48 // 52

48 // 52 Lillia & Zane

“A portrait of my children once a week, every week, in 2014.”

Lillia: This week you had a holiday concert at your school. I love watching you go through the process of deciding how you will dress because you have very particular ideas about how you want to look. You always like to wear a tie to special events — it’s your “signature style.” After your part of the concert was over, I noticed you were animatedly chatting with your teacher. It makes me so happy that you enjoy school, and that you have such a great relationship with your teacher. As we know from experience, it doesn’t always work out that way. I feel very thankful that the past two years at school have been, by and large, very good ones.

Zane: This week you got to start your advent calendar (we started on the first day of advent, rather than the first day of December). I don’t think anyone has ever been more excited about Christmas than you are this year. I keep reminding you that the big day doesn’t come for several more weeks, but every morning you still ask me, “Is today Christmas?” I kind of wish there was a way to rein in the excitement; Christmas is built up to such a huge degree that it’s inevitably a little disappointing. I do try hard to de-emphasize the gift-getting part of the holiday, but it seems like the whole world is working against me sometimes!

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47 // 52

48 // 52 // Lillia
42 // 52 // Zane

“A portrait of my children once a week, every week, in 2014.”

Lillia: This week you had a “Harry Potter Party” at school. You were so excited about it!!! You and Daddy read all of the Harry Potter books together, and you’ve read them again to yourself several times, including The Prisoner of Azkaban at school with all of your classmates. The party was to celebrate finishing the book, and everyone got to make a wand and dress up as a character. You decided you wanted to go as Nymphadora Tonks, and you insisted that you needed to have colorful hair so you borrowed a wig from your friend. I think you make a pretty endearing Tonks.

Zane: This week it snowed! You were so amazed by it, and you really enjoyed playing in it with your sister. You made snow hills and then tried to slide down them (yes, we got that much snow!). Now you’re big enough to really play in the snow — no more being stuck sitting in a snowbank watching the “big kids” play without you! It’s so fun to watch you experience the change of seasons because this year you seem much more aware of your surroundings. Everything is exciting to you, which makes it exciting to me, too. What a gift to be your mother and see everything fresh and new through your eyes.

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the first snow

The cold was our pride, the snow was our beauty. It fell and fell,
lacing day and night together in a milky haze, making everything quieter as it fell…

— Patricia Hampl, 1981

Nature chose for a tool, not the earthquake or lightning to rend
and split asunder, not the stormy torrent or eroding rain, but the tender snow-flowers
noiselessly falling through unnumbered centuries.

— John Muir

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zane snow collage
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the first snow collage
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46 // 52

46 // 52 // Lillia
46 // 52 // Zane

“A portrait of my children once a week, every week, in 2014.”

Lillia: This week we took a trip to Boston and visited the Science Museum. I think you had fun, and it was interesting to see how you interacted with the exhibits in a very different way than the last time we visited. You are so much more grown-up now. Your favorite part was the exhibit on the human body. You measured your gait and your core body temperature, and all kinds of other metrics of health and well-being. You probably won’t work in the field of healthcare because you have a, self-professed, weak stomach. But, you seemed intrigued by the science of locomotion and discovering what knowledge can be extracted from raw data.

Zane: This week you have been talking a lot about your friends at school. We are a few months in and now you know many of their names. You have criticisms of their behavior (especially their wanton destruction of your block towers), but you seem to get along really well with a couple of little boys. We still have some difficulties at pick-up because you almost never want to leave. You’re especially offended that you don’t get to eat lunch with everyone else, since you are just a morning preschooler. Maybe next year you can stay longer, but mama is just not quite ready to give you up for that long yet.

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boston // museum of science

This weekend we visited my husband’s sister in Boston and decided to take the kids to the Museum of Science. The last time we visited the museum was during our year of homeschooling Lillia, in December of 2012. Comparing my photos from the two trips I noticed a few things: my kids have grown a ton, and so has my husband’s beard; my photography has changed a lot thanks to my 50mm f1.8 lens, Photoshop, and two years’ worth of practice; I used to have a really annoying habit of breaking my posts up into multiple parts. I remember two years ago when I took those photos I thought they were amazing, and I was totally shocked that I was actually the person who took them! Now I look at them and see that they are not terrible but they represent a younger, less experienced photographer (and probably a younger, less experienced me, too). In any case, you can look back at our photos from the first trip here 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. Many of the exhibits have changed in the past two years, so it was really fun to see some old favorites but also to experience some new things. Lillia’s favorite part of our visit was definitely the Hall of Human Life area, where she got to measure her gait, her body temperature, and all sorts of other things (check out our infrared “family portrait” here). Zane’s favorite part was the baby chicks, of course. He really didn’t want to leave. All in all, a great trip!

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dinosaur exhibit collage
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zane chicks collage
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shells collage
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