

Peter, Misty, Grant & Henry's world view. Pete and I wanted to create a space that we could update regularly with pictures and our tales of new parenting. Feel free to add any comments or advice. I'm sure we'll need all we can get. :)
Nothing much new just a few little funny stories about the boys..
Dead Inside
A couple of weeks ago Grant started telling me all mommies were mean. “It’s true.. they are”. I kinda brushed him off and figured it was some weird phase or he was mad about having to do is ONE job of emptying the dishwasher (and not letting him con Henry into do it for him). But this kept coming up in different conversations throughout the week and the other attributes he’d given to “all mommies” were getting more disturbing. “All mommies are mean, they are evil.. and they are dead inside”. Weirdly I took the most offense to the “dead inside” comment. How could he think I was dead inside?!? I’m the most alive-iest inside person I know!! (could someone dead inside come up with a word like alive-iest?.. ok don’t answer that) And really, that’s a weird concept for a kid to say… “dead inside”? really? I can’t imagine WHERE he would have heard that. I pushed for more answers. I got “they’re all wrapped in themselves”. What?!?! Now we’re all self-centered? Where is this kid getting his intel? Am I going to have to actually start WATCHING Power Rangers to find out what it’s teaching my kid? I had to get to the bottom of this. “How are they wrapped in themselves.. what do you mean, Grant?”. He answered “You know.. like band-aid wrap stuff.. wrapped around their heads and bodies and stuff.” The light went on. Mummies. Got it. It all fell into place. So I could breathe a sigh of relief knowing my kid didn’t find me dead inside and wrapped up in myself, mean and evil. I’m normal. He’s normal. The world has been restored to it’s normal self.
Does Not Approve
Yesterday after swimming lessons I stopped to get the boys Happy Meals on the way home. On the way home Henry opened his only to find they’d mistakenly given him a GIRL TOY. We were already on the road and I wasn’t about to go back and switch it out. So I told him sometimes girl toys could be fun too. He seemed fine with it. Grant however was not amused. From the backseat I heard him say with much disdain in his voice “That’s a BARBIE doll. I don’t like Barbies.. if I ever got a Barbie I would just go over and throw it right in the trash”. Henry somehow didn’t catch what was going on and wanted to fit in so he of course agreed “uh huh! I would throw it away too” and I hear Grant say “well that’s whatcha got!” It didn’t turn into any huge argument so I didn’t think much of it. When we got home they were able to open their toys and Grant looked on with serious disgust as Henry opened his Barbie Head with it’s matching comb. Fortunately Henry didn’t know what Grant meant when he said “Actually Henry’s Happy Meal toy is really lame”. It’s always weird when you hear your kid come out with little phrases like that. Today I’ve already heard Grant again say twice “If I ever got a Barbie I’d just throw it in the trash”. Perhaps the power of suggestion would make Henry do the right thing. It’s like he thinks it’s devaluing all of the other cool toys in the toy room by even allowing it to exist in our house. I’m going to keep it around for awhile to see what happens to it.
They are seriously and endless source of entertainment.. every day.
Grant graduated from preschool on Wednesday. I think the with all the chaos of the end of the school year events and planning it didn’t really leave me with too much time to do any introspective thinking. I found over the weekend these small waves of reflection sort of popping up at random times throughout the day. In some ways he seems like such a little boy still. Can he really be leaving for school ALL DAY in the fall? In other ways I’m completely stopped in my tracks at how much he’s grown. This is a picture of Grant on his first day and last day of preschool at Bellevue Country Day School.
I remember his first day and his nervousness. He is and forever will be an observer first. He sits back, takes in the environment, the people, what is going on, and what his role will be and then decides if he wants to participate. There was a lot of thumb sucking and observing going on that first week. The little boy in the second picture knows his role and is more confident and talks excitedly about kindergarten in the fall (though I still sense a tiny bit of anxiety and I know it will take him to get used to it).
