Making all the night wakings worthwhile...
Apr. 8th, 2006 09:56 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
From the title, you thought this would be a sappy post about Alex hugging me and calling me Mommy, right?
Nope.
The reward for making it through nearly a full year of parenthood is this:

Man, it's a good thing that we're doing her birthday presents tomorrow, because how could I wait an extra two days to play with this?
See those buttons by the handles? When you push them, voices and sound effects right out of a 50's sci-fi movie inform you that you are cleared for landing or welcome you to Jupiter or warn you about astroids. Or you can push the ignition button, and hear "3-2-1 blastoff!" accompanied by sounds, vibration, and a lit-up afterburner.

I am trying to remind myself that this is a toy Alex will have to grow into, and that she might not be too crazy about it tomorrow. That's okay. Michael and I are crazy about it already.
We also got her a shapes puzzle and a four-book set by Sandra Boynton. (
shandralyn, please tell Sam that the set includes Alex's first copy of But Not The Hippopotamus.) Of the things that we're giving her, I think she'll like the puzzle best right now and the Radio Flyer Retro Rocket best longterm. (I just like to say "Radio Flyer Retro Rocket." Radio Flyer Retro Rocket!)

Sadly, the pictures we took of me standing next to my citation abstract at my San Francisco conference were some of the least flattering pictures of me ever. But here's what the abstract itself looked like on display. I kept the blue ribbon.

Last, but not least, I give you shark fin and jellyfish sushi:

When we were in San Francisco we went to Isobune, which apparently was the first sushi restaurant in the United States to have the sushi travel around the bar on little boats. You grab whatever looks good. I grabbed this because it just looked so outrageous, and because I wanted to try something I (a) had never had before, and (b) was unlikely to find in Maryland. The absolute deliciousness was an added bonus.
Nope.
The reward for making it through nearly a full year of parenthood is this:

Man, it's a good thing that we're doing her birthday presents tomorrow, because how could I wait an extra two days to play with this?
See those buttons by the handles? When you push them, voices and sound effects right out of a 50's sci-fi movie inform you that you are cleared for landing or welcome you to Jupiter or warn you about astroids. Or you can push the ignition button, and hear "3-2-1 blastoff!" accompanied by sounds, vibration, and a lit-up afterburner.

I am trying to remind myself that this is a toy Alex will have to grow into, and that she might not be too crazy about it tomorrow. That's okay. Michael and I are crazy about it already.
We also got her a shapes puzzle and a four-book set by Sandra Boynton. (
![[livejournal.com profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/external/lj-userinfo.gif)

Sadly, the pictures we took of me standing next to my citation abstract at my San Francisco conference were some of the least flattering pictures of me ever. But here's what the abstract itself looked like on display. I kept the blue ribbon.

Last, but not least, I give you shark fin and jellyfish sushi:

When we were in San Francisco we went to Isobune, which apparently was the first sushi restaurant in the United States to have the sushi travel around the bar on little boats. You grab whatever looks good. I grabbed this because it just looked so outrageous, and because I wanted to try something I (a) had never had before, and (b) was unlikely to find in Maryland. The absolute deliciousness was an added bonus.