All these photos are linked to larger photos (just click 'em)
Orlando. Early June.
Now, just because vacation is when you can pig
out, doesn't mean you actually have to be out of your home city to let
your depravity begin. We're still in San Diego when Dash is
bequeathed with this lollipop.
"Eh. Son. Back in my day, we didn't have no
fancy polychromatic school-of-fish lollipops. In my day, the were
of one color. Either round, round-with-an-equatorial-belt, or a
slice of round (like a cut of an onion or a beet). If we were lucky,
it had a tootsie bar or gum core.
"And we were glad to have it."
Day 1. Sunday. The Martin's pool. Dash in
water five hours. Contrast that with the five minutes
in wetsuits the week before before we were blue and chattering...
Uncle Dan, Zachary and Zoe.
Aunt Corrine.
Dash playing acrobat.
Dash doing a really good job swimming. It was the first time I'd
seen him in the middle of the pool taking multiple breaths before heading
over to a support. He can survive a fall, I'm relieved. But
not for long, his technique doesn't leave much endurance.
Dash admires his cousins. Here, he's making cookies
with Zoe. Zoe reading to him. Zoe's two years older, a gifted
and precocious two years. Close enough where he can still thing of
Zoe as an almost peer.
Here's The Cousins, a Rock Band rock band.
Next day, Monday, was New Smyrna. No pictures of the
requisite sand castle, deferring to other, later castles.
We're here at Norwood's Fine Seafood for the first time since we were
here with Dad as our very common post-Smyrna meal. I always used to
get the Flounder and Danny used to get the Smoked Mullet. They had a
major renovation, decades ago it was low and dark.
Dash is not an adventurous eater, but he does like his King Crab.
He ate a 1-lb leg almost by himself. Leigh and I are enjoying
Rogue's Dead Guy Ales.
We then hit "Wet and Wild" on Tuesday and Thursday.
Tuesday was while Orange County schools were still in session.
Minimal lines. Dash spent a bit of time in the kid area before
heading for the big rides with mommy and daddy. Fairly intense
stuff. "Disco H2O" was a whole lot of fun: the three of us
on a four-position inflatable doing a big belly lifting drop in the dark
before spiraling around in a 70s beat throbbing disco ball ceilinged black
funnel. Frankly the in-the-dark drop scared me every time (my
greater weight always had me going back-first. Dash did a bunch of
grown up rides and was overly adventurous in the wave pool (as he is
everywhere else). A very cool day. Actually a very warm day.
We went again on Thursday. School was over. Dash was more
inclined to stay in the kiddie area. The one time we ventured onto a
big ride the line was so long, we bailed. Tuesday was: hell, let's
move here. Thursday was: how much is the Express Pass?
On to Friday.
Whereas Zoe is an amazing almost-peer to Dash, the age
difference between him and Zachary makes Zachary appear almost God-like to
Dash. Here there doing the sort of bonding that makes you want to
sell the house and move back to Florida.
I do have to point out Dash's swim technique: he does do an
above-water freestyle stroke now, but notice the elbow is locked and the
arm pretty much follows a Great Circle. Ahh, but he survives.
Here in the pool, Zoe has had ENOUGH of ZACHARY, him being
the Worst Brother in the World!!!!!!!
Her future husband will
trigger this behavior with an innocent face-splash on their
honeymoon. We all have our baggage.
Not having a young lady in the house, I was caught somewhat off guard
by this apparently mandatory ritual: tie-up and makeover some
unsuspecting uncle at each visit.
Wednesday: Daytona
FishPatrick: the Special Love between a boy and
a dead fish
Dash amazed us with a heretofore unforeseen nurturing side. He
and FishPatrick were inseparable for hours, even though FishPatrick had
expired before washing into our slushpot
This is the Castle/lagoon that enabled FishPatrick to
present himself to Dash.
It took a while to pry FishPatrick from Dash's
cold dead fingers. Whoops: pry cold dead FishPatrick from Dash's
fingers. A gas station in Daytona. A dignified eulogy and
burial in the plastic can with the built-in windshield squeegee wash
reservoir.
Dash has even been very gentile with our cat, Kili, since his
experience with FishPatrick.
Saturday we met the Murphy's at the Cocoa Beach pier.
Warm water. Almost worth moving to.
Boy is not afraid of waves too deep to touch bottom in. Maybe 60
degree ocean is a safety thing...
Leigh, Cousin Sean, Aunt Anna, Uncle Pat and Grandma
under the pop-up.
Where is Dash: in his own private
Idapool.
Dash and Sean playing Snakes and Ladders.
Rented a Pontoon on the Intercoastal with Grandma and the
Murphy's.
A highlight of the trip (along with a stripmall dive bar
with an awesome beer list).
Miscellaneous Quotes:
So we're watching Star Wars and Dash says to me "I like Yoda's
voice. Do you like Yoda's voice more than WALL-E's Otto?" I say
"Huh?" He says "Otto from WALL-E." I remember
that I mentioned I like the Auto-Pilot's (Otto) voice in WALL-E. I'm
speechless that he remembers this since it's been a while since I said
that. I guess I had a dumbfounded look on my face, so Dash tries to help
me out by doing a pretty good Otto impersonation: "Captain: give me
the plant." I bust up. He is a funny boy and knows how to work
it. He still sneaks in the occasional post-drink "Aaahhhh. That's a
good cup of Joe!" if you let your guard down.
Before I forget: Kids, they can't really
distinguish between core characteristics and ancillary details. Which makes
things fun. Dash - the constant drawer - asks what I want him to draw. I say the
Space Shuttle, or better yet, an alien ship. He says "Okay, but you'll have
to help me draw The Light That Sucks Things Up."
Feeding the Bat Rays at Sea World: "Where's his mouth?"
"On the bottom." "He just slurps things up?"
Sunday, May 23, 2010
Underwater Dash
You ever get that feeling that you’re enjoying
something more than you should?At
least if you take that event in isolation? “Hey,
I’m enjoying this too much.” There are generally deeper reasons for
it, associations with earlier events, connections to the past.
I like go to theme parks even when you don’t do
much there.Standing in lines
doesn’t bother me there,though
it drives me nuts pretty much anywhere else.Traffic in general.
Going boating, even if you just drive around the bay
for the umpteenth time, too cold to actually lounge about and too bumpy to
let down your guard (it’s definitely more like off-road biking than
street biking).
Pretty straightforward explanations for both.Growing up near Disney World, you go so much that the thrill in the
thrill ride is drops to “routine” fun in a couple of visits.Ultimately the memories that last are the emotional connections you
make there.The lines are like
sensory deprivation tanks where you and your guest have nothing to do but
talk.So waiting in line now
is like family dinners, but with less getting up for things and far less
Carrots and Sticks to get Dash to eat his meat.
Boating, like the going to the beach, goes beneath
any memories of any event, it was our Family Time, though we never made it
seem that important at the time.It
was the one time we consistent forgot about everything else and were just
in the moment, together.On or
at the water, the brain just lets go and reboots.Whatever burdens you are carrying are put down.When you pick them up again, you’re picking them up anew,
refreshed – the endurance clock is reset.
What you do at the park or on the boat doesn’t
really matter.
I feel like I’ve been busier than normal
lately, more harried, getting less done.Proof: my updates to Dash’s website have been non-existent.People ask, what’s new and I answer nothing much, but then
realize that our schedule has been strongly impacted by Dash’s swim
lessons (and subsequent splashing around the pool).I forget because thetime
is so well spent, but in a quiet, subtle kind of way.And here’s where that “enjoying it more than I should”
feeling comes in.Swimming
with him after his lessons has been a real joy in the obvious ways, but it
was becoming clear that it was meaning more to me than the obvious ways
could explain.There was this
deep, quiet foundational feeling, that core connection like the beach and
boating effect.Well, I knew
something was up and I knew that eventually the reason would dawn on me.
As for the obvious reasons, he really enjoys it.As your kid matures his feelings get more nuanced and the joys
become more muted (though it seems the anger doesn’t, hmmm).He may not find his lessons a delight, as he is not in charge and
must obey his teacher, but he does enjoy the free play we do afterward.I’d have him do a few exercises that would improve his swimming,
but he’ll have none of that.He’s
there to play.
As a South Florida toddler
with a pool in the back yard, I don’t remember a time when I couldn’t
swim.I also never remember a
time when I had any interest in swimming or any other aquatic exercise.I was always more interested in feeling like an astronaut, floating
around upside down or doing various zero-g deadman’s floats.You know, Playing AquaMan.To
this day may only functional swimming has been to the skis or back to the
boat or back out into the waves to let the waves pummel me more.I still enjoy the immersion of head-in body surfing more than being
on a board (maybe to some degree because when my belly separates from the
board, so does the rest of me).
And really, underwater is
perhaps the most otherworldly experience we have here on earth.Rollercoasters, hanggliding, skydiving: extreme examples of what we
experience on a daily basis.My
first night-dive was my most otherworldly experience ever, a night Manta
dive the second most.Underwater
is truly a different world.Why
waste the experience exercising?
So Dash and I play around
after his lesson, doing whatever.He,
like most kids, loves the water.He’s
swimming well, though I’m not sure he can actually breathe, there are no
areas where there isn’t a grasping point within 20 feet, which seems to
be his range for not having to breath.Arms flap over the water, but ultimately through it, enough to pull
him forward.His kicks like
he’s riding a bicycle, using only the bottom of his feet, his arches, to
push the water.I could fix
his kicks in ten minutes, if he’d let me.But he seems to be getting by.
I resisted getting him
goggles, thinking he’d be dependent on them, and he now is, but he’s
also now very comfortable under water and spends a lot of time under it
even though he’s buoyant like a cork.When he first got the goggles he’d pull himself to its bottom and
sit there looking around, doing his own version of the AquaMan thing.
So even on his own, without
necessarily interacting with me, he is consistently all smiles and in that
increasingly rare state of pure joy.So
there’s one obvious source of my joy in swimming with him.
Our routine is that we go
play for half an hour or 45 minutes, me doing whatever his whim.“Waterhorse: Giddyap!” “Go underwater and let me grab your
fingers” “Let me stand on your hands” “Let me jump off your
legs”etc., etc.So, obvious source of joy #2: our very fun physical and mental
interaction.
Then of course is the
natural joy and pride in seeing him progress.I said at one soccer practice “he’s got some good physical
instincts on land.In water:
not so much.”While his
aquatic intuition still lags far behind his terrestrial (if it’s grown
at all), he is becoming increasingly functional and competent.He may even survive a fall off the boat, which is a profound
milestone (and probably the only important one).But in any case, it’s good to see that after maybe 100 lessons,
if you turn your head you can be pretty confident he’ll still be
breathing when you turn back around.To
a large degree, his reach has caught up to his grasp.He’s showing signs of planning and judgment (I better bask in the
glow of this, as I suspect that these milestones are going to be
widely-spaced).
At first he would start
with a weak “dive” from floating at the surface.He’d make some progress when he’d sweep his hands back, but as
soon as his armstrokes end at his side, he’d start bobbing back towards
the top.Eighteen inches down,
twelve inches up, eighteen down, twelve up, eighteen down, twelve up.So he’d get to within a couple of inches of the toy and think he
could stretch to get it, but then he’d cork up about a foot.Even with the goggles on, you could see his eyebrows hunker down
with determination as he’d strain to get to it.Close, then a reach, and the cork.Repeat this process a few times. I
made the mistake once of laughing underwater, bubbles escaping my mouth.He hit the surface before I did, when the water cleared away he was
crying mad at me for laughing at him.I, of course, apologized and gave him the never-believed line about
laughing with him (I really was,
though).
By the end of the session,
though, his underwater strokes were far more effective, hands cupped
better, much longer, stronger pulls.He
made sure he got much closer to the toy before going for a much faster
grasp.Almost no missteps. To
see him make that sort of improvement in such a short amount of time
impressed me strongly.The
fact that he made those improvements without any instruction impressed me
more strongly.It was the
first time I’d seen the intuitive body sense that he’s shown on land.
So, there’s another aspect of the mysterious depth of feeling about
the swimming: see something your spawn has worked hard at for a long time
and finally seeing a tangible example of a quantum growth of competence.
And finally, maybe way below consciousness, my
deepest psyche feels a circle closing: for the first time since I
was the son, I’m not Playing AquaMan alone.
Sunday, Jan 31, 2010
Leigh and Marissa took Dash and Alex skiing at Mountain High (in Southern
California) on Sunday. The boys did very well.
Leigh got some good videos. These first two are the first
she took.
Here he shows very nice backwards technique. Whether any of this is
on purpose is moot in my mind.
This is later in the day, but a nice spinstop, nonetheless.
I think he "gets" it.
The boys got a full, long day in.
Soccer Practice #4
GOOOOAAAAAALLLLLLLLLLL!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
They had their first "game". I forgot my camera,
but Dayanne had her i-phone.
Big field, seven kids. Lots of running. Dash scored
on a breakaway, showing good instincts. He got it high on the
right wing, barely keeping control on the high speed run, managed to
nudge it to keep it from going wide and then kind of guided the ball
in with his foot over the top of it (I likened it to a dunk in
basketball). Dayanne's picture shows the ball breaking the
plane of the goal, foot on top, and most importantly, no one getting
hurt.
Retirement $$$, here we come, right?
Sunday, January 24, 2010
Leigh was kind enough to take Dash for the day, so that I could write about
Dash. I recognize the irony of wanting time away from my kid to write
about my time with my kid.
He started lessons, on January 9. He was intimidated by the idea and
very reluctant to go.
Crying on the couch (you could call this staged, as he just
had sunscreen applied, which normally inspires overdrama).
Trepidation in the car (there is video of this somewhere)
He started somewhat unsure and mopey, but loosened up.
We were happy that he did seem to enjoy it and was pretty relaxed
afterward. Treated him to a Jamba Juice.
The following Saturday he was actually very chipper prior to
practice, even smiling before and during practice (unheard of the first
week)
This is Dash using body English to steer his kick into the
goal.
Soccer Practice #2
Dash blew his cover as he actually knows how to listen (a skill he had
been very careful to keep secret around the house and at school)
Week 3: More fun, First "Team Jersey". We'll
have to save that.
One rainy Saturday we did science experiments on live
animals.
Just kidding.
Mostly volcano- type reactions with household ingredients.
Dash Skis!!!
For the first time since finding out we were
pregnant, we went skiing. Driving up to Mammoth Mtn, with our little
fruit of the womb. A conceptually significant moment. Like the
first time we ate at Souplantation with Dash on the outside (we ate there
A LOT during the pregnancy since our house was being remodeled and we were
kitchenless. Aunt Kathryn has a beautiful condo up there and was
kind enough to let us stay with her.
Here's Dash a couple of nights before trying on his ski bib.
We drove up on Saturday after soccer practice.
Here's Dash prior to sliding down the hill for the first
time:
Here he is doing "the Pizza."
Ski Lesson.
Sorry about this, only the first 20 seconds is good, I couldn't
trim the video without it ballooning 20 times its original size.
The
first 20 seconds is him sliding down the hill, doing a hard right
turn, evading the instructor (and the instructor's attention),
picking up speed, smiling, digging it. At 20 seconds, I
realize that he is going to whacking into some equipment unless I go
catch him. The remainder of the tape is the run, catch, and
reassurance with the camera flailing about.
After a half-day of lessons on Sunday and some
sightseeing with Aunt Kathryn, Mom delivered on her promise to help him
build his first snowman with facial features he picked out himself: two
radishes, a carrot and a string of licorice.
On Monday we wanted to get another day of
lessons in for Dash. Leigh and I both had a good full day of
boarding and were content to kick back in the lodge during Dash's lesson.
At Kathryn's suggestion we went to June Mountain, where we had never
been. Chances were that the ski school would be less populated than
at Mammoth. A little more one-on-one instruction. As it
happened a monster storm was rolling in that was supposed to drop between
seven and nine feet o' snow. Do I have snow chains? Yes.
Do I have snow chains that fit without having to be jerry-rigged with shoe
laces? No, but I seemed to have forgotten this from five years ago.
At June Mountain you actually have to take a chair lift to get to the
"base" of the mountain. So Dash go his first chair lift
ride. By now the blizzard was underway. The slopes were
deserted, white out conditions and high winds seemed to have scared
everyone with sense off. The lodge was half full of sensible people
riding out the storm, including Kathryn, Leigh and me. The only
people visible from the lodge were two four year olds and and
instructor: Dash, Max, and Van.
I'm not sure what the primary skills are to be
learned for toddlers in a blizzard, but there was a lot of
"hold-the-stick" going on. This shot show a base empty
except for two toddlers, and instructor and a stick. Those flags
were flapping widely and visibility was very low.
As I was heading back down the hill to fight with the too-small tire
chains, Van, the instructor, said that he was going to find an escort to
take both the kids up the chair lift to ski down the hill (he felt that
hold-the-stick was going to simply exhaust them without any fun being
had). Dash was in high spirits, not realizing that he should be
intimidated by the whole thing.
I'm not sure what transpired over the next hour
but the Dash and Van tandem eventually materialized at the edge of
visibility and skied into the safety of the lodge.
He seemed to have had a very good time.
And what is skiing without Apres-Skiing?
Here he is enjoying hot chocolate with whip cream and his first Milky Way
bar.
Jeff's Birthday
I was looking forward to this primarily because he was at
an age where he was excited about my birthday. Let's face it when
you've had forty-plus, it gets a little routine. Ahh, the fresh
perspective of youth. Basking in the novelty of it, the lost
appreciation of it...
Notice Dash's Dimples during the card opening...
We binged with our first Filippi's Pizza in
seven months (our favorite pizza is loaded in calories). We always
get the Minty Breath special (jalepenos, onions, sausage and pepperoni).
We followed that up with a Cold Stone ice cream cake (peanut
butter). Delicious.
Afterwards, for reasons I no longer remember, we decided to have a
concert. It had been a while (Dash seems to have moved on from music
to coloring). We put in "Under a Blood Red Sky" and broke
out the mic and the amp.
Forty minutes of Dash singing a bit but mostly aping Bono's microphone
and stage movements, we came to a point where I said "uh-oh" and
looked back over my shoulder at him.
A quickie until I get a chance this weekend to fill in a ton of details...
The big deal lately with Dash has been his
behavior. He can be something of a Dashole. The Daycare
Equivalent to the Color-Coded Terror Alert Scale is the 3 Apple Scale
(Green is Good, Red is Rotten, Yellow is middlin). Every kid has
their name on a worm, and the worm has a daily journey starting on the
green apple. That's the big drama at pickup time. Treatings or
beatings?
Everybody
is on to it. I have kids yelling to me in the parking lot:
"Hey Dash!" (the parents are called by their kid's first name (no one,
including the adults, seems to know any of the parent's names)). "Dash was on the yellow apple."
Clever boy. We used to say "We'll read two books and then it's
bedtime." He'd stall and stall, taking half an hour to pick out a
book and then wanting to re-start the book, etc., etc. I changes things up
one night saying: "Okay, we can read a bunch of books tonight, but
the reading stops at 8:30." He immediately responds "But the
back rubbing stops at 10:30."
December 14, 2009
Dash and class sing. Rudolf at the Daycare Christmas Party.
December 6, 2009
Happy Christmas Season!
The shot above was from our annual walk around Jay and Diane and Chase and
Chance's neighborhood.
November 30, 2009
It's been a while. Behind on a deadline at work. Reasonably
caught up now.
Dash is finally 42" tall. Meaning: Sea World's Shipwreck
Rapids and their Journey to Atlantis roller coaster. The boy digs
it. Had fun. Have a picture on the phone. Will post when I get
it uploaded...
Had a very nice Thanksgiving at Chantelle, Andy and Julianna's.
Friday evening went out to El Campo where they have a
"Polar Express" train ride with a visit from Santa. Dash
was really excited the whole time.
It's getting to the point where you have to put a little bit of effort
into setting up delight. It's worth it when you do, though (he did
enjoy the Sea World rides, for example).
So the Polar Express had decorated passenger cars on a trip to the
North Pole. Dash had his first hot chocolate and a big ole chocolate
chip cookie.
We helped Dash fill out a wish list for Christmas. The train had flood
lamps illuminating the scenery, which out east in El Campo is a lot of
undulating rocky terrain. Somewhat surreal.
After about 20 minutes outbound (west by my reckoning) the floodlight
lit up the North Pole, with a bunch of elves and Mr. and Mrs.
Claus.
The train stopped and picked up those special passengers and
started it return trip. Santa and Mrs. Claus worked each car,
handing out a special souvenir: a Jingle Bell, which had us all
tickled. We all sang Christmas carols on the ride home.
Notable Quote:
Been swamped, but had to write this down before I forget. Was talking with
Dash about Thanksgiving. "Do you know about the Pilgrims and the
Indians?" "The Indians are the guys with leafs growing out of their
heads." I shouldn't have dropped him so often.
Doing some coloring at the Old Blind Lady Tavern during the
Adams Avenue Street Fair