Monthly Archives: April 2011

Boring, meet Unboring.

I decided to read one of my favorite books to Little Man last night: The Cat in the Hat.

As I read the story, I realized…I’m the fish.  Even as a kid, I remember reading the book and thinking that the fish had a good point.  Yup.  I was that boring kid.

And I’m that boring adult.

My husband, on the other hand, is the cat.  He makes life fun!  I could totally imagine him saying, “Look at me! Look at me! Look at me now!” as he bounced on a ball while balancing all sorts of weird things.

Then I read another favorite:  Green Eggs and Ham.

Again…my husband is Sam.  I’m the other dude who finally says, “Fine.  I’ll try it to prove I don’t like it, just quit bugging me!” and then says, “Hey!  I guess I like it after all!”

Sadly, my take-away from the two book was…I’m boring/risk-averse/boring.

I’m so glad I married the cat.

First Solid Food!

Today marked the first day of bottle-training for the little man.

It ended with trying solid food, instead.  It’s only a couple of weeks earlier than our doctor recommended starting him on solids, but with upcoming schedules, we needed to find something he’d eat than didn’t require my presence!

First bite…not sure if he likes it or not.
With no baby spoons on hand, we started with a regular plastic spoon…

Guess that rice cereal isn’t too bad after all!
…and Rich got a 1/2 teaspoon measuring spoon to use.  Hey, at least it was small!
(Desperate times, stubborn mother determined it was either solids or a bottle for Little Man, desperate measures.)
He ate nearly 3/4 of the bowl of cereal!
(Well, okay…3/4 of the bowl of cereal was gone. Maybe 1/2 of that actually made it into his mouth.  Still, we figured it was pretty good for the first time!)

Cleaned up and smiling! HURRAY!

He’s Growing!

If anything could be called constant in our lives, it would have to be…change.  I was just looking through pictures of our little man this evening, unbelieving at the changes in the past few months.  This last week, little man’s first tooth started popping through, poor guy.  His dad had teeth early; looks like little man is taking after his dad in more than just looks!  Unfortunately, I think little man also got my pain tolerance.  Thankfully, we’re learning the sound and associated moves with the, “OW! MY GUMS!” cry and can quickly get some teething stuff on his gums to help him out.  
I can’t believe we’ve gone from first tubby time in the sink to splashing around with kicks, grins, garbles, and laughter during tubby time in the tub.  From little cries to big cries.  From living life in 4-hour blocks, where sleep came for 3 hours and eating took the fourth hour to sleeping most of the night and taking 30 minutes to eat, change a diaper, and get back to sleep.  From eyes just roaming to focused, intent tracking!  And another this last week…learning he has hands!  He was sitting with Grandpa, staring at grandpa’s pens in his shirt pocket last night.  Grandpa got a pen out, got little man to hold it.  We watched as little man then stared at the pen in his hand and slowly started bringing it up to his mouth.  He had too much of the pen sticking above his hand the first few tries (pen hit the ear, then his face); when Grandpa pulled the pen down a bit, little man hit success!!  We cheered him and he grinned!  Thus starts a phase of grabbing and gnawing, but I am so proud of the little guy!
First Tubby Time — about 2 weeks old.

Blessing Day — about one month old.

Sitting in a mini rocking chair – about four months old!

LDS General Conference

I love General Conference for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.  During conference, the leaders of the church address us, giving us messages we need to hear.  The topics usually include gospel basics, such as prayer, faith, and repentance.  This conference, though, I took away two big things: have more charity by doing more service for others; and nobody is immune to struggles in life.

One talk in particular really touched me and dealt more with being a better spouse.  Elder Richard G. Scott, one of the members of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, delivered the talk.  I had tears in my eyes for most of it.  He spoke about his wife (who passed away awhile ago) and his children, and the moments of joy he had from his marriage and from being a parent.  He said his wife had always been so kind and thoughtful, and left notes for him in his scriptures and other places she knew he’d find them.  He said she always put others first, and always prayed for opportunities to serve someone every day – a prayer he said was always answered.  That talk really inspired me.  I really felt a desire to be a kinder and more caring wife.  What was funny to me was hearing my husband refer to the talk as the “how to be a better husband” talk; I felt like it was a “how to be a better wife” talk!  I guess Elder Scott managed to reach both husbands and wives with his talk!

The other thing I found interesting from this conference was the fact that two speakers spoke on trials in life, and both quoted a previous church leader who basically said nobody is immune to struggling in life, but the joy after the trial outweighs the difficulty from the trial.  I really appreciated that, in part, because I’d just been reading talks from the October 2008 General Conference where speakers said the same thing!  Trials come, and trials go, but we always learn more, and we find greater joy afterwards, though it’s tough to remember that or feel that way in the middle of the trial.

My goals after conference: be kinder; be gentler; reach out in service to others more; and remember when there seems no end in sight for some difficulty, God is watching and helping, and, in the grand scheme of things, the present is pretty fleeting!