Day 184

Level 2 Chi Kung.

Nick took morning shift and I had a lovely sleep in – the electric blanket really makes a difference. Katie returned from her sleepover very happy and lively. The highlight of the evening was the night-time walk through the school’s small patch of forest, culminating in toasting marshmallows over a bonfire. The scandal was that Sam (a tiny child with the face of an angel, but allegedly the naughtiest child in year 3) took his onesie off and displayed his three piece suite to the assembled company. Katie, who was looking in the wrong direction (poor child takes after her mother!), would have missed the entire incident if she hadn’t heard the deputy head shouting “SAM, PUT YOUR ONESIE BACK ON RIGHT NOW AND DON’T YOU DARE TAKE IT OFF AGAIN’.

I joked with Nick that, in a few years, the parents would no doubt be wanting to send the children to sleepovers sewn into their onesies! And of course that made me remember the Knight in Rusty Armour (Every suit of armour ever made/ has a chink/ chainmail pants with a missing link.). I was astonished that Nick had never heard of it – I guess it is the difference between being the oldest (and growing up in a small town with only the National Programme), and having lots of older siblings playing their records in the background.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=STNtH-orVpE

Day 183

Level 2 Chi Kung.

Finished packing for Katie’s sleepover (having had to wash and dry her robe and slanket) ending up with an unfeasibly huge and heavy amount of luggage for one small child to be away from home for 17.5 hours. Cleaned the kitchen before embarking on production of near-industrial quantities of shortbread. Filled six tins to give away, replenished the tin in the freezer that I had bandicooted in desperation to produce a present for the guitar teacher, and left a dozen or so pieces out to mollify the family.

At 5:30 I went to collect Katie from after-school club and took her out for pasta before dropping her, and her mountain of luggage, at the school sleep over. The large hall was a mass of excited 7 year olds and the entire stage was covered in luggage, with many parents hauling even bigger bags than Katie’s.

Day 182

Level 2 Chi Kung.

A whisky and honey hot toddy, radio 4, a huge pile of Christmas cards…

A little ego-boost for Katie when Elias’s Dad called last night to say that Elias had made it very clear that he preferred to come to Katie’s house, so could we go back to the original arrangement? I said fine and duly collected Katie and Elias from school. I think Elias must be missing his mum (who is in India, working with impoverished children) because, while Katie holds my hand only to cross the road, the little Moomin Troll clutched it all the way home.

Another really beautiful golden sunset on the way home from school. Home just in time to meet the bus bringing my precious Dashi home from camp. He had a good time and raved about doing archery, and going on zip wires and high level rope walks. He told us that Jordan, the boy he was sharing with, had ‘some bad times’ and was a bit tearful, missing his parents, and also reported, somewhat astonished, that Jordan couldn’t get to sleep with the light off! I explained to Dash that lots of people are a bit scared of the dark but he plainly still considered it bizarre.

I made a huge pot of pasta for Katie and Elias – pesto for her, ham and cheese for him and took it through to the living room for them (since Elias is a bit frightened of the dog). I then thought Elias’ pasta smelled so good that I boiled up the pasta post again and made myself some but I had barely got the first forkful to my mouth when Katie came in and said that she needed another half-bowl of pasta and Elias needed a big bowl. So I put the pasta pot back on the hob again… By the time Katie and Elias had devoured their second helping of pasta, it was time to head for trampolining. The kids had a great time. Elias’ Dad had originally been meant to pick Elias up from trampolining at 7pm but had asked if I could take Elias home again and he would pick him up about 7:30pm. We headed home and K & E were keen to get their ice creams immediately in case Elias’ Dad arrived early … Unfortunately their concerns were groundless – as he didn’t finally arrive until about 8:45. This wouldn’t have been a problem if I’d known in advance – when it got to bath time I would have just parked Elias with a book or a DVD and sooled Katie into the bath, but when I think someone is going to arrive any minute, I am more inclined to just let things slide a bit…

Started unpacking Dashi’s suitcase, while at the same time packing Katie’s stuff for a sleepover in the school hall tomorrow night. Dash’s camp must have been damn cold: I thought a pair of trousers was missing when I started unpacking but it turned out he was wearing two pairs at once and had clearly been doubling up like this the whole time he was away, as the worn clothes were all one inside the other!

Day 181

Level 2 Chi Kung.

Fighting the chaos, climbing the laundry mountain… Katie’s teacher phoned yesterday to ask for a meeting to discuss ‘how she is in class’ (bored stiff mostly by the sound of it) and we agreed to meet this afternoon but I arrived at school to find that Mrs Lucas was off sick. Very annoying.

