Archive for August, 2009

Just when you think

your kid isn’t paying attention…

Today, the dutchkid sat down at the piano, with “music” she had written herself. She had already illegally scribbled on some sheet music of mine, so I figured that was what inspired the composing. But then as I was listening to her random song from the kitchen, I heard the telltale beep of the metronome! Monkey see, monkey do. In my family, music was a big part of growing up. Someone was always playing something. I used to worry that the dutchkid wouldn’t have that exposure to music. It may not be the variety of music I heard as a kid, but guess I can cross that worry off my list!

In other music news, I met my piano teacher yesterday for my first lesson. It went pretty well. I managed to play my prelude and fugue for her without any major memory lapses even though I was nervous as all get out. She was very encouraging and I think we’ll get along great…although she’s contemplating making me relearn all my scale fingerings (groan) because my old teacher had me learn them with his own system. The curse of switching teachers, I guess. Now I’m glad I’ve been neglecting them all summer.

A little bit of summer left

berries closer

Last week, Tressa wrote about how she took her kids berry picking and it made me sad that summer was passing us by and I never did get out there to pick anything. So when a friend here called to ask if I wanted to go pick some blackberries I jumped at the chance. Especially because I don’t remember ever having picked any, raspberries, blueberries and strawberries, yes, but not blackberries. Well, I can no longer say that!

tractor ride

It was a really fun farm (Happy Apple in Penrose for my local friends) and they also grow raspberries, apples and pumpkins as well as the blackberries we picked today.

do you think they were good?

Do you think they were good?

Keeping it together

We survived the first week of school! Even though starting school was something I was really ready to do, and I think the dutchkid was ready too, it still felt stressful. I was indeed the oldest in my class, although there are many other non-traditional students in there as well. While looking at the syllabi is intimidating (final project: a written composition in 4 parts incorporating specific chord progressions) I have a good feeling that this will be both challenging and rewarding. I already knew that my lack of working knowledge in more advanced music theory (beyond just the basic key signatures and scales) is the missing link in my playing. My private lessons don’t begin until next week.

The dutchkid’s first day of school was today. When I left her this morning she didn’t shed a tear, although she did tell me in the car on the way home today that she wasn’t so sure she liked it. It is a much longer day than she’s used to. Her little school does a small nap/quiet time in the afternoon, and of course she was having none of that. She told me all about how they made her be quiet. I’m hoping she’ll adjust once we get into the routine.

It really feels like summer is on it’s way out… I’m going to do my best to enjoy what’s left of it this weekend!

Nerves

So, um, yeah. The first day of school for me is tomorrow. I’ve been sort of busy getting all those “back to school” things done for the dutchkid and I, so I didn’t have a chance to think about it. Until someone I know here wished me good luck today. It has been a very long time since I’ve been in the classroom. And how much you want to bet it’ll be full of students who list their birthdate as 1990? Scary is what that is.

The Community Boat?

Within the very small section of the new unit my dh is in, we have come across two families who are involved with adoption. One family is almost through the process. They are getting ready to bring their child home, hopefully within the next 6 months. The other family… well the other family is so much like us it’s frightening. One child. Fertility issues. Unsure if it’s the right path for them.

Adoption is everywhere I look lately, in things I read, people I talk to. I question if whether this is a sign, or whether I’m finding things because I’m looking for a sign. And quite honestly, I’m struggling. Currently I have a self imposed ban on talking about adoption related stuff with my dh… mostly because I know that it will push him, and I don’t want him to be pushed. And partly because I know that he just needs time. Maybe I do, too.

I think if it were up to me, today at this very minute, I would go forward. But I am the queen of second guesses. I wish I could say that I always knew I would adopt, as many parents can. I can’t help but wonder if the pull I feel is negated by the reality that if we could have biological children without any trouble at all, I doubt very much we would be thinking about adoption. Does that make us “less worthy” than parents who choose to adopt just because they want to? And if this is indeed what God is calling our family to do, why do I have doubts?

Even when I bypass those sticky questions and just start looking at the process, I am overwhelmed by the decisions that must be made. Domestic or international? If domestic, would we want closed or semi-open or completely open? If international, which country? Reading websites alone is daunting. As much as I love the information highway, it’s like drinking from a fire hose.

Clarity seems elusive lately.

