Watch the video below to find out what Cailey had in her pocket.
Tuesday, April 22, 2008
Cailey's Loose Tooth
Enjoy this video of Cailey telling you about how she lost her first tooth. She is VERY excited about it.
Friday, April 18, 2008
Luke's First "Job" Interview
A recent article in the Des Moines Register was about incentives Iowa offers to filmakers and how it is drawing them here to make movies. Recently there was a movie called South Dakota that was casting a two year old boy. Mom encouraged me to submit Luke's picture, but we didn't hear anything.
So today I was rounding up my students at the end of our field trip and saw I had a missed call. I called back and it was the casting agency! They were auditioning for a two year old boy with brown eyes, which just happens to be the color of Luke's that people always comment on!
So I took Luke to talent agency director's house for Lukey's very first job "interview." Luke walked right in like he was going to grandma's or something. She gave him some directions to follow like "Can you stand on the x?", and "Can you walk over here?", and "Can you sit down on the x?" He followed directions great; now if he would always be that super-obedient at home!
Next she asked him to repeat things she said, like "ice cream" and "Can I have some ice cream?" Those turned out to be his lines and I have to say he aced them! She commented on how well he talked.
He didn't do so hot on the "copycat game." He didn't want to look sad for her, he told her he wanted to be happy. But later he got all quiet looking at her antique carousel that he couldn't play with and she asked him if he was sad so maybe that will work.
Then he just kind of played and chatted it up with her about Spiderman and sorts of stuff like that. He asked if he could rock on her rocking horse and he did that for a moment and was done. He heard traffic nearby and was asking about that. He just kind of was himself; typical two year old boy.
So it was pretty cool to see what that is all about. I was kind of blown away when I had a chance to read the info she sent me at home tonight. This is a real movie. It is starring Ellen Page from Juno, which I have been wanting to see and got great reviews and Cillian Murphy who was in The Girl With The Pearl Earring, which I havent seen, but recently put down as one of my favorite books on my profile.
So here is Ellen Page and my mom's recent scrapbook page about Luke's encounter with a real peacock at the zoo, which did I mention the name of the movie is "Peacock?" Do you think he could pass for her child?
So today I was rounding up my students at the end of our field trip and saw I had a missed call. I called back and it was the casting agency! They were auditioning for a two year old boy with brown eyes, which just happens to be the color of Luke's that people always comment on!
So I took Luke to talent agency director's house for Lukey's very first job "interview." Luke walked right in like he was going to grandma's or something. She gave him some directions to follow like "Can you stand on the x?", and "Can you walk over here?", and "Can you sit down on the x?" He followed directions great; now if he would always be that super-obedient at home!
Next she asked him to repeat things she said, like "ice cream" and "Can I have some ice cream?" Those turned out to be his lines and I have to say he aced them! She commented on how well he talked.
He didn't do so hot on the "copycat game." He didn't want to look sad for her, he told her he wanted to be happy. But later he got all quiet looking at her antique carousel that he couldn't play with and she asked him if he was sad so maybe that will work.
Then he just kind of played and chatted it up with her about Spiderman and sorts of stuff like that. He asked if he could rock on her rocking horse and he did that for a moment and was done. He heard traffic nearby and was asking about that. He just kind of was himself; typical two year old boy.
So it was pretty cool to see what that is all about. I was kind of blown away when I had a chance to read the info she sent me at home tonight. This is a real movie. It is starring Ellen Page from Juno, which I have been wanting to see and got great reviews and Cillian Murphy who was in The Girl With The Pearl Earring, which I havent seen, but recently put down as one of my favorite books on my profile.
So here is Ellen Page and my mom's recent scrapbook page about Luke's encounter with a real peacock at the zoo, which did I mention the name of the movie is "Peacock?" Do you think he could pass for her child?
Wednesday, April 9, 2008
The Three Billy Goats Gruff
The girls were excited about reading The Three Billy Goats Gruff at school this week. So here they are performing it.
Saturday, April 5, 2008
Potty Mouths
The girls are doing great sounding out words these days. They were so excited to get books they could actually read from their last book order. They are reading everything. Cailey looked at my college sweatshirt the other day and said, "That says BULLDOGS!" Pretty cool.
