The Itchy and Scratchy Show

Poor. Little. Girl.

 

img_3141

Started with a fever about a week ago, which resolved after a day, and then a rash a few days later.  Took her to the pediatrician who diagnosed the generic catch-all term for “we’re not sure,” which is “viral syndrome.” She reassured us that it was not chicken pox, nor contagious as she had gone to school before the rash got quite so bad.  The girl kept scratching her back, though, and just seemed uncomfortable.  She’s such an easygoing little thing that she must have been pretty miserable to act like she was. 

It’s getting a bit better:

img_3170

And she’s acting more like her usual self.  Case in point–she had previously lost her appetite a bit, but this morning was back to her usual voracious self.  4 oz of whole milk, an entire pear, 1/4 cup of cheerios, and 1/2 a banana, and that’s all before 8 am. 

Even through it all, she kept smiling as best she could:img_31562

On a side note, we’re working on cup training her, which she loves! She doesn’t quite get the sippy cup, but has a lot of fun with a glass and both she and the boy find the process hilarious:

She speaks!!

I think this totally counts as a first word.  She does such a good job with the sign, too! So proud of you, little one.

She loves dogs.  Looks for them everywhere, tries to pet them all, giggles uncontrollably when they inevitably lick her.  A good friend of mine is coming to visit in a few weeks and bringing her puppy with her–I can’t wait to see how she reacts to having a dog in our house.

Stripey dress, redux

I decided that the dress was indeed too short, and I realized I had done the feather and fan border wrong, and there were not enough garter rows at the end so the whole thing just rolled up… so I ripped out, reknit a few rows and voila:

imgp1481imgp1492

So much better!!  The dress is still too big across the top, but I think I can knit a little cord and add it to the back for a design detail and to pull the sleeves in, then take it out when she grows.I love the malleability of knitting, to make it what you want, to undo and redo.  Truthfully, I’m not much of a perfectionist, and I see knitting as a way to improve that part of me.  I often tend to see things as “good enough” and not feel compelled to make them just right.  With the knitting, I push myself to do that, and am always pleasantly surprised  to be much happier that I did.

Stripey Dress

New dress for the girl:

imgp1454

imgp1400imgp1403

Grrr… A bit too big around the top, a bit too short overall… I may rip out the bottom and knit a few more rows, or just leave it as is and call it a tunic for summertime.

You may also notice that she has the standing down pat–it’s her favorite thing to do.  She’s also picking up more signs and can now sign “dog” and most importantly, “brother.”

Sally

My best friend from med school came out for a visit last week with her family.  I was so excited for our kids to meet–she has a 4 year old daughter and a 2 year old son.  The older kids met almost 3 years ago but obviously had no recollection of each other. When thinking of presents for the kids, B told me that her daughter was really into fairies, and her son into balls.  What’s a knitter to do? Enter Sally the Eco Fairy and a set of knitted balls.

imgp1343

Not quite finished here–she needed a set of wings, hair, and eyes.  In my usual fashion I was sewing these on in the car to Vail.  While I managed to finish in time, my camera ran out of batteries so I don’t have a picture of the finished product, but will try to get my friend to send me one.  Really, she is so cute–even my boy looked at it and told me, “Mommy, that doll is really beautiful.” Honestly, I don’t know if the girl will really love it–it seems that so many kids these days are more enchanted with plastic versions of toys that look like the movie characters they see.

The knitted balls are adorable too, and of course suffer from the same lack-of-camera syndrome.  I almost put little jingle balls in them, but then took pity on the parents and decided against it.

I’m of course going to make a fairy for my girl–darker yarn, darker hair.  I’ve realized that there are very few representations in children’s media that involve non white children or voices.  Some I find frankly racist (the Latino car in the movie “Cars,” for example, complete with hydraulics and flame paint job).  Sesame Street is going off the air, and Dora/Diego are so unpalatable that I can’t bear to watch. But Bob the Builder, Thomas, Curious George don’t really have any.  Any thoughts on others?

Science Experiments

Remember “Mr. Wizard” from when you were a kid? No? He was this guy on TV who would do simple science experiments with kids.  I loved this show and watched it obsessively, much like every other kids science show.  “Newton’s Apple” with Ira Flatow? My heart still goes pitter-pat when I hear him hosting “Science Friday” on NPR.

Mr. Wizard

There was one experiment he did in which you mixed cornstarch and water together and played around with it.  I recently found a book of science experiments for toddlers and found this in it. Remembering how much fun it had been, I did this the other day with the boy.

imgp1178

It’s pretty cool stuff.  Cornstarch suspends in water, making a substance that is a liquid when poured or manipulated slowly but will act like a solid when hit.  You can roll it into a ball but it will melt a second later.

imgp1191

We had a blast, talking about what is liquid and what is solid. And, really, it doesn’t make too much of a mess.

imgp1198

Okay, maybe by your standards it makes a terrific mess.  But it really isn’t hard to clean up at all.

I’ve realized that my daughter gets a bit of a short shrift in these posts.  Truthfully, it’s partly because she hasn’t been doing all that much.  She’s wickedly adorable:

imgp1137

And as noted before will eat anything put in front of her.  She is starting to sign a bit–she’s got “fan” “milk” and “more” down pat. We’re working on a few others.  Her brother had over 100 signs at his peak, and it was really fun to be able to communicate with him that way. She also says “mama” and babbles a lot. We’re still working on the whole movement thing.  She has figured out how to get around by a combination of rolling and spinning, but isn’t really all that interested in crawling yet.  Who knows? She may surprise us yet and head directly for walking.