Tuesday, December 11, 2007

Come one come all, welcome to the show!

Welcome to the land of Public School! Hurry hurry come on down, today we are celebrating contagious germ week and every germ is B1G1! Fill up your home with snotty, head congested, irritable children! Share them with your friends! Share them with your family! Share them with your families' friends! Hurry hurry while supplies last!

Ugh! Somebody let me know when they make a shot for the common cold and I will buy stock in the company.


The meeting went well...they needed more personal information so they can adjust his behavior plan. The BS(behavioral specialist, LOL) offered to attend the eval with us at Easter Seals for the Psychologist. I was sitting there thinking that I was the only one in the room who really understood what Hunter's real abilities were.*shaking head* I'm not giving up, I'm being realistic. And sometimes, being realistic can really hurt.


Sweet girl needs a bigger room. Yes, she needs less stuff but she also needs a bigger room. She needs her sanctuary just as much as we do. We always say, "in the next house". Well that goal really needs to take foot. In our house hunting adventure so many years ago, we saw houses in the Homes magazine with a single master bedroom suite on the top floor and wouldn't even consider them because we couldn't figure out how we could be on a different floor with the kids(who were still in the planning stages). However now with the kids older, I'm thinking we can handle it now. A smallish house with a single bedroom upstairs is just what a growing girl needs. A cousin just bought a house a few months ago and its just simply adorable. The upstairs needs work to raise the slanted roof, but once that's done it would be a perfect retreat. Next time we buy we will be better informed at what works and what doesn't.

1 comment:

Whirlwind Woman said...

Well, thanks, I think, on the B1G1 on the germs...I think we already got a couple freebies. Some we even had to pay for...

Hugs about the school stuff. I don't know what else to say. Honestly, I hope that he will be able to do more things than anyone thinks, it is so hard to tell when they are little. Everyday at work I see adults with all sorts of disabilities, and most of them have found hobbies, some have jobs, and all seem happy.