Category Archives: Family

14/365: Crystal Prison

We’d just picked the kids up from the sitter’s house this afternoon.

“This is not the way to home,” Atticus warned us, as Kevin turned the car west, down a state road that would wind a bit through the woods.

“We’re going a different way home,” we said.

As we came upon the still-iced-over pond, I asked Kevin to stop the car for a minute, so I could take some pictures from the open window. The boys both gaped over the frozen pond.

“Is the water stuck, Mommy?” Atticus wanted to know. “Aww.”

Kevin explained how water is more likely to freeze in a pond than a river because it’s not moving as much.

Then, he asked Lucas if he would walk out on the ice.

Lucas said he’d walk out on the edge first to see if it would hold him, and then move out to the center if it did.

“That wouldn’t be a good idea,” Kevin said.

I explained that we can’t be sure from one solid area that the rest is necessarily solid, as well. Just because you step once or twice or ten times without crashing through to the freezing water beneath doesn’t mean your very next step won’t buckle under your weight.

(This is especially true around here in southern Virginia. My dad has old tin-type photographs of early 19th-century people skating on the rivers around here, but it’s not a normal wintertime activity. I don’t think I know anyone who’s ice-skated outside a rink, actually.)

We talked about what would happen if you were to fall in, too, how the thick ice that held your weight would become your crystal prison from underneath, fighting for air and muscle-shocked, searching for the hole that granted you access to the frigid water. What an awful feeling that must be!

And we talked about George Bailey and his friends sledding onto the frozen pond in It’s a Wonderful Life and how his brother would have drowned if not for George, who ended up with a deaf ear. (They both want to watch the movie now. Yay!)

So Kevin hammered in the lesson (“So don’t ever walk across the water”), to which I threw in a clause (“Unless Jesus tells you to walk across the water”), which he cautioned against (“You better make sure it’s Jesus”).

And then we were off to the house from the back way, through our favorite tunnel and on down the highway.

Amber Is Forever

It was Wednesday night, July 21st of last year, during our annual NYC pilgrimage.

We’d just left Zinc Bar on West 3rd, where we got to know (part-time) bartender and photographer Jacob Murphy while the Alex Stein/Matt Brown Quintet played.

As we headed back westward and along West 4th toward the Christopher Street station, we came across the smallest shop in the Village at 184-3/4 West 4th: The Silversmith. We had to take a look.

The SilversmithOwner Ruth Kuzub didn’t warm up to us immediately, but she suffered us to ooh and aah at her jewelry, and by the next afternoon when we returned with cash to purchase the two rings we’d fallen in love with, this amber and Kevin’s turquoise Mr. Blue, she was definitely opening up to us a bit.

She told us that she’d been in the original Broadway cast of Fanny in 1954 (with Florence Henderson in the lead role), which was why she’d come to New York in the first place. She told us about working for The Silversmith since 1960 and eventually buying the store later that decade. She told us about living in the Village through the decades, the changes she’d witnessed.

And she told us about this amber ring.

Amber is petrified tree sap; this particular piece is from Poland. The dual tones of the stone, darker and lighter, are extremely unusual, and the whitish pieces inside the stone are seeds that were trapped in the sap as it hardened millions of years ago.

Millions. Whoa!

We left Ruth’s shop that day, the 22nd, and went over to Washington Square to hang out and play some music for an hour or so before heading uptown to Radio City to see Widespread Panic.

As usual in the City, it was a day to remember.

I took this picture with the Retro Camera for Android app by Urbian.

Lucas’ 1st-Grade Christmas Concert

Atticus and I went to Lucas’ first-grade Christmas concert this past Monday evening. They did a great job!

I actually took videos with my DroidX, but it’s so shaky that I got a bad case of motion sickness from trying to edit it. So I decided to extract the audio and post it instead. (I’m blaming it all on Attie, who was so excited about the songs that he was jumping up and down and all around and into me as I held the phone. ๐Ÿ˜‰

Lucas is the second row, third from the right in a burgundy shirt.

Up on the Housetop:
[audio:southside-1st-grade-xmas-concert/2010-12-06-southside-1st-grade-xmas-concert-up-on-the-housetop.mp3|loop=no]

Silent Night:
[audio:southside-1st-grade-xmas-concert/2010-12-06-southside-1st-grade-xmas-concert-silent-night.mp3|loop=no]

Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer:
[audio:southside-1st-grade-xmas-concert/2010-12-06-southside-1st-grade-xmas-concert-rudolph.mp3|loop=no]

Rockin’ Around the Christmas Tree:
[audio:southside-1st-grade-xmas-concert/2010-12-06-southside-1st-grade-xmas-concert-rockin-around-the-christmas-tree.mp3|loop=no]

O Come, All Ye Faithful:
[audio:southside-1st-grade-xmas-concert/2010-12-06-southside-1st-grade-xmas-concert-o-come-all-ye-faithful.mp3|loop=no]

Atticus says the Hail Mary … in Latin!

Thanks to our resident lover of Latin, Kevin, we’ve been starting our mealtime blessings with the Latin version of what’s called the “Trinitarian formula”: In nomine Patris, et Filii, et Spiritus Sancti (In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit).

The kids picked up on this really quickly and over the last year or so, it’s become a habit. (Lucas, aka the Prayer Police, keeps us reminded. ๐Ÿ˜‰

Well, Kevin has also been praying and saying the Hail Mary in Latin, and obviously somebody’s been paying attention.

This morning on the way to the sitter’s/bus stop, Atticus wanted to say the prayer but wasn’t satisfied with English. I said the couple of lines I know in Latin, and then he kept right on going!

I was in awe, to say the least. I mean, he’s only four!

This evening before bed, he must’ve said the prayer in Latin at least 15 times. He said it’s easy. Hmmm…He obviously didn’t get his memory gene from meeee…

Ave Maria

Ave Maria, gratia plena, Dominus tecum.
Benedicta tu in mulieribus,
et benedictus fructus ventris tui, Iesus.
Sancta Maria, Mater Dei,
ora pro nobis peccatoribus, nunc,
et in hora mortis nostrae.
Amen.

Thanksgiving Music, part 2

Here’s the second clip of Kevin and Ryland’s bluegrass jam the other night: “Dig a Hole,” “Salty Dog Blues,” “Ballad of Jed Clampett,” and “Can I Sleep in Your Barn Tonight, Mister.” My brother Bobby’s behind the video recorder, and his wife Kim’s dad, Bruce Wiles, is the off-screen singer on that last song.