Sunday, September 02, 2007

Pay Attention

Thursday, June the twenty-eighth, Clara Grace announced proudly, “Daddy, I have something for you.” Her daddy held out his hand and Clara Grace placed an imaginary something into his palm. Not quite sure what to do with the “something,” her daddy popped it into his mouth and chewed. “No!” Clara Grace responded with evident shock and disappointment. “You’re not supposed to eat it.”

“Ooops,” her daddy said and spit the something back into his hand.

“Oh, you’ve ruined it,” Clara Grace declared in dismay. Then, after a momentary reluctance, the little girl relented and pinched another imaginary bit from the air. “Here’s a new something.”

A Good Deal

On Wednesday, June the twenty-eighth, during a vacation to visit her grandparents in Michigan, Clara Grace munched happily on a decorated cookie from her Nanna,. Her grandpa asked if she wanted any help eating the cookie. Clara Grace responded that she had the situation under control and then asked for a drink of milk. Her grandpa seized the moment of weakness and offered a barter, “A drink will cost you a bite of that cookie.” Clara Grace seemed to have no problem with this arrangement. She accepted the cup of milk and then obligingly took a bite.

Neglected

Clara Grace’s daddy whisked her away on an early morning shopping trip Friday, June the thirtieth. Daddy made the quick decision to take her to the store in her pajamas in his haste to get her out the door. He was considerately allowing her mommy a little more sleep after a long night with teething baby Everett. Clara Grace rode quietly in the shopping cart down the isles of food, housewares, and toys, but when the buggy entered the clothing department, she announced in a loud voice, “Daddy, buy me some clothes. I’m in my pajamas. You need to pay for some clothes for me.”

A New Twist on an Old Tale

Clara Grace’s baby brother wailed in his high chair on the morning of Friday, June the twenty-second while his mommy scrambled to throw breakfast together. Clara Grace stood near the inconsolable boy and recited an appropriate line from a favorite bedtime story to cheer him up, “Little pig, little pig, let me out.”

After a moment, Clara Grace realized she had made a joke and called into the kitchen, “Mommy, that was funny. I said, Little pig, little pig let me out.”

Hey!

After a visit to the zoo on Saturday, June the sixteenth, Clara Grace announced, “I pet a sheep.

Her mommy answered, “Yes you did. That was a baby sheep which is called a lamb.”

Clara Grace remarked, “I like lambs. Do you like lambs Mommy?”

Her mommy responded, “Yes, I do like lambs.”

Clara Grace inquired, “Do you like lambs, Daddy?”

Her daddy answered, “Yes I do like lambs, especially with a nice mint jelly.”

Clara Grace’s mommy punched him in the shoulder for his callous and insensitive response.

“No mommy!” Clara Grace intervened.

“That’s right, Clara Grace, you tell her,” daddy cheered.

I want to get him,” Clara Grace explained.

It's Hard to Keep Up

While breakfast was being served on the morning of Saturday, June the sixteenth, Clara Grace asked her mommy for a white top on her sippy cup to match her white milk. “We don’t have any white lids,” her mommy replied, “but you have white pajamas to match your white milk right?”

Next, Clara Grace requested a white napkin. Her daddy smiled and asked her, “Do you want a white napkin because you spilled your white milk or your white yogurt on your white pajamas?”

Clara Grace responded matter-of-factly, “No, it’s because napkins are white.”

7 Letters and a Star

Clara Grace dangled from the handle of a WAL*MART shopping cart during an afternoon trip to the store on Friday, June the fifteenth,. From this vantage point, she was presented with an excellent view of the store’s printed name. After a moment, she announced proudly, “Seven letters and a star.”

Another Story by Clara Grace

Sunday, April the thirtieth, Clara Grace’s daddy tucked her into bed and told a story. He began with the time-honored introduction “Once upon a time, there was an…”

“Alligator,” the little girl interjected.

“Okay,” her daddy obliged, “there was an alligator named--”

“Clara Grace,” his daughter supplied.

“Okay,” her daddy continued, “and Clara Grace the alligator like to swim down the river and…”

“Bite!” Clara Grace interrupted decidedly.

“Hmm,” her daddy went on a little unsure as to where the story was headed. “Okay, so, Clara Grace the alligator like to bite—“

“Angelfish,” Clara Grace finished quickly looking up at her arch nemesis on the wall.

“Angelfish and flies,” she added as she remember the pesky insects which had only recently begun to pester her outdoors.

“Does Clara Grace like to bite turtle or stingray??” her daddy asked in clarification.

“No,” the little girl answered definitely, “just angelfish and flies.”

Bad Breath

Clara Grace developed a severe case of pink eye on the night of Friday, April the twenty-first. The little girl began showing symptoms after any doctor’s office was closed, and awoke in the middle of the night with painfully swollen eyes. So, while her mommy remained at home with baby Everett, Clara Grace and her daddy made a midnight run to the hospital. To keep his daughter occupied in the waiting room, Clara Grace’s daddy began to tell her a rambling story. Not far into the tale however, the little girl pulled away from her daddy’s face and said, “Daddy stop talking. Daddy’s talking goes in my nose.”

“Sorry if I didn’t take time to brush my teeth before trucking you to the emergency room,” her daddy replied wryly and then put his hands behind his head and leaned back to rest.

Clara Grace squeezed toward the opposite side of her chair and instructed, “Daddy put arms down. Daddy’s arms go in my nose.”

Scientific Explanation

Clara Grace’s daddy carried his daughter to the car before sunrise Monday, April the seventeenth. The sleepy toddler lifted her head from her daddy’s chest in consternation at the sound of his beating heart and commented, “Daddy ate a drum.”

Blameless

Clara Grace and her mommy walked down the road on a sunny April afternoon. “Ooops, my bad,” Clara Grace’s mommy apologized as her shoe snagged the back of her daughter’s sandal.

Clara Grace replied disapprovingly, “No mommy, that was your shoe.”

Blame

Clara Grace bounced her rubber ball a bit too enthusiastically on the afternoon of Friday, April the thirteenth. When the ball rebounded onto the glass pains of the French doors, her mommy called, “Clara Grace, I told you not to bounce that ball so hard.”

The little girl answered in complete candor, “Mommy, floor did it.”

Everything's Relative

Clara Grace’s daddy looked over his shoulder as he left the nursery Saturday evening, March the thirty-first. “Let’s eat dinner, Curley-Head,” he called to his little girl.

“Okay, Big-Back,” Clara Grace replied without hesitation.

Imitation is the Worst Form of Flattery

Clara Grace picked up her ukulele to join in a practice session with her mommy who was still struggling with the new guitar she’d received for Christmas. The little girl decided to play along and started in on the new song she’d heard her mommy butchering for the last fifteen minutes. Clara Grace strummed the ukulele and sang proudly, “I’ve been working on the-oh rats--railroad, all the live-long--darn it--day.”

The Girl and the Alligator by Clara Grace Paulson

On the evening of March the twenty-ninth, 2007, Clara Grace and her parents went to the mall for a little non-pollinated exercise. Clara Grace ran straight for the fountain, so her Daddy gave her three pennies to throw in the water. After her coins were all submerged, Clara Grace sat on the nearby bench and her daddy said, “Tell me a story.”

“OK”, Clara Grace said and paused to think.

“Once upon a time…” her daddy prompted.

“I’ll do it. I’ll do it,” Clara Grace interrupted. “Once upon time, there was little girl in fountain. She say, ‘I want some money!’ Alligator say, ‘I get money! Touch my head.’”

Clara Grace’s daddy waited in suspense, but when no more of his daughter’s tale seemed forthcoming, he prompted again, ““And the little girl said…”

Clara Grace took up her yarn once more revealing how the wise maiden by the fountain answered the cunning alligator. “The little girl say, ‘NO! Bite my hand!’”

Talented

On Monday, March the nineteenth Clara Grace fell off her swing several times. Finally, her daddy teased, “Do you like falling off the swing?”

Clara Grace answered, “No.” but then added, “I’m good at it.”

