Elena has recently expressed interest in banging on this drum, which produces a satisfying, plastic vibration. Sylvan offered to demonstrate some drumming techniques.
Archive for the ‘Sylvan’ Category
Little Drummer Kids
Posted by julie on Wednesday, 22 April 2009, 23:26Happy Birthday, Sylvan!: 43 Months
Posted by julie on Monday, 13 April 2009, 23:03Dear Sylvan,
I love you, Sir, but sometimes (more than once but fewer than a dozen times a day) I wonder if I have anything nice to say to you. Three and a half has hit you and me hard. The thing that keeps me from running away to the North Cascades to spend my days as a backcountry ranger is the shared misery from nearly every other parent I know: “Yes, three and a half – with the tantrums and whining and the crying….It was awful.” Well, that validation and the fact that, even in the face of another dreaded day, you make me laugh at your insights or cry at your tenderness.
Just yesterday, you helped Avi, age 20 months, down the stairs. You walked slightly ahead of him and voiced words of encouragement: “It’s just one more step, Avi.”
You’re almost always up for assisting when your sister’s unhappy, unless you made her unhappy by snatching her toys, you little imp. Most of the time, I enlist your help, but, last week, you just started singing “You are my sunshine” when Elena was crying. Just your presence is usually enough to calm her, but your singing is nearly fail-safe.
Last week, you, Elena, and I went out to Mount Pisgah on Sunday, then again on Monday at your request. Both days were sunny and nearly 70 degrees. I told you we were hunting wildflowers, and you followed that lead, seeking bleeding heart and “tiger daffodils,” then tiger lilies after a slight smile from me – and one of your own in response. We even found some deer and raccoon tracks in the soft earth by the river, a detour you suggested.
You’ve enjoyed costumes in the past, but you’ve really entered that cowboy boot/Captain Underpants phase with vigor. You love your Daddy’s suspenders, which have been passed down to you, and, whenever you can get hold of a dress or skirt that I’ve picked up for Elena that will fit you, on it goes! (I don’t blame you; they’re super-cute.)
Grampa Dick and Gramma Mia came and visited for a week, and, while you probably gave us more tantrums during that week, you really enjoyed their company. You played and went for hot chocolate with them, explained how [trains, a peanut butter and jelly sandwich, etc.] works, and generally enjoyed them. You miss them both, and jump at the chance to share a phone conversation with either of them, one that ends abruptly with “Okay, I love you. Bye.” More adults should be so cognizant of their immediate desires.
You still love to assign each of your family members a totem animal. Elena and I were flying starfish for a while last week, and now I’m Tracy Peacock. You’ve been a flying raccoon for quite some time.
I’m working on saying “yes” to you more often. And listening to your latest assignment of animals, explanation of train track design, review of how your version of Jacks works, and so on. It does go on and on, but you are a funny little guy, full of surprises and observations. I love you.
Love,
Mother (it’s replaced Mommy when you’re conscientious enough to be a smarty-pants)
Happy Birthday, Sylvan!: 42 Months
Posted by julie on Friday, 13 March 2009, 1:24Dear Sylvan,
You’re really 3 1/2 now, an age you’ve been calling yourself for the past few months. You understand ages better than I would think someone with little knowledge of fractions could: you know that after you’re 3 1/2, you’ll be 4, then 4 1/2, etc. Each age is a compartment, or so I imagine it in your brain. You’ve got the sequence in hand, and you even said to me today: “I’m 3 1/2 and Elena’s zero; when I’m 6, Elena will be 3.” I actually remember thinking, when I was about your age, that I’d never be older than my older friends, and it was sort of an epiphanic moment; it saddened me then.
Your understanding of numbers isn’t always so obviously accurate. Witness this conversation with your Dad:
Daddy: “If I have seven of something and you have eight of something, who has more things?”
Sylvan: “Mommy!”
But your understanding of your Mommy is accurate – especially if we’re talking about Mommy having more chocolate.
