It Was… 93 Degrees Less Than A Hundred Degrees Last Night

We’re good parents. Honest! We’re saving up to put lenses in our kids’ glasses.

Happy Saturday everybody from Unorganized Hancock.

(Update: Lorraine supports the ahhts through our PayPal button. Many thanks! I think I owe her a novel pretty soon)
Up-Update: Kathleen M. is serially generous. Many thanks! And Dave R., who offered the “stump the band” idea originally, is very generous indeed. Many thanks!)

If The Potter Has A Sure Hand

I do not know where this person has gone to. It’s only three or four years ago, but only the faint outlines of him are visible in the current model of miniature wrecking crewman that still sleeps in the old version’s bed.

I don’t recognize the place, either. It’s from a fever dream. I only remember the illness, not the sickbed. I’m better now, so it doesn’t trouble me.

We only have one bathroom in our house now, so one can’t dawdle in there. The little feller was in a hurry to brush his teeth because it was time for school, but I was about to take a shower. He knocked, and asked, and I let him in.

“You didn’t close the door properly, Dad.”

It seemed a very… studied formulation of words for a nine-year-old to use.  I was curious.

“What part of speech is properly, son?”

“It’s an adverb.”

“Which word in that sentence does it modify?”

“Close.”

“What kind of word is close?”

“A verb.”

My wife teaches that boy, and his big brother. I hardly ever see it done; the boys learn in their rooms, and I’m working one or two floors away all the time. But by gad, it happens. You can barely make out the outline of the raw material after a while. But it’s there if you look hard. Good clay makes a great pot, if the potter has a sure hand.

Immodest Mouse

If you just tuned in, those are my sons. They’re homeschooled.

It’s very important that the viewer understand that I’m their music teacher, but I had absofarginlutely  nothing to do with the production of this video. I did not teach them any part of this song. I was not present when it was chosen, or arranged, or overdubbed, or mixed, or compiled, or uploaded. They did it all themselves yesterday afternoon. I saw it in the same manner that you did — finished product. I’m told that the parts they played together were done in one take.

The older one is seventeen. I have been harsh with him in the past. Brusque. Demanding. He is very even-tempered, or more likely, has learned to project even-temperament, which is better and the same thing at the same time. I can’t remember the last time I raised my voice to him, or that he required any form of external discipline from me. The little one is only nine, and could wear out a stone with his relentless nature, but you can never be angry with him, because he seems incapable of malice of any kind.

If I had one wish, I know what it would be. I’m not a beauty pageant contestant, so whirled peas isn’t on my list, never mind near the top of it. Let the world sort out its own problems; I’ve got my own. Here’s my one wish: I wish I’d never raised my voice, even once, to those little children, or their mother. There had to be a better way.

I can still die a happy, if defective, man, though. If the approach was not perfect, you can at least see perfection from the top floor window of our house.

(Update: Thanks to Kathleen from CT for your continuing generosity! And many thanks go out to jolie Julie, too!)

(Higher-Update: Melissa K’s continuing generosity is marvelous. Many thanks!)

(Still Further Update: Thanks, Lorraine; you’re a peach)

Inscrutable

Our nine-year-old gets up to things.

His older brother is a teenager, and has gone quiet. But he is not inscrutable. The little one is literally inscrutable. He is my flesh and blood and kith and kin and I have no idea what’s going on in there sometimes.

He is currently sitting in the dining room. It’s the only really warm room in the house. He’s eating a waffle and reading a Calvin and Hobbes compendium aloud to no one — or everyone, including one sleeping person. He also has handy a giant book of New Yorker cartoons that he reads by the hour. He reads them over and over, but never laughs at those. He reads them like a stock report. Then he turns to a giant, 1000 page visual dictionary he stole from his brother’s room. He reads them all like morning newspapers.

After he’s done eating and reading, he’ll probably watch physics lectures on YouTube on an elderly laptop we keep in there. I have no idea why he watches physics lectures on YouTube. He doesn’t seem to think there’s any difference between physics lectures and the Borderline Sociopathic Blog For Boys for entertainment purposes. He often sits impassive while watching the most absurd thing in a viral video, like it’s instructional, then laughs at gravity drawn on a whiteboard. None of this has anything to do with his schoolwork. He does all this stuff before his schoolwork. Whenever I see those whiteboard animation lectures that are popular in college nowadays, I can’t help noticing that they’re perfectly suited to a nine-year-old’s attention span and interest, as long as it has nothing to do with school. Parents are blowing 40 large on Sesame Street Science class for children that shave and drive and occasionally procreate. 

He likes lists and like things, like many small boys. He favors flags right now. He’s fond of drawing each one in Microsoft Paint. He draws all sorts of things in Paint. He’s the last person in the world to use it, I think.  He exhibits a behavior I admire. He’ll be interested in something, so he’ll try to reproduce it in every medium at his disposal. He likes Calvin and Hobbes, so he draws them in crayon, and then in Paint, and then he assembles giant totems of them out of blocks in Minecraft, and then he gets outre and draws the giant, blocky versions of them he made in Minecraft in Paint again. Then he erases is all and starts in on something else.

I do not spend as much time with my children as I’d like. I am always around, but I am busy. Yesterday I took a moment to try to teach the little feller something on the drums. His older brother had learned the guitar parts of a song, but the drumming was, I thought, more complex than anything the little boy had ever heard. I showed him a video of the fellows playing the original song, and it was a regular music video, not just a performance, and he was giggling uncontrollably at the way the rock stars presented themselves. He did not know that they did not intend to appear as clowns. He thought they were the circus. He wanted to watch it forty times, but wouldn’t pay attention to the musical part. He could wear out a stone, that boy.

I painstakingly learned the drum parts and went upstairs and haltingly worked them out on the drum set. It took me fifteen minutes or so to get through it, slowly, once. It was deuced difficult. Then I went and got the little weirdo and stood him next to me at the drum throne and tried to teach it to him. He wiggled all around, and looked at the ceiling like there was money up there, and fidgeted enough for me to ask him if he needed to go to the bathroom, and he looked out the window, and generally ignored me until I was exasperated. I could tell he wanted to watch the video, and all this other stuff I was on about was superfluous.

We do not force any musical instruction on the kids. They play because they want to, or don’t. I got up because it was pointless to continue. He sat down and played it, without error, right away. I hate that little kid sometimes.

He wants to be funny. He’s still unsure exactly how to be funny. He says riotous things at dinner, and we all laugh until tears come. He starts after we do, and laughs more uproariously than we do, and then gets stonefaced and says, “I don’t know why that’s funny,” and we laugh at that, too.

I advise you to get a little boy or two and watch them. They’re better than television, and use less electricity.

Your Saturday Dose Of Unorganized Hancock

Thanks to everyone that listened and watched and put quarters in the kids’ PayPal jukebox slot. Thanks, Lorraine! Thanks, Gordon! The boys are working on Gordon’s fine suggestion, too. Don’t touch that dial. But first…

Dave “de Medici” (LOL — I keep giving money to those Michelangelo boys, but my chapel’s never finished) dared the boys to play another song. I thought the Otis Spann suggestion was piquant, but I’m not carrying a piano up those stairs. So Sugar Ray it is. Another Someday song.

I’ve noticed that Dave suggests things that are just slightly out of the kids’ ranges, but not impossible. That’s what a good educator does. The Heir had to work diligently to reach the upper registers of the Neon Trees song, but now he and his brother can play and sing it almost effortlessly.

The original, somewhat inferior version of the song can be heard here. One can hear the autotune on the high notes. Cheaters.

Tag: homeschooling

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