This morning I came home from Zumba and found all 3 of my guys watching Planet Earth. I came in and Grant gave me the run down about snow leopards and how they had to kill other animals to eat them and a load of other little facts. I’m always amazed at how much he picks up and how his mind works. He laid across the couch with his head in my lap, while he carried on watching. I got a little teary remembering 5 years ago sitting in the exact same location with a tiny baby that fit in the crook of my arm while I fed him. I had tons to get down today but lingered there a little longer knowing this moment would be gone in a heartbeat. I was reminded of the ABBA song Time Slipping Through My Fingers.
on to the next chapter…
lyrics
Slipping Through My Fingers lyrics
Schoolbag in hand, she leaves home in the early morning
Waving goodbye with an absent-minded smile
I watch her go with a surge of that well-known sadness
And I have to sit down for a while
The feeling that I'm losing her forever
And without really entering her world
I'm glad whenever I can share her laughter
That funny little girl
Slipping through my fingers all the time
I try to capture every minute
The feeling in it
Slipping through my fingers all the time
Do I really see what's in her mind
Each time I think I'm close to knowing
She keeps on growing
Slipping through my fingers all the time
Sleep in our eyes, her and me at the breakfast table
Barely awake, I let precious time go by
Then when she's gone there's that odd melancholy feeling
And a sense of guilt I cant deny
What happened to the wonderful adventures
The places I had planned for us to go
(slipping through my fingers all the time)
Well, some of that we did but most we didn't
And why I just don't know
Slipping through my fingers all the time
I try to capture every minute
The feeling in it
Slipping through my fingers all the time
Do I really see what's in her mind
Each time I think I'm close to knowing
She keeps on growing
Slipping through my fingers all the time
Sometimes I wish that I could freeze the picture
And save it from the funny tricks of time
Slipping through my fingers...
Slipping through my fingers all the time
Schoolbag in hand she leaves home in the early morning
Waving goodbye with an absent-minded smile...
I’d like to invite you and your friends to a free Aqua Zumba demonstration class that I’m teaching on Wednesday 4/27 at 7:30pm at Samena Swim & Recreation Club in Bellevue. This is a full length class and is free for participants. Non-members must sign-in at the Front Desk and pay the Samena Guest Fee of $8, which can be applied to their first enrolled session. The session starts the following week at the same date/time. PLEASE CALL SAMENA TO PRE-REGISTER AND RESERVE YOUR SPOT FOR THE DEMO! 425-746-1160
From the Zumba website:
Known as the Zumba® "pool party," the Aqua Zumba program gives new meaning to the idea of an invigorating workout. Splashing, stretching, twisting, even shouting, laughing, hooting and hollering are often heard during an Aqua Zumba class. Integrating the Zumba formula and philosophy with traditional aqua fitness disciplines, the Aqua Zumba class blends it all together into a safe, challenging, water-based workout that's cardio-conditioning, body-toning, and most of all, exhilarating beyond belief.
So, leave your floaties at home.. bring a towel, your water bottle, aqua shoes (if you have them), and your groove thang (to shake) and join us for a calorie-burning hour of fun and great music.
Please let me know if I can answer any questions. I can be reached at misty_dampier@hotmail.com or 425-818-0220.
Samena Swim and Recreation Club
15231 Lake Hills Blvd. Bellevue 98007
Bellevue, WA 98007
Thanks!
Misty
I’m always amazed at all the stuff Grant comes out with that he’s learned in school. I ask him every day what he did and his answer is “ummm I can’t remember” then in the middle of doing some random task he’ll blurt out some odd trivia. This week, I was surprised when Grant came home and told me about his old classmate who had come back to visit from Egypt. His teacher explained to the class that there was a lot of fighting going on in Egypt and that was why they came home. It feels weird that he’s now becoming aware of current events.
Other things I’ve been informed of over the past school year in passing conversations: Pluto is no longer a planet.. according to Grant it is now a “not planet”. The brontosaurus is not a dinosaur anymore. Indigo is no longer a recognized color of the rainbow (I actually had to look this up).
