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Friday, May 4, 2012
Monday, August 1, 2011
No Chores for a Week!
I was so pleased with myself—I had chores on the board before the boys were even out of bed! After returning home from my early morning work-out, I headed straight to the office; I diligently reviewed the household tasks and assigned about 12 to each boy. I printed the lists and happily stuck them on our white board located in our home’s command central. I was prepared—there would be no computer, no movies, no treats, no Facebook, no friends, no fun, and no food until chores were all completed.
Max was the first one up, and the first thing out of his mouth was “Can I get on the computer?” I smugly smiled and said “Not until chores are done. Good morning.” Max let out an exasperating sigh, grabbed his book, plopped on the couch and started to read. After reading for about 15 minutes, Max sauntered into my office to borrow my calculator. He wanted to see where we were at on our “Summer Reading Challenge.” He diligently started to add the pages. Dad’s list was the first column; it didn’t take long to accumulate his pages because he has only added one book to the chart. Taylor and I both have just three books and David has none so Max quickly reached his column. This took a minute, because Max is our heavyweight reader this summer with eight books listed in his column. As Max started to elicit sounds of joy, my inner auditor emerged, and I decided to check the numbers myself. To my dismay, I learned that our family has collectively read 6,874 pages this summer! How did this happen? I thought we were still at least 500 pages away from the 6000 page benchmark. This means “no chores for a week” and another tank of gas for Taylor! It appears that mom will being doing all the chores this week. What can I say, a deal is a deal, and I was the “well-meaning” mother that put the “no chores” benchmark on the chart. Happy Summer Reading!!
Max was the first one up, and the first thing out of his mouth was “Can I get on the computer?” I smugly smiled and said “Not until chores are done. Good morning.” Max let out an exasperating sigh, grabbed his book, plopped on the couch and started to read. After reading for about 15 minutes, Max sauntered into my office to borrow my calculator. He wanted to see where we were at on our “Summer Reading Challenge.” He diligently started to add the pages. Dad’s list was the first column; it didn’t take long to accumulate his pages because he has only added one book to the chart. Taylor and I both have just three books and David has none so Max quickly reached his column. This took a minute, because Max is our heavyweight reader this summer with eight books listed in his column. As Max started to elicit sounds of joy, my inner auditor emerged, and I decided to check the numbers myself. To my dismay, I learned that our family has collectively read 6,874 pages this summer! How did this happen? I thought we were still at least 500 pages away from the 6000 page benchmark. This means “no chores for a week” and another tank of gas for Taylor! It appears that mom will being doing all the chores this week. What can I say, a deal is a deal, and I was the “well-meaning” mother that put the “no chores” benchmark on the chart. Happy Summer Reading!!
Monday, July 25, 2011
Ocean City, Master Swim – 7/23/11
Last Tuesday, we received a call from John, a family friend. He told us that the Ocean City mile swim was on Saturday and wanted to know if any in our household would be interested in participating. We exchanged pleasantries and updates on children happenings, and left it at "we'll see."
After a few brief instructions, the race flag dropped signifying the start. The swimmers, several in wetsuits, made a mad dash into the water. It was complete bedlam as swimmers fought and crawled out into the ocean. The water was freezing! Hence, several swimmers immediately turned around and fought their way back to shore. One swimmer waved his hands for help and was rescued by the swim patrol—the race had just begun.
Neal and I looked at each other and I said, “Do you think Max will be okay?” We watched for few minutes to see if he was one of the swimmers that was returning to shore. I told Neal that we never discussed what to do if he couldn’t finish. Max has no choice but to finish because he wouldn’t know how to find us if he didn’t.
As the race excitement played out, a reporter sauntered over to our little group and began asking us questions about the race. She continued to interview the boys while taking copious notes. She finished up by making certain that she had David, Max and John’s names correctly spelled and told us to look for her report in the Ocean City Sentinel next week.
David 22:11 13 out of 20 swimmers in his age group
After saying goodbye, I recalled five years earlier when we made the trek to Ocean City, NJ for Taylor to participate in the Ocean Mile Swim. Taylor, David and Max had just begun swimming for the Northampton swim team, and as one of the swim team activities, the older swimmers were encouraged to sign-up for the Mile Ocean Swim. Taylor was eager to sign-up, but I promptly said, “No. I’m worried about sharks.” Earlier that year, there was a shark attack just off the Ocean City beach, and of course, the newspaper account reported that the shore is “teaming with sharks.” A few days later, I picked Taylor up from swim practice, and she informed me that everyone laughed at her when she reported that her mother was worried about sharks.
