View Full Version : Wish me luck !
DMZ-LT
01-30-2004, 06:09 AM
My daughter and Steven are going away Sat. for the entire day and night. Sharon and I are keeping the baby , been a long time. My new dog cries when the baby cries. I feel like I am walking into an ambush. Scouts Out !
revwardoc
01-30-2004, 06:22 AM
You know what they say about babies...Shit happens, and happens, and happens, and happens......
Better have Huggies make direct deliveries to your house!
Keith_Hixson
01-30-2004, 09:02 PM
Some advice - start at the bottom and work up!
Keith :D
Timothy R. Kuhr
01-30-2004, 11:01 PM
Keith,
Timothy R. Kuhr
01-30-2004, 11:04 PM
Screwed up again.
Bottoms up don't work with girls. Just spent the morning at my son and daughter-in-law's - 3 boys and 1 girl so I know - been warned enough by my ex.
DMZ-LT
01-31-2004, 07:29 AM
They just left. I have gotten the duck tape out , just in case.
catman
02-02-2004, 07:01 AM
LT...give us a SITREP! How did the opa make out?
Trav
DMZ-LT
02-02-2004, 07:19 AM
Sharon did most of the work but I walked a pretty good slack. Only had to duck tape him once. Daughter called every 15 min to check on him. He will melt your heart in a second , wish my Dad would have met him. Scouts Out !
Dragon Lady
02-02-2004, 10:16 AM
Opa,
Sounds like it wont be very long before the kid signs you off on your Opa Training and you advance to your next rating!
How many beers after it was over?
;-)
DL
DMZ-LT
02-02-2004, 10:50 AM
A few , but even walking slack I was exhausted. I feel asleep during the Super Bowl ! PFC (p) Opa
Jimmyjet
02-02-2004, 05:08 PM
Opa
Diapers like politicians have to be changed often..and for the same reason
DMZ-LT
02-03-2004, 09:24 AM
Having raised two girls , I was unprepared for the showers boys seem to enjoy launching when you take their diaper off. But I am learning - fast !! Pass a towel , please
revwardoc
02-04-2004, 05:56 AM
I sure hope your grandkid grows up to be a lot smarter than these idiots:
<DIV class=storyhead>Brrrraving the cold</DIV>
<DIV class=deck>Many teens think it's cool to go coatless in winter.</DIV>
<DIV class=deck></DIV>
<DIV class=deck>
<DIV class=byline>By Ellen Miller</DIV>
<DIV class=credit>
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<DIV class=date>February 3, 2004</DIV>
<DIV class=date></DIV>
<DIV class=date>
<P class=text>It's a winter-morning drama playing all over town: "The Young and the Coatless."
<P class=text>It stars a frustrated mom -- "Put your coat on! Don't you know it's cold outside?" -- and her blithe youth, who insists a hooded sweatshirt is protection enough even during the kind of bitter cold that prompted school delays and closings last week.
<P class=text>"The other day, I saw a kid getting on the bus in a T-shirt," says Michele Rector, eighth-grade guidance counselor at Ben Davis Junior High School on the Westside. "On a cold day, maybe 10 (percent) to 25 percent have hats or gloves. I don't think I see anybody in a pair of boots. Somewhere between 50 (percent) and 65 percent of kids have a coat (on)."
<P class=text>While the recent spate of super-bitter cold drove some coat-averse kids to give in and don cold-weather gear, some still opted for sweatshirts or shirtsleeves.
<P class=text>Kids offer different reasons for coatlessness, but it basically boils down to coolness and convenience.
<P class=text>"A lot of my friends and I prefer to wear hoodies. It's easier going from place to place," says Ali Cialdella, 14, an eighth-grader at St. Michael Catholic School. "It's so hard to accessorize with a big winter coat," she adds.
<P class=text>When the Westside teen knew she'd be outside a few hours early last week, to build an igloo with the kids next door, she did wear a jacket, boots, hat and scarf.
<P class=text>"It's OK," she says, "because the neighbors have known me since I was 7, and they've seen me in anything."
<P class=text>But most winter mornings, says mom Sherry Cialdella, "I'm always on Ali: 'You need to take your coat!' "
<P class=text>Like many parents of adolescents, Sherry has decided the bundle-up battle is not worth winning at any price.
<P class=text>That's a sane approach, says Dee Love, a child development specialist at Purdue University and parent of an 18-year-old high school senior.
<P class=text>"He and I just had this discussion not too long ago," Love says. "I asked him, 'Why don't you want to take your coat?' I expressed my concerns about him getting cold.
<P class=text>"He says his reasons are practical: 'My locker is too small; I'm not outside all that much.'
<P class=text>"Then we tried to explore some options and settled on a long-sleeved T-shirt and a hooded sweatshirt with pockets in front where he can put his hands.
<P class=text>"Also, he just got his first car, and I gave him a winter emergency kit that includes socks, gloves, a blanket and packets of hand and toe warmers. At least, in the worst-case scenario, he has something to keep him warm."
<P class=subhed>Few reasons to worry
<P class=text>Rose M. Mays, associate dean of the Indiana University nursing school and a specialist in adolescent health, says parents shouldn't be overly concerned about the weather's impact on kids.
<P class=text>"Colds are not caused by cold, but by viruses," she says. As for frostbite and other conditions that can arise from prolonged exposure to bitter cold, "The amount of time they're out in the cold is miniscule, usually. There is that chance the bus will break down, but that is an unusual scenario."
<P class=text>Mays says that when her now-grown daughter was a teen, she would often forgo her coat in the cold, but Mays didn't sweat it.
<P class=text>"To me, it's not a big concern," she says. "I trust our young people to come in out of the cold."
<P class=subhed>A cultural difference?
<P class=text>Mays and Rector have noticed a cultural aspect to coatlessness. They say it's more common among white kids.
<P class=text>It's something Cheryl Holt, an African-American whose two sons attend Arlington High School on the Northeastside, also has seen.
<P class=text>"I have a couple of white friends; it's like they like this weather," she says, noting her belief that black people are more susceptible to feeling cold.
<P class=text>Whatever the reason, her 16-year-old son, Antonio Batteast, an Arlington junior, wouldn't want to face winter without his black, knee-length, hooded fake-fur coat.
<P class=text>"It's a fashionable coat," he says with obvious pride.</DIV></DIV>
Dragon Lady
02-04-2004, 07:20 AM
Dan,
That is my 17 year old. Even when the weather hit the heavy negative numbers she would only wear a "hoodie". Meanwhile the $200 down ski coat I bought last year still hangs on the peg in the hall. I'm taking it back since she wont wear it!
Although I do remember running out to get the mail without shoes on and snow on the ground. On the flip side I never wore shoes for those 3 months of summer either.
DL
revwardoc
02-04-2004, 05:52 PM
DL,
Now that I'm back in school full time, I see that, too. I feel like dope slapping some of those kids. You know how cold its been this winter, and they go to school in jeans, sneaks, and t's. I saw a kid waiting at a bus stop, its about -10, and that's all he's wearing. He was shaking so hard I think he registered on the Richter Scale, but I'll be he thought he was "cool"! As far as going out for the mail half-dressed, sure, that's just a few seconds. I dunno. Maybe I'm just gettin' old, but I believe in dressing for the weather.
Doc.2/47
02-05-2004, 03:38 PM
Lt.-
Sounds like you're learnin fast.Baby boys have range and accuracy that would turn your average sniper green with envy.I ever tell ya about my stint working the new-born nursery?Probably not as I cannot recall being drunk enough to talk about that anytime recently.Averaged 20+ babes at any one time and had one co-worker.Vividly recall one infant lad-being changed by my co-worker-who managed to hit me (and all other babies in between) across aprox. 30 feet.Dead center in the face first shot.Brings a whole new meaning to "spray and pray".
One shot.One splash.
Consider wearing MC helment w/face shield.
revwardoc
02-06-2004, 06:13 AM
Doc,
That happened to me when I was changing my grand-nephew's diaper. I remembered that my mother, when she was changing her grandkids, would softly sing to them because she said it calmed them down. I thought it a pretty good idea so did just that. The kid let go while I was in mid-lyric and got me right in the mouth! Bleah!!! THEN she told me that, when changing a boy's diaper, always put another over them just in case. Bad timing, Ma!
Doc.2/47
02-06-2004, 08:22 AM
Yep.There's a critic in every crowd.
DMZ-LT
02-21-2004, 06:30 PM
Took him , with his Mother , on his first ever stroller push today . It was cool. Opa PS also watched him puke a whole bottle up .
Oh well, it's all part of the package I guess. Kids are the absolute best. Keep up the good work OPA :D
SEATJERKER
02-21-2004, 07:33 PM
...My son just turned 4, and has been doing his own thing for a good long while now,...
...makes me proud,...
...Now John,... Dear John, I'm sure your quite aware of the consequences of not wearing protection against ones with a limited range of vision,...
...The puking's cool though,... you'd not think they couldn't hold so much, we took ours to the local mini amusement park/ mini golf in town 2 years ago, and as we're walking in, he's strapped in the stroller no less, and well you get the picture, filled up his lap, and we're just still strolling in, took a few moments until my daughter gave the famous "ooooohhhhhhhhh, and the dreaded finger point,... immediate 180, and home for wash, and wax, back out for round two,...
..."Don't eat yellow snow',...
...
SuperScout
02-21-2004, 08:21 PM
By now, I'm sure you've heard of the Absolute Truth #37 that white shirts cause allergic and emetic reaction in babies! Yup, put on a clean white shirt, and that grandbaby of yours will do some serious projectile hurling your way!! :D :D
DMZ-LT
02-23-2004, 05:42 AM
Yup. Didn't think he could hold that much. Took the old Harley out and put a couple of hundred miles on it. Some times it takes two tanks of gas just to get me thinking right :xx:
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