Must be Halloween.
Crikey!
Posted by jonesey on Sunday, 29 October 2006, 20:55Sylvan and Mommy, models
Posted by julie on Saturday, 28 October 2006, 22:17Sylvan and I are going to be famous — in Eugene. And everywhere where bikes are sold. And among active parents looking for creative ways in which to haul their offspring. Sylvan and I were in the right place at the right time last week when our friend Cary, the marketing director at Burley, called. Burley, located in Eugene, designs and builds bicycle trailers, bikes, baby joggers, and raingear. Cary had plenty of men who work for Burley who could take part in a photo shoot the next day for their new trailers, but he needed women. I’m sorry, what actually happened was that Cary called and said, “We’re having a photo shoot for Burley’s new catalog, and we need superbly attractive moms and their adorable children. I immediately thought of you and Sylvan.”
So of course we said yes. Well, Sylvan said, “daw,” but that’s just because the photo shoot was in the park, with its plentiful pooches. We just viewed the photos, and some are fantastic; it’s amazing what a professional photographer can do. Unfortunately, we can’t post any of the photos on our blog, but, let me tell you, they’re great! And, when they’re published on Burley’s website or in a print catalog, I’ll let you know.
Explaining a parking meter to a baby
Posted by jonesey on Saturday, 28 October 2006, 7:30It sounds like a Billy Collins poem, but today, it’s an observation about abstract concepts.
When Sylvan and I go for walks, I like to point out the objects along the way and talk about them. Usually, the objects we see are mundane and straightforward, at least to Sylvan: truck, dog, tree, bird, light. Sylvan understands these objects. He even has words for them and will point them out to me, repeatedly and unprompted.
The other day we passed a parking meter, and Sylvan was giving it a look, so I tried to explain. “That’s a parking meter. When you’re driving your car and you want to park, you put money into the meter, and you get to park for an amount of time based on the amount of money that you put into the meter.” That’s when I realized that a parking meter is a much different class of object from a truck or a dog. Especially a dog.
While a parking meter appears to be an ordinary inanimate object, certainly less complicated than a truck or a dog, just the opposite is true. Understanding a parking meter requires understanding, at minimum, two abstract concepts that many adults don’t even grasp: money and time. A parking meter’s function is to turn money, an abstract concept whose true meaning and value eludes most people, into time, an even more abstract concept that eludes even more of us.
These are the things you learn when you walk with a one-year-old child.
A brief exchange while looking at an ad in the New Yorker
Posted by jonesey on Sunday, 8 October 2006, 22:59Chris: “Sylvan, what does a monk say?”
Sylvan: “…”
Chris: “That’s right!”
Sylvan’s Vocabulary
Posted by jonesey on Sunday, 8 October 2006, 22:44As far as Julie and I can tell, Sylvan’s thirteen-month vocabulary currently consists of sixteen words, along with a few questionable sounds that will probably turn into words soon. He always says these words in the appropriate context. Sometimes he surprises us by seeing or hearing something (a dog, a bird, a truck) that we either haven’t seen or heard yet or didn’t pay attention to.
All of the words are nouns so far. Fluent English speakers would consider most of Sylvan’s current noun definitions somewhat broader in scope than Mr. Webster would prefer. His words for things are often more like words for classes of things. For example, the word “sock” includes socks, shoes, and pretty much any other kind of footwear. I have included examples of items included in each word’s scope of meaning.
Pronunciation follows each word, in parentheses.
Ball (bah or baht) – Any round or mostly round object, including balls, round fruit of any sort (grapes, plums, apples, avocadoes, avocado pits, peaches, etc.), pumpkins, eggs.
Balloon (moom) – He doesn’t say “balloon” for non-balloon objects, and he can accurately point them out as we pass a car dealership at 40 miles per hour.
Bird (buhrt or buht) – He has been pointing out birds for a while. He used a version of the sign language sign for “bird” for a while (Grandma Diana taught him) until he could say “bird” and be understood.
Book (bhut) – Sylvan loves books. Magazines are books. If you ask him to bring you a book, Sylvan will bring you a book from his basket and then sit down to be read to. Those of you who knew Julie and Christopher as children will not be surprised by this report.
Bottle (boh’l) – Bottles include glass jars, any sort of plastic water bottle, and drinking glasses. His only two-syllable word, unless he’s in a hurry.
Dog (daw) – This was Sylvan’s first word, at about nine months. He said it frequently for a few weeks, then stopped saying it for a while. A dog used to be any animal with four legs and fur, but he has stopped using it for cats recently.
Duck (duh) – Most water birds are ducks. At the beach this weekend, Sylvan pointed to crows, sparrows, woodpeckers, etc., and said “bird”, then to seagulls and said “duck”. The great blue heron fooled him, though. A heron is a bird, so far.
