Archive for April, 2009

Thomas III’s Unusual Brain & Gabo’s Unusual Tongue

April 27, 2009 - 8:59 am No Comments

Thomas will be attending an In-Residence Educational Institute this summer at Amherst College in Massachusetts, which we are affectionately terming “camp”.

In the process of choosing the classes he will take – he became slightly indignant about the prospect of classes filling up and having to select a second choice. As usual, he had a million questions – and as in all things Thomas, the questions came out slowly and over time … like drops out of a leaky faucet … as he continued to mull it over and process all the variables.

“Don’t worry,” said dad. “You’re not going to be forced into Doll-Making in the 18th Century.”

To which he replied: “I get to go back to the 18th century to learn that?”

It took us a minute but we realized the thought that he had missed a class with a time machine in the curriculum guide was good enough for him — even if he had to make dolls. Come to think of it, he probably would like that too, what with the amount of fiddling he does with anything that makes it near his hands!

Over the years, he continues to amaze me with his thoughtful observations and sensitivity to life details that nobody else seems to notice. He is also so calm and wise. Traits I simply do not share. One of his favorite things is finding mistakes in our educational materials. I now have a file to keep all the editors’ letters that thank him for catching those errors.

In math alone, he has found 3 mistakes in only 60 lessons. For some reason, he always catches me by surprise and before listening to his point, my Latin temper takes over and I try to shut him down. He just calmly waits for me to be done telling him all the reasons why the “Teachers Guide” answer is right for the third time, and then he once again tries to get his point across. And he is usually right.

I have now learned to just listen if he is insistent. I think the fact that Gabo argues every single bit of work I give him – purely out of sport – has conditioned me to be very sensitive to any “back talk” in class.

Gabo has a comment about everything. I think sometimes he just does it to hone his debate skills, or just to amuse himself. He is always respectful, and sometimes genuinely interested in clarifications. This has to be the single hardest thing about homeschooling smart kids. Trying to determine when they are arguing because they just don’t want to do it … as opposed to being in a funk, and just not open to learning at the moment.

With Gabo, we have always treaded a delicate balance to not squash his spirit while instilling strong discipline. It appears that all the qualities and talents that will make him a very successful adult – persistence, perseverance, righteousness, speed, strength, endless energy, challenging assumptions and rules, socratic methods to challenge those assumptions and rules to get what he wants … these are all the character traits that make children very hard to manage. Especially for peri-menopausic, short-fused Latin mothers.

Unfortunately, Gabo has combined his natural traits with some of my bad habits. Tom says he’s a 45-year old woman trapped in a 9-year old boy. He has picked up some of my OCD and is pretty obsessed about his environment. Everything needs to be a certain way before he can focus and even then he fidgets and has to be doing something else.

When he was little and I read to him, he always wanted to be looking at another book while listening and looking at the book I was reading to him. He bothered me for months but he was so persistent that I let him.

As he learned to read, he was actually reading another book simultaneously while I read to him. That, I really did not like, but he insisted so I finally allowed him.

I began to understand that in most cases, he can absorb the two tracts of information simultaneously. I tested my theory many times. As I turned a page, he would ask me to wait until he could look at the illustrations that I had just read about. I quizzed him and he could recount details from either book with perfect clarity.

Of course, he got a big kick out of answering my questions, as if he thoroughly enjoyed disproving my assumptions about his attention. He still loves trying to find ways in which I may be wrong about things.

One of Tom’s many sayings to all of us is: “It’s better to be kind, than right.” It is what Tom lives by, and over the years I have learned he is right, and have tried to practice that little bit of advice.

However, Gabo is another story. He is so focused on winning, on being right, on getting the best of everything for him first, that our biggest challenge is always “pounding” empathy, compassion, and a giving heart into him, every step of the way, every day.

At the moment, Thomas’s biggest challenge is that he needs to learn how to do his own laundry. He is very excited about camp albeit anxious in anticipation of the new life skills it will require from him.

