What happens when a baby falls out a window?
Answer...
Awful isn't it? Wouldn't you feel terrible if you were this baby's mother? We've been using windows to cool our house during this nice in-between time of heater and AC. The window has a window seat, and Ashley doesn't play there very often. So I didn't even think of it when she was playing there Thursday, while I was a few feet away in the kitchen. I could hear her talking and babbling, then all of a sudden it was distant crying and screaming. She had pushed through the screen while leaning on it. I made a mad dash outside to rescue her.
This was the next day.
So much for the cute pictures of the previous post, eh? We're very, very grateful that it wasn't worse than it is. Heavens knows it could have been! But she has rebounded well and acts her normal, happy self. She's just a fright to look at. And every time someone asks "what happened?" I have to feel guilty all over again telling them, "Yes, my child fell out the window."
Now I'm praying it will all heal nicely without scars we can post cute pictures again!
Saturday, May 30, 2009
Thursday, May 14, 2009
Ashley Cuteness
Tuesday, May 12, 2009
April Newsletter
Tennessee Tidbits
Bryan went on a trip to China at the end of the month. He spent a day giving an 8-hour lecture on statistics as part of a workshop sponsored by the Chinese CDC and another day listening to lectures. The other 3 days he was able to spend as a tourist. He visited the Forbidden City, Tiananmen Square, the Summer Palace, the Ming Tombs, and the Great Wall. He also ate lots of weird Chinese food. It was a great trip – China was pretty spectacular. But thankfully, he has no more out-of-country trips planned for the rest of the year.
Gifts for the kids from China:
We’ve been enjoying the mild Spring weather, until it started raining. Lately it’s felt like we’re back in Seattle. The kids have fun playing hide & seek and freeze tag outside with neighbors and riding bikes and tricyles on the driveway. We can now do short family bike rides with Sienna on her own bike and the other two in the bike trailer, although Ashley screams like she’s dying whenever she’s wearing the helmet. We had a friend from Seattle visit and together hiked the Harpeth River Narrows, a nearby State Recreation area. In April we also went to a Sounds game (local baseball team), visited the zoo, and did an Easter egg hunt in the front yard. Even when it’s raining the kids like to play in puddles and with the umbrella, which is now hanging on to only three spokes. Ashley thinks its great fun to splash in the water under the downspout then lick her fingers. Gross.
The kids are enjoying soccer, although two games and a practice have been canceled due to weather. Coach Bryan hasn’t minded too much. Both Colby and Sienna like to stay on the outskirts of the pack chasing the ball. They also like to practice in the front yard with Dad and the neighbors, using buckets to mark the goals. It’s cute to see them give each other hugs after a goal.
Kristen has been busy planting flowers, and enjoys working in our pretty perennial garden. She spent many hours giving our hedges a much needed haircut, and even got a big haircut herself.
Bryan found a friend who likes working on cars… yippee! A few weeks ago they tried to fix a squealing belt in our car. They didn’t finish the project and it only made it worse, giving an ear-splitting loud squeal enough to wake the neighborhood at 7 am. It turned heads in parking lots and Kristen was embarrassed to drive it. They finally got together again and got it fixed… hooray!
That’s about all! (Here's more pictures from April)
Love, Bryan, Kristen, Sienna, Colby & Ashley
Bryan went on a trip to China at the end of the month. He spent a day giving an 8-hour lecture on statistics as part of a workshop sponsored by the Chinese CDC and another day listening to lectures. The other 3 days he was able to spend as a tourist. He visited the Forbidden City, Tiananmen Square, the Summer Palace, the Ming Tombs, and the Great Wall. He also ate lots of weird Chinese food. It was a great trip – China was pretty spectacular. But thankfully, he has no more out-of-country trips planned for the rest of the year.
Gifts for the kids from China:
We’ve been enjoying the mild Spring weather, until it started raining. Lately it’s felt like we’re back in Seattle. The kids have fun playing hide & seek and freeze tag outside with neighbors and riding bikes and tricyles on the driveway. We can now do short family bike rides with Sienna on her own bike and the other two in the bike trailer, although Ashley screams like she’s dying whenever she’s wearing the helmet. We had a friend from Seattle visit and together hiked the Harpeth River Narrows, a nearby State Recreation area. In April we also went to a Sounds game (local baseball team), visited the zoo, and did an Easter egg hunt in the front yard. Even when it’s raining the kids like to play in puddles and with the umbrella, which is now hanging on to only three spokes. Ashley thinks its great fun to splash in the water under the downspout then lick her fingers. Gross.
The kids are enjoying soccer, although two games and a practice have been canceled due to weather. Coach Bryan hasn’t minded too much. Both Colby and Sienna like to stay on the outskirts of the pack chasing the ball. They also like to practice in the front yard with Dad and the neighbors, using buckets to mark the goals. It’s cute to see them give each other hugs after a goal.
Kristen has been busy planting flowers, and enjoys working in our pretty perennial garden. She spent many hours giving our hedges a much needed haircut, and even got a big haircut herself.
Bryan found a friend who likes working on cars… yippee! A few weeks ago they tried to fix a squealing belt in our car. They didn’t finish the project and it only made it worse, giving an ear-splitting loud squeal enough to wake the neighborhood at 7 am. It turned heads in parking lots and Kristen was embarrassed to drive it. They finally got together again and got it fixed… hooray!
That’s about all! (Here's more pictures from April)
Love, Bryan, Kristen, Sienna, Colby & Ashley
Wednesday, May 6, 2009
Bryan's Trip to Beijing
I got to spend a week in China at the end of April, participating in a workshop sponsored by the Chinese CDC. Here are a few pictures from the trip.
Here I am in Tiananmen Square, looking towards the Forbidden City. There were some notorious riots here 20 years ago. There is a huge picture of Mao Zedong, the founder of the Chinese Communist Party back in the 40s hanging on the wall, and Mao's refrigerated body is on display in a large memorial building on the square. (I didn't get to go inside the building.) I went back to my hotel and tried googling Tiananmen Square, but I couldn't open any of the websites -- they've been censored by the government.
This is me and my helpful friend, Dr. Yie, inside the Forbidden City. China's emperors lived here from the 1400s to the early 1900s.
The Great Wall is about an hour or so north of Beijing. Here are a few pictures. I've never seen more tourists in my life -- most of them were Chinese.
The next two pictures are from the Summer Palace. This was the countryside retreat of the emperors. It's spectacular, with beautiful gardens, a large lake, and lots of fancy buildings. The first picture is of "The Long Corridor," which is a pretty walkway paralleling a lake for almost 1 kilometer. The second picture is looking up towards the Tower of the Buddhist Incense.
I ate without using a fork, spoon, or knife for over 5 days. Some of the food was very interesting, to say the least: chicken feet, chicken heads, coagulated blood soup, pig ears, lots of seaweed,... I didn't know what I was eating most of the time. I typically enjoyed the food, although I got a little tired of eating Chinese food for breakfast.
If you're interested, more pictures are here.
Here I am in Tiananmen Square, looking towards the Forbidden City. There were some notorious riots here 20 years ago. There is a huge picture of Mao Zedong, the founder of the Chinese Communist Party back in the 40s hanging on the wall, and Mao's refrigerated body is on display in a large memorial building on the square. (I didn't get to go inside the building.) I went back to my hotel and tried googling Tiananmen Square, but I couldn't open any of the websites -- they've been censored by the government.
This is me and my helpful friend, Dr. Yie, inside the Forbidden City. China's emperors lived here from the 1400s to the early 1900s.
The Great Wall is about an hour or so north of Beijing. Here are a few pictures. I've never seen more tourists in my life -- most of them were Chinese.
The next two pictures are from the Summer Palace. This was the countryside retreat of the emperors. It's spectacular, with beautiful gardens, a large lake, and lots of fancy buildings. The first picture is of "The Long Corridor," which is a pretty walkway paralleling a lake for almost 1 kilometer. The second picture is looking up towards the Tower of the Buddhist Incense.
I ate without using a fork, spoon, or knife for over 5 days. Some of the food was very interesting, to say the least: chicken feet, chicken heads, coagulated blood soup, pig ears, lots of seaweed,... I didn't know what I was eating most of the time. I typically enjoyed the food, although I got a little tired of eating Chinese food for breakfast.
If you're interested, more pictures are here.
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