I always know just the person I'll give these giveaway items to if I win... I just never win! Here's to hoping this one's a winner.
Picnic Frock GIVEAWAY
Monday, April 27, 2009
Saturday, April 25, 2009
Levi Pictures
Tuesday, April 21, 2009
Sunday, April 19, 2009
Friday, April 17, 2009
IEP
Nate's annual IEP meeting was yesterday at school. This is a very important meeting to determine Nate's placement for the next year. My hopes were that Nate would get some "typical peer" exposure. My expectations were that the school was going to propose Nate stay in his current placement.
Nate's area of need now is social development, but how is he going to get that if he's the highest functioning in his class and only around children who don't speak or speak atypically? In addition, I've seen Nate start to bring home some negative behaviors. I know he isn't perfect, but I do think if he's going to pick things up from his peers, they would hopefully be "normal kid" things.
After reading over Nate's recent assessments and the proposed goals for him in this next year as a group, the district representative made their offer of placement. I was beyond thrilled; it was exactly what I would have asked for if I had been able to create a "perfect plan" for Nate! Starting in May, Nate will do his normal day at school (first half in non-severe Special Day Class, second half in IBI), but he will leave IBI for one hour to go into the regular preschool, Preschool Connections. An IBI staffer will go with Nate (and possibly one or two other children), but that staffer will help with all the kids in the class and won't be velcroed to Nate. So that person won't be his aide; however, he/she will know Nate's goals and areas of need. After a month or two with this setup, we will probably increase the time Nate is in the regular preschool. Then, by late September/October, he will be in the regular preschool full-time, with probably an hour a day in IBI to work specifically on Nate's goals and kind of as a daily check-in. I'm super excited!
The goals for the next year include maintaining appropriate physical proximity when engaged in conversation or play (i.e., respect personal space); greeting others once and waiting for a response (not repeating the greeting over and over); maintaining a reciprocal conversation (asking questions and waiting for answers); accepting not getting his own way or not getting to be first for an activity; sustaining attention to complete a 10-minute, non-preferred task; skipping; raising his hand and waiting to be called on; cutting better with scissors; and drawing more simple shapes.
Nate will go for the extended school year (school through July) and will have August off, like last year. I signed him up to take the bus in the mornings starting at the end of June!
All in all, it was a wonderful meeting, and I left smiling!
Nate's area of need now is social development, but how is he going to get that if he's the highest functioning in his class and only around children who don't speak or speak atypically? In addition, I've seen Nate start to bring home some negative behaviors. I know he isn't perfect, but I do think if he's going to pick things up from his peers, they would hopefully be "normal kid" things.
After reading over Nate's recent assessments and the proposed goals for him in this next year as a group, the district representative made their offer of placement. I was beyond thrilled; it was exactly what I would have asked for if I had been able to create a "perfect plan" for Nate! Starting in May, Nate will do his normal day at school (first half in non-severe Special Day Class, second half in IBI), but he will leave IBI for one hour to go into the regular preschool, Preschool Connections. An IBI staffer will go with Nate (and possibly one or two other children), but that staffer will help with all the kids in the class and won't be velcroed to Nate. So that person won't be his aide; however, he/she will know Nate's goals and areas of need. After a month or two with this setup, we will probably increase the time Nate is in the regular preschool. Then, by late September/October, he will be in the regular preschool full-time, with probably an hour a day in IBI to work specifically on Nate's goals and kind of as a daily check-in. I'm super excited!
The goals for the next year include maintaining appropriate physical proximity when engaged in conversation or play (i.e., respect personal space); greeting others once and waiting for a response (not repeating the greeting over and over); maintaining a reciprocal conversation (asking questions and waiting for answers); accepting not getting his own way or not getting to be first for an activity; sustaining attention to complete a 10-minute, non-preferred task; skipping; raising his hand and waiting to be called on; cutting better with scissors; and drawing more simple shapes.
Nate will go for the extended school year (school through July) and will have August off, like last year. I signed him up to take the bus in the mornings starting at the end of June!
All in all, it was a wonderful meeting, and I left smiling!
Thursday, April 16, 2009
Gluten-free getting easier
Some cool news: Kix, Rice Chex, (and possibly some other General Mills cereals) have been reformulated and are now GFCFSF! If you look at the old Kix ingredients, you can see they had gluten (whole grain oats), but they don't anymore. Jon called the manufacturer and also confirmed the cereals are made in a dedicated facility, which means nothing else with gluten is made there. This means more things are available for GFCFSF dieters at the regular grocery store, and they cost less than the specialty cereals we usually have to buy.
Monday, April 13, 2009
Language development
I've been fascinated with the children's language development lately. It's so cute to watch Lucy as she soaks in tons of knowledge each day. She just got over a stage where she knew she wanted to create possessives when speaking, but she couldn't get it quite right. Instead of "Lucy's cup," she would say, "Lucy cups." Instead of "Nate's room," it was "Nate rooms." She just started getting it right in the last week or two. She also used both "it" and the object in a sentence: "Where is it, cup?" or today: "Cami bonked it head."
Nate is speaking very well. It's fun to watch him make "correct mistakes." That is, he has internalized a certain "rule" for language, but he doesn't know all the weird exceptions to the rule in English. For example, the other day he wanted me to put the deck of cards down so he could deal, but he wanted me to do it like Daddy did: "No Mama, don't do it softly. Do it hardly."
Nate is speaking very well. It's fun to watch him make "correct mistakes." That is, he has internalized a certain "rule" for language, but he doesn't know all the weird exceptions to the rule in English. For example, the other day he wanted me to put the deck of cards down so he could deal, but he wanted me to do it like Daddy did: "No Mama, don't do it softly. Do it hardly."
Saturday, April 11, 2009
Born 2 Impress guest giveaway on Grosgrain
Born 2 Impress GUEST GIVEAWAY
Would love these hair clips for Lucy. Her hair is getting crazier and crazier.
Would love these hair clips for Lucy. Her hair is getting crazier and crazier.
Friday, April 10, 2009
Injured Lucy
Poor Lucy has had a tough couple of days. Not only does she have a cold, but she also got hit in the eye last night (with a plastic colander while we were dancing in the kitchen), and she got a splinter somehow today. That splinter required about 10 minutes of screaming to get out! (I waited 'til Jon got home for that one.)
Pre-colander injury

