Sunday, October 31, 2010

Happy Halloween!

We had a great night, but I think I'm a little sad that my kids are getting older. Coop didn't even want to dress up (although from the amount of teenagers I saw out there, maybe he's not too old . . sheez!), so he and I stayed home and handed out the loot. After a while, he got jealous of all the goodies and put on something and headed out for one street and then we went to visit friends.

The girls seriously LOVE Halloween and usually start planning their costumes in July. Kinley wanted to be a cowgirl and Kaiya decided on Judy Jetson, which is funny because no one even knows who she is anymore. I thought Kinley was going to bust and I had to restrain her from trick-or-treating at 4:30.










The toothless cowgirl




The other pics are from their parties at school (although my dear husband forgot the camera at the breakfast party in Kinley's class since I had to be at a work meeting that morning), a birthday party for Kinley's best buddy at school, and from our pumpkin carving night at home . We roasted the best pumpkin seeds this year . . brown sugar, cinnamon, coarse salt, and butter. Yum!! And, I'm pretty proud of our Rockies pumpkin. Kaiya did the logo completely by herself and Doug carved it.

So happy to finally ride a horse . . . OK, a pony


Kinley's best buds at school





Pretty proud of our Rockies pumpkin!







Until next year . . . . .

Sunday, October 24, 2010

Struttin' their stuff

Once again, Kaiya and Kinley kept us super busy this weekend. Kaiya had a meet clear down in Castle Rock on Saturday night and Kinley had a 6-hr dance workshop in Longmont. When it was all over, Kaiya told me she wishes she would have just enrolled in the dance workshop instead. Yeah . . . it was that bad.

We were excited about this meet because it was small and looked to be a quick and easy meet. Her coaches picked it for that very reason. It turned out to be a JOKE. The gym backed up to some railroad tracks that had loud trains rolling through in the middle of the meet, there was NO seating for families, it started an hour late, and the judges would have been better suited to judging pies at a county fair. So frustrating! BUT, Miss Kaiya hit 4 for 4 routines and felt so good about her performance that we are going to take it and run! She started on bars and did the same great routine she has done all year and scored a 7.10 (that scored a 9.0 two weeks ago). I thought her coach was going to go postal! After the rotation was over, she walked over to the judge with Kaiya in tow (which is not like her coach at all) and demanded an explanation, showing her the code of points that showed she was wrong. Turns out the judge just finished her training and had all these laminated cheat sheets in front of her and had NO clue what she was doing. I really thought her coach was going to just take our girls and walk out.

I was so proud of Kaiya, though, because she shook it off (realizing there is nothing you can do about a bad judge) and nailed her beam routine. She finally stuck one and she was all grins. This girl has worked so dang hard on that stupid beam and she was so happy. She finished out with great floor routines and good vaults and ended up 5th in the all-around, but just shy of qualifying again. Ugh!! I was so proud of her for keeping her chin up and recognizing that the judges were nuts. Subjective judging in sports is NOT fun sometimes!!

Miss Kinley had the time of her life at her workshop. A professional traveling dance group called Fusion traveled to Longmont and put on a 6 hr workshop. She and her dance buddy did it together today and had a blast. I have never seen a couple of kids learn complicated dances so fast. They had 4 one hour classes and had to learn a new dance in each one. The one posted below is the hip-hop class to "Can't Touch This." So cute! Keep in mind she learned this dance in one hour and then performed it for us at the end of the day.

5th place!


"U Can't Touch This!"

Monday, October 18, 2010

Adolescence

I have decided that I might need to take up yoga or something to get me through the adolescent years that lie ahead in this household. Having a boy as my oldest was supposed to make this transition easier, but I think that is a myth.

I feel like I don't even remember when Cooper was little and it is all a big blur. He is such a great kid, but he has had to deal with some mild bullying at school and is just dealing with other aspects of growing up. He tried the 'girlfriend' thing for about a week, but when she started texting him all the time, he checked out and dumped her.

Then, on Friday he had his semi-annual pacemaker check-up and Dr. Schaffer decided to have him wear a 24 hr holter monitor to check the function of his SA node and to take a further look at his coronaries. Apparently, at his last check-up, Dr. Schaffer saw something that made him want to investigate further. His pacemaker is working great now after some issues with it over the last year and he was even able to turn down the amount of energy required to make it capture (meaning the battery still has 7 years left!), but Dr. Schaffer gave me the impression that there are just enough small anomalies that he needs to keep a close eye on him over the next few years.

