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Archive for November 2008

Alma Mater

By Goddess in Progress · Comments (3)·   November 30th, 2008

We were going to meet some friends for lunch in Harvard Square this afternoon, and decided to go a little early and let the kids run around in Harvard Yard, M’s old stomping grounds.  Of course, we didn’t exactly count on the wintry mix that greeted us as soon as we went outside, but the kids didn’t seem to mind.  And while we did not get the requisite picture with the statue of three lies, we did get some cute ones of them rampaging around the yard before all the students returned home from the Thanksgiving break.

We even took them to the COOP to get their first bits of Harvard swag.  I suppose I have to allow equal time, since they already have a bunch of Northwestern gear. :-)

Comments (3)
Categories : My beloved, Photos, Toddlers
Tags : Harvard, NaBloPoMo

Executive Decision

By Goddess in Progress · Comments (6)·   November 30th, 2008

Though Rebecca is still just shy of 20 pounds, M and I made the executive decision yesterday to turn those Marathons around!  She’s plenty tall, and her feet were kicking the seat back, and our pediatrician was fine with the idea when we asked at their 15-month checkup.  Daniel met the weight requirement ages ago, but we left them both rear-facing until now.

It’s amazing how much more space there is in the 2nd row of the van all of a sudden.  Even though the exact same pieces are still present, the simple act of turning those mammoth seats around has made all the difference.  No longer will people have to climb in through the trunk if they want to sit in the 3rd row!  The contortions I go through to hand them snacks (so they don’t fall asleep on the way home) have reduced dramatically, though they’re actually slightly farther away now.

Anyways, it’s a fun change, and the kiddos seem to have gotten a kick out of it today.

[By the way, for anyone who is installing their own Britax carseats, I strongly recommend watching the little instructional videos on their website.  Made a lot more sense to me after that, especially for things I don't do often like attach it with the seatbelt.]

Comments (6)
Categories : Toddlers
Tags : Britax Marathon, carseats, NaBloPoMo

Next up…

By Goddess in Progress · Comments (5)·   November 29th, 2008

Now that Thanksgiving is over, I am suddenly faced with my own imminent departure.  The kids and I leave for Chicago on Wednesday, and will be there until after Christmas.  Beloved M is taking Wednesday off from work to fly with us and fly back the same day.  Very sweet of him, and though I actually might consider daring to fly on my own if I had to, the plane to Chicago is only four seats across instead of six, so I’d end up with at least one kid across the aisle from me.  No good.  And, this way, we get a little extra daddy time.  He’ll fly back and join us shortly before Christmas, and then fly home with us afterwards.

Anyways, this is a very different kind of trip prep from your average long-weekend excursion.  We’ll be staying with my mom (possibly switching to my dad at some point, who knows) for just over three weeks.  It feels somewhere in between visiting and moving in permanently.  I’ve purchased some booster seats from Amazon, and a whole mess of diapers, sippy cups, and assorted sundries from Diapers.com, and had the whole lot shipped straight to mom’s house.  She, despite being still a little jetlagged from her recent trip to India, is doing her best to babyproof and borrow toys from friends. (No, she was not in Mumbai, and thankfully was home well in advance of recent events.)  I’ve got a draft email of the grocery list to send her, and need to start lists of my own: errands to run, chores to do, and some semblance of a packing list.

I’m doing my best not to think about the aspects I’m less happy with: being away from M and being away from home for so long.  I’ve given almost no thought to the actual foot surgery, and paid only minimal attention to the fact that I’ll probably be on crutches for a couple of weeks.  Instead, I’m focusing on the good parts.  My mom is beyond thrilled to get an extended visit with the kiddos, as are all of her sisters and my cousins and everyone else in town.  I’m glad that this visit will be long and (so far) relatively under-scheduled, because it means I might actually have a little free time to visit with friends that I never get to see on the shorter trips.

There will be hard parts, I’m sure.  Hopefully my mom and I will be able to gracefully coexist for that long and I won’t go too nuts with the relative lack of independence.  I will miss M terribly, but we should be able to do Skype with the kiddos, so that will help a bit.  And I know I’ll find myself busier than I am currently imagining, what with the holidays and so much family around.  It will be fun.  Really, it will.

Oh, and if anyone knows of good toddler activities in the near north Chicago suburbs, do let me know!

