Andrew’s surgery is tomorrow

My boy is having minor surgery on his herniated belly button tomorrow morning.   I’ve tried not to think a lot about his operation recently.  Writing out “minor” and “surgery” together seems a little oxymoronic when you’re talking about a wee 5-year-old cub.

Andrew’s surgeon is going to be Dr. Dennis Lund at the UW Children’s Hospital. We’re scheduled to check in at the hospital at 8:30 on Wednesday morning.  His surgery is scheduled at 10:05am.  I think they said that the surgery was scheduled to last around 45 minutes.

We’ve read lots of “…goes to the hospital books” include Curious George and Franklin.  We’ve talked about the sleeping medicine that will help him go to sleep for the operation, and Andrew has expressed considerable relief  that he won’t have any shots or the IV put in until he is asleep.  That said, he’s nervous and brave.

Andrew’s not supposed to eat solid foods after midnight, so I’m hoping that we can get up and out of the house tomorrow morning before he gets too worried about wanting breakfast.  Sylvia will be at Donna’s daycare all day on Wednesday, so that will leave Bryan and me free to focus on Andrew.

We get to be with our little guy in the operating room until he’s asleep, and then we’ll be with him again before he wakes up.  I’m anticipating that post-operation nausea might be an issue, but hopefully they’ll be able to help him with that.

The doctor said that he’ll have a bandage over his belly button for something like a couple weeks.  He’ll be out of school on Thursday, and then we can see how he’s feeling on Friday.

I’ll plan to post tomorrow if the hospital has internet.  Thanks for sending warm wishes our way.

And for those of your who are interested in the hospital we’ll be at, the video below is a promotional piece from the UW Children’s Hospital.  The doctor narrating is Andrew’s surgeon.

Bootcamping mornings and running nights

I just got back from a three-and-a-half mile run.  I should put an exclamation point at the end of that statement since I can’t remember the last time I ran that far.  It’s been pre-kids for sure:)

For the last nine weeks I’ve been attending Dustin Maher’s 5:30am boot camps.  And I loooove them.  Which feels like a little bit of an odd thing to love.  I think of myself as a person who loves good books.  I love delicious food.  I love to be outdoors.  But working out? HARD?  At 5:30am?  That seems to be a little weird thing to love.  Perhaps, then, I am a little odd, but I do indeed thrive on my early morning workouts.

It works really well for me to set my alarm and just get up and go without having to think or giving myself the opportunity to come up with excuses.  Just get up, get dressed, and go.  By the time I fully come-to, I’m at the park, visiting with my friends, and ready to follow the trainer’s instructions.  I’ve met some really great friends through Boot Camp.  Several of us joined for a 21-day challenge back in mid-July, and my favorite part of going is getting to see them.

I like the way Dustin’s workouts often leave me heaving and panting and sometimes nearly unable to drag my body back to the car.  They also leave me happy and positive and empowered.  When I get home at 6:30, I feel like I’ve accomplished something really substantial.  I feel strong (or sore) and good in my body.

I’ve been going to Bootcamp 5-6 days a week.  I’m also (mildly) training to run a couple 5Ks this fall (that’s about 3 miles).  As I’ve gone running in the evenings, I’ve been really happy with how easy it feels to run.  It’s clear that all the cardiovascular working out in the mornings is making running a much easier endeavor.

I’ve been mostly running 1.5 to 2.5 miles, but tonight I tried 3.5.  Yay!  The Vilas Zoo 5K run on Sept. 26 shouldn’t be a problem:)

My whole schedule is going to change this week, though.  My bootcamp membership ends on Wednesday (sniff!).  As much as I enjoy it, I can’t balance early morning workouts with my photography work in the evening.  Going to bed at 9am isn’t really compatible with running a business after the kids are in bed!

Fortunately, Dustin has an alternative fitness group – MamaTone.  They meet in mid-morning, and I’m going to try it out.  Childcare for Sylvia, a daytime workout for me…seems like it might make life a little more manageable!

I’ll be sad to be leaving my park-based workouts when in wake up with the stars and watch the sun rise.  But I’m glad to have found some fun and engaging ways to incorporate exercise into my life.  I’ll let you know how it goes!

