Showing posts with label blog tags. Show all posts
Showing posts with label blog tags. Show all posts

Thursday, August 13, 2009

Picnic Table Talk: Writing

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I come from a family that enjoys writing. Our love of writing comes primarily from my father, who writes poetry and the occasional story in his (very sparse given his ten children and demanding job) free time. My mother also deserves credit, however – she is the letter writer in the family. She doesn’t write frequently (she does, after all, have the demanding job of mother of ten children – two still at home), but the letters she writes are always long and detailed.

I type more than I write by hand. I enjoy writing with a fountain pen, thanks to intensive handwriting education in French public schools. I type very quickly, but sometimes it’s good to have the extra reflecting time given by my penmanship.

I have done very little to teach my children penmanship. Johnny is too young (he does draw circles, which is pretty good for a 20-month-old). Emma has printing sheets, but she’s a perfectionist who only draws the letters she is certain she can get perfectly. I’m fine with that for now. She writes a very nice T, E, L, I, and U, as well as the occasional M and A when she is feeling adventurous.

I hope my children grow to love writing also, and I think there is a lot that can be done in early childhood to foster a love of writing. A few things I remember and try to practice as a parent from my own childhood:

  • Read aloud, a lot.
  • Write yourself, and let children hear what you have written.
  • Write down stories your children tell you before they are old enough to write them themselves.
  • Keep a journal and encourage your children to do so also. I’ve kept a journal for most of my life (every single day since September 27, 2003), and all three of my children have journals. Emma and Johnny scribble and draw in theirs as I did in my first journal as a child, and I’m sure Lily will be doing the same soon. I write occasional journal entries in my children’s journals to get them started with a record of their lives as well.
  • Sing songs – often overlooked, this is a great way for children to learn about rhyming and the rhythm of language.
  • Write simple stories and have your children use them to practice their penmanship once they are reading. My children are too young for this currently, but I remember my mother doing it with me, and it made penmanship practice much more interesting.

Thursday, July 23, 2009

Picnic Table Talk: Organization

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I try to provide my children with as many opportunities to explore their world and express themselves as possible, while maintaining a reasonably clean house. Organization is something I think about frequently, and a topic I have blogged about before.

I haven’t done much to organize learning in our house; I think very young children learn a lot by exploring their world, particularly if parents pay attention to and discuss their children’s interests. I am considering a loose adaptation of Sue Patrick's Workbox System to provide Emma and Johnny with things to do at their play table with minimal supervision when I am busy with the baby. If anyone has used workboxes in this way with young children, I would love to hear about it! Some things I would put in the workboxes:

  • Play dough, sometimes on it’s own, sometimes with one of our homemade play mats.
  • Pattern blocks, sometimes with templates like the ones I referred to in this post.
  • File folder games like this one.
  • Their travel felt boards with the activities mentioned in this post.
  • Their crayon rolls and paper/coloring pages
  • These paint brushes and paper

Have any other suggestions as to what I should put in these bins? I’d love any other ideas!

Here are a few things that work well for us in terms of physical organization:

  • Divide craft materials into categories. I have some supplies (colored paper, fabric scraps, and pipe cleaners) that I let the kids use with minimal supervision. The next category is supplies that both kids can use with light supervision (crayons, markers, glue), followed by materials that require close supervision (small beads, scissors).
  • Categorize toys. We keep our building toys in a different part of the house from stuffed animals and dolls, which are also separate from books. Puzzles are kept separately from other toys also.
  • Make clean-up fun and easy. Each toy has a place where it always goes, and I use containers that are easy for my kids to put toys into. Sometimes they will clean up a toy on their own, but more often I clean up alongside them. If they’re reluctant to help pick up, we’ll sing a song and/or turn clean-up into a game (who can find the most red duplos, who can pick their toy up the most quickly, etc)
  • Catch destructive mode before it’s full-blown. Emma and Johnny both occasionally go into destructive mode. For Johnny, this typically means he needs a nap; for Emma it’s a signal that she needs to do a structured activity.