I overcame my shark phobia, and Taylor joined with her team for the mile swim. It turned out to be a delightful activity for our family. John, his son Jeff and friend Alec signed up to swim as well. They were in the first heat, so all were at the end to cheer Taylor onto a strong finish.
As these fond memories surfaced, I decided to make it work for Max and David to participate. David immediately agreed to sign-up. He is a super strong swimmer and always up for a challenge. Max adamantly said, “Mom, don’t sign me up!”
Max is my boy that always needs a strong push to try something new or challenging. Once he breaks through his fear and starts the challenge, he always finishes strong singing along the way “that was the best thing ever.” I placated his reluctance and told him he didn’t have to swim. Then, I promptly asked his swim team coach to work on changing his mind. The next day after swim practice, Max jumped in the car and said “Coach Stacy says that we swim more than 2 miles every day at practice.” After a great deal of cajoling, coaxing, and cheering, Max reluctantly agreed to sign-up on our drive to Ocean City.
Upon registration, we learned that the water temperature was 63 degrees, and the mile swim was shortened to ¾ mile due to the cold water temperatures. The air temperature was 100—how could the water be so frigid?
We caught up with John and learned that David left his jammer home. So we made a quick stop at Hoyt’s 5 and 10, and amazingly found a jammer for David. We then maneuvered through traffic and dropped the swimmers off at 40th street—the starting point.
As we made our way back to the truck, I thought to myself “What have I done? What if Max gets into trouble and the patrol doesn’t get to him in time?"
We hurried to the end and noticed that several swimmers had already finished. They were shaking and talking about the icy water. Elapse time was around 20 minutes, so our swimmers should be running up the beach any time. John was first out followed shortly by David. They both said the water was freezing, and John said he thought about quitting during the first couple minutes. My anxiety began to increase as I worried about Max and his ability to complete the race. Just as we thought Max may have been pulled out and sitting in one of the boats, he came running up the beach. I shouted with excitement and reached for my camera. Max, being embarrassed to hear his mom cheer him on, ran behind another swimmer, allowing me to capture a picture of just his back. Max said that when he first jumped in the water, he went completely numb and just started to swim. I asked Max if he thought about quitting to which he replied, “No, because you taught us to persevere and quitting was not an option.”
I couldn’t have been more proud of Max and David. I saw several swimmers quit as the race began and a few other swimmers requiring medical attention for what appeared to be hyperthermia. However, my boys finished—it was hard, it was cold and but they finished strong!
Final Times
John 20:38 13 out of 29 swimmers in his age group
Max 26:31 13 out of 18 swimmers in his age group
What a coincidence—they all ranked 13th in their age groups!
Tuesday, July 12, 2011
Tuesday, June 14, 2011
Follow-up to the Backpack Trip
Check out this short video-- It really captures the fun!
2011 Water Gap Hike
2011 Water Gap Hike
Saturday, April 23, 2011
Backpack Camping Trip
It has been quite the production preparing for this two-day event. Several weeks ago boxes started being delivered to our front door—a tent, camp stove, hiking boots, sleeping bags. All of which were necessary for the camping trip. In addition, there were several trips to REI and more trips to REI for other camping items. I was quickly learning that the backpacking industry is a major sub-economy, and the backpacking extremists do not know the meaning of RECESSION. Nonetheless, the boys will eventually be spending a week backpacking through the Appalachians, and I do want them to be prepared! So I have been massaging and trimming the budget in an effort for them to purchase all the "right" gear. Last Wednesday night was what Neal called "controlled chaos;" aka pack inspection Max was a minimalist and only packed what he thought was truly essential. However, his definition of essential was quite a bit different than his Scoutmaster's. There were several "essential" items missing from his pack. David, having a little more experience, faired quite a bit better with his pack inspection. After one more trip to Dick's and some late-night list checking, the boys' backpacks were filled to capacity and left by the door for an early morning quick departure. It's not every day you get to participate in a 20-mile backpacking trip.
Late Friday afternoon, I received a photo and an abbreviated text—"12 miles. Everyone is great." Today, however, will be the real test—it is pouring rain and temperatures around 47. I'll try to have a pot of warm broccoli soup waiting for them upon their return. I'm sure they'll be drenched, cold and hungry. I can't wait for some more "controlled chaos!"
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