A few nights ago, we were playing "ski jump" on the wii in the basement. Ski jump is hard -- you have to get your weight juuuust right, and stand up but not actually jump at JUUUUST the right moment. And when you weigh just 42 pounds, there's not a lot of weight to shift around to control the Wii Fit device.
So Noah became a "meatball," which is how he refers to the condition of falling off the slope and turning into a snowball with skis and poles sticking out of it. And then again. And again. The charm of "being a meatball" wore off as his frustration increased over not being able to get off the jump. He began to hurl himself at the ground and kick each time he "meatballed" to the bottom of the hill. For a kid who never threw a tantrum as a 2-year-old, it was a pretty good try.
Eventually we changed to a game that was less challenging, he pulled himself together, and we bowled a couple of games and then went upstairs to get ready for bed. And as we curled up on the bed, I asked him about it. "Oh, Mommy, my brain was taken over by aliens. I'm fine now" he explained.
Well, okay. I'm going to have a hard time arguing with that one. Frankly, it was what I thought at the time.
Saturday, February 21, 2009
Saturday, February 07, 2009
Wingpits?
This comes from a correspondence with my 4th grade teacher; that scenario is a whole topic by itself.
We were driving to school, and Noah was looking out of the window.
Him: "Look, Mom, that bird is going to the playground!"
Me: "It is? What do you think it's going to do when it gets there?"
Him: "Go down the slide!"
Me: "That sounds like fun!"
Pause
Him: "He might get hurt. Maybe he'll go swing on the monkeybars."
Me: "He doesn't have hands, does he? How will he swing?"
Him: "With his feet!"
I'm not quite sure how this transmogrified into the rest of it, but soon the conversation was going like this:
Me: "So the bird is going to hang by his armpits?"
Him: "Yes. No. Birds don't have armpits."
Me: "Why?"
Him: "They have wings!"
Me: "Then what do they have?"
Him: "Wingpits!"
Me: "Excellent! What does Lucy (our dog) have?"
Him: "Nothing."
Me: "Well, she doesn't have arms, but she does have front legs... does she have legpits?"
He loved this concept, and debated strenuously with me about what animals have "legpits" for most of the ride. Tonight when we went to cuddle up in bed, the dog was there, and we investigated her "legpits." And then he tossed his legs in the air over his head and said "Hey, do I have legpits down there?" and I had to tickle him, it was so cute. He seems to agree that the cat has them, but he isnt so sure about the dog.
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