Thursday, December 3, 2009

Deep questions

Conversation I overheard while trying to fix the DVD player in the newly minted "TV room" (Ahhhh! I swore it would never happen! Well, maybe it won't, if I can't fix that DVD player...):

Hannah: Nyomi, when we die are we still gonna have our house?
Naomi: Our house is never gonna die... but it's gonna break someday.
Hannah: Waaaaaaaah!

Saturday, November 28, 2009

Shabbat with twins

(First of all, I am making no excuses for myself. Yes, I noticed that I haven't been posting. But I'm the only one reading my posts, anyhow. So why do I feel guilty, and like I have to declare my unapologetic-ness? I guess it's because I've let so much silliness and yumminess pass by undocumented, and there's no way I'll remember it all--and no time even to try. :( Sad.)

Grandpa is visiting us now. He is so, so sweet--the sweetest, loveliest old man. D. helped him wash his hands for challah with a basin at the table, and dried his hands for him, and I saw the girls and Ez smiling at him with eyes shining with... love, I think. He's impossible not to love. We watched him eat his eggs, not seeing them, today, and I kept watching him trying to pick up pieces of egg with his fork, not realize he hadn't, bring an empty fork to his lips, then calmly try again. I was soooo rooting for him...and holding myself back from helping him. He's adorable.

Anyhow, last night, at our most solemn Shabbos table, Saulie said (with rest of family quietly awaiting their slice of bread): Balance. Get Balance!! (referring to "Smart Balance," the margarine-esque spread). We all snorted in spite of ourselves. And he was right, and I got it.
The first thing he said, before he got practical, was, "See moon in-a window!" I guess he had seen it earlier that night...
It's so fun to have the silly twins with us now for Shabbos, now that the sun sets at 4pm. They're so uncivilized, and so delicious. Jakey sits in his booster for a while, then climbs out, comes to me, and says, "More sit on lap!" and no matter how inconvenient, I can't resist him.

Uncle Mikee flew in with Grandpa, and together, we made our first unaided Thanksgiving! We got a turkey from Trader Joe's, he handled the turkey and stuffed it, I made sweet potatoes with sweet crunchy walnut topping, mashed potatoes, the cranberry sauce, the gravy. We did it! I was so, so pleased we weren't, once again, opening foil pans from Nosh Away (though they did provide the pies--c'mon, we have two year olds!) or begging our friends to take us in, orphanlike. Making the cranberry sauce, easy though it was, made me feel like I was finally on the grown-up side of the adult-kid divide. Hooray!
I couldn't help thinking of Ingrid the whole time, and called Julian, for old times' sake.
The twins, the twins. We moved their cribs, and crib tents, downstairs so that Grandpa wouldn't have to climb stairs every day to get to the kitchen, and they are so cozy there. I was hesistant to have them so far away, but we hear their cries through our bathroom vent very well. And the girls are right next door, too.
Saul loves to "read," is almost never without a "twucky book" or some other book, and says, "Dis iz a caww. Dis is a twuck. Ducky eyes. Fishy cwying, Mahmee?" and so on. They like to sit on their boosters with little cars or trains behind their backs, supported by the booster's back (we have a no-toys-during-meals rule), so they say, " Car sit down!" and think of each other, too, as in "Saulie sit down the car," Jakey's way of reminding me to put Saul's car behind his back, too.
Saul asks to go in the (real) car this way: Gunna gunna gunna gunna gunna caww!" Unfortunately, the answer is usually "No car." It's still too hard to go out with the two of them, especially now, in the rainy season, when we can't go to playgrounds. I'm terrified of shopping with them, ever since Yasha took a nosedive out of his cart at Ross, and landed on the cement (?) floor on his head.
Well, this room is tooooo cold to sit and type in. More later, perhaps, now that I've broken the ice again. And you--that is, I--have forgiven the long delay.

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Me? Cookie?

