An Abecedarium for Today's Youth

You know how when you type a letter into a search box and immediately a dropdown box of suggestions appears?

My friend Nathen‘s friend, Ethan, over at the blog The Quodlibertarian wrote an interesting post about measuring celebrity by how quickly a person’s name pops up when typing in a letter in a YouTube search box. His YouTube alphabet begins: Akron, Beyonce, Chris Brown, Disturbia…

He goes further by also listing a Google alphabet, which begins: Amazon, Bank of America, Chase…

However, I think that a Google dropdown suggestion box is influenced by your previous use of it. For instance, my “F” brings up Francisco Goya and “P” pulls up purses, whereas Ethan gets Facebook and Paypal.

Check out Ethan’s post here. (I had to look up abecedaria to see what it meant – and then immediately wanted to use it as a post title like he did. It’s matching a word to each letter; an abecedarium is a primer, often used to teach the alphabet.)

Posted in youtube | Leave a comment

Pigs and Things

At my husband’s urging, Christian and I have decided to forego all get-togethers where lots of babies exchange saliva chewing each other’s toys this week – what with swine flu breaking out all over California. Bella’s principal even called last night (he has an automated system to reach all the parents of his 3000+ students) to encourage sick students to stay home; to remind everybody to wash their hands frequently and with soap; to avoid touching their eyes and mouth; and to refrain from sharing drinks and food with friends.

I skipped a La Leche League meeting this morning and even canceled a Worms and Tea Meetup I had planned for Thursday. (I was passing out free worms  and vermiculture information to moms who wanted to start a worm box after serving snacks…)

But the upside of staying home is getting things done: finishing dolls and other knitting projects. My next project is going to be a a knit pig as I have a Knit-Your-Own-Pig Meetup planned in two weeks time.

Look at what my friend Sierra made today!

Directions for this pig (and other animals) are in the book called A First Book of Knitting for Children by Bonnie Gosse and Jill Allerton. How cute is that knit piggie in pink cotton chenille?

[P.S. Chad later sent me this blurb from boingboing to keep the swine flu in perspective.]

Posted in crafts, waldorf | 3 Comments

A Spot of Richness

We’ve finally cashed in all of my brother’s citibank thank you points (earlier post about this) for two ipod touches (8 gig for me, 16 gig for my sister); a $100 gift certificate to Bloomingdale’s for Bella (she got her white Hudson jeans yesterday); a $50 gift certificate to Macaroni Grill (had the seafood linguine – yummmmm); and a $40 gift certificate to Chili’s (had hamburgers there last weekend).

To top that off we also got over $8000 back in taxes. I recommended starting two IRAs with Vanguard for $3000 each and using the rest for Thailand. Chad thought we might put the whole sum aside for a new car savings. We compromised and put $1000 aside for my IRA, $1000 for a new computer for Chad, $1000 for life incidentals for Bella (if she needs tennis lessons or decides to run track etc), and $2000 aside for a trip to Thailand!!! (That doesn’t add up I know, but I can’t remember the whole list at the moment.)

Chad has decided that he does not want to spend his vacation traveling somewhere hot and crowded, so it’s just me, Christian and Bella, who are down for Bangkok. And it may end up being just me and Christian, as Bella is insisting that she needs to take a summer class at the local community college to remain a viable candidate for a UC school, and she has also been invited to spend ten days traveling with a good friend (location still undecided – her friend has an aunt who is letting her pick the travel destination!)

Finally I did not recover my new camera, but Chad counted out all my stored change and there was enough for a replacement. So I’ve got a new camera again.

Lots of excitement and big smiles around here (caressing new clothes and surfing the net while on the can and such).

Posted in money | Leave a comment

Letter to Christian – Month 11

Dear Christian,

You are completely crashed out on the bed behind me as you are so often while I am writing. You are sleeping even more deeply than usual these last few days because you have the discovered the thrill of walking and climbing. Your adventures through the hitherto unexplored regions (behind momma’s desk! top of the coffee table!) of this apartment are tapping your seemingly endless fount of energy. While breast milk is still your favorite pick-me-up snack, you are relying more and more on solid foods – munching down on beets and rutabagas at dinner, oatmeal and strawberries at breakfast, and rice and kidney beans at lunch – and in between meals, you can never resist a little bit of dried something from off the floor.

Although you took those first tentative shuffling steps almost two months ago, it wasn’t until this week that you suddenly caught sight of something irresistable (the entertainment console was open) and your hand let go of the armchair and you took one-two… eight steps across the room. And from there, it’s become a regular routine. Your Auntie Corrina channeled your love of the tennis ball to do another marathon walk (we’ve lost count of how many steps) across the kitchen, and then when your dad came home he used the same technique to get you to walk for this video. You are just pleased as punch to be able to do this new thing.

