Tuesday, May 30, 2006

15 Months


Gabriella playing with her door.
This toy is still a hit!


Gabi pulled the chopper
out of the kitchen cabinet.


Gabi got a package!
Gabi loves to read books.


Growing Toddler
Here's how Gabi measured up at her 15-month check-up:
  • 30 inches tall (25th percentile)

  • 21 pounds 3 ounces (25th percentile)

  • head circumference of 48 cm (90th percentile)


Gabi has also taken to
carrying a purse around.

Such a big girl!

Decatur Arts Festival
On Saturday of Memorial Day Weekend, we went to the Decatur Arts Festival. In the children's area, we heard storytellers and listened to a concert and did some artwork.

Gabi watches Papa make bubbles.

What fun it is to stir the bubbles!


Mama helps Gabi make handprints.


Mama and Gabi do
sponge painting.

Gabi makes a mess
with finger paints.


Papa and Gabi draw with sidewalk chalk.


Gabi chases a butterfly.


Mama and Gabi admire the doorway artwork in the Square.


Our refrigerator proudly displaying
Gabi's art from the Decatur Art Festival.

WORDS
Gabi can say 21 words now! I could probably add "cat" and "hair" to this list, too. Plus, she can roar like a lion and pant like a dog. Gabi has also used some two-word sentences, such as "more rice."
  • ball

  • banana

  • bear

  • bird

  • boo

  • book

  • duck
  • hi

  • hot

  • juice

  • Mama

  • more

  • Papa

  • puppy
  • purse

  • rice

  • shoe

  • slide

  • stairs

  • uh-oh

  • yes


Gabi reads a book after her bath.


Gabi likes her first taste of chocolate milk.


Yea! Cheeseburger!

Zoo Atlanta
We took Papa to the zoo over Memorial Day Weekend to play with the Fisher Price toys in addition to all the regular exhibits. It sure is hot outside!

Gabi rides the car at the
Fisher Price exhibit at the zoo.

Honk! Honk!

The queen drives the dump truck.

All aboard!


Gabi pets the lion fur at the Wild Like Me exhibit at the zoo.


A little lady in red pushing her stroller.

SIGNS
Gabi's signs count as words, too. Even if she says a word and does the sign for that word as well, it counts as two words because her signs are like a different language. Bilingual children who learn the same word in two languages have actually learned two words. Gabi uses 15 signs, and there are some others (drink, elephant, lion, and Papa) that could probably be included here as well. She recognizes as many more when we model them.
  • all done

  • bird

  • bye

  • cat

  • dog
  • fish

  • hi

  • hot

  • milk

  • more
  • no

  • rabbit

  • stand up

  • Where is it?

  • yes


What a mess you made with your oatmeal, Gabi!


"Mmmmm!" Gabi says when she tastes her ice cream.

Tuesday, May 23, 2006

Fun with Papa

It is with much fanfare that we bring you a post full of pictures of Gabi playing with her Papa. Gabi actually spends much more time playing with Mama, but there isn't always someone around to take pictures. Mama is an excellent photographer when it comes to catching the baby playing with her silly Papa. So here's that fanfare we promised...


Look! It's Gabi's first non-percussive instrument: the cardboard tube. We've discovered that the cardboard tube has many uses, most of which will be more fun when Gabi girl gets older. For now, she's working on her embouchure.


Papa Papa! Put on your shoes! We're going to the park today! (Shoes, like cardboard tubes, are apparently fun things to play with. Mama and Papa have to check their shoes carefully before putting them on -- to make sure there aren't surprises hidden inside, like rice or little bottles of lotion.)




Gabi really likes playing on the slide. Here she is testing one out on her own. She's also modeling her Gonzaga shirt that Tita Chrissie gave her.


She's already figured out how to sit down at the top. After that, however, she needs a little assistance. She's not quite big enough to ride down all by herself just yet.


It's fun to ride down in Papa's lap (or Mama's lap for that matter). Papa has discovered that he's much too large for the twisty slide these days. He hopes that Gabi learns to ride down by herself soon, because it's kind of uncomfortable.


Gabi can ride down the shorter slides with just a little help staying upright. The problem with riding down by yourself when you're little is that, being a little top-heavy and you tend to fall backward and bonk your head on the slide. But a little bit of parental truncal support goes a long way. (Where "a long way" is defined as "roughly 5 feet of blue plastic.")