Comments (5)
Categories : Family, Holidays, Toddlers, Travel
Tags : Chicago, foot surgery, NaBloPoMo

Photo Shoot

By Goddess in Progress · Comments (6)·   November 28th, 2008

This may be one of our new family Thanksgiving traditions, even if it isn’t a super-exciting one.  Last year and this year, we took advantage of the fact that my sister-in-law was with us, and had her take a photo for our holiday card.  Last year’s turned out pretty well.  And I’ve learned a lesson: while you may think it’s “hard” to get a good shot of two not-yet-4-month-olds….  ha!  That’s nothing compared to attempting one with two nearly-16-month-olds.  Witness, last year’s holiday card photo:

Cute, huh?  Everyone more or less looking at the camera, even the dog.  The kids aren’t exactly smiling, but they didn’t do that on demand so well back then, so I’d call it a success.

This year, well… most of them looked something like this:

It was raining, so my plans for being outside with lots of natural light were shot.  I hate using the flash, so the shutter speed was slower than ideal.  And, well, they’re two toddlers who had no interest whatsoever in cooperating for a family picture. I could have used some of the other individual cute pictures I have of the kids, but I wanted to avoid the “kids who live in an adult-free world” photo, and actually have all four of us in there.  (Didn’t even attempt the dog this year.)  Ah well.  There was one acceptable shot, which has been uploaded to Kodak Gallery and ordered.  I’ve sent them directly to my mom’s house, so I can write up addresses while I’m laid-up post-surgery (a week from today – yipes!).

The best shot of the whole day is one that we can’t actually use for the holiday card, but is possibly my favorite picture yet of me and both kids:

Not perfect, but as close as you can get with two toddlers.  No good for holiday cards, though, since I don’t want to start weird rumors about the demise of me and M. :-)   Maybe I could photoshop him into the background…

Comments (6)
Categories : Holidays, Photos, Toddlers
Tags : holiday cards, NaBloPoMo

Holiday Scene

By Goddess in Progress · Comments (4)·   November 27th, 2008

I got up a little early this morning, before the kids woke up, so that I could put the turkey in the brine.  It was getting brighter out as I stashed the brining bucket in the unheated sunroom, then checked my email while I heard the kids start to wake up over the monitor.  It was nice to make my way through my usual set of websites without the kids trying to drag me away from the computer.

Now, the kids are up but still in their footie pajamas.  Daniel is dragging around the blanket his grandmother made for him, funky and damp and discolored from always sucking at the corners, but none will replace it.  Good thing their great-grandmother made an identical one for Rebecca, but she prefers the Project Linus blanket from the NICU.  Rebecca is scampering around in her pink-striped pajamas, and has already requested to put her favorite backpack haan-ah.

I think we’ve already read six or seven books. M has made a rare early appearance in the living room and is reading books eight and nine while I blog.  I’ve got the soundtrack from Finding Neverland playing on iTunes, a spectacular Sunday morning kind of album if ever there were one.

It will be a quiet day, and even the cooking isn’t out of hand.  My sister-in-law is bringing dessert and cranberry sauce, M is in charge of the potatoes.  That leaves me with the turkey, which will sit in its salty bath until the kids go down for their afternoon nap, and the green beans, which can also wait until this afternoon.  We’ll pull the kids up to the dining room table, and we’ll all eat an early dinner together.  Maybe watch a movie after they go to bed.  Small and quiet, quite a contrast to what will be the crowded (and beloved) insanity of Christmas.  But so far, here at 8:00 on Thanksgiving morning, a lovely day.

Happy Thanksgiving, everyone!

Comments (4)
Categories : Family, Holidays
Tags : NaBloPoMo, Thanksgiving

Playmate for life

By Goddess in Progress · Comments (4)·   November 26th, 2008

That’s one of people’s favorite things to say about twins, isn’t it?  “Oh, they’ll have a friend for life!  They’ll always have someone to play with!”  Yeah… I guess.  Mostly it’s been screaming over stolen toys and the beginning of hitting and biting, recently.  Not a fun development, and while certainly interactive, not exactly what I’d call “playing together.”

I think that is all starting to change.  They’ve been sometimes laughing at each other for a while now, which is always fun.  But the last few days, it seems like they’re actually playing together.  For one, they seem to have learned there’s fun to be had in “chasing” one another.  They’ll race around, pushing their Ikea stools, shrieking and giggling.  And while I might have once thought it was less playing together and more “oh, that looks like fun, I’ll do it too” parallel play, now I notice them looking over their shoulder for the other kid.

