As his independence grows, so does his ability to contribute. Dishes, making his bed, dressing himself, pouring his own milk, mowing the lawn, filling the recycling, bringing in the trash bins, closing the garage door, buckling his own seatbelt, closing his own car door, climbing everything… You can never start the lessons of responsibility, respect and creativity too early.
And despite his traditional jealousies, Jack adores helping with his little brother. Feeding him, making him giggle when he’s antsy, pushing his stroller, giving him toys to chew and relieve his sore gums. 99% of the time Jack comes to my bedside when he wakes up in the mornings, but from time to time I catch him standing by Bobby’s crib, chatting with his little brother after sunrise (or…climbing his furniture).
Steering
The “Sons of Entropy” biker gang
Jamming
More jamming
Calming down his antsy brother at the B17
Wait – I need gloves like Daddy. I’ll be right back.
Had to help Daddy mow the lawn. HAD to wear the rain boots and the gloves.
He may be socially reserved until he is comfortable in his setting, but Jack is most certainly not afraid of adventure. As long as he doesn’t have to perform, he’ll try just about anything. At the fair a few weeks ago, he practically leapt onto the very front car of his first kids’ roller coaster.
And in the pool he’s a dynamo, leaping off the ledge into the deep end and kicking his way back to the surface with only a small amount of parental assistance. He has a fear factor of zero when it comes to being under water, provided an adult or a stair is at least within sight. I need to get this kid some swim lessons, pronto!
The oldest of my little men has recently passed the 2 1/2 year milestone (which according to any actuary you might ask, would be considered 3). His adorable wit and enthusiastic giggle continue to infect my heart, not to mention those expressive eyelashes and affectionate hugs. The vocabulary and imagination on this kid are astounding and I find myself speechless in awe of how voraciously he’s developing into a gifted little man. My favorite time of day is often just before Jack tumbles off into slumber, when I lie on his bed for a “couple whiles” to “just talk”. He loves when we ask him questions about his day and he recants the minutiae of his experiences (“I didn’t go on the slide because it was too hot, so I played with Eddie on the rocket ship on the playground…”). And given the number of those experiences that have built up unblogged, Jack’s 2 1/2 year old post is brewing into something quite lengthy. So let me summarize, to the best of my verbose ability, why I am 100% convinced that 2s are not terrible.
Quirks
I think we are blessed to have a child with an exceptional ability to communicate from a young age. This has, I am certain, limited the number of tantrums and time outs we’ve had to witness and administer. On the occasion that we do send him to stare at the wall in his time out chair to consider his disobedience, my creative little pumpkin has found a way to self-entertain, either by monologue, or with imaginary friend.
Jack still, after 6 months, will often refuse to leave the house if he is not sporting his bicycle helmet.
He’s obsessed with “lips” (aka chapstick) and will mash mounds of it onto his drool-covered puckers
My little conservative doesn’t like when I wear a tank top and much prefers my outerwear to have sleeves. He saw a teenager in a sundress the other day and told me she was “naked”.
In this age of growing independence, Jack prefers to do everything himself (pouring his own milk; brushing his own teeth; climbing into his own car seat; buckling his own seatbelt; and closing his own car door), including pressing the garage door button, which he is about 1/8th of an inch too short to reach. Hence, why he is constantly getting his rubber boots out of the closet on a bright, sunny day, so that he can be elevated just enough to reach the garage door remote.
Along the same lines, Jack absolutely loathes eating “a piece” of anything. He must have the whole thing. The whole banana (peel on so he can peel it by himself, of course), the whole slice of toast, the whole peach, the whole granola bar, the whole popsicle (heaven forbid you split a two-stick frozen treat in half). He’s happy to share, but only after he’s in control of doling out the bites. The other day he shared a snack-sized banana loaf with me because he had already had one and I told him he was only allowed one. When I took my first bite, he inquired “can I have a piece?” Wily, I tell you.
Jack has taken to sing-song lately and I catch him bursting into melody about whatever is on his mind. “Pancakes…Pancakes…” He also loves his bedtime songs (listen here: Bedtime Songs).
Jack gets out of bed an average of twice before finally settling in to slumber. He’ll stand at the top of the stairs and say something like “I’m happy!” or “I want my motorcycle” (which is typically already in bed with him) or “Want to hold me?” His cunning attempts at escaping sleep are wholly entertaining.
