Getting things done…

About 35 weeks now and things are starting to get done…

Last week I got the diapers out and placed them in the bathroom, all ready for the new baby… Seeing the small sized bummis covers and prefolds makes thing seem so much more real… in a few weeks we will have a new baby here, in my arms wearing those diapers!

Two weeks ago I found a new dresser for the boys at the “Recyclo-Centre” (Local donation centre that resells things and provides jobs)… I thought it looked not bad amidst all the clutter of all the other dressers etc, and we were really needing more place for the boys clothes so I bought it for 40$…

When it got to the house last week I realized that I found a great piece of furniture made from solid cherry and made in Canada and is worth a lot more used than I paid. Though I already had a great dresser in my room for my clothes, I decided to trade and use it for myself, which actually turns out well because my old dresser had 9 equal sized drawers while the new one has 6 thin and 3 long which fits all of our needs better. It also means that I now have a mirror in my room which is another nice thing.

The mirror should be in the middle but that would have blocked the window, but I find that putting it to the side worked out great…

New dresser

So this weekend we switched the dressers and then placed the boys clothes and my own… Placing the boys clothes in their new dresser also liberated the dresser for the baby and we brought that in my room, which fits better than I would have thought it would.

Baby dresser in our room

Now to get all the baby clothes out, cleaned (in the washer as I type) and placed in the drawers… again, something that will make it feel so much more real..

My mom also came over on Sunday and gave us a hand in the house. Cleaning the bathroom, dusting and cleaning a few of the walls, the floors etc… It helped us get the upstairs cleaned while we worked more downstairs…

Another big thing we did was to take down the vertical blinds in the living room (which I have always hated!) and put up curtains… I wish I would have done so a long time ago, the blinds were ugly, always looked dirty and didn’t work well… and I already had everything I needed, the rod, the curtains (though I had to fix them to fit), I just needed to do it.. (nesting is good for that).. the curtains transform the space completely and it makes this house feel just a bit more like a home…

New Curtains in the living room...

My living room now makes me smile a bit more when I see it… It lightens the whole place up…

Slowly but surely things are getting done in preparation… I still have a bit to do but knowing that I now have clothes and diapers and the carseat is not too far out of reach, I feel a lot better now…

Today I also received my new potty bowl… ready to EC… and so much smaller than I though it would be!

My next big (little) detail is to find or buy a new adaptor for the hose to fill up the birthing pool… after I do that I will feel really ready to give birth and welcome the new little one.. it’s all coming together now…

Smile…

There are times that one of the greatest tools of parenting is a simple smile.

a smile to show that you are there, that you are all ears … A smile that welcomes.

one that shows that you are paying attention…

that shows that you are there and that though a situation may be tense, you accept that their feelings are real.

that shows that you are ready to listen without judgment.

that shows that you respect them and are interested in what they are doing.

There are times that moods can be tense and anger is building and words can only make things escalate but that small smile diffuses the situation, lets tears come though and brings a child to your arms and makes their feelings finally come through…

It is such a small gesture that can say so much…

Shiv Chopra

I listen to a local (Montreal) talk radio station on almost a daily basis… when I am cleaning or doing things around the kitchen or cooking…

The  H1N1 coverage and all the hype has been really getting to me though so when I heard one of the hosts introducing her next guest to talk about vaccines I rolled my eyes but decided to listen in anyway… what I heard surprised me. Not what was being said of course, but that he was saying it on the air, on a show who’s host is completely vaccine crazy usually…

After hearing the interview, I needed to know more about this guy and I really want to get my hands on his book on of these days.

Dr. Shiv Chopra is a former Health Canada scientist and “whistleblower”. He has a M. Sc and PhD in Microbiology and a degree in veterinary medicine and has been the recipient of many academic rewards including a fellowship of the WHO…

The interview started as normal but then he took over explaining H1N1 and how not dangerous it is and then went on to talk about vaccination in general… pretty much stating  how it is a 50-60 year human experiment, how they have never been proven safe or effective, how they cause autoimmune diseases and just don’t work…

Here is the interview… it is really worth the listen!

(I have to say that I love how she sets up the interview and then is completely blindsidedlive radio at its finest) I wish I had the second part also but they didn’t put it up… but it was him answering questions from the host and callers…

If you are interested in hearing more of what he has to say, look around his website, there is a lot of great info, I especially like the interview video from the Pimento Report which explains a lot of what he has done and what happened with his career…

Since hearing him, I have definitely been keeping an eye on what he has been saying.

Video games…

“When parents think a child’s interests are ‘stupid’ or worthless, the parent thinks less of the child.

When a child finds something stimulating and fascinating and the parent declares it worthless, the child thinks less of the parent.”

