Beyond Brutal

Brrr! This forecast shows the extreme temperatures that have been over us for the last few days. School starts up today, and the -50 degree windchill is less than welcoming.

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Fortunately, there is a break at the end of the week to look foreword to!

From Photography Class

The college photography class I took this semester was a challenge. The teacher’s personal tastes were very different from my own, so sometimes I had to ignore my own favorite pictures, and try to figure out what pictures she grade highest. But, some of the assignments produced some really nice pictures.

This is from the first week of class, when it was still really warm and flowers were blooming.

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Light painting at the end of October:

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Dad helped me set up this picture, and I really like it.

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The self portrait assignment was the hardest of the year because I had to set the camera on timer and run around to sit in the photo. Landon helped me get in the right place in this photo:

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This was the last assignment of the year for finals, and it was on of the hardest.  The goal was to spy on people and take pictures when they didn’t know it, and I felt really strange hiding behind things to take photos of other people. Nevertheless, these ended up being some of my favorite photos for the whole year.

These are in the college commons lounge:

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In the library:
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   This picture of  my friend from Vietnam was my favorite, and it received really good comments in my class.
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Three and a Half Big, Full, Months

Despite (or perhaps causing) the way the semester flew by, I have never conquered so many experiences in so little time. New events seem to come one after another!

I got my first car back in October, which has been really nice, but it is also the first time I have driven such a light vehicle. Winter has already thrown a fair amount of precipitation here, and I have had to learn what I can and can not do in the snow. For example, if we get a couple inches and the snow plows go by, my car will get stuck in the pile of snow they leave at the end of the driveway! Also, if there’s a couple inches of snow on the road at rush hour in the morning, the typical 10 minute drive to college takes 45 minutes.

December 8 found me riding on a tour bus for the first time with the rest of the Augustana Choir, and we sang in Rapid City and then came back in the same day. Fortunately, my first class was at 11 am because we arrived home at 4:30 in the morning!

I have now lived through finals, though it definitely was a lot different for me than some of my fellow students. Not only did only 3 of my 5 classes have a cumulative exam, but since I was good at keeping up on my assignments for the rest of the year I didn’t have to worry too much about my final score. So, I actually had a  pretty relaxing finals week. However, I am slightly concerned that I might be missing out on the Full College Experience, since I never pulled an all-nighter and lived on coffee the next day. In fact, the latest I ever stayed up doing homework was midnight. I hear other students talking about being up to 2 or 3 am.

I shadowed a nurse at the hospital for the first time yesterday morning. It was a very interesting experience, and helped me get a much better idea of what my job will actually look like when I graduate. I got a good look at how many facets there are to the job, which involves both medical knowledge and interaction with many different sorts of people.

Now the year is nearly over, and I am sure that the next semester will bring a whole new set of exciting experiences! I am slightly torn between enjoying my break, and excitement for the next year to begin.

Winding Down

Except for a few final exams, the semester is finished. Where did it go? Having my days full of one scheduled class or activity after another really made me lose my sense of time-I have never known it to move so quickly. I glanced at my calendar yesterday and counted the days to Christmas with disbelief. Isn’t it still November?

But now I can sit down and take a deep breath.  After Thursday morning, I won’t have to think about another school assignment till January.  I will be able to pull out my kindle and read again, knit again, bake again, blog again. I am looking forward to a few weeks of stillness after the whirlwind of the semester.

Tutu Claire

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I took this picture a few weeks ago for my college photography class, and now that I am on Thanksgiving break I finally  have a chance to share it.

Claire had just learned to sit when I took the picture, and now she is fully mobile, crawling around like crazy. She even has pulled herself up to standing a couple times!

Yummy!

This adorable picture makes me laugh. It pretty much sums up Claire’s philosophy of life right now: everything is edible.

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In Which I Heave a Sigh of Relief

Whew!!!! I just made it through my first set of midterm tests. Finally, I can breathe!

Lots has happened in the last few weeks. I have finally gotten the swing of college time management. The two commandments: Thou Shalt Study Hard on Weekends if Thou Wanteth to Survive, and Thou Shalt Not Ever Fall Behind in the Reading.

The biggest difference that I have had to adjust to in college is that homeschool can maneuver around life events. If I catch a cold and don’t feel well, I still have to make sure to do homework and attend class. Johnathan had his appendix removed ten days ago, and
I spent a night in the hospital with him. I didn’t get all of my reading done that day, and it took me several hours each evening for the next four days to just catch up.

Life is moving fast at home as well. It seems to race by now that I am not around for a good chunk of the day, and I end up missing out on major happenings around the house. I glanced in the small aquarium where we keep our two little frogs one evening. “Oh!” I cried. “One is missing!”

“Oh, yes, didn’t you know?” Mom said. “He died about two weeks ago.”

Clare is making great strides in her skills. She is sitting up almost perfectly for long stretches of time and pushes herself up onto her hands and knees. She hasn’t crawled forward yet, but she can really move backwards.

Dominic is going through the language explosion, and frequently surprises me with his vocabulary. Because I haven’t been around as much to hear him speaking, it catches me off guard when he says something that sounds like it came out of a three year old. He also knows his colors and almost all of the letters and their sounds, thanks to a Leap Frog movie.

Kansas City

In September we took a trip to Kansas City to show the family the Steamboat Arabia exhibit Landon and I saw in February. While we were there, we went to Powell Gardens. It was beautiful.

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There was also hundreds of butterflies flying around, including kinds I had never seen before. I had to look them up when we got back.

