Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Julia's Philbrook Adventure

We took Julia to the Philbrook Museum of Art in January for one of their free family Saturdays. Just for signing up, Julia got her very own art kit, complete with a pad of paper, a pencil, and an eraser, and a promise for more art supplies if we bring her back. Hilarious possessions for a then thirteen-month-old, I know. We only let her "write" with the pencil under tight supervision, lest she poke her eye out.

I really love that museums, libraries, etc. are such good sports about parents signing up their much-too-young children for such things, because they have the foresight to know that children grow and that it's better early than late for getting children interested in art, reading, etc. I mean, Julia couldn't even scribble at the time, let alone participate in the clay sculpture making going on there that weekend, but even a couple months later, I think she'd have a lot of fun at one of their events, and certainly will by the time she's even older.  Hooray for beautiful art and beautiful gardens and family friendly (free!) events!





Julia loves "Jee Jee"

Julia loves "May May"

Deep in contemplation.

Tuesday, March 27, 2012

January 2012 Photos

Here's a smattering of random January photos. Enjoy!



Artist in bloom.


Spaghetti-sauce-faced and -handed baby gets transported to the bath by daddy, who didn't want to get red sauce stains on his shirt.

Julia, enjoying her birthday/Christmas celebration with Alex :-)


Not the kind of group you'd really expect to be playing a fantasy medieval adventure co-op board game, eh?

Birthday girl = Mr. X

Julia with her "best friend," Violet, the singing dog.

Someone's pretty excited about a Sesame Street youtube music video clip.

Early Winter Photos - 2011

I tend to get super behind in posting photos, so enjoy this delayed deluge of photos from November and December!  It's amazing to me how much smaller Julia already looks to me in these pictures from only a few months ago!

My library fine receipt from a trip to the library in November. Amazingly, we only owed $17.65!

Julia's green male friends - Shrek and the Hulk.  They were her main squeezes once upon a time.


Rocking her new shoes!


Sillies.



Julia used to LOVE this old purple lunch box. Sarah used it in elementary school, I used it in medical school, and we used it to tote Julia's milk and food. She always wanted to hold it on the way to and from my parents' house, and she used to freak out if I broke her grip to put her in her carseat.




These last few photos are from the last day of 2011!  What a beautiful year it was!





Awkward family photo



Saturday, March 24, 2012

JGI ver 1.25

I had a powerpoint presentation to work on the other day, so naturally, I felt it was the perfect time to work on writing up....

Julia's 15 month post!

Procrastinators of the world, unite! 




Can you believe that Julia is 1 1/4 years old??  Neither can I!  Time is flying like crazy.

  • Julia likes to feed her milk, water, and play food to her baby doll, stuffed animals, finger puppets, book characters, etc.  She loves sharing and she's very nurturing. 
  • She has taken a huge interest in letters.  She can sing along decently well to the alphabet song and can spell her name aloud when asked, usually without prompting.  We have foam letters and numbers in the bathtub that we enjoy practicing with her.  
  • Her ability to sing words to songs is increasing. She's especially good at knowing some of the words to the songs that her singing stuffed dog, Violet, performs.
  • Julia is getting really good at coloring. We draw outlines for her in chalk or crayon, and she focuses her efforts on scribbling on what we've drawn. She can't stay in the lines, but she definitely centers around what she's trying to color in. She asks to color several times a day by making a scribbling motion with her hand and saying, "Write!"
  • Our baby is still an outdoors lady. She runs to the door many, many, many, many, many times a day, saying, "Outside!" Actually, that's what she used to do. Lately, she says "outsideoutsideoutsideoutsideoutside..." very quickly and under her breath. It sounds like a crazy chant uttered by someone under house arrest driven mad by cabin fever. Once outside, she runs around, picking up leaves and rocks, digging in the dirt with her fingers, trying to eat said dirt, and chasing birds with great enthusiasm.
  • I gave Julia her first real hair cut the other day. We put a towel around her and Aaron held her against him with her arms pinned down to her sides. I stabilized her head with one hand and cut her bangs with the other. I had fun making her look less wild. She hated it, but she probably enjoys not having hair in her eyes anymore. Well... she probably doesn't notice, but she does look cute!
  • Julia has been really good in mass lately, all things considered. She's usually quiet when she should be quiet, and she sings beautifully whenever there is music. Sometimes, she pulls out a hymnal when there isn't music and points at the music and sings, but she isn't too loud. She does shout out for "crack" sometimes, which probably makes people raise their eyebrows at us (she's no crack baby, I promise... it's just her word for cracker ;-) ). She loves going to church to see "Jee Jee" (Jesus, not to be confused with "Gee Gee" = Grammie).
  • Julia's vocabulary continues to amaze me. She knows so many words. I lost track of how many words she knows so long ago, but it'd be a really high number. She's a verbal one. She does a fair amount of hilarious babyese as well, reading books out loud and running around monologuing. She's funny.
  • Julia loves wearing shoes and hats and even hair bows. When she was younger, she tried to rip any nonessential garb off as soon as it was put on her, but now she likes accessorizing. I'm having fun dolling her up by fixing her hair :-) We also bought her her very own baseball cap - TU, of course. And taught her to say, "Go TU!"  Cutest golden hurricane ever.
  • We have put Julia in the church nursery a few times on Friday evenings this Lent for the talk that follows the Lenten supper. The nursery workers are quite taken with her and they couldn't believe how well she played with other kids, especially considering many of them were quite a bit older than her. One of the volunteers asked me, "Is she around other kids all the time?" To which, the answer, of course, was no... pretty much never. She loves other kids so much, though. The other evening on the playground, she tried to play with some kids a few years older than her. She had this goofy grin on her face the whole time as she tried giving them pebbles. Puppy love.
  • Speaking of love, we love Julia. A lot a lot a lot a lot.

