Because reading is the only grown-up activity that's really compatible with being on baby duty, it's the activity Gareth sees me do more often than any other. Most household tasks require two hands, and many of them are hard to drop immediately when the baby gets into something he shouldn't. It's not a coincidence that most injuries to children under five happen while their adults are preparing meals. Fortunately for Gareth, I've always been a terrible housekeeper.
We go out a lot, to parks and kids' sections of libraries, to bookstores and playgrounds, and of course to Starbucks (my unnatural habitat), because those are places where I can alternate between vigorous games of peekaboo and slow perambulations holding a book in one hand while Gareth tows me along, his little fist gripping my pantleg.
Sounds kind of charming, doesn't it? Actually, while I was letting Gareth tow me around Starbucks and reading a book with half an eye's attention, a couple of thieves noticed I had my back turned to my stroller. They lifted my wallet right out of my purse. I noticed the theft within a couple of minutes, and everything's going to be just fine. But by the time Bank of America had finished turning off all the relevant plastic, the thieves had made about $7000 in purchases up and down Route 18. Turns out mothers of toddlers make notoriously easy targets. With my nose in a book, I was an easier target than most.
But hours on the phone with the fraud claims office can't get me down, no, because Gareth has started demanding that we read to him. He chases Dan and me across the house, carrying his little board books, and prods us with them. Better yet, he likes to turn the pages himself. This is the kid whose first birthday isn't for two more weeks.
I'd been feeling a little guilty about forcing him to share my attention with the books I read, comforting myself with the thought that at least I was modeling reading behavior. I wasn't expecting to see him imitate it so soon.
We go out a lot, to parks and kids' sections of libraries, to bookstores and playgrounds, and of course to Starbucks (my unnatural habitat), because those are places where I can alternate between vigorous games of peekaboo and slow perambulations holding a book in one hand while Gareth tows me along, his little fist gripping my pantleg.
Sounds kind of charming, doesn't it? Actually, while I was letting Gareth tow me around Starbucks and reading a book with half an eye's attention, a couple of thieves noticed I had my back turned to my stroller. They lifted my wallet right out of my purse. I noticed the theft within a couple of minutes, and everything's going to be just fine. But by the time Bank of America had finished turning off all the relevant plastic, the thieves had made about $7000 in purchases up and down Route 18. Turns out mothers of toddlers make notoriously easy targets. With my nose in a book, I was an easier target than most.
But hours on the phone with the fraud claims office can't get me down, no, because Gareth has started demanding that we read to him. He chases Dan and me across the house, carrying his little board books, and prods us with them. Better yet, he likes to turn the pages himself. This is the kid whose first birthday isn't for two more weeks.
I'd been feeling a little guilty about forcing him to share my attention with the books I read, comforting myself with the thought that at least I was modeling reading behavior. I wasn't expecting to see him imitate it so soon.
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Date: 2008-10-18 05:02 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-10-18 09:08 am (UTC)But... GO GARETH!!!
As a mother, clearly you rock.
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Date: 2008-10-18 11:49 am (UTC)It did not take them long to begin using the same tune, but begin to Filk.
Sorry to hear about your wallet. Glad you noticed it quickly though!
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Date: 2008-10-18 03:50 pm (UTC)But about Gareth's early reading behaviors---WOOOO HOOOO! Wonderful!
if you get the chance.......
Date: 2008-10-19 01:26 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-10-20 05:25 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-10-20 05:28 am (UTC)The list of things my mom did right about teaching me to read and write would be a long, long list. Watching her with Gareth and my nieces is incredibly useful. She has no formal training in early childhood education, but she has a tremendous instinct for it.
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Date: 2008-10-20 05:30 am (UTC)Thank you, by the way, for the lovely teapot. You didn't need to, you know. My first thought was that I should send you a replacement finger for the one my broken teapot sliced up, but then I realized I'd never find a Fair Trade source for replacement fingers.
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Date: 2008-10-20 05:33 am (UTC)Re: if you get the chance.......
Date: 2008-10-20 05:36 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-10-20 05:57 am (UTC)Re: if you get the chance.......
Date: 2008-10-20 06:02 am (UTC)This one makes me cry every damned time I read it. EVERY time. Even if I read it five times in one day.
Re: if you get the chance.......
Date: 2008-10-20 06:04 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-10-21 04:51 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-10-21 04:57 am (UTC)Nano?
Date: 2008-10-23 04:35 am (UTC)I don't know if you remeber me but we did Nano together in 06. I had red hair and wrote the novel SEWER RUn about a killer who is after 2 men who escaped him when they were young. We met at the Starbucks on RT. 18 a few times. Anyway I realised I still had you as a writing buddy and was wondering if you were writing this November. I see you had your baby - congratulations!! You can e-mail me at wordmage38@yahoo.com or visit my blog at wordmage.wordpress.com to see what my new fantasy novel is all about.
Re: Nano?
Date: 2008-10-24 02:52 am (UTC)This year I won't be doing Nano by the book, as it were, because I owe my editor a 25K novella that's only about a third of the way to roughed out right now. I might try to work with some of that old Nanowrimo energy to get the first draft finished, though. Maybe I could crash some of the write-ins?