This Moment: Worker Man
Inspired by SouleMama {this moment} – A Friday ritual. A single photo – no words – capturing a moment from the week. A simple, special, extraordinary moment. A moment I want to pause, savor and remember.
Inspired by SouleMama {this moment} – A Friday ritual. A single photo – no words – capturing a moment from the week. A simple, special, extraordinary moment. A moment I want to pause, savor and remember.
Ian and the kiddos spent the weekend getting ready for our vacation in the desert. Fortunately, we don’t have to buy any major items, especially considering Friday’s expensive emergency car repairs. Oy! Our desert equipment needs fixing up in some cases, but we have most of the things we need.
Ian has tons of electroluminescent wire leftover and/or recycled from old Burning Man art projects and he decided to decorate the boys’ nighttime jackets for 1) visibility and safety, and 2) fun!
This is what a creative guy with a thrift-store jacket, a stash of EL wire, and a glue gun can achieve in about an hour. Asher thinks his jacket is the coolest, and Daddy is the BEST! He’s right on both counts.
Our prep work has begun for Burning Man 2010! Yesterday Ian cracked open our Burning Man totes for the first time in several years. This dusty job starts with an inventory of what’s in there, what still works, what needs repairing or replacing, and so on. There’s lots of dust. Lots of list-making. And lots of “Oh wow! I forgot about this!”—not surprising, considering we haven’t been to the playa since Asher was but a bump in my belly (2006).
Asher especially enjoyed the old rainbow umbrella and the wacky glasses Ian pulled out of the totes. Alas, dear Internet, I cannot show you the rest of his “outfit.”
While I have some trepidation about taking my littlest boy out to the desert for a week of experiential silliness and irrepressible elements, I’m starting to get the inkling that he’s going to have a rad time. Outrageous flamboyance in his genes.
Inspired by SouleMama {this moment} – A Friday ritual. A single photo – no words – capturing a moment from the week. A simple, special, extraordinary moment. A moment I want to pause, savor and remember.
Lucas off to camp, Daddy off to work. Me and Asher with all kinds of time for …
chalk drawings on the patio,
inspection of garden flowers,
and the study of sun and shadow, curves and lines and points …
for free-ranging hens, like Avalanche here,
and for growing pumpkins, green and ghostly white,
for purple morning glories, cana seed pods,
and corn in the morning light. How do we know when it’s ripe?
It’s August, so the crepe myrtles are blooming, bursting!
We’re busy, so the playroom needs sweeping. A million precious things scattered a million different places.
And then the blocks simply must come out to play,
and Mommy simply MUST work a tad.
“Bob the Builder” is fun for Asher. Chapter 8 is not so fun for Mommy.
The leftover Ciro’s pizza simply MUST be Lunch.
“I will take my nap on the couch. For ONE minute. And then you wake me up and say, ‘Asher, it’s time to wake up to play!'”
Mia’s Apple Tree
Cameleon Was A Spy
I’ll be damned! He is asleep on the couch, just like he promised.
More of Chapter 8 in the hush of the sleeping preschooler, who,
miracle of miracles!
awakes with a smile and gentle
pat, pat, pat footfalls,
bear in hand.
We fetch Lucas from summer camp, where he wove a tiny rug.
“When can I go to big-boy summer camp?” Asher asks. Again.
“Buckle up, boys. We’re going to the library,”
where they cannot see the books for the computer that has kid games and a candy-colored keyboard.
But the Carmichael Library is newly remodeled and lovely, as is evident in the rotunda. Mommy wants to take more pictures, but then feels too much like a weirdo.
There’s also too much bickering between Asher and Lucas over the computer, so Mommy decides to check out.
Three books for boys, three books for Daddy.
We visit Great-Grandma and Great-Aunt, who are fine and old and loving and mysterious and bored until we arrive.
They don’t believe we have chickens.
Home again, we collect the day’s eggs. The green ones are lucky, don’t ya know.
And “Toy City” grows and grows some more.
For dinner, tasty snapper, spinach, snap peas, garden tomatoes, à la Daddy.
Sundown.
There’s still time for chicken ranging, feeding, and holding,
for watering the garden,
for watering the boys, giddy and nekkid, screeching and laughing.
“MY FOOT! I stepped in chicken poop!”
Shivering.
Shower. Teeth. Jammies. Stories. Lotion for eczema. Songs. Cuddles.
“You check on us?”
“Oh yes.”
We parents are sometimes allowed to sleep until 7:30 a.m. It has been happening more often lately, especially after a particular recent blowup over the unneccessary waking of Daddy at 5:30 a.m., which seems to have made a difference. Some mornings we wake to find our boys peacefully looking at books on the living-room couch. Other mornings we wake to hear them fighting over something that they both want. We were just telling some friends that lately, more often than not, our mornings have been gentler.
This morning, there was too much excitement in the air. Asher marched around the house shouting, “Wake up! Wake up! Wake up! Wake UP!” Lucas was a little subtler, quietly saying, “Oh my! Look what the Tomato Fairy has brought us!” He had to repeat it a few times before his sleepy parents clued in.
We came out to the kitchen to find this bounty, this glorious Lughnasadh gift from the Tomato Fairy. (I had no idea there was such a fairy! Imagine my surprise!) There on green and yellow silks rested gorgeous tomatoes from Lucas’s garden, harvested at their peak in the early morning stillness. A little note from the Tomato Fairy reads, “For The Wilson 18 tamatoo.” I’ve never seen anything cuter.
A few of these were eaten with breakfast, then I took the rest outside where the light was better. My little 8-year-old gardener is pleased as punch. Now I’m on the hunt for the perfect dinner recipe for these beauties.
