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Tuesday, March 11, 2008

Smiley's 1st Day of School! 3-10-08

At quarter to noon I left work and met Lisa and Smiley at his new school. He'd just woken up from a nap when he got  there and therefore didn't look too happy in this shot.

He seemed a little apprehensive when he saw all the big kids on the playground, but as his Mom said, he'd probably have jumped the fence to join them if we'd given him the chance.

Armed with his Spongebob backpack packed with diapers, a pair of new shoes from my Mom, and a sharp sweater vest he was ready to go!

The classroom is on the lower level, a cozy little room where about 8 kids gather to do intensive speech related activites. Then, for an hour or so, they move over to join the K4 kids for storytime and the usual kindergarten curriculum.

We met his teacher, Ms. Heidi, and he seemed fascinated by the other kids, spending a long time watching in awe as they hung up their coats in their cubby holes. After a few minutes it was time to leave, and the teacher asked Smiley to have a seat around the table.

Uh-uh. Wasn't having it. He let out a squeal and swatted her hand away. As we were walking out the door he was crying at the top of his lungs, reaching out for Lisa and yelling 'momma momma momma'.

The girls couldn't have cared LESS about our leaving them on the first day of school, and they were no older than he is now.

It genuinely freaked me out for the rest of the day, as if I wasn't wistful enough over having my only son start school. Thankfully the report from the ride home after school was positive. He cried only for a minute or two, was all smiles as he left the school, and was very animated and noisy on the way home.

Later, when I asked him if he liked it, he nodded enthusiastically.

Here's Lisa's emailed report from Day Two:

drop off went smoothly ....
 
talked to the other 2 parents that do the drop off thing [note: we turned down bussing] ...
 
one man said his son only started 2 weeks ago.....and that he says a lot more then when he started.
 
i said Smiley spent 2 hrs w/ miss heidi and said a lot of new sounds just on the car ride home....
 
another lady said her daughter finally just started calling her momma for the first time about 3 weeks ago....
 
no crying.....lined up really good with the kids, waved goodbye w/ his pack on his back like a little man but so cute and cuddly, lol...
 
....only 4 kids (that includes ours) get dropped off....
 
sooooo.....very promissing...very nice kids/parents....
 
She went on to note a fistfight she saw on the playground that seemed to go unnoticed, but I'm betting that's just a fluke; it can certainly happen anywhere and the school gets rave reviews.
 
So little Smiley is now in school and even has a zoo fieldtrip coming up! What a big week for him!
 

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The Legend Trip

I've bombarded the reader with fun family stuff for awhile, and have more to come, so I thought I'd take a short break and talk about something else.

Back in December I bought a Christmas present for my wife off of Craigslist.

When I picked it up the seller cheerfully included a free DVD of a locally produced horror movie entitled The Legend Trip; I think he had a role in producing it.

Kind of an odd incentive for buying a Tresor gift box, but allrighty.

Look, I’m always hesitant to criticize someone else’s artistic work.

A) Because they’ve done something and I’ve done jack diddly to date

and

 B) if I eventually do ‘do’ something it might come back to haunt me. Best to treat it like a jalapeno and assume it could could back to burn my ass tommorow.

But really, this film was nothing more than torture porn.

The plot revolves around a ‘legend trip’ a nocturnal visit to a place of evil misdeeds, in this case ‘the fabled Buth House’. We’re treated to a series of stories going back at least 75 years, with characters/victims including prohibition era gangsters, college kids, a priest (played by Mark Metcalf from Animal House), and the researchers intent on making the visit.

For a local film the acting was unusually good (except, in my opinion, for the physciatrist and the female student that initiates the trip) and some of the shots were staged with just the right creative eye. The brief story of the college kids was intriguing and entertaining.

So much for the good.

On the bad end of things I couldn’t follow the plot, and frankly if it exists outside the DVD cover I couldn’t find it. We get it – the house inspires bad deeds – but do you have anything more to offer than that revelation?

That was the main downfall for me. I can forgive many a sin if it’s concealed within the boundaries of a solid story, but I’ve never been one to enjoy a bad script, no matter how visually stunning.

There was also the issue of gore. I don’t think it was necessary to include an odd and out-of-kilter self disembowelment, nor the shot of a man stabbing himself through the eye, or the kidnapped woman strapped to a chair as her captor wraps barbed wire tightly around her face.