Intellect
Jack’s memory never ceases to dumbfound me. While reading a book a few months ago, Jack spewed the names of the Presidents whose statues appear on the Washington skyline as clear as day (listen here: Presidents). He can point to specific states on a map of the US; he knows that Saturday and Sunday are “swimming pool days” (aka weekend) and that Monday is the first school day of the week; he can spell his name; he can navigate his way from his home to his school by telling you exactly which direction to turn and when; he can pass by a street and say things like ”Mommy and Jack went driving on this road to look at the big houses and Daddy didn’t go” multiple weeks after the event occurred. After meandering through the aisles of Walgreens after preschool one day, I realized once we were in the car that Jack had left his milk behind. He was able to tell me the specific location in the store where he had placed his glass (beside the Snoopy toy) so that I could go in and retrieve it. This past weekend we visited an ad hoc Ducati promotional tent set up at a local park and when we drove by on Monday after the exhibit had been taken down, Jack looked at the park inquisitively and said “the motorcycle tents are gone.” His capacity for organizing objects and processing their logical sequence, relation to each other, and position in time is seriously mindblowing. He understands yesterday, today and tomorrow (although he currently uses the term yesterday to refer to any moment in the past, whether truly yesterday or three weeks ago); and he can count to thirty (although he faithfully skips the number 15 for some odd reason – and if he is required to wait for thirty seconds he’ll count “1, 2, 3, 4, 5…30 because that speeds up his wait time); he can spell any word you put in front of him, whether upper or lower case (overheard in the car yesterday: “t-r-u-c-k, b-o-o-k”) and he informed me recently that the #1 in his numeric flashcard set was actually an l (they DO look exactly the same after all).
He also knows Mommy’s the boss. What can I say, he’s a smart guy!
Feats of athleticism
Jack is extraordinarily coordinated, fearless and agile. When his class had a makeshift olympics one week this summer his name topped the leaderboard in all the ‘sports’ (first in bowling; second in standing long jump). He’s been racing his tricycle around the park from the moment he turned 2, scaling monkey bars, leaping from benches. He can whip a frisbee clear across the side yard, hit a badminton birdie with a racket, throw a nerf ball in the air to himself and smack it with a baseball bat, kick a soccer ball so hard across the basement that it hits the middle of the wall. And now he lifts his entire weight with just his upper body to hoist himself over couch arms and…tractors?
Quotes
“I don’t want a bath, I want to go to bed. It’s my choice.”
“Ketchup on toast is not gross. Poo poo and pee pee are gross.”
“I don’t want this…I want Lady Gaga.”
“You wanna sleep with me for a couple whiles?”
“Because…” or “Actually…” or “You wanna…”
“Hey…” in front of the majority of his sentences.
“The sun is up, it’s time to wake up!” or “The moon is up…it’s time to sleep” (the former he says quite enthusiastically, the latter he whispers)
“Hey Grandpa, now can we go on the really faster boat?”
After being told to get out of the middle of the street: “There are NO CARS, Mommy!”
“Pee pee is faster than cars.” “I runned faster than pee pee.”
“Mommy, you have to work so you can make money to buy me a dirt bike.”
Driving by Metro construction in Tysons Corner: “The rocket ships are building a subway where Bobby will live.”
About birthdays: “My birthday is in January. I will have a big cake. Bobby will have a little cupcake.”
“Upside down” and “upside up”
About tiptoeing, “I’m walking on my balls.”
About sickness, “I’m not feeling better.”
Food
Though we may have unofficially ruled out dairy and eggs as the catalyst for his eczema breakouts following negative skin tests at an allergist, he still prefers soy milk and cheeseless meals. But I am blessed to have a young man who is oddly willing to try just about anything. Perhaps because we guided him into many blended taste adventures as an infant, or perhaps because he sits with us at dinner and eats whatever Daddy has cooked, Jack’s palette is abnormally broad for a 2 year old. He eats salmon, every fruit, nut and vegetable that crosses his plate (in fact, he even requested “more spinach” the other night), lamb chops, mild curries and steak like it’s the last cow he’ll ever get to eat.