Life is kind of... good! Pesach was lovely. Ezra and Naomi put on a hilarious show for the 10 Plagues, scratched us with forks for lice, dragged the red chair pad off the Ikea chair for the river of blood, flopped on it to represent the dead fish (those were the two very original ones), and so on. Farfel replaced kasha (for us, oats--"kasha" of generic Russian use) for the deedees, and Saul can still be heard requesting it. Ezra now reads constantly, finished the Prydain books, read the Alfred Hitchcock mysteries D. read as a boy (now fears the Jackal god, sleeps with light on), read Julie Andrews' Whangdoodle book, and has moved on to Narnia (I silenced D.'s objections). When I tried to read My Father's Dragon aloud to the three big kids, I got halfway through, Ezra took it to bed and finished it, then read the rest of it aloud to me the next day while I was finishing the Pesach prep. Naomi is starting to read, too, she sounds out words very slowly, but she's on her way. Saul now likes to pull Yasha's pack-n-play up to the futon by the window and dive inside, then jump wildly (I always scoop him out before he gets in the habit of trying to climb out by himself). Yasha likes to call everything a beebee (i.e. baby) in a plaintive/excited tone of voice and point and point. He loves to hug. We went on a Shabbos "adventure" this past Shabbos with the twins and the two bigs, while Hannah napped. We discovered that we had brand new neighbors with little boys, and that our beloved across-the-street neighbors have Roman lamps and pottery from 120 A.D. (!!!) in glass cases in their basement, and many many ancient treasures, we met several animals, whom Saul smothered with loving babbles and giddy half-scared pats and compliments (i.e. "He'ssooooo pretty!") but Yasha wouldn't walk on the road, and I had to carry him. He wouldn't even stand on the road without clinging to my legs and whimpering. He's a Kling-on Yasha. I love him. Oh, another development. Naomi decided on the same Shabbos that the deedees were ready to grow up, so she gave them sippy cups and they haven't had a bottle since. They drink less, they sleep better (no more nighttime diaper changes) and I have no more tooth-related guilt. I really appreciate that my older kids make up for what I'm lacking as a mom. She also tried to let them feed themselves with utensils, but the resulting mess pushed my limits, though she's welcome to try again. I'm sticking to bad mom status on that one, for now. So long for now, more some time later: no time at all lately to blog, think, post photos, or even take them. Oh well. 
But wait! Must explain the title: "Me? Cookie" needs no explanation, but it does need attribution. It is all Saul, and sums that little guy up pretty gooood.

Thursday, April 2, 2009

mar. 31 twin love. jacob hoppee. fun! high chair head snuggles. woo hoo! joined at the hip photo on top. 

Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Bits of news

On 3/20/09, Ezra and Naomi's class was combined (no $ to pay their sweet Morah Heather) and so they are with Morah Esther all day now. 3/22--I deactivated my facebook account. What a relief. I had been using it to escape certain tedious aspects of my existence, even to the point of ignoring things like meal prep (such as it is) and bedtime rituals. Bad Mommy--but now good! Also on same day (lucky number 22!), the TV and DVD player got disconnected and are now hibernating in the garage. 3/23-- twins went to the allergist: Saul has no allergies, and Yasha has only egg and peanut. No dairy allergies! Now we have to ease them in with part-lactose-free milk, part regular. Have so far only tried cheese-no problems so far. But eczema mystery not solved... 3/29--Ezra went to Morah Esther's house to have his reading level evaluated. In reading, he's "entering 4th grade." Don't put much stock in that stuff, but sounds good to me. Since the TV went away, he's read (this in one night) the 3rd Wimpy Kid book (dumb, but still a book), the first Lloyd Alexander book (Book of Three) and a book about Wishbone the Dog (Rip van Winkle one). And he just keeps reading and reading and reading, now that there's no TV. I view this activity as sacrosanct and never come in to turn off his light...though I think he stays up past 10pm every night! Even if I were to turn it off, he would just curl up with a book on the bathroom rug, as he does on Shabbos......

Thursday, March 26, 2009

Saulie Shema-lie!