What organizing tricks simplify your life?

Thursday, July 9, 2009

Picnic Table Talk: Staycation

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In our eight years of marriage, Mike and I have gone on only two vacations that didn’t involve visiting family, attending weddings/reunions, or some type of work commitment (I wish we could go along on Mike’s work trips, particularly last summer when he “had” to go to Hawai’i for a week). The vacations? A three-day visit to a small Scottish town to celebrate our three-year-anniversary (we were living in Scotland at the time) and our less-than-48-hour honeymoon way back in 2001.

Fortunately, we always have a wonderful time visiting family, and we’re pretty good at staycations. We love finding local ways to have a good time, especially when these things are free. We spent several years as (by Western standards sometimes nearly literally) starving students and now live as a family of nearly-five with many student loans and a house that (lately) has been exceptionally fond of falling apart, so free is good. Here are a few staycation activities we’ve enjoyed so far this summer:

  • A free family outing to the Boston Museum of Science last Friday, courtesy of the Highland Street Foundation’s Free Fun Fridays.
  • A day out at Davis’ Farmland – not free, but we got discounted tickets through a friend and the kids had a fantastic time.
  • Several trips to the Discovery Museums in Acton. We bought a membership last year and have gotten more than our money’s worth over the past twelve months. I do wish I had started bringing my kids to the science museum earlier – I assumed they were too young but took them there last week and it turns out they PREFER the science museum over the children’s museum (much to their super-geeky father’s delight, and well-timed since he had been expressing concern over their lack of geekiness relative to himself).
  • A potluck BBQ for Mike’s coworkers and their families in our backyard (they don’t fit in our house)
  • Our town’s 4th of July parade
  • Celebrating my birthday with family
  • Celebrating our 8-year anniversary (dinner out without children – quite the treat in our home!)
  • Play dates and get-togethers with friends
  • Playing outdoors

And some activities we’re looking forward to:

  • More play dates – including a trip to the zoo with friends this Friday (free, thanks to the friends’ zoo membership!)
  • Visits from family members throughout the summer (thanks in large part to the pending arrival of Baby #3)
  • Mike’s birthday
  • Playing outdoors
  • Visiting local farms and our town’s new Farmer’s Market
  • Birthday parties for a couple of Emma’s friends

Last, (hopefully) quite small, but most definitely not least, the arrival of Baby #3 – ideally within the next 30 days! I even washed the baby clothes and packed a hospital bag last night…

Monday, July 6, 2009

My first swap!

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I just took part in my first blog swap! Beth from be the thread sent us this adorable dress for baby #3, and we sent off a travel felt activities kit with a felt board similar to this one, felt shapes, and some laminated geometric shapes activity templates. Emma was super excited when we got the package in the mail – she even had to help take the picture of the package contents, as you can see!

Thursday, June 18, 2009

Picnic Table Talk: On The Go With Toddlers

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My children do not like the car. Both screamed in the car as infants, and Emma threw up on every car ride until we switched her to a forward-facing car seat. As toddlers they tolerate the car as a necessary part of life, but they definitely don’t enjoy the ride. Luckily I’ve learned a few tricks to help us survive car trips, doctor’s office waiting rooms, and airplane rides:

  • Music: For toddlers, songs that have actions to do with their hands seem to work the best. We spend a lot of time listening to Wee Sing Children's Songs and Fingerplays and the Signing Time CDs for this reason.
  • Draw attention to their surroundings: Emma likes to count trees – very easy to do in Massachusetts! She also likes to look for certain stores whose logos she recognizes. Johnny likes to look for various construction vehicles, and both kids love looking for animals.
  • Bring car-safe food: I like the (expensive) freeze-dried yogurt melts, because I feel like they are virtually choke-proof. My kids love them, and it’s a treat they only get in the car.
  • Coloring books: I always keep crayons and a coloring book in my bag. Sometimes they color, sometimes they tell me what to color.
  • Surprises: I’ve wrapped small toys for kids to open on long plane and car rides. They enjoy unwrapping toys they already own, so you don’t even have to buy something new.

