Monday, June 15, 2020

Groundhog Day Part 2


WOW!  It has been almost a month since I last blogged.  Time flies when it's all blurring together, I guess.  Hahaha.  I figured now is as good a time as any to document more of our life during Covid-19.  My brain is too tired to write a compelling narrative here, so bullet points are going to have to suffice.

  • Summer Reading
We'll start with our 2020 Summer Reading Challenge.  This year, we're going extra tech-y and instead of filling out a banner (mostly because we're all out of banner paper and I don't want to go to the store) we're using Google Classroom.  Hahahahahaha.  I think this will really help to sell some of the kids on it.  After all, Grace has been giving assignments to Sophie and Jane all summer long in a Google classroom she created for THEM.

Mom's Summer Reading Challenge 2020 Categories:
History * Mystery * Dystopian * Non-Fiction * Written before you were born * Memoir * Book that's been turned into a movie * Sci-Fi/Fantasy * Free Choice * African-American author * Caldecott Winner * Graphic Novel


  • Avatar
Grace's Google Classroom leads me right into their newest obsession -- Avatar: The Last Airbender.  The vast majority of Grace's assignments (if not all of them) have to do with Avatar stuff:  you know, like making collages of pictures from the show and creating video clips with scenes from the show, that kind of stuff.  Outside of their little summer school, they have also modified our Guess Who game to have Avatar characters.  It's a mood.  I have no earthly idea why this show has gripped ALL of their fancy (minus Ethan), but it has.  And I have to hear about it non-stop.






They like to go all in when they do something.


  • Yearbook
I forgot to include Sophie's article in the last-days-of-school post that she wrote for her school yearbook.  She's a good little writer.



"Finding Hope"
    The shouts of the crowd echoed through the large gymnasium.  A single shred of hope lingered in the eyes of worried fans.  The Cowboys were down by only two points.  The fate of the game would be decided by a free throw.   
    "We were down our best defender, and that hurt us a lot" [so-and-so] said.  "We really just cracked under pressure, which resulted in us losing the game."
    The Cowboys were ahead during the first half of the game, but not by a lot.  "I feel like parts of the game we did the best we could, but we may have been a little over confident because of the score difference," [a different so-and-so] said.
    During the third quarter, the team's score rose more than 10 points above the Indians.  "We communicated a lot more during the first three quarters, so it wasn't really surprising that our score was a lot higher during that time," [another so-and-so] said.  "We were so sure that we were going to win the game."
    The Cowboys were both aggravated and sad, but many were hopeful for the next time they would play against their rivals.
    "We definitely didn't play our absolute best, but we did spend a lot of time practicing for it," [a final so-and-so] said.  "It was really disappointing, but I feel like the next time we play against the Indians, we can beat them."
    Although the Indians went home with the win, the Cowboys went home with faith and hope for the future ahead of them.

* clearly wasn't going to include the actual 7th graders' names who were quoted in the article.
** Yes -- the rival mascots are Cowboys and Indians, and yes -- those names are being changed this year.

  • New Movie 
While we're speaking of Sophie the yearbook writer, we should move sideways and talk about Sophie the screenwriter.  Hahahaha.  The kids created a new movie at the start of summer.  Sophie wrote the script, Ethan directed and edited, and all 6 kids starred in"Get a Clue," -- a loose mash-up of the real movie "Knives Out" and the game "Clue."  It was hilarious.  Not gonna lie.  It's too bad I can't include full on video clips in here.  Or maybe I could, but it's probably way too long.

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Some still frames from the movie -- Colonel Mustard (played by Isaac) is dead


  • Baking
I'm starting to feel like this post is all about Sophie, but it is what it is.  Hahaha.  Sophie has become a baker extraordinaire over the last several months and she and Ethan have collaborated on a few different projects this summer that have resulted in some delicious treats.  In addition to treats, Sophie has also learned how to make bread all by herself -- which I was LOVING, and then we ran out of yeast and can't find any at the store.  Doh!  For a week or so, though, she was whipping out the Kitchenaid mixer almost every day.  Hopefully the yeast I finally broke down and ordered off of Amazon will be here sooner rather than later.

