Full day…

On Saturday, Simon, Willa and I went to Montreal for the day. Simon had a concert to go to in the evening and the boys wanted to go to the cabin so the two events coincided perfectly. My mom came and got the boys on Friday and Khéna was so excited that for nearly two hours before she got here, he was dressed and waiting in the stairs, ready to go.

She came and then left right after lunch, the boys faced beamed as they headed out. Though rain was on the forecast, I wasn’t worried at all that they would have a blast.

We had a quiet evening on Friday and then got up on Saturday bright and early.

Two weeks ago I had gotten a message on Facebook asking if I might be interested in giving a babywearing workshop at a great new store/café in Montreal called Melons et Clémentines. I called the owners and we arranged to meet on Saturday morning. What a great space that has been set up and what amazing people doing it! I am so happy to be able to get to know them and now I need to get my butt into action and get ready to give workshops on both EC and babywearing. It is not going to become a big source of income but it might bring in a few dollars and it will be a great opportunity to get to know some more amazing like minded moms.

Simon and I then went for lunch and then headed out to the talk on unschooling given by Sandra and Holly Dodd. I have to admit that I didn’t find it that amazing of a talk, I guess it was a bit basic and was a repeat of a lot of things that I had read in the past, but it was fun to see the usual faces in the crowd and be able meet others. I know that I say it often, but it is so refreshing to get together with like minded people. It not only makes us feel what we are doing is “normal” but it is also great to talk and get feedback from people that are living the same challenges, going through similar experiences, dealing with the same comments and internal struggles. It gives me a boost each time.

After the talk I brought Simon to the Metro so that he could head to his show and I headed out to the West Island to pick up Sushi at my favorite place and then brought it back to my friend Gen’s house to eat and hang out with her for the evening and we talked and shared until Simon called to say he was done  and then I went and got him and then we headed home, arriving at about 1am…

We got up on Sunday morning, and headed out in the cold and the rain to go pick up the boys at the cabin…

Though we have to admit that it is a lot quieter in the house without them, I was really happy to see them again. Sometimes even just a day away makes me look at them in a different way and realize just how big they are really getting.

Quebec City…

Last weekend we headed to Quebec city for a family party. It is so rare that extended family gets together is happy time (not a funeral)  so I jumped on the chance…

An old friend and his wife invited us to sleep over at their house that night also which was amazingly kind considering that we are six people and they have an apartment.  It was one of those weekends that everything just turned out great and we all had fun.

The party was for my mom’s cousin’s 25th anniversary. There were a lot of happy tears and catching up and meeting second cousins and relatives that I had never met before. The boys had fun running around outside and picking at the buffet and hanging out with their grandma and going to the bathroom downstairs all by themselves. All dressed up we were able to get a pic of the family… This is the first time that we are all in a picture as it is usually Simon and I who are behind the camera…

(Khéna was fixated on the fountain that was in front of us)

My Family :)

My grandmother was really happy to spend sometime with the kids also…

MéméMémé and Willa

After the party we headed back to our friend’s apartment and then in the morning we headed to a flea market and then to the old city. It is amazing how you can go along the street and then meet the walls of the old city and be taken back in time. Buildings, centuries old, line the streets crowed together, and you are taken back in time. We parked the cars in the lower city and looked for a place to eat lunch.

(Chateau Frontenac, the most photographed Hotel in the world)

Château Frontenac

After lunch we decided to take the Funiculaire up to the upper city and then walk down again so that we could walk around more without us all getting too tired. The Funiculaire first went into operation in 1879 and worked on steam and counterweights. In 1907 it went electric and over the years it has been updated. It is a short ride that costs 2$ but is well worth it, and the boys loved it…

(from the street in the lower city and the view going to the top)

Going toward the Funiculaire Looking down the Funiculaire

At the top, there are the remains of the fort that stood on that spot nearly 400 years ago. The boys loved going around in the remains and seeing where things used to be.

Remnants of the old fort

Of course the view from the top is also spectacular…

view of the St-Laurent river and Basse-Ville

(another family pic!! and again, Khéna is not looking… )

In the old port of Quebec

After walking a bit in the upper city, we headed back down… It was a beautiful day, it was the weekend and their were tons of people, but it didn’t hinder the experience at all..