And another coup for Saul! Tonight he sang the entire first line of the Shema! And, on a more mundane note, he asked me, when I returned with a diaper-changed Yashie to the kitchen, "Yashie, diapohchange? Yah?" Yah, indeed!

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Unbalanced praises





Unbalanced because they are dedicated solely to Saul. Oh, what a clever and silly Saul he is! Yes, he and Yasha are naughty, yes, they occasionally break wine glasses, but look what else they do (mostly Saulie) with those glasses. Look how carefully he inserts a vitamin bottle into each one and replaces it in the cupboard...and he is trying to figure out how to open that Zicam! When I catch him on the counter, see how he beams at me, though he knows he is being naughty.
He has been so, so playful lately, so talkative and exuberant. He has been doubling up his words, hilariously, and making a song out of them, where he emphasizes the second word, i.e. with bottle and avocado and cereal: "Bah-doo, BAH-doo! Cadoh-CAH-doh! Ya-yohs, YA-yohs!" He speaks quickly, loudly and emphatically, with his sweet sing-song voice. (Yasha still sort of squawks haltingly, or says a word slowly and without much vigor, but with intelligent, sparkling eyes.) When Yasha climbs on the table for a dance, Saul turns disciplinarian: "No!! Okkkkayyy??? (answers himself) Okay. Yashie, NO! Doppitt!" (Stop it.) Often, he gives Hannah a piece of his mind as well. Even if she is not guilty of any crimes (she usually isn't), Saul orders-sings at her: "Hannah, NO! Hannah, NO! Hannah, NO!" and he is quite authoritative. (He is actually more authoritative, while remaining friendly, than I manage to be. I can't walk this line at all.) I should see in him a future bossy brat/bully, but I can't--he's too funny. 
He has an eye for beauty. When I open the blinds and he sees our flowering apple tree, he says, "Ohhhhhh, flou-wer!" When we have a vase of flowers somewhere, he can't keep his eyes or, alas, hands off them. And once--I couldn't believe he noticed this--when a vase of tulips cast delicate tulip-shaped shadows on the dining room wall, he ran to the wall and gently patted the shadow-tulips, repeating "flou-wer" in awed tones. Sweet Saul. I also get the "Mommy-MAH-mee!" song, by the way, but Daddy just gets the rat-tat-tat "Da-dee-da-dee-da-dee-da-dee-da-dee-da-dee..." with no beginning or end. And of course, by now both boys (esp. Saul) are expert at saying "Thank you!"--Saul sings the "classic" thank-you tune (low note, high note)--and Saul never misses an opportunity to say, "Bless you!" to my many allergic sneezes. Oh, well, his brother is starting to cry--it's feeding time!

Monday, March 16, 2009

Hannah-chka

I keep coming across several messy little scraps of paper on which are transcribed verbatim Hannah's random/funny speeches from the month of February. Up on the blog they go, and hard copies into the garbage.
While coloring on the kitchen floor one morning, she tells me: "Hashem loves Yasha and Saulie and Hannah, and we love Yasha and Saulie and Hannah. (Pause.) And wabbis (rabbis) love me...and they're in shul. (Thinks.) And they're in choedge of me." This from a girl who doesn't really ever go to shul, or have the experience of rabbis being in charge of her.
Another morning in the kitchen, playing with Yasha's (hers too, once upon a time) pink blanket on her head: "It's not dark! It's pink inside heeoh. It's pink inside the dark." Grabs a remote control: "I wanna talk to my phone." Then, re. same: "I wanna sleep with this." And she does, eventually, tucking it between her mattress and the mesh walls of her pack-n-play. But first: "I wanna put it under here (pink blanky)--with my seeds." This re. two pumpkin seeds she asked to taste, rejected, but, oddly, kept around to play with. (Echoes of Princess and the Pea? I've since told the girls this story many times--not my favorite--but now, alas, they keep requesting it.) And this game, these little collections keep her busy awhile.
Another day, after Hannah, the twins, and I drop off Ezra and Naomi at school one morning, she was moved to share her back-seat musings with me (I scribbled madly, trying not to laugh): "I like cars so much. And I like all of the people that are biking on their bikes and that are walking. I like them so much. And I even (sic) like the deedees. And I like Hashem." (And Mommy likes you.) She also says, so confidently, when we are listening to the radio and a certain talk show host (and friend) comes on, "He loves me."
And one from Noma. She takes my long pre-Shabbos shopping list one Friday and writes her name on the very bottom, saying, "Mom, you have to buy me." Really? And here I thought she was free.