Henry, as the second born is always letting me know what is going on in his little world so he can get equal face time. This morning I was up early with the boys and he crawled in my lap and was chattering about Lego and then stopped and said “Actually, Mommy I need to tell you sumfeen… it’s actually kinda stinky in there.” As the parent of a child not quite through potty training, I immediately went into questioning “Where? Did you go in your pants? Where is it stinky?” He replied “No, in your mowf”. I’d be kinda fine if kept his opinions to himself in that respect. Gotta love ‘em.
Hello and Merry Christmas from the Dampiers! With two little boys in our household not a day goes by that we don’t spend talking about some random Super Hero. After some time I came to the realization that we, as a family actually do have Super Powers or at least Super Senses. While we aren’t rushing out to buy matching leotards (you can thank me later) I think that the Justice League could perhaps make use of our skills. I plan to submit the resume listed below. I think we may have a shot!
Have a wonderful holiday and we look forward to seeing and/or hearing from you in the New Year!
Also please enjoy the enclosed photo that has nothing to do with Christmas or Super Heroes. It is perhaps proof the Christmas mania has set in. J
The not-very-dangerous-only-available-before- 7pm-bedtime crime fighting super hero family,
The Dampiers
The Dampiers
Peter, Misty, Grant and Henry
Objective
Parental Super Skills
Kid Super Skills
Equipment
My baby is 3. I can’t quite believe that 3 years ago we were blessed with another baby so completely opposite to his brother that it felt like we were parental newbies again. They seem to be polar opposites in temperaments, physical stature, personality and about anything else. We thought we had this parenting gig down pat and it turns out we were back at square one. The only useful skills we could carry over were.. put them to sleep on their back.. and which way the diapers went on. Grant from day 1 has always been super independent. Hugs and affections were ok if you hurried up about it –linger for more than 2 seconds and he pushes you away.. still. Henry is the opposite – he’ll sit quite happily in my lap, cheek to cheek, forever. There was a time when Henry kept coming up to me and whining at my feet with his arm outstretched. It honestly took me an embarrassing amount of time to realize that he wanted to be carried.. not to get at something higher..just to be carried. To this day Grant has never asked to be carried, ever. Henry could happily live out his life as a baby kangaroo.
I think every parent worries they’ll compare their second born to their first (like I just did, twice) constantly which will lead to a life in therapy as an adult. Of course you do.. you have no other little being that you know so well. But our comparisons aren’t if they measure up only that we’re constantly boggled by how different they are.
You also worry that when the second child comes along that they will repeatedly feel ripped off. It’s true that I haven’t enrolled Henry in hardly ANY of the classes that Grant used to take, because logistically it’s sometimes a nightmare. We spend a lot more time at home and the boys really do get along well. Henry is gaining useful skills at home that no gym or music class could teach so well, like sharing with a brother and when to tell mom things and when to keep it between brothers. Last week Grant overflowed the toilet (I dunno what that kid DOES in there) but as Grant went about washing his hands and making faces in the mirror -he was completely oblivious to the toilet running all over the floor. Henry on the other hand came running out and was in such a frenzy I had no idea what he was saying. Finally he just kept saying.. “Get UP… COME ON… I SHOW YOU”. As I followed him down the hallway I saw his little socks making wet tracks and hurried my pace to find the entire bathroom flooded and grant on the step stool still making face at himself in the mirror. It was like having a slightly more useful version of Lassie!
You may think a second child would feel left out or overshadowed by an older sibling..no need to worry with Henry. The kid will NOT be ignored. It’s not enough to acknowledge things he’s saying with an “MM-HMM”.. EVER – even when appropriate. You answer his question with that and he shoots back with “DON’T SAY MM-HMM LIKE THAT – YOU NOT LISTENING TO ME!!” “WHAT THIS UH-HUH? DON’T SAY UH-HUH.. YOU NOT LISTENING TO ME!!”
