Sunday Bookends: My son is a graduate and temps are still cool

It’s time for our Sunday morning chat. On Sundays, I ramble about what’s been going on, what the rest of the family and I have been reading and watchingand what I’ve been writing. Some weeks I share what I am listening to.

The most exciting thing that happened last week is that our son graduated from a local career center (high school level). We are proud of him and are excited for him to receive his other high school diploma in a couple of weeks when we meet with our state-certified homeschool evaluator. She will sign off on his diploma through the Pennsylvania Department of Education and he will be a high school  graduate!

He’s taking a few weeks off to decide on his next step and his dad and I are fine with that.

He and Little Miss both have a few things to write for me this upcoming week and then we will be done with school for this year. Little Miss and I can start counting anything we do, such as field trips, books read, etc. after July 1 toward our school year next year so this year I am not waiting for a start date in August for our school year. We’re just starting whenever in July and taking days off whenever we want. I’m looking forward to it, but I am having a hard time adjusting to not planning for The Boy’s lessons next year.

It has been very cold in our neck of the woods for the entire month of May. I enjoy snuggling up under my blanket, so I don’t hate it when I am in the house, but it has not been super fun going out in it. Wind, rain, more wind, more rain. Bleh. But it looks like June will be when things warm up and I’ll probably be a medical mess in July and August with the heat like I usually am.

Today we visited a small bookstore about 20 minutes from us. I didn’t even know it existed before a couple of weeks ago. They held a book sale on their porch. I’ll chat about it more in a future post or next week.

Erin from Still Life, With Cracker Crumbs and I are still holding Drop-In Crafternoons once or twice a month.

We will be holding another one Saturday, June 24 at 1 p.m. I’m tentatively looking at one for June 14, hosted by me, but I haven’t finalized that yet with anyone. Keep an eye on this space for that announcement if it does happen.

The crafternoons are events where we gather on Zoom and craft at our respective homes and chat while we work on various projects. There is one woman who creates with beads, another who colors, I sometimes draw or color, and Erin has been embroidering lately. We are calling them drop-in crafternoons because you can drop in and out during the time we are on. No need to stay the whole time if you can’t. Come late if you want or leave early. We are usually on about two hours, three if we all get chatty and don’t have something else to run off to.

If you want to join in, email Erin at crackcrumblife@gmail.com and she will add you to the mailing list.

I finished Vera Wong’s Guide to Snooping on A Deadman by Jesse Q. Sutanto last week and enjoyed it but not as much as the first book. This one seemed a bit more rushed and contrived and pretty obvious when it came to finding out who the perpetrator was. It was also darker in subject matter than the first. Vera’s sense of humor and sweetness made up for all of that, though, and it was, overall, a good escape. Don’t avoid it because of anything I said, because you may have a totally different opinion of it.

I DNF’d one book when the author said the woman enjoyed the male main character’s “male spicy scent”.  I will have to go sniff my husband, but I’ve never noticed he smelled spicy and if he did I might tell him he spilled pepper on himself and suggest a shower.

Thea romance was also overtaking the mystery, which was also falling apart. Life is too short to read books we don’t enjoy I say.

I am still reading All Things Wise and Wonderful by James Herriot but not enjoying it as much as I did his other books. The stories are good but I keep wondering what’s actually true and what isn’t now that I know how actually semi-autobiographical the books are. I still very much am enjoying the stories, but I’ll be making my way slowly through the book.

I started Mansfield Park by Jane Austen which I  had actually started on Audible last year. It is interesting so far. I know Austen fans think everyone should start with the big ones like Pride and Prejudice or Sense and Sensibility, but I know those stories pretty well from watching the movies and don’t know the story of Mansfield Park.

I’m also reading The Wishing Well by Mildred Wirt, which is a book from the 1930s by the original writer of the Nancy Drew books.

Last week I watched Murder, She Wrote, Ludwig, Everybody Loves Raymond (good grief..the laugh tracks!), The Dick VanDyke Show, and Just A Few Acres Farms (on YouTube). I also watched The Intouchables again with my son and his friend and they ended up loving it. I didn’t think they would.

I made a bit more progress on book four of the Gladwynn Grant Mystery series. I don’t know why but this one is really a struggle for me. I am really in my head too much on this one. I am comparing my books to other books and overthinking pretty much everything — from the story idea to the structure to the actual writing.

Last week on the blog I didn’t share a ton.

This post was spot on: In Challenging Times I Turn to Cozy Reads: https://pagesunbound.wordpress.com/2025/05/20/in-challenging-times-i-turn-to-cozy-reads/

Now It’s Your Turn

What have you been doing, watching, reading, listening to, or writing? Let me know in the comments or leave a blog post link if you also write a weekly update like this.


This post is linked up with The Sunday Post at  Kimba at Caffeinated Reviewer, The Sunday Salon with Deb at Readerbuzz, and Book Date: It’s Monday! What are you reading hosted by Kathyrn at The Book Date.


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12 thoughts on “Sunday Bookends: My son is a graduate and temps are still cool

  1. Congratulations to your son and you! I have always thought gap years, months, weeks, or even days are a good thing. We expect kids whose prefrontal cortexes aren’t fully developed to make such huge life-defining decisions (says the woman who got married at age 18). I think the field trips in July will make for an easing into the new school year and help you both.

    It has been cooler here, too, and could stay that way until November! I’d be quite fine with that idea!

    https://marshainthemiddle.com/

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  2. Congratulations to your son! And, yay for school being almost over. We never waited until the end of August to start our school year either. Our state mandated that we homeschool in 9 months of the year, but I always made sure we got 180 days in (traditional school year). Off to see what books you are reading for the challenge. Have a great week!

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    • We are required to have those 180 days but my evaluator counts any kind of field trip or any trip that could be educational as a day so we count things we do in July and August too. I mean, if we go to the movies I don’t count that, but if we have a hike or do something I would consider educational I do.

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  3. Congratulations to your son and good for him for having a good think about what he wants to do next. I know I stayed on a conveyor belt through my education and sometimes wish I hadn’t! Love the green pictures and enjoyed the Crafternoon, it’s excellent to hear everyone’s different stories and see their crafts. I love Mansfield Park, by the way, it’s one of my favourite JAs.

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    • I read some more of Mansfield Park today. The language is challenging for me but not as challenging as I thought it would be. I’m enjoying it so far but everyone kept interrupting me and I would have to go back and re-read part of it. I’ll get through it eventually.

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  4. Congratulations to you son! I love your photos. Your books sound good too. And I agree life is too short to read books you’re not enjoying. Come see my week here. Happy reading!

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  5. Maybe you could Home-College your son! You could start a whole new trend.

    Congratulations to your son!

    I’m glad I got to join in for the Crafternoon. I ended up taking all my stitches apart, but I plan to meet with my friend and try to start it up again.

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    • You poor lady. Cat and I probably talked too much! 😂😂

      Yeah he probably won’t appreciate the Home-college but I’d love it. Dragging him through senior year was a nightmare. 😩😩

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