Christmas Day(s)!

Ok the last of my documentation which requires time sensitivity. Let’s close the book on 2017! Christmas Day was as you would expect: lots of hyperventilating and wrapping paper carnage. Here is the video of the boys finding out that Santa came. Jason and I had bought them PowerWheels last Christmas, but they sat in the basement for a whole year until we decided to give them to them this year finally. Not sure why we made that choice but we did. Anyhoo. Now I’m trying to remember what the boys asked for from Santa. Ashton wanted “a box of diamonds” – he’s super into gems and crystals and all that. Lo and behold, Amazon sells a lovely paperweight set:

I died laughing when it came. PERFECT! Alex wanted a play coffee maker and the Playdough oven, which were easy enough. They wrote several “lists” for Pete to take back up to the North Pole and I think they were pleased on Christmas morning, if you can see past the blur 🙂

It was a beautiful snowy morning and all was right in the world. After breakfast, we packed up in a whirlwind and headed up to Vermont! I have a couple random pictures that don’t even capture the wonderful holiday spirit we all felt (for shame) and then some from when we went sledding the next day!

Subpar. I know it, you know it. Oh well. 
Overall I’d say we hit all the boxes for what one is supposed to do over Christmas vacation.
Deal with copious amounts of boxes, toy packaging and batteries ✔
Sit around in the house and/or in a car for long periods of time ✔
Visit with family ✔
Listen to the ten Christmas songs that exist, in all their 4,558 versions ✔
Count the number of days left until school starts (at least twice) ✔
Overspend ✔
Eat and feel fat ✔
Drink ✔
Realize your blessings ✔
Be Merry ✔
My holiday blog posts this year don’t come close to representing what a truly wonderful season we had. It was magical. Ashton and Alex nearly burst with excitement for most of December and Jason and I had so much fun “creating” their Christmas experience – shopping for their gifts, writing them letters from Santa, having friends over for crafts and cookies…it was the best. I hope you found as much joy in this holiday season as we did. All our love to you and yours. On to the New Year… 🙂

Holiday Staples

The Christmas lead-up was pretty much as you would expect. Get a tree, partake in crafts, concerts, and cookies, fear Pete, and make no less than 9 different lists for Santa.

In the interest of fast-tracking this catch-up process that I’m in, here is our December, in a few pictures.

Holiday Home Depot Kids Workshop – a tree picture frame/ornament thing. The tree was made of wood. Get it? So meta.

Then we went to get our ACTUAL tree. In the past we’ve had two trees but since the piano came into our lives this year, there was no room for the second one in the front foyer. Poor second tree! We missed it.

We saw two live performances in December – a kids production of Charlie Brown (Alex was sooo psyched 😉 )

and Disney on Ice (for which both boys sat, virtually unblinking, for the entire thing. It was a Christmas miracle I tell you).

We also had our friends over for pizza and to decorate cookies (you can guess how long that lasted – also I am still finding sprinkles in random places, those round nonpareils will never happen again!!)

and Jason built an ice rink in the backyard. Yes he did.

This monstrosity did not come into our lives without a few, er, hiccups. But nonetheless the boys have started to learn to skate which is a nice wholesome wintry activity.

Pete (our elf) is always a mainstay. He flies down December 1 and spends a few weeks whipping the boys into shape. As the month goes on, the law of diminishing returns does take some effect, but overall Pete is quite beloved. The boys JUMP out of bed in the morning to be the first to find him. You can see it in Alex’s face as they said goodbye to him on Christmas Eve:

Final prep for Santa:

Twas the night before Christmas and all through the house…
See you on the 25th!

Family Photos 2017

There is almost nothing that is as big of a pain-in-the-you-know-what as an impending family photo shoot. Inevitably, your kid will fall and have a scab on his face, or you’ll be in desperate need of haircut, or you’ll spend so much time worrying about what everyone else is going to wear that you are literally standing in front of your closet two minutes after you planned to leave, staring blankly while your husband honks from the car (you can’t wear the top you wanted to because it’s navy blue, and then three of the four of you would be wearing the same color and that would create a total imbalance! Doesn’t he know that?!).