Monday, February 23, 2009

Complaints

Hello, again. The twins are safe for a few minutes, eating pasta and making sweet noises of animal pleasure. Now I can complain about them. Every day, hundreds of times a day, they climb up on the kitchen counter and open the cabinets and threaten to (or do) smash glasses, shake vitamin bottles or even open them (Saul ate an MSM), turn on the coffeemaker...or else they open the cabinets on the other side and help themselves to cereal and crackers ("quack-ohs," both). I can confine them to the downstairs, but then they fight and bite. I can't win. They have baby anxiety disorder, clearly, and can't stay happy doing much for long, other than plugging things into outlets while I look the other way (what can I do? they know how to remove the covers), or dumping every single book off the living room shelves, or putting various items into the floor vents. They're very, very, very cute, but whiny and aggressive and soooooo easily bored, and so needy. Before I fed them pasta, they expressed their hunger this way (they got hungry earlier than they were supposed to, you see, more boredom, probably): Yasha bit Saul, so I grabbed S., so Yasha bit harder, so I moved Y. further away, so he hurled himself back and bit me, so I tried to hug both of them at the same time (I should know better), thereby causing them to scream louder and bite each other with even more ferocity. That's when I realized I had to make the pasta. And I can't play with them. If I try to read to them, they grab the book and fight and bite (contrast the video I saw on facebook of girl-twins, same age as ours, nicely Patting the Bunny with their dad). If I try to play Duplos with them, they grab each other's creations and throw and hit and bite. Now Saul is wailing (his strap is tighter), and Yasha is dancing on the table (stomp, stomp, stomp)--off I go. 


P.S. Above, Ezra's clever, if depressing, "solution" to the problem of babies climbing on kitchen counter. Just how long do you think it took them to figure out how to tip the chairs up (after a fun round of "riding" them like sleds)? Hmmmm...... ten minutes? And when I take the chairs away, just how long do you think it is before a toy truck pulls up, or a diaper box, or a rocking horse, with a newly-tall twin on it, ready for acrobatics? Not very...

A morning in the life

I come into twins' room, to the tune of crescendoing cries, and make the fateful choice of which twin to change/dress first. It's Yasha! (Saul wails and shrieks like dying animal.) I finally finish with Yasha (fighting his strong thin arms constantly reaching to scratch his eczema-ankles--poor twinnies, must get to bottom of this), plop him down onto floor, and take up the Saul-Ball, who now lies with full diaper on the changing table. Yasha attacks me viciously with the tube of hydrocortisone, which falls from his hands, but he continues to smack me on the legs. When that fails, he hugs my legs and bites. Meanwhile, Saul is kicking and twisting and flipping and endangering all the semi-clean clothes piled up on the changing table--not clean enough for dresser, not dirty enough for hamper. Finally Yasha gives up and starts dumping videos and huge jackets awaiting bigger Ezras and Naomis, and other odds and ends from his closet. Saul is dressed and on the floor. Hooray! Yasha has a change of heart, recovers from jealousy and brings Saul a peace offering--a navy blue, velour jacket that Saulie sleeps with and often carries around while proclaiming "Ahhhhhh--jacket!" As soon as I open the bedroom door, they race for any semi-open non-baby-friendly rooms, but I swoop them into their high chairs, giving them "quack-ohs" (generic term for any carbs used to tide them over, whether crackers or not) while I make their "ba-boos" and oats. 
Ok, I'm off to stir those oats! Hannah is sleeping in, still.... amazing.

