Archive for February, 2010

Picnics and Naps


2010
02.21

After several weeks of either snow or rain, this weekend we were blessed with days in the lower 60’s!  My husband suggested a picnic at the park with Thomas, since the girls were out with their cousin having lunch before guitar lessons.  We packed turkey and cheese sandwiches on hoagies, fresh pineapple, carrots, peppers, chips, and Girl Scout cookies, then set off.  Just about every other house on the way to the park had people outside either weeding or washing their cars.  Sure, I’ve seen the loyal few who are out for a run or walk even in 30 degree temperatures, for for the most part I feel like everyone has been staying inside until the weather got nice enough to spend some time outdoors.

Thomas enjoyed the picnic and played on the slides and swings until three older boys showed up.  They had some kind of toy guns and were spying on each other in the trees and bushes surrounding the park.  Thomas wanted to join in so badly, he went to help the poor boy who’d been left to fend for himself against the other two, bigger, boys.  He was telling him quite loudly where the other two were hiding!  It was really funny, but soon after that we were ready to head home—Woody and I on foot, Thomas on his bike with training wheels.  We had a diet ice-tea with a lid that he put in his little bag on the front of his bike, and every block or so he’d stop and get off his bike to take a drink.

Back at home the adults settled in for nice naps, while Thomas watched his favorite cartoon channel on TV.  Now Woody is off to study at the library for his Foreign Service oral assessment and Thomas is across the street playing with Breahna and her two little sisters.  The girls are still with their cousin so this gives me the perfect excuse and time to write some blog posts!

Am I A Paranoid Parent?


2010
02.20
My girls

Birkdale Village is a trendy little shopping district in Huntersville, near to the town where we live.  There’s a movie theater there and lots of stores like Barnes and Noble, the Gap, Victoria’s Secret, Bath and Body Works, etc.  There are also many restaurants and coffee shops, and apartments above all the shops.  When it was first built a few years ago, my kids were still pretty young.  I remember thinking that when my children became teenagers I would not allow them to roam around Birkdale on a weekend evening…it has become the thing for young teens to do, to the angst of many policemen and parents.

So where are my children tonight, you ask?  Hmmm, interesting question.  We dropped them off to see a movie at 7:00 and they are saying to come pick them up at 10:00.  I’m thinking that will give them some roaming time, and I’m not liking that.  I’ve witnessed the policemen who patrol the area, asking kids where their parents are, and I just don’t want my kids causing problems for anyone.

So does that make me paranoid?  My girls are super good at manipulating situations and getting their way regardless of my stand.  They make me feel like a paranoid parent.  What do you think?

Order Up a Rainbow, Please


2010
02.18

This morning on the way to taking Thomas to his preschool, he asked if I’d ever seen a real rainbow.  I told him that yes, indeed I had, and it was beautiful.  He said, “Does it have to rain first?”

I told him that sometimes rainbows do appear after it rains.

He asked me, “Could you please call up the weather man at the news station and tell him to say we’re going to have rain today?  I really want to see a rainbow!”

Cute how 5 year olds think things work, and the power they attribute to the weather man.

My Musical and Theatrical Family


2010
02.16
Tammy Stanwood and David Woods in Nutcracker, 1991

It’s not surprising, really, that I wanted to dance.  My mom said when I was in the womb that I would either be a football player or a dancer, and she was right!  I still don’t understand football, so it’s a good thing I liked to dance. :)

My mom and dad are both pianists.  My sister is a very accomplished pianist herself, and she and my mom both teach at a Music and Arts store in North Carolina.  Lori and my dad are also singers, and my dad was the drama director at my high school and directed many community theater shows as well.  My sister also played the flute, my older brother the drums (still plays, too!), and my little brother played the saxophone.  I played the piano (a bit) and the flute for a few years.  By the time I finished my freshman year of band I was so into my dancing that I didn’t have time to consider another year of marching band, so I let that one go.

