Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Magnets and Wrappers and Wigs, Oh My!

Both Papa Rooster and I are going to have lots of memories of this show! 

He got more involved than he really had time for, with what sounded like a simple picture-taking assignment.  When he learned that the pictures were to be Photoshopped onto a background and made into fridge magnets, parent badges and candy bar wrappers, to be sold as show souvenirs, he volunteered to help out with the Photoshop piece of it as well.

He did a beautiful job with the individual magnets and badges, then combined them to create photo montages of different groupings of kids.  You could buy a "Wonka Bar" with School Kids, Soda Pop Dancers, Oompa Loompas, Townspeople or Ticket Winners on the wrapper--and they were so popular, they sold out immediately.  They're making more for next weekend!  Imagine this image wrapped around a jumbo bar of chocolate:



Wouldn't you want to buy one? 

Chicklet8 was his guinea pig for the magnet and badge shots:




With and without wig and makeup, as you can see.  And speaking of wigs and makeup, although I wasn't officially on the makeup committee this time, I've helped a good bit with turning these...


...into these...


 (yes, that's how you keep 28 green wigs looking good between shows:  you store them on skirt hangers, with hair nets to minimize friction between them!)


...into these on-stage cuties!


You would never know it was C8's first show!  She's having the time of her life, already mourning that there are only four days and five shows left.

And her brother?


He's having fun too.

(This is my parent badge, which clips onto my lanyard identifying me as a parent and which committee I'm on.  B15 thinks he's too cool, but we should have put him on it too; he's working backstage for this show and having a good time.)

Good times for the whole family!!


Sunday, February 20, 2011

Me, I'm a Wonkerer!

At least I feel like one after the last week!

After three nights of dress rehearsals, two school day shows and three public performances of Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory, we are all a little Oompy-Loompy.

Ah, and here's our favorite little Oompa Loompa now!


That's her, directly underneath the Woody doll that Willy Wonka is holding.  Woody is the miniature version of Mike Teavee, of course.  That's a TV screen behind them.


And there's her reaction (click to enlarge) after Wonka suggests they put Mike into the taffy-pulling machine to stretch him back to normal size.  In just a moment, she will take Mrs. Teavee's purse, they will drop Mike into it and she'll be the one to carry purse and doll offstage.  It's the one moment that we can tell our friends to watch for and know it's her!


Because you know those Oompa Loompas...they all look alike.  (She's directly behind the two seated girls.  I notice this crew doesn't look as enthused as they should, but these photos were taken at dress rehearsal, and probably the director is talking to them or the tech folks while they "freeze.")

On the other hand, our friends will have no trouble picking out B12.  He sings the opening lines of the first number:  "I can't stop eating sweets, all those wonderful Willy Wonka treats; you can keep the others, but me, I'm a Wonkerer!"


He's a School Kid named James, and he is a friend of Charlie Bucket, the main character, in the middle.  The girl on the left is Matilda, another school friend of Charlie's.


James, Matilda and Charlie help the Candy Man sing "The Candy Man." Can you guess why these friends are named James and Matilda?

Anyone?  Anyone?

My parent commitment this time was acting as a docent, visiting schools who were bringing classes to see the show.  I asked each group lots of questions about the characters, but this question, about these two characters, stumped every class.  They're not in the movie, for one thing.  But then I would ask if the kids had read any other books by Roald Dahl, the author of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. Eventually some child would come up with "Matilda" and another with "James and the Giant Peach"--and there you have the answer!


Everyone loves a good ending pose.


Papa Rooster tried out a new wide-angle lens (click to enlarge).  

What a brightly colored spectacle!

Sunday, February 13, 2011

Lego Building Contest Birthday Party!

So the birthday party was a success!

I admit I was a little worried.

B12's idea of a Lego building contest sounded fun, but didn't it also hold the potential for a good deal of conflict?  I could just imagine the guests fighting over special pieces, arguing over who needs what bricks, complaining that there aren't enough whatevers....and generally working themselves up to the dreaded "This is not fair...not fun...I quit."

I shouldn't have worried.

In the first place, it seemed we had plenty of Legos to go around.


In the second place, our guests not only enjoyed the building process, but they seemed to enjoy helping each other find needed pieces.  A more congenial and helpful atmosphere I could not have imagined!