Thursday, February 5, 2009

Snippets of things (and snips of hair!)

Last week the twins and the Hannah went to Essence, my friend Cherie's salon, to get snipped. This was Hannah's first snippage (not including bangs) and I was convulsed with great fears. But she survived, cuteness intact. Her perfectly round face is now--if this were possible--even rounder; the curve of the hair meets the curve of her cheek too precisely, if anything. Isn't she funny? Here she sits with her Chanukah gift (textured cards from Aunt Violet) and a Lego car which she made all by herself.


After listening to a Kabbalist's shiur on my new iPod (thank you, thank you, dear husband) I have been a better mommy, which, I'm finally convinced, really just means loving your kids more, trying to actively show your love--and correcting with warmth and affection, too. They have responded, and it does help them be their better selves more often. The Shlomo Wolbe-Kelemen-etc. way wins out over the make-'em-mind school of childrearing, after all. And I guess the modern thinking on the subject (Positive Parenting, Unconditional Parenting, et al.) is the same. I'm happy, and there is much more happy energy and hugging in my house now; I see the difference in Ezra, especially. And Hannah's mini-mutinies are so easy to deal with now, as are Naomi's screechy meltdowns. Nome actually says, now, "Mah-meeeee! It's just that I miss you soooooooo much when I'm at school, and school is soooooooooo hard and soooooooooo long! Waaaaa-aaaaaaah! Boooo hooooo hooooo!" and she gets long, drawn-out hugs.... 
Hannah's usual first words, as soon as I come in to her room, are "Modeh Ani, Mommy!" and then more orders: "Negelvaser!" Even if I forget, she doesn't. And she won't eat without a bracha--not only that, but she reminds me when she's done: "Mommy, let's say Borei Nefashos!" which, to be frank, I usually forget. And she, without being asked, unloads the dishwasher daily, now. She tells me, "Mommy, I put away the sharps knifeses." She knows she is good, and she loves to be good. Hooray! Could I possibly be any luckier?


The twins, the twins. They have been naughty. Many things have gone missing recently, and we finally found their hiding place. There is a grate covering the empty space behind the furnace, and they have been pulling away one corner of it and slipping things in. Ezra got to unscrew the grate with Daddy's tools, and we found: 2 DVDs: Ratatouille!!! (missing for weeks, and a library dvd) and Winnie the Pooh, 2 checkers from Connect 4 (yay!), Sefer HaKriah Hashalem (phew!), 1 tube hydrocortisone, 1 pair broken sunglasses, 4 of Hannah's cards, and very many and great dust bunnies. Things I found in the toilet yesterday: 1 almost-full package of Q-tips (oh well), and 2 porcelain chopstick-rests (huh?). 
Today, today, today was also the day Yasha climbed out of his crib and landed painfully and cried (I did not witness it, but came running at the sound of the thud). I hate to admit it, but I'm glad he didn't land smoothly. I hope it will deter him from trying again right away.
And yesterday, yesterday was the day they first brushed their teeth--we've been delinquent. Dad is the son of a dentist, and his own kids have never been to one... and the oldest is seven! Ahhhh! My fault!

(post naomi brushing yasha)

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Quel rat! (Warning! Do not look down!)


If you looked, you must not be so squeamish, or so easily deterred. Very well, then. The story of this rat--my rat--is also the story of my great courage, which I must memorialize. I found him after the snow melted; he must have frozen to death eating our overflowing garbage (we had no pickup the week of the snow, of course). The odd thing is, we found him just as we were reading all about rat-villains in Despereaux, and we found him on Erev Shabbos, when Daddy was unavailable, so it was left to me to get him far, far, far away from the blue house before Shabbos began. I did it!! He rode in the passenger seat all the way to the emergency garbage dump-off place at the Dragon Park. Rats have the most disgusting tails, truly they do, and the rest of them isn't so lovely either. 
This reminds me of a funny recent story. I was changing a disgusting Saulie-diaper, and Naomi rushed over to look at the fallout (so to speak). I got into affirmation mode, "You're not scared of disgusting things, are you? And you don't really mind looking at blood, cuts, scrapes, any of that stuff, either. Right?" She agreed. I went on, "You could probably be a really good doctor, since you're not afraid of blood, guts, any of that stuff." She said, "No, I'm not afraid of any cuts at all. Except if they're Rosie's." I asked, "Why?" and she said, as though it should be obvious, "Because she's my friend!" She didn't want her friend to be hurt! Empathy.... good little future doctor, all right.

