Archive for the ‘Brandon’ Category

Our journey with Brandon

Wednesday, October 3rd, 2012

There are a few questions that we’ve been asked over and over since June and it seemed like a good idea to document what’s been going on.

What prompted us to take Brandon in for allergy testing?

Two things came together at about the same time.  We had received an email from Brandon’s teacher that he was falling asleep in class.  We didn’t think anything of it until a couple of weeks later when he came home and said he wasn’t allowed to go to recess the rest of the year (this was May).  He was required to go to the health room to nap instead.  That’s when we found out there was a recurring, systemic problem.  I called a conference with his teacher and found out he was alternately sleeping or disruptive and hyper.  Around the same time, we had gone out to a restaurant and he had consumed a little bit of cantaloupe which made him sick immediately.  With my own history of food allergies, little red alarms were going off in my head.

Upon testing, Brandon reacted to every food tested except egg.  Wheat, soy, milk, rice, potato, tomato, sugar, chocolate, yeast, and one more (I’m always missing one when I list them).  We eliminated all of these foods from his diet and noticed improvement in his general demeanor, control, and energy level very quickly.  As I posted earlier, he’s down to just four of these foods that truly cause a problem.

Okay, so he has food allergies.  So what does this have to do with homeschooling?  Seems like a leap.

I agree, it was a decision prompted by an emotional reaction.  I had a conversation with the school principal and nurse that made clear that they believed that Brandon was being deliberately disobedient and that our choice of pursuing food testing was ridiculous.  The principal was utterly unhelpful, immovable, and did absolutely nothing to help us get through the last few weeks of the school year.

Though a bit impulsive, I still believe it has been the best move for him this year.  Brandon spent last school year being yelled at.  He was in trouble in music class.  He was in trouble in his regular classroom.  He was in trouble in the health room because he couldn’t sleep on command.  While Brandon projects himself to be a self-confident, social, extrovert, we have learned that he is actually quite insecure, anxiety ridden, sensitive, and folds into himself when stressed.  Our goal is to spend this year (and probably next) finding ways to build up his confidence again.

What about socialization?

Oh my, the number 1 question posed to homeschoolers everywhere.  I could cite so many books, links, resources that answer this question.  In short, in the real world we socialize with people of all ages.  So do homeschoolers every day.  There’s nothing that says kids need to be in a group of kids the same age in order to turn out just fine.

That said, yes, Brandon is still playing soccer with the same group of kids he’s played with for years.  He is attending school at Edmonds Heights K-12, a parent-participation alternative school formerly known as the Homeschool Resource Center two hours a week.  He participates in Sunday School and church activities.  He’s not learning in isolation.

What does homeschooling look like for him?  What’s he learning?

He’s taking a game-programming class called RPGMaker.  He’s taking Class Piano.  At home, we’re working through a lab-based Chemistry curriculum.  For literature, he’s reading The Hobbit and is looking forward to seeing the movie when it comes out.  The rest of the year, we have King Arthur and Robin Hood on the agenda.  For Social Studies, we’re working through Story of the World Book 2 (The Middle Ages), which includes a lot of fun little projects that bring history to life.  He’s also studying the election process, of course.  He’s working through a standard math text.  He’s looking forward to participating in Nanowrimo again this November for creative writing.  He’s working on a super-secret video project that combines his love of video games with learning new technology.  We’re looking forward to attending a few Seattle Children’s Theater productions (at inexpensive homeschooler rates).

Because we are enrolled through Edmonds Heights, he is still considered a public school student and as such, we are required to report his monthly progress to the school, to spend at least an hour a week with a certificated teacher, and to meet with an advisor three times a year.  On the flip side, we have access to a great library and many encouraging people, and we are held accountable, which is helpful.

How is it working to homeschool and work at the same time?

