Crawl sighting

Posted by jonesey on Tuesday, 28 April 2009, 17:15

Elena has been scooting around on her tummy and rolling over for months.  She has also been getting up on her hands and knees. She usually scoots around until she ends up under a piece of furniture or wedged into the corner next to the toilet. Just a couple of days ago, she started being able to scoot herself forward on her tummy in order to get to something, usually a toy.

This morning, while I was putting Sylvan’s shoes on (him), Elena was lying on the floor facing us.  She really wanted Sylvan’s shoe.  So she propped herself up on her hands and knees, as she had done hundreds of times before, and (cue dramatic music) crawled forward, left-knee-right-knee-left-knee-collapse, to reach the shoe.  Sylvan and I were impressed.  Elena didn’t get what all of the fuss was about.

I know, I know, all of your children were standing, walking, pole-vaulting, and doing the rumba when they were eight months old, but mine wasn’t.  Not until today.

Elena sitting, with Bob the Builder

Elena sitting, with Bob the Builder. Yes We Can.

Brick Walkway

Posted by julie on Thursday, 23 April 2009, 23:31

When my parents visited for spring break, they (willingly, I hope) took on a great number of tasks, including taking my children so I could breathe and washing my dishes. Ah, luxury.

dad_laying_brick

Dad also made a brick path in our backyard leading to a bicycle-parking pad. Previously, there was a muddy “path” leading up to our sad little lawn moss patch. Now there’s a walkway, built with bricks salvaged from a chimney that was torn out during the remodel. The bricks could be 90 years old, and some bear the charred signs of their former life, containing the heat borne of a wood-chip furnace. The bricks are imperfect and chipped, and I’m really happy that we could reuse them. They’ll undoubtedly return to the earth more quickly than new bricks made especially for pathways. That’s somehow comforting.

brick_walk

The path is perfect for us, and I was quite happy to watch Dad consider it, pour the “decomposed granite” bed, and lay the bricks. No more mud and puddles. The empty spaces between the bricks are places where I haven’t kept up with filling in with gravel where it’s settled.

Newly confident after helping Dad a bit, I even tried my hand at the ankle-biting hole at the bottom of the stairs. This landing pad is disconcertingly asymmetrical, but I was lazy. No one was ever going to step to the left.

landing_pad

I’m still trying to determine what will happen between these sections of path. Will I just place a few pavers? Make some simpler, narrower paver and brick walks? Stay tuned.

Little Drummer Kids

Posted by julie on Wednesday, 22 April 2009, 23:26

Elena has recently expressed interest in banging on this drum, which produces a satisfying, plastic vibration. Sylvan offered to demonstrate some drumming techniques.

elena_sylvan_drumming

Happy Birthday, Elena!: 8 Months

Posted by julie on Wednesday, 15 April 2009, 23:15

elena_foundtoes

Dear Elena,

Oh, sweet girl, to celebrate your eight months here with us, we gave you your first antibiotics. I didn’t want it to come to this, but you’d been fighting conjunctivitis (the highly contagious “pinkeye”) for four or five days already (I’m sorry, I don’t remember who had what when; it’s been an endless hamster wheel of boogers and vomit for four months), and we didn’t want to be irresponsible and blasé when it came to your eyes. So Daddy took you to the doctor yesterday, and she gave you antibiotic eye goop to help you shake the green eye goop. Happy Birthday!

In the past week, you’ve started sitting much more comfortably. I still put a pillow on the floor behind you lest you crack yourself, but I’ve sat you down to run things to the car and come back to find you playing with a toy, smiling at me.

elena_sylvan_bench

Last Monday, I saw you crawl backward. For months, you’ve scooted backward on your belly, and you’re quite competent at a combination of rotating and rolling to power yourself around. But you lifted yourself onto your knees and moved backward the other day. Today, I saw you inch yourself forward, albeit on your belly. You put your toes on the ground, as if you were going to lift into downward dog (a move of which you’re capable), then pushed forward off them. You needed that bulldozer that was just out of reach.

Annie, Annie, are you okay?

Annie, Annie, are you okay?

