Saturday, November 23, 2019

Entry 486: School Stuff

With S out of town for the week on work, I've been doing all the parenting myself, which means I've had to pay closer attention to some of the school stuff S usually handles.  I'm reasonably informed about what's happening in my kids' school lives.  I drop them off every morning, so I know all the people who work at the school, and I know a lot of the other kids and parents in their classes. I go to half the parent-teacher conferences, because S and I usually split them up evenly.  And I get bombarded with automated text messages and emails telling me the latest classroom news -- some of them I even read.  But, I just want the big picture.  I feel like I don't need (nor do I want) the details about specific assignments and projects and such.  My view on that is that's on the student.  It should be structure in a way such that they can manage things on their own with minimal parental involvement.  I think it's better for the student that way, and I know it's better for the parent that way.

S agrees with me on this in theory, but in practice, once one of the kids starts to struggle, her Mama Bear instincts take over, and she feels compelled to help them.  Then we have an argument, because I feel pretty strongly that learning to overcome struggles will be far more valuable to our kids in the long run than will getting a 3 instead of 2 in social studies our the next report card.  It got to the point to where S said, "Do you want our kid to be held back in second grade?" which if you know DC public schools, is extremely unlikely to happen, and if it does (but it won't), then maybe it is for the best.  Because both our kids were born in August, they're just as close in age to the children in the grades one below them than they are to the kids in their own grades.  I think this matters, at least a little bit.  At some point, it won't, but for now it does.  Development is still month-to-month at their ages.

But, since marriage is a compromise and all that.  I've been trying to not be so militant about my no-help policy.  This especially comes into play when S is away and filled with anxiety (and maybe some guilt) about not being with her kids.  She was especially worried about this big project Lil' S1 had due -- he had to research numerical facts and then present them on a poster board with pictures -- so I assured her I would work on it with him.  It went fine.  The only things I did were Google and print pictures of things he told me he wanted (he doesn't know how to do that, and I don't want him using my computer to try to learn) and trace some of his letters in marker, because it would have taken him all day to do it by himself.  This seemed reasonable.  It came out decently.  He said the presentation went well, and the only comment he relayed from his teacher was that he got a point taken off because he didn't write his name on it.  Then he tried to blame me for it, which is a perfect example of when helping is counterproductive -- he should feel full ownership of his work, good or bad.

The other thing I've had to work on him with is his spelling.  Apparently, they have weekly spelling tests, and he's been scoring in the 0%-10% range.  His teacher mentioned it to me one time during drop-off, and I agreed to help him, and then I said that I didn't even know he had spelling tests.  The moment it came out of my mouth I realized, it was one of those things you say in your own defense, but it actually makes you sound worse.  She gave me a look of astonishment (not in a good way), and then said, "I post them on Rallyhood every week."  I smiled, shrugged, and assured her that he would do better in the future.  See, I learned from my previous mistake.  I didn't tell her that I still hadn't created a Rallyhood account and was only vaguely familiar with its existence.

So, we did some spelling words.  He's a dreadful speller, which is somewhat strange, because he's a pretty strong reader for his age.  I'm not super concerned that he become a crack speller.  I would guess my spelling skills are well above that of the average adult, and it doesn't really help me much in life.  I know many intelligent people (e.g., my wife), who aren't great spellers.  It's not that important a skill, considering we communicate mostly through devices that literally spell for us.  But, what studying spelling words can do, I think, is train him to focus his mind on something that he doesn't particularly love.  That is a very important life skill.  No matter what school we attend, or what job we hold, there are always parts we don't like, and being able to do those parts efficiently, nevertheless, I suspect, is crucial to our success and satisfaction in those endeavors.

Plus, I've long felt that rote memorization gets a bad rap as a learning technique.  Everybody is always about "the concepts," which is great, but in my experience the concepts are often facilitated by the memorization.  All the basic math formulas I learned in pre-college -- Pythagorean theorem, quadratic formula, limit definition of a derivative, etc. --  I memorized and used without having a deep conceptual understanding.  And then later, with more experience, I gained this understanding, in large part because I already knew (through memorization) what they were and where to use them.  The what and where led to the how and why.  I still remember looking over a friend's algebra homework as a freshman in college, and seeing how they completed the square, and having an epiphany: That's how the quadratic formula is derived!  If I didn't know the quadratic formula by heart and hadn't memorized the step-by-step process of completing the square, would I have made this connection?  I doubt it.

Anyway, back to Lil' S1, we spent a long time on his spelling words, and he only learned five of the ten words on his list, and I'm not convinced he will retain even those when his test comes around.  But, I think we made some progress.  He did much better toward the end.  We all have our memorization techniques, and I think Lil' S1 was starting to figure his out.  I feel confident that we can get his scores up in the 80%-100% range before too long.

