Not nice one, nice one

Grace can be very picky about music. In the car she is currently loving (and requesting…no demanding) Lollipop by Mika. And recently we received the new season of Glee, and watching the music videos goes like this,

"Not nice one."
"Boring one."
"Nice one," (with the appropriate head nodding and affirmation).

And her favourite selection? The one with the policeman on the horse.

Swimming rituals

Grace and I go regularly go swimming at the gym, and, like everything, it has its rituals. Most of them happen after the swim. First its the shower to get warm after a swim, which includes "pick up, pick up" so that I can hold her under the spray. Quickly into her towel, then "something eat, drink some juice," but before that some clothes, followed by some hair drying underneath the hand dryer in the changing rooms. Then sit on a chair, demolish a juice, devour a snack, ready to go. Out the pool room, throw the juice box away, and go and stare into the kiddies play area. Off we go, out the door, crunch, crunch, crunch across the pathway stones and back to the car. Music! And we're on our way home.

Needing something to read

In the bookstore this morning and Grace picks up some books and starts saying, "Potty, go poopy." Okay, let's go…but it turns out that Grace desperately wants to take the books with her so that she has some reading material.

Feeding the ducks at the reservoir this afternoon

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And we just love that dogs go, "Woop, woop." That had us chuckling for a while.

Mel and the kiddies

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All watching Dora together

Always nicer off another plate

I have a feeling that I am being watched. No, not just watched…..stared at….intensely…..like a young Jedi trying to move a big rock. Except it's not a big rock, it's my food. And the Jedi is a two year old willing it into her mouth. Not that she doesn't have food on her plate, often exactly the same food, but food from daddy's plate is just so much tastier. Of course, being the tricksy parents that we are, we do know how to turn that to our advantage.

Time with Grace

Grace and I have started a little mother – daughter ritual.  On hot summer days we go to Vida and share a Chocolate Frio (blended Lindt chocolate, ice and milk).  If you ask Grace how a Chocolate Frio tastes her answer is "yummy, yummy, yummy."  For me I really find that time together very special. 

Today after we finished our Frio, Grace pushed our trolley around pretending it was her car, parking it, reversing it, doing 3 point turns and having the odd crash, usually into our table. She also had a passenger – her hippo bubble bath 🙂  I just sat and enjoyed watching her, seeing how the simple things in life bring so much joy.

Spoke too soon

So after declaring day sleeps over, what would happen but a day sleep. And not just any day sleep, but one that not even marshmallows could wake her from.

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Good bye day sleeps

It has been a little while now, but we can officially call it – Grace has dropped her day sleep. Getting her to sleep has been a challenge this whole year and eventually she has worn us down enough that it is just way more effort to try to get her to sleep than it is worth. So now she happily goes through the day, makes it to the end okay, and then crashes at night. The spin off is that putting her down at night is really easy.

So now we have day "rests" which involve some down time on her bed and the option to read books. Some days go well and she is peaceful, and other days…well…they go okay.

INTJ

No, INTJ is not some engineering mathematical function – it is a personality type from the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator. One of our friends was discussing the framework with us, so I decided to take an online screening to see where I lay on the spectrum.

Intj

Here is a description of the INTJ personality type. I found it quite interesting to see myself in the typical characteristics, as well as learning that it is the rarest type. That might explain why I have struggled to find people similar to me to work with (and the ones who are similar are probably doing their own things anyway).

Interesting. Does it change how I see myself? Probably not, but it does give me a new looking glass to peer at myself, and to give me more handles on the way I act and think.

Builder Drennan’s

Dad putting a cabin hook on the door and Grace building a house for the mice (the ones in the book whose house burnt down)

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