Humanism

While reading a fellow-photographer’s blog the other day, I learned about a school of thought called Humanism.  She was saying that she wasn’t religious but that her beliefs could most closely be summarized by the Humanist Manifesto.  After reading it, I would kinda say the same thing about myself.  I especially liked this sentence,

“We aim for our fullest possible development and animate our lives with a deep sense of purpose, finding wonder and awe in the joys and beauties of human existence, its challenges and tragedies, and even in the inevitability and finality of death.”

I generally loathe to define my views  as those of a group.  I won’t (probably ever) commit to a political party because I staunchly think of myself as an independent.  I like to think what I think and not subscribe to a group where there’s a platform of ideas that one subscribes to.  Also, as a disclaimer, I’ve done almost no reading on humanism, and I’m sure there are aspects of it that I wouldn’t like.  But in my reading of the “manifesto” below, I thought it was pretty nice.  And without further ado, here it is:

Humanism is a progressive philosophy of life that, without supernaturalism, affirms our ability and responsibility to lead ethical lives of personal fulfillment that aspire to the greater good of humanity.

The lifestance of Humanism—guided by reason, inspired by compassion, and informed by experience—encourages us to live life well and fully. It evolved through the ages and continues to develop through the efforts of thoughtful people who recognize that values and ideals, however carefully wrought, are subject to change as our knowledge and understandings advance.

This document is part of an ongoing effort to manifest in clear and positive terms the conceptual boundaries of Humanism, not what we must believe but a consensus of what we do believe. It is in this sense that we affirm the following:

Knowledge of the world is derived by observation, experimentation, and rational analysis. Humanists find that science is the best method for determining this knowledge as well as for solving problems and developing beneficial technologies. We also recognize the value of new departures in thought, the arts, and inner experience—each subject to analysis by critical intelligence.

Humans are an integral part of nature, the result of unguided evolutionary change. Humanists recognize nature as self-existing. We accept our life as all and enough, distinguishing things as they are from things as we might wish or imagine them to be. We welcome the challenges of the future, and are drawn to and undaunted by the yet to be known.

Ethical values are derived from human need and interest as tested by experience. Humanists ground values in human welfare shaped by human circumstances, interests, and concerns and extended to the global ecosystem and beyond. We are committed to treating each person as having inherent worth and dignity, and to making informed choices in a context of freedom consonant with responsibility.

Life’s fulfillment emerges from individual participation in the service of humane ideals. We aim for our fullest possible development and animate our lives with a deep sense of purpose, finding wonder and awe in the joys and beauties of human existence, its challenges and tragedies, and even in the inevitability and finality of death. Humanists rely on the rich heritage of human culture and the lifestance of Humanism to provide comfort in times of want and encouragement in times of plenty.

Humans are social by nature and find meaning in relationships. Humanists long for and strive toward a world of mutual care and concern, free of cruelty and its consequences, where differences are resolved cooperatively without resorting to violence. The joining of individuality with interdependence enriches our lives, encourages us to enrich the lives of others, and inspires hope of attaining peace, justice, and opportunity for all.

Working to benefit society maximizes individual happiness. Progressive cultures have worked to free humanity from the brutalities of mere survival and to reduce suffering, improve society, and develop global community. We seek to minimize the inequities of circumstance and ability, and we support a just distribution of nature’s resources and the fruits of human effort so that as many as possible can enjoy a good life.

Humanists are concerned for the well being of all, are committed to diversity, and respect those of differing yet humane views. We work to uphold the equal enjoyment of human rights and civil liberties in an open, secular society and maintain it is a civic duty to participate in the democratic process and a planetary duty to protect nature’s integrity, diversity, and beauty in a secure, sustainable manner.

Thus engaged in the flow of life, we aspire to this vision with the informed conviction that humanity has the ability to progress toward its highest ideals. The responsibility for our lives and the kind of world in which we live is ours and ours alone.

Morning brain candy from NPR

Each weekday morning for the last month-and-a-half, I’ve been driving through the dark streets of Madison at 5:15am on my way to my morning fitness boot camp.  There are many, many reasons that I’ve loved going to boot camp, but one of them is the time in the car listening to NPR.  My kids, you see, are not fans of NPR.  They do not like to have their ears assaulted with the sound of news or people who are not singing kids songs.  So on a normal basis, I do not get to listen to NPR, which, my friends, makes me a little sad.

