Thursday, August 31, 2006

First steps

Here's a video of Kiyomi's first solid steps that she took a couple of nights ago...

Time to break out the baby gates!

http://www.mediamax.com/kojtam/Links/8FA49B83AB

Tuesday, August 29, 2006

She's a climber...


She could have been a fine pianist, or strong at the sciences, or even a fast runner... but nope, Kiyomi has decided to take after her dad's climbing obsession!

I knew I was in trouble when I noticed she seemed to prefer crawling over obstacles rather than around them. There were other indications as well. Like as she was starting to walk with support, she would have a tendency to lift her foot high in the air when she came upon a step... or really anything else that looked like it would be good to stand on.... lean backwards and vault forward. Sometimes successfully, sometimes not. However, we learned it was game over for sure just last week when she spontaneously, with no prompting and minimal assistance, started climbing the stairs. Yup, Kohji watched helplessly as our little darling headed straight for, and then started to crawl up, the stairs. I wonder if MEC makes a climbing harness for a 13 month old?

Her climbing hasn't been contained to the stairs either. It seems to extend to pretty much anything. Which was a little bit inconvenient when our friends Catherine and Lauren came by with a fantastic little kitchen set, and before opening it, Kiyomi felt a need to summit it!

Of course, yet again, it is not her parents who spurred on her ingenuity, but the cat. It would seem any new trick she learns is more than likely to be a result of trying to talk to, catch, pet or otherwise get in the way of, the cat. The cat, meanwhile, has determined that if you can't beat 'em, join 'em, and she too has taken to poking, following or otherwise pestering Kiyomi. They are quite the pair, and while it seems likely that one of them may regret the partnership, for the moment, they seem to be partners in crime.

There has also been some interesting developments on the walking front. And for once, it's not motivated by the cat. I suspect the primary motivation is the "tot lot". Kiyomi and I go there regularly. It's a small little park with pint size play equipment, often crawling with fellow parents and tots. There's a interesting little dynamic with tot clicks, parent clicks and probably a million and one stories a day. Kiyomi and I are slowly becoming regulars, recognizing the other regulars, making some friends. I, for one, have become the bounce-lady - the mom who can get conned into bouncing the kids on the bouncy bridge for up to half an hour at a time. It's actually a pretty good workout as I can feel my calfs burn after 10 minutes. Kiyomi LOVES sitting on the bridge with the other kids and bouncing helplessly. There seems to be some sort of thrill in the ragdoll effect that I don't understand, but hey, I'm over 30 now.

Anyhow, the "tot lot" has been a really strong walking motivator. Let's just say that nothing cramps your style like having to drag mom around the whole place. Especially when you want to walk through the tunnel or chase the other kids tearing around. Everyday, Kiyomi seems to be able to take more and more steps on her own and they are steadier each time she tries to walk. So, in summation, it won't be too long before she's running away from us and tearing up the stairs. Hmmm, another baby gate may be in order.

Another milestone this week has been some new words, or at least word recognition. She's been pretty good with cat, but we also noticed that everytime she saw a dog, she's yelp out "daw". Wow, we thought, cat and dog. Not bad. Oh sure, there was a little confusion when she looked at the giraff in our living room and said "daw", but eh, when you look at a giraff, it kinda looks like a dog, other than that whole neck thing!

So, this was the theory until this week! I took her to the experimental farm. Our first stop... the cow and cattle barn. She took one look at King the Clysdale, and yelped out "DAW!!" Hmm, I guess we need to work a little more on the word recognition thing. However, there is hope as just tonight, we asked Kiyomi where her belly was, and she patted her tummy with both hands and grinned wildly. Now, as long as we don't interfer and confuse her (as we did when we showed her her toes, and asked her where they were. She wound up grabbing her toes the next time we asked about her belly), we seem to be on our way to learning body parts and animals.

The parting shot for tonight is one I couldn't resist - the wee one with a wee bit of hummus on her face (which she loves by the way)!

Good night from Ottawa!

Tuesday, August 22, 2006

Cruisin'... the next frontier

I've been told before that you spend a great deal of time hoping your children will talk, crawl, walk... and then after they've been doing it for awhile, you pine for the days when they couldn't!
So it is in our household. I had a few precious weeks where I was reasonably certain that if I left Kiyomi on the floor and stepped out of the room for a second or two, I would find her in the same place I left her. Those days are already a distant - albeit plesant - memory.

Not only has she pretty much mastered the crawling thing, she has now taken to cruisin' around furniture - her high chair being the favourite piece. In fact, she spent about 3/4 of an hour last week, cruising around it, and singing to herself.


She's also been spurred on by a gift from our friends Tim, Alison and Tessa - a rather nifty Fisher Price walker-contraption that actually starts to sing when she bumps into things. Unfortunately, Kiyomi hasn't quite figured out that when you hit an obstacle, you have te reposition the walker to get around it. Rather, she's taken to backing up and having another go at it. Either that, or she just wants to make it sing again! Good mommy that I am, I pretty much wind up laughing at her until she gets a little frustrated, and then I redirect the wheels.

Other than working on the walking thing, we've been partaking of typical summer activities - wading pool, park, library, walks, runs to see the ducks. The highlight of last weekend was a trip to the fair. The SuperEx is in town, and just happens to be a couple blocks from our front door. So we headed there to see what Kiyomi thought of the lights, rides and general fanfare. It was kinda like letting a gambler loose in Vegas! There was a combined awe and barely contained excitement that came out every now and again with a few yelps and squeels. Unfortuantely, she was a little too young to get on any of the rides, but she had a blast watching her friend Ella on the ferris wheel and merry go round. She also really enjoyed watching the cops give a hard time to some teenagers who had been smoking pot right around the corner from the merry-go-round... but that's probably a tale for another day.

I have also been through my first full week 'solo'. Some things are easier than I thought they would be, others are harder. Needless to say, I have now been introduced to Teletubbies! I don't understand it, and that baby in the sun still freaks me out, but it buys me 10 minutes or so to get dinner started.

Kiyomi has also become a rather consistant ultimate fan - largely against her will. She's made it out to every game (thanks to relatively good weather, Nana, and a couple teams worth of willing baby-sitters). She seems to enjoy it, especially when Nana or aunty Sue are there to run her around. We'll have to see how this week goes as we're now into playoffs and have 6 games in the next 7 days. Hopefully, she won't add any more bites to her growing mosquito bite collection (bad parents, baaad parents)!

This week has also marked the next step in the paper chase with the citizenship application finally filled out and in the mail. The government has a test for assessing its employees' capacity to learn a second language. I've never taken it, but I've been told that the test is effectively in Kurdish and a large part of it is testing your ability to retain new words. I've decided that the government actually writes up all its immigration and citizenship forms in Kurdish first, and then gets someone who only speaks French to translate them into English. That is the only possible explanation for the vagueness of the questions and the strange rationale for the needed supporting documentation. I actually had a CIC employee tell me on the phone that a passport is not a sufficient proof of citizenship. When I asked - and it was in fact quite politely - whether it was indeed the case that only Canadian citizens could get Canadian passports, and whether that would not be proof of Canadian citizenship, she responded - no word of a lie here - that a Canadian passport was insufficient documentation for a citizenship application! I think she was a little offended by my giggling.

Just a little side note for those of you in the process - if you don't have one already, invest in a small home photocopier/scanner thing. It's been invaluable with all the paper work.

The parting shot for tonight (if I can get it to work since blogger's been giving me trouble) is a little priceless (apologies to uncle Kenji, but it had to be made public). Good night from Ottawa.

Sunday, August 13, 2006

Locomotion and puppets

Well, really a pretty average week in the household... crawling, standing and puppets!

Yup, you read right. In the last week, Kiyomi has started standing on her own for longer and longer periods of time. She has also, unfortunately, picked up this really fun game where she free falls backwards with the full expectation that someone will be there to catch her. She laughs, while she's doing it! We're not sure if she's laughing because she's in free fall, or because out of the corner of her eye, she can see an adult or two dive across the room to make sure she is indeed caught. All I can say is that this does NOT bode well for her teenage years!

Impatient with the fact that she can't actually walk yet - and eager to get her hands on the KT cat's tail - Kiyomi has started to crawl. Who knew that a four legged creature could create a four legged creature out of our little girl?!

So, we now add crawling to her expanding repetoire, which at the moment consists primarily of wanting to walk (assisted of course), launching really messy foods like spaghetti across the room, saying "cat" (although we have no idea whether she actually associates it with the cat since she called a dog "cat" the other day) and generally making all sorts of crazy, funny faces. I tell ya, what's not to love!

The standing has also created a new challenge for bedtime, as it seems she's mastered the ability to pull herself to standing in the crib. Now, normally, this wouldn't be a big deal, but for the fact that she's extraordinarily proud of herself when she does this. The bedtime routine usually has Kohji or I laying on th ebed beside her crib reading and waiting for her to fall asleep. We try to ignore her rather than interact so she settles in with Elton. Well, it's hard to ignore it when you glance over and are eye to eye with this huge grin. Once you laugh, you're sunk because she takes that as a sign to giggle at will!

We had a great visit with Nana. Not only did she help with the baby, she helped put together Kiyomi's room, including making curtains. Much appreciated by all, but especially Tamara. It was a nice way to transition into full time "on my own". Mom, you'll be missed!

Yesterday, we headed off to the Puppets Up! Festival in Almonte - a pretty little town about 45 minutes from Ottawa. Now, it's not that we wouldn't have considered the driving 45 minutes to a puppet festival before Kiyomi (usually at the prodding of uncle Phil). But let's face it, we probably would not have spent a warm, sunny Saturday afternoon driving to Almonte for it. My how things have changed... Of course, it would seem there isn't much we wouldn't do for this little face (see again comment above re: teenage years).

The Festival itself is quite fun, although probably more interesting for the older (4 and up) crowd. All of Almonte gets into it. They close the main street to traffic and puppets rule the roost. There are a number of theaters set up, all within easy walking distance, and puppeteers from all over spend two days entertaining. The highlight is the puppet parade down main street.

We've also discovered that Kiyomi seems to really like music (thanks in large part to the musical potty that Nana got for her). You haven't lived until you've heard the "Toilet Paper" song over and over and over... and over.
However, throw in a couple of baby maraccas, and it doesn't seem to loose it's charm ... quite as quickly.

On that note, the parting shot for today is a little baby boogie. Good afternoon from Ottawa.


Sunday, August 06, 2006

Cows and bears

It's amazing to think that we've now been home for three weeks. The time has flown by but at the same time it already seems like she's always been with us. She's tons of fun, and I'm sure every parent thinks this but she seems to be learning things so quickly!

Last weekend we took a trip out to the Central Experimental Farms just a 5-minute drive away. Kiyomi had a fun time having a staring contest with the cows (the cows laughed first), but she was a little unsure about the calves who were doing lots of mooing. It seems she's a no-moo girl.

Kiyomi's grandmother (Tamara's mom) joined us on Wednesday for a little Kiyomi visit until this Friday. As easy as Kiyomi has been on us for the most part, it's been very nice for these two first-time parents to have another set of hands around, especially for Tamara's first week on her own. Plus Kiyomi's been having lots of fun with Nana saving some of her biggest smiles for her. It also means that Kiyomi's earned a few new nicknames. She's already called "baby", "cutie", "stinky", "boo", "the destroyer" and perhaps a dozen others, and now she has added "Muckaroo", courtesy of Nana.

Kohji started back at work this past week and while it was hard for him to leave every morning, it made things a little easier having pictures of Kiyomi at work. The picture appearing here is the one he has on his computer and he says it makes him smile every time he looks over. It is hard for him though, as he feels that he's missing out on so much every day - not only spending time with her, but all the new things that she learns every day!

For example, this week, she started standing on her own for long periods of time. She can't pull herself up to a standing position and when she realizes she's standing she starts falling over, but if she's got something in her hands to distract her, she can stand on her own up to a minute at a time.

She also learned to play peek-a-boo. We had previously played a game with her where we cover our heads and say "Where's Mommy", and she pulls the blanket down to reveal us and we'd say "There's Mommy!" (thanks to Jen & Rick for this game!). We also occasionally put the blanket on her - "Where's Kiyomi" and she would pull it down and we'd say "There's Kiyomi!". Just this week she started putting the blanket on her own head and pulling it down. It cracks her up.

She's also started being able to walk holding only one of our hands. She also started clapping, and just a couple days ago she learned to get up to a sitting position from lying down. Tamara's mom has been laughing at Kohji because he wants Kiyomi to slow down her advances - she's growing up too fast!

We're also discovering that Kiyomi is likely destined to be a Southpaw. She reaches for most things with her left hand and pretty much feeds herself exclusively with her left hand. I guess Ned Flanders will have one more customer for his Lefty's store...

On a final note, Kiyomi has also taken to a little bear named Elton. We introduced Elton to her about 10 days ago and he's now become an important part of her bedtime routine. She gives him a few kisses, and then likes to cuddle some part of him as she falls asleep. It's nice to see her make a comforting friend, and above all....it's very cute to watch.

Friday, August 04, 2006

China packing list

http://mediamax.streamload.com/kojtam/Links/EB7F1B1A27

As promised, above is the (somewhat massive) list of things we took to China with us with some commentary on things we didn't need and things we didn't use but others did.

Enjoy, and have fun shopping for bigger suitcases!