Saturday, October 16, 2010

yogurt!

Frida has a recent love of yogurt. It probably helps that it's sweetened. She adamantly refuses all help eating it. But she's very happy about the process.



She can manage the spoon ok, though it's often upside down. Fortunately full-fat yogurt sticks on pretty well.



Hamming it up for the camera. She likes to roar.



After a while she abandons the spoon and just uses her fingers. This works better than you'd think. She gets at least 50% of the yogurt into her mouth.



Sam cannot bear to watch this process.



Though if you note the mess around his plate, you'll see that he's not exactly fastidious. Honestly I think he's just grossed out by yogurt, not by the mess so much.

Wednesday, October 6, 2010

September

Whoa, that month went fast. Here's a newsy update, in case you've been squirming with curiousity about our family's activities.

Frida started daycare, which involved a lot of crying the first week, a bit of crying the second week, and then it was smooth sailing (yay!). She is attached to all three of her teachers, one of them especially; she is learning some new signs (importantly, for "eat" and "more", but given that a classmate three months older than her is signing a lot, and she watches him intently, she'll be picking up many more); she loves the toys there; she naps well on her little mat. I have a suspicion, due to a newly-appeared rash, that she's allergic to the iron-on name labels I spent an hour and a half ironing into most of her clothes last night-- dammit!-- but hopefully I'm wrong about that: we'll see if she has the same reaction tomorrow to new clothes, same label. She and Stephanie are still delighted to see each other when they get to hang out (like tonight, when J. and I went out to dinner to celebrate the anniversary of our engagement), but I think we made a good decision with this place. Here she is on her first day of daycare, wearing a onesie that Stephanie decorated (with Sam in a matching t-shirt that he colored in, after Stephanie outlined the same flag pattern for him):



Frida is funny and mischievous and opinionated. She loves to put things on her head and wear them like hats, including Sam's recently-shed underwear:



A couple of weekends ago I was at the farmer's market alone with both kids, picking up our farm share, and realized I'd forgotten a sling or carrier to put her in. The market is small and in a blocked-off parking lot, so there's no car traffic through it and it's not near the street. I set her down on the ground when I needed both hands to pay, and she took off running in that stiff-legged toddler gait (away from the street, thank goodness). Sam followed her calling back to me, "Help! Frida's running away!" so I jogged over to scoop her up, set her down momentarily to juggle my bags of food, and before I turned around she'd already gotten taken off again for the far reaches of the parking lot, chuckling delightedly.

She likes to rearrange things in the kitchen drawers to which she has access (all of the low ones; we've moved breakables out of the bottom drawers and locked up the cabinets with anything dangerous, so she has free range through the pots and pans, storage containers, and towels/napkins). We find her soccer ball tucked into the towel drawer and one of Sam's shoes in the stockpot. Sometimes she'll bring one of her lunch containers to me, emphatically signing "eat", which means she wants yet another snack. Frida eats tiny amounts at a time still, so she eats many times a day (she's not the only one like that in her daycare classroom-- they've settled on 4 meals a day, 2 snacks and 2 lunches). Between this and the fact that she likes to move move move, she's still tiny for her height at <18 lbs (her height is less remarkable at around the 25th %ile); her 2-month-old cousin Ezra is likely to outweigh her before long! Our pediatrician is fortunately not worried about it, mostly because she's so clearly healthy and happy and active, and because she eats a variety of foods... just never very much of any one of them at once. Now that she can communicate about this, she often signs "eat", is given some avocado or meatball or crackers, has 3 or 4 happy bites, and then is emphatically done. And repeats the process an hour or so later. If we don't give her food more often? she eats the same amount at each meal, and just eats less overall. So, for now, we give her food often.

Frida usually likes to feed herself. Sometimes this gets a bit messy, and once recently she turned into the Swamp Thing and had to go right into the bath after dinner (black bean soup with rice, with a large dollop of sour cream added to her portion-- she LOVED it):



Sam is really liking being in kindergarten for the second time (he was a "junior kindergartner" last year as a 4.5-year-old, so while some of his former classmates went up to first grade, he and the other 3 former-junior kids are in the same classroom this year, joined by a new crop of combined "junior" and regular kindergartners). All the stuff that used to challenge him is much easier: waiting his turn when he wants to tell a teacher something; staying quiet; keeping track of his stuff. He's developing closer friendships with two specific kids, including one with whom he plays on the school playground most (non-rainy) days, accompanied by Stephanie and by the other boy's very nice but non-English-speaking grandfather.