However, at 5:15am, I am the only one in the car, and I get to listen to my station for 15 minutes each way.  That’s 30 minutes!!!  Oh the rapture:)

Sometimes, I even feel like I kinda know what’s going on in the world these days.

One of my favorite segments is a special series called “The Human Edge.”  Each day they explore a different aspect of human evolution that gave us an evolutionary edge and allowed us to be as a species as dominant and “successful” as we have become.  Shows have discussed our hands (allows us to hold and make tools), our feet (allows us to stand upright, live on the ground, run), cooking our food, crying, and telling stories.  Each segment is about 10 minutes long, and I’ve found each one to be really interesting.

You can read more (and listen online at) NPR.org or subscribe to the podcast on iTunes.

Andrew’s Kindergarten Schedule

My little boy is off on his second week of Kindergarten.  Hard to believe!  He’s really loving it.

Andrew’s young heart thrives on calendars and schedules and charts.  He starts each day looking at the calendar and figuring out what day it is and how many days until some event in the future.  Now that we have the school’s hot lunch schedule hanging on the refrigerator, we have a new topic to consider: hot or cold lunch today?  [I could re-phrase that as processed, trans-fat-laden, sugar-filled hot lunch vs. organic, locally produced, nutrient-rich homemade lunch, but I won’t.  That’s a topic for a different post.]

Andrew brought home some info on Friday describing the different classes that they have each day.  I’d also received a handout describing the kindergarten class schedule.  So Saturday morning, I took a few minutes and typed up a weekly schedule for my boy.  So on any given morning he can look and see what special classes he has scheduled that day.  And at any time of the day, I can glance at the schedule to see what he’s up to.

Here’s a version in PDF if you’d like a copy for yourself!  This week he has four days of school, and next week, we’ll be up to five.  So far, so good:)

Thinking back on swimming lessons

Back when it was summer.  When our lazy days were spent lallygagging from one activity to the next, Andrew and Sylvia took swimming lessons at the Monona pool.  Each morning at 10am, we drove over to Jessica, Eli, and Celia’s house and then walked together to the pool.  Eli and Andrew had class in the morning, and the girls had class a couple afternoons a week.  On the last day of class, I brought my camera to document some of the fun.

Here are our two five-year-old boys about to head to class.  They’re both so cute it makes my teeth hurt.

08-19_10_040

Guys being goofy in a less-well-lit part of the living room.

08-19_10_028

Since it was the last day of the session, the teachers got out all the noodles and toys, and the whole crew would jump in together to clean it up.

08-19_10_044

My Andrew is third from the right.

08-19_10_049

Here’s where Jessica and I could be found five mornings a week.  We often got a baby sitter for the girls so we could enjoy 40 minutes of leisurely pool-side chatting.  Ahhh  Next summer the girls will get to take their lessons at the same time as the boys!

08-19_10_052

Andrew’s scooping up toys.

08-19_10_055

Eli is a ring-retriever extraordinaire.

08-19_10_059

I love how much these kids love being in the water!

08-19_10_063

As of this summer, Andrew’s dunking and swimming under water.  For a kid who spent the first four years of his life strenuously avoiding getting his ears/face/hair wet under any circumstances, this was a rather titanic shift!  He loves it now!

08-19_10_073 08-19_10_075 08-19_10_076 08-19_10_077

There’s Eli swimming about.  He’s getting to be such a great swimmer!

08-19_10_085

Andrew jumped off the diving board this last session.  He told me how he was pretty nervous the first time, but then he just did it.  And now, although there was a little hesitation, he seems to love it!

08-19_10_110 08-19_10_111 08-19_10_112

On the last day of class, they got the water slide going, and kids got the opportunity to slide down.  It was so cute to see the crowd of life guards at the bottom waiting to catch “their kids.”  Andrew went down twice!

08-19_10_113 08-19_10_114

Here he is with his end-of-session certificate.  In a way, I can’t wait for next year when we can enjoy these hot pool days again!

08-19_10_116

Registering for school and getting back to the dentist

On August 19, we registered Andrew for kindergarten.  He was pretty stoked!

Here we are just outside his school taking a group shot before heading in.