One thing that helped a lot was motivating him through "extra" iPad time.  I use quotes because I just adjust the baseline, so that it's actually just normal iPad time.  He usually watches 15-20 minutes at night, and so I told him he could have five minutes plus an additional two minutes for each of five words he could spell correctly without looking at the sheet.  So, he took a few minutes to study, and then I administered the "test," and after not being able to memorize any of the words for the previous 45 minutes and complaining about it constantly ("Daddy!  I don't know how to learn things!"), he magically got every single one correct.  I was happily surprised.  I guess that's the power of the carrot -- figuratively speaking, of course.  If I offered my kids a literal carrot as a reward, I don't think it would work very well.

I'll keep you all posted on how it goes.  But, to put things into perspective, both my kids seem to be happy and well-adjusted little boys.  They both seem to "get it," meaning they know how to function within their little stations in this world.  That is probably much more important than what percentile they fall into scholastically.  One of Lil' S1's good friends was admitted to the psychiatric department at the children's hospital last night.  I don't know why exactly, but I do know an ambulance had to come get him at school, and they don't send ambulances to schools for nothing.  It's obviously a sad situation all around.  His parents are going through a terrible divorce, and it seems like their dad is running away from it all, putting everything on their mom's plate, and she just can't handle the full load.

We help out when we can, but there's only so much we can (or, truthfully, are willing to) do.  Last night for instance, she texted S and asked if she could come over and spend the night at her house with her youngest child (the little brother of the kid in the hospital), so that she could stay at the hospital with her oldest son.  S isn't in town, so she can't do it, and I have to watch my kids so I can't do it.  Plus, that's a big ask, in general.  We know these people, but were not super close friends.  But, maybe that shouldn't matter.  Maybe you should just help people who need help, because it's what you should do.  I don't know.  I mean, what I would like to do, all things equal, is phase these people out of our lives.  It's too much drama, and their kids get along less and less well with our kids as they get older.  Lil' S2 doesn't even like their youngest son, even though they're the same age.  (This kid has a serious temper and a hitting problem -- a legit one, not a playful, watched-too-many-episode-of-Power-Rangers one -- which explains why Lil' S2 doesn't like him.  I wouldn't like him either.)  But all things aren't equal, and these kids need stable adults in their lives, and this woman needs help.  Knowing this, is it ethical to say "it's not our my problem" or "I have my own family to worry about" and wash your hand of the whole situation ?  I don't know.  I really don't.

But I do know that suddenly spelling test don't seem like a very big deal.

Until next time...

Saturday, November 16, 2019

Entry 485: Impeachment and Whatnot

The impeachment trials have started as you've undoubtedly heard.  They're are a good thing, I think.  The only reason they wouldn't be is if they turn public favor toward our scurrilous president, but I don't think they will do that.  They might not do much good in that regard, but I think they're unlikely to do much bad either.  Plus, public opinion aside, somebody has to hold this guy accountable for his misdeeds, and it's certainly not going to be the Republican-held Senate.  They're ride-or-die with Trump, as has been confirmed and reconfirmed many times.  Reps give public rationales about why they still support Trump, but there really is only one rationale: He's their guy and they will defend him no matter what he does -- literally.  That's it; that's the bottom line.  Everything else is just spin.

I'm keeping up on the proceedings, but I'm not absorbed in them.  It's the ongoing struggle of staying informed and staying sane.  The NPR Politics Podcast has gone to a daily format, which is nice because each episode is only about 15 minutes long.  At 1.5 speed (you get used to it), skipping the ads, you can usually knock those suckers out in under 10 minutes.  Supplement that with The Weeds (twice weekly) and The Political Gabfest (weekly), and you've got yourself a pretty solid information base.

I also have a subscription to the Washington Post, but I don't read it all that often.  I mainly have it to support my city's paper -- real journalism is important, y'know.  The subscription was a Christmas gift my dad got me -- or, technically, that I got myself.  We do a not-so-secret-Santa gift exchange each year in my extended family, and last year I drew my mom and my dad drew me.  I asked for the subscription to the Post, and my mom wanted a subscription to Acorn TV, but it got too confusing setting up and paying for an account for the other person, so we just agreed to pay for our own thing and call it good.  Actually, that's not a bad way to do gifts now that I think about it: You make a pact with a friend that you are each going to buy something nice for yourself.  That way you get exactly what you want, and you still have that sense of connection with another person.


In other news, speaking of subscription services, it sounds like Disney+ is the new BMOC.  I doubt we will get it, but maybe...  I would like to check out The Mandalorian, and The Simpsons catalog is quite enticing, but my kids have never been specifically into Disney movies, and we already have Netflix, Hulu, Amazon Plus, and HBO Now.  At some point you have to cry uncle on the streaming services or you will end up paying way more for TV than you did before you cut the cord.

