• the quotidian (11.19.12)

    Quotidian: daily, usual or customary; 
    everyday; ordinary; commonplace


    A Saturday experiment: ginger cake. 
    The recipe calls for grinding a crazy amount of chopped fresh ginger,
     about 1/2 cup, in the food processor with the sugar and spices. 
    How brilliant! How fragrant! 
    There’s also ground (dried) ginger in the recipe, the glaze is made with ginger ale, 
    and then I put chopped candied ginger on top. 
    Point made. 

    Drawing on fabric: a leftover project from Sunday school that has occupied him for hours.

    Sweet discipline. 
    To minimize the mind-numbing bickering that goes on in this house, I lay four Twizzlers on the counter and, for a specified period of time (in this case, afternoon clean-up), every time someone says or does something nasty, I take a bite of that person’s Twizzler. It’s stunningly effective. Plus, I pay better attention to the dynamics—I don’t want to miss out on any Twizzler bites. 

    Packing apples. 

    Peeling potatoes for a batch of sweet rolls

    My ancient workhorse: whipping the hot marshmallow batter. 

    You can’t tell from the picture, but there was quite the crowd of snitch-happy onlookers. 

    In pretty, thrifted tins: caramel popcorn

    French chocolate granola, ready for the bake sale. 
    (That’s where the marshmallows, caramel popcorn, and sweet rolls were destined, as well as a bunch of other things not pictured here: ginger cream scones, cranberry orange scones, sourdough bread, chocolate peanut butter cake, and monster monster cookies.) 

     Assembly line: readying the prayer cards, fundraising letter, and pledge cards for church mailboxes. 
    For those of you whose mailing addresses I already have, I’ll be sending you a packet later on this week. If I don’t have your mailing address and you’d like to receive one, let me know.

    This same time, years previous: the quotidian (11.16.11), a homeschooling experiment report, red lentil soup with lemon and spinach, bad mamas

  • official

    This morning I took my younger daughter to the doctor and she wouldn’t greet him but she also didn’t kick him so that was good.

    Also this morning, I learned that our insurance will do an override so we can take a ten-month supply of medications with us when we leave the country. Helpful insurance people, the ones that are blessed with common sense, are never to be taken for granted. Amen.

    My son’s last orthodontist appointment is scheduled for the same day we leave our house (leaving the country happens six days later). The appointment is an hour and a half away. Maybe this is what some people call Overdoing It?

    Last night I spent a couple hours doing all sorts of odds and ends paperwork. I completed all the forms for the 2013-2014 homeschool year, plus wrote a letter explaining why my children’s eval will be about six months late. I love checking things off my list. It makes me feel powerful. And then when my husband and I stay up late wasting valuable minutes watching Parenthood (it was either that or Once, so we flipped a coin and I won), it’s all cool because at least I did the paperwork.

    We have our passports! They came last week, on the same day that we got our official invitation from MCC.

    Yeah, that’s right, nothing has actually been official until now. Kind of crazy, no? This whole process really has been backwards and upside-down. (Maybe my son’s behavior is more a family norm than I realize?)  Sometimes I was fine with all our gun jumping and other times I panicked: What if they back out on us and then I have to go and explain THAT to everyone? But I couldn’t stay in limbo indefinitely, not when our departure date was bearing down on us in a vaguely threatening fashion, so move forward we did.

    So anyway. Now we have passports and real job descriptions and an official invitation. And on Sunday my brother came over before church and took a couple hundred family pictures. We only needed one photo, for our MCC prayer cards, but getting six people to smile with their eyes open at the same time is rather a monumental feat. We got a couple good pictures, but just barely.

    Not the one we’re using, though if we were going casual this would be my first choice. 

    My brother did well enough, but the kids were complete and total dufuses. They stuck out their tongues, puffed their cheeks, rolled their eyes up into their heads, chomped their teeth like chipmunks, made rabbit ears, etc. etc. My husband, O Mr. Uptight the Great, didn’t handle it so well. Just look at this series in which he whacks our older daughter over the head.

    At times like these when the kids get bitten by the crazy bug, we wonder how in the world we are going to actually move them to another culture, a culture in which the people are tiny, shy, and timid. It seems outright preposterous. We’re forever muttering things under our breath, like, “They can’t even sit still for a ten minute picture session. How in the world are they going to make it on the chicken bus rides? With no bathrooms?”

    Or, after a particularly hellish ride to town (please note, never ever ever teach your children how to play Punch Buggy), we ask, “How in the world are they going to manage the airplane? The taxis? The micro buses?” (Pronounced “mee crow boo ses.”)

    Or, when they’re running around our back yard screaming their heads off we think of our new house out in the middle of nowhere, a few K’ekchi’ families and a 175 teenagers our only neighbors, and say, “What will the Indians* think of us?”

    In just two more months (two more months, eek!), we’ll find all that out. And more.

    *Is is politically correct to refer to the K’ekchi’ Indians as “Indians?” That’s what they are, but still. Maybe I should call them something else? I guess I’ll soon find that out, too.

    *Update: It IS indeed politically incorrect to refer to the Indigenous people as indio, or Indian. I looked it up. However, those are all Spanish words, and I’m not sure how it translates to English. So maybe I can say “Indian” in my writing? Nah, probably not. I suspect it’s safest to just skip the word all together and refer to the people there as just…people. (Or K’ekchi.) (Or Maya.) (Or amigos.)

    This same time, years previous: why I’m glad we don’t have guns in our house, cinnamon flop, on homeschooling and socialization

  • the wiggles

    My younger son has been driving me bonkers. He’s always been a go-go-go sort of kid, but lately he’s turned into a spinning top. He bounces off the walls, flails fists, talks in a megaphone voice. Also, he has an affinity for flipping upside down whenever possible. I find myself almost wishing that he’d get sick, just so he’d hold still for two consecutive minutes.

    Is this off-the-wall, upside-down, spin-around behavior a crucial step in healthy six-year-old boy development? Did I miss reading this section in the How To Raise A Child books?

    The other day I took a series of pictures of him working on his Spanish. I was sitting at the art table, working with my daughter on her math or something, and every two seconds I’d turn around and snap a photo. Some of the pictures are blurry. I think you can figure out why.

    Maybe I should tie sacks of flour around his ankles to slow him down? Because I’m at my wits’ end.

    This same time, years previous: the greats