My big guy requesting his folder of information for KG!

Registration was mostly me filling out forms and turning them in while the kids colored and watched a movie.  But afterward, we wandered the halls to find his classroom.  Here he is outside Maestra Laura Gibson’s classroom, #104.

The next week, my big guy went to the dentist.  Our insurance changed a year ago, and we never got around to finding new dentists.  So after Bryan switched jobs in June, we made appointments.  Andrew was soooo excited.  Every day he would look at the calendar and say, “Three days until I get to go to the dentist!!!”  Ahh, if only we all had the same enthusiasm and joie de vivre:)

Here he is in the dentist chair.

And here he’s all ready for his cleaning.

Sylvia tries on the fancy dentist-patient sunglasses.  She get’s her first appointment in February!

Assorted pictures: Andrew and his stacking game (“Mom!  Take a picture of me!”)

And a hot air balloon that Sylvia and I spied while we were out running errands together the other night.  She was so very intrigued by this sight!

Sylvia’s big-girl bed

Sylvia stopped napping sometime in July (sniff!!).  And around the same time, she climbed (successfully) out of her crib a couple times.  It is indeed a startling thing to have one’s child appear before you when you think they are tucked away snug in their bed.  So we decided that it was time to transition our girl from her crib to a big girl bed.  The crib was Maretta’s (circa 1985).  It’s served us well for two babies, and it was a little sad to say goodbye.

Here’s Sylvia’s changing table.  She’s been potty trained since last spring, and I turned her changing table into a shrine of sorts for her favorite things: shoes and handbags.

Our babysitter Shara came over and watched the kids while I put together the new bed.  Our friends Benson and Veronica gave it to us, and it’s so cute in this little room!  The stitchery above the bed was made by my mom.  It’s a sampler with a little girl taking a bunny rabbit for a walk.  I’d asked Mom to make it, and I think she worked on it in 2004.  I found it amongst Mom’s things and had it framed last winter.  So it’s finally up in a place of honor in my little girl’s room.

Note that Poodle and paci are perched on my girl’s pillow.  Poodle is no longer pink.  It’s now a kinda dingy brownish gray.

Here’s Sylvia leaping in delight onto her new bed.

And there her brother joins her!  How exciting!

Here she is alseep.  Looks like she needs to get used to the absence of bars!  She fell out quite a few times the first few weeks, but these days she’s staying comfortably in the bed.  And (thank heavens) she’s done a good job of staying in her bed at night and in the morning.  Yay for my big girl!

Jack’s summer float weekend 2010

Due to the usual obsessive nature of my blogging, I sometimes wonder if things actually happen if I didn’t write and post photos about them.  Would Christmas really have been Christmas if there was no post on dotzourfamily.com?  Did we ever all really go to Jack’s house on a warm weekend in July/August?  Or was that just a figment?  Some passing fancy?  Well, if you were feeling like maybe your memories were faulty, worry no longer!  There was indeed a trip to Jack’s house this summer, and I’ve got the blog post to prove it!  The full album of pics is available in the gallery.

Here’s our group (except for me) ready for our float down the river.  From left to right, we have Terry, Jack, Josh (kneeling, Betsy, Kyle, Melanie, Michael (sitting), Lisa, Tom (kneeling), Joe, Andrew, Sylvia, and Bryan.

07-31_10_Jack's_weekend_055-1

The Wisconsin River was so high this summer that it had gone well over its banks in many places.  The photos below Bryan took of the kids swimming in what is normally a small grassy field next to the river.  The slightly submerged vegetation is at the edge of the banks, and usually the river is 2-3 feet below the banks.  This year, the grassy spot became a good splashing/swimming hole for the kids!

07-30_10_Jack's_weekend_001 07-30_10_Jack's_weekend_005 07-30_10_Jack's_weekend_007 07-30_10_Jack's_weekend_008 07-30_10_Jack's_weekend_009

We enjoyed our dinners out on the patio.  The bugs were out, but they weren’t terribly hungry.  What pretty sunset light.

07-30_10_Jack's_weekend_015 07-30_10_Jack's_weekend_019 07-30_10_Jack's_weekend_020 07-30_10_Jack's_weekend_024 07-30_10_Jack's_weekend_029 07-30_10_Jack's_weekend_033

Here’s Jack’s home as seen from the street at night.  I just love knowing that the warm light coming from those windows is illuminating my family as we all enjoy a slow summer evening together.

