"Making time" revisited

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Periodically, I glance through the archives and drag up something that I think bears repeating. Perhaps more than any other entry, I've returned to "Making time" (10.21.2004), reposting it here, here, and here.

I still get the questions, though, mostly via email, often after I've posted an "On the nightstand" entry, but just as reliably after I've mentioned art or music or field trips.

Where do you find the time?
How do you make the time?


I'm going to repost the entry below -- I think it bears repeating -- but I want to amplify my message by suggesting you check out these entries, too: "I thought it was that time again..." (4.19.2008) and "The researching and writing f(r)iend (4.25.2008)." After all, ruthlessly trimming one's virtual itinerary will likely free up more time than any combination of suggestions below.

Making time
How do you make or find the time to read, write, keep house, etc.?

Over the last six years, I've fielded some derivation of this question too often to count. And when I first posted on this topic, I created a bit of a stir by pointing out that, honestly? It's more than a little wearying to contemplate the lives of people who haven't the self-discipline to determine for themselves how to do what matters most.

So there exists in me a curmudgeonly inclination to lob the question back into the inquirer's court: How do you not? Of course, some readers are too sensitive for this bold an approach.

Heh, heh, heh.

Look. My writing is my work. Asking me how I find time to write is a bit like asking a barkeep how he finds time to tend bar or an information systems engineer how she makes time to develop projects. It's what I do, and in order to be paid -- well and on time -- I must get the work done.

The rest? The reading, learning, living, blogging even? Well, I sleep less to read more, and I have, quite simply, never understood the big deal about keeping an organized and comfortable home.

But if you require something more specific, consider this list of don'ts the next time you find that you haven't enough time to do it all. Something here may prove helpful.

● Unless you're training for a marathon or pursuing a career as a model or professional athlete, don't spend a lot of time working out. Just do enough to maintain good health.

Don't fuss with complicated hairstyles or "busy" clothes or make-up.

Don't answer the telephone. Turn the ringer off. When/if you have time for telephone conversations, make a call. Amazing how much time this alone saves.

Don't waste time complaining about the commonplace (e.g., the way your son forgets to turn his socks right side out before dropping them in the hamper, the way your spouse this, and his or her mother that, and your mother ... and the neighbor ... and the people at the library ... blah, blah, blah). Energy- and time-sapping stuff, that.

Don't go shopping. No mall walking. No window shopping. Keep a list. Pick up the items on the list. Work the clearance racks at the end of the season, in one maybe two trips. But hit the mall or Wal*Mart or wherever for no particular reason? Perish the thought. Bookstores are, of course, an exception.

Don't read catalogues. 'think this is a trivial suggestion? Consider all the time some folks waste paging through the Christmas season's offerings. You know you don't have $75 for a letter opener from Levenger. Drop the catalogues in the can before the mail deliverer has sped from the mailbox. Clothes catalogues? Why? If you want to dream of opulence, read a Victorian novel or certain Shakespearean plays. Why waste time mulling over the Nordstrom's catalogue when the best sales are in-store at the end of the season? You get the idea. Book catalogues are, of course, the exception.

Don't join clubs.

● In general, don't say, "Yes," to anyone. This is harsh, but grow adept at looking nearly every person (excluding your children, spouse and/or significant other, and boss (or editor or client)) who thinks you owe him or her a piece of your time in the eye and saying, "No, but best wishes with [insert time-sucking activity here]." Trust me, this isn't going to cause any death-bed regrets. "Oh, how I wish I had spent more time organizing that [insert time-sucking activity here]!" Yeah. No.

● Unless you are particularly gifted in one or another craft such that your creations make anticipated gifts and/or money, don't scrapbook or craft.

● And don't compete with neighbors in the "who can out-decorate everyone else" during Halloween and Christmas seasons. Display simple, pretty decorations. End of story.

Don't indulge in home and/or garden magazines.

● Or home and/or garden shows. They only inspire time- (and money-) sapping projects that keep you from family field trips, game nights, books, and the occasional lazy morning in bed with coffee, muffins, and two papers.

Don't cook elaborate meals.

● Sometimes, don't even cook. That's why god made takeout. Really. So readers, thinkers, and autodidacts don't starve.

Don't waste time on doubt. Why invite discontent by perpetually glancing at what he or she is doing?

