I cannot stand for my feet to be cold, which is unfortunate because they stay cold much of the winter. The other night, even in bed with an electric blanket on, I couldn’t get my feet warm enough. I finally wrapped my chenille bath robe around them and slept that way, with a foot cocoon.
Camille, however, cannot stand to have socks or shoes on her feet. One of her first acts upon entering the house is to sit down and remove all footwear. Even when our hardwoods feel like ice blocks, and even when she has to stand on top of a heater vent periodically to warm up, she does not want her feet covered.
This distressed me the other day when putting her in her crib for a nap. It was a chilly day, so I made sure the covers were tucked high under her chin, but when I covered her feet she complained and kicked the blanket off. I covered her again and she said, “No, Mama! Don’t cover my feet!”
AAAAGH!
So imagine my distress a few days later when I was packing her lunch and she asked to hold one of the re-usable ice packs I use to keep the food cool. AND STARTED RUBBING THE ICE PACK ON HER FEET.
I was in physical pain watching this, but she was all smiles. I think she was re-enacting the joy of having a “boo-boo bunny,” which is a small version of a reusable ice pack with a plush bunny covering that can be used to treat toddler boo-boos. She got to use one at a friend’s house after a fall, and thought it was awesome.
Or maybe she just likes cold feet. THE HORRORS!
Tonight, while handing Camille a much-coveted gummy vitamin:
Me: “Here you go Camille! Vitamins make you so strong.”
Camille: “Yeah! Strong and healthy and warm and snuggly, too!”
One of the gifts we gave Nia for Christmas was a Princess Cookbook, full of kid-friendly recipes complete with pink frosting and lots of sprinkles. I was excited about the book, but even more excited about my idea to sew an apron for her too.
I had a plan in my head, and with Alva’s expertise we figured out how to pull it all together. And I was pretty happy with the end result!
Here it is – a multi-patterned child’s apron with ribbon straps and ladybug accents:
I couldn’t resist making one for Camille too. The aprons are a little big, but I’d rather the girls have room to grow than for the aprons to be too small. Here the two girls are sporting their new aprons and making cookies together:
You know your baby doll is a redneck when…
So tonight, Camille was playing with Baby Oscar while I was folding clothes. She found the used dryer sheet and lovingly placed it over Baby Oscar’s naked form like a blanket. Then she gave her some plastic french fries with ketchup.
“There you go Baby Oscar,” she said.
This was a good weekend. It’s always a good weekend when we get to spend time with the Valles fam. Lee and I enjoy hanging out with our buddies, and Camille loves playing with Nia and Nate (or Natey-Nate as Camille calls him).
We made the mistake of telling her they were coming long before they arrived. Saturday morning, Camille repeatedly asked me to hold her up to the window so she could see if they were here. They hadn’t even left their home at that point, and weren’t expected for another 6 hours. I kept telling her they wouldn’t get to our house until after naptime. So at 9 a.m., she said, “Mama, is it naptime yet?”
When they did get here, the kids had lots of fun playing together, opening their Christmas presents (only a tad late, right?), and then taking a field trip to the local Bouncing Angels where they bounced themselves into sweaty exhaustion.
Bouncing Buddies from Ginger on Vimeo.
Last night, I apologized to Nikki for slitting their tires. So I may have been lying, but I considered damaging their vehicle if only to prolong their visit just a little more. We really do miss our buddies.
Hi sweet girl, and Happy Thirty-One Month Birthday! You’re probably having Princess dreams right now since we spent the last half hour before bedtime playing dress up. First you were a woodland fairy wearing ballet shoes. Then you switched to your Cinderella dress. Then you insisted that I put your ballerina tutu on top of the Cinderella dress, making it a very poofy, very pink outfit indeed.
You look quite proud of yourself!
Playing dress-up was just one installment of a princessey month. You received your very first Barbie doll courtesy of Nana and Granddaddy. It’s the Princess Aurora Barbie doll, and when you opened the box I felt a mixture of dread and glee. Dread because now I have to keep up with tiny pink shoes and tiny jewelry, but glee because I knew you’d love it.
I loved Barbies growing up, so I don’t mind that you have one (with more to come, I’m sure), but I couldn’t help but feel protective as you admired her. Barbies are impossibly designed – an example of female beauty that is not only unattainable by most, but also unhealthy. But I don’t think Barbies had any negative affects on me as a child, so I’m hoping you’ll also grow up with a healthy dose of reality about body image.
And although I find your girliness very cute, I’m glad your personality still has so much depth – you’re a magnificent well-rounded mix. For example, you like to raise your Princess Barbie’s hands over her head and yell, “Touchdown!” You still love to wear your princess crown, earrings, rings and bracelet, but then you merge this fantasy with your comic book ones. You shout, “‘Princess to the rescue’ I cried!”
I am fascinated by the way your imagination has continued to develop this month. You’ve been playing “pretend” for a long time, cooking imaginary food and playing with dolls and stuffed animals. A couple of months ago, you took things up a notch by pretending objects were something else, like when you imagined all the rice puffs in your Veggie Booty were elephants. You picked out various elephant families, then later decided the rice puffs were wheels, so you made a car.
Your imaginative skills jumped again this month. We were eating breakfast, and suddenly you got a very serious look on your face and leaned toward me. In a hushed voice you said, “Mama, I see monsters on the floor.”
