Sunday, July 14, 2013

10 and 11 months

NOT the bug I'm talking about.

I started this post right around Levi turning 10 months with every intention of finishing it.  However, I ended up in crisis mode and blogging went to the very bottom of my list.  What happened?  Oh ya know...we have bed bugs.  Nasty, disgusting creatures that we're still battling.  But I don't want to talk about it right now.  Let's focus this cute little boy who just turned 11 months, shall we?



LEVI at 10 months:

~Has started doing "sniffy-face" just like his sister.  Its the cutest wrinkly nose and big ole' grin combo you've ever seen.

~Really wants to pull up on things, but just isn't quite stable enough though.

~Still only army crawls.  (Sorry, my marine bro-in-law informed me it isn't an "army crawl."  Its a modified low crawl.  ;)

~No longer has stick-straight-up hair.


11 Months:
~Pulls up on everything.

~Cruises to his hearts content (which means the end tables are no longer safe.  Dang.)

~CRAWLS!!!  Little man finally realized that crawling on all fours was a lot more convenient then dragging his little self across the floor.  (July 10)

~Has mastered the pinch and grab, which means he's doing a lot better feeding himself finger foods.  (Hooray for an easy way to distract him at mealtimes!)

~Nurses twice a day.  (Yay!)

~Is NOT a picky eater.  Its kind of shocking to have a baby that will eat just about anything (minus pureed peas, but who can blame him!?)

~Is a little chatter-box!  Right now its just babbles, but you can tell there is intent behind it!  Oh the thoughts he must be thinking!




Friday, May 31, 2013

2 1/2 Years!

Grace turned 2 and a half on April 27 (her Grandma's birthday).  She's such a special little girl and this is such a fun age I want to try to capture a little of her personality.

Grace is a caretaker.  She's not real interested in purses or jewelry (that may come later), but give her a stuffed animal and her sweet, caring nature comes out.  Often I hear her playing with Wolfie, telling him "Don' be sad. G'ace is hewe." as she rocks him to sleep.  She's very caring of Levi too, although the more mobile he gets the more often I hear claims of toys being "Mine!"

The other day, after a particularly trying day with a very fussy Levi, I was having a good cry on the couch.  Grace came running over to me with a very compassionate look on her face.  "Don' cwy, Mommy.  G'ace is hewe.  Is ok, Mommy."  And then she gave me a big kiss.  I explained to her that Levi was tired and that made mommy very tired, too.  She got very thoughtful and said "I tink....I tink you go to your woom and lay down.  Den you feew betteh, ok?"  Oh little girl.  You made me feel so much better then a nap ever could.

One of her favorite things is to have Levi come play in her room.  Her toys are still large enough and her room baby proofed enough that its a great place to put him down and let them just "play" for 20-30 minutes.  I'm hopeful they'll play that well together as they get older.

Her other great joy in life is "soomin'" (swinging).  The girl could swing for hours if we were willing to push her that long.  Thankfully she's learned that when the timer dings its time to get out of the swing and do something else without fussing.

She's kind of a picky eater, but she does eat so I can't complain.  We're also having a hard time with potty training.  I'm trying to be patient, to let it happen when she's ready.  But when you're changing her diaper and she's giving you a verbal recount of all the things you have to do clean her up, it sure does make me wish she was potty trained NOW!

Kurt and I were talking about how verbal she is now-there aren't many thoughts or needs she can't convey to us somehow.  Several days after a bout with upset tummy, we were at Jimmy Johns for dinner.  Grace finished eating, turned to me and said "My tummy owie."  I took no chances and rushed her outside, just in case.  Once there, I kept asking her how her tummy felt.  "Pwetty good.  Pwetty betteh.  Pwetty owie."  Not helpful, kid.  Not helpful.  Fortunately, we were able to finish up our list of errands with no issues.

She's figured out that "going to the restaurant" is a pretty neat deal.  During the day she'll randomly come tell me goodbye and that she'll see me either at the "westaurant" or at the science center (thanks, Sid the Science Kid.)  And apparently her favorite place to eat is Panda Express, where she can eat both "wice" (fried rice) and "sghetti" (chow mein).

