Preschool!

Nathanny-man, you begin preschool tomorrow morning.  You’ve been awaiting this day for two long years… that’s most of your life, Bub.  “Peesool” is your holy grail and you will finally obtain it!

Your siblings began preschool just prior to you turning 18 months old.  You loved exploring the water table at Wee Disciples.  When I brought you to school with me when I volunteered at class parties, you snuck over to the painting easel and gleefully smeared paint all over other kids’ paintings, the easel, the wall, and just a tiny bit on yourself.  I moved you no less than 6 times and you went straight back to that easel.

As a 1 year old, a VERY friendly and happy 1 year old, you were thrilled to be at preschool every chance you could get!  The other little brothers and one little sister joined you as you moved about the classroom, finding all of the best toys.  As a 2 year old, you felt like a big kid and demanded to sit in a chair at the table for snack time at parties. You were a preschooler, you were just sure of it!

And then you turned 3.  You morphed from a VERY friendly and happy toddler to an even friendlier and more emotive little boy.  And you expanded your emotion arsenal.  You are often smiling sweetly, but you also have opinions.  STRONG opinions.  You stopped throwing yourself to the floor because you are smart and doing that hurts.  Now you sit down and huffily cross both of your arms and look anywhere but at the person who has ruined your plans.  You don’t want to walk across the grass?  You sit and pout.  You don’t want to go to Quiet Time in your room?  You sit and pout.  Recently, you have added a special code word to further express your dissatisfaction with any choice beside your own obviously superior choice:  “WHHHHHHYYYYYYYY?”  Oh, the many Why’s of your day.  None of our decisions make sense to you… you are NOT tired, you are NOT all done watching a show, you do NOT need to clean up your toys because you will need them out again tomorrow.

(I shouldn’t tell you this, but if I get you giggling, you snap out of it pretty quickly and are back on board, chatting away and going through life with the easy confidence of someone who has “dood ideas.”  Someone like you.  I often wonder if you are manipulating me… this “I won’t stop pouting until you crack me up and snap me out of it” thing or if I am redirecting you.  Hmm, I shouldn’t reveal this either, but “redirecting” is just a codeword for manipulation performed by parents.  So we’re both pretty sneaky, aren’t we?)

Now that you are almost 3 and a half, you are practically stampeding your way to “peesool.”  You’ve been ready for 2 years and we are the insensitive jerks who are standing in your way due to some red tape about your age and when it aligns with the start of the academic year.  Your social skills are excellent (although you rely on your ability to persuade others with cuteness and flattery more than I’d prefer… mostly because it totally works for you!), your academic skills are excellent, and you can build pretty much anything out of Lego blocks intended for kids who are 5+.  You can follow the directions that come with Legos or you can imagine something and produce it on your own!  You are so smart and so kind-hearted and so stubbornly committed to all of your “dood ideas.”

I used to worry that it would be difficult to launch you, Nathaniel.  You are my baby, despite your intense protests that you are NOT a beebee, you are a bid boy!  How would I feel about sending you to preschool, your first launch from our nest?  And my last first launch of one of my children?  You are fun and delightful and I thought maybe I’d hesitate to send you off.

You nipped that in the bud this summer.  You are SO ready… you are beyond ready.  You need far more stimulation and excitement and adventure than I can give you here at home.  You have proven that to me and I am ready to begin the launching countdown!  You loved our Mommy/Thanny dates while your siblings were at preschool these last 2 years, and you especially love our “Mommy/Sanny Day dates!” this past week while your siblings were at all-day kindergarten!  But we’ll still have those.  And you NEED preschool.  You need the structure and the opportunity.  And they need you, Stink-a-bub.  They need your smiles, your “dood ideas,” your brightness, your kindness.  It would be a disservice to you AND to the world to prolong the inevitable.  You need to be among the masses, charming them and plotting to rule them.  You already have the plans… you just need the right audience!

We love you so much.  We can’t keep you to ourselves;  we must share you because people need your brand of excitement.  They need to experience your overwhelmingly pouncy snuggles when you feel a surge of love that just cannot be contained any longer.  They need to learn how to share as well as you do.  They need to learn conflict management and how to stand up to your big ideas of why that toy belongs in your hands alone. 🙂  And you need to learn to compromise with same-aged peers.  You know how to compromise with Zach and Rissa, but I fear that is largely based on “well, they are bigger than me, so I’ll cave… for NOW.”

