Thursday, July 22, 2010

Overheard

SOPHIE: Dada, can you read me a bedtime story?
ME: Yes.
SOPHIE (handing me a book): Read this one. The Egyptian one.
ME (opening the book to a story about how mummies were made): You want me to read you a bedtime story about how mummies were made?!?
SOPHIE: Yes.
ME: Oooookay.

Some excerpts:

"The brain was pulled out through the nose with a special instrument made for that purpose."

I don't know why she giggled at this part, but she did:

"Next, the corpse was caked with natron--a natural kind of salt--that absorbs all moisture as it kills the bacteria that rot flesh. The natron was left on for about 40 days."

Sweet dreams.

The siege

Sophie had to sit in her chair for a long time tonight until she at least tried a bite of her ravioli. After many tears and a long time, she gave in and tried it. I won. Although as Ginger said, I won the battle, not the war.

Driving home from a meeting in Kentucky today, I listened to this, and was glad to have heard this:
A word now about our own families. Some of us are older; some are in mid passage; others have yet to begin. Some of us are parents, and some, grandparents. Grandparents have empty nests. Such emptyings are part of the plan, of course. Yet, since our flocks have left their nests, we find ourselves remembering and savoring precious days now irrevocably past. We listen in vain but with eager ears for children’s voices we once thought too shrill, too constant—even irritating. Yet that cacophony of children, which we once called noise, was actually sweet sound, a sound we yearn to hear again if we but could.
For the rest of you now amid the cacophony, seize the defining moments. Make more Mary-like choices and show less Martha-like anxiety. What are calories anyway, compared to special conversations? Of course, meals need to be served and consumed, but the mentoring memories will not be taken from you.
That is good advice. I am totally on board with that, but she had to at least try her dinner, right?

Two "Mary-like" moments I'm recording here for my own good, so I don't forget:

  1. When I came home tonight I went to the end of the driveway to put away the garbage can, and heard Sophie's little bare feet sneaking up behind me. I turned around and she thought her sneakiness was very funny.
  2. Yesterday afternoon she begged and begged me to stop working and play house with her. When I finally went to play house with her in the basement after dinner, she had a present that she had wrapped for me to open--which had been sitting down there all afternoon--and a birthday "cake" that we ate after she sang me happy birthday, even though it's not really my birthday.

Sunday, July 18, 2010

Planning her attack


Those boys better watch their backs.

Overheard


SOPHIE: Dada, can you make me a bomb?
ME: A bomb! Why do you need a bomb?
SOPHIE: A paper one. I need a bomb to destroy the boys.

Monday, July 12, 2010

Adbay Ewsnay.


Today Andrew finally cracked the code to pig latin. Now Ginger and I no longer have a secret code we can use in front of the kids when we want to talk without them knowing what we're ayingsay. First he learned to spell, and now this.

Wednesday, July 07, 2010

Overheard

CUB SCOUT (to me while at cub scout camp): I don't mean to say you're a bad guy, but all the bad guys in movies look like you.
ME: Ha! Awesome.
CUB SCOUT: And they kind of sound like you too.

Overheard

SOPHIE: This winter we forgot to build some igloos. It's a kind of house.

And then she demonstrated how to make an igloo using an imaginary shovel, the carpet for snow, and some "can-do" attitude.

Sunday, July 04, 2010

Psalms 116:8

Been thinking a lot about this one this weekend:

"For thou hast delivered my soul from death, mine eyes from tears, and my feet from falling."