Monday, November 15, 2021

Fall 2021

We're now halfway through November, and it's time for an update.

The kids have been back to in-person school since September. While having the kids home doing virtual school last year was overall a good experience for us, it's been equally good having the kids back in school. Felix got thrown into the deep end of middle school, learning a new building and new routine (and much earlier hours!). Iris has been doing well in 4th grade as well. We had parent-teacher conferences last month, and we heard nothing but praise from their teachers, which makes us very proud of them.

We decided on teal for this year.

My folks went traveling, so we went to the season-opening Badger football game in their place. It wasn't the greatest game (losses rarely are...), but Iris and I got our picture with the amazing UW Volleyball team.

Go Badger Volleyball!
We went to our first wedding in a few years, with the nuptials of my cousin Beth the following week. My aunt hired a face painter, and Iris convinced me to get mine painted, too. :D

The kids had a day off at the end of September, so the three of us had an Adventure Day in Marathon County. We hiked around the Dells of the Eau Claire, ate our lunch at the RiverLife Park, and took on Rib Mountain's trails, all for the first time.
We had the Dells of the Eau Claire all to ourselves!
We returned to "normal" for Halloween. We passed out candy and it was (un)seasonably cold. The kids both decided they wanted the same costume, which made a wonderfully creepy impression. This is how they greeted my folks:

As I said in the last post, Felix played fall baseball in Plover for the first time. That was a new experience - Sunday doubleheaders. It was nice to have a chance to play more baseball before it got to be too cold. Iris, naturally, made the 10U tournament team, and I've been assistant coaching. We had several practices this fall, and a scrimmage which made our weaknesses glaringly obvious. Now that ball season has wrapped up, it's swimming season for Iris. She competed in her first real meet this past weekend. All four 10 & under Rapids girls won a heat, which was awesome, especially because there was usually one of the others in the same heat. Iris got hers in the 50m backstroke, but she also competed in the 50m freestyle and 50m breaststroke.

Nick's been keeping very busy, with business during his first year of operation exceeding his projections, which is fantastic! Not much has changed for me except my hours. I have to be in the office for a percentage of the week, so I now take Felix to school, go in to my nearby office, work a few hours there, then telecommute the rest of the work day.

Awesome things: Pediatric covid vaccine availability (Iris got her first shot on the first day she could!), Season 3 of What We Do in the Shadows, the MST3K forum, Great British Baking Show eps

Be warned: Iris has decreed that anything pink, purple, rainbow, or bedecked with unicorns is banished from her room. She's no longer a little kid and has no tolerance for such childish things.

Tuesday, August 31, 2021

Summer 2021

Since it's the last day of August and school starts for the kids tomorrow, I thought now would be a good time to wrap up the summer.

My last post in mid-June was all about ball. That theme continued for the rest of the summer. 

Felix played in three more tournaments; they should consistent improvement, and even came back to win the consolation bracket in one tournament. Felix also worked hard and once again made the more desirable team for next year. Nick and I are proud of him; he's developing into a solid, consistent player with the ability to play just about any position. Nick's been working with Felix on playing catcher and pitching skills especially. 

Felix's 11U team

Iris's team rounded out their season by winning a 10U tournament (despite being mostly 8U with the help of a few big sisters), playing a waterlogged day only to have the tournament canceled, and finishing 2nd to their archrivals, Plover, at their last tournament. Iris definitely made huge contributions to all of those finishes, and she's very pleased with her growing collection of medals and trophies. Iris also tried out for next year's tournament team, and to no one's surprise, made it. She'll be playing with many of the same girls, plus a few that are a year older than her. Iris has also been getting some private pitching and hitting lessons from the high school daughter of acquaintances. It's helped to refine her skills and set up her up for more success.


We made some changes at home to help the kids train over the winter - I cleared out all the toys from the main part of the basement (so. many. legos.) and put a bow net there instead. Now the kids have a place where they can work on their hitting and pitching mechanics. And of course, within a week of having it up, Iris broke the basement window with an errant softball. Sigh. 

See the broken window?

Once the summer ball season ended, we intended to just hunker down and enjoy having no plans, but, naturally, the best laid non-plans go out the window. Nick and Felix went up to Green Bay to celebrate Grandpa's birthday by golfing; Iris and I caught a ride to Madison with my folks and spent the day with my sister. A good time was had by all. This was my first time in a crowded bar in god knows how long (but it was in highly vaccinated Madison, so the risk was low and nothing came of it). Iris got to send three people into the dunk tank that was set up outside for a fundraiser.

