Wednesday, October 21, 2015

Who'da Thunk....


In writing, this year, I decided to do a program that included history in the process. We are learning about U.S. history, and have been researching Native Americans and the early explorers. On this particular week, the kids were challenged to write a poem about what the explorers felt when they came ashore after the long trip on the boat. To my surprise, Jacob really surpassed all expectations and made and incredible poem. 

The American Explorers

Their hair flowed with the wind as they approached land,
Their eyes twinkled in great hopes of settlement,
Their mouths blabbered trying to fathom the excitement at hand,
And their arms flailed as they yelled in excitement.

They remembered the reason they came.
They hope the Indians are friendly.
They are the great English explorers. 
-Jacob                          


Meagan chose to take on the view of the Native Americans and what they felt or thought.

 Native Americans

Legs kneel down, descending as they peek suspiciously.
Their bodies trembling, and in tremor ever so fearfully.
Their eyes swiftly searching for signs of onslaught.
Their mouths utter a silent gasp.
They then grasp a weapon imperative for stability.
All they dreamed of was amity.
They are Native Americans, who wanted to be left in peace. 
-Meagan                       

I thought they both did a fabulous job, and love seeing the progress they are making. I think we have some poets on our hands.
-Sarah

Monday, October 19, 2015

Finally a reader!!

Jacob is finally an avid reader!! YAY!! He had always disliked reading until we started homeschooling. We gave him so many other options to choose from for reading and it worked! It used to be like pulling teeth, but now he loves to sit and read for fun.



For a long while, he would only read non-fiction but slowly, bit by bit, we got him to read other things, and now he is reading anything that sounds funny or he is interested in. I finally have to "keep" him in books, just like his father and his sister. Way to go Jacob! I am so proud of you and all your hard work!! 

-Sarah

We love to draw!!

Something I have noticed about our family is that each of us love to draw. One of my favorite times of the day is when we go out to the driveway and Josh and I sit and talk with the kids, and the kids each draw with sidewalk chalk.


You can always tell what the kids are interested in, at the time, by what they draw. Meagan loves My Little Pony, and Jacob is obsessed with Link from The Legend of Zelda!
 

I have really come to know the importance of spending quality time with each other as a family. 


"In family relationships, love is really spelled T.I.M.E.”

       - Dieter F. Uchtdorf

-Sarah

Ouch!!

I am not always clumsy, but when I am, I do it with gusto!! 





So we had some friends over for dinner and while getting something out of the freezer, I accidentally knocked over the can of frozen orange juice, which fell out and "lovingly" (NOT) landed on my toe. As you can see, the orange juice won the battle. Oh, well. I learned to never hurry when reaching in the freezer for anything. 
- Sarah

Friday, October 16, 2015

Such a loving child...

Jacob has always had a sweet spirit and a kind heart. The other day Josh was in some unbearable pain. Jacob saw this and went straight to work, making sure Josh had everything and anything he needed. He came to me and said, "I wish I could take some of his pain for him."

My heart just melted and I felt his love for his father and the wonderful spirit about him. For the next few hours, he sat close to Josh and made sure he didn't need anything. What an amazing thought and spirit he had. I am so proud of him and the man he tries to be each day.



Way to go Jacob for trying to model your life after Christ!! 

-Sarah  

Monday, October 12, 2015

I'm bugging out...

While watching Meagan at her tennis match, Jacob happened to see an ant trying to carry off a dead bug carcass. He got super excited, and we began watching this ant try its mightiest to carry off food for his home. We spent the next 20 minutes watching Mr. Ant, and began talking about ants in general. We talked about how he could carry something much bigger and heavier than him. We talked about how ants live and what they eat and the various different jobs that each ant has. He was fascinated, and so was I, just talking and exploring life. One of the best things about homeschooling is just that: talking and experiencing life and learning all about it.


After all of this, I found a documentary on ants called Ants: Nature's Secret Power (In case you want to watch it: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z-gIx7LXcQM). They watched it and wrote a paper on what they had seen. When asked what they thought of it, Jacob said, "So cool!" Meagan on the other hand said, "It was so gross.....yuck!" I guess you can't please everyone.

