Thursday, May 16, 2013
The "Dark Stuff."
I love my little son so much, and I am continually amazed at what he has learned and does, but one speech pattern he has been doing has amused me more than usual. Noah will often ask me for a snack and it seems like he is always eating.
We have started a shelf for him on the bottom of the pantry that contains snacks that he can access himself and eat when he gets hungry while mom is busy cleaning/studying/writing etc. He is usually pretty happy with the granola bars, raisins, fruit cups (he even goes to get a spoon and brings me one upstairs too) and other snacks. He also knows where yogurts are in the freezer and cheese and baby carrots in the fridge However, there are times where the kid wants something a bit sweeter to whet his whistle and he has found a new way to try to get me to give him all sort of treats.
"Mommie, I'm hungry." I tell him he can go pick something out. "Maaayyybe, something round?" He motions like a circle.
"Like a carrot chip?" I ask, knowing what item in the pantry he wants.
"No, something rounder? And big?"
"Oh- you mean a cookie?"
"Yeah, a cookie. That's good." This isn't the first time that he has been able to use his words to verbally trap us. When he used to be less adept at articulating words he would ask for something he knew we wouldn't normally be about to do, and then we would repeat it to clarify that we were hearing it correctly.
"A movie?"
"Okay." As if were the ones who had thought of it. No Buddy, we were just clarifying, not offering.
Now, he has gone a step further and is using adjectives to try to get his point across. He just walked up to me a few minutes ago and asked of the double chocolate cookie dough I made a couple days ago, but haven't quite made it to the oven, and which I was sampling a little while ago. "What did you do with the dark stuff?"
It is so interesting to hear how his language is developing, and that he is seeing these words as alternative ways to describe something that he wants, or one reason that he likes the object of his desire. Yes, the cookie dough is dark and chocolatey and yummy, and he knows somehow if he appeals to that aspect of the object, he just might have a better chance of getting it. I'm curious if he is showing this because he is taking after mom in writing, or if he is taking after daddy in his ability to sell.
We have started a shelf for him on the bottom of the pantry that contains snacks that he can access himself and eat when he gets hungry while mom is busy cleaning/studying/writing etc. He is usually pretty happy with the granola bars, raisins, fruit cups (he even goes to get a spoon and brings me one upstairs too) and other snacks. He also knows where yogurts are in the freezer and cheese and baby carrots in the fridge However, there are times where the kid wants something a bit sweeter to whet his whistle and he has found a new way to try to get me to give him all sort of treats.
"Mommie, I'm hungry." I tell him he can go pick something out. "Maaayyybe, something round?" He motions like a circle.
"Like a carrot chip?" I ask, knowing what item in the pantry he wants.
"No, something rounder? And big?"
"Oh- you mean a cookie?"
"Yeah, a cookie. That's good." This isn't the first time that he has been able to use his words to verbally trap us. When he used to be less adept at articulating words he would ask for something he knew we wouldn't normally be about to do, and then we would repeat it to clarify that we were hearing it correctly.
"A movie?"
"Okay." As if were the ones who had thought of it. No Buddy, we were just clarifying, not offering.
Now, he has gone a step further and is using adjectives to try to get his point across. He just walked up to me a few minutes ago and asked of the double chocolate cookie dough I made a couple days ago, but haven't quite made it to the oven, and which I was sampling a little while ago. "What did you do with the dark stuff?"
It is so interesting to hear how his language is developing, and that he is seeing these words as alternative ways to describe something that he wants, or one reason that he likes the object of his desire. Yes, the cookie dough is dark and chocolatey and yummy, and he knows somehow if he appeals to that aspect of the object, he just might have a better chance of getting it. I'm curious if he is showing this because he is taking after mom in writing, or if he is taking after daddy in his ability to sell.
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Monday, May 6, 2013
Social Media Planning: Editorial Calendar
As anyone who has read this blog knows that i love me a good printable. In fact, by far my most popular Pinterest Board is dedicated to Digital Freebies that have made my life easier, or are just something enjoyable.
Recently, I have been scouring the web for an editorial calendar for my blogs and social media. I have used an social media calendar int eh past, but never found one that worked well enough for me to stick with it. Until now. One of the best parts of my discovery is that the graphic designer that created the blogging calendar is a fellow Minneapolis resident. I always love to send a little linkage to a fellow Minnesotan.
Ekcetera Design Studio is a local graphic designer and creative and she is offering not only a free social media planning calendar template, but she also has a free e-book as well as some great simple tutorials for small businesses and social media for those of you who are newbies to the whole social media management game.
I've changed a few of the fields in my version of the template since I don't particularly use YouTube all that much (hopefully in the future.) I also prefer to have a printed version of the calendar to work with and scribble on and cross out, so I had to scoot a few things in order to make it all fit on one standard sheet. For the most part though, the logic of the organization for this social media calendar trumps by far what I was using in the past. Be sure to check out Ekcetera Design and let her know that I sent you. ;)
Recently, I have been scouring the web for an editorial calendar for my blogs and social media. I have used an social media calendar int eh past, but never found one that worked well enough for me to stick with it. Until now. One of the best parts of my discovery is that the graphic designer that created the blogging calendar is a fellow Minneapolis resident. I always love to send a little linkage to a fellow Minnesotan.
Ekcetera Design Studio is a local graphic designer and creative and she is offering not only a free social media planning calendar template, but she also has a free e-book as well as some great simple tutorials for small businesses and social media for those of you who are newbies to the whole social media management game.
I've changed a few of the fields in my version of the template since I don't particularly use YouTube all that much (hopefully in the future.) I also prefer to have a printed version of the calendar to work with and scribble on and cross out, so I had to scoot a few things in order to make it all fit on one standard sheet. For the most part though, the logic of the organization for this social media calendar trumps by far what I was using in the past. Be sure to check out Ekcetera Design and let her know that I sent you. ;)
Labels:
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calendar,
digital,
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interactive media,
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Minnesota,
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