Category Archives: Books

inspire me

About the photos first- these are some very new little neighbors that we’ve been visiting and helping out with a lot in the last couple of weeks.  The twin nurslings below (3 days old in these photos) are a happily bonded set sticking close to their mama.  We give them lots of space and try not to get in the way of all that is good there.  The little lambs that you see in-arms here (a week and a half old) were rejected by their sheep mother and needed a two legged mama to step in to provide them with care and feeding.  Or, when available, several.

And now for the part where I need your help!  I need suggestions for several things in life right now.  Number one is something new to read.  I just finished Reinventing the Enemy’s Language: Contemporary Native Women’s Writings of North America, edited by Gloria Bird and Joy Harjo, a thoughtful gift from my sister.  Having thoroughly enjoyed that tome I’m ready to move on to something new.  Any suggestions?  Perhaps something inspiring in the realm of education?  We’re currently re-doing our local history block (along with math review) with both of the older boys, since we were in different towns and a different county when they originally did them.  It fits well and makes sense with our life right now.  But I’m undecided as to where to go from here.  At the same time I’m feeling that end of year push of everything I want to get done before summer starts and we take a bit of a break.  So inspiring in the world of education would be very good, but I’ll take any and all suggestions for a good read!

Number two: I need something to watch.  A late night knitting companion, if you will.  Because I do sometimes like to watch a bit of something and knit at the end of a long day.  So suggestions?  Preferably something available on Netflix instant watch?  TV shows work well because they are nice little watchable chunks and perhaps even more importantly, I don’t have to come up with something new to watch from day to day, I can just click “play next episode” because really deciding on something new is far too over-whelming at that point in my day.

And finally I need boy clothes sewing pattern ideas and inspiration.  Because I have boys that need clothes, but I am bored, bored, bored.  Bored I tell you!  With the same old.  Bleck.  You must help me find something new and exciting that I can get into sewing or else they may just have to go naked because I can’t talk myself into sewing another dull thing.

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letter to no one in particular

For three days now everything has been draped in thick grey fog.  It’s insulating and fascinating and kind of gloomy and in some ways very welcome to me.  It makes me want to knit shawls in just that same color.  I actually have two projects on needles right now in shades of fog, but it’s not quite the same as a shawl or a stole to wrap the fog about me.

It’s been a long and thoroughly stressful several months with yesterday ending in heartache and disappointment.  After everyone else was in bed I got down one of the cheap wine glasses with wisteria vines etched on them, that I bought myself when I moved into my first apartment, and poured myself a glass of really bad, cheap cooking wine.  The only kind of wine we ever have in the house because well, Steve doesn’t drink at all and I really don’t either.  Maybe a glass of wine while out somewhere once a year.  Maybe.  Depending on the year.  And never at home.  Seriously, this may well be the first time I’ve ever had a drink in my own home.  And it was from the screw top bottle of red wine that I mix in with my beef stew.

I read somewhere once that your cholesterol level influences how easily you become intoxicated.  The lower your cholesterol the less alcohol it takes.  If there is any truth to that them my cholesterol levels must be fan-freakin’-tastic.

I’ve been out of sorts and not exactly myself the last couple of days.  This morning I made a pot of coffee, perhaps as a counterpoint to the wine the night before?  Even though I’ve not been a coffee drinker for nearly 13 years now.  Not since I got pregnant with Iain.  Those two weeks of withdraw headaches were nearly enough to do me in and since then I’ve contented myself with snagging Steve’s mug on the weekends and taking a couple of deep breaths, and once every so often a tiny sip.  I deemed today’s indulgence medicinal, for the headache I woke up with, probably triggered by the wine (no I wasn’t hung-over, I don’t think you can get a hang-over from a partial glass of wine, but certain foods and substances are triggers for me).  I added maple syrup and coconut milk to it, even though as a coffee drinker I only ever made it black, plain, nothing added.  And usually that’s how it would appeal to me.  But today somehow I wasn’t entirely me.

We made Russian Tea Cakes, as the new me/not me conveniently forgot that we’re not really eating sugar right now.  Or dairy for that matter.  I replaced all of the flour with white buckwheat flour and once cool they tasted very much like the cookies I remember from my childhood, though we called them Mexican Wedding Cookies.  Elijah said they were, “scrumptious and sickening”.

We cut hundreds of paper snowflakes.  We’ve always made the ones with fancy folds of a hexagon, but decided to try circles of all different sizes this year and enjoyed the effect.

The big boys have taken to waking up early to clean random things as a surprise for me.  Which is really lovely, and kind of odd, and makes me feel vaguely guilty, though I’m not really sure why.

The two little ones have been out of sorts as well.  It’s that time of year when you can never quite tell if they are still getting over some little sickness of starting to fight off something new.  Màiri’s cheeks grow bright red when she’s fighting something off and Galen made her cry by telling her she looked like she had scarlet fever.

For dinner I made roasted Brussels sprouts, bacon and apples (for the first time ever) and baked squash (for about the umpteenth time this season alone).

It’s getting cold in the house.  I think that maybe I should make a new throw or two.  I keep borrowing The Girl’s yellow afghan to use as a lap blanket.  She shares very nicely, but it doesn’t seem fair.

It was my father’s birthday today.  I wish I had been there to give him his present.  Not that he would have been around anyway, as he’s working too hard this December, just like every one before it that I can remember.  I worry so about him.  The kids all sang ‘happy birthday’ over the phone.  I hope it brought some cheer to his day.

I just finished reading The Dirty Life: On Farming, Food and Love and it was very good, even while making me a bit squeamish at times.  Now I’m re-reading Homecoming by Cynthia Voigt because I seem to remember it striking a cord with me as an adolescent and I was wondering if Iain is old enough for it yet, but even a couple of pages in somehow I don’t think so.  Not that there is anything particularly alarming going on, but it just doesn’t feel right for the stage he’s at.  It doesn’t seem as though it would be nourishing to him in any way.  I really do look at books for them that way, for myself as well.  I try to find the ones that will feed something inside of them and my gut tells me it’s just not the right time for this one.

I had thought that this evening I’d curl up with my fog colored knitting and watch ‘Little Women’.  Somehow that sounds like such a comfort.  All day this has been in the back of my mind.  And if Màiri is restless again and wakes up looking for me, she can come and lay on my lap while I knit.  But now that it’s nighttime, I’m so tired that I can’t imagine staying up so late, so I suppose I won’t after-all.

Sincerely,

Melody

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School in September

We started our school year the first of September and it’s been a good year so far.  A sixth grader, a fourth grader, one in kindergarten and preschooler means that I am one busy mama!  Honestly, we’re all busy.  There is so much to fit in to each and every day.

We started our first day by gathering up, cleaning and organizing all of our supplies.  We cleaned out the homeschooling closet for a fresh start.  I didn’t buy any new school supplies this year.  I first wanted to see what we had left and assess.  We cleaned our crayons and sharpened our pencils, tossing away the ones that are too little to be of any use.  There will be more art supplies coming to all of the children at Christmas time, but for now I want to use up what we have left.  Apart for the practical aspects, I wanted them to start the year off by actively doing something to maintain our little school at home.  This isn’t just my thing, we all work together and it’s everyone’s responsibility to help out.  I feel like reinforcing that idea really helped to start us off on the right foot.  At the start of every day, they tidy our homeschooling table again, emptying the pencil sharpener, filing away old work, clearing away scarps of paper and anything that might have been left behind the day before.

At the end of the first day we celebrated by breaking out the chalk; playing games and drawing designs on the driveway.  We’ve lived here for a year now and it wasn’t until that day that it occurred to any of us that for the first time in over a decade, we actually have a paved driveway where this sort of thing is a possibility.  Sometimes we’re not real quick on the uptake.  But it was all the more fun because of the novelty.

Iain is now doing a bit of yoga to start his school day.  Not much, just a few sun salutations, some deep breathing and gentle stretching to settle him into his lesson.  The little ones think this is fabulous and line up beside him to join in.  Pretty adorable that.

 

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Week in the Life, Friday

Friday 1

~Today Galen was a cow that needed milking in the morning and a queen in the afternoon.

cow

~We were supposed to have friends over, but they had to cancel and we were kind of at a loss as to what to do with ourselves.

~Early in the morning a road crew started repaving a section of road about a block away.  We’re still sensitive enough to chemicals that this was scary and the children and I ran around the house closing and locking windows and digging out the air purifier.

~It was a dark, grey, blah sort of day, with everyone a bit cranky and antsy at being trapped inside.

brunch

~We cooked and ate, did some dishes and laundry (I’m forever doing laundry).  Eljiah broke a plate, Màiri fell in the toilet, Iain and Galen crashed into each other.  It was that kind of morning.  I rocked Màiri and sang to her.  The kids read a lot. I played the piano with little cars rolling over the keys an octave down, unclogged the adored laundry chute, and was called upon, yet again to explain why I don’t think our landlord would appreciate us keeping a horse in the shed.

dishes

~Around 1:30 the workmen packed up.  We went out.  The wind was blowing strongly in the opposite direction.  What a relief!  I weeded.  The little ones caught a grasshopper, the bigger ones played catch.

~storms started rolling in, canceling our tentative plans to cook supper over an open fire.

~It was decided that a change of scenery was most definitely needed.  When Steve came home we would head to town.