It’s truly a challenge.  Most days I don’t feel like I’m balancing everything very well.  I know that we are doing this for the right reasons and God has control of the situation.  I’m at the office very little right now, and Brandon often comes with me.  We’re learning how and when he learns best (which is a day by day struggle depending on what he ate the day before).  I’m praying that by the time tax season comes around again we’ll have this figured out a bit more, but realistically I think it’s just going to be a challenging time.  I am, most days, truly enjoying getting to know Brandon better and exploring and experiencing learning in different ways.

What is the plan for next year?  What about middle school?

We expect to homeschool through next year (6th grade) and he’ll move into Meadowdale Middle School with all of his friends in 7th grade.  Only God knows if that’s truly how it will work out.

Any other questions I’ve missed?

I’m happy to try to answer them.

Food allergies, revisited

Tuesday, October 2nd, 2012

Yep, I know… it’s been two years since my last post.  I’m not sure how that’s possible, but I do know that facebook has taken over most things that I would have blogged about.  At the same time, I’m sad that I haven’t blogged many of the events of the last few years.

This will not be one of those massive “catching up” posts, though.  For today, I just want to throw out there the cheat sheet we’re putting together to go with Brandon when he goes to a friend’s house.  His food allergies have been much more pronounced and serious than anything I’ve dealt with before, and it’s been a learning experience.  I hope to write out our journey so far soon.

In the meantime, here it is:

Brandon is allergic to five foods: Cantaloupe, Sugar, Yeast, Soy, and Tomato

Cantaloupe will make him sick immediately.  Best not to give him fruit that has been mixed with cantaloupe.

Sugar causes swings from hyperactivity to lethargy and crankiness, but no severe reaction.
Limit: Anything with sugar, brown sugar, cane juice

Yeast, when consumed in quantity, causes Brandon to be virtually unwakable the next morning.
Avoid: Breads, cakes, pita chips

Soy causes extreme stomach pain, headache, nausea, slurred speech, and has caused Brandon to lose mobility. His reactions to soy do not begin immediately and can take 12+ hours to manifest. If you see him eating something with soy, please stop him.
Please do check labels, many chips and most tortillas use soybean oil.
NO Chinese food, tofu, foods cooked in soybean oil, edamame, foods with “soy protein”
Ok: “Soy lecithin”

Tomato caused a very strong reaction in the clinical setting. He has not had tomato since, so we do not know how he would react. An epi-pen was issued in case of anaphylactic shock, where the airway closes up. If you do not know how to use an epi-pen, please ask and he would be happy to show it to you and explain how to use it. In an emergency, please don’t hesitate to use it and call 911.
NO tomato sauce, pizza or pasta with red sauce or tomatoes, barbeque sauce, ketchup

So what DOES he eat?
Meats, salad, vegetables, and fruits are good. He likes sugar-free jello. Popcorn is probably fine. 100% fruit juice or water are good. We do try to keep some sugar-free snack foods in his emergency kit (which contains his inhaler and his epi-pen).

It’s a journey, and we’re still discovering ways to keep Brandon healthy and feeling well.  When he’s well, Brandon is a joy to be around.  He is helpful and kind, funny and thoughtful.  When he is not well, he can be inattentive, angry, very easily frustrated, seemingly deliberately disobedient, hyper or lethargic.  We continue to pray for wisdom and patience on this journey.

 

Spring craziness

Saturday, May 1st, 2010

I think I can safely blame FaceBook for killing my blogging efforts. The little day to day stuff gets posted there. This last week has been a little crazier than usual, so here’s a longer update.

Alyson

Alyson is doing great in Kindergarten. She loves her class, her teacher, and her school. She’s preparing for a fairly large part in the Kindergarten Peter Rabbit play. They’re having graduation pictures on Tuesday and she’ll be graduating June 9. After much consideration, we have enrolled her at Seaview for Fall. We love Cedar Park, but we’re looking forward to having all three kids at the same school with the same schedule for a year.