Actually, you can get a package of Disney+, Hulu, and ESPN+ for $12.99, which isn't terrible.  I would do that if ESPN+ actually was ESPN+ -- meaning it has everything ESPN has plus additional content -- but it's not.  For example, you can't get Monday Night Football on ESPN+, and that's the only thing I watch regularly on ESPN.  It's always the NFL, man.  They're going to be the last thing traditional cable has.  Their Sunday Ticket is probably single-handedly keeping DIRECTV in business, and their live games on NFL Network and ESPN are huge money deals.  (ESPN paid in the billions for Monday Night Football.)  So, I doubt the NFL is going to make their non-network games available on a $12.99/month streaming services anytime soon.

The model I would like is a pay-per-game model.  Like, if I could stream a non-network NFL game the same way you can rent a movie -- a $5 one-off -- I would probably spend at least $15 a month doing that.  But I'm just not going to pay $60 a month for a year-round DIRECTV subscription and then pay an additional $100 a month during the football season for Sunday Ticket.  Although, I did do that for two years, and the Seahawks made the Super Bowl both years, so, hmm...

Right now I have a pretty good system going -- I have solid network reception with my HD antenna, and then I have my parents' cable login credentials for everything else.  I still can't watch some Seahawks games, but that's fine -- it motivates me to spend more time with the kids.  I also have my friend JY's cable credentials, but he has Xfinity, and they went to a "two step" authorization, so every time I want to log in, I have to hope he's looking at his phone to send me the temporary pass code.

"Hey, man, can you send me that five digit code you just got?"
"37861"
"It expired -- you didn't reply fast enough.  Hold on, I'll get you a new one."
"Dude, I'm on vacation in Maui."

(Actual conversation.)

Well, I started out with a political post and somehow veered off into streaming services.  I should probably wrap it up here, as my Lil' S2's Netflix (speak of the devil) show is about to end.  He's really into Power Rangers these days.  He loves fighting and wrestling and playing "football" (i.e., wrestling with a football involved).  It's actually gotten to be a bit much.  He will just walk up to S or I and start kicking and punching us.  The other day he socked me in the ear -- like right on the tip of the ear -- and it legit hurt.  I'm watching him for the day, while S is at an all-day robotics event with Lil' S1.  It started at 8:30am and doesn't end until 4:00pm!  She's been texting how boring it is.  I would feel guilty for getting out of it, but we actually did stop by for a few hours.  Plus, she's leaving for a work trip early tomorrow morning and not returning until Friday.  So, I will be doing more than my fair share of childcare very soon.



Until next time...

Friday, November 8, 2019

Entry 484: Owner of Broken Phone

My phone broke.  It's pretty annoying.  It doesn't get service.  Sometimes I can get it by turning the phone off and on again and taking out the sim chip and putting it back in and praying to Amen-Ra, but then it just goes out again an hour later.  I looked for solutions online, but nothing worked, and I'm loath to spend a year of my life in a help session with a robot or a contractor in Bangalore.  I'm just gonna get a new phone.  It's time for an upgrade anyway -- unfortunately.  I hate upgrading things.  I absolutely despise the pressure to constantly get the "latest and greatest" when I'm perfectly happy with my old thing that was the top of the line, like, four years ago.  But so it goes.  It's Tim Apple's world, and we're forced to live in it.

Well, maybe not "forced," but at least compelled.  I thought about going rogue and just not having cell phone service.  I can still use a lot of the functionality on my phone without service, provided I have a WiFi connection.  All the apps work and I can still receive iPhone-to-iPhone texts and calls.  But there are a few crucial things for which I need service, such as the ability to speak with coworkers when I work from home and the GPS map app.  I use those two things all the time, and it adversely affects my life to not have them.  So, I think a trip to Verizon is on the horizon.  In the meantime, here's Andre Rison.

[Fun fact: Andre Rison is the only player in NFL history to post 1,000 receiving yards and have his house burned down by his girlfriend in the same year.]

In other news, it was a busy week, since I last posted.  We took the boys trick-or-treating, which was a huge success.*  I dressed up like Billy Hoyle from White Men Can't Jump.  It's one of those costumes where 65% of the population will have no idea who you are, but the other 35% will so appreciate it that it makes up for it.  One guy said it was, "the best costume of the night," and this ten-year old boy said, "I know who you are!  You're the guy from White Men Can't Jump!"  I was amazed he'd even seen the movie.  It's almost 20 years older than he is.  It was pretty cool.