Petit Champlain district

We had Gellato, we people watched and looked at murals on the walls of the buildings (click on the pics below to see in big) We saw street performers (Khéna was quite intrigued by the statue lady) and heard music and just enjoyed the history around us….  I look forward to returning in the near future for another adventure…

Mural Statue? Khéna was not sure at all... the historic Notre-Dame-des-Victoires

Video games…

“When parents think a child’s interests are ‘stupid’ or worthless, the parent thinks less of the child.

When a child finds something stimulating and fascinating and the parent declares it worthless, the child thinks less of the parent.”

-Sandra Dodd

Video games are often given a bad rap. I know many parents limit their child’s time of playing because they see them as something bad, not educational or a waste of time. Other parents limit what their child is playing and only have “educational” games and the only goal is to make learning boring stuff somewhat fun… (I honestly have not encountered an intentional educational game that I consider fun or very well made)…

In our home, video games are not at all unknown and are not limited. I have a video of Xavier playing one of his first computer games when he was 2, it was a Thomas the Train memory game on the Thomas website… He had understood how to use the mouse long before that…

Xavier can spend his day in front of the computer, playing various games, it is what he loves to do and all we can do is encourage him and provide him with new games and new things to discover.

Colin and Khéna are not the same, they enjoy watching at times, but would rather do other stuff, though Colin does enjoy playing on the Wii and this weekend a new game on the computer has peaked his interest enough that he is learning how to use the mouse, but Xavier is our gamer at heart.

The thing is, Video games are a great way to get the brain working, and yes learning, even for us adults… The games that interest our family are mostly strategy games, Role Playing games,  games that have you creating and playing, Games that give you a challenge. These kinds of games are not at all mindless, you need to use logics and your imagination. We don’t own any “educational” games.

Primary learning, like math, reading etc are not directly addressed, but are learned in the background, without even knowing. And, as I mentioned in a recent post, it is because of Video games that Xavier learned how to read. In order to get the the next level, do the right thing in a strategy, say the right thing in a conversation he had to learn to read in order to play, to get ahead. We didn’t teach him, he taught himself. The game that helped him the most was the D&D games and Zelda Twilight Princess for the Wii.

An argument that we often hear of course, is the argument that if the parent doesn’t limit the child then they would play *all* of their time of video games and would *never* do anything else. So, how is a child supposed to learn to self limit? Xavier does spend a lot of time in front of the computer, but he also plays with his brothers, goes outside, loves to go for walks or go other places with us. He goes through phases of playing more and then doesn’t play for a while after…

Along with not limiting how much time our kids can spend playing, we also don’t limit what they can play. Most of the games are rated for older than Xavier but that doesn’t stop him or us…

Two of the favourites in the home are Neverwinter Nights and Baldur’s Gate, Role playing D&D games. They are rated for teens, but I can’t seem to comprehend why… yes there is violence, you may attack goblins and and dire wolves in the forest, fight a dragon or even an evil wizard, what is the difference between that and fairy tales that are told to children every day?

Another favourite is Spore… Xavier actually wrote something on Spore last year for a homeschooling journal (well, he told me what to write and I wrote it) so you can read his review to know more about that one… we have also since gotten the expansion of the game that makes “Space Stage” more interactive. Often, Xavier spends his time, not just playing, but creating new ships and characters, often based on other things he is interested in at the moment. It is amazing what he can create.

Last week Simon discovered two new games that the whole family is enjoying. (One of them, I finished all the levels in a two spurts of playing). That one is called Crayon Physics. Here is a little video of the game:

The other is called World of Goo , I am on Chapter 2 at the moment and it is really addictive!

Video games are far from mindless activities that they are often seen to be. They are fun, innovative, spark the imagination, work the logical mind and even if they are not “educational” it doesn’t meant that nothing is learned.  Just taking an example of the above game, many might think that playing with wooden blocks is “better” than playing a virtual game. But what is being learned in both is the same, physics, hand eye coordination etc… the disadvantage of the wooden blocks is that the physical world has its limits. In the virtual world you are provided with the tools to build structures that are way more complex, to have more challenges and as you get farther in the game the challenges get progressively harder.

Video games are as much a tool for learning and fun than other mediums and I find it amazing what can be learned through them.

I am confident that if there is such an interest,  that there is only positive that will come out of it in the end.

