-- Olive Turns Six Months and Lucy Imitates a Baby
Imitation is Flattery |
Recently, she approached Papa and said, "When I get tired of blowing up this balloon, I will wipe off the slobber, and you can blow it up for me." This caught Papa off-guard as he had no idea that slobber was an issue for her or that she should anticipate it was an issue for him. It turns out that earlier in the day, Nana had refused to help blow up Lucy's balloon until she had, "wiped the slobber off of it,"
Taking that episode as guidance, when she approached another adult with a balloon-blowing requirement, she anticipated resistance to "slobber," and offered the bargaining chip that she would "wipe it," prior to Papa having to take over. This shows a lot of forethought for a four-year-old trying to get some cooperation from an adult.
-- When is a Four-Year-Old Smarter Than a President?
Our dolt of a President went to North Korea and managed to not get anything done. He hadn't rehearsed an offer, or a compromise offer, or a quid pro quo, or anything when meeting with the dolt running North Korea. The US President didn't have the common sense of a four-year-old to anticipate the objections and offer a compromise solution. Lucy gets it; the dolt does not.
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-- When is a Salad Bar not a Salad Bar?
Garden Bar? |
Patti's "salad" had no tomatoes, lettuce, onions, etc., although she said they were available. She preferred to go with the egg salad, beets, beans, fruit, etc., instead of the inevitable greens. A salad bar is not a salad bar when it's a "Garden Bar." Now I know too.
-- Helping Olive With Her Books
Turn the Page |
Now that Olive is with us each week I got her started reading her first book. With no coaching she was quickly flipping the pages of "Wonder Horse," and when necessary, ripping the pages for extra emphasis. None of the pages left the binding entirely, but some did suffer minor tears and abrasions. (All easily repaired).
Help from Papa |
-- Out With the Winter Scene and In With the Spring Scene
Even though the snow is still a foot deep outside, we sprang forward with the mantle display by taking out the winter-scape and inserting a spring-scape. It's a bit early for the spring motif, but we were in the mood. It's got spring flowers, berries on the trees, and patches of green grass. Strangely, the house feels warmer.
READING UPDATE: When I saw this title I wasn't sure how these two famous Americans could actually be a topic for a book combining their lives into one story. I have lots of books about Mark Twain and written by Mark Twain and I have a lot of books about and by Teddy Roosevelt. But, the connection between them seemed vague to me. In his book, "Mark Twain and The Colonel," Philip McFarland manages to hang both stories on the fast-changing circumstances of the first decade of the 20th Century. Although they came from different backgrounds and developed great variance in their views of American life, they both were larger than life, had a lot to say, and they were not afraid of taking a stand and taking action. It is these qualities that bind them together as they raced across the border between the 19th and 20th Centuries.
Fun to read.
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