Thanksgiving 2011

We had a fun time having all of our siblings over for Thanksgiving.

Looking back, hosting Thanksgiving dinner 3 weeks after moving and 1 week before our Christmas production probably wasn’t the best idea in the world. But it was good motivation to get settled in the new place quickly, but it was just a little bit stressful making that happen with two little people around.

Our siblings live in New York, South Carolina, and Georgia so we appreciated that all of them traveled out to come see us.

My sister arrived first, and she got both kids to herself for several days. We had fun shopping, playing, and took a trip to the Children’s Museum of Memphis.

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My brother and all of Rob’s siblings arrived the same evening. Xander is in the right family, because all of his uncles are extremely geeky. With two computer programmers and an engineer, my robot-obsessed Star Wars fan has no trouble bonding with his uncles. Here they are discussing Minecraft before heading to bed the first night.

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Some pictures of Thanksgiving day (which was actually Wednesday because we had a couple of Black Friday workers that needed to be back home by Thursday):

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I’m very thankful for my families: Both the one I was born with and the one I married into.

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Screwdrivers, Galoshes, and Presidents

 

We all hear stories from our parents about the amazing things we did as young children. But we have no memory, they have no proof, and part of us wonders if what really happened has been embellished over the years.

That’s why I’m glad I finally caught this on video. Xander has had it down for several months now, but is never in the mood when the camera starts rolling.

 

We are currently working on states and capitals. He can memorize the faces, first names, and last names – 3 pieces of information – for 44 presidents. So the locations, names, and capital cities of 50 states won’t be much more difficult. Xander has learned 5 states so far – a tenth of the way there!

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The One about Santa

“Birthday is about Xander. Christmas is about Jesus.”

This is what my 3.5 year old has been saying for the last few days. I thought we were ready for December… and then we went to preschool today.

I may have overslept a bit this morning, so by the time I took Xander in they were already at the morning assembly. And singing Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer.

Cue a morning full of fretting. Until today, my son knew the bearded man in a red suit as The Christmas Monster. I just knew that when I picked him up from school, Xander would know the man’s name. And he did. He even told me all about the chimney. It was easy enough to fix. “Santa is just pretend. He doesn’t give you presents. He isn’t real. Christmas is about Jesus.”

I talked with his teacher, who showed me her lesson plans for the month and let me choose what Xander was exempt from (which really wasn’t much; he can sing and craft all day long but he’s not writing a letter to Santa). No big deal, and we’re back in business.

But a tweet about the situation it set off some replies. So here, in paragraph form, is my response to the usual criticism. Note that these are my personal convictions about how to raise my family.

 

There’s nothing wrong with Santa.

An omnipresent, omniscient being who weighs your good deeds against your bad deeds and rewards you accordingly?

First of all, there is only One who is all-knowing and that is God.

Secondly, and this is nitpicky I know, but aren’t we setting up a works-based theology with that?

 

You can’t shield your kids forever.

I know that, and I’ve never attempted to do so.

I think that phrase, when applied to anything parents attempt to keep their children from being corrupted too soon, is one of the worst things to say to someone who is only trying to do the right thing. We are calling a person who is striving for moderation an extremist. We’re saying, “I gave up, and you should too.”

Of course I can’t keep Xander from ever seeing Santa, Frosty, or Rudolph. I can’t keep him from learning the songs or watching the movies – I’m fully aware that it will happen either at school or at a friend’s house.

But what I can do is keep it away from my home and out of my family’s tradition. What is so extreme about that?

My goal is simple: To remove the secular elements from religious holidays and, when possible (see: not cheesy) to add a Christian element to secular holidays.

I see our not observing Santa as just the first of many “other families do that, but we don’t” parenting moments.

 

You Can Do Both

I disagree.

“I explain what the true meaning of Christmas is, but we also do Santa because it’s fun.”

“I explain to my kids why it’s important to eat healthy, but I buy them lots of junk food because it tastes good.”

What’s the difference?

 

Your kids will resent you.

In our home, Santa doesn’t fulfill your list of wants, wrap them up, and leave a large and glorious pile under the tree.

