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April Fool’s

Posting got a bit sparse at the end of March on account of all the family drama already posted about and then the last 8 days being tied up with KIP’s annual fundraiser and my finishing an all-consuming editing project.

April wasn’t scheduled  to start off much calmer. Today was to begin with a trial run, weeding,  lawn mowing, family tax assistance, and then—oh yeah—something for Matt’s birthday before the sprint to get ready for a Passover seder began.

Instead, April arrived in Chaucerian fashion, as right on schedule the “shoures soote” of April “the droughte of March hath perced to the roote.” We had no drought (or droughte) this March, but the shoures soote/sweet showers have arrived right on time. Just in time to postpone my run and preclude lawn work. The tax work got canceled, too, as the family member in question realized that computer assistance was not required.

So that leaves today, Matt’s 42nd birthday, for sleeping and snuggling in with Simon,  a celebratory trip to the coffee shop, not much in the middle, and then dinner out. We’re all ok with the “not much” bit, as Simon just explained that what’s good about the weekend is that “you get to just hang out.”

Our grass still needs to be cut. We’ve still got plenty of weeding, trimming, mulching, and pruning to do. And, heaven help us all, we’re still hosting a seder for 10 or 11 in six days. But it can all wait. Today is to be a celebration of sweet, sweet showers, sweet, sweet sloth, and sweetest of all family. Keep on percing that droughte, April!

 

 

 

 

Glimpses

There are a few fun things Simon has said or done that I haven’t the time or energy to fully flesh out. The annual KIP fundraiser was Saturday (for which I ran check-out and helped plan and for which Matt assembled and rehearsed with a band), I’m wrapping a seemingly endless freelance project, and both of things took place against a back-drop of illness and general household chaos. So I think I’ll just post in an abbreviated fashion and consider these glimpses of life with Simon:

  1. Simon has a new secret/make believe identity. When he’s not being Simon or Baby Kitten, he’s Burt Handsome, a striker for Sunderland who scores amazing goals. We know; we have to “watch this!” for what seems like hours while he kicks a ball or picks it up and shows us in super-slo-mo how it moved in the air.
  2. He might have just been responsible for the most boring show-and-tell session ever. Last Wednesday he brought his calculator (thanks Zadie!) to school to show everyone how it can tell you that 14 million + 14 million = 28 million. I asked if he was sure it was really a million that he plugged in, and he reassured me that he remembered all 6 zeros. Thank goodness for that, eh?
  3. He continues to look for numbers and patterns in everything. At his non-score-keeping soccer games, he can tell you the score, who scored when, and how many times he got kicked or fell down. (One goal for him, over 12 for his team, 3 kicks to the shins, and one spill last Saturday.) He also helpfully pointed out to Matt that he wore his new sandals one day, then his sneakers the next, then back to sandals, and then back to sneakers. “That’s a pattern!” he observed with glee.
  4. Last Monday was our second round at the dentist, and Simon was an absolute champ. He chatted about the planets again, this time also discussing Mars rovers, atmospheric layers and conditions, and the nature of gravity. But the absolute best part was when he told me, the dentist, and her assistant that “I can’t control my brain.” Thinking of a certain Ramones song, I winked at him and asked if he could control his fingers. At which point Simon sang “I Wanna Be Sedated” in its entirety. The assistant looked stunned; the dentist simply confused. I was simultaneously hysterical from laughter (how contextually appropriate!) and mortification (how age inappropriate!).
  5. Just tonight, Simon told me about Jillian chasing him on the playground and Anieya catching up to Jillian and tackling her. “Then something funny happened,” he told me. “Anieya called her ‘cutie-face’.” “Well she is a cutie face,” I said; “you all are.” “But who’s the cutiest face?” Simon wanted to know. “I don’t think there is a cutiest-face,” I answered. I wasn’t sure exactly what he was getting at, and we don’t discuss beauty or compare others that way around here. “Oh, I can tell you, it’s Anieya. Or maybe Caroline,” said Simon helpfully. Which makes me think he is indeed noticing if not responding to beauty, as these are two of the prettiest girls in the Fours.
  6. And finally, a lesson in biting off more than one can chew. Simon has finished reading a few super-beginner books and is eager to try something new. Last night, while Matt thought out loud looking for a new book, Simon suggested The Hobbit. He could barely listen to The Hobbit when Matt read it to him earlier this year, so it was ludicrous for him to consider reading it before, say, 2018. But he wanted to give it a go, and Matt decided that the first sentence or so was easy enough. So Simon dug in, tried his best, and got most of the first two sentences. Then, when we began the third sentence, his entire brain shut down and even words like “the” or “of” were indecipherable. It is fascinating to see exactly how exhausting reading can be when you are brand new to it. It’s equally fascinating, and more than a little disturbing, to see how upset Simon sometimes gets when his brain reaches the saturation/shut-down point.

