True Confessions of an Epic New Miller Misadventure

Photo by Jen Theodore on Unsplash

Spring Break hit hard this year. 

The house we had giddily reserved for almost a week for our large young family was on a small island accessible by ferry. It had sufficient beds, a wood-burning fireplace, and a hot tub in the yard. We were anticipating a week of restful quiet, beach-combing, game nights, cuddling up with books, and soaking in the hot tub while hearing the wind sigh in the towering pines overhead. 

Alas.

Upon arrival on a gray and windy afternoon, we discovered that the narrow, steeply downhill driveway was covered with thick pine needles and did not allow us to turn or park our large van in the garage – firstly because we had no space on either side from the bare scratchy shrubs and row of thick evergreen trees on either side, and secondly because we would never have fit in the low, small garage anyway. No matter. We parked with the van pointed down on the slope, and unloaded our bins and bags of belongings, running in and out multiple times. 

The initial smell of the house was mildew. The smell only strengthened as we began to explore. Downstairs was worst – where the two rooms I was going to put six of my eight kids were. The two rooms each had a double bed and a trundle, and were connected by a bathroom in the middle. The bathroom doors in the bedrooms on either side were glass, but had been thoughtfully covered by curtains of fabric – allowing modesty but not stopping any light. And the light switches for the bathroom were in each bedroom – allowing anyone on either side to turn on or off the light at any moment, regardless of what the person actually using the bathroom expected or needed.

As my husband and I made up the trundle beds, we noticed that the floors were rather dusty and the mattresses were covered with hair. Human hair, and not just from the head. A small pill was also found in one of the beds – not one I could readily identify – and my husband quickly threw it away with disgust. Trying to erase these things from my thoughts, we headed upstairs to continue unpacking and settling in.

The main floor bathroom where each of my children were told to wash their hands had another glass door with another semi-private cloth curtain. The soap dispenser shot soap directly outward rather than down, so some of my kids came out with soap sprayed on their chests or arms.  

The dishwasher wasn’t actually attached to the cupboards or counter, so when my husband tried to help me open the door (because I was unable to wrench it open despite trying several times), the entire dishwasher tipped forward so his thumb was caught and wedged between the metal casing of the dishwasher and the top of the counter – still without the door open. Maybe I didn’t need to think about dishes yet.

Upstairs, I was surprised to note that the master bedroom was actually a loft, complete with two little nooks with twin mattresses for two more children and a full prospect of the living room, and no door at the top of the stairs. The master bathroom kept the loft theme, with an open space above the bathroom door (again, fully glass, covered with a thin see-through gauzy cloth curtain) that continued all the way through to the toilet and shower – allowing any sounds or activity therein to be discernible by anyone on the upper and main floor at any time. But then, privacy is highly overrated. 

The wiring was suitable for the age of the house – which is to say, it was outdated and quirky, with switches for various rooms or areas in mysterious, non-intuitive locations, sometimes on other floors altogether – one switch for the light in the master shower on the top floor was actually downstairs on the main floor, near the kitchen. The fairy lights strung fancifully in the little nooks upstairs were adorable – except that one set’s wiring had been disconnected from the plug altogether, and the end of the wire was stuffed under the mattress. Nothing like a fire to keep one warm at night.

Trying to get supper ready, I headed down to the kitchen to begin preparations. After setting a stack of fresh napkins on the table, I heated the oven and made the salad. When I returned to the table to start setting it, I was surprised to see a clear black handprint on the top of the stack of napkins. All the children denied it – but the culprit was easily found, since their entire hand was coated in a greasy film of black soot. What had they been touching?! I shrieked in alarm – and discovered that it had been the table itself. Apparently the chimney had just been serviced – there was an invoice and a report on the counter – and we found that the entire main living area and kitchen were coated with a thin layer of soot. The yellow cloth we found to use to clean came up with a black streak with every swipe. Running a palm over the kitchen counter, the palm turned grey-black almost instantly. 

