“Jumping dandelion” picture, names, fishes, blather, standing

The Great Elf William as The Jumping Dandelion

This beyond fabulous photograph of Mago on a trampoline was taken by my dad on his cell phone camera while we were at.. a.. multi-birthday party?.. at my sister’s. (No, I don’t mean by that link that we were having a party at her blog. You can’t really do that. Well, maybe you can, but even blogs aren’t good enough for real parties.) It scales up to a large resolution pretty well, which I have done and you can grab that image if you click the thumbnail to open it. On my work computer as a “desktop” or “wallpaper” (which is it already – a desk or a wall?) this one has gotten a lot of notice.

Mago is very interested in water lately. Yesterday he placed a plastic bag in a sink and emptied a quarter of a large bottle of body wash in with running water. Fun experiment – but Tia was exasperated. He makes up words and names many things, including pretend fishes, which can be any object at all – toys, a frisbee, branches, rocks – which he collects and puts in a large plastic bin (“aquarium”) full of water (in the front yard). One example among so many I’d forget is that yesterday he named a rock a “rockfish” with a name of Thotha (“th-aw-tha”), which Tia thought I should write down for a character name in some fantasy story, which is why I’m writing it.

Nem-nem has started babbling many vowels and different consonants and blather. She’ll offer you perfect blather in perfect meaningfulness, as if it were just ordinary adult conversation, which I now recall thinking with Mago it may as well be for adults anyway. How much do we consciously remember? We might as well make it perfect blather – it’s more fun.

Nem-nem stood on her own for a good ten seconds the other day, balancing.

3 Replies to ““Jumping dandelion” picture, names, fishes, blather, standing”

  1. bla hoo ble ga buh ba?

    (Thank you. It took me some moments to realize my wish for pure babble-speak among adults was being fulfilled. My regrets that I followed it with something “meaningful”.)

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