What are your best car/waiting room/airplane tips?

Thursday, June 11, 2009

Picnic Table Talk: Arts and Crafts

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I was really excited when I heard that the picnic table talk topic for this week was arts and crafts. As the title of my blog implies, I love crafting with and for my children. I wrote about things I do to encourage creativity in our home here (there are more excellent ideas in the comments for that post). That post inspired this post about crafting in tight and/or rented spaces (there are some great suggestions in the comments for this post also). Crafting can get pretty messy, so I shared my best laundry tips and tricks here.

I get fantastic inspiration from blogs that I read, and I sporadically share my personal favorites through “blog favorites” posts. Here are a couple favorite activities I made up with my kids:

Emma has recently started inventing her own craft activities, which is very fun and rewarding to see.

I’m always a fan of free-style art, and let’s not forget nature’s art. I try to let my kids play outdoors as much as possible, weather permitting, and I’ve even been known to bring the outdoors in on particularly blistery days.

I love art supplies. Here are the basics that I try to always have on hand:

  • Felt
  • Markers (I love Crayola washable)
  • Crayons
  • Construction paper
  • Glue sticks
  • Plain paper
  • Roll paper (we get ours from Ikea, which has the best price I’ve seen)

Other items I like to have around:

  • pom poms
  • pipe cleaners
  • beads (with holes large enough to fit on the pipe cleaners)
  • yarn
  • fabric scraps
  • various kitchen and household recyclables
  • Play-doh (store-bought or home made)
  • any other art supplies I can get my hands on

I also recently bought some Crayola paint-filled brushes that I love (and blogged about here). I’m pretty loyal towards Crayola products, in no small part because I ingested ridiculous quantities of their art supplies as a child and still turned out okay. Not that I recommend ever ingesting art supplies of any brand in any quantity, but I appreciate the non-toxic and frequently washable nature of Crayola products.

I look forward to reading everyone else’s posts about arts and crafts!

Tuesday, June 9, 2009

Sewing Machine Meme

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What brand and model do you have?

I have a Brother XL-3030 (fairly basic electronic sewing machine) and a Brother 1034D overlock serger.

How long have you had it?

I’ve owned the XL-3030 for eleven years, and the 1034D for about a month.

How much does that machine cost (approximately)?

I’m pretty sure the XL-3030 cost around $100, and I just paid $200 for the 1034D.

What types of things do you sew (i.e. quilting, clothing, handbags, home dec projects, etc.)?

Primarily clothes, but also the occasional curtain and toys for my kids.

How much do you sew? How much wear and tear does the machine get?

My machines get less wear and tear than I would like them to, because I find it hard to sew with two toddlers (particularly with my 18mo son, who thinks he should operate the sewing machine). However, the XL-3030 did survive sewing my wedding dress, which I found very impressive for a budget sewing machine. It also does fine sewing jackets.

Do you like/love/hate your machine? Are you ambivalent? Passionate? Does she have a name?

I’m absolutely in love with my serger, I wanted one for a long time and this one is living up to my expectations beautifully. I’m very fond of the XL-3030, it’s served me well for many years.

What features does your machine have that work well for you?

Brother sewing machines have reminders etched onto the machine of how to thread them – very helpful for forgetful souls like myself. The XL-3030 has never broken down or had any other mechanical problems, and I definitely appreciate that!

Is there anything that drives you nuts about your machine?

Not so far. I taught myself to sew on my mother’s beat-up Singer sewing machine, which had major tension issues, so in comparison my two machines are fantastic. In my mother’s Singer’s defense, it had survived roughly 20 years of Home Economics students before arriving in our home, where it went on to receive more abuse at my own hands (picture a not-especially-cautious/careful twelve-year-old playing with a sewing machine unsupervised).

