Tuesday, 10 November 2009

Simple pleasures

Yes, this again is a post about how things have changed since we were kids - and things that we enjoyed that Peanut will either never enjoy or would not see why we enjoyed it.

At 2 years and 9 months Peanut already knows how to use a computer, how to move the mouse and click to get files open, he knows what an Xbox (PS2, Xbox360) controller is for, he knows how to open my laptop and how to get the screen to wake up... but this is not about the things that Peanut can do, i believe i have already gone through a few of the wonders of technology that peanut seems to have so easily picked up on.

There are things that we used to do, things that we used to enjoy that Peanut never will. And the thing that I remember enjoying, that Peanut will never know the pleasure of is playing under the hose - running under the sprinkler - putting on bathers to wash the car and not getting much water on the car...

In this day and age i find it hard to comprehend that we used to so wasteful with water! I can never imagine putting Peanut in the backyard under the sprinkler! And we seemed have already impressed the water conservation onto our son.

I should also give the piece of information that Peanut is not at all keen on the process of being washed. If i try to give him a shower he screams in terror (yes, there is true fear there where having a shower is concerned). His main form of ablutions is in the "toddler tub", a plastic tub that we have sitting in the bath tub and we use a shower hose that is attached to the tap to wash him. He is not keen on the shower hose, but we find it quick and easy to use and he puts up with it (and hopefully if he learns to cope with the shower hose we can finally get him in to the shower...). And the good thing about the toddler tub is that the water we use can be easily taken outside and put on some of the plants - the few plants that we do water that is.

So tonight when it was time for Peanuts to have a bath, he told that he didn't want to have a bath and that it was a "waste of water". He said "maybe bath tomorrow, not tonight, bath is wasting water". I should say that despite the protest he had a bath anyway - and had fun playing with his bath toys.

I am amazed that the concept of having to save water has hit home with him though, even if he is using it to try and get out of staying clean. So maybe Peanut will not miss the childhood pleasure of running under the sprinkler. I mean he will not be able to experience to it, but our way of thinking has done such a shift that he would not even think of it as option of entertainment. And in this day and age - that can only be a good thing.

(: Reggie

Thursday, 24 September 2009

Not like I remember when I was young

Peanut loves watching TV (well, don't we all) and on the week days that i do not go work - and he does not go to daycare - we watch ABC Kids together. We eat toast, drink tea / milk and watch some of Peanut's favourite shows. There many shows on that i remember watching throughout my childhood - but they are not the same as they were then. And i blame technology for this, the ease in which a show can be computer animated has done away with a lot of the charm kids TV used to have for me. One show i particularly remember enjoying was "The Magic Roundabout". It featured a variety of creatures and was filmed in stop animation. The show is still on TV, and the basic characters are the same, but it is now a 3D computer animated show. All the characters move freely and their faces are very expressive - Unlike the jerky movements and faces frozen with a single expression that i was used to from my childhood.

But when i think what is out there for kids these days, i can't help but do the head shake and say things "It's not like it used to be... I did not have all the toys they have these days! All i had to play with was a brick with a piece of string tied around it!!!"

Ok, maybe not that far, but when i think about children's toys now - the idea of toy made out of wood is almost a novelty now! and when a range of wooden toys can be found they tend to have a rather exclusive price tag attached... I remember having quite a few wooden toys when i was little. One of my favourites was a toy that i lovingly called "tink-a-tonk", it was a wooden pull-along toy that had hammers that would strike one of three wooden bars as it dragged along. I wish i still had it, so that Peanut and Bean could see it and get as much fun out of it as i did... But if tink-a-tonk was still around, i don't Peanut and Bean would find it as entertaining as i did.

I was fascinated by this toy that would play a very basic, a very simple piece of music - if you can call three notes being played over and over again music - but I'm sure that the fascination would be felt by today's youth.

Peanut has toys that do almost everything! At a press of a button they sing songs, light up and some will almost dance a little gig - so why would he enjoy a simple tink-a-tonk?

The same goes for the TV shows that are on for kids. They are so full of bright colours, catchie songs and special effects that the shows i enjoyed when i was little must seem quite dull in comparison. For example Thomas the Tank engine now has a face the moves when he is talking and the fat controller is no longer a motionless doll. Peanut's favourite show Lazytown (i have seen every episode at least ten times each) maybe a live action show but a large amount of it shot in green screen.

Now thinking about it, with all the focus on products and shows for children, will it help teach Peanut's generation things that we did not have access to from a very early age? is there a chance that the adults of tomorrow could be far superior in intelligence because of the greater amount of exposure to technology and "educational" shows and product that are now available?

