Category Archives: Weather, Seasons, & Celebrations

Twelve Months Old — Happy First Birthday, Liam!

New word as of this morning: “Fish.” He said it to the aquarium this morning, often. He said it when we came to the fish page in his new pets book. Can you tell the new aquarium is a hit? He was kissing it yesterday. He won’t stop waving at them.

One year ago, it was swelteringly hot, dreadfully humid, and I had a baby after only thirty-one weeks of pregnancy. Now we have a strong, bright, bouncy one year old boy, the temperature is half the seasonal average, and we had about fifteen millimeteres of rain yesterday. We made sure we had that swingset and the sandbox on purpose for the party. And in theory, it was a lovely idea. Ah well.

I’ve heard that first birthday parties can go one of two ways: badly, or really well. Ours went really well. We are so proud of how confidently Liam handled himself. He was cheerful, played well, had fun, and demonstrably appreciated the physical gifts he was given. (And he will appreciate the paper gifts that are going into his RESP in the future, I’m sure, and we appreciate them deeply in the meantime!) Tal arrived bearing a bunch of balloons, which proceeded to delight every single child over the course of the afternoon and features in about eighty percent of the photos because they got tied to the coffee table in the middle of the room. First foods were some carrot cupcake, half a cookie with icing that he scrounged from an abandoned plate (at least I hope it was abandoned; anyone, if the half-cookie iced in green that you left vanished, now you know who stole it), and green grapes. (Yes, well, it was a party; we kind of gave up on controlling the first foods one at a time. Besides, other than the grapes, I made everything myself, so I knew exactly what was in it.) And he ate dinner afterwards, and nursed to sleep just fine, and slept a normal night, too. Thank you to everyone who came over to make it a special day, especially Matthieu, Teela, and Devon! We’ll have a family BBQ sometime later in the summer so everyone can enjoy the swings and sandbox when the weather’s better. And the food I’d made went over very nicely. There are no cheese biscuit things left, alas. Although I expected this, it’s still very sad. I’m glad I deliberately kept some of everything else away in containers to protect it for today’s family luncheon, otherwise I’d be serving Liam’s grandparents crumbs.

Liam is now in size 4 diapers, and size 4 shoes too I discovered when I bought him his first sandals last week. (Not that he’s been able to wear them since, but at least now we have them.) He shares everything with everyone, holding out food and toys and books to cats, people, and other toys. It’s a lovely phase, and we’re enjoying it very much, particularly since we know the next phase is the “Mine!” phase. He’s well over the 12 month size in most clothes, too, and looks more and more like a little boy instead of a baby. I bought a set of cloth diapers last week as well, something that I’ve been waiting to do until he moved into the toddler size, and they’ve gone over just fine. It’s relief to me, because I was squirming about the amount of landfill we were creating. When he was tiny we used biodegradable diapers, but then people started buying us a diaper supply and we kept using them. And then when his system stabilised enough to be predictable, he was so close to the toddler size that I decided to wait so we wouldn’t have to put away the infant size soon after we’d bought them.

His favourite band is Invisible. If we put the spring gig CD on and crank the volume up on Folsom Prison Blues (because really, how else does one listen to it? and then everything else just stays loud, which is also right and good) he grabs the edge of the table and boogies with a big grin on his face. (Have we mentioned that we can play Sheena Is A Punk Rocker and A D E on his piano/xylophone?) He loves it when we sing, particularly the Five Little Ducks song or the ABC song. For some reason, he’s not as big on Twinkle Twinkle Little Star (which is a good thing because I cannot remember to not sing “like a tea-tray in the sky” when the third line rolls around) or Baa Baa Black Sheep when we try to slip some variety into the lyrics.

He’s cruising all over the place, and can crawl faster than we can walk sometimes. He loves playing with the baking sheets and roasting tins in the kitchen. He waves at everything, all the time. He waved goodbye to some people yesterday, which was a first. He loves standing at the front window to watch the cars and people go by. When we walk down to the water, he’s fascinated by the birds. Wheels are still the coolest things in the world, be they stroller wheels or car wheels or wheels on his toys.

There’s more; there’s always more, but I always forget. I try to keep notes for the next monthly update, and they never seem to accurately reflect everything that’s going on. Words cannot capture the dynamic nature of the daily life of a one year old.


Liam says: Cheerios taste much better off the floor.

Wish List

I’m open to gifts any time. Really. Just-because gifts can be even more special than birthday gifts, or Yule gifts, or name-day gifts. There aren’t enough holidays to use as excuses to gift people, in my humble opinion.

Most of my wish list goes out of date pretty quickly as things are added and dropped, so I’ll direct you to the up-to-date wish list under A. Murphy-Hiscock on Amazon.ca. Please use it primarily as a shopping reference; support independent shops as much as you can. They’ll be happy to special order something for you if they don’t carry it regularly. To avoid redoing hard code (i.e. in the interest of keeping my sanity), I have decided to only list this little bit of non-book/music/film related material here below.

I’m not picky; secondhand in decent shape is fine. Gift certificates to Indigo, HMV (any book shop or music shop is fine) and so forth are all equally welcome. Gift certificates to Cellos@go.com to help buy things like cello strings and accessories are great too. My local luthier is Wilder & Davis.

Other:

A high-quality set of kitchen pots and pans such as Paderno or Lagostina
A stand mixer (such as this Kitchenaid model, but any brand would do)

And in case you think I’m materialistic, and measure love by presents… you’re wrong. I just love getting mail, and opening packages. And reading books. So sue me.

Wednesday Morning

Slept acceptably well. Woke up in a slightly better mood. We shall see what the day brings.

HRH and the car are off at the garage, theoretically making everything better.

The humidity is already stifling, and the humidex is supposed to hit 42 Celsius today. There had better not be any obstacles to the car being fixed, because there’s a trip out to get ice cream in my future this afternoon, yes indeed, or else.

Luanna called last night and made me envy her all the more for studying groovy book stuff. I’ve never been so grateful to hear anyone say “Scholastic” and “Anansi Press” in such an excited voice. I miss that part of being in the book trade. My position is completely different now.

The only thing that comes close to receiving cool mail is sending cool mail out and hearing back that people are receiving it.

Oh: Liam has finally learned to wave. Now he waves at everything.

Quick Weekend Recap

We are so very, very tired of the rain. HRH has been cranky because he’s been working outside in it all week, Liam’s been cranky because he’s been stuck inside, and I’ve been cranky because their crankiness has been getting on my nerves. There was a brief period of sun over on the South Shore mid-afternoon when we dropped Liam off at his grandparents’ house today, and it did wonders to lift the general depression, even if it was only for a little while.

We did an elevation ritual this afternoon and because it started late we had to race off to pick up the baby as soon as the ritual was over, which meant we didn’t get to stay for the dinner afterwards. It was disappointing, because we’d really been looking forward to sitting down and sharing time with everyone involved. It sounds like the Rocky Road ice cream pie I made went over well, though. I’ll have to rely on other peoples’ reports.

Yesterday was a fabulous magic of cooking class, too, possibly the most successful one we’ve done so far.

I finally had the opportunity to restring the cello tonight (I so want to say “I restrang the cello”). These new steel strings are so thin! And they haven’t gone out of tune since I put them on! Steel strings are very stable, but I’ve never used them, because generally they’re a lot brighter than synthetic or gut core strings and I prefer a rich mellow tone from my strings. We’ll see how they settle in over the week. The tension is very different as well, so I’ll have to adjust my playing both at orchestra and at band.

A warm bath and bed are in order, I think. The gloom and rain have been sapping my energy.

Weekend Recap Number One: Mother’s Day

Let’s start with the day that will require less introspection and time expended in actual writing of the post: Mother’s Day.

It began just after nine o’clock, which was positively the best present I could have been given. We got to bed at around two AM after the wedding, and that whole insomnia thing that’s been hitting me hard for the past while has really been giving me a beating. To wake up and realise that I’d slept almost six hours was wonderful. HRH got up as soon as he heard the baby early in the morning, and they let me sleep in. When I did wake up they came in to say hi, and Liam gave me a painting he’d made for me while I was asleep. He was mildly reluctant to give it up, but eventually it was all mine.

We had brunch, then we left to get flowers and head over to my in-laws’ place for the afternoon. And a lovely afternoon it was, too. We spent some time with neighbours, then ate Alaskan crab legs while Liam napped a very short nap, then we had steak and vegetables and salad. Liam joined us for the main course, and had his first taste of steak. He polished an awful lot of it off, along with zucchini and manadarin oranges from the salad. And he ate it all with his fingers, too. I’ve been mildly concerned about how he hasn’t been interested in eating any non-bread product with his fingers, but it’s like a switch was thrown on Sunday: the only way he’s really happy eating now is by picking things up by himself and putting them into his mouth. Of course, his patience runs out long before he’s eaten the amount that he usually eats when we feed him with a spoon, so we have to be careful.

Sunday night I went out to a concert with Pasley. L’Ensemble Sinfonia was playing the final concert of their season at the Oscar Peterson auditorium in NDG, and since I’ve been starved for live classical music played by someone other than myself, I really wanted to go. I’m so glad we did, because it was simply wonderful. The soloists for Mozart’s Sinfonia Concertante were phenomenal, and the orchestra was impressively precise in ther performance of Mendelssohn’s Italian Symphony, a notoriously challenging piece. We were so impressed that we’ve decided to subscribe to next year’s season together, which also solves the problem of missing out on live music.

So all in all, it was a lovely day. I’m lucky to have wonderful family and friends with whom to share days like this.