Where to start?
The zoo trip was fun. Every parent ought to spend a day chaperoning kindergarten kids around a zoo.
My doctors were happy as usual. They only teased me for a few minutes about keeping such a detailed notebook full of test results. I think they must know it was the only way for me to feel like I had any control over this disease, but they still like to make wisecracks about it. For the record, I haven't even looked at it in probably 6 months. This month, my 6 minute walk result was good, my PFT results were stable, I found out that ANMC does have Revatio in the pharmacy's formulary (no more $45 monthly co-pays!), and I am waiting on a test result to find out if we need to adjust my Synthroid dosage. The rheumatologist is checking into getting Reclast added to the formulary - once that happens I'll stop the once-weekly Fosamax and get the once-yearly IV-infused Reclast. Not that it's realistic or anything but I imagine myself in a room full of beautiful, witty, osteoporotic retired women, sipping chai and having our nails done, Reclast IV bags hanging overhead, complimentary buffet of broccoli, cottage cheese, and calcium-fortified orange juice at the ready.
Girl Scout Bridging ceremonies are sweet, awkward, funny, and- if you're unfortunate enough to have one or two microphone-hogging troop leaders - LONG. Bridging basically means the girls move up from one level of scouting to the next. T bridged from Brownies to Juniors, and BossLady bridged from Daisies to Brownies. Together with the last week of school, it's all an overwhelming mixture of "Oh! They're so cute" and "Oh *%@! They're growing UP".
Our kindergartener graduated... She received the "Journaling Gem" special award, because she luuuuvs to write in her journal. She and her classmates loped into the room with 'Pomp and Circumstance' playing (construction-paper mortar boards & yarn tassels in place), sat quietly through the special awards and the reading of "All I Ever Need to Know I Learned in Kindergarten", then performed a graduation song about first grade, to the tune of "New York, New York". The day before, they whooped it up with all the other kindergarten classes on the school grounds, for Kindergarten Rodeo Day. For her, it meant dashing about with her buddies, playing kiddie-ranch-hand games and eating hot dogs and chips. For me, it meant standing around waiting for takers at my game-station, the Shoe Race; finding a replacement parent to supervise the Shoe Race so I could walk R around the rodeo; and finally ending up filling 5 squirt guns per hand from a bucket for an endless line of kids doing their best to claim the coolest squirt gun before anyone else could. I'd only stopped for a few minutes to help the mom who was already there, but she saw her opportunity and ran for it I guess. You have to be either an idiot or on happy pills to volunteer for the most popular game on Rodeo day.
T's last day of school was similar, but set up for upper grades of course. I didn't have R or BL with me so I got to apply myself as the Snack Table Lady. The weather was perfect and we all had a great day. There was some melancholy for the girls (and their teachers) in the fact of our transferring to another school in the fall. I hope we made the right decision there.
T-ball season is here. K is getting over the early stumbling blocks of coaching and is getting those players into the zone. BossLady seems bored with it, as do all the kids on the team who stand around watching the pitcher and first baseman get all the glory. They all hit pretty well, though. We moms in the bleachers have the most fun, giggling at everything, especially the kids who sit down in the outfield to watch clouds, and the kids who round third and head for the dugout.
My Litter Crew (T, BL) and I made serious headway last week, stuffing 5 ALPAR bags full of trash which seemed mostly downwind of one particular house. I was happy to have given the neighborhood kids one trash-free morning at the bus stop! The Crew found a bucket, two life-preservers, and a bed-pillow among the litter. Then they stopped to climb trees and 'take a break'.
Next up, ballet happenings and hopefully some kind of a gardening beginning... then, soccer.
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