Bull's eye!

The kids spent a week at resident Y camp in mid-August. Both enjoyed it a lot, except I had to pick up Felix midweek to check out a sore throat/laryngitis situation he had going on (not covid or strep, thankfully!). Sent him back to camp with lozenges and ibuprofen. (Nick and I enjoyed the week being child-free and had friends over to dine with us one night. So nice.) Y camp ended last week, and overall, it was a good experience to get them out of the house after spending so much time within our walls during last school year.

Felix turned 12 in July (celebrated his golden birthday with teammates at a tournament; he got a new ball bag and a laptop for presents) and Iris turned 9 yesterday. We celebrated with grandparents at the ball fields in Plover on Sunday and with friends at home yesterday. (She coveted Felix's new bag, so we got her one, too, and a hoverboard that's coming today.) We also checked another item off the unofficial summer bucket list by going to the new Aquatic Center for a few hours (thunderstorms interfered with our timing - grrr).


The upcoming school year has a bunch of new things for us. Felix will be 2 weeks past his 2nd covid shot on Friday, which relieves one of the myriad stressors for him going into 7th grade at a new school, with new teachers and having to go between multiple classrooms. Masks are mandatory at his school, Iris's school, and on the buses. Iris is excited to start 4th grade with the same teacher Felix had. We get to drop off her stuff this afternoon. I have to spend 40% of my time in the office now, so I've changed my schedule to 4-10s. I'll be dropping Felix off at school in the mornings, working in the office 4 hours, then telecommuting the rest of the time at home, allowing both kids to take the bus home. We'll see how it works in practice, but it's ideal in theory.

Looking forward, we have some social events for the first time in over a year and a half - a Badger game and a wedding. We signed Felix up to play fall baseball in Plover and enjoyed the first Sunday doubleheader of four last weekend. Iris will be joining swim team again, which is great for her strength and stamina. She wants to go up a level, to practicing for 1.5 hours three days a week. Don't try to slow her down... (If only she could put as much energy into keeping her room clean!)

Awesome things: the kids getting back to in-person school, the Bucks' championship, how the Brewers are doing, people who wear their masks and get the shot.


Monday, June 14, 2021

Ball

 Catching up from my last post: The kids finished their virtual school year at the beginning of June (both getting As in all subjects :o). Honestly, that's been it other than the subject of this post: Ball.

After not having any organized sports for the kids last year except golf lessons, it's been quite a change of pace to have so much ball this summer. Both kids are on baseball/softball league and tournament teams. Naturally, they play their league nights on opposite days, and have their tournament team practices when the other is playing league games. Nick and I are both assistant coaching the league teams, so there's an additional level of effort out there. It's my first time with any coaching, and it's been fun getting to know Iris's 10U teammates and cheering them on. She plays on the 8U tournament team, so she's getting higher-level experience that she's able to use in her tournament play.

This past weekend was our first time with overlapping tournaments. Felix had a tournament in Menasha, with his first game on Saturday morning. We stayed overnight, so it was an easy up and drive for us to the fields. We've had a streak of hot (90s), dry weather, and this weekend continued that trend. Yay for canopies! It would have been brutal otherwise. 

It again showed that Felix's team is a bit behind some of the other team who played last season, instead of cancelling everything because of COVID like our organization did. They're just a step behind, a step too slow, a step inexperienced. I'm not sure how or if they're going to make that up... They lost their first game 0-3 and tied their second 3-3 (Felix pitched a couple of innings). That put them 2nd seed in their pool, and they played the last game of the day at 5. They rallied, but couldn't overcome some big hits by the other team and got knocked out of the tournament 7-10. Most of the boys and families were staying at our hotel, and we all had a big unwind after the games. It's fun to get to know the other parents and watch the boys play together. I hope that experience helps them click for their next tournament.


Regardless of what happened in Felix's tournament, I was taking Iris to her first softball tournament in Waupaca early the next morning. We started off the day on the absolute wrong foot when she spilled her hot chocolate on her lap as I was about to pull out of the parking lot. I was more concerned about her skin than the state of my car, and we rushed to assess the situation. She got a bit of a 1st degree burn on her thigh, and I applied cold compresses to it right away. (We did get her some burn ointment and it didn't bother her all day - little damage done overall, thank goodness.)  I also did my best to clean up her (thankfully black) softball pants and the puddle in her car seat. That put us behind in our schedule, so it was a dash to make it to the field in time for warm-ups (especially because Iris was pitching first). Got there just in time at 9 and took a deep breath. Nick and Felix arrived a short while later. Her team lost their very first game together 0-4 (not too shabby), and then won their next two 9-0 and 14-6, which meant they would play in the championship game at 3:30. Alas, they lost 5-9 to the same team (heck of a pitcher to start the game), and took 2nd. The girls showed a lot of spunk to show up at their first tournament in high-80s sun, play a quadruple-header and walk away with silver medals. 


