Tuesday, March 30, 2010

Happy Anniversary to me....

So today is Danny and my 3rd anniversary.  

Are we celebrating it with a night out on the town?
No.

Are we staring lovingly into each others eyes, strengthening the bond between us?
No.

Are we enjoying a peaceful evening at home watching our wedding video and pondering back on how far we have come together?
NO!

We are doing none of those things! Cursed surgery rotation!  He just started surgery yesterday and found out at 3pm that he had call tonight.  He kissed me goodbye at 5:30 this morning while I was in bed, and I won't see him again until tomorrow night around 7pm (hopefully) at which time he will probably head straight up to bed so he will be rested enough to get up at 5am and start again.  Sound fun?

So since I don't get to spend time with him, I will blog about him.

Just a few of the reasons I love Danny:
~Every day he has some new nickname for me that makes me smile.
~If we're both really busy working on projects, he's always the one to come over and make sure we spend some quality time together (even if I get frustrated at the time because he is interrupting me).
~I don't think I'm a moody person, but next to him I seem bipolar. He always puts up with my antics and leaves me laughing in the end.
~He gets excited with me about my plants.
~If I'm really worn out from work he'll make us dinner and I love him for it...even if it is something really easy, like warming up the leftovers.
~He loves to sing songs, but instead of the real words he will always change to lyrics to be about me.

I LOVE you Danny!!  Thank you for 3 amazing years!

Thursday, March 18, 2010

Well hello there


They came!  Well, one of them anyway.  My broccoli popped up to say hello just three days after I planted them.  I love my little plants.  It's always been remarkable to me that something so little as a seed can start something so amazing.

I'm excitedly anticipating the rest of my plants, but I thought I would share this little accomplishment with the world.


I'm realizing that they are quickly going to outgrow their egg carton home.  I want to plant them in containers on my deck so no animals eat them before we can.  Any ideas of a cheap container I can put dirt and plants in so I don't have to spend $100 on a big planter?

Monday, March 15, 2010

Bring on the Veggies!

I've helped my mom in our garden when I was younger but I've never had my own garden until we moved here.  My very first gardening attempt was last August after we had settled into our new home here in Pittsburgh.  I started some bean seeds I had left over from my kindergarten class in Philly.  I went out and dug up the weeds by the side of my house and planted the beans there.  They grew great.  When the flowers came I knew the beans would not be far off.  Imagine my happiness as I was about to reap the fruits of my labor.  

Then imagine my dismay as I discovered one day after work that my plants had been torn up.  It looked like a kid had gone out there with scissors and cut the tops off each plant.  It took me a while, but I finally realized those beautiful deer that I love to watch roaming around in my neighborhood were feasting on MY BEANS! The plants grew more, and the deer ate more, and such was the story of my garden.  By the time it started getting cold outside I was able to go out and gather a bowl full of beans - enough for one meal.

This year I didn't know if I would bother with a garden.  What was the point if it was just going to be grazed over every week?  Deer eating our plants was definitely not a problem we had to deal with in Dallas.  At enrichment though we had a class all about container gardening.  The Mormons in the east are not going to let some critters stop us from our natural instincts.  It's in our blood to plant gardens, even if we don't get much return on our efforts.

So here we go.  Round 2.  I've been saving the egg cartons all winter, the seeds I got at enrichment, and I found some pots and some dirt at an estate sale.  Even if we have no money, I'll get those seeds in the dirt one way or another.  Now, the question is if I'll get any plants? 

To be continued...

Friday, March 12, 2010

It's here!

I found it!  The first signs of spring!  The snow has almost completely melted, and I found the first brave crocuses pushing up out of the ground.  They were just waiting for that darned snow to go away so they could make their grand entrance into the world.

So far, Pittsburgh has put on quite a show for the seasons we've been here.  We adored the summer of beautiful greens, bright sunshiney days that never got above 90, and living out on our deck barbecuing.  We were entranced in the fall as the most vibrant colors we've ever seen spread throughout the whole city and we watched as the gorgeous yellow, red, and orange leaves cover the ground.  We were astonished in the winter as we witnessed the biggest snowstorm we've ever been in.

