matching tracksuits

fun in threes, sometimes fours

the girl

Saturday

Saturday is usually a day of hustle and bustle in our house, a day of constant movement and seemingly unending motion.

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Yard work, repairs, cleaning, cooking, child care, soccer games, shopping -- it makes the day pass in a flash. And I never really notice just how busy we usually are until we aren't. With both kids a bit sick, today became a stay-at-home day.

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And except for some cleaning and a bit of cooking, with some grading squeezed in here and there (40 out of 50 complete) and the Girl's Polish schooling, it was an uneventful day.

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It's hardly something to complain about, though. Nothing on occasion is just fine.

Silly Story

A bug named Rose lived in a hut made of Roses. Rose is a good bug. Rose has a tub full of mud. Rose likes to play in the mud. Rose is awesome.

A story by the Girl.

First Autumnal Sunday

Outdoor living in South Carolina really only becomes comfortable around mid-September. Temperatures dip, the wind seems to blow more, and it feels less humid.

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And so on a day like that -- the first day like that -- we decide we must take advantage of it. We head to our near-neighborhood favorite, less than five miles away. Lovely views, a flat paved path for the Girl to ride on: it's a perfect place to pass a couple of Sunday hours.

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It's a great place for L to practice on her new bike: hand brakes and gears make for a stressed, confused girl sometimes, and so a gentle, flat path is what she needs more than anything to grow accustomed to new techniques. She still tries to brake by pedaling backwards, and the overly-sensitive gears on the bike sometimes wreck havoc on her confidence, not to mention her pedaling.

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Still, she manages.

As we walk, the Boy, who spends much of the time in the stroller, finally reaches a breaking point. He must get out and walk. But he doesn't walk when he's outside. Ever. He runs. And falls. And he has eternal scabs on both is knees to prove it.

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His teetering and tottering about add a new stress element for the Girl: she decides it's safest to ride far in front. Until she realizes she's far in front, then she stops and waits for us.

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Those breaks, though, will come fewer and farther between as she grows older. She'll soon be seven, and that's so difficult to believe that I think I must be making that up.

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September Day

It occurred to me that I never posted Saturday’s pictures.

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There’s a story behind them — we can all see that. But I can only piece together bits of the morning side of things because I stayed at home with the Boy while K went with L for Saturday morning soccer.

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Another tough loss, I hear when they come home. Not like last year’s start, which included four goals in the first two games.

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No, this year they’re on the other end of it, getting whipped. And that’s good. In fact, I think as an educational experience, getting your tail kicked is more instructive than winning. Many more lessons to learn: humility, sportsmanship, graciousness.

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Hang on — those are the exact same things you can learn from winning. Perhaps it’s just the sting that matters: we all have to get used to it sooner or later. I’d rather it be sooner for my children.

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Apples 2013

We must crave rituals, for we invent them endlessly. We sleep on the same side of the bed nightly. When we participate in a class, we often end up sitting in the same seats throughout the course that we chose the first day. We go through periods of eating the same thing for breakfast.

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It's easy to understand why: ritual makes life comfortable because it provides signposts for our lives. It adds predictability and stability, and early humans certainly lacked both of those, I would say.

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Some rituals are natural: it doesn't take much thought to understand, for example, where birthday celebrations come from. Birthdays come around every year, whether we want them to or not, whether we're aware of them or not.

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Other rituals, like cuddling up with a family friend who is in many ways more like simply family, come from the comfort they bring. Sweet conversations about school, the difficulty of speaking Polish, listening to your mother -- these are things we repeat simply because they make soul glow just a bit brighter.

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Some rituals are flexible, born out of obsession, such as an obsession with pushing, pulling, tugging, conjoling, and wrestling anything and everything that's bigger than you are.

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Still other rituals receive their form from the calendar: seasonal rituals are beyond the control of even the most OCD toddler or desparate-for-an-outing parents. Apples cannot be hurried, and we cannot make an autumnal ritual repeat in December just because.

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We pick up most of these rituals by watching others do them. All the parishioners at our church genuflect and make the sign of the cross before entering the row of pews. It's not something I'd ever seen in Poland, and K has never really done it. As such, I've never really done it. L took it upon herself to do so this morning at Mass. Perhaps she's creating her own personal ritual by watching others' traditions.

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The Boy is keen on such watch-and-learn rituals. He knocks on closed doors when he sees them, and every time he passes something that's off limits, he reminds himself and others with a shake of the finger and the Polish equivalent of "no-no."

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And rituals often themselves contain sub-rituals. A visit to the orchard, which often includes the usual suspects, always concludes with a group portrait -- or a semi-group portrait, because someone has to take the picture.

Just like someone has to push the cart.

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It's ritual. It's habit. It's life.

Early Afternoon

Polish lessons.

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Lunch.

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Nice start to Sunday.

P-english

Mama, masz cos twardy żeby bear down on?

Boosterthon 2013

After

It's been a project we've wanted to complete for a very long time. It's been something that's shifted up and down our priority list. But eventually, we reached a point that either we get the lower portion of the driveway redone or what was unpaved would end up down the hill after repeated rain.

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The great thing about it is that it included a bonus: not only is it a great place to park a car now (obviously), but it's also a great place for everyone to roller skate, to ride a scooter, or to engage in a million other wheeled- and non-wheeled- activities.

Season Opener 2013

It was a rough season opener. Not just a loss, but by soccer standards, complete destruction. But that's good: we can learn more from losing than winning, I think.