He is a character and a cut-up and finds his older brother the most hilarious person in the universe. He’s got eyelashes that are ridiculously long and the biggest brown eyes that can either turn on the charm or turn to a scowl that would stop you in your tracks. I can’t wait to see what the years will bring us with this fun little guy. Happy Birthday my little 3 yr old.
love,
mum
I think most parents are in agreement that anytime you ask your kid what they did at school that the standard answer is usually “nothing” or “I dunno, stuff”. So occasionally when Grant is feeling super chatty about his day I pounce with lots of follow up questions so I can get a glimpse of what his day was like and what he’s thinking about.
Today at school pick up he was chattering about some book they read at school that was SO funny about some big fat chicken. And it was a fairytale.. like the princess and the pea and goldilocks and stuff.
So I immediately thought.. chicken? oh.. perhaps Chicken Little or Chicken Licken. I asked if it was about the chicken thinking that the sky was falling and he responded with “No.. it was about a .. chicken. and he was really fat.. and the straw or hay or something”. Oh! got it! right! Obviously it was the Little Red Hen who tried to get everyone to help her grow, harvest and bake the bread with no luck and then everyone wants to eat the fruits of her labor(sounds like my life btw). So certain this was the fairytale Grant was speaking of I started explaining the Little Red Hen story and he stopped me. “No..it was.. about a big fat chicken.. and I think he was eatin’ tacos”. I thought surely I heard him wrong but no he continued that the tacos were made of straw or hay. Now, I was completely stumped.
I got home and did some internet searches in the event that it was some modern day fairytale I didn’t know about.. and only came up with a thousand different recipes for chicken tacos. So I then emailed a classmate’s mom asking if she’d find out about this Obese, Straw Taco Loving, Chicken story. She went to work and mailed me back this:
Well I asked him and this is what I got. "Chicken, there wasn’t no chicken." "Not at my school" "Duh"...verbatim...they are both out to make us nuts!!! And when I tried to explain about book and all, he said "Is this gonna take long 'cause i gotta tinkle"
I found another classmate’s mom on facebook that night and asked her. Her son was still up and his response was this “he's singing something about baking bread and about a cat, a goose, and a hen?????”
So.. back to where we started.. with the little red hen.. the moral of this fairytale is when I get an answer don’t go digging for it’s meaning because after hours of research it still won’t be clear .. and that only leaves you confused and hungry for chicken tacos. Take THAT Mother Goose.
-misty
Today Grant had to go to the Dr. to pee in a cup for the first time ever. Of course he refused. No amount of pleading or stickers convinced him that this was an OK thing to do. The Dr. sent us home with 2 stickers and the cup to try and collect it at home. On the way out the door Grant felt his presence at the Dr’s office warranted his 2 stickers and started whining and being obstinate. I’m trying a new tactic for these tantrums that I can see coming. Grant is one that will try to engage you in an argument for hours.. repeating the same thing over and over and over. He also thinks he can negotiate everything. Neither of these tactics on his part has ever worked so I’m not sure why he’s still trying. After reading this 1-2-3 magic book though, I’ve realized that he’s just constantly trying to get us to argue with him. I’ve stopped taking the bait. So today we got to the car and I told him to fasten his seat belt and he told me that he wanted the 2 reward stickers (for weeing in the cup- that he didn’t do) before he would buckle himself in. So I sat there and explained that he wasn’t going to get them..and that I would no longer be telling him WHY as I was telling him this NOW and we weren’t leaving the parking lot until he was in his seat belt.
