Tuesday, October 5, 2010

Ben's Special Helper Day


Monday it was Ben's turn to be the special helper at preschool.  Mark is back in Charlotte working so unlike last week it was just me to take video and pictures.  I was trying to hold the camcorder in one hand and the DSLR camera in the other.  As anticipated, the results aren't quite as good.  Some of the still photos are blurry.  I'm sure in years to come when we want to look at the video, Ben is going to wonder if Mommy was drinking when she took the video.  Oh well, I did my best.

Ben loved being the special helper.  It is fire safety week at school so we checked out a book about firefighters from the library for his show-and-tell item.  He also got to wear a firefighter's hat during play time.  Ben isn't always willing to take the time to write his name (although he knows how) so I was very happy he wrote his own name on his name tag.  It was also cooking day.  They made sugar doughnuts for letter D week.  He was extra happy to be the first one in line and the first one to get to eat!



Got to love the hats during Fire Safety Week.

The hat might be just SLIGHTLY too big for that baby.


Silly girl!

Ben writing his name tag.  Car in one hand, pen in the other.
Getting his attendance sticker

Passing out name cards







Hi.  I am 4 years old. If you want to take my picture, at least one of the shots is going to look like this!

Sunday, October 3, 2010

Abby's Special Helper Day


The kids' preschool  has a special helper every day.  They go in alphabetical order plus you get to be the helper around or on your birthday.  Last year my kids were gypped.  Our last name is at the end of the alphabet and they have a summer birthday.  They were all the special helper once before Christmas.  By the time their 2nd individual turn should have come around it was towards the end of school and the teachers were trying to get all the summer birthdays in.  My kids had to be the shared helpers for their early birthday day.  While everyone else in the class got to be the special helper 3 times, mine only got 2 and 1 of those times they had to share.  Sometimes it really doesn't pay to be a triplet.

They LOVE being the special helper and ask almost daily if it is their turn yet.  This year I know we will not be here the whole year.  By the time their normal turn comes around we might not even be here.  That is why I asked if they could be moved up.  It is bad enough we are going to leave in the middle of school.  I was determined the kids would not get gypped out of being the special helper this year.

Friday was Abby's turn.  The special helper gets to ring the cleanup bell and pass out the name tags.  They hold the flag for the Pledge of Allegiance and point to the letters, numbers, colors and days of the week.  They put the date on the calendar and tell everyone what the weather is like that day.  They get to be first in line all day.  The special helper brings the snack and gets to pass it out at snack time.  Who wouldn't want to be the special helper!

An extra added bonus was that Mark was home for a long weekend so we both got to watch Abby be the special helper.
"Carrying my baby all over town"

Getting her name tag

Ringing the clean up bell

The 1st one to put her sticker on 

Passing out name tags




She is SO short!







Ben bumped his chin on the table
They usually sit at different tables, but Abby put their name tags all in a row.



Friday, October 1, 2010

1st Day of Preschool


Yes, I am a slacker.  The kids started preschool three and a half weeks ago and I haven't put up any pictures.  They are having a good year overall.  It is such a big change in maturity from last year in some ways.  They all walk in, hang up their own things and happily go in to the classroom.  Now...if we could just get Abby and Ben motivated to learn how to write their letters.  They both need to work on fine motor skills.  Ben especially needs to work on paying attention and following directions.  That applies to both school and home!  I really hope we can find a preschool after we move because I think it is really good for all 3 of my kids.  For those who haven't already seen these on Facebook, here are the pictures.
Katie
Abby

Ben



Tuesday, September 28, 2010

For Mark


This is what I (Lori) think of our house not selling!

Saturday, September 11, 2010

Where were you (when the world stopped turning)?

That song, by Alan Jackson, perfectly summed up the mood of the country immediately following September 11, 2001.  Nine years ago.  It doesn't seem that long.  That day and the days that followed are etched in my mind like it was yesterday.  I'm sure every American who was old enough to understand what was happening can say the same thing.

I was working as a director at WINK-TV in Fort Myers, Florida.  My shift was 2:45-11:45.  It suited me because I am not a morning person.  My normal routine was to come home from work, stay up half the night and sleep until noon.  It didn't quite work that way on September 11th.  I was asleep when the planes hit the towers in New York City.  Mark (at the time we were just friends) called me on the phone and woke me up to talk about what happened.  I had no idea what he was talking about but turned on the TV and was quickly drawn in to the horror that was happening in New York.  I watched the first tower fall.  It didn't seem like this could really be happening but it was.

After the first tower fell I decided to try and get a little more sleep.  After all, my night had been cut short and the rest of the day would likely be busy and difficult.  In my mind I didn't really think the 2nd tower would fall because the plane had hit it at a different spot.  Right before turning the TV off, they were talking about reports of smoke near the Pentagon and speculating a helicopter might have crashed.  Of course, I didn't fall back to sleep.  That was not mentally possibly no matter how tired I was.  When I turned the TV back on the 2nd tower had already fallen and they knew a plane had crashed in to the Pentagon.