Well today at lunch they were deciphering the word on the top of their cup. Now, it wasn't a word, but perhaps a item code or something. It said FK. So the girls' logic went like this.
"Well, it is a cup, so it's got to be like cup."
"Ffffff. Kkkkk."
"But it is like cup!"
"Fffff. Uh. Kkkk."
"FfffuhK."
"F**K!"
Now, haven't ever hearing that word and having no idea it was a bad word, they repeated it a couple times nice and loud, proud of themselves for sounding it out until Daddy told them it wasn't a nice word. Gotta love phonics!
Well today at lunch they were deciphering the word on the top of their cup. Now, it wasn't a word, but perhaps a item code or something. It said FK. So the girls' logic went like this.
"Well, it is a cup, so it's got to be like cup."
"Ffffff. Kkkkk."
"But it is like cup!"
"Fffff. Uh. Kkkk."
"FfffuhK."
"F**K!"
Now, haven't ever hearing that word and having no idea it was a bad word, they repeated it a couple times nice and loud, proud of themselves for sounding it out until Daddy told them it wasn't a nice word. Gotta love phonics!
Wednesday, April 2, 2008
Paper House
Ok, this blog needs some pictures. I'm going to post some pictures of how I'd like to decorate.
First is the girls's room. I've got the bedding already and this weekend I started to pick out the paint. I think I'll go lighter than this.
Possibly more like this, though I suppose they might be the same color, depending on the light.
For the living room, I'm thinking something like this-
Though, while looking for new furniture this weekend and watching David gravitate toward black and red leather, I think I'm in for a fight. I'd rather just keep my worn, comfy blue couch, but the kids have worn holes in it and it's faded.
For Lukey's room-
I'd like to have maybe khaki walls with navy or dark brown furniture.
The kids bathroom is tricky. It serves as a bathroom for guests, along with two girls and a boy. I'm thinking chocolate brown, and maybe white, and/or light blue. These are by Margot Curran. I'm not sure I like them as much as I did before though.
Or these by someone named Unel-
Or by Joelle Wolff-
Not this particular one, but to give you an idea of her style. But now I'm not sure if it would be too babyish. If I could open up a niche market, it would be fun shower curtains for kids. I get kind of tired of the frogs and ducks that you find everywhere. It is also hard to find something gender neutral.
Ok, enough of the game I call "paper house."
First is the girls's room. I've got the bedding already and this weekend I started to pick out the paint. I think I'll go lighter than this.
Possibly more like this, though I suppose they might be the same color, depending on the light.
For the living room, I'm thinking something like this-
Though, while looking for new furniture this weekend and watching David gravitate toward black and red leather, I think I'm in for a fight. I'd rather just keep my worn, comfy blue couch, but the kids have worn holes in it and it's faded.
For Lukey's room-
I'd like to have maybe khaki walls with navy or dark brown furniture.
The kids bathroom is tricky. It serves as a bathroom for guests, along with two girls and a boy. I'm thinking chocolate brown, and maybe white, and/or light blue. These are by Margot Curran. I'm not sure I like them as much as I did before though.
Or these by someone named Unel-
Or by Joelle Wolff-
Not this particular one, but to give you an idea of her style. But now I'm not sure if it would be too babyish. If I could open up a niche market, it would be fun shower curtains for kids. I get kind of tired of the frogs and ducks that you find everywhere. It is also hard to find something gender neutral.
Ok, enough of the game I call "paper house."
Kids Say the Darndest Things, part 2
So, this is my better late than never Easter post. We went to the late Saturday mass at Grandma's church to avoid trying to get three kids and two adults ready for church in the morning. Lukey was a little tired so I had to hold him the whole time and most of the mass was standing up so I was struggling to hold him. I had him on my hip and it wasn't comfortable for him.
I have to say the acoustics at that church are great, unfortunately. Here's everyone all solemn, silent, reflective and Lukey calls out, due to the way I was holding him, "My pee-pee hurts!"
He also repeatedly asked Neenah for a cracker and asked her "Where's your baby (doll)?" When I'd try to shush him he'd say, "I'm talking to Neenah!"
Then he was fascinated by the unique cross-shaped baptism pool in the isle. "I want on the stairs to see the water!" he said over and over as the priest and man climbed in for a baptism. I should of just let him and get his baptism taken care of!
