Welcome to the Scharrer family's real life story! Most of our story is written for, and about, our four kids and the spice they add to our lives. It's our story of happiness, craziness, and sometimes ridiculousness. We've journaled through childbirth, the terrible two's, private school (and our public school experience), an autism diagnosis, medical school, residency, and long-term mission work in Africa.

Now we're following a new adventure, which involves a 45 foot motorcoach, homeschool, and as many ski slopes as we can go down in one year.

For posts from while we were living in Zimbabwe and updates about our future plans in Zimbabwe, please see our mission blog...

www.ourzimbabwejourney.blogspot.com.





24 April 2015

2nd Grade Wax Museum - Rosa Parks

This year the second grade put on a wax museum.  Each student was to pick a person to resemble in the wax museum.  The students researched these people and wrote reports on these people.  Maida chose Rosa Parks.  I bought her a stack of books off of Amazon, which she read through in no time!  She wrote a marvelous report and really took true pride in being able to represent such a noble character.  

A couple days before the museum, we dyed Maida's hair brown!

The night before we took her to the Rosa Parks Pavillion where Maida proudly wanted her picture taken with Rosa Parks!



The day before the wax museum, the school decided that Maida could no longer wear her tan makeup as we had planned.  Maida was extremely upset about this, as were we.  We met with the school leaders, but they wouldn't budge on the issue.   The morning of, Maida woke up and declared that she would like to wear her makeup, anyway, because that's what Rosa Parks would do.  We supported her in this decision, explaining to her that she would have to take any consequence that came of her actions.  She understood.

Our Rosa Parks in full make up!


Maida's Rosa Parks display!  She wanted to be looking out the bus window, so the bus window was a last-minute midnight creation, but turned out pretty good.






The second graders did an amazing job representing so many great people!  The costumes were great!  Maida wore her make up proudly and to our surprise, there was no consequence for disobeying the school's ruling.

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We write to taste life twice, once in the moment and in retrospection.”
~Anais Nin