family photo

family photo

Monday, March 30, 2015

Drinking Fountain

While at kangaroo zoo William wasn't really a fan of the bouncy houses. However, he had a lot of fun playing with the drinking fountain. He would push the button and when he moved his hand to grab the water it would turn off. He tried to catch the water for the longest time.

Kangaroo Zoo

We didn't have anything big or fancy planned for spring break, but we still wanted to be able to have a little fun. I had a coupon for kangaroo zoo. We have been there once before with my brother and the kids had a blast, so we thought we try it again. 

William was the funniest. He was really hesitant to do anything. We had to literally drag him in and as long as we stayed there, he would venture a little and I do mean a little. Once in and a few steps around he found he way back out. 
Gabbi and Owen on the other hand, had a blast. They were chasing each other around the entire place, bouncing from one bounce house to the next. They couldn't get enough. 
Both Gabbi and Owen were very disappointed when it was time to leave. They could have played all day at that place, but William was done and wanted to leave. So instead of hearing him cry and whine we dragged all the kids out the door.

I probably shouldn't share this, but its something that I thought was funny, so I shall. 

Owen had to go to the bathroom so he ran to the bathroom. He did great and he made it, sadly he didn't sit back far enough and peed all over his pants and underwear. He was so sad. "I thought I was on the potty," he said. Luckily we were close to Walmart, just a block away, and I was able to get him some underwear and a pair of pants.

Saturday, March 28, 2015

Lagoon, opening day

This year instead of a big vacation, we decided to get Lagoon season passes. We were really excited to be able to take the kids. We've always gone at least once a year with Ben's mom for her work appreciation day and the kids always have so much fun. This was going to be an awesome summer. 

We couldn't wait for it to open and we like many others were there for opening day. The lines to get in the park were crazy, not to mention the season pass holders picture line. But once we got through the line it was time for fun. 

We first headed to the kiddie land. We first headed to one of Owen's favorite rides, the spaceships. We were lucky to be able to have William ride, because we didn't get him a pass, but the ride operator told us that we could have him ride just once. He loved it. Sadly that didn't change our mind on whether or not to get William a pass. He can't ride much and what he could he didn't need a pass for.
Afterwards we convinced the kids to ride the Jumping Dragon. Gabbi was excited, Owen not so much. Luckily Gabbi was tall enough to ride herself so Ben or I could ride with Owen. Once the ride started he was still a little unsure, but when he got off he said it was a lot a fun and wanted to go again.
One of the new rides we tried was the Red Rock Rally. They are jeeps that go around in a circle. They kind of whip you around the corners like on the Wild mouse. The kids couldn't stop laughing every time the were thrown around a corner.
We then walked a little bit around the kiddie land. Some of the rides had really long lines so we skipped them for another day, the blessing of having season passes.

We then went on the kid swings. They wanted me to ride for them, but I'm pretty sure I wouldn't be able to fit my bum in those swings and if I could, I would probably have a hard time getting out. The kids had fun on the swings though. They both love the swings at the parks and this was no different.
After some kiddie land rides, Ben took Gabbi and they went to ride some of the bigger kid rides that Owen is too short for. They went on the Wild Mouse, Music Land Express, and one other that I can't remember. Gabbi was not a fan of the Wild Mouse and swore she'd never go on it again.

While they were off on ride, I took the boys on a few as well. We first went on the Merry-go-round. William was a little unsure of the giant horse I put him on, but once the ride was going he had a big grin on his face. Once we were done with the Merry-go-round we went on the helicopters, the shooting spaceships, and the airplanes.
When we got back together we walked around for a little bit just to look at some of the things that have changed since we were last there.
We had been there for about 3 hours and William was getting restless. So we decided to hit up one more ride. Gabbi loved Music Land Express so we walked over there and luckily Owen was tall enough with a parent to ride, so we took turns taking the kids. While we were taking turns taking the kids on the ride, we walked William around and to our surprise he fell asleep.
After we were done riding we headed to the gate to leave for the day. We got lots of people saying how cute William was. I do have to admit, he's a cutie when he's asleep.
The kids were so mad when we told them that we were leaving. They didn't understand that we could come back whenever we wanted. Reluctantly they walked to the car and all the way home they kept asking us when we could go again.

Monday, March 23, 2015

Hat

I couldn't help but take a picture. I was cleaning out the diaper bag and it had an extra pull up in it from when Owen was potty training. William grabbed it and decided that he wanted to wear it like a hat. He cracks me up. He walked around with that pull up on his head for the longest time.

Playing, not playing in the snow

We finally got some snow. It was crazy chaotic on the roads, but there was enough to play in. Owen asked if he could play in the snow, so we dressed him in his snow clothes and he headed outside. 

He took one step in the backyard and feel in the snow. He was mortified. He didn't like be in the snow. He didn't want to step in at all and tried his best not to walk in. I was a little taken back when he didn't want to get in the snow, but wanted to play in the snow. He begged me to shovel the back patio so he could still play outside, but not in the snow. I reluctantly did and he just watched  me and waited to be done before he started to play. 
After a while of playing he finally dared to get in the snow.
Overall he had a lot of fun, but got pretty cold and wanted to go back inside and warm up.