During the past couple of months, you’ve developed a friendship with Camilla. I won’t tell any stories that might embarrass you later, but suffice it to say that you’re crazy about Camilla and she’s crazy about you. When you see each other at school, you start giggling and making Happy Talk hands, facing each other and smiling. While I don’t expect Camilla to drop you like a hot potato (not only do I think you’re a little young for the fickleness of middle school friendships, but Camilla is such a genuinely sweet person that I don’t think it would cross her mind not to include her Sylvan in her circle), the depth of your joy with this friendship makes my heart both swell and break for you, for the deep love and the deep pain that we humans cause each other. I don’t mean that last sentence as a warning. But I will be here to hug you when your heart breaks.
You and I have given up your naps this past week. Since September, you’ve rarely slept at school on the couple of afternoons you’re there each week. I have been dreading this, although now that I’m not spending an hour and a half trying to get you to take a nap, it’s much less stressful, of course. We still read books and I leave you to spend some quiet time in your room in the late afternoon. You read books to yourself one recent afternoon and jumped on your bed for 45 straight minutes on another.
Sometimes I wonder if whoever coined the term Terrible Twos meant Terrible Threes. But that’s not alliterative. Thankless Threes? I feel that way on the difficult afternoons, when you and I are butting heads, sometimes literally, when you are having a difficult time curbing your whining and so am I, frankly. But you are definitely becoming a better listener and helper. You made yourself a peanut butter and jelly sandwich yesterday, from removing the bread and jelly from the fridge to slapping the slices of bread together. I helped with the twist tie on the bread bag, a little final peanut butter spreading, and cutting your sandwich into nine pieces, per your request.
How about Thecodont Threes? That’s probably most appropriate, given your new interest in dinosaurs, especially pteranodons.
You’re becoming more and more independent, which is great, given that, even though Elena’s pretty low-maintenance for a nearly seven-month-old, she still needs to have her diaper changed and be taken upstairs for naps. You have created some fantastic train tracks and glued together some fun collages recently, all under your own steam.
You still love letters and sounds, and, if you ask me a word and I suggest that you sound it out, you ask pertinent questions, like, “Does this C make a ck or ss sound?” Recently, you spelled WMM with alphabet blocks, then said, “Look, Daddy, it says ‘Wuh! Muh! Muh! That’s what Elena says: ‘Wuhmuhmuh!'”
I’ll leave you with a joke, the first you’ve told, as far as I know:
How do light bulbs and light fixtures learn to fly?
They just need to be a weathervane!
Yeah, I don’t get it either, but I’m willing to laugh with you.
Love,
Mommy
Bathroom Update: Psych!
Posted by julie on Thursday, 5 March 2009, 22:29You’d think I’d learn. Of course it will take longer than I’d hoped. The tub and sink are in place and waterfied. The showerheads are also hooked up, but not affixed to bars on the wall yet. No toilet.
But, luckily, I have cute children. So, Babies in a Basket!
Camilla’s 5th birthday party
Posted by jonesey on Sunday, 1 March 2009, 10:47Yesterday, Sylvan went to Camilla’s 5th birthday party at Bounce Gymnastics.
Camilla is a friend of Sylvan’s, from his school.
Follow the link above for cute pictures of Sylvan with tons and tons of girls (he was the only boy at the party other than Camilla’s brother). Also, a bonus picture of Elena!
Fierce Love
Posted by julie on Saturday, 28 February 2009, 23:03My friend and mentor, Debra Gwartney, recently published a memoir, Live Through This, about a terrifying stretch of time in the mid-90s when her two older daughters, then in high school and middle school, ran away first for a few nights at a time and later for months. Debra’s finishing up a book tour, and she read in Eugene the other night. After her daughter Amanda’s moving introduction and Debra’s heartbreaking reading, Debra mentioned, while answering a question, that Amanda and Stephanie are both superbly creative, intelligent women. A family friend told her that they had needed to express their creativity somehow; they couldn’t have just sat home and done their homework, essentially. Debra wishes she’d known how to channel that energy.
