30.12.08
29th and 30th December - Furniture is the thing!
Basically, the influx of new items kindly provided by Father Christmas, friends and relatives have left us with a space problem. We hadn't got any, so needed to make some. We had resolved, after dumping everything in the middle of the living room floor on the evening of the 28th, to make the 29th our 'Tidy-up day', finding homes for everything. We woke up, ready for action. At least, daddy and I forced ourselves to get ready for action. Sylvie lay on our bed with her hands over her ears, refusing to listen to the hated word 'Tidying'.
This led to a bit of a battle of wills, where I gave her the choice of helping to put things away or having a 'One toy only out at a time' rule strictly imposed from now on. She refused to remove her hands from her ears and/or answer me, so I chose for her (One toy only) and she flounced off to her room where she fell asleep. When she got up, she was much more amenable and was persuaded to apologise by daddy. Since she offered to tidy up her room of her own accord, I allowed her the choice again and she picked 'Home Economics - Tidying' over 'One toy only'.
While debating what to do with her new TV (a present from my parents) we looked on the web for wall-mounted TV shelves. This led to our first ever visit to IKEA after lunch. It took us a while to get used to the store layout and the way the system worked (it also took us a long time to find the item we were looking for). We had decided to check out a few other items while we were there - we wanted a coffee table as the small table currently in use in our living room is the table base of the high chair, and will shortly be needed for Davy's first forays into real food, and the bookcase in Sylvie's bedroom is no longer adequate for the task with no space for any more books.
We ate at IKEA as what we had thought would be an hours job at most took a good three hours in the end thanks to our unfamiliarity with the store. We came home with two TV shelves, one for Sylvie's room and one for ours (we have a TV we have been meaning to put in there since we moved in), and a coffee table. We also spotted a bookcase and a DVD rack that we decided to think about (and take measurements for).
I erected the table while daddy and Sylvie went to buy her Dr. Who magazine (a futile effort as we hadn't realised the next one won't be out until next week thanks to Christmas until they got there). Sylvie exercised some 'Fiscal Management' and came back with a packet of chocolate cake instead. I managed to multi-task, breastfeeding Davy while wielding a screwdriver, so the coffee table was ready to receive the cakes when they got home.
We watched the recording of the Christmas Dr. Who episode while eating the cakes, and Sylvie went to bed with very little tidying having occured but with a slightly different layout in the living room.
This morning we measured and talked about the bookcase and the DVD rack. We decided they would be a good investment for Christmas money, so we headed up to Sylvie's room to look at space. This led to a major rearrangement of furniture that meant everything got shifted around to make space for Christmas presents, a new bookcase to be purchased soon and, with any luck, the cardboard teepee she got from the Play Rangers for being the 500th attendee.
In order to move the wardrode, we took all the clothes out which afforded the perfect opportunity to go through them and remove the ones that don't fit (at least, the ones Sylvie would let us remove. One or two items she refused to put in the 'discard' pile!) Things got a bit stressful - the furniture was difficult to manover, it was a very cramped working environment and Sylvie was determined to watch and/or help, so I snapped a few times when I shouldn't have, leading to apologies and having to tell Sylvie a number of times why we were doing this furniture moving. We were all exhausted afterwards.
Her TV ended up on top of a cupboard where she can reach the inbuilt DVD player, so we may take one of the TV shelves back. We realised once we had rearranged everything that the place the shelf would have to go would be far too high for her to put in and remove DVDs, while the top of the cupboard was just about ok with a stepstool.
The efforts have paid off - the floor space is used much better now, Sylvie really likes the new layout (though she complained she can't reach to open the window to 'let the fresh air in' now her bed has moved, a plus as far as I'm concerned!) and we will be able to fit the bookcase in, though I'm not too sure about the teepee. I did ask her if I could put her Fisher-Price little people castle in the loft now she has her new Playmobil one to make more space. As far as I know she hasn't used the old one for ages. She refused though - it seems she is collecting castles!