She just started a new season of soccer. Her previous team filled up before they got to Alyson’s registration, so she got bumped from the Storm Troopers to the Grasshoppers. She had a great time at their first game this morning and is looking forward to facing off against the Storm Troopers next Saturday. Coaching those 5 year olds appears to be similar to herding cats, but they sure have fun.

Alyson loves…. her family, reading, her stuffed animals, pink, her friends, and so many other things.

BJ

BJ is sitting out this sports season. He’s (sometimes) bat boy for Christian’s baseball team, though, and he’s looking forward to being on his Sounders soccer team again in the Fall. He’d LOVE to take a turn on Alyson’s team but we don’t think he’d pass for five very well 🙂 BJ blogged about Christian’s last baseball game. He’s hilarious.

This school year has been a challenge for him. BJ is a very impulsive child who lacks a filter between his brain and his mouth. He’s gotten in trouble enough that we had to have a conference with the principal, counselor, and one of his teachers last week. This whole team-teaching thing is a disaster (at least for our active ADHD boys), no offense intended to his teachers, who I’m sure are good teachers. He’s not enjoying school and thinks everything is boring. We know he’s a smart kid and just wish he’d show it more often. The school wants him tested for the Challenge (gifted) program, mainly to gain insight from the results. We aren’t really willing to send any of our kids to the Challenge program, as it’s held at a late start school, an hour and a half later than Seaview. They’ve created a way to reward him for good behavior and I’m hopeful the rest of the year will be better.

Christian

Christian is also still having some trouble at school, but like BJ he’s a smart kid. He’s just having a hard time organizing himself. He has a difficult time keeping track of assignments. We’re working with his teacher to find solutions, and I’m volunteering in his class once a week to supervise a bonus recess the kids can earn by getting their assignments in and having a good attitude. Monday, Christian leaves for two nights of 5th Grade Outdoor School at Camp Killoqua. He’s looking forward to it. He loves camp and he’s looking forward to going back to Bible Camp this summer.

Christian is playing baseball for the Echelbarger Phantoms this Spring, and Bill is head coach. The Phantoms are a very fun team to watch play. Bill always keeps the details up on his blog.

Christian is active in our church youth group and enjoys being active in their bible studies and activities. He is singing with Seattle Children’s Chorus (next concert June 5 in Seattle), and with our church choir. Between baseball and choirs and youth, the kid has something going on nearly every day.

As for me, I’m still primarily gluten-free and still holding steady about 30 pounds lighter than I was last summer. I lived through another tax season. I’m spending a lot of time keeping track of the kids, their projects, and their events. It’s a whirlwind and I’m grateful we have Google Calendars to keep us all on track.

I think that’s about it!

A new school year…

Thursday, August 27th, 2009

I’m trying really hard to remain optimistic about the new school year. But I’m incredibly frustrated that this year not one but BOTH boys will be in team-taught classes. This didn’t go so well for us last year, so imagine our surprise when Christian even still has one of the same teachers!

Breathe in, breathe out…

I’m trying to remind myself of the bright sides here…
– teachers creatively kept their jobs despite budget cuts
– Christian apparently liked this teacher and is not too bummed he didn’t get the teacher he wanted
– Christian’s second teacher will only be 1 day a week, so hopefully he’ll have a bit more consistency this year (and it’s his music/pe teacher, who he also liked)
– BJ’s only in second grade and hopefully it won’t be as big of a deal as it was for Christian in 4th.

That’s all I’ve got so far. We get to go visit Alyson’s classroom this evening, so we’re looking forward to that.

