HomeLife

How we spend our days is, of course, how we spend our lives. - Annie Dillard

  • HomeLife

    where we’ve been . . .

      It’s a good thing my computer saves my password to sign into this blog. I almost forgot it myself. It’s been a busy couple a days y’all. Here’s what I’ve been doing since last I wrote a post: Of course teaching school.  (High school science say what?  I don’t even think the letters strung together make actual words on some of London’s biology book pages.  On the other hand, two real winners this year in the curriculum category are Visual Latin and Language Lessons.  All the thumbs up.)     Taking my youngest students to the cutest classroom on a farm.  A classroom alive with birds and fish and…

  • HomeLife

    evening shake down

      It’s probably the changing of the seasons. Or being without a car.  Because even when you don’t want to go anywhere, you still like the freedom of the knowledge that you can go somewhere. And it could just be me. It’s probably just me. There’s nothing technically wrong but I sort of am standing here disgusted with all the things. And thinking thoughts rapid fire …. This house feels so constantly dirty. No one seems to know how to return anything to its home.  Ever. Bergen lost at least three of his school books over the course of this single day. Ryder was rifling through the trash in the…

  • HomeLife

    As Seen Through the Door Frame: A Monday Night Poem

      My desk is wherever I am. Tonight it’s the extra leaf at the end of the dining room table. I’ve spread my supplies wide, stacked in an order that follows my brain and makes Lacey Logic. I hear laughing. My Piper and her friend Hanna.     They’ve asked to bake chocolate chip cookies together. Before they began, they prepared. Not the flour and the butter, but themselves. They have raided the dress up closet and put on fancy Cinderella style dresses waist aprons and grins. They have turned on the music of the Okee Dokee Brothers. Singing. Laughing. Dropping cookie dough on the floor. I’m actually working here…

  • HomeLife

    The Stories My Life Hands Me

    I don’t even have to try to generate story ideas. Life just keeps handing them to me. May I present to you – A Portrait of a Sunday. Or How We Surprised Uncle Danny and Got a Little Surprise Ourselves. On Sundays in our home we sleep in.  We make a big brunch together.  We attend our church’s evening services.  And that’s about as busy as we like our Sundays to be. But for the sake of love we broke from routine, rose early, loaded the car with picnic supplies and headed to Knoxville, Tennessee to surprise Uncle Danny for his birthday. Aunt Beckey and their son Max were pulling…

  • HomeLife,  Otto Fox Wilder

    Five Finds Friday: brown sugar tea and Otto are both sweet

      I worked a little extra hard this week to balance the work/life/home routine and said no to a few things so that we could say yes to slower afternoons and being home together during that time since our nights are currently in a season of being busy with soccer and such. I think it paid off, but goodness – balance is a tight rope, is it not?  (And even on the weeks like this where I put in the extra effort, by Friday it seems to fall apart again.) Life is a steady tension of push and pull, give and take. This week I found extra time to write…

  • Field Trip,  HomeLife,  HomeSchooling

    it’s easy to love homeschool on a day like this.

      One of the more challenging aspects of homeschooling five students at once in five different grades is that their needs and desires and skill sets, both educationally and otherwise, are so varied. When they were all younger, this seemed less dramatic.  There seemed to be less of a division. Now London, in high school, can be rather tethered to giant books or a computer for her math program.  Her science can take nearly an hour to wade through each day.  Labor intensive.  Much more so than elementary school. So the dreamy Little House on the Prairie days are fading and it’s certainly plausible that I am holding more tightly…

  • HomeLife

    redefining.

      Life is weird. I left my phone at the house when we headed out this evening.  The kids and I were gone for maybe four or five hours.  The internet didn’t go anywhere and I didn’t miss anything and the 12 texts that were waiting for me were taken care of in all of three minutes when I returned.     It was freeing and that feels ridiculous to acknowledge. I’ve struggled of late to figure out (again) the balance between social media and the internet and regular old living.  I want to be less connected to my phone.  Increasingly, however, my line of work is tying me to…

  • HomeLife

    Five Finds Friday (a video, a broken dryer, and – of course – an earring)

      It’s really only been one week since I last typed one of these? You’ve got to be kidding.     funny   These guys are still funny.     fashionable   Have I mentioned these before? It’s totally possible. I love these ear cuffs from Noonday.     My ear is pierced twice in only one ear.  (Once upon a time in high school or college Emma and I both wanted to get only one ear pierced, so we split the cost and each had one ear lobe pierced.  That’s the entire story.) Anyway, I should ask Emma if she wants to split the cost of this earring, since…

  • HomeLife

    slice. of. life.

      Not all days go according to plan. In fact, very few days actually do. Today we rose on time and started school in an orderly fashion. Mosely baked us fresh and warm chocolate chip muffins (which she hopes to begin selling soon, matter of fact).  There was a history lesson about Roger Williams and narrations about Benjamin Franklin, a grammar lesson about prepositional phrases and one about the four types of sentences.  (I remain unconvinced this is actually important information.)  Novels such as Henry and the Clubhouse, Because of Winn Dixie, Count of Monte Cristo and The Hobbit were all read by some student residing in my home.  A…

  • HomeLife

    from there to here

      Growing up one of my primary chores was to mow the grass.  This chore was far more pleasant than bottle feeding the baby calves or cooking dinner for picky brothers.  We had a riding lawn mower and I could spend my time looking like I was hard at work so no one would talk to me or bother me, but all I was actually doing was just sitting still and imagining things.  (I applied the same principles to my assigned task of raking hay on the tractor too.) I have always been a daydreamer.  Always spent far too much time in my head, working through ideas and dreaming up…

  • Bergen Hawkeye,  HomeLife,  Product Review

    Five Finds Friday (Bergen is very funny, a chance to help and a really great documentary)

      It seemed like I had a little more time to do things this week. Oh, that’s right.  It was our rest week from school.  Of course I had more time to do things. Today the kids and I and some friends went on a dual purpose outing – a field trip and an interview for Travelers Rest Here.  The couple was a fantastic pair of humans beginning this charming and exciting tea farm.  They shared about their lives as I asked them questions and I was impressed slash overwhelmed slash in awe of all they have thus far accomplished and we all looked to be about the same age.…

  • HomeLife

    run of the mill and catch up thoughts

      Let’s just have a little rundown write-as-fast-as-I-speak sort of post, shall we? Alright then. Piper Finn attended a tea party birthday gathering today that just sounded like all sorts of sweet fun.  She told me that she learned how to walk with a book on her head and how to fold napkins into shapes and there were tiny sandwiches shaped like stars and it just sounded like the best sort of way to celebrate her friend turning ten.  A friend recently told me that ten is just about her favorite age and I have to say – it is a pretty special age. My own ten-year-old, and the birthday…

  • HomeLife,  HomeSchooling,  Keiglets

    Five Finds Friday (Puck perches, a leftover success and a breakfast solution)

      Sometimes I feel this need to apologize to you all for not writing every day.  Like I’ve got some quota to fill and I’m letting someone down if I don’t post daily.  Sometimes I feel as if the person I am letting down is me.  But goodness, y’all.  This pace is hard to maintain. The website for TR, homeschool, driving kids to events and activities and soccer practices and appointments and theatre camp, the prepping and planning of meals for half a dozen people like three times every day.  This sounds like a rant, a whine.  It feels a little like it too. Anyway – thanks for continuing to…