What Happens When You Force Her to Use Full Sentences

“Juice!”

“Cordy, that’s not how you ask, is it?”

“Juice, please!”

“Can you say ‘Can I have some juice please?'”

“Some juice, please!”

“No, ‘Can I…have some…juice, please?'”

“Can’t have some juice please!”

“No, no, repeat after me.”

“After me.”

“No, I mean say this…’Can I have some juice please?'”

“I have some juice please?”

“Close! Now, say the whole thing.”

“The whole thing!”

“Ugh! This is going nowhere.”

“No, going to kitchen!”

“Can you ask for juice?”

“Can I… ask for juice, please?”

“Close enough.”

***************
PS – Another review is up! This time for an awesome music DVD called That Baby DVD. See what I thought about it over at Mommy’s Must Haves.



The Future Songwriter

We were watching Backyardigans last night while eating dinner. (Yes, we’re lazy and have dinner in front of the TV on occasion.) As usual, I’m never allowed to eat my own meal – Cordy will gobble every last bite of her food, then rush over to demand half of whatever I’m eating. There’s something about mommy’s food that makes it sooooo delicious.

On this occasion, it was my Lean Cuisine Margherita pizza, and I really didn’t feel like sharing. I only get 300 or so calories from this meal, and I’d like to enjoy every last one, thank you very much.

Cordy started with her normal begging for food. “Pizza for Cordy?” she asked. “No, you had your dinner. This is mommy’s dinner,” I countered with my standard response.

This exchange continued for a few minutes, and then she was quiet. The Backyardigans episode we were watching was the Secret of the Nile, and the song “Please and Thank You” was being sung at this moment. (For those who watch, it’s the song that Tasha and Uniqua sing at the end.) Suddenly, out of nowhere, Cordy comes up to my chair and starts singing along with the song, only with different lyrics:

Peeeez an fank you are da seeee-cwets of da pizza!
Iiii waaaan some of da red pizzaaaa, it’s weally yummy!

She continued on from there, but Aaron and I were laughing too hard, tears in our eyes, to hear the rest of her original song.

I had no idea she was a songwriting talent.

And yes, she got some of my pizza.



She’s Been Waiting For This

Ever since Mira was a few weeks old, she’s been obsessed with watching everyone else eat. We laugh at mealtimes, watching her stare longingly at our plates and making chewing motions right with us. My mom took the girls out to eat on Friday, and told me Mira fixed her gaze on the plates of food like she was going to swipe a piece of chicken when no one was looking.

I knew she was ready for food. The chewing motions, the constant hunger, the fact that she lunged for my sandwich. So we tried some oatmeal on Friday evening. Somewhere in that first meal, she gazed at me with a certain look, as if to say, “Thank you, it’s about damn time.”

Is that bowl for me? If so, put down the camera and feed me, Seymour!
Can you shovel that gruel in a little faster, please?
Oatmeal…check. Now when can we move on to pizza and chicken fries?

After I took that last picture, she cried when she realized it was all gone. This kid takes food seriously. There was no struggle learning to swallow solids properly, no trouble with tongue thrust, no confusion about opening her mouth when the spoon came near. Perfect form, with nary a drop wasted.

This kid is going to be a foodie.

And speaking of food, want to see how I’m sneaking veggies into our meals and how you can too? Check out my review of Deceptively Delicious at Mommy’s Must Haves – there’s a link to some of the recipes, too!



The Tale of the Sentient Trash Can

You may not know this, but I live in a magical neighborhood. Not everything here follows the normal laws of the universe. Maybe it’s super science, or maybe it’s mystical. I’d swear we lived in Eureka if it wasn’t for the fact that my mail clearly says Columbus.

Our trash can has been acting weird lately. No longer content to bide its time on the edge of the street on trash day, waiting for me to eventually haul it back up the driveway around noon when I take Cordy to school, it seems bored and maybe even a little malicious.

At first it moved just a little. For several weeks, it seems to have been testing it’s powers of mobility by moving back a few feet into the edge of the driveway. I found it odd, but didn’t consider it too much. I even tried to rationalize it away, thinking the trash truck may have put it there (hard to do – it’s an automatic truck that sets the can down right where it was), or maybe the mailman was getting here early on those days, pushing the can out of the way of his little mail truck. Neither seemed likely, though.

Pleased with those early efforts, and confident in its abilities, the trash can became more bold last week. As I put Cordy in the car for school, I looked down the driveway and saw the trash can, sitting at the end of the driveway, smack in the middle. Smart trash can, that one – it knew that I wouldn’t be able to get out of the driveway without moving it.