Great Spangled Fritillary:

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South Dakota is just barely in the range of the Buckeye Butterfly, but I have never seen one.

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Zebra Swallowtail-these don’t live in South Dakota!

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Question Mark Butterfly:

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Everything’s bigger in Kansas! We saw a large number of the biggest grasshoppers, caterpillars, and spiders we’d ever seen.

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This ended up being the joke of the day.

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I have been commenting for years that every time we go on a trip, we end up having to stop at a Lego store. In Florida, Chicago, and Minneapolis the boys made sure seeing the Legos was a high priority. It seemed the boys thought we took trips just for Lego stores!

I protested. “No more Lego stores on trips!” I said. “Everything in the store is on the internet, so why do we have to spend time in the store when we always walk out with three kids crying about what they couldn’t get?”

But the Legos apparently have a sense of humor, so they followed us when we visited the destination I had picked out.

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When we were planning to go to Kansas city, I didn’t realize that the trip would include an airplane flight. Mr. Wilson (tales of our adventures with him herehere, and here) lives in Kansas City now, and he met us at the airport. He is a pilot and was one of Dad’s flight instructors a long time ago.  He had a small Cessna there at the airport, and Dad took everyone from Daniel to Mom on a ride over  beautiful downtown Kansas city. The plane only seats four, so it took four separate flights to give everyone a turn. Mr. Wilson accompanied Dad for the first couple flights in a while Dad became accustomed to the new digital dashboard in the airplane.

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Downtown Kansas City is really beautiful, and seeing it from the air gave a really cool perspective:

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I was especially fond of the patterns the train cars and train tracks made.

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My favorite picture of the day:

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Familiar objects were scattered around the hangar where we put the plane away- the wings of the Gentle Lady I crashed once, the little Cessna, and the Keebler, which was put away in its unbelievably small case. Looking to surprise me, Mr. Graham said, “There’s a hot air balloon behind you!”  With a grin I replied, “I’ve ridden in it!”

A few more KC pictures:

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College Update

I have been a college student for an entire three weeks now. (Wow!) School is great, and I enjoy walking amidst the large buildings on campus. It is a really nice place, too, with beautiful trees everywhere and nice brick buildings. I am just getting to the point were I recognize quite a few of the people I see when I’m walking around outside of classes, and I’m getting to know a few of the other freshman students, especially the other members of the choir.

I had to audition to see if I could make one of the three choirs on campus, and found out my official singing category when the choir director told me I have the range of a low soprano. I was placed in the women’s choir, and it’s truly an amazing experience to sing in such a large group. I was amazed at the beautiful sounds we produce as even as we warm up our voices.

Classes are going fairly well, though I’m still trying to figure out how much study time I need to put into each one. I really like my teachers, who are very approachable and willing to help if you have questions.

Of course, there has been a few difficulties in transitioning from a home environment, and since I promised I would show the world exactly what happens when a poor, unsocialized homeschooler finds themselves in college, I must be honest and tell all of the challenges I have had to face in the last three weeks:

 

The Backpack

I have never had to carry more than one book at a time in my backpack, so it has taken me a while to get used to carry it loaded with three thick textbooks and several notebooks. I have improved my back stamina a lot since the first day of classes, when I thought I was going to die from the load before I’d crossed half the campus!

 

The Drinking Fountains

Since I have been living within a 15 seconds of a glass of water my entire life, I have never had to learn how to drink from a fountain without dripping all over my face and clothing. This challenge took about two weeks to overcome.

 

The Language Barrier

I have found that students who came from a school environment have a language of their own. Last week, I got up the gumption to answer a question Chemistry, and a girl next to me raised her fist in my direction. Maybe she had wished she had given the answer? Not knowing what she expected me to do, I just smiled at her sheepishly.  The girl lifted her other fist and demonstrated (with some exasperation) that she expected me to bump her fist with mine.

 

Stay tuned, as I’m hoping to devote a whole post to the socialization myth as soon as I have time!

A Homeschooler’s Guide to College

This video was soooo funny and spot-on. I cannot say how many times I have heard “but you need the full college experience!” whenever anyone finds out I’m living at home. (School is only about ten minutes away.)

Hat tip to the other Sarah, on whose blog I first watched this a couple months ago.

College Quotes

The World watches eagerly as teenaged homeschoolers graduate, salivating as they wait to see what comes next. Everyone knows the lack of socialization has been building up year after year, just waiting to burst out of hiding. College, then, is the moment of truth when the sheltered child is first separated from his parent and will certainly BECOME ENTIRELY UNABLE TO FUNCTION!!!!!

 

I have only spent one day at my college, but I have already encountered several of the deep set misconceptions about homeschoolers. The epidemic of prejudices is a little worse than I expected!

The bright side to this is that it offers the potential for a goldmine of hilarious stories. Here’s the first:

 

Sophmore boy: So, what school did ya go to?

Me: I was homeschooled.

Sophmore boy (dryly): Sounds like fun.

Me (completely not hearing the sarcasm in his voice): Yes, a lot of fun!

Sophmore boy (stuttering): Oh-oh-ah-um, really?

 

 

Never fear, World. I will keep you posted on all the  ins and outs of this homeschooler’s transition to college life.

Chicken Business

Marigold loves to sunbathe, and we often catch her in very funny positions.IMG_0029

Victoria has discovered that she can stand on the fence, and has flown over it a couple times. Luckily, she will soon get too fat to fly that far.

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