If you change the way you look at things, the things you look at change.
Showing posts with label funny. Show all posts
Showing posts with label funny. Show all posts

Saturday, April 11, 2020

Activities

Shortly after Harris started going to Preschool a couple of days per week - well after the crying stopped, he and I had a conversation about what school was like.  He explained to me that they have story time and play time and lunch time and did some activities.

I asked a bit more about these activities and was informed that it is when you make stuff and sit and do stuff and paint stuff. School activities. 

Soon preschool took a break and Harris was home again with his mom.  One day when I talked to him on the phone, he let me know that he and his mother had done an activity the day before.  You see, he had a newborn sister and I think mother needed a bit of quiet, still time out of the little fellow. 

I asked Harris about it and he informed me that he did a color sorting activity.  Then, when I talked to his mother, she let me know that she might run out of fresh ideas because he didn't like to repeat the same activity.  So, I made a suggestion and Harris wanted to know if I had some activities. 

Well, tradition continues and now that we are staying at home, like I shared yesterday, Harris is doing a little school work and Linley now is doing some activities, since she is at home from preschool as well.

I learned that one of her favorite activities is a color sorting one.  Again, tradition continues.  Only, this time, the color sorting activity doesn't involve little cars and colored stickers.  This time Linley is sorting colored cereal pieces.
Look at that little genius!  I told her mother that my grandchildren were destined to be true geniuses!  After I got the photo above, I got another message from her mother:
And then there were a couple of photos.
And a message from her mother, "true talent!"
I think she inherited that talent from me!

Friday, April 10, 2020

The Rules of the Classroom

I am an educator and my family knows that I put a lot of stock in reading, writing, and learning.  I also know that keeping the learning going while we are staying at home is very, very difficult.

I've checked in on a pretty regular basis to make certain that everybody is doing alright.  I've inquired about everyone's health and that of their extended family and asked about their food and toilet paper supply.

Sometimes I'll ask about their continued education but lots of times I let that go because...well...we are staying at home.  School and learning is hard enough to do when you go to school and learn.  So, when everybody is home and they have to be home ALL THE TIME, some things have to be let go at times and that is all right.

I checked in this morning with my son's family.  I hadn't talked to Jessica in a while and I cannot even imagine being at home ALL THE TIME with a six-year-old-boy who is full-of-energy and a two-year-old girl who is two years old.  I remember those years of having two littles at home with you and it was probably some of the hardest work I ever did.

Anyway, I digress.  Knowing that school is usually a part of the morning routine, I asked if they were having school this morning even though it was Good Friday.  Jessica assured me that they were and reiterated with, "We tend to work better when there is structure and a routine."  I get it. Rambunctious.  Busy.  Boisterous. Bouncing. I get it.

Linley was working on one of her favorite activities - color sorting - but that is another story for another time.  What I was intrigued by is that Jessica informed me that she was really learning a lot from Harris and the curriculum that he has as a kindergartner.  She said they'd had to Google something yesterday to be sure they had gotten it correct.  But that's not all!

She also informed me that when they started using the bonus room as the school room, Harris let her know that they needed some rules.  He liked the rules they had in his classroom at school.  So, he wrote them out and asked her to post them on the wall.

I kind of expected rules like Be Nice To Your Sister or Do What Mama Says.  These rules were all business, though.  The rules involve Hand Signals.  You see, if you need to go to the bathroom, you hold up one finger.  If you are in need of a wipe to clean something off your work area, you hold up two fingers.  Hold up three fingers if you need a pencil.  Four fingers signifies that you need some water.  If you have a question, hold up five fingers.

Jessica let me know that she has a difficult time remembering the rules.  She sees Harris following the rules and sometimes she is attending to Linley and her activity and cannot see the rules posted on the wall to clarify the difference between two and three or something like that and it is a struggle for her.

She sent me a photo of the rules and this message: "Just in case you and Mike need some rules around there."  I think I would be lost in keeping up with the rules, too.  I tried to text her back but I was laughing so hard I could hardly see my keyboard.  I said that maybe I just needed to start waving my hands in the air!
She said, "That should cover it!"

Tuesday, April 7, 2020

Dare Devils on Wheels!

We always love getting photos of the grands!  Each of the random photos below brings a smile to my face every single time I see them.

Every.

Single.

Time!