Friday, March 20, 2015

Sleep walking

I have been meaning to write about this for a long time, but keep forgetting.

Gabbi is a sleep walker. It's pretty creepy sometimes too. There will be nights that I can hear movement outside our bedroom door, but that's it. No lights are turned on, to toilet flushes, etc. Then there are nights were she's talking as she's walking around, that's not any better.

There have been a few nights where I will walk out to see what the movement is, I'll see her, and ask her what she's doing. Sometimes she doesn't answer and just stares at me. Then she'll turns around and go back down to  her room.

One night I came out, she was standing right outside our door. I asked her what she was doing and she said she didn't know. I told her to go back to bed. I then went back to bed and 10 minutes later noticed that there was a light on. I walked into the kitchen and Gabbi was sitting at the kitchen table. I asked her why she was at the table. She said she was waiting for breakfast. I told her breakfast was a long time away. She looked at me with this blank stare and the stumbling walked back down to her room.

Sometimes I worry that she will get hurt walking around in the dark, other times I'm so dead tired that I don't even notice.

The worse one was when she came into our room one night, I didn't hear her at all. Then I rolled over and for some reason opened my eyes for a split second and all I saw was the shadow. It then quickly walked away. I wanted to scream, but I didn't want to scare her. I ended up having to turn on a happy movie to go back to sleep. Totally reminded me of the ring creature. I know, that's sad to think of our daughter that way.

I hope as she gets older the sleep walking will stop. Ben apparently slept walk, but he doesn't do it now. So I have high hopes that she will turn out okay. 

Sunday, March 15, 2015

Parenting

I'm a Relief Society teacher and have been for almost a year now. I'm okay, but still feel so frantic when I teach. Everyone is so nice though, which makes it not so terrifying.

This month's lesson has been on Parenting and making the parent the prime gospel teacher. I have enjoyed preparing this lesson because I have learned a lot. I was able to find pages and pages of quote to parents that are very inspiring.

I've looked at what Ben and I teach and do in our home, but feel that we are lacking in someway. I know that I need to be better spiritually. I don't read my scripture as much as I should, I don't pray as often as I should. There are many places where I need to pick up the slack. I tell myself that I'm doing okay and tomorrow will be better then today. Then I remind myself that those are just excuses for not doing what I should.

I know that I need to be better, I just need to remind myself that I need to be better. If not for myself for our kids. I need to be a better example for them. I want them to be able to have a Christ center life and know the things that I know.

The other night when we were having Family Home Evening, Ben asked me to share my testimony. I told him I didn't want to. I shouldn't have said that. I should have happily said yes. Our kids need to know that I have a testimony, otherwise how will there's turn out.

I did end up sharing my testimony to them, but they were being very rude and mocking the things that I was saying, which make me not want to do that again. But I know that they didn't understand what they were doing and that should never stop me from letting my children know that I do have a testimony.

Tuesday, March 10, 2015

Goal

I have read so many articles and heard lots of advice from friends and family who have all experienced the same challenge. I've tried my hardest to find something that will work for me to better tackle this frustration I have in myself.

I have learned a lot reading these articles and have thought long and hard about all the suggestions I've heard, been told, and read about. I just can't decided what would work best for me. I just don't know. I'll figure something out, eventually.

Right now, I'm just working on breaks. I have to take a break from the kids when I can't handle it. I just walk out of the room. That is very hard because I just want them to behave and not fight with me on everything. Sadly I've come to realize that I am the reason they are fighting with me. They are just acting how I act and that just makes me feel like dirt. So for my kids sake, I've really got to get a handle on this sooner then later. I don't want them to grow up having the same struggles as I have.

Monday, March 9, 2015

Danny's Butterflies

Here's the story that Ben found in the Friend. 

Danny’s Butterfly

“Today we’re going to start raising butterflies,” our den mother, Sister Sills, said.
“Butterflies!” whooped my brother, Danny. He jumped up and ran in a big circle, waving his arms as if they were wings.

“Danny,” I hissed. “Sit.”

Danny stopped and looked around. Everybody else was sitting down, so Danny sat down, too. But he kept flapping his arms.

Sometimes it’s really embarrassing to have Danny for a brother. He’s actually two years older than me, but he was born with Down’s syndrome, so he doesn’t do everything at the same age as everyone else. Danny just waits until he’s ready. That’s why he’s in my Cub Scout den.

I love him, and I try to help him, but sometimes I get mad because he’s so slow at everything. Danny never complains when I do things without him, but he looks sad. I don’t like him to be sad, so I try to be patient with him.

Sister Sills explained how we were going to raise our butterflies. Then we made butterfly houses—shoe boxes with plastic windows and air holes. We also filled clear plastic cups with chopped green leaves that Sister Sills called “caterpillar food.” We called it “green goo.”