Eleven boys were invited; nine were able to attend, so we had nine categories which were announced beforehand.  Guests were encouraged to build toward multiple categories, since there would only be one winner of each award category.

Certificates (along with a treat bag) were given for:

Indiana Jones Award--Most Adventurous
Concorde Award--Most Aerodynamic
Bat-Tumbler Award--Most Compact & Sturdy
Pegasus Award--Most Fantastical
Mad Scientist Award--Most Ingenious
Camelot Award--Most Medieval
General Patton Award--Most Militaristic
Suburban Award--Most Realistic
Golden Starship Award--Futuristic

We let the nine builders watch funny videos on YouTube for a few minutes, to give the judges (B12 and B20) a chance to judge the entries in private.  As the winners were announced (with appropriate drum rolls), each boy seemed pleased with his award; there were no complaints over the judging.  The candy in the treat bag may have helped take their minds off any disappointments; however, it seemed the most fun was in the building.  And as one of the guests pointed out, B12 would enjoy playing with all the creations after the builders went home!

Yup, B12 came up with a winner of an idea.  And his guests were all winners in my book.  His golden birthday was truly "golden"!

Saturday, February 12, 2011

Happy Birthday, Bantam12!!


No, he's not opening birthday presents in this picture; it's from Christmas. And yes, he's super-excited about getting jeans for Christmas.

(Not just jeans--skinny jeans.  Or "skinny pants," as we like to call them, harking back to "stretchy pants" from El Nacho Libre.)

Anyway, I love B12's enthusiastic personality.  He's interested and talented in so many things--piano, acting, singing, tap dancing, improv, art, writing, graphic novels, the Redemption card game, Legos and soccer.  Papa Rooster and I speculate all the time about what he'll eventually end up doing with his life!

He's also got his endearing little quirks, like really hating to wear a shirt, and loving silky bed sheets and a particular soft fleece jacket.  But he loves hand-me-downs from his big brother and listens carefully to his fashion advice.  Thus the skinny jeans at the top of his Christmas wishlist.  Well, one down from an enormous Lego set.

Such an interesting age.  Still a kid in so many delightful ways...but starting to leave childish things behind him. He told me just a couple days ago that he's not as interested in Legos as he used to be, and he and I both had a moment of mourning over that.

But today, for his "golden birthday" (meaning he's 12 years old on the 12th), 11 other boys are invited for a Lego Building Contest!  B20 is home from college for the weekend, so that he can be a judge for the event.  Every Lego creation will be awarded a prize.  They're also going to play "Creationary" which is like Pictionary, except with Legos.  B12 planned the whole thing on his own.

So, welcome to the Golden Year, B12.  Twelve is a great age.  You're at the top of the childhood totem pole, but there's no pressure to feel or act like a teenager yet.  You are such a delightful member of our family, and we love you so much.  May God bless you, son, today and always!!

Wednesday, February 09, 2011

Happy Birthday, Bantam6!


There is something about your youngest child turning 6 that signifies the end of an era.  I think I felt this way about him turning 5, too, but last February he wasn't even entering kindergarten for another six months, so I could somewhat fool myself by calling him a preschooler, at the time.

Now, he's truly a big boy.  He can get his own snowsuit on, ride a bike, make a sandwich, take out the trash, sign himself onto Lego.com...and even has begun reading and writing!  I just can't call him my baby anymore.  Out loud, at least.

This is one of my favorite pictures of our son.  There is a quiet focus about him when he's at rest, gearing up for some period of intense movement.  He has so much inner energy, but it's not uncontrolled.  He's a force.

His vitality is such a blessing, especially if you know his history:  He nearly died at 5 weeks of age, of severe pneumonia caused by RSV.  I recently opened a box and immediately found tears springing to my eyes at the sight of his nebulizer, which we had to use so much for that first year.  They were tears of rejoicing, though--at the realization that we haven't needed it since he was two, despite the warnings that he might have respiratory issues for years, even life!

Thank you, Lord, for the gift of this, our son---your child--and his life, his spunkiness, his humor, his abilities, his energy.  Grant us wisdom, love, discipline and energy to parent him...in the particular way that he should go.  Bless him, Lord, as you have blessed us--with him.

Monday, February 07, 2011

Newslets

Besides the snow and the Super Bowl, what all is going on in our lives?

