Tuesday, July 27, 2010

There Is A Season

Something has changed for me in the last couple months.  Somehow I have taken on the adjective "blogger" as part of my life descriptor.  Obviously, I have been tending this little blog for several years now.  However, it was a little like when I first had Soren.  I only thought of myself as a young wife who happened to have a baby.  Somewhere along the line I actually became A MOM (I know, major life adjustment!).  I am okay with being a mom.  In fact, I absolutely love being the mother of Soren, Elliot, and Penelope.  I have embraced it completely (mini-van, sneakers and all).  

However, something in the last couple months threw me over that threshold from "happens to keep a blog" to "is a blogger."  For some odd reason, this title is really uncomfortable for me.  I do not want to be "a blogger."  Perhaps it was taking that leap into hosting my own blog carnival.  BLOG CARNIVAL?!  Who even understands these terms in the real world?  I do not want to have to wonder if someone in my real community has already read my blog.  It puts me in a catch-22.  Do I assume they have (which feels so arrogant)?  Do I ask (which seems like self-promotion)?  Do I assume they have not and risk boring them with redundant information (and will they be offended if parts of the conversation are verbatim from the blog post)?  It is strange.

I feel utterly detached from this blog.  I feel miles away from the reasons I even started keeping a blog.  I feel like maybe I am done "attempting transparency" online.  In some ways, any attempt at such a thing online was bound to fail.  In some ways, I hope, I achieved it as best I could.  However, what keeping this blog really did was to provide community for me at a time I was desperately without it.  When I moved back "home" to Eugene, I returned to real community.  The kind of community you can barbecue with, share real life with, and never exhaust the conversation.  There was a large separation between me and this blog once I moved.  It seemed a funny accessory that I just kept wearing out of habit, but not of love.

Now, I am ready for a different adventure.  Of course, I do plan to still be learning (ancora imparo).  I am approaching thirty years old next month, and I feel like I have more to learn than I ever have in my life.  From what I can tell, that is a good thing.  From what I have heard, that feeling will only increase.  That is strangely encouraging, while it is also a little frustrating.  I can still remember being in 6th grade and over-hearing my mother tell someone I was "11 going on 30."  That diagnosis stuck with me.  "Thirty" held the secrets of being undeniably grown-up, fully-mature.  It also put me on a path (created only by myself and my 11-year-old conceptions of what maturity even meant) of trying to continue "being mature."  I do not think this is a bad path.  It is still the path I want to travel.  However, now I am 29 going on 30.  Now I am right where I am supposed to be.  Soon, I will be 30, and on what will I be going then?  No one has dared to prognosticate for me from here.  Thirty is wide open to me.  Life, moment by moment, is on what I am going.  The same as you.  The same as I have always been.   Yet now I feel it more acutely.  I feel its fragility, its beauty, its brevity, its frivolity and meaninglessness, and yet I feel its possibility.  I feel possibilities that are not foreseeable 19 years on the horizon.  Perhaps now I will be 30 going on 11.  Perhaps I have much more to learn about childhood from watching my own children discover theirs.

I am ready to walk into my thirtieth year while still attempting transparency, but attempting it with the people with whom I am in true community.  This blog will fall silent.  In fact, I will even be making it private (for I cannot bring myself to simply delete it).  I do not plan on posting here, so the privacy is not to hide anything.  In the event that I change my mind, or life sends me different circumstances where I need blogging as a form of community, I might start up again.  If you would like to be on the email list for when/if that happens, shoot me and email or leave me a comment with your email address.  

I am not yet ready to close my seldom-posted-on writing blog, nor my food blog, so you might still find me there.  I would also like to leave Facebook, but it is so darn convenient to get in touch with people there.  I am undecided.   I am also undecided about how much I will follow others' blogs, so if you share any major life updates I should know about, please let me know by email!

