Archive | June, 2010

Mecca, Now Open in Rockefeller Center

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It began about a week ago.

“What’s the date, mommy?” Caleb would ask.

And then he would carefully count from whatever that date was, to the 29th.

Oh well, that makes sense, you say, because the 29th is the first official day of summer vacation for NYC public school students.

Nope. That’s not it at all. The 29th was the official opening of the Lego Store in Rockefeller Center.

The Lego Store, aka mecca, aka the shop of the holy grail, aka the no-you-don’t-have-enough-pieces-already emporium.

A trip to the store did not occur just out of the kindness of my heart, oh no. I’m the mean mommy, remember?  It happened because back in December, we had decided to… incentivize, let’s say, Caleb’s reading progress. At that point, he seemed reluctant to tackle anything other than the easiest books and—much more worrisome, he was gave up as soon as he encountered a difficult word. We wanted to help him find a reason to work through the harder words, and so we promised him that if he reached the end-of-year goal set by his teacher, he would get a Lego set of some magnitude.

Ever since the “incentive program” was put in place, Caleb pored over his Lego catalogs like a Talmudic scholar, weighing the merits of Space Police versus Pirates versus Atlantis.  (And worked at his reading, thirty minutes a night, making slow but steady progress towards where his teacher wanted him to be.  The lesson here, of course, is that greed can be a powerful pedagogical tool.)

What Caleb loves most of all are the mini-figures, the little people that populate lego-world. Caleb uses these figures to create elaborate narratives that he doesn’t realize put his entire subconscious on display–as well as his startling talent for making blowing-up sounds.

You can imagine, then, the joy with which the announcement of the Lego Store was received and why the 29th became such a shining day on Caleb’s personal calendar.

I’m on Caleb detail this entire week, actually, because Liam is in soccer camp, and Husband is finishing a book (so his ever-loving wife has offered to be the SAHM this week, and yes, dooce readers, that does translate to shit-ass-ho-motherfucker).

I told myself that I would travel on Caleb time and not do as I usually do with my second child, which is to hustle his ass hither and yon as we go from school to soccer to karate to errands…So he set our timetable today, which was to be at the Lego Store WHEN IT OPENED. Caleb customized a shirt for the big day:

IMG_1508I had visions of Apple Store-esque lines, but it was, by New York standards, a totally manageable crowd, all of whom roared approvingly when the doors to the shop opened on the dot of 8AM.

We were in the store for more than an hour, perusing the shelves, examining all the lego vignettes that were set up inside viewing windows in the store, asking ourselves how they built the dragon tail that undulated across the ceiling.IMG_1514

There were grownups there, cheerfully unaccompanied by kids, including two guys loading up what looked like plastic deli containers with lego pieces from the huge parts wall. They said they were architecture students but I think they were just there because they loved legos:

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Caleb made his selections and we made our way home, where for the first time ever, Caleb put together an incredibly complex set, with only a little help from Mommy, who served primarily as piece finder.

Can I tell you that building those goddamn things is both utterly engrossing and as boring as watching paint dry? Somewhere in the second hour of building (we took a lunch break, don’t worry), both of us just wanted to be finished, but because I refused to build it without him, Caleb stuck to it.

The finished product, all three hundred and ninety one goddamn pieces of it:

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I think it means he’s ready for first grade.

Read full story · Comments { 3 } on June 29, 2010 in Kids, legos

RubBerBandz

Silly Bandz are stupid, Caleb announced the other day.  Plus they’re for girls (voice dripping with disdain). 

Hard to quarrel with the kid. Silly Bandz are atrociously stupid and yet so simple that I don’t know one parent who hasn’t thrown her hands up and said “why didn’t I market these damn things!”

Well, Caleb and his kindergarten posse might just be on to the Next Big Thing. For boys only, that is:

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Yep, that’s right. RubBerBandz.

It’s all about the “z.”

Kid’s a genius.

