Wednesday, October 5, 2011

Time Goes Fast

This week in 2009, 2010 and 2011.
Sometimes I look at my tiny little boy and think "I'm so glad I can still pick him up and move him somewhere" (this thought mostly occurs when he's terrorizing the dog or rubbing Vicks Vaporub all over our pillow cases before bedtime -like last night). Other times I look at him and think "Oh my gosh my tiny boy is not so tiny anymore!

This is a picture of my little worm the first week of October in the year he was born -2009:

This picture makes me laugh because I am positive that the pacifier may have been in his mouth long enough to take this picture. You would think there was poop on the paci they way he used to react to those things! It's weird to look back and see him in an infant car seat.

In the first week of October last year -2010:


Dan had just gotten deployed this time last year. I'm pretty sure that we handled it decently gracefully the first week (by this I probably mean we cried, ate chocolate, thought about drinking, cried because we couldn't drink because "what if I get drunk and it's late and Link falls out of his head and starts bleeding to death and I can't drive and have no one to call because D isn't here and we have to call 911 and go in the ambulance and then what will I do with the dog and the ferret..." and on and on! I swear I'm mentally stable and equipped to handle all the responsibilities of being an adult!) He liked to sit between the wall and breakfast bar while I checked my email and ate breakfast. I think he was munchin' on some Cheerios.

And the first week of October this year- 2011:

I took my cheesy little goofball to the Pumpkin Patch this morning. When I sat him down by the pumpkins and told him to say "cheese" this is what I got. And I love it. We've come a long way from a tiny little ewok that fits inside an infant carseat.

Even though I sometimes miss him being so tiny, I am savoring every second of his toddlerhood now. I am also savoring the fact that I can still pick him up and get him out of things because as I worked on this post I heard "We don't play in the doggy water. We has cars. Cars need a water. Cars need to go swimming," and like a good mom I ignored it... until D goes in the laundry room to find Link. My sweet boy has taken it upon himself to have all of his cars go swimming in the dog bowl (that has a jug attached to the top). He's soaking wet and his cars are now drying on the counter. So, thank goodness for trouble being in a small, easy to carry size.

A Time I Had

Tuesday, October 4, 2011

The Perfect Toddler Meal

Dinner: Impossible
It is a constant struggle, as I'm sure it is in most households (especially with children), to figure out what to have for dinner. Yesterday was no different. We have gotten more responsible lately in making a weekly menu plan and sticking to it. But for some reason this weekend we completely messed that menu up and made two of the meals planned for this week. Like a well adjusted adult, I freaked out around 4:3o PM trying to figure out what to make. So I turned to my trusty sidekick.
"Link," I said "what should we have for dinner tonight?" and I opened up the pantry. He came up behind me, looked inside and said "Hmmm. We should have.... POPCORNS!" as he spotted the can of the unpopped popcorn kernels just slightly above his eye level. Next he found the Gerber crunchies that he loves so much. "And we need, uh. We need some crunchies!"
"So you want popcorn and crunchies for dinner?"
"OK!"
Let me tell you about my child for a second. He will come up with what he thinks is a brilliant idea (i.e. having popcorn and crunchies for dinner). He will then tell you his plan. When you repeat whatever he just said to you in the form of a question he will then reply with "OK!" like it was your idea and he loves it.

The problem with letting a two year old decide what your family is having for dinner is this:



When you tell him that his choices are less the adequate as far as a nutritional meal is concerned (aka "No. No popcorn and crunchies for dinner") he cries. Big fat tears. My dinner plans have broken his heart. In conclusion, never ask your toddler what they want for dinner.

A Time I Had

Monday, October 3, 2011

Ruh Roh.

This is what rivalry looks like:


VS



I liken this to raising your child in a home where one parent is Catholic and the other is Mormon or Jewish. There is no doubt in my mind that my child will grow up confused and torn! In fact, he most likely won't go to either school and will end up rooting for someplace like Baylor or something. It's like what happens when your Daddy is a KC fan and your Grandpa is a Broncos fan. You can't, in good conscience, choose either of those teams (in this case, mostly because both of them suck) because you can't choose which loved one to give your loyalty to... and so you, at random, choose to root for the Steelers. Why not!? So in conclusion

If this:+ this:
=this:


What are we really doing to our kid?! =P

Tuesday, September 13, 2011

Protect Your Ass


We Need More
I will NEVER claim to understand the mind of a two year old. Link makes no sense to me. Every once in a while he decides he needs new underwear. OK change is good. Wearing the same pair all day long isn't very exciting. Sometimes you just want to feel fresh or something right? Here's Link's thing though: He has to have ALL the underwear. Here is what happened tonight.

"I need to go potty"
So we take him in to go. He finishes his business.
"I need new underwears"
We surrender. New underwear it is. He grabs train underwear. D helps him put it on.
"We need another one"
He hands it to D to help him and on goes another pair of underwear.
"We need this one"
"No. Two is enough underwear" -D
"How 'bout this one"

So now my son is wearing not one, not two, but three pairs of underwear. Quite honestly, of all the toddler shenanigans he could pull, wanting to wear three pairs of underwear is a parental victory. At least he wants to wear them. Who am I to tell him not to wear a bunch of underwear?!