Albert Einstein did not have the Tellie Tubbies when he was baby, and he seemed to have turned out not too bad!!!

You know, i don't know if this was the point i was trying to make when i started this post... But TV has killed so many of my brain cells that i don't think i was really ever going along with a single train of thought! One thing i do know is - I like cake.

(: Reggie

Friday, 31 July 2009

Where has the baby gone?

Every day I am amazed with how much our little Peanut has grown, how big he is getting and how able he has become!

The toilet training is coming along nicely, if that is a word can be used to describe the process of trying to encourage a child to use the bathroom, and that is thanks to the daycare centre. Each morning now rather than changing his night nappy for a clean dry nappy, he will pull on a pair of undies (and yes, he puts them on himself) and then it is off to the daycare centre - or on non-daycare days he will plonk himself in the kitchen to wait for some brekkie.

Most days when I pick him up from the centre he will not be in the same clothes that I dropped him off in and there will be a bag of clothes for me to wash BUT it is obvious that there must be more successful trips to the toilet than non AND the days that there is no bag of washing for me are picking up.

It seems to be a bit of process but the girls at the daycare centre are positive about his progress, and I have noticed improvement myself when we are at home. I have heard stories from other mums about how their kids are toilet trained in a week or two, but my response to that is that i have a life and I can not spend two weeks doing nothing other than watching my child's every slightest move and rushing to the toilet every 15 minutes while never leaving the house!!!

But this was not actually going to be a post about Peanut's bodily functions, just more of a general post about how much he is growing - blink and you would miss it!

He defiantly knows what he likes and does not like, and he seems more than willing to tell us. If his cup of milk is not fridge cold he will hand it straight back and tell me that it is "yucky and older".

Last night was his Nana's birthday and we bought a simple butter cake to share as a little bit of a celebration. The cake had glaze cherries mixed through it and on top - I knew that M34tb4LL and Peanut are rather partial to glaze cherries and was pretty sure that Nana likes them as well. The cake went down with everyone (I had a piece without the cherries, not being much of a fan) and Peanut loved the cherries. In fact he got so into the cherries that he picked them out of his piece of cake and handed the dissected cake to M34tb4LL saying he wanted more! M34tb4LL went to the kitchen, got a packet of just cherries and put some on Peanut's plate. Peanut then pushed each of the cherries into his piece of cake only to pick them out again so he could eat them.

When we were finished M34tb4LL took the cake into the kitchen. A few minutes later Peanut wondered off and came back into the room carrying the cake! He handed the plate to M34tb4LL and told him that he wanted more cake - little greedy guts! We of course then had to stop laughing long enough to tell him that we felt that he had enough cake - which was not easy to do!!!

Bedtime is another thing that Peanut is getting very good at telling us whether he is ready for or not, and even if he is willing to get into bed himself - he still tries to stretch things out by wanting us to read him stories, sing songs with him or rub his back as he calls it "circles". However there have only been a few times that we have given up and bundled him into the car to "drive" him to sleep, last night we were close i must admit but we did not have to go there.

So i think we can pretty much say that little self-dressing, self-opinionated, self-aware person is growing up so fast! He really is no longer our baby - time to have another one then...

(: Reggie

Monday, 29 June 2009

"I'm a big brother"

And that is close as we have managed to get Peanut to tell people that he is "going to be a big brother". Which he is, not that he understands what that means really, but he is going to have to figure it out or he is going to get one all mighty shock!

I bought a couple of book to read to him about little boys becoming brothers. He has taken quite a shine to the book called "There's a House Inside My Mummy". It may be rather strange way of looking at things - from a grownup perspective - but we tend to have at least a small grasp on the idea of where babies come from. For a two year old i could imagine that it would be a very confusing idea to get ones little head around.

The book is very good at putting the concept of pregnancy into the giant metaphor of house inside Mummy and it does it all in a nice little rhyming way - too cute! Problem is that Peanut now thinks there is house in his tummy and in Daddy's, and today he lifting my top trying to see the house...

Well, like i said, there is time for him to work it out and if he doesn't get it by the time the baby comes he will defiantly have to work it out then!

(: Reggie

Sunday, 10 May 2009

Kids say the darndest things!!!

Peanut is very good with the talking now, he is putting full sentences together and answers question (most of time like he has understood) that you ask. But he is still quite big with parroting what he has just head or if you ask a question with two options, giving back the option that was the second to be asked.

For example, if I ask him if his much beloved Lambie is a boy or a girl - he says "Lambie is a girl". But if I ask him if Lambie is a girl or a boy - he says that Lambie is a boy.