Last night, while I was putting together dinner, I heard the hysterical giggles and went to investigate.  They actually seemed to be playing tug with a blanket, and not just trying to take it away from the other child!  Of course, it did end up with blanket-stealing, a minor fall, and some bedtime tears.  But there they were, playing the beginnings of a game.

And this morning, more shrieking and giggling.  When I looked up, it appeared to be little more than chasing each other between the front hallway and the dining room.  Back and forth, pause and wait for the other one to come after you, and skitter away again.  Apparently, hysterical.  I didn’t manage to get a shot that quite captured the action, and my video camera is still having a disagreement with my computer, but still.  Trust me, it was cute.  (And yes, I had them dressed kind of matchy this morning.  Just cause sometimes that’s what you do.)

Comments (4)
Categories : Child Development, Toddlers
Tags : NaBloPoMo, parallel play, Social/emotional

I have a plan

By Goddess in Progress · Comments (8)·   November 25th, 2008

Thanksgiving is a mere two days away, and I am in big-time prep mode.

First, there was the debate over the menu.  That’s settled, and it’s nearly the same as last year.  As we’re down to probably only three adults and two picky toddlers, we’re cutting out a side dish (goodbye stuffing, I like you a lot but I don’t think I’ll miss you terribly) and taking it down to one debatable dessert.  Much as I adore our usual pumpkin bread pudding and some kind of pie, it’s just way too much.  After the big dinner, we stuff some dessert into our bellies and still have entire platters leftover for the weekend.  And you know what?  It just isn’t necessary.  Yes, this is largely motivated by my current Weight-Watching (and things are going pretty well, if I do say so myself), but everyone else is in agreement: it’s just unnecessary.  So we’re actually only making pumpkin cranberry bread.  It hardly even counts as a dessert, it’s really just a quickbread.  But maybe we’ll saute the slices with a little butter and serve ‘em with a scoop of ice cream to make it dessert-y for the holiday, and then whatever leftovers we have will just be a simple quickbread and not a dense, eggy (delicious) lump of bread pudding.  Even the side dishes, which I refuse to make “light” versions of, will be moderated by only making half portions in order to have less leftover the next day.

Alright, so made my list of the menu.  Then, I made the ingredient/shopping list for each menu item.  Long list, some overlap, some things we already have.  But you have to start with a good list.

Actually, since it was such a big list (and it was already typed and easy to cut and paste), I went a little nuts and organized it by sections of the grocery store.  Because I hate getting all the way to the freezer case and realizing I forgot something in produce.  And with the two kids that will be strapped into the cart this afternoon, I want to be as efficient as I can be.

The pièce de résistance of Thanksgiving meal prep lists is my actual cooking plan.  For each menu item, I made a rough list of steps, so that I know which ones will need the oven (for how long, at what temperature), stovetop, or cuisinart; when in the day they need to be cooked (whether they can be made in the morning or need to be done at a certain time relative to the meal); and who will do what (M is in charge of smashed potatoes, SIL is making the pumpkin bread and cranberry sauce).  And the turkey has been thawing in the fridge since Sunday.

All this for a single meal for three, maybe four, adults.  Ah well.  I enjoy doing things big from time to time, and though it won’t be the enormous family gatherings I grew up with, I don’t think I could ever just skip the festivities entirely.

In the meantime, it’s pouring rain and Daniel seems to be boycotting the nap for the second time today.  We could be quite a spectacle at Stop & Shop this afternoon…

Comments (8)
Categories : Cooking, Holidays
Tags : NaBloPoMo, Thanksgiving

A tale of two mommies

By Goddess in Progress · Comments (5)·   November 24th, 2008

Did you know I live in a two-mommy household?  Well, alright, maybe not the traditional kind of two-mommy house.  But, if you ask Daniel, he has two parents named Mommy.

He started saying a very clear “Mommy” (mah-mee!) within the last two weeks.  It’s adorable, and I love it.  And while he sometimes says it at totally random times, he also says it very pointedly to and at me.  I’m taking that as a solid word-meaning connection.  Hooray!  He can also say “daddy.”  Except, what you think is “daddy” is usually when he means “doggie.”  Hrm.  And when he is clearly looking for or indicating M, he says “mah-mee.”  So apparently “mah-me” is actually a more generic word for parent.

