Saturday, July 12, 2025

High School Writing Group 2025

 

Something new we did this year was a High School Writing Group with Malachi, Daisy, and me. We read a bunch of articles and essays, and took turns giving writing assignments and then reading and talking about our work. It was really wonderful. I loved seeing what the kids wrote, and getting a chance to practice my own writing too!

I need to ask Daisy for some of her essays and poems (she had some great ones), but I happen to have a couple of Malachi's essays saved in my files, so I will post them here for posterity:

**********

Mike Machete
by Malachi Nielson

His name was Mike Machete, although that’s not what his friends call him. Not to his face anyway. 

He first approached me in that particular way that makes one wish to… escape notice. I didn’t want to flee in terror or scream for help or anything like that, just to briefly become irrelevant to the mountain of muscles and sweat walking toward me. He was likely in his sixties, with a few graying hairs on his mostly shaved head, though his age made his build more disconcerting not less. In each hand he held a 70 pound dumbbell which I can only guess he’d been doing lateral shoulder raises with. 

I’m used to the way adults look down on teenagers in the gym, as if it’s insulting to have such small humans with such weak muscles even in the presence of adult body builders, but usually that only means we’re ignored when we’re waiting for a machine, or we’re scoffed at when we enter. Mike Machete, however, wanted to confront me directly.

“Gym’s busy today,” he noted, eyeing me and Luke, (and the exercise machine we had the impudence to occupy.)

I affirmed the point weakly, with a nervous giggle.

“People keep stealing my station every time I walk away,” he told us, and something about his inflection warned me against questioning this information’s relevance to me and Luke.

I gave him another giggle of agreement, signaling he’d persuaded me on this too. 

“I figured I’d just do the workout with dumbbells instead,” he said, perhaps to justify the weights in his hands. As if he needed any justification.

Then, I followed his gaze to his “station,” the bench press at the corner of the room. It was still loaded with the meager 40 pounds Luke and I had been lifting before our migration to our current position, where we’d been intercepted by Mike Machete. I felt a spear of nervousness, and I would have given anything in that moment to dispose of the evidence that we’d been the ones who were last using the bench.

To my relief, he left us then, to return to his station. I call it his, because if you don’t use the entire station you’re clearly only borrowing it. Mike Machete, however, didn’t let a single available weight go to waste. 

We ran into him again on our way out, and he seemed impressed with us. “I’m so tired of all the high schoolers that come here and don’t even work out,” he said. It is the greatest measure of my gym success that he didn’t include me and Luke in that category.  

He introduced himself then. I accepted his handshake, and his hand enclosed mine completely, in the way a blood pressure machine encloses the bicep, and whether his hand was scarred, from the countless knife fights he’d survived with his bare hands, or merely calloused from daily workouts, I’ll never know. 

“My friends just call me Mike,” he told us, in that particular way that implied that we would too, (at least to his face) and he hoped he wouldn’t ever be forced to instruct us otherwise. 

Since then, we haven’t been ignored when we’re waiting for machines, and nobody ever scoffs when we enter Mike’s Gym.


***********

The Window
by Malachi Nielson

My first mistake was opening the window. I wasn’t paying much attention to the drive through at this point, but I’d seen the next car driving forward so I opened the window assuming it would arrive momentarily. It did not. The car in front of it didn’t leave quite enough space for the next car to line their window up with mine. But you must understand, once the drive through window is open, it seems beyond rude to close it and ignore the customer. 
“Hi, how are you?” I asked, hanging my head out the window, looking in the direction of a bald man’s open window at least six feet away from me.
“Doing well,” came his distant reply. 
We looked at each other across the distance between us. It wouldn’t have been a vast distance were either of us in a position to move closer, but as it was it might as well have been the Atlantic Ocean. 
Surely the car in front of him will soon move, I thought. I began to read back his order, slowly, to give time for the drive through to move and bring the man into more natural proximity. 
“You got… uh… one cheeseburger?” 
“That’s right.”
“And there weren’t any fries or drinks on that order.” 
“None.”
“Oh good, because I don’t have any here. I mean I could add them of course, but—” 
“That’s all right, thank you.”
We eyed each other. This was the awkward part of the conversation. He was holding his credit card, and the car blocking his way didn’t seem any closer to moving. I ran some mental calculations. I wouldn’t be able to reach it. On the other hand, there’s only so much awkward silence a person can bear. 
“I think I can reach,” I said.
The man’s eyes widened —whether in admiration or fear I could not tell. Wordlessly he stretched his hand out as far as he could. I leaned out of the window, but alas there was still a space between us. And so I was forced to wriggle forward hanging with one hand on the window while I stuck my entire torso out, until I felt his credit card in my hand. 
Triumph washed over me, as I wriggled back through the window to charge him for his order. The glory of success made the return journey easier, and when the man once again held his card, we were both beaming. We’d done the impossible. It was as if we had bridged the great divide between man and God. And then I heard a sound. 
I looked back to the card reader, to see it had printed a receipt. 
“Do you want your receipt?” I asked. 
“Yes, please.” He said. And the journey began again.


The Second Shakespeare Unit (ruffs, Globe Theater, sonnets)

We had an enormous Shakespeare Unit to fill out the school year after we got home from Quebec at Christmastime. It was super fun to revisit our favorite writings and plays. I don't know why I'm bothering to post these unit organization screenshots, because you can't even read the tiny writing, and the links aren't clickable, but I don't know how to put them in a more useful format here. At least this will help me remember a broad overview of things we talked about and did!