Just over two weeks ago, you went to “school” for the first time. We’ve called Moss Street “school” ever since Sylvan started when he was sixteen months old, so school it is. (note: you’ll find Sylvan in two of those Moss Street photos if you look closely) You’re in the Chickadee room, where Sylvan started out. The room is smaller and cozier than the other under 2-year-old room, and I think very highly of the lead teacher, Lori. The drawback is that I have to pick you up by 2:30, which means that, with an hour commute in each direction, my work days are short, and I only have two of them a week. I can also no longer take the bus, since it only runs a couple times a day. But it’s worth it to have you in that room, I think, where you get lots of gentle care and attention.

You fell asleep on Grampa. He's under your spell.

You fell asleep on Grampa. He's under your spell.

Thanks especially to your Dad feeding you off his plate as if you were a chubby cocker spaniel under the table, you’re eating many different types of food – in chunks that are too big, in my opinion. (Daddy says that’s how you learn; I say that’s how you choke.) You eat typical baby fare, like puréed spinach and yams, applesauce, and yogurt. You’ve moved on to Cheerios and cheese and tofu cubes (a surprising hit from the first) as well, and you’ve had plenty of pizza and cornbread, which you, admittedly, can’t get enough of.

You can’t yet feed yourself finger food, but you’re close. You can pick up Cheerios, usually by raking them into your palm and holding them there with your thumb, holding up your hand in a thumbless wave. Now, how can you get that food into your mouth? You did use your thumb and index finger to pick up some Cheerios today, so the day is near when I won’t have to swing by on my way from the stove to the dishwasher to stuff another cheese cube into you.

Love,
Mommy

Happy Birthday, Sylvan!: 43 Months

Posted by julie on Monday, 13 April 2009, 23:03

sylvan_chicken

Dear Sylvan,

I love you, Sir, but sometimes (more than once but fewer than a dozen times a day) I wonder if I have anything nice to say to you. Three and a half has hit you and me hard. The thing that keeps me from running away to the North Cascades to spend my days as a backcountry ranger is the shared misery from nearly every other parent I know: “Yes, three and a half – with the tantrums and whining and the crying….It was awful.” Well, that validation and the fact that, even in the face of another dreaded day, you make me laugh at your insights or cry at your tenderness.

sylvan_saladtongs

Just yesterday, you helped Avi, age 20 months, down the stairs. You walked slightly ahead of him and voiced words of encouragement: “It’s just one more step, Avi.”

You’re almost always up for assisting when your sister’s unhappy, unless you made her unhappy by snatching her toys, you little imp. Most of the time, I enlist your help, but, last week, you just started singing “You are my sunshine” when Elena was crying. Just your presence is usually enough to calm her, but your singing is nearly fail-safe.

sylvan_pezdispenser

Last week, you, Elena, and I went out to Mount Pisgah on Sunday, then again on Monday at your request. Both days were sunny and nearly 70 degrees. I told you we were hunting wildflowers, and you followed that lead, seeking bleeding heart and “tiger daffodils,” then tiger lilies after a slight smile from me – and one of your own in response. We even found some deer and raccoon tracks in the soft earth by the river, a detour you suggested.

sylvan_prettyflower

You’ve enjoyed costumes in the past, but you’ve really entered that cowboy boot/Captain Underpants phase with vigor. You love your Daddy’s suspenders, which have been passed down to you, and, whenever you can get hold of a dress or skirt that I’ve picked up for Elena that will fit you, on it goes! (I don’t blame you; they’re super-cute.)

sylvan_suspendersskirt

Grampa Dick and Gramma Mia came and visited for a week, and, while you probably gave us more tantrums during that week, you really enjoyed their company. You played and went for hot chocolate with them, explained how [trains, a peanut butter and jelly sandwich, etc.] works, and generally enjoyed them. You miss them both, and jump at the chance to share a phone conversation with either of them, one that ends abruptly with “Okay, I love you. Bye.” More adults should be so cognizant of their immediate desires.

sylvan_suspendersvest

You still love to assign each of your family members a totem animal. Elena and I were flying starfish for a while last week, and now I’m Tracy Peacock. You’ve been a flying raccoon for quite some time.

I’m working on saying “yes” to you more often. And listening to your latest assignment of animals, explanation of train track design, review of how your version of Jacks works, and so on. It does go on and on, but you are a funny little guy, full of surprises and observations. I love you.