In our home, your mother and father take the time to consider your personality, your interests, and your maturity. Then together they choose one, and I repeat, one gift to give to you as we all celebrate the birth of Jesus.

Birthdays are about our children and giving them a party, a cake, and a pile of presents in celebration of their life. Christmas is not.

The truth is this: At a certain age, whether you give you kids a few gifs or a lot of gifts, they will want more. We all remember that feeling of thinking our parents didn’t care about us enough to get us what we really wanted. And then we got older and it passed.

I’m not worried about resentment.

 

Well, what do you do?

We have done this for the past two years, but now that he’s old enough, we’re talking to Xander about it:

Our goal is to have Xander give and do far more than he receives. And I’m being very deliberate about it. After shopping together, I let Xander pack our Operation Christmas Child boxes. This week Xander is fulfilling the list of a little girl his age who is currently living in a group home. If there are other children in need of sponsoring after we are done, we will add another.

Last year, anytime a bell was ringing outside a store, Xander would insist that we put money inside. This year, he has a wallet full of change that he carries in his pocket anytime we go shopping, ready to give.

He is hand-making a gift or letter for his family members and friends.

He is memorizing Luke 2:8-14. No joke.

Our kids get one gift from us. The words “big” and “small”, “expensive” and “cheap” have nothing to do with it. Two years ago, we got Xander a workbench that still gets played with weekly, if not daily. Last year he received a four-wheeler that he loves and takes very good care of.

 

I don’t want my children’s favorite memories of Christmas as a child to be the rush of opening gifts, or the fun of made-up characters. I don’t even want their memories to be of Wintertime Togetherness.

I hope that, by God’s guidance, we can pass on to our children the legacy that their grandparents began – that Christmas is a time of worshipping God, especially through serving others.

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Still Alive

New house. A garage full of boxes I have no energy to sort through. A 3-year old who is rethinking the whole daily nap thing. A 14-month-old who just figured out the use of her legs (about time!). A rapidly growing belly.

A Christmas concert in 11 days and so, so much motion graphic work to do between then and now. On top of what I usually do.

And did I mention that all 7 of our siblings are here for Thanksgiving?

I’m still alive, but there are not enough minutes left over in the day for this little blog.

Maybe I’ll do a November recap after the craziness dies down.

Big Brother

Arya, Aliza, and any future Schumann siblings are truly blessed to have such a wonderful older brother.

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Halloween 2011

I never liked Halloween as a kid. Not being American, my parents never did the costume and trick or treating thing – and I never really wanted to, either. We usually wore our normal clothes and always went to the fall festival at church. I got plenty of candy to satisfy my sweet tooth, and winning at the cake walk is a lot more satisfying than freezing your tail off knocking on doors.

Anyway. I don’t think I missed out as a kid, but I had a blast with Xander this year. He was finally old enough to sort of understand the season. He loved seeing houses decorated with ghosts, jack-o-lanterns, and (his personal favorite) skeletons. Because I never pass up an opportunity to fill Xander’s head with useless-now-but-useful-someday trivia, he learned the scientific names of all the bones on his skeleton shirt. And most importantly, he learned that Halloween is fun but it’s not real; it’s just pretend.

In mid-September, I couldn’t decide what the kids should dress up as, and Xander just didn’t understand when I asked him what he wanted to be. But then he played over at a friend’s house who was wearing a Sheriff Woody costume. Somehow, the concept of Halloween clicked with Xander and he decided to be Luke Skywalker. Arya’s Princess Leia costume only made sense.

Some pictures of our weekend with the fall festival at church, and trick-or-treating with Xander’s 3 favorite girls and one adorable dog:

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Moved!

We managed to get moved over the weekend and it was a relatively unstressful event. Our movers were troopers, and did a great job!

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Because of our drawer system, Xander was able to put away a lot of his own boxes:

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I had to turn Xander’s girly room into something a little more manly. Thankfully it was much easier to do than it will be to turn Arya’s creepy bunny room into something that won’t give a toddler girl nightmares. But that’s another post.

