About the Author

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currently loving: my handsome, adoring husband, Justin; my rambunctious two-year old Bennett; Miles & Fergi (my out of control, lovable Welsh Corgis); Netflix; a great glass of pinot grigio; free time; and, home decorating.
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Wednesday, January 13, 2016

Preschool Post - Getting Started

When I started out on my educational journey years ago, I never in a million years would have imagined that I would be planning my own at-home lessons for my rambunctious, strong-willed two year old little boy.  As it turns out, my little boy is a smart cookie who needs a lot of extra stimulation to keep his mind busy (more on his gifted diagnosis another day), or my house and my patience really suffer.  Mostly my house, if I can be honest.  I suffered from what a lot of moms suffer from these days - I call it extreme exhaustion, but my son's pediatrician called it  "lazy parenting" (ugh, whatever, obviously she has no clue what it's like...)  It's no one's fault; parenting is hard and simply just not fun sometimes.  It's a lot easier to turn the TV on and scroll mindlessly through Pinterest looking at adorable sensory bins, mason jars (who knew you could do so much?), crafty activities and things you would definitely do if you could just have a plethora of things work out your way including, but not limited to, having your morning coffee in peace, sleeping a solid 8 hours in a row (or even 6, I'm not picky), time to do laundry or heck, even take a shower!  But then reality set in and I realized that if I wait until all of those things actually happen, we will have watched an inappropriate amount of hours of Mickey Mouse Clubhouse and my laundry will still probably not be done.  So, my discovery brings me to present time:

UN-Lazy Parenting  (thanks to an unnamed pediatrician who shamed me into this)

I decided to take my fancy education degrees and put them to good use.  I knew my son was acting out because I was not keeping him busy like I should be, and that was no one's fault but my own.  He needed stimulation and I needed to put my phone down.  I decided to begin researching appropriate lesson plans for gifted preschoolers (or just curious little minds in general) and learned that most of what was considered "interactive" and "appropriate" was actually really, really easy to prepare with a very limited amount of time (and time is always an issue with parents).  In my upcoming posts, I'll detail out my lesson plans, pictures, the materials needed for each lesson, as well as how they actually worked.  I won't recommend a lesson that totally bombed, but I'll let you try it for yourself if you're really curious.  

To get started with these lessons, I recommend you have a small place where you can keep your materials for each lesson in a basket, and a work space that can get messy.  You don't need a whole room, and it doesn't need to be fancy, but it does need to be able to get a little dirty or have a random crayon scribble every now and then.  For me, this space is in my son's playroom.  

Learning Zone at Casa de Smith
 He had a train table for a long time that really wasn't being used, and I had stars in my eyes envisioning all the fun things we could do on that flat surface so, the trains went in a bin on the other side of the room and I turned it into our learning space.  Some children will really need chairs or a small table, but my son really has a difficult time sitting for more than 3-5 minutes, so we do a lot of our lessons on our knees or standing when it's appropriate.  He does have a little Mickey chair he likes if he gets tired, but we move around a lot. I made a quick trip to Target for some colorful bins, a white board and came across some adorable letter and number banners (Dollar Spot at Target, they are still there as of today - 1/13/16!) that I knew would work well for our letter and number focus and ta-da! We had a learning space.  It is important to make sure it isn't cluttered with unnecessary stuff, and remains a place they are excited to go to and learn.

Other things you might need just to get started:

  • Baskets/bins
  • Dry erase markers and a dry erase board
  • Construction paper
  • Miscellaneous materials that you might already have including letter blocks, crayons, markers, paints, small plastic toys, etc. 
  • Age appropriate worksheets (I can provide a link to those if you're interested)
  • Bingo daubers (great for young kiddos who don't have the motor skills to grip pencils and write in lines, etc.)
  • Glue sticks
  • Scissors for little hands AND big hands

For now, I'm going to provide the basis of what I did to get started, as well as the first thematic unit (a whole lesson plan unit on a particular subject, for those of you that aren't teachers) we learned about which was... drum roll please... OCEANS!   