My first thought when I saw this one of Levy with his helmet, elbow and knee pads, and sporting Spiderman ensemble from head to toe made me smile.  Doesn't he look like a dare-devil.  We would have called him Evel Knievel back in the day.  Bicycle training wheels and all, this five-year-old looks like a wheeled sport to be reckoned with!

Then, there was this guy!  At the top Easton was shown riding his dinosaur four-wheeler with superhero knee and elbow pads, dino helmet, and swinging a badminton racket to heard goats out of the yard and back into the pasture.  The close-up just does not do justice to this dare-devil's speed and flexibility with those scampering goat kids!

Saturday, April 4, 2020

Patience

I've been bugging Mike to put a new top on the table for the front porch.  A few months back a strong wind storm did a number on it and broke the glass top that was on it. 

Mike doesn't have quite the urgency that I do for the project.  So, I'm having to be patient. 

Patience is hard for me.

Yesterday, when I had finished working from here at home, I hopped on the ATV with Mike and we went for a ride.  We rode all over our ponderosa and even a little bit of the neighbors'.  We wound up back at Pop's barn where I checked out the progress of the seedlings he has been nurturing.




Then, we eased around the side of the barn to go close up the greenhouse for the evening to keep the new seed trays from getting too cool during the overnight temperatures.  I noticed something as we rode by the seedlings again.  Do you see it?
I think my exact words to Mike were, "I like how you crafted that plant table."
He responded, "Now, honey, that is a fine example of some redneck-carpentry there!"

So, today, when I mentioned how nice it would be if I had a new top on that table on the front porch so I have a place to set my coffee cup, he began to tell me how he would be glad to bring me one of those red plastic tubs and some different pieces of lumber to stack upon it.

Somehow, I'm learning that patience might be easier than I thought.

Wednesday, March 25, 2020

Soup In A Cup

Oftentimes children have to be coaxed into liking different foods.  I fondly recall that my children were 'good eaters' but that doesn't mean that they liked everything I ever served.

Bridgette, Bryan, and I often will bring up stories from their childhood which cause us to chuckle.  Generally it is in relation to something that their own children are doing.  One thing that we have chuckled about for years is my fondness for tomato soup and the fact that, as a child, Bryan did not share that fondness.

One day I served up tomato soup and we probably had grilled cheese sandwiches as a side item.  Instead of pouring our soup into bowls to be eaten with a spoon, I served the soup up in a mug or a cup.  

Bryan was having none of that.

Honestly, I don't know if he wound up eating something else or if I was that awful mother who told him to do without till dinnertime.  Miraculously, he survived my horrible parenting - whichever option I provided.

That afternoon when we went to the dairy farm to do our chores, Bryan was tagging along with my Daddy and he asked him, "Papaw, do you wike soup in a cup?"  I'm sure my father had a wise response or perhaps asked him a question to find out what type soup was being referenced.  Bryan clarified, asking, "Do you wike wed soup in a cup?" (red soup in a cup)

I can imagine Daddy not criticizing the red soup but not expressing delight either because I don't think it was one of his favorite options.  Daddy was more of a meat, beans, and potatoes kind of a guy and would have wanted something more like beef stew.

Finally, Bryan informed him, "Well, Papaw, I don't WIKE soup in a cup!"  There it was.  His preference stated.  And it was a fact that we all chuckled about when Daddy shared the conversation with us later.

To me tomato soup and a grilled cheese sandwich warms me up like no other meal.  So, when we had a cold, grey, damp, rainy day last week, I warmed up my favorite go-to.  Just like almost always when I have this menu delicacy, I sent Bryan a picture and the message, "Good day for soup in a cup!  Hate you missed it!"

Wednesday, July 17, 2019

Haircuts!

Somebody got fresh haircuts last week and had to come down the hill and show them off!
Of course we all were excited about a new summer haircut.  Why wouldn't we be?!
Especially after it was pointed out to us...
"It's spiky!"

Thursday, January 24, 2019

Oldies

Old photos rake up old memories.  Most of the time, I think we find that old photos make us chuckle.  Other times, I think they make us question past thinking.  I'll never forget years ago when I was moving and some of my son's old photos surfaced.  He paused and looked at a school picture of himself and asked, "Mom, why did you let me wear my hair like that?"  I couldn't help myself, I just laughed out loud.  The main reason is because my memory of that stage of his life was of me thinking, why does he want to wear his hair like that?