Today’s Deep Thought

So Matt and Simon are in the car heading to Graeter’s for some ice cream. Prince comes on. Matt sets up the song:

“Oh Simon, you’ll like this one. It’s about a number, 1999.”

Simon ponders this information:

“1999? That’s what everything costs on TV!”

This fascinating coincidence aside, the young Mr. Whitworth is following in his father’s foot-steps when it comes to music. He loves the Beatles, loves the Clash, loves Nirvana, and loves the Ramones. But Prince? Not so much apparently.

“Daddy, I don’t like this song. I hear it, but I’m not listening.”

This is actually a brilliant strategy. If only it worked with me and Pavement.

The Bright Side

There is one, thankfully. But getting there is going to take a little explanation.

I haven’t blogged much about Ashul* this year because I’ve been worried about her and didn’t think it appropriate to discuss someone else’s child in those terms. The cause for concern has been her language development, specifically her expressive (spoken) language. Ashul hardly talks, and it’s increasingly been freaking me out.

Within a few months of her arrival in the US, it was clear to me and her preschool teachers that Ashul’s comprehension of English was progressing rapidly. Her fine and gross motor skills are above age-level, and she’s plenty bright. So even though she didn’t say much in English or Dinka, none of us were particularly concerned last year. We figured it would all come together this year in the Twos.

But it didn’t. As the other kids began chatting away with each other, Ashul remained mostly silent and therefore increasingly isolated. On a good morning, I’d get one or two words out of her besides “Simon”. On a bad morning, I’d hear nothing. As far as I can tell, her Dinka wasn’t much better–lots of little two-word descriptions or demands, but no real conversation. And while this seemed behind schedule but acceptable for a sequentially bilingual child at two or two-and-a-half, I hit the panic button when she turned three this January.

By three, even the bilingual kids are speaking in full sentences. More importantly, three-year-olds use language to express wants, needs, ideas, and questions. Language is no longer a stand-alone milestone, but rather is the vehicle for many other cognitive, social, and emotional developments. I worried that the longer Ashul stayed silent, the more she’d risk falling behind in these areas, too.  And in case that wasn’t enough, there was the question of how to address these concerns with friends who do not necessarily share my cultural expectations of child development.

Bringing up a possible developmental delay is an ultra-fine needle to thread in any case, but more so when one is also concerned about overstepping bounds or appearing insensitive. I finally settled on a course of action that began with my chatting informally with a speech language therapist.  For the record, I’m leaving a lot of things unsaid here because, again, she’s not my child, and also because I’m no expert in child development.

My chat with the therapist was very fruitful and reassuring, as it gave me some ideas of how worried I should be (less than I was), other ideas of how to encourage Ashul’s speech and/or vocalization, and book recommendations for further advice I could bring to her teachers and parents.