Communication has taken a leap forward as well. Besides “Ba” for Bella, “Dada,” and “Mama,” you also sign for “all finished” (both hands waving in the air); “nursie” (one hand repeatedly squeezing open and shut); “dog” (panting); rabbit (both hands open and closing near your face – supposed to be more on top of your head, but I know what you mean); chicken (one finger tapping); and then yesterday you even told me that you needed to go potty (one fist waving in the air)! I didn’t believe it at first but you yelled and arched your back until I brought you to your potty at which point you promptly sat down and peed and then signaled that you wanted up.

In fact, yelling when you have to go pee has become somewhat of a regular occurrence. I mean I understand that impulse when your full bladder pinches and you can’t think about anything else, but it cracks me up that you have so little inhibition that pee shivers and yells just erupt from your little body – even in the middle of the night! When you turn and shout out when you’re sleeping I know that you want to pee, not nurse – and oftentimes these days you let me prop you up still sleeping on the potty to pee – and when I lay you back on the bed you just keep on slumbering. (At night you usually pee once and you’ve been waking up with a dry diaper and peeing on the potty when you wake. Sometimes too, during your long afternoon nap you “wake” to pee and then keep on sleeping.)

You are such a fun baby!

I love you and I’m cherishing all my moments with your sweet happy soul.

Love,

Mama

Posted in Christian Holden | 2 Comments

Backpack Debrief

I’m a bit delinquent posting about the backpack Chad, Baby, and I went on over spring break – but it was just too depressing to post about it without the pics and video I took on the new camera.

Because we waited so long to make reservations, all the popular beach spots were booked and we ended up hiking in four miles to a primitive tent campground, which was fine by us. Chad picked Deer Canyon in Crystal Cove State Park which is just north of Laguna Beach, so only a half hour’s drive from home. Here’s an article about that exact same campground in the LA Times.

It was wonderful! The day was sunny, but not too hot. I wore the baby and a large daypack with all our food and the baby’s stuff. Chad wore a backpack backpack with two gallons of water tied on. Heavy yes, but he likes to err on the side of safety in all things, especially when it comes to water. And in the end, we were able to drink and wash liberally and used almost all of it before we broke camp the next day.

We started off on a rocky dirt road going uphill. The first bit had nice views of the ocean as we hiked inland; I like it better when we turned off into the canyon on a narrower trail and we were surrounded by yellow blooms on both sides. There were lots of up and downs which made the hike excellent exercise, I mean, besides the all the weight we were carrying.

We were the only ones at the camp, so we got our pick of sites. I had a great video of the field facing the tent and wind blowing through the grass – which is now lost and gone forever, but it looked a bit like this photo, which I took on a recent hike nearby in the Aliso and Wood Canyons Wilderness.

The baby loved the tent and being outdoors. And when he woke up in the morning – he couldn’t believe his good fortune; his head swiveled around and around – he was STILL IN THE TENT! That just put him in the best of moods.

We didn’t fiddle around too much in the morning – just leisurely had breakfast and began packing up. The hike out was easy with much lighter packs. The baby slept most of the hike out.

Overall, an excellent first camp adventure with the little guy. The only reason we wouldn’t go back there though, is because the route by the campground is a popular mountain biking trail, so while we didn’t see too many bicyclists in the evening and early morning, the ones we saw, did diminish our feeling of being far away from civilization.

Posted in camping | Leave a comment

Stop Motion with Wolf and Pig

Thanks for sharing, Kimetha!

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rmkLlVzUBn4]

Posted in Jeannie's Stamp of Approval, youtube | 1 Comment

Crochet Your Own Woolen Soaker

I’m up late finishing an art capsule or two for my spending money this month and thinking about how I am going to get my house in order before a dozen moms with toddlers in tow show up tomorrow at 10 am.

Instead of a full cleaning, I’m thinking about just re-adjusting my attitude and being content with a less clean house.

I’m hosting a Crochet-Your-Own Woolen-Soaker playdate (although some are knitting stuffed animals and others are crocheting pants) and I’m hoping that it goes as well as last month when the moms and kids were all very focused.

The pattern I am using for the soaker is from a site called With a Tangled Skein. You can see the pattern here.

I doubt I’ll get going on another one today as I’ll be helping other moms get started, but I’m pleased with how the first one turned out. I used one of the last balls of wool from a 73-square blanket I made for my sister’s wedding gift.