● Similarly, don't dabble in self-doubt. Much. (See this entry for more on this topic.)

And then there will be time to read. And read some more. And to write and learn. And to keep a home that makes your family happy. A home in which you will have time to live and learn and laugh too loudly.

A new slogan, then: Just don't.

Added later
And to repeat... even more than all of the suggestions in my original "Making time" post, the following will yield all of time you need to read, think, learn, and, yes, even catch up on your household chores:

Ruthlessly trim your virtual itinerary.

In other words, enough with the boards, the endless email checking, the social networking tools, the mommy blogs, and the like. Visit sites that provide you with information, insight, and/or inspiration. And then? Get off the computer and...

"What happens when the doctor becomes the patient?"

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"Who was Jackson Pollock?"

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It tickled me that Caroline Taggart asked that question in her article "Ten Trivia Facts You Probably Used to Know." Taggart, the author of I Used to Know That: Stuff You Forgot from School (see this recent entry) writes:

He was what is called an Abstract Expressionist and he believed that the act of painting was more important than the finished product. His paintings are therefore highly colourful, often huge, and (like his life) chaotic to the point of frenzy.
Well, that would be, as they say, the Reader's Digest version of Pollock's contribution to art.

Hey, wait a minute.

Heh, heh, heh.

Check out the complete article for a couple of fun facts to trot out at dinner this evening.

Related posts
Pollock Sunday (8.12.2007)

Untitled (9.08.2007)

The recommended daily allowance (7.16.2007)

Fine Art Friday (7.28.2006)

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Semicolon hosts "The Saturday Review of Books." Consider participating this week.

Click to enlarge:
A morning at the beach

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International Bog Day

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Apparently, Europeans and Canadians have been celebrating International Bog Day on the fourth Sunday of each July since 1991, but it wasn't until 2008 that the celebration arrived in the United States, courtesy of the Volo Bog State Natural Area. A favorite FCLP field trip destination (Wow, say that three times fast!), Volo Bog is the only "quaking" bog in Illinois to have an open water center. It is, as I've said before, beyond cool.

So, if you haven't made your way there yet, consider participating in this Sunday's International Bog Day festivities, 12 to 4 p.m. You'll find details here. (Scroll to the lower half of the page.)

Honored, I'm sure

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The folks at Secular Homeschool wrote to inquire about adding Mental multivitamin to the new site's list of resources, and there we are now, on the list of secular homeschool blogs.

Secular Homeschool will be a
home base for discovering articles about secular homeschooling, sharing blog posts about your experiences, finding like-minded friends, and discussing what is on your mind.

Secularhomeschool.com aims to be your one-stop shop for all things homeschool! We will be highlighting information about wonderful secular homeschool resources, and keeping you up to date with what is going on in the world of secular homeschooling.
Stop by and check them out. Thank you, Topsy, for the invitation, and thank you, L., for recommending M-mv.

Oh, and for this recent honor, too:

Apparently, I must
1. List seven things that make me awesome;
2. pass the award onto seven bloggers I read regularly; and
3. tag those seven bloggers.
But I'm just not good at this sort of thing, so may I just leave it at "Thank you"?

Earlier this month...

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I posted about, as one recent correspondent put it, "the not-so-joyous cycle of nature." Since the correspondent also generously offered a photo to complement the entry, I've decided to run the poem again, this time with a beautiful image. (Click to enlarge.)

Many thanks, xcris.

I watched a bird die today.

Nothing I could do.
THWOCK!
Into a deceptive reflection,
then prone on the porch,
wings extended --
dying in a flutter,
a flutter,
a flutter,
then stillness.

She weighed nothing,
and, dead, felt nothing,
as I cupped her in my hands.
Did her eyes open just then?
Is she moving?
Could it be...?

But no.
Flight aborted, neck broken.

Stillness.

Well, then.

A nest of soft, rain-soaked soil.
A blanket of pine needles.
And it is done.

I watched a bird die today.
Nothing I could do.
Nothing.

Adventures, we've had a few

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While not the Christmas-in-early-spring event that the Field Museum's Annual Members' Nights are, the Museum of Science and Industry's recent Member Open House was all right. Yes, the "behind the scenes" tour of the collections was limited and somewhat mismanaged, but we were delighted to meet the museum curator who helped restore two iconic exhibits: the body slices and the babies. Off-exhibit for several years now, both will be featured in the new permanent exhibit "You! The Experience," as will the museum's own "plastinates" -- the work of Dr. Gunther von Hagens.

