Five years later we have grown to love Tennessee as much as our home state of Texas. Our adventures as a military family continue in the land made famous for country music and hot chicken. As much as our lives have changed with our twenty plus years in the military, much remains the same. We spend our weekends playing soccer, our winters on the beach, and our holidays with family.
Wednesday, August 29, 2012
Be All You Can Be
"Mom, I would never be a soldier unless I needed money to pay for college. If I do need money to pay for college, like something happens and we become really poor, then I want to join the Army and fly. Do you think the war will be over by then?"
Saturday, August 25, 2012
Hammers, Cameras, Oh My!
Today I hear a scream. I see a flash as Keagan runs past me. I hear the pounding steps of Man Child as he chases his little brother. It is then I notice the red video camera in Keagan's hand and the hammer in Evan's hand.
I intercede.
No worries. The screams are fake. The boys are filming a horror movie. Certain that a true horror film was only seconds from becoming my reality, I took the hammer. It is now hidden in the bathroom among the towels.
The boys have now returned to recording Instructional films on how to beat the enemy while playing Skylanders, a much more calm and less dangerous filming process. For the time being anyway.
I intercede.
No worries. The screams are fake. The boys are filming a horror movie. Certain that a true horror film was only seconds from becoming my reality, I took the hammer. It is now hidden in the bathroom among the towels.
The boys have now returned to recording Instructional films on how to beat the enemy while playing Skylanders, a much more calm and less dangerous filming process. For the time being anyway.
Tuesday, August 21, 2012
Eight, Skate, Donate
Keagan told me a week before his birthday he wanted to spend his birthday weekend at a hotel on the beach, riding bikes, and eating shrimp. And so we did.
Suffice it to say, we all felt better about the weekend when we learned a soccer tournament was taking place a mile down the beach, and of course, we couldn't be that close without catching a game or two. We never did get to ride bikes along the beach, but Keagan did have a new bike awaiting him on the morning of his birthday!
Happy Birthday, Keagan! We love the sparkle in your big blue eyes, your wonderful sense of humor, and your wicked ability to run like a Jamaican. We love you!
Monday, August 20, 2012
First Day of School
Keagan is in second grade this year. He told me it was a great first day of school because "after all of the rules, we went straight to work. Straight to work." Lunch was also a highlight. Some things never change from year to year.
Evan is in fourth grade. I sent him to school happy because his science teacher had told him he would be able to build a rocket. He never likes school; always finds something unfair, unjust about the process. This time it was unfair that the teacher had built up his expectations only to disappoint him when he learned the rocket would be made from construction paper. The first week of school he read two chapter books. I think I find something unfair, unjust about school.
May the next 179 days begin with the same big smiles.
Friday, August 17, 2012
Irony
It was six years ago that I decided to start a blog so that I would have a record of all of the amusing things my boys did as babies. I recorded it all: the first day of pre-school, learning to ride a bike, football games, the many, many soccer games, and the amusing day-to-day events that I will surely forget without them recorded in print.
Now it is gone. All gone. I have mourned the loss of those photos, videos, and blog entries as if it were a family member. Eight weeks later, 55 days to be exact, I have decided that every day I cry about the the six years I have lost, I am neglecting to record the here and now.
And so it begins again. Living with Boys
Wednesday, July 4, 2012
Let Freedom Ring
How appropriate is it that we would spend American's birthday on
some of the colonists' original stomping grounds? Fort King George was built in
1721 by English colonists.
The fort is surrounded by wetlands that we soon learned are filled
with alligators. This was of course after I allowed Evan to walk to the water's
edge to throw rocks into the water. We almost became an episode of Gator Boys
on the Discovery Channel. Keagan said while carrying his oversized wooden
musket, "Don't worry, Mom, I can take care of you and hit those gators
between the eyes."
The fort is a four story building that was filled with secret
doors and hiding places, perfect places to aim a gun or cannon without the
enemy even knowing you were there. The boys LOVED it and the elderly just
smiled when they came around the corner with guns pointing at them.
They climbed in the rafters, flipped open trapped doors, pretended to battle the enemy, and hiked the nature trail.
We also arrived in time to see the re-enactors fire the cannon
over the Altahama River.
Keagan was taken prisoner by King Evan. He played the part
perfectly.
We made our way back to the car, and Keagan gave me a huge hug and
said, "Thanks, Mom, a million thanks for bringing me here. This was the
best day trip ever!" Eight hours later, he is still thanking me. It might
have had something to do with the over sized musket.
Happy Fourth of July!
Saturday, June 30, 2012
Work in Progress
It's 100 degrees and not
even noon, but Keagan has a dozen cones set up in the cul-de-sac running
basketball drills. He must have stopped me from working on my homework a dozen
times, and that easy one hour research critique has now dragged into a three
hour ordeal.
"If I mess up, Mom, I have to start the drill all over again."
"Look at my muscles, Mom. I think this means I am gaining weight and strength."
"Mom, don't buy any more Frosted Flakes. It's only Special K for me from now on. I gotta work on eating healthy."
"Mom, where's my Kindle? I need some good music to keep my energy levels up."
"Score! Now I gotta go to my room to do some sit-ups. I'm a work in progress, Mom, a work in progress."
Wes, you have yourself a work-out partner when you return. Now maybe I can finish that article.
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