He will learn how to manage his own time, and his own money. They have to finish meals within a certain time frame, walk to their classes, be responsible for their own work, manage his own closet, pick his clothes, wash his clothes … find his clothes! There will be no: “Mom, I don’t have any underwear again!” or my personal favorite: “I can’t find the one pair of socks I like.”

“Can I pay someone to do the laundry?” he asked. “Absolutely not,” said dad. “You have to learn how to do it yourself.” Thomas ponders … “Then if I learn to do it, can I get paid to do it for other people?”

When people find out we homeschool, there only question is always: “What about socialization?” Of course they mean the ability to interact with other kids in a group. I am increasingly realizing it is the right question, but not for the reasons they think.

I had this vision of my industrious little homeschooler happily skipping class to finish everybody’s laundry for a few quarters. In our desire to make him respect the value of an earned quarter, they are constantly dreaming up ways to obtain coin. I think we’ll have to get him an ATM card!

Quoting Tom

April 26, 2009 - 8:54 am No Comments

Every week or so I find myself on the other side of a pensive husband who still likes to share his wisdom nuggets. This week it was: “The frequency at which I get laid is inversely proportional to the square footage of the place in which we live.”

I am afraid there is a studio efficiency in my future…

PC is Hard For Me

April 26, 2009 - 8:46 am No Comments

I am having a hard time keeping up with all these PC rules. I finally figured out it is because PC has not made its way into Spanish.

There are also too many exceptions and the rules change too often. Why is it called the Congressional Black Caucus and not the Congressional African American Caucus? Is that too much of a mouthful or are the rules different depending on who says it? I never can keep up with the way groups want to be identified, and which words are positive and which are negative.

Latinos still call flight atendants “azafatas”, the word for stewardess. It does not even exist for a male flight attendant — I have never heard “azafato”.

On one unfortunate flight, when I had an adult beverage or two – I tried to summon the flight attendant by calling across the plane for the “air maid”. I really meant no disrespect, but my English skills disintegrate rapidly in proportion to the number of cocktails I consume. (There’s another one — cocktail – how come we have not cleaned that one up? What the heck does the tail of a cock have to do with my libation? Or is it that I’ll more easily trade tail for… never mind…)

A darker color person is affectionately called “El Negro”, or “negrita” if she is a close friend. There is even a very famous song where a young girl tells her mother her boyfriend is trying to jump her, and she sings a colorful description of how he’s chasing her around the house, trying to get her into the sack. The chorus is: “Mami que sera lo que quiere el negro…” Which sounds great lyrically but translates to: “Mom, what does the black dude want…”

Older people still call me amorcito, or linda o corazon, even if I don’t know them (although I must admit, that is happening less often these days…) And all Asians are called “chino”, whether they’re Japanese, Korean or Filipino. My mother used to call me “chinita” when I misbehaved. She would say: “When I get my hands on that chinita, I’ll show her!” Does not sound too good in retrospect.

A New Low…

April 7, 2009 - 2:07 pm 2 Comments

“Mom, can you scratch my athlete’s foot? It itches and I don’t want to touch it!” Gabo, 4/7/09

Obamanomics Simplified

April 4, 2009 - 3:41 pm 1 Comment

This one was sent to me by a friend, but I found it compelling.

An economics professor at Texas Tech said he had never failed a single student before but had, once, failed an entire class… The class had insisted that socialism worked and that no one would be poor and no one would be rich, a great equalizer. The professor then said ok, we will have an experiment in this class on socialism.

All grades would be averaged and everyone would receive the same grade so no one would fail and no one would receive an A. After the first test the grades were averaged and everyone got a B. The students who studied hard were upset and the students who studied little were happy. But, as the second test rolled around, the students who studied little had studied even less and the ones who studied hard decided they wanted a free ride too; so they studied little.. The second Test average was a D! No one was happy. When the 3rd test rolled around the average was an F.

The scores never increased as bickering, blame, name calling all resulted in hard feelings and no one would study for anyone else. All failed to their great surprise and the professor told them that socialism would ultimately fail because the harder to succeed the greater the reward but when a government takes all the reward away; no one will try or succeed.