My Rachael

I didn’t get a chance to write to you on your birthday. So I wanted to take and make the opportunity now to write to you.

I know you’re three years old and even if I read this to you, you’d probably be on to playing before a paragraph was complete. But some day later, if you want to make the time, you can look back and see and hear and read.

Rachael, I adore you.

You are my little Mommy look-alike, with Daddy’s nose and character. Your patience blows me away sometimes. You have taught me so much in giving someone time to work through something, without pushing them to “get over it” at your own speed. I admire that about you and am really challenged by that in you.

Your nurturing heart is so alive that you just can’t help but care for others. This precious little person in you finds such joy and contentment in serving and caring for others, especially those younger than you. I could not ask for a better “first child” to lead the way by example and grace. But even beyond that, I hope and pray that your compassion never changes as you view others with love, respect and delight.

We have found our clashing in three years old too. You challenge me to learn how to love you, while letting go and letting you feel and sometimes be “in control.” Your autonomy is blooming. You’re trying to find your identity outside of us – while still remaining tapped into the family. It’s like the budding of your teenage years as you try to figure out leadership and followship. Sometimes your autonomy comes off as disrespect, flexing your wills with a selfish motive. But sometimes that autonomy has opened my eyes to the little girl you are becoming and the independent little character that has become alive in you. Even in the moments of fluctuating balance between “your wild side” and your need to be quiet and calm, I want you to know that I am working hard to love you from a confident distance. It’s a new learning curve for me too. I want you to feel my confidence in your ability to try hard, even if the success is variable at this point. I want you to feel my love in me letting you go to make your mistakes and celebrate your successes. You don’t want me to do things for you anymore, unless you’re in a pickle, and I am trying to learn what it means to bless and release. Sometimes it’s more hard than at other times. But loving you the way you understand love is well worth the challenge.

Oh and the delight of your joy – your raw, utter joy. Rachael that joy is so contagious. I just want to soak it up and delight in those moments to their depth with you. Life is so vibrant and exciting for you. Your little body wells up until you explode with uncontrollable delight. Thank you for running to me to share those moments with me. I’m so blessed to be your playmate in those times of excitement to the full. That kind of thrill makes me want to work harder to come up with surprises and ways to make even the ordinary extraordinary. Your energy and light on your face… that is just plain fun.

And then there’s those shy, quiet moments. The timid, reserved Rachael that we have known since birth. Your contentment to take it all in and then choose your time to participate. Sometimes it’s just a bit overwhelming to watch all the business. Sometimes I can see you studying and deciding where you fit into the play group. And while your ambitions tell you to dive right in with confidence, sometimes your calm preferences over-ride. Your ability to sit and be fascinated by books, learning, and wanting to know more. Your desire to accept the challenge of learning a new skill, observing the world around you and figuring out how something works. Sometimes it’s curiosity that fuels your quietness and other times it’s just your desire to study life, and absorb your world. I am thankful for those times of “just sit with me” and “just experience this with me”. I will try to see those more in the chaos of caring for my responsibilities. Those times that are so contrary to your loud independence catch me off guard sometimes and remind me that the difficulties of autonomy come in phases. And even in the toughest looking, most confident looking child is a small person seeking affirmation and quiet love. I love that you are learning the balance of reckless abandonment in a project and reservation. Life calls for both.

Oh Rachael, there is so much depth to your character. There is so much life in your “big girl” world. Your changing and challenging needs followed by your “that’s just our Rachael” consistencies. And even in the most friction-built, power-struggling moments, I see my Rachael in your eyes…

My Rachael whom I delight in. My Rachael whom I love to be with and find such joy in studying, learning and watching. My Rachael who has such passion for life, drive for discovery, and fascination with learning the depth of your own abilities. My Rachael who “needs space” away from and cannot play without her sister in the same moment at the same time. My Rachael who seeks independence, while clinging by Mommy’s side in the same moment. My growing, thriving and delighting Rachael…

I love you so,

my Rachael Elizabeth.

Wordless Wednesdays: Generations

When my Mom stayed up late to finish this for her little three year old’s birthday,
 Me (3 years old)

I wonder if she ever thought this would happen:
Rachael (2 years old)
Abi (2 years old)
– Because some things you just want to pass down.

Garage Sale Season

Don’t you just love it? Going to a garage sale and finding that “excessively marked down” newbie. It’s like getting a package in the mail, when you see it… sitting there amongst the junk.

Like these: There’s over 2 complete sets of these alphabet, magnetic pieces. And they cost me A DOLLAR total. (We already had the double-sided magnetic white board that I’ve been using for teaching – it cost me $12 on Amazon.)

Now I couldn’t find the exact same tiles online, but in the teacher store these guys were between $20-25 and in the online store they’re anywhere from $20 to (this almost made me cry) $55. FIFTY FIVE DOLLARS! (You can get the exact same set on Amazon for a sale price of $41, but even so FORTY ONE DOLLARS?!?!)

[Though I think ours are better than these tiles because ours click together, making the concept of a word being a combined set of letters more concrete.]

I’ll take our dollar find any day!

And Rachael’s already learned how to recognize Abi’s name through just playing with them for five minutes. No, the child can’t spell, but in our homeschooling she has just begun decoding words through their letters as I spell them and distinguishing them from other words. (We’ve been working on decoding color names to the completion of the word, not just recognizing by the first letter or two.)

So these little tiles will have much life in our household as the concept of reading and building words is, oddly, feeling closer on the horizon. Crazy to think that the child is only 3.5 years old and is beginning to show signs of beginning reading skills.

Nice to be able to keep up with her little brain with a dollar find. 😉

I’m looking forward to starting to have her build the color words next as I spell out the color aloud.

Yay for fun, cheap, effective and non-bulky materials!

WITH Chocolate!

The other night we decided to make some cookies. We had some free time so why not add in some chocolate, right?!

Here’s my THRILLED helpers who highly enjoyed the process. And are still enjoying the eating process. =)

Adding in the right amount is fun work. 
Stir the flour and backing soda and salt together. 
Sugar, sugar sugar. 
And more sugar of course! =)
Thrilled to be a “big helper.”
(Abi vetoed the scary blender noise help part.)
“Stick your tongue out…”
Could she open any wider? hehe.
Mmmmm, chocolate chips!
Concentration helps to hold the gigantic spoon.

I didn’t grab any pics of the eating part cause *ahem* my hands were preoccupied. But let me tell you what, the 14 minutes of excited waiting was well worth the yummies.

Good times had by all.

Pool Play

This “Spring” has brought some wonderfully hot afternoons in which pool play seemed only to be a natural conclusion. So a few weeks ago on one such hot day we busted out the old pool from last year, borrowed a pump from a friend (thanks, Lydia) because of course we couldn’t find ours on that day, and “filled her up” for post-nap jubilation. Now by “we” I am referring to Matt in this case doing all the hard work because I was working on another project that day of the sewing origin.

So here’s some fun in the sun pool pics I have to share of our frolicking delights.

 Daddy spoiling our girls with a mix of freezing hose water and boiling water from the stove. 
 Water play: good. =)
 Frolic away…
 “Oh! It’s so cold!”
 Play, play, play.
 Taking serious safety precautions here. 😉
 Dump and fill, dump and fill.
 Never mind our recycling bin propping up part of the deflating pool. hehe.
[Guess we’ll have to spend an other whoppin’ $18 on a new one this year (dramatic sigh)].
And what better than Popsicles in the pool on a hot afternoon. =)
We had a great time. Thanks for sharing in the joy with us.
And by all means, next time come play with us! =)

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