kids

Spelling To The Beat Of Her Own Drummer

As I mentioned a couple of weeks ago, Elizabeth had qualified to participate in the HUSD Spelling Bee (Click here to view that post).

Today was the big day; we drove her down to the main office in Hemet to compete against 4th, 5th, 6th, 7th and 8th graders from every school in the district. There were 38 kids present in all.

Steve and I were very nervous, but Elizabeth? Totally unruffled. She was the picture of composure as we arrived at the compound and found the right building. “I hope they give me ‘inconvenience,'” she remarked cheerfully as we came in and got in line with the rest of the contestants. “That word is so much fun to spell.” We signed her in and they assigned her a seat number and a sample word for the practice round. To her great delight her sample word was ‘brain.’ One of her all-time favorite words. “Braaaaiiiinnnn,” she drawled happily as she went off to find the seat she’d been assigned and Steve and Luke and I went to look for seats over on the spectator side of the room.

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When they began the practice round, there were some problems with getting the first couple of kids to speak up loud enough to be heard. A tech was called in to turn up the sound system before they moved on to the third contestant.

“They’re turning up the microphone,” Steve murmured to me. “Elizabeth….”

“…is going to blow everybody’s hats off,” I nodded in agreement. Last year Elizabeth was in the 3rd grade production of ‘Anza Then And Now,’ and had really cultivated her vocal projection skills. Her ‘mic voice’ is quite impressive, even without the actual mic.

For the practice round each child was asked to come up to the mic, introduce himself, say what grade he’s in, and spell his sample word. It all went smoothly until Elizabeth stepped up. “MY NAME IS ELIZABETH,” she began. You could practically see people bouncing in their seats as the shockwave spread through the room. She wasn’t shouting at all, she just has spectacular projection. “I’M IN FOURTH GRADE.”

“Hello Elizabeth,” smiled the Spellmaster. “You should teach a class on microphone etiquette. Your practice word is ‘brain.'”

“BRAAAAIIIIINNNNN” she intoned in a rather dramatic voice. She just really loves that word. “B-R-A-I-N. BRAAAIIIINNNN.” She returned to her seat.

After the practice round, the Spellmaster asked the contestants if they had any questions before the contest officially began. Several hands went up, including Elizabeth’s. The other kids all had questions about specific rules and details of the Bee.

Elizabeth’s question: “Can I go get a drink of water?”The Spellmaster looked mildly taken aback, but then told her that she could if she absolutely had to, but if she wasn’t back by the time her turn came she would be disqualified. I hastily got up and said I’d go get her a bottle of water from the refreshment table out in the hall. I fetched her the water and sat back down.

For a while my attention was on the other contestants as they stepped forward and spelled their words. The next time I looked at Elizabeth I was horrified to see that she was amusing herself by balancing the bottle of water on her head. There was nothing I could do about this flagrant breach of protocol, so I just squirmed in my seat until the Spellmaster sternly instructed the contestants to please stop doing anything that might distract the other contestants. Elizabeth took the hint and put her bottle on the floor.

Incredibly, one of the words she was asked to spell actually was ‘inconvenience.’ What are the odds of that??

“Just my luck!” she crowed delightedly to all and sundry. “Inconvenience. I-N, C-O-N, V-E-N, I-E-N, C-E. Inconvenience.”

You know that flamingo with the yoyo in the “Carnival Of The Animals” scene from “Fantasia 2000?” That was my kid today. Skipping happily along to the beat of her own drummer.

Sadly, she was eventually tripped up by the word “amateur” and did not qualify to continue on to the County Level.

It’s probably just as well. I don’t think the County and my yoyo-wielding flamingo are quite ready for each other just yet. Maybe next year.

Categories: Family, Humor, kids, Life, Spelling Bee | 3 Comments

Dragon Trap

Elizabeth’s room is a strange and alien place, full of mysterious goings-on. I wandered in there today and found this rather unsettling scene unfolding. Seems the Minotaur had escaped his bonds and set a diabolical trap for the local dragons, with chillingly gleeful success.