07-30_10_Jack's_weekend_036

Now a few people pictures.  Here are the kids being themselves.  Sylvie in our suitcase with paci.


07-31_10_Jack's_weekend_042

And here’s Andrew following in his mother and uncles’ & aunt’s footsteps, swinging himself around the pole.

07-31_10_Jack's_weekend_044

Kyle is doing the dishes.  We were so glad that he made the trip down even though Maretta wasn’t able to come because of her (awesome) play.

07-31_10_Jack's_weekend_050-1

Here’s Sylvie acting a little cooky.

08-01_10_Jack's_weekend_024

Andrew explores the world of reading books on Uncle Bubba’s iPad.

08-01_10_Jack's_weekend_081

Jack’s prairie is stunning.  Really amazing.  It’s come so far in the last 5 years!  Here’s a few images I took while swatting mosquitoes.

07-31_10_Jack's_weekend_058-1

07-31_10_Jack's_weekend_062-1

07-31_10_Jack's_weekend_071-1

07-31_10_Jack's_weekend_076-1

07-31_10_Jack's_weekend_083

07-31_10_Jack's_weekend_091

Jack’s parents both passed away in the last couple years, and a group of friends commissioned this bench for his land.  It’s a really beautiful piece…and so fitting.  There are also a variety of saplings planted in their memory.

07-31_10_Jack's_weekend_107

Here’s the view from the bench.  We’re looking down toward the Wisconsin River and the bluffs on the other side.

07-31_10_Jack's_weekend_109

The river at sunset.

07-31_10_Jack's_weekend_003

Melanie and Sylvia on the front steps of Jack’s home.  It was so fun to have Melanie come out to Jack’s with us this year!  Out trips to Jack’s are such a happily anticipated aspect of my family’s history.  It was great to share it with her:)

07-31_10_Jack's_weekend_005

Pretty balloon flowers.

07-31_10_Jack's_weekend_006

Dad came out to join us on Saturday.

07-31_10_Jack's_weekend_007Flowers and a view of the river beyond.

07-31_10_Jack's_weekend_010

Our nightly traditions include Trivial Pursuit and (new in the last five years) poker.

07-31_10_Jack's_weekend_013

Jack took us in the pack of his pick-up for a tour of the prairie on Saturday night.

07-31_10_Jack's_weekend_052

Here Dad is enjoying Jack’s beautiful property.

07-31_10_Jack's_weekend_057

Andrew and Sylvie loved getting to ride in the back of the pick-up truck.  EXCITING!

07-31_10_Jack's_weekend_068

My sisters!

07-31_10_Jack's_weekend_071

Sunset between big bluestem and yellow coneflowers.  Ahhh, summer!

07-31_10_Jack's_weekend_076

Early August outings

Back in August, I biked the kids to the downtown Farmer’s market.  Here’s Sylvia embracing life (and the impatiens):

It all went great until my girl didn’t want to put on her seatbelt for the bike back home.  Thus began a half-hour tantrum.  Here I am photographing the start of it.  Somehow, she calmed down and was convinced to ride nicely.  Patience paid off!

Bryan’s parents came to town for a quick visit on their way to the PGA tour in Kenosha, Wisconsin.  We really enjoyed seeing them.  Here Sylvia is sitting on Grandad’s lap at Red Robin.

We had a lot of big storms this summer.  Here we’re driving with Terry and his cousin’s daughter, Brittany, in Columbia County just northwest of Madison.  The storm clouds were just amazing.  And we drove through some major downpours.  The kids loved driving through the flash floods that filled the roads!

Another morning at the farmer’s market.  Sylvia has worn a swimming suit about 85% of the time this summer.  Here she is (again) sporting the Kitty Cat suit, backwards.

We stopped to run around and to sample our purchases.  Andrew’s cheeks are filled with delicious sungold tomatoes.

Sylvia is (finally!) wearing the adorable dress that Granny made for her!

Such a cute kid she is!

Ahh summer…you’re fading into a warm, happy, active, delicious memory.  I’m so glad to have been home with the kids to enjoy it so thoroughly!