And so it’s pretty bad. You get in the front seat, flushed and feeling a little bloated and the sweater you have on, well, you hate it. Obviously you hate it because it’s one of those “adds ten pounds” sweaters but you were in a hurry and out of time to try things on. This portrait that you are about to have etched in time, professionally and not at all uncheaply I might add, is going to be a bust. The kids are already whining from the backseat, which is making your husband snap at them, and then you look down and realize your jeans could use a wash. Fab. We are sooo going to look like a happy, smiling family unit! 
But, if you’re lucky, your photographer is amazing. She assures you that even though it feels like each shot is coming out terribly, like all the boys are doing is grimacing, the pictures will be beautiful. And in the end, they are. 

We used this photographer two years ago and our favorite one from that shoot we had mounted on a canvas and put it above our fireplace.
We asked her to get another “tree shot” this year:
And had this one was framed for our bedroom:
I love the trees in these because they are art in and of themselves, but adding our tiny family figures into the photos makes them so personal. They are a couple of my favorite things in the house.
Anyway, cut to all the usual feelings afterwards like “Oh I’m so glad we did that” blah blah. You can’t go back in time and retake pictures like this, nor do I have the skill set to capture the boys so perfectly myself, so in the end, it was worth it. After all, I have Christmas cards to think about 😉

Thanksgiving and a whole lot of catching up

Guys, it is January and I am feeling very behind and overwhelmed with this blog! There is not a whole lot of new material now that we go through the same routines and go on the same vacations with the same cast year over year. I am at a dangerous precipice where, if I don’t catch up now, there will be no going back. Now that the crazy holiday season is behind us, we are kicking off some *new!* projects and I’ve decided to dive back in to sharing our daily nitty gritty. You’re like, sooo lucky.

Some housekeeping items. I am going to backdate these posts to when I should have written them so as not to muck up my blog history. They will also be more frequent because they are probably going to be short, like this first one for Thanksgiving. Frankly I can’t remember much about it now that it was nearly two months ago, so I’m going to throw my pictures up here and call it a day. We hosted my friend Jessica as well as Grandma, Grandpa, Aunt Lizzie, Uncle Chris, Cousin Owen, Uncle Berg, Aunt Karen and Jayden!

Twas the night before Thanksgiving 
and all through the house
The to-do list was set 
(typical of my spouse).
The food and the recipes
their times to be cooked
The pots and the pans
with post-its were booked. 

Hahaha. No seriously everything was labeled. If Jason had a schedule to hand out, we all would have had a copy. No messing around. Grandpa was put to work:

And we had some parade watchin’:

Some turkey preppin’:

Some toastin’:

And some table settin’:

We didn’t reinvent the wheel with our recipes – we had made them all before and everything was delicious. If your menu ain’t broke…although my sweet potatoes came out terribly. They were forced to cook in our convection oven and it just didn’t work 😦 Luckily we had a stupid amount of food and there was no shortage of other things to gorge ourselves on. 
So that was Thanksgiving! Initial pounds put towards overall holiday weight gain: 2. Onward!

All the Boo-tastic Details! (Halloween 2017!)

There’s a lot to cover here folks. Let’s begin.

Part 1: Pumpkins
We got them for free when we went apple picking (and by “free” I mean they came with our $156 farm admission for 4 adults and 2 kids!). But that is beside the point. What I’d like to call attention to is Ashton’s completely hilarious pumpkin that I thought could not possibly come out right. He did it all by himself and the result was amazing.

From concept:

to execution:

I think it’s the tiny eyes but I was dying laughing. It is perfectly imperfect 🙂

The others came out as you would expect (ooo, pointy teeth, how original) and you can probably guess which one I did.

In fact I was intending to copy the eyeroll emoji – ah well. Still fits.