Saw Elias’s Daddy at the school gate and casually mentioned that I would be picking Elias up from school tomorrow and taking him to trampoline as arranged with Siniqua. Unfortunately it seems he had forgotten about this arrangement and had arranged for Lena to have Elias. Katie very disappointed.

Missing Dash.

Day 180

Level 2 Chi Kung.

A day of fighting the chaos, sorting, putting away – even got back onto purging the damned filing cabinet, Probably would have been more productive if I hadn’t stayed up until 3am last night working on the jigsaw!

Missing Dashi – very strange not having him around.

Day 179

Level 2 Chi Kung.

The cleaner called in sick, so the place is a bit dishevelled, but I resisted the temptation to clean up and focussed instead on sorting out and wrapping up the children’s Christmas presents. About 80% done.

It felt like old times setting up a jigsaw table in the living room – 1000 pieces – first serious jigsaw I have attempted since 1989/90, when Nick and I took 18 months to complete a 5000 piece of Breughel’s painting of a village fair!

20141208 Pile of presents
The pile of wrapped presents getting higher.

 

Day 178

Level 2 Chi Kung.

Katie’s last day of Stagecoach, then straight on to the Christmas fair at Katie’s school. Unlike her friends Katie has little interest in buying things at the fair – other than perhaps a cup-cake or a gingerbread Christmas tree – it is the craft activities she is into. Today she made a felt mouse with a candy cane tail for hanging on the Christmas tree and various other cards and decorations. We eventually found Arina and her mum at the mulled wine stall and Lena persuaded me that we’d better have one, you know, purely to raise money for the school!

Meanwhile, back at the ranch, Nick had taken the boys and Sherlock to choose a Christmas tree. We all arrived back home just before 4pm – just in time to meet a prospective new borrower for Sherlock. We instantly liked her and it turns out that she literally lives just a few houses down our street (at number 32). She took Sherlock up to the heath for a ‘getting-to-know-you’ walk. So, after a five mile walk with Tudor yesterday, he has now had three decent walks today – but he still seems to be literally bounding with energy.

Spent the evening organising a very long list of clothing and equipment ready for Dash to go on a school camp tomorrow.

Day 177

Level 2 Chi Kung.

A busy, and very Christmassy day. Saturday started with guitar and I was very pleased I had remembered to take Mr Baulch a gift, as there were four lined up on the window sill from the four students before us! A couple of months ago the pound shop had pretty biscuit tins so I bought the whole stock (about a dozen) and am gradually filling them with baking to be given to all the various people who require small gifts at this time of year. Apart from the school teachers, who will, as usual, be given alcohol. After years of trying more inventive presents, alcohol is the only thing that has ever been well-received, or even acknowledged! So Mr Baulch got a tin of homemade shortbread and looked very pleased indeed. While we were in the neighbourhood, I took Katie and Dash to the Christmas Fair – the latest incarnation of the piece of waste ground which, under the inspired guidance of Sydney Thornberry, became Blackheath Beach over the summer. In one sense, there wasn’t that much there: plenty of hay for the children to play in, sit on, and throw at each other; and old boat to scramble over, lots of fake ice, a stall selling tea, coffee, hot chocolate and homemade cakes… But half the village was there, all very much in the Christmas spirit, and the kids were having a blast. And of course Sydney herself was on the gate, handing out the spring course guides. I’m sure I’m not the only mummy to leave the kids playing in the hay and go straight back inside to book up course places for the children. After that, I took the children to lunch at Chapter’s – Dash loves their grilled chicken and I take him as a monthly treat. I was still feeling a bit seedy and not really hungry but, even though we are regulars and they treat us like old friends, I knew I couldn’t take up a table on one of the busiest days of the year and only order one children’s meal, a bottle of sparkling water and a side of mashed potato (Katie used to order their bangers and mash but she eventually confessed that she didn’t actually like the sausages and asked if she could order just the mash). I decided to go for grown-up bangers and mash with pickled red cabbage – a good choice for comfort food. Next up was the fair at Blackheath High (where Katie does Stagecoach) and then home for a brief rest before heading back to the village for the lantern parade. Just as we escaped the kettling, we ran into Arina and her parents. We had been meant to meet them at the start of the parade and walk together, but hadn’t been able to find them. They explained that they had been ‘a few minutes’ late, but I suspect that this statement re-defines ‘a few’ to ‘around 15’. It wasn’t a problem – we weren’t exactly expecting them to be on time. They are pretty much always late for school – in spite of living, it turns out, about 200m from the school gate. Once, when Katie and I were running late for school, Katie was speculating as to whether we would just squeak in before registration or whether we would need a late note. Then we saw Arina’s mummy heading in the other direction, having already dropped Arina off. ‘Oh well’, said Katie resignedly, ‘if we’re later than Arena, then we DEFINITELY need a late note.’.

