That’s how we roll…well that could be referring to the bike ride everyone not still coughing took today. But I was actually thinking of spending the last few days with the boys making new Dungeons & Dragons characters.
For the first quest they did, the dad who is the dungeon master and teaching them to play took the time to make a bunch of characters and just let them pick one. One of the joys of living somewhere with numerous homeschoolers is there is a group, gathering, co-op for that. Whatever that is.
For their second quest, they have the option of making their own characters. Now neither of us ever played D&D – just because I never knew anyone who did, not because of it’s geekiness; we played Magic the Gathering for a while instead :)- so trying to get through the guidebook is like reading a foreign language. I keep having to ask the boys, “Did that make sense?”

They have loved learning to play and are really enjoying the game. D&D doesn’t have the same geeky connotations today that it used to. Or perhaps being geeky itself doesn’t. Today’s children – and adults – are surrounded by computer technology – the more you know the better; Harry Potter and wizardry, magic and dragons; Bill Gates and Steve Jobs being household names. Nothing wrong with being smart or liking myth, magic and make-believe. Of course, this comes from probably the only cheerleader in my high school that read Tolkien and Douglas Adams.
One of my favorite quotes by our eldest was last year when I mentioned Shakespeare. C, who was 8, momentarily couldn’t remember who that was. D, who was 10, looked and him and said, “Remember on that one episode of Dr. Who…?” Pure awesome. I’m not sure which puts us more firmly in the homeschool box: the fact that I expected my 6, 8 and 10 year olds to know who Shakespeare was, or that the explanatory reference came from Dr. Who. Of course this same child performed in Romeo and Juliet just last month. He was Abraham of the “Do you bite your thumb at us, sir?” line. When his sister asked what that meant he held up his middle finger and told her he thought it was the same thing. Then he held up his first two and said that would be the same in the UK. After telling the idea was similar for all…I told him he watched way too much BBC.