Why? I mean really. I love horror, but ‘horror’ and ‘fright’ are different than gore and sadism. Enough of these Hostel/Saw copycats. The world’s a messed up enough place even on a good day. There’s no need to get off on showcasing it at its worst.

Over at IMBD.com the reviews are largely glowing, so maybe I’m out in left field (but at least one review smacks of being written by someone involved in the film).

I’m happy someone in the Milwaukee area successfully brought a film to the screen. I just wish the result was something I could be equally proud of.

* * *

I also had a chance to see Fantastic Four. Not nearly as bad as I feared, but I still wouldn’t have paid to see it.

Ditto Daredevil. It was a very passable film but I agree with some reviews that say it didn’t do enough to explore the hero vs. vigilante aspect of his personality. I loved the effects that represented Matt’s hearing but deplored some rather lousy CGI at other parts of the film. And what’s with DD being able to leap up two stories? He’s just a plain jane human after all, albeit one with super hearing.

Warning: Spoilers ahead

National Treasure:Book of Secrets was a fun popcorn movie even if the history and motivation were goofy.

To paraphrase a line of dialouge from the movie: 140 years later no one cares who the (non-Booth) Lincoln conspirators were, aside from historians, and it hardly slurs your family name.

 I also don’t see the US government covering up the existence of a city made of gold during the Depression, if ever. Melt the damn thing. What, Americans of the 1930’s would object on the grounds that it was a Native American artifact? Get real.

And if memory serves it took the US  a wee bit of time to secure the Dakotas. How was the financially and militarily strapped Confederacy going to invade, secure, and hold that area against both the natives and the US? C'mon - really, the whole movie is bunk.

But fun bunk.

Frankly, of interest only to my family

Franky, for no other reason than the fact that I doubt my sister has a copy, here's a few poems my nephew Jonah wrote Oct 26th of '04 for a 5th grade project.

He's the same kid who started the Jonah's Wail blog on the sidebar then ditched it for Myspace. If he - or his sister - would start up a journal and stick with it, I'd reward them. I think it's a great way to develop their writing skills before high school.

Crunk

When I go into my room

I can kinda hear my hampster say voom-voom

He wants to go in his car and drive very far

And go to the hamster bar

The bar is on 85th and Nar

That’s where you’ll find his blue car

Bugs

Bugs crawl through the dirt

Birds come down and eat insects

They are really small

Leaves

They fall from all trees

And can not get stung by bees

You might not lose your keys

Monkeys

They might feel funky

Some are very chunky

And I like monkeys

Money

Fun essential

Spend buy save

Car home school food

Cash

Six Flags

Thrilling intense

roller coasters game prizes

Fun food nausea families

Park

Cocoa

My dog is brown my dog is round

She always makes a sound

Her nose is wet

She hasn’t been to the vet yet

You wanna make a bet?

She’ll pull off your hair net

That’s all the time for the rhyme

That’s my dog

Cocoa

Crunk

When I go into my room

I can kinda hear my hampster say voom-voom

He wants to go in his car and drive very far

And go to the hamster bar

The bar is on 85th and Nar

That’s where you’ll find his blue car

Bugs

Bugs crawl through the dirt

Birds come down and eat insects

They are really small

Leaves

They fall from all trees

And can not get stung by bees

You might not lose your keys

Monkeys

They might feel funky

Some are very chunky

And I like monkeys

Money

Fun essential

Spend buy save

Car home school food

Cash

Six Flags

Thrilling intense

roller coasters game prizes

Fun food nausea families

Park

Cocoa

My dog is brown my dog is round

She always makes a sound

Her nose is wet

She hasn’t been to the vet yet

You wanna make a bet?

She’ll pull off your hair net

That’s all the time for the rhyme

That’s my dog

Cocoa

 

 


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JLand Photo Shoot #130 - Photographer's Choice

The subject this week over at Sometimes I Think's J-Land Photo Shoot is "Photographer's Choice", meaning you're free to choose any current or old photo of yours as the weeks entry.

I spent a good deal of time looking through old digital photos to find something appropriate, and I had a blast. It's great reliving some of the memories of the last few years. I only wish digital cameras had been around for more than just the last decade - no way anyone took as many pictures in the ol' film era.

I still had trouble finding something that would thrill a viewer, but I kept coming back to this one.

