Wednesday, August 22, 2018

I Was Wrong.


Somehow I saw you as a weakness
I thought I had to be strong
Oh but I was just young
I was scared, I was wrong

10,000 Heather Points for whomever can name those lyrics WITHOUT looking them up!!

As I have well-documented on this here bloggy thingy, I set out this summer with a lot of ambitious academic goals. I attended a school meeting in May that described the horrors of the on-average 2 months of school work memory loss that happens each summer and the good solid month or so it takes teachers to get their students back on track every fall. 

I was determined not to let that happen because we have our own academic struggles anyway, and I don't need anything else making us fall behind.

So I pushed my children through school work for the first half of the summer. It wasn't all bad. My girls generally like a lot of school subjects, and I think they like the attention I give them when they do school work. It's Mom-time when there can be a scarcity of that in a three-kid household.

But I have a tendency to push too hard, and I became militant in our studies. I was stressed about falling behind, and I let that fear fuel some meanness. I didn't like who I was becoming.

And then I talked to a friend who was SO SAD summer was ending because she had been having so much fun with her kids and didn't want it to end.

And then I realized that I'm an idiot.


And then we started to have a lot of fun.

We went to the beach, or as Jerseyians say "down the shore."



Last weekend, we went into the city


and crossed the Brooklyn Bridge.



Almost everyone else was a runner, and Gwen was feeling inspired so she ran too.




This freaks me out.


Then we headed to the 9/11 memorial.


There is a man from our little town here in Jersey that died in 9/11. There's a plaque dedicated to him at the park down the street from us. Next time we go, I'm going to find his name on the memorial.

Dan loves his job. And right now, he's working with Staples a lot, so he had to stop for a picture. Too bad they were closed so he couldn't go in and see how they were displaying his beautiful products. Too. Bad.

We stopped by a park to let the kids play for a minute.

and ate pizza before boarding . . .


the Staten Island Ferry.




This also freaks me out.

Then everyone either looked or felt like this. So we went home.


Dan drove, and I only minorly freaked out compared to what I usually do when we drive in the city, and it was a good trip.

Later that night after everyone was in bed, Dan found June like this on our couch.


Comfy!

The girls have been listening to TSwift's "Welcome to New York" on repeat ever since.

The End.

4 comments:

  1. that sounds so fun!!!!!! and I can add from my own experience that having fun is a lot more fun than not having fun. hahahaha. this is the first summer ever that I was sad it was ending and I'm pretty sure it's because I threw responsibility to the wind and decided to go and do and as much fun stuff as possible with the kids. one day I'll learn moderation in all things, but that's probably going to be a lifelong journey. ;)

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  2. I think it's good they had a balance of school and fun this summer, but I'm really glad you got to have more fun recently! TSwift's "Welcome to New York" and JayZ's "Empire State of Mind" do not leave my head for entire trips there. Love it! I had to look up the lyrics you quoted finally because I knew I knew it and couldn't figure it out. I remember now! Anyway, glad you have been having a good time. Also - can we just all appreciate how TAN you are??! What the heck.

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  3. Good for you! It's all about progress and doing what's right at the right time. Glad you were adventurous❤️

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  4. Thus looks like so much! Your kids probably learned so much on this unschooling adventure! What a time to be alive!

    You could have a running series of Dan outside his stores and products

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