Growing up we always had music in our home.  People playing piano, drums, flute, sax, and singing filled the house from downstairs in the living room, downstairs in the music room, upstairs in the bedroom, and even out on the front porch steps and upstairs balcony.  I love piano music and could listen to it all day, especially when someone is sitting at a piano playing it live.  My parents played a duet on one piano using two octaves and four hands, my aunt Virginia would come and she and my mom would open the doors between the music room and living room and play two piano duets.  It was awesome!

My next door neighbor, Jennifer, took ballet and tap.  I took some gymnastics first, but was really taken by what Jennifer had to show me when we were about 9 or 10 years old.  I had a pair on black patent leather shoes that I would pretend were my tap shoes and she’d give me lessons on the front porch.  I loved it, and couldn’t wait until my parents said I could start taking lessons, too.  When I was ten years old and classes started in the fall, they let me begin, and I was in love.

I started out at Debbie Wilkerson’s Dance Studio in Greenfield, Indiana.  Her studio is still in business to this day and she will always hold a very dear place in my heart.  I began with tap and ballet, and my favorite at first was tap.  Eventually we added jazz, and then Debbie recommended I start taking classes at the Jordan Academy of Dance in Indianapolis.  So on Saturdays, my dad would take me to ballet where I had so many new steps to learn and had to adjust to taking class once a week with girls who took everyday together.  It was awkward and I really disliked it, but somehow I knew that by going there my chances of improving and making my dreams come true were brighter.

My dad found out about a special program at Butler University while talking with some of the other parents in the waiting area one day.  They had a program for high school students who attended college early, usually going half a day to high school and finishing out the day with dance classes at Butler.  My dad knew this had to happen, and he made sure it did happen.  He spoke to the principal at my high school and starting the second semester of my sophomore year, I began going to school early for independent study sessions, attended my other classes, ate lunch at noon, and then drove to Butler University for ballet class beginning at 2:00 until 3:20 Monday through Friday.  There were a few other high school students in my position, but none were from my school, so I drove alone 35 minutes on the interstate each day.  Twice a week we had pointe class from 3:30-4:30, and during Nutcracker season I stayed on for rehearsals for Snow or Waltz of the Flowers (or soldiers, my first year!) until even later.

Then, I’d go back home and get ready for play practice, because I wanted to be involved in drama club where my dad spent much of his time and where my best friends from school were every night.  Sometimes I would also teach classes for Debbie’s studio, but I think those were on days when I didn’t have rehearsals at Butler or the high school, or were on Saturdays.  My dad helped me put up a makeshift barre in our attic and clear out some space so I had my own little studio up there.  It was hot in the summer, but it felt so wonderful to be up there doing barre, practicing my pirouettes or tap, and choreographing for the school talent show.  I had a record player with lots of records and it felt so authentic.

By the time I finished high school a semester early, in January of 1986, I had 21 college credits and began my full time studies in ballet at Indiana University in Bloomington the same month.  I went back to high school for graduation with my friends and classmates in June of 1986, even though I’d already been living on campus and had completed my first semester of college.  It really was like a dream, and I continued dancing at the University of Arizona from 1989-1992 where I got my MFA degree in dance in Tucson.  I got to do some awesome roles in Arizona, and was prepared then to begin dancing professionally.

I’m just thankful that my family is so artistic and theatrical; otherwise I’m not sure I would have been given the opportunities I was given to succeed in my area of passion.

Any Minute…


2010
02.12

The other day my son, Thomas, was making a mess with his toys—but what else is new?  Anyway, I told him to please pick them up because his father would be home any minute.

“What’s any minute mean?”

“Well, it means any time now.”

Less than five minutes later, I asked Thomas again to please pick up his toys.

“Any minute and I will,” was his quick response.

Cold Hands, Anyone?