I have to say the acoustics at that church are great, unfortunately. Here's everyone all solemn, silent, reflective and Lukey calls out, due to the way I was holding him, "My pee-pee hurts!"
He also repeatedly asked Neenah for a cracker and asked her "Where's your baby (doll)?" When I'd try to shush him he'd say, "I'm talking to Neenah!"
Then he was fascinated by the unique cross-shaped baptism pool in the isle. "I want on the stairs to see the water!" he said over and over as the priest and man climbed in for a baptism. I should of just let him and get his baptism taken care of!
Kid's Say the Darndest Things
When I taught kindergarten, I remember always thinking, "If their parents knew they told the class that!" when the kids revealed something. Well, Mia has become quite the participant in our catechism class discussions.
The last few weeks we touched briefly about the events leading up to Easter. Mia of course wants to know why it is called "Good Friday" and then proceeds to say something like, "We didn't go. We just stayed home. Right, mom?" It sounded worse the way Mia said it.
Tonight's topic for the last class was growth: physical, academic, spiritual etc. I asked what they can do now that they couldn't before. Mia shared that she can play outside now on her own and her little brother can't, like when she was little.
I don't really let them play on their own. I know when we were kids it was a different story, but I honestly don't let them out of my sight. Like I'll yell at them if they go around a clothing rack at a store. Maybe overprotective. I kind of wonder about the kids who grew up here with the high profile kidnapping cases of my generation. Are we all overprotective parents?
Anyway, sometimes I'll watch the girls from the window, but if Luke is out I have to be out there. Well, they've been begging me to play outside but it has been so wet. So yesterday it was drier, and Luke wasn't supposed to be home, so I told them they could play outside.
I was exhausted from battling middle schoolers. You know, because I'm totally out of line not allowing them to eat Cheetos while reading my books, talk on their cell phones, and a ba-zillion other complaints. I really just wanted to sit.
Luke ended up being home and as soon as he saw the girls go out he threw on his boots and coat and headed out too, so I stood outside and watched for awhile. After a while I just couldn't take standing out there anymore, so I brought him in. He sobbed and sobbed, so I broke down and sent him out and sat at the slider ready to dart out the door if need be. I ended up feeling too nervous about it and went back outside.
But Mia tonight shares that I sent Luke out to play saying, "Mommy was supposed to be watching us play, but she wasn't." Again, it sounded worse they way she said it.
Now I kind of wonder what she's shared with her kindergarten teacher!
The last few weeks we touched briefly about the events leading up to Easter. Mia of course wants to know why it is called "Good Friday" and then proceeds to say something like, "We didn't go. We just stayed home. Right, mom?" It sounded worse the way Mia said it.
Tonight's topic for the last class was growth: physical, academic, spiritual etc. I asked what they can do now that they couldn't before. Mia shared that she can play outside now on her own and her little brother can't, like when she was little.
I don't really let them play on their own. I know when we were kids it was a different story, but I honestly don't let them out of my sight. Like I'll yell at them if they go around a clothing rack at a store. Maybe overprotective. I kind of wonder about the kids who grew up here with the high profile kidnapping cases of my generation. Are we all overprotective parents?
Anyway, sometimes I'll watch the girls from the window, but if Luke is out I have to be out there. Well, they've been begging me to play outside but it has been so wet. So yesterday it was drier, and Luke wasn't supposed to be home, so I told them they could play outside.
I was exhausted from battling middle schoolers. You know, because I'm totally out of line not allowing them to eat Cheetos while reading my books, talk on their cell phones, and a ba-zillion other complaints. I really just wanted to sit.
Luke ended up being home and as soon as he saw the girls go out he threw on his boots and coat and headed out too, so I stood outside and watched for awhile. After a while I just couldn't take standing out there anymore, so I brought him in. He sobbed and sobbed, so I broke down and sent him out and sat at the slider ready to dart out the door if need be. I ended up feeling too nervous about it and went back outside.
But Mia tonight shares that I sent Luke out to play saying, "Mommy was supposed to be watching us play, but she wasn't." Again, it sounded worse they way she said it.
Now I kind of wonder what she's shared with her kindergarten teacher!
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