Love,
Mother (it’s replaced Mommy when you’re conscientious enough to be a smarty-pants)

sylvan_capecostume

Happy Easter (Bunny) Day!

Posted by julie on Sunday, 12 April 2009, 21:11

Enjoy some pre-egg salad pictures while I write Sylvan’s birthday letter.

sylvan_eastereggs

You can try those natural egg dyes, like spinach, blueberries, and coffee, but in the end most of us return to food coloring, with its associated propylene glycol content (generally safe, occasional “cardiac arrest after rapid i.v. injection of drugs containing large amounts of propylene glycol solvent“). I diligently brewed spinach, coffee, and blueberry “teas,” strained the foodstuffs out with cheesecloth, added vinegar, and those pretty, earthy dyes yielded underwhelming tannish eggs.

eastereggs

Although the prettiest egg, in my opinion, the tan one on the right with the purplish-brown overdye, has a coffee first coat (yeah, I know, I could have just bought tan eggs). The bright pinks and greens are the result of unadulterated food coloring, and the purples, browns, and dark greens bloomed from Sylvan’s forays into mixing and pouring. All the mottling comes from mixing dyes with olive oil, creating a resist-dye, like a batik.

Spring Harvest

Posted by julie on Thursday, 9 April 2009, 22:08

What I’ve heard in the last few days:

  • a metal bat connecting with a baseball
  • a pair of geese honking their way up the McKenzie River, maybe looking for a nesting site
  • Elena giggling when Sylvan tickled her feet
  • an osprey calling from its nest, high up in a snag above the river
  • drops of water falling from Douglas firs to the ground
  • “I’m so sorry, Mommy. There was an earthquake in Elena’s room.”

Happy Birthday, Elena!: 7 Months

Posted by julie on Tuesday, 17 March 2009, 10:36

elena_ribbon_spinach

Dear Elena,

It noticed it first when I went in to order an after-work scone (marionberry at Eugene City Bakery – highly recommended), both to fill me up with calories and to have the opportunity to sit and fill you up. You upstaged me. I know it’s far from the last time. The barista/cookie supplier almost couldn’t make change for the woman in front of me because he was so busy watching you. This was a 23-year-old guy. He said to me, “Her expression is just so wonderful, so open.” You don’t even know you’re charming people like you are. If you can catch their eye, you smile, and they get pulled right in.

elena_mirror

Even Tephra knows you’re calm and kind, and that’s high praise, believe me. She lets you grab her fur with your not-so-careful but ultimately benign fingers. She’ll stay in the room when you enter it, which is, let’s be frank, not the case with your brother. After stomping around after her and screaming monosyllabically, he wonders why she runs away at the merest hint of his voice. Not so with you.

Since your six-month birthday, you’ve been swimming, swinging, and sitting for the first time. After seeing that your six-month-old cohort, including Marigold and Finn, was sitting up, I sat you up. And you stayed – pretty much. You can almost get there by yourself.

elena_sits

We took a family outing to the just-above-body-temperature pool at the Tamarack Wellness Center a couple weeks ago. You weren’t quite sure what to think. You are, after all, a showerer rather than a bather. We just got a bathtub last week, and you haven’t been in it yet. So the pool was odd and loud, given the screaming children in the enclosed space. You just wait until I take you down the blue slide this summer.

You’ve even licked a chicken since your six-month birthday – a live one, not a drumstick. Thanks, Leslie!

elena_chicken

You can drink from a sippy cup, although not by yourself. You LOVE cheese, but you are a good eater of everything we’ve fed you, from yams laced with spinach to bananas mixed with yogurt. In fact, usually you just can’t get enough, and you will cry in frustration if you finish a bowl of food and we get up to make more: “But I’m still hungry! Stick that spoon in my mouth now.”

elena_headon

Love,
Mommy

Sylvan educates Mommy about trains

Posted by jonesey on Sunday, 15 March 2009, 21:23

As we drove past a very long train today, we were talking about the empty lumber cars and the hopper cars.  Sylvan knows both of these cars from watching one of his favorite train movies.

Julie asked me: “Besides coal, what else do they put in hopper cars?”