You are a lightning bolt of light, bouncing images of Jesus all around you.  It is impossible to ignore His presence around you.  Your passion, your heart, your comforting nature, your sense of justice, your creativity.  You are SO excited that “Deesus died on the twoss, and den He tummed awive ah-den!!!!”  People love you the moment they meet you and you so captivate our hearts that we can’t help but enjoy you.  You wield a powerful weapon with that smile and we need the help of wonderful, godly preschool teachers as we train you to use your awesomeness for good.

So we’re launching you, trusting God with you, trusting your teachers with you.  Just like we did with your siblings two years ago.  They grew by leaps and bounds in preschool and had an amazing experience.  They also provided an amazing experience for those around them – their lights for Jesus shine brightly too.  You are our Bub, and we are pleased to share you.  The world needs more of you.  More beauty, more delight, more careful thought and risky enactment.  We’re so grateful to belong to you and that you belong to us, Sweetheart.

Make your mark, Nathaniel Malcolm.  You are named for St. Columbo, a charismatic leader who began with battle until God transformed him into a man of peace.  I see that already coming into place in your life.

Be kind.  Be brave.  Be you!

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Submarine

Last night, Nathaniel threw a fit that it was time for bed.  He wasn’t ready – he had plans to build a submarine with Zach’s Legos!  He begrudgingly got in bed and informed everyone that would listen that he was going to build a submarine when he woke up.

Fast forward to this morning…

When I came downstairs, Nathaniel held up his completed submarine that he designed himself and showed it to me.  It’s really creative!!!!

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He put a windshield in the front and a propeller in the back!

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Here’s what he had to say about it when I asked him to tell me about his submarine:

“I build dat part, den dat part.  I put wings on, but den, I know submarines don’t have wings.  That (the little gray crank sticking out of the tan square piece) the start fing so that I tan start it up!  It dive down in da water.  It doze under water and doze, “Zoom zoom!” (more sound effects and gestures to demonstrate moving quickly) and that’s how it doze!  I donna pway wif it and help it swim and help it not mate bad tsoices.”

We didn’t even know that he was familiar with submarines or understood how they work!

Speech Therapy

My early years as an SLP-in-training and as a full-fledged SLP were chock-full of adorableness.  Little people make the cutest speech and language errors, and I found myself giggling daily right after therapy sessions (it is NOT professional to giggle DURING sessions).  One 3 year old girl had finally realized that my fellow therapist wanted her to make the /k/ sound at the beginning of /k/ words so she generalized that /k/ to the beginning of everything.  In frustration, she stomped her foot and said, “Kuh, I want a TOOKIE!”  My own preschool client said, “Kuh, look at the rainbow tolors!”  One little girl called me “the peach lady” and then after a few months of therapy with me, she could form a consonant blend and now called me “the squeech lady.”  That was pretty much the pinnacle of my career.  I’ll never top it.

My early childhood language training unfortunately came from a professor who desperately needed to retire at least 10 years before I sat through her classes.  I still can’t comprehend why we had the most poorly written textbook I have ever seen (no, she didn’t write it, so we weren’t just using it to boost her sales) or how a topic as exciting as language development could be made dull, lifeless, and stab-yourself-in-the-eye so as not to die of boredom during class.  But magically, that’s what I had.  It sucked.

Imagine my delight when I had clients who literally brought my training to life and were so much cuter and more interesting than a textbook.  And then that delight multiplied exponentially when I had my own children.  Watching Zach and Rissa acquire language was one of my favorite activities as a mommy. The dry list of milestones came to life and MY kids were doing it!  Their brains were functioning just as I had learned that they should!  Their God-given desire to communicate and be understood was happening right in front of me!  I soaked up every moment, just in case we didn’t have any more children after the twins and this ended up being my simultaneous first and last experience with watching babies develop.

And then we had Nathaniel, and everything about him was a bonus layer of frosting on the cake of motherhood.  I already had these two amazing kids who could not possibly be surpassed in awesomeness… and now a third kid was keeping up with them and perpetuating his own brand of awesomeness in my life.  All three of them are so different, yet so perfectly developed!  I saw that the textbooks couldn’t possibly account for all of the personal variance that each child contributes to their own development.  That having two babies at the same time was not a repetitive experience – they were both their own unique people from the beginning.  That having another baby didn’t mean he was limited to being either like his sister or like his brother – he had the option to be himself!