It's a pic of YaYa taken on Cinco De Mayo of '05, one of a series of shots of her and Lu I took  as they enjoyed the playset that day. And, I guess, as they enjoyed climbing the porch too. :)

To me it's startling how different YaYa looks in just three years. You can still tell undeniably that it's her, but the face is so much rounder, the distance from elbow to wrist so short, and the hands so pudgy.

You see the kids everyday and you don't notice how they change. Then you look at an old photo and  . . .wow. 

Monday, March 10, 2008

Just a nice photo, looking out my 2nd floor hallway window

On how I'm nothing more than a means of transportation and amusement for the kids

At my house there are two inescapable truths:

A) there is nothing so irresistible for use as a trampoline/jungle gym as a Daddy lying on the floor and B) I am nothing but a mule designed to transport the kids from one floor to another.

Here are some examples from Smiley's party of this second point. Please disregard my increasingly bothersome baldspot, which continues to bother me to an insane degree.

In these shots I was ambushed by a bushel of 'em, and proceeded to do some squats, tossing them about to their amusement.

I don't know why, but when I flipped this next pic 'right side up' it looked odd, so here's the sideways version.

This is what they refer to as being my 'necklace'.

And a final shot (I wasn't glum - 'twas just the moment) of a typical 'carry me upstairs to bed pose'. For some reason they like to be carried to bed like a sack of wheat.

Smiley's 3rd Birthday Party - pt 2

While I was busy with YaYa Lisa ran another game, this time where they wrapped each other in toilet paper like a 'cocoon'.

 

 

Then it was time to sing Happy Birthday and have some cake.

 

 

 

Smiley then opened his gifts. Note the Spiderman couch, itself a gift from his maternal Grandfather.

 

 

 

<SPANSTYLE="MSO-SPACERUN: yes?>He got lots of cool gifts: squirting race cars, an Avatar playset, Play-Doh sets, sandbox toys, the list goes on and on. From us he received Easy Link, a cool internet connectivity device. You simply take the figurine of your favorite character and insert it into the slot. Presto, it takes you to that characters webpage! There's Wiggles, Clifford the Big Red Dog, Elmo, Bob the Builder, Arthur, DragonTales, Thomas the Tank Engine, Barney, and Fisher Price.

 

 

After that it was pretty loosey goosey, but relaxed and fun. The kids continued to play upstairs

 

 

 

 

 

A very nice time, an imagininative idea by Lisa, and a relaxed and pleasant time for everyone! Happy Birthday Smiley! We love you!



Smiley's 3rd Birthday Party Pt. 1

On Friday the 7th my Smiley turned 3 years old and we celebrated with a 'Bug' party at the house.

Lisa had picked up inflatable insect balloons at Target and put them up around the dining room.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Smiley was initially scared of the insects, but we told him they were harmless andhe got over it. We LIED!!!

 

 

We'd also planned on a course of lasagna for the adults and sandwiches for the kids, but at the last moment Lent reared its ugly head. It was Friday after all, and while Lisa and her family are Lutheran mine are Catholic. So Lis improvised a pasta buffet with Alfredo and spaghetti sauce and an optional sausage dish.

 

Surprisingly the pasta idea was a smash hit, and we'll probably offer it again in the future.

 

While we're on the subject of food, the menu also included ants on a log (raisins and peanut butter on celery) and a bug covered mudhill cake. Without question the cake was the ugliest thing I'd ever eaten and looked downright disgusting, more a dung hill than mud.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Even so it was one of the tastiest I've had, more like a brownie than cake.

 

The house got crowded fast with 12 kids and 14 adults in attendance.  The kids dominated the second floor, the adults the dining and living rooms. The kitchen was neutral territory. Check out all the presents in the 3rd shot!

 

 

 

 

 

The first game was 'eat the ants'. A spoonful of jimmies - one for each year of the child's age - was placed on a paper plate in front of them on the floor. Without using their hands they had to eat the plate clean, with the winner being the first done.

 

 

 

 

Then I was dispatched upstairs to hide 30 rubber insects for a hide and seek game. The kids were sent upstairs by age to try and find them.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

[Here's the problem. YaYa qualified for a prize but had won the ant contest and therefore wasn't eligible for another prize (the law is the law people!). She then melted down and had a hissy fit which I quickly tried to squash. Problem is she eventually admitted to being too embarrassed to go back to the party, which led to a bigger fit when I demanded she rejoin the festivities. "I'm six, I'm too old to have had a fit, I can't go out there!"

 

Man. Sigh. Kids.]

 

Ok, I had to chop the post in half for AOL. More later!