And Mr. M-mv was particularly glad to see (finally!) the new U-505 exhibit. (Do you remember this entry from nearly six years ago?)

The first half of this month had already been jam-packed, what, with illness and revelations and activities, but we were glad to squeeze the trip to MSI in before the divisional conference meet and the annual summer piano recital.

An aside
While they practice often and effectively, I remind the Misses regularly that music, and music performance, in particular, requires a certain attitude (coupled with ability, of course). Some call it passion; others, confidence. I could make a strong argument for personality, but, in the end, I think it is simply... respect.

Respect for yourself.
Respect for the music.
Respect for the audience.

This can be conveyed in innumerable ways, not the least of which would be demonstrations of passion, confidence, and/or personality, but respect overarches all of these.

Moreover, respect can utterly silence an unruly and/or immature audience. Just ask the Misses.

Heh, heh, heh.

That's just what I said.

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Those familiar with my 5.20.2005 entry "Paying for college: A rant of modest proportions" will understand why this recent editorial resonated with me.

Related post
About college (11.16.2003)

"The whole thing's just BALLS from start to finish, and I want my money back."

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Content warning: Some of you will find the language in this "A Bit of Fry & Laurie" skit offensive. The rest of you? I hope you laugh with as much gusto as I did.

Stuff you forgot from school

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What does c in E=mc² represent?

What are the "Seven Wonders of the World"?

What is onomatopoeia?


If you once knew the answers to these questions (see below) but are now a little fuzzy on the details, you will likely appreciate I Used to Know That: Stuff You Forgot from School as much as the Misses M-mv and I do.

Perfect for -- I'm just going to say it -- bathroom reading, this book has joined company with the likes of How Things Are Made: From Automobiles to Zippers and Campbell's Constant Quiz Companion, and all of us are the brighter for it.

Equally delightful were the two companion books bundled with the review copy of I Used to Know That: My Grammar and I (Or Should That Be Me?) and i before e except after c: Old-School Ways to Remember Stuff.
_______________________________

Answers
c is the velocity of light.

The Hanging Gardens of Babylon, the Mausoleum at Halicarnassus, the Lighthouse of Alexandria, the Colossus of Rhodes, the Temple of Artemis at Ephesus, and the Statue of Zeus at Olympia, the Great Pyramid of Giza. (Of the seven, only the Great Pyramid is still in existence.)

A word or phrase that sounds (a bit) like the sounds it is meant to convey:
buzz, purr, or Tennyson's "the murmuring of innumerable bees."

Called to service

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Note: Some of you will find this entry too long. Skip it, then. Some of you, though, are in a place not unlike the one in which we, Mr. M-mv and I, now find ourselves -- that is, the edge of a yawning chasm of uncertainty; the place where our children are about to step off and we... well, we must wave goodbye, hoping we've done more right than wrong and averting our eyes so no one sees us cry.

If you're in that place, perhaps you need to read this entry as much as I needed to write it.
______________________

By late 2003, many people knew that Master M-mv was committed to the idea of a military career. I've told this story so many times before that perhaps you would appreciate hearing it from his perspective, instead. The following is excerpted from one of several essays he prepared for a summer program at one of the service academies a couple of springs ago:

Do many applicants point to September 11 as the defining moment in their call to serve their country? My commitment dates well before that. In fact, I can trace the precise path of my call to serve from my childhood interests in (all right, obsessions with) firefighting, police work, and the armed forces to my participation in the Young Eagles program sponsored by the Tuskegee Airmen. On September 8, 2001, when I flew out of the now defunct Meigs Field in Chicago, I was an eleven-year-old boy with dreams of service. When I returned half an hour later, I was a young man with plans (partially formed, colored with the excitement of flight, but plans, nevertheless) to pursue excellence through a career in service to my country.