*Happy belated birthday to my sister K -- sorry, I forgot to reach out on your actual birthday.

My kids went as transformers and got so much candy we hid three-fourths of it after they went to sleep, and they didn't even notice.  I've been dipping into it a little bit, but I'm not huge on Halloween candy.  Twix are good and Snickers are decent, but I don't like much beyond those two things.  I'm a snob when it comes to candy.  I like the fancy shit -- See's candies and salted dark chocolate and the like.  The typical Halloween stuff -- Skittles, Milky Way, Starbust, etc. -- don't cut it for me anymore.  They aren't worth the calories.

The day after Halloween, we dropped the kids off at school, and then hightailed it to Columbus, Ohio -- a seven hour drive -- for our friend R's wedding.  We should have just flown.  Originally, we were going to bring the boys, and we didn't want to pay $1,500 in airfare, so we didn't buy tickets.  But then S's parents agreed to watch them, and for some reason -- inertia, I suppose -- we never reevaluated our decision to drive.  We could've saved a lot of time.  Oh well.

It's not a terrible drive.  It's pretty in a lot of areas, but it's depressing in others, because you drive through these cities that progress forgot.  Lots of abandoned shopping centers and run-down buildings and dilapidated homes.  When you see swaths of the country like this, you really do understand why so many middle-Americans have so much resentment toward "coastal elites" like myself.  Why this resentment manifests in Trumpism and not, say, Bernie Sanders-style redistribution, however, is something I still don't have a good grasp on (or maybe I do: racism).  Although, I only saw one "Trump, Pence" sign the entire drive, so I'll consider that a win.

S feels especially unwelcome in such parts of the country given her brown skin.  We try to stick to making pit stops in urban (or at least urban-ish) places.  That's one nice thing about this country: Even in the reddest of states there are always pockets of blue in the cities.  And Ohio is a straight-up red state now.  It swapped with Virginia, which, thanks largely to the ever expanding DC suburbs, now has a completely Democrat-majority state government.

A funny thing about S is that she will chalk up every travel inconvenience to being in a different state.  We stopped at a gas station, and they had a mini-mart, but no public bathroom.
"What?  They don't have a bathroom.  That's weird," I said.
"That's Ohio for you!" S responded.
I started chuckling, "Oh, apparently I didn't know that Ohio was known for it's lack of gas station bathrooms."

Anyway, the wedding and the related wedding activities were all really nice.  So many friends together in one place -- I love that.  The ceremony was one of the best I've ever witnessed.  It told the story of how R and her now husband M met.  I think R wrote it, and the officiant is an actor, so it was very well-written and well-delivered, funny and heartfelt, not too long nor too short.  It was excellent all-around.

The reception was fun also, but the dance floor never really got going until the very end.  R and M built the playlist themselves, and they made a fatal mistake (IMHO) of picking music that's fun to listen to and reminisce to, but not good to dance to.  Take Billy Joel's Only the Good Die Young for example.  That's a perfect song for a bunch of middle-aged, drunk, white people (the primary constituency of this wedding) to sing along with at a bar, but it's a bad song for dancing.  Every time the dance floor really picked up for a moment, one of these mood-killing songs would come on, and everybody would leave to go get a drink or mingle.  There was no consistency.

The thing is, you just gotta stick to the classics, even if that's not normally your preferred style of music.  When I made the playlist for my wedding reception, it was all dance hits people know -- C+C Music Factory, Rob Bass, Madonna, Whitney Houston, Technotronic, Salt-N-Pepa, LMFAO, Black-Eyed Peas, Lady Gaga, etc.  Most of that is stuff I would never listen to on my own, but it's great for weddings because it gets the party going on the dance floor and that's where the party's at.  Toward the end of the reception, another person who was frustrated with the musical selection strong-armed the DJ (who didn't seem to be doing anything at all) into putting on some actual dance music, and everybody got super into it, and it was a fun way to go out.



After the reception, we went to the after party back at the hotel.  Unfortunately, we were staying at a different hotel down the street, so we had to bail "early" (around 12:30 am), because S was tired.  I could've stayed out all night, but it's just as well.  This way I wasn't a slug on the drive home.  In fact, I drove the entire way.  I told S we would switch when I got tired, but I never got tired.  We made it home about as fast as one could make it without risking a reckless driving ticket.  There was almost no traffic, and we stopped only once, briefly for gas -- we didn't even get lunch.  Neither of us were hungry, probably because we ate (and drank) so much the night before.  In fact, other than a small breakfast at the hotel, I didn't eat anything until 8:30 that night.

The boys were safe and happy when we got back, which was great.  I hear they are surprisingly easy to manage when we are not around.  It's a different story when actually are here, but I'll save that for a different post.

Until next time...