I'm so proud of Iris. In my biased opinion, she was the MVP for her team: she pitched some good innings (most of the balls near the plate), hit the ball every time (even a couple pitched by players and not the coach), and even made caught two fly balls. She also led the team off with a hit to start a 4-run rally after a tough inning in the final game (I could see her getting upset and near tears - she wanted to do more, but many of the girls don't have the play awareness to react to Iris's throw meant to get a tag-out). And she did it all with a hot chocolate burn and her first bad cold in over a year. Such a trooper.

Awesome things: our kids playing well, What We Do In The Shadows (Nick and I now laugh to ourselves with every "Bat!" we hear on the ball fields), 

Monday, April 5, 2021

Spring 2021

The sun is shining (today, anyway), the snow is gone, and things are looking up! I'm cautiously optimistic that we've turned the metaphorical corner. (Granted, in recent years, we've had rogue snowstorms in April, so I'm still holding my breath.)

16 days ago, Nick and I got our one-dose J&J COVID-19 vaccination! I put in a vaccine request on a whim (even though we weren't in any of the priority groups, and I made it clear that we weren't), and we were contacted a few days later to schedule our appointment. Nick wanted the one-dose vaccine, so we left the kids with my folks and drove up to Weston on a Saturday to receive it. Felt so relieved afterward... also achy with chills and a bad headache. That makes me think that I never got COVID over the past year, and would have had a rough time of it had I contracted the virus. 

10 days ago, Nick's folks (now a month past full vaccination) took the kids for the weekend. It was nice for everybody - they got to see the kids, the kids got to be somewhere else, and we got to have two kid-free nights for the first time in 15 months.

5 days ago, we left for a little spring break trip up to Superior and Duluth. It was nice to see different walls for a change of pace. Not only walls, but waterfalls! Spring melt made for some spectacular waterfall viewing at Amnicon Falls and Pattison State Parks in Wisconsin and Tettegouche and Gooseberry State Parks in Minnesota. It also made for copious amounts of mud on our 3-mile hike at Tettegouche... We spent much of the time with my parents, who joined us. We got back yesterday afternoon.

One of the more spectacular views we saw

We're now turning our attention to the future, with summer ball starting up soon (Felix has his first tournament team practice tomorrow night). Soon, we'll get the kids signed up for summer camp. We're just about set for our kids to return to in-person school next year. 

Awesome things: It's baseball season (Go Brewers!), hearing Bob Uecker call ball games (worthy of its own mention), being able to take a vacation, science and vaccines!

Saturday, March 13, 2021

Our First Pandemic Year

On Friday, March 13, 2020, Nick and I made the decision to preempt the inevitable decrees by the governor and our school district, and kept our kids home from school. The COVID-19 pandemic was approaching by leaps and bounds, and the writing had been on the wall. The week before, we cancelled our planned Spring Break trip to Florida (not that we would have been able to use our theme park tickets anyway, since the parks closed). That Friday, I left Nick and the kids at home, went to a brief meeting with ~20 people in the conference room, got our groceries for the following week (and then some), and once I returned home, our family isolation began. My office started sending people to work from home the following Monday; I didn't bother going in since I had my laptop at home with me. The school district went virtual the following Wednesday. I started collecting screenshots of major moments from the news outlets I follow as a time capsule of sorts. 

We settled into our all-at-home existence. Nick and I took separate parts of the house (him at the kitchen table with lots of natural light, me in the office in the basement). The kids drew up a daily schedule to mimic what they did for a school day, and for the next months, stuck to it (mostly). A few weeks later, we did a 3-room swap: Felix moved from the sunny bedroom to the large basement bedroom. and we bought him a lofted bed with a desk. Iris moved from the dark bedroom to the sunny bedroom. She eventually got a loft, too. My office moved to the dark bedroom. The moves have worked well. 

My weekly schedule pre-pandemic was such that I would work 38 hours in the office Monday through Thursday (the real office, not the one at home), and on Fridays, I would finish with a few hours of teleworking and have the rest of the day in a quiet house having my much-needed *me* time until the bus brought the kids home from school. That alone, quiet time has been nonexistent for nine of the last twelve months. That's been a mental challenge for me (oh, boo-hoo, I know, but I'm chronicling the changes this pandemic has wrought, and this is one of them).