I still have to remind Snack Attack that cookies are not for breakfast (even though we keep our sweets on ‘unreachable’ shelves, Jack has been found stacking cartons for a step stool and helping himself to a sample of the forbidden when momentarily unattended in the mornings), but otherwise his diet is relatively well-rounded. When you have a kid who begs for mangos, broccoli and grapes, you definitely cannot complain.
Current Obsessions
Diego. Lord help me, he loves this show. He can now identify just about every species of rain forest animal known to man (including what those animals consume, what they’re afraid of and where they live); he puts a pen to his eye and tells me it’s his “spotting scope”; and he sings “rescue pack” while skipping around the house (as do I, because that *!#&*(&#@! song is so damn catchy). He also knows how to work the remote to get the next episode to play. As a bonus, however, his Diego briefs are helping us with potty training, because Jack feels very bad about peeing on his favorite cartoon character.
Motorcycles. If you’re willing, he’ll take you to view his favorite 1956 Harley Davidson on the print of 26 classic Harleys that hangs just to the right of his bed. He points out every. single. motorcyle. that he sees or hears by yelling and enthusiastic “Motuh-cy-tul!!” and asks me “can we chase it, Mommy?” if we happen to get passed by one while we’re driving. He sat motionless on his Grandpa’s lap at the Ducati exhibit, absorbing every detail of the most boring film about torque and metal alloy components of the motorcycle framework. Jack doesn’t mess around when it comes to his motorcycles.
Playdough. The colorful putty has become an almost daily pre-dinner ritual, but the creative effort required is minimal. He’s happy simply molding the putty into a sausage and pretending it’s a rocket ship. He’s also fond of the fluorescent putty that he made at the Maryland Science Center using Elmer’s glue and borax.
Gatorade. I don’t let Jack drink much other than milk, water, or limited quantities of juice, but Gatorade is a special treat for our exercise time. Jack is enthralled by the rainbow hued drink colors and when I need to fit a run in while I’m watching the kids, promising a few sips of Gatorade mid-way through our jog is a sure fire way to coerce Jack into crawling happily into the stroller (that and an assurance that our route will go past both the swimming pool and the houses under construction). In fact, on weekends, Jack eyes the Gatorade and requests “I want to go jogging now.” If a few ounces of electrolyte-infused sugar water are all it takes to convince Jack that a 3-mile jaunt around the neighborhood is fun, why not?
“Squirt” or “spray” hose. He likes to water the tomatoes, the grass and Daddy.
Games
We recently taught Jack to play “I spy”. Jack’s version, however, is to choose an object, which may or may not be in immediate view, and then tell you the answer before you guess. For example, “I spy with my little eye, something that is red – my helmet!” And there doesn’t have to be anyone else in the room for him to play. In the back of the car on our way to the Baltimore Inner Harbor today, we overheard Jack playing by himself. “I spy with my little eye something that is brown – the telephone poles! And the trees are brown too!”
Motorcycle dance. We have a dance for just about everything. The motorcycle dance consists of singing “dance, dance, dance…motorcycle dance” and doing some spins and kicks. We also have a pee pee dance where we do side-to-side chest pops while sitting atop the potty. The words to that one are “pee pee dance…pee pee dance.” Genius, really. Must be something Mommy made up.
Without reading the “for ages 6+” on the label, I bought Jack a pocket version of Guess Who (or as Jack calls it, “my people game”), thinking it might be fun. Playing by the rules didn’t quite work, but when we improvised slightly by using one board instead of two with Mommy holding the answer card in her hand and helping to prevent Jack from flipping all the faces up or down at one time, he actually did quite well.
Making up names. His little plastic pilot inherited the name “Pilot Wingsy”, his blue bear is “Blueberry” and he often refers affectionately to his brother as “Bob”.
Photos
And last but not least, a myriad of 2 1/2 year photos. All imagination, all the time.
Strawberry picking with his best bud
Hitching rides with older ladies
Homemade hair cut and Dr. Horrible
Silly eating
Old school triking
Helping Dad (and Christy) build the garden
Eating one of Christy’s 36-hour, best ever, chocolate chip cookies
He HAD to go out in a monsoon
After his cornhole victory at beerfest
July 4th fireworks
Marshmallow roasting lessons
Smores
Picking blueberries
“yoda”
Why hello, Handsome
Pinching Nana’s buns
Learning to crack an egg
Teamwork: Jack cracks the egg, Nana removes the shell
Whisking
Scooping by himself
He got most of it in
Meeting George
Jackson Pollock
Too cool (his legs were also crossed)
Serious driver
Turqouise Jeep
First roller coaster, went right to the front
Thirsty
Nana!
Admiring the guitarist
Watching a local concert
My handsome man
Police car
Back of a police car. Let’s not make this a habit.
Notice all the kids filing through orderly. Notice Jack.
Jeep!
Who needs quarters when you can make your own sound effects.
Mommy’s shirts – the new pyjamas
“I’m a really fast guy”
Still hates to leave home without his helmet
Can I ride it?
Jack and all the adults hit the Ducati test drive center
Door stoppers
Harleys and Puppies
Pancake Saturday
Safety first
Fish face
Excited to try the watermelon from Daddy’s garden
Potty with friends
Best friends, watching boats on the Baltimore harbor
At dinner yesterday evening Jack had a case of the sillies and told Kent and me that his chicken was poop and then began laughing hysterically. I covered my mouth to stifle my own giggle and then scolded Jack (very lightly) not to talk about poop at the dinner table, that it’s not polite. This evening Jack informed me that his carrots had poop on them.
And so we commence the next 60 years of my life as a mother of boys…
The last leg of our vacation was the shortest and also the most hectic. We had a lot of people to visit in the Bay area, but only one full day to do it. We meandered up the 101 for as long as our gas tank would take us, then pulled over for a pit stop. At one point during our break, both boys required simultaneous #2 diaper service and given the lack of changing areas we simply lowered the front seats of the car. This made neither one of them happy and the cacophony of angry protest from each side of the car vibrated through the windy air. Kent and I, exasperated, looked at each other and laughed that this would be one of those joy-of-parenting moments we would surely look back on with a twisted fondness.
As dusk settled, we arrived like violent tumbleweeds tearing through Aunt Kristy and Uncle Jason’s modern downtown rowhouse. Jack jumped up and down the stairs and wandered into the garage proclaiming that Kristy’s sporty Lexus was cooler than Jason’s Volvo, then tore through a plate of penne like he hadn’t just eaten 15 snacks. He then attempted to devour Kristy’s cough drops, wear her feather earrings, stand on the coffee table, remove every picture frame from the built-in bookshelves, take apart Jason’s computer mouse, unearth a pair of inconspicuous scissors from beside the keyboard, jump on the sofa, stomp on the freshly planted herb garden, throw the toy meerkats Kristy bought for the boys down the stairs, and run around each room with fists forward shouting “and beyond!” If Jason had any hesitation about having kids before our visit…
Unfortunately, that was about all we saw of Kristy even though we spent the next night at her place as well. Kristy had a client-bound flight before the crack of dawn the following morning and we had more people to visit. We started our last full day in California with an accidental tour of the entire Stanford campus before arriving at the home of one of my oldest and dearest friends who teaches talented Stanford music students to be even more talented (and perhaps, one day, maybe even as talented as her). Just 5 weeks earlier, Sharon had given birth to the most easy-going and beautiful of baby girls and I was anxious to meet her. When Bobby finally woke up and finished nursing, he gave baby Julia a curious stare. Jack, on the other hand, was far more interested in wandering the house touching…everything, including wearing a garbage can lid as a hat and sneezing on the baby’s sanitized crib toys. It was a good debrief in toddler-proofing for the new parents. Our stop was more of a breeze through than a true visit, but I think that was about all their brand-new-infantized-house could take of Jack-zilla.
We then drove over to the East Side of the bay to spend some necessary hours with Kent’s Grandma Mo whose incredible husband (Jack and Bobby’s Great Grandpa Mark) had passed away just a week earlier. We had spent a wonderful evening with Mark late last summer just after Kristy and Jason were married and I was 4 months pregnant, but we weren’t able to get back to introduce him to Bobby in the flesh. Regardless, Mark’s bright spirit permeated the home and the visit was a joyful one. Jack got to eat soup, flan and biscotti, pick flowers from the backyard hedges, and run rampant along the golf course abandoned before dusk. And even with his whirling dervish tendencies, he still managed to charm Mo (who I suspect despite her cheerful demeanor, needed the uplifting) with his extraordinary eyelashes and flirtatious grin.
With one last night crammed into Kristy and Jason’s office/guest room, we actually made our flight at SFO the next morning and were relieved to be headed home. Jack met a pilot hitching a ride in a jump seat and earned himself a set of “pilot wings” that he wore with pride to preschool the next three days. The boys were both absolute angels for the entire flight, but it’s still tiring to tend to the needs of your offspring for so many hours in the equivalent space of a bedroom closet. Despite having been cooped up for over 5 hours on the plane, Jack still waited patiently at the airport cafe (and Bobby slept) while Daddy went to retrieve the car we’d parked for free at his office. The only difficult post-vacation transition we had to overcome was trying to balance Jack’s disappointment that his house was not teeming with relatives. He walked through our garage door and stated “I want Grandma,” then proceeded to get out of bed about 8 times before begrudgingly sleeping in his own room. Bobby, however, slept 7 straight hours that evening and has given me 8-10 hours every night since.
At the closure of our phenomenal and exhausting Grandparent Tour, I was left with less than a week until the end of my maternity leave and was grateful for a long weekend to get the boys back on Eastern Time. Thanks to everyone for hosting us – Jack is still talking about it and Bobby is still sleeping it off.
Caught sleeping together
BFFs meet each other’s babies
Bobby and Julia check each other out in advance of their arranged marriage
Our next destination was a visit with Nana and ”Dampa” who is arguably Jack’s best friend in the universe. The drive between Las Vegas and San Dimas is about 3.5 hours without traffic, but we opted for the scenic 8 hour route through Ojai so we could squeeze in a visit with Kent’s uncle for whom Bobby was given his middle name. We spent most of our visit in Ojai convincing Captain Entropy not to tear apart the non-baby-proofed house nor torture the dog; but he did get to pick his own oranges and help squeeze his selected citrus into fresh juice, which he drank pulp and all (Mommy despises fleshy tendrils in her juices, but Jack apparently takes after Daddy and drinks his orange juice like a man). After a delicious late lunch, a glass of white wine and a stroll around the blossoming neighborhood to say hi to some goats, we packed the boys back into the car for LA. They were both fast asleep before we finished reversing down the driveway.
We awakened Jack from a deep, car seat slumber when we arrived at the ripe early hour of 10pm (Nana and Dampa waited graciously to eat dinner with us at that ungodly time). Jack shed a few tears of confusion until it dawned on him that he had just crossed the threshold of the house of his kindred spirit, at which point he commenced quite literally bouncing off the walls. Jack spent the next four days not caring less where his parents were. He helped his Dampa expedite conference calls by shouting “Hey Dampa, you wanna put the phone down?”; dig unidentified cat poop out of the garden; water the same flowers over and over; go snail hunting (the snail is apparently quite fascinating to a 2-year old who spent half his waking hours discussing them); and go wagon riding to the giant park around the corner. Bobby, on the other hand, zeroed in on the comfort of his Nana’s voice and kept her on her toes by settling into a mood of supreme content only when she was walking with him in her arms (where he spent the majority of our stay). Nana discovered the triceps she didn’t know she had.
While in LA, Jack hosted a dinner party for some of our friends in the area, including a sweet, older, almost-4-year-old blonde girl with whom he was instantly smitten. He also took his pal Dampa out to eat for both Mexican and Vietnamese food where he proved that if it were up to Jack, children should be seen AND heard. Why sit still and eat when you can stand, climb, poke, squirm and giggle your way through lunch?
By the end of each LA day, Jack was thoroughly entertained and drained and curled willingly into the middle of the giant queen-sized guest bed he was offered. Mommy was nervous about how high the bed was from the ground given how much Jack writhes during his slumber, but despite the multitude of pillows on either side of the bed, Jack never once fell out. In fact, he slept like his champion self for this entire leg of the trip (and may have even been disappointed when we arrived home to just a twin). Bobby, however, determined that pack-n-plays are not his thing and awakened every 3-4 hours for most of our Grandparent Tour (to Mommy’s relief, he came back to Virginia and immediately commenced sleeping 8+ hours a night).
I must admit, it’s always hardest to say goodbye to Nana whose longing and devotion to her grandchildren makes our separation so bittersweet. But there were still more places and people to see. After a full morning in the outdoor sunshine flying plastic bowling pins through the air and hunting snails, we pushed Jack as late as we could into the afternoon without a nap and then hit the road for Santa Ynez before LA rush hour traffic could burden our journey.
Just last week, Jack took a free fall jump face-first off the couch and landed belly-flop style on the floor. He held a pillow at his chin so his face wouldn’t hit the carpet directly. Kent and I gave each other a ”did that really just happen” look and both started to giggle. Little Knievel, in his lack of apprehension, is at least cautious of his own well-being, even when he’s leaping from 4-foot surfaces onto solid ground. Fear of heights has most certainly bypassed this kid. There are few obstacles he does not attempt to escalate; and once at the peak there are few platforms from which he does not attempt to nosedive.
Climbing a digger. Best day ever.
Fearless ascension
and problem-solving turn around to get down
Unfortunately for me, I don’t think this is a phase.
When you’re 2 years old, the world is your oyster. No shell will be left unturned. No dark corner left unexplored. Jack, with his inquisitive, adventurous, 2-year old view of the universe makes me laugh every day with his unabashed use of the English language. Every sentence starts with “Hey”. “Hey, I’m jumping on the couch”; “Hey, my little Buzz Lightyear went to the moon” (which is where he’s determined all his toys go when he can’t find them); “Hey, I’m eating my tomatoes.” Coincidentally, fruit snacks are “tomatoes” and chocolate Easter eggs are “footballs”; both of which he requests each day for breakfast (and is, of course, subsequently denied). Who needs oatmeal and fruit in the morning when there are “tomatoes and footballs” waiting patiently in the cupboard to be consumed? I thought putting the fruit snacks on the top shelf of our pantry would suffice to take Jack’s mind off of his favorite after-school treat, but last weekend after an unusual period of silence from the pantry in which he had shut himself (this is also where he hides to do his man-business), I opened the door to discover that Jack had ascended to the top of five shelves to retrieve his desired consumable. “Hey, I’m climbing up…”
Toddlers are nothing, if not creative. I capture as much as I can on film, like the “spoon dance” he did with our kitchen spatula after his Daddy had given him a sleeve of temporary tattoos, so I can cling to the memories that whisk by. But I can’t get everything, so instead, I blog. To remind myself of those precious moments when Jack puts his giraffe in time-out for not listening; or flips his inflatable couch upside down to create a makeshift fort; or plows into his library book collection after lights out and reads about the hermit crab who decorated his shell with urchins and sea anemones (pronounced perfectly) to his giraffe in the glow of his night light (the one that he constantly reminds me is from his Grandpa); or does karate kicks (instead of jumping jacks) in front of my exercise video; or follows his dad around the yard, wearing exactly the same shirt and Adidas sweat pants, “helping” him add mulch to the trees and gardens; or chases his girlfriend Madeline through her backyard and sneaks into her basement to take a stroll on the treadmill; or climbs into the cockpit of a Beechcraft at our local air field and gives the pilot his “pilot” hand sign; or pedals his tricycle feverishly towards the park (but rarely home – that’s Mommy’s job); or wanders the house singing the entire theme song to Super Why…
I got a call from Kent this morning about 25 minutes after leaving the house. He said “Hey – I’m at the office and guess who I’m hanging out with?” After a few missed attempts at guessing, he fed me the answer, “Jack!” While enjoying his conversations with Jack in the car ride, he’d completely forgotten to drop him off at pre-school. Ah well, made for more father-son bonding time this morning anyway.
My precocious, flirtatious, witty little man has surged into his third year of life with more gusto and charm than a mother can handle sometimes. I sang him happy birthday from the edge of his crib the morning he turned two, after which he proceeded to command that I sing happy birthday to his giraffe as well (which continues to be the favorite of his stuffed toys).
I swear, despite the frequency with which the word “no” comes out of his mouth, he’s even funnier and cuter than ever. With four days of experience behind me, I would argue there is absolutely nothing terrible about two (although I hear the riotous “just you wait” chants from other mothers brewing). His pediatrician appointment today confirmed what I’ve already known for quite some time that a) my kid is a sinewy giant and b) he’s exceptionally bright. At 37 1/2 inches and 30 pounds he’s over 99th percentile in height and 73rd for weight. He also whipped out a string of thoughts for the pediatrician (like his comment on the wall mural in her office: “there’s a white police helicopter flying up in the blue sky”) which then caused her to suggest that we must read a lot of books together, given his conversational command. His knowledge and recognition of numbers, letters, colors and words were just the icing.
Book Nook
With over a month of action-packed blog backlog, I have plenty of two-year-old fodder to share. Jack has recently decided that first person was sooo last month. Instead, Jack prefers to discuss his conquests in third person. When I ask him what he’s doing, he’ll respond, “he’s hiding in the tent with Lightning McQueen” or “he popped a HUGE bubble in the bathtub.” If I ask him during our drive home what he did at school today, Jack will respond “he played with his friends” or “he rode the buggy with Nicholas.”
Jack also, like most two-year-olds I presume, likes to be in charge of his own decision making. He might preface a response to my question with a simple ‘no’ in front of the statement (Q: “Jack, would you like some oatmeal?” A: ”No oatmeal.”). Or, better still, he has also grown fond of presenting us with choices (Q: “Jack, are you ready to go in Daddy’s car?” A: “How ’bout…Mommy’s car?” Or “Jack, what book would you like to read?” A: “How ’bout…watch Super Why on the TV?”)
Speaking of conversation, Jack no longer just repeats every single phrase that comes out of our mouths verbatim (which has me on extra-sensitive alert when he regurgitates things like “Daddy’s dumb” that I’m hardly conscious I’ve uttered in jest); he actually holds full question/response conversations with us for extended periods of time. I can ask him about what he’s seen or done in the past and he’ll reply with a clear description of a vivid memory. He informed his teacher today that “Daddy’s name is Kent and Mommy’s name is Jessica” (something I taught him once two days ago). It’s been three weeks since we dropped my parents off at the airport following an extended holiday visit and he continues to remind me every time he sees an airplane that “Nana and Dampa are going on the red airplane up in the sky.” Why he determined their airplane was red, I’m not certain, but that’s his story and he’s sticking to it.
You may notice an ‘up in the sky’ theme commencing here, which merely reflects Jack’s penchant for all things mechanically airborne. If I have to read his “Fighter Jets” library loaner one more time, I might just… Actually, after reading the book five times the first day we brought it home, he basically just reads it to me now, so my tolerance has been pacified. But the pages of the book now have tiny tears on the inner creases simply from the number of times they’ve been turned by Jack alone. He’s also fond of helicopters, rocket launches and jet aircraft. And if machinery can’t fly, then it had better be able to dig, transport or race. Motorcycles and garbage trucks are cool, but bulldozers, diggers and tractors top the list. In particular, he is extremely drawn to the John Deere brand of farming equipment and if we allowed it, he’d spend hours in front of the streaming John Deere propaganda video that he selected himself from the library.
Another thing that is certain to pique Jack’s interest is the stockpiling of change. In fact, after placing a few coins in his loon-shaped piggy bank today, Jack stated boldly, “he has SO much money!” And if he’s not satisfied with the few quarters that Mommy empties from her wallet to invest in her son’s early capital ventures, he then saunters into Daddy’s office and fishes in his pockets for “more monies for Jack.” However, as much as he enjoys saving for his future, he also derives relatively equal pleasure from store purchases. After handing the checkout clerk at Target a $10 bill for his box of Hot Wheels cars, he spent more time discussing the “pay the man for the cars” transaction than the cars themselves.
Business education begins at two
For an incredibly lively little guy who, although intensely focused on whatever activity in which he’s participating at the time, Jack outright refuses to sit still. Strollers and high chairs are no longer options. He is in perpetual motion while he eats meals at his table (I use the word ‘at’ very loosely) and he bounces, jogs and saunters his way through malls, theme parks and museums with more energy than any adult. It’s exhausting to keep up, but thoroughly fulfilling when he lifts his warm fingers to grip mine and gallop beside me hand-in-hand.
The last time we bothered bringing out the stroller
As our solo mother-son time draws to a close, I cherish and breathe in each moment of our alone time like a savory glass of vintage wine. On Saturday evening this past weekend we walked home from a neighborhood child’s birthday party together holding hands and discussing the lights on the airplanes flying overhead, nightime animals and the shape of the moon. The imprint of his soft fingerprints during those five minutes of adoring conversation are forever engraved on my knuckles. The last two years have been the most fulfilling and joyous of my life and the best is yet to come.
Jack cuddles with Mommy and the baby going "bump bump"
Happy Birthday to the sweetest boy I’ve been blessed to know.