My husband was watching a show on urban legends the other night, and one little story between the segments caught his attention-- it was about a flood that happened in Boston back in 1919. He asked the kids today if they knew about it-- which they didn't--- and then asked me-- which I also didn't-- and so then went and searched it online. He got a return to a site that is really interesting-- some of it's educational, and so could be tied in with your lessons, and some of it is just plain fun. Kind of reminds me of Paul Harvey's The Rest of the Story.
Well, two weeks ago we welcomed a new addition to our family-- little Abigail, who weighed in at 7 lbs, 11 1/2 oz and was 21" long. I'd forgotten how much time a newborn takes up. Wow.
Anyway... as a result, I'm taking the summer off HSN here, more or less, but I'm hoping to bribe talk someone into writing some guest posts. So, please don't stop visiting me here! And please, feel free to e-mail me ideas/ links/ whatever you think might benefit others on this hs'ing journey. It might take a while to get things posted, but I still welcome your input!
This is a repost (sorry, folks, real lazy here) from my personal blog. Might explain why I've been so slack here.
I haven't blogged much lately. I've never been much of one to be at a loss for words (the exact opposite), but sometimes life gets in the way.
School has been a struggle for me. Ever just feel like you just don't want to be bothered? If it weren't for courses that practically teach themselves, we'd be in real trouble. I'm barely getting things marked. Some things I just don't. Housework is sliding. Sounds like depression? Not exactly-- I've been there before-- and I don't feel the same.
Let's see.... friends are moving back home from out west. We miss them, we're looking forward to seeing them again.... but I know it just won't be the same. I have a friend from the CHB (see sidebar) who has been struggling with a brain tumour for over a year now. Just got word she is more than ready to go home.... she and her husband have great faith, they are born-again believers, but it's still hard. I'm pregnant with our 6th child, and have had a few scares, especially after losing one last April. And today, got a call from the doctor that there was something they want to investigate further regarding the baby's heartrate during my ultrasound in December. *sigh*..... and then the usual spiritual battles and discouragment regarding ministry opportunities.
So, there it is. A heavy heart, and lots of things falling by the wayside.
I so want to be an encouragment to other homeschoolers. This ain't it. But you know, I know homeschooling is still the right choice. I'm not perfect, nor do I pretend to be. Been doing this for 10 years now, and I have good days (or months), and I have bad ones. But I keep on slugging away at it, and maybe, just maybe, someone who thinks they can't do it because of whatever, or a newbie who wants to quit because they don't match the ideal portayed in the Sonlight calalogue (or any catalogue/ magazine-- I'm not picking on Sonlight), will realize that real homeschooling families go through crap too. And we get through it.
It's that time of year again... for some, it never stopped-- they homeschool year-round, and this is just the time of year to stock up on cheap looseleaf and scribblers. For others (like us) it's time not only to buy school supplies, but time to start a brand-new school year.
Now... the whole school supplies thing? It's totally my thing. There's just something about crisp new paper, binders, Hilroy scribblers, and crayons... yup, at 36 years old, I still love the smell of new Crayolas. And even though we rarely use those Hilroy (or "Canada") 4-pack 32-page exercise books, it doesn't seem like back-to-school without them.
When I was a kid (get comfortable, it's story time), my step-dad was what they used to call a "travelling salesman"... he worked at a small warehouse that stocked and delivered pharmaceutical and medical supplies (ie: anything found at an old small-town drugstore, including watches, sunglasses, aspirin,
candy, some toys, and yes, school supplies) throughout western Nova Scotia. He went to these small businesses, took orders, delivered goods, unloaded trucks, you name it, all from this warehouse that used to house apples. It was a normal thing for him to come home with some new product, a "hot new item" for us to try out. I never bought my own shampoo or "feminine protection" until I moved away from home-- embarassment over these thing was unknown since it was as normal for him to hand these things over to me as a newspaper (by the way, stuff wasn't free, just wholesale cost got taken off his pay). Anyhow... back to my story.
August was the magic month for me. I knew that sometime in August, we'd go over to the warehouse, and I'd get to pick out my school supplies. I must have been a real pain in the neck. "When can we go?" "Not yet..." A week later: "Are we going soon?" "Yes, soon, not today." I must've asked a dozen times during the month... then finally.... after an agonizing wait, we'd head over. Invariable, I'd be the only kid in school with whatever "hot new item" was available that year. I still have a green metal pencil box with "School Tools" written on it (that nobody else had), and somewhere, a wooden pencil box with a sliding cover and swing-out top compartment that later got decorated with A-Team stamps of Hannibal and Mr.T. Both of which were also hot new items that nobody else had. One year, we took a friend with us, and her parents were greatly relieved.
Anyhow, that would be my "big" back-to-school memory. Certain aisles of Costco trigger it, because the smell is the same... and I have an urge to scout out binders and paper and erasers, and see what unusual
It's just that, well, it's summer, and there's not much home-school-ish stuff to blog about. We've taken a break for the summer, more or less following the public schools, not to mention the fact that we REALLLLLLLY needed a break. And it's too hot to think.
However.... that being said....
If you are elsewhere in the province and you are doing something different, let me know. Comment, or e-mail me. It would be cool to start a category on on the way NBers do things.
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