The monkey-bar dome is a fun toy, even if you're not an experienced climber. They can be fun for walking under and modeling your Gonzaga gear, or you can practice your monkey-swinging (again with a little paternal help). Gabi was also interested in watching the older kid perched atop the dome.


We also conducted a short science experiment on the effects of static electricity on unruly baby hair. After reviewing the results of this experiment, we have devised the following Einstein-Gabriella Equation:

(Plastic playground equipment)
---------------------------------------------     =     funny^42
      (Static) + (Gabi's hair)



One more piece of plastic playground equipment, and we're done. Gabi enjoyed exploring the crawl tube. Crawling is something in which she has months of experience, you know.



Crawl tubes are also fun for playing peekaboo! Gabi got plenty of mileage out of one of her newly acquired words: "Boo!"


Well, just watching all that playing made Mama and Papa feel exhausted. After a busy day playing in the park, Gabi can be pretty tired too. It's definitely beginning to feel a bit like summer here in Hotlanta. Good thing you can sleep wherever you want to when you're a cute baby.


Before bedtime, though, Gabi wanted a bedtime story. Since Mama and Papa had already read most of Gabi's books about 50 times that day, we had Strong Bad read Gabi an email or two. He obliged, but was a bit perturbed that we thought he'd be adequate entertainment for a 14 month old.

Wait, do you people think I'm intended for children? Like, the littlest, tiniest babies?... I don't think I'm cut out for that sort of sugarjob.
                                                  -- Strong Bad, SBEmail 110

Monday, May 15, 2006

Talking

The narration in this post doesn't really have anything to do with the pictures, besides the obvious fact that it is all about Gabi. Rather than think of the content as incongruous, you might consider looking through this post twice: once to view the pictures and captions, and once to read my story.


Gabi pushing her stroller around the
Columbia Presbyterian Seminary campus
(just a few blocks from our house).


Uh-oh! The stroller got away!
Going downhill is tricky...
5/2/06


As Easy as a Game of Marco Polo
Gabi is starting to talk quite a bit these days. Her first word was "Hi!" Her favorite word is "Mama," which she repeats tirelessly to get my attention. When I get annoyed with hearing "Mama" 150 times every hour, Michael reminds me that "Mama" is a good thing for her to say, and it is a tribute to my parenting that she says words like "Mama" instead of things like "shut up," which some other children her age say.

Gabi had been calling Michael "Pa-mama" or "Pop-ma" -- I guess he's like the Mama, only a little different -- but Michael didn't appreciate those names. Michael decided to teach her to say "Papa," so a few weeks ago he started saying "Papa" every time Gabi said "Mama" to him. They would chase each other around the living room repeating that over and over ("Mama" "Papa" "Mama" "Papa") as if it were a game of Marco Polo. Besides this little game, he will only pay attention to her if she calls him Papa. Fortunately, Gabi has since learned to say "Papa" when talking to Michael.


Gabi loves to stop and smell the roses.
5/3/06


Hot
Gabi learned to say "hot" shortly after she picked up the sign for hot. She can now tell me that the car seat is hot when I put her in the car, that her bath water or the water for washing her hands is too hot, and that her food is hot. If something is really hot, then she will both do the sign and say the word to emphasize how hot it is. Whenever her food is hot, she knows to blow on it to cool it off. Gabi is so smart!

I think rice was the motivating factor in how quickly Gabi learned to sign and say hot. Gabi loves rice (even more than her Ninong!), and she knows that rice is hot. She started saying "more hot" to ask for more rice. She will do her sign for hot, say "hot," start blowing, and point to the rice cooker to let us know what she wants. We are working on a sign for rice, but she hasn't picked it up yet. (Why bother, if she can get her point across perfectly well as it is?)

Gabi says "nana" to ask for a banana, another of her favorite foods, and this morning she even got the b sound added to the beginning.


Gabi climbing some stairs at Oakhurst Park playground.
5/4/06


Gabi and Papa enjoying the garden at Mason Mill Park in the rain.


More
More was Gabi's first sign, and she is now very good about pronouncing "more" as well. She used to say something similar to "mama" for more, but as that caused some confusion, she is now very careful to draw out the m and use the o vowel ("mmmmmooahr"), so her "more" is very clear these days.