Do you have a great story to share about your machine (i.e., Found it under the Christmas tree? Dropped it on the kitchen floor? Sewed your fingernail to your zipper?, Got it from your Great Grandma?, etc.!)? We want to hear it!

My strategy for buying sewing machines so far has been to buy them at Costco, when they are on sale. I doubt it’s the way to buy a fancy specialized machine, but it’s worked well in terms of meeting my fairly basic needs.

Would you recommend the machine to others? Why?

I would definitely recommend the 1034D. I’d probably look for a different model than the XL-3030 for a basic machine – mainly because I don’t think they make the XL-3030 any more but also because I don’t like the way the spools of thread sit on the machine. Both machines have been a good value for the price, though, and I would recommend Brother as a budget sewing machine brand.

What factors do you think are important to consider when looking for a new machine?

At this point in my life, I’m looking for decent quality at a good price. I also wanted machines that were easy to store, since I currently do all my sewing on the dining room table and am therefore constantly setting up/taking down machines. I would love to own a higher-end machine some day - and my own sewing/craft room!

Do you have a dream machine?

Not yet, since I’m years (possibly decades) away from being in the market for one. I think it would be fun to own a fancy embroidery machine, and I would love to own an old-fashioned treadle sewing machine – they look beautiful, they are earth-friendly (no electricity), and they seem to last forever.

Thank you Sew, Mama, Sew! for this fun sewing machine meme!

Thursday, May 28, 2009

ABC & 123 Picnic Intro

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Welcome to my blog! I’ve been following ABC & 123 from the beginning, and I’m looking forward to visiting the other blogs that contribute to this amazing cooperative blog run by Katie and Katie!

I’m a SAHM to Emma (3) and Johnny (17 months), with a baby girl on the way. Before becoming a mom, I taught high school (French and Spanish) and then went back to school for a PhD in Medicine. Emma was born as I was finishing my PhD, and I enjoyed taking care of her so much that I decided to stay home with her after I graduated. Thankfully my husband Mike was able to find a good enough job that this was possible for us! A lot of things I learned in grad school are actually very helpful to life as a mom – I know how to research things I don’t know, and writing a dissertation requires patience and dedication (just like motherhood!)

My blog title is inspired by things I love: being thrifty, crafts, and – best of all – being a mom. I love making things with and for my kids, and that is what this blog is mostly about. Here are a couple of my favorite educational posts from my blog:

As for picnics, we try to eat outside as much as possible during the spring/summer, and our favorite picnic foods are watermelon and corn on the cob (I spent the first not-quite-seven years of my life living on a corn farm, so corn is near and dear to my heart!) Since we have a baby due this summer, we’ll be staying near to home, but we’re lucky enough to have several family members visiting us!

Thanks for visiting my blog, please leave a comment so I can be sure to visit yours! If you have an idea of something you’d like to see on this blog, I’d love to hear it!

Saturday, May 9, 2009

Would You Rather…

Katie from A Listmaker's Life tagged me to answer these questions:

Would you rather...

Always have to write with your other hand or with one eye shut?
Always write with my other hand. I like being able to see, and I learned to write left-handed once before (when I broke my right hand), so I should  be able to learn again. My handwriting just goes from bad to worse…

Walk in circles through a spinning door a thousand times or hang upside-down for 3 hours?
Walk in circles. Hanging upside down for three hours sounds painful.

Wear a bicycle helmet everywhere you go or carry an open umbrella everywhere?
Open umbrella.

Be the first person to land on Mars or the first one to live on the moon?
Land on Mars, so long as it didn’t take forever to get there and back. Living on the moon sounds lonely, and it would be cool to see Mars.

Kiss a monkey or eat a bite of dog food?
If it’s well-trained, kiss the monkey. Otherwise I’d go for dog food.

Be the fastest runner in the world or the fastest reader?
I thought Katie had a great answer for this question: be the fastest reader but look like the fastest runner.

Walk on water anytime you want or fly for 3 hours, but only 3 different times in your life?
Walk on water anytime.

