Sunday, December 11, 2011

The Double Mohawk

What will this boy think of next? Should we take a poll on what the NEXT hairstyle will be???

Thursday, November 17, 2011

Say WHAT???

I have to admit to a certain thrill over the fact that Charlie's English is now good enough that we can communicate by text message on our phones rather than depending on having a videophone connection between school, office, and home.  It makes things so much more flexible.

Yesterday morning, however, I was reminded that we still have a long way to go.  As I arrived to work thinking the day had gotten off to a good start, I received the following text message from Charlie.

"I plastic teen fall in sink."

Huh???  So I sent him a note back:  I don't understand.

"Just I fall the plastic teen in sink of deep hole."

So I sent another note:  I think you are using the wrong word.  Teen is a person age 13-19.  What do you mean?

At this point, he must have asked a friend for some help, because the next message came through perfectly.

"I mean retainer fall in sink."

Uh-oh, now I get it.  This is bad news.  As any parent who has lived through the process of a child with orthodontic appliances knows, retainers are expensive. 

The radio station I listen to a few days ago had a listener call-in session where people were talking about things they have had to go dumpster diving for, and retainers popped up frequently.  I should have known better than to congratulate myself over the fact that Charlie had never thrown his away like that...

No, he washes his down the sink.  They got a plumber to check the pipes, but the retainer was already washed through, probably out in the Atlantic Ocean by then. 

We have emergency orthodontic appointments today to get the impression molded and the new appliance made.  Thank goodness there is a little money left in my HSA!!

Monday, August 29, 2011

Goodnight, Irene

We were right along the path that Irene was due to hit.  As a member of the Hopkins "Go Team," I take disaster preparedness pretty seriously.  I was reviewing our household plan and current level of preparedness, and decided to seek Oldest Son's review to see if he had anything to add.  Since we were both at work, I sent him a list of where we stood and what last-minute things I was picking up on the way home from work.  Here is the list I received back from him:
  • Also charge Kindles and iPods. Make sure Kindles are set with wireless off, and iPods are on Repeat None to conserve power.
  • Unplug your laptop and printer when not in use. Mine should be fine until the outage, what with the UPS.
  • Gas up the bikes too, if it’s not raining when we get home.
  • Make sure any important documents exist locally, in the cloud, and on hardcopy.
  • We might also want to stock up on handguns, shotguns, long-range sniper rifles, ammo, throwing knives, body armor, concussion grenades, land mines, trip wire, portable generators, ATVs and EMP devices in case the zombies, robots, ninjas, demons, secret dark magicians, clone armies, scientifically resurrected velociraptors or all of the above choose this time of chaos and vulnerability to strike.
  • Oh, and protein bars. Can’t run a guerilla war against the clone armies without protein bars.

Saturday, August 20, 2011

HSAs: Two down, two to go

We've been dying all summer to get the results of the High School Assessment tests Charlie took back in May.

All high school students have to pass 4 HSAs in order to graduate.  There is an alternate way for special needs students to graduate (called "Bridge Projects") if they don't pass all the HSAs, but colleges don't look as kindly upon students who didn't actually pass the HSAs. 

Charlie passed the Algebra HSA last year on the second attempt.  We knew English would be a problem.  The first time he took it, he was around 60-70 points from being able to pass.  The second time he took it, he was still 40 points away from passing.  Last May, he took the English one again and he took the US Government HSA, as well (which is about to be phased out, but would be really great if he passed). 

We just got the results.  He passed the Government HSA with a good margin, and he is now WITHIN 9 POINTS of passing the English.  He is just thrilled!  He is scheduled to take it again in October, and since he has been working with a tutor all summer and learning some grammar, he really feels he will be able to pass it this time.  Then the only one left would be Biology (which he is taking this fall, and already knows and likes the teacher he will be taking it with). 

So, we now have two down and two to go, and he is feeling more confident about being able to pass the remaining two.

I decided this was something we just had to make a big deal out of, so I went out and bought a Snickers Ice-Cream cake and put two candles on it.  We'll just keep up that tradition until he passes the last one, when we'll have 4 candles and some sort of little present to go with it. 

Gotta celebrate the small victories, KWIM?  Wahoo!!

Monday, August 1, 2011

Conversation @ Costco

So, do you want that huge, plush, overstuffed bear you're standing there hugging to death?

No, it's fine.

Sure?