When I then inspected the other kids’ hands and socks, a layer of grey-black grime was evident. All our kids were immediately advised to stop touching things (because apparently I was hallucinating about their ability to actually obey this order) and to replace their shoes, which they had removed. 

I was horrified and grossed out. I began texting the owner – only to be interrupted by a piercing scream of pain. My daughter stood in the doorway of the bathroom, bent double and shrieking in agony – she had been shot in the eye by a stream of soap. Since she was unable to see or move, my husband and I ran to her and dragged her over to the kitchen sink. We began an attempt at emergency eye-washing with cool water – while she continued to scream and writhe and fight us, unable to process or listen to anything we said, swollen eye shut tight and face contorted. Her eye remained swollen, pink, and weepy the remainder of our stay.

It was my breaking point. At this juncture this property was beyond redemption for me. 

I communicated to the owner that we were too uncomfortable with the cleanliness (or lack thereof) of the house and would not able to stay – we would be leaving in the morning. She was apologetic and understanding, and quickly reimbursed us, but now we had to start repacking up everything we had just unpacked – which was a lot, since I had apparently excelled at efficiency, to my chagrin. 

My husband, searching online, found another large home nearby – the only other option we had seen that would accommodate us – and made reservations as it was, miraculously, still available for the dates we needed.

In the morning, we ate hurriedly and then, despite our children’s best efforts to sabotage our departure, managed to get everything reassembled and shuffled back into the bins we had come with, only breaking one glass bottle in the process.

Then my husband received news: The second reservation he had made was actually not available. At all. It had been listed by mistake, and the property was being used for storage for all the furniture from another property that had flooded the year before. So sorry for the inconvenience! 

Stunned, sick at heart, we quickly searched again online for any other available place that would work for our immediate housing needs and numbers – and came up empty. I began to weep as I continued packing up, facing the inevitable – we would be returning home after this disappointing and negative experience. Spring Break was a bust. The children who did not cry were pale and silent with disappointment – and that hurt my heart worse.

Then my resourceful husband located a possible option at a town we had visited a couple years before – but it was about four hours’ drive away. If we were willing to make it, it was available immediately and was spacious enough for us and had a hot tub to boot. Eyes wide with sudden galvanized hope, our packing went into fifth gear. Flinging the last coat and bag into the van and shuffling the last child in, we climbed into the van to make our way back to the ferry line – perhaps we could make the one leaving in about ten minutes! 

In the meantime, the gray and sullen sky had begun to rain. 

Engine revving, we lurched forward – then in trying to reverse up that steep driveway covered with (now wet and slippery) pine needles, the tires spun out and we couldn’t move backwards up the final stretch of the driveway. Three times, four, five – each time we tried, we spun out, tires whirling and smoking, engine roaring, never reaching the top of the driveway and the freedom of the lane beyond. Panicky thoughts of being trapped at this house began to rise in my mind.

I leapt out of the van, running back to the house for a broom – coming back to try to make a dent in the thick spongy layer of decomposing pine needles, eventually frantically scraping at them with the dustpan, since the broom was ineffective. My husband, now worried about the transmission and thinking we would need to call a tow truck to get out, called out the window for me to get off the driveway – he would try one more time and didn’t want to run me over!  Using only the back-up camera, he gunned it into reverse one more time – and lurched and spun, and despite more skidding and roaring, made it up to the top and backed into the lane! Flinging the broom back inside the house, I leapt into the van and we took off. Adrenaline pumping, we drove quickly and carefully down the winding narrow island roads to the ferry dock – only to see the cars from the most recent ferry driving past – the ferry back to the mainland was about to leave! 

We drove down to the waiting queue and were the last in line – and already mourning, I saw that the ferry was mostly full. Surely there would be no more space for our large van – and the next ferry was another hour and a half later. In shock, my mind couldn’t process what this meant.