The dark weeks that followed September 11 only cemented those plans, and in the intervening years, I have carefully considered each branch of our nation's armed forces as I have pursued my somewhat unconventional but always rigorous education....
These "childhood interests in (all right, obsessions with)" military service had focused nearly exclusively on the Marine Corps by the end of 2003, which explains how Making the Corps (Thomas E. Ricks) and Keeping Faith (John Schaeffer and Frank Schaeffer) ended up in the 12.31.2003 "On the nightstand" entry.

As I mentioned in that entry, Master, and later, Mr. pressed the first book on me; I pressed the second on them. Told in the alternating voices of father and son, my recommendation narrates one young man's experience on Parris Island. But what resonated with me -- what stays with me still -- is Frank Schaeffer's voice. You see, throughout the text, the young recruit's father remains somewhat perplexed about his son's choice. Why, after all, would a smart kid with good college entrance exam results and a comfortable middle-class background choose to enlist after high school?

A good question. The short answer? Apparently, because that's what he feels called to do.
______________________

While most people knew that Master wanted to serve, few knew how ardently he hoped to enlist in the Marines when he finished his high school studies.

Would you pause for a second to consider what his hopes and dreams might have meant to the parent-teacher who had given her son an education -- hell, a life -- full of films, good and great books, conversation, Shakespeare, science fiction, astronomy, theater, art, music, martial arts, Latin, the City of Chicago and all of its wonders, a personal library, courses in everything and anything, and more, so much more? It about killed me. I selfishly (ignorantly? angrily?) thought, I spent all of this time, talent, and treasure for him to become... cannon fodder?!? No. No, no, NO!

Mr. M-mv and I believed -- foolishly, as it turns out; lovingly but, in the end, foolishly, futilely -- that we could steer Master to something... safer. Yes, and we thought we could help him make a choice that would be more explicable to family and friends, most of whom are (generally) well meaning but (apart from a dear one or two) somewhat set in stereotypical thinking (i.e., "Smart, well-bred young men go to college after a successful high school career"). Perhaps we, too, were somewhat set in stereotypical thinking, hmmm?

"Operation Gentle Push" (OGP) began in 2006, then, when we (often, I) would talk to Master about other branches of the service, options for military training while enrolled in a conventional four-year-college program of study, and, yes, service academies. OGP gathered momentum with Master's applications to the summer program referenced above and, later, to the service academy itself. It hit a roadblock with the arrival of a thin envelope in mid-April 2008, but it didn't officially become a failed mission until about two weeks ago.

But I'm getting ahead of myself.
______________________

As regular M-mv readers know, Master registered at the local college for what served as his senior year of high school. As a dually enrolled student, he took eight classes that academic year, earning twenty-three college credits. (He audited an upper-level math course first semester or his total would have been twenty-eight.) He also continued working as a swim team coach, swim instructor, and lifeguard, averaging fifteen to twenty-three hours a week during the school year, forty to fifty hours a week in the summer.

During that year, he completed the admission process for the service academy OGP had led him to, but obviously not with the fervor one would expect from an applicant to such a prestigious institution. Earning a spot requires a "fire in the belly" approach. Was there was even a coal in Master's stomach? I don't think so.

Even so, his response on receiving the thin envelope in April 2008 was a blend of brief, mild, and surprised disappointment (and, yes, relief, although we only recognized that in hindsight). After all, he had not been rejected once in eighteen years. He has led a somewhat charmed existence, moving from one endeavor, area of interest, and pursuit to another with success, grace, and a great deal of affable comfort and acceptance. In short, he is not accustomed to someone telling him, "No." A day later, though, he invested in an excellent computer upgrade to work on his burgeoning game design and development interests and carried on with his semester. He had already told us in no uncertain terms that if he didn't earn admission to the academy, he intended to complete his degree at the local college and either get a job or enlist.

Not in the Marines, though, right?

Nope.

Phew. Crisis averted.

Look. You need not lecture me on the dangers, hazards, and sacrifices of the other branches of service. As one friend recently said, "He may actually be safer in the Marines than in the Coast Guard," which was the branch of service we preferred for Master since we had known a high school friend who enjoyed a wonderful -- and wonderfully safe -- career in the Coast Guard. In fact, all of the men and women who serve put their lives on the line. It was parental ignorance that prompted us to favor one branch over another. It was our way of saying, "Not my child," when, in fact, they're all someone's children. Moreover, it was parental foolishness to think we ever had a choice.