-Sandra Dodd

Video games are often given a bad rap. I know many parents limit their child’s time of playing because they see them as something bad, not educational or a waste of time. Other parents limit what their child is playing and only have “educational” games and the only goal is to make learning boring stuff somewhat fun… (I honestly have not encountered an intentional educational game that I consider fun or very well made)…

In our home, video games are not at all unknown and are not limited. I have a video of Xavier playing one of his first computer games when he was 2, it was a Thomas the Train memory game on the Thomas website… He had understood how to use the mouse long before that…

Xavier can spend his day in front of the computer, playing various games, it is what he loves to do and all we can do is encourage him and provide him with new games and new things to discover.

Colin and Khéna are not the same, they enjoy watching at times, but would rather do other stuff, though Colin does enjoy playing on the Wii and this weekend a new game on the computer has peaked his interest enough that he is learning how to use the mouse, but Xavier is our gamer at heart.

The thing is, Video games are a great way to get the brain working, and yes learning, even for us adults… The games that interest our family are mostly strategy games, Role Playing games,  games that have you creating and playing, Games that give you a challenge. These kinds of games are not at all mindless, you need to use logics and your imagination. We don’t own any “educational” games.

Primary learning, like math, reading etc are not directly addressed, but are learned in the background, without even knowing. And, as I mentioned in a recent post, it is because of Video games that Xavier learned how to read. In order to get the the next level, do the right thing in a strategy, say the right thing in a conversation he had to learn to read in order to play, to get ahead. We didn’t teach him, he taught himself. The game that helped him the most was the D&D games and Zelda Twilight Princess for the Wii.

An argument that we often hear of course, is the argument that if the parent doesn’t limit the child then they would play *all* of their time of video games and would *never* do anything else. So, how is a child supposed to learn to self limit? Xavier does spend a lot of time in front of the computer, but he also plays with his brothers, goes outside, loves to go for walks or go other places with us. He goes through phases of playing more and then doesn’t play for a while after…

Along with not limiting how much time our kids can spend playing, we also don’t limit what they can play. Most of the games are rated for older than Xavier but that doesn’t stop him or us…

Two of the favourites in the home are Neverwinter Nights and Baldur’s Gate, Role playing D&D games. They are rated for teens, but I can’t seem to comprehend why… yes there is violence, you may attack goblins and and dire wolves in the forest, fight a dragon or even an evil wizard, what is the difference between that and fairy tales that are told to children every day?

Another favourite is Spore… Xavier actually wrote something on Spore last year for a homeschooling journal (well, he told me what to write and I wrote it) so you can read his review to know more about that one… we have also since gotten the expansion of the game that makes “Space Stage” more interactive. Often, Xavier spends his time, not just playing, but creating new ships and characters, often based on other things he is interested in at the moment. It is amazing what he can create.

Last week Simon discovered two new games that the whole family is enjoying. (One of them, I finished all the levels in a two spurts of playing). That one is called Crayon Physics. Here is a little video of the game:

The other is called World of Goo , I am on Chapter 2 at the moment and it is really addictive!

Video games are far from mindless activities that they are often seen to be. They are fun, innovative, spark the imagination, work the logical mind and even if they are not “educational” it doesn’t meant that nothing is learned.  Just taking an example of the above game, many might think that playing with wooden blocks is “better” than playing a virtual game. But what is being learned in both is the same, physics, hand eye coordination etc… the disadvantage of the wooden blocks is that the physical world has its limits. In the virtual world you are provided with the tools to build structures that are way more complex, to have more challenges and as you get farther in the game the challenges get progressively harder.

Video games are as much a tool for learning and fun than other mediums and I find it amazing what can be learned through them.

I am confident that if there is such an interest,  that there is only positive that will come out of it in the end.

Babywearing again…

I haven’t worn Khéna in a while… nearing three he still over 40lbs and though he asks to be worn at times and I have my wrap with me pretty much all the time, he would rather walk…

Also, with my pelvis being so sore and being more and more pregnant, I am really not minding having the extra weight even though he is not much heavier than he was at one year…

I am however looking forward to baby wearing a new baby again… I LOVE to wear a little one… and I am looking forward to using my wraps again, especially a stretchy wrap with a new little one and then the Storch as the baby grows…

I had mentioned in a recent post that I had made a new friend in the area who opened a store recently… I have been talking to here more and more and we have been starting to organize a few things together for her store/my interests and the community… After talking to me, she decided to put a sign up saying that the store will be offering baby wearing classes and pre-natal classes (natural birth)… She wore her youngest a bit but not as much as she would have wanted so she doesn’t know much but was really excited when I offered to help… So I will be giving the classes and will get the money that they pay for the class, and she will be able to sell items in her store. I think it is a perfect solution. She also asked me to help give the pre-natal classes with her, and again, I would be make a little money…

So tonight, I am giving the first babywearing class, to 2 or 3 moms… We would have wanted to wait for a few more but one of the moms is about to give birth and would like to have the information before so that she can start right away…

I am not really nervous tonight, which is great and I am looking forward to get back in the groove again… I was missing it 🙂

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