Some old photos were found recently when my mother was packing up to move.  Some of them fell into my hands, somehow.  I was ever grateful to get most of them and was also glad to share some with cousins and aunts.  Of course, again, I chuckled. 

There was one incredibly horrible photo of one of my cousins.  She was always a really cute girl.  Oh, she went through a gangly stage at one point in her life, but she still was a cutie to my recollection and turned out to be a beautiful woman.  However, this particular photo was probably taken sometime around her first through third grade years.  I won't post it here because that would just be cruel.  However, her hair was chopped off right about at the bottom of her ears and was sticking out around her ears.  Her bangs were chopped off about an inch above her eyebrows and she had a really snarly look on her face.  To give her mother credit, my cousin, Janice, had on a really cute jumper and blouse with beautiful cotton lace around the Peter Pan collar and puffed-sleeve cuffs - a classic ensemble for a little southern girl.  Her outfit was hand-made and not home-made looking.  However, the remainder of the picture just really was unflattering.

Not having her mobile number, I texted it and a few other photos to Janice's sister, Joyce.  She and I spent about an hour laughing till our sides ached texting back and forth about this and several other photos I sent her.  Then, we also had a phone conversation that was at least a half-hour long talking and laughing about those photos and wondering where our mind was at the time to think all that was attractive.

I love photos and I really love looking back and reminiscing about days gone by.  Having somebody to contribute to the memories makes it even better and I am ever grateful to have photos and relatives with whom to share them.  I am constantly telling myself that I should take more photos and even after taking a pot-load of them, I always wish I had more. 

My plan is to take some time here to share some of those old photos from time to time so that they are not lost sitting in a box or stored in an online album somewhere.  I hope they bring a smile to others like they do to me.

Today's photo is one of me.  I am almost six years older than my sister.  I think my parents worried that I needed playmates.  I also know that my parents wanted me to be school-ready and socially aware when I began school.  So, I was enrolled in the local Head-Start program.  The best that my memory serves me is that I went to Franklin High School for these interactions and at some point, I must have been told that I was going so that I "would learn to play with other kids."  That really is about all I recall.  Goodness!  I wasn't even five years old, yet! 

At the end of my time in the Head-Start program. I do recall a graduation ceremony of some sort and getting a rolled-up piece of paper, tied with a ribbon, while wearing a mortarboard hat made of stiff, white paper.  The photo of me shows my snaggle-toothed self standing, wearing that hat, and holding my rolled-up paper.  Like my cousin, Janice, was in her picture, my hair is the style of the day, chopped off and straight bangs across my forehead. 

My snaggle-toothed smile is one I wore for several years, because aforementioned cousin, Joyce had kicked me to get back away from her when I was taunting her for something and she was sitting atop the washing machine, to the best of my recollection.  I was four and she was three and I lost my two front teeth that didn't grow back in till I was aged six or so. 

My dress was a cute one that was probably hand-made by my mother because I don't think I owned a store-bought dress till I was in the fifth grade.  I was really dressed up because I was also wearing lacy, white socks and white shoes.  I well-remember that white shoes were reserved for Sunday-wearing and special occasions! 
I'm sure there are many other photos of me over the years wearing a mortarboard hat and dressed in my finest because, after all, I went on to graduate from high school, as an undergraduate from college, and with a graduate degree from college.  However, this will probably always be my favorite photo of me as a graduate.  Good times!

Thursday, June 7, 2018

Another coach in the family?

Back when the days were still chilly and the skies were grey and there were no leaves on the trees, a certain little fellow signed up to play a little T-Ball.  This grandmother asked his dad whether he was planning to help coach and got this as a response, "I think I'm going to just watch and see how things go. It might not be the same here as it was where I grew up playing and I can learn how things are done here this year."  This grandmother smiled.
Then, ball practice started.  This little fellow had a bit of early coaching at home from dad.  So, he sort of knew a wee bit about what to do on the ball field. 
However, when all of the team gets together, that back-yard coaching sometimes flies out the window and chaos ensues!  Players rolling in the grass, fighting one another for the ball, and other general preschool fun takes over.  So, even though there is a head-coach and an assistant coach, other auxiliary coaches are needed to step up. 
When this grandmother asked the ball player's dad how practice went and called him Coach Dad, I was immediately corrected with, "I'm not coaching, Mom.  I just help out a little bit during practice."  Once again, this grandmother just smiled.
Call it what you may.  But, I think I see Coach Dad out there on that field giving a little instruction and playing catch with the team.
Look at that pair in the background.  I'd bet somewhere in there is a phrase about squaring up your feet and your shoulders as you face the ball.
Now, I know Coach Dad feels a responsibility toward this player as seen in the background but I really had a little suspicion that the coaching didn't stop there.
Somehow, I really believed the coaching went a wee bit beyond this player and improving his fielding and his batting. You know, maybe Coach Dad might be helping some of the other little sluggers as well as our own favorite.
Maybe it was just a gut feeling on my part.  Somehow, in my mind, I kind of thought the other little players might be getting just a wee bit of Coach Dad's coaching as well.  But, this grandmother just smiled as Coach Dad protested.  Then, the first game came along...
I called to find out how things went and talked to Coach Dad.  I was told that our little slugger walloped the ball!  This grandmother just smiled and listened to all the details.