After much deliberation and assurances by staff, we sent the kids each weekday to get some fresh air, sunshine and socialization at our local Y Camp for the entire summer. It was great to give them that opportunity to get away from us (well, me, since Nick went back to working at his office starting in mid-June) and the walls of this hours, and they got some much-needed physical activity because their summer ball seasons had been cancelled. But all good things come to an end, and so the summer ended. 

Birthdays were celebrated with minimal socialization (no friends, though we did meet up with family at a park and kept our distance as best we could). We did allow the kids to play with friends in the neighborhood as long as it was outside only.

During the summer, we also made the decision to enroll the kids in our district's virtual school for the year. We weren't comfortable with the decisions the school district was initially making regarding in-person learning, and I was okayed to keep teleworking for the school year. I've been writing about virtual school experience occasionally HERE.

Part of Iris agreeing to make an effort with virtual school was our permitting her to join the local Y swim team for the first time. Large ventilated facility, treated water, masks on the pool deck - all went a long way towards assuaging our worries. She's been swimming for at least three hours per week since late October, and often asks to go more often. There have been no meets this year, but the team did two intersquad time trials to give us a small taste of what one is like. Iris has been focusing on 50 yd events, and shaved at least 10 seconds off her December times at the March time trial. We're so proud of her effort in that. She also chose to challenge herself, doing a 25 yd butterfly heat by herself (no nerves!).

As predicted, our social life became nearly nonexistent (not that we really had much of one before...). In the past year, we've had brief visits from my parents: maybe a dozen times; Nick's parents: twice; spent time with another family: twice; and ran into a friend at the grocery store: once. (These are all me, and Nick has had more interaction with friends/fellow attorneys.) All of these took place either outside or masked inside. We spent Easter and Thanksgiving in front of our computers, having family Zoom sessions. We finally got together at Christmas, but masked and physically distanced. As of this writing, both sets of grandparents have gotten both of their COVID-19 shots, so soon we will be able to gather again with them. Yay!

Because my social interaction became severely limited by isolation, I decided that I needed to make sure my brain stayed active. 251 days ago, I started a Spanish course online and have been putting time every day toward learning the language. Si viajamos a México otra vez, hablaré español. Around the same time, I bought a ukulele and learned to play it. Meetings turned out to be a great opportunity for me to practice chords and strumming patterns when I was muted (it also helped that we never use video during work meetings).

Our eating habits have also changed. Once we emerged from the late spring lock down, we made it a habit to support local restaurants once a week. The rest of the time, I've been planning meals as usual. I got creative in December by picking cuisines from all over the world. Persian fish stew? Check! Korean chicken? Check! The kids have also gotten old enough and interested enough to start including more in our meal preparation.

With no evening sports to occupy us, we've been creating in dealing with evening entertainment. We taught the kids how to play sheepshead in the spring and regularly play four hands of four-handed. We've also bought a few new board games to occupy us (like Azul). Just as the stress of this situation was getting to me, I discovered the Bob Ross channel on our Roku. (So soothing. How can everything be wrong when there's a happy little tree here?) As there has been so much doom and gloom with the pandemic and politics, I just don't have any interest in watching dramas. Thankfully, I've had Archer, Crossing Swords, and our newest discovery, What We Do in the Shadows, to entertain me. We've also taken to putting on the MST3K channel on Shout!, which has gotten the kids more interested in the show.

Politics. Dear lord. I don't want to go too much into this, but 2020 was a fraught year for that. Trump shouldn't have been trusted to tie his own shoelaces, let alone lead our nation through a pandemic. We're in a deep, dark hole, and it'll take society as a whole a lot to climb out of it.

We celebrated our year with Indian pizzas and later, fancy vermouth. It's nice to pretend we're somewhere else, but the tide seems to be turning enough that hopefully, as I just learned in my Spanish course, nosotros también esperamos viajar pronto.