Thursday, January 8, 2009

Foiled again, in a good way

Re. Tuesday's post. Yesterday, the day after I confidently announced the personality switcheroo, Saul suddenly did complete teshuvah for his treatment of Yasha. He returned to his sweet, loving, cooing, generous self, stopped biting, and now once again passes the time offering nervy Yasha one toy (or remote control, or calculator, or bottle) after another in attempt to comfort him when he is troubled, which is fairly often. He proffers the toy, cocks his head sympathetically toward the Yasha, and mumbles sweet Saulisms with questioning intonations, variations on a theme of "Are you okaaaay?" and lots of repetitions of Yasha, Yashie (so sweet on his lips). During the mean interlude, he did not say his brother's name. I had completely forgotten that he used to pepper all his "sentences" with Yasha's name; now he does it again, one favorite being, "Yashie's a mess!"--whether he is or not. I relaxed, yesterday and today, for the first time in weeks, and allowed the twins to play in the same room. Hooray for reverse switcheroos... or returnaroos! 

Tomorrow is my birthday. My mom "made" me order myself an ice-cream cake (!), my dear husband (probably) bought me an iPod. Meanwhile, there is a real war in Gaza... how will it end? 

Wednesday, January 7, 2009

Revealing the hidden

Shhhhh. There is a very boring video of Hannah and Saul hiding on Youtube. But if you love them, it is not boring at all. The grandparents for whom it was posted finally figured out how to watch it (California ones) and left a very gratifying complimentary voicemail. I can't wait to hear more compliments when we speak (hey! Should I lie?). You must click "watch in high quality."