There are some things that we will repeat things over and over again so the they get in Peanut's head and he will say them on queue, like to wish someone a happy birthday. He has gotten extremely good at saying happy birthday to people - but to the point that he says it nearly every one whether it their birthday or not. He will even sing the happy birthday song and pretend to blow out a candles, again whether it is their birthday or not.

And of course there are sometimes when what we have told him or what he has heard will get an odd reaction. Back in January one of the carers at Peanut's day care centre pulled me aside, concerned that there was a bit of family situation going on that Peanut seemed to have picked up on. He had told this carer that "Nana's a bitch" - or at least that is what she thought he was saying.

I explained that my mother-in-law was spending her summer holiday at Rosebud and that Peanut was just telling her that Nana was at the beach. We then quickly changed what were saying to Peanut about his Nana's whereabouts to either: Nana is at Rosebud or Nana is down the beach.

And of course there are sometimes that things are said in front of Peanut that he just picks up on instantly. Like the time that he was in the car with his Granny and Grandpop. I was at work so I am only telling the story as it was told to me. Peanut's Grandpop was driving the car and took a wrong turn, he let out his frustration at this mistake but saying "BUGGER". Peanut's two grandparents them heard from the back seat, clear as a bell, Peanut saying "BUGGER". Grandpop tried to tell Peanut that he had actually said "bother" not "bugger" but Peanut was sure of what he had heard and corrected him "No Grandpop, not bother, bugger".

M34tb4LL will sometimes give Peanut a shoulder ride and if he puts him on one shoulder he will say he is a pirate and that Peanut is his parrot. Peanut loved this, he will prouding sit on M34tb4LL's shoulder and say "Daddy's a pirate!". Well yesterday we were at a shopping centre and when Peanut had had enough of being in his pram, M34tb4LL lifted him onto this shoulder. I noticed that Peanut had a smudge of chocolate on his face - from the babychino he had just devoured - and I tried to clean it off his face. Peanut quickly smacked my hand away and said "No Mummy, no touching the pirate!" However once he was in his car seat and buckled in I was free to clean the chocolate off his face, he was no longer a pirate you see.

But there are somethings that no matter how much we encourage Peanut to say something - he won't... it is a bit strange. But it is not going to stop us from working on him, like today. I need to get him to say "Happy Mother's Day", not "Happy Mother's Birthday" like he is currently...

(: Reggie

Friday, 10 April 2009

Helper monkey in training

Now those of you who know me, know that I am not much of a domestic goddess. In fact it has been said that my only domestic quality is the fact that I live in a house! Cleaning is not one of my strong points, but thankfully those who know and love me seem to be able to overlook this.

Peanut is becoming more and more helpful around the house. I'm sure that by now you have all seen the YouTube video of him helping me empty the dishwasher. And if you haven't seen it go look at it! it is adorable!!! Here is a link to the video -

Every home should have one of these

I must admit though, every time he helps me, I do hold my breath till we have finished.

So anyway, at Peanut's 2 year check-up the MCHN (maternal & child health nurse) I was told that a child should have his own chores to do around the house. Picking up toys, putting his used clothes in the laundry basket - whatever. And the amount of the chores the child should have should be the same number as his age. So, seeing as Peanut has turned two, he should have two chores - tasks that are his to complete.

The first chore that has been assigned him was the one that you have all witnessed. And if you do not know what I am talking about - SERIOUSLY, GO AND WATCH THE VIDEO AND THEN COME BACK AND FINISH READING!!! Go on, the story here can wait a few minutes.

As for the second chore, this is where am stuck!!! I can't really get him to put his used clothes in the basket, seeing as he does not get himself undressed (well, not most of the time) and the basket is next to the change table. Unless I throw the clothes on the floor next to the basket and get him to pick them up, but what kind of an example am I setting for him. Throwing things on the floor then telling him to pick them up. That is just inviting a monkey see monkey do scenario.

But the idea did get me thinking. Though we might not have given him two chores yet, does not mean we can not start training him! For Christmas we gave him a mini Dyson vacuum cleaner that looks pretty much like the Dyson we have. So the other day when I vacuumed the floor (and this is a pretty rare event, but ...) I gave him his Dyson vacuum and encouraged him to follow me around the house so we were vacuuming together, he thought it was terrific fun. He is a bit too little at the moment to use the real thing - but soon...

Next I am thinking of sending him out in to the yard with his push-along toy (not sure what it is called really) and get him to follow me around while I mow the lawn. Then I could get one of those play kitchen / food sets and get him to practise making dinner!!!

