Quick! A post before month’s end.

Posted by julie on Tuesday, 30 January 2007, 22:35

I found a chair on craigslist, and it’s become the seat of choice in our home.Tephra enjoying the new reading chair Tephra nestles in when the boy is asleep or outside. Our occasional nanny, Courtney (“Kiki” in Sylvanese), spends some hard-earned minutes reading there when Sylvan is napping. And I can sit in the chair with my legs outstretched and have only my ankles and feet hang off. And the best part is that the pillow Mom made for us last year was obviously created just for this chair, which happens to be of reupholstered Barnes and Noble vintage. I’ve rarely spent $25 so well.

I convinced Chris that we needed to play in the snow last weekend, so we rented a cabin in Lapine State Park from Friday to Sunday. All the “deluxe” cabins were taken, which is a boon for the park but a bummer for procrastinators. Okay, it’s not so bad; the “rustic” cabins have lights, heat, and two full beds – not exactly rustic, except when compared with the bathrooms complete with showers; kitchens with sinks and refrigerators; two rooms; and big TVs with DVD players in the deluxe cabins. All for just $10 more a night than the rustics. Honestly, I prefer the rustic cabins. Really. Otherwise, I’d feel like going home was roughing it. I would have preferred to have two rooms, though. With Sylvan’s schedule a tad off, he screamed and said, unhappily, “Dad-dy” or “Mom” into the darkness a bit too much for my taste.

On Sylvan, bundled up at Odell LakeSaturday, we cross-country skied at Swampy Lakes Sno-Park. I gained new respect for Chris’s skiing abilities and lack of fear of falling on our child. It hasn’t snowed in weeks, so the trails were slick and bumpy, and we’d chosen those conditions for our first ski with baby on back trial. My adrenaline junkies both loved it. Sylvan especially enjoyed the last descent, a teeth-chattering trail chewed up by weeks of skiers and snowshoers that tilted slightly to the right. I’m buying a sled for Sylvan so that I don’t have to ski behind them, just hoping that Chris doesn’t lose control and squash the boy.

Sylvan spent the weekend asking to go outside so he could crunch in the snow. That’s exactly the type of behavior I’m trying to encourage.

On Sunday, we stoppedSnow with surface hoar on the way home to snowshoe at Willamette Pass. The clear, cold conditions allowed a feathery layer of surface hoar frost to grow in areas protected from the wind. I’m no avalanche expert, but these gorgeous, light crystals, when buried, become a weak point in the snowpack, and Pacific Northwest avalanches often occur when heavy layers above just slough off the hoar frost layer. (Click on the photo to see the frost more closely)

Odell Lake frozen overThe mountains were out all weekend: Diamond Peak, Bachelor, South Sister, Broken Top, Maiden Peak. This is Odell Lake from the west end, the spot to which Tom, Chris’s Dad, skied (snowshoed?) with us a few years back; that’s Odell Butte, a little over 7000 feet, beyond the lake. We’ve never seen Odell Lake so frozen; snow has collected in the ice’s waves, and past icy shorelines are visible throughout the lake. I shouldn’t be surprised that the lake is almost completely frozen, since, currently, at 10:24 p.m., it’s 18 degrees Fahrenheit at Willamette Pass, and it’s been like this for weeks: no rain, no snow, just stars and cold air. I love it. As much as I love Eugene, I’m hankerin’ for Rockies weather.

Sylvan vocabulary update

Posted by jonesey on Tuesday, 30 January 2007, 20:08

This is probably the last time we’ll be able to do this, because Sylvan’s vocabulary is growing every day (literally; he’s picking up two or three new words a day).

This weekend, Julie and I wrote down all of the words that Sylvan uses without being prompted or reminded. These are words that he will either use spontaneously or use correctly when asked “Sylvan, what’s that?”

We were prompted to do this because at his 16-month check-up visit, Sylvan’s doctor asked if he had any words. Julie was a bit taken aback, and replied something like “Sure, lots.” When the doctor asked how many, Julie didn’t know, but she guessed about 50. When she got home and told me this story, I thought it might be closer to 100. So we made a list. Here they are:

another, apple, avocado, backpack, backwards, bag, ball, balloon, bath, bear, bib, bike, bird, book, boot, bottle, bowl, bubble, buckle, burp, button, cardinal, cat, cheerio, cheese, clapping, cookie, daddy, dancing, diaper, dog, door, down, duck, ear, eat, egg, food, giraffe, girl, hat, helmet, hot, jogger, knock, light, lion, magazine, milk, mitten, mom, moon, more, nap, no, nose, off, on, owl, pen, phone, plane, potty, raisin, rock, rocking, rubber, shoe, shower, slipper, snow, sock, spoon, squirrel, stop, teeth, tiger, tongue, top, trousers, truck, tub, under, up, vroom, walking, wall, water, wheel, yucky, zipper

That was the list, 91 words, as of Saturday. He has learned another five or ten words since then. It’s amazing. We really have to watch what we say, because he’s absorbing all of it and repeating most of it.

The words are mostly nouns, as are most of the best words in English, but he has his share of verbs, adjectives, and adverbs.

Amazing.

We have liftoff

Posted by jonesey on Sunday, 17 December 2006, 11:32

Three thousand words by 11:30 AM. I’ll take it. This feels good.
Time to go print everything out for the plane and start packing for my trip.