A Time I Had

Saturday, September 3, 2011

Watch Your Step

What is Clean?
I remember a time before we had a kid when our house was presentable all the time. I rarely had to scurry about cleaning. If someone would say "Hey we're going to swing by in a few" I would run around our house, throw the dirty clothes in the hamper, put the cookies away, wipe the crumbs from my face and wipe down the counter. Tada! Clean and lovely. If someone were to call me right now and say "Hey we're going to swing by in a few" I would laugh at them and warn them that they were going to walk into a hazardous area. Really, there should be red tape surrounding our house some days. Gone are the days of putting a way a couple of things. I could still rush around trying to clean things up but instead of three things it would be more like this:

Fold up the blankets on the couch (you never know when an underwear-clad toddler is going to decide that today is the day it would be fun to pee all over the couch... blankets are easier to wash than a whole couch)
Find all the matchbox cars that are strategically placed as life threatening devices and put them away.
Throw all the puzzle pieces back in the bag
Put all the trains away
Try to peel up all the stickers on the living room floor and put them away
Calm the screaming child because I just ruined his sticker/floor masterpiece
Find the god forsaken caps to the damn color wonder markers
Clean up the leftover lunch mess that I was hoping Link would finish sometime before dinner that has been left on the kitchen table
Put away all the underwear that he was convinced he needed to put on. After all, four pairs of underwear is pretty stylish.
Shove the basket of clean laundry back into the laundry room because I still haven't found the time to put it away (it was done last week and we are now living out of the basket)
Clean up the cup of milk Link thought would be fun to spill since his art is obviously not appreciated.
Check to make sure I remembered to get dressed that morning.
Clean up the matchbox cars Link has taken out since I began the cleaning process.
Take the damn stickers away from the child that has now become a lightning speed mess making machine.
Pry him off my leg.
Change my pants into ones that he can't pull off of my waist by hanging from me.
Put the puzzle pieces in the closet.
Swear that the next person who buys him another g-damn toy is going on my list of mortal enemies and I'm never talking to them again.
Open the door to company and apologize to them for the mess, and tell them to give me more notice next time and I will just go ahead and cage the kid.

I miss non-mobility
I remember the days when Link was tiny. I could put him in one spot and he would be there two minutes later as long as no one moved him. In those days our house was still a mess. It was different then though. Those days involved loads of diapers, lots of burp clothes, some bottles and multiple tiny outfits. And this stuff was everywhere! No one adequately explains to you how much shit comes with tiny little people!
Then he reached the point of being able to sit up and scoot a bit. This was all right with me. At this point he would merely make a mess in the immediate area around him. I could handle that.
And then he learned to crawl... and walk. It was over. No one told me that once this milestone was reached that he would immediately be placing objects in my path designed to end my life. Tiny little people have a knack for finding the most dangerous toy they have (usually with wheels and a pointy edge) directly under your feet. This is usually done while you are making dinner and not necessarily watching your step on the floor. He used to enjoy putting those big ride-on toys in the kitchen while I wasn't looking and I would ALWAYS trip over the damn thing!

When it's not toys it's something else. Link has an unnatural obsession with trying on people's shoes. We will reserve judgments for a later time but he loves wearing my high heels. He also enjoys carrying around bottles of nail polish (he thinks it's paint and likes how nicely it fits in his tiny paws). This would be all well and good but again, I tend to trip over the shoes. He loves to take them out of the closet and place them right outside the bathroom door. So now not only is he trying to kill me when I am making him meals but he's also trying to do away with me when I get out of the shower. I'm sure if he ever does succeed he will go straight for the nail polish and stickers and complete his once brilliant masterpiece that was ruined by me at one point. Who's laughing now, Mommy!?
Crayons are the devil
One of the worst things that you can find spread all over your house are crayons. They are not as dangerous as some things if stepped on BUT they can be ground into your carpet. I made the mistake of originally getting some twistable crayons and colored pencils for Link. I'm sure they are a great idea if you hate peeling off paper but to a mom who thinks "these are perfect, they will prevent my little one from eating the crayon" you are in for a big surprise. Luckily for us Link was never the kind of kid who felt it necessary to see what the color blue tasted like but he's a curious little person who likes to figure out how things work. Twistable colors were no exception. We soon had casings of twistable coloring vessels scattered about the house and bare lead and crayons being munched on by the dog, squirreled away under the area rug (where they buried their way into our carpet), hidden away at the bottom of the toy box, stuffed into the couch cushions, etc. Nothing like a crayon to the butt when all you want to do is sit down and watch some TV.


Don't even get me started on how awful searching for marker caps can be. I'm pretty sure I found one stuffed in a sock he had taken off one time while coloring.