Monday, March 12, 2012

Julia's Literary Discovery, Part II

We have been working with Julia on her ABCs. We got a book out from the library called My Foodie ABC: A Little Gourmet's Guide. I like food and I like helping Julia to learn, so I thought it'd be a fun read.

Umm...

This book is how I know now that I am not a foodie, because I had no idea what half of the things in the book were. Chanterelle, anyone? Xuxu? I thought those sounded like really out there names for dogs (maybe that celebrities would use for poodles and shih tzus, respectively). Opah? I thought it was what you shouted out at a big, fat greek wedding. Nopales? No clue. Luckily, there is a definition and description of each, but it's the most esoteric thing I've ever read to Julia, and highly impractical for a little girl growing up in this family. I make a mean chicken tikka masala, my tzatziki is legit, and my carnitas tacos are pretty delish... but that's about as ethnic as I get in the kitchen. I'm no foodie... or gourmet (G) or locavore (L) or even a vegetarian (V).

I got tired of trying to read the pronunciation key for all these obscure terms, so I started just singing the alphabet song as I flipped through the pages with Julia.

Aaron, however, must have let her linger on the pages quite a bit longer tonight, because she made a few new discoveries.

First, she found "Papa!" (her name for my dad).



Insightful?  Decently so. My dad isn't balding and doesn't peddle fruit (hard to believe, I know), but he does have gray hair and wear reading glasses, so she wasn't entirely off the mark. Aaron texted the photo to my dad, who noticed the key missing feature by responding, "Where's the moustache?"

Unfortunately, Aaron had to respond by saying, "Haha, apparently on "Mama!"


Yes, "Mama!"

Insightful? I hope not. Insulting? Probably. Should I use some of this semester's loan money for upper lip electrolysis? I wasn't aware of a problem... but from the mouths of babes?

To add insult to injury, here is the whole panorama.



Not only am I the moustached male in a flannel shirt and baseball cap selling avocadoes, there were even two females on the page that she could have chosen instead! One of who is definitely a "Mama!" pushing her smugly content toddler in a stroller (!!! sound familiar, Julia?!).  To be fair, I don't look that put together, especially not while shopping outdoors (okay... never ever). The other woman, though, is dressed much less well and is fairly pasty.  Why not her, Julia?  The red hair couldn't have been the reason (see below).

I think I liked her previous storybook "Mama!" better.


She may have been a muppet... with red hair?... no nose??... and pink skin??? (okay, okay, can't argue with that one)... but at least she was a female... and didn't have facial hair.

My main question is this: if her mother is a man with a mustache and her father is a monkey, how did she end up being so gorgeous?

"There can only be one explanation," Julia thought slowly...

She must believe that she was adopted.  A sophisticated face like that must come from people who cook with quinoa (Q), radicchio (R), and saffron (S), right?