Sleep each night on a hammock 3 stories above the ground or sleep each night on an air filled pool mattress floating in a pond of baby sharks?
Sleep on a hammock, although I’ve been swimming in open water with sharks before (college summer job) and I don’t think baby ones would be too bad, obviously depending on the type of shark. I’m just not a fan of floating around on pool mattresses. The hammock sounds lovely, provided I don’t fall out...

Have a jar of jellybeans that never goes empty or a magical stereo that can play any song you want?
Magical stereo, especially if it would give me any recording of any song I wanted.

Spend the rest of your life in a submarine or in a space ship?
Space ship. Submarines seem more likely to induce claustrophobia.

I’ll pass this on to anyone who’d like to give it a go…

Monday, May 4, 2009

10 Things You Were Dying to Know

Tricia at Five Little Monkeys tagged me for 10 Things You Were Dying To Know. Here are my answers to these all-important questions :)

1) What is your current obsession? Sleep. I haven’t been getting much of it.

2) Which item of clothing do you wear most often? Jeans and monochrome t-shirts. Especially the one pair of maternity jeans that fit right.

3) What's for dinner? Good question. Mike’s getting dinner at a work meeting, so I’ll make whatever the kids want (mac 'n cheese is a safe guess, if we used the boxed kind we make it with pureed squash instead of milk and add frozen baby peas).

4) What are you listening to? Birds singing! And some truck clearing away December ice storm damage in a neighbor’s yard. That’s what we spent the weekend doing, it’s a popular pastime round here lately.

5) Say something about the one who tagged you: Tricia has 5 kids AND she finds time to blog! It also sounds like she makes some delicious food, she plans her menu a week in advance (my hubby would love for me to do that and we would definitely eat less mac n cheese), and she’s always sharing great finds from around the web - like this post about recycling denim.

6) Favorite vacation spot? My parents are posted back in the same country (and city!) where I went to high school, and I’m dying to go visit! It’s in Europe, so not the easiest of travel destinations but I’m determined to get there before they move.

7) What are you reading right now? The Best Birth by Sarah McMoyler and Armin Brott. I like the central idea of working with hospital staff (if you plan to have a hospital birth or even if you planned a home birth and wind up transferring to a hospital for whatever reason) to create the safest, most satisfying birth possible rather than coming in with an “us versus them” attitude. The recommended “hold a fistful of ice for 90 seconds” activity doesn’t come anywhere near approximating the pain quotient of labor for me, but it was very entertaining to see my husband complain about how much it hurt.

8) Four words to describe yourself? Wife, Mother, Dedicated, Resourceful

9) Guilty pleasure? Dark chocolate

10) First Spring thing to do? Get the kids outside to play!

Tag, you're it!

I tag quadmama, Valerie, Holly, and anyone else who would like to participate – just leave a comment if you do so I can be sure to read your post!

Friday, April 24, 2009

Blog Award!

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Thanks to Chronicle of an Infant Bibliophile for giving me the “Premio Dardos” award for "bloggers who distinguish themselves for showing cultural values, ethics, great and fun writing skills, as well as individual values, through their creative writing." Infant Bibliophile writes a blog full of excellent book selections for young children. Favorite books receive the “watermelon award” (Infant Bibliophile loves watermelons); you can check out the list of books that have received this award thus far here.

Here are the award rules:

  1. To accept and show the distinct image
  2. Show the link to the blog from which you were given the award
  3. Choose 15 blogs to give the Award (Premio Dardos).