It scared me a bit, both the reading and this comment. I mean, Debra’s sometimes discouraging but ultimately family-strengthening experience could put the fear of daughters into any red-blooded parent. But that comment about smart teenagers scared me even more. I think I have at least one of those children – those creative, brilliant ones.
And I’m not like that. While I have some artistic talents, it’s more in the execution of an idea, not in the development of said idea. I sat home and did my homework when I was in high school. I wasn’t full of passion and creative energy and spirit. Sylvan might be.
I’m started the channeling of his creative energy right now. We’re working on cutting and collages.
Tonight, Sylvan pulled himself onto my lap and told me that he loves me. Unsolicited. Some people might not have to wait nearly 3 1/2 years for that. Debra might have waited longer.
41 Months: Through Sylvan’s Eyes
Posted by julie on Thursday, 12 February 2009, 9:31And check out Sylvan on Oregon Wild’s website. Chandra invited us to join an Oregon Wild snowshoe to Fish Lake last weekend, and she blogged about it on their website, so I needn’t.
And did anyone know that a crumb-saster is “a disaster where crumbs fall all over you”?
Happy Birthday, Sylvan: 40 and 41 Months
Posted by julie on Thursday, 5 February 2009, 16:06Dear Sylvan,
When we picked up a few items at Sundance the other day, while hauling a grumpy Elena, you were the magic man. You found a grocery cart, steered it into the store, and then started grabbing the items we needed off the shelves: “Where’s the tofu, Mom?” “Do we need milk?” Whoa. Really? It’s a far cry from the child I’ve had to restrain, occasionally kicking, in the cart – and that was only last week.
You’re helping out more in the kitchen now, too; you love to cut vegetables with a plastic knife (which means that you have to REALLY want to cut vegetables, because those knives are about as sharp as fingernails), you like to help make PBJs, and pouring and mixing flour is clearly on the road to heaven (you’d drive your trains through the cookie batter if I’d let you).
All this after being quite concerned about you a month ago. After flying to the east coast for Christmas, you had become a little monster I didn’t recognize while we visited family. I was, frankly, really worried about flying back to the west coast with you. Yes, to be fair, I worry too much, but I thought you might pull some sort of kicking/screaming tantrum for the entire twelve hours, because that’s the kind of behavior you’d been exhibiting during our visit. The moment our family again became four people, though, you morphed back into a human – even a lovable human. You sat and put stickers into a sticker book, you watched movies on my computer, you wanted to ride the train at the Denver airport, you made polite requests for juice and cheese. It’s interesting how I expect that my three-year-old to behave perfectly when faced with unfamiliar surroundings when I certainly don’t behave perfectly when faced with my everyday life. I’ll try to remember that you need space, too. You like being alone, which only makes sense, given your parents.
You’ve acquired a best friend, an older woman named Camilla. She’s four and a half and in your class at school. On her sharing day, she chose you to guess what was in her Elmo sharing bag, “because he’s my best friend” (you guessed rain, by the way). You’ve told me that you’d like to go to school every day that Camilla’s there: “Sunday and Monday and Thursday and Friday. Is that all the days?”
While we started a “Sylvan says” list here soon after you started stringing words together, your classroom teachers have recently started a “Sylvan says” list. In fact, the pre-school room NEXT to yours has also started a list for you, because you visit them, too, and, frankly, the next thing that comes out of your mouth might be hilarious. You recently announced to your teachers that, “actually, pickles are an acquired taste.”
Love,
Mommy
Happy Birthday, Sylvan: 39 Months
Posted by julie on Friday, 12 December 2008, 0:58Dear Sylvan,
Tonight, you told me that “Instead of blood, bones, and boogers, you should be filled with beads” (like Giraffe Spot Giraffe Giraffe, your baby, who’s filled with something like beads or beans).
You like to count, add, and subtract, and I think it’s neat how intuitive number-crunching seems to be for three-year-olds. What, Mom? Of course two more than three is five.