Event roundup

Friday, June 19th, 2009

I imagine everyone’s getting tired of me writing, “We’ve been busy”.  Maybe I need to invest in a thesaurus.  Thankfully we just had one kid in sports this spring, but baseball really seemed to take over our lives there for a couple of months.  It was a lot of fun, though.  Pics and details are on Bill’s blog.  BJ and Alyson will be playing soccer in the fall, and Bill may be looking into Fall Baseball for Christian.  I think he’s nuts 🙂

I had the pleasure of accompanying BJ on his field trip to the zoo on Wednesday.  Alyson got to come too, and she’d been asking to go to the zoo, so it was perfect.  (She can spell ‘zoo’, by the way.)  We had BJ’s friend Sammy with us, and the three kids stopped at EVERY bench to have their picture taken.

Zoo kids

The new penguin exhibit is open and SO much better than the old one.  I’m sure I could’ve gotten a better picture, but the kids were not as interested as I was.  It was even feeding time, so I wish we could’ve watched a little bit longer.

Penguins

And we ran into the famous peacock.  (Okay, so maybe not famous, but the peacock is one of the things I most remember about the zoo from when I was a kid.)

Peacock

BJ was a really good big brother and made sure Alyson could see at each exhibit.  He was also really responsible about keeping himself and Sammy with Alyson & I.  BJ’s really grown up a lot this year.  Alyson really wanted to see the giraffes the most, and the boys both wanted to see the bats.  All were happy.  (Except poor Alyson who got sick at the end of the field trip.  We’ve come to the conclusion she was simply over-exerted.)

The annual school carnival was a couple of weeks ago, and Alyson got to ride a pony.  Mom would be so proud.  She even had her heels down (one, at least) 🙂  She loved it.  When we first saw the ponies from across the field, she asked, “Are they real?!?”  LOL

Alyson on the pony

Christian and I also walked the Race for the Cure, our  annual tradition.  It’s always incredible to see the number of people turning out to make a difference.  You can see that while we were near the front and well past the half-way point, there were still thousands of people ahead of us and behind us.

Race for the Cure Seattle

Christian enjoyed the kids area this year too, especially the football toss (though he throws a football like he pitches a baseball).

Christian Football

I think that’s it… our update for another season 🙂  The summer will be filled with sports camps for the boys, daycare for Alyson, and work as usual for us adults.  Christian’s also looking forward to his first week of sleep-away bible camp!  We hope everyone has a happy, safe, fun summer!

The end of another school year

Friday, June 19th, 2009

Well, today is the last day of another school year already. I don’t know where the last 9 1/2 months went!

Alyson’s Kindergarten evaluation appeared in the mail today. She is, on average, a year ahead of herself. They evaluated 8 areas and assigned an ‘Estimated Developmental Age’ to each. In three areas, she tested at age 5 (personal skills, language, and gross motor). In three areas, she tested at 5.6 (visual motor, body image, and fine motor). And in two areas, she tested at age 6 (numbers and concepts). Very interesting. The bottom line says, “Alyson is ready for half day kindergarten. She is on probation based on age.” She’s very excited to go to her own school in the fall.

BJ is proud to be officially a 2nd grader. He had a couple of 2s on his report card, mostly accompanied by ‘occasionally’ on the Effort line. He’s starting to rush through work like Christian. He’s still getting 4s in PE 🙂 His teacher made a note that she appreciates the responsibility he took in turning in math assignments this year. Great job, BJ!

UPDATED:  Christian’s officially a 5th grader (wow, that sounds weird).  While he certainly struggled to turn in assignments, apparently the work he did in class showed significant improvement.  Yay!

Christian’s (almost) 10!

Sunday, May 17th, 2009

Christian’s kid-party was yesterday at Traxx Indoor Raceway.  The kids all had a blast racing each other.

Birthday boy:

Racer Christian

BJ:

Racer BJ

And Alyson got to go all by herself after the crazy boys were finished.  She’s so proud of herself that she only crashed once!

Racer Alyson

Christian got Nerf guns from every one of his friends.  They all opened them right away and had an organized battle right there in the party room.  Crazy kids.  Over all, Christian said this was the best birthday ever 🙂

Happy Birthday Christian!