The potential here is endless! If he thinks a chore is playing - then I'll let him play away!!! Of course there is still the problem that at two he currently only has one chore - not two.

(: Reggie


Saturday, 7 March 2009

The transformation is nearly complete

Peanut celebrated his second birthday nearly a month ago and he seems to be changing from baby to little right before our eyes.

He is getting very good at telling us what he wants, he is not be talking in full sentences - well he is only two - but he is pretty well trying to. He is walking and running around everywhere is getting less willing to sit in the pram while we are at the shops. And with his latest haircut he looks every bit the part of the little boy.

Last weekend M34tb4LL took the bars off one side of Peanuts cot and attached the stability rail that it came it. The cot we bought for Peanut can be converted into a toddler bed. The first night that Peanut slept in his 'bed' it took him a while to settle down. Each time we tried to put into his bed he got upset because he couldn't pull the side up. I suppose it would seem every strange to someone who has spent two years sleeping in an enclosed, cage like bed to suddenly being put into a bed that has no sides and is wide open.

But the funny thing it was the first night that Peanut seemed to be nervous about his new sleeping arrangements. The next morning when his Nana (my mother-in-law) came over so we could go to the farmers market together, Peanut was very keen to show her his new bed and how he could get in and out of it all my himself.

The next night he was happy enough to go to bed and the night after that he did not want to be carried to and placed in, he wanted to walk to his room himself and get into the bed on his own. And i must say that know there is no bar to try to get over - it is much easier for M34tb4LL and me to give Peanut a goodnight kiss and cuddle.

So what is next in the baby-to-boy transformation? Toilet training... It has started, sort of. Peanut has a training seat and can climb the steps and sit on the seat, but personally - I'm not really sure how to get him make the connection as to what to do when he is there! And having a house that is fully carpeted, including one of the bathrooms - I hope the learning is not going to get TOO messy!

(: Reggie

Tuesday, 3 February 2009

Inflation Woos

No, this is not a post about the "suffering economy". This is the Peanut blog and all the random ramblings that go here are all about our boy - or boy related dealings.

Today (or at least the day that i started typing this post) was a hot day, a very hot day, very very very very hot day! And seeing as our air-con had already been running for nearly two days straight i thought it was time to switch it off and seek cooler quarters.

So i bundles Peanut into the car and drove the local shopping centre, hoping to get some relief from the heat. When we got there however we found that the air-conditioning had broken down in 2/3 of the building, but there was plenty of shops to browse around that did still have a temperature that was remarkably better than it was outside.

At our local shopping centre, and I'm sure at others, there seems to be a growing trend for business to try and give a certain item to any small child who wanders (or is pushed - in a pram or stroller i mean) by. And it was this trend that i said "NO, no thank you" to seven times on this particular day.

The items that are being handed out care freely are balloons...

Now comes the question, why would i not want my child to be handed a balloon? Kids love balloons! Kids find holding a balloon fun! But, call me strange (most people do) i don't like balloons. They have a tendency to pop and when they pop - not only do they make a loud noise and scare the bejeebers out one - but they have the potential to take some one's eye out! Ans statistically 56% (Please note that this statistic has been completely made up) of all eye injuries in this country are caused by flying balloon debris.

And is not just my personal dislike for balloons that makes me not want to except them when they are offered, it is also the way that Peanut treats them. As soon as he receives a balloon will try and hit thing (and people) with it, he constantly drops it and wants it picked up, runs his fingers over it to make a squeaky noise and (the worst one) he tries to bite it - which if he is successful will result in a loud pop and an injured eye.

But back to the practise of how balloons are being distributed in shopping centre. I must admit that i do find it a bit rude that the people who are handing out the balloon just ask a child that happens to be walking (or being pushed) by directly if they want a balloon, they do not ask the parent (of care giver) if it is alright to offer the child a balloon - they just give it.

Do we not live in an age where we are supposed to teaching our children about "stranger danger"? Now i have my own opinion on "stranger danger", and the bollocks that it is, but that is not for this post. And what if the parent does not want the child to have a balloon, for any reason, not just the strange near-phobic reasons that i have.

So why don't these balloon handing people just ask a parent - "would your child like a balloon?" and leave it to the parent to confer with the child, and the answer will no doubt be yes, but the child still thinks they have a choice.

(: Reggie

p.s. - I don't like balloons

Monday, 26 January 2009

Pram Rage

Having a child definitely adds another chapter to ones life. The house takes on a whole appearance, and the practice of 'popping out to the shops' becames a highly coordinated event. And it is on this that i would like to reflect today.