Tuesday, January 6, 2009

On one foot

Happy New Year, blog. The twins are new, too. They did what all twins are, apparently, supposed to do. They switched personalities. I now have on my hands an adorable fighter, biter, swatter, and (egads!) skin pincher-and-twister named Saul--that last trick of his hurts the most. And I have a nervous and helpless Yasha-victim, the original Biting teacher (and also a too-slow less-violently-bitten Hannah). And I have more baby gates than I have time to click into place, while I sneak twins into place in different parts of the house, praying they do not think the grass greener in the other twin's area... and then, they get hungry or tired or full-diapered by the time I do all this, anyway. It's rough these days, but they are absolutely delicious. And, did I mention that they are bad at sleeping again? So cute about it, even when they wail. But I have never been so tired (newborn days aside) and so emotionally spent and mentally frozen, while doing so much, as I am now. I am simply not coping, for the most part--though, I guess I must be. I should be sleeping now, and will be, soon..... please.
Saul sings. He sings Beethoven's 5th, he sings "Na-na-na-NA-NA" (like nananabooboo), he sings in his bed, he sings in his chair, he sings to me, he sings to all. He lips curl up in a smile, his eyes flash while he sings. And the twins talk. Yasha says "Pas-tah!" slowly, clearly and emphatically, and Saul says, quickly, "Mahmee-can-I-huv pah-tah?" and they both say "avocado." Ba-boo is now often ba-doo. They both say "Hola!" round the clock on days Olmedi is here, and sound like little Spanish babies. Saul sings: Daddy, Daddy, Daddy, Daddy, Ma-mee, Ma-mee, Ma-mee, Ma-mee, Noma, Noma, Noma, Noma, etc. and now with my mom's visit, Nina, Nina, Nina, Nina. And his voice is sooooo sonorous. And Yasha... well, he climbs onto counters, opens cupboards, and smashes wine glasses. That's worth something, isn't it?
Hannah is still the very sweetest creature, but has begun trying out no's with more kavanah lately. Today, for the first time in months, I attempted a quit-cold-turkey version of potty training. My timing was no good. She's pretending to rebel! But my mom's in town, helping a lot, so I had to at least try. She had three accidents in less than two hours and I gave up, called our lovely parenting-expert neighbor, and got the green light to give up--nothing like affirmation. Woo hoo! Truth is, I was more guilt-ridden at the great cost of diapers than anything else. She'll learn when she learns--and parenting expert said only the most defiant girls are still untrained by age 4, and almost all by 3 1/2. Phew. 
She has been drawing lovely flowers, and with each week they get lovelier. She drew me, once (I looked Japanese). Her art is getting more representative. Will have to post. She is so careful, her delicate little body bends over her paper so intently, her sure little fingers hold those oversized markers so sweetly. Hannah is ageless, and way too tiny for her age at the same time. It's sort of out of character that such a sage little girl is in diapers, but that, too, like everything about her, is endearing. She and Naomi have bonded over the art thing. Both of them can color for hours, and do, and Hannah is no slouch, so when they are drawing they are almost equals. 
She still "davens" with me--I admit, it's SO often her initiative, and we sit on the ripped-up black floral couch and, hopefully, release some trapped sparks. She does, certainly, and maybe I can coast on that. Not-good Jewish mommy! :-( I often think that there's a part of Chanah in her, who after all, originated the Shemonah Esrei, and my Hannah is clearly religious. She says, about everything interesting or beautiful that I point out to her, "Hashem made that." And talks about LOVE so much: "Hashem loves me." Or "I love Hashem." I have fed her these things, but only a little; it is she who thinks of them. And there's lots of love-talk about other people, animals, toys. 
Naomi has really grown up in school this year. She's found herself, has friends, does well, comes home happy, relaxed, quietly confident. She still gets tired and has tantrums, is still victimized by big brother, still leaves the most horrid messes in her wake, but there is a new maturity there. She is generous, when she has money she buys the girls little trinkets (there are only 3 girls and 3 boys total in her kindergarten class!), and they all draw each other pictures constantly. She drew an absolutely delightful picture of herself and the two other girls climbing a tree (will post!) that sort of captures the essence of kindergarten (which I never attended) for me.
I'm tired, but must say: Ezra read The Tale of Despereaux, which I then read too (we started out loud, he finished), and it was a real book. He's still reading The Littles series on his own, and now Treasure Island with David and Stuart Little with me (that is, we read to him). Naomi still does not have the attention span; she and Hannah are off coloring, or bouncing in their beds, while the Ez reads. Though she has started reading Sefer HaKriah HaShalem for school, and Ezra listens and plays teacher. 
There's much else I don't have energy to post about, like the funny story of how Naomi learned the "f" word from fellow kindergarteners at her lovely Chabad school, and the hilarious story of how Ezra's fellow first-grader told him to hack his way into Club Penguin (a silly virtual world they play games in online), and how we were snowed in with 8 inches of snow all Chanukah (which is when Ezra learned to read, for real, and read recipes--fractions!-- and bake... it was so unschooling-homeschooling for a while there, and I loved it) and we sledded down 68th, and David and I trekked to QFC in the snow, and how Hannah finally, after saying she would only go out into the snow "tomowwow" went out the day before it was all over and ate some with Naomi. And how Hannah and I went to see Ezra's Chanukah show at Kline Galland, and how Ezra's voice was one of the very happiest and loudest, unlike last year, and he was not shy, but smiled and enjoyed himself without being a ham.


And then there are all the other things I could write about that aren't about the kids at all, but they will have to file themselves away in memory land too. I'm off to read Rav Kook till I fall asleep--I mention him only because I think I have found my rabbi-love, though it's too soon too tell. With him, it seems, all things have their place and it sounds more and more like their rightful one. Good night.