Food (nahn) – We have used the sign for food forever, but Sylvan has not picked it up. He generally points to what he wants or away from what he doesn’t want, and we have to figure it out. He keeps us running around the kitchen picking up different foods to see if we can guess what he wants to eat. It’s a fun game, I think.
Light (neht or nat) – Sylvan has been fascinated by lights since he was about five weeks old. Ceiling fans are also lights. He pronounced it “nahn” until last week; one day he changed and hasn’t gone back.
Milk (neh-neh-neh) – This useful word was one of Sylvan’s first. He picked up the sign for milk pretty early, then he started using words and dropped the sign.
Mom (mom) – Another useful word. He can pick her out from really far away. “Sylvan, who’s that?” “Mom.”
Potty (dahn) – Sylvan says this when he sits on his potty and can also correctly identify multiple kinds of adult toilets with this word. This word may also be the verb “to change” and appears to have other related meanings that we have not yet divined. I’m guessing that when we figure out what he’s talking about when he says “dahn”, there will be fewer trousergrams for us.
Sock (dok) – A sock is anything that a person wears on his or her foot. Shoes are definitely “dok”.
Truck (tuh) – This was also one of Sylvan’s first few words. It originally applied to all four-wheeled vehicles, but only when they were moving. He is beginning to get the idea of “car”, but he doesn’t have a word for it yet.
Vroom (voom or boom) – “Sylvan, what does a truck say?” “Vroom!” “That’s right!”
Water (wah or waht) – Any drinkable liquid. He also recognizes water in its untreated state in rivers, streams, and lakes.
Emerging and dormant words:
Backpack (?) – He has a word for backpack, but I don’t think he’s settled on a pronunciation yet.
Box (bah) – He just started saying this tonight. I don’t know if it will stick.
Done (dun) – He used to say “done” and give us the sign language equivalent. He doesn’t appear to be saying it anymore. Now he just refuses additional food and gives the sign for “up”. This was his first non-noun.
Down (down) – I think he is starting to say “down” when he descends stairs. Holy crow, an adverb!
Squirrel (qurh or gurl) – He said this for a week or two, but I haven’t heard it in a while, even though we saw and discussed a bunch of squirrels this weekend.
Tree (bwot or maybe bot) – He used the sign for “tree” for a while, but he hasn’t done that in a few weeks. I think that he is telling us about the trees when he says “bwot”, but I’m not sure.
Clear Lake Camping
Posted by julie on Monday, 2 October 2006, 23:37Chris’s summary of camping last weekend with Sylvan: “Camping was great. Sylvan loved the tent, and the water, and the trees, and the trucks, and the squirrels, and the birds, and the hollow tree trunks, and the watermelon, and the big fish, and the dirt, and the snuggling in sleeping bags. He was quite pleased.”
Due to commitments at 5 p.m. Friday and 5 p.m. Sunday, along with the reality of travel with a one-year-old, we needed to camp and hike somewhere nearby; but we wanted to visit someplace new. Chandra recommended Clear Lake, which is considered to be the headwaters of the McKenzie River, although Ikenick Creek, Fish Lake Creek, and the Great Springs all flow into it. The lake, which owes its clarity to 38 degree water that supports little life, was created when a lava flow dammed a river 3000 years ago. Some trunks of the trees submerged when the river backed up still stand upright in the lake, preserved by the cold, lifeless water. The water appears turquoise in some places because the bottom is covered with the silicate bodies of diatoms, a type of algae. The pale sediment reflects sunlight back through the water, giving the lake its Caribbean color. As Chandra had promised, the vine maples were also losing their summer chlorophyll, turning red and orange and yellow, depending on how deeply they were buried in the shady forest.
Sylvan has been a super camper since he was eight weeks old and snuggled in the tent on the way to Monterey, but he truly enjoyed this camping trip.
He toddled into the tent as soon as it was up, recognizing that he’d found a soft, forgiving playroom; he tumbled around, flopping to the ground and burying himself in sleeping bags. Sylvan and Chris read a bedtime story by headlamp. Sylvan’s riveted expression is typical of storytime; if we offer to read Sylvan a book, he says “book” and sits down, patting his legs with his hands in anticipation.
And the big fish Chris referred to were spawning chinook salmon. Chandra told us about an artificial channel created for salmon habitat just downstream of the Trail Bridge Reservoir. The quarter-mile section of gravel stream (effectively a cul-de-sac, although fed by McKenzie water) held 40-50 salmon, holding position in the cold water and occasionally swimming splashily up over the artificial log steps. Chris says the fish weren’t over two feet, but I’m convinced they were closer to three. I just kept imagining them next to my 27-inch-tall son; they were bigger.