2010
02.11

We’ve had some really cold temperatures for our moderate climate in the Piedmont of North Carolina lately.  So much so that we even cleared half of our garage in order to get one of our cars parked inside.  That took some doing, too!  My husband took someone’s advice and closed off all the air vents on the ceilings upstairs because it was very warm up there and super cold downstairs.  It worked, but now it’s pretty chilly upstairs and I have been sleeping under a sheet, blanket, bedspread, and another blanket folded in half on top of me.  Plus I’ve been wearing sweat pants, socks, a long sleeved pullover sweater, AND a zip up sweater to bed!

Needless to say, I’m ready for some warmer temperatures.  I have found that in the spring and summer months I am generally a happier, more pain-free person. I’m downstairs now, fairly warm with the fireplace going and drinking some Persian tea, but my fingers are still cold! Makes typing a bit harder than usual and I keep making typos.

Are there any good remedies for cold hands, besides wearing gloves in the house?  Any ointments or lotions that produce the effects of heat that anyone knows of?  I suppose I could get some of those fingerless gloves that bike riders wear.

I hope wherever you are living that you don’t have tons of snow right now!  We were fortunate to miss the big storm that hit Washington, DC, Virginia, and parts of Maryland.  All we got was cold rain!  I’m not complaining!

What Makes SpongeBob so Great Anyway?


2010
02.09

spongebob Honestly, I think it’s one of the dumbest shows I’ve ever seen.  But my kids (all of them, regardless of age) just love the show!  They sit, mesmerized (the 5 year old Thomas), or laughing their heads off (Deanna and Debby, the teenagers).  Me, I can’t wait to turn it off or leave the room.  When the girls were young I wouldn’t let them watch it based on my own principles—or the belief that such stupidity should not be propagated into my childrens’ brains.  Now, after watching it a few times I think it’s basically harmless, but I still don’t get the appeal.  Anyone have any ideas to shed some light on this mystery?

Dance Essentials


2010
02.08

I was teaching at a dance school that was located in a former church, and I also made little stuffed teddy bears with tutus and earrings that I sold for $10.  I guess the selling bug got to me, and over the summer I had the idea to use a room in the basement of the dance school to set up a trade of shoes.  Many kids outgrow their tap and ballet shoes before they are really worn out, so we painted the words Dance Exchange on a long board and attached it to the railing behind the building where steps led down to the basement.  We were blown away by how many people came from other dance schools, and how many people wanted to get brand new items from us.

So, being the enterprising people that we are, my husband and I found a few companies that would sell to us at wholesale prices!  All we really needed was a phone number, and we already had an address to use for shipments.  The studio owner said it would be okay, so we set up a real shop.  One day we were in downtown Lexington, KY where we passed this small space for rent right beside a guy who sold stained glass.  We started getting excited and called to learn more.  It was 600 square feet and we could have it for $350 a month!  This was in 1993 right before Christmas.  My mother-in-law and her sister came to help us set up, and we found an old (but nice looking) case to use for our cash register and several rounders and other types of things to hold our clothing on and attach to the walls to store our tights and some shoes.  There wasn’t a back room, so we had to have all our shoes and stock right out in the store, stacked clear to the ceiling.  My parents decided to invest some money into the store, so we were able to begin carrying brands like Capezio, Bloch, Danskin, etc.  For credibility, we asked all the professional dancers who shopped at our store to give us an 8X10 picture of themselves that they would sign.  We framed each one and hung them near the mirror at the shoe trying on area.

Shortly after starting our store, I became pregnant with our first child.  We moved into an apartment right next door to the store, which came in handy because we only had one car and Arthur was still in college.  The following year, after Deanna was born, my parents decided to move from Indiana to Kentucky to help us out with the store and the baby.  My father retired from teaching high school English, drama, and speech, and I was so grateful to have them nearby.  In addition to the store, I was teaching at two or three private ballet schools.  Our store took off!  The other store in town wasn’t very accommodating to the needs of dancers, and we had a professional company in town, as well as many schools of dance.  We got in canvas ballet slippers, pointe shoes from Freed, Grishko, Repetto, Sansha, Gaynor Minden (to name a few…we carried over 20 brands of pointe shoes!).  I got more classical leotards than the other store carried (they catered more to aerobics and cheerleader-types).

