Friday, March 26, 2010
Molly at 18 months!
Mobility- She started walking at 10 months but now she runs and even runs on her toes. She is in Tumble Tots which is basically a kids gymnastics/balance class. This has really helped her alot. She is able to walk on balance beams, climb towers, climb up monkey bars (not totally coordinating moving her hands and feet together but getting very close). She jumps on trampolines, climbs up on any chair by herself.
Eating- She is a great eater. Her favorites are pizza, yo baby yogurt, eggs, grapes, oatmeal, peanut butter and jelly sandwhiches and anything that we are eating. We have started introducing her to lots of different raw veggies lately which she has taken to pretty well, especially raw broccoli, she loves that. And she likes red peppers surprsingly well. I will probably do olives next. She likes almost any and all fruit. Everyday on the way to playgroup she eats an apple by herself. I don't even peel it, just give it to her and she goes to town. She is able to use her fork and spoon all by herself! She ate oatmeal squares cereal with milk this morning for breakfast and only spilled minimally on her bib. She eats her own yogurt cup each morning and an applesauce cup for snack. She doesn't like us to help her unless she is so hungry she can't get the food in fast enough. She even holds the sppon properly and sometimes sticks her pinky up like a little prissy thing.
Play- She is involved in two 'mum and tot' playgroups, a total of three days a week. One is on base(tuesday and thursday) and the other is at our church(monday). She is getting to know all of the children and moms really well and starting to explore. She was doing especially great my second trimester but has started to get really clingy to me again. I think she senses something is different and it makes her a little anxious. Her favorite things are books (especially the elmo ones from Becca), her little tikes car and balls. We have been working with her on flash cards and she can almost identify any animal you show her and lots of other stuff (clothing articles, transportation, etc). Cows and dogs are her favorite and we see them almost every day since so many of them live in our neighborhood :)
Verbal- She talks NONSTOP, however, most of it I cannot understand. She does have quite a good vocabulary though. Her favorite words are daddy, dog, duck, sticker, chip, cookie, dirty, bath, and NO!!!
Sleep- She sleeps 10-12 hours a night depending on when we get her down. Since Bryon's car went kaput last week, we have been taking him to work at 8am every day. So now we put her down around 7:30-8pm and she gets up around 6:30-8am. She takes about an hour nap during the day, on most days. It is usually in the car driving home from our daily activities. The newest sleeping development is her new cribmate. She now sleeps with a stuffed puppy dog. Mom and dad, this is the dog we accidently took from Scotland (and later paid for once we realized it was packed in our bag). She takes a bath, brushes her teeth, gets lotioned up and dressed, reads two books and goes to sleep snuggling her puppy. It is really cute. We see her chatting with the puppy and nuzzling him in our video monitor.
Physical- She has all but two teeth in. Horrah! Her hair is getting really curley and growing fast (finally). Poor little thing was bald for so long and now she has a good bit of cute curls. She even lets me put pony tails in and hairbows. She is a size 5 shoe, size 18month clothes and size 4 diaper.
Personality- She is a complete prissy girl. She hates being dirty, likes to carry around a purse, likes to wear my jewerly and my shoes, and eats with her pinky stuck out. I was planing seedlings the other day and she saw my hands, pointed at me and said "dada, dirty!!!" She wouldn't touch me until I washed my hands. She is a very affectionate and loving child. She would sit on my lap, give me wet kisses, and snuggle with me all day if I would let her. She is also empathetic and caring, if another child around her cries, she will cry too. She will usually go over to them and pat them on the back or give them a hug/kiss. If someone takes her toy away or is mean to her she just looks at them and blows them a kiss. If she is really tired or sick, she may scream "NO" and take it back but that is very rare. She usually will go find another toy or just come sit on my lap.
That's all I can think of for now! Have a great weekend everyone!
Wednesday, March 24, 2010
Hmmm
Friday, March 19, 2010
First family walk of the year!
Tuesday, March 16, 2010
Dachau Concentration Camp
Saturday, March 13, 2010
Germany and Austria, part two
Wednesday, March 10, 2010
Daniel at 22 weeks
Monday, March 8, 2010
Germany and Austria, part one
Wednesday, March 3, 2010
Germany here we come!
Sunday, February 28, 2010
Blog setting changes
I have had several comments to change the settings on my blog so that anyone can post comments and not just registered users. I didn't even realize I had those settings, sorry!! So, as of now anyone can post but I will have to review the postings first (in case someone I don't know post something inappropriate). Sorry it took me so long to catch on and make the setting changes.
Happy Lord's Day everyone!
Haley
Thursday, February 25, 2010
NC Baptist Men in Haiti
My brother in law, Chris, sent me this email and I was so touched I had to post it here. The NC Baptist Men are a fantastic group who serve the Lord so eagerly and passionately. Reading this makes me proud to be a Baptist!! :)
Dear Family and Friends,
You may not know but here in Haiti we are wearing new shirts that are red. They say Rescue 24 which represents our rapid response search and rescue teams from NCBM (North Carolina Baptist Men). I have just come in from hanging the clothesline full of red Rescue 24 shirts. They are quite a sight flapping in the breeze. Scott has told the story of being mistaken for an angel when our disaster volunteers wearing yellow shirts arrived on a site in Gulfport after Hurricane Katrina. Here in Haiti our red shirts are our badge to travel and enter into any area we need. They are so respected that our handymen can walk into the operating room freely. Our Haitian drivers wear one to have access thru the gates of the compound and clear passage on the roads thru roadblocks. This morning our newest interpreter was given one to wear to the clinic and to gain entrance to the compound. He beamed from ear to ear...."NOW I am a member of the team!" he said.
Team 8 arrived two days ago..after a 10 hr. road trip from the DR....all "green" and full of questions and energy. Team 7 left this morning to return to Santo Domingo and home. They are now veterans and well-bonded from their shared experiences in the hospitals, long drives on hot, dusty, congested roads, scenes of Haitian peoples and tent cities, sights of piles of rubble with people digging to find anything of value and of sharing our only 2 bathrooms and close living quarters. The medical staff have experienced medicine in different conditions, lack of facilities, lack of their customary equipment, working in tents and in courtyards under tarps, seeing diseases that are rare at home...TB, malaria, scabies, thypoid. ...falling in love with orphan children.
Two days ago our doctors retrieved 19 children from an orphanage run by an 86 yr old lady.
These 19 were sick, starving and malnurished. They were taken to Community Hospital were a tent was set up for them to receive treatment for the next four days. Our feeding people prepared special "rice soup" for them to eat. Some were not able to eat it yet and are on Pedialite. They were all clean and cared for.....they simply didn't have any food.
Arrangements are made for them to go to another orphanage upon release. But I am sure that they will never forget the "angels" in red shirts.
Our feeding team has been feeding 300-400 patients and staff at the hospital ...delivering meals to each room and trying to manage the many people who line up wanting a meal but perhaps are not staff. ....cooking with Haitian volunteers in a basement kitchen on small gas burners in gigantic pots. Our handymen have installed 3 sinks with running water and some lighting down there. They have also built shelving to try and organize the mountain of donated supplies and food that come in and have been stacked in hallways. And they have began constructing a small shower house for the male team members here at the team house. That will relieve some of our "necessary" needs.
Our medical director here for NCBM ... Dr. Eric has started two clinics here in nearby villages. In the clinic in Cite Soleil he and other med staff saw 280 patients last week and had 3 salvations. The new clinic in Cabaret will open tomorrow. I was excited to accompany Dr. Eric and 3 team guys to scout out the location. It will be in a classroom at a church and school. The church and school both are heavily damaged but one room is save and secure for use. I will have to tell you that both sites have some toilets that I have never seen before. They are pit toilets built of concrete with square holes for the openings. Outside the gates of the church yard, there is a sight that I can not get used to seeing.
People are living in shipping containers. They have them set up on metal tire rims for cornerstones. On the open door end, they have built a thatch covered "porch". I have seen them also in other areas. I cannot imagine how hot and dark they are inside. But I also cannot imagine living in the open with rice bags stretched on sticks for walls. Rainy season is approaching. It has rained a little for 2-3 nights. The UN and US Army has switched their priority from food to shelter and waste management. The once bare mountainsides near our compound are now dotted with make shift shanties. The number grows daily. There are an estimated 1.2 million displaced people here.
Please pray for our volunteers who are giving so much of their selves. Please pray that others will say "Yes, send me." Please pray that people at home will continue to care for "the least of these" and not forget. Please pray for the more than 400,000 orphans here. For they are truly the "least of these". Please pray for our military who are not only helping the Haitian people but providing needed security for us. Please pray for the volunteers who are coming with Samaritan's Purse. They are doing much good here.
Please pray that our witness will be bold. Please pray for our continued strength and wisdom in carrying out this mission. Please pray that I never tire of hanging out Red shirts!
In Christ's love and service, Janet and Scott
http://www.baptistsonmission.org/Projects/disasterrelief/2010Response/Haiti.aspx
Jim Burchette
Special Projects Coordinator
North Carolina Baptist Men
jburchette@ncbaptist.org
800.395.5102 x 5612
919.459.5612 Direct Line
919.467.5100 Fax
www.ncmissions.org
Your generous giving to the North Carolina Missions Offering and contributions through the Cooperative Program make the ministries of NCBM possible. Thank you!






