Natural History

There are some wonderful exhibits going on right now at the Natural History Museum of LA, and I thought I'd share the details in case you've got the kids on your hands in between school and camp for a few more days (is Freida the only one who starts school after Labor Day?). Truth is, Freida has been weirdly and wildly obsessed with dinosaurs for a while now, and we really trekked out to NHM (which we usually reserve for a trip to the Butterfly Pavilion) for the Dinosaur Encounters (since she had become interested on her own, I had been searching for local exhibits and such to cultivate her curiosity and work with her natural excitement). But once we were there I was thrilled to see they had a exhibit of animal horns - perfect trip for Elul!

They had a completely interactive hands-on display of all sorts of horns and antlers! I was even educational for me - I never realized quite how many different shapes and forms horns can be! And it was interesting to me that horns and antlers are made up of two completely different things - I always thought they were kind of the same thing and that we only use certain kosher animals horns for a Shofar, but it turns out antlers are made of solid bone and can not be hollowed as opposed to horns which are actually made of the same thing as nails. #JudaicWeirdness. :)

Aside from the horn exhibit, we had a crazy-cool time at the Dino Encounters!! It was fantastic! Check it out here.

And, of course, the Butterfly Pavilion is always a favorite! It's only around for another week or two, so if you got the kids on your hands go check it out!!!

Think Good

Ladies, I'm sorry I've been MIA but I've been so ridiculously busy! Freida suddenly decided last week that she didn't like camp and I had to pick her up crying a few hours into the morning two days in a row. Turns out (as the genius young counselor had suggested) that she was getting sick. So - I've had her home with fever, cough, cold for a few days... Which, naturally, gave Hudi some fever, cough, and cold - plus, another tooth bud to complain about! And so, as life would have it, instead of having one more week with Freida in camp and a list of chores and errands to knock out last, I was stuck at home nursing and nurturing my two little babes. Which was wonderful and depressing. :)

On Monday I took over for the director of the camp here and I'm running with it until the end of the week. It's only 5 days, but oh my was it exhausting! I felt like I walked through the twilight zone yesterday as I made an attempt to run "lineup" - who has the stamina for that kind of screaming anymore?? I was pretty humored by the fact that it took so much out of me to sing a few songs at the top of my lungs, and I'm actually kind of looking forward to getting back into it.

Anyways! I've been meaning to write a bit about how positive thinking has recently impacted my life, and about this poster that my brother gifted me with when I moved into our new apartment. He had been working on a few lines of art highlighting some chassidic sayings, and being a serious typography lover, this Think Good poster was my favorite.

I remember connecting to this mantra since the very first time I heard of it in middle school. Whether it worked magically or not didn't really make any difference to me, what I loved about it was how obviously positive a person who'd think like this would become. It just made sense to "think good" either way. I was always a more upbeat and positive person, but when things would start to go wrong I definitely had/have a tendency to start the downhill negative thought process. Which is why this poster helps me so much; it quite literally serves as a constant reminder to keep my thoughts positive. When things are going great, great; and when they're not going so great, keep thinking great things. That's basically the gist of it. :)

And you know what? It totally works!

Plus, I love that we hung it in the dining room facing the hallway. I see it all the way down the hall, even lying in my bed!

You can get one of these positive posters here. And, if this isn't quite your thing, check out the rest of his art for sale!

P.S. I've been really into the whole typography thing - especially random words of inspiration. You can have a look at some of my other favorites on my "words" pinterest board.

Fab Neon Sacs

I feel like we've been seeing shots of these neon satchels everywhere! (Pinterest, anyone?) Using one of these brightly hued totes can work as a dose of color to upgrade any classic ensemble, to bring some daytime to a nighttime look, or to easily anchor a punk-rock getup.

 

Well, today you can snag these beautiful sacs at Fab.com!! If you don't yet have a Fab account, you can create one here!

Portrait of a Family

Last week Freida created her first self-portrait of her family! She had been coloring happily in the kitchen, while I was eating lunch and plugging away (at a design project my husband is currently working on) at my desk. Every once in a while she'd come into the living room to proudly show me her masterpiece. Most of them were of rainbows, clouds, and crocodiles (can anyone shed some light on how these 3 things connect? :), and I was in total awe when she brought in a paper, demanded that I close my eyes, and went on to surprise me with a full-on description of her drawing of our family! Isn't it so fun when they suddenly draw something coherent with reality, and we get to see it from their point of view...?!

Here were a few of her descriptions:

"The mommy is pink because she is a girl. She's wearing lots of hot-pink lipstick and playing guitar."

"The daughter is pink because she is a girl. She's stretching next to the Daddy because she is growing."

"The baby is little because she is a baby. Her legs are like that because she can't walk. She's crawling. And growing."

My absolute favorite part of this drawing is her depiction of the father: "The Daddy is big because Daddy's are so big."

I find it so interesting that children naturally view their fathers as big (apparently, even when daddy weighs much less than mommy! :). I think it's such an baffling and interesting fact that although the fathers work primarily away from the home, have much less involvement in the every-day life of their children vs. the mother, yet get the "big" role in their child's understanding of life and of people. I had a friend over the other day, and when she saw this drawing hanging in the dining room she immediately commented on how ridiculous and unfair it is that even though the dads do "nothing" in comparison to what the moms do daily for their children, the children still view the dads as the largest part of their life! We spoke about it for a while, and I simply had different views on the matter. I think it's genius, and obvious!  It's as if the children anthropologically understand that the father is the "hunter and gatherer" of the family! Isn't it amazing?

Honestly speaking, I think about this pretty often. Both of my girls smiled first at their daddy, and when Freida was a baby she would immediately change her mood (for the better!) when my husband walked through the door at the end of the day. I thought it was due to the fact that we, the mothers, put the father on a pedestal so often; from "don't worry, daddy will fix it when he gets home." to "oh, just you wait until I tell your father about this!" - we are constantly raising the daddy-bar. Setting the table for dinner and waiting at the window until daddy pulls into the driveway is really exciting for the kids, and watching Freida call Manasseh to say goodnight before she retires on the nights he can't make it home before 7pm is simply wondrous. She LOVES him, and to her, he's totally king.

Anyways, I used to think that was why they smiled at him first. But recently my mother told me something that changed my mind about all that... She said she thinks all the kids smile at their father because of how happy their mother gets when daddy comes home! That totally hit home for me, and is a much more obvious reason - our mood changes when our husbands come home, and that, in-turn, is felt by our brood as well. Plus, they see us brighten up in our husbands presence and that's makes all the difference to them. How beautiful is that?

P.S. I love how the baby looks like a baby!

I jotted down a little word-for-word description of everything right as she was telling it to me, plus the date of the drawing. Doing it there and then makes it easier to keep stock of all the things our children make that we want to keep filed. Also, Ikea is the best and cheapest destination for framing things - with a matte and all!

Happy Camper!

 

Freida started day camp on Monday! I was mommy-ed out, and freaking about how much I had to get done before the end of the month... So! I signed her right up to Camp Israel @ Shaarei Tefila, and we've been a duo of Happy Camper and Blissed-Out-Mama ever since. :)

The camp is down our block, so we walk there together in the morning at 9am (sometimes joined by her best-buddy cousin Zali), and I take Hudi for a walk in the stroller to pick her up at 3pm. It's perfect.

She cried plenty on the first day when I left, but 30 minutes later my phone dinged with a photo-text from her counselor featuring a happy-faced Freida sporting hot-pink goggles in the pool! :)

 

 

While Freida's camping happy, I've been feeling like I'm racing the clock! 10 whole days to myself (Hudi doesn't demand much - a variety of toys, a walk for fresh air, and some good food pretty much keeps her smiling!) have proven insanely useful! My task-list seems to be a mile long (preparing my home for PLAY involves baby-proofing, outfitting the outdoors, baby toy and gear roundup, First Aid + CPR training, and lots more! Plus, planning Babyccino 2013 is super-fun and creative but super time-consuming as well!), but I'm making so much headway without my little ladybug in tow!

 

 

Walking her to camp is totally dreamy for me. I grew up in the suburbs and always had to carpool for 20 minutues minimum to get anywhere! While Skokie is beautifully awesome (!), I kind of always wished I had friends to walk to on Shabbos or neighbors to play with after camp etc. It's so blissful for me to walk my little girl down the block with her lunchbox and meet the whole entire neighborhood on their way to one nearby camp or another. Even her best-friend next-door-neighbor goes to another camp in the same building and they see each other at drop-off every morning. And the concept of being able to walk there with the baby to get her, stop at Coffee Bean on the way, or head for ice cream on the way home is SO fantastical to me! Ah, the little things in life.. :)

 

 

Anyways, while Freida's off at camp and Hudi is currently napping, I'm going to tackle re-organizing my kitchen pantry and laundry room (which includes making a list of things I need to buy to make the storage spaces more efficient), meet up with some girlfriends for lunch at RFD, head to The Container Store (and once I'm in Century City I'll probably make my way into Kate Spade :)), pick up Freida from camp, play a few mellow rounds of matching game with the AC full-blast, and run a warm bubble bath for the girls to enjoy together before dinner. As I said, it's been blissful. :)

 

 

Huge thanks to wonderful staff and people behind Camp Israel!!! You folks obviously know what you're doing!

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