Link in the Kitchen with the Candlestick

As I am sure you have noticed, Link's primary danger zone appears to be the kitchen. Of the two places we have lived with him thus far the kitchen floor has a hard surface and the rest of the rooms are carpeted. Obviously his cars and wheeled objects just go better in the kitchen. Fair enough. But there is a reason they make child locks! Below are a few examples of those reasons:
I've definitely twisted my ankle trying to do ballet moves to avoid the pot drum set he has repeatedly created on the kitchen floor.


Stubbing a toe on a spaghetti sauce jar is fairly unpleasant. Another death trap by someone not even tall enough to ride the kiddie roller coaster. Inevitably all the contents of the pantry will end up in the living room. The dog loves when this happens. Our bank account does not.
And of course, the rearranging of the refrigerator. This used to be one of Link's favorite pastimes. Thankfully he outgrew this hobby. After continually finding bottles of soy sauce, mustard, chili sauce, etc in places like the toy box, the dining room chairs, the stairs, it got pretty old. Not to mention, yes, I kept tripping on condiments.

Double and Triple the Trouble

I'm not going into detail about how dangerous playdates can be. If you want your child to have friends they are pretty much a must but just be warned, there will be things EVERYWHERE. All those toys your kid never plays with will be taken out of the toy box and you will see how much shit they actually own. Never fails. Friend #1 and friend #2 will make sure your kid helps them free all the toys from their toy-jail. It is wisest to plop on the couch with the other mommies, drink your caffeinated beverage and pray you don't have to pee because if you have to navigate the awaiting doom you are sure to be injured in some way.


Heads in the toybox. This is how it begins.


Blocks are especially painful when stepped on.

(notice the doll stroller and chair in the kitchen that the girls brought in and my little rodent investigating the contents of the broken into cabinet. See what I mean!?)


The Good Ol' Days
Quite frankly I miss the days of teeny tiny baby. I know I have most likely blocked the bad stuff out but I miss not taking a ride on a matchbox car. I miss not stepping on a toy train when I try to sit down on the couch. I miss the sound of someone not walking over paper and coloring books. I miss not grinding crayon into my carpet when I try to walk to the bathroom. As fun as puncture wounds and crayon spots on my floor are, I miss when all Link needed was a clean butt, a cool pair of shades and a boob. I'm sure some day this will be all he needs again.


A Time I Had

Sunday, August 28, 2011

How to make sure your kid's a nerd

It's no secret that D and I are, and pride ourselves in being, big fat nerds (without literally being big and fat). With that said we are doing as much as possible to ensure Link follows closely behind in our nerdy footsteps. In case you are wondering how such a thing is done I have put together a check list of steps to follow. Enjoy.

First thing's first:
-Name your kid after a video game character.
I can't imagine that anyone who reads this blog hasn't heard the story of how we named Link but just in case, no, Link is not short for anything. We pulled it from t
he video game Legend of Zelda. It's awesome. It's nerdy. It's fairly unique and we love it.


-Make sure they are properly geared. Just because they are only level 1 doesn't mean they have to settle for gray items. Hook them up
with some superior blue or epic purples (WoW reference for my non-nerdy friends).


Last Halloween by good friend Caitlin made Link an awesome moogle costume (Final Fantasy character). No one knew what he was but he was deliciously nerdy and incredibly adorable. Gear is everything!



















-Make sure they know Mommy and Daddy are proud to be nerds.Yes, that's a tat of a triforce with the master sword with holly around it (guess why!? hehe) and Link's name in the courage triangle. I'm a big fat nerd who loves my kid. I'm also a big fat nerd who advises against getting a freaking sword tattooed down your spine. Holy crap that hurt.

-Get them started early. You are never too young to know how to click a mouse, play a DS or hold a PS3 controller.
The bathroom is a good place to start. Potty training and nerd training at the same time.




Link could totally pull off being a paladin in WoW. All they really do is button mash and remain the most powerful class no matter what they do anyway. Youngest WoW gamer ever???


-Teach them to count with a D20
Our kid literally learned his numbers looking at dice you would use to play D&D or other RP games. How 'bout them apples!

-Teach them WWMD (what would Miyamoto do?) I think he'd celebrate in style.















Link's first birthday was somewhat Legend of Zelda themed. The Link character on the counter is made out of mini cupcakes. He also had a triforce smash cake.





-Decorate accordingly:Thanks to boredom I sewed up the question block, fire flower and mushroom pillows and my mom made that amazing pixelated Mario quilt. It's easy being a nerd when you have creative family to help you.
Pacman idea from D executed by me. Pretty easy.
His room has hand drawn video game characters done by me and amazing canvas paintings done by my friend Nicky.

His bathroom is Pacman adorned. A hand painted arcade screen shower curtain (which I show you how to make here), paintings and the rest of the accessories are also hand painted... some day before he moves out the latch hook rug will be done too.

This bad boy resides in our little nerds play room. Glass design done by me. Refinished, stained, coats of resin by D.

-Equip them with the correct weapons

(I know a certain plumber who rescues princesses. A toilet brush is close enough to a plunger.)













































-Teach him to defend himself if he gets picked on and remind him that the nerds always do best once high school is over and the real world hits!




A Time I Had