Grampa’s Romper
Posted by julie on Wednesday, 27 September 2006, 21:29This is the first in a series of photos I’m trying to take of Sylvan in the clothes of his forebears. The process isn’t proving easy or simple, since he’s growing pretty quickly and being messed with (e.g. having his clothes changed) falls pretty low on his list of favorites. This romper was my Dad’s, and his Mom kept it beautiful for years and years. It has a label that says “Handmade” with the initials BLM. The stitching on the collar and on the front is pretty intricate. Sylvan pulls off the 60 year-old romper quite well, I’d say (remember that you can always click on a photo to see a larger version).
Sylvan’s language acquisition continues to astound us. He frequently uses words that I don’t even know he understands, much less that he can actually say. Tonight, for instance, he told me “dock” when I was putting on my sock after a shower. Now, I know, that sounds a lot like his word for truck, dog, and duck. The difference in pronunciation is slight, but he uses those words discriminately, when he sees a truck, dog or other four-legged mammal, or duck. He also has a word for “potty,” we think, as well as one for “light.” Those words sound nothing like the English words for them, but he uses his words in only those specific situations.
Even more amazing is that almost every child goes through just this language development! Miraculous. Really, it’s like a miracle. I can’t believe we all don’t go through life grunting.
You had a stroke?!
Posted by julie on Sunday, 24 September 2006, 14:04When my friend Laura asked what was up with me medically, since I’d mentioned the Seattle hospital in a past entry, I e-mailed her this explanation of my recent medical misadventure:
The last weekend of July, I was climbing Rainier with my brother-in-law, Chris, who is married to my Chris’s sister, Stephanie. He has considerable mountaineering experience, and we had a great outing, climbing to 11,200 feet (about 3000 feet shy of the summit) before I felt like I needed to turn around because the gusty wind was throwing me off balance on steep snow slopes. On the way down, I was sleepy and had a mighty headache, but I usually do at altitude.
Chris and I camped down low, at 2000 feet, outside the park that night. In the morning, I awoke at 4:30 and sat up and immediately fell over to my left, onto Chris. He kept sleeping. I wasn’t sure why I woke up. I was having a little difficulty breathing, but I figured it was just residual from there being so little oxygen at altitude. I put my left hand in my right on my chest, and I could only tell that I was doing that because my right hand felt what felt like fingers. My left hand couldn’t feel it. I figured I’d slept on it wrong or it was cold. I finally fell back to sleep only to wake again at 7 to fall over directly onto Chris again. That woke him up, and he looked at me, pretty concerned. I must have looked pretty out of it. He got up and set up the stove, and I tried to pump breastmilk with a hand pump. I couldn’t use my left hand to put the pump together or to pump. It just wouldn’t do what I asked it to do. I got out of the tent and walked around. My left foot dragged through the rocks, kicking them. I could lift the foot, but I wasn’t getting enough feedback to know how high to lift it.
So, Chris and I decided that instead of hiking, as we’d planned, he would drive me back to Eugene, a five hour drive, so I could go to the hospital. On the way, when we got out to use a restroom, a woman who happened to be a nurse saw me and suggested I get to the nearest ER, which I did. They gave me a CT scan and suggested that I be airlifted to Seattle, where there’s a world-class neurology unit, since I’d probably had a stroke. So away I went in the helicopter. It was a beautiful flight, with clouds snaking up the valleys and rain hitting the windshield. I was glad that I was stable and aware enough to enjoy it. Unfortunately, we killed a seagull on the way.
In Seattle, the MRI confirmed that I’d had a stroke, and not a small one. The neurologist was sort of surprised that I was doing as well as I was, given the size of the stroke and the fact that the embolus had stopped blood supply to two areas of my brain. Over the course of four days, I had a contrast CT scan, an MRI, an ultrasound of my heart, one of my neck vessels, and one of my legs. The heart ultrasound, the echocardiogram, showed that I had a PFO (patent foramen ovale), which is a hole between the right and left atria. In young people who have cryptogenic (unknown cause) strokes, they often have PFOs. The PFO allows blood from the right atrium to pass to the left, instead of from the right atrium to the right ventricle and on to the lungs, where the lungs would filter most clots and bubbles. So my clot passed into the left side and up to my head. One-fifth of the population have PFOs, since it’s just a hole that’s open until you’re born to allow blood to bypass the lungs. With the first big breath after birth, lots of people’s close. Mine didn’t. I actually had another test this past Tuesday during which they passed an ultrasound device down my throat to see the heart better. That showed that I might have an atrial septal defect (ASD) instead of a PFO, which just means that instead of a flap that opens and closes, I might just have a doorway that’s continually open.
