Wednesday, May 28, 2014

Just the two of us...

I really love this video of Magnus and Maya interacting.  It shows how Magnus can be very patient and gentle despite his frustration with his sister, and it shows how interested Maya is in spending time with her big brother.




Kendrick and I can't even fathom what it will be like when the third one arrives.  We should start, I suppose, by picking a name.  Magnus has supplied us with two nicknames.  The first nickname was "Mr. Rabbit", named after a character in one of his books - an absentminded gentleman who gets firmly stuck in cement.  The second nickname was coined just one week ago: "Nitro" - inspired by his favourite racing game on the iPad.

Lately I've been reading a lot of my past entries on this blog - and I realized that if I had not written so many stories down, I would have forgotten so many of them.  There are probably dozens and dozens of sweet stories of Magnus and Maya that have already faded from my crowded memory banks.  I sat down tonight to write a few, and I couldn't think of anything until I starting reviewing my youtube videos.  Thank goodness for those videos!!

There is one story that is not captured on video, and for good reason: Maya's ongoing potty training.  My mother and decided on April 11 to start Maya potty training, here in Toronto.  Magnus would be at school in the mornings, and I did not have to go to work, so it seemed like a good time to try.  I had brought seven pairs of cute little panties with me (courtesy of Grandma) and we did away with the diapers and explained to her what she was supposed to do.  She understood us.  She could even tell us what she was expected to do.  However, she didn't do any of it.  And she still, to this date (which is 1.5 months later), has willfully NOT done anything she's been instructed to do.  Which is, of course, to tell us when she needs the potty.  Most kids don't like being wet or dirty.  Maya doesn't seem to mind at all.  She likes to tell us that she wet herself or dirtied herself - AFTER the fact.  We have tried every trick in the book (and trust me, my mom has potty trained dozens of kids so she has a really good playbook) but nothing has worked.  The only silver lining is that Maya consents to sit on the toilet if we put her there and do her business if it happens to be the right time - for her.  So we've pretty much surrendered for now, put her back on pull-up diapers, and just try to get her on the toilet regularly to save some diapers.

Some other moments that are not captured on youtube are our evening storytimes.  Every evening, since arriving in Toronto in April, I let Magnus and Maya choose a story for me to read.  (Every evening, Maya complains loudly until it's her turn.)  As much as possible, I encourage Magnus to read some or all of his stories to me - and it is such a thrill to hear him working on his reading.  He improves gradually, but steadily, but the best part for me is to see how much he feeds off my encouragement.  Maya on the other hand is now enjoying her stories because she is starting to understand them - and she has now has the ability to memorize stories by rote.  She simply insists that I read the story she likes to her over and over again, night after night, and as I read to her, she commits the words to memory.  At some point she knows the story well enough and she loves to read stories back to me, just like in the video below:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nPcjMUHaaRc&feature=share&list=UU675HvYb3EyvJ_JPWmvVZoQ&index=13

In addition to the book in the video (Eat Your Peas), she has mastered:
- Goodnight Moon - by Margaret Wise Brown
- Ollie - by Oliver Dunrea

The last two books were library books from the local Toronto library branch, so we have to leave those behind when we go back to Dubai next week!  Luckily, I already know which book she is going to master next - Aunt Lisa and Uncle Michael came for a visit this past weekend and brought a copy of "The Very Hungry Caterpillar" for Maya and she is already fascinated by the story.

She has a couple of songbooks memorized too:
- Over in the Meadow - by Louis Voce
- Journey Home From Grandpa's
- Wheels on the Bus

I should also mention that she's memorized many dialogs from her favourite show - Max & Ruby.   Sometimes she will sit at her table drawing some pictures and recite a few lines from an episode she watched the other day.  She also likes to incorporate some of that dialog into her conversations with us, often without us realizing it until much much later.  Here are some examples:

"It's me again, <Mommy/Popo/Gonggong>"
"How about... harshmallows?"
"Ladieeeees and Gentlemeeeeen!"

Sometimes she just takes a dialog snippet out of context and has fun confusing the heck out of us:
"Please Po po, tell me you found my greeting card for Aunt Clare and Uncle Nate!" (except it was much more garbled when she told us the first time - so we had to resort to asking Magnus to translate for us!)

That's all the time I have for now for this blog entry.  Nitro is schedule to arrive the first week of July, and if he lives up to his nickname, I predict some havoc in our little family's future.  :)





Thursday, May 15, 2014

Spring, Toronto, and the Mind of a 4-year-old

As most of you already know, we are expecting our third baby, a boy, in July.  This put a big crimp on our regular plan to visit Canada during the summer.  So instead, Kendrick and I decided that I would bring the kids to Toronto for the months of April and May, and spend the <gulp> summer in Dubai.

The trip has been a real treat for Magnus and Maya, who have now experienced snow, rain, and the threat of tornadoes (which fizzled into a normal rainstorm).  They have also reconnected with friends and family, and feasted on the best food prepared lovingly by their grandparents.  

Youtube is filled with little videos cataloguing M&M's day by day antics, but I thought I would mention a few more things that I have really enjoyed talking to Magnus about as his little four year old mind develops in interesting ways every day.

He's interested in geography.  He wants to know how long it takes to fly to places, particularly places he's seen in his favourite movies (Cars 2 and Planes) and his favourite video game (Asphalt 8).  He wants to know if we can fly to Nevada, or the Great Wall of China, and how long it would take.  He likes looking at the globe we have in the basement and looking at Iceland, and Nevada, Canada, and Dubai.

He's intrigued by the concept of cardinal directions.  He doesn't quite understand the difference between NESW and left and right, but he wants to learn.  

He very much dislikes "the statue of the person sitting down" on the Great Wall of China.  When he finally showed me the picture, I discovered it was a statue of the Buddha.  His father and I took some time to try to explain who the Buddha was and why there is a statue of him that looks like that.  He really wants the statue to be changed so that the Buddha is smiling so that it will not be so scary anymore.

He told me a few months back that he wishes we could just go through the iPad screen during Skype and visit people right away, instead of flying for hours and hours on an airplane.

He told me yesterday to look at the cloud above his head.  He was trying to show me what his bad dream looked like.  He said it was there, just like George does it.  I explained that Curious George does it that way because he's a cartoon and we can just draw a cloud to explain what he is thinking, but that it doesn't work that way in real life.  Magnus took this in stride.  

He told me that Tai chi is from China from a looong time ago, so it's a fossil.

He asked me how the baby was going to get out of my tummy.  (I told him he's coming out a hole called the cervix - after a good brainstorm with Clem)

He told me that "Jesus" is not just something you say when things go wrong, but it is also the name of Ms. Sylvia's friend.  I told him that when I use the word "Jesus" in that way, it is not appropriate, and I promised to try to stop.

He thinks dress shoes without shoelaces are for girls, and has promised to learn how to tie his own shoelaces if I buy him shoes with shoelaces.  Today was our first lesson.  I learned that he likes to learn step by step, rather than to see the big picture.

That's all I can think of off the top of my head.  I'm glad I had this chance to write this down and I'll try to do the same when Maya turns 4!

What M&M said (over Christmas 2013)

This is a very long overdue post!  I dug some of these gems out of my old notes, enjoy!


Magnus: Mommy, why are all the teachers at my school girl-teachers?

Magnus: Mommy, it looks like you have 1-2-3-4 eyes!

Magnus: Mommy, do you have a parachute in your tummy?  (He really thought parachutes were stored in the tummy area)

Gina: Magnus, remember what we said, when Mommy calls you to take a shower, you have to go right away!
Magnus: Mommy, when you were in the other room, I couldn't hear you, but when you were in this room, I could hear you.  
Gina: Magnus, how do you know I was calling you from the other room if you couldn't hear me?
Magnus: I don't know!

While playing video games:
Kendrick: Elimination!
Magnus: No daddy, it got an eliminated!
Maya: Lemonade!

Gina: Maya, put mommy's shoes away!  (Repeat x 10)
Magnus: Maya, you're a moron

Gina: Magnus if you don't think of a good name for Mr. Rabbit (Magnus's nickname for the baby) we'll have to name him <censored>
Magnus: Ok ok, two Magnuses!!!

Maya: Moooommy, it's me again!!


Maya: Cupcakes!  Cupcakes!!
Gina: No cupcakes, Maya
Maya: How about... harshmallows?