Let's start with the oldest child and work our way down.

Bantam20 seems to be getting off to a good start at college.  He learned some lessons last semester...and so did we.  Like what questions to ask!  Do you have every single book that you need?  Check.  Are you signed up yet for the tutoring program?  Check.  Have you met with your tutor?  Check.  Have you been exercising? What do you weigh? Have you missed any classes?  Do you have any assignments overdue?  Is there anything you are waiting on from a professor?  From your advisor?  Now if we can just remember to go through this list every week!  But his answers have been all good so far, and he seems really determined to stay on top of things.  I am so proud of him.

Blondechick18 is a busy gal these days.  Before Christmas, she left her job as a hostess at Perkins and took a retail job at a mall, and she is much happier at her new job.  She's working around ten hours a week and is managing her time well.  She's staying after school a couple times a week for pre-season women's soccer workouts, and she goes in early for NHS meetings and show choir rehearsals.  She also sings on the worship team at our church and in chapel at school.  Next week she and Bantam15 are performing at a fundraiser Dinner Show; they're singing "What I've Been Looking For" from High School Musical, and they've been practicing the original choreography:



Isn't that cheesy?  They have joked for years about how much fun the two of them could have playing these roles.  These two characters are brother and sister in the musical, and if you know Blondechick, you know she has a Sharpay side to her, and B15 in real life has played Ryan to her Sharpay more than a few times!

Blondechick also was accepted to TIU! That's Trinity in Deerfield, where her brother is, and it's a nice distance from home--about 35 minutes away.  She and her young man are having serious talks about their future as well.  It looks like he'll be continuing at the local university next year, and though she'd like to live at home and go there with him, we're insisting that she spend her first year at a Christian college (some thoughts here). She's resigned, but also cautiously optimistic.  TIU is the closest to her boyfriend, so it looks like that's where she'll be next fall.  She's undecided about playing soccer there or about her major, but she's thinking of communcations.  She just told me that her favorite high school class is English Lit, though, so she might explore an English major too.  (Of course that excites her mother, who started out as a Lit major; ended up an El Ed major, Lit minor.)  She's a good writer, too...so we'll see!

B15 is being inducted into the NJHS (National Junior Honor Society) this week, so now in addition to morning show choir rehearsals, he'll start having NJHS meetings at the same time as Blondechick's NHS meetings.  I am so glad that they can drive together this year!  He usually stays and works out during her soccer workouts; he joins the wrestlers and is thinking about that sport for next year.  He's also excited about their choir trip to California in March.  (So is Blondechick.)  He finished driver's ed and just needs to get his learner's permit soon, since there is a 6-month wait before he can actually get his license...hopefully right before school starts next fall.  We thought about getting it earlier, so he can work this summer, but for what we'd have to pay in insurance premiums on a 16-year-old male, it's probably not worth what he'd earn, assuming he can find a job.  Plus he really wants to go back to Honey Rock, the Christian camp that was so important for him last summer, for four weeks this summer, and we've agreed.

He's also taking guitar lessons and hopes to concentrate even harder this summer.  He runs on our treadmill and works out with weights on our new(-to-us) home gym set, purchased from a friend who's going overseas.  He's helped lead worship a few times at church, and he continues as our senior acolyte.  Next week he's helping to move in all the sets for Willy Wonka; then he's working backstage for two dress rehearsals and most of the shows over two weekends.  He's planning to audition for Robin Hood, our next show, which will make Mama happy to have three kids involved in our Christian theater group again.

B11 and B5 both have birthdays coming up next week.  Chicklet8 and B11 are busy attending Willy Wonka rehearsals every weekend and are eager for the show to go on!  Instead of doing makeup this time, I'm the docent for school visits, so the kids and I are taking a day off next week to visit several schools who are bringing students to our show, along with a small group of cast members.  C8 and B11 continue with piano lessons; B11 serves as an acolyte, and C8 has started asking when she can be one too.  C8 and B5 love their AWANA program.  B5 just started trying to spell words, instead of randomly stringing together letters, so we've been riding that wave!

It's a full life, but a good one.  Thank you, Lord, for the opportunities and privileges you have granted us!

Sunday, February 06, 2011

Go Pack! ?

So you may have noticed that we are not a huge sports family.