Using the "boo-boo bunny"

Silly girl playing with glasses today
Pre-colander injury

Using the "boo-boo bunny"

Silly girl playing with glasses today
"And Mom and Dad can hardly wait..."
This has been spring break week, so Nate has been home from school all week. The mornings have been soooo much nicer not having to rush to get everyone out of the house by 8:10. However, Nate and Lucy aren't used to so much uninterrupted time together. There was a lot of bickering going on Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday. It got better yesterday, and things are pleasant today. It doesn't help that I feel very hormonal! Ha!
The title from this post is from a Christmas song. My dad used to sing this line all the time as a "joke" when we were kids. "And Mom and Dad can hardly wait for school to start again..." Real funny, Daddy. Real funny. :)
Here are two aprons I made in the past few days to donate for our church's women's luncheon/raffle thing.

The title from this post is from a Christmas song. My dad used to sing this line all the time as a "joke" when we were kids. "And Mom and Dad can hardly wait for school to start again..." Real funny, Daddy. Real funny. :)
Here are two aprons I made in the past few days to donate for our church's women's luncheon/raffle thing.

Monday, April 06, 2009
Chubby boy
Sunday, April 05, 2009
Lucy's birthday
Ahhh, our Lucy. I have so much I could say about this rambunctious, opinionated, spunky girl of ours. She is smart and very verbal--but usually only at home. When we are out and about, she is quite serious and doesn't like talking in front of people. I'm finding it a parenting challenge to get her to greet people when they say hi to her. (My opinion: even a shy child should learn to say hello.) But when we're home, she talks up a storm in full sentences. Her favorite person in the world is her daddy. Lately, she has been afraid of random things (e.g., the garbage truck, a texturey koosh ball I showed her in the store, the turtle bracelet Mimi sent for her birthday). Sometimes, when she sees something that worries her or when she's about to go down a "scary" slide at the park, she murmurs in a little froggy sounding voice, "Daddy..." even when he's nowhere around. She also sometimes says, "That scaried me." Lucy is all about doing things by herself, except when she knows I want her to do it by herself. (Example: she wants to get in and out of the car and carseat by herself, but she doesn't want to walk up the stairs in the house by herself. Also, I set up the toddler bed in her room, but she vehemently refuses to sleep in it because she knows I want her to.) She eats anything and everything; if we're at a party or church function, we always know where to find Lucy: by the food. She's a girl after my own heart!
Here are a few pictures and video from the small party at the park on Saturday.
Happy birthday video:
The cake was a Namaste spice cake mix that is gluten-, casein-, and soy-free, so Nate could have it. I also made this frosting and only frosted 2/3 of the cake since Nate couldn't have that part. That frosting was good!




Here are a few pictures and video from the small party at the park on Saturday.
Happy birthday video:
The cake was a Namaste spice cake mix that is gluten-, casein-, and soy-free, so Nate could have it. I also made this frosting and only frosted 2/3 of the cake since Nate couldn't have that part. That frosting was good!




Finding the time
Several people have asked recently how I find the time to sew when I have three kids. Thankfully, all three children take an afternoon nap at the same time (though Nate has been staying awake lately in his room), so I get at least an hour there. Then, I stay up late at night. I don't stay up often, but if it means finishing a project, I guess I get that late-night crafting adrenaline. I've decided sewing is my "outlet," just like reading or taking walks or knitting or cooking might be for others. And then I read this post, which hits the nail on the head: when I sew, I get to finish something!
Friday, April 03, 2009
Fashion statement
Today Lucy wanted not only Jon's shoes but also his socks. It's a great look. (If only the socks were rainbow, too.)


Speaking of Lucy, her 2nd birthday came and went yesterday, and I didn't post! I'll post after our little family party tomorrow.
Unrelated but I wanted to document it somewhere: Levi fits well in the BumGenius one-size diapers now (using 2 newborn inserts), and the medium Fuzzi Bunz actually fit fine too. Cool!


Speaking of Lucy, her 2nd birthday came and went yesterday, and I didn't post! I'll post after our little family party tomorrow.
Unrelated but I wanted to document it somewhere: Levi fits well in the BumGenius one-size diapers now (using 2 newborn inserts), and the medium Fuzzi Bunz actually fit fine too. Cool!
Thursday, April 02, 2009
First aquarium visit
The aquarium was fun! Nate really enjoyed it, though I think his favorite parts weren't the animals themselves but getting to lead the way and call out, "Mama, look!" Lucy was fine as long as she had a snack (but that's how she always is!), and Levi was a happy kid as usual. In about 2 hours, we got to see all the exhibits, even outside, though we rushed past some things. I loved the jellyfish!














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