To my friends and family (many of whom are, sadly, not a part of our physical community here) - I imagine I will start some sort of family blog devoted solely to pictures and antics of the kids and our adventures.  If you want to be emailed when I post/start that, let me know.

To everyone else - Thank you for being a very meaningful community to me here for as long as you have.  I have treasured every interaction.  You have meant a lot to me and helped me through more than you could know.

Carpe Vitam!!
(seize the life)

[Blog scheduled to go private in a few weeks.  My hope is to give time for occasional readers not to be taken completely by surprise]

Friday, July 23, 2010

Favorite Things Fridays: Temporary Masterpieces

I am using the word "masterpiece" liberally.  What I mean to say is that I enjoy spending time, energy, and love to do things that will bless if only for a moment (even if that moment lasts a couple hours/days).  Case in point:  I am typing this post while in-between batches of chocolate cups setting in my freezer.  In a few hours, I will peel the foil off those chocolate cups, fill them with field-fresh blueberries, and serve them with joy at the marriage celebration of Erin and Gil (Congrats you two!!)

I enjoy spending an hour or two crafting a lovely meal to display on the table only to be devoured shortly thereafter.  The boys and I have spent hours drawing with sidewalk chalk knowing full-well the rain is coming.  I write messages on the beach proclaiming my love of kin.

This reminds me of the development of temporary art (here's an interesting artist who happens to be from here in Eugene - see picture at right, sourced from the linked article).  However, this is hardly a contemporary development.  Disregarding the culinary temporary arts, which have been around as long as people have been eating and sharing food with one another, the buddist monks have been doing temporary art for centuries.  I have not researched this topic at all, but I would not be surprised to find out that temporary art has as long a history as mankind (of course, in the scope of history, all art is temporary, no?)  Let's face it, the most joy is often found in the process.   Action is where living happens.  Static art, while I love to view it, is much harder for me to create.

There is balance to my delight in temporary art.  Generally speaking, I do not like to spend more time creating something than it will take to destroy/consume it - unless the joy from the destruction/consumption is so great that it makes it worthwhile (complicated domino trails might qualify)

Perhaps I am not making sense but I am up past my bedtime.  There is chocolate cooling in my freezer, and melted on my stove, and I have to get back to work!  Perhaps some of you readers will be able to help me destroy this creation later today.

Sunday, July 18, 2010

Summer Fashion Week: Day 7

Fashion Week has now come to a close.  It has been a lot of fun to see everyone's great ideas and spunky personalities, it has also been weird to take a picture of myself every day and share it with the world!  However, being "forced" to share myself and my wardrobe with the world has given me a fresh perspective.  It's a little like inviting an acquaintance to dinner.  Suddenly those little clutter spots you had been over looking are glaringly obvious.

(this is what happens when your cameraman is four years old and wants to see how low you can go)
A little bit better, but blurry
Shirt: Eddie Bauer, from mom's closet
Tank (seen a little bit in the top picture): Great Outdoors, Fred Meyer
Skirt: Mica, Thrifted
Shoes: No Boundaries, "vintage"
Pearl Bracelet: Gifted for Prom (1998) from my step-father

Elliot (age 3), still in jams, toy motorcycle in hand

Saturday, July 17, 2010

Summer Fashion Week: Day 6 Evening Addition


Shirt: H&M, thrifted
Tank: Great outdoors, Fred Meyer
Jeans: Levi's (with a thrifted belt that you cannot see)
Tan Line: From brunch


Fashion Week is coming to a close tomorrow.  Most of us are in denial.  However, I thought I'd throw out a bonus post since I wore two outfits today.  After this morning's brunch, the evening ended with some friends at a spontaneous BBQ into the sunset hour.  It was a day well lived.  

Did you do anything fun this evening?

Summer Fashion Week: Day 6


A simple saturday
Dress: Talbots, thrifted
Hat:  Thrifted, as seen before
Shoes: Mudd, the $1 Garage sale find

Necklace: Gifted from an art show. 

Today was lovely as I was able to slip away without the kids and enjoy a brunch with some friends.  It was beautiful.  One of the other mothers present mentioned that she so rarely even has time to flip through magazines with images of such lovely settings and brunches, let alone take part in one.  I could not have agreed more.  What a treat it was!

Also, here's a sneak preview of some fashion I will be donning come October (for my sister's wedding):
This was taken early this morning, so forgive the sleepy jam girl and the unbrushed hair.  
It's good pictures cannot include morning breath.
Dress: Unique Vintage

The week of fashion is nearly over.  Take a peek at the other weekend wear.

Friday, July 16, 2010

Favorite Things Fridays: Community


There are so many reasons I am grateful we live here in Eugene.  Most of them are people.  We moved down here to be back in the church community that surrounds my alma mater.  I am so grateful for my church.  I appreciate the freedom in our communirt to live, and love, and learn from one another.  I love the grace that comes from everyone acknowledging that we are all broken.  I so enjoy bible study with good friends that almost always involves good food and drink.  I love women's nights and book groups.  I love that a few other alumni and I are leading discussions this summer that are open to the community and revisiting the great questions of western civilization as posed by Plato, Dostovevsky, Kierkegaard, and Ellul.  I am so excited for our evolving Family Music Night and knowing that I grapple through parenthood with so many other wise people near by.

Today my great reminder of community was at the informal soccer playdate we've been enjoying each Friday morning for the last three weeks.  Having a village in which to raise my children is the best gift of all.  Of course, there are people I wish we here in my village, and that I miss dearly, and who are truly still a part of my village, just extended (you know who you are).  It is watching my children thrive in my community that really makes my heart swell.  There is nothing so wonderful as to see other people love your children well (even when that love looks like instruction).  Today was the last soccer playdate, and it was a lovely day to visit with the other momma's.  Summer grabbed my little point-and-shoot and caught a few shots from the day that I get to share.

What about you?  What is one of your favorite things?  Do you have a community?  Please join us for Favorite Things Fridays!




Summer Fashion Week: Day 5


Shirt: J. Crew, gift from mom's closet
Shorts: Old Navy, thrifted 
(for "shorts" read: this is me, going out on a limb for fashion week and generally feeling like it failed!)  Upon looking at the pictures...I wonder...do these shorts need to go?  Or do I need to tuck my shirt in?  Help!


Necklace: Gifted from my mom in 1997 when I went on a mission trip to Tiajana, Mexico to build houses and lead VBS.  It is a working compass, so that my heart would still know where home was (aww, it means more to me now that I am a momma and can better understand how hard it must have been to send your 17-yr-old out of the country for two weeks)


Shoes: Mudd, $1 garage sale find

In full disclosure, this was me running out the door this morning trying to make sure we had my mom completely packed up and trying to make it to soccer on time:
Shirt: J.Jill, also gifted from mom's closet
Shoes: Keen walking sandals, gifted from a friend's closet
Hat: Thrifted, as seen in Wednesday's post.
Poodle: Not mine.

Kids:
It is only worth noting that Soren decided to wear a tie to soccer and hunted down his power tie.  
He takes his work seriously.

Are you still enjoying fashion week?  For more fun check out all the other beautiful ladies.

Thursday, July 15, 2010

Summer Fashion Week: Day 4


Penny Today
Summer One Suit: Carter's hand-me-down
Hat: Under The Nile
Ribbon (saved from something, perhaps from Christmas?)
Clip (to hold the ribbon, that is tied to the hat - which keeps the hat with us on adventures): HABA


Exploring the yard (visually) together


Me Today
Wrap: Old Navy, thrifted 
(The wrap keeps the tank more modest without losing the coolness factor.  
It also makes a great nursing cover)
Tank: "Great Northwest" from Fred Meyer 
(I have one in 5 different colors, I love it when staples are on sale)
Skirt: Gap, thrifted
Necklace: Claire's (The 20 for $10 sale from years ago that I mentioned yesterday)


Shoes: Dansko, from a good friend's closet 
(lucky me, her long legs made these too wobbly, my legs are just right!)