Since playing is a child's job, it makes since that many of Gabi's words refer to her toys. Ball ("baah") and bear ("beah") and puppy ("puppah") and book ("bu") and duck ("duh(t/k)") top the list. (Sometimes I think she has a Boston accent with all the hs that she uses to replace the difficult r sound.) Some of Gabi's other words include "yes" and "boo" and "akullahca-babalupaka." She hasn't said "no" yet, for which I guess I should be thankful. She shakes her head no if she needs to communicate that concept.

She imitates a lot of words that she doesn't use spontaneously yet. For instance, when I read her color book, she repeats "purple." After she gives us something, she repeats our "thank you." When I ask if she wants up, she will very clearly say "up." She also imitates what I say when I name the food I'm giving her, such as "apple."


Gabi and the starfish at the aquarium.
5/5/06


Gabi walks so fast now,
it's hard to catch a good picture before she runs away.


Gabi and Doc, a neighbor's dog.


Signing
A number of people have inquired about Gabi's signing, so I'll give a few more details here. Baby signs are very popular these days with many new moms, so you've probably seen them if you know any toddlers or older infants. Children can start signing around 9 or 10 months, whereas they do not master the necessary control of vocal chords for speech until 12 or 13 months of age. Signing makes it easier for babies to communicate. The most common place to start using baby signs is at the dinner table. Gabi can ask for "more" instead of crying and screaming, and she can sign "all done" instead of throwing food on the floor.


Gabi likes to watch the water fountain at the mall.
5/6/06


My Child's Mind
Baby signs have also allowed us to see what Gabi is thinking and let us know how smart she is. One day last year, when she first woke up in the morning, she did her rabbit sign to tell me she wanted to visit the rabbits--and I would never have known that she woke up thinking about the rabbits if it weren't for signs.

Gabi uses the dog sign and her word for "puppy" interchangably, which is evidence that she realizes that dog and puppy are the same thing. I was so impressed when I learned that she figured that out.

Another day I was talking to a friend about how Gabi learned to stand up by herself, and Gabi did her sign for stand up to tell us about her new skill even while she was strapped into the high chair. Over Christmas, Lola suggested that we go to the store to buy some hot dogs for Gabi, and Gabi did her dog sign to say that she recognized one of the words that we were saying. We would not how realized how soon Gabi started picking up on words used in regular conversation without her signs.

One day, a violinist was playing a solo at church, and Gabi smiled and swayed to the music and did her bird sign, as if to say that the violin sounded like a bird's song. What a beautiful analogy! I don't think you could ask for a better compliment from a one-year-old who loves to listen to birds.


Gabi holding a Gerber daisy from our front yard.
5/10/06


Self-Expression
Perhaps the most important benefit of baby signs (in my mind) is that it gives Gabi a way to share her experiences and thoughts. How lonely would you be if you could not communicate with anyone around you? Gabi gets so excited when we understand what she is trying to tell us. When she asks for something and we say something to let he know that we understood, she smiles so big and laughs. When she sees something interesting outside the window, she loves being able to direct our attention to what she found. There are so many opportunities that Gabi has had to share her world with us because of baby signs. I think her ability to communicate with us has given her a boost in self-esteem.

Research has shown that baby signs help children speak sooner and build vocabulary faster. Signs introduce the concept of language -- a symbol (sign or word) represents a concept -- and give young children the opportunity to match the sign to the object. Figuring out these connections helps their brain development as well as promoting an interest and confidence in communication skills. Even now that Gabi is talking verbally, she can still use her signs to emphasize what she is saying (by pairing the sign with the word to say it two ways) and to augment her vocabulary (for signs that she cannot yet say the word).


Gabi at softball practice at Mason Mill Park.
5/11/06


Gabi watches Papa at bat.


Communication
The purpose of baby signs is communication, not perfection. While I like to use ASL signs when I can (if she's learning to sign, she might as well learn ASL), some of the ASL signs require more fine motor skills than babies have or are too similar for babies to differentiate. Our sign for hot, for instance, is waving the hand at the wrist (like you might do to cool down your hot food) -- Michael just made it up, but it works wonderfully. And even when we do model an ASL sign (we do the ASL sign for more), sometimes Gabi modifies it a bit (Gabi tends to clap to say more). As long as we know what she's saying, it works.