One

When Clara Grace’s first tube of toothpaste was squeezed dry sometime in early March, she received her first education in the mass marketing of products designed to appeal to her age. As her shopping cart rolled down the toothpaste isle, her Daddy asked, “Which tube do you want, the car toothpaste, the elephant toothpaste, the superman toothpaste, the horse toothpaste, the cat toothpaste, or the Elmo toothpaste?”

Clara Grace replied, “I want the elephant.” Two isles away however, she experienced sudden buyer’s remorse and told her daddy, “I want the car.” They wound their way back to the hundreds of toothpaste tubes and her Daddy picked up one with a red racecar.

The only problem at that point, was that Clara Grace did not wish to relinquish her elephant tube in exchange.

“You can only have one,” her daddy told her.

Clara Grace thought for a moment and then answered with her usual astounding logic, “I want one car, one elephant, one superman, one horse, one cat, and one Elmo.”

An Ear for Talent

While riding in the shopping cart with her Daddy in early March, Clara Grace requested, “Daddy sing Everett song.” Eager to oblige, her Daddy began an impromptu song about her new, little brother. Before the song had even gotten off the ground however, Clara Grace interrupted, “No, sing Everett taking a bath song.” Not one to fluster easily, her daddy began another off the cuff performance pertaining to the last night’s splishing and slashing in the bathtub. After one or two bars though, Clara Grace stopped him once again, “Um, I like mommy singing.”

Doesn't Work as Well Both Ways

As Clara Grace’s mommy helped her put on her pajamas one morning in early March, the little girl groped helpfully to find the hole for her head. As she worked, she commented to herself, “Where’s my head? Where’s my head?” And as she popped through the opening she exclaimed triumphantly, “Oh, there’s my head!”

Weird, but Articulate

Families often adopt odd ways children express things as a sort of private language and inside joke. One of the very first of these to catch on for Clara Grace’s family came about as the little girl attempted to express the phenomenon of an unpleasant aroma. Her Daddy halted work on the car in order to change his daughter’s diaper. Though he dutifully washed his hands, a pungent odor of gasoline still remained. After a moment of introspection, Clara Grace said, “Daddy’s hands funny. Stink goes in my nose.”

Lip Reading

On Valentine’s Day, Clara Grace’s daddy received a fishbowl full of candy hearts surrounding a cup of flowers in the center from his adoring students. Long after the flowers had faded, Clara Grace’s mommy was still doling out the candy hearts for potty training rewards. Often, she would also ask her little girl what letters were in the message on the front of the heart. Without thinking, Clara Grace popped a candy into her mouth on Sunday, March the fourth, before glancing at the words on front. “Hey,” her daddy protested, “What did that heart say?” Clara Grace quickly examined the dissolving candy with the tip of her tongue and reported, “Says, A, B, C.”

Get a Job

Clara Grace surprised her mommy on Thursday, March the first with the sudden declaration, “I need a job.” Once her mommy figured out that the little girl wasn’t requesting nine to five employment, she surmised that Clara Grace must be wanting some task to perform. “Will you take this shirt to the dirty clothes?” she asked. Clara Grace cheerfully complied. Much to her mommy’s amazement and delight, In the days that followed, the little girl continued to request to be helpful.

Anatomically Correct Diagnosis

“Ow!” Clara Grace announced and stared down at her foot. “My piggies hurt.” Knowing this was code for his daughter’s toes, her daddy massaged the pajama footie lightly then blew her foot a tiny kiss. The little girl acknowledged that this had done some good and began to walk around her room with renewed vigor. “Ow!” she called again, “My arch hurts. Check my arch.” Possibly, this was one of the first truly useful occasions for all the anatomical vocabulary her grandma had taught her during the past several days. Clara Grace’s daddy decided to inspect more closely. Sure enough, a tiny object was stuck to the little girl’s foot and rolling around in the bottom of her footie.

Another Achievement

Clara Grace was quietly building with her legos on waking up from her nap Monday, February the twenty-sixth. When her daddy heard her bustling around the room at last, he opened the door and was met by his very excited daughter. “Look at that, Daddy,” Clara Grace commanded. She was pointing toward her tiny table on which three rectangular legos were set out in a perfect line. “I made a train block.” At that, she ran from the room and found her mommy in the kitchen. With extremely urgency, Clara Grace pulled her mommy toward the nursery and said, “Come in, mommy. Come in, Mommy. Look at that. It’s a train block.”

Little Miss Know-it-All

Clara Grace was not even two and a half years old before beginning the life-long task of correcting her daddy’s grammar. “I see an airplane,” she announced gazing toward the sky.

“I see an airplane,” her daddy agreed.”

“I see an airplane TOO, daddy,” Clara Grace admonished with particular emphasis on her daddy’s omitted word. Fri Feb 23 corrected Daddy’s grammar “I see the sun too, Daddy.”

Thankful for Euphemisms!!!

On Saturday, February the seventeenth Clara Grace stepped into the cruise boat’s glass elevator. She peered through the translucent wall at a very animated woman playing the piano. As the elevator rose toward the upper decks, the woman’s low-cut dress became more and more apparent. Clara Grace grew excited and announced to the entire elevator, “Look, she has Feeding Everetts!” Fortunately, only direct family was able to decode her meaning.

Just Bring Me the Menu

Aboard the cruise ship Ecstasy, on the morning of Friday, February the sixteenth, Clara Grace was told she could order anything she liked for breakfast. “What are you going to eat this morning?” her daddy asked as they strolled under the beautiful ocean sunrise.

“I want eggs,” Clara Grace began thoughtfully. “And oatmeal, and some yogurt, and bacon, and a banana, and potatoes.” She considered this for a moment then added, “That’s a lot of food, Daddy.”

Inherited Taste

Clara Grace and her daddy took a trip to the hardware store on the evening of Monday, February the fifth. As her daddy unbuckled her car seat he couldn’t help but notice his daughter’s fascination with an enormous pick-up truck parked in the space beside them. “That’s an orange truck,” she announced enviously.

“Yes it is,” Clara Grace’s daddy agreed also admiring the old 76 Chevy.

“What’s that truck have Daddy? Clara Grace asked him.

Her daddy observed the patches of bondo and rust covering the exterior and couldn’t think of much that the vehicle had going for it. “I don’t know,” he answered.

“That truck has spots,” Clara Grace informed him excitedly.

By this time the burly owner of the orange truck was on his way out of the hardware store. Clara Grace watched him open his heavy door then called, “I like that truck!”

Surprised, the man turned and told her, “Well, you can have it for thirty five cents.”

Beaver Fever

Clara Grace woke up with a fever in the middle of the night Monday, January the twenty-ninth. Her mommy rocked her on her lap and wiped a cool washcloth across her warm face. “Cold washcloth,” Clara Grace announced groggily.

“I know,” her mommy answered. Your head is too hot because of the fever so we need to make it feel good with this cold washcloth.”

“I have a beaver on my head,” Clara Grace mused curiously.

The New Entertainer

While Clara Grace’s mommy and daddy scrambled to get ready for church on the morning of Sunday, January the twenty-first, she decided to help out with her unhappy baby brother. She knelt beside his bouncer and soothed in a very motherly tone, “Shhh, don’t cry Everett. What’s the matter Everett?” When the baby had quieted down enough to enjoy a performance she launched into her rendition of Old MacDonald, which went something like, “Old MacDonald had a farm Moo here, Moo there, Moo here, Moo there.” By this time, Everett was smiling happily so Clara Grace tried out some of her grandma’s favorite games on him. “Little man, little man, little man,” she sing-songed as she playfully walked her two fingers up his tummy. “Spider, spider, spider,” she continued as her wriggling fingers danced on the top of Everett’s head.

Such A Good Girl

In January Clara Grace made her mommy’s day by taking a bite of her vegetable hash brown casserole and announcing, “I like this food, mommy.”

Let Them Eat Cake

Ever since her birthday party in October, Clara Grace had been quite enamored with birthday cake, and the last three months of the year proved to provide quite a plentiful supply. She partook with her cousin and Granddad in October, and with her Aunt Ginger, mommy, daddy and Grandpa in December. On the rare occasions when actual cake was unavailable, Clara Grace began her exploration into the realm of the imaginary. On Friday, December the twenty-ninth, she reached up with all her fingers and pushed them into her mommy’s mouth. “What are you doing?” her mommy asked curiously.

“Some party cake for you,” Clara Grace announced generously then helped herself to an invisible bite.

I Live in a Gingerbread House

During her third Christmas, Clara Grace had been somewhat inundated with gingerbread houses. She had made one with her mommy artfully placing shredded wheat shingles on the roof and stealing gumdrop bushes. Then, her nana helped her construct one of graham crackers in Michigan. While taking a bath on Thursday, December the twenty-eighth, Clara Grace began pounding on the bathroom wall with her fists. After this peculiar ritual she began pinching the spot she had buffeted and then bringing her fingers to her mouth.

“What are you doing?” Clara Grace’s daddy had to ask.

“I’m eating the house,” Clara Grace informed him matter-of-factly.

“You’re eating the gingerbread house?” her daddy inquired.

“No, this house,” she told him. “I’m smashing it with a hammer and eating it.”

Waitress!

Clara Grace and her family enjoyed a meal out on Wednesday, December the thirteenth. The little girl shoveled down an adult’s portion of macaroni and cheese, a piece of Texas toast, her side order of broccoli, some of her mommy’s nachos, and a bite or two of her daddy’s baked potato. As her mommy and daddy were contemplating whether or not they could stand after the enormous meal, Clara Grace was waving after a passing waitress and requested, “Ice cream, want some ice cream please.”

Too Much Info

“I have to go potty,” Clara Grace announced on Saturday, December the ninth. Once on the toilet she told her daddy, “Want to poop, no, want to pee.” And then, amazingly, she did. Of course, her mommy and daddy made quite a fuss over the little girl’s new milestone. On Tuesday, December the twelfth, Clara Grace again asked to be seated on the potty. “Want to poop,” she told her mommy. “Want to pee, want to poop more, want to pee more, want to poop more, want to pee more.” And believe it or not, she did all of that.

The Logical Sequence

Clara Grace and her family decorated their first gingerbread house on Thursday, December the seventh. Though Clara Grace was integral to the house’s construction, she did ten to eat more than she built. When the final product complete with frosty shingled roof, latticed windows, snow covered bushes and pine tree, stood before them in all its glory, Clara Grace’s first response was, “I want some milk please.”

Good Sense

On Saturday, December the second, Clara Grace and her daddy both stood with jaws dropped by the front door in complete awe of a starling migration. The lawn was black with the swarming birds and their clicking and chatter was a cacophony. “Lot’s of birds!” Clara Grace announced. Then, as if on cue, there was a thunderous sound of wings and the entire flock swarmed to the next yard. “I’ve never seen anything like that,” Clara Grace’s daddy commented in wonder. “Never seen like that.” Clara Grace agreed.

You're as Pretty as a...

Clara Grace’s mommy was slightly flattered when her tiny daughter ran a hand through her hair and announced, “Mommy pretty.” She wondered if her feelings of pride had been a bit premature though on Friday, December the first, when she and Clara Grace sat on the floor playing with a nativity set. “Donkey have pretty ears,” Clara Grace announced in admiration.

What Do Angelfish Say?

When Clara Grace was only around eighteen months old, she witnessed a violent thunderstorm. She refrained from crying or screaming but did run to mommy with the request, “Thunder, hug.” Every night that week, heat thunder rippled through the sky and shook Clara Grace’s house while she slept. Each morning, she greeted her mommy with the excited announcement “Under, boom, boom!” Clara Grace’s mommy was slightly puzzled at how nonchalantly her daughter was taking the resounding rumbles. When the storms finally receded, the little girl continued to greet her mommy each morning with more news about thunder.

Whenever her parents commented, “I didn’t hear any thunder last night,” she pointed and repeated “Under!” vehemently. Finally, her daddy looked where she was pointing and noticed his colorful paintings of sea life on the walls. “Oh, you mean underwater,” he announced. “Yes, the fish are underwater.” Clara Grace continued to include “Under” in her morning discussions at least once each week. As her vocabulary grew, she commented, “Under, fish underwater.” It puzzled her mommy that even though the little girl could clearly say “Underwater, and used it appropriately at the aquarium and in the bathtub, she continued to refer to “Under” in the mornings.

Finally, more than six months later, on the morning of November the twenty-second, she met Clara Grace bouncing in her crib. “Thunder, thunder,” the little girl clearly announced during her mattress exercise routine.

Clara Grace’s mommy was befuddled, there had not been a thunderstorm for weeks and her daughter was obviously pointing out something on the wall. “Where is the thunder?” she asked Clara Grace. “Show me the thunder.” Clara Grace obligingly directed her toward a dark blue angelfish swimming on the wall opposite the crib. “This is thunder?” her mommy asked in disbelief. She picked her daughter up and brought her closer to the beautiful fish.

“Woah!” Clara Grace laughed nervously, “Funny fish, funny thunder.” Pronouncing things as “funny” had become the little girl’s way of expressing mild distrust.

“That’s a nice fish,” her mommy tried to explain. “It’s an angelfish. Do you want to pat the angelfish?” Clara Grace patted the seahorse, octopus, turtle, discus fish, and even the stingray above her rocking chair, but declined to touch the “funny thunder fish.”

After a few moments though, she summoned all her courage and reached out to stroke the angelfish lightly. “Angelfish hurt you?” she asked her mommy tentatively.

“No,” her mommy reassured her, “the angelfish won’t hurt you. The angelfish is nice.”

By the middle of December, Clara Grace was asking to pat the “nice angelfish” regularly. However, despite all her mommy’s explanations, a slight misconception prevailed. During a diaper change on Wednesday, December the fourteenth, Clara Grace asked her mommy, “What ladybug say?”

“Ladybugs don’t say anything,” her mommy informed. “They’re very quiet guys.”

Clara Grace mulled this over then added to the conversation, “Fish say ‘Boom, boom!”

Saturday, November 25, 2006

In The Holiday Spirit

Could it be called anything but ironic that Clara Grace said “Thank you, Daddy" unprompted, for the very first time, as he set lunch on her tray Thanksgiving Day?

An Exercise In Humility

Clara Grace’s mommy and daddy pushed the long double stroller passed their town’s new liquor store during their evening constitutional on Wednesday, November the twenty-second. "At least it looks a little classier than most,” Clara Grace’s daddy said ruefully of the establishment. “They’ve made an effort with the wought iron wine wacks.”

“With the what?” Clara Grace’s mommy teased.

“You say it then,” he challenged. So they attempted the tongue twister of their own creation all the rest of the way to the grocery store.

As they neared their destination, Clara Grace’s mommy joked, “Clara Grace, can you say, wrought iron wine rack?” The parents were more than a little shocked and slightly chagrined to hear an almost perfect rendition issue from their daughter in the stroller on her very first attempt.

More Than Words Can Say

Clara Grace could not seem to get enough time with her new baby brother. “Come here, come here,” she often soothed as she wrapped her arms around his body as if to carry him from her mommy’s lap dispite his weight being over half her own. “Everett’s arms,” she constantly announced proudly patting and admiring her brother’s stumpy appendages, “Everett’s hands, Everett’s fingers.” At the slightest sound of discomfort from her baby brother, Clara Grace was immediately by his side patting his tummy vigorously and sounding the alarm, “Ah oh, Everett crying. Everett crying.” “Where’s Everett go?” was her regular inguiry whenever she and her mommy found themselves in a quiet house with a sleeping baby and “Want to see Everett,” was her constant request whenever the baby is in view. There was one phrase however which continued to baffle Clara Grace’s mommy. “Look-a-lump, look-a-lump,” Clara Grace was often heard cooing over the little boy. Her mommy gathered that the expression most certainly conveyed tenderness as it was always accompanied by all manner of hugs, kisses, and pats. The word for word meaning of this term eluded her though. Perhaps the expression is one of those rare ones for which there is no sufficient translation to convey the emotion in the limited vocabulary of our language.

Big Sister Sentiments

Up until Saturday, November the eighteenth, Clara Grace had shown absolutely no signs of that all too common aloofness big sisters aquire toward their younger brothers. Almost every morning on being released from her crib, her first question was, “Where’s Everett go?” That morning started out as no exception. “Want to see Everett,” Clara Grace persisted as she tagged along behind her daddy who carried the baby much too high for her to inspect properly. Obligingly, Clara Grace’s daddy knelt down and put Everett on eye level with his big sister. Unfortunately, but not altogether inconceivably due to the high frequence of that occurance, Everett chose that moment to spit up a healthy amount of his freshly consumed breakfast. "Everett spit,” Clara Grace informed her daddy, confident of the disapproval this action always gains her at the dinner table. Surprisingly, when no paternal reprimand was forthcoming, the big sister took the task upon herself. “Gross!” she announced definitively and then ran into the bedroom to tell her mommy enthusiastically, “Everett spits! Everett is gross!”

Hard Headed

Clara Grace pulled the shopping cart through the wide isles of the grocery store on the evening of Saturday, November the eleventh. As she approached the check-out lane, she realized from the slight drag that she was not in total control of the cart. Incredulous, she stopped in her tracks to tell her daddy just what she thought of that, but unfortunately, the cart did not stop as quickly and the little girl got a knock on the noggen. Of course, some crying was warranted and of course, a sympathetic cashier came running. “What happened?” she asked Clara Grace’s daddy.

“I bonked my head,” Clara Grace answered her.

“Did she just say she bonked her head?” the astonished cashier asked.

By this time, Clara Grace’s crying had lessened considerably. She’d only been in this new Bi-Lo a handful of times, but already she recognized the unique power which the cashier’s uniform worn in this store bestowed. “I want a sticker please,” she sniffled hopefully.

“Here you are darling,” the clerk brightened at a chance to make the little girl’s tears go away and pealed one of the “PAID” black and white cow stickers away from the waxy paper roll. The cashier reached out to stick the stickers which left the store on all milk jugs and almost all children to Clara Grace’s shirt.

“Me do it,” Clara Grace informed her exhibiting the same stubborn independence which had gotten her head bonked in the first place.

Do Ray Me

It was sometime during the month of October, just before Clara Grace turned two years old, when she truly began singing in earnest. Many autumn mornings she spent rocking on the porch swing with her mommy and requesting one song after another. “Sing the duck song,” or "Sing the baby song.” She drank in every word often singing along one phrase behind until she had masterd it. By the end of the month, her mommy could no longer count the number of songs Clara Grace knew by heart.

Saturday, November 11, 2006

Kavetching

Clara Grace often listened to programs on public radio as she rode around town with her mommy and daddy. Up to Friday, November the tenth though, her parents were of the opinion that their little girl was interested more in the scenery outside the window than the riveting commentary that flowed from the speakers. That afternoon a commentator interviewed an expert on Yiddish customs and colloquialisms. When Clara Grace’s daddy pulled into the driveway and began unbuckling her seatbelt, the little girl bemoaned, “Oy daddy.” He smiled and asked, “Are you hungry, Clara Grace?” Oy, hungry,” his daughter kavetched.

Everyone's A Comedian

Riding home Halloween night, Clara Grace sucked proudly on the fruits of her labor. “Like a lollypop, like a lollypop.” She chanted excitedly.

“You like licking lollypops?” her mommy laughed.

Clara Grace was amused and continued her joke, “Like a lollypop, like a lollypop.” She chanted faster and faster with only momentary pauses for licking. When this phrase no longer evoked polite chuckles from her mommy and daddy though, she sought for another tactic. It was then the little girl stumbled upon word substitution, the first stage of toddler humor, or so her mommy had read. “Like a mommy pop. Like a mommy pop.” She continued all the way home.

Share And Share Alike

The day before Halloween, Clara Grace’s mommy practiced the time-honored phrase for procuring candy with her hopeful little girl. Unfortunately, the thought of all those sugary delights seemed to make remembering new vocabulary something of a Herculean challenge.

“Okay, if you want candy you need to knock on the door and say ‘trick or treat.” Her mommy told her.

“”Trickeetree.” Clara Grace repeated.

“Right,” her mommy smiled encouragingly then closed the sunroom doors.

Clara Grace, in her cowgirl hat and bandana, knocked just as she’d been told then eyed the package of smarties in her mommy’s hand hungrily.

“What do you say?” her mommy prompted.

“Candy,” Clara Grace answered.

“No,” her mommy waited.

“More candy,” Clara Grace tried, her eager fingers outstretched.

“Nope,” her mommy said with a sigh.

“More candy, please,” Clara Grace attempted, this time remembering her manners.

Her mommy began slowly, “Well, that’s good, but—“

“More candy, more candy, more candy!” the little girl chanted in an escalating panic.

Her mommy tried one more time. “What do you say to get candy on Halloween?”

Clara Grace looked longingly at the sweets, and then at last a word did come to her. The word which her mommy so often used to persuade her to turn a cherished item over. “Share the candy,” Clara Grace instructed.

A Case Of Mistaken Identity

Clara Grace sat beside her mommy on the morning of Tuesday, October the twenty-fourth. Everett, the tiny one-month-old baby on Mommy’s lap, was still the most interesting playtoy in the house. All at once, they both heard an abnormally loud rumble which could only mean one thing. “Whoa,” Clara Grace commented in surprise and drew her hand back momentarily. “What do you think that was?” her mommy teased. The little girl looked once more at her tiny brother on her mommy’s lap and responded without hesitation, “mommy pooped.”

Please And Thank You

Clara Grace learned very quickly that the bank serves one purpose only and that is the withdrawal of suckers. On the afternoon of Monday, October the twenty-third, she waited while her daddy did whatever it was that he did at the drive through teller and then called through her open window, “lollypop please!” The amused teller sent two of the sugary treats through the underground tunnel. “Thank you,” Clara Grace called much to the teller’s delight. “Window up please,” the little girl told her daddy.

Mighty Fine Motor Skills

Clara Grace sat beside her mommy and baby brother on the couch Monday, October the sixteenth. Her mommy was feeding Everett and talking to Clara Grace about all the things left to do before they could leave for the park that morning. “Do you know where your shoes are?” she asked the little girl. “Yeah,” Clara Grace answered and ran off toward her room. “Found it!” she called and ran to join her mommy on the couch again. When Everett had finally finished eating around ten minutes later, Clara Grace’s mommy was shocked to discover her not even two-year-old daughter had already wriggled into her own footwear and even refastened the Velcro.

All In The Timing

Clara Grace wiggled and squirmed in her daddy’s arms at the checkout line on Saturday, October the fourteenth. “What are you doing?” her daddy finally asked as he noticed the curious stares of onlookers directed his way. To his mortification, Clara Grace replied very loudly and enthusiastically, “I’m Sooooo poopy!”

Reach Out And Touch Someone

Clara Grace waited in the Hobby Lobby checkout line with her daddy more or less patiently on the afternoon of Thursday, October the twelfth. Curiously, the toddler slipped under the chain and into an abandoned cashier’s station. Her daddy watched the little girl closely but didn’t see anything in too much danger at the moment.

“Good afternoon,” Clara Grace’s daddy heard the cashier from his line announce cheerfully and realized she was addressing him. Just as he was about to swipe his card at the end of his purchase, a sound from the abandoned lane caught his attention.

“Hello, hello?” a confused voice inquired through the speakerphone.

Clara Grace stared wide-eyed at the unusual phone trying to remember which of the hundreds of interesting buttons had evoked this response. She couldn’t believe her luck, perhaps checkout lines weren’t really so boring after all. There was only one female voice which regularly spoke to her through such a contraption. She answered excitedly, “Hello, hello Nana!”

If I Do Say So Myself

As the mail truck pulled away on Wednesday, October the eleventh, Clara Grace and her Daddy went out the front door to retrieve what he had left in their box. “Checking the mail,” the little girl announced conversationally on the way down the sidewalk. “There goes an orange cat,” she told her Daddy and pointed at her old friend across the street. “Walking away,” she sighed sadly as the cat quickly scampered under a car. She watched her Daddy flip through the stack of envelopes and in the absence of any forthcoming praise, she finally announced, “talking so well.”

Bumps In The Road

Clara Grace found her daddy doing yard work on the morning of Wednesday, October the eleventh. Blissfully unaware of his current state of productivity, she decided to use him as a human highway for her tiny fire truck. “Up the leg,” she told him as the red engine plowed up his worn blue jeans. “Drive on tummy,” she continued as the truck made a U-turn along her Daddy’s old T-shirt. “Down the leg. Ah oh pocket,” she announced as the fire truck veered into the deep and unexpected pothole.

The Grass Is Always Greener

Clara Grace and her mommy sat reading a book together on the couch the morning of Tuesday, October the tenth. Suddenly, as though a new idea had come to her, the little girl reached for a second book that lay on the coffee table in front of them and handed it to her mommy. “Read too,” she told her and in quite a grown up air scooted a few inches away to open her own book. She began perusing the story she had chosen with occasional comments each time she turned a page such as, “Elephant walking in grass. Agalator jumping in water.”

Her mommy took the cue and began to read her own book with great interest. “Ah ha, there’s Elmo,” she announced quietly, and then, “Oh, look! What is Oscar doing?”

Reluctantly, Clara Grace peered around the cover of her own book and into her mommy’s. After a few more page turns and fascinated remarks from her mommy, she could bare it no longer. “Share,” she announced and offered her book in exchange.

“Okay,” Clara Grace’s mommy said in agreement to the swap.

In the same manner as before Clara Grace dove into her new book. She flipped the pages excitedly and exclaimed “Elmo, brushing teeth, Ahhh!”

Meanwhile, her mommy flipped a few rigid pages of the board book her daughter had discarded and commented, “Oh no, the hog is scared.”

Clara Grace’s page turning faltered and again she peeked around the corner of her book.

“Mama raccoon and baby raccoon are playing,” her mommy continued. By this time, Clara Grace was unabashedly reading over her mommy’s shoulder and it was clear she was having second thoughts about this new plan of hers. “Share,” she instructed her mommy once more, only this time, she took her mommy’s book and kept the other safely stowed beside her.

Saturday, October 07, 2006

Growing Up

To her bewildered mommy, Clara Grace seemed to have suddenly transformed into a grown child. Everyone had warned her of this phenomenon, but she honestly believed that her perception of her baby girl was accurate enough to remain unshakeable even after she returned from the hospital with a helpless and tiny infant in her arms. All children grow up however, and Clara Grace’s mommy soon saw in alarming clarity with a mixture of regret and pride how the gradual effects of almost two years had worked their inevitable effects of change over her baby daughter.

The first time Clara Grace’s mommy kissed the top of her daughter’s head, she was utterly surprised at what now felt more like a Kindergartner’s curly noggin than the little baby’s soft brow she had left just days earlier. And when she rocked Clara Grace on the first day home, she couldn’t help wondering how she’d missed the way her baby girl’s head and long legs dangled over the arms of the rocking chair completely unlike the curled up baby girl she had remembered from less than a week ago.

Not only had the toddler seemed to grow physically, but her vocabulary and syntax had multiplied by leaps and bounds as well. On Friday, two days after Everett arrived, Clara Grace snuggled beside her mommy and baby brother on the sofa and pretended to sleep like her baby brother. “Are you sleepy?” her mommy asked quietly.

“Sleepy,” Clara Grace answered.

“Are you ready for your nap?” her mommy inquired.

“Okay,” Clara Grace replied.

“All right, let’s go to your bed then,” her mommy said and began to stand.

Clara Grace’s head popped up from the cushion in alarm and she shouted, “No!”

“But you said you were sleepy,” her mommy told her.

“Want to sleep on the couch,” Clara Grace informed her and then snuggled back onto the cushion.

That night, Clara Grace awoke uncharacteristically in the early hours of the morning. Her daddy checked in on her to determine the problem. "What’s the matter?” he asked his little girl.

“Fires on floor,” she told him dejectedly and looked wistfully through the crib’s bars at her discarded pacifiers.

“Why are they on the floor?” her daddy asked in an attempt to find the underlying cause of the night’s disturbance.

“I dropped them,” Clara Grace admitted ruefully.

“And why did you drop them?” her daddy persisted. “Hungry,” Clara Grace replied, “Need food.”

Floored by his one year old daughter’s grasp of cause and effect, Clara Grace’s daddy asked patiently, “Do you think you can wait till morning when we’ll eat a big breakfast?”

Clara Grace thought for a long moment and then answered, “Wait.”

Her daddy rocked her until the little girl told him drowsily, “Want to go to sleep in bed.”

Baby @ Work

Clara Grace’s daddy took her to work with him on the morning of Friday, October the sixth. The day was designated as professional development, so he selflessly decided to allow the energetic toddler to accompany him and provide a few hours of rest for his wife and new baby boy. The first activity on the agenda was a session on “Brain Dance,”--one of the latest trends in education involving stimulation through movement to improve learning.

Once Clara Grace’s daddy had successfully interested his daughter in cooking at the play kitchen area, he joined the other teachers who were beginning relaxation techniques in the center of the Kindergarten classroom. “Stand with your feet on the floor,” the instructor directed in a soothing monotone.

“Where else would they be?” Clara Grace’s daddy wondered sarcastically.

“Let your feet sink deep into the floor,” the instructor continued.

“They’re as deep as they’re going to get,” Clara Grace’s daddy reflected silently.

“Now lie on your backs,” the instructor directed and Clara Grace’s Daddy obeyed grateful for the chance of a moment to close his sleep-deprived eyes. No sooner had he finally begun to give in to the feeling of relaxation when he heard the familiar “jingle, jingle, jingle,” of his daughter’s rapidly approaching shoes. “Ooof!” he grunted as twenty-five pounds of toddler landed squarely on his chest and lungs.

“Feel your body sinking into the floor,” the instructor carried on obliviously dispite the snickers from every corner of the room. Spurred on by the laughter, Clara Grace decided the grown ups area had far more potential for entertainment than the play kitchen. She scanned the room and decided to join in with this strange ritual by lying on the ground and performing her best imitation of snoring. “Sleeping,” she informed the room in case anyone had mistaken her performance.

Then, she glanced at her daddy’s half drunk coffee mug and announced, “Need some coffee.”

“Did she just say that she needed some coffee,?” one of the teacher’s asked incredulously.

“It’s not how it looks," Clara Grace’s daddy attempted to explain.

Baby Logic

Clara Grace’s mommy had done her best to prepare the little girl for the earth shattering arrival of a new sibling in the home. In the beginning, this had been done through requests for the toddler to please refrain from kicking or bouncing on mommy’s tummy, seeing as how a tiny baby lived inside. She further explained that the baby was getting bigger and bigger and soon would come out to play with his big sister. Clara Grace showed interest in the concept by continually asking her mommy to sing the “Baby song” which had been improvised for the occasion. Even so, her mommy couldn’t be sure whether the full magnitude of the coming event was fully realized by her little girl.

During the last week of pregnancy however, Clara Grace talked more and more about her little brother, almost as though her anticipation was mounting along with the rest of her family’s. On Thursday morning, four days before her brother’s arrival, Clara Grace commented to her mommy during a diaper change, , “Baby Brother coming.”

Her Mommy replied, “You’re right, baby Brother is coming soon."

Clara Grace carried the conversation further by stating matter of factly, “Baby Brother coming out door.”