I have quite a passion for shopping – I love it. If shopping was a full time job i would do overtime every week AND still pop out to the shops on my day off.


At my local shopping centre there used to be a woman who was there every day that was known as the pram
natzi. I know she was there everyday because of my own observations and that of and other mum who go to the centre. And i say used to be, because she has not been seen for sometime now...


From my own experiences (and the stories i have heard from other mums)
TPN (the pram natzi) always seemed to appear from nowhere and always manages to nearly run into any pram she sees and she will abuse the hell out of the pram driver!!!


But another perk of being a pram driver is the parking at my local shopping centre. A few places within the car park there a designated parking spots for “parents with prams”. Half the time these spots are already taken because it is not like they are a secret, but they are very handy when you can get one of them.


The last time i managed to get one of the parks it was a wet, rainy day. Now on wet days, if you can just jump out of your car and run into the shops – it is a hassle, but it is not that hard. But when you have a child it is impossible to jump out of the car and run. With a child (toddler in my case), i have to get out of the car, go round to the boot and get the pram out, go back to the passenger side of the car and get any bags that i may have brought with me - which on a good day will consist of my handbag, a nappy bag, a bag with food and drink options for Peanut and some empty bags to put
any shopping into – then i have to get Peanut out of the car and into the pram and then and only then can i think about heading into the shops.


Now this is a bit for of process at the best of times, but when it is raining it becomes quite a rushed event, and having the option of using a “parent with pram” parking spot (which tend to be very close to the door of the shopping centre, making the dash ends up being the easiest part of it.


So on the day in question, the wet and raining day, once Peanut and i had finished our shopping we headed back to the car. Of course as soon as i pulled the pram up along side the car there was a car waiting to take the spot and i noticed the there was only one person in the car – the driver, no child, no baby, and definitely no pram! So i took my time getting my shopping into the car (it had stopped raining), took my time putting Peanut into his car seat, took my time folding up the pram and putting it into the boot. The car that was waiting sat there through all this.


I did consider doing an “oops, i forgot something” motion and getting Peanut back out of the car and going back into the shops, but Peanut was tired and i did want to get him home.


So i pulled the car out of the parking spot and watched as the other driver pulled his car in. I sat there and watched him as he sat in his car for a few moments and then when he got out of the car i wound my window to alert him to the error he had made with choosing that particular parking spot.


“Excuse me, did you realise that you have parked in a “parents with prams” parking space?” - “Lose some weight Fatty” was the mans response. Well i knew that i was dealing with someone of incredible intellect and i pointed out to him the people who live in glass houses should not throw stones. He asked me what i meant by that and i reminded him that he also carried a little bit of extra weight.


His next insult to me was as well thought out and articulate as the first - “Why don't you get a job!”, to which i corrected him that i do currently have gainful employment - “As what? a hooker?” - “No, a receptionist” - “your a cocky bitch, you just need a good f*@#” - “Thanks for the advise, I'll let my husband know your opinion and see if he can remedy that fact”.


It was at that point that he just gave me a bit of a snarl and walked into the shopping centre.


But of course having a pram is not all conflict, you should how much shopping i can fit into that thing! I'm thinking that even when Peanut does not need it anymore i will still take it to the shops just for the bag space.


:) Reggie

Wednesday, 14 January 2009

He's going to be how old?

TWO!!!

In less than a month our little Peanut is going to be two years old!!!

My how the time has flown.

But then has it?

Time is a very strange thing when it is put into context with a child. It seems like no time at all since Peanut was a tiny little baby who would curl up into a ball on my chest and go to sleep. But that was nearly two years ago, and in that time we have done a lot of patient waiting.

How many sleepless nights did we have where we thought he would never mater the art of sleeping through the night. I can assure you that the time did not fly by then. As any parent (or person who have lived in a house with a baby) would know, midnight to five AM seems to go forever when you are pacing up and down a dimly lit hall way trying to settle an upset infant.

The first few meals that Peanut ate seemed to go on forever - and such a small amount of food was eaten. I have watched the video of Peanuts first meal and it only goes for a few minutes but my memory of it was it took nearly an hour! Putting the spoon to his lips, watching him as he tries to figure out what on earth he is supposed to do with this new object that has been shoved in front of his face, taking the food off the spoon and then letting it dribble out because he doesn't realise he had to swallow it!

And i can remember watching Peanut for what felt like hours as he tried to figure out how to take those first few steps. Again it felt like hours that we watch him pull him self up, wobble around a bit and then fall back down to the ground.

So it is weird to think that time has gone so quickly when i think of individual events that seem to have passed by so slowly.

(: Reggie