Sunday, October 28, 2007

Halloween!

Ah, the holiday everyone can enjoy! Okay, not everyone. Some folks feel it is too anti-religious or whatever, so maybe they should go to bed early on the 31st.

The church where we attend is having what is called, "Trunk or Treat" in which you sign up for two parking spaces at the church building, bring your vehicle and decorate. You are allowed to have the requisite candy, of course, but you may also have games or whatever for the kids to do while they are there. The point of it is to give the kids/families safe alternatives to traditional trick or treating. We are new there, so I'd planned to sit this one out, but my daughter, Ky, signed up for a couple of spaces. She has a cute little Scion xB and will decorate it as a Lego block. There may be some other girls helping her--I certainly hope so--but I'll be there, too, to be sure she has everything she needs. I'd like to see this because the people I've met there are very creative and they are the most positive people I've ever met.

I'll see if I can figure out how to post some pictures afterwards!

Sunday, October 7, 2007

How Does One Go About Choosing a College?

My DDD is in the final stages of choosing which college she'll attend next year. I tried as hard as I could to convince her to stay nearby and go to the local community college or even a nearby 4-year college, but I didn't get far. Truthfully, I don't want her to go to either of those places.

College is a great mid-way point in a person's life. You are still kept busy with activities like classes, yet you have free time and new living arrangements and strange environments to adjust to and you get to be surrounded by a culture centered around others like you. Your money worries are minor compared to those you'll have for the rest of your life and everyone expects that you'll do some stupid things and for the most part, you'll escape with little consequences, as long as you don't go to crazy. You decide when to be awake and when to sleep, you decide when you'll eat and do your laundry and homework. It's a great situation. You have some freedoms and some restrictions.

When I chose my college there was no choice. Okay there were other colleges, but there was really no discussion about where I'd end up. It turned out disastrous in Oh-So-Many ways, but I survived.

Usually, when I face a problem, I turn to my older sister, whose children are now grown and married and doing quite well in all the ways a parent hopes. The only problem is, neither she nor her children really chose their schools. I mean, not like today. Where the kids are told to apply to at least one "probable" school, one "certain" school, and one "reach" school. It seems almost like a lottery.

I wonder who perpetuates this multi-application to colleges atmosphere. Probably the accountants at the colleges, since applying to a school is an expensive act: in time, emotions and money.

Sometimes, you must apply to both the university and the college you wish to attend. I did that a couple of years ago. I was a little worried about getting into the university, but not the college. Instead, I got my rejection letter from the college (of my proposed major) before I got the acceptance letter from the university. So, I was admitted to return to college, but had no major. End of adventure.

Well, keep DDD in your prayers as she does all the necessary paperwork for admission. She has two schools who want paperwork NOW, but she'll know early if she is into those schools. That would be nice since then she could spend her time doing well on her FIVE AP classes this year instead of having to continue to answer essay questions and fill out online forms, only to have the entire form disappear suddenly when you accidently hit the wrong button.

Any suggestions for schools???? (Engineering is the proposed major!)

Saturday, October 6, 2007

Ain't I smart?

Your Vocabulary Score: A-

Congratulations on your multifarious vocabulary!
You must be quite an erudite person.



Actually, I was surprised at the minus. My vocabulary used to be pretty good. I think working in an elementary school hurts ones vocabulary. If you use interesting words, no one understands you. I need to subscribe to a "vocabulary word of the day."