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Sandy in Indy

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Posts posted by Sandy in Indy

  1. I would encourage you to ask the librarians for help. It is, after all, their job to help patrons.

     

    Is it possible for you to reserve books? If so, then they are pulled off the shelf and held for you to pick up. You wouldn't have to worry about finding anything!

     

    I'd be absolutely broke if I couldn't rely on my local library.

  2. I don't live in the Chicago area, but my sister does and we visit her.

     

    The Museum of Science and Industry has a Mythbusters exhibit right now (until Sept I believe). I know you've been there, but it could be worth another visit.

     

     

     

    Oh my! We're going to Chicago in June. DS will be over the moon that there's a Mythbusters exhibit! We're blessed to have a science museum pass that will get us into several of the area exhibits.

     

    We're also going to make a short trip to Wheaton to see THE wardrobe, as in the inspiration for CS Lewis.

  3. It's amazing what kids will do to win a bet! I once had a bet with a student who NEVER turned in his homework. If he turned in EVERY assignment one quarter, I had to go see a movie of his choice (and not cover my eyes). I don't remember what I would have won. Of course, he turned in every stinking assignment, and I had to go see The Terminator. Ugh. :-)

     

    Hope you're still enjoying more quiet time!

  4. My youngest was a high-needs baby. I thought I had lost all of my parenting skills the first four months of his life--then I read Dr. Sears' book about high needs babies and I knew I wasn't completely nuts.

     

    I used to joke that my dh didn't cut the cord right. Ds was ONLY happy when *I* held him, including when he was sleeping. If I tried to put him down, he woke up. (I tried all the tricks, warmed the bed, etc. No go.) He slept a total of about 6 hours--as a newborn. He still doesn't require as much sleep as my other kids did. I think I held him every night and for every nap for at least two years.

     

    For five very long years, I couldn't be out of his sight, 24/7, or he was miserable and so was whoever was watching him. It got to be easier just to stay with him.

     

    At three, my sister thought he was hyperactive and wanted me to medicate him. I said NO.

     

    Sometime between five and six, a light switch flipped and he became an independent kid. It was worth all the time I nurtured him.

     

    However, if he'd been my first, he probably would have been my last. It was a long road.

     

    Today he's 11.5 and a great kid. He can still be intense, but in a good way. Remind yourself that all those strong qualities are things you really want in a kid....you want the kid that can stand up to peer pressure and who isn't afraid to go a different road from everyone else.

  5. DD(24) and I saw it opening night at midnight in IMAX. I think this is one that would be better on the regular screen. There's a lot of fast camera movement (too much, I think) and my eyes were just bonkers by the end of the movie. I'll go see it again...when I can hit the early $5 showing. :-)

     

    It is very well done, and I think stayed true to the book. You could "get" it without reading the book, and in some ways, the movie might be better if you *haven't* read the book. Very interesting interpretation of the Capitol--not what I imagined.

     

    There were lots of people dressed as characters when we went. Some went so far as to carry their bows, and we had a few rousing "wave" sessions when a gal ran back and forth in the theater with her bow held high. (Hey, when you have to wait 2+ hours for the movie to start, I guess you have to have some entertainment!)

  6. I have been to convention and loved it...and I've been to convention and come away thinking, "bleech." I'm taking a convention break for that reason this year.

     

    (A few friends and I had our own "convention" in January. We rented a cabin at a local state park [great discount in the winter], stayed a couple of days and did NOTHING. We each brought a meal; we talked; we played games; we sat in the hot tub. It was a great convention!)

  7. Get a jar of vaseline. A big jar. Coat everyone's hair with the vaseline and cover with shower caps. Wait 8 hours. Towel off as much as possible, then wash the hair with Dawn. Comb the hair thoroughly...and yes, I'd get out everything I see.

     

    We battled lice for months until someone told us about vaseline--that killed them in one treatment. It was messy, but well worth it.

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