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Here are the kids after church today:IMG_4642

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On the drive to the new place, as the movers were hauling the very last load from our old house, I got this wave of sadness. The day we moved to Arkansas, Xander was 18 months old – still a baby. Now he is a talking, reading, potty-trained, robot-obsessed, gymnast, history buff, preschooler! Xander did so much growing up at 503; it was the house where we really got to know him. I’ll miss living in the place where all those memories were made, but I’m looking forward to creating some new memories with Xander, Arya, and their new sister at 7000.

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New Beginnings

On Monday, I was sworn in as an officer of the court. This means my adventure as a CASA is about to start.

Today I had what was supposed to be a routine prenatal checkup. I asked my doctor if he thought it would be okay for me to try a gender ultrasound. He said sure, but not to get my hopes up. I am a few weeks earlier than when he likes to do them, but I am impatient so we tried anyway. Just as I have suspected since I first saw my positive pregnancy test, it’s a GIRL! I am excited to start making preparations for baby Aliza.

Friday is moving day. I can’t wait!

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Quote of the Day

Rob: “If you’re happy and you know it, take a dump.”

Xander: “AMEN!”

Living with boys is never boring.

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Wake Me Up When September Ends

It’s the last day of September, and I couldn’t be happier. This has been one of the craziest months we’ve ever had; it just kept coming. Most of the “issues” that began this month haven’t come to a tidy close, but there is a light at the end of the tunnel, and it looks a lot like October.

First things first: the nausea. The Nausea. THE NAUSEA. Morning sickness, noon sickness, night sickness, all the time sickness. Ritz crackers and ginger ale sickness. I’ve been trying to be a big girl and not whine about how I’m feeling when people ask, or via status updates. But my husband gets to hear every last complaint. And he deserves to because it’s all his fault, anyway.

I guess that was really the second thing.
Actual first thing first: We’re expecting again! Baby Schumann #3 will be arriving in early April 2012.

Because we’ll be out of room come April, we were house hunting all month. There was a little bit of stress involved with that. A closing date is in sight, which is a relief, but the thought of packing and moving and unpacking is slightly terrifying. How have we acquired so much stuff in just 2 years?

The kid and I took our trip to Atlanta. We left after church and had a pleasant, uneventful trip in the van. Until the last hour and a half. I needed some gas (fun fact: a single tank in a 2001 Sienna will get you from Paragould, AR to Chattanooga, TN) and I was already planning on meeting my parents in Chattanooga anyway, so I exited and headed towards the nearest station. As I was crossing the intersection to pull into the gas station, another car ran their red light. Because they were headed straight for Arya’s side of the van, I turned to try and avoid them. They managed to mangle the entire passenger side of the van, but thankfully nobody was injured and the van is still in perfect driving condition. The doors even close!

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Long story short: the other driver claimed to have a green light, we are both insured by the same company, there were no cameras present at the intersection to disprove their statement, and the police officer who came to the scene didn’t decide who was at fault in the police report. Which leaves both parties responsible for their own repairs. A 2001 Toyota Sienna,  even one in exceptional shape like ours, would cost more in repairs to the doors than it is worth. Our insurance company says, “Total it.” We have come up with a creative solution. Stay tuned.

Rob led worship for his first revival at a church in Jonesboro. One thing I love about Rob is that he doesn’t do anything halfway. If he’s going to do something, it’s going to be done with excellence. Of course, that meant he was busy while preparing for the services. Because his drummer ended up passing a kidney stone, I got to fill in one evening. I was very impressed with the speaker; he had me engaged for every word of his sermon.

I completed my CASA training this month. You know how you’re supposed to feel ready and able and equipped after hours and hours of reading and sessions? I’m terrified. I’ll be getting sworn in as an officer of the court in October then probably get my first case very soon afterwards. I have no idea what I’m doing.

All month, somebody seemed to always have an appointment, rehearsal, practice, or meeting to attend. We just had to keep calling babysitters and juggling kids. It’s stressful, but it’s just a part of our little family getting bigger.

The IRS sent us a delightful little letter this month saying we owed them $10,000 for 2009. That was a fun mailbox surprise. It was just a clerical error and it’s all cleared up now, but with everything else that has happened this month an audit seemed to just be icing on the cake.

So long, September. I hope October is more merciful to us.

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