Chile still hasn't started their "fall back" to regular daylight time cause they're trying to save energy, so it's been feeling sooo dark and early in the mornings. I thought the time would switch at the beginning of April, then finally asked someone in the elevator and they said May 8th, and I was bummed cause we're gonna miss it and we were so looking forward to having that extra hour in the mornings. But, we'll be back in the US, and guess I'd rather we go back than stay just for the time switch. So we've pressed forward with the early morning routine.
6:45 - wake up the kiddos.
They get dressed in their uniforms and I go start to make the lunches.
I always put in four things.
1) Peanut Butter and Jelly/Honey sandwiches everyday (grateful Lider is owned by Walmart and we can find some "Great Value" brand foods!
2) yogurt almost every day, sometimes boiled eggs.
3) Fruit almost everyday, sometimes a juice box or cucumbers
4) Some random snack - chewy granola bars, chips, cookies. They got lucky this day with the Chilean version of Ding Dongs! Happy kids. (Now say "Thank you, Mother!")
Also, after buying all the school supplies I decided against buying them lunch bags that were 10 bucks each cause I didn't want to spend the money, so we've been getting by on reusing ziplock bags. They get a few looks and comments at school, but they don't mind. We can get away with just being the weird foreigners.
Ok, get your books for the day... backpacks on and lunches in? Good. It's 7:30, let's go!
Hop in the elevator!
Down to our parking level at negative 2.
Push the button to open the locked gate to the parking garage.
Walk out the gate into the dimly lit garage...
Joe
ReplyDeleteThank you mom.
A girl in my class asked me if everyone in the U.S. had plastic bag lunch sacks.
Tiffanie,
ReplyDeleteI know you and the family are leaving South America very soon but....If you send me a mailing address for you in Utah I will mail to you (and the kids) some fun, reusable lunch bags that I make at home. My kids used them when we were living in Washington state and they attended the big school rather than our home school. They're super easy to make, very unique, fun to have and 'toss in the washer at the end of the week' easy to clean!
Jillian
jilliancutter3@gmail.com
Love the comment about just being the weird foreigners. I guess you have some leeway since you're not from Chile. Soon you'll have to conform and deal with being just like everyone else. But it's worth it to be home, right?
ReplyDelete