I have always parented with a strict “I’m the mom, not the _________” perspective.  If my kid is getting a shot, I’m not there to hold him/her down!  I’m the mom, not the nurse!  If my kid is learning a skill that I used to have/kind of have/could have if I tried, I’m not there to drill them on the intricacies of that skill.  I’m the mom, not the piano teacher/sports coach/etc.!  I love to teach my kids, but not formally.  I love to play with my kids, but not competitively.  I feel the same way about educating my children – I’m the mom, not the teacher.  And I especially feel this way about the intersection of my career as mommy and my career as an SLP.  I do NOT do speech therapy with my kids.  I suppose that I could.  But I don’t want to!  Receiving therapy should be a positive and fun experience.  And receiving parenting should be an affirming and loving experience.  I don’t want to point out specific errors in my kids – no matter how lovingly I do it, I’m still mommy first.  So with my kids, I’m the mom, not the SLP!

When Rissa was 4, I noticed that one particular speech error was sticking around while all of her other baby-like pronunciations quickly disappeared on schedule.  She had a lispy /s/.  It was adorable.  Seriously. And I knew that she wouldn’t qualify for services because you can’t even receive therapy for an /s/ error until you are 7 or so, since so many children are still developing and fine-tuning their tongue movements between 4 and 7 years of age.  But I didn’t want a habit to develop since habits that have been going on for 3 years longer are that much harder to break.  So I asked an SLP friend to do a couple sessions with my daughter.  My friend said she would be happy to work with Rissa, but she really thought she was too young for therapy on her /s/ and would work it out on her own.  I asked another SLP friend, and she said the same thing.  So I took my cute daughter in for a speech and language evaluation (much like I used to perform when I was working with kids), and guess what the SLP said?  “Rissa is fine.  She’s too young for therapy on her /s/ and will work it out on her own.”  Paranoid Mommy reared her ugly head – oops!

Rissa and I went to DQ after her eval and enjoyed Dilly Bars.  I talked her through what had just happened so that she wouldn’t feel weird about it.  I told her what a great job she did at her eval and that Miss Susan was so pleased with how well she was growing and learning.  I felt so silly for even questioning my girl’s skills in the first place, especially since it took three OTHER SLPs to help me understand that she was fine.  Why did I even request the formal eval in the first place?  Stupid Paranoid Mommy!

Within a few months, Rissa’s lisp was gone.  Craziness, right?  It resurfaces once in awhile when she is tired, but for all intents and purposes, she no longer lisps.  And she didn’t just get there on her own.  It was because of the eval!  Miss Susan asked her to try making an /s/ sound with her tongue behind her teeth just to see if she could do it with instruction (I had practiced this with her at home a few times).  Rissa felt so accomplished that she could do it for Miss Susan that she started speech therapy on herself!  She gave herself reminders to keep her tongue behind her teeth.  She corrected her own lisps by redoing them with the new and improved tongue placement.  She showed off her new skills to me and to Matt and to her brothers, and we always clapped and acknowledged that she was learning something new.  She glowed with pride that she could work so hard and accomplish something.  And now it is second nature to her!  It’s such a classic Rissa story.  She decided to become awesome at something, put in the work, and now she’s awesome at it.  Just like that.  I never had to say, “Your /s/ sound is wrong.”  Just hearing someone request a new way was enough to motivate her to learn, without ever feeling like she lacked something.  I suspect that she still might have a lisp that developed into a muscle habit if we hadn’t had that innocuous eval with such a kind person as Miss Susan.

With a newfound resolve to keep Paranoid Mommy from taking over, I chose to delight myself in Nathaniel’s adorable speech errors.  This second time around, I know how quickly toddlers morph into tiny adults in communication skills.  It doesn’t seem so long ago that my twins sounded like toddlers when they spoke, and now they sound like skilled orators!  Plus, in every way, I’m so much calmer this time as a mom.  I’m more relaxed, I’m less stressed by all of the worries that clouded me with the twins.  I have the buoyant hope that children can survive my care!  So despite all of his cute patterns (turning all /k/ sounds into /t/, turning all /g/ sounds into /k/, eliminating the middle syllable out of 3-4 syllable words, simplifying all consonant clusters by deleting one of the consonants), I chose to just enjoy him.  All of those patterns are normal for 2-3 year old kids – they are still learning to organize the rules of vocabulary and grammar when they speak.  It’s only when the patterns stick that there might be a problem.

Nathaniel turned 3 and I wondered if his patterns were sticking… he had settled into a very established groove of forming words and sounds.  I immediately reminded myself, Ehhh, shut up, Paranoid Mommy.  He’s fine!  He’s adorable!  (He IS adorable.  My gosh, he is SO adorable).  He’s not going to head off to college and say, “Ohtay, Mommy, I doe to tah-wedsss now!  Bye-bye!”  He’s fine.

