Here he even fed his nose a little smoothie. I'm sure I'll find some mashed into and staining the carpet, but maybe the crazy pattern will hide it forever. If you come over, don't point it out. Thanks.
We did have a huge breakthrough, though! We bought some freeze dried or dehydrated, I have no idea, okra. Sort of on a whim. It was one of those display things at the end of the aisle where I was waiting with one child while D got the rest of the shopping list with the other child. And, I thought, why not? For those that know me, I'm not an impulse shopper, nor a big fan of okra, so maybe some higher power or mama instinct put the thing in my cart. Last night while the kids were eating, you guessed it, mac n cheese (with a little tuna hidden inside), D and I opened the okra and each had one. Naturally, Sylvia wanted one. But she wants to eat everything. Much to our surprise, Rafa did, too!! And then another. And another... I think he ate 6. I don't much about the health benefits of okra, but it's green and not a carb, so if he keeps eating them, I'll buy them every day!
I've been trying to teach her "Oma" (grandmother in German and the name our family uses for my mom) and "Gong-Gong" (maternal grandfather in Cantonese, which is what we hope they'll call my dad). So, yesterday, as she was babbling words, I said "Oma" to encourage her to repeat it back and she responded with "Gong-Gong"! Took me by total surprise. This stage is going to be really fun for me! I can't wait to hear what they start saying next!
3 comments:
Haha, that's cool - she knew that Oma and Gong-Gong go together. It's fascinating to wonder what they already know before they gain the ability to speak the words..
Sounds awesome. I'll be interested to hear more about how their speech develops. People ask us about the bilingual stuff frequently, and at this point all we can really say is, "we'll see!"
J - I think I now have an answer to the question of "if you could have one wish, what would it be" and it would be to spend a day in the head of one of my kids. I know they know more than I think they do, but it's so hard to imagine what goes through their little brains.
Tuuli - I sometimes feel like it's a science experiment. And everyone has a different perspective. Some are worried my kids will not learn English. Others are worried they'll confuse the languages. Others wonder why we're not also working on German or Chinese. In the end, it'll all be fine. I look forward to seeing (hearing) Lilja's speech develop, too! I need to try to get a video of Sylvia with some of her words. Maybe it's because I'm her mom, but I love it and think it's so fun. Probably because I've been craving communication for 18 months!
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