Posted in babies, crafts | 4 Comments

TRANSformal

Dk-Y-Gr, 2009, oil on primed steel 5 x 5.375 x 2.125 inches

Dk-Y-Gr, 2009, oil on primed steel 5 x 5.375 x 2.125 inches

The second show of the art collective named TRANS, TRANSformal offers a peek at abstract painting from nine artists from Munich, San Francisco, Tokyo, and upstate New York, revealing similar formal concerns with color and context. Nancy White’s petite steel abstractions barely rest within the idea of painting; painted squares of steel they look like origami in process. Each slight fold beckons the mind to consider the possibilities, but no recognizable form appears; the hand-sized work is simply an open geometric shape, and frozen in its openness on the wall at eye level. In Richard Shur’s more conventionally-sized paintings, a contemporary Mondrian is conjured with taped squares of obliquely overlapping color jostling for space between cool expanses of unpainted linen (Pharmaka, Downtown LA).

Posted in art | Leave a comment

Steaming Hot and Caffeinated

I just drank my first cup of black tea in six weeks.

I’m not religious, but like many of the folks around me, I borrow freely from religions as it suits me. I have been known to meditate, do yoga, fast, exchange gifts at Christmas, color eggs at Easter, and eat latkes at Hannukah – even though I don’t consider myself Hindu, Christian, or Jewish.

So this Easter I thought I’d try my hand at the Lent fast. Originally intended to be a time of cleansing and religious study (no rich foods and read the bible), Lent has morphed into annual six-week symbolic fast, meaning that folks generally just give up one thing to represent their sacrifice.

I decided to give up black tea and caffeinated coffee as I felt I had become a little too dependent on caffeine to jumpstart my day.

Chad said he would give up French fries. (Although we actually only eat French fries probably once a month, I thought it best not to press the point – as he wasn’t keen to make a sacrifice in the name of Christianity to begin with.)

Upon hearing what we were doing, Bella promptly said she would give up cabbage rolls, which she hates and never eats anyhow.

I explained more about the concept of Lent to her and she grudgingly decided to give up Starbucks, and then the next day decided she would give up soda instead. Again, she rarely drinks anything fizzy, but she did point out that her Lent sacrifice would prevent her from having root beer floats as well.

I don’t know how it went for them – but it felt good to nip my black tea habit in the bud. I think I can revert back to my original couple cups a week habit rather than a couple cups a day. I liked being aware of my craving – not the moving so slowly and foggily part – but that phase passed quickly enough.

Bella didn’t get an Easter basket per se this year – but she did get a chocolate bunny from See’s, a pack of sour “5” gum, and her favorite Ritter bar (Dark Chocolate with Marzipan – obviously she gets her keen sense of chocolate from my side of the family) tied with a yellow ribbon on her breakfast plate. Her Easter gift was a pass to the San Diego Zoo.

Easter meal I’m putting off until next week when Chad’s parents will be making their monthly visit to play with Christian. I thought I’d try a Provencal-Roasted Leg of Lamb and Spring Pea Soup with Bacon Breadcrumbs with a Bittersweet Chocolate Cake for dessert (all from Williams-Sonoma online recipes). For me, it’s really just an occasion to spend money on a slab of meat and to cook for the family.

On Easter day, we had a Braised Brisket with rice (also from Williams-Sonoma recipes online – But I only made it because I needed the brisket for their Shepard’s Pie). Chad spent the evening rolling my change to see if I have enough to replace my camera. Looks like I do.

Posted in Easter | 1 Comment

Unlucky Day

Three unlucky things happened today – and I hope that’s the last of them.

First when Chad met me at LA Union Station (he biked, Christian and I took the train) he told me that somewhere along his route one of his bike locks had bounced off. It’s a shame because it was a combo lock and will probably never be useful to anybody again.

Then when I bought Chad his Metrolink ticket I inadvertently purchased a nonrefundable round trip when (obviously) he only needed a one-way. That was a minor thing but cost us about $8.

Finally, and most sadly, I lost my new camera today. It was a 10 megapixel Canon Elph and it was Chad’s  early birthday present to me.

*muffled sob*

At one gallery it was hooked to my belt and at the next gallery it was not. I think it may have dropped off on the subway when I sat down and there is about 1% chance that somebody honest found it and will turn it into the lost and found. Chad thinks it was pickpocketed and there is zero chance of recovery.

sigh. deep sigh.

He’s out in the living room counting my emergency stash of change (that I keep sorted by denomination in plastic juice jugs – I actually know somebody whose house burned up and the change she kept in glass jugs had exploded and was impossible to recover, while the change in the plastic jugs was kept safe: the plastic melted and became a form-fitted plastic sack around the coins.)

There goes the new mattress I was saving for.

Posted in money | 4 Comments