With the imminent day approaching, her mommy reflected wistfully of a delivery where things could really be that simple. On Saturday morning, the day before her baby brother arrived, Clara Grace patted her mommy’s stomach during another philosophical diaper change and said, “Baby in tummy.”

Her mommy answered, “You’re right, there’s a baby in mommy’s tummy.” Clara Grace thought for a moment then reflected empathetically on what must seem like an eternal imprisonment for her baby brother, “Baby in time out?”

Friday, September 29, 2006

Pacifier Debate

Clara Grace bounded to meet her daddy as he came home from work on the afternoon of Friday, September the twenty-ninth. After greeting him with a hug she asked, “Fire, please,” which meant she would like a pacifier. Once her daddy had retrieved her precious pacification device, she decided to press her luck with a further request. “Two fires?” ventured the hopeful little girl. “How many mouths do you have?” her daddy asked rhetorically. “One, two,” Clara Grace replied slyly. “One mouth, one fire,” her daddy answered without wavering. Clara Grace stood thoughtfully for a moment and then made her final plea, “Two hands, two fires.” With their one-year-old daughter’s current level of reasoning and verbal repartee, her mommy and daddy have high hopes for a prosperous future in law.

Wednesday, September 27, 2006

Playtime Etiquette

Clara Grace and her mommy enjoyed a play date with Nicholas, one of Clara Grace’s best friends on the morning of Thursday, September the twenty-eighth. The two toddlers giggled almost uncontrollably as they raced each other to the top of the two slides in Clara Grace’s back yard then sped shooting down. Then came a very proud moment for Clara Grace’s mommy as Nicholas decided to switch slides. The little girl stepped back allowing Nicholas to pass, looked at her mommy and announced, “Share, share slide.”

Tuesday, September 19, 2006

Phonics

Clara Grace proudly pushed the letter “B” on the refrigerator to hear the sound it made on the morning of Tuesday, September the nineteenth. “B-b-b,” she told her mommy enthusiastically. “You’re right,” her mommy encouraged, “’B’ says ‘b’ like b-b-b-baby or b-b-b-ball.” Clara Grace considered this for a moment then surprised her mommy by saying, “B-b-b-book!”

Saturday, September 16, 2006

What Happened in Shoe?

Clara Grace’s Daddy got her dressed on the morning of Saturday, September the sixteenth. As her daddy hurried through the finishing touches of shoes and socks, Clara Grace exclaimed suddenly, “Ah! What happened in shoe?” Her daddy reexamined the situation only to find a crumpled sock stuffed all the way in the shoe’s toe. When the little girl heard her mommy repeating this story and the laughter it received, she commented “Funny joke,” and often repeated, “What happened in shoe, ha ha ha!” as her feet were shod.

The Last Inhibition

Clara Grace’s daddy removed his little girl’s wet pajamas and snapped a new diaper in place on the morning of Saturday, September the sixteenth. Clara Grace exclaimed, “Ouch! Hurt foot! Foot hurts! After kicking her big toe on the wooden rail of the diaper table. Miserably, she glanced up at her daddy and requested, “Kiss it?” Her daddy, who would normally do anything to wipe away his daughter’s pain, was more than slightly reluctant on this particular occasion owing to the fact that Clara Grace had completely soaked her pajamas and sheets the past night. In the spirit of compromise, her daddy offered, “I’ll kiss your cheek,” but Clara Grace wiggled her tiny toes and replied, “No, kiss foot.” Upon seeing his options were none, her daddy gingerly kissed the very tip of the little girl’s big toe. “Hug it?” Clara Grace persisted and of course, her daddy eventually succumbed to this request as well.

Friday, September 15, 2006

Consider the Consequences

Clara Grace’s daddy balanced her high up on the afternoon of Friday, September the fifteenth. She eyed the enormous and inactive ceiling fan and pleaded, “Up, up fan.” To her surprise, she stretched out her hand and actually moved the giant blade. As the fan slowly rotated away from her, she waved and called, “Bye bye fan.” Predictably though, the next blade in line followed and gently tapped the back of her head. “Bonk the head,” she announced in surprise.

Thursday, September 14, 2006

Calling Us Names

Clara Grace’s mommy and daddy woke her early from her nap on the afternoon of Wednesday, September the fourteenth for her mommy’s doctor’s appointment. Their daughter popped up from the mattress as they tiptoed into the room and greeted them, “Jeff, Marcy!” Needless to say, this was quite a shock to the parents who weren’t even aware that their little girl knew their names. “Hopefully if she regresses when her baby brother is born, she’ll go back to calling us mommy and daddy,” her daddy mused.

Monday, September 11, 2006

Danger Baby Robinson

Clara Grace played with her daddy in the department store on the evening of Saturday, September the eleventh. “Crawl under here,” he urged his little girl pointing out one of the doughnut shaped clothes racks under which he had spent many happy hours while his own mommy shopped. Clara Grace wasn’t interested though, so her daddy attempted one more tack. “Be careful,” he warned and glanced ominously once more at the hanging garments, “be very careful!”

Immediately, Clara Grace looked back at the rack with renewed interest. She pushed through the clothes glancing over her shoulder every few seconds and grinning at her daddy. One can only wonder what activities this daredevil attitude will lead to in the future.

Sunday, September 10, 2006

Mailbaby

Clara Grace bounded from the sunroom on Friday, September the tenth. She found her mommy washing dishes in the kitchen and proclaimed in a state of near hysteria, “Truck is here knocking on door!” As it turned out, the delivery of her daddy’s new steamer was the highlight of the little girl’s day.

Friday, September 08, 2006

That'll Learn Ya

Clara Grace eyed the coffee cup in her mommy’s hand with particular envy on the afternoon of Thursday, September the eighth. Mustering all her toddler charm, she laid her head on her mommy’s lap and asked sweetly, “Mommy coffee, try it? Try it please?” “I suppose we can give her a sip,” her mommy said tentatively to Clara Grace’s daddy. “Once she tries it, she’ll probably stop asking for it all the time, right?” Unfortunately, no sooner had the little girl’s lips come away from the mug, than she said in a throaty voice, “Like it! Nummy, nummy! Good coffee!”

Saturday, September 02, 2006

Dog Observations

Clara Grace’s mommy and daddy took her to an outdoor concert on Friday, September the second. Their daughter proudly called out “banjo!” and “fiddle!” each time these instruments took a solo break.

After a while, her daddy decided to take her on a tour of all the dogs that had come to listen to the music. Each of the canine’s owners was proud to let the little girl pet their furry friend. First, Clara Grace met a tiny and playful Jack Russell and commented, “It’s a doggie, fast dog!” Next she met a quiet but friendly red spaniel. Much to her surprise, she got a big kiss from its large, wet tongue and said, “Wet dog! Need a towel." One of the last she met was a wiry terrier whose fastidious owner had even remembered to bring its water dish. “Water,” Clara Grace observed after taking a sip from her own cup, “doggie’s water, bye bye doggie.”

Saturday, August 19, 2006

A Spoonful of Sugar is the Medicine

The morning of Saturday, August the nineteenth, was not a good one for either Clara Grace or her parents. While Clara Grace’s mommy faithfully manned the family yard sale intended to make room for Clara Grace’s soon to arrive baby brother, Clara Grace and her Daddy marched around the front yard hand in hand until the little girl took a notion to run toward the road. Instinctively, Clara Grace’s Daddy squeezed tighter to his daughter’s hand. After a strong tug from the little toddler, she whimpered in surprise, “Arm hurts!” She grasped her wrist and held it straight out gingerly. This resulted in an emergency trip to the doctor who coincidentally happened to be the very same physician who had treated Clara Grace’s mommy when she was a little girl.

“Nursemaid’s elbow,” he said definitively on first sight of the poor toddler supporting her left arm straight out by the wrist.

“I think it might actually be her wrist—“ Clara Grace’s Daddy tried to protest. “I felt a little pop and she’s been holding it—”

Before he could finish though, the doctor had Clara Grace on her mommy’s lap and had begun bending the little girl’s injured arm in what could only be described as rubber-like contortions. “It’s back in place,” the doctor reported, “she should feel better in a few hours.”

The poor little girl sat uncharacteristically motionless on the couch for the rest of the afternoon and propped her arm just as before. Finally, her mommy made the hard decision to go ahead and bring her to Nicholas’s birthday party in the hopes that she would be distracted from her misery. As expected, Clara Grace cheered up on seeing all the lively children, but hung back from fully joining in their raucous play. When it came time to eat, she allowed her mommy to hand feed her yummy cheese and crackers, hotdogs, and macaroni, but still felt it necessary to prop her left arm.

The moment of miraculous healing at last occurred when Nicholas’s mommy held out a vanilla and a chocolate cup cake to Clara Grace and asked which one she preferred. All memories of pain seemed to vanish as the little girl stretched out both arms and grasped the two cakes simultaneously.

Tuesday, August 15, 2006

Invented-but-Accurate English

Clara Grace’s daddy heard a tiny rumble as he watched his daughter in the bathtub on the night of Tuesday, August the fifteenth. “I Tooted!” Clara Grace informed him proudly. “Yes you did,” her daddy replied. “Bubbles!” the little girl went on discovering a new bath time diversion.

The next day, a similar tiny rumble issued from the little girl while she played with her toys in the nursery. “I bubblesed!” she exclaimed.

Monday, August 07, 2006

An Announcement

Monday, August the seventh, Clara Grace surprised her mommy by announcing from her high chair “Two spoons.” And “Two yogurts.” Which happened to be precisely the cargo her mommy had just deposited on the table for their breakfast.

Sunday, July 30, 2006

Caught a Cat by the Tail

An extremely amiable cat frequented Clara Grace’s yard during her second summer. After a few meetings, the little girl developed enough courage to chase down the friendly animal and pet it’s soft back. The short-lived friendship ended abruptly however when Clara Grace decided to invite the cat into her house. Not knowing the words for a formal welcome, she decided the best plan was to take hold of the cat’s orange tail and pull in the direction of the front door. Needless to say, it was several months before Clara Grace ever could get close enough to the cat to attempt to reestablish their relationship. Her mommy took this time to give a few lessons on feline etiquette. After this instruction, Clara Grace never failed to treat the posterior of a cat’s body with proper respect. Whenever she viewed her estranged friend at a distance across the street, she would call ruefully as he scampered out of sight, “Bye bye cat, bye bye tail!”

Thursday, July 20, 2006

Conversational English Progresses

Clara Grace can be said to have carried on one of her very first conversations of substance on Friday, July the fourteenth. On this afternoon, she was again watching vehicles as they whirled past her car seat. “Truck,” she announced and stared after a pickup that had caught her attention.

“You’re right,” Clara Grace’s mommy told her from the front seat, “that’s a truck.”

“Dirty truck,” Clara Grace elaborated.

“Yep, trucks get dirty a lot,” her mommy answered.

“Need to wash it,” the little girl continued.

“He does need to wash his truck,” her mommy agreed.
“Wash with water,” Clara Grace concluded apparently guessing that if it worked for her bath time, it couldn’t be a bad idea for this dirty truck as well.

Thursday, July 13, 2006

Butt Nothin'

Clara Grace and her daddy prepared to board an elevator on Thursday, July thirteenth. Unfortunately, her daddy wasn’t aware of the new responsibility his daughter had recently inherited from her mommy of pushing the buttons. The little girl looked on in utter disbelief as her daddy called the elevator to their floor and the number four button lit brightly. “My butt!” she announced as she tried to convey her frustration. “My butt! My butt!”

It was during these last enthusiastic exclamations that the elevator doors slid open to reveal a full cart. “My butt!" Clara Grace protested once more then turned to the crowd, waved, and offered a cheery “Hello!” Once that courtesy was out of the way, she turned back to her daddy and, just for good measure, reminded him once more, “My butt!” Of course, this evoked riotous laughter from the confused elevator passengers.

Sunday, July 09, 2006

True Love

Clara Grace’s Daddy called to say that he had made it safely to his hotel in California for another short speaking engagement on Sunday, July ninth. He talked to his daughter on the telephone for a while and then told her he would call her back the next day. When he said, “Bye, bye, Clara Grace answered, “Love you” unprompted for the very first time.

Woo-Car

Clara Grace’s attentiveness to the automobiles that barreled past her car window was obvious. She could identify already cars, trucks, busses, “Woo cars” (police cars), and fire trucks. On Sunday, July the ninth, she watched curiously as a car with a screeching fan belt drove past. Sympathetically she pointed after the vehicle in need of repair and commented, “Ah-oh, car cry.”

Thursday, July 06, 2006

It's Only Fair

Clara Grace’s daddy prepared to tuck Clara Grace in for her afternoon nap on Thursday, July the sixth. The little girl realized for the first time, that she would like to start another bedtime routine and insisted, “Mommy kiss.” Ever since then, no matter which parent gets her ready for bed, the other must at least receive one kiss before she drops off to sleep.

Monday, July 03, 2006

Sweet and Salty Dreams

Clara Grace had taken Tylenol for her swollen gums and fever but still lay in bed with mommy during a restless night of teething Monday, July the third. At least for that night, her mommy didn’t have to wonder too much about the dreams flitting through her daughter’s tiny brain. In her sleep, Clara Grace contentedly murmured, “chicken, yummy yum yum.”

Sunday, July 02, 2006

I Think So

Sunday, July the second, Clara Grace asked her mommy from the backseat of the car, “Is Nonnie here?” The little girl had obviously been missing her cousin Donnie whom she’d played with under Grandma’s supervision while her mommy taught Spanish a few hours each week during the school year. Mommy said sadly, “I don’t think so.” Much to her mommy’s surprise, Clara Grace replied confidently, “I think so.”

Friday, June 30, 2006

Food Critic

No matter how enthusiastically her parents presented vegetables, fruits, and meats, Clara Grace never seemed quite able to trust many foods that strayed too far from some shade of beige. Needless to say, her mommy and daddy smiled politely, but didn’t slow down when a not so savory character with a nose ring and dreadlocks offered their daughter some teriyaki chicken on a toothpick outside the China Express. Much to their disbelief and slight chagrin, their finicky daughter gulped it down as though she’d never been fed in her life. She then used her powerful, one-year-old charm to win another sample and scarfed if from the stick twice as fast.

Tuesday, June 27, 2006

Sick as a Dog

While Clara Grace ate in her high chair on the morning of Tuesday, June twenty-seventh, her mommy noticed that the little girl seemed a bit stuffy and coughed every so often. “Are you okay?” her mommy asked sympathetically. Clara Grace responded in an extremely dejected voice, “No! Not okay not okay!” Her mommy realized actually acting sick during a cold was just one more little sign her baby was growing up all too quickly.

Saturday, June 24, 2006

Share

On Saturday June the twenty-fourth, Clara Grace played at the Children’s Discovery Museum with her mommy. She watched enviously as other children raced around with a popping lawn mower. Finally a little boy discarded the coveted toy and she dashed in for her chance. Unfortunately, her triumph was short lived. She got in about three good pops, then decided to lay the lawnmower’s handle down for just one fraction of a second to give her mommy a toy shaker with which she had previously been playing. Another eager child swooped in right under poor Clara Grace’s nose and merrily popped away with the mower. As Clara Grace looked on in amazement and disappointment, her mommy heard her repeating softly an unhappy mantra of “Share, share, share, share.”

Friday, June 23, 2006

Peaceful Protest

By Friday, June the twenty-third, Clara Grace was becoming very good at communicating with words the things she did and did not want. This was a welcome relief to her parents who had often found themselves completely baffled by their daughter’s enthusiastic gestures, grunts, and cries in past months. On that particular evening, Clara Grace’s daddy had finished lathering her up with soap and then directed, “Okay, sit down in the water so I can get the soap off.” “No!” Clara Grace answered defiantly. “Clara Grace,” her daddy repeated in a firmer tone, “sit down.” “No, no,” his daughter whimpered, “Poopy,” she added and pointed out a floating log which obviously held contradictions for her when presented in the same context as cleaning off in the bathwater.

Thursday, June 22, 2006

What's Important

On Thursday, June twenty-second, Clara Grace’s mommy set a bowl of oatmeal and a banana on her daughter’s high chair tray and then got busy preparing her own breakfast. With the push of a button, the family coffee machine whirred into action. No doubt, this sound brought to the minds of both mommy and daughter the family’s true coffee aficionado who was away on a four day speaking engagement. “Foffee,” Clara Grace commented as the lights on the machine blinked to life. “You’re right, I’m making coffee.” Her mommy answered. “Yum yum,” Clara Grace remarked then went back to scooping her oatmeal. Later that morning on the phone, Clara Grace’s mommy was sure to relate the influence Clara Grace’s daddy had already had on his one-year-old daughter.

Sunday, June 04, 2006

One, Two...Skip a Few...100

On Sunday, June fourth, Clara Grace’s Daddy packed up the luggage from a weekend trip to Gatlinburg with the Whisman family. While he worked, he allowed his little girl to indulge in one of her favorite activities, pretending to drive his big, red car. After a few moments of two much quiet from the front seat though, he decided it would be prudent to investigate. What he found was Clara Grace on the floorboard helping herself to the travel stash of animal crackers. “What are you doing?” he asked rhetorically. “Mamamal crackers,” Clara Grace answered nervously. “I see that,” her daddy sighed, “and how many have you eaten?” he inquired not expecting any answer. “One, two…” his daughter replied.

Monday, May 29, 2006

Rats

On Monday, May the twenty-ninth, Clara Grace’s mommy made conversation with her daughter on the way home from a long trip of errands. “When we get out of the car, do you want to take a bath?” “No,” Clara Grace responded from her car seat. Always enjoying the thrill of outwitting a one year old, and knowing his daughter’s fondness for the word “no,” Clara Grace’s daddy then asked slyly, “Are you sure?” “Without a second’s hesitation, Clara Grace answered definitely, I’m sure.”

Monday, May 15, 2006

Calls it as She Sees It

On Monday, May the fifteenth Clara Grace sat on her Daddy’s lap while her mommy washed dishes across the house. Apparently Clara Grace felt the injustice of a rule being broken as her parents conversed across the space of the living room and over the noise of the running water. “Too loud!” she announced with finality.

Saturday, May 13, 2006

So PAY!

On Saturday, May the thirteenth, Clara Grace’s mommy and daddy began to notice a strange form of pig latin creeping into their daughter’s vocabulary. Suddenly, once easily understandable words such as soap, no, and shoe, needed decoding. Thankfully the key was fairly simple; draw out the first part of a one-syllable word, then add “ay” very enthusiastically onto the ending. This created words like, “Soapay, shoeay, noay, noseay.” (Soap, sounds like So-PAY! for example.)

Friday, May 05, 2006

Birding Baby

Clara Grace shared her mommy and daddy’s hobby of bird watching even from an early age. She quickly developed the ability to recognize and identify three birds in the wild by their calls. When Clara Grace heard a crow, she exclaimed "Co, co!" When a Blue Jay flew over our yard and made its call, she jumped up excitedly and shouted, "Jay jay!" And whenever she heard the sad song of the morning dove, she informed her mommy, "Duh, duh!"

Thursday, May 04, 2006

One...Two...THREE!

Clara Grace climbed nimbly to the top of her new slide time after time. Once at the top, she had a habit of getting her mommy’s attention by calling “Two, two, two…” until her mommy finally got the hint that it was her job to watch and count to three.

Tuesday, April 18, 2006

Masterpiece

Tuesday, April the eighteenth Clara Grace sat politely in her restaurant highchair and waited for her food. To pass the time, she colored streaks and dots of orange and blue on her paper placemat. Then, as if to acknowledge the true worth of her masterpiece, she laid down her crayons and kissed the abstract three times.

Monday, April 17, 2006

Backseat Driver

Clara Grace showed the first signs of becoming a backseat driver right around this time. Whenever her daddy took a curve a tad sharply or rode over a bump in the road, a firm “Whoa daddy!” came from the occupant of the car seat behind him. “Thanks baby,” her daddy replied obnoxiously and then made sure to give the next bump just a little bit more bounce.

Sunday, April 16, 2006

A Discerning Ear

One habit of Clara Grace’s which her mommy and daddy find particularly adorable is her way of really listening to a song and then announcing her approval of a select few by a quick but enthusiastic “Yea!” after the final note has sounded. The reason her mommy and daddy find this habit particularly endearing is that while professional musicians score only the occasional “Yea”, whenever one of the amateur songs recorded in mommy and daddy’s home studio is played, Clara Grace never fails to be encouraging with resounding and decisive “ “Yea!”

Monday, April 03, 2006

Zoo Adventures

Clara Grace’s zoo visit on the morning of Monday, April the third proved to be quite eventful. She was high fived by an enthusiastic orangutan through the glass enclosure and if that wasn’t up close and personal enough, she was actually pecked right on the head by an African Crowned Crain. She ran straight for mommy, and although there were not many tears, that bird still retains one of the prime spots on her “Things not to be trusted” list.

On Friday, April the fourteenth, Clara Grace gave her mommy a flower for the very first time. While walking on a wooded path through the zoo, Clara Grace bent down to examine a pink petal on the trail. Then, deciding it was worth further notice, she marched back to her mommy and announced “Flow,” as she placed the silky petal in her mommy’s palm.

Saturday, March 25, 2006

Riding Along in my Automobile

On Sunday, March the twenty-fifth, Clara Grace’s Daddy allowed her to pretend she was driving his big, red car while he worked on cleaning the automobile. Once it was clear that Clara Grace had mastered horn honking, a new game had to be found, so her daddy put her into her little motorized, blue car. After a few more minutes of productive cleaning, her daddy heard the whirring sound of the battery-operated motor, alerting him that Clara Grace was on the move. He looked up to see her pulling out of the garage and into the driveway as though she’d been driving all her life.

Wednesday, March 22, 2006

Whatever Works

Clara Grace was visiting her Nana and Baba in Michigan on Wednesday, March the twenty-second. All the grown-ups were finishing lunch that afternoon and clearly not paying Clara Grace enough attention, so she devised a plan. She toddled down the hall to her bedroom, climbed up onto the bed and grabbed her changing pad. Then, she dragged the pad back down the hall, and laid it out flat near the table. Once she had situated herself in a comfortable supine position on the mat she announced, “Diaper.” Upon inspection, her mommy found the little girl not very in need of a new diaper, but the plan had succeeded.

Tuesday, March 21, 2006

English Language Learner

On the morning of March the thirty-first, Clara Grace greeted her daddy with the words, “Hi, diaper, yes.”

It is amazing what social skills and conversation topics Clara Grace can glean from her meager vocabulary. She began a new custom on Saturday, April the first, which she maintained for months afterwards. Her mommy and daddy had taken her out for an omelet at the Waffle House. Of course, it wasn’t long before one of the waitresses stopped to say hello to the adorable little girl. Clara Grace returned the greeting and then, so as not to be rude, went on with further introductions. “Mommy,” she informed the waitress and patted her mommy. “Daddy,” she announced pointing across the booth to where her daddy sat.

Due to a backup in the dishwasher drain, Daddy spent all of the first week in April putting in a new kitchen floor. Fortunately this time, he had occasional help on the job. Whenever Clara Grace wandered into the worksite, she dutifully handed Daddy a nail and then joined in the hammering by exclaiming, “Boom, boom, boom!”

Thursday, March 16, 2006

Jump!

On Thursday, March the sixteenth Clara Grace bent low to the ground, then thrust her arms up into the air with a loud exclamation of “Mmmm!” The sheer force of this motion actually propelled one foot from the ground. It was clear that this was Clara Grace’s first attempt at a jump. Within several weeks, both feet cleared two to three inches and she began replacing the exclamation with the actual word “Jump!”