His receptive language skills do seem to note the difference between mommy and daddy.  If I ask him “where’s daddy?”, he looks for M.  And vice versa.  He knows the difference.  But I guess he’s decided to give us both the same name.  Ah well, works for me!  And how can I argue with my perfect boy?  He knows what he means, he just needs us to catch on.

Comments (5)
Categories : Child Development, Toddlers
Tags : language development, NaBloPoMo

Hot Seat, Part 2

By Goddess in Progress · Comments (3)·   November 23rd, 2008

Hooray for Q&A, for providing a blog topic when I was otherwise at a loss, and continuing my NaBloPoMo streak. :-)   Today… blogging about blogging.  How very meta of me.

From LauraC:

You always seem pretty upbeat and find a positive spin to every situation. Do you think you are like this IRL?

Well… yes and no.  On the one hand, I’m perfectly capable of lots of snarkiness and crankiness.  Things piss me off, and I let people know. I have most definitely been known to mope and wallow. I’m far from Pollyanna.

That said, in a lot of situations and with a lot of people, I do tend to put a positive spin on things, or at least deflect the complaining.  Sometimes it’s about finding a silver lining, and sometimes it’s just “yeah, wah wah, quit yer bitchin’.” Like when people used to ask, with pity in their eyes, how I was doing in the newborn days.  I mean, yes, it was super hard. Stressful.  Exhausting.  But I was OK.  I was sleeping sometimes and managing to eat and shower most of the time.  And I could bitch about it, but what’s the point?  Was there really some alternative to what I was going through?  No.  I was putting my head down and getting through as best I could, and that was fine.

My relative lack of complaining (and I do complain, usually to M or maybe one or two other people) again seemed to give off the impression that I was freakishly calm and put-together in those days.  Well, sometimes I was and sometimes I wasn’t.  But I was more or less fine, and it seemed superfluous to me to complain about things like lack of sleep or crying babies.  I mean, that’s just part of the deal, right? Why whine?  I would just shrug, and do my best. And the act of complaining didn’t help the situation.  Frequently, it just made me feel worse. Yes, there were days when all three of us were crying.  There were lots of times when I would end the day with my last nerve totally frayed.  But even I didn’t want to listen to my own complaining for all that long.  Sometimes, you have to laugh so that you don’t cry. And so I try to laugh when I can.  Even when things suck.  Might as well have a laugh about it.

Hrm, that’s a kind of negative-sounding response to a question about being upbeat, isn’t it?  The short answer is, yes, I am a lot like that in real life in a lot of situations.  But, just like what you read on the blog… not always.

Is there anyone IRL who does not know you have a blog?

This is a funny question to me, because I think my blog started the opposite way from a lot of other mommy blogs.  A lot of people start them as a way to keep family and friends updated, and then they branch out past just photos and pediatrician updates.  They pick up other readers, expand their blogroll, and become a part of the larger blogosphere.

I started mine when I got pregnant.  [Truth be told, I created a blogger account and claimed the "Goddess in Progress" bit maybe even a year before I started blogging.  I thought the name was sort of cute.  But, then, I found I had nothing interesting to say.]  When I got pregnant (1st, 2nd, 3rd time’s the charm), I not only had something to say, but it was something I wasn’t ready to tell “real” people.  I was bursting with the news, but couldn’t call my mom or my friends.  So I went public to stay private.  Hence, my real name was never associated with this blog.  It was always somewhat anonymous, and has stayed that way to a certain extent for the last two and a half years.

Over the last year, “real-life” friends have started reading the blog.  I started telling people, mentioning it in passing or posting the link on my Facebook page.  But, strangely enough, I’m still sort of evasive on the topic when it comes to my family.  There’s something about the public/private nature of semi-anonymous blogging that is really helpful to me, that fills a certain need.  If I knew that my mom or my aunts were checking in… it would be different.  (And, given my Sitemeter stats, I don’t think they’ve found me. No hits from my hometown.)

So, the easier question for me to answer is whether anyone IRL does read my blog!  I know there are some (those of you who aren’t commenting… I know you’re there, so speak up!).  But I think the vast majority of my readership is people I’ve never actually met face-to-face.

From Krissy:

Would you write any differently if no one you knew in real life was reading your blog?