But then – astonishingly, the people loading the ferry were waving brusquely at us to move forward! There was one last rectangle of space on board – and our van filled it exactly. Beaming broadly, I pumped my fist victoriously at the wonderful woman who had motioned us aboard, wishing I could leap out and hug her in gratitude. She merely smiled, clearly humbly unaware of how magnificent she was.

It was a glorious departure.

And when we finally arrived at the third reservation, the simple discoveries that the house smelled clean, there wasn’t a smear of soot in sight, the master bedroom and bathroom were private, the dishwasher opened in a most unexciting way, and that there were clean and plentiful hair-free beds for each and every child were causes for rejoicing and gratitude. 

Nothing like an incredible dose of perspective to create a heart of thanksgiving.

And create the firm resolve to just stay home next Spring Break.

Have you had any kooky misadventures these past few weeks? Sign up for my emails and keep in touch to let me know how you’re doing! And please share this post! Thanks a bunch.

Wear your crown. Carry your sword. – Maria Miller

How I’m Raising Eager Readers (Part Two)

My Method in the Madness

In a large family with so many littles, I’ve had to streamline and simplify how I teach reading. 

I use Teach Your Child to Read in 100 Easy Lessons (by Siegfied Engelmann, Phyllis Haddox & Elaine Bruner, Touchstone Publishing) with a significant twist

This battered copy has been through six children so far… starting the seventh sometime later this year!

If you are at all familiar with this book, you know that the sounds and words to be taught are in a large, bold font.  After the first introductory lessons which do not have stories, each lesson has a simple picture with a “story” (some of only a sentence or two, others much longer) for the child to read which practices the sounds and words they learned.  (Some of these stories are a hoot, and my children grew to anticipate whatever funny story they would read that day!)

This book uses a special orthographic (how words are spelled) font so that children become familiar with the sounds certain letters make without being confused by sound rules.

Each lesson also comes with a carefully detailed script – both for the parent to say/teach (in pink print) and an expected response from the child for each lesson.  They also give writing exercises, rhyming activities, picture comprehension questions, and multiple questions/answers throughout each lesson. 

Confession time: I only focus on the bold print when I teach my children reading from this book. 

Yep, I brazenly ignore all the fine print, writing exercises, rhyming, and multiple admonishments for repeated readings.  (I know, shocking!)

This way there is a lot less drag and irritation from the slow progress, and my kids and I can zip through the first several lessons without even breaking a sweat.  Because the book starts very simply, teaching only two sounds in the first lesson, then slowly building each time, I often find that my child can easily cover multiple lessons in the early days, then as the reading increases and the stories at the end become a little longer, we “slow down” to about two or so for each reading session.  (One of my children was so excited by her progress that she insisted on covering about four to five lessons each time we worked on her reading!)

Here’s my method in the madness, broken down:

1. I use Teach Your Child to Read in 100 Easy Lessons, but teach using only the bold text without following the script.

I use it as a resource, not a mandated method. My kids react with irritation if I try to slowly go through all fine-print script, slowing us all down and increasing frustration.  When I let it go, they start to fly through the lessons with increasing enthusiasm and excitement.  It is an easy choice.

2. I use the actual lessons as a general guide, but go at the pace my child sets, rather than insisting he/she completes a set number of lessons or pages

If we are struggling through one lesson and don’t even finish and ten minutes is up, I often say cheerily, “OK, let’s get to the end of this line (or to the bottom of this page) and then let’s stop for the day!  Great work so far!” because then my child knows the end is in sight and is encouraged to keep going for just a little longer. 

I try to generally aim for about ten minutes at least for “reading time” with me, in addition to whatever books they read to themselves or each other before bedtime or during quiet time.