I wondered if it might be a Russian thing, and found the following on a business etiquette site:

‘As a foreigner, you are expected to be on time to all business appointments. However, your Russian counterpart may be late, as this may be a test of your patience. Do not expect an apology from a late Russian, and do not demonstrate any kind of attitude if your business appointments begin one or two hours late. This may also be a test of your patience.

Social events are more relaxed. It is acceptable for foreigners to be 15 to 30 minutes late.

Patience is an extremely important virtue among Russians; punctuality is not.’

We chatted as we waited for the lights to be switched on, then we said goodbye and I asked MY kids if they wanted to go straight home or go for hot chocolate first. At which point Arina seized her chance and said definitely hot chocolate but in a takeaway cup so that they could drink it on the way to the heath to go on some ride that had been set up there. We got the drinks and wandered up to the heath, where the ride turned out to be one of those spinning tea cup scenarios. As the children had opted for hot chocolate with cream AND marshmallows, and Katie is a bit of a vomiter, I stepped discreetly back out of range as the spinning started, but there was no need – they all had a wonderful time and no one threw up. When they got off the ride they were in high spirits and clearly in no mood to go home. Instead they started running really fast, chasing each other around the heath. There’s no lighting on the heath, so once they went out of range of the street lights round the edge, we could only detect them by the occasional glints off the reflective tape on Katie’s jacket… and the wild laughter. It was lovely to watch the sheer exuberance: of being 7, and full of hot chocolate, and finally off the parental leash, running free with the friendly spirits of the dark.

Lanterns and Kettling

In the lantern parade in the village this evening with Kate and Dash, we found ourselves near the front of the parade at the point whether the crowd reached a fork in the road and had to be compacted into one of the forks (the other being open to traffic). So there we were, trapped between a small brass band and some mounted police in front, and a jolly but inexorably advancing crowd behind. I turned to the lady behind me and said “It feels rather like being kettled.” To which she replied, nostalgically, ‘Oh, it’s years since I’ve been kettled. But I remember what I was chanting when it happened: “Kill, kill, kill…”‘. I hope my face didn’t show my mounting horror at this point, because she went on to explain “Kill, kill, kill the bill”, against the criminal justice bill’. Phew, that’s all right then! She then went on to tell me that, growing up, she was so proud of her cool aunty who got arrested at Greenham Common. Very sweet.

I resisted the temptation to go one-up!

Day 176

Level 2 Chi Kung.

Before Jack was born, when we first started thinking about trying for a baby, we followed the advice in some book, to buy a digital thermometer and take my temperature each day, so that we could see (from the slight spike in temperature) when in the month I typically ovulated. In solidarity, Nick took his own temperature as well, and we thereby discovered that he runs on average half a degree above ‘normal’ while I run at least half a degree below normal (so in Twilight terms, he’s Jacob to my Edward, except I’m a girl). This makes him an ideal sleeping companion in the winter months and, over the years, he has become stoical about me treating him like a man-sized hot water bottle (with benefits). A couple of weeks ago however, I identified that this was part of the problem with my ongoing sleep deprivation: Nick is a night owl but there is no point in me going to bed before him, as I just lie there shivering. I hit upon the idea of buying an electric blanket, and following extensive perusing of reviews, chose one from John Lewis. It arrived earlier this week and worked so well that I immediately renamed it ‘the electric husband’.

During the preparations for the pikkujoulo yesterday, I began to feel the first inklings that I might be coming down with Katie’s cold. By the time the guests decided to leave I was feeling a bit under par, and by the time they actually left (after the obligatory 45 minutes of rousting multiple children, and the losing and finding hats, coats, gloves etc) I was feeling pretty dreadful. By the time I had put the leftovers away, brushed my teeth and washed my face, it was all I could do to crawl into bed with the electric husband on 5 and lie shivering uncontrollably until joined by the real husband. I woke up this morning feeling utterly dire, and croaked a plea for Nick to do the morning for me, rolled over and, aside from breaks to take paracetamol and go to the loo, slept until 1 pm. Feeling slightly improved, I did Chi Kung, ran a hot bath (in which I immediately fell asleep again) and then went downstairs to be ready for Jack returning from school. The kitchen, with post-party mess overlaid with breakfast chaos, was a depressing sight and, in low-productivity mode, it seemed to take hours to clean it up. By the time it was spic and span and the kids had been fed, I was ready to collapse on the sofa and have family movie with the kids.

The thing is, that sounds like a bad day, but actually, it was total luxury to feel sick and be able to STAY IN BED, instead of dragging myself into the office, or (since several members of the family usually get sick at once) cleaning up someone else’s vomit!