She also seems to be understanding more about Jesus, too.  After we discipline her, we always pray and ask God to forgive her sins.  The other night I was getting ready to pray with her and have her repeat the prayer line by line.  Well, she launched into her own pray "Deaw Jesyuv, fogive me fo disobeyin' Mommy.  He'p me be a good he'per to Mommy.  T'ank you for taking away my sins.  Amen."  While I know much of that is just repeating things she's heard us say, it encouraged me that some of it might actually be sinking in.  The other night at bedtime, she even asked if I thought that Jes'yuv would lay down with her and keep her safe from the shadows.  So sweet.

While age two can be VERY trying at times, there are also many moments when I stand in awe of the little girl she is becoming.  She's sweet, smart, funny, and my heart delights in her.  So thankful I get to spend my days with "G'ace Ewiana."  :)

Monday, May 20, 2013

9 Months!

Wowee!  9 months old!

LEVI at 9 months:

~Has 4 teeth in (2 top, 2 bottom) with two more top ones on their way.

~Still has patches of eczema, but they're very, very mild.

~Army crawls to get everywhere.  He's so incredibly close to "real" crawling I feel like I can't take my eyes off him when he's up on all fours, just in case I miss THE moment.

~Sits up pretty well when propped up on one of his arms.

~Nurses 4 times a day, and has around 2 tubs of solid food twice a day.

~Has figured out how to make the guttural "G" sound and makes it as he wends his way through the house.

~Still has hair that sticks straight up.  Love it!

~Giggles the hardest when you tickle his ribs.  :)

~According to our home measurements, he weighs 17.4 pounds and is 30 inches long--one long and skinny boy!

~Thanks to his height, he's ready to move up to a convertible car seat.  Makes me happy and sad at the same time--as heavy as the infant car seat is with him in it, it is awfully convenient!

Levi's our little adventurer--always going somewhere or getting into something.  We have plans to replace our back door with the giant dog door in it since I have no doubt that as so as he's able, he'll adventure out the door head first!  He has a very honest face and the sweetest little grin, and I am madly in love with this boy!


Tuesday, April 16, 2013

Life Imperfect

I read this article the other day and it really stuck with me.  It talks about how technology has given us an excellent outlet for displaying our accomplishments in life while being able to shove the less then desirable parts behind the camera.  It talked about how Pinterest and Facebook posts can often lead us to feel like we're inferior, that our lives are lackluster and that we are somehow failing.  We post these grand collages of our kids' latest craft but conveniently leave out the utter mess left behind.

 And it made me think, "Why?"  Why hide the reality of day-to-day life?  I am a stay at home mom with 2 wee ones under foot.  My house is RARELY company ready, my kids often disobey and truthfully most days I don't even get a shower.  But that's ok.  I have been given the task of rasing my children, training them up in the ways of Christ and honestly, that gets a little messy.  A LOT messy. Every. Single. Day.  So in an attempt to embrace this messy life, I decided to start taking a picture a day that shows the beautiful reality that I'm living in.  Dirty clothes and toys all over the floor?  Check.  Lunch dishes still on the table at dinner time?  Check.  I do this to show myself that the mess has beauty and purpose, and that things are never as they seem from Facebook looking in.  So check out my Life Imperfect pics on Instagram and maybe even share a few of your own.  Because life is messy.  And hectic.  And imperfect.  And beautiful.   

7 and 8 Months

*I had this post all ready to go last month and then our laptop caught on fire.  Yep.  Small flame, much smoke.  Thankfully, while it ruined the screen and rendered the laptop useless, the hard drive was intact and we were able to transfer EVERYTHING to a new laptop.  But since that process took some time, here I am a month late with this post.  I blame technology.*

Did February fly by for anyone else?  How in the world is it already March!?!