Once in a while, I know my child is just being a punk and decided that he/she doesn’t feel like doing the work of reading that day.  So then I will tell them that they need to complete a page (or a lesson) before moving on to another activity (like playing), and if they refuse, they will lose that other activity. As the mom of my kids, I can tell when it’s totally an attitude thing versus a real problem like an illness or exhaustion or low blood sugar.

Even though I want reading to be enjoyable, sometimes getting to that point will be work.  And teaching my child that work is part of life is never a bad thing. 

3. I often fit “reading time” in with normal life.  This means that after we get through the initial lessons and my child is more confident in reading, I often have a child sitting (or lying!) on a mat on the kitchen floor next to me or sitting on the couch, reading aloud, while I clean up breakfast dishes, fold laundry, or cook dinner.  I stay close and keep an eye on their book and can usually direct them easily if they make an error or need a reminder about a certain sound, or can chat with them about the picture and discuss the story.

This way I can get through about two or three children’s reading lessons (usually the most I have in this learning stage is three kids at a time) while still getting through the regular household things that I need to accomplish for our family.

4. I never insist that we finish the book

I have experienced now with several children that by the time they reach around lesson 75 (three-quarters of the way through the book), they have enough confidence and reading skills that they have already begun reading other books that they themselves have chosen, on topics they find interesting. THIS IS SUCCESS.

Some of my kids never go back to 100 Easy Lessons because they self-teach new words and sounds through other materials. (Often later they go back and read the fun stories at the end of each lesson, merely as an entertainment rather than a scholastic endeavor.)

And I cheerily put it back on the shelf to wait for the next upcoming reader, knowing it has successfully completed its mission of helping me teach reading to my child.

Booyah! Victory.

There you have it, the basic way I teach reading in my home.  Up next: Part Three: How I cope with specific challenges like wiggly kids, meltdown-days, and learning difficulties.

8 Kids and a Mini-Bus: An “Ordinary” Family Outing (Keeping It Real)

Move over, Swagger Wagon. Here comes the Spook Bus!

Confessions from a Mama of Many

When it’s ‘just us’, we count ten people.

And since the majority of us still require a booster or a carseat when we travel by car, that means we need a family vehicle that can accommodate this, while also allowing space for groceries, luggage, sports equipment, tools, diaper bags, and the random family friend or two. Or three.

Enter a former shuttle van, a black, 15-passenger Ford Transit, which we affectionately call “The Mini-Bus”, which technically might be an oxymoron.

There’s nothing like arriving at a friends’ barbecue in our big black shiny van.  We often roll up along an extended length of sidewalk to park, because sometimes the driveway is too short.  Turning off the engine, I usually call out careful reminders of overall behavior, expectations of good manners, kindness toward siblings, obedience toward parents, thankfulness towards the hosting family, and then recite the Gettysburg Address.  Just kidding.  (About the Gettysburg Address, I mean. I actually do say all the rest.)

Then we open the big side door. This is usually where at least two kids literally fall out onto the sidewalk because they couldn’t wait for a parent to help with their seatbelts and were leaning against the inside of the door, against the rules. The wails and sobbing from the ensuing scraped knees and hands create quite an entrance, if anyone happened to miss the actual arrival.

Then, after dealing with any emergencies, we have the ones who actually got out first without injuries try to stick close in a clump until we get the remaining horde crew out safely. In busy parking lots this can be a fascinating effort since we have a couple daydreamers who tend to drift gently away and completely block other parking spaces or veer into the way of other cars trying to drive by while observing a flying bird, an oddly-shaped cloud, or an interesting crack in the ground, deaf to all reminders to stay close. 

We also have a couple kids who love to finger-paint in the dust of our van – or truly, any available vehicle nearby – trailing once-clean fingers along the sides of streaked cars, then guiltily starting when I shriek their name, quickly wiping the grime from their fingers on their clothing. This is usually on our way in to church, while they’re wearing a nice outfit.