So I sat there checking email on my phone and ignoring him.. while he screamed “I. WANT. MY. STICKER. RIGHT. NOWW!!!!” Which on it’s own is incredibly awesome in the pediatrician’s parking lot with every parent walking bye casting judgey judy looks at your child spewing horrible demands. All the while Henry was looking on.. either horrified.. or observing what worked and what didn’t. After awhile Grant calmed down and I thought we’d be off in no time. When I heard the following conversation:
Grant: Henry.. Henry.. tell mommy you want the Spiderman sticker.. but DON’T say it’s for me.. just say “I want the Spiderman sticker”
Henry: Ok.. Mommy, Grant want-
Grant: NOOOO NO HENRY.. don’t say I want it.. say you want to have it.. just say “I want the Spiderman sticker.. "
Henry: “Grant want the Spiderman sti-"
Grant: Noooooo HENRY NO .. don’t say my name.. MOMMY, HENRY HAS SOMETHING TO TELL YOU.. (quietly) henry.. don’t say my name.
Henry:….. …. “him want the spi-“
Grant: NOOOOO..HENRY DO NOT SAY MY NAME!!
All the while Henry was just NOT getting what it was that Grant wanted and kept looking at him like he was crazy as he was doing EXACTLY what he asked.
So it seems we’ve already entered into the stage where your kid thinks you’re a complete dumbass. I really thought that started in high school when they think we don’t know they’re planning on how to get to unchaperoned parties. I don’t know how he thought I couldn’t HEAR the entire conversation and what he was doing.
Exasperated and annoyed he finally relented and I heard a very quiet “click” from behind me. I was glad my sweet little polite boy had returned when he yelled out “WHY AREN’T WE GOING ANYWHERE???!?!?”
always a work in progress…
oh. and he DID pee in the cup at home.. and then every time after that he needed to go he wanted to be going in the cup. I’m not going to be trusting any cups lying around for awhile.
-misty
I gave birth to a bright and smiley little boy that stole my heart from the moment I saw him. It’s been a crazy whirlwind that has completely flown by.
He was an easy baby that was very independent from the moment he arrived. He has always been this ball of sunshine and I didn’t realize it was any different to any other baby until people asked me every time we were out “Is he always this happy?”
Grant’s a very caring little guy that has seemed to grasp empathy and caring for others at really early age. He is emotional, like me.. strong willed and stubborn.. like both of his parents. He has incredible recall for minute details that happened years ago. But mostly he is a great little guy that you can’t help being happy around – unless he’s having one of his little screaming fits we’ve been dealing with lately.. then.. wow.. earplugs.
Today was a big day. It was Grant’s birthday.. or beerthday as he still calls it (I’m sure he’ll pick this back up in college). It was also his first day of pre-k school. After school I picked up his best friend Garret to come over for a playdate and then we took them all out to Red Robin for Grant’s birthday dinner. I’m reminded now of why we will ALWAYS have birthday parties somewhere else. The boys had a grand time. It’s so funny hearing him interact with his little friends in different social situations. We got to RR and Grant immediately introduced “my friend Garrett who is gonna eat with us for my beerthday” to the host. The boys were quite squirelly all through dinner but we kind of let them be a little crazy. We were tucked in a corner with only a few other families in earshot.
My favorite conversation that had me in stitches was between Grant and Garrett. Grant was asking Garrett “Remember that time when I did blah blah blah.. and I got the Skittles?” Grant’s speech is coming along but he does sound like he’s saying “Squittles”. Somehow Garrett heard this a little wrong.. and had a lot of questions about this incident.. repeating back.. “You got the Shittles? When did you get the Shittles? I didn’t get Shittles did I? Where did you get the Shittles?” After nearly shooting my drink through my nose I turned my head.. and laughed until I was crying.. occasionally snorting throughout dinner remembering it. It’s still cracking me up as I write this.
Before we left the Red Robin crew did the Happy Birthday song and dance for Grant and actually brought out little tiny sundaes for Garrett and Henry as well. I was trying to get them not to eat as much because I knew we had cake and ice cream at home. Peter thought he’d help Henry along by taking a bite and Henry bit his head off and sneered at him “NO! It’s not YOUR birthday”.. which.. is amusing considering it wasn’t Henry’s either.