Whew, tax season’s over

Monday, April 20th, 2009

With another tax season over, I’m breathing a sigh of relief and getting a bit of my life back.  We must’ve been busy this year.  I can’t remember another April 15th that I was so anxious for (except, perhaps, for the year the earthquake extended tax season to April 30).  I didn’t realize just how stressed I felt as we neared the deadline, until Thursday April 16 when my office, the phone, and even email were silent.  Friday I had my energy back again.  Amazing.  Anyway, it’s time for an overall update.

Christian is doing very well in baseball.  If you’re not following Bill’s blog, why not?  All of the details, including the schedule and results, are updated after every game.  School is still a struggle, and we’re looking into tutoring for writing for the summer.  He enjoys reading Geronimo Stilton books, and Yotsuba books (which are comic book format translated into English from Korean and are read from right to left).  Christian’s really enjoying learning to cook.  He’s great at pancakes and made us breakfast unexpectedly one Saturday morning recently.  He followed directions to make brownies from a mix quite well (except I didn’t have the right oil out for him so they turned out weird – olive oil is not always an acceptable alternative to vegetable oil).  Today he’s making fudge, yum!

The kids did a great job each of the six weeks leading up to Easter presenting a new symbol of the season each week during the church service.  The boys read their lines slowly, clearly, with enviable poise.  Alyson memorized her lines and said them loud and clear (the four weeks she decided to participate – two of the weeks BJ had to say her line for her).  The last week, her line was really long, and we were really proud of her.  The kids do so well up in front of people.

This summer, the kids will be attending Skyhawks sports camps again.  They had a good time last year, and it’s an economical solution.  BJ was adamant that he didn’t want to go, until I made him an offer.  If they make it through the summer without whining, moaning, and complaining, we’ll spend a night at Great Wolf Lodge at the end of the summer.  BJ changed his tune quite rapidly.  I’d really like to manage a road trip to visit Angie in UT, but I haven’t figured that out yet.  We’ll have a week of VBS in July, and Christian wants to go to Bible Camp.  I’d love to go and take BJ and Alyson too, but I don’t think we can afford it.  I’m proud of Christian for being willing to go to a week-long camp without us.

BJ is having a blast being Bat Boy for Christian’s baseball team.  I think he enjoys being part of the team (particularly the snacks at the end of each game).  He’s a smart kid and does his homework easily, when we can convince him to do it.  He advised his brother to just rip it in half if he didn’t want to do it.  *sigh*  He’s become quite addicted to a computer game, so he frequently loses computer privileges.  He does enjoy reading, though, and can freqently be found sitting in front of the heater in the living room, reading any book that’s handy.  He’s into chapter books now, and is in the highest reading group in his class.  He claims to have read all of the Junie B Jones books.  He also likes Geronimo Stilton.

Alyson is still amazing me daily.  She’s often trying to sound out words.  She now writes Alyson, BJ, Mommy, Daddy, Christian, cat, dog, God and lovely without assistance.  She sounded out Doctor the other day and it was readable.  She called herself Doctor Alyson and said she wanted to be an eye doctor.  Go figure.  She can often be found sitting with a workbook and markers.  Or dancing.  Or playing with toys and games we had forgotten we had because the boys never played with such things.  It’s the workbooks that amaze me.  She can do word searches.  She can do fill-in-the letter activities which require her to look at words/pictures on the back of the book to figure out what letter is missing, and go back to fill it in.  She loves patterns and sees them in everything.  Today she decided she wanted to learn to play piano and learned the first three notes of the random song we had music out for.  She still loves to sing.  Her current favorite band is Paramore (particularly because they have a couple of songs on Rock Band).

We haven’t heard back from her school yet, but I’ll give them a call soon to see when testing should be scheduled.

I’m sure there’s more to say, but for now, hope you enjoyed the update 🙂  I’ll see if I can find some new pictures to add later.