Part 2: Adornment
Let’s get to the epic saga that was costumes. The fundamental component of any Halloween. The boys started the decision-making process last July and for a brief month, they would be superheroes. Of course, because their outfits from last year were in shreds and yes I would love to buy them identical $40 costumes to the ones we already had. But I didn’t jump and good thing because Alex moved on and for a time was proposing random household items. He thought maybe he could be a lightbulb, or a ladder? How about a banana? He said “shark” right around the time that Target was having a half off sale at the beginning of October and I hit “purchase”. (I like to think I’d let my kids be anything they want, but really it has to align with something somewhat identifiable and at least partially store-bought. I don’t do homemade. Yet.)

The shark sat in the closet along with Ashton’s Lego guy costume. He had picked that in September and stuck with it. We were done and ready.

Except then the boys watched Moana mid-October and found themselves possessed. I’m not sure if you saw my YouTube video but the music in this movie has both boys singing and dancing – it’s quite a sight. Ashton then wanted to be Maui (shapeshifter, demigod of the wind and sea, hero to all):

And for Alex it was Tamatoa or die. Tamatoa is a giant crab with a blinged-out shiny shell who looks like this.

You can see the issues here. 
We talked and talked, for days, about all the other super-cool costumes out there (including the ones we ALREADY HAD) and finally Alex said “Ok, maybe a ‘pweece’?” (police). Since his shark costume was a little too tight anyway, and he was increasingly into it, on the ripe old date of October 29, we went shopping.  

The handcuffs! The walkie talkie! The WHISTLE! He was in heaven while Ashton was in the corner sobbing because now he wanted to be a “pweece” too. I made Jason deal with it the next day while I went to Target and tried to get my money back for the shark and the Lego guy. Remember those? The employee was like “MMMM hmmm, I don’t think so sister. Halloween is tomorrow”, but I showed her my receipt and the tags and she had to push it through. Who returns costumes at 6:30 pm on October 30? ME. Boom.

Part 3: Other lead-up
We skipped a lot of Halloween events this year in the name of having no costumes (and also, I was not prepared mentally – once any sort of costume goes on, all bets are off, so I sure as heck didn’t want to start with that five days in advance of the actual holiday). But if we had made everything happen, we would have gone to the Lilja dance, Zoo Howl at the Stone Zoo, the Spooktacular in Natick, the Brae Burn kids Halloween and one of Ashton’s classmates’ “boo-day” party. As it was, we managed just fine with Alex’s parade on Monday:

And Ashton’s K parade on Tuesday:

Which was not without a class party afterwards and I had signed up for “healthy snack” so, voila.

The green stem is a fork and inside is cantaloupe and clementine wedges. Shrug. They were cute but in all seriousness what kid is going to pick fruit on Halloween. But Jason was super happy that I spent at least $40 on all this anyway.
Something else that cost me about the same amount – my themed coat hook/shelf thing in the kitchen!

This doesn’t merit its own category but I wanted to love on it somewhere.

Part 4. The main event.
Ready for it? My two little members of law enforcement – “watch out bad guys!”

After all that practice, we had our first run-in!!!

Apprehended. Thank god!
Once the coast was clear, our friends were able to come over. A plain Alex, chicken Crosby, police officer Ashton and minecraft Elijah had some pizza:

Lined up:

And off we went! Honestly I didn’t bother with any of the night time shots. You guys know what trick or treating looks like. The interesting part is that Ashton is the only kid who lasted! The other three were all “Eh. Can we go home now?” while Ashton raced around the neighborhood and Jason struggled to keep up. He filled his pumpkin three times!! But I did manage to get these last two gems:

Happy Halloween to my two little mall cops. Thanks for keeping me safe! (Someday I’ll tell you the truth about the whistles that came with your costumes. For now, they are still “lost” 😉 )

Calm before the October storm

I can’t really explain myself but I’ve had no love for blogging lately 😦 Everything that I would typically turn into a post I am just like, meh. I am on a dangerous precipice because I know if I quit, I’ll regret it. Mainly we have just been really busy. This school business is no joke you guys. Between both boys, the number of donation drives, birthday parties, class events, school picture days, projects, save-the-dates, sign-ups, “make-sure-to-send-this-in”s and overall things going on completely fills my day to the brim. My next two weeks are so beyond that I actually had to make a calendar on top of our regular calendar to fit it all. Let’s take a look at the next 12 days! It’s a little blurry but I can’t figure out how to paste it otherwise.