We have learned that this city likes to do it big when it comes to the seasons.  Spring will be the last season to round out our first year in Pittsburgh.

I can't wait to see what it will bring!


Monday, March 1, 2010

from Kute-Slothful (or as you know it, K-12 )

As most of you know, I work as a building sub at an amazing elementary.  I've worked with all the kids from Kindergarten to 5th grade and know them all pretty well by now.  They all love me, and I love working with them.  They are all very respectful and nice, even the ones who come from rougher families.  Of course, I especially love the younger grades - that's why my certificate is EARLY childhood education.  Although I'm certified to teach preschool to 3rd grade, I don't even care to go that high.  Second grade is as high as I've ever wanted to teach.  Although, you don't always get a say in what grade you teach, and that is especially true when you are subbing.  You are asked to go all over the place as a sub, and in my position I could be in kindergarten one period, then up to 5th grade, then I head on over to special ed.  But I know the kids, and it's fun.  Today was different though.  My school had parent-teacher conference today so they didn't need me.  I could have just taken the day off and lounged around in my fuzzy socks all day, but I needed the money, especially with all these snow days and the fact that we just lost our food stamps!  I went to another district to see if they needed subs for today and they were looking for a sub to teach 12th grade social studies.  I've never wanted to sub in a high school before, but with all the experience I've had out of my comfort zone in 5th grade I figured it couldn't be too bad.  You can do anything for a day, right?  (Especially if they offer you $100.)  I guess I survived, so I shouldn't complain too much, but I should have stayed at home in my fuzzy socks.

To put this day into perspective for you: I've never taught a grade higher than 5th (in a terrific school), I've only been taught HOW to teach up to 3rd, and I've never attended public school higher than 2nd (I home schooled after that).  I had no idea what to expect going in today.

First period I had to supervise all the kids who had in school suspension.  Luckily for me, there was only one student in there today.  I thought it was going pretty well and that he was behaving very nicely until a lady came in to give him some work to do.  He simply said "no" while she was in the room, but after she left he started shouting that he wasn't going to do any work.  He tossed his work onto the next desk and sat there muttering under his breath for 3-4 minutes.  He quieted down for a while, but after another couple of minutes he stood up to come toward me. I thought he was going to ask me a polite question but instead he threw his work in the garbage and started muttering under his breath again.  I wasn't trying to make a good impression on anyone in the school, so I didn't feel like correcting his behavior.  I just ignored him and started practicing my cursive handwriting to pass the time.  As long as he wasn't hurting me, himself, the building, or anyone else, I didn't care.

And that's about how I spent the next 8 hours of the day; writing in cursive and ignoring the students' bad behavior.  I went back to the social studies classroom and every 45 minutes a new class would come in, ignore me while I tried to take roll, listen to about half the directions I gave them, and then continue to talk to their friends.  For all the personal finance classes we went down the hall to the computer lab so they could work on an essay about careers they thought they might like.  The moment I unlocked the door to the lab the kids scattered to a computer.  Some kids did their work.  They talked the whole time, but they worked.  Others spent the entire time watching movies, playing games, instant messaging, shopping on the Lids website, researching cell phones, or texting on cell phones. There was even one group of boys who were playing music on their computer speakers and singing along to it!  They didn't once work on their assignment.  Everyone knew I was watching them, but they didn't care.  And the language of these kids!  In 5th grade kids will tell if someone says "shut up" but I guess in 12th grade anything goes - every other sentence!

In American Government the kids were supposed to use rulers to draw time lines of important events.  Some kids used them to draw straight lines, but others saw them as good weapons.  I'll give them one thing, they were creative.  They used an ordinary ruler to battle in a sword fight, slice across arms (luckily it didn't break the skin), slap people, and choke people.  That time I decided I could no longer hide behind my desk and write a letter to my friend on a mission, I had to regulate.  I've learned I'm not very good at regulating.  I'm not a very stern person and I ended up smiling as I walked over there, and of course they couldn't take me seriously then.  They did stop using the rulers as weapons...for a little while.

How do such Kute Kindergartners turn into such Slothful Seniors?