Here is a pretty old Pinterest Board from last time we did this (hopefully some of the links still work?):


And some assorted pictures from activity days during this unit. Making ruffs (we did this years ago too):
Gus was inspired by his ruff and the "clothing in the Elizabethan Era" videos that we watched, and ended up making a whole elaborate costume for himself.
He looks just as grand as Queen Elizabeth!
Hmm, not sure why this is in this batch of pictures? cute, though :)

Here are the children working on making paper models of the Globe Theater:   https://www.papertoys.com/globe.htm

Goldie's, maybe?
Ziggy's (look at all the people inside!)
Junie's

Talking about Macbeth and making "witch's brew" with dry ice:
Eek, a scary witch!

Some wonderful sonnet-writing practice:
Ziggy's less formal interpretation :)
Teddy's perfectly-scanning sonnet

Inside Ziggy's "life size" globe theater (complete with watching animal audience):

Stage Combat

We watched a bunch of Stage Combat videos and got really interested in this almost-dance-like art form. (I remember it being a big hit [HA HA] last time too!) 
I got my mom to save us some newspapers so we could make swords while we were learning about fight choreography. It's pretty cool to learn even some basics of how people make fighting look more real on stage and on film. I split the kids up into groups of two and had them choreograph their own fight scenes.
These two just liked whacking their swords together and laughing about it
Goldie and Teddy worked Clementine and Gus and Zig into their little scene and it was almost like a mini-play. Super cute.
Daisy and Junie's fight scene was amazing! They did Romeo and Tybalt in Romeo and Juliet. They fought with swords, fists, and feet, and were practicing all morning to get it exactly right! It was like a complicated dance, and they did it SO well…I thought several times, "Oh no, they really hit each other!"
(This would be a good place to remember little Daisy getting super into fight scenes as a 5-year-old and saying "I die, I die!" So this flair for the dramatic is not new. 😄)
There was even one part where Daisy slashed at Junie's arm, and she clapped her hand over the wound, then lifted it away and looked at it covered with blood. She had colored with red marker on her hand and arm in that spot, to reveal it at that precise moment, and it was actually SO realistic and somewhat terrifying!
Here is one of their takes of the finished fight
And here is my favorite fight scene ever, by Gus and Clementine.

Quebecois Back-to-School Dinner

What a school year this has been! So different and so wonderful. I always write these posts in the summer and am amazed, looking back, at how long ago the beginning of the school year feels! It feels especially far-off this year because last August, we were in Quebec! The first few days were a shock of adjustment and discomfort, but by the time we had our back-to-school dinner we already loved where we lived. We learned so many things that can't be quantified in these homeschool posts! I did write a lot about our life in Quebec on my other blog, but it's hard to overstate the educational value—for our entire family—of living there!

Quebec's motto is "je me souviens," meaning "I remember." And I knew immediately this must be our family theme for the year as well. Not just because I wanted everyone to remember this unusual experience, but because I wanted them to remember who they became through that opportunity, and to whom they owed their gratitude—our Heavenly Father and our Savior Jesus Christ.
The thought of remembering has become a meaningful theme for me personally as I have pondered and digested our experience in Quebec, even after we've returned home.
I got forget-me-not necklaces for all of the girls to wear and remember Quebec.
And I got the boys forget-me-not ties!
I decided to make a bunch of traditional Quebecois foods for our dinner, and it was super fun to learn about the different traditional foods and where they came from. We had had some of these things at the cabane à sucre that we visited and I thought I might be able to even improve on some of them.😄 But it was a lot of cooking, and in our rental house kitchen I did not have all the things I had back at home, so there was definitely some flexibility and substitution needed too! 

Since I knew I would have to be cooking all afternoon, I put the kids 100% in charge of decorations. We didn't have craft supplies, nor a printer, nor any of the things we might usually be able to get through Amazon or borrow from a neighbor—but that actually made it SO fun! We had paper and markers we'd bought for the little boys, and I did manage to find some forget-me-not napkins, and then the kids improvised all the rest!
Busy with all the preparations…
Goldie and Clementine picked flowers and berries from our yard and put them all over the dining room. They looked beautiful.
Daisy and Ziggy (and maybe Teddy and Junie too? And Goldie?) made little forget-me-nots to put all over the walls, and a lovely "Je me souviens" sign.
Ziggy drew a Quebec flag!
I put some quotes about remembering up on the walls, and we talked about the word "savor," related to the French "savoir," to know. You come to truly know something when you remember and savor it. I found little journal notebooks to give the kids also, to write about their experiences in Quebec so they could "savor" them and have all those things as "souvenirs" in their memory later on.
The kids set a beautiful table, using the drink shaker (whatever that is called) as a vase 😄
Everyone got dressed up, and Daisy even curled Clementine's hair!
(Oh, this makes me miss our balcony!)
Junie spent all day doing a zillion tiny braids in her hair. I don't know if it was really in honor of our back-to-school dinner as such…but it looked cute!
The food
Maple sugar pie
Somehow I didn't get a picture of us all together. But all the kids were there, from Malachi on down.
It was a back-to-school dinner we will always remember!
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