Peter Rabbit Pop-Up

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I requested this book at the library, because I remember loving the Peter Rabbit stories when I was little, not realizing that this was the pop-up version. But I’m so glad I got it, because this book is simply wonderful. There are tons of pictures that pop up, can be moved, and there’s even a real net for a paper Peter to be caught in.

Amelia is absolutely entranced by it. She’s a little too preoccupied with the interactive stuff to pay that much attention to the story yet, but I’m sure that’ll change.

I’ve decided to buy a copy, because it’s such an awesome book, and the library one is not in that great of a condition. Pop-up books generally don’t do very well at the library. I think this is a classic that Amelia will love for many years to come, so it’s worth owning. Highly recommended!

Word progressions

It seems like Amelia’s constantly pronouncing words more correctly these days, which is somewhat bittersweet. It’s great that she’s learning and getting better at communicating. But of course, bad pronunciation is way cuter.

A few word progressions:

GRANDPA

At first she said “Papa” and we had to puzzle out if she meant her grandpa or her dad. Eventually it changed to “pee-pa.” And now she says “gwan-pa” which is as good as it’ll get until she can say Rs.

YELLOW

At first it was “wuh-wuh.” Then “wuh-woh” and “ye-woh.” And now “yeLLow.” As in, she figured out the Ls and hits them comically hard.

CHRISTMAS

We told a lot of people about how she said Christmas. For a couple of months, she was constantly saying “Tippets.” She has already changed it to “Crippets.” We though tippets sounded like a pretty serious disease, but crippets sounds like something that would kill you for sure.

There are a ton more words like this, some of which I wouldn’t even know how to spell phonetically. Like the way she says “Pinocchio.” Is it wrong to ask her to say some things just so we can get a good chuckle?

Baby in there!

Last weekend while we were working on unpacking the boxes that were still sitting in our loft, Justin found Amelia’s ultrasound photos. He explained to her that they were pictures of her from before she was born, and so I dug up the belly pics from Facebook and showed them to her. “You were in there,” I told her. She then tried to shove the ultrasound photos into my belly button.

One week later, this morning as I was changing her diaper, she suddenly pointed at her own belly and said, “Baby in there!”

“No, there’s not!” I said, both horrified and amused.

Lesson: She understands a lot and forgets nothing.

New blogging format

Well, here I am, trying something new again. The previous way of blogging obviously wasn’t working for me, since it’d been 3 months since I’d posted. Granted, I had very good reasons for being too busy to blog, but even so, I needed to find a way for blogging not to seem like such a chore. I do want to keep posting these tidbits about Amelia, but I guess it just need to not be so much work for me to do it.

So I’ve set it up so that I can blog by email. Meaning, I send an email and it turns into a blog post. No logging into WordPress, uploading images, writing a post, publishing it, and blah blah blah. Instead I’ll just be sending an email. Easy peasy! So, from now on, I’ll be posting more often, hopefully at least once a day. The posts will usually be very short, and because of that, much more palatable. Ahem.

A summary of the past 3 months! In November, Amelia had a lot of fun when Grandma and Leslie visited for Thanksgiving. In December, we moved to a new house. Amelia transitioned remarkably well, despite the fact that we all kept getting sick. Her grandparents from Norway were here for 3 weeks at Christmas, which she enjoyed immensely. Now we’ve finally settled back into a routine. She’s going to school again twice a week, and we had no problems with that, although now she’s getting more and more reluctant to leave when I come to pick her up.

Her language skills have developed in leaps and bounds. The biggest sentence that we’ve counted was 9 words. She’s become an expert at riding her tricycle, and she can count to 20 (when she wants to). She’s showing signs of being able to differentiate letters, so I’ve been picking up my efforts to teach her ABCs and letters. As with all things, she can seem a little slow in catching on to things, but when she does learn how to do something, she masters it very quickly.

She knows lots of colors and shapes already, so I’m dreading the day that I decide she has to be moved to a different school. From what I understand, her current school won’t allow her to “graduate” to a different classroom until…I don’t really know when, honestly. She’s born late in the year, which causes extra problems. In short, I don’t think I’ll be happy with her school for that much longer, but she’s become attached to her teachers and friends, so moving her will be really difficult. On the other hand, I really don’t want to continue paying a lot of money for a school that’s only going to “teach” her things she already knows.

But before a move can even be considered, she has to be potty trained. No progress there. She has zero interest in the potty, and she still won’t tell us when she needs her diaper changed. They say there’s no point in pushing it before the kid is ready. Well, we’re up to size 6 nighttime diapers now and will probably start buying that size for daytime, too. And that’s the end of the road, folks. It’s the biggest diaper size you can get at the store. So she’d better be ready soon, because I refuse to be the parent that has to order oversize diapers on the Internet because my kid still doesn’t seem like she’s ready for potty training.

So that’s where we’re at. This week’s favorite quote: Amelia accidentally knocked over a glass of water on the coffee table. She gasped, turned to me and said, “Be careful, Mia Anna!”