A day in Montreal…

Yesterday we headed to Montreal for a trip to the Redpath museum and a few other things that we wanted/needed to do…

Just as we were heading out the door,  Xavier told me that his stomach felt weird… I asked him if he wanted to go or stay home but he really wanted to go to the Museum… So we left, but not before I grabbed a plastic bag for the car in case his weird stomach turned out to be more…Mid-way there it did… and luckily he had the bag…

We decided to keep on going even though there was a part of me that wanted to head home. He was saying that he felt better and was looking better also… So to the museum we headed…

I had never been to the Redpath Museum, though it won’t be the last time I go for sure. It is a building on the McGill University Campus in Montreal and is free to the public. The theme was Mummies. A little tour and talk about mummies and then an activity for the kids…The talk was perfect, geared towards kids and just the perfect amount of time for the kids. Little did I know that as small as the Redpath museum is, they have the second largest ancient Egyptian mummy collection in Canada…3 mummies, a sarcophagus, mummified animals, a set of Coptic Jars along with many other artifacts.

Mummified Falcon, Cat and Iris?

Mummified Falcon, Cat and Iris

Mummy, with mask

Egyptian Mummy at the Redpath museum

Mummy, with just the wrappings and resin

Egyptian Mummy at the Redpath museum Egyptian Mummy at the Redpath museum

I would have liked tolook around a bit more, but just as the talk was finishing, Khéna needed to go the bathroom and Xavier felt he had to throw up again… so we rushed down 4 flights of stairs to get the bathrooms and the crafdt was about to start on the first floor and I didn’t want to climb up again…  (I will go back soon though hopefully)

We did the craft (need to get pics) and the boys made their very own little mummies… Pretty cool looking… I must say!! and then we headed to Simon’s work to go pay him a visit and for the boys to see his office which they had been wanting to do for some time…

Looking out of the 17th floor window near Simon’s office

Visiting Daddy's office on the 17th floor

Xavier was feeling a bit weak by that point and Simon offered him an apple… he ate it but it came back up soon after as we were leaving the office building…

I still had one stop before we could head home… to pick something up at my friend Gen’s house on the West Island… but because Xavier was not feeling good I didn’t want the boys to go in her house (she has two babies at home) so I picked up my mom on the way and she offered to stay in the car while I went into Gen’s house and she made sandwiches for me and the boys because we hadn’t eaten lunch yet…

Xavier tried to eat a bit more again because he was hungry, but while I was in the house it came back up again… we headed back towards Montreal and I got him some Soda Crackers and finally he was able to eat and then fell asleep… I picked up Simon and we slowly headed home… Xavier hasn’t thrown up since but still feels a bit queasy but doesn’t regret going out at all…he is loving the crackers and was able to keep some more food and drink down today… so I guess it is just a little bug…

The boys also now have a new big interest for Mummies and ancient Egypt so now I am gathering up some info and documentaries for them to watch…  so it ended up being a great day despite the little weird tummy…

Xavier can read…

Xavier turned 7 last summer and for a while now we knew he could read a bit because he would do so when he thought we weren’t paying attention… but I knew he wouldn’t admit it until he knew he could really do it.

He has always been like that… It has been his personality since he was tiny.  I have always seen him as the kind of kid that doesn’t like to be a “Performing Monkey”.. he doesn’t like to show himself “trying”… he doesn’t show that he can do it until he knows he can do it right.

So how did he learn how to read? Mostly… video games… and not “educational” ones. Video games that are geared towards older kids and adults. Spore, Neverwinter Nights, Baldurs Gate, Zelda, Star Wars Empire at War etc…

He loves video games and I have no problem letting his play… at first he would ask often what was written on the screen often and after a while he started asking less and less…  the less he asked the more we saw that he was reading…

Earlier in the year we bought him a D&D monster manual and right away he knew all the monsters names and he was able to give me details on them, details that he was reading… just little words of course that he recognized but he was able to figure out a lot of things because of that. He looks at his books often, but not with us… always by himself, especially in the car.

In the last few weeks though, he has admited to himself and to us that he can do it and it has been amazing to see him! He has been loving to show us what he can do. He reads signs when we are in the car, he reads ingredients on food or in my recipes. He reads the titles of DVD’s in the closet and now he is reading books to us. He read a very easy book to me this morning and then I asked him to go get the Little Bear book that we have just to see if he could do it and he read the first story without a problem… and of course the look on his face after was priceless…

So.. my son, who has never been “taught” to read, can read…  it is amazing to see how unschooling works 🙂

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