The good news, and there’s much, is that, first of all, I’m pretty much fine. I might not be as deft with my left hand as I once was, but I’ve never been ambidextrous. Typing is good therapy. I can run, dance, and pick up my son (which was my first concern). I’m a little short of breath, and my cardiologist here said that that’s probably because there’s a hole in my heart.
The rest of the good news is that I can have the hole repaired. My blood is fine, and not more likely than other people’s to clot. To close the PFO/ASD, they put in a little device like a double-sided umbrella which the heart tissue soon covers so it becomes part of the heart wall. That surgery is done with a catheter up through a blood vessel from the groin. It’s out-patient surgery, so it would only take a couple of hours. If I get it repaired, I’m no more likely than any other young, active, non-smoking female to have another stroke, so that’s what I’m leaning toward. Sylvan can’t be breastfeeding after the surgery, since I have to take another anticoagulant along with aspirin for the three months after the surgery, so I’m not sure when we’ll get it repaired – maybe next spring?
North Bank Deer Preserve
Posted by julie on Sunday, 24 September 2006, 10:02In an attempt to give Chris some time to work on his thesis (he napped for four hours instead!) and to raise my heartrate enough to shove off this horrific cold, Sylvan and I drove down I-5 to Roseburg on Saturday to the North Bank Deer Preserve, which overlooks the North Umqua River, a wide, gravelly fly-fisher’s dream. The BLM-managed area was created to provide habitat for the federally endangered Columbia white-tailed deer. Thanks to my need to study a sketched map, we stopped early in the hike and actually saw three deer as we sat quietly by the gravel road. Sylvan watched and pointed as the deer stotted through the September-dead grass and Oregon white oaks.
Neither Sylvan nor I saw the “fainter track/old roadbed” mentioned in the hiking guide, so we set off cross-country, following deer and horse trails through the thigh-high, crispy grass. Soon, Sylvan asked to get out and explore, so we sat in the shade of some enormous oaks, eating Cheerios. We heard a raven, not a bird I’ve ever heard at 600 feet in Eugene, and one of my favorites, because it reminds me of being in the mountains.
When we started hiking again, I walked uphill, dodging the frighteningly prevalent poison oak (Really, it was frightening. Some of my former students, the ones I’ve urged on as they scrambled on all fours up rock ledges while whining that they were going to die, would have enjoyed watching me dance around the poison oak. I’ll let you know in a few days if I avoided it enough and used enough Tecnu in the shower hours later.). We bushwhacked along a ridge strung with large oaks. Sylvan fell asleep. I wasn’t sure where we were, but I could basically see from where we’d come. Eventually, we hit a gravel road that wasn’t on the guidebook’s sketched map.
I turned away from the direction of the car, hoping to get in a little more of a hike. Now that I was on a road and didn’t have to think about navigating anymore, I noticed how many different trees forested the darker valleys: madrone, Douglas fir, big-leaf maple, oak, and a conifer too far away to identify. After some uphill walking, I headed back downhill. Walking down the road, through the oak woodland and oak savanna, I was surprised by how much the light and color looked like the mountains of the southwest in the fall; everything was yellow and brown, dry and crunchy. The speckled light under the trees made this place look like just what it had once been – cattle pastures. As lovely as the Deer Preserve was, the cattle pasture feeling reminded me that I really need deep, green forests for my outdoor rejuvenation. Maybe next weekend?
A New Tradition
Posted by julie on Saturday, 23 September 2006, 11:07Sylvan and I, at Chris’s suggestion, decided that we would institute a new tradition on the day before Sylvan’s birthday: hiking to the summit of Mount Pisgah every September 11. Last year, in a fit of get-this-baby-out-of-me, Chris, Aunt Jenny, and I hiked up with Sylvan in utero from the east side, which is longer but not quite as steep as the well-traveled, west-side summit route. In 2005, the hike worked like a charm; I went into labor the next day at 5 a.m.
So, this year, Sylvan and I slowly climbed to the top from the west, hopping off the busy summit route by taking trail 17, which Chris helped build. We stopped to smell the pennyroyal, feel the lichen on the oak branch that crossed the trail just over our heads, and, with our eyes and pointed fingers, follow the bald eagle as it soared to the west, over the Coast Fork of the Willamette. At the top, Sylvan found that he appreciated the summit sculpture, which, along the outside, depicts flora and fauna through the eons; Sylvan slid his fingers along brachiopods and ferns. The sculpture is broken up by two fissures running through it, which, it turns out, are great peek-a-boo slots, as you can see from the photo.