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I’m kind of rooting for the dragons, but it doesn’t look good….

Categories: Dragons, Family, Humor, kids, Life | 3 Comments

Adventures in Spelling

Last week Elizabeth won her fourth grade spelling bee, earning herself a spot in the larger competition against all the other fourth- and fifth-grade classroom winners, and a chance at the big HUSD Spelling Bee down in Hemet.

splngb.jpgToday was the fourth- and fifth-grade competition, and Elizabeth took 2nd place! That means she’ll be going to Hemet to compete against all the 1st and 2nd place winners in her age group from all the other HUSD schools.  She also won a nifty trophy and a $15 gift card for Barnes & Noble.  

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I was proud of how well she did in the spelling bee today, but I was even prouder of the way she spontaneously and very graciously congratulated the 1st place winner as he received his prizes. No one told her she should do that, she just knew it was the graceful thing to do. My heart swells to see what a poised and kind person she’s growing up to be. As far as I’m concerned that’s worth more than a houseful of trophies.  

And in two and a half weeks — we’re off to Hemet for the District spelling bee! It’s pretty exciting. :^)

Categories: Family, kids, Life, Spelling Bee, Uncategorized | 7 Comments

Book Review: The Dangerous Book For Boys

I found this book (and it’s companion volume, “The Daring Book For Girls”) while shopping for Christmas gifts.  I glanced through its pages, loved the concept, and bought one of each for my son and daughter.

My kids opened them on Christmas morning, gave them a baffled once-over and a polite “Thank you,” and moved on to cooler stuff.

I didn’t mind; it was a natural reaction to what looked like a couple of 1940’s-era textbooks.  I hadn’t expected them to appreciate this particular gift right away. 

Later that day, as the excitement was winding down, I sat down with “The Dangerous Book For Boys,” and perused its pages from cover to cover. This book is an absolute treasure. It’s part how-to guide, part encyclopedia, part secret agent tutorial.  It offers sage advice, inspiring poetry, and valuable information about the natural world.  There are step-by-step instructions for how to make a paper airplane, paper hat, paper boat, or paper water bomb.  It shows how to tie five different useful knots; how to build a great treehouse, a go-cart, a workbench, a real bow and arrow, or a periscope; how to build a simple battery or electromagnet or pocket light from easy-to-find objects.  It includes the rules of 14 different sports and games; how to understand morse code or US Naval Flag Codes, how to encrypt and decipher secret messages.  It offers the Navajo Code Talkers’ Dictionary, several Latin phrases everyone should know, as well as the basic rules of English grammar.  There are instructions for how to learn to juggle, skip stones across water, fish, do coin tricks or grow a sunflower.  The Declaration Of Independence is printed in its entirety, as are the Ten Commandments.  The subject of astronomy is covered exhaustively.  There are seven poems every boy should know, and a recommended reading list of books.  There are several pages devoted to navigation, including how to find North in the dark, and a detailed explanation of why the sky is blue. 

And I’m not even scratching the tip of the iceberg yet.  

There’s a vast wealth of information and advice contained between the covers of this amazing tome.  Everyone should own a copy of this book!   

“The Daring Book For Girls” is a fun companion volume, but I found it to be rather less satisfying in its content choices.  If I could only buy one or the other for my child, it would be one for boys — even if she were a girl.     

Categories: books, Christmas, Family, kids, Life | 2 Comments

‘Tis The Season…

I’ve been too busy with Christmas stuff (and visiting with Steve’s cousin out from NJ — fun!) to think of anything profound or inspiring to write about this week. I still enjoy reading other folks’ blogs whenever I get a spare minute, though, so in lieu of an actual post, here are a couple of entries that have made me think and/or smile today.

The Brokenness Of Christmas

The Little Things

I Love This!

Categories: Christmas, Family, kids, Life | 2 Comments

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