-Sarah 

Friday, October 9, 2015

A Rare Opportunity

My first job as an Engineer (FINALLY!) was at KeyTronicEMS in July 2006.  In 2007, I took my very first "business trip" to our facility in Juarez, Mexico, with my mentor, Ken Holmes (a now-retired specimen of engineering awesomeness).  Growing up, I remember vague tales of grown men taking business trips to "exotic" locales and seeing incredible sights.  The way they described it made it seem like a company-paid vacation.  Apparently, my wife had heard the same stories.  I went.  When I got back, she immediately wanted to know what sights I had seen and what souvenirs I had brought back from them.  I told her, "none".  She was incredulous and asked what I had done for an entire 6-day period.  I told her, honestly, "I woke up at about 6:00 every day, had breakfast in the hotel, and at 7:30 went in to the factory.  We got done sometime around 6:30 or 7:00 PM every day, went to dinner (at which time everybody else is eating too, so it all took longer).  By the time we were done with dinner, it was 9:00 PM and we were exhausted so we went back to the hotel and slept.  EVERY.  DAY."  She never asked me what I did on a business trip again.  They were ALL like that.

All of them so far... except this one.

For a particular project we are working on with Eaton Corp., I traveled to the Baltimore area with our Sales Manager and my Design Engineer.  Often, it is much easier to resolve issues like the ones that we were having face-to-face rather than via email.  Not that the latter is not possible, it is usually just faster to do the former.  It is also a great relationship-builder between companies and teams.  We do our best to plan enough time to address all the concerns a customer has, but sometimes, like in this case, we are just too darn efficient.  Based on the length of the flights (and the routes we had to take) we allotted travel days, not hours, so the 6th and the 8th were "flight" days and the 7th was for visiting the customer.  We completed that visit at 11:00 in the morning.  Lunch with the customer was over by 12:30, and we were left wondering what we were going to do for a half-day.  The obvious and usual answer was to go back to the hotel and work remotely, but I knew that my designer had no way to do so.  We learned, however, that he had never been to Washington DC, before, and both our Sales Manager and I had.  We decided to take him on a tour to some of our favorite sites.  First up, was the National Air and Space Museum.  Our Sales Manager is a private pilot, and I have always been interested in aeronautics and the space program (after graduation I wanted to work for NASA as a Chemical Engineer), so we both LOVED the place.

Several pictures of the things that we saw are below (In the later ones, I thought to take pictures of the descriptive plaques so that you might see what they were...):


This one is from the inside of a Boeing 747 cockpit.


Some of the "experimental" planes used by NASA and the US Air Force:



Old rockets and space modules:



A couple of satellites:






                                 

 

After that, we started in on the national monuments.  The capitol building (the dome was under repair at the time):


The Jefferson Memorial:



I have to stop here for a moment.  I have been here 3 times now.  Twice as a kid and once again as an adult.  I have to say, as an adult, this had MUCH more meaning than it did when I was younger.  I had an actual spiritual experience here this time around.  Over the last several years, I have been studying off-and-on the founding fathers, their writings, American History, Economic Theory, Political Theory, Constitutional Law and Theory, and American Government.  To me, Thomas Jefferson was the pinnacle of American Thought and, while not particularly sectarian, was very definitely a God-made man, who reverenced his Creator and understood the importance of using God as a foundation for an enduring and just system of government.  The quotes within this monument are powerful enough to me now that I had to take photos of all of them. His words are worth studying still and, in my opinion, should be required reading for ALL youth in America today so that they will understand the great inheritance that they have received and treat it with the care and respect it deserves.






The Washington Monument (and the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool):


And finally, the Lincoln Memorial:


And old Top-Hat himself...  I've often wondered what he'd say if he were here now.  I think I have a pretty good idea.


By the time we'd been to all of these, everything south of my knees felt like it was going to fall off.  I'm getting too old and too out of shape to be doing that much walking all at once, but I am incredibly glad I did, and grateful that my designer could provide an excuse for me to re-visit some of these timeless locations and gain a new and more mature appreciation for them than I was able to in my youth.  Also, it was simply a more pleasant way to spend an afternoon than sitting in a hotel room in front of a computer.  I don't know that I'll have the opportunity to do that very often, but it was definitely nice this time.

- Josh