The Pentagon plane was the one that personally concerned me.  My brother Rob works as a government consultant in Washington, D.C. and worked at the Naval Yard.  I knew he occasionally went to the Pentagon for meetings.  Thankfully that was not one of those days.  When I talked to him several hours later he was safe at the Naval Yard on the highest level of military lockdown.  He had driven past the Pentagon shortly before the plane hit but that was as close as he came.

The rest of the day at work was surreal.  We sat and watched TV all day along with the rest of America.  Occasionally we would do a little work.  Most of our newscasts were cancelled.  When I went home that night I watched more coverage.  Then I tried to sleep.  That didn't happen.  My exhausted body was no match for the images that were going through my mind of the horror of that day.  There is a line in the Alan Jackson song "Did you open your eyes and hope it never happened  Close your eyes and not go to sleep."  That was me.  I didn't sleep until the following night and alternately cursed Mark for waking me up and being glad he did because it was important to know what happened.

Like all local stations, our news team immediately started looking for the local connection to the events in New York, Washington and Shanksville.  They didn't have to look too far.  President Bush was at an elementary school in Sarasota when the planes hit and he learned about it.  One of our reporters was there covering the President.

One of the flight attendants on the Shanksville flight was from Fort Myers.  Her name was CeeCee Lyles.  Her husband Lorne was a local police officer.  In the weeks that followed, we did a lot of satellite uplinks for national news shows.  Mr Lyles came in several times.  Watching the quiet grief and confusion of this man was heartbreaking.  We all felt so bad for him and there was nothing we could do to make it better.   CeeCee and Lorne Lyles had a blended family of 4 boys ranging from about 6-16.  I'll never forget one night when he was on Larry King.   The other guests had younger children who had a parent killed and Larry was asking how they were dealing with explaining what happened.  After the show ended, Mr. Lyles told one of our camera people that he wished Larry had asked him that question.  His children were older and could comprehend what happened.  How was he supposed to help his kids?  The confusion and sorrow in that grieving man will stay with me forever.

The other local connection was the owner of a SW Florida flying school.  Two of the hijackers had learned to fly at his school.  He came in often to go on the national news shows too.  What an arrogant, rude man!  He was full of himself and his 15 minutes of fame.  I just wanted to smack him upside the head and tell him the story wasn't about him.  It was about the victims who died and the ones left behind like the Lyles family.

In the midst of everything that week, a tropical storm hit SW Florida.  Normally that would have been a bigger deal and we would have been doing a ton of weather coverage.  That week it just seemed like an afterthought.  The night after I finally slept I ended up staying at the station for most of the night to run weather crawls.  That was the point I couldn't take the news coverage anymore.  Alan Jackson wrote "Did you turn off that violent old movie you're watching and turn on "I Love Lucy" reruns."  I spent the night scanning the cable channels for any old show that wasn't depressing.


9 years ago.  For all of us it is a day we can never forget, but isn't something we think of every day.  The feelings are stirred up on the anniversary but it isn't a part of our every day lives.  For the families of the victims the pain will never end.  I know from media reports it took years for Lorne Lyles to put his life back together.  It is for all the victims on the planes, in the Twin Towers and the Pentagon that we remember this day.  It is for the families left behind that we still feel sympathy and give our support.  We won't forget.  We can't forget.  Where were you?

Saturday, September 4, 2010

Properly Attired


Today is the first Penn State football game this season.  We are a Penn State crazy family.  Not only did Mark and I meet at Penn State, both of our brothers are also alumni.  My parents had season tickets for many years and my brother still does.  As soon as we knew we were having triplets, it became a priority to have them properly attired.

6 weeks old
Mark could not wait to buy Penn State baby clothes.  He came home from working a basketball game while I was pregnant with 3 cute onesies and bibs.  They were 0-3 month size.  The first time the kids wore them they were about 6 weeks old and about 5-6 pounds.  The clothes were too big for the kids but we dressed them up anyway and took pictures.  That first game we were at my parents' house.  Mark was out of town for work.   We packed up and drove 6 hours because I was in a panic about being left alone for a week with 3 infants who needed to be fed 24/7.  It was kind of cool the first week, so we took more pictures the following game.
Ben still looked jaundiced at 6 weeks.

7 weeks old
When they were one, Uncle Rob started making it a priority to make sure his nieces and nephew were properly attired.  He came to our house after the first football game with tiny t-shirts and sweatshirts.  It was much harder to get them to stay still long enough to take pictures that year!
Katie, one year old
Abby, one year old

Ben,  one year old
The only way to get a 3 shot that day!
At age 2  Uncle Rob came through again.  As 2 year olds, the kids were more willing to pose.
Touchdown!   Age 2

At age 3, Daddy got back in the clothing game and picked up t-shirts for the crew.  The kids, however, weren't so cooperative for pictures.


As good as it gets, age 3
Today, at age 4, it is Grandma and Grandpa who furnished the clothes.  They were part of their birthday presents.  Although still a challenge, it was easier to get them to pose this year.
Age 4
Always have to end with the silly shot when you are 4!