And the irony is not lost on me. I prided myself on my ability as a parent-teacher to tailor studies, adventures, and life in general to the needs, interests, and abilities of my children, and I was certainly confident of my ability to let my son decide and do for himself. Yet confronted with this particular choice of his -- one that was neither impulsive nor ignominious, by the way -- I balked. I interfered. I even -- GULP! -- manipulated, getting a little weepy at the mere mention of Marines.

What were you afraid of? you wonder. Please. Don't pretend you don't know what I was -- what I am -- afraid of. Reflect for just one moment on all of the mythology and lore that the words "Marine Corps" inspire and then tell me that fear is not one of your first reactions to the idea that your son or daughter may wish to become one of the few, the proud.
______________________

Every once in a while, Master would mention that the USMC recruiters had been at the college, which prompted my knee-jerk response: "You can do whatever you want, of course, since you are an adult. But you did promise to finish school first. And I thought you were planning on a career in the Coast Guard." To which he would always offer a placating, "Yes, Mom. I will finish school first."

Mr. and I both agree that this, at least, is critical. With Master's unconventional education, a college degree, even an associate's, will serve him better than a homemade transcript when he enlists. Of all of our assertions and manipulations, on this point alone, I remain unwavering. But, oh, how we tried to persuade him to consider transferring to a four-year college. "With your grades! Why wouldn't you transfer?" At one point, we even talked up UPS, which offers earn-as-you-learn programs.

Nothing seemed to hold the same appeal for him as the U.S. Marine Corps, though.

And, finally, anticlimactically, simply, two weeks ago, I let him go.

I was reading in bed when he came to wish me good night. I mentioned that his Fall 2009 tuition was due soon, which led to something about his "plans" -- a regular, albeit uncomfortable, conversation-stopping topic that I felt compelled to worry, like a pimple on otherwise unblemished chin.

"You're still planning to enlist in the Coast Guard after graduation, then?" I asked.

"Yeah," he said.

"But that's not really what you want to do," I ventured. And my heart stopped in my chest. Because in that moment I wasn't his mother. I wasn't his teacher. I wasn't even his friend. I was just a person who loved him and wanted him to be, if not happy, then at least himself, whoever that might be.

"Nope."

"What you really want to do--"

"Is become a Marine," he interrupted, not rudely, just... animatedly. "Hell, it's what I've always wanted to do."

No, it's not! I wanted to shout. I felt a flash of petulance push past my better self. You wanted to be a rock-n-roll policeman! I wanted to scream, to embarrass him. I have the pictures! And you wanted to be a lifeguard! For Christ's sake, David Hasselhoff was your feckin' role model!

"That's still all you want to do?" I said calmly, ignoring the petulance. "That's what you really want to do?"

"Oh, yeah!"

"Then do it. If you can stand there and tell me that's what you most want to do in all the world, then do it. I won't ever mention it again. Just promise me," I hastily added, "that you'll get the degree first. PLEASE. With honors."

"You're serious!?"

"Yeah."

"Oh, my God!"

And so it goes.

Always a good man, he became, in that instant, unequivocally, his own man.
______________________

Master's work pace slackens just a bit in late July / early August, so he hopes to meet with a recruiter then. He graduates in December; I think that means he will leave in January. I'm sure I will be moved to post more as we move closer to that last stop on the parenting train. Until then, I will leave you with just two more things.

The first is an email message I received on Tuesday. M.C. writes:
I've been a reader of Mental Multivitamin for some time now. As a reader, thinker, autodidact, and potentially homeschooling mother (my son is only 2), I enjoy your entries very much. Your "On the Nightstand" feature is a favorite as a source for new ideas and material even though my own to-be-read pile is always overflowing. I have never felt the urge to comment before, and I do not usually engage strangers in conversation, but I could not help notice Master's reading choices this month. I had to share a related story.

Thirteen years ago I was a newly married starving college student. My husband, who was the brilliant-but-lazy type, managed to overcome his so-so classroom experiences with a near perfect LSAT score and secure admission to Georgetown Law School. Everyone was so proud! He then did the unthinkable –- he turned it down to enlist in the Marine Corps as a basic rifleman. Friends were astounded. His mother was appalled and disappointed. People thought he was wasting his talents and his life. Understand this was before 9/11 so even the excuse of heroic patriotism was pretty thin. They just didn't get it.

