We went down to a local park to play, and encountered a free circus workshop!
Category: Spawn
There’s so much more to it than I ever thought possible.
Tuesday adventures
This morning Squish and I traipsed off to New Lynn to the New Zealand Association for Gifted and Talented education, for him to have a another cognitive assessment, with a view to seeing if the one day school was appropriate for him. The appointment was for 10am, and took a few hours, so we had lunch (and a milkshake) with daddy in the city afterwards.
He’s been offered a place, and I’ve been strongly encouraged to take up the offer. Apparently, he scored above the 99th percentile for reasoning, which means that the way he thinks is highly original (we knew that!), and that he is unlikely to ever fit well in standard school (we were starting to understand that too).
On the up side, from next term he’ll have one day a week of inquiry based learning, in a small class environment (about 12 kids per class), where he will be encouraged to engage however he sees fit. And he’ll be with his academic peers – which is huge – rather than having to wait until he’s at university, I am really hoping he’ll find a bunch of kids that really get him. And don’t punch him for being “eccentric”.
And if you’re wondering why I used the word “eccentric”, read this lovely piece by Amy Gray.

A mobile apartment building
Today’s culinary adventure – potted stilton with chocolate digestives and rhubarb jam. Β
We’ve been watching “How to Cook like Heston”, and this was his choice of what he wanted to cook. Not macaroni & cheese, or even fondue. No – he wanted this…
140gm Stilton
70gm Marscapone
Mix well, pot, and chill
Chocolate digestives
Port wine reduction (or jam if you can’t be arsed, and you live in a country where port is considered to be for winos only)
And a video review
Hobbiton
https://www.flickr.com/photos/rhubarbandcustard/14118021162/in/set-72157644128782870/player/
Mark, Squishy and I spent Star Wars Day (4th May) at Hobbiton. Β And today, I finally arranged to borrow Mark’s lappy so that I can upload my pics and caption them.
I was going to try to make a gallery here, but instead I think I’ll just stick in a link to flickr, and same myself some pain and a few hours of dealing with wordpress.
So, without further ado, for your viewing pleasure, here areΒ my pictures from Hobbiton.
(Or – I’ve just realised you can click left and right from the main picture and see the whole set from the main picture above)
Some perspective on forcing gender roles in children
Lord Howe Island

We just got back from an amazing holiday, thanks to my lovely mother in law. I don’t want to gloat too much, but in one day, I swam with (multiple) turtles, saw lion fish, a moray eel, bull rays, a small shark (only a little bit terrifying) and puffer fish, amongst others.
Here are some pics to make you jealous!
My moon and stars redux

Inigo got himself dressed this morning.
In these pants.
I’ll have to get Mark to post a picture.
Snort
I’m planning a Star Wars party for Squish’s sixth birthday. Today I am researching some of the details and am looking at the insignia for the robes. I found a font that has all the insignia.
The installation instructions for the font follow…
More proud mama talk
We’ve had some pretty rotten behaviour in the last two weeks, which I am putting down to a combination of stressed out mama and normal kid growing up stuff. On Tuesday, he threw an epic, epic tantrum. So huge that he has hysterical and almost vomiting when we got to the school gate. I prescribed a mental health day, and we spent the day together hanging out, and trying to de-stress.
And today, he was re-tested on his reading progress (which happens once a term). Today, he reached level 27, cluster 9 – which apparently puts him where he would be expected to be around the end of year three. Yup, he’s a reader π
Hopefully, this will mean that he will be able to pursue his own interests, which will make life a bit more interesting for him in the years to come. Hopefully, it will help him to enjoy school a bit more.
Three Years
Last week, a friend asked me about how we chose names for our three boys. I was so pleased to be asked, and on the third anniversary of Archie and Aubrey’s birth, I thought it was a good time to share what I told her, and some thought about how I am doing these days.
Three years is a long time, and the very blink of an eye. Inigo keeps getting bigger, the others remain a treasured memory.
Inigo was named after the character in “The Princess Bride“.
Have you seen the movie? Or read the book?
It won’t make a lot of sense unless you have – he is a strange character, very brave, and loyal, and determined. But also very human.
Inigo’s middle name is George, after his maternal great grandfather
Aubrey means “Ruler of Elves”. We chose it because Aubrey wasn’t with us for long, I think of him as a fleeting sprite. A bright but brief energy (which makes me sound like a crazy hippy, but there you have it). His middle name is Michael, after my uncle, my mothers younger brother who died when he was 10 days old. He was born with a hole in his heart, and my grandmother was never allowed to even see him. or hold him, or feed him. His absence left a big hole in our family, I can’t imagine what it was like for my grandmother.
Archimedes was named after the great mathematician, and father of the science of fluid dynamics. He lived for such a long time with little or no amniotic fluid, and we so hoped that he would overcome that adversity. It was not to be, but the name reflects great scientific striving.
Hare is an old family name in Mark’s family, we don’t know the story behind it, but early in our relationship we were given a hare to care for by a vet. Grasshopper meant a lot to both of us, and Hare also has that feeling of the brief but powerful.
Three years makes me feel like an elder statesman – the survivor.
I know that is a crazy thing to say, but surviving every single day at the beginning was so fucking hard.
Now I feel like I have woven them into my life, that their lives and their loss are inextricably a part of me, and I know for certain that I am a better person because of them.
There is great power in knowing that you can survive the worst thing in the world. That is their gift to me, and I am coming to a point now that I can honour that gift by living well, feeling joy, and that success and happiness is not disloyalty, but the best sort of memorial.
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Thanks to everyone for your messages of support on the day, and especially to Steph for taking me out in the morning, to dad for entertaining me in the afternoon, and mum for loaning him out π
Thanks also to Bonnie and Zenia for the memorial stone fruit trees, and to Adam and Kerry for taking great care of them. Both trees have fruit on them!
I appreciate every single chance to talk about my boys, and even more, those of you that let me do it π
And the flowers? Awful blue chrysanthemums I found at the train station. Yes, I do have an odd sense of humour.