But what it didn’t know was that my maneuverability skills are ranked somewhere up there with NASCAR drivers and the Bureau of Motor Vehicles drivers’ test administrators, thanks to years of careful parallel parking in impossibly small spaces during college. Unwilling to give in to this toddler-like demand for attention, I carefully weaved my car around it and took Cordy to school. I moved it back to the garage when I got home, feeling the trash can had a suitable time out while I was gone.

You know those sentient trash cans, though: they’re stubborn. And this one is still acting out like a spoiled toddler…or maybe an emo teen. You can practically hear it stomping its wheel, unhappy with its one chore of being forced to stand outside once a week. No, it’s determined to show me how unhappy it is and somehow make me unhappy, too.

So this morning I was looking out the window to see if it was raining yet, and I saw this:

Just look at it, taunting me…

Since I shrugged off the trash can’s attempt to be noticed at the end of the driveway last week, it upped the ante, using all of its power to move just behind the SUV this morning. And wow it moves fast – the trash was picked up just before 7am, and it had moved to its new position before 8am.

I IM’d Aaron at work to ask if he had moved the can, but he said it was out on the street by our tree when he left this morning. A quick glance further down the street showed several other trash cans still dutifully waiting for their owners on the edge of the street. Apparently we not only have high-needs children, but now a high-needs trash can as well.

Having a trash can that doesn’t like its job is no fun. City law states that it needs to be taken out of the street within 24 hours, which is about 23 hours more than it’s giving us. This trash can needs to be taught that whether it likes the rain or not, it’s our bitch and we decide when it’s done for the day, not it. Lots of other cans wait without complaint, many until the end of the day.

Next week I’m going to set up a video camera in a front window. I’m determined to catch it in action, so it won’t give me any lip with some lame excuse. Like the wind pushed it uphill, or small gnomes forced it into that position against its will, or spiteful, feral neighbors with a chip on their shoulder and a passive aggressive nature put it there to be nasty.

In its current position, of course, I will be forced to move it from behind my car before I can leave today. This makes me unhappy that the trash can is getting its way.

Any thought on how to punish a willful trash can?

Next week: I will tackle our sentient front yard, which keeps stealing the neighbor kids’ toys for its decoration, cluttering it up. It must be taught that we do not want stuff that isn’t ours on it for days.



They’re Cute, But We Can’t Keep Them

Some may be wondering what happened to my instant feline family that took up residence in Cordy’s play barn last week. As of today, they’re still enjoying our hospitality, and they may not be leaving anytime soon.

Thanks for all of your suggestions on the matter. We’ve called every rescue group we can think of in the area, but they’re full. Vets who take in kittens are also full. The local paper just happened to have a feature on the cat overpopulation problem in Columbus right now. The only place that will take the kittens and mama cat is the humane society, but with the overpopulation problem, I was told they would likely all be euthanized.

And seeing how I’m a nursing mama myself at the moment, my hormones are making me fiercely protect this little family, and there’s no way I’ll take them anywhere where they might come to harm. Mama cat and I have bonded – I can understand the efforts she’s gone through to protect her family. Lactation solidarity, my peeps (putting fist to chest).

For now, I’m feeding her kitten food to give her the extra nutrients for nursing. In just a week, she’s already looking less emaciated, and the kittens have developed cute round bellies. I’ve also earned her trust: she will let me pet her, and she’s let me pick up her kittens in her presence.

The kittens are adorable – two fuzzy brown tabby females (twins?), two black and grey tabby males (with white underbellies and faces – again, twins?), and one black and grey tabby female. All have their eyes open, and they’re gaining weight and growing well. When I peek in on them, they now all turn and come towards me when they hear my voice.

But they can’t stay. As soon as they’re able to walk out of that play barn, they’re dinner to our local marsh hawk. And if they get outside of the fence, the neighbor kids could hurt them. We must find them homes, or at least a temporary safe house until they can find new families.

We already have cats, and our house cannot accommodate more. I’m a temporary guardian angel, not an adoptive mother. We’ve had several offers of help to spay and neuter the family once they’re old enough, which I appreciate. They now just need new families to pet them and spoil them rotten.

Pictures from this weekend (by Katie):

Mama cat:

Kittens:


Who knew I’d be dealing with this? I can’t turn these kittens away – mama cat somehow found her way to our backyard, so I feel I have to help.

Anyone want a kitten?

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