Yeah, let's get checked out.

(after we have checked out and the goodies from Costco are loaded in the car):
Y'know, I think maybe I want that bear for Christmas.

This store doesn't work that way. If you see it, you like it, you want it, you gotta buy it now, because they won't get it again for a long time.

Okay, let's go back and get it.  Pleeeeeease???

So we get out of the car, leaving our perishables in the 100-degree heat in the back of the car, and head back into the store.  On the way, he suddenly hurtles himself into my arms and gives me a big hug.

Some moms will do absolutely anything for hugs.

Ten minutes later, we are exiting Costco for the SECOND time, him hugging to his chest a stuffed bear that is almost as big as he is (and people are doing the swivel-head thing to get a second look at this gangly teen-ager blissfully snuggling into this bear's neck), and I'm left ruminating about the fact that he missed out on this kind of stuff throughout his whole childhood and that there is still a trace of that abandoned little 3-year-old in there who just wants a mommy and a teddy bear.

Sunday, July 10, 2011

Who is that MAN in my house?

Charlie's birthday was a couple of days ago--he just turned 18.  Where did the time go?  Wasn't it just a few jet-lagged days ago that we got back from China with a 13-year-old???

He has done an amazing amount of growing up in a very short period of time.  But he's still rather gullible.

I'm afraid I've inherited a mean streak about gift-giving jokes from my parents. They are the absolute masters of the game. They once managed to hide a piano for Christmas right in the living room--had me convinced it was something else entirely and I had to keep the secret from my little sister. I was so gullible back in the day...

We had Charlie's birthday dinner/party tonight.  Rick and I had gotten him a (used) Kindle, and I had loaded a whole bunch of free books (Goosebumps, Animorphs, Hardy Boys, etc.) on it.  Everyone else gave him some sort of accessory to go with it. 

He had said about a week prior to his birthday that he wanted a Kindle, 'cause he sees Rick and me sitting around reading all the time and wants to be just like us, I guess.  We already had it by then--this has been in the works for a couple of months.  When he said he wanted one, too, I gave him a bunch of stuff about how expensive they were and there's just no way we could afford to get him one.  He bought it, hook, line, and sinker, since he sees me constantly trying to cut corners and save pennies.

So, party time.  We started with the accessories.  He opened the reading light from my former husband, Ted.  Wasn't sure what it was, so we explained that it was for a Kindle, and now he would be ready once he had saved up enough money to buy his Kindle to read in the dark.  He nodded sagely.  Good to be prepared ahead of time.  Then he opened the Amazon gift card from his godfather--oh, wow, this is so you can decide ahead of time what books you want while you're saving up for that Kindle.  Then Rick gave him the leather cover....hey, cool, now you even have a cover to protect that Kindle you're saving up for! 

Once he'd gotten all the accessories, we switched to non-Kindle-related presents.  I gave him the information on a jewelry class he wanted to go to that month (more about jewelry later!), and my parents gave him a nice little wad of cash to put towards the class supplies he would be needing, since this would be a somewhat pricey endeavor.  His godfather's twin sister and her partner gave him a gift card to one of the craft shops where he loves to shop for beads.  So he figured the Kindle bonanza was over.

He still never suspected, when I gave him an over-sized box that actually had the itty, bitty Kindle inside, what was really in there.  His jaw dropped and his eyes bugged out, like he couldn't believe what he was seeing.  Wish I had a picture of that face, it was great. 

Nice party.  I think he'll enjoy being 18.

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

The Next Belt/Mohawk Minus

Charlie is ready to test for his next belt. This one would add a black stripe to his brown belt, signifying that he is now a first-grade brown, the highest level prior to black.

He was originally going to attempt it back in March, but his instructor felt that he should wait one more session so that he could fine-tune things and turn in a more perfect performance. Charlie wisely and graciously accepted this wisdom and waited and honed his routines and skills. He is now as ready as he could possibly be.

But he has this mohawk. And it's grown longer since the prom. I warned him the judges wouldn't take him seriously if they were distracted by this wild hairdo--they wouldn't be able to concentrate on how precise his moves were if all they could see was an overgrown mohawk flopping in the wind.

So Charlie promised he was going to shave it off prior to the test.

He came home the weekend prior to the test with his newest "do," which his roommate at the dorm had ever-so-kindly helped him out with.
I told him that was even worse than the mohawk...it looked like he had a bottle brush on his head. He went back to school on Monday saying he would get his friend to cut the rest off before coming home on Wednesday (the night of the test).