Before I began my unit, I spent about 10 minutes on my local library's website searching for children's books on the theme I was interested in teaching.  I found 8 or 9 books and reserved them for a quick pick-up (my library calls to tell me when my books are ready so I can swing by and grab them without actually spending much time in the library).  I have these books on display as well as in his book box with easy access.  (You will see in the picture above that I have books in the red basket - that is my book basket and I keep it on the table at all times.  We use them a lot when we learn together. However, this particular picture does not show all of the library books I just picked up for this unit; I'll show those in a different post.)

Book basket - but not updated with all of our newest books!
Check back later for a picture of all the books for the Ocean unit.
Once you're all set up and you have your books ready to go, you're ready to teach your little one(s).  Keep in mind that my lessons are geared for a two and a half year old little boy, but can easily be altered to be more or less rigorous for younger/older children.  In my next blog post, I will outline my lesson plans for the whole thematic unit as well as my personal reviews as to how well each lesson went.  I can't wait to share more with you! Subscribe to my blog and you will get updates on each and every thematic unit I post, as well as links to the worksheets, the lesson plans and pictures! Drop any questions you have in the comment box below :)

Thursday, January 7, 2016

finally free. raw. unedited.

I visited one of my oldest and dearest friends today to bring lunch and well wishes after the birth of her first son.  I know how hard those first few weeks are after you bring a new baby home, and there was nothing I appreciated more than a hot lunch and someone to talk to that didn't grunt or cry.  Baby J is sweet little three-and-a-half week old bundle of baby coos and wrinkly skin, pure perfection. And my friend?  She was collected, calm even, and seemingly content with her new role as 'Mom'.  Granted, sweet little baby J was napping peacefully in the beautiful lifesaving machine that is the Mamaroo, but my friend was wide awake (point 1), cheerful (point 2) and working (!!)(??)(point 3). These three points didn't really hit me until I was walking out her front door and thinking about my own experiences as a new mom.

As we settled in at the kitchen table with the Mamaroo humming nearby, I asked her all the normal things like:
"How are you doing?" 
"How is baby sleeping at night?" 
"Have you had a lot of visitors?" 
"Is your husband being helpful?" 

Her response to everything was as expected ("I'm fine", "We've had a few rough days", "Not too many visitors but wow, this one family member just wouldn't leave..." "Husband got up with him last night! Yay!"), until she said this:

"Everyone keeps checking on me, making sure I'm doing okay.  It's like they think I'm going to go crazy.  I know that the post-partum depression thing is so common now.  But I'm doing fine.  I'm just perfectly okay."  

And she really is, at least by my outsider's point of view.  She looks happy, and has acknowledged the difficulties of (new) parenthood, but most importantly, she has not been overtaken by them. She was content in the sleeplessness and the coos and the hour it takes to leave the house to go anywhere and the endless dirty diapers. The cuddles and gassy smiles and new baby scent and pure love made it all worth it to her. 

As I walked back to my car after lunch, happy mom and baby standing on the front porch behind me,  a moment of guilt hit me. Horrible, terrible, raw, painful guilt.  

I never felt that way after my son was born. 

There, I said it.  It's out in the open (and the internet is a wide open, scary place filled with judgment and mean people).  After my little boy was born, I was immediately overtaken with fear and helplessness and anxiety.  Sheer panic set in when he was a week old and my husband went back to work.  I was 100% in charge of this little human who would simply not stop crying, and I was the only one there to fix his problems.  My little boy, whom I love dearly and would protect with my life, remains the most difficult child I have ever encountered (and I was a teacher).  God bless him, but the kid cried for six months straight.  All day long.  Half the time, he whimpered through his naps. He was not a content baby, and if his eyes were open, he was upset.  Over-stimulated is what the doctor called it, and later rendered his diagnosis to 'high-maintenance' (whatever that is).  Whatever those things meant still meant I was alone and scared and had no idea what I was doing. I was exhausted, and begged for help that nobody could give or knew how to give, and through that six week journey, I cried as much as he did.  I would lock myself in the bathroom the moment my husband came home from work so I could stand in the shower and sob hysterically, wondering what lesson God was trying to teach me by giving me a baby that seemingly hated me. My house felt like a jail cell and no one I knew had the key to freedom.  Looking back on these sentiments, I realize how utterly ridiculous I sounded as I know my son loved me and needed me, but I was paralyzed with fear. The day my six week maternity leave was over was the happiest I had been in six weeks.  