For more summer fashion inspiration, go check out the other ladies!

Wednesday, July 14, 2010

Summer Fashion Week: Day 3

Today was casual. 



Soren's Shirt: Children's Place, thrifted 
Shorts: OshKosh, thrifted
Hat and Shoes: Momma's (both thrifted!)

My tee: French Laundry
Skirt: Apostrophe, thrifted 
(This is hard to see in the pictures, but the skirt is a light cotton/linen with two large pleats in the front.  I love the simplicity!)
Shoes: Jeep (J-41), from friend's closet
Hat: Thrifted

Penny's Summery two-piece: Gap, Hand-me-down

Elliot: Was sleeping at time of photo shoot

(Truck in the background: Andrew's new job)

Fashion week always puts me in better touch with my closet and options.  I have realized that my new hair cut is going to open a whole new world of hats to me.  I also realized I lack in the accessory department.  Time to dig back through the jewelry box and to hit up a summer sale at Claire's (most of my clunky summer jewelry came from a 20 for $10 sale 7ish years ago...yes, I think that means it is time to update).

Want more fashion?  Go see the rest!

Tuesday, July 13, 2010

Summer Fashion Week: Day 2


Skirt: Gap, thrifted
Tank and Cardigan: Eddie Bauer hand-me-down from my mother
Shoes: Well-loved Keens (probably also from my mother...am I seeing a theme?)
Haircut: Thanks, Mom! (theme confirmed)

What are you wearing today?  It's not to late to join the party.

Monday, July 12, 2010

Summer Fashion Week: Day 1

Remember when we did this last fall?  There might have been a winter and spring version, but I think I was in the middle of moving (yes, in winter and in spring!).  So I'll try to play again this week.  Emery is hosting this blog event.  My mother is here (yay!), which should mean I have no excuse for not getting dressed each morning.  My mother being here might even mean that fashion week will introduce a new hair style.  Hint: My sister is having a 20's themed wedding in October.

So today, a nice cool day after a heat wave:

Dress: "Velvet" brand, thrifted
Belt: Grosgrain ribbon I saved off the wrapping of a blanket my sister brought years ago
Jeans: Levi's
Shoes: Steve Madden, thrifted
Purse: 100% Corn husk, thrifted

I love this little dress though.  It is perfect for summer, and especially summer here in the Pacific Northwest when you never really know what the weather will bring (cold mornings and hot afternoons?).  It's a good thing this dress can be worn so many different ways!  It also pairs well with my brown, MaryJane Danskos and my $12 brown gap bow flats (difficult to see below).

What are you wearing today?  Want to play along?

Friday, July 9, 2010

Favorite Things Fridays: Routines

I know it sounds perfectly boring to say that one of my favorite things is routine, but it is true.  I wrote a post on the wonder of monotony earlier this year, so I will try not to repeat that here.  We have been living with constantly changing routines for a while now and this week was our first week with Andrew's new job.  One job, not four different piece meal jobs happening at sporadic times with inconsistent hours, just one simple job with the same start time and same end time, Monday through Friday.

What a gift!  I know when he will be home and I can plan my pick-up efforts around that time so that he can walk into an inviting home at the end of his work day.  I can plan meals around the same time each day.  I know when he will need a lunch (M-F).  I know when we are available for social activities.  Who knows what such normalcy could bring!?  It is refreshing.

What are your favorite things?  Please consider joining us in Favorite Things Fridays, and leave your link below!


Friday, July 2, 2010

Favorite Things Fridays

I hope to add my own post later today, but for now, I hope you'll add your link below.

WinCo: An apology and explanation

I wrote last week's post on WinCo in a blurry, stream-of-consciousness haste to express the stressful experience I had having returned from shopping there for a week's worth of groceries for my family.  I wrote it mostly for myself.  I mentioned briefly to an acquaintance that I was working on a piece about my WinCo shopping experience, and that person mentioned that they would be interested to read my thoughts on WinCo.  That tempted me to publish.  Then, on the eve of my week off from reading, I decided to go ahead and schedule it, thinking I could always come back online and pull it as the day drew closer.  Then I didn't think about it again until it was too late.

My biggest regret is that I did not give the post the time it needed to clearly express what I meant to express.  Given the response in the comment section, I can see that my actual intentions were buried underneath careless word choices that did offend.  I apologize.  I hoped that the fact that I was, indeed, shopping for my own family at WinCo would display that I knew that many people choose WinCo for varied reasons, and that many people could still choose wisely within WinCo.

The responses to my post seem to be concerned with two things.  First, that I was judging people, specifically about their parenting, by their cart contents.  Second, that I am/was arrogant, haughty, and/or smug about having "better" cart contents.

To address the first concern, first.  I can now re-read and see how someone might assume I was judging people's cart contents, and possibly even their parenting based on said contents.  I am sorry for this.  I do not recall anyone's cart contents excepting the woman who very nearly ran me down with a cart full of only soda.   I mentioned her cart contents because of the soda weight added terror for my ankles.  I hoped that the mention of "conservation of momentum" would give the soda comment context to emphasize the danger of large carts moving quickly with heavy content.  I made no judgement about her except that she was in a hurry and presumably buying drinks for a large gathering.

I think the assumption that I connected cart contents with parenting came from my comment about under-developed facial patterns and behavioral issues.  Here I really should have removed the paragraph, because behind that little sentence is a huge body of reference that I did not provide, and with which many of my readers may be unfamiliar.   There are two things to note in this regard.  One, I passed by two children, with different families, in close succession who had such pointy faces with small nostrils so close together that they could not breathe out of their noses and were nearly panting while standing.  This was the most profound example I have ever seen in person of the things I have been studying in Dr. Price's book Nutrition and Physical Degeneration.  Two, I saw them right after having an unnerving time seeing the name Cargill on the meat packages knowing the icky food practices (especially meat) of Cargill and their competition.  The proximity was a glaring reminder for me of all that is wrong with the industrialized food system right now.   I reacted strongly to it.

The post was not in any way meant to be a reaction to parents or shoppers.  One can buy soda, sketchy chicken, and Mac'n'Cheese anywhere.  On any given day, that might be a healthier choice than the other options.  I am deeply sorry that I communicated so poorly that I could be read as having made snap judgement about parents, or any shoppers, based on a walk by in the store.  I regularly buy things in the store I would not want Sally Fallon-Morrel seeing, not to mention my husband, who brings home all the things I can't even bring myself to purchase for him.  I have had - on plenty of occasions - the whining, begging, yea tantrum-throwing kid in the store/park/etc.  I was not feeling smug.  I was not criticizing parents.  What I was feeling, having made the decision to shop for my own family at WinCo due to our own budget restrictions, was victimized by the industrialized food industry.  As I looked at the children present, I felt strongly that everyone in that store was also being victimized by that industry and that many might not even know it.  The only comfort I could give myself was that WinCo was providing local jobs in a bad economy.  For me, that is a bitter comfort.

I did not think a single person there was a bad parent.  I think parents are amazing.  I find parenting to be the most demanding and difficult job I could have ever imagined, and I fail at it every day.  Parents love their kids ferociously.  Parents deal with any myriad of personal and collective sufferings and travesties and have to make very complicated decisions about priorities in the midst of those sufferings.  I completely respect that other people's priority structures are what make the most sense for them.  I support them in making those decisions and I assume that they truly are the best decisions given their circumstances.  I was not judging parents.  However, I was angry, sad, and judgmental of the people behind the industrialized food giants, the ones who actually DO know what they are doing.  The under-tone of moral superiority was directed, not the shoppers at WinCo, not the employees of WinCo, not even at the main shareholders of WinCo, but at the small group of people who have decided that their profits are more important than the long-term health of millions of families.

As I have been thinking over and over this post (I have tried writing this three times since Monday) and trying to find a way to respond better, I have wondered if even my arrogance in the face of the industrial food giants is wrong.  However, I have not yet reached the point where I can shake it.  I am really, really mad at what is being done to food in this country.  I have wondered if, perhaps, I am too informed.  I have wondered if, perhaps, I am too informed from the wrong sources.  Ignorance or apathy might be better, because if it weren't for the fact that I am divine determinist and have peace that God is allowing all of this for a reason that will be eventually brought to good to those who love Him, if it weren't for that, I would have such profound indigestion over the whole thing that it wouldn't much matter if the foods I was eating were nourishing or not.

The food that permeates those interior shelves is NOT the food that even we grew up eating.  The genetically modified foods are a whole new ballgame.  The technology was only developing in the 80's and has only become mainstream in the last decade.  That means the first generation to be guinea pigs full-time for GMO foods, is my children's.  I can get over crammed feeding warehouses.  I can get over ammonia-washed hamburger filler.  I can get over burger that is molecularly equivalent to corn (here is a Pollan article on the dangers of corn taking over the food supply).  What I have a very hard time getting over is a diet that is near 70% genetically modified.  I simply have no trust in what those genetic modifications might be doing inside today's children.

I have not shared much of what our family has been going through for the last two-and-a-half years.  I have hinted at bits, and my close friends know that life has not been easy.   We could scarcely afford to feed our family immediately after deciding to become pregnant with Penelope.  The first trimester (and most essential, nutritionally speaking) was terrible, and has had the repercussions (combined with being my third pregnancy, closely spaced) of gestational diabetes, a badly overweight baby, and a slew of allergies for her that now has me eating out of only two food groups.

Last June our situation was even worse as we were finally and completely financially ruined from failed business ventures.  From June to November of last year, our family of 4-5 was living on $250 a month for groceries.  Gratefully, I anticipated that as a possibility and funneled our tax return into buying half a pastured cow and decently stocking our pantry with rice, beans, and oats.  So, $250 a month did not include buying meat, rice, beans, or oats.  We ate only rationed meat (twice a week) from our cow, what our CSA provided us (at $25 a week), raw milk and pastured eggs from a local farm, chicken a couple times a month, and typically a take'n'bake pizza a few times a month when Andrew was in charge of dinner (also didn't help with the 11 pound baby).

Come the end of last November, I had decided that half-starving our family was no longer an option and that groceries were going to have to be more important than rent.  I very nearly sold my wedding ring to pay rent.  I had an offer with a request to come purchase it so fast (the Christmas season) that it scarred me into keeping it.  We finally broke down and told our church we needed help.  They helped us beyond what we could have imagined.  They rescued us.  I still tear up when I think about it.  They helped us work with our landlord to get out of our lease, they provided a stable place for us to transition into a smaller place of our own (where we are now).  In the midst of that, Andrew lost the new job that he had just landed a few months prior, and we have only just now found new full-time work that Andrew will start on Monday.   We didn't know about this job while I was shopping at WinCo, nearing the end of my rope.

Our financial counselors from church strongly advised, repeatedly, that we get on food stamps.  For a number of reasons, mostly pertaining to my childhood and family background, I resisted.  However, we finally decided to do it so as not to burden our community any more than we already had/were.  I know the humility of shopping with food benefits.

I share this to say that I am no stranger to having to make tough financial decisions about food.  You can still choose health in the midst of poverty, it just takes a lot of know-how and a lot of time.  I realize that not everyone has that all of the time.  I realize how rich we have been in the midst of poverty.  We have a great marriage.  I have had a mostly functional kitchen (our transitional space had only a convection oven, 1 burner, and a mini-fridge, but I learned you can still cook whole foods with a convection oven, one burner, and mini-fridge).  I have had the know-how from years of studying Nourishing Traditions and the Weston A Price Foundation's materials.  And I have been able to remain a stay-at-home mother despite strong suggestions that I get a job as well to help our financial recovery.

I grew up in daycare with a single-mom to three young kids.  We ate a lot of frozen TV dinners.  My mom really tried to make sure each food group was represented, and there was almost always a salad, be it iceburg with bottled French dressing.  I grew up thinking that boiled hotdogs topped with instant mashed potatoes and american cheese was HEAVEN.  When we were with our dad every other weekend, it was a fast food paradise.  My favorite were Big Macs.  We were poor until I was twelve but we had each other and we loved each other well.  I had a great childhood.  I am even pretty healthy, all things considered.  Sure, my face is narrower than traditional people groups - just like almost every other westernized person living right now.  I have crooked teeth.  I have had two c-sections.  I now wear glasses.  My first and third children have narrower, more underdeveloped faces than my middle (with whom I was able to give a more nourishing pregnancy).  

I am not perfect, not in food and health, and obviously not in communication and love of my neighbor.  I did not mean to sound smug.  I was venting, and if I had thought better, I would have never hit publish.  I know there are far worse things that could happen in life than eating gross beef.  I know that it is "just food".  However, it is an important part of my life.  Three solid meals around a shared table is what has kept me sane these past two-and-a-half years.  It is what has made me feel like I had something tangible to offer my children and my husband.  It has grounded me when I was tempted to find escape.  Nourishing food has kept us energized and hopeful in the midst of some difficult things (beyond financial).  It has kept us healthy at a time when sickness would have been the proverbial last straw.

This is the fuller picture of what was behind my post last week.  If you are still reading, I am humbled, and I thank you.  If you find me in need of further correction/exhortation, please let me know, gently.

Thursday, July 1, 2010

Interview's Revisited

I found this in the draft box and thought it was worth revisiting.  Remember Soren's original interview?  Well, later that day they wanted to do it again with Elliot.  Below is the second go round, from back in January.  It would be interesting to do it again, now 6 months later, and see what answers have changed.  But for good measure (and mainly because Elliot cracks me up) here is the outdated post:

What do you want to be when you grow up?
Soren - A conductor, who has a farm, and I'll get married.
Elliot - A goat!   A noodle!!

Who is your favorite grown-up?
Soren - Daddy
Elliot - Mommy

Who is your favorite baby?
Soren - Penny
Elliot - Octopus

Do you want any more brothers or sisters?
Soren -Yes
Elliot - Yes

What would you name your brothers and sisters?
Soren -Pinocchios
Elliot - Computers (I think he was mesmerized by the fact I was typing all of their answers into the computer)

How old do you think Daddy is?
Soren - I think he's 41.
Elliot - (blank stare, since Soren just blurted the answer)

How old do you think Mommy is?
Soren -28 (I think he missed my last birthday)
Elliot - (same blank stare)

What is your favorite thing to do?
Soren - Go to the park!
Elliot - Hit you

Elliot, really?
Elliot - No.

Soren, What do you think Elliot will be when he grows up?
Soren - A burgler  (this comes from a Berenstain bears video they watched)

Elliot, What do you think Soren will be when he grows up?
Elliot - Nothing

What do you think Penelope will be when she grows up?
Soren - She'll go to the park with me, she'll get married, and she'll do whatever her kids want her to do.  They'll show her what they made and then they'll put it away when they're done.  Then they'll pull out a huge block set and build a castle!
Elliot - Type on the computer.

What does love feel like?
Soren - You hugging me and kissing me and loving me and playing games with me.
Elliot - Typing

When you grow up, where will you live?
Soren - In hillsboro.
Elliot - (nothing, bordering on complete loss of interest)

What is your favorite word?
Soren - (had moved onto finding blocks to build a castle)
Elliot -Stupid!