In 1996, we decided to move our store to a better location with parking and more space inside.  We also moved to an apartment close to that store.  It had a storage room for shoes (yay!) and for a desk to do our behind the scenes work.  We got more equipment from the outlet store in Mt. Sterling so we could display even more clothing and shoes and tights.  We gained quite a few more customers and it was going great guns.  My second child, Deborah, was born in 1997 and my mom and I worked at the store with her in her little carrier, while Deanna attended a daycare/preschool part time during the days.  My dad also watched Deanna quite a bit and read to her a lot, which I believe is why she loves to read to this very day.

A year or two later, the tenants in the small shop beside ours left, and we decided to rent that space and tear down some walls to make our store even bigger.  We moved our shoe section into that space, as well as all our children’s wear.  We also added a little table and chairs and a basket full of toys so that when shoppers came in with their young children they were occupied while they shopped.  We made laminated discount cards for all the teachers, and were generous about giving the low paid professional dancers 25% off their pointe shoes.  Many of those dancers also worked at our store part-time, and we didn’t pay a lot per hour but we gave them 40% off anything they wanted in the store.  It was wonderful, because it gave our store a lot of credibility, and teachers trusted our employees to fit their students into new pointe shoes properly.  We also knew the dress codes at schools that used them so we’d have those items in stock, and knew what types of pointe shoes teachers liked to start beginners out in.

It was such a wonderful time, working with my parents was the highlight, as well as being able to have my children there in the store.  In 2003 we sold the store and it continued to run for a few years.  The last time we drove through Kentucky we passed by the store and it was empty.  Now the dancers from Lexington go to Louisville to get their new pointe shoes.  It was a lot of work, and I doubt we’d have done it if we’d known what was involved!  But I’m so happy that we did this as a family.

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My Life


2010
02.06

I’m starting this blog so friends and family can keep track of what’s going on with my family.  Arthur and I have been married 17 years and we have three children:  Deanna is 15, Debby is 12, and Thomas is 5.  We also have a cat named Sweet-Tart.  We live in Cornelius, NC right now, where we enjoy the climate and good jobs.  I work at a bank and Arthur is a Project Manager/contractor.  I’m presently on a leave of absence from work (medical) until March 15 (possibly April 15) and have been off since January 11.  I’m doing a bit better and am enjoying the extra time with my kids.  I’ve actually been so busy driving them to appointments and school; I don’t know how we managed when I was working full-time.  Well, my parents and sister (and her husband and one of her daughters) live in Huntersville, as does my mother-in-law, so we have a lot of support.

I got my Bachelor’s and Master of Fine Arts degrees in dance and danced a short time with the Lexington Ballet, in Kentucky.  Two years after we married we had Deanna, and Achilles tendinitis made it impossible for me to continue dancing en pointe.  I taught at several private and one public school in Lexington and also started a dancewear retail store called Dance Essentials, Inc.  My parents moved from Indiana where I grew up to help us with the baby and the store.  We had the store for 10 years, but 7 years into it Arthur and I moved to NC to be near his family.  It turned out to be a good decision because three years later his dad had a brain tumor removed, and then he only lived an additional 16 months.  By then we also had Debby, and I became pregnant with Thomas.  Art, my father-in-law, named him Thomas Rhoades Stanwood, and was still alive and well enough to travel to the hospital to meet him after his birth.

My husband is now in the final stages of acceptance into the US Foreign Service.  Many people who leave the US and become families of Foreign Service Officers keep blogs, so I thought now might be a good time to start one for our family.  Next month he has the oral assessment in Washington, DC.  I haven’t seen any blogs where the spouse was ambivalent about moving overseas, but this spouse (due to my health issues) is very nervous about the prospect of leaving my family and home here in the states.  But I hope that my anxiety about moving will dissipate so I can be excited along with the rest of the family, and partake in this wonderful dream of my husband’s if he makes it past the oral assessment.

SweetTart

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