If she could just use her powers for good instead of evil.

Since returning from our trip we have been working dilligently at getting Stella back on somewhat of a normal sleep pattern (I say somewhat because when it is daylight until 9:30pm it can be difficult to convice someone that it is actually nighttime). We have had a couple of hiccups in this process, like for instance, last weekend when we had her to bed no earlier than 10:30 on both Friday and Saturday nights. Sunday went a little tiny bit better, but on Monday we regressed considerably. We got her to bed at a respectable 8:30 and were feeling rather confident at the ease within she went down. Then we heard it. The gutteral yell of a child being tortured by pokey things. Yowling at the top of her lungs, “Mamaaaaa, Dadeeeee.” Although one can tolerate this for a certain amount of time, it does reach a critical mass wherein your ears begin to bleed at the desparateness of the call. So, in I go, with my stern voice and solid resolve. “No, Stella it is time for ni-nite, here are boo-white-ba-ba-sugar (the menagerie of items required for sleep time).” She calms enough that I can get her to nod her head in agreement that she is ready for ni-night, and I leave feeling triumphant-ish.

Quiet.

Quiet.

“Mamaaaaa, Dadeeeee.”

This time I go in, ready to lay down the law, and what does she do? She pulls out the cute guns and shoots me smack in the head. “Hi Mama!” Powers fading. Must resist cuteness. Must not cave. I lose it. I smile. She smiles. She reaches out her arms. I pick her up, she says “Git down. Dadeee,” and runs to the kitchen to find him serving up a bowl of ice cream. “BITE! BITE! MMMMM! BITE!”

So, at 9:10pm after two failed attempts and a shared bowl of ice cream, Stella went to bed without incident.

walscapades beta version 1.0

Today marks the official launch of walscapades.com.

Firstly, I need to give credit where credit is due. Thank you to Grampa Andy for his winning entry in the “name the new blog” contest. After careful review, it was decided that this one met all criteria and, more importantly, wasn’t already taken. Your prize will be to not have to ever remodel our kitchen again during the rainy season.

As for the rest of this site, my testing has consisted of calling Andrea and asking her to look at it on her Mac and, well, that’s about it. This is what we call in the industry a Beta version. Pretty much meaning, if it breaks you can’t blame me. So if your keyboard bursts into flames when you load the page you should probably let me know. Likewise, if you experience any other adverse affects it would probably be a good idea to drop me an email so I can try to make it a more pleasurable experience for you. And to all of you grandmas out there: not posting enough is NOT considered broken, so don’t even try suggesting it.

The site has some expanded content, and better methods for archiving. It also allows me much more flexibility in design. What this means to you: if at any point you come to the site and it is broken, flashing blue and yellow, and displaying text written in Russian, this probably means I am working on it and will hopefully have it up and running again soon. Consider it a work in progress.

I will probably be posting a tutorial titled “Comments are your friend” so that – gasp! – all of you out there who call or email me in response to what I write on these pages (you know who you are) can actually get the hang of responding in the forum provided for you!

Happy reading!

Giving new meaning to colonoscopy

Last weekend, we went to a birthday party for one of Stella’s friends from day care. This is the second party we have attended at the Children’s Discovery Museum, leaving me to ask myself: Is this the McDonald’s Playland of the new millenium?

The kids are free to run amok — all in the name of “educational discovery” allowing parents to not have to concern themselves with the regular annoyances that come with taking your child into a public place. In fact, the only real parenting we had to do was to keep Stella from railroading all the other kid’s with her relentless need to climb through the life-sized digestive track.
I’m thinking we need to build one of these in our backyard.

Giving new meaning to colonoscopy

What I did on my summer vacation.

I had honestly planned to continue posting throughout the remainder of the trip, but found myself quickly losing any kind of inspiration. There was plenty going on and plenty worth mentioning, but each time I sat down to write I found myself incessantly leaning on the backspace key. Being back in the land of mc-mansions and shiny gargantuan SUVs and endless sprawl and oppressive heat seemed to suck me into some sort of mediocraty vortex, wherein I couldn’t express a coherent thought that didn’t include the word ‘duhhhh.’ It has taken me this long to even want to turn the computer on, let alone be inspired enough to put word to page.

So here we are, back in the land of moderate temperatures and consumptive isolation. Ahhhh. Can you hear it; the sounds of hippies begging on the plaza and the smells of methamphetamine cooking on our neighbor’s stoves? Home sweet home.

In reflecting back on our week abroad, I feel it is high time to give a huge shout out to the shortest member of the family (no, not me) and let it be known that I can actually recognize how truly amazing our daugher can be. Although it wasn’t our intention, we – over the course of 10 days- committed parenting atrocities on such a deep level that, had we not on the lam, moving locations approximately every 48 hours, the authorities would have surely tossed our sorry-asses into the bad-parent wing of the local pokey.

It started with our insistence that while en-route, stopping the car at anything less than a 4-hour stretch was just plain unnecessary. It was only after, oh, say, about the FIFTH outfit change that we realized the precise limit of a disposable diaper. If anyone has seen how much those suckers hold you will understand the extent of our dense skulls. It was shocking that she only ended up with one diaper rash — and that was after we left a poopy swim diaper on her for the better part of a day. I think that time, I may have actually heard the sirens off in the distance as they sped toward our location.

Next up was our insistence at resetting her circadian rhythms. Her daytime nap commenced anytime within a 7 1/2 hour range — 10:30 am, 5:30pm, whatever works. As for bedtime, we were sure to do everything in our power to insure puffy, dark circles under her eyes each morning. Hey, don’t judge, we were conscientious enough to have a strong cup of jo waiting for her each morning. She is a Walston, after all. A day without coffee is a day not worth living….unless you are Scott.

The rest of our parental digressions were scattered throughout the week like fun little prizes: Loading her into a 250 degree car and allowing her to burn herself on the scortching car-seat, mistakenly placing her pack-n-play too close to the bed so she was able to climb out and fashion a life-sized model of Mt. Everest out of a package of wet wipes, oh and my favorite — when, somewhere along the line she managed to get a splinter in the heel of her foot THAT WE STILL HAVE NOT REMOVED! She won’t let me near her feet with nail clippers, let alone a big needle and pair of tweezers. I can only guess that my next post will be titled “Staph: It’s fun for the whole family.”

Stella bounced back from every adverse situation we threw at her. She slept well…when we let her; she was amazingly accommodating…no matter how ridiculously inconsistent our schedule was, and she, through it all, managed to actually keep learning. No longer do we have the Stella of one word commands and unintelligible babble. We now have a little person who can string words together telling you exactly what she wants and rattle off the names of all of her extended family:

  • “Damma” (Grandma)
  • “Dampa” (Grandpa)
  • “Dot” (Uncle Scott)
  • “Pad” (Uncle Thad)
  • “Ant Peene” (Aunt Celene)
  • “Yiddy” (Lily)

And she even knows her own name….”Teppa”.

Lest you think I am kidding about all of this, you should probably click here.