Before I could respond, Sylvan piped up from the back seat: “Bunnies!”

.

.

.

.

Get it?  “Bunnies?” “Hopper?”

Yeah, it took us a second too. We thought he was just giving an absurd answer, but he was right on.

It still cracks me up when I think about it. Both him saying it, and the image of a hopper car full of bunnies.

Happy Birthday, Sylvan!: 42 Months

Posted by julie on Friday, 13 March 2009, 1:24

sylvan_purplegloves

Dear Sylvan,

You’re really 3 1/2 now, an age you’ve been calling yourself for the past few months. You understand ages better than I would think someone with little knowledge of fractions could: you know that after you’re 3 1/2, you’ll be 4, then 4 1/2, etc. Each age is a compartment, or so I imagine it in your brain. You’ve got the sequence in hand, and you even said to me today: “I’m 3 1/2 and Elena’s zero; when I’m 6, Elena will be 3.” I actually remember thinking, when I was about your age, that I’d never be older than my older friends, and it was sort of an epiphanic moment; it saddened me then.

sylvan_olives

Your understanding of numbers isn’t always so obviously accurate. Witness this conversation with your Dad:

Daddy: “If I have seven of something and you have eight of something, who has more things?”

Sylvan: “Mommy!”

But your understanding of your Mommy is accurate – especially if we’re talking about Mommy having more chocolate.

sylvan_possession

During the past couple of months, you’ve developed a friendship with Camilla. I won’t tell any stories that might embarrass you later, but suffice it to say that you’re crazy about Camilla and she’s crazy about you. When you see each other at school, you start giggling and making Happy Talk hands, facing each other and smiling. While I don’t expect Camilla to drop you like a hot potato (not only do I think you’re a little young for the fickleness of middle school friendships, but Camilla is such a genuinely sweet person that I don’t think it would cross her mind not to include her Sylvan in her circle), the depth of your joy with this friendship makes my heart both swell and break for you, for the deep love and the deep pain that we humans cause each other. I don’t mean that last sentence as a warning. But I will be here to hug you when your heart breaks.

sylvan_mid-snow

You and I have given up your naps this past week. Since September, you’ve rarely slept at school on the couple of afternoons you’re there each week. I have been dreading this, although now that I’m not spending an hour and a half trying to get you to take a nap, it’s much less stressful, of course. We still read books and I leave you to spend some quiet time in your room in the late afternoon. You read books to yourself one recent afternoon and jumped on your bed for 45 straight minutes on another.

Sometimes I wonder if whoever coined the term Terrible Twos meant Terrible Threes. But that’s not alliterative. Thankless Threes? I feel that way on the difficult afternoons, when you and I are butting heads, sometimes literally, when you are having a difficult time curbing your whining and so am I, frankly. But you are definitely becoming a better listener and helper. You made yourself a peanut butter and jelly sandwich yesterday, from removing the bread and jelly from the fridge to slapping the slices of bread together. I helped with the twist tie on the bread bag, a little final peanut butter spreading, and cutting your sandwich into nine pieces, per your request.

sylvan_snowshoeing

How about Thecodont Threes? That’s probably most appropriate, given your new interest in dinosaurs, especially pteranodons.

You’re becoming more and more independent, which is great, given that, even though Elena’s pretty low-maintenance for a nearly seven-month-old, she still needs to have her diaper changed and be taken upstairs for naps. You have created some fantastic train tracks and glued together some fun collages recently, all under your own steam.

Sylvan wears a homemade bracelet and necklace

Sylvan wears a homemade bracelet and necklace

You still love letters and sounds, and, if you ask me a word and I suggest that you sound it out, you ask pertinent questions, like, “Does this C make a ck or ss sound?” Recently, you spelled WMM with alphabet blocks, then said, “Look, Daddy, it says ‘Wuh! Muh! Muh! That’s what Elena says: ‘Wuhmuhmuh!'”

I’ll leave you with a joke, the first you’ve told, as far as I know:

How do light bulbs and light fixtures learn to fly?

They just need to be a weathervane!

Yeah, I don’t get it either, but I’m willing to laugh with you.

Love,

Mommy

sylvan_pinkboots