There are three main issues. First, the Scholastic Book Fair is next week. This massive fundraiser for Lilja? Yep, I’m the chair of it. Binders and folders and webinars and committee members and parent helpers and to-do lists of information – it is way, way bigger than I anticipated when I volunteered. I’ll leave it at that but it’s been weeks of preparation already and it’s simply huge. Second, it’s Ashton’s week for Family Week next week. He needs to make a very specific poster with photos and things on it, and I will be visiting his class on Thursday to share something special and I have no earthly idea what that is going to be yet. We don’t have a unique family culture or anything that makes us that interesting sooo yeah, Kristen, good luck with that when 19 sets of kindergarten eyes are on you and waiting for something good to happen. Third, Halloween is coming. The costumes, the candy, the parties, the parades…I’m already on a couple sign up sheets for snacks and supplies and all that. Also, of course Alex’s costume is too big so now I have to get him a smaller one, meanwhile I hid BOTH costumes because otherwise the boys wouldn’t wear anything else and I don’t want them getting wrecked before the one zillion Halloween things they will be wearing them to..Overall I’m just PRAYING I don’t forget something, like the sticker chain letter that I have to copy and send out to a bunch of people but first I have to go buy the stickers. Definitely haven’t done that yet and I think my deadline is Monday. Hmmm.

Not listed in all of this is of course the regular school schedule for both boys plus Jason’s work schedule plus mine. But, what’s the point here. Am I drowning? No. Is it fun? Mostly. I guess I’m just doing other things besides blogging lately 😉

The weather has been gorgeous and warm, the boys are doing great at their schools and I’m hoping my wild west book fair goes off without a hitch next week. But first, Grandma and Grandpa came for a quick visit last weekend we went out apple picking, here are a few pictures! I would say I found the biggest one 😀

For those that have made it all the way to the end of this post, may you now enjoy this little musical dessert 😉

September Catch-up

There hasn’t been a whole lot going on in our lives other than school school school! Besides the regular schedule, which is every day for Ashton 8:30 am – 2:56 pm at Lilja Elementary in Natick and MWF for Alex 9-11:45 am at Community Nursery School in Wayland, there’s all the extras. For example, last week, Monday night was the soccer meeting and equipment pickup, Wednesday night was Curriculum Night where the teachers all made presentations to their classrooms and the principal gave an address, and then Friday night was the Kindergarten picnic. Plus, I am the chair of the book fair which is in October, so I have had meetings for that and I am really looking forward to it, but it is a huge fundraiser that is turning out to be more involved than I was expecting haha. We got invited to the first class birthday party and the field trip permission slips are starting to come home, and that’s just Ashton’s part of things! Btw we did a retake of his first day picture once I found the sign I had made:

And also here is Alex, ready to rock CNS on his first day a couple weeks later! I think it’s the shark shirt – that one is a real confidence booster 😉

Right in the middle of all the school starting shenanigans, Papa and GG came to visit us! It was wonderful. The last time we were together was (gasp) four years ago and Alex didn’t even exist! But that was then and this is now 🙂

Papa and GG, I loved having you here! (XOXOXOXOX!)

Right after that we cruised through Labor Day Weekend, which, you know what stinks when you’re in Long Island and supposed to be at the beach or in the pool? Crappy weather. And that’s what we had. The boys played some baseball, fished and swam anyway.

Four cannonballs: Jason, Ashton, Chris and Alex in the corner!

And we made it to Southwick’s Zoo last weekend, the largest zoo in New England. I have to say I was impressed (with the zoo, not Jason’s pictures, which are what follow 😉 )

 

(Cheetahs!)

(Lions!)
(Unidentified small mammal!)