LEVI at 7 months:

~Has discovered how to squeal!  Unfortunately, his happy squeal and mad squeals sound the same, and I am having a hard time telling what he needs!
~Is so very close to sitting up on his own.  One look at the floor, though, and his big old noggin drags him right down.
~Loves to bounce.  He's finally gotten his feet under him and thinks its great fun.
~Can roll with the best of them, which is very strange to me because Grace never did that!  She would roll, but stay in pretty much the same place.  Levi takes off and will be across the room, stuck under something in a matter of seconds.
~ is teething again, I think.  At least that's what I think all the chewing and drooling is about.
~Hasn't started solid food yet, but I think that's gonna change this weekend.  Stay tuned for this oh so important breaking news.

We had planned to dedicate him this past month, but bad roads and a bout of stomach flu for the grandparents made us very thankful we postponed!  Right now we're planning to dedicate him on March 17th.


LEVI at 8 Months:

~Is getting his two top teeth in!  While it hasn't been bad, we're very excited for them to poke through.  It just looks painful.
~Started solid food the same weekend he was dedicated (Mar 17).  The kid loved it!  He had his first bite of rice cereal and lunged for the bowl.  Now, he puts down a tub a day.  Its amazes me to think that Grace wasn't eating solids yet at this age.
~Likes his solid food heated up.  Cold food (room temp even) gives him the shudders.
~ Has got the army crawl DOWN.  There's no stopping him now!  Anything he wants, Levi can get to.  I fear for when he actually starts crawling.  =)
~Is starting to do the pre-crawl rock, although its usually on knees, a hand and an elbow.
~Shot right through 9 months clothes into 12.  Ok, really I just left him in 6 months clothes for too long.  Its amazing how much more comfortable he looks in clothes that have room to grow!

Levi is a great little guy and I'm glad he's my buddy.  He thinks tug of wars and anything his sister does is hilarious.  I realized the other day my kids have the same belly laugh.  Is that normal?  I don't know that I've ever met siblings that laugh the same...

Friday, March 1, 2013

I've finally done it...

I opened an Etsy shop! 


I was bitten hard-core by the crochet bug this winter.  
And as there's only so many scarves
and hats and gloves that one family needs, 
I was faced with the decision to either give it up or find a way to make it pay for itself.
  

So to Etsy I went and opened a shop called 
 My shop is small right now, but I'm hoping to start making sales
 and increase the number of items I have for sale.
  
photo.PNG

I plan to use the blog as a virtual  "Look what I did!" forum, whether I can sell the item or not.  

So click on the links to head to either the shop or the blog,
and take a look.  
If anything strikes your fancy, let me know!  
I LOVE custom orders and trying new patterns.  

I'm a lot like an elephant, except they work for peanuts and I work for YARN!  =)


Tuesday, February 12, 2013

6 Months!!

'Sup y'all?
It has been a fabulous 6 months!  I feel like the craziness is starting to subside and we've come into a good routine for taking care of two kiddos.  I'm madly in love with my little man, and it makes me pretty happy he's been in my arms for 1/2 a year!

LEVI at 6 Months:

~Is a happy, smiley, giggly kid.  He's pretty content to sit near the action and just coo.  He LOVES Grace and gives great big squeals when she pays attention to him.

~His eczema is looking pretty good right now.  He got a small patch on his cheek for a while, but thankfully that cleared up right before we had his 6 month pictures taken.

~ Sleeps like a CHAMP!  He does 12 hours at night, which is amazing, cause he wiggles from one end of his crib to the other and back again without making a sound.

~Is still just nursing.  I'm a little hesitant to start him on solids.  It took Grace forever to take solid food, so I kind of figure what's the point in rushing?  Plus, he's a big part of my weight loss plan.  I've lost over 40 pounds on Weight Watchers since the end of October and a large part of that is because of him nursing.  So I selfishly want to get down another 15-20 pounds before he starts getting into solid food.  =)

~Rolls from his back to his tummy with ease and can get from tummy to back by pushing with his feet and doing a quasi-somersault up over one of his shoulders.  Pretty funny!

~The kid has a GREAT internal steady beat (says his music teacher mom!).  Levi constantly pounds on whatever is nearby with his right hand.