Now for some photos. Let’s face it, it’s December, and I have way too many holiday things I make myself do, so you don’t really need a long letter, right?
This wasn’t super-comfy, but like any red-blooded child or cat, you dig boxes!
So, I’m ready for Thanksgiving dinner. Are you guys gonna sit down sometime soon?
Elena clearly loves you, since you’re obviously the only one in the house who’s any fun. She smiles at you when you encapsulate her in her activity mat (Don’t encourage him, Elena.) and follows your every move when you bound around the house singing the alphabet song without your clothes on.
I love you,
Mommy
All of a Sudden, He’s Bigger
Posted by julie on Thursday, 27 November 2008, 0:53I’ve occasionally considered the question (wavering in and out, taking up valuable brain space) of when my son is going to seem less like a toddler and more like a boy. I’m not hoping he’ll just grow up, you understand. I’m not trying to push him along. I really can, at least once every day, appreciate his three-ness (although I just read on another blog, Mighty Junior, that a three-year-old has “all the fury of the two-year-old, only [he’s] smarter.” Yes.). But I sometimes wonder.
And, this past week, Sylvan has seemed like a boy. First, I took him to the dress rehearsal of an M.F.A. thesis dance performance last Thursday night. It started at bedtime, 8 p.m., so I knew I was embarking on a risky adventure. I told him, though, that if he was tired or if he just didn’t want to stay, we’d leave. I’d stacked the deck, of course. This was a show created for Sylvan’s dance interests, with modern dance that included African drumming and Carnivale costumes in the first half and a second half comprised of three hip-hop pieces. One of Sylvan’s three idols, Master’s student Chris Gorney, also known as Craze G, is a hip-hop and breakdancer with a sincere interest in preserving the history of breakdancing and hip-hop through contemporary hip-hop performance and competition. Whenever Sylvan’s around Chris, he breaks into a goofy grin, stands by Chris’s knees, and regales him with stories of yellow sneakers (or whatever else is on his mind. Sylvan’s remarkably undeterred, even if Chris simultaneously fields comments and questions from other adoring fans.).
So Sylvan sat through a dance performance that was an hour and forty minutes long! That’s more than his Dad can handle — to be fair, that’s longer than most adults can handle. When the show was over, Sylvan still didn’t want to leave: the stage crew was using a Genie to take down Craze G’s spraypaintings: graffiti signs introducing the dancers and DJ.
Then, on Sunday morning, I asked Sylvan if he’d like to ride his bike, a heavy little two-wheeler with training wheels that Chris (Daddy, not Craze G) serendipitously found on the side of the road with a “FREE” sign on it a couple years ago. Sylvan donned his helmet and didn’t look back. He’s been on this bike two or three times before, for a few minutes each time, but it’s been many months since he’s been on it. He fell over a few times, always when he was paying more attention to silliness than the sidewalk. A new four-year-old friend was riding HIS bike, too, so the two boys pedaled together, around the block and down the hills.
Finally, later on Sunday, Sylvan earned the 50th star on his star chart. He accrues stars for going to bed at bedtime, using the potty by himself, helping out, putting his toys away, and taking showers. Sylvan can choose what he would like — a toy, in this case, but I’m all for a trip to Sweet Life — when he reaches 50 stars. I’ll admit that I’m still of two minds about essentially using bribery to get my son to go to bed; I know that external motivators can backfire. Nevertheless, we’ve decided to try bribery, hoping to make these tasks habitual. And, after over a month, Sylvan got 5o stars. He doesn’t pay much attention to the chart, so I didn’t think it motivated him, but, after I counted 49 stars and told Sylvan he only needed one more, he immediately went in, used the toilet, washed his hands, and went to the back door to put on his shoes and wait for me to take him to the toy store. And he waited patiently. No whining, just excitement about going to Eugene Toy and Hobby, where he played with the train table, marveled at the plane models, and chose a little bulldozer, Byron, from the Thomas the Tank Engine series as what he’d like to take home with him.
He just seems big.