He came home Wednesday and still had the bottle brush on his head.

"What happened? Why do you still have that mess on top of your head?"

"Roommate didn't bring scissors back."

"C'mere boy..."

I'm no hairdresser, as my former husband would testify. (He once came to me in desperation with a pair of scissors in hand, asked me to get the hair off his collar and his ears because he had an inspection the next morning. By the time I finished, he passed inspection, but hid the scissors where I would never, ever find them again.)

But desperate times called for desperate measures--the test starts in an hour. I grabbed the scissors my mother uses to cut my hair, and I started hacking. Can't be too hard, right?

Twenty minutes later, I had the top reasonably level all over.

He absolutely refused to let me cut off the orange rat-tail in the back. He said the judges would get over it.

Sure enough, they did. He turned in a practically perfect performance and got his first-grade brown. Now he can actually start studying for black.

He also won the performance achievement trophy for having such a flawless test performance. I was told later that when the judges were voting between him and the other candidate of choice for the trophy, every single vote went to Charlie--even the other person's instructor.

Saturday, June 4, 2011

Graduation

Guess what?  A post that isn't about the boys!

I FINALLY finished practicum and managed to CLEP the one remaining course I needed for my degree.  This was a special day for me, considering that almost a year ago I was in the ICU recovering from a heart attack and an appendectomy.  I didn't really expect this to hit me, since I wasn't emotional at my high-school graduation and I've interpreted several other graduations since, and I was fine through the whole graduation ceremony (even when the friend sitting with my parents blew an air horn when they had the summa cum laude graduates stand to be recognized), but when we processed back out and there were all of our faculty lining the pathway we had to walk back to the disrobing location, and they were applauding for us, I started crying.  Really, that's why my nose is so red in the photo and I look like I'd had a little too much wine too early in the day. 
These pix show the people who made it all possible.

Top: Oldest Son (Rick) and ChinaBoi (Charlie). They have both supported me and made it possible for me to go to classes in all the little ways that add up to so much--taking care of my dogs after work on nights when I've had to go straight from work to class, cooking me dinner when it looked like I would come home from a late-night class and go straight to bed without eating at all, and forgiving me when I didn't have enough energy to keep up with both work and school and still be supermom.

Bottom: My parents, who financed my education even though I'm a little long in the tooth and should be able to stand on my own two feet financially by now. Finances have been so tight since the adoption that I would NEVER be standing here in this stupid hat if they had not provided the funds (and the encouragement) to get this done.

I think it's finally time to rest and spend some quality time with the boys.

Thursday, May 26, 2011

Prom Blackmail

When we went to get Charlie's tux for this year's prom, Men's Wearhouse was having BOGO sale.  After looking at the price of the tuxes, I started doing some mental arithmetic.  Charlie has 3 more proms to get through (including this one).  Renting a tux every year would come up to more than just buying one, and if we bought one, he would still have a tux left at the end of 3 years that he could sell if he wasn't ever going to use it again...AND he would have a nice business suit, too!  Didn't take much to sell me, huh?

So we bought a tux and a suit.  Next year, all he will have to buy is a different colored tie and pocket square, and he'll be set. 

Tux: $450
Shoes: $70
Prom ticket: $45
Flowers: $30
Picture of him wearing a tuxedo with a mohawk for future blackmail purposes: PRICELESS!!!!


Saturday, May 21, 2011

Return of the Mohawk

Oh, dear, I knew it would happen again. If you noticed in the picture in the last blog post, Charlie's hair went orange again--all over this time.

Sure enough, he decided the weather is warm enough, he wants his mohawk back.  Once the black started growing in, he had the hairdresser shave it.  The stripe runs a different way now...

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

So proud of ChinaBoi. Some kid at the dorm tried to sucker punch him, and Charlie caught the punch, put him in a wrist lock, and sat him down. 

What I'm proud of isn't that he defended himself--I expect that, since we are a martial arts family--but that he controlled the situation and didn't snap the kid's wrist (which he is more than capable of doing).