Oh.. and this year Grant requested a beerthday cake that looked like a bag of popcorn. The problem with being arty is that your kids now think you can create or make anything. The problem with loving this stuff and your kids is that you will move mountains and lose countless hours of sleep to do it. Here’s the cake.. and really it only took a few hours.
Happy Beerthday my little 5 year old. May the years to come bring as much laughter and joy as you have brought to us.. and not so much in the Shittles dept.
love,
mum
xoxo
My method to potty training is to select a week in the summer when the forecast is good for a week (perhaps the biggest obstacle yet). I strip the child-in-training down to nothing from the waist down and we do outdoor activities on the deck for a week and a half with the potty right beside us. This also includes endless amounts of juice and what I have always promised - Hershey’s kisses (1 kiss for wee’s, 2 kisses for #2’s). For his job as the cheerleader Grant also gets a Hershey’s kiss when Henry does.
Today was day one with Henry. At first Henry wouldn’t get OFF the potty unless he had undies to walk around in. Once those were provided he and Grant got to work on finger painting. Juice boxes flowed like wine. About 20 minutes into it Henry was alarmed that he wet his Diego underpants so I sat him on the potty.
About 15 minutes later Grant wanted to see how progress was going and screeched the news that Henry had indeed gone in the potty.
We made a big deal and I awarded Henry and Grant with their chocolates. I went and emptied the potty and Henry decided he liked his place at the throne… in less than 5 minutes he’d gone again. Cheering all around ensued and the whole process was repeated. I now was in the process of making their dinner as well and came around the corner to hear Grant saying.. “Henry.. do you need to go again?.. no? .. just move and let me try to go wee in there and we can get another chocolate”. That kid is SO sneaky.
I also seem to have opened the flood gates with Henry as he’s gone for the 4th time in the hour and right now I can hear Grant asking every 10 seconds if he has to go again.
-misty
The past few weeks we’ve had my in-laws staying with us. They don’t drive so we’ve had to configure the van so that Henry is in the second row and for ease of getting in and out we’ve put down the other 2nd row seat so the 2 In-laws and Grant are in the 3rd row.
On one of our excursions out Henry had 2 crayons and a bit of paper he was coloring with and Grant decided later that he needed a turn. Fast forward to a few hours later and the following conversation ensued.
Grant: “Henry.. Henry.. blaojeiojfieow?”
Me: What Grant?
Grant: "No Mommy, I’m talking to HENRY.. not you”
Me: “Geez, alright"
Grant: “Henry?”
Henry: “uh-huh!”
(I should at this point note that Henry will happily answer an affirmative “uh-HUH!” to any question asked excitedly.)
Grant: “Henry. Did you color on the wall back here by my seat!?”
Henry: “uh-HUH!” :)
Grant: “MOOOOOMMMMM. Henry got crayon on the wall back here by my seat”
Me: “Uh, Grant? Henry has never even been BACK near your seat.”
Grant: “He just said he did it”
Me: “Grant. Henry has not been in that back seat.. do we need to have that talk about lying again?”
Grant: “But Henry said he did it!”
Me: “Grant!”
Grant: “Oh. Yes. I think that was a mistake. I think it was maybe Mr. Nobody that did it.. I think he was back here.”
Obviously we need to revisit the lesson on lying but when do they get so cunning?
Peter got an iPad this last week (I still don’t GET why we needed one but a “boy and his toys” is a whole separate blog post). He’s quite late on the iPad acquisition and we’ve had a running joke since it’s come out about “takin’ it to the iPad”. On one of the Entertainment gossip shows in the evening one of the commentators was obviously comp’d an iPad and at LEAST once a segment he says “let’s take it to the iPad” where he does nothing but slide a photo around and point to famous people. Henry has obviously picked up on some of this and applied it to his world. I now hear him daily talking about “iPoot” and it’s usually followed by a familiar nauseating scent. But have no worries.. there’s an “app” for that.. it’s called a diaper. Peter seems less happy about “Takin’ it to the iPoot”.