Challenged in a way he never had been before, my husband tried out for the elite reconnaissance field, made it, and served with the unit featured in Generation Kill (before the war, but many of our friends are mentioned in the book). More than a decade later he is now an officer, finished up a tour as a Recon platoon commander last year, and is currently an infantry company commander leading Marines in a dangerous part of Afghanistan. He is good at his job, finds challenge and meaning in his work, and there is one less lawyer in the world. Not surprisingly, many people still don't get it.

If Master is considering the military I want to applaud him. The military needs intelligent, educated, and motivated people. A lot of people won't understand but hopefully there are at least a few who will get it. If he is just curious, then I applaud that, too. The military is a diverse and interesting environment and I hope that popular literature and the new expanded GI Bill will cause more young people (especially those from middle class backgrounds) to consider it a viable experience. Best of luck to him whatever he chooses to do with his life.
It was a letter from a stranger that arrived at precisely the moment I needed it. Thank you.

The second thing is this, which some of you will remember from a couple of years ago:

We're letting go of them from the moment they arrive, but today it felt a little all-at-once to me. A little "Wait! Stop! I want to get off!" A little like watching his back as he loped into the elementary school a little more than a decade ago.

Wait!

Stop!

Come back.

Come back.

It's fine. It's all right. We did well, it seems. He'll be great. Today the cicadas will hum, and the grackles will rob me (again!) of all our good seed. And my daughters will make art and make me laugh. Night will fall, and then tomorrow will be here.

And so it goes.

But, in focusing on the moment I'm in right this second, I realize that sometimes a job well done feels like a terrible loss.

An empty place.

An unheld hand.

Wait. Come back.

Go. Be well. Be good. Be kind. Work hard.

Come back.

Links that made me think this morning

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It's time to play another round of "What you talkin' 'bout, Willis?"

What was he meant to feel? Was this a small step or a giant step, and in what direction? Perhaps because of the Moon landing’s hybrid nature — it was at once a science project and a media spectacle, an expression of apolitical idealism and an act of national self-assertion, a fact and a symbol — this happening was both dramatic and a bit puzzling, even opaque.

Some of us stay married because along with fancy schools, tae kwan do lessons, and home-cooked organic food, the two-parent marriage is another impressive—and rare—attainment to bestow on our fragile, gifted children.

Crow Planet

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If you remember this entry and this, and you recall my abiding affection for crows, you will begin to appreciate the great sense of delight I felt in learning about Lyanda Lynn Haupt's new release.

Haupt's associate publicist sent along the following information:
Among Crow Planet's key themes are nature, sustainable living, wilderness, birds, urban wildlife, parenting, women and spirituality.

Crow Planet's key audiences include bird watchers, gardeners, naturalists, urban homesteaders, mothers, and a general audience with an interest in the issues and ideas of our time.

A little more about Lyanda:

A Seattle-based author, speaker, naturalist, and teacher, this is Lyanda's third book. She won a Washington State Book award for her first book, Rare Encounters with Ordinary Birds (Sasquach, 2001) and received enthusiastic national reviews for her last book, Pilgrim on the Great Bird Continent: The Importance of Everything and Other Lessons from Darwin's Lost Notebooks (Little, Brown, 2006), for which she is still in demand as a speaker, and was recently interviewed on NPR's Morning Edition.

A little more about the book:
Crow Planet documents Haupt's journey to becoming an "urban naturalist" through the study of crows--the big, gutsy, boisterous, intelligent birds that have managed to adapt and thrive even as urban and suburban development have encroached on their territories. Crow Planet reminds us that we do not need to head to faraway places to encounter "nature." Rather, even in the suburbs and cities we are surrounded by wild life, and through patient, conscious observation we can deepen our connection to our local place and to the planet. Crow Planet richly weaves Haupt's own crow stories with scientific research and the history and mythology of crows, culminating in a book that asks readers to expand their ecological perspective and find a new way of seeing the wild life around them every day.
Other items of interest
Author's website

Author's blog

First chapter online

On the nightstand

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An abbreviated edition of my regular feature.