We had a really great day there! The boys read books about rhinos, lions, tigers, giraffes, monkeys, zebras, etc. all day long and seeing those animals in real life is always so much fun for them. Grandma and Grandpa took them to the Riverhead aquarium over Labor Day weekend too and she said they were losing it over the sharks and sting rays 🙂

Lastly, the star of the summer: our garden. Freshly planted at the beginning of June:

By August:

And the tomatoes as I type this are even taller. Most of it has been cut back by now but the amount of summer squash, zucchini, tomatoes, peppers, mini eggplants, herbs, and cucumbers that this little plot spit out…whoa. Jason did an AMAZING job taking care of it, I honestly did nothing, but do get to reap the rewards by making things that look like this.

I mean…
Tomato sauce doesn’t get any fresher than that.
So that’s where we’re at. Summer’s over, our new routine has begun…stay with me!

KINDERGARTEN!!

Ok this is going to be really long. I have way too much to say about this giant milestone so here we go.

First of all, I could have been doing this post a year ago. Ashton was 5 by 8/31/16 and technically eligible for Kindergarten, but it took us about four seconds to decide to wait another year. I am SO glad we did, for so many reasons. One of the surprising results of Ashton sticking around? How close he and Alex have become. They have had a lot of adventures together this past year and truly, one of the central emotions I have felt about Ashton starting school is sadness for Alex! Alex will be in preschool just MWF from 9 – 11:45 am. Ashton on the other hand will be gone from 8:15 am – 3:15 pm (school is 8:30 am – 2:56 pm) MTWThF! That’s.every.day. That’s 35 hours a week. That’s a full time job!

So, the prep for this new gig has been insane. Sometime last January, I said “Hey Natick Public Schools, I have a student for you next year!” and thus opened the floodgates of the most incredible amount of paperwork you have ever seen. Name, address, demographics, insurances, immunizations, emergency contacts, family history, what was the birth like? I had to present a giant packet, in person, with an appointment. That was first, in April. Followed by bus registration. Then over the summer we started getting weekly e-blasts, signing up for iPass, Virtual Backpack, and the school’s Facebook group(s). The playdate schedule came out, I had to bring nametags to one of them. I volunteered to do the book fair with the PTA in October. What was Ashton’s daily dismissal plan? Please fill out this form. Has Ashton had a lead test? Please fill out this form. In the event of Ashton needing an Epi-Pen administration, please fill out this form. You think you want to chaperone or be a room parent? Please fill out this form. Do you want to participate in BOKS (before school fitness program)? Yes? No? Regardless, make sure Ashton has a rest mat (tri-fold only), brings in a family picture on the first day, and has a backpack and a lunchbox. The soft kind. On Tuesdays the class has PE so wear sneakers. Oh, and everything needs to be labelled. It wouldn’t hurt to label your labels. Your son will need a fresh haircut and of course we recommend getting him microchipped.

Kidding (about that last part). But it’s been a LOT. I’ve lost sleep haha. Overall I’m so impressed with the school but whoa!

So here’s the breakdown of the beginning of it all. Last Wednesday, August 30, was the first day for Ashton’s group. Only half the class started (the second half went Thursday so Ashton had that day off) and the schedule ran from 9-1. Before school pictures:

We gathered in the lobby at Lilja, the K’ers lined up as their teachers called them and off they went down a lonnnng hall.

And that was it! I didn’t even cry? Was I shell-shocked??

At 1 pm the parents came back for pickup and we got to see their classroom. Ashton’s class with Ms. K is 19 kids and they are in one of the 6 new modulars at Lilja (and the only K class in there – the other 4 are in the main school). I know they’ve been really in a rush with the project so the rooms aren’t completely done, but this is the quick glimpse I got.