And then yesterday, after a week’s absence due to allergies (hers) and illness (mine and Matt’s), Ashul showed up bright and eager at my door and talked more than I’ve ever heard her. She didn’t suddenly leap to full sentences, but she did label things, repeat words we all said, ask Simon a few two-word sentences, and talk to herself and sing to herself quite a bit. She vocalized in some form or other for the vast majority of the morning, and she directed her vocalizations at me, Simon, and Matt. Even her play was more sophisticated and interactive.

The change was dramatic, and it struck me as a very promising sign that Ashul is simply a late bloomer and not facing an organic problem. But it gets better. Her daily report from school yesterday included the note “Ashul talked much more today.” As she’s most reticent with her teachers, that really gladdened my heart. Better still, when I mentioned this to her mother, she told me that Ashul has been chatty all week and that everyone has noticed a big difference. “We thought she was just the girl who didn’t talk, but last week she talked and talked and talked—too much.”

Marvelous! This admission gave me an inroad to express my own past concern and to begin discussing things I’ve read and heard about how to help Ashul along now that she’s looking ready and interested. And best of all, a couple of the things the speech language therapist suggested I try worked.

For example, two weeks ago when Ashul pointed at her doorbell to indicate she wanted a lift so she could ring it, I tried to cajole her into saying “bell” by making it a precondition. It ended with her in tears and me feeling lousy. Yesterday, I held her up and sang about how the bell goes “ding dong ding”. When I then asked her how the bell goes, she smiled and sang “ding dong ding” right back to me. Interestingly, this tiny step yielded an emotional reward, too. Ashul was so happy with the game and her ability to participate that she was unusually open and affectionate with me. It felt like all her walls were coming down at the same time.

The other tool in my box is Simon. Ashul talks more to peers than adults, so the therapist suggested I bring Simon on board to engage in more speech. He understands his role, and he’s eager and willing to fill it. Maybe a little too eager, in fact. When we were chatting about colors yesterday and Ashul seemed not to know the word “red”, Simon helped out by lifting up a red pepper and saying, “Look Shu, it’s thith.” “Thith” is Dinka for “red”; we asked her mother about Dinka color words a few weeks ago, and Simon loves trotting out thith and mangok (green) whenever he can. When that didn’t work, he moved over to German.

We’ll have to work on his technique a bit. So that was yesterday’s bright spot. I’ve dialed down my alert status to yellow, I’m really looking forward to having Ashul back Thursday morning for some more song and games, and I have a good feeling that this spring, Ashul will be blossoming right alongside the trees and flowers that are making me so miserable.

*This is, of course, not her actual name. I’m talking about my friend Gabriel’s oldest daughter, but I don’t want this post to pop up in a search engine so I’m not using it or naming her mother.

Shingles!

Not to be outdone in the week’s misery index, or determined to start off next week’s with a bang, Matt has come down with a case of shingles. For those keeping score at home, that puts us at one crown (Simon), three car repairs (all on the Camry), one sinus infection (me), three skin biopsies (Matt) and one case of shingles (Matt) in 7-day period.

You have to laugh, because what else is there to do at the absurdity of this run of bad luck? We might be exporting our bad luck, too, as my nephew Ben had his appendix out yesterday.

On a positive note, we caught the shingles early. Matt noticed some pain on his neck at the beginning of last week. There was nothing to see until Friday, at which time it looked like a spider had bitten him. Things seemed worse Saturday night, when I found two rings of rash, one of which looked to be developing small blisters. We decided then that a trip to the doctor was in order, and by this morning Matt could see the beginnings of a rash in two other spots. These were very painful, and they were all on one side of his body. Ten minutes with Google and I had made my diagnosis, and for once Fake Dr. Goldstein had it right. Matt has already started his antiviral medication.

Tomorrow we head back to the dentist for Simon’s second repair. And then, we can only hope, it will be nothing but blue skies, soccer practice, swim lessons, and maybe even a trial run from there on out. I think we’ve earned it.

Who’s the Grown-Up?