Not sure if you really saw something you mistook for an actual monster, I asked for more information.
Me: “Where are they?”
You: “Right there, on the floor,” you said, pointing to a perfectly normal patch of carpet.
Me: “What color are they?”
You: “A little bit black, and kind of a little red.”
Me (ignoring that you’d used the colors of my alma mater to describe these monsters): “Are they silly monsters?”
You: “No, they’re a little bit scary.”
Me (wanting to nip this scary monster business in the bud): “Then we better stomp on them!”
And I did. Then you got down and stomped on them too. You also imagine sweet things. A few days after you discovered the “monsters,” you brought your cupped hands over to me and said, “Mama, hold my baby bear.” I held this imaginary bear for a while, then you took him back, scooping his invisible form out of my hands, and rocked him while singing a song. Such a sweetie.
This has also been a month of new culinary adventures. Your Daddy had the bright idea one Sunday afternoon to make root beer floats. I LOVE root beer floats, and while we don’t usually let you have soda, we felt you were ready for this special treat. You loved it, sucking on the straw until there wasn’t an ounce left in your cup. Girl, I know the feeling!
You also helped me make a key lime pie, and I let you have free rein with the spatula and bowl when we were finished. Usually I don’t allow this because there are raw ingredients involved and I’m not ready to deal with salmonella in a toddler. But this was a no-bake pie, so all the ingredients were safe. And you had fun! I wonder if I’ll regret this the next time we make brownies and you can’t lick the bowl? Ahhh, it was worth it.
I am still really enjoying our story time outings – Oatland Island on Tuesdays and the library on Thursdays. I was so proud of you this month during the Oatland story time, as you began to participate even more, raising your hand to be called on and giving great answers to the leader’s questions. But I realized something while watching you interacting with the leaders and the other children. You are now one of the older ones at story time. How did this happen? You look so grown up, towering above the other children, many of whom are only crawling, or just barely getting around on wobbly legs. And there you are, poised and listening, your long, blond ponytail falling down your back, looking like quite the young lady.
I’m very proud of you, young lady. I’m so thankful for another month to enjoy your sunshine and watch you blossom. I ask you sometimes if you know how much I love you, and you say, matter-of-factly, “Yeah, I do.” I realize you don’t understand, couldn’t possibly comprehend how loved you are, but just know that I love you a whole, whole lot. And I always will.
Our friend Waco came up with a fabulous idea, and Lee has helped turn it into a reality called NewsWrecker. It’s a website compiling the best news bloopers from around the net, and I’m addicted to it.
I think something about having been in the business makes these bloopers that much more interesting, even satisfying. It’s like, for every time you mispronounced something or stumbled on air, there is someone who did something worse. Is it wrong to laugh at them? Probably. But I can’t seem to help myself.
This has to be one of my favorites.
Check out much more at NewsWrecker.com, or follow it on Twitter at http://twitter.com/newswrecker
My hammock and I have a long, tumultuous history. It was the source of my first marital disagreement with Lee, when he thought it was too expensive and I thought the sale price was too good to pass up. Also, we didn’t have a hammock stand or even two good trees to tie it to at the time, so I kind of see his point.
So the hammock remained rolled up in our garage, with me on the lookout for a good stand or some other way to bring my hammock dreams to life.
That was 8 years ago. When we moved to this house three and a half years ago, I was psyched that there were a few good trees for hammock hanging. So here I was, finally in my hammock, several months pregnant with Camille and enjoying a popsicle and a book.
Thankfully, Camille was just fine, but the hammock was rolled up again (and cursed at) and returned to the garage.
Fast forward three years. I found a good deal on a hammock stand on Amazon, so decided to give the hammock one more try. Surely its bad karma couldn’t continue, right?
I was excited when I assembled the stand and hung the hammock securely on the hooks, with no more fear of breaking ropes. I sank into it, and literally sank. All the way to the ground.
Sigh.
Apparently, my hammock is larger than the typical hammock size, and was too long for the stand. The hammock was cursed.
But I refused to give up, and after twisting the hammock ropes many, many times, I was able to shorten the length enough that I no longer touch the ground while lying in it.
SUCCESS!
We have really enjoyed it the few times it has been warm enough for a swing, and I know we’ll use it even more as spring approaches. Camille, ever the timid one, has no interest at all in swinging in the hammock. However, she does enjoy pushing us, or if there is nothing else to do, pushing a stick. Why not?
Hammock Time from Ginger on Vimeo.
Last week we took advantage of some ridiculously warm and sunny weather to enjoy the Georgia Day parade downtown. It’s a celebration of Georgia history, and nearly every elementary school in Chatham County sends a delegation of students marching down Bull Street. I figured it would be good practice for us too, since the St. Patrick’s Day parade will follow the same route in just a month (I AM SO EXCITED!).
Camille enjoyed waving at everyone, and was especially excited when her Daddy and her buddy Elsie showed up for the event.
When the parade was over, we lingered in Chippewa Square a little longer, letting the girls play. They still seem quite fond of each other, chatting together while enjoying a patch of grass.
Then later, sharing an apple together while listening to musicians play in the square. Fun morning!
Definition of a Dog and Pony Show: