Sunday, August 30, 2009
She Will Not Sleep
Eeeeeeyyyyyyyyyhhhhhhhhhhhhh!!!!! (Sadie's Favorite Sound)
Saturday, August 29, 2009
Teeth Hurt!
Sadie is clumsy, stumbling around, falling frequently. She is absolutely exhausted and I've been trying for the last forty-five minutes to get her to go to sleep. She has been squealing and thrashing and making it clear that she does not want to close her pretty little eyes. That behavior, in combination with biting me twice today while she was nursing (and biting Nani once today on the finger) let's us know what's going on. Her fourth tooth on the bottom is coming in (eighth total tooth). She is one unhappy camper. So tonight my blog will be short. Sadie needs Mommy!
Outfit of the Week
The Great Dress Experiment: The Result
When I started my Dress Experiment (wearing a dress every day for thirty days) I wasn't sure what the result would be, or even if there would be a result, other then sticking to something that might be kind of uncomfortable, for an entire month (like a shortened version of Lent). When I started the Experiment I was definitely still more comfortable in pants. I usually threw on a dress before we left the property, but at home I could usually be found in a skirt or dress. Friday, August 28, 2009
Animals, A Carousel and a Big Bath Tub
We've been making an effort to keep Sadie busy each day, because she seems to get reckless when she's bored. Today we drove the hour over to the county fair and Sadie was absolutely astounded by seeing the actual animals that she points out and makes us name in her books. We saw (in no particular order) cows, sheep, goats, pigs, roosters, chickens, turkeys, ducks and bunnies (I'm sure I'm leaving some animal out). Sadie scared the goat when she rushed up to the fence, but was a bit overwhelmed when we got our picture taken with the Best In Show Steer, which belongs to one of the girls who goes to our church. Religion in School
I have been reading "The Well Trained Mind" by Susan Wise Bauer and Jessie Wise and I love the method of learning that they describe. I have been making my way through book after book on homeschooling and so far this method, which is based on the idea of a Classical Education, is my favorite. I wish my education had been based on this method. I was my high school valedictorian, but I spent most of my education sitting in class, daydreaming and bored. While education concerns aren't the reason we decided to homeschool (social concerns are, which is funny since everyone asks "aren't you worried you children won't be 'socialized.'") I'm really excited about this particular method. I'll be writing more about it as I go along, but today this section, on religion, really jumped out at me:Thursday, August 27, 2009
One Bruised Baby
Sadie's legs look likes she's been in a fight. We went on a walk this morning and she refused to hold my hand. She strolled down the driveway and she headed over to Nini and Gigi's house (with me trailing behind her to make sure that she stayed out of trouble). Two crashes later she had arrived at the bottom of their staircase. At least when she goes up stairs she reaches for my hand. Music for Little People
I just have to write a post about my experience with Music for Little People. It's an amazing store and twenty years ago, when I was little, we lived near it and my mom used to get tapes and other fun musical stuff from them. My favorite was a red tape recorder with an attached microphone. When I was trying to figure out what to get Sadie for her birthday I thought of the company and googled it. I was excited to find that the little company was still in existence and over the course of the last two decades, had grown. After exploring their website I found the perfect present: a baby proof MP3 player. Wednesday, August 26, 2009
Sadie's Schedule
Busy, busy, busy. Sadie is always moving and always wants to be playing. Yesterday I was feeling industrious and made a little schedule. We managed to stick to the schedule until 10:30 when Sadie, the baby who does not take morning naps these days, curled up and went to sleep. When she woke up we had lunch and went swimming, before going into town. We stopped at the library, went to the new ice cream parlor in town for sorbet and then walked around the farmers' market in town. Worst Case Scenarios...
I'm not one of those mom's who is obsessed with germs. One of my friends has a cousin who made everyone, including her ninety year old grandmother from China, wash and sterilize their hands before going near the baby. While I certainly kept Sadie away from people who were sick I have, for the most part, figured that excessively sterilizing everything that she comes into contact with would only mean that she wasn't being exposed to germs and wouldn't develop immunities and would get sick more often. In the past when Sadie's binkie fell on the ground we would pick it up, wipe it off, and give it back to her...Tuesday, August 25, 2009
Rules, Rules, Rules
Sadie can now climb up onto one of the chairs in the living room by herself. She thinks that this is one of the greatest developments in the history of her entire life. There are so many things that a chair can be used as. She can pretend to ride it like a horse. She can use it to get to the table that is behind the chair that she can't reach on her own, even on her tippie toes. And of course, the chair is the greatest launch pad that she's found yet. She can fall of the chair in a number of different ways. And Mommy is always diving to save her. So far Mommy has been successful and Sadie hasn't hit the ground. Mommy is also being impossible and insisting that Sadie sit when she's on the chair. What Mommy just doesn't seem to realize is that that takes all of the fun out of chair sitting. Monday, August 24, 2009
A Busy Day at Turtle Bay!
Sunday, August 23, 2009
Not the Baby Spoon!
Tonight at dinner I figured out a new way to get Sadie to open her cute little mouth. I just need to put her food on a grown up fork (or spoon). When she sees her little baby spoons these days she clamps her mouth shut and refuses to eat. Apparently the brightly colored plastic lets her know that it's baby food, and she doesn't want to have anything to do with baby food. The best disguise for baby food seems to be... big people utensils. Wives Should Be...
Saturday, August 22, 2009
Oh the Horror!
Oh the horror. We came home from an trip to get ice cream at the new pizza place in town this afternoon and Sadie started to run around Nani and Grumpa's living room. She headed out into the hallway and turned to the right. And then I heard it. The most terrifying shriek. It wasn't a "hurt" type of cry. For a moment I wondered if Sadie had come face to face with the brown bear that ran in front of our car halfway down the driveway yesterday. But he couldn't be in the house! Sadie came barreling around the corner, past Nani who had come out of the study and stopped in the middle of the hallway. Then she shrieked again. Outfit of the Week
My husband bought this dress for me for my birthday the week before I was confirmed in the Church. It fit perfectly at the time and I wore it for my confirmation (with a teal button up sweater). These days it fits somewhat less perfectly. A pregnancy and a fourteen months of nursing a baby have changed my body significantly. Even with the baby weight gone, it's not the same. Thursday, August 20, 2009
Accident Prone
Wednesday, August 19, 2009
Bad Mama?!?!?
Sadie is a wild woman today. She is still bouncing off the walls. It is long past her bedtime. She was wild when this picture was taken earlier today and the wildness has continued, unabated, right up until this moment (it is, as I type this, 8:33pm... An hour past bedtime). Sadie no longer has a concept of bedtime. She is a baby who does not need sleep. Gender Inclusive Language
We are back into the triple digits and it's just too hot. Sadie wants to spend all day in her blow up swimming pool. We started with one pool, but it's now up to three. Two of the pools are tiny, blow up pools that were on sale for two dollars at CVS. We picked up two because we wanted to fill one with sand to make a sand box. But it's just too hot, so right now both of them are filled with cold water. The third pool is one I got at Target a few years ago and never took out of the box. I spent the morning dragging tarps around to create a spot for it, and it is now set up in the shade under an oak tree, right next to Grumpa's tractor. It's 1o feet by 6 feet and Sadie thinks that it's the greatest thing that she's ever seen. As soon as she wakes up from her nap we're headed back out for more swimming! We swam a little this morning, but it was so cold (the water) that I had to drag her inside kicking and screaming before she turned into a tiny ice cube. Tuesday, August 18, 2009
The Great Dress Experiment: The Dresses








Bubbles
Now it's not just the sun parading around as the moon that is upsetting Sadie's reading time. It's bubbles too. Tonight, while we were reading one of Sadie's favorite bedtime books (which she's actually had a bit of an attitude about recently because it only has tiny pictures of a crescent moon and Sadie prefers giant full moons) she became very excited. There was a picture of a mommy and a baby fish. And there were bubbles. Sadie got a huge smile. She pointed to the bubbles.Monday, August 17, 2009
The Great Dress Experiment
Sunday, August 16, 2009
Be Gentle!
Saturday, August 15, 2009
Happy Birthday to...
Natural Family Planning: Part 5: Vasectomy
What are the health risks of vasectomy?
Although the final verdict on the health risks of vasectomy is not in, suspicions are rising that the long-term effects on a man’s immunological system can pose serious health problems. Criticism is mounting within the medical community about the uncritical way in which vasectomy has been declared medically safe. Between 10% and 15% of adult men in the U.S. have been vasectomized3and yet, as Dr. H. J. Roberts has written, "I know of no other operation performed on humans that induces responses to such a degree by the immune system."4
What happens to the sperm?
After a vasectomy, sperm production continues as before, around 50,000 spermatozoa per minute.5Lacking a normal anatomical passage, these cells are either consumed by destroyer cells (macrophages) or degenerate and produce antigens that cause antibodies to be produced.6
At least eight of these sperm antigens have been identified. These antigens frequently infiltrate into the bloodstream and induce other cells throughout the body to manufacture antibodies against the sperm. These are called "anti-sperm autoantibodies."
What is autoimmunity?
Antibodies are the way we immunize ourselves against specific diseases in our environment. Antigens are the triggering mechanism the body needs in order to produce the right antibodies for its defense. An example of this effect is the allergic reaction that occurs when the body is highly sensitive to a certain food cell.
When the body gears up its defenses to destroy cells of its own making, as after a vasectomy, then the body becomes "auto-immune" — allergic to itself.
Has this been linked with vasectomy?
Several studies confirmed this linkage in the l970s, finding antibodies to sperm antigens in 55% to 75% of patients within two years after vasectomies.7 In a 1982 study, investigators pointed out. "...the incidence of sperm antibody following vasectomy may have been underdetected."8 It is so common to see this reaction among vasectomized men that an absence of such antibodies has become an indicator of hormonal malfunction.9 With more advanced methods of detection, it has been possible to detect the antibody response within two weeks after vasectomy.10
What are some auto-immune diseases?
Auto-immunity has been suspected to cause diseases such as multiple sclerosis, diabetes mellitus, rheumatoid arthritis, some types of hepatitis, Addison’s disease (malfunction of the adrenal glands), and lupus erythematosis.11
A landmark study by Nancy J. Alexander and Thomas B. Clarkson concluded that "the immunologic response to sperm antigen that often accompanies vasectomy can exacerbate atherosclerosis" (hardening of the arteries).12 Subsequent studies have lent support to their finding.13
What about the risk of cancer?
In the early 1980s, Dr. Richard Ablin, researcher at the Hwektoen Institute in
Prostate cancer is the second leading cause of cancer deaths among American men, claiming some 30,000 lives per year. Although these studies did not prove any conclusive link between vasectomy and prostate cancer, the American Urological Association urged that patients be informed of the risk on the basis of these papers.17
Increased risks of lung cancer, non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma and multiple myeloma were noted among men 20 years after vasectomy.18 The Coronary Artery Surgery Study, analyzing 1106 men, found a two-and-a-half times higher risk of kidney stones among vasectomized patients 30-35 years old.19 An association with testicular cancer has also been noted.20 A healthy immune system is our day-to-day defense against cancer. The authors of the Harvard studies hypothesized "the immune response to sperm antigens following vasectomy may enhance tumor growth by blocking of antibodies of tumor suppresser cells by sperm antigens."21
Friday, August 14, 2009
Outfit of the Week

This weeks outfit was one of the first new things that I got after I had Sadie. My Mom had gone to JC Penny's and it was on clearance and fit my expanded pregnancy waistline. I had to add a sweater and a camisole to make it pass my own personal modesty test.The Giant Excavator
Sadie loves tractors. She has sat on Grumpa's tractor twice, but really, the first time she saw the old red Yanmar puttering around the horse corral, it was love at first sight. However, Sadie's love of tractors isn't limited to Grumpa's tractor. It extends to tractor toys, to the tractors in books and to the tractors and heavy machinery that we drive by that are parked, or working, at the side of the freeway.Thursday, August 13, 2009
Adventures in Knitting
I've promised to upload pictures of the projects I've been working on for a while, and while I haven't pieced the teddy bear for Greg and Kerry's baby together yet, here are shots of the sweater I'm making (this is the back panel) and Sadie's Christmas Blanket. I am knitting like crazy and going into town tomorrow (3 hours round trip) to pick up more yarn (there's a sale at Michael's and I have a coupon!).
I'm trying to keep from getting ahead of myself. If I start thinking about all the baby presents I need to make I may start thinking about the Christmas presents that I should already have started on. And there is never any way that I will finish all the projects that I will come up with. I never do. I buy the wool. I have the best intentions. And then I end up with a handful of presents and a bunch of leftover wool (and a bunch of presents I need to rush out and buy). It's best to focus on the babies right now and not get ahead of myself. Here's what I need to knit/crochet in the coming days.Baby Sadie Loves Her Veil

A few weeks ago Bishop Soto visited St. Patrick's in Weaverville. I gave Sadie her veil towards the end of this Mass (she usually only wears it for part of Mass, so I usually give it to her around the consecration). That evening she was apparently in a mood to wear her veil and after Mass she didn't want to take it off. I got it away from her before dinner! Here are the pictures! It looks so huge on her!
The Moon
Sadie is a little obsessed with the moon. She finds it in books. She constantly looks for it in the sky. And when we’re reading a book, if it’s daytime in the book, she gets upset if she points to the little circle in the sky and I say “sun.” She will keep pointing to it, over and over again, with a serious little frown on her face.I explained it to her by saying that the sun is in the sky during the day and the moon is in the sky at night. Then we went outside yesterday and Sadie was shocked by what she saw. The sun was in the sky, but so was the moon. She pointed at it on her entire walk. Then today, when we went outside, she nearly fell over after every step, because her head was straight back and her little arm was flung up, pointing at the half moon. She now knows that it is out during the day… which means that Mommy was wrong when she said the sun is out during the day and the moon is out at night… completely justifying her insistent pointing when I label the little circle in the book the sun instead of the moon. Clearly it is the moon.
What First Ammendment?
Alameda Parents File Suit Over Denial of Opt-out Requests
Contact: Brad Dacus, President, Pacific Justice Institute, 916-857-6900
ALAMEDA, Calif., Aug. 13 /Christian Newswire/ -- A group of parents filed a lawsuit yesterday against Alameda Unified School District after the District denied their requests to excuse their young children from controversial lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) instruction.
In late May, despite strong opposition by parents at school board meetings, AUSD approved a supplemental curriculum that will promote LGBT alternative families to kindergarten and elementary-age students. Since AUSD adopted the curriculum, numerous parents have sent letters to Superintendent Kristen Vital, requesting that their young students be opted out of the controversial instruction. The District recently sent form letters denying all of the parents' requests.
While the District has claimed that a LGBT curriculum was necessary to address bullying and harassment in elementary schools, documentation from the District obtained by Pacific Justice Institute through a public records request shows that the vast majority of reported incidents on AUSD campuses involve racial tension and opposite-sex sexual harassment, not sexual orientation. In fact, school incident reports show that there were no complaints of harassment due to sexual orientation in AUSD elementary grades.
Today, staff attorneys for Pacific Justice Institute filed suit in Alameda Superior Court, seeking enforcement of opt-out provisions in the California Education Code. Kevin Snider, PJI Chief Counsel, commented, "Alameda parents believe all children deserve safe schools. Parents do not support LGBT indoctrination that fails to address the main causes of bullying and harassment in the District and intentionally omits children belonging to the other five protected classes," Snider stated, referring to race and ethnicity, gender, disability, nationality and religion. "It is their right to remove their children from this highly controversial program, and we intend to vigorously defend that right," he continued.
EEOC Violates Religious Liberty of Catholic College - Catholic Online
EEOC Violates Religious Liberty of Catholic College - Catholic Online
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Wednesday, August 12, 2009
What Did You Break, Sadie?!?!
Natural Family Planning: Part 4: Tubal Ligation
Before I get to the actual theory and implementation of NFP (I will, I promise!) I need to slog through all the disturbing ways that women and men try to tear apart what God has put together. Natural Family Planning: Part 3: Extreme Birth Control
I remember being baffled by a conversation with one of my best friends shortly after we graduated from college. She had a good job with good health insurance and she had made an appointment to speak with her doctor. She came home outraged. She had gone in and demanded the doctor schedule a hysterectomy (at the ripe old age of 22). She said that she knew that she would never want kids and she was tired on dealing with monthly cycles. Her doctor said no, because of the side effects and because she might change her mind. My friend ranted and raved. It was unfair. If a man wanted a vasectomy she wouldn't have a problem with it. It was sexist to deny her the procedure.Tuesday, August 11, 2009
Twelve Hours
The Incredible Exhausted Stair Climbing Baby
Monday, August 10, 2009
Mommy the Comedian
My Experience with State Run Health Insurance:Medi Cal
I have spent the last thirteen months of my daughter's life trying to get health insurance for my family. We lost our insurance four weeks after my daughter was born and paid out of pocket for her appointments and vaccines. It drained our savings pretty quickly. Sunday, August 9, 2009
Natural Family Planning: Part 2: The Pill
It's funny that so many people disregard NFP because they think that it doesn't work. I know a number of women who became pregnant while on the pill (actually I know more women who became pregnant on the pill than I know that use NFP) but I've never heard complaints that the pill doesn't work. Pill manufacturers claim a 1% failure rate. In practice it tends to be between 1.9% and 18% during its first year of use. Saturday, August 8, 2009
Natural Family Planning: Part 1
I've been thinking of writing a post, or a series of posts, depending on how much I have to say, about Natural Family Planning (NFP). It is such an incredibly important topic for married, practicing Catholics, yet because of the subject involved, it doesn't get much attention. I don't remember it coming up at all in RCIA (maybe it was one of the classes I had to work during) and I shockingly didn't know about the Church's teaching on contraception until my husband and I began researching on our own. I really should have caught on earlier, when a nurse came in and taught the method in a Catholicism and Sexuality class I took during college, but I was too busy arguing with the Professor on every single point (even if we had agreed on the various subjects, as we probably would today, I don't think that we would have gotten along) to actually learn anything. I do remember thinking that people who used NFP were crazy and would probably have several dozen kids.







