After losing 24 pounds between September and December of 2007, I stopped keeping track of what I was eating and how much I weighed. The result was predictable: after plateauing for a while I started to gain weight again. Now I’m back to tracking calories and losing weight again.
As she gets older, Esther is getting better and better about knowing when she needs to sleep.
This morning, she woke up around and 6:30a and wanted to eat some yogurt. I carried her to her booster seat, got her a cup of yogurt and watched her eat. After she finished, I lifted her down from the table. She immediately walked down the hall to her bedroom and stood next to her crib. I lifted her into her crib and she curled up and went right to sleep.
She slept for about 45 minutes, then came out and played in the living room for another 45 minutes. Then, she grabbed a Nuk and her blanket and walked back to her room. This time, she turned on her CD player and stood next to the rocking chair. I rocked her for about 10 minutes and then she went to sleep in her crib again.
Something similar happened last Monday. Christine had already left for an early morning appointment. I was in the shower and Esther was playing in the living room. As I finished up my shower, I could hear her whimpering somewhere. After getting out and getting dressed, I went to find her.
To my surprise, she was in her room, standing next to her crib. She had pulled one her blankets out of the crib and was holding it in one hand. She pushed her other hand between the bars of the crib and was resting her arm on the crib mattress. She’d been standing there, waiting for me to get out of the shower and help her get into her crib. As soon as I lifted her in, she went right to sleep.
Because she’s getting so good about bedtime, we’re thinking about setting up a real bed for her and retiring the crib until her new baby REDACTED comes along. I think the only thing she would miss is the ability to hold onto the sides of the crib and jump up and down.
Once we decided that our time is more valuable than our money, we started working on upgrading our kitchen. The most obvious way to cut the amount of drudge work was to stop washing dishes. But we value hygiene too highly to simply let the dishes remain unwashed. Thus, a dishwasher.
But this old house has never had a dishwasher before. The previous owner did put washer and dryer hookups in the kitchen. We decided to piggyback on that water line and to install a dishwasher next to the washer and dryer. That wall of the kitchen doesn’t have a countertop to put the dishwasher under. So, we’re also going to install a second countertop and some additional cabinets.
(This is also why you shouldn’t ask me to scope a project for you. Instead of going with the easy solution — a portable dishwasher — I chose to go with the much more expensive kitchen upgrade package.)
We’ve been working with Stoughton Lumber to plan the project and decide what we’ll need to buy. After we’ve bought everything we’ll need, a friend from our church Life Group will help me install it all. Because I lack pretty much all handyman skills, this will be a real learning experience.
Christine’s been watching the sale flyers for a while now. She’s also been researching dishwashers and checking out the Consumer Reports rankings. This week she saw a good deal on CR’s Best Buy. So we went out and bought it at Quam’s Appliance. They’ll hold it until we call them up and tell them we’re ready for it to be delivered.
We thought about buying our new dishwasher from Sears. Sears was willing to more than match the advertised price from Quam’s, but insisted on charging a $75 delivery fee for any purchase less than $399. The price match would have cut the dishwasher down to $344. The total price (including delivery) would have been $419. Quam’s sold us the dishwasher and delivery for only $389. Done deal. Sears wasn’t willing to price match on the delivery and that cost them the sale. Their loss, our gain.
Now we just have to finish the overall design, buy our new cabinetry and countertop, and do the installation. We can’t wait.
We went to the zoo today. Madison’s zoo, The Henry Vilas Zoo, is fairly small — it only takes about an hour to walk through the whole thing. It has two redeeming characteristics: it’s free and it’s small enough that young children can see the entire zoo without getting too tired or cranky.
We walked through the entire zoo with Esther. She enjoyed watching the chimpanzees climb around their cage. The zoo staff setup an indoor habitat and covered it with climbing ropes and nets. Esther enjoyed watching the chimps climb around the ropes.
She was starting to look tired by the time we reached the goat pen. As soon as she saw the other kids feeding the goats, she wanted to have a go of it. She climbed out of her stroller and started reaching up towards the goats. We helped her find some food that the other kids had dropped and she tried to figure out how to give it to the goats. Her idea was to just hold it between her finger and thumb and put it into the goat’s mouth. We helped her lay it on her hand, for the goats to eat out of, so she didn’t accidentally lose a finger.
After the zoo, we went out to dinner at Broux-Nellie’s. We ordered macaroni and cheese for Esther. Before her dinner came, she amused herself by eating most of a cup of ice and watching everyone else in the diner. Once her dinner came, she ate most of it herself. It was so much fun to see her scooping up bite after bite herself, using her spoon like an old pro.
In this action packed movie, Esther first figures out her mother’s new water bottle, then rocks on her rocking horse while watching a tobyMac concert. Next she dances on the couch while enjoying more of the concert. She finally finishes up by emptying out her toy bin, from her lofty perch on the couch.
With this classic home movie you can relive one of Esther’s first trips to the park again and again. Enjoy her sliding down a slide, climbing up a slide, crawling through a tube, swinging in a swing, and much, much more. All of this can be yours for just 3 easy payments of $19.99.
Esther’s at a fun age right now. She really likes to pick things up and move them around. Books, CDs, magnets, clothes, toys — nothing escapes her desire to rearrange her environment.
At the end of April, I got some video of her moving clothes around and moving around her refrigerator magnets.