A view like this

view from the tent

Is enough to make even the grumpiest of campers (ie, me) glad we went. I was apprehensive for lots of reasons… we were camping with people we didn’t know well. We were at a site where we had to walk in, instead of just drive up and pitch the tent. Rain was forecasted for the weekend. I was fully prepared to not have a good time at all. Luckily, while I was busy procrastinating before we left, I read a really great post by Renee, about how camping builds character. I decided I should look at the experience as an opportunity to grow, and at least try to make the best of it.

We ended up having a really good time. Other than a few sprinkles the first night, the weather was great. The other couple also has a 3 year old, so that leveled the playing field right there. And it was just a really pretty place.

We were at a large reservoir not too far from here. The combination of being able to hike through the woods and being near water was great. The dutchkid had a blast playing along the shore.
fun with the cup

Swimming is not allowed, but fishing and boating are. I would love to have our own canoe someday, which is the outdoorsy-est thought I’ve had for a good long while.

sparkly water
There’s a few more pictures on flickr. Hope you had a good weekend.

Unfaithful

I cheated on my favorite thrift store last week. I went to Goodwill instead. It was a bust. But in repentance I went back to my favorite place. It still loves me.

new finds

Do you know how long I have been looking for a little wooden stool? Since the dutchkid was born, practically. And I know, I promised I wouldn’t buy any more kitchen stuff, but how can you not love that vintage pyrex? And three matching bowls? Come on now, I couldn’t let that one go. When I was checking out at the store, a staff person told me it was left out in the parking lot in the rain.

This is not going to become a thrifting blog, I promise, just nothing much else going on this week. We are headed camping again this weekend, with some new folks we met here. I’m not sure how I feel about that, since I prefer that you either know me for 6 months or complete a 1000 word essay on how much you like me before I’ll go camping with you. But I guess we’ll see. It’ll be like a three day first date. In tents.

What you are

I finished The Time of Our Singing just before the weekend. I’ve had some thoughts banging around in my head since I started reading it so I thought I might put them down here. I’ve tried to put them into something coherent, but it might be a lost cause. Consider yourself warned, and just go read the book and tell me what you thought of it.

One of the central themes of the book is about music, and it was fascinating to me to read how the author put into words what the experience of both singing and listening to a singer can be like. Especially when he described early music, which is one of my favorites. I wondered, though, if someone who is not familiar with music would find those passages baffling, or just boring.

Mostly, though, the main thing that was so thought-provoking for me was about race. The main characters are a family, a black mother and a white father with three children. The book follows their lives, from the late 30′s to the present. It was at the beginning of the book, when two of the children are asked, “What exactly are you boys?”… that really got me.

You see, I get that question all the time, in a way. Oh, maybe less so now that I have lived all over the U.S., places that are less homogeneous than the blond, blue-eyed town I grew up in. But even now occasionally someone surprises me. Are you from India? Are you Native American? Egyptian? What I am is some sort of dark mirror image of my Dutch mother. It doesn’t really bother me, sometimes people are just looking for commonality — someone from Spain riding the same bus as me and wondering if I was from the same place. In contrast to the book, where the parents of the family decided not to definitively say what their children were, I was always taught to answer proudly. “You tell them you are Mexican,” my father would say. But am I really? The truth lies somewhere inbetween. Which is usually the answer I give.

I am thankful to live in the here and now, where it seems to matter less and less. I grew up in a community who largely accepted me, even if I was the only kid in class with olive skin who wasn’t adopted. I have been called names only a handful of times. In college it actually turned into a benefit, being considered a minority made me eligible for scholarships. But at times it left me feeling like an imposter. When my parents’ marriage ended, I think I chose to identify with my mother’s Dutch heritage much more because being Mexican represented everything negative about my Dad. Besides, how Mexican can you be when you don’t speak Spanish? This was especially clear over the past year, with my husband in school with international officers from all over Latin America. I may have had a passing resemblance to some, but that ended the moment I opened my mouth.

Sometimes I like to think that I am just another part of the “browning” of America, and that our culture is evolving into one without seeing skin color. But I think of the stories my parents can tell about their own courtship, not all that long ago. And I wonder if my perspective would be different if I hadn’t married a white man. If I hadn’t chosen my mother’s faith and culture. If my daughter weren’t fair and blond. If I still had a Mexican last name.


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The Small Is Beautiful Manifesto

Music stacked up on my piano at the moment

Partita 5 in G Major (Bach)

Dance in Bulgarian Rhythm No. 6 (Bartok)

Sonatine II movt de menuet (Ravel)

Nocturne in B-flat Major (Szymanowska)

Sonata Op. 24 "Spring" (Beethoven)

Flickr

The naughty angel

skating (Dec 8)

luminaria Dec 7

More Photos

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