I asked how the ballgame went when the little players were executing defense and who was out in the field with them during that time.  The response went something like this, "Gosh, Mom.  We all were out there.  It was just chaos.  There were three or four of us standing in the field with them and nudging them into positions and telling them to get baseball ready. Then, the batter would hit the ball and we would have to tell some of them to stay near a base or to go cover home plate and nudge them in that direction.  It was sort of like a three-ring-circus.  They would fight over the ball and everybody ran after the runner no matter whether they had the ball or not. Then, it was nudging them back into position to get ready all over again for the next batter and be baseball ready...  It was a lot like herding cats!"  And this grandmother just smiled.
I asked about a couple of our little slugger's friends whose names I could recall.  Coach Dad's response was, "Aw, she did pretty well.  She has a lot to learn but she is just the sweetest little thing!"  And this grandmother just smiled.

So, I said, "Sounds like Coach Dad is doing a pretty good job." And the response I got was, "I'm NOT coaching, Mom.  I'm just helping out a little bit."  And this grandmother just smiled.
Me thinks he doth protest too much. 
We are glad to have another coach in the family!

Saturday, July 29, 2017

Silly Boys and Water

I think most everybody has memories of running through a sprinkler during the summer time.  Now, Levi will have such memories as well!


Doesn't that look like fun on a hot summer day?  Thanks for sharing the fun time, Bonnie!

Silly boy!


Thursday, July 27, 2017

Funny Face

I don't know if Levi has learned to make silly faces from seeing folks make selfies or if he was planning to blow us a kiss.  Either way, this photo sent by his mom made Mike and me chuckle!


Sunday, March 12, 2017

A Sad Day

Well, yesterday was a sad day in our household.

We had to bid goodbye to an old friend.

We had been served well.

After all, that friend had only been a part of our lives for thirty-plus years.

Yet, when I set it atop the mate and pushed down on the center spot like I have countless thousand times before...

My finger just pushed straight through the trendy avocado center.

Sadness abounds.

Thursday, March 24, 2016

Patient Listener or Partner in Crime?

When I got to Mom and Daddy's this afternoon, their young friend, Jim, was sitting with Daddy and listening to him ramble.  I'm sure that sometimes his ramblings might have made little sense as Daddy was working through the tangles that sometimes take place with his oxygen deprived thinking.  But, Jim was patiently listening and smiling or chuckling when appropriate.

At one point I overheard Daddy mention something along this line...

"I just thought when Beverly got here today she could lead it."

So, I asked Daddy, what is it you think I"m going to lead for you?

He replied, "A horse."

Me: What horse?

Daddy: "That one out there." (and he pointed out toward the front pasture)

Me: Are you kidding me?  Daddy, you know I'm afraid of a horse!  I'm not gonna lead any horse for you!

Daddy in a hoity-toity way: "Well, we sent you off to 'The University' and I thought you might have learned something about leading a horse."

Me in a hoity-toity way:  I learned a lot at 'The University' about horses.  I learned I didn't need any old horse.  I learned I didn't need to be messing with a horse.  I confirmed that I am scared of horses.

Daddy just rolled his eyes and he and Jim chuckled together.

Then, I noticed that Daddy had taken his oxygen tubing out of his nose.  So, I took the couple of steps over to him and repositioned it into his nose and told him that he had to leave that in his nose like that to help him breathe.  (I was a little surprised that I wasn't accused of being bossy.)

He cut his eyes over toward Jim.  Then, he said, "Did you know this tube grew longer last night?"