Related, obviously, to LauraC’s question. And the answer is, not really.  I started with the assumption that no one I knew was reading my blog.  But I also worked on the assumption that things have a tendency to find a way on the internet, so I’ve always tried to be at least a little careful/considerate, and think of how something might come across if the person I’m talking about actually found the blog.  So there are times when I could tell gossipy stories about family or friends or people I run across.  But if the story is anything in which someone could recognize themselves and wouldn’t be pleased… I just won’t do it.  I’ve heard of too many stories where a bride talked shit about her mother-in-law on a blog, and big shock, the MIL found it.  No thank you.  I do think that I would write differently if I knew my family was reading.  But I also try to keep the tone and content such that no feuds would break out if they stumbled upon it and recognized the photos of the grandkids.

How would your life change if you suddenly stopped blogging?

Well, I’d probably stop taking pictures of my quilts, that’s for sure. And I’d have a lot more time on my hands, and stop having thoughts like “I’m totally blogging this!”  :-) And I’d really have to start keeping some kind of baby book so I don’t completely forget my kids’ first years.  But I’d really miss the outlet.  I’d miss the emotional outlet of having to think things through in a coherent enough way to write it down.  I’d miss the intellectual/creative outlet of the act of writing.  I’d miss the social outlet of giving and taking feedback. I’d miss having the ability to go back in the archives and get a snapshot of my life at a point in time.  Some people think this stuff is trivial, and in some ways it is. It’s “just” a blog. It’s a hobby, after all.  If I stop enjoying it, I should stop doing it.  But it has also become really important to me, and so I keep doing it.

Comments (3)
Categories : Blogging
Tags : NaBloPoMo, reader questions

Free Advice

By Goddess in Progress · Comments (3)·   November 22nd, 2008

I like giving advice.

I know, you’re all falling down with shock.  It’s a startling revelation.  I’ll give you a moment to recover and climb back onto your chair. … … …

I’ve long been this way.  I love to give advice.  And it’s not about being a know-it-all, or at least I’d like to think it isn’t.  It’s more about wanting to share the things I’ve already learned, maybe to have other people benefit from my experience.  In a sense, it’s sort of my small way of feeling like I get a do-over, since there are no real do-overs in life.

The downside, if you want to call it that, is that I think I’m coming off as more knowledgeable than I really am.  That I’m somehow giving off the impression that I’m better at this stuff than someone else.  And while it’s sweet to get compliments about being a good mom and having my act together and “doing it all”… I have a secret for you:

I don’t have my shit together any more than most people.  I’m not a super-mom, or at least no more than any of the other moms I know. I might do some things “better” than some people, but lots of people do lots of things better than I do, too.

I could go into the many ways in which this is true, from the cluttered mess that is my house to the times when I get angry and frustrated and yell at my kids (totally unproductive, of course, but I think we’ve all done it).  Not to mention the times when I turn on Sprout in the hopes of a moment’s peace.

I’m not trying to say I’m a bad mom.  I think I’m doing the best I can, just like everyone else, and I think that most of the time I do a reasonably good job.  But the fact that I’m vocal about suggesting this thing or that thing (apparently my responses to my twin club listserv questions have earned their own bookmarked folder in at least one person’s inbox!) does not make me some uber-expert.

Nearly all of the stuff I spout off about are things I learned elsewhere, and not original thoughts because I’m some parenting prodigy.  I talk to moms whose kids are older than mine.  I see what worked for them and what didn’t.  I read lots of blogs.  I read a few good books.  I mash it all together, just like everyone else does.  But, I suppose, when I figure out something that seems to work, I start to feel really strongly about it. And then, well, I have a big mouth and feel compelled to tell everyone.  I’m also the kind of person who likes to go into a situation with a plan, even if the plan doesn’t go as I would have hoped.  So all of that, plus the filter of blogging and you only seeing what I choose to write about, sometimes creates an illusion of me having it more together than I really do.

While I wouldn’t go so far as to say I have many regrets, there are times when I wish I had the chance to go back and do things over with the benefit of hindsight.  Not that I’d necessarily change the outcome or anything – more that I’d love to be able to get to the outcome faster, more confidently, with less trial and error.  Of course, I know that I’d then miss out on the lessons learned by the errors, but you know what I mean.  And, since there’s probably a better-than-even chance that I won’t have more kids, I don’t ever get to parent the ages that have already passed with the benefit of what I know having gone through them.

And, so, I do my best to pass along what I’ve learned to those who are weeks or months or years behind me in this process.  And I hope that bits and pieces resonate and make the bumpy path a little easier.

Or, you know, maybe not.

You know what they say about free advice…

Comments (3)
Categories : Blogging, Parenting
Tags : advice, NaBloPoMo
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