By 1:30 pm it was time to go home and Ashton was fried. He was complaining about everything including the walk to the car and started to cry over a snack. Ms. K warned us that the first days of kindergarten are a lot on children and to expect complete and utter exhaustion. Ashton was the very definition. On the plus side, he was obsessed with the idea that he could buy lunch. It was all he talked about: that there were different things every day, that there was a menu, that you could take money and go to the cafeteria and buy it. And there was PIZZA. He put his lunch money together pretty much as soon as we got home Wednesday and carried it around until Friday, which was the first full official day: drop-off line, school bus home, pizza that you could buy, the whole bit. Jason Facetimed me on Friday so I could “be there” at drop off and when I heard Alex’s voice call after him: “Bye Ah-ton! BYE!” that’s when I finally cried.

Friday went really well I think, he described in full detail what it was like to buy lunch, how he put his name under “Pizza” on the classroom lunch list and then the lady gave him a HUGE piece of pizza, like the biggest piece he had ever had. “I asked her, I said um excuse me, could you please cut this? But it was TOO LATE, I had to keep pushing my tray down the metal thing and she didn’t hear me.” The other thing was, he was sooo excited to take the bus home but it was running super late, I was literally panicking because I had no idea where he was, so I called the school and they said he was still there (it was 3:40 pm! He was supposed to be dropped off by 3:10 pm!). So I went to get him and he saw me and was like “AW! You’re not the bus!” and I explained that he was going to come with me just today and he was like “THIS IS THE WORST BUS DAY EVER”. (Jason’s planning to drop him off in the mornings because the ride is way too long, in my opinion: 35 minutes to go 1 mile! Such a long story.)

Anyway today is Tuesday and Ashton’s second full day. Jason dropped him off this morning and I have been thinking about him constantly. I need to teach him to tie his shoes. I wonder if he ate his sandwich (we tried turkey today). Lunch is at 11 am and he doesn’t get out until 2:56 pm – is he starving? Plus on Friday he got a little lost, I think because his classroom doesn’t have a bathroom or a nearby water fountain so he was fretting last night that he was going to “lose his way” again. The school is big when you are six.

It’s tough, this Kindergarten business. There’s no one watching him or helping him. He’s responsible for himself and the lump in my throat hasn’t quite dissolved yet. 5 full days a week seems like way too much. But Ms. K created an Instagram account (please fill out this form) and there’s been no shortage of letters and emails from the school all about the first few days. We’ll settle in… Alex and preschool is next!

Happy Kindergarten Ashton!!

Another birthday in the books…

The other day Ashton was watching me put on makeup.
“Why are you doing that?”
“So I look a little beautiful.”
“Oh. So your face is shiny? So everyone thinks it’s brand new?”
“Haha. Yes.”

“Oh. But you’re just joking right. It’s not really new.”

Welcome to SIX everybody! A place where Ashton pretty much knows the truth (aside from Santa/Tooth Fairy/etc.) and doesn’t blindly buy in to whatever I tell him. Bribes are usually met with counter offers and he can see through a lot of my strategies. He like, knows things now! And if he doesn’t, he is voracious for information and the questions are endless. Kindergarten is going to blow his mind.

This post is divided into sections and here we go.

Age Six, Part 1: Thursday August 3rd
This was Ashton’s actual birthday. We did not do much and I had warned him repeatedly that there wouldn’t be any gifts until his party on Sunday (mainly because I was still waiting for Amazon to deliver his presents but also, I wasn’t sure what Jason’s schedule would be so I wanted to keep expectations low). He was shockingly good about it. We went to the pool around 4:30 pm when I got home from work and Jason ended surprising us all there 🙂 So after our swim we went home and had a birthday barbecue, cupcakes, and ran some backyard races. Ashton is actually fast and it surprised me that I had to put some effort into beating him lol. Here are some minimal pictures from August 3.