19.12.08
19th December - Getting ready to leave.
I sent her with some clean clothes, including a pair of trousers she hasn't worn before and which turned out to be just a bit too big - she came home with tales of trousers falling down and needing a belt to keep them up. They shall be going back in the cupboard for another 12 months!
It took me most of the day to get my wrapping done in between doing laundry so we will have clothes for our trip and dealing with Davy. He kindly had two good sleeps during the day but was horrible in the evening and just wouldn't settle. I think his teeth are planning to erupt soon - he's chewing on everything, the Calpol seems to barely take the edge off for him and when he bites my finger I can feel distinct nobbles near the surface of his jaw now. He slept badly last night too, so both I and his daddy were shattered all day today. Having to deal with him meant that while I managed the wrapping, the packing was no where near done. It's a good thing we don't need to leave until lunchtime tomorrow!
When she came home, I gave Sylvie the felt and sparkly card I had picked up for her on Monday - I had wanted to get her more glue from Woolworths as it is by far the best I have tried for her so far and the shop won't exist after Christmas, but it seems other people think the same and there was none left so I got these bits instead. After getting them all out, she picked the purple card and black felt. She said she wanted to cut out some fishes from the felt and asked how to do it. I suggested drawing the fish in chalk so we hunted some down. In the end, she found the felt too hard to cut with the scissors she chose (her old ones - her new ones might have been more effective) but she liked the effect of the chalk on the black felt, so drew a picture on it and mounted it on the card with sellotape.
After dinner, she used some more felt but this time as a backing for a paper picture. We stopped her from using any more then as we could see her getting into 'use it for the sake of it' mode, the mental lock that leads her to scribble on every page of a notebook as soon as she gets it or waste reams of paper by putting a single dot in the centre of each sheet until she runs out. She then wonders where all the fresh paper etc is the next day.
She ate a chocolate she had from Granny anouncing that she gets her superhero strength from chocolate. We decided she must be 'Super Chocolate Girl'. Davy was very interested in the chocolate and tried to swipe it. When Sylvie took it away he got interested in his daddy's watch, throwing a definite baby strop whenever daddy tried to move his arm away and calming down each time the watch came back into reach again. This fun game of pull and press it to see what it does was stopped when he decided to see what daddy's watch tasted like.
I took Sylvie to bed. Her 'Personal Care' is getting better - she brushes her teeth without reminder or insistance now and actually does a reasonable job of it. Tonight she asked for assistance with her back teeth - she does have trouble with these, her brush seems slightly too big to be comfortable at the back of her jaw.
She did not get to bed until 10pm - she was very busy with her new 'Art' materials and her glitter glues. The living room floor is currently covered with cardboard tubes from the recycling box that have glitter drying on them. Unfortunately they roll, so my floor also has nice shiny spots on it too. I am so glad we have laminate!
18.12.08
18th December - Another book!
As we left the house, she exclaimed "A whole new world!" This is nothing new at present - she has taken to sometimes pretending we live in a 'TARDIS house' and every time we leave through the front door we are stepping out onto a new planet. This time it was 'Rose's world' apparently and Rose accompanied us to the Early Years Centre. We looked at the trees as we went past and tried to remember which ones we had planted. Sylvie asked if the bulbs would have sprouted yet, so I explained they wouldn't appear until spring when there would be a large arc of daffodils where they had been planted.
At the Breastfeeding cafe, Sylvie used the paper and pens I had packed to start making a new book. She stopped when she spotted a couple of Stickle-bricks though - she had played with those last time we were there. One of the Health visitors saw her with them and offered to find the box for her so she spent the rest of the morning there building with those. Another little girl played with them too, which led to a slight incident when we were leaving and Sylvie packed up the bricks so they could be put away again - she noticed the little girl was still holding some and tried to take them off her. I stopped her, but then had to reassure her that someone would make sure the bricks got put back safely as she was getting quite anxious over it.
We left a little early - Sylvie noticed I had had Davy weighed (he is now a hefty 18lbs! There are 9 month olds at the cafe that weigh less than my monster baby! His weight is finally catching up with his height.) and she wanted to leave "because everyone leaves after the baby ids weighed." I pointed out that everyone in the room had had their baby weighed and hadn't yet left so that wasn't entirely true, but since we would have to leave in 15 mins anyway I decided to let her have this one today!
On the way home, she started making odd noises and movements. I joined in, and the random nature of the exercise gradually morphed into a game of 'What am I?'. One that stood out was when Sylvie started to walk very slowly, shuffling her feet. I guessed a penguin, an old person and then an elephant before asking for a clue. She said "I'm not one with a trunk, I'm one with a shell." from which I immediately got tortoise.
We were heading over to the pine trees when we saw a cardboard recycling bag in the hedge. These bags are issued by the council and have a place for the house number so the recycling men can return them to the right house. They often don't. We checked the number and found it wasn't too far away so we engaged in a spot of 'Community Service' and returned it, taking in some 'Maths' as we checked the house numbers to find the right one. Then it was back to the park to get some pine cones. At first I thought we were going to be out of luck, but we found around 8 or so. We might have found more had some unthinking persons not lit a fire between the trunks of two of the trees, burning up any that lay there. It was a stupid place for a fire - the tree bark was very charred and had it been drier both trees could have been destroyed.
Once home, Sylvie had a nutritious lunch of Scotch eggs and cheese (apparently a sandwich or toast would "take away my superhero energy.") with 'Media Studies' - the video of Beauty and the Beast we bought yesterday. After lunch, she wanted to clean her pine cones ready for painting so I told her to use the bathroom sink. I later found out she had taken this to mean she could dry them on the bathroom towels too!
Sylvie then got down to the serious business of turning the pictures she had drawn at the Breastfeeding cafe into a book. I helped her bind the pages together by tying the string and took dictation as I did yesterday. The following pictures show the finished product (and I must point out that on one page, the word 'handing' should read 'hanging' - I made a spelling error that I didn't notice until called up on it by my husband when he read it. It was a freudian slip - I thought the 'rollerskates' were hands!)
After the book was complete, while Sylvie was engaged in 'Free Play', I rang my parents to see if Sylvie could spend tomorrow at their house while I wrapped presents and packed ready for our trip to the Isle of Wight on Saturday. My mum rang me at the same moment - she wanted to let me know that they have booked a date for a caravan holiday on the island. The plan is that next year they will take Sylvie with them so she can stay with her Isle of Wight granny and grandad. They have wanted her to stay with them for a while now and she reciprocates the sentiment, but the logistics of getting a 4 year old from the Midlands to the ferry then over to the island on her own and then back again are difficult.
17th December - Witing and a Christmas fair
Today began with something of a Wow!
While I was feeding Davy and checking e-mails, Sylvie was busy 'Writing' her name from memory. The first I knew of it was when she brought me this piece of paper asking me to check to see "if the letters are right." I was very impressed that she got so close! She missed out the 'L' but all the other letters of her name are there in the right order (though not necessarily the right way up!). Not bad for a child who doesn't read yet, has up till now only copied or joined the dots when writing and still confuses similar-looking words for her name occasionally.
She said she remembered it from the last time she wrote it which must have been a couple of days ago now. After e-mailing it to her daddy (yep, I was that impressed!) she decided she had to try to write 'mummy', 'daddy' and 'Davy' in the interests of completeness. She tried to write mummy while I verbally spelt it for her, but quickly decided it was easier if I wrote them for her to copy. Her copying was very good, though the two 'm's in the middle of mummy did come out as a continuous wavy line!
After this, she suddenly remembered and asked after a pine cone she had picked up and painted last winter, not a bad feat of memory since it has been sitting forgotten on a windowsill for nearly a year. Sylvie was fascinated by the way it had opened up - she remembered it had been closed up tight when she painted it - so we delved into some 'Botany' as I explained that the pine cone opens up when the temperature rises to allow the seeds out at a time when the weather is good for growing things. She asked if we could collect some more so I said we would see if there was time before the library to walk through the park and pick some up.
The rest of the morning was taken up with 'Media Studies' as she took the opportunity to watch her library DVD's for the last time before they went back. She hasn't had much chance to watch them lately, what with spending so much time at my parents the last two weeks. I sat and watched 'The Fairy Kingdom of Ar' with her but left her to watch 'Spookley the Square Pumpkin' on her own over lunch. It ended just in time for us to head off to the library. We didn't go through the park - it turned out that we had three heavy bags full of books to return as well as a couple of parcels to post and I didn't fancy doing anything but going straight there loaded down with all that! We agreed to go another day, hopefully tommorrow.
When we arrived at the building we found they were setting up a Christmas Fair in the sports hall. We had expected to attend the Play Rangers there (this month they are doing crafts indoors rather than 'Outdoor Activities' in the park.) so I asked where they would be. They covered well by saying they would probably be in the sports hall too along with the Christmas Fair crafts, but suspicions were confirmed that my enquiry had reminded them of something they hadn't thought of yet when we actually met the Play Rangers at the fair and learnt they had been accomodated at the last minute because the staff had forgotten they were coming in the preparations.
Up in the library, I limited Sylvie's book selection and would not let her take out any DVD's as we won't be around to return them next week or be likely to get much use out of them over Christmas. It also made things a little easier when we went into the Christmas fair, though that wasn't an initial consideration.
We bought a puzzle (she insisted on it being a fairy one, though the chances of her doing a 1000 piece foil-embossed puzzle are nil - we bought it for daddy!) and she had a go on the lucky dip, winning a key holder from Alicante (she thought it was a photo frame and was a bit disappointed for a few minutes when she realised it wasn't) before we headed over to the Play Rangers where Sylvie made a Christmas cracker and Davy tried to eat it.
We moved on to the craft table where bauble decorating was going on and she had fun sticking glittery bits to a shiny red one. We hung it up to dry then, after a quick trip to change Davy, she joined the queue for face painting. However, the magician was about to start so we left the queue and watched the performance instead. Sylvie got to help spin a plate and was given a balloon teddy bear. Davy fell asleep. I took her away to get her face painted during the balloon animals as I realised the stalls were preparing to pack up and I didn't want her to miss out. She chose to have a butterfly face and while she was getting made up, I nipped over to the Scouts stall to get her a ribbon on a stick before they left - I had spotted it earlier and thought she would love it as the ribbons are her favourite part of her 'Gym' classes. The last thing we did was visit Santa's Grotto, where a Christmas chocolate selection pack was a very welcome gift from Father Christmas!
We headed home, with a quick detour back when we realised we hadn't picked up her bauble, and were in the middle of a tussle over tidying (I wanted to see the floor again, she didn't) when daddy got home. He added his weight to the argument and she finally stopped crying and moved her art and dinosaurs before showing all her new treasures to daddy while I made dinner. There was another teary blip when she decided to open her cracker and found that the toy she had carefully picked out to go in it was missing - it must have fallen out when we were trying to stop Davy enjoying it for tea. I quickly redid the cracker with a choccy biscuit inside which stopped the tears but could do nothing about the now very smeary butterfly make-up!
Sylvie wanted to do some more 'Writing' while I cooked and asked me to write the words 'good' and 'naughty' for her to copy(apparently she wanted to describe her dolly!). We watched 'Dr. Who' together and she shared her chocolates with us. She needed a little persuasion to go to bed as she was a bit wired after the exciting afternoon. I took her and read her her new book for 'Storytime', a nice little Shirley Hughes book that she really enjoyed. I must remember to thank the librarian for a great choice next time we see him.
17.12.08
16th December - Making books.
12.12.08
12th December - A creative day.
11.12.08
A week undocumented due to illness (mine)
I spent most of the last 7 days sleeping and sitting around feeling sorry for myself at my parents who babysat Sylvie and Davy for me, so I don't know exactly what Sylvie was up to, though I know the following;
She did some 'Writing' - she got her daddy to do dots for her to follow so she could send me a note saying she loved me
She showed 'Generosity' - she lent one of her Catty's to her older cousin and, unbelievably, she twice gave away her advent calendar chocolate to her younger cousin.
She had 'Childcare' - she tried to help me with Davy.
She had 'Free Play' and 'Tidying' - she always has this at granny's!
She had 'Maths' - she did her advent calendar every morning and tried to read the clock when expecting her cousin and daddy to arrive.
She had 'Nature Studies' - grandad's bird table has been well-visited over the cold period by all sorts of small birds which he points out to everyone especially his grandchildren.
I'm sure she did other things too, but these are the ones I know about.
Thursday we also made some Christmas photo frames for family members, using metallic corugated card to frame photos of Davy and Sylvie to send out to everyone. Sylvie has earmarked the scrap for a collage and stuck stamps on the envelopes so we could post them.
Today was a quiet day, I didn't want to do too much and as I have started a cold as I recovered from whatever wiped me out initially we stayed in instead of going to the breastfeeding cafe and had marathon 'Media Studies', cuddled up on the sofa watching an entire series of Dr. Who. Sylvie had missed me while I was ill and was a little jealous that Davy had had the majority of my attention at the time - I was waking to feed him then going back to sleep. The one time she tried to join us I had got rid of her as soon as possible as nothing I said seemed to stop her bouncing on the bed and talking constantly. She was just happy to be with us but I wasn't up to coping with it, so a morning of cuddles was what she seemed to need today.
Later, she did a spot of 'Art', sellotaping bits of bubble wrap onto a felt tip pen drawing. She said it was a submarine and the bubble wrap was fishes swimming past. She also had some 'Free Play' which consisted of her yelling something like 'No, stop, don't do it! I'm just a kid!' at some imaginary baddy before making a dash for the safety of the TARDIS/kitchen - 'Media Studies' always has a big influence on her imaginary games!
She also got out her domino cards and played some game whose rules were beyond me with an imaginary friend. It seemed to be a form of snap, but had elements of a Tarot reading the way she laid out and picked up the cards. As far as I know she has never come across fortune telling before so this is undoubtedly a coincidence, but it made me think she would probably find the idea of Tarot highly attractive if/when she does hear about it, it's just the kind of thing that would capture her imagination.
Hopefully I can get back into the swing of blogging until the 20th, when we travel to the Isle of Wight where access to the blog will be non-existant. I do plan to type it out in Word documents for publication on our return if I'm not too busy enjoying myself though!
5.12.08
5th December - Cat games and castles.
2nd and 3rd December. Well, the morning of the 2nd anyway!
Note - forgot to finish this, now can't remember what else I intended to write!
3.12.08
1st December - letters to Father Christmas
We went to my parents in the morning - Sylvie had to be woken up but got out of bed more easily than usual thanks to the exciting knowledge that she was going to write her letter today.
We started it after breakfast - she has been determined to write her own letter to Father Christmas in legible English since last year when she wrote her letter in Scribble but was very concerned that Santa wouldn't be able to read it, especially after her cousin told her so, despite us telling her it was ok because Father Christmas knows how to read anything. I wrote down what she wanted to say on one piece of paper so that she could copy it onto another, then the 'Writing' began.
26.11.08
24th - 30th November - A Week's Worth of post!
In the afternoon, I finally decided we were going to make the cake I had promised her we would bake despite Davy's reluctance to sleep or have me put him down, so we had a chorus of angry baby screams even though I had him in the kitchen where we could talk to him and I had put music on, which usually keeps him happy. It was a bit of a cooking experiment - Sylvie wanted to try and make "A swirly cake" so we split the cake batter in half, used food colouring to make one lot blue and the other red, then lightly mixed the two together again to try to get blue and red swirls. It wasn't too bad an effect, though the red colouring did make a spirited attempt to overwhelm the blue. Sylvie Decorated the finished cake with a person - it has eyes, nose and mouth in white chocolate buttons, arms legs and hair in little smartie-like sweets. (She stuck the 'hair' ones in on their edge to make it stick up!) She apparently didn't do this in a nurses outfit, by the way, the costume was standing in for something else (can't recall what she said it was now, but I'm fairly sure it had some Dr. Who theme!)
We left at around 10pm - Sylvie was obviously shattered and her parents weren't much better! It was on until 11.30pm, but with Dancing in the morning and tiredness sapping enthusiasm we headed home rather than hang around til the end.
I suspect they were short-handed and this was a reasonable way around the staffing problem, but the younger ones thought they had had a real treat!
At home, it was a 'do little' day for us parents - Daddy had a nap as he wasn't feeling well, then I had a nap as Davy was finally sleeping and I needed to recover from my disturbed night.
Sylvie got out her easel for the first time in ages and played with the magnetic letter set it had come with. After messing about with combinations and patterns, she actually asked me how to spell something that wasn't her name - she asked how to make 'Atishoo' so I called out the letters and she found them (a feat in itself as some were scattered over a wide area of floor!) then she asked for her name. She played 'I don't know the letter', grinning as she asked 'Is it this one?' holding up the wrong ones for every letter in her surname - I played along as it was clear she did know most of them but wanted reinforcement on others.
Afterwards, she drew the above sequence of people with mad hair. I love the bottom one - it's me carrying Davy in his sling! It really does look like this - blue, over one shoulder and across the body. I thought it was pretty good (though I seem to be the only bald person in the row!) She was going to fold them in half to make a book, but I suggested a scroll instead so the pictures could actually be seen properly instead of only half at a time, so she stuck them together in a row and I vandalised a couple of baby dress coat-hangers fo the spindles of the scroll.
Storytime was the bird book again.
Sunday - Today began with 'Gym'. Sylvie was pretty good to start with, having recovered fully from the not winning disappointment of the competition (the marks were posted on the door still - she had come 13th out of 13! No surprise to us but we definitely kept quiet about that to her.) She then had a crying strop when one of the other children took the big dominoes she was playing with (they put a few toys at the end of the mats to occupy the children while the others have their turns) and took some effort to get her back to happy girl despite the dominoes being returned with extras - she refused to do her vault until I took Davy to the other side saying he wanted to watch her jump which finally perked her up.
She also got frustrated with rocking back and forth again, but I don't blame her for this, she has been trying to get this skill for months and has been 'almost there' for so long it isn't surprising she got miffed, though she did get up and try again really hard at the end. Then two or three others got badges, and the competitive green eyes showed. She Neanderthaled over without waiting for a sticker, so I suggested asking the coach what she needed to do to get her next badge. The coach was very obliging as usual, and Sylvie came back smiling and peppered with little stickers. The coach commented as we left that Sylvie "is really sweet!" I said Yes, she is sweet...MOST of the time! The assistant, who had had the dubious pleasure of dealing with stroppy Sylvie, nodded emphatically!
Sylvie spent most of the rest of the day at Granny's while we went shopping. Daddy picked her up in the afternoon (he got a phonecall from Sylvie asking when he was coming to get her just as he was preparing to leave) dropping off some bits we had picked up for my parents while he was there.
Once home, after rolling up her scroll (it had needed a little extra glue this morning) Sylvie settled in for a Dr. Who evening - thanks to some rather eccentric programming by BBC3, we had managed to forget to set the tape for the second episode of a two-parter on friday, but daddy had found it on BBC iPlayer so Sylvie had watched it over breakfast. Before dinner, she wanted to watch both episodes and then embarked on a marathon Series 1 viewing.
After daddy left for role-playing, she did a spot of 'Art' - I think the drawing below is inspired by a scene she had just watched in Dr. Who where a Gelf (gaseous, ghost-like being) had just left the body of an old woman and swirled around the theatre where Charles Dickens was giving a reading. (I believe the person is Dickens and the dots etc. the audience, I know the scribbly thing with the face is the Gelf). I popped upstairs and when I returned, she had written letters on the back. No actual words (though upside down you can pretend she was trying to write Ho! Ho! ho!) but this is the first time I have seen her deliberately write letters without guide dots or copying something.
So, that was this week in brief! (Well, fairly brief, anyway!) Surprisingly productive considering I would say I have neglected Sylvie in favour of Davy a lot this week due to his cold making him crave mummy, and a lot of relaxing not doing much activity. Hope I can do more with Sylvie next week - she shows my neglect by getting seriously over-clingy with daddy - so with any luck, Davy will get better soon and I can play with her properly again.
23rd November - Gymnastics Competition
She had her normal 'Gym' class before the competition, which was held after lunch. We were pleased to see a happier little girl than last week actually participating with enthusiasm despite yesterday's exertions - looks like the growth spurt may have ended!
While we were there, I enquired into Trampolining - Sylvie had expressed a desire to try this after watching her cousin at a class but the lower age limit is 5 so I haven't looked into it before, but knowing how long a waiting list these things can have sometimes, I decided to see about putting her name down. I was told there were 3 classes, Monday and Tuesday evening and Saturday afternoon, with places being available now in the Saturday class. Sylvie could start immediately in the Saturday class as the coach will take them from 4 and a half in that one, but I decided to get back to them on our preferred day - although Sylvie would love to start immediately, not only are we feeling a little low in funds at the moment I don't feel 2 'Dance' classes in the morning followed by Trampolining in the afternoon is a terribly good idea! In the end, we decided Monday would be best as that day my mum can drop us off at the Sports Centre and my husband collect us. Tuesday would be difficult transport-wise and is also the day the local Rainbow troop meets, something else she has her name down for when she turns 5.
After 'Gym', we headed out to my parents - they had told us they would be away on a walking holiday in the Cotswolds this weekend so wouldn't be there, but I wanted to sort through the cherry tree runners my dad had left for me to take to the Community tree-planting project in the local park which happens next week so we planned to make a quick stop then go home for lunch.
As we arrived, however, my parents car pulled in behind us! They had decided to cut their holiday short as the weather had turned and they didn't fancy the walk in sleet, so we stayed there for lunch before heading back to the Sports Centre for Sylvie's competition. Lunch marked a big first for Davy - he tried solid food for the first time (a chocolate bar, carrying on the fine tradition started by his sister whose first taste of solids was when she grabbed a chocolate I was eating out of my hand and stuffed it in her mouth at 4 months. By this count, Davy is starting late at 5 months)
He loved it, and only allowed his chocolate-covered hand to leave his mouth afterwards so we could clean him when he grabbed for yet more chocolate waved enticingly in front of him.
He was also given the opportunity to try out the baby carrier that was bought for taking his cousin Geocaching. Grandad is keen that he shouldn't stop me and Sylvie going! He seemed to enjoy it, happily chewing away on a strap as he was settled in and swung up on his grandad's back! Looks like he will be coming too next time a caching trip is suggested.
Back at the Sports Centre, we were pleased to see Sylvie's new-found confidence around other people was evident, with her heading off to her correct group on her own and taking full part in the warm-up despite the large crowd of unknown children and adults around her. She even went over to get a drink all by herself, threading through the crowd of spectators in a way I would not have imagined her doing a couple of months ago.
She was eager to take her turn, and was obviously excited, but was also starting to show signs of tiredness - not surprising really, but it all affected her performance as she was no where near as neat as she had been in practice. She did try very very hard to do her rocking back and forth on her own, a skill that she still can't manage without assistance (she can do it on a slope but not on the flat) and came very close to succeeding. Unfortunately, this was balanced out by her not standing on one leg anything like as well as she usually does.
She jumped off the vault on her own (I had thought that the environment might make her regress to demanding assistance, but she was fine with this) however, it was only a 3-tier vault not a 4-tier the younger groups were using, so rather than jump on, Sylvie happily stepped up onto it from the spring-board as if she was climbing the stairs!
She made it clear she really thought she was in the running for a medal after they finished and despite us pointing out that she hadn't done as well as she has done in practice so she shouldn't get her hopes up, she was obviously very disappointed when she wasn't in the top 3. All the competitors got a certificate of attendance to take home but this was not enough for Sylvie who has got used to getting medals lately! They had a big group photo with all the children and the mayor of North Warwickshire who was there to present the medals (which means Sylvie has met two mayor's in a week!) but Sylvie sat there with a huge pout on her face - until she saw me with the camera when she covered her face with the certificate! (I'm not posting these photos as I don't like posting other people's children without permission)
She was in full-on strop mode after the photo, which came as no surprise. I dressed her while her daddy took Davy out to the car, but then she took off at full speed before I had collected all my gear, something she is prone to do in a temper. I couldn't allow it today - too many people milling about meant that I didn't catch her until she reached the foyer, where she tried very hard to dash off into the car park. It was tipping it down with rain and there were more cars than usual entering and leaving thanks to the competition, plus her daddy had had to park across the road due to lack of spaces when we had arrived so there was no way I was letting her go out alone so she screamed and fought to get away from me and out into the rain while I was equally determined to hold on to her until I was ready to leave. I ended up locking us in the toilet together so I could put my coat on as I did not trust her in the mood she was in not to get squashed by a car if I let go of her hand.
Sylvie continued screaming and trying to get away from me as I took her over the road to the car and only stopped when she fell asleep. We debated whether to take her to town to get her magazine or not, but decided in the end to go straight there as we didn't want her to miss an issue but didn't want to get it for her then have her pay us back - we learned from experience that that leads back to the slippery slope of her expecting us to buy her everything she asks for. I had wanted to go into town to watch the Christmas Lights switched on, but we decided to play it by ear - the weather was extremely changable today and Sylvie might be too tired to want to anyway.
In the end, we decided to pop in and take a look at the carnival and stalls that were in town. We arrived just in time to hear the applause as a group of dancers from the Dance school Sylvie attends finished their last dance of the night - we had hoped to catch a bit of them but fate had other ideas!
We did a couple of tombolas and lucky dips on the Charity stalls, watched a puppet show and then headed back as it was freezing and starting to rain. We promised Sylvie a go in the Maze we had seen on the way down - it had clear plastic walls, so you only knew which was passageway and which wall by sense of touch. Although she was told repeatedly by me, daddy and the man running it to move slowly with her hands out in front, Sylvie refused to and walked solidly into more than one wall. The last one hurt and made her cry, so daddy, who had gone in with her, took over the lead and they happily completed it this way.
We stopped for a junk food dinner as the fast food restaurant had a special deal on and we all needed to warm up. While I got the food, Sylvie showed daddy some 'Maths' with the glow sticks we had been given at one stall. She then joined them all together and made a 'crown' that daddy had to wear during the meal! We were just finishing when we heard the count-down to the lights going on outside and we saw the tree and town light up through the restaurant window.
We headed home, where daddy tried out the dalek mouse mat that had come with Sylvie's magazine but found it had the wrong surface for an LED mouse, so we decided she could use it as a place mat for her food instead. Daddy headed out and I took Sylvie to bed where she had a very short story - she was shattered!