I'm sure the look on my face was pure confusion and I asked him where it grew longer.  So, Daddy held up a long length of the tubing between his hands and said, "See?"

Then, his hand went up to remove the tubing from around his left ear and take the tubes out of his nose.  So, I gently put the tubing back like it was supposed to be and told him that I bet if that tubing grew longer it was because SOMEBODY had been pulling and stretching it!

"Well, I don't know anything about that!"  Daddy said and cut his eyes over toward Jim.

I said, I bet it was the one who is pulling at it right now, and again gently took the tubing away from him and repositioned it behind his ear and into his nostrils.

This time, he pointed his finger at me.  "I don't know how many degrees you have gotten but I do know one thing.  You don't know EVERYTHING!"  he said, looked over at Jim, and they chuckled together.

Wednesday, March 23, 2016

Twists and Turns

Sometimes conversations can take interesting twists and turns and can be quite entertaining.  These days we are finding this fact out in an unusual way.  As I've mentioned before, sometimes due to oxygen deprivation, Daddy's conversations get a little tangled.

We had just one of those conversations last week.

Now, first, let me tell you that everybody who knows my husband, Mike, knows that he is NEVER in a hurry.  He always pokes along no matter what.  So, that being said...this is how the conversation ensued...

Daddy noticed out the window that there was somebody mowing.  I told him that it was Mike mowing along the driveway.  He was surprised and said, "Well, I didn't ask him to do that." Then, after a long pause, "I didn't tell him not to, either," and he shrugged.

Bryan and I were taking Daddy on a tour to provide him with an opportunity to see things he had been missing due to being tethered to his oxygen machine and weather constraints.  As we were touring his farm, we met Mike, who was mowing alongside the driveway.  Mike was poking along more than usual because this was an area he hadn't cut before and was unsure about the location of rocks.  Bryan pointed at Mike and Mike pointed at Daddy and Daddy exclaimed, "He is going W-I-D-E open!"  Bryan's eyes met mine in the rear-view mirror and we both burst out laughing.

Later in the afternoon, Jim, a young friend of Daddy's came by for a visit and mentioned that he thought Mike and Bryan were doing a nice job grooming the place and getting the grass cut and Daddy informed him, "Yeah.  I think they are cutting it a little shorter than I would but it looks pretty good."  Mom and I burst out laughing this time before we explained to Jim that they had raised the deck on the mowers at least two inches!

Then, just before dark, Mom got a phone call and we overheard her saying, "Let me jot down your phone number..."  Daddy looked at me and informed me that the caller, "must be a new customer."  I asked him what kind of customer and he wasn't sure.  Then, he offered, "Maybe she is going to cut the grass next time!"  I chuckled and said, "I guarantee you one thing...she won't do it to suit!"  To which he agreed, "I know it.  I have cut this grass for years and your Mama always fusses about something - too short, too tall, grass in the flower beds...There's just no suiting her!"

See, just a little twist and turn and the entire perspective is different!

Wednesday, March 2, 2016

Read Across America!

In celebration of Dr. Seuss's birthday, today is Read Across America Day.  Is there a person who doesn't have a favorite Seussical book reference?

When I was prepping to write this post, I discovered Seussville where there are links to Seuss''s biography, video clips, activities and printables for lessons, and lots, lots more!  Someday I'd love to take my grandchildren to the Dr. Seuss National Memorial Sculpture Garden at the Springfield Museum where they truly have made Theodor Seuss Geisel a place for hands-on and feed-the-eyes interaction with the genius and his imagination.  There is so much to learn about this literary genius!  For example, most people don't realize that early in his career he was an illustrator who created "fantastical political cartoons in the early years of World War II," or how he took on Hitler.

As an educator, a reading specialist, and a lover of the written word, I encourage you to honor Read Across America Day today and read aloud to somebody - anybody!

Do a little reading…
Out there things can happen
and frequently do
to people as brainy
and footsy as you.
And then things start to happen,
don't worry. Don't stew.
Just go right along.
You'll start happening too.

Oh!
The places you’ll go!
(From The Places You'll Go!)

Monday, August 25, 2014

Helping Out

Now that there is a new baby in the house...

this seems to be the favorite pastime.

However, some things still have to get done.

Girls will be girls and siblings will be siblings...

So, when Mama gets tired of hearing them argue and fuss with one another...

It becomes job time!

And that isn't completely bad for everybody...

After all, ...

Then it becomes...all about the tunes!