Funny, but his brother had a similar episode way back when he was blue belt.  Rick had been bullied a lot in school, and he never let anyone know that he took martial arts because he was afraid they'd come after him even worse.  But one day at the bus stop, some kid put him in a head lock, and instinct and training took over--Rick used his jujitsu moves to escape and gain control of the other kid and very gently forced him down to the ground.  By the time he realized what he had done, the other kids had just backed up in a circle and fallen silent.  He never had another problem with being bullied again.

I'm very grateful that our karate association teaches not only how, but how far. 

Saturday, May 14, 2011

The Skunk

Lord help us all.  Oldest Son just bought a bike.

No, not a bicycle.  A motorcycle.

I knew he would.  He's been fascinated by them forever, and he was very, very jealous when I got one a few years ago. 

I knew, at some point, he would find a way to learn, and I was deathly afraid that he would just go and learn the basics from a friend and then take the test at MVA and not have any REAL knowledge of how to ride safely.  And even in a car, his driving leaves a lot to be desired, IMHO.

So for his birthday, I sent him to the Motorcyle Safety Foundation 3-day training course.  I figure if he's going to get a license, I can at least make sure he gets it as safely as possible and gets all the knowledge I can wish for him so that he has a fighting chance of staying alive out there. 

He passed and got his license, and withdrew every cent he could afford to sink into it from the bank and started looking for a deal. 

Prior to taking the MSF course, he wanted a crotch rocket.  But afterwards, he decided he wanted a cruiser, after all.  In a mature moment (rare when it comes to thinking about motorcycles!) he realized that riding in the forward posture on a crotch rocket gives the rider a more aggressive mentality, and that the straight-up posture of a cruiser gave a more laid-back attitude about the ride.  (THANK YOU, MSF!!!!)

But he was so desperate that he was considering bikes that I wouldn't have ridden for even a test drive if you'd paid me--one that had been laid down (motorcycle-ese for a bike that hits the ground while still in motion), one that had 88K miles.  I finally managed to talk him out of them and put his money back in the bank and just sit back, because a good deal would come to him when the time was right, just as it had when I got my Rebel. 

Sure enough, a couple weeks later, he goes to look at a Suzuki Volusia Intruder he found on CraigsList.  He gets the guy to ride it out to the house for him, since he doesn't want his first ride to be on someone else's tags (just in case!), and a couple of days later he has it tagged and on the road.

It's nick-named "The Skunk" for obvious reasons once you see it.  Here's a link to the YouTube vid the seller posted.  Rick's bike

He got a good deal. I think he's got a keeper. 

And most important, since it is bigger and badder than mine, he has managed to reclaim the "macho" title of the household.

Saturday, April 30, 2011

ERKC Trophy


Charlie competed in the Eastern Regional Karate Championships today.  He took a 2nd place trophy in kata and got wiped out in the first round on fighting.  He was disappointed in the fighting, not because he didn't win, but because it meant he was done after the first two minutes and couldn't fight any more. 

When we got out to the car, I said something about him needing a piece of furniture to keep all these trophies he has racked up in karate, and just how many do you have now, anyway?  (He keeps them squirreled away up in his room, so I never see them.)  I figured there must be 9 or so by now.

He thinks for a minute....18. 

Really?   18????

Wow!!!  He really DOES need a piece of furniture just for the trophies!

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Death of an Acura

Got the call today that every parent dreads...when your kid has been in an accident.

Not Charlie.  This was Oldest Son, Rick.  I was at the office and saw his cell phone number flash on the display, but I was already on the phone and couldn't get rid of the other caller fast enough--it went to voice mail.  Rick NEVER calls me at work.  He is a child of the Age of IT, and he always either e-mails or texts.  And we had a really wicked ice storm today....I got rid of the call as fast as I could and switched into voice mail, only to hear a very shaky and thready, panicky-sounding Rick.  I couldn't even make out all of the words, he was talking so fast and there was so much background noise, but I clearly made out the phrase "flipped the car."  When I called him back, I still couldn't understand half of what he was saying, but I managed to get enough to find out where he was, and I just left everything and flew out of the office. 

Didn't get the full story until I actually got to him.  Short version:  He skidded on an ice patch, did a 360+, and his tail end caught the guardrail, flipped him end-over.  He was belted, so he ended up hanging upside-down from the floor, and managed to undo his seatbelt and crawl out. 

The car, of course, was totalled.  But he was completely unhurt. 

Rick doesn't believe in God (or if he does, in a very nebulous way), but he ought to.  There's simply no one else to thank for the ability to walk away from this.