Alternate Title: It's just so hard to be a baby.
Hmmm. . . what do I have in my hand?
Did it come from the table?
Well, I definitely need to keep hold of it in my death grip. I'll have to use my other hand to get another one.
Oh, but just look at the treasure trove I've found. I'll use my raking grasp to get a handful of these.
Oooh, oooh, I've got one.
But I see a half-gnawed piece of cracker there that I'd hate to miss out on.
Oh, and what is that black thing Mommy is pointing at me? Maybe I want that too.
This is another one of those delicious puffs that just seem to jump out of my hand at the last second before they make it to my mouth. Maybe I'll have to sneak up on this one.
Concentrate. Concentrate. Don't lose focus.
Fail. Try again.
The only time Maddie was able to get one of these puffs in her mouth is when she had accidentally slid it to the edge of the table and she was able to pounce on it with her mouth like a baby hawk. We've got a lot of work to do on the pincer grasp.
Wednesday, April 13, 2011
Monday, April 11, 2011
Recipes You Need to Try
All right, friends. I'm trying to get my act together and make myself a mini collection of the recipes my family loves and I am willing to make. I find myself fighting the inner meal-planning battle every week, which I hate. It's sad, really, because I actually love to cook, if what I'm making sounds exciting and delicious, rather than last-minute and yucky. So--I've been putting some things together. And because I'm generous like that, I'd love to share some of my favorites with all of you. I'm linking to the recipe, rather than writing them all out here 'cause I don't want this post to look all messy. :)
Tortilla Soup (a light and delicious version)
Peanut Wraps (my kids loved these, and they are usually skeptical of new "mixed-up" food)
Chicken Corn Chowder (not light, but absolutely amazing. Thank you, Larissa!)
Creamy Baked Taquitos (serve with a salad and the lime cilantro dressing she recommends. Perfect!)
Yummy Salad (infinitely changeable--make it how your family likes!)
Easy, Fresh, Tomato-ey Pasta and Pizza Sauce
Roasted Asparagus (goes with everything, tastes like spring)
Lemon Chicken with Roasted Vegetables (So. Stinkin. Fast.)
Sara's Chicken Salad (love it!)
Lemony Tortellini with Bacon and Peas
Bread Salad
Granola (not really for dinner, but it's fabulous anyway, and it's a great breakfast-for-dinner option)
Yogurt Parmesan Chicken (amazing!)
A Whole Darn Week's Worth of Recipes (you really should get Everyday Food--it's Awesome!)
As you can see, my tastes veer dramatically toward, chicken, soup, and salad, with a little bit of pasta thrown in. I love to try new things, though, and if you have a recipe you want to recommend, I want to have it recommended. Please share!
Tortilla Soup (a light and delicious version)
Peanut Wraps (my kids loved these, and they are usually skeptical of new "mixed-up" food)
Chicken Corn Chowder (not light, but absolutely amazing. Thank you, Larissa!)
Creamy Baked Taquitos (serve with a salad and the lime cilantro dressing she recommends. Perfect!)
Yummy Salad (infinitely changeable--make it how your family likes!)
Easy, Fresh, Tomato-ey Pasta and Pizza Sauce
Roasted Asparagus (goes with everything, tastes like spring)
Lemon Chicken with Roasted Vegetables (So. Stinkin. Fast.)
Sara's Chicken Salad (love it!)
Lemony Tortellini with Bacon and Peas
Bread Salad
Granola (not really for dinner, but it's fabulous anyway, and it's a great breakfast-for-dinner option)
Yogurt Parmesan Chicken (amazing!)
A Whole Darn Week's Worth of Recipes (you really should get Everyday Food--it's Awesome!)
As you can see, my tastes veer dramatically toward, chicken, soup, and salad, with a little bit of pasta thrown in. I love to try new things, though, and if you have a recipe you want to recommend, I want to have it recommended. Please share!
Saturday, April 9, 2011
Viva Honduras
John went to Honduras for his favorite medical mission in March. He went all four years in medical school, and he was able to go again this year with the same group from Toledo. It was delightful. Here is his report.
Edited to add: Some of the pictures below are a touch graphic. Please be careful if you are, like me, sensitive to yucky medical stuff.
Edited to add: Some of the pictures below are a touch graphic. Please be careful if you are, like me, sensitive to yucky medical stuff.
Here's the view from my room the first week. That's mostly smoke from burning stuff with a little fog. People cook with wood and burn trash so there's a lot of smoke.
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Front of the Hospital in La Esperanza
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The ambulance we donated when I was a 3rd year med student. Well used with 270k miles.
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The hallway looking from the ED entrance. That's the table where ED blood draws are done using gloves for tourniquets.
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The ED complete with intern. It's really more like two office rooms with one exam table each. No O2, no suction, no bed. They want to remodel since they recognize the limitations of the current ED.
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The other half of the ED room complete with exam table and Barbie curtain for privacy.
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Drug reps look the same in any country.