Books read
Crazy for the Storm: A Memoir of Survival (Norman Ollestad)
After asking me for recommendations for the first four selections in his summer reading log (The Road (Cormac McCarthy), World Made by Hand (James Howard Kunstler), Lindbergh (A. Scott Berg), and Willie and Dwike: An American Profile (William Zinsser) -- all of which he thoroughly enjoyed), Mr. M-mv snagged Crazy for the Storm: A Memoir of Survival from my library stack before I had a chance to read it. He gave it a thumbs-up.

Olive Kitteridge (Elizabeth Strout)
Most of you have probably already read this collection of related stories, perhaps after it won the Pulitzer Prize. I resisted it, though, and resisted it and resisted it but finally succumbed during my long illness. Dare I admit how much I identify with the title character? A beautiful meditation on life's commonplaces, replete with memorable characters.

The Last Child (John Hart)
I read Hart's King of Lies and Down River last year. Good poolside books. The Last Child was adequate for this purpose, too.

Tuck Everlasting (Natalie Babbitt)
With the "Girls Rule Book Club." Also with the Misses (as part of an illustrator study):
Wanda Gág: The Girl Who Lived to Draw (Deborah Kogan Ray)
The Girlhood Diary of Wanda Gág, 1908-1909: Portrait of a Young Girl (Wanda Gág; edited by Megan O'Hara)
Millions of Cats (Wanda Gág)
Nothing at All (Wanda Gág)
Gone Is Gone (Wanda Gág)

Speaking of the Misses, they have been consuming all of the books in the Percy Jackson, Shadow Children, and Maximum Ride series. Nope. Not necessarily great or even good lit. But seasonally appropriate. Besides, you all know how I feel about dictating a child's reading.

Oh, and we also listened to another Andrew Clements' tale on CD: The Report Card. You know, we were actually a little disappointed. The character of Nora was terrific, as was that of her best friend and of the school librarian. But the parents were, uncharacteristically for Clements, in my opinion, all but worthless -- silly, superficial, and, worse, clueless.

And what's Master reading? Why, this and this.

More later. We're going for a bike ride!

Culled from the archives:
Advice for parent-teachers

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A happy and successful home education adventure is predicated on a happy and successful parent-child relationship.

In short, it all begins with you.

Ayup. You.

So if you haven't figured out how to be an effective parent yet, then it's unlikely that you will be an effective parent-teacher. It's really that simple, so get on it, folks, because we owe them an education. And contrary to all the warm-fuzziness floating around the 'net, we have a finite period in which to provide said education -- the window closes a little every day. And while it may all begin with you, it should be all about them, no?

Let's go.

Some practical advice:

Classroom management and parenting have a lot in common. A good classroom manager knows that he must give the students a frame in which to hang their day, a song on which to hang their dance.

Give your children some simple daily rhythms. Wake. Make the bed. Groom. Hear Mom read over breakfast. Work on math. Play. Snack. Work on reading. Play. Lunch. Rest. Read. Study. Play. Adventure. Snack. Bathe. Read. Sleep. (Wash. Rinse. Repeat.) Kids like and need reliable rhythms. And it is so much easier to inject fun and adventure into a reliable routine (think improvisation on several measures) than it is to just play it all by ear.

Ensure that the children understand exactly what is expected of them. Tell them what they must do each day before they [insert favorite activity here]. Remind them what obligations must be fulfilled before [insert another here]. Have them repeat it back to you. Often.

Think like a teacher. Don't lose touch with the needs and abilities of young elementary school students. Do you remember kindergarten? Letters and songs and dances and blocks and dress-up and nap time and art and math chants and snacks and words and Mrs. Moen reading stories and Timmy learning to tie shoes and the firemen visiting and soft voices in the classroom and loud ones on the kickball field.

And third grade? More work, to be sure, but Mrs. Slocum understood the need for wonder and fresh air and math fact Bingo and reading Charlotte's Web; she knew to mix a worksheet with a song and seat work with recess. Regardless of how well it all began, your children need the right mix of required subjects, rest, and play. Seat work for ten to fifteen minutes, maybe twenty for the typical five-year-old. Thirty to forty minutes for the typical eight-year-old. A game. An adventure. A walk. A song. Then some more seat work.