This is about how my brain feels right now:

how i feel

3K and it’s not even 1 PM

Posted by jonesey on Saturday, 16 December 2006, 12:43

I had 1,000 words done before 9:30 AM, then I stalled at a hard section, fiddling with it for a while. Something got me started again (probably my 11:30 hit of dark chocolate), and I cranked out the rest of a 3,000-word section before 1 PM.

This is going to work.

Here’s our house with as much snow as we’ll probably get this year. This picture was taken five days after Thanksgiving.

house_snow_2006.jpg

Postscript at 8 PM: I finished the day with 5,000 words under my belt. That’s 17 pages. Only 3,000 to go tomorrow.

Three thousand more done

Posted by jonesey on Friday, 15 December 2006, 21:44

Is this getting old for you? I’m still having fun. I’ve got 8,000 more words to go, about 27 pages. I got 3,000 done today, despite a haircut, a dentist appointment, showing the house, checking in on the dry rot work, taking a half-hour nap, and dining with Liz and Larry.

For those of you who are tired of not seeing any fun pictures, here’s one of Julie with Aunt Sheila’s casserole cozy:

Julie and a cozy

Good news, bad news

Posted by jonesey on Wednesday, 13 December 2006, 20:29

The good news is that I’m right on schedule. I finished a 5,000-word section tonight, shrinking it to just under 3,000 words. My word counter says I have 11,000 words to go over the next four days, which means I’m about two-thirds done.

The bad news is that we have a mysterious, small leak dripping water from the porch ceiling just above the front door of our house, and the contractor working on the house we’re trying to sell reports that there is standing water under that house. It looks like someone will be buying a sump pump tomorrow, somewhat ahead of schedule. And I don’t think the porch leak will go away by itself either.

Another day, another thousand words

Posted by jonesey on Tuesday, 12 December 2006, 7:21

I’m still on schedule, with a thousand words this morning and a thousand last night. I think I need to get ahead a little, though. Ten thousand in three days is looking more and more daunting as Friday approaches.

Rewriting is hard

Posted by jonesey on Sunday, 10 December 2006, 21:42

Mom called to check in on me, since I’m all by myself for a few days. We commiserated about how hard it is to take well-written source material and fashion it into decent prose without plagiarising. So far, so good, but it’s difficult.

I got my weekend writing goal accomplished. I rewrote a 6,000-word section that needed significant work. Seventeen thousand down, fifteen thousand to go, according to the word counter. I’ve got a 5,000-word section to work on before work every day this week, which will leave a brutal 10,000 words for next weekend. If I can do it, I’ll have something pretty nice to line-edit during ten hours of flights to New York on Monday. It beats watching The Da Vinci Code.

If these numbers bore you, you’ll want to skip reading the weblog for the next week. It’s all I’ll be able to talk about, and I’m just kicking around this empty house with nobody else to talk to.

Freude, schöner Götterfunken

Posted by jonesey on Sunday, 10 December 2006, 0:05

A joyful end to a long day.

Up at four to take Julie and Sylvan to the airport. Everyone else had the same idea; lines were long. We saw Mike, Brooke, and Kylie (going to Hawaii) as well as Annie, Damien, and Oscar (going to Denver). Julie stood in the “security” line while I waited in the long line to hand her suitcase over to the friendly suitcase inspectors. It looks like their flights all went fine, except for the fussy fifteen-month old boy in 20H.

Later in the morning, I went to a memorial service for a retired faculty member at my school. It was moving. His children and one of his grandsons stood up and talked about him, followed by a number of his former students. They said that he knew the difference between happiness and contentment (hint: contentment involves sitting and watching television). They said that the highest compliment he could pay to a person or an object was “vigorous.” Vigorous meant that something, or someone, was full of energy, and still a little rough-hewn.

If people say a quarter of the good things about me when I die that they said about Philip, I will have lived a life wonderful beyond measure.

In the afternoon, I took a nap. Tephra helped. She’s helpful that way. I woke up and worked on an easy part of my thesis for a few hours. I revised about 2,500 words today. So far, so good.

I rewarded myself with a night at the opera. Well, at the symphony. They didn’t play Take Me Out To The Ballgame, but they did start with two short pieces. The first was a choral work by Ralph Vaughan Williams, Julie’s favorite composer, based on text from The Merchant of Venice (Act V, scene 1). The second was a rousing Bruckner choral piece based on Psalm 150, a psalm of praise, music, and loud noises.

After the intermission, the choir had decided to stay, so the orchestra played some Beethoven. Thirty minutes of crashing, zooming, and teasing followed, until finally the cellos and basses relented and warmed up the Ode To Joy theme. A whole lot of hollering followed, most of it apparently in German. The tenor had the most fun.

I had a cheap seat, which ended up being in the second row. I got to watch the conductor’s remarkable variety of facial expressions, but I didn’t get to see the timpani, which is the best part of the Ninth. Sounded good, though.

Seid umschlungen, Millionen.

All But Thesis

Posted by jonesey on Saturday, 9 December 2006, 9:10

I took my last exam in my last class on Wednesday. Now all I have to do to finish my master’s degree is finish my thesis. My plan is to hand in a good draft to my advisors on January 8, then have it completed and turned in to the university by the end of winter term, March 16.

It looks like it’s going to be about 30,000 words (100 pages, yow!), of which about 10,000 are in good shape. The rest needs to be turned from a structured collection of notes and excerpts into readable prose that makes sense.

Julie and Sylvan left for New York this morning; I leave in nine days. That means I have five excuse-free weekend days and four workdays to rewrite about 20,000 words. Hmm, 3,000 words of rewriting each weekend day, and 1,000 words each workday. That should be possible.