Sunday, February 28, 2021

Into 2021

I was just looking back on my last post, thinking it would be a good time for an update, since we're now two full months into 2021. The good and bad tale of the tape:

  • We had some gorgeous freezing fog at the beginning of January (yay!).
  • I watched (via refreshing the Washington Post website) with horror and disgust the insurrection by Trump supporters on the Capitol on January 6th (boo!) and the thankfully uneventful inauguration of our 46th president (yay!).
  • We watched the Packers season end so close to the Super Bowl (boo!).
  • We enjoyed our first get-together with friends for the first time since July (yay!), outdoors on a frigid, windy night (boo!).
  • We've had my parents over for a brief, masked visit (still strange, but yay!).
  • We've trying to deal with the cabin fever that has come with too many days indoors and together (thanks, 10-day-long polar vortex, for heaping on) (boo!), but we have a plan to take a little trip up north during spring break and go looking for springtime waterfalls (yay!).
  • Both kids are still doing well with their school work (yay!), although Iris's days typically end an hour and a half after they start. It's not easy keeping her busy and I end up yelling at her to clean up her myriad messes (boo!). We are planning on having them return to in-person school next year (yay?).
  • The kids are all signed up to play ball again this summer and we've got our fingers crossed that the season(s) will go as planned (yay!).
  • My hair is long enough to put into a bun since I haven't gotten a haircut since October 2019. Nick has a goatee as of this morning, partially shaving for the first time in five years. (I feel like I'm scraping the bottom of the barrel with these ones...) 

So, that's it. That's what's been different for us as we continue to tread water and ride out this pandemic.

I'm hoping that the next few months have more yays than boos (although there's likely to be plenty of booze...)! In the meantime, here is the new wall art I've created for us (I'm quite proud of this one):

Awesome things: What We Do In The Shadows (both TV show and movie - so late to the party!)

Friday, January 1, 2021

Goodbye 2020

It's time to say goodbye to 2020 and hello to the new year, whatever it may bring us. Since summer wrapped up, we've experienced a strange blend of new and mundane. You may have read about some of it in our 2020 Holiday Card. To quote Inigo Montoya, "Let me explain. No, there is too much. Let me sum up."

We started fall navigating the newness of the kids' virtual curricula and attempting to fill a school day's worth of time. (I'm chronicling our experiences separately here.) I think we've settled into something that works, since it lets me concentrate on my job during the day, with occasional check-ins with the kids. Iris still gets through her stuff too quickly, and I have to redirect her toward "school stuff" occasionally. Same old, same old by now. Same wake-up time, same views, same irritations (hence the "mundane").

Our newest family excitement has been Nick starting his own law firm in November. The pieces fell into place and the time felt right. It's been awkward trying to get things done during a pandemic, but done they are and he is open for business.

We let Iris join the local Y's swim team late this fall. They had the covid precautions in place to make us feel comfortable with the situation, and it allows her to interact with other people and puts her endless supply of energy to good use. We had the opportunity to see her "race" for the first time at an intra-team time trial last Sunday (with a masked, socially distanced, close-family-only audience). Despite being among the youngest, she's pretty speedy and clearly has some natural talent.


We also decided to shake things up with the holidays. Thanksgiving was spent alone at home, with video chats with family (with varying levels of technical difficulties).


We decided to do family presents on the Winter Solstice instead of Christmas morning. We had a nice family dinner, gave gifts (the kids picked out and bought their own presents for each other - so proud!), and played a family game. I've long felt that the kids haven't truly appreciated their presents when they get so many from us and grandparents during three events over two days. I think this is a tradition I'd like to build on next year. This was the first year that we included Felix on a view of our traditional Christmastime movie, Stalag 17. We've been watching it for 10+ years and learn something new each time. 

The gifts for each other were a hit.

While we couldn't go to any sporting events this year, we could at least be present in one way at Badger games:


We quietly bid 2020 goodbye, staying up until 11 watching Pixar movies before the ball drop. Nick & I felt a blackberry merlot was more appropriate than anything bubbly: a locally made wine, dark with a hint of sweetness (seeing as we had some good amidst the gloom and didn't go anywhere...). We'll save the foreign bubbles for tonight, to encourage 2021 to be a good year. 🍾

What we're looking forward to:

  • Cara: getting vaccinated against covid, the next presidency, spending time with people in person, summer ball, traveling again, finishing my Spanish Duolingo course (halfway done!). 
  • Nick: echoes many of Cara's sentiments, but includes getting his business going, having baseball/softball seasons for the kids, having a drink with a friend occasionally. 
  • Felix: the vaccine being out and being able to socialize safely, being able to go back to school and be with friends.
  • Iris: "Getting over with this whole year, because this year has kinda been a mess." 
Awesome things: Vaccines! (and science!), virtual meeting platforms that work, the return of the Great British Baking Shown, A.P. Bio, democracy, The Joy of Painting channel (the soothing balm this experience needs), the occasional sporting event on TV.

Goodbye, 2025

The last half of 2025 included some new beginnings and adventures for us.  Felix passed his driver's test and began racking up experienc...