Saturday, November 27, 2010
The Name Change
I wanted to let you all know that I have wanted to make this name change for quite a while. I had tried to get feed back from the Net nobody gave me any ideas. Anyways, the new name is great. My queen helped me come up with it. Enjoy!
Sunday, November 21, 2010
Learning to be myself
I am an avid listener to the Podcast "This I Believe." I have mentioned in previous posts that I wish to submit an essay to the organization but cannot seem to come up with the right essay. This weeks essay (which you can listen to by clicking on the title above) was about the life lessons that one man learned while hunting with his father. I am not an avid hunter so I won't try and bore you with a post about what I might be missing by not hunting. Instead, I immediately thought of the activities in my own life that I share with my children.
I share the activity of biking my oldest princess and my youngest prince. I taught both of them to ride their bikes without training wheels within twenty-four hours. It really was simple. I was patient and kind with both of them as we worked through their fears and set backs. I am not normally a patient man especially with my kids. I am scary often overbearing. So, it surprised me that I was able to get both my princess and prince from not even being able to balance on training wheels to a two hour journey a few weeks ago. I am a different man on a bike. I don't feel frustrations the same way as when I am on the ground. I understand that I have limits, and I accept that not everyone will be able to ride at the same level. I forgive myself. I feel a bound stronger than steel with my kids when I am leading them down the road.
The challenge now is to find that same bounding activity with my oldest prince and youngest princess. Each one of them presents separate challenges. My oldest son is Autistic which makes him very unique. He and I run on similar batteries but they aren't 100% compatible. My youngest daughter is a fiery red head with spirit. If you think this is sounds pat it's not. She is exactly as described. The challenge with her is merely age. As young as she is now, I just need to take her the nearest 7-11 to get snacks and that is special to her. I wonder what she will want to do when she's thirteen? But isn't that the challenge? As dad's we have to meet our kids half way in their lives to get to know them and conversely they get to know us. They see use through our activities and we get to see them. We just have to be open to trying out what brings our children joy. Good Luck.
I share the activity of biking my oldest princess and my youngest prince. I taught both of them to ride their bikes without training wheels within twenty-four hours. It really was simple. I was patient and kind with both of them as we worked through their fears and set backs. I am not normally a patient man especially with my kids. I am scary often overbearing. So, it surprised me that I was able to get both my princess and prince from not even being able to balance on training wheels to a two hour journey a few weeks ago. I am a different man on a bike. I don't feel frustrations the same way as when I am on the ground. I understand that I have limits, and I accept that not everyone will be able to ride at the same level. I forgive myself. I feel a bound stronger than steel with my kids when I am leading them down the road.
The challenge now is to find that same bounding activity with my oldest prince and youngest princess. Each one of them presents separate challenges. My oldest son is Autistic which makes him very unique. He and I run on similar batteries but they aren't 100% compatible. My youngest daughter is a fiery red head with spirit. If you think this is sounds pat it's not. She is exactly as described. The challenge with her is merely age. As young as she is now, I just need to take her the nearest 7-11 to get snacks and that is special to her. I wonder what she will want to do when she's thirteen? But isn't that the challenge? As dad's we have to meet our kids half way in their lives to get to know them and conversely they get to know us. They see use through our activities and we get to see them. We just have to be open to trying out what brings our children joy. Good Luck.
Sunday, November 07, 2010
Lazy Saturday Ride

This Saturday my oldest princess, my youngest prince, and their friend came with me on a bike ride down the Lee Gulch trail here in Littleton. We started out by making our lunches then packing up the hydration packs with water and food. I had not even gotten dressed in my bike shorts when we ran into our first problem. My princess' back tire was flat. I had filled it up when doing my safety check of the kid’s bikes. I didn't really have to more than five minutes and the tire was flat again. Luckily, we had a secondary bike nearly the same size that would work. I got dressed prepared my bike, and we were ready to go. Not yet, once my princess' friend D showed up his chain was falling off. No problem, the adjustable wrench worked its magic and off we rode. We rode quickly through the streets getting on the trail. Five minutes on the trail, D lost his chain again. I made a quick repair with my chain tool removing a link from the chain. I figured if the chain kept falling off it was either the wrong chain size or it had stretched out to much.

Once everyone was fed we were back on the trail. Everyone rode really well. Our destination was a dirt jump park setup by the parks and rec. D was great at keeping the other two going even after they started getting tired. Both the prince and princess alone don't really have the motivation to make it as far as we were going but with D there he gave them a reason to keep going. I was so proud of them. We rode a lot faster than I thought we would. We arrived at the jump park in little under forty minutes. When we got there I took one look at the size of the jumps and thought this whole trip might have been a bad idea. Personally, I look at the jumps and they don't really look all that big. I am not saying that they are tiny by any means. To give you some perspective to the size the largest jump is about as high as my shoulder (my height being 5'10").

After freeing my foot from under the bike (luckily my feet popped out of the clips), I dusted off and tried again. This time I didn't fall but I was starting to fell it in my back. We rode home on the street to save time. D had to get home on time his mother was taking him somewhere. I was really happy on the trip home, and I hope that this is the start of a great family activity to share with friends. To end I will leave you with the only injury I sustained from my fall. Have a great week.
Labels:
dirt jump,
kids,
littleton,
local life,
mountian biking
Location:
Littleton, CO, USA
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)