But I know that he has some phonological errors.  Quick SLP lesson:  articulation errors are when an individual has trouble with one or two sounds, like Rissa’s lisped /s/.  Phonology errors are when an individual displays patterns of errors.  All of those patterns I listed two paragraphs ago?  They are PATTERNS.  Phonology is actually my favorite type of therapy to provide.  You make progress with those kids like CRAZY!  You don’t have to drill a /k/ or /g/ sound.  You show them that they are “fronting” – moving their tongue up to their teeth to make /t/ and /d/ and then you show them that they can keep their tongue and the sound in the back of their mouth to make /k/ and /g/.  (You’re all trying it, aren’t you?  Good job!)  Once a /k/ and /g/ successfully happen, bam!  That fronting pattern disappears and a whole category of errors are gone.  It’s seriously amazing.  Thanny’s brain has done an awesome job of categorizing language… he just has a few extra categories.  So we need to redistribute those patterns into some accurate patterns and he will be set.

So I gave him a quick sound inventory test at home and realized that I was right and that he qualified for therapy.  We scheduled a formal eval and found out we’d be seeing Miss Susan again!  Yay!  (Miss Susan works at the outpatient clinic in our health insurance network of providers).  Nathaniel went in today.  He was charming as always and he whipped through her stack of puzzles in record time while she interviewed me about his development and milestones.  (We suggested that he do each one again… most 2 and 3 year olds who come in for speech/language evals do not practice on 100 piece puzzles at home).

Miss Susan used the same sound inventory that I gave Nathaniel so he kept telling her, “Dis da same one Mommy have!”  I found myself quieting my automatic “repeat and expand his utterances” technique during the eval.  It’s extremely valuable and I’d recommend it to anyone who interacts with little people (especially when they are talking on the phone!).  You repeat what they say to indicate that you hear and understand them, but you do it in a grammatically accurate way with correct sound production.  (You know that’s a clown because you saw one on Phineas & Ferb?  Yeah, you DO know that!)  I stopped myself because I wanted Miss Susan to experience him without the benefit of me filling in for the unintelligible parts of what he says so that she would have a good idea of how intelligible his speech is to unfamiliar listeners.

Thanny-man qualifies for weekly phonology therapy and I couldn’t be more thrilled.  He has so much to say and he is so sweet about repeating himself and looking people in the eye so that they can understand him when he is talking, but it would be awesome if he felt understood on a regular basis by someone other than his immediate family members.  It must be so frustrating to constantly repeat himself!  And I get to maintain my role as Mommy instead of trying to master the double-dipping of Mommy/Therapist.  This way, therapy will be fun instead of work!  And I can support his efforts instead of demand them.  I get to attend with him in order to carryover whatever he learns to our home settings.

He will LOVE going for his special therapy time with someone kind and affirming and there are so many TOYS at therapy!  Toys he doesn’t have!  Toys that only exist at preschool!  Toys that he doesn’t have to share because it is an individual therapy session!  And his therapist will LOVE him!  He is eager to please others and to learn, he is smart, he has a loving and supportive family structure, he has a continuously growing list of interests that make planning therapy sessions a cinch (dinosaurs, coloring and drawing, Phineas & Ferb, 1980’s Spiderman cartoons, trains, puppies, vehicles, firefighting…), and he is ridiculously charming and adorable.  He is the very image of the ideal client that I would hope for as an SLP.  He will crank out some quick progress and all of his adorable error patterns will disappear and he’ll sound like a little adult.  Which is somewhat sad for me, but best for him.

I look forward to sharing his particular slice of sunshine with whomever is lucky enough to work with him.  He is a delight and will hopefully be a bright spot in his therapist’s day/week.  And I look forward to him saying, “Can I please have a cookie?”  Until then, I’m pretty thrilled with “Peas me have a tootie?”

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Turning Free: March 18

Nathaniel’s party with friends was on Monday at the indoor playground.  (Major shout-out to First Christian Church who provides a giant INDOOR playground open to the public on weekdays!  It costs anywhere from $75-$200 to book a birthday venue in town, but FCC offers their playground for free!  What a ministry they have to our community!!!!)

Since Gramma and Granpa were still in town, they were able to attend BOTH parties!

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It was spring break, so we weren’t sure if our friends would be available to join us, but a good number of them were still in town!  Nathaniel listed out his friends and we invited them!  He had SO MUCH FUN running around like a crazy man and trying out all sorts of things that he was unable to do on his own prior to turning three.  This picture encapsulates his identity right now and a large portion of my life:

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After some much-needed rest time (Mommy took a massive nap too!), we headed over to Toro Loco for dinner.  Toro Loco is the new El Toro – they moved to a larger location.  We ate deliciousness.  And then to commemorate Nathaniel’s birthday, we repeated the events from his first birthday at El Toro… and even had the same waiter!  Here we are 2 years later, with more sombrero fun, more singing amigos, more whip cream, and a LOT more shuffling!