Here are 15 blogs taken from the many I enjoy:

  1. Filth Wizardry: creativity with cardboard and sewing and an admirable willingness to let her kids make a mess
  2. Got Quads?: tales from a mother of quadruplet 3yo girls
  3. Having Fun at Home: toddler activities and crafts
  4. homemade by jill: fantastic tutorials ranging from sewing projects to diaper cakes
  5. Ikat Bag: awesome creativity with cardboard, sewing, and foam
  6. Itty Bitty Bistro: fantastic recipes for babies, toddlers, and children
  7. maya*made: beautiful sewing
  8. Mommy Love: crafting, cloth diapers, and life with three little boys
  9. Mom of Littles: tips for pregnancy and parenting little ones
  10. Olabelhe: stunning dresses for her little girl
  11. sunnydaytodaymama: beautiful photos chronicling the joy and wonder of childhood
  12. The Adventures of Bear: toddler crafts and activities
  13. Tracyecakes: gorgeous cakes and stories of parenting
  14. Two Under Two. Whew!: entertaining tales of life with two children under two
  15. UK lass in US: lovely sewing and crafting

Sunday, March 29, 2009

Blog Awards - Thank You!

I received this first award from sunnydaytodaymama, a blog where I always enjoy reading about “life with a sunny boy”. Sunnymama writes posts about daily life, activities she and her son do together, things they make, and other aspects of everyday life with with a toddler.

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Lemons to Lemonade award rules:

  1. Put the logo on your blog or post.
  2. Nominate at least 10 blogs that show great attitude or
    gratitude.
  3. Link to your nominees within your post.
  4. Let the nominees know that they have received this award by commenting on their blog.
  5. Share the love and link to the person from who you received your award.

This second award was kindly given to me by Chronicle of an Infant Bibliophile. If you have a book-loving toddler in your house - or if you are a book-loving parent of a toddler, you will love this site, which is full of “Reviews from a baby bookworm…and his crafty mama”.

iloveyour blog I love your blog rules:

  1. Add the logo of the award to your blog
  2. Add a link to the person who awarded it to you
  3. Nominate at least 7 other blogs
  4. Add links to those blogs on your blog
  5. Leave a message for your nominees on their blogs!

I spent a ridiculous amount of time unsuccessfully compiling a list of blogs for these two awards, so here’s what I’m doing. If I have visited your blog and left you a comment, it means I love your blog and your attitude, which means you deserve both of these awards. Consider them hereby awarded.

If I have never commented on your blog and you think I would like it, leave me a comment, and I’ll come visit sometime in the next week.

Friday, March 20, 2009

Ultimate Blog Party 2009

Ultimate Blog Party 2009

5 Minutes for Mom is hosting a blog party! It’s a great opportunity to check out all of the amazing blogs out there, to get to know some fantastic bloggers, and even to win prizes, such as:

I started blogging last October, and it’s something I really enjoy! I love sharing the activities my kids and I enjoy, and learning from all of the amazing posts on other blogs.

I’m wife to my fantastic husband of nearly eight years, and mom to a three-year-old daughter and a one-year-old son. We have a baby girl due this summer.

I got pregnant with my first daughter while finishing up a PhD in Medicine. She “helped” me finish up writing, and even came to the celebratory dinner after I passed my defense. I really wanted to focus on being a mom after graduation. Fortunately, my husband was able to find a job that allowed me to do just that.

I cherish my life as a stay-at-home mom. It’s a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to re-experience the magic of childhood and to stretch my creativity as we explore new crafts, activities, and pastimes.

Friday, February 20, 2009

Blog Award

Kreativ blogger award

Sandy from Just For Fun very kindly gave me this award earlier this month, and I’ve finally got my act together enough to pass it on. Drop by Sandy’s blog if you haven’t already – she’s a mother of five who posts tons of fun and exciting ideas of things to do with your kids. Thanks, Sandy!

Here are the rules for the award:

Thank the person who gave the award to you, post the award on you blog or on a post, nominate 10 blogs which show great attitude/gratitude, link to the people you chose on your post,and comment on their blogs to tell them about the award!

I’m passing this award onto these blogs:

Tuesday, February 3, 2009

Blog Awards

I got my first two blog awards, both from Keeling at Confessions of a Mommy Blogger. Thanks, Keeling!

I’m supposed to pass the Butterfly Award on to 10 blogs that I think are pretty cool.