But we do usually watch the Super Bowl, since my husband is a businessman as well as a priest, and he'd look...well...pretty out of touch at work on Monday, now, wouldn't he?  And since our new state is home to a pretty awesome football team, there's even more reason not to miss the Big Game today.

Some of us are a bit ambivalent about the Pack, though. Although B11 has only watched a couple solid hours of football in his life, he's a die-hard Bears fan, who had orange-and-blue bands on his braces for the playoff game.  Now that Da Bears are out of the Big Game, he says he's for the Steelers.  B15 says he liked the Packers when we lived in IL; now that we are from WI, he doesn't like them anymore:  He's rooting for the Steelers. Go figure.

Blondechick and I agree that we basically like both Da Bears and the Pack.  We didn't really care too much which one won the playoff game; it was exciting to think that the winner--one of our two home teams--would be in the Super Bowl.  So we're both rooting for the Packers, just as wholeheartedly as we would have for the Bears if they had won two weeks ago.  Go Team!

Papa Rooster says he has always liked the Packers, since his dad was an admirer of Vince Lombardi back in the day.  I wonder if he'll work The Game into his sermon?  Fittingly, he'll be wearing the appropriate stole for the liturgical season, which is green with gold fringe and embroidery. "Not an endorsement," he tells me. Hmm.

We've invited friends over, and I don't even know who they'll be rooting for.  The good news is, they'll have company!

Are you watching the game?  Do you have a favorite team?

(I was delighted to see a kid at theater practice today wearing a Cincinnati Bengals cap.  Ah, the team of my youth!)

Friday, February 04, 2011

Seven Quick Takes: It's All About the Snow

1) Pictures, don't you think?

Father Rooster's "Priust," half-buried.
("My dad is a priest, so he drives a Priust!")

Drifting around our front door

Same view, with the front sidewalk shoveled
Lake Michigan shoreline, 2 days before the blizzard
2)  I ventured out on Thursday to find most roads passable, but with huge drifts on either side in places.  It felt like driving through a canyon!  At the worst spots, it was down to only one lane plowed--a little hairy to navigate with oncoming traffic.

3)  Still, as high as the drifts are in places, I'm not that impressed.  When I was a kid in Ohio, in January of 1978, the Great Blizzard nearly buried our one-story house.  I remember looking out the windows--to the north and to the south--and seeing nothing but snow.

4)  I also remember a snowmobile arriving at our house to pick up my mother, an emergency room nurse, to take her to work!  She got in a little trailer behind, and then we watched as they zoomed off toward town, level with the tree branches in our front yard.

5)  It was days before our country road was dug out, and when they came, they came in a Caterpillar.  They pushed the snow up on the sides of the road in piles that were 14 feet high!  My brothers and I made slides down all sides of those piles.  Some twisted and turned, some were straight shots, some were steep, some more gradual; we gave them all descriptive names, like "The Twister."  Then we started tunneling and building snow caves. It was the most fun a kid could ever have in the snow!

6)  And it lasted for weeks.  On March 21, the first day of spring, we took a picture of us kids with a snowdrift that was still there from the January blizzard.  And it was about that long before we could use our regular gravel L-shaped driveway.  Whoever plowed it out--I think this was before Dad got a snowplow attachment for his yard tractor--just took the shortest distance straight across our front yard and out to the road.  Didn't hurt our yard at all; the snow was packed down firm.

7)  My younger kids are working on tunnels and snow caves too.  Bantam15 has earned a small fortune this winter in snow removal--and that's just for our driveway!  Blondechick is getting great driving experience this winter--a little hair-raising for Mom and Dad.  All grist for the memory mill....

For more Quick Takes, visit Conversion Diary each Friday!

Wednesday, February 02, 2011

Song of the Midwest Blizzard

Oh hear those snowplows rumblin'
Snow tum-tumblin' too
Come on it's lovely weather
To stay inside together with you...

Outside the snow is fallin'
And friends are callin'
"Stay home!"
Come on it's cozy weather
For a board game together
With all.

Bundle up, bundle up, bundle up, let's go
To play in the snow.
There's feet of it on
The driveway for to blow...

Bundle up, bundle up, bundle up, it's great
To live in this state.
We all
Think it's cool
There's no school
And we all get to sleep in late!