~Iain offered to get Màiri Rose ready to go out.  He tried to bribed her with a nickel to wear a dress, she held out to the tune of twenty-five cents, but looked adorable in her red gingham….and one of Elijah’s hats.

getting ready

(my hair is still wet in this picture.  why is my hair always wet in the pictures I post?)

~I decided to put on a dress and make-up (a couple of months ago I started wearing make-up occasionally for the first time in 12 years or so) and to pretend like I was going on a date with my husband, instead of the six of us being driven out of the house by roadwork and unfavorable weather.  It was very funny and somewhat sad that the lady at the fabric store that I now know quite well, didn’t recognize me.  “Oh my gosh, it’s you!  I just figured it out from your voice!”

~Also a little sad, the only nice dress that I could find in my closet is one that I bought when I was 16.

fabric store

~bobbins, a yard of something nice off the remnant table and the fabric to make Little Rosebud an autumn outfit, were all procured while the rest of the family returned library books up the street.

on the way

~we all took a little stop in at the used bookstore.  Both of these stores are just the kind I like; quiet, a little dim, somewhat cluttered, with so many interesting things to look at on over-flowing old wooden shelves.  They both stock the kinds of gems that you just won’t find anywhere else.

bookstore

~a couple of select things that made their way home with us.  I was hoping to find the entire Anne of Green Gables set, the boys are reading them now and our library doesn’t carry them all, but only one volume was to be found.

books

~also “The New England Cook Book: The Latest and the Best Methods for Economy and Luxury at Home” , a reprint of the 1905 classic and “The Field and Forest Handy Book” both of which will be thoroughly enjoyed in this house.

~Steve was kind enough to sneak back and secretly purchase a vintage storybook with charming pictures (Jesse Wilcox Smith makes me so happy), that has now been tucked away for Christmas.

~ran into some friends on stood on the sidewalk, in a bit of rain, chatting

at dinner

food

~and then dinner out.  Such a treat!  We love this little Mexican restaurant.  It’s one of those rare and delightful places that uses fresh and local ingredients and offers big servings for a moderate price.  It’s one of Galen’s very favorite places and I was highly amused by watching him very carefully packing up his leftovers to take home.

mist

~Mist covered the mountains on our way home.

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Week in the Life 2011, Tuesday

Tuesday

~We had a visitor this morning, the neighborhood cat that Galen has christened ‘Ginger Cat’.  Ginger Cat let Galen pet her for the first time ever, and quite a bit more.  They played and snuggled together outside for nearly half an hour.  They are very good friends now.  Not even Rosebud running out and squealing with wild excitement disturbed them.  After kitty had left, Màiri Rose decided that she should be called ‘Baby Cat’ instead and a heated argument ensued.

ginger cat

dew

~More cooking for the boys this morning.  This time the herbed almond bread that they make so often.  Màiri Rose, who was feeling fussy at the time, decided that she only wanted certain herbs in hers and not others, so they made her her own little loaf.  She is so clearly their little darling.

gathering herbs

baking

brother and sister

~Over breakfast Elijah was talking about how he’d hit a baseball through a window a couple of months back.  He concluded the story with, “and we never played in that spot again….except that we did.”  Then he told the story of Iain and him inadvertently hitting a ball into a bush which, unbeknownst to them, contained a hornets nest, with painful results.  And that story concluded with, “and we never played in that spot again……………………..except that we did.”bath

~I took a hot, hot lavender bath trying to ward off an impending migraine.reading

~The fixing of remote control cars was on the agenda today.

car

~I’ve been messing with all kinds of crazy braids and things, now that my hair is getting long again.  Today was a dutch-lace, half-crown braid, heavily rumpled by laying down to read to little ones at nap time.

queen anne

crown braid

birdbath

~Màiri Rose got a piece of a cornstarch packing peanut stuck up her nose.  I had to bride her with a frozen strawberry so that she would let me extract it with fine tip tweezers.

playing a game

Asian slaw

tiny crocs

~Galen took it upon himself to harvest a big bunch of violet greens to have with dinner.

violet greens

Elijah tree

~More thunderstorms late in the afternoon.  Steve is convinced that God doesn’t want him to cut the lawn.

laundry

~We opened the next to the last jar of green tomato chutney from last summer to have with our chicken, green and yellow beans and violet greens at dinner.monopoly

~Màiri only changed her clothes four times today.  I think that may be a record.

bedtime

~Galen insisted on wearing long sleeves and pants, all in black (well, some navy blue, but it’s best not to mention it), so that he could be a gorilla.

bedtime 2

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under the maple tree

My current favorite (shady!) spot.

maple

For probably the first time in my life, I’m so disappointed when the sun comes out!  A well worn quilt, under a leafy canopy is at least a consolation.  The photography book was mere wishful thinking on  my part, the berries a boyish offering, the knitting a homeschooling notes for next year were used in tandem, but just for a little while.  Mostly this quilt was covered in five people, one reading and the rest listening (or pretending to listen while tracking the movements of an ant, working it’s way across a calico landscape).  Despite everything, it’s still summer!