I do not now and never have liked going to the dentist. The X-ray bite-wings don’t fit in my mouth, any dental work leaves my jaw aching and my lips cracked and bleeding, and I frequently have plaque build-up and inflamed gums despite near perfect dental hygiene. In fact, I dread the inevitable lectures about brushing and flossing (I use a Sonicare and floss daily, but it doesn’t always look that way) almost as much as I dread the actual dental work.

My dental procrastination and denial hit its low point when I was 30. I needed a crown, and despite my then-dentist being a dear, it was still a miserable experience. When we were all finished, the dentist affixed my crown with a semi-permanent adhesive so I could be sure my bite was comfortable and told me to come back in two weeks to replace with a permanent adhesive.

Well, my bite was fine, and I was done done done with the dentist. So I blew off the appointment and only went back when a full year later I bit into a coffee nip on my way to a Passover seder and ended up removing my crown with the candy. At which point I gave an Oscar-worthy performance about being “confused” or “forgetful” about my need to return for the permanent adhesive.* Really, confusion or forgetfulness both sounded better than denial or procrastination.

So that’s me. My son appears to be more grown up about these things. At our last trip to the pediatric dentist, we made the unfortunate discovery that Simon has two large cavities in his lower molars. They are the type of cavities you usually see in kids who don’t use fluoride toothpaste or drink a lot of juice. Neither of these is true for Simon; he just drew the short-straw when it comes to genetics. (Matt brushes lackadaisically, never flosses, and has never had a cavity.) We have lots of remediation plans in the works, including new prescription-strength toothpaste.

That should keep Simon in good shape going forward, but it still leaves us with two large cavities to repair. Monday we went to fill the first one, and as the doctor warned and I feared, the decay extended to the pulp and required a crown to repair. Simon didn’t like the feel of the nitrous oxide mask on his face; it made him feel suffocated and he panicked a little. In this, he is like me and my dad. And some of the work triggered his gag-reflex, making him sputter and choke. In this, he is like Matt, my mother, and my Zadie. And at one point, when the pulp was hit, the novocaine and gas could not prevent things from hurting enough to have him cry.

It was kind of awful.** Once fixed, the dentist patted his leg, told him how wonderfully he did, and told me to book another appointment two weeks out to fix the second tooth. “You need to give kids time to heal, get over it, and forget a little bit. He did great today, and I don’t want to push him any harder. This was enough for one session.”

I didn’t expect Simon to forget anything, but putting some distance between appointments seemed like a good idea. Then last night, out of the blue, Simon asked me about his second appointment.

“When do I go back to the dentist to have my other tooth fixed?”

[I’m thinking he might be anxious.] “Not for a while, honey.

“But when Mommy? What date?

“March 28.

“March 28! But that’s spring! [He’s clearly not anxious, more like eager.]

“Yes, it is spring. But today is already the 15th, so it’s only 13 days from now.

“13 days! That’s like almost two weeks. Why are we waiting so long?

“Well, Dr. Branson wanted to give you time to feel better and be ready to go back.

“I’m ready, Mommy. I don’t want to walk around with a hole in my tooth for two weeks. Can you call the dentist so I can go back sooner?”

I was gobsmacked. My son, it would seem, is more mature on this count than I am. He goes back Monday.

* They should seriously consider using coffee nips as dental adhesives; you wouldn’t believe how sticky and strong those suckers are!

** But not as awful as I perceived it. Simon is more of a dental trooper than I am. And once he got used to breathing in the gas, he got just enough to take the edge off any anxiety. He wasn’t silly or out of it, and he regaled the dentist and her assistant with information about googols, googolplexes, the relative size and distance of planets in our solar system, why Pluto and Eris are dwarf planets, and the ages and age spreads of everyone in our family.