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The home behind the hospital women who live out of town move into when they get close to their due date.
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Ovarian cyst and ovary. (the little white part in upper right is ovary). This was taken out of a 17yr old. I only saw two hondurans cry and it wasn't the machette/hatchet/gun shot wounds it was this girl and another girl that had a ruptured tubal pregnancy. Did not see a single narcotic used in two weeks. All tylenol, diclofenac (like ibuprofen), and ibuprofen. Even surgery patients got tylenol. It was same in Bolivia though I did see narcotics used once there to put an elbow back in
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Machete to the hand.
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Rural Honduras....typical home.
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Bull used in construction of adobe house. Water hole is where mud for adobe blocks was taken from.
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170 water filters pre assembly $4020 worth.
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Univ Toledo team. This was our work station/teachers desk. We're usually in schools or churches. Different town each day.
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Sweet little 6 year old who has lost his two front teeth.....
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.....because they along with a few others have rotted out of his head. This is where Dave comes in a few years from now. There was a dentist my first trip as a student in 2005 but hasn't been one since. Dr. Paat says he hasn't been able to get one to go since then and he was the busiest guy there nonstop pulling teeth. I wish this picture wasn't common but I'd say about 1/2 the people I saw kids included had at least a couple teeth that were completely rotted out.
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Somethings not quite right with that right eye.
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It's called ptergium and it's where the conjunctiva because of UV light and dust (irritation) grows over the iris. I can become problematic if it grows too far. Treatment is surgical removal. We gave sunglasses to help with dust and UV light.
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It was trial and error with random glasses from a box which included old prescription glasses (like those above) and a bunch of dollar store reading glasses. I saw several people with cataracts too which glasses help very little and that need to have them removed.
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As we were driving Satruday to the R&R location (a beach resort) we came across a three care accident two of which are pictured above. What lucky people to have a bus full of gringo doctors be amongst the first on the scene. Amongst whom are the chair of internal medicine at Mayo, the chair of peds at Mayo, a GI doc from Cleveland Clinic (all U. Toledo grads). The wilderness life support course came in handy as I got a Honduran to cut us some sticks to splint the lady's very obviously dislocated knee (possibly broken too), and her husbands wrist. An ICU nurse got the IV going on him. We moved his wife using empty duffle bags since one of the cars (a pickup) involved was leaking diesel all over the road. Eventually we loaded both into a pickup and sent them to the hospital.
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Over all the second week I was there which was the week with the team we saw a record 2247 people if you count the two on the highway and the one team member who passed out and was seen in clinic and transported to the hospital but was released shortly afterward.
A big thanks to Susanne for coming out to take care of the ladies.
Thursday, April 7, 2011
Interview with a Monster
My brother requested that I interview Bella once a week for our family blog and ask her opinions on current events. This is the result. (Her newest phrase, when she is in trouble is, "I don't curr [care]." I was trying to get her to say that about Egypt. Let me clarify that I do, indeed, care if Egypt gets a working government. I'm all in favor of stability and democracy.)
Wednesday, April 6, 2011
Tuesday, April 5, 2011
Chugga-chugga-choo-choo!
As part of our spring break festivities, we headed to the Train Museum in Elkart today. It was really fun.
They have a ride-on Thomas the Tank Engine for the under-three-year-old set. Bella loved it. She's recently become obsessed with Thomas.
She did, however, ask me where Percy was, and if she could ride Percy too. I'm afraid my answer was a little disappointing.
They have an engine parked just outside the main museum that you can climb into. However, after all thirteen children in our group had climbed in, there was no room for adults. This picture was taken through the very dirty window. The best part of this train cab is the actual working horn. (No, the actual best part is that the air compressor that supplies the horn runs out of air after 8 or 9 long honks. Long LOUD honks. 8 or 9 is plenty.)
The museum is covered with crazy signage and old railroad ephemera.
Plus it has two tracks full of abandoned cars with sets of stairs leading up to several of them. Some of them were death traps. . .
. . . and some were perfect for a little nap. (If a little dirty.)
Bella thought all of them were terribly exciting.
The tracks were so much fun to climb around. I have no idea how the museum's liability insurance lets them get away with all of this, but we thoroughly enjoyed ourselves.
Getting all these little faces to look our direction at once was impossible. This was the best of several shots.
We loved the train museum. I definitely recommend it.
And if you're wondering how I could take four little kids to the train museum by myself, meet my new best friend. (And I'm not talking about Maddie.) This is my ergo carrier, (Thank you, Krista and Karen!), and it is how I vacuum, how I make dinner, how I do all my chores. Maddie loves to be right next to me, and this way, she can be.
I love it when she falls asleep and her little face peeks out the armhole. :)
Oh, as an afterthought, I wanted to share these two little still lifes set up in the model railroad room. I think a crashed airplane is in great taste, no?
And if that's not your style, how about a classic bear mauling? I wish I could have gotten a clearer picture of this--it was hysterical.
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