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Mr. Charismatic Three

At barely 3 years old, Nathaniel is the most charismatic person I have ever known.  He wills that others love him and that they allow him to love them back, and people respond to him.  We all comply with his demands because they sound so tyrannically reasonable, don’t they?  Is there anyone who doesn’t want to love and be loved?  Never mind that being loved includes tackles from the Bully of Luuuuhhhve; once his sweet arms are around you, you forget the tackle and revel in the amazing snuggles.  Nathaniel has not yet found a person or animal who can withstand his sweet charms.  I can think of only two who have firmly held their ground against his advances, although it is hard to count older siblings as legitimate opposition.  Zach and Rissa have the unique ability to view him as a frustrating little brother, but even they come around.  After dismissing him, they eventually cave and call him back into their good graces because he is lovable and even they can’t stay away for long.  Also, I suspect that once they aren’t so much larger than him, Zach and Rissa will be just as powerless against Nathaniel’s love tackles as the rest of us.

We work incessantly on “use your gentle hands/be careful, she’s a baby!/THAT’S a good way to be kind, Buddy” guidance in order to shape our little luuuhhve bully and guide his powers toward good.  There is so much to enjoy about someone who is openly loving with everyone around him and who spews smiles, hilarity, snuggles, and “you’re so special to me!” messages like an active volcano.  In fact, I think that word picture is the perfect descriptor for our Nathaniel.  Our tiny volcano who melts the world around him on a regular basis.

As the woman blessed enough to be that volcano’s mommy, I get to concoct ways to use his caring tendencies for his own good.  Perhaps Nathaniel does not want to take his nap?  “No pobwem!” as he would say.  I just pick up Arf-arf and say, “Oh, Arf-arf, I know you are so tired, but don’t fall asleep yet!  You have to wait for Nathaniel so that he can snuggle you to sleep… let’s go upstairs, Arf-Arf.”  Without fail, Nathaniel will snatch Arf-arf out of my arms, hold him close like a baby,  smile and say, “Oh, Arf-arf!  I hep you go nigh-night!  We bring Bantie wif us to hep you!”  Then he’ll snuggle Arf-arf all the way upstairs while I carry Bantie (blankie) and Arf-arf will say in Nathaniel’s high-pitched impersonating voice, “Ohtay, I wait for you, Sanyiel!”  I tuck them both in, give them kisses, and whisper, “Thank you so much for helping Arf-arf, Thanny-man.  He loves to do his nigh-nights with you because you do such a good job taking care of him.  Make sure he stays in your bed and doesn’t get up, okay?  Nigh-night, boys, I love you!”  I smile as two versions of “I wuv you!” echo out of the firetruck’s bottom bunk and close the door.  Another job well done by a persuasive mommy and a caring little man who is already a wonderful daddy to his babies.

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Speaking of babies, Nathaniel adores them!  He hears them crying in the grocery store and guesses at what might “hep dem.”  (Given his older brother’s proclivity for poopy jokes, it is no surprise that Nathaniel most commonly suggests changing the baby’s “poopy diapie” as the first thing to do).   He sees babies crawling and toddling around and dashes over to get down at their level and say, “Hi, Baby!  You wike dat pacie? Dat’s a vewwy nice pacie!  Here, you dwop your toy!  I div it to you!”  He has never said so with words, but he longs to be a big brother.  He wants a baby of his very own to help and to love and to pounce with snuggles.  He seeks babies out and always has happy smiles and a kind word for them.  We make a point to give him baby time whenever possible to satisfy that longing in his heart to care for someone smaller than himself.  There is a little boy in his Kindermusik class who brings his baby brother along each week.  Nathaniel oftens asks me to “hold da baby!” and he checks on little Leo often throughout the class.  (This is a vast improvement from only 6 months ago when he would angrily announce to tiny Leo, “No, Baby!  Dis MY mommy!  You no hold her!”  Back then, babies were for him to love, but I was to reserve myself for Nathaniel only!  He shares me much more openly now.)

As we shape this little man into the big man God made him to become, we pray for God’s wisdom to find ways to always encourage and enable his love.  If only the world had more Nathaniels – little beacons of love that explode all over the place leaving everyone more cared for and everything else a bit more messy.  No one minds the extra mess with all of that love to go around!  And we pray for God’s strong protection around him, guarding his heart from anyone who might crush his kindness and exuberance or try to break him.  Our Bub is a gift to be shared, and if he has his way, you’ll be forced to take your share and you’ll WIKE it!