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I’m passing this award on to:

On to the second award…

th_Honest_Scrap_Award Here are the rules for this award:
a) List 10 honest things about yourself - and make it interesting, even if you have to dig deep! and
b) Pass the award on to 7 bloggers that you feel embody the spirit of the Honest Scrap.

First, I’ll pass this award on to:

Now, 10 honest things:

  1. I love blogging. It’s a fun way to share things that I enjoy doing with my kids. I especially like getting comments back and reading about all the stuff other people do with their kids and have on their minds.
  2. I love cardboard boxes. I think this goes back to a childhood of moving frequently and having tons of enormous boxes to play with, but I have a hard time sending a cardboard box straight to the recycle bin without my kids making something or letting my kids play with it first.
  3. I love my dishwasher. I grew up hand-washing dishes – big deal in a family of 12, and I fall in love with my dishwasher all over again every time I open the door and see the rows of sparkling dishes.
  4. I love my washer and dryer. I lived without a dryer for three years, and hang-drying a family of three’s laundry is no picnic, especially in a 350-square-foot apartment. I’ve also had to hand-wash clothes for up to a month at a time, and that’s not fun either (although I did once buy some really awesome hand-clothes-washing goop in Bosnia, it got my clothes really clean with minimal effort and didn’t even dry out my hands!).
  5. I hate, hate, hate the belly contraction/baby heart rate monitor they use in the labor and delivery wards in hospitals. It drives me nuts, and they can never get mine to stay one. Plus, with both babies I’ve had so far they’ve made me keep it on the ENTIRE time. I’m hoping third time’s the charm and they won’t make me keep it on non-stop. Can someone please invent an EKG-type thing that is just a sticker with a wire attached? And get it into my hospital by this summer?
  6. I LOVE chocolate, especially Ghiradelli 60% cocoa chocolate chips. This will come as no surprise if you’ve been reading my blog for a while.
  7. My nine siblings are the best resources/backup ever. I think having lots of siblings as an adult is quite possibly the biggest benefit of growing up in a large family. I just wish I lived closer to them.
  8. I’ve never lived anywhere longer than 6.9 years.
  9. My daughter had lived in three countries (and visited a fourth) before she turned nine months old.
  10. I don’t plan to move anytime soon. It’s a good feeling.

Monday, November 17, 2008

15 things you might not know about me

Andrea tagged me to write a list of 15 things you might not know about me that I'm not too scared to admit. Here they are...

  1. I eat Ghiradelli 60% cocoa chocolate chips nearly every day.
  2. My favorite food is pumpkin chocolate chip cookies made with Guittard chocolate chips. Guittard, please start selling your chocolate chips on the East Coast?
  3. I met my husband the first day of college freshman orientation. We were so obviously smitten with each other that my roommate asked me that night if I thought he was "the one". I didn't answer because I realized he just might be and that was a scary thought...
  4. I once took a job that required a 2-hour bus commute each direction from where we lived. I read a lot of books on those buses that year, but I don't remember what any of them were about.
  5. I took a (different) bus to the hospital to have my daughter.
  6. I can type really fast - accuracy depends how tired I am and whether or not a child is sitting on my lap.
  7. I'm claustrophobic.
  8. I choke on water at least once a week.
  9. I once got a part in a theatrical production because I "looked androgynous" (to quote the director at our first full cast meeting).
  10. I have five sisters and four brothers. They are awesome.
  11. I don't get bad morning sickness (so far at least!) but being pregnant gives me insomnia. For all nine months.
  12. I love to chew crushed ice even though it's bad for my teeth and drives my husband crazy.
  13. My favorite colors as a little girl were purple and pink. I remember coloring entire pages pink and purple. No drawings, no details - just lots and lots of pink and lots and lots of purple.
  14. As a toddler I ate the felt tips off of most of my older siblings' Crayola markers. I remember doing this. The markers did not taste good, but eating them was irresistable. That's why Crayola products are non-toxic.
  15. I've been a cancer survivor for as long as I can remember (diagnosed at 22 months).

I tag Erica, Maile, Paula, and James.

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