For the past couple of weeks Grant has been yelling out from the bathroom that he can “only wipe my own bum on Tuesdays”. I thought it was just some weird regression and told him he needed to do it every time, no matter what day. Today he extended the offer to Tuesdays and Wednesdays. When I told him he was in luck because today was Tuesday he responded “Oh. Well then today I can wipe my bum" as if it were the most normal thing in the world. I don’t even want to know the horrors that are going on back there on a daily basis. And I don’t know what it has to do with the other days of the week.
So I don’t think Grant GETS what happens with gas. He walks around ripping farts (we call them toots) all over the place and has no reaction to them other than acting slightly annoyed when I ask him to say “excuse me”. Whatev. I assume all the fart jokes will come as soon as he’s in school right? For now I just don’t really laugh or react and just ask him to say excuse me. It occurred to me that he really had no idea what was going on when he let one rip the other day. Grant was in the living room and Henry was in the kitchen. Grant then came into the kitchen with a look of disgust on his face and told me I needed to change Henry’s diaper because he could smell it. Henry sat there innocently eating while being falsely accused. No amount of explaining could convince Grant that something that wretched could have come from HIS bottom. This may be a lesson his dad has to teach him. I’m not volunteering.
-misty
This post so isn’t going where you think..
So about a year or so ago Grant had an imaginary friend “Doobie”. I have no idea where he got this name. The only information we got about Doobie was that he lived on Mountain Lilypad and that his mom’s name was Doobie and his dad’s name was Doobie and that he was Grant’s best friend. I got asked to schedule playdates with Doobie and when I explained that I didn’t know where Doobie lived Grant would tell me “on Mountain Lilypad”. Then I’d tell him but I don’t know his mom and I’d get “his mom is named Doobie” and I’d try explaining yes but I don’t know where to find them.. “on mountain lilypad” (you get the picture). I realized yesterday that I hadn’t heard Grant mention Doobie in like 6 months so I thought I’d ask him about his old friend. He told me “Oh. He died” Apparently the cause of death was from eating too many bubbles in the bath. This morning I asked again about Doobie, wondering if we were going to have “what dying means” conversation. After I told him that when things die they can’t come back he decided he was just joking about Doobie dying.. but he did get really sick and have a tummy ache from eating too many bubbles. So.. have no fear.. Doobie lives.
On Saturday after Henry’s nap I picked him up and he was pointing to his monkey picture above his crib saying “Kiki”. I did this series of paintings for Henry’s room and they’ve been there since he was born. His crib sits in the center of them below the Turtle and Giraffe.
So after realizing he was trying to say Monkey we practiced it for a little bit and then I moved on to having him name the other animals…
"Tur-toe”
“Jaff”
“Boobies”
Wait? what!? He looked at me.. patted my chest and said “Boobies” again and pointed back to the Hippo. And really? from the angle in which he sleeps.. I can totally see that now. But it was a shocker to hear him say it. And of course THAT word came out crystal clear. I’m sure preschool teachers get an earful of things they don’t let on about.
-misty
Yesterday we were at an appointment with Grant and they had a whiteboard out for kids to draw on. I didn’t realize Grant had never drawn on one before and he had completely filled the board up with what he calls “train tracks” or “roller coasters” (a load of scribbles). The doctor then asked Grant if he could draw a square and “I Can’t Grant” paid a visit and somewhere in between exclaiming “I can’t” his fingers swiped over his drawings and erased them. Grant looked at the board and then his fingers with no real reside and got completely wide eyed and yelled “MY FINGERS ARE MAGIC!!!!!” and from then on couldn’t understand why were weren’t jumping up and down and praising his magic skillz instead of asking him to draw a stupid square. I wish he’d use those magic fingers to clean up his room.
