



Henry: Henry is so close to starting school. Only eleven more days! Today we got him a new school haircut, and last week we received the backpack and lunch sack we ordered for him online. I had the doctor's office fax his vaccination record to the school today, which made it all seem very real all of a sudden. I still need to get a sheet and blanket for his nap mat, although those items are probably unnecessary - when I told him he would be taking naps at school, he actually laughed. Kind of hard. Like, "Ha ha, Mom, you know I can't sleep without you!" Next week we go to visit his classroom and meet his teacher, which I think is an excellent idea, and I have to go to an informational meeting for parents one night next week, too. I'll be the parent silently
sobbing in the corner. In other Henry news, he is really into drawing right now. He mostly draws people, often family portraits. His people look a lot like primitive sun drawings, or amoebas - one circle with four lines radiating outward for the arms and legs, in varying sizes depending on the age of the subject. Sometimes he also encloses them in cages, so they can't escape. Not sure how to interpret that; fear of abandonment? Anyway, it's fun to watch. While we are in Sylva, I found a wooden child's easel with a blackboard, a dry erase grease board, and a roll of paper on Craigslist for $30, so now he'll really be able to do some drawing. (But that is definitively the last large item our playroom can accommodate! I mean it this time.) Finally, something funny I keep forgetting to write about is Henry's in-the-car "I need to pee" sound, or his "pee sound," as he refers to it. It's kind of a protracted grunting sound he makes when we're on the road (Uhhhhhhhhh. Uh. UH!) and it's accompanied by spasmic thrashing, kicking, and head tossing. Russell and I know when we hear it to start looking for a place to pull over. Henry thinks it's hilarious, and he is right!
Charlie: Charlie, age sixteen and a half months, had his fifteen month checkup today (oops). He weighs twenty six pounds and is 31 1/2 inches tall (or 2 foot 7, as I like to say). The doctor continues to fret over the size of his head (XXL), but I think we've pretty much convinced him it's genetic. Developmentally he is doing fantastic: walking, babbling, running, dancing, saying a few words. And oh yeah, sleeping, too, finally! Now he wakes only once a night, most nights, and I will take it! Charlie's assigned duty in our family right now is "bug patrol": he scours the floors and nooks and crannies of whatever environment we find ourselves in, and when he finds a bug, or even a small speck that might be a bug, he stops and points, bloodhound style, saying, "Buh! Buh!" He does this until someone comes over to inspect the object and gives him a yea or a nay, "Yes, it's a bug, Charlie," or, "No, that's a tiny piece of Lego. Henry, please keep the Legos on the table!" Then he moves on, satisfied he has fulfilled his duties. Bug patrol. Charlie has a special chair in the den he likes to sit in and look at books. It's a little blue futon-style chair I bought at a consignment sale when Henry was a tot. Charlie loves sitting in this chair, and sometimes he'll disappear and I'll go looking for him and find him alone in the den, sitting in a chair, looking at a book. This definitely reminds me of me. And Russell! Charlie sleeps with a blankie now! I finally got one of my children to form an attachment to a sleep object! I don't know why this feels like an accomplishment, or why it's important, but since I've had children, everyone has insisted that such attachments are healthy. With Henry, I am the sleep object he attached to, a less desirable situation, I've been led to understand. So there you go, world: one of my kids is doing something "normal" in the sleep department! I'm sure it's a fluke.
Once again - a brilliant blog! I adore your family picture!
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