Monday, January 26, 2009

Round and Round and Round I Go

I seem to be going in circles these days...literally! Now that I can pretty much control my legs and LOVE to exercise them, my parents have been plopping me into this fun plaything that does just that. But I can't use it to explore the house quite yet. It's a walker with two wheels and one pivot point so I can only go in circles! Check out my locomotion on this video, shot Jan. 25.



Note that this handy plaything (called an EvenFlo Walk-Around) also has toys for my hands to spin and grab and bring to my mouth to gum. Yes, I can bend the fish on their seagrass stalks down to face level and give them wet, slobbery kisses!

I have started kissing my mommy back (she kisses me a lot, I figure it's high time I reciprocated), using this open-mouthed approach. Sort of like I'm trying to nurse on her chin or cheek. It makes her laugh. I'll just keep practicing my kisses until I get them right.

Wednesday, January 7, 2009

I'm Having a Ball

Arghh, a striped meteor just landed on me and it weighs a ton and it's smashing me into the floor...!!! Just teasing, it's only a beach ball and it hardly weighs a thing. Even I can lift it.
But it does frustrate me that I can't put it into my mouth.
The world does look wavy from here. OK, enough silliness. Signing off.

Sunday, January 4, 2009

My Acting Debut on Christmas Eve -- As Guess Who?

Look out Hollywood, here I come! My first acting job was such a smash success, I may aspire to the silver screen if my plans to become a solar agent like my Dad don't work out.

But any role from here on out will be anticlimactic after my debut as the Son of God. Yes, I was Baby Jesus himself in our Methodist church Christmas Eve service a week or so ago. As the youngest member of our congregation, I guess I was a shoo-in, but that's not to say the role was a cinch. I had to look cute and calm through two hymns, and not cry from the chill when I kicked my "swaddling clothes" off. Hey, I was only wearing a diaper underneath, brrr!

I began preparing for my performance during the mini sermon by Pastor Ankeny. Mom whisked me out of the sanctuary and into a back office, where she put on her Mary costume and stripped me down. Then the aforementioned swaddling clothes (i.e., blanket) went on, and when the huge pipe organ struck up "O Little Town of Bethlehem," making the very air vibrate, we started down the center aisle.

When we reached the altar area, Mom laid me gently in a manger made of wooden slats that was filled with real hay. But beforehand, she had laid my favorite blue fuzzy blanket on top of the hay, so unlike the real Baby Jesus, I didn't have to suffer itchy straw next to my skin. Everyone was singing and the organ was pumping away, and that's when I looked up and became fascinated by the slowly revolving ceiling fan. Unconsciously, I kicked my foot free of my loose swaddle and my chubby bare leg rose straight up into the air. The congregation murmured a collective "awww."

Mom sat right beside me the whole time, and my dad, aunties and grandparents were all in the front row. It looked to me like everyone -- all the women at least -- had tears in their eyes. Afterwards, I heard Mom say she understood for a fleeting moment how the real Mary must have felt, to be so overwhelmed by the miracle that is any child, and then to know her child was the miracle of miracles. I'm not even that religious yet, but that makes spiritual sense to me. I'm glad I could help impart that emotion to her and hopefully others in the audience.

Mom picked me up during "Silent Night" and the candlelighting, and I snuggled against her chest, playing the newborn baby part as well as I could, considering I'm four months old. But hey, that's what acting's all about, right?








See also my pix on our church's brand new website: http://www.trinityumcpt.org/Christmas2008.html