Age Six, Part 2: Sunday August 6
PIRATE PARRRRRRRRTY!
Ashton is obsessed with treasure and jewels. He has any number of small boxes that he collects things in – stray sequins he finds, buttons, pebbles, bolts, beads, tokens, anything. It did not take me long to decide to throw a pirate themed party for him. Mind you, it was nothing like last year. This one was super small and it was a drop-off! No parents meant no one to impress with decorations 😉 We did it in the afternoon so there wasn’t a huge food commitment AND I hired a Jack Sparrow lookalike to entertain the kids! (They haven’t seen any of the movies but easily recognized that he was a pirate.) It turned out to be a winning combination and I was practically stress-free. I ordered some swords and eye patches, carved a ship out of a watermelon, hung some balloons, and organized a treasure hunt for their favors but that was about it and it was glorious. Captain Jack was worth his weight in gold (no pun intended! HAHA). Not only did he look just like Johnny Depp, he even had the same voice and accent. He gave some swashbuckling lessons, played Simon Pirate Says, taught them about the code on the high seas, and best of all, they sat down in a circle for a Pirate Q&A and the kids could ask him any question they wanted. “Can you breathe underwater?” “Can you swim faster than a shark?” “Do you have real eyes?” and of course, because they are boys, “Where do you poop on a pirate ship?” They just kept going, it was priceless. [Captain Jack overall made quite the impression – the next night my friend texted me that he was all her kids could talk about and one of them kept pondering over and over, saying “I can’t tell if Captain Jack was a real pirate or just dressed up like one. He really seemed like one but why would a pirate be so nice to kids at a party?” LOL]

It was perfect and the boys had a ball. Ashton opened his gifts after everyone left and that was a wrap on turning 6!

 Age Six, Part 3: The Good Stuff

This is my favorite part 🙂 Let’s start with the stats.

Height: 48 inches/4 feet!
Weight: 50 pounds
Shoe Size: 13
Clothes size: Really depends on the brand, mostly 6 or 7
Teeth lost: 2 (both middle lowers)
Cavities: 1 (AHHHH!!! Apparently it’s very common but we need to get it filled nonetheless)
Shots: None, but blood draw for lead
Allergies: Outgrown peanut and tree nuts, still egg and sesame and he has a hard time with dogs too

Currently obsessed with: sharks, dinosaurs and fishing

New skills: he passed the deep end test at the pool at Longfellow so he can go off the diving board now! He’s also really good at remotes and maneuvering remote-controlled airplanes, helicopters, cars and trucks (all of which we, uh, have)

Favorite toys: You should see the Lego things he builds. They are amazingly creative. Both Ashton and Alex will sit for hours with a big bin of loose Legos and build, build, build. He also really loves the perler fuse beads and will spend a ton of time creating patterns with those.

Books: Any of the “Who would win” series (i.e. Killer Whale vs. Great White Shark, Lion vs. Tiger, Tarantula vs. Scorpion etc. – they outline the qualities of each, describe how they would fight and then declare a theoretical winner. They are actually educational hahaha)

As a brother: Ashton is so good. If they are running and Alex trips, Ashton doubles back to help him up. If they are both trying to climb something (the fence mainly) and Alex can’t quite make it, Ashton will actually push him up from below before going up himself. Ashton helps Alex with puzzles and to open things and shows him how stuff works. They hold hands when they walk around sometimes and are completely BFFs for the most part. All they do is play, for hours.

Coming up: K with Ms. K! That’s Kindergarten with Ms. Kuzinevich. Ashton is so ready. One of my favorite things about him is how he soaks up information. You can literally see on his face when he is learning something new. His expression brightens or something, it’s hard to explain. But it’s there. Like most other kids his age he is a sponge. I can’t believe in 2 weeks I will be putting him on the bus to Kindergarten. But that’s a whole other post.

Foods: any dry crunchy carb will do. He likes to eat cereal without milk, crackers, granola bars, chips, pretzels etc. He basically eats all day and usually is ok with whatever I serve for dinner. Except peas, he claims they make his tongue itch. Pretty sure that’s a lie but it works because like I’m going to give him peas in light of the fact he has other food allergies! What if it’s not a lie? Grrrr.

Speech: Not perfect. “W”‘s are often used instead of r or l but his actual vocabulary is huge. Some of the adjectives seem to come out of nowhere but pronunciation isn’t great. So he’ll say (playing doctor): “Yep, your heartbeep [heartbeat] is fine – not cwacked or damaged or anything, total-wy fine.”

Other funny -isms:

Watching Jason shave his beard: “Hm. I guess he doesn’t need it anymore.”

**
“I love Hershey’s kisses!”
“So you mean you love CHOCOLATE!”
“MOM! I like to call it Hershey’s kisses.”

**
Me: “It’s bedtime right? What time is it.” (7:50 pm)
Ashton “Well, it’s 10:45!”
“Oh really?”
“Yes it is. I get to make up my own numbers.”

**
“Mommy do you know what a salami is?”
“I do. It’s meat that you slice up and eat.”
“Mommy, NO. A salami!”
“Well, yes…the kind you put on sandwiches? Right?”
“No it’s not! It’s a HUGE wave that is so tall it goes over peoples heads and it puts water everywhere even in towns and cities.”
“Oh a TSUNAMI.”
“I know, yes, a salami.”

**
“You know, when something dies like a person or a cow or something, it means they lay down under the grass.”

**

“Why are you mad mommy?”
“What? I’m not.”
“Then why do you have a not fun face?”

I wish I wrote down more. But overall no amount of words could quite capture him. In general, Ashton is busy. He’s always talking, building something, collecting something, or imagining something. He’s inquisitive, kind, thoughtful and jumps when he’s excited and/or waiting for something to happen (Alex has started to do this too by the way). He’s just so enthusiastic, about everything, and I am incredibly proud of him. His TK teacher Mrs. Cooney told me at the end of the year, “If I had a classroom full of Ashtons, life would be a dream.”

And so it is 🙂 HAPPY 6th BIRTHDAY ASHTON! We love, love, love you. xoxox

Block Island 2017

Well Ashton has officially turned 6 so that post will be forthcoming, but firsssssst, our summer vacation! We’ve already been back for longer than we were gone (haha) but I needed some time to decompress and go through all my photos.

Our ferry plopped us on Block Island on Sunday, July 23rd by 10:30 am. It was windy, cloudy, and cold. Little did we know, the sun would not come out until Wednesday. It’s true, at several points during the first three days, I said “This is actually worst case scenario right now…” and then I’d go check the window again to see if there was any semblance of light coming from the sky. At any given moment while we were there, someone in the house was checking their doppler app. And then someone else would check theirs for a second opinion and we’d all sit around and say “surely it won’t stay this cold/windy/cloudy/rainy…”. I will say, the house we rented was floor to ceiling sliders on the main level and had spectacular views, so it helped not feeling closed in. And the kids did great. Better than the adults I’d venture (i.e., me). I brought a huge box of new toys/art supplies/games/puzzles/etc. and for the first half of the week the boys were with their cousin Owen and the second half they were with Callie and Holden and they all stayed very entertained and busy. In fact, we did a lot of stuff that we don’t normally do on BI because we are always at the beach, so it kind of worked itself out.

Sunday we were occupied by settling into the house we rented. Monday it just rained all day and I don’t remember a thing. Tuesday it was about 62 degrees and the wind was still whipping, but we forced ourselves to eat lunch on the beach and packed up after 45 minutes. GG arrived which was a nice distraction. And then finally, beach days on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday! But then Saturday was crappy again and Sunday it was time to go home, just in time to miss this glittering forecast for the upcoming week:

Despite the weather, on the way home all we could talk about was how amazing a trip we had had and how we wanted to go back next year for TWO weeks. LOL. What the what?

We hung with Grandma, Grandpa, Aunt Lizzie, Owen, GG, Aunt Kari, Uncle Ben, Callie, and Holden (and special guests Robyn and Mike) and in various combinations we went to the farm, shopped at the farmers market, hiked down Mohegan Bluffs, played at the playground, fished, ate, drank, ate, drank, went out a night or two and sunned ourselves wherever possible. I give you BI 2017! First, who wins for cutest picture of the week?

Ashton, Alex and Owen in matching pajamas
~ OR ~
Alex and Callie playing Scatch (the series)

They were all so stinking cute. It’s a tie.

The end!
How tired is your scrolling finger right now?! Hahaha. See you next year Block Island!!