Happy First Fruits!
Some are probably sick of hearing me talk about swim team and swimming lessons, but I just have to crow one more time. My kids are awesome. I am totally proud of them. They met this long-term challenge with so much courage and perseverance.
Lucas raced in three races last Friday at his final swim meet. He worked HARD all summer. He attended 29 practices (out of 32) and two swim meets. The practices he missed were missed because of illness. Going to swim practice four days a week for eight weeks was a lot, and he did so after long days of camp. It was sometimes a struggle and he sometimes wanted to give up, but he kept at it and finished with flying colors, and now he feels great about his accomplishment.
Here’s Lucas warming up for his meet.
Most of the kids just started diving this summer; they have a lot to learn still. 😉
At the end of the meet, the kids got to jump off the high dive. So brave!
As far as results go, well, Lucas’s team came in second during the 100-yard relay. Lucas finished smack in the middle of the pack in both of his other two races. Not the fastest, not the slowest.
This summer Asher went to 30 20-minute swimming lessons, which he hated at first and learned to enjoy. He also learned how to swim—at least a little ways to get to the side of the pool. He learned streamline position and kicking and floating and blowing bubbles and diving for things underwater.
He can use a kick board or a noodle now and can jump into the pool from the edge or diving board and swim to his instructor.
And he learned that if you work really hard, you can have a lollipop.
I spent about 57 hours poolside and driving so they could do this. It was hard for me to drag them unwillingly along, especially on those hot days when I didn’t want to go either. It was hard to hear “I hate swim team. I wish you would just let me quit.” And it was hard to say in reply, “I’m sorry you feel this way. You made a commitment. And besides, Wilsons don’t quit.” To Asher’s almost constant plea, “WHY do we have to do swimming lessons? Why?” I learned to answer simply, “Because it’s summertime.” Somewhere around the sixth week he stopped asking that. Phew!
Many thanks to the two grandmas who took the boys to swim a handful of times so I didn’t have to do it. That help was a sanity-saver!
We’re all feeling pretty accomplished.
Lucas is pretty sure that these chickens are meant to be lap chickens—at least Midnight.
Avalanche and Snowdrift graze in the backyard. The hens are enjoying morning and evening ranging hours. Alas, they are displacing the mulch in my flowerbeds a lot. I’m wondering if I could coax them to the school field two doors down and back again (but I would be afraid of off-leash dogs).
Lucas’s garden is about to overwhelm us with juicy red tomatoes. Just this week they are turning red.
A magical moment at Sacramento Waldorf School just before the summer camp play began. The oak tree at the Oak Stage is magnificent.
A backyard visitor graciously paused for my photo. I’m pretty stoked about this shot.
Evening picnics on the lawn are fun. There’s a bit of sandwich-eating, a bit of snuggling, a bit of wrestling, a bit of coaxing the hens to eat out of our hands, and …
… a good bit of airplane rides with Daddy.
Asher and I walked to school two mornings last week. (With the shift to our summer schedule, we hadn’t been doing that as much since we had to drive Lucas to summer camp, too.) It was fun to have those cool morning walks together.
We discussed again where the curb water drains to. “What does this sign say, Mama?”
“Protect our creeks. No dumping. Drains to Arcade Creek.”
“Under the road?”
We visited those bumpy sedum plants again—he remembered just where they were. And guess what! They are flowering, with tiny star-shaped white flowers.
We also visited the “super-secret spy tree.” I had no idea it was any such thing.
Asher likes to know where the roads go. “This one goes to the zoo? This other road goes to Lucas’s school?” Yesterday he told me, “That road goes to the Fairy Zoo.”
“Oh? The Fairy Zoo? What kind of animals do they have at the Fairy Zoo?” I asked.
“Horses and marmosets.”
There is nothing quite like a crisp summer morning. It always seems that the whole world is savoring the moist coolness all the more for the day’s coming heat.
We are having full, full days with summer camp and day care and work for Mom and Dad.
Today there was a play performance at summer camp. Lucas was a tax collector in the “Dragon with Thirteen Tails,” performed on the Oak Stage at Sacramento Waldorf School. We also got to see a gymnastics demonstration, as the children have been doing movement and assorted gymnastics in the awesome gym.
Some days, to get out of the heat, we play with puzzles.
And with chalk in the cool morning.
Lucas goes to piano lessons on Wednesdays. This week he noodled around until he figured out the first part of Beethoven’s “Ode to Joy.” When he told his piano teacher, Mrs. Tan, she helped him work on it and learn the next little bit. I love that she goes with his interests!
We swim at Grandma’s and Papa’s house, and at swim team practice and swim lessons. Only four more of those are left!
We watch our garden grow—the things we planted …
… and the things we didn’t, like this volunteer sunflower!
And we watch and care for the chickens. Oh, how they are enriching life around here! Our first week of chicken farming has been going well. We’re all fascinated by them.
At first the chickens slept on the ground in a cuddle puddle, all higgledy-piggledy, piled on top of one another in the corner of the chicken run. They hadn’t gotten the lay of the land yet, I think. Gradually they are claiming this new space as their own. Ian had to pick them up one night and put them on the roost inside the chicken coop, but after that, they seem to get it. Last night we found them roosting just where they’re supposed to be (where it’s safest), without any help from us.
We gathered sixteen eggs in the first four days, after that, I lost count. They are averaging almost four eggs per day. They eat pretty much ALL of our kitchen scraps, including milk leftover from the boys’ morning cereal (for the calcium). I didn’t know chickens drank milk, did you?
The eggs taste wonderful!