The class is doing a year-long study of the life cycle of the monarch butterfly. So far they've had 5 caterpillars build chrysalises and emerge as butterflies since the beginning of the school year. This is perfect for Sam, who loves butterflies. One day over the summer, he and Stephanie made this elaborate butterfly exhibit, which they'd taped to the window (I just moved it into a frame to preserve it). They started out cutting out and coloring butterflies on construction paper based on pictures in books that he has, then went to the branch library down the street when they needed more pictures. Apparently Sam marched up to the librarian and said, "We're looking for books about butterflies so we can use them for our exhibit."



Sam's also signed up for a math class ("Math Circle") outside of school; we'll see how that goes. He loves talking about math concepts and, more generally, analyzing things, and Cambridge schools are a bit notorious for being weak in math. I feel like math is something that's hard to make up once one hasn't learned it as a kid (like music and language skills), and we've had friends who've liked the Math Circle as a way to make math alive and exciting (while learning a lot). One of the activities they've done is something he now wants to do all the time with us: a "function machine" in which one person thinks of a function (e.g. "add 3") and the other person has to figure out what it is by putting in a series of test numbers (e.g., 1) and being told what comes out (4, for those of you playing along).

He still wants to mostly read nonfiction. We've spent most of the last month reading two books about space, one on the planets and the other on the search for life outside Earth. He falls asleep looking at one or both of these many nights:



At least these are interesting (vs. the more pre-school-oriented nonfiction books, with lists of unrelated facts about types of trains). His latest favorite thing from the library is Eyewitness Videos (topics we've borrowed so far: Volcanoes; Insects; Butterflies and Moths; Rainforest; Dinosaurs; Rivers and Ponds).

Sometimes I let him decide what we're going to have for dinner. One night when the late-summer bounty of fruits and veggies was at its peak, he picked fruit. I convinced him to add ham sandwiches. So our respective plates looked like this (can you guess whose is whose? and identify the six different fruits we enjoyed?):



He's very articulate about his emotions and his emotional needs, which is a great quality in general, I think, and leads to some very sweet exchanges, but also some funny ones. When he's upset, he does a choreographed Angry Dance that involves a lot of pouting and stomping. One night recently he tried to practice it, but was not quite mustering the emotional expression. "It's hard to practice something that's how you feel," he explained.

And yesterday on the way home in the car (sometimes he and Stephanie take the bus home; other times they hang out elsewhere and meet me on campus as I'm heading to pick up the Bean), he booped her on the nose, as he likes to do (and she sometimes enjoys, and other times is enraged by). "Every single time I boop your nose, a little bit of love comes out of my finger."

He likes to wake Frida up in the mornings, singing softly while stroking her head, "Bean-a, wake u-up! Bean-a, wake u-up!"

J. was gone for most of the second half of the month (he was on TV! among other things. That resulted in someone emailing to suggest that J. might be a perfect match for his daughter-- ha!). We survived, and J's not traveling much for the next couple of months, just hiding away trying to get lots of writing done. I have, as always, a ton of respect for single parents. Whew. I'm applying for a few tenure-track and FT adjunct jobs near here for next year, but I'm not sure how we will deal with the craziness if I have a more demanding FT job (and two of the options involve substantial commutes). But we'll deal with that question if and when it's ours to deal with.

Sunday, September 5, 2010

anecdotes

I was in such a hurry to get the MV pics up, I forgot all about the notes I'd scribbled from the trip.

On our way to the Fair, Sam and J. had a lengthy conversation about how afterward we would go to the Unfair. Where, you know, all manner of sucky things would happen. e.g.: "They have all your favorite things to eat, and you can't have any of them." "There are a lot of great rides, but they're all broken." Sam loves absurdity.

One day, Sam was dawdling as usual over his socks. He doesn't like putting on socks, because they get stuck halfway and he gets frustrated. He asked for help. (J. gave him strategies but kept trying to get him to do it himself.) "You do it, Dad."
"You're going to need to learn to put on socks, Sam."
"Why?"
"You're going to have feet, hopefully, for the rest of your life. We can't put on your socks for you when you're a grownup."
"When I'm a grownup, I'm not going to wear socks. I'm going to live in the rainforest, remember? There's warm steamy air there, I won't need socks."

[Sam has for some time been saying that he will live in the rainforest and collect animals when he is a grownup.]

Sam one day at breakfast, a propos nothing: "What's a theory?"

When we're getting ready to go out, Frida has started bringing us our shoes. She's pretty good at bringing the appropriate shoes to each of us.

Thursday, September 2, 2010

MV, part 2

Thursday we did our favorite hike. There were a LOT of caterpillars (all over, including on the hike), and Sam pointed out Every Single One.



We hung out for a bit by the brook, with Bean asleep in the ergo.