I went through the first year of my son's life in a haze, the fleeting happy moments I would allow myself to feel clouded with anxiety of what the night would bring (would he ever sleep? would I ever feel normal again? why am I not enough for him?) or what event outside of the home we couldn't attend because I was afraid that his incessant crying would upset other patrons more than it did me.  I took cute pictures with him when he was sleeping or in the few moments after he was fed as that was the only time he was even remotely content in an attempt to convince myself that I was a good mom, and I was enough for my son.  Looking back at those pictures, I realize I only took those pictures for two reasons: (1) to convince other people that I was a good mom, and (2) so my son would have pictures to look back on his childhood where his mom didn't have mascara stained cheeks and puffy eyes.  

My family said I was just emotional, and my husband, bless his heart, stepped up to the plate a hundred million times more than any other dad would have in his position to fill a role I could not muster myself.  He didn't understand my stupid hormones, or why I was sobbing hysterically in the bathroom for the fifth night that week.  He only knew that I needed a break, and was always eager to give me one.  My friends were probably terrified of me.  I don't blame them.  I terrified myself.  When my doctor asked me how I was doing, I proudly stated that I loved motherhood and that my son was the best thing to ever happen to me.  (He is, by the way, but at that moment, I felt like I was lying through my teeth.) 

Looking back on this time, I realize that I suffered from undiagnosed post-partum depression so badly that I thought I would never see the sunshine again, even though it shone down upon me daily.  I lived in a dark cloud where a thunderstorm was constantly brewing in my head and the pressure I felt to be a Pinterest mom (you know, the babywearing, breast-milk factory that had organic homemade baby food and the perfect developmental activities for each milestone) made my head want to explode.  I didn't even feel like myself; how could I be a good mom, too?  Every single day was a struggle for me, and I felt an amount of shame that no new mom (or person, for that matter) ever should.  I was so embarrassed to be around my family and friends out of fear that they would see right through my shiny facade to see the helpless, anxiety-ridden mess I was on the inside.  

I wish I had known I was not alone.  I wish I had known that I was not crazy.  I wish I had received the help I so desperately needed so I would be able to look back on my son's first year of life and reflect on his childhood with sappy nostalgia.  Seeing my sweet friend today in all of her new Mom glory made me realize that.  

Fast forward almost two and a half years later, and I have found bits and pieces of my old self and have reinvented myself as a different person.  I'd like to say new and improved, but we'll let Bennett be the judge of that in about 16 years. Maybe I've screwed him up for life, but I'd like to believe that I have redeemed myself.  Every now and then, I find that pesky depression rising up, calling out, reminding me that I am failing, but I know now that I can swallow it back down and forge on through the tantrums and messes and sleepless nights.  The depression is a constant reminder of all the things I was not able to be for my son when he was an infant, but it also serves as a reminder of all the things I can be now that I feel semi-whole again.  

My son is my sunshine, my moon, my stars.  He makes me laugh every single day, and there is no sound in the world greater than his giggles.  I pray that my dear friend only ever knows those feelings of joy and love, and never those of resentment, fear and loneliness.  Parenthood is so, so hard, and sometimes it is alienating and scary, but it is also so rewarding, and if I could have learned to let the little things fill me up with love, I probably would have lived through those first twelve months rather than just survived them.  My only hope is that my son knows how deeply my love runs through my veins.