-misty
So lately I've been talking to Grant about not trying hard enough at things and giving up before he’d tried. I told him that when he did that I'd be calling him "I Can't Grant" or "Grant I Can't" to remind him to try. Today he gave up on something without trying and I said “Do we need to start calling you "I Can't Grant" ?” without missing a beat he said “No, probably “Sometimes I Can’t Grant”.
-misty
We all were having a wonderful Christmas with family – The boys had woken up early and with great excitement – the kind you remember only too well. The kind you wish that still endured though it can never be recaptured quite as exquisitely as it exists in a child on Christmas morning. The first glass of champagne had been started – toys were being enjoyed with high energy and delight.
I think now there is something about two year olds that kicks you screaming into the reality of what can happen in a split moment of time. It happened to us with Grant with his seizures. Now again, two years later.
Henry was playing by Misty’s chair when Bubba (English Bulldog) started chewing on a bone. Henry bent over to take a look and before you could have ever noticed Bubba went for him. Bubba has been a very gentle dog with children. Apparently even taking food from his bowl while he has been eating before now.
Henry suffered two deep puncture wounds on his right cheek and some grazing across his face from other teeth. We were lucky in that it could have been much worse. The shock is still sinking in. Looking at him brings tears to your eyes.
Unfortunately this happened in the middle of a serious blizzard and way out of town in the country on gravel roads. The nearest hospital was 20 miles away if you could reach it. The travel advisories were all “DO NOT TRAVEL” (rare in the mid west!) but we called the hospital and they said he needed to be seen within 4 hours in order to prevent infection in the wounds.
Even with serious 4 wheel driver vehicles (a Hummer H3 and another 4 wheel driver crew cab truck) there were serious doubts as to whether we would be able to make it through the snow drifts and gravel roads to the edges of town. Chris, Junior and I loaded the truck up with shovels, blankets, donned tons of layers, brought multiple cells phones and water – We really did expect to get stuck about 5 miles in and so we wanted to be prepared for the worst. We were also not sure if we’d be able to make it back out to the house after the hospital. Luckily we got some good inside knowledge from local farmhouses on gravel routes that had been less impacted and so had good intelligence to work from. Visibility was often near zero and we plowed through a couple of big drifts but fortunately luck was with us and we didn’t get stuck. Once of the major roads it was easier going – Just the visibility problems due to the blizzard there.
Rushed the little guy into the hospital and after all the usual “are you insured” card finding melodrama (richest nation on the planet and the only one without universal health care – outrageous and disgusting but I’ll get off the soap box for now)…. They had to strap Henry down into a little burrito/straight jacket type thing in order to do the stitches and wound cleanings. Poor little guy was petrified with fear. Most distressing sounds you can ever hear as a parent are your own flesh and blood in real pain and fear – yet you can do nothing since they need it in order to get better – if only at two years old you could at least comprehend that. Alas no. By the end I’m not sure who had the most tears on their face – Henry, me or Misty. Awful, simply awful.
Henry ended up with 4 stitches in the lower wound and 5 in the top wound. We have to have them removed in 5 days and then see how scaring goes over the next 6 months – may then need to see a plastic surgeon depending how things are. Hospital prescribed him antibiotics which we managed to pick up at a pharmacy open on Xmas Day next to the hospital – Then we started the dreaded blizzard filled journey back to the house. Things had not improved but we finally made it after plowing through some snowdrifts and navigating the gravel roads. Many thanks to Chris for driving us there and back safely in such dangerous conditions. Getting stuck at any point on that route could have been a really serious situation for all.
Henry is doing well at home – Injuries don’t appear to be greatly impacting his toy playing activities!
Amazingly this all happened at 1pm and we were able to get home in time for Prime Rib – which Henry enjoyed! Many thanks to Audra and Irma for the wonderful food and hospitability. Thanks to Junior for helping us get the van loaded and ready to go so quickly and thanks to Taylor, Tim and everyone left at home for looking after Grant for us while we rushed to the hospital.
Some photos of the poor dude below: