Stuff

Aug. 13th, 2008 03:43 pm
semperfiona: (Default)
Called Christine this morning. It's been a while since I had talked to her, and I recalled that her baby's due date was Aug. 1. Lo and behold, she's currently in the hospital. But no baby yet. It's not so overdue as all that, since they'd changed her due date to Aug. 6, but they did a test yesterday that showed that all the amniotic fluid is gone (?) so she was admitted for induction. She's not getting dilation, however, so if the current drug doesn't induce dilation she'll have to have a cesarean. Either way, there should be a baby within 72 hours.

Baby baby baby nom nom nom!

***

Jennie is also in the hospital today; she's just had an abdominal surgery intended to prevent gastric reflux that could eventually have caused rejection of her new lungs. All is well so far, she's out of surgery and in recovery.

***

One of the things I was concerned about when we left for Huntsville last week was that the peaches on my tree were thisclose to being ready for picking. I was delighted, on our return, to find that they had ripened to almost perfect, and the tree was still loaded down with peaches.

The tree has been in my yard for six or seven years. Each year, it's been covered with blossoms, has set a plethora of fruit, but something has happened between spring and harvest. There were the birds and squirrels. There was the big windstorm that blew them all down. There was the freeze right after blooming. But this year, they made it all the way to the end.

We started by picking up the windfalls and freezing the good parts of those. We picked a few more and made up baskets for the nearest neighbors, along with a few cucumbers and tomatoes from the garden (we have cucumbers coming out our ears but for some reason the squash plants all died almost immediately). It felt so good to give away our very own produce.

But this morning, between when Tammie left for the hospital to sit with [livejournal.com profile] transplantmom and when I left for work, Someone or Someones Unknown picked all the peaches left on the tree. GRRRRRRRRRRRR!

Reminds me of the time we came home to find that Someone had chopped the top off of our baby oak tree. It was all of eighteen inches tall, and Someone lopped it down to six. In the long run that may have been good for the tree, as it now has little branches where it used to just be vertical, but hello? Is not your job to prune my trees.

***

Rosa's first day of third grade today. Such a big girl she is now! But still excited to go back and see all her friends.

They have an incredibly long list of school supplies, and very specific: must have 2 purple, 2 blue, 2 red, 2 green and 2 yellow notebooks. D'you know, there was not a single solid-colored notebook to be found at Wal-Mart Saturday? I ended up clearing out the stock at Schnucks.

And then there's the room supplies: Clorox wipes. Paper towels. Kleenex. Apparently the school district can't afford to supply these, so the parents have to. But even Parkway Schools had such items on the list. I swear I didn't have to bring such things when I was a kid (cue rant about walking to school uphill both ways in the snow).

***

The ex called the other day to tell me he wanted to enroll Rosa in PSR classes on Monday nights this year. I had two problems with that: 1) Monday is my custody time, and 2) girl scout meetings are on Monday nights. I'm really not willing to take Rosa out of girl scouts. He suggested putting her back in the troop she was in during first grade, but I was vastly happier with the one she is in now. Much better organized, actually accomplishes things, and all her friends from school are in it. So he did some investigation, and has two other possibilities for her. He found a Sunday morning PSR class which she might be able to do (depends on the parish and total enrollment, etc) or he can homeschool.

We win!

Mar. 29th, 2005 11:20 am
semperfiona: (rosa crowned)
Rosa's going to public school next fall. Ray actually felt that the
public school had its act together better, and that the facilities and
specialty offerings were better. He still thought she'd get a better
"morality" education from Catholic school, but the other things seemed
to outweigh that.

With the following conditions: We're to drop her off at school and pick
her up for at least the first year rather than sending her on the bus.
Starting in the first grade she's to go to Public School Religion
classes on Wednesday nights, and to adjust for some of his "lost time" I
start picking her up at eleven on my Sundays rather than nine. I
stipulated that that was a tentative agreement because it's a year and a
half away, but it seems okay. Gives me a chance to go away for the
occasional weekend and not have to come back before the crack of dawn.

So the Christian Witness statement is moot. Whaddya know. Now to
register the girlie for kindergarten and also for the summer school
pre-K introductory session.
semperfiona: (rosa crowned)
This has the potential to be interesting, in the Chinese sense. I feel
that Rosa's school experience will be better if we are able to be open
with the school about our family configuration. So I called up the
Catholic school today and asked them some questions.

I said I had read a news item about a child somewhere being refused
entry to a Catholic school because her parents were a lesbian couple. (I
can't actually remember whether the parents were men or women. But it
doesn't matter for the purpose.) I asked whether that was a policy or
just that particular school. The secretary didn't know. She said it had
never come up before, but it "might be a problem." Would I like to talk
to the principal? I said yes, and proceeded to ask him the same
question. I got much the same answer, along with "I'd have to check with
the pastor and the archdiocesan council, but it would seem to conflict
with our Statement of Christian Witness."

Said item turns out to be some sort of document that the enrollee's
parents are supposed to sign. I have asked them to send me a copy, since
it normally isn't part of the registration process but is sent home
later, "after school starts." If I can't assent to whatever is contained
in that document, then I'm not going to allow Rosa to be enrolled there.
But I gave them my proper name and mailing address to send it to, so
there is no more chance of closeting ourselves with that school in any
case.

When I told Tammie this, she wondered how long it would take for the
gossip mill to get back to Ray's family. I'd like to hope the school
administration could be more discreet than *that*, but well, another
day, another adventure.

Profile

semperfiona: (Default)
semperfiona

September 2024

S M T W T F S
1234567
891011121314
15161718192021
2223242526 2728
2930     

Syndicate

RSS Atom

Most Popular Tags

Page Summary

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jul. 13th, 2025 12:08 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios