Wednesday, April 15, 2015

Our Day Together

Dear Ash, 

I love our days together. 

I usually get up before you do. It depends on how tired I am and also how late you sleep. You generally wake up between 7:30 and 8:30. I used to have you wake up within a half hour block, but I hate waking you up. If I can, I always just let you sleep for as long as you need. 

If I wake up before you, I start with scriptures. If Benjamin hasn't left for work yet, I help him pack his lunch and make us breakfast. After eating breakfast and checking Facebook, email, etc., I tidy up the house. You are almost always awake by this time. 

You usually wake up happy and hungry. I feed you, change your diaper, and we play for a little while. If I haven't eaten yet, I'll get breakfast and finish picking up the house. With your help, of course. You love to be in the same room as me now (you scream when I leave you alone), so I usually tote you along with me as we do chores. 

Then it's bath time. You love bath time. Your favorite room in the house is the bathroom. It always has been. I think it's how bright it is. I'm not really sure. You also love being in the water. More and more, you'll play in there. I got you foam alphabet letters and you love them. They're perfect for chewing on. You still don't like getting out of the bath, but you don't scream. 

Once we have you dressed for the day, it's usually time to feed you and put you down for your first nap. You sleep an hour and a half to two hours. That's my writing time. I sometimes do other things too, but I have to get at least 500 words in while you're asleep. If I didn't have a chance to before you woke up, this is also when I do scriptures. 

When you wake up, I feed you and change your diaper and blah blah blah again. Then we read and sing together in your room for a little bit. When you get tired of that, we move to the living room. You get to go in your exercauser with Signing Time on. You LOVE signing time. You don't usually sit and watch it for very long, but you get so, so excited when it starts. Then, while you watch and play and watch and play, I go in the kitchen (which is connected to the living room) and make dinner and everything else that we eat. 

Then sometime before or during your second nap, daddy gets home. You usually sleep for less time during your second nap, about an hour and a half. When you wake up, dad is almost always home (unless he's at class) and we both play with you. You love when your dad plays with you, he's way more wild than I am. You get so excited when you see him. 

After dinner, a lot of times, daddy plays us guitar and I try to snuggle you on the couch while you squirm around. If it's warm, we take a little walk while dad works. If it's not, we might turn Signing Time back on or play with your toys. Then, half an hour before bed, we go in your room and get you all ready to sleep. Then it's bed time for you. 

After I put you down, I usually straighten up real fast and get ready for bed. Then I get to do whatever I want. Usually I end up snuggling with daddy, watching a TV show with him, or reading while he works. After a last dreamfeed, your dad and I try to go to bed. We usually end up talking way too late though. Those moments are nice. I hope you find someone as good for you as he is for me. 

I think we're a pretty lucky family. 

Love,
Mom

Tuesday, April 7, 2015

Baby Home Schooling

Dear Ash,

You're going to be home schooled. Some people think that's crazy.

It's something your father and I knew before we even got married, though. Your dad and all his siblings were home schooled. If she could have, your grandma would have home schooled my brothers and me as well. We were both able to see the advantages of home schooling.

There are a lot of "arguments" against home schooling. You're not even old enough for school yet, but I already have people sharing with me their I-knew-a-person-who-turned-out-uneducated/awkward/horrible-"because-of"-being-home-schooled stories and shock at the idea that I would put my kids at that "disadvantage".

I was thinking this past weekend about your sleep situation. When we first brought you home, your father and I had no idea what we were doing. We were NOT sleep experts. We'd set you down in your co-sleeper and within a minute, you'd start crying. We would change you, feed you, and attempt (and when I say attempt, I mean, we tried but honestly had no idea how to) swaddle you. Nothing worked. So we took you in shifts. And then people came to help and they took some shifts too. And we got you to sleep in your crib occasionally.

Then we started putting you to sleep in your car seat. And I bought a swaddle blanket. And we got white noise. And on and on and on. We did everything we could to get you to sleep when we wanted you to be sleeping. It didn't always work. You went through a phase where you woke up every fifteen minutes. You went through a forty five minutes nap phase. You had a time when you wouldn't sleep between ten and one in the morning.

Through it all, I read like crazy. I read literally everything I could find on baby sleep. I read blogs. I read sample baby sleep schedules. I read books. And I learned a lot about sleep in general and also how baby sleep cycles work. But the thing that I became expert on wasn't sleep, or even baby sleep. It was MY baby's sleep. I am an expert on your sleep. I know how to get you to go to sleep. I have a 90% guess rate within five minutes of when you'll wake up. I can tell if you are too mad/worked up to go to sleep or if I just need to leave you be for a minute.

I think that's how home schooling is. I am not an expert in science or math or history. I know a lot about writing, but I'm still learning. I am a great reader, but I've never taught anyone else how to read. But the thing is, I know that won't really matter. I'll learn and read and use some of the endless resources that are available. I will do my very best to make sure I am doing my part. But the most important thing is not to be an expert in every subject. The important thing is to be an expert in you, in how you learn.

That's the beauty of home schooling. I know it's not for everyone. I also know that public school isn't bad, or even not good. I was in public school until college. But I do know that for my family, for my children, home schooling will be the best thing. With my children home with me, I can help them learn the way they learn best. I can meet their individual needs and do what I, as their mother, know is going to work for them. I can do what works best for you.

I feel that I am already beginning our home school journey, even though you are still so small. You learn so quickly, it amazes me. You are so smart. I pray that I can help give you confidence in yourself. I pray that I can help you see how smart and talented you are. I pray that I can give the best education, the best one for you.

Love,
Mom