Our cheeks are nice and rosy
We're comfy cozy inside
We've got a fire in the fireplace
While the wind howls so loudly outside

Oh hear those snowplows rumblin'
Snow tum-tumblin' too
Come on it's lovely weather
To stay inside together with you!

Tune:  "Sleigh Ride"
Lyrics:  Mine, with apologies!

Tuesday, February 01, 2011

Chores, Allowances, Cooperation, Motivation

I said there was more to tell about the younger set....

So we've instituted a new chore system here at the Henhouse.

We've gone through so many evolutions of chore charts, sticker charts, points, and monetary incentives in the past thirteen years that I've been homeschooling.  They've all worked great for awhile, and then inevitably, they become cumbersome, or life gets too busy, or the kids realize that it's still the same old chores (and I'm sure this one will be no different).  We've also gone through long periods of time in "git 'er done" mode, where we just gave out jobs to be done--or else.  That's where we've been since we moved.

But I sensed that it was time to start incentivizing and rewarding the younger three, now that they are all old enough to really be helpful.  And I kept thinking about a good system we had used with the older three when they were all in elementary school.  In fact, it's something I bought (and you can too, if you wish, right here).

It's a pegboard with little plastic circles that you hang on the pegs, and it's a great system.  I recommend the instructional materials that come with it, as a way to think about building character as well as responsibility.  But it can be a little complicated to keep up with the whole system, and in this house, I didn't have a good place to mount the pegboard.  (Mine is the jumbo size.)
So I'm just using the plastic circles, and a hanging shoebag.  (Not really like the one pictured, but ours has our kids' names all over it, so I didn't want to post a picture of it.)  My shoe bag is navy fabric, with mesh for the pockets, and it's much smaller than this--maybe it's for kids' shoes.  Or maybe because I got it at the dollar store--Dollar General, perhaps?  Anyway, it's longer and narrower, with 4 rows of two pockets, and it fits on a narrow wall by the kitchen pantry that faces the bathroom.  Out of sight, basically, but conveniently located for the whole family.

Their chores are written on cards.  When they do a chore, they move the card from the To Do pocket, to the Done pocket, and they put a green circle in in the Done pocket.  Each morning, they move the cards back to the To Do pocket (but if they forget, it's no big deal, because they remember when they go to put in their green circle after a chore is done).  When they get ten green circles in their Done pocket, they get a dollar.  They can earn extra green circles if they do an extra job that Mom thinks of, or if they do someone else's job, so I've found them very willing to pitch in when needed (vs. saying "That's not my job!").

There are bonus green circles they can earn, too, like "Finished my school before lunch."  (Sadly, I've paid out only once so far!)  They can also lose a green circle for disobedience, complaining, fighting, etc. This has been nice for me to have a non-emotional, objective consequence to give them.  And they can earn bonus yellow circles for good choices.  These aren't for money, but they praise good choices like, "Obeying quickly,"  "Didn't argue or complain," "Cheerful heart," "Good listening" and "Great attitude." They have colorful stickers on them and it reminds me to reward the attitude as well as compliance.

It's been working so well that we added the two teens that are still home.  We didn't have enough pockets, but with them, their cards are in a pocket, and if they complete the chore, it gets attached to the front of the pocket with a colored paperclip.  When all ten of their cards are under the paperclip--with the idea that these are spread over a week, as they have to help with dishes and meals multiple times--they get ten dollars. 

That's on top of what we normally fork out for lunch money and occasional spending money.  We've never really given a flat allowance.  We pay for things that come up, and we've paid for jobs that require lots of time, like lawn mowing and snow clearing.  We've occasionally had monetary incentives for chores, but we've had difficulties with nitpicking about how much a job was worth, or whether they should get paid for doing only some of their chores.

This system eliminates the timing element that sometimes became awkward, like what to do when we are gone all day?  Or the all-or-nothing approach I tried once, where they only got paid for the day if ALL their daily chores were done.  With this new plan, they earn more or less depending on how hard they work, and it rewards those who remember their responsibilities and do them.  The burden's on them, not me.  And they end up reminding each other.

I'm wondering why I've spent so much time on this post.  I guess I'm hopeful that it will inspire somebody else!  Teaching kids responsibility and helpfulness can be one of the most tedious parts of parenting, but it is so important. 


"Let us not become weary in doing good, for at the proper time we will reap a harvest if we do not give up."  
Galatians 6:9