We've been using the bread recipe from iheartnaptime and it's really good.



  • Deck
Meanwhile, one of my projects during corona-cation was to stain the deck.  I rented a power washer to get it clean first, and I have to say that pressure washing the deck and seeing the immediate results was one of the most satisfying things I've ever done.  Not even joking.  Hahahaha.  Seriously, though.  It was so fun.  Ethan was my helper here and there, and when it came time to do the actual staining, Ethan was my right-hand man until Scott was finished working for the day and came out to take his place.  Even though my back (and hands from holding a paint brush for so long) was KILLING me by the end, it was totally worth it for how amazing the deck now looks.  

See that satisfying line??

I ran out of gas in the pressure washer with THIS much left that needed to be done.  DOH!  It necessitated a trip to the gas station and extra rental time from the hardware store.

Post-Pressure-Washing, Pre-Staining


And the after!  We used the color "Cordovan Brown" from the Home Depot in their Behr Premium Semi-Transparent line.  We ended up using almost the whole 5-gallon bucket that we got.



  • Book of Mormon
We've been supplementing our family reading of the Book of Mormon for "Come, Follow Me" this year with as many "fun" activities as I can come up with.  Hahahaha.  One way we've been doing this is to make a themed cake representing each book as we finish it.  So, for 1 Nephi, we made a Liahona cake; for 2 Nephi, we made "the Lion and the Lamb" cupcakes; Jacob was represented with an olive oil cake to pay tribute to the Allegory of the Olive Tree; I don't think we actually ended up making anything to cover Enos, Jarom, Omni, or Words of Mormon, but Sophie and Ethan created this masterpiece of a King Benjamin's Address cake.  Hahaha.


"King Benjamin" on his tower, giving his address.

Lamb and Lion cupcakes


Olive oil cake -- it looks kind of gross, but it was actually quite good, and more kids liked it than I expected.

We've also turned our Sunday school portion of home church into a competition each week.  We've done scripture Pictionary (with people, places, things, and scripture quotes from the Book of Mormon up to the point we've read); we've played the "celebrity" game with the same set of cards that I made for Pictionary; we tried a Family Feud -- but that resulted in actual family feuding; and my personal favorite was when we had them recreate our whiteboard outline of the people of Mosiah versus the people of Zeniff, or as I liked to call it, "A Tale of Two Cities."  Hahahaha.  You can color me pink, because I had NO idea any of these ideas would actually land with the kids.  It's been a lot of fun, though, and I'm hoping all these positive associations with the scriptures will stay with them for life.

Here's our outline we added to as a family while reading Mosiah...


And here they are completing it to fill it back out after I erased the board.

The teams were big kids v. little kids and they both did astoundingly well.  It was really more like two on two, though, because Isaac obviously wasn't going to be able to help much and Grace has retained an astonishingly minute amount of scriptural knowledge.

The big kids had the Zarahemla side and the little kids had the Lehi-Nephi side.  I was pretty impressed to see how well they filled it out.


  • A Tribute
So, 2020 has been quite the year.  About a month after my dad passed away in March, HIS dad passed away as well.  He had lived a good, long life, so it wasn't unexpected.  However, after he died, I realized that I had never paid tribute to my Grandma (his wife) who passed away last fall.  Growing up in New Orleans, we didn't see my Hansen grandparents very often since they lived in California.  It's sad to realize that I don't have nearly as many memories with them as I do with my Bourgeois grandparents who only lived an hour away from us.  What I can remember, however, is the love I felt from them whenever we DID see them.  Especially from my Grandma.  I remember one visit we made to their house in California when I was maybe 8 or 9 and my grandma patiently tried to teach me and my sisters how to make Barbie clothes on her sewing machine.  There was a rubber tire swing in the backyard that everyone always wanted a turn on, and my Grandpa would dry fruit leather on the roof of his house.  My grandma would send care packages at Christmas time when we were younger and it was something we looked forward to every year.  {They're also the inspiration behind the packages my dad would send for my kids' birthdays.} We would do our best to make it to the big Family Reunions every couple of years that were usually held in Hiko, NV and being with the huge extended family and playing with all these cousins that I rarely ever saw were some of the the best memories of my childhood.

