Overheard
“I want a castle party.”
I was kind of shocked to hear Lael say that in response to mom and Seth planning his upcoming train-themed birthday party. I’m not really sure where Lael got the idea of a castle party.
“I want a castle party.”
I was kind of shocked to hear Lael say that in response to mom and Seth planning his upcoming train-themed birthday party. I’m not really sure where Lael got the idea of a castle party.
Last month I wrote a post about how my kids like to fall from a shelving unit onto our bed. I was able to catch them mid-fall with my Canon EOS-20, but my digital SLR does not have a video recorder function.
I’ve tried converting footage from our analog video camera to digital, but the converter I bought a few years ago doesn’t seem to work.
I finally solved our dilemma by getting a new camera for my wife on Mother’s Day. Don’t worry, she’s as happy about getting the Canon A470 as I am.
So now, the whole world can enjoy the spectacle of our rambunctious kids falling from the shelves in our bedroom.
As a surprise for our track-obsessed son, we took our kids this weekend to National Train Day, which was sponsored by Amtrak at Chicago’s Union Station.
Success was guaranteed, even though there were some hiccups. The worst moment came when Lael, who had been hanging onto the model train table, disappeared when I glanced at some of the freebies my wife collected. (Note the hats and whistles the kids have on the jump.)
One minute our little girl was there, and the next she was gone. I didn’t take my eyes off her for more than 20 seconds.
Anne and Seth found her in the care of a police officer. The whole incident took less than a few minutes, but it felt like hours. Lael recovered quickly though, as you can see in the picture.
The other hiccup was construction on the Elevated. While we were able to take the train in, repairs meant it was near impossible to take it back home, so we took the bus.
The kids seemed okay with that. All in all, a great day.
“Daddy, I want to go under the Jell-O Bean.”
That’s what Lael calls the Cloud Gate, which is part of Millennium Park in Chicago. She’s confusing Jell-O with Jelly Bean.
Both of my kids are huge Cars fans. So it wasn’t much of a surprise when Seth asked for help building the Piston Cup out of Legos.
But Seth was unsure of what the cup looked like. Instead of helping him outright, I found a tiny picture of the cup online and printed it out for him.
An hour later, he came back with not one but TWO Piston Cups and TWO Checkered Flags, which he made from memory. Pretty cool, huh?
“ ‘The kid isn’t that sick; her temperature is only 102.’ ”
– Dr. Richard Lander, a pediatrician in Livingston, N.J. explaining how parents are responding to rising health insurance costs.
Rising gas prices are an inconvenience. There are ways around higher food prices, however unpalatable. But how do families cope with rising health care costs when it is too costly for Americans and their children?
It’s hard for me to fathom, but consumers are now spending more money on health care than food or housing, reports The New York Times:
Since the recession of 2001, the employee’s average cost of an annual health care premium for family coverage has nearly doubled – to $3,300, up from $1,800 – while incomes have come nowhere close to keeping up. Factor in other out-of-pocket medical costs, and the portion of the average American household’s income that goes toward health care has risen about 12 percent, according to the consulting and accounting firm Deloitte, and is now approaching one-fifth of the average household’s spending.
Continue reading "Health Care Expenses Exceed
Housing, Food, Times Reports" »
Hey everybody, did you know America’s economic problems are all over? That’s right, kiddies, after a week of stories revealing a continually worsening housing market, continued job loss, soaring prices and plunging consumer confidence, Wall Street is indicating the worst is over.
Just watch CNBC for a few minutes as pundits take turns pummeling any analyst who says, “But what about those folks struggling on Main Street?”
You see moms and dads, the economy isn’t really about you and me. It’s about oil and commodities and credit. Think I’m kidding? Check out this New York Times story:
Many on Wall Street, the epicenter of the credit mess, seem to think that the worst is over. For the first time in months, analysts and executives sound upbeat again. Many of them see a broad, sustained recovery in both the economy and the financial markets coming in the second half of this year, a prediction some market strategists call hopeful at best.
Why the constant drumbeat of happy news when most of us are trying to find affordable housing or considering whether to give up bread or cheese? Because in America, telling people that they are happy is a proven formula for success. Most of the time, anyway.
And certainly, the bigwigs in government and business don’t want you thinking too much about the monumental problems we face everyday. Problems such as these:
Continue reading "Main Street Struggles While
Wall Street Seems Oblivious" »
More American mothers tried breast feeding, though they’re not sticking with it, reports The New York Times on a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention study. The 77 percent rate of moms who attempt nursing is a high point.
By six months, though, most women have given up on nursing despite health organizations urging moms to continue for up to 2 years. (For the record, Seth and Lael were nursed for about 2 years.) Studies have shown that breast feeding can pass numerous health benefits on to children.
Perhaps the most interesting tidbit comes at the end of the article:
Dr. (Barbara) Philipp said that while doctors and nurses were doing a better job of emphasizing the benefits of breast-feeding to patients, most continue to offer new mothers free diaper bags containing infant formula when mothers go home with their newborns.
“That’s a problem because at least five studies have shown that when a doctor or nurse hands the family that bag, even if they take the formula out, that mother will have less success with breast-feeding,” Dr. Philipp said.
Siblings are experts at torturing each other. Seth for example, likes to mutter an unending stream of rhymes.
“Mutter, putter, dutter, futter, jutter,” he says.
I’m not sure Seth voices that exact combination, but something similar.
Eventually, he hits on key words that irritate the heck out of Lael. “Cocka.” “Poopoo.”
We think Seth learned some of the potty words at school. Others are completely made up. But once Seth hits on a sound that makes Lael whine, he tortures his sister by saying it ad nauseam.
Lael then comes running to mom or dad, proclaiming, “Seth is using potty words” or “Seth uses THAT word.”
Several times, THAT word sounds as upsetting as “oona.” I guess it is more tone of voice than anything else.
At some point, my wife Anne came up with an ingenious solution. “Seth, call Lael flower.”
Seth took to the idea pretty quickly and it seemed to work, especially after we showed Lael pretty spring flowers.
But alas, tone of voice seems to be turning flower power into swear smears. “Flower, flower, FLOWER,” Seth calmly says.
“Stop saying THAT word,” Lael shrieks.
In the last three or four days, though, Seth has gone back to nonsense words and potty talk, enraging Lael. I fear her shrieks might crack glass.
But little Lael is learning to defend herself. She often screams back:
“Flower, flower, FLOWER!”
My wife is currently exploring the idea of becoming an urban public school teacher, which I firmly support. But I can’t help wonder why anyone ever goes to the hassle:
Perhaps the worst thing a teacher must face is No Child Left Behind, which I’ve been calling No Child Gets an Education. It seems to me that teaching elementary school students to a “test” would be the final straw for those men and women who already put up with so many career negatives.
But forget anything I write. Watch this Tom Chapin video, which I discovered via Thingamababy, a great blog on parenting. And here’s Chapin’s website against NCLB.
Additional
A review of a Tom Chapin album.
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