whole paper and start over...do you know how trying that can be when you have a long paper to write?
We tried several different curriculums through the years...my favorite has been unschooling... (If you haven't heard of it, click on the unschooling link.)
One thing I hope that I taught my children is a life-long love of learning. I know that they have to have certain skills in order to pass the tests that are required to get into college. But beyond that I hope that they have just enjoyed learning. I know that I have enjoyed having my children home with me, sharing our days, and our experiences together. I can't imagine having to send them off everyday for 7-8 hours and not knowing what they were doing or what they were learning. I know that for many people they feel they have no other choice, I am not judging. Just speaking of my own experience.
I love being able to go upstairs and see Megan sitting in her room reading or watching Noah playing and pretending to be this or that. I always enjoyed having my kids with me when I did the grocery shopping or when I had to run errands. We have spent many hours in the car exploring new places and finding interesting things to do. I enjoyed having them come into the kitchen in the middle of the day and our having lunch together.
I believe that kids will learn what they need to learn when they are ready. I don't believe that all kids learn the same way and at the same point in development. Putting them in a setting that requires that or considers them a failure if they don't, isn't what I consider a good learning environment. Homeschooling offers the freedom to learn at each child's own pace and level, without being compared to others. These are just a few of the reasons why homeschooling is our choice. Homeschooling is a lifestyle choice, it isn't just about education, but it is all inclusive lifestyle...
Homeschooling touches all aspects of our lives. At our house, school is always in session...