Read full story · Comments { 3 } on June 25, 2010 in Children, Kids

In Praise of Libraries

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I started John Burdett’s Godfather of Kathmandu a few weeks ago. I liked the other books Burdett wrote—Bangkok 8, Bangkok Tattoo—and thought Godfather would be a nice thriller with which to start the summer (nothing, of course, will measure up to The Girl Who Kicked the Hornets’ Nest. RIP, Steig).

Wrong. I read about sixty pages or so and decided it wasn’t spending my precious pre-sleep minutes wading through Inspector Jitpleecheep’s thoughts about crime, punishment, and reincarnation. Life is too short to finish books I don’t like, especially now, when my reading time is usually the twenty minutes or so before my eyelids come crashing down at day’s end. (For the record, I also feel free to skip articles in The New Yorker, which I know some people consider a kind of heresy.)

So you know what I did with the Burdett book? I returned to the library.

Can you imagine how freeing that is? Now I don’t have to find room for a book I don’t like on my overcrowded shelves; I don’t have to foist it off on an unsuspecting friend.  I’m sure Burdett would have preferred that I spend 18$ for his book on Amazon (or $14 for the Kindle edition), but I’d prefer to keep that eighteen bucks and spend it on something important, like bacon-peanut brittle at The Redhead. I guess you could say that I’m a big believer in read-and-return (sort of like catch-and-release, in fly-fishing). Besides, at the risk of boasting, without a library, I couldn’t afford my reading habit: in a good month, I crank through almost a book a week, which is way more than I can afford to buy (digitally or actually).

As my jammed bookshelves attest, we still buy books—sometimes it can’t be avoided—but mostly, I put books on reserve at the library and then anywhere from a week to a couple of months later, the book appears in my local branch. Yes, it means that my literary repartee at cocktail parties is always a bit belated, but that’s okay – I don’t get invited to many cocktail parties. (Of course, if my repartee were more up-to-date, maybe I would have a more active social life. Hmm…)

Husband points out that I could be reading everything digitally and thus avoiding the jammed-bookshelf problem, but storage is not entirely the issue. As I’ve said before, I like books, the physical thing that is a cover and pages in between. When I was a little girl, maybe seven or eight, I was allowed to start riding my bike alone to our village library. I’d pedal over there on my green Schwinn, and spend hours in the stacks. It seemed impossibly generous to me that I could check out anything I wanted! (Or, at least, as many books as would fit in my basket.)

The largesse of a library still amazes me. Do you have an overdue book? Well, that’s okay, they’ll let you check out books anyway and you can pay next time (or the next or the next or the next).  Or perhaps you’d like to check out a laptop and use it in-house for an hour, or use the desktop terminals and printers? Do you need language instruction, tax help, or job search advice? Looking for a census form or a neighborhood map? Need a toddler reading group or a kids craft activity, a poetry reading, or a movie night? Or perhaps you’re just one of those errant urban wanderers who needs a place to sit quietly and mutter while you read the paper (and occasionally use the bathroom).

It’s all there. And it’s all free. (Even the bathrooms.)

But if Bloomberg and the city (not to mention the budget geniuses in Albany) have their way, the library budgets will be cut by $37 million bucks.  Some branches will close altogether; others will have their hours of operation reduced from six days a week to four; and let’s not even think about the list of services that will go out the window.

Why is it that when government officials want to save money, things having to do with kids (schools, libraries, parks) are always first on the chopping block?  What does that say about us as a society, that we would let this happen?

And once again, I have to turn to my default answer for New York’s money woes: let’s call that guy who got the 4 billion dollar bonus last year. With money like that, he’s gotta be BFF with Mayor Mike, so why not just agree to rename the library system the David Tepper Libraries in exchange for a big ol’ check? About forty million ought to cover it – chump change.

In case Mr. Tepper doesn’t step up to the plate, you can click here for more information about library budgets and where to send your letters of outrage.

After all, Caleb just got his very own library card, and while he seems to have learned to read, we’re going to need our local branch to stay open because he’s clearly going to need some spelling help. 

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Read full story · Comments { 0 } on June 24, 2010 in Books, NYC, Politics