The caterpillars were so small that Sister Sills used a paintbrush to put them into our cups. We put a lid with air holes on the cups.

“That’s a butterfly?” Danny asked.

“It will turn into a butterfly, Danny,” Sister Sills told him. “Then it will fly.”

“Wow!” Danny exclaimed.

We each took two caterpillars home. Those little things ate and ate. We had to add more chopped leaves. I couldn't believe how fast they grew. Finally they hung upside down from the lids of their cups and shed their fuzzy skins. It was like watching someone wriggle out of a very tight snowsuit. Underneath was a smooth, green chrysalis (a covering that shelters the caterpillar while it turns into a butterfly).

We moved the lids with the chrysalises attached to them to our butterfly houses and waited and waited for nearly two weeks. Danny was the first one to notice when something happened. “I got a butterfly!” he squealed. Then he ran around the room flapping his arms. This time, I just let him.

During the next day, all four butterflies emerged. We watched them exercise their new wings, and we fed them sugar water sprinkled on flowers for three days. Then we took them outside to set them free.

At first, the butterflies didn't know what to think of the sunshine and the wind. Then one took off, and then another and another. We watched them flutter around our yard until they were out of sight.

When we looked back down, there was still one butterfly left. I gently picked him up on my finger. “Fly,” I ordered. But the butterfly stayed perched right where he was.

“I don’t think he can fly,” Dad said, looking closely. “He’s missing part of his wing.”

Mom bent down to look. “He has only four legs,” she said. “He’s supposed to have six.”
“So what do we do now?” I asked.

“I think we’d better keep him,” Dad said. “He’ll get eaten by a bird or something if we leave him out here. He probably won’t live very long, anyway.”

“I’ll take care of him,” Danny said.

I wasn't sure about that. Sometimes Danny breaks things because he has a hard time being careful. I didn’t think he could take care of something as tiny as a butterfly without squishing it. But Dad said, “Let him try.”
Every day, Danny fed the butterfly. And every day he took it out for a walk. “Butterflies don’t need walks,” I said.

“My butterfly does,” Danny said. “He needs to learn to fly. Sister Sills said so.”

“That butterfly is never going to learn to fly. He’s missing half a wing,” I pointed out.

“It’s OK,” Danny said. “He’s trying.”

That’s what Danny always said when the poor butterfly waved its wings. I couldn't believe how patient and gentle he was. Every day he took the butterfly outside on his finger to exercise its wings. Sometimes it stepped out onto a flower to eat.

Then one day, in a puff of wind, the butterfly flew off Danny’s finger and circled the apple tree twice before landing in the grass. There it fluttered helplessly until Danny picked it up. But as soon as he did, it spread its wings and tried again.

“He flew!” Danny exclaimed. “He flew! He tried and tried, and he flew!” I’d never seen Danny so excited.
Danny took the butterfly outside to fly every day until it got old and its wings lost so many scales that you could see right through them. Finally it died. Dad helped Danny bury it. I was afraid Danny would be really upset, but he wasn't. He was smiling. “Heavenly Father will give my butterfly new, strong wings,” he said, “because he tried!”

I still get impatient sometimes when Danny is slow or he forgets how to behave or he does something really silly. But when I do, I remember how kind Danny was to that poor butterfly and I say to myself, “It’s OK—he’s trying.” I figure if I work really hard, I can be as patient and kind as Danny.

FHE Butterflies

Patience is not passive resignation, nor is it failing to act because of our fears. Patience means active waiting and enduring.               
                       President Dieter F. Uchtdorf

As you may know from previous post, I have been working on not yelling at the kids and having more patience with them. It's a long process and I don't really think I've made much progress, but Im still working on it.

Ben has watched me struggle with this and has noticed that the kids don't make this goal any easier. He came across a story in the Friend Magazine and thought it would be good for Family Home Evening. It was a story about patience and being kind. The story was about a boy and some butterflies.

So as an activity for Family Home Evening after the lesson we let the kids color butterflies and tape them around the house as a reminder. 
The next morning they both remembered what they butterflies were for, but if you were to ask them now (even thought there still hanging) I don't think they could tell you what there for.

Saturday, March 7, 2015

2nd lost tooth

Almost 2 weeks later Gabbi complained enough about her tooth that Ben asked is she wanted it out. She had to think about it for a little bit then finally told him yes. He warned her that once they started they couldn't stop. She told him to pull it.

They tried to do the string around the tooth, but the string just wouldn't stay on the tooth. So he pulled it how the Dentist told him to. After a few minuets of whining and screaming for him to not to anymore, it was out and she had a smile on her face. 
All the hard work and whining paid off, the tooth fairy again brought 4 quarters for her tooth.

Monday, March 2, 2015

Dr. Suess Birthday

Gabbi's class was also able to celebrate Dr. Suess's birthday. They had a small party in class where they got an activity book full of Dr. Suess games and coloring pages, they did a craft, and even got a special Dr. Suess treat. Gabbi had so much fun, I wish I would have been able to volunteer and help out. It sounded like a lot of fun.