And high school? Well, it's not supposed to be easy, but it need not be without its adventures and laughter. Remember, too, that while independence is one objective of an education (as in, you'd like your students to work well without you hovering at their sides), you are the teacher. You must teach. Lead. Coach. Model. Discuss. Monitor. Challenge. Grade. Criticize. Praise. Teach, damn it. Not just when it's fun. Or convenient. Or interesting to you. Or easy. If the window is closing a little every day, then it's nearly closed on our teens. Push as much through the opening as you can. They will be left to their own devices soon enough. Teach them now.

Think like a parent. When the little one asks to be held, hold her. She will only fit in your lap for a little while. Inhale the scent of her warm head. Tackle the next thing.

Think like a teacher's aide. Keep a carton or large basket of oversized paper and crayons, building toys, paper towel rolls, washable markers, large letters and numbers, etc. near your school area so the littlest one has something to do while you work with the older children.

Focus on the moment you're in. Sometimes we become so intent on ticking off the events and errands of our lives in some planner or to-do list, that we forget to live. To breathe. To laugh. To learn alongside our children. To enjoy ourselves. We didn't, after all, choose this path to be miserable, right?

Find the joy.

Parent. And teach.

See "Thoughts on education and parenting" for more posts like this one.

Cracking geodes or,
What we do for fun on Sunday nights

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Here's a neat introduction to geodes: "Whence geodes come" (USA Today, June 19, 2006).

We picked up our most recent batch of geodes at the gift shop here.

Where I've been

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Summers are heavily scheduled here because we're up by 6 a.m. each weekday morning for Mr. and Master's work and, a little later, for the Misses' swim practice. Rising that early means heading to bed early, but we had been packing a lot of fun (bike rides, walks, field trips) and studies (lit, art, math, and music) in between.

Until three weeks ago.

Three weeks ago yesterday, Mr. M-mv left for a week-long business trip, and twenty-four hours later, Master and I were sicker than any of us have been in years. Two days later, the Misses were ill, and despite my earnest efforts to air the place out and scrub everything down, Mr. M-mv succumbed to the lingering germs within three days of returning home.

We blame the illness on the many viruses going around, as well as the insane temperature fluctuations we've been experiencing here in Illinois, and we're only just now finally looking at the end of it. Boy, it just hung on and on. And on. And it was rough on us. For example, the Misses missed five swim practices, and Miss M-mv(i), who usually takes first or second in every event, earned fourth in both her individual events at the meet two weeks ago(at the height of the illness). Miss M-mv(ii) managed seconds in both of her individual events that week, but with the return of their strength, they both walked away with firsts in their individual events at last week's meet. (You go, girls!)

We missed two full weekends of bike rides, too, and I think it surprised all of us how much we had come to rely on that adventure. Oh, other cyclists go longer and faster. To them, our little five-, seven-, and ten-mile adventures must look positively wimpy. But to us, they represent fun and prairie flowers and bird calls and the tinkling of the old-fashioned bells each of us have. It's legs churning up small hills and wind whipping our faces as we sail down the other side. Simply put, it's fun.

So we've worked back up to seven miles. (No comments about how you do that much just to get to the trail where you conduct your "real" workout.) We did five miles on Monday, five miles on Saturday, and seven today. We're hoping to ride a night or two this week and to get back to ten miles next Sunday.

Here's hoping.

A word on recovering from a long illness
The old wives may be right. Rest and fluids served us best. Whenever we felt tired, we napped. We drank juice and water; we sipped soup. We took our supplements. We aired the house out and changed linens often. We sat in the sun for a few minutes a couple of times a day. We turned to movies and, yes, even television. We read simple books and played soft music.

In other words, we did what so few will do: We convalesced. It's what the body needs. You can't rush a recovery. Not without fear of relapse or other serious consequences, anyway.

Seen on the bike trail

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Swim chicks

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Taken through the screen door

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I watched a bird die today.

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Nothing I could do.
THWOCK!
Into a deceptive reflection,
then prone on the porch,
wings extended --
dying in a flutter,
a flutter,
a flutter,
then stillness.

She weighed nothing,
and, dead, felt nothing,
as I cupped her in my hands.
Did her eyes open just then?
Is she moving?
Could it be...?

But no.
Flight aborted, neck broken.

Stillness.

Well, then.

A nest of soft, rain-soaked soil.
A blanket of pine needles.
And it is done.

I watched a bird die today.
Nothing I could do.
Nothing.