Best Day of the Year

Meg was so anxious to kick off summer vacation and excited to have the boys home all day every day that she booked us a hotel room in Newport the day after the boys finished school in June. I told her this new-found excitement would last about a week (she probably blew me off, but I can't remember what happened three hours ago, let alone three months), and then she would be longing for September and school. I think the later proved to be true, but maybe not until a few weeks.

Well, September finally arrived, and the two of us walked Aaron and Ed to their first day of classes. Aaron could probably pass for a fifth grader, but he is stuck in third grade. And Ed began life as a full-time student in the first grade (but don't expect this full-time status to last forever).

We arrived 10 minutes early to a chaotic crowd that felt like the Rose Garden on Blazers bobblehead night: people were swarming everywhere. When the bell finally rang--the official notification that kids can enter the building--I tried to stick with Aaron to accompany him to his classroom, but he left me like a running back trying to find a hole through the o-line. He has a teacher new to the school (and the district, city, and state), and Aaron reports that each of his first four days have been awesome.

You never know how Ed will react in a situation, but Meg reported he happily went to his class (he has the same teacher Aaron had in first grade), and she was able to leave promptly without issue. Ed can't articulate his experience as well as Aaron, but he seems to be doing well and enjoying the experience--such a drastic change to the beginning of last year's school year.

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