She's three! How did that happen? I mean, really. A month or so ago Gregg said to her, "Callie, you're getting so old!" She replied, "No, Dad, I'm still new." And how fun it is to enjoy her newness and zest for life. Here's a little update on this bundle of drama and cleverness:
- She still loves Minnie (aka "Min") - sleeps with her, feeds her a bottle (or sometimes nurses her, too), gives her rides in the shopping cart, brings her to Grandma's . . . Min is the 5th member of our family, for sure. I told Cal she was a good mom to Minnie and she said, "You're a good mom, too."
- We recently finished our first ever chapter book together - she sat (mostly) through Charlotte's Web and loved it. I loved reading something other than Curious George for the umpteenth time. We're working on Homer Price currently, and while I don't think she's quite as into that one, she does ask for a chapter every day, so that is something!
- She's the best kitchen helper - so eager to "do it myself!" on everything lately. She's become especially adept at egg cracking, grape picking and washing, dough mixing (as ling as it's not too stiff), dough "pinking" (her word for patting/poking the dough into a circle before rolling it out for pizza), dough rolling, liquid whisking, and ingredient dumping.
- She's a bit (probably an understatement) of a drama queen - default response to pretty much anything is shooting crocodile tears. Disappointment, anger, hurt feelings, hurt fingers, you name it. And then she "needs a tissue for my tears" to make her feel better.
- She says phrases that she's heard but don't completely fit the current context (for example, riding her bike to the neighbor's mailbox on a totally typical, normal, boring afternoon she says, "I can't believe my eyes!" Or maybe it really is magical and I just need to be more observant.)
- Best bedtime staller ever.
- Absolutely loves Daniel Tiger - would watch him non-stop if I'd let her. And she can work the roku remote to turn him on all by herself. (Luckily she only does so with permission.)
- She's got the bossy big sister gig down - a lot of squawking and screeching at Sam if he gets too close to her things. (We're working on changing the default of pushing and hitting him to something less physical.)
- She's totally rocked the potty thing - I don't even have to worry or wonder or think about accidents anymore (except yesterday? what the heck was that fluke?)
- She knows all the days of the week and loves to discuss what is coming up on specific days before bed (I have to limit it to two days; she picks which ones) and then we recite all the days in order. (This was something she came up with pretty much on her own and now it's part of the routine.)
- "Yesterday" or "last week" means anytime in the past.
- "I fink" ends many of her sentences. "I need a drink of water I fink." "I want to blow bubbles I fink." "Let's go to the park I fink."
- Loves getting the mail (gets that from her mom!) and is extra excited to see mail with her name on it in the box. "A letter for me! My very own name! My very own letter!"
- She loves to be outside - playing at the park, walking through the cemetery, going for a bike ride in the burley, riding her own bike down the street to the neighbors' mailboxes and back, making fires in the backyard, playing on the hammock, watering the garden
- She is an amazing little hiker (she is a champion and will just keep going and going and going, even on steep uphills: "I fink I can! I can hear my muscles! This is a steep steep hill!")
- Still naps every day after lunch for usually a couple hours - looks forward to it, even. (Hoorah!)
- Adores nursery - skip-hop-jogs down the hall every week and into the door. She's a dream.
- Her word for anyone who helps us in any way is "nurse" - could be an actual nurse or a ranger, waitress, librarian, etc.
- Loves story time and music makers, though it may not look like she's totally into them in the moment. Usually she just sits there and soaks everything in rather than recite the poems or sing the songs along with the leader and other kids. BUT - she knows every word and will sing them or recite them all at home.
- My favorite thing is to find her "reading" to herself and/or reciting parts of stories or poems or songs from memory as she's playing alone.
- She can finally open the fridge by herself and thinks she's so big!
- Can read/recognize the words no, not, now and will point them out to me on the page as we read a book or on a sign we encounter somewhere out and about.
- Knows the sounds of all the letters (at least the most common ones) and can name words that start with every letter.
- Can tell which way is right or left by looking at her hands (nope, not for the letter L made by the left hand finger and thumb trick; because her right palm has a freckle!).
- Becoming very independent - "I don't want that choice" is a common phrase heard around here in response to something we've told her to do (usually it's something that doesn't even have a choice associated with it.)
- She's a picker - nose, chapped lips, crayon papers, little plastic ribs on her sippy cup . . . anything that can be picked is. She is her mother's daughter after all.
- Well check stats: weight: 25.0 lbs (3rd percentile), height: 35.75 inches (21st percentile) - still small, but her sass more than makes up for it.
Here's a video Gregg took while hiking with her last weekend:
She's the funnest little three year old I know. Also, a darn smart one - I'll hire her to map weeds ("I found a bad weed!") anytime :)
ReplyDeleteWhoo. I need to take a break! How cute, fun and enlightening to go hiking with a three year old. They have such a goo perspective on things! Beautiful little girl! Love you, Cal!
ReplyDeleteWhat a delight our miss Callie is! Love the photos, love the video and love the sparkling girl!!
ReplyDelete3 IS so big! What a fun milestone.
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