I forget sometimes that the surgery Cooper had was only successfully done for the first time about 15 years before he was born. The coronary arteries that feed the heart itself were among those structures that were in the wrong place and had to be switched using stitches that are thinner than a human hair. It stands to reason that messing with them would cause some trauma and some issues later in life--I've just chosen to not think about it.

Anyway, the holter monitor is a very simple test--you wear a small box that you clip to your pants and you have 5 EKG leads on your chest. It gives excellent data not only about the electrical status of your heart, but can show things like ischemia in certain areas, hypertrophy, etc. I'm amazed what you can see from an EKG. Cooper was not pleased that he had to wear it (major understatement here). I think the culmination of what's been going on at school and then not wanting to feel different was the last straw. How easily I forget that middle school can just be ROUGH!!!

As we were leaving the hospital, we ran into one of Cooper's friends that just spent a month at Children's for necrotizing fascitis and nearly lost his arm. He, too, was there for an appt. God works in mysterious ways sometimes because there we were in the lobby at Children's and Cooper is not happy with his holter and his friend had just been poked and had some painful stitches removed and suddenly they didn't care anymore. They instantly forgot their own problems and we ended up having lunch with them. Of course, I had to get a picture of them without shirts on. :)




So, after a drama-filled week, I then got an e-mail from one of Cooper's teachers telling me he had been selected for a behavior award and his picture would be on the wall for the week (probably means more teasing, but oh well!). Here were her comments, "As teachers, we see many responsible students every day. They come to class prepared to learn. They have pencil and paper ready, and they come to class with a positive attitude and that's infectious. When they are missing something for class, they are the student who finds a solution, not an excuse. Although many of our students are responsible, we chose one student who best exemplified this train. It is with pleasure that the 7th grade team honors Cooper Lindhardt." Made my day and helped me remember that even though parenting can be so hard and such a roller coaster sometimes, it is worth every ounce of effort and the most important job I will ever have!

Saturday, October 2, 2010

Photos, dances, meets and a new job! Whew!

I am way behind on current events, so this is a jumbled post!

We had family photos taken last weekend by my friend, Kris, and I couldn't be happier! I feel kind of responsible for pushing her into doing this as more than just a hobby because we were her first family photo shoot last June. :) We are truly not a photogenic group and struggle with natural smiles, etc., so these are even that much more amazing.


















Last weekend before we had a photos taken, Kinley had her first performance with her new dance company. It was so dang cute! It was a disco number that was a full 3 minutes long and she really knew her stuff. They performed on a stage in old town Louisville (which reminds me of a mini Aspen or Vail) while a big farmer's market was going on. So fun! And, the best part was that their costumes were just bright shirts from home and black pants. They looked great! Kris took these awesome photos, too.

Boogie on down!





Here is a link to the video of the performance:


On Thursday, I found out that I got a new job!! It was something I had interviewed for in June and took this long to come to fruition. I will be transferring within Children's Hospital to the North Campus, which is 15 minutes from my house. No more one hour commute and nearly falling asleep at the wheel each morning on my drive home. I have some mixed emotions--I will really miss my cardiac kiddos, but I'm looking forward to learning so much more. The North Campus is an emergency room/urgent care facility as well as a short-stay inpatient unit. It's where I've taken my own kids for staples in Cooper's head, a baseball to the eye and when Kaiya had her asthma attack. So excited!!

Then, rounding out the week was Kaiya's 3rd gym meet of the season. She continues to improve and was one step closer to qualifying for state (missed it by only 0.5). She looked so confident, but still had her troubles on beam. She got her first 9.0 on any event last night (bars) and ended up winning the event plus her team also won and she still placed 5th in the all-around! We got to go out to dinner after the meet with her fans, Brandon and Erika, so that was a real bonus, too. Doug stayed home with the other two kids so that Cooper could be in the homecoming float as a 7th grade representative for his school. He had a blast. It's probably a good thing I wasn't at the homecoming game with them last night because sources tell me Cooper was walking around at the game with his friends, one of whom he claims is his girlfriend. Yikes!!

5th place All-Around!

1st place Level 5 team trophy!



When we are not running around doing activities, I feel like my other part-time job is that of a tutor! Kaiya and Kinley both got selected to be in a gifted and talented program at school, which just means more difficult homework. Between algebra, etc. for Cooper and the girls, I feel like we are stretched so thin, yet I couldn't be more proud of my kids.