Of all my children, I have only two that have never thrown up in the car. Most of the rest have a strong tendency to carsickness, requiring careful planning and vigilant driving. “Look out the front window! Focus on those trees far away! Stop looking down!” is a commonly heard admonition on family drives. I have learned to bring a constant stash of wipes, bags, and something I’ve developed for these situations: a plastic container with a tightly sealed lid, lined with a couple paper towels for absorption. I usually bring a minimum of three.

On one infamous trip to pick up a food order from a place in the county we hadn’t been before, my GPS stopped working and I got lost driving up and down little forested hills with no idea where I was. Worried that we would miss our scheduled grocery pick up, I was anxious, and the children beginning to cry, squabble, and fight in the back didn’t help.

One of my sons started looking green, and his big sister yelled, “MOM! He’s going to throw up!” I began shrieking in panic, “Hold on! Just hold on! I’m going to pull over as soon as I can!” Seeing a driveway just ahead, I pulled over quickly, leaped out of the van, threw open the door and my son catapulted out to throw up on some bushes by the side of the road. Then, still gray-faced, he got back in the van full of wailing children, and I, completely stressed, hurriedly drove off. I’m not proud of this. (If those were your bushes, I deeply apologize.)

The other day I decided to be brave and load them all up for an outing, to get out of the house for an hour or so. My plan was to quickly throw on shoes, get in the van, drive to our church parking lot where they were handing out 30-day promise/prayer journals, and then head home for lunch.

Deep breath.

First we had to get ready. This involved siblings assisting/struggling with shoes, diaper changes, practicing military salutes, tickle fights, and wrestling when I had asked them to make sure they went to the bathroom.  

Saluting practice. One child apparently feeling two-handed salutes are better than one.
Tickle fight. Because that’s what I meant when I said, “Have you gone to the bathroom?”

One child unexpectedly had an emotional meltdown.

Another disappeared without a trace for about fifteen minutes – I later discovered that they had capriciously decided to change their entire outfit. For a drive where no one was planning on exiting the vehicle, in a van with tinted windows where no one could see them. Brilliant.

Then suddenly  it was remembered that some of the children had already written/drawn some cards/pictures for a couple of the pastors/ministry leaders at our church, so those had to be found to bring along.  But alas! This reminded the children who had not written or drawn any such communiqué that they were remiss and therefore needed to quickly make up for their lack. So, because I was still dealing with the meltdown child and also hadn’t yet gotten myself ready quite yet, I agreed. (Insert head slap.)

Twenty minutes later, now with various envelopes addressed to no less than five different people, each stuffed with drawings/notes, I sent the children who were ready out the front door to climb into the van. They were told to get in, help their little siblings put on their seat belts, and then strap themselves in and wait quietly while I grabbed my purse and locked the door.

 
Before I even managed to get my shoes on, my youngest toddler was somehow back out of the van, wandering around our front porch, and no less than three different children had also come running back inside to tattle or ask an asinine question.

With growing exasperation, I herded them all into the van, told them I was disappointed in their unwillingness to obey quickly, and ensured they were all strapped in.

Off we went!

The twenty-five minute drive was marked by various utterances from the eight passengers:

“Mom! Can you turn up the air conditioning?! I’m HOT!”

“Mom, I’m freezing!”

“Mom! She took my flip flops and won’t give them back!”

“Mom! He just said bum!” (in scandalized tones)

“Mom! He’s playing rock-paper-scissors with her and not looking out the front window so he’s going to get SICK!”

“I’m think I’m going to throw up.” (from the one child who is never carsick)

“I throw up!” (from the toddler, who hadn’t, but likes to say it)

“Mommy! She hit me and she didn’t say sorry!” (Culprit bursts into noisy tears)

Then, moments later, the same child: “Mommy! She’s looking at me!” (Culprit bursts into even louder sobs, this time from a deep sense of injustice.)

And the usual: “Mom! Are we there yet? How much longer?”

Yep. Good thing I was heading to pick up some prayer journals. I could really use them.