Enrollment

I am writing this week's post from my bed, looking out my window at our unobstructed view while the sun rises over the valley. We still have many months left in this home, but I'm already mourning the loss of these incredible views when we move. We'll likely have bits and chunks of views from our next home, but nothing like this incredible panoramic experience. I'll just have to keep waking up early to take in the sunrises while I can. 

It has been a research-heavy week. We have realized that spring sports, summer camps, fall preschools, and fall public charter schools all opened their registrations in early January and are filling up quickly. There is a good chance that we will keep Jack in the public school that is a short walk from our home, but he has complained many times over the past two months about hating his school, the way the classes are set up, how loud it is. I promised him I would at least look into other school options to see what's available. And as I've done so, the world of public charter schools has opened up. 

I always thought of charter schools as expensive private schools. But we have learned that there are multiple highly-rated *free* public charter schools near our home. One is a Montessori entrepreneurship school just a 3-minute drive from our house. One is a STEM school down the road. One school has an incredible space voyager program and many other programs Jack would love. The final one would be a 15-minute drive but is the top-rated public charter school in the valley. They all run on a lottery system for enrollment because they get so many applicants each year. So we sent in applications to all of them just to keep our options open, and if Jack gets accepted to any of them then we will start doing tours and more research to see if the public charter school route could be a good fit, and worth driving Jack to school instead of sending him scampering down the road. He is just starting to make friends at his current school so that will play a factor. But we feel grateful that there are so many genuinely great options in the area where we live. We've never had such an abundance of school options we feel really good about in previous places we've lived.

In other Jack news, Jack had his first playdate with a neighborhood friend! He has been making friends with several boys at school, and one kid in his class, who happens to live right down the street from us, has been inviting Jack over for playdates. This is uncharted territory for me, as I've always been friends with the parents first before I've set up playdates for Jack. I wasn't really sure how to navigate setting up a playdate with a parent I had never met. It seems that sending a note to school with your kid with your name and number on it, for him to give to the desired friend, for him to give to his mom, is the traditional approach these days. Luckily me and the other mom both sent notes with our boys to exchange on the same day. I did a little facebook research to get a feel for the boy's mom and family, felt comfortable with the situation, and sent Jack down the street to play with his new friend Theo. About an hour later they both came to our house. The playdate was a success. If the playdates continue I'll swing by and meet the mom. For now, I'm glad there's someone nice in the neighborhood Jack can play with.

Other highlights from the week: 

-I attended the BYU Philharmonic concerto night with my dad! It was soul-filling to spend time with my dad and go to a symphony concert for the first time in nearly a decade. It was was also delightful to watch my cousin, the newly hired conductor of the BYU philharmonic, knock it out of the park with his conducting. I do in fact feel like family of a celebrity now haha. My favorite was the clarinet concerto, which isn't what I would have expected, but it was a blast. 

-I had a girl's night with my high school bestie Julie! When she mentioned her husband's excitement for us to have a late-night, I was thrown RIGHT back into high school nostalgia in the best, weirdest 32-year-old lady way. We watched her favorite show, snacked, chatted, and meal planned/scrolled Pinterest in the background. Low-key. 10/10, would recommend. I'm sad she's going to move back to Idaho in April and happy we have these few months of overlap to hang out and get our kids together for frequent playdates. Honestly Jack plays SO well with her boys, so we'll all be sad to see them go.

-We hosted my parents and Grandma Roper for Sunday dinner yesterday! I'm so happy I was able to host my grandma for dinner in my own home for the first time ever. I have looked forward to this for a very long time. We had a classic Sunday dinner--chuck roast with mashed potatoes and gravy, carrots, rolls, jello, and pineapple. Jack and Jared made brownies for dessert, which we munched on while we played Chameleon, which is a wonderful, quick party game. I am so happy we could have Grandma over and look forward to having her in our home more often in the future. 

And now for this week's pictures:

^^The sunrise I'm enjoying right now.

^^I was trying to get Alice into her carseat but she was flat-out refusing. Because we were only going to be driving two minutes away, I offered to let her sit in Jack's booster carseat instead. "What seat do you want to sit in--Alice's, or Jack's?" She started doing eenie-meenie-miney-mo to decide: "Me me me me me me mo, me me me me me me mo, me me me me me me mo, me me me me me me mo." Then she looked at me and said resolutely, "Bof" (both). Curious to see how this would play out I said, "Ok." Sure enough, she climbed up, straddling both of the seats, and told me she was ready to go😂 After another minute or two I wrestled her into her own seat and off we went, but she is constantly making me laugh.
^^On saturday we went to the children's museum with cousins. Jack and Cole built their house out of bricks (hardy har har). We had lots of fun and then went to Tim's house afterward for a spontaneous cousin dinner. Moving near family really has made our life so much more full.
^^ Not the best picture, but Alice and I explored the final Thanksgiving Point attraction we hadn't visited yet this week: Curiosity Farms. The first time we went, Alice was NOT a fan of the animals, the smells, the temperature. She kept shouting, "Icky! Poopy!" whenever she'd catch a whiff of an animal. We only needed to kill half an hour, so we went home shortly after. But over the next few days she kept making animal sounds and saying, "Alice. Daddy. Kaka (Jack-Jack). [insert horse sound here] Bye mama!" In Alice language this means, "I want to show Dad and Jack the farm, and mom, you'll stay at home." Saturday mornings, Jared usually takes the kids to a Thanksgiving Point museum while I stay home and clean or get other work done. So that's what they did on Saturday morning. Alice loved it this time. She loves the train, playground, and indoor exhibits. She goes back and forth about the animals.

^^ The kids went inside at Curiosity Farms and there was this enormous climbing structure. I think it was supposed to imitate a plant growing up to the sky. Jack climbed all the way to the top.

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