 

The Non-Hypothetical

Non-hypothetical question of the day; pretend like this is a word problem in math class:

Given one house, two drivers, and two cars, solve for the following:

  • Person A has to pick up Agotich 4 miles from house and get her to preschool by 9:00 a.m.
  • Person B has to drive Simon to school by 8:30 a.m. and then go to doctor’s appointment because of new growth on face.(Probably a Keratoacanthoma, but he should be checked out due to being high risk for skin cancer. No link because…. yuck!)
  • Person B also has to drop off car with gashed tire to auto repair shop.
  • Person B ends up having an additional 2:50 p.m. appointment with a dermatologist for skin-cancer screening.
  • Person A has to meet Simon at JCC for swim lesson at 4:00 p.m.
  • Person A has to pick up Agotich from school at 12:45 p.m. and make 8-mile round trip drive to her apartment and back.
  • Person A has 2:00 p.m. doctor’s appointment herself for sinus infection.
  • Person A discovers at 11:00 a.m. that her symptoms have progressed into severe dizziness and she cannot drive.

Stumped? Here’s the solution:

  • Person A cancels on Agotich; no school for her today.
  • Person A cancels Simon’s swim lesson and has in-laws pick up Simon and spend day with him.
  • Person A arranges for father to drive her to doctor.
  • Person B takes a half-day off to manage two doctor’s visits and two trips to the automotive repair shop.

I’m always grateful to have family support, but some days I’m more mindful of it than others. Today we’d be hurting bad without their help. Even more so when you figure in that the dermatologist Matt got referred to is my cousin. (Total coincidence, but a serendipitous one.)

Next math problem: Given one sinus infection, one flat tire, one destroyed side mirror (car hit again last night while parked in front of house with flat tire), one new skin growth on face, one broken car door handle (don’t want to talk about it), one bad trip to the pediatric dentist (really don’t want to talk about it), and earlier injuries related to running and falling down stairs, how does one avoid a massive pity party?

Solution: One picks up the newspaper and reads that one’s veterinarian drove home after work on Friday, March 2, to find that tornadoes reduced his pre-Civil War house to matchsticks, left only a concrete slab where his barn once stood, killed four of his horses outright, and injured the other two so badly that the vet had to put them down himself. If my reading and math add up correctly, all my vet has left is his cat and his person.

That’ll offer some perspective. Still, 2012 is leaving a lot to be desired so far.

 

Music of the Spheres

After an exciting evening of Soccer practice, a late dinner and the Merseyside Derby, I was helping Simon wind down in bed.  Lying there with the lights off, we were talking about one of Simon’s favorite subjects: the planets.

“Earth,” I was telling him, “has a lot of things that make it a good place for people to live.*”

“Like milk?” asked Simon.

“Yes, but I was thinking of some more fundamental things.”

“Milk is very healthy for you and it helps you grow.”

“All true,” I said stifling my laugh, “but in order to have healthy milk we need some other things, like water, air, sunlight….”

“Oh yeah,” said Simon, “and Earth also has some really great spheres.”

“Hmmm, okay.  What spheres are you talking about?”  I thought maybe he meant the Moon, possibly even the Earth itself.

“Oh you know,” he said, getting that I can’t believe I have to explain it to Daddy tone in his voice.  “The Troposphere, the Stratosphere, the Mesosphere, the Thermosphere and the Exosphere.”

Yep.  Simon not only knows the five layers of Earth’s atmosphere (in order), he finds ways to work them into conversation.  This kid so needs to get into the Math, Science & Technology magnet program for next year.

* And, yes, for all you philosophy of science nerds out there, we’ll get to the Anthropic Principle in a few years.

Shades of His Mother

Just as there is a gulf between Whitworth and Goldstein game-playing styles, so there stands a not-unrelated chasm between attitudes towards school. This cultural divide can be best illustrated via two brief vignettes.

Let’s visit young Matthew first. It’s seventh grade, and he’s sweating bullets in home-room because he has to bring home a report card with two Ds on it. In case this weren’t bad enough, the ignomious report card is going home on the very same day that the principal is broadcasting Matt’s best-in-school test-scores over the intercom. So while young Matthew was emphatically underperforming in his course work, his test scores (99th percentile in all subjects) were giving away his vast, untapped potential.