My cousin created these picture books about our grandparents so that her kids would be able to know them even if they didn't get to see them very often.


My Grandpa and Grandma  -- as well as my dad -- were laid to rest in the Schofield Family Cemetary in Hiko.  I wasn't able to be there for any of their funerals, but I am so happy that we will be driving out to Utah next week, to spend time with my family and then drive out to Hiko to gather at my dad's graveside and put the engraved stone marker on it for his birthday -- July 1st.  

  • Life Histories
That leads me to my next bullet point.  I was inspired by the awesome little books that my cousin made for her kids about OUR grandparents and decided I wanted to make something similar for my children -- especially Isaac, who will never remember his Papi.  I have always loved family history, but over the last few weeks as I've been working to complete a Life History of my dad, I have felt the spirit of Elijah more strongly than I ever have before.  As I've been poring over every single document I can find to fill in the gaps of knowledge I have, I have felt like my dad is still here.  It has been a tender mercy.  Familysearch.org has been an awesome resource as well.  I've learned so much that I never knew about my Grandma's side of the family.  My Grandpa's side has been well-documented in an awesome family history book that was compiled by my dad's Aunts several years ago and I have really enjoyed re-reading through it this past month.  People are so interesting and life stories are fascinating to me.  I love knowing where I came from.

That big book in the center is the family history compilation for my dad's side of the family.  I've been able to get a lot of info from it for MY family history compilation.


  • My Book
And that brings me to my final stopping point -- my book.  I have felt like a family history sleuth the last few weeks as I've been trying to capture everything about my dad's early life!  It has been so fun and satisfying.  I'm pretty sure my dad's life purpose was to keep a record/archive his life, so it has been EXTREMELY helpful in getting a glimpse into his younger life.  My brother Freddie has a memory like an elephant and has helped me a TON with remembering stories my dad used to tell us about his life growing up.  He's also the keeper of all my dad's old stuff at the moment, so he's been texting me pictures left and right of the traces my dad left behind.  {And spoiler alert -- he left a LOT behind.  He kept just about everything; old birthday cards from his grandparents, invitations to parties, graded papers -- both A's and F's, momentos such as his Boy Scout troop card from 1967; and a collection of old magazines and comic books from when he was a kid.}


An "A" on an English paper...

...and an "F" on a Geometry paper.

This from his very own scrapbook.




I'm using Shutterfly to make the book and print it out and it's going to be a real tour de force, let me tell you! Hahahaha.  Along with the narrative of his story, I'm inserting little "fun facts" into the layout and as an homage to my dad's love of vocabulary, I'm including vocab boxes on each page to define words that the kids might not necessarily know.  There will be lots of pictures, of course, and plenty of actual quotes from my dad.  All-all-all, it's going to be awesome.  I have loved putting everything together and writing it up.  {Although, I'm not quite finished with the writing -- I've got the rest of high school and beyond to go.  And I still haven't decided where my stopping point will be.  I'll definitely go through his mission and getting married, but after that, I think life becomes too complicated and I don't think it will be of interest to kids anyway.}

A little sneak peak at a couple of the pages in his book.



Well, that's all I've got folks!  Until next time...

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Wow. That memory book is going to be great. Great job on Sophie’s yearbook post and all the baking. Most impressed with the Tale is Two Cities metaphor. I cracked up at the Grace comment, “ retained an astonishingly minute amount of scriptural knowledge.“

You’re amazing sweet Jessica!

Jessica Blankenberg said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Jessica Blankenberg said...

I loved this post. <3 That book about your dad is awesome! What a wonderful tribute to him.

That Avatar Guess Who is amazing! My jaw actually dropped. My kids are also huge fans of Avatar.

And I love the Tale of Two Cities, including the creepers and the bad bois. haha

And great job on the deck! What a huge project to take on. Looks great!

Melissa Michiale Hansen Horlacher said...

Okay i cried at the grandma tribute. She's one of my very favorite people. Your dad's book looks amazing!!! I'd love to see updates here as you have them if you feel comfortable with that.