Chicago – days 3 & 4

Saturday, February 28th, 2009

It snowed again Friday night.  I don’t think the temperature rose above 25 the whole time we were in Chicago.

We had a quiet morning Saturday.  The kids enjoyed some time in the pool before we got ready for the wedding.

The wedding location was beautiful. The boys waited patiently between pictures and the ceremony.

Christian & BJ

The ceremony itself was brief, and Bill and Edward provided music.  Everyone laughed when the Mission Impossible theme played as Brenda walked down the aisle.

Bill & Ed

Alyson was really looking forward to dancing and pouted when she had to wait.

Alyson pouting

She was thrilled when it was finally time for the reception. Grandma gave her a bouquet.

Alyson flowers

She danced with us in rotation… Grandma, Daddy,

Daddy Daughter

and Mommy

Alyson & Mommy

Christian even danced with Grandma and me

Grandma & Christian

Bill

Bill

The groom

The groom

Alyson was exhausted by the end of the night

Sleepy Alyson

Sunday morning, we all had a lovely brunch, and Alyson took a turn with the camera.

Brunch

She also got this great picture of Grandma

Grandma

Daddy, Alyson, and the newest member of our family, Puppy 🙂

Bill & Alyson & Puppy

We caught a 6:15 flight home, on which the boys finished their homework and Alyson slept most of the flight.  We got home late Sunday night.

Overall, we had a wonderful weekend.  I’d love to go back to Chicago for another few days and get to the museums and other sights we missed this time around.

Chicago – day 2

Saturday, February 28th, 2009

The next morning, the hotel shuttled us to the Hinsdale train station, about 5 miles away. We enjoyed the train ride into the city. We took an express train that took about 30 minutes. From Union Station, we took a cab to Navy Pier.

Navy Pier

We enjoyed walking through the building. There is a stained glass museum that’s just incredible. There is also a garden with really cool fountains. Some fountains went in spurts that made it look like fish jumping. Some flowed in arches from one pool to another.

Garden

Navy Pier is also the home of the Chicago Children’s Museum, and we spent a few hours here.

Chicago Children's Museum

The kids had fun playing, climbing, building, and flying airplanes.

CCM Slide

The kids each got to spend $15 in the gift shop. Alyson picked a stuffed puppy, Christian got a yo-yo type toy, and BJ got another toy.

We had lunch at the biggest, busiest McDonalds I’ve ever seen at Navy Pier. From there, we took a cab to the Hancock building and went up to the 94th floor. A voice informed us we were on the fastest elevator in North America, making the trip in 40 seconds. Our ears popped in confirmation. Here are just a few pictures of the view.

Hancock view of city sprawl

The city

Hancock view of city

The kids listening to the audio tour

Kids at Hancock building

The silly kids pretending to be window-washers

Hancock silly kids

The view of Navy Pier from the Hancock Building

Hancock view of Navy Pier

I was amazed at just how BIG Lake Michigan is. It seems like an ocean.

Hancock Lake Michigan

Lakeshore Drive

Hancock Lakeshore Dr

Some of the amazing architecture

Architecture

We took a cab back to Union Station and then the train back to Hinsdale.

Train at Union Station

We felt right at home amongst Starbucks and Washington Mutual’s everywhere. We had a little time to kill before the hotel shuttle picked us up again. We spent the time at Starbucks and had a bit of a culture shock. The coffee shop filled with 30+ middle schoolers with Starbucks cards, designer clothes, and attitudes. It was quite an experience, and when we asked about it, we were told they come in every Friday afternoon.

After we got back, we got changed and headed off to the rehearsal dinner. Bill was happy to get his toast delivered and did a great job. The meal was wonderful.

Bill's Toast

BJ was really tired through most of the dinner, but he perked up later when we handed over the camera. Christian enjoyed playing with his new yo-yo. Alyson spent another meal drawing and talked Kelly’s ear off.

Dinner

Alyson thought it was funny to meet another Allison.

Alyson/Allison