Matt would find some focus in later years, but never overly stressed or strained himself. I don’t think he much cared whether he got an A or B in a given subject, and given his natural test-taking ability and academic aptitude, he had to do little if anything to get that B. If I had to sum up Matt’s academic career in a single word, I’d choose “coast”.

Now let’s drop in on young Jessica. It’s second grade, and I’m sweating bullets over the fact that I haven’t mastered borrowing in subtraction the very first day it was introduced to me. I’m so anxious to learn quickly and be perfect that my teacher advises my mother against having me tested for the advanced program. She knows I have the ability, but she wants to let me mature for a year so I’m not overly stressed.

I would find very little equanimity in later years, always worrying about my work. If a B was good, and A was better, and I’d do just about anything to get the higher mark. All-nighters? Check. Limited social activities? Check. Gut-wrenching stress? Check. What? You thought I ended up all-but-dissertation in Ancient Near Eastern Studies because I didn’t take school seriously? If I had to sum up my own academic career in a single word, I’d choose “grind”.

I was hoping Simon might pull from both of his parents. If he had my propensity for school stress and Matt’s tendency to forget his homework, we’d be looking ahead at 13 years of school frustration. But if he could apply himself like his mother while enjoying his father’s natural test-taking abilities and aptitude, well, then we’d really have something special.

It’s too early to know how Simon will do on the test-taking front, but I’m starting to get a picture of where he sits in terms of application and stress, and it’s a mixed bag. On the stick-to-it-ness front, I couldn’t be happier. Simon has a long attention span, cares if he can do something or not, and will try and try again until he masters a new skill. He’ll swing at baseballs for an hour in the heat and try to make soccer goals or baskets just as long in the cold. He doesn’t care if he’s getting sweaty, frozen, tired, or hungry. He just keeps going until he makes that home run, goal, or shot.

I love that! On the other hand, when he gets tired or hungry and the hits, goals, and shots disappear, he collapses in frustration and will not entertain my suggestion that he take a rest. Instead, he insists that he can’t stop until he succeeds one more time, and he frequently ends up a snotty, sobby mess if he can’t do it.

I’ve just learned that this tendency extends to academics. Simon is at the baby-stages of reading now. He recognizes some sight-words, can figure other words out from context, and can sound out simple words on his own. He finished Hop on Pop last week and started Green Eggs and Ham last Sunday. With help, he read half of Green Eggs and Ham Sunday night. Monday morning, before even eating breakfast, he wanted to complete it.

He started out well enough, but by 8:10 he was hungry and having trouble finishing up. We begged him to take a break. “Simon, your brain is tired. Simon, you need to eat. Simon, you’ve already read 20 pages! Simon, you’ve worked so hard and done great—don’t be so upset!”

Our words resonated with him about as well as my mother’s did with me lo those many years ago. Which is to say, they didn’t. I ended up having to practically force-feed breakfast to a child who was still sobbing over his inability to successfully complete a 60-page book on an empty stomach.

Time will tell whether he’ll score in the 99th percentile for all subjects. Time will also tell how much he’ll apply himself to subjects he doesn’t much care about. But the writing is on the wall about how he’s going to react when he sets a goal—however realistic—and misses the mark. So this mama’s job is to somehow find a way to impart the wisdom it took me 40 years to accrue into a pre-K child or, barring that, figure out some coping strategies to minimize the stress… for both of our sakes!

The Wireless

Matt is currently practicing with two bands that play an 80’s heavy rotation, meaning we’ve listened to a lot of 80’s music in the car these last 4 months or so. The hilarious result of which was the following conversation. I promise I’m not making this up!

[pre-1980s song finishes playing on the radio]

“Daddy, that song was really short.”

“Yup. Way back then, pop songs were really short. They could only be a two or three minutes long if they wanted to get played on the radio.”

“And then video killed the radio star?”

Seriously! He knew exactly what joke he was making, too.

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