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Home Comforts

I started this post a week ago now, but couldn’t finish it.  It was to be about some of the things that I did to keep the little ones somewhat grounded during our long and exciting trip.  About how I brought some of the rhythms and work of home with us.  How in addition to beloved bedtime toys, books and a special blanket from home, I brought a little jar of wood polish for them to have some downtime while caring for their wooden boats.  How we traveled with jars of sprout seeds, letting the rhythm of rinsing them together 3 times a day act as a marker in days that could and did include almost anything.  About trying to hold to quiet times and naps and bedtimes in so far as was possible and reasonable, to keep everyone at their best.  About how we gave more leeway to the older ones, but still held some form for them and pulled them in when needed to keep them from being over-whelmed by too much.  How I thought a lot about the work of Gordon Neufeld during that week and a half and about the role and structure of families in general and ours in particular.  That’s what this post was supposed to be about and that’s the post these photos reflect.

mairi

But as it turns out, this post is about something entirely different.  Because I came home with Lyme disease.  And I don’t want to talk about that here either.  What I do want to write about is joy.  Joy in the everyday little things.  The minutia of life that we so often take for granted.  I want to talk about my heart swelling and being brought nearly to tears by being well enough to sit by my little ones as they have their bath.  Of piling them onto my bed, all sweet clean and deliciously pajama clad and singing songs as I gently work the tangles from their hair.

hands

I want to always remember what a blessing that is and how easily it could be taken away.

polishing

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snapshots: camping by the ocean

water

iain

yarn

m and the rest

rocks

beach towel

galen on the beach

sandy

gull

biking

sand castles

seaweed

E

dragonfly on hand

frisbee

kicking

cones

boo

~the sound of rain on a tent, like a giant pan of jiffy pop

~hot boards underfoot, with a dusting of sand…the air thick with the sticky-sweet smell of honey-suckle

~boyish voices, so very excited, telling tales of adventures; pickerel. turtles.

~gifts of heart shaped stones dug from damp, smooth sand

~gooey marshmallow, clinging to gritty skin, glowing by the light of a dancing fire

~a vast expanse of starlit sky as waves crash beside us

~and the joy of being home again, tucked up luxuriously in a warm, dry, comfortable bed

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Our Easter Celebration

bloomingThere was (thankfully) very little snow (it melted).

There were baskets for little ones…
baskets

With chocolate nests, organic “jolly beans”, mama’s home-made maple nuts, this years books (for details see below!), a jar of new paint brushes to share and some mama-made rabbits that looked rather like kangaroos (these things happen).

And there were baskets from little alright, middle? ones…

harry

for Steve and I, with boy made chocolates, and little Harry Potters (after enduring years of hounding from the boys, Steve finally buckled and it reading and, I think, enjoying, the series).

There were some very goofy children…

elijah copy

galen

And an egg hunt of course…

the hunt

for eggs full of yokes and such, but also some with peanuts, coconut chips, more maple nuts, and coconut rolled dates.

e and m

Some year I will get around to making some fabulous felt eggs to stuff.  It wasn’t an option this year, but some year it will be.

my iain

this galen

This year’s books:

Swallowdale by Arther Ransome for the 11 year old.  We read Swallows and Amazons during an extended illness over the winter and it was a huge hit with the older set.  I thought they would enjoy seeing the story continue.

All-Of-A-Kind Family (All-Of-A-Kind Family (Pb)) by Sydney Taylor and Helen John for the nearly 9 year old (!!  more on that soon, I am sure!).  When I saw this review, I knew I’d found his book.  I was so excited to read it with him, but then he smuggled it away before I even had a chance and nearly finished it in one sitting!  He’s really liking it though, so I’m sure he’ll be open to reading it again with me.

The Lost Lagoon by Reg Down for the 5 year old, because anything by Reg Down is, by default, an instant classic in this house.  This one is about a springtime adventure.  Perfect.

The Story of the Rabbit Children by Sibylle Von Olfers for the Wee Girl (age 2).  I actually wasn’t overly thrilled with this one.  I don’t know, but there is something about a book for young children where there is a scene in which a father nearly shoots his own babies, that I find off putting.  P.S.  Mom is at home knitting while her children are lost in the woods.  And yet, I don’t think little people really see it in the same way we grown ups do.  I didn’t pre-read this as I normally do.  In fact, I didn’t pre-read any of this year’s books, which is very odd.  And when I sat and read this one for the first time, aloud to the children, they loved the simple story and pictures and have been requesting it regularly ever since.

See here for last year’s list.

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