Back at the house. When the sun hit the skylight just right, it made this lovely patch on the rug:




(See FB for pics of me reading w/Bean in the same spot.)

In the early evening we went to the beach for a bit. There was a breeze, but the sand was warm. J. went for a bike ride while I hung out with the kids, listening to the surf.





Cool sunset:



Sam grew these enormous feet:



Friday we spent much of the day at another beach, with a warm shallow lake on one side and the ocean on the other side of some sand dunes. Frida briefly modeled this ridiculously cute cover-up (it was *very* cheap on clearance online... which is good because she has worn it for about 20 minutes ever, and here is the evidence).



Then it was too cold, especially after she and I went in the lake for a bit, so she suited up and played in the sand while Sam played endlessly in the water.



We went to Menemsha for more scrumptious take-out seafood (eaten behind the store on lobster traps and crates), and then the sunset. It was crowded, but beautiful, and it was one of the things on the list of MV must-dos that we hadn't ever done. Check.









We got home late the next evening, after loading up the car and chatting with the nice retired kindergarten teacher who owns the house, browsing through a flea market, and going mini golfing.



It was a nice, relaxing week, and while we didn't get to spend as much time outdoors as we would have liked, we had fun. We saw (and waved out our car window at) the presidential motorcade twice, and were reminded of how nice it is to be able to go places spontaneously and more-or-less alone. Sheesh. Also, we're glad we aren't there *this* weekend.

And then September started with a bang. J's going on 6 different trips (some combined into two) this month; Bean just started daycare; I'm applying for jobs. Yeeeeehaw.

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

vacation!

With no work and no internet to distract us for a whole week, we took a lot of photos on Martha's Vineyard. Here are some highlights. No pics of adults, per blog tradition, though we may post a few somewhere else; email me if you want to see.

We got there on Saturday evening, and promptly went to our favorite outdoor-seating-only seafood place for fried clams and fried-fish sandwiches. Yum. This year's rental was much nicer and cleaner than the place we stayed the last couple of times we went, which proved especially nice given that we spent much of the next three days indoors due to rain. Sunday morning, though, we went out in drizzle to catch the last day of the Agricultural Fair. There were rides:


There was barbecue and watermelon and all manner of other fair food. Frida does surprisingly well biting off just the right size of bites with her 3.5 teeth:


There was a climbing tower:




Plus a sheep shearing demonstration, a horse-and-cart race, and numerous other fair-ish delights.

Later that week we bought the best granola ever:


And explored a nice little library with a great kids' section and a couple of bookstores to shore up our indoor-amusement options. Frida suddenly discovered the joys of being read to, especially lift-the-flap books, and brought us the same two over and over and over (in addition to, less frequently, non flappy books), lifting flaps so enthusiastically that some tape repairs were necessary by the time we got home. She also had a great time with the kitchen cabinet:





Pasta with pork, corn, tomatoes, and zucchini is YUMMY!



I love Sam's stripy pajamas. I love Sam in stripy pajamas:



On Wednesday it cleared up enough that we went to the Arboretum. Here's Frida in a onesie I applique'd (to cover up the "made in Hawaii" iron-on design that Grandma made when Sam was born! it felt weird to put it on Frida with that on it, so I used some leftovers from the oneside-decorating party we had for Aunt Sara and Uncle Dan before Ezra was born):





Frida fell asleep on J., who was feeling sleepy himself, so after walking around for a while they hung out in the gift shop while Sam and I ran around for a bit getting rid of some built-up cabin fever. He didn't want to be photographed standing still:





That afternoon the skies finally cleared! We went for our first family-of-four bike ride. Here's Frida in her ridiculously huge helmet (it fits her on the inside, though after about an hour it's clear she's tired of holding her head up):



She *loved* riding on the front of Daddy's bike in the WeeRide and squealed with joy on the downhills. And with her in front, and Sam on the trailer-bike in back, J. was slowed down enough that I could just about keep up.

That night we went to Family Disco Night at Flatbread Pizza/Nectar's Club.






Y-M-C-A!



[Second half of the week in a separate post.]

coupla pics

A few pics, before the big vacation post(s; might have to be two, because there are a lot of nice pictures to share from MV):

Frida got a set of bongos from Omi and Opa for her birthday. They are a hit, no pun intended:


She also likes to sit on them:



(See her toy phone in the background-- on the far right of the top picture? that was one of her gifts from Grandma and Grandpa. She likes to put the wrist strap around her arm and walk around the house with it, often with a dishtowel or piece of laundry (or recently, my bathing suit bottoms, retrieved from the beach bag) draped artfully around her shoulders. For hours.)

Sam got a new soccer ball. Bean likes it.



She also likes to sit on it: