Category Archives: Art, Theatre, & Film

Weekend Roundup

I’m pretty out of it today. I’m fighting a bad sinus cold, and the medication I’m taking for it is making me feel loopy. Apart from that the weekend, though fun, pretty much wiped me out.

I’m very glad HRH and made it out to the museum to see the Once Upon a Time Disney exhibit on Friday night, even if we only got there 45 minutes before the museum closed. “You know we close at nine?” the kind attendant said as I bought our tickets. “Yes, but this is the only time we can be here before it ends,” I said. HRH and I go through exhibits at exactly the same speed, plus there really weren’t too many other people in our way, so it was the perfect time to have gone and the precise amount of time needed. I think we’d have appreciated another half-hour to go back and look at things that really interested us, but we got what we needed out of the visit. It was terrific to see the various European art influences on Disney design.

Saturday morning we went to an old friend’s wedding, and if I hadn’t had the wedding I’d had, I would have chosen to have this one. It was a perfect day with lovely weather, in a lovely location, with around fifty people in attendance, excellent food, and wonderful company. We had to leave before dessert, but such is the compromise when one has a child with his own social schedule.

We got home, changed, grabbed the boy, thanked Grandma for playing with him while we were out, and headed over for the last half of Arthur’s birthday party. It was great to unexpectedly see some people I hadn’t seen in a few months (and further proof, if it was necessary, that the world is a Very Small Place), and of course, fete the birthday boy. (Every kid needs his own pirate ship!)

Sunday I woke up with the cold worse than it had been and managed to slog through the morning while preparing for the Midsummer rit that afternoon. Said rit came off excellently, and was perfectly timed with Liam’s nap. Liam joined us afterwards for melon and Cool Whip and homemade lemonade, all of which was delicious. Then we headed over to the in-laws’, and moments after walking into the house the weekend and the cold caught up with me. I effectively passed out, unable to do more than utter monosyllabic words, watch Liam play, or eat more than three bites of dinner. Once home we put Liam to bed, I took more medication, and passed out at eight o’clock.

Theoretically I should be embarking on the first day of a four-week contract, but there’s been no communication from the company despite a prompt from me last Friday, so I suppose today is a bonus day. Good thing; I can’t really focus on much. I may try to work on my own stuff later; I may just crash and read.

Friday

Poked abut Bureau en Gros this morning while HRH did some photocopying and came out with a new keyboard (requires some getting used to, because not only is it an ergo it’s peaked in the middle, so I’m learning not to move my hands too far and to really thwack the spacebar), and a new wireless card for the laptop (it works, except all the networks around here are locked, which is fine because I bought it for use in public places anyhow). Both on sale/at decent prices, too, so yay me. Then we went to Services Canada for the boy’s SIN.

My two-volume Oxford dictionary arrived on Wednesday, so I came home from my last day of work and had the pleasure of opening it.

Rehearsal Wednesday night was great in that I didn’t walk out of orchestra hating myself. When I’m actually playing the right notes, I like my intonation very much and my expression is decent, too. I lost focus not long after break, but I forgave myself for the stupid mistakes I was making because hey, tired; it’s not like I suck all the time. The entire section is sounding like a unit, which is always pleasant, too.

Yesterday was frustrating because HRH, Liam, and I were looking forward to a family day once he’d helped clear out the apartment downstairs for the floor people to lay the linoleum over the new floor he and the landlord had laid this week. Landlord and HRH started work at 7, were done by 8. The floor people were supposed to show up at 9. They showed up somewhere around 11, and took lunch at 12. We couldn’t really go anywhere because our garage was wide open with all the downstairs apartment’s stuff in it and the driveway. Because they started late, the floor people didn’t leave till fiveish, not noon as we’d expected. You can imagine how impressed HRH and I were, when we had planned to have the entire afternoon to knock about once Liam woke up from his nap. At least our landlord agreed to hang around for an hour and a half while we went out to ai731‘s open house at her art studio. It would have been nice to be able to relax the way we’d hoped to, though. There’s nothing either of us hates more than hurrying up to wait.

General note to all who have borrowed our Slings & Arrows DVDs: season three comes out July 3rd. Yes, I have pre-ordered it.

Gig tomorrow night!

Twenty-Three Months!

We are stunned that suddenly, the countdown to two years old has begun. It seems like it’s been forever, and yet we’re not sure where the time has gone.

New words? We’ve officially stopped counting. He picks them up so quickly, usually directly after you tell him one. The ones I remember are: alone, sorry, teeth, hot dog, scone, spider, bottle, quilt, alone, play, peanut butter (“peanabbudder”, which makes HRH and I giggle every time), ice cream, hamburger, outside, stop. Liam is now using descriptive words, which is awesome because it further underlines his sense of self-awareness. He was crying the other day and told his caregiver, “Liam crying”. (Thanks for the tip; nice of you to narrate the action for us, kiddo, otherwise the subtle action might be lost on us.) When he asked for milk two nights ago and we gave it to him he took it with a smile saying, “Happy”, and he says it at random times during the day to us as well when he smiles. Likewise, when he relaxes in bed after we put him down, he sighs and says “Happy.” It’s a nice way to end the day.

And as to bed, that brief period of rocky nights of short or interrupted sleep have given way to a cheerful little boy who looks forward to bed and now limits us to one story before sliding off my lap and pattering over to the crib of his own accord. Sometimes we don’t even get the full story in before he slides off my lap and says, “Night-night!”, heading for the crib, dropping his cup in over the edge, and trying to climb in after it. He’s sleeping around eleven hours a night, with a nap averaging two hours in the afternoon.

In the past week alone I’ve seen such a physical change in him; he’s becoming more and more of a little boy in his face and body. He’s wearing 2T pants, and 2T or 3T tops, with shoe size of 6.5 or 7. He recently learned how to climb up on our bed, and now we really have to watch him in the bedroom because he likes to stand on it, too, as well as burrow under the covers. He tries to climb into his crib, but fortunately hasn’t considered climbing out. He’s becoming more physical as he ages, more confident in his body and ability. This means less fear (not that he ever had much to begin with, alas), along with a tendency to forget how strong/heavy he is and what kind of momentum he carries when he throws himself at someone, or swings a foot or hand or elbow. He can also soak up damage like a little tank. Along with better control of his body has come an increase in his awareness of his effect on other people. Recently this has been demonstrated by hitting someone (not very hard, but firmly), then saying “Ow” to describe what happened, followed by, “Sorry, [Person-I-Hit]”. It’s very interesting to see him make the connection between the three things after having learned from us that hurting someone is Not Okay. It’s not so great to be the person he’s pretending to beat up on, of course, but it’s part of the learning process for us all.

Recent new foods have included chicken dogs and a bite or two of hamburger. He’s usually more interested in the buns. He’s begun drinking cambric tea and feels very proud of it, and we have a nice little ritual where we each sit on the floor with our teacups and sip our tea together.

His alphabet is really coming along well. Every once in a while you hear a very clear “T U V” coming from somewhere in the house. His colours are really settling too, and he can count to four almost all the time. You can have conversations with him, so long as you get into the Liam headspace to interpet his singsong statements and facial expressions. He loves to sing, and does it while he draws an dplays and rides in the car. He runs different songs and words together too, one of our favourites being: “A B C D E F G, how I wonder how you — apple!” His sense of humour regarding the ludicrous in language now complements his sense of ludicruous in the physical, as the previous example demonstrates. If we pause to let him fill in a word in a song, sometimes he gets a mischeivous look and says something completely different. Our caregiver found it very amusing one day when she sang the first line to the ever-popular Twinkle Twinkle and stopped to let him supply the final word, and he said “Turtle!” instead.

He is a joyous and unabandoned tree hugger. He loves to run around the backyard, and to balance himself on his tummy on one of the swings. His official backyard job appears to be picking up rocks and moving them from against the house to the garden, or vice versa. He has also developed a fascination with sitting in buckets and baskets. The laundry basket is especially exciting. He likes to be picked up and carried or dragged around in it, and dumps all sorts of things in it before getting in himself, as if he were packing for a trip. He has also learned to fake a smile for the camera, creating the oddest expression, baring his teeth and closing one eye. HRH calls it his Calvin face.

This past month also saw the loss of his dear little daycare pal Boo the bunny. Every once in a while Liam finds a picture of a bunny and puts his finger on it, looks at me and says, “Boo?” Boo is playing the Summerlands, he is told. It saddens HRH and I more than it affects him. He found a picture of Boo in his scrapbook the other day and kissed it. Again, it choked us up. He chases the cats with great delight; all he wants is to pick them up and hug them, but being cats they are of different minds, and so he tries to hold them down or pull them to him with fistfuls of skin and hair, which does not go over well. He got boxed by one of the upstairs cats the other day (with very good reason), and was so stunned that something he loved so much would hit him with a pointy paw that he cried in astonishment and was upset. He wasn’t physically hurt, you understand; he was wounded in spirit.

The potty training continues along. We don’t make a big thing of it, allowing him to guide the process. He refused to use it at home for while but used it at the caregiver’s and his grandparents’ homes, so theorizing that it might be our cold bathroom floor deterring him I moved it from the bathroom into his room, and voila, everything was back to normal. He woke up pretty much dry this morning, so I asked if he wanted to use the potty, and he did. Later in the day he asked his grandma for it and proceeded to use to for both solid and liquid waste, so great strides are being made.

I gave him a round rice cracker in the car yesterday and instead of putting it directly in his mouth (he places them between his teeth vertically to bite them, we have no idea why) he held it in both hands and rotated it back and forth. “Wheel,” he said thoughtfully. It’s so great to see him connecting the shape of a cracker with the shape of an object he’s seen elsewhere.

His current TV show/DVD of choice is Peep and the Big Wide World. HRH and I love it too, as the writing, characterisation, humour, artistic style, and pacing are great. His current favorite book is a tie between The Patchwork Cat and a version of The Night Before Christmas starring a family of mice visited by a human Santa. (Not that we read the poem; we talk about the story happening in the pictures, which are what really interest him.)

Liam loves the DS. It’s the perfect size for him, too, which is a bad thing because it’s only got one operational hinge and he’s stronger than he thinks when he grabs for something in two hands and pulls in two opposite directions. I may try to find a secondhand Finding Nemo game and play it with him. I think he’d enjoy that a lot. He loves to read, loves to draw — he’s filled an entire book with drawings, and we’ve given him a second one, planning to build up an entire collection of Liam’s Sketchbooks volumes one through whatever — and he loves music. I think we’re all doing pretty well.

And so the countdown is on: thirty-one days until Liam’s second birthday. That means I ought to start thinking about a birthday thing.