~Has his 2 bottom teeth!  They came in right after he turned 5 months.  He's getting better about biting, but there was a while there when mealtimes were pretty painful!

~Is getting very close to sitting up on his own.  He's pretty good about balancing his weight on his arms, but if you don't pay careful attention, over he goes!

~Height: 28 inches.....97%  (He has 1/2 an inch on Grace at this age, but....)

~Weight:  16.4 pounds.....32% (She had a full pound on him at this point!)

~Head:  17.5 inches...88%  (Their brains are the same size, though!)

     I'm not surprised he's not weighing as much as Grace did.  He just went through a big growth spurt, sleeping for almost 18 hours a day.  Its like he converted all of his weight into height and all of a sudden little man is looking long and skinny!   Plus, he's a constant mover!  I LOVE getting to see the differences in boys vs. girls, even at this young age.  I'm mightily blessed!

          And now for your viewing pleasure, a pictorial of sister's involvement in the monthly snapshot....




Oh well.  At least the stuffed animals had fun!?

Monday, January 14, 2013

Dr. H.C. Neuswanger

My Grandpa passed away December 21st.  He was an amazing, strong, compassionate man and is dearly missed, but I'm thankful he has a heavenly body that once again matches his strong spirit.  Levi and I flew to CO the day after Christmas for the funeral, which was a very sweet time remembering Grandpa, being with family and saying goodbye to both Grandparents as we buried their ashes.  Below is the talk my Aunt Deb gave at the funeral.  There is nothing more I can say to explain who Grandpa was.  I think its a pretty interesting story!

Such a handsome guy!

 Henry Clayton Neuswanger


March 25, 1922 – December 21, 2012
Life Story                                                                                          

     Henry Clayton Neuschwanger was born on the family homestead, five miles south of Eckley, Colorado, on March 25, 1922.  His parents, James and Stella (May) Neuschwanger, homesteaded in Yuma County in the early 1900’s.  James came with his brothers from Kansas.  Stella came on the train with her cousin from Kentucky.  Stella was a school teacher before her marriage; Jim was a farmer, as were his brothers and cousins who also homesteaded in Yuma County.  They were dirt poor, like their neighbors, trying to survive on dry land farming.
     Jim and Stella had two sons, Henry and Charles.  Stella disliked nicknames and insisted that the boys be called by their given names.  Henry and his cousin, Dallas Godsey, arrived 1 month apart, and have been fast friends ever since.  When Henry was about 3 months old, his mother heard an odd sound coming from the crib – the baby had learned to whistle! 
     When Henry was 6 years old, the family moved to Michigan with Jim and Stellas’s siblings, Raymond and Rosa (Neuschwanger) May and family.  The two families shared a house on a small farm overlooking Lake Michigan, near Charlevoix, MI.  Henry loved living in Michigan – a forest of trees surrounding them, an orchard, sleigh rides in winter to get to town.  He found an old pair of skis on the property and rode them straight down the hill – and he never skied again.   After one year, Henry’s folks returned to Colorado, just in time for the Dust Bowl and the Great Depression. 
     They farmed with a team of horses and the boys rode horseback to school.  One year, a neighbor fell ill; and every morning before school, Henry was sent to do the milking for that family after chores at the home place were done.  When the teacher admonished him for falling asleep in class, another student said, “Leave Henry alone – he’s milking for two families.”   
     In 1939, Charles, age 15, died when a sandbank collapsed on him while he and two buddies were digging out coyote pups. Stella said she cried all the tears she had when Charles died.  All the Neuschangers remember that time vividly, but no one recalls ever talking about it with James, Stella or Henry.  Cousin Weldon Neuschwanger says that they were always very quiet, sober people.  Life was hard for everyone in those days, Weldon recalls, and there was not much time for fun.
     Because the Eckley, CO, homestead was so far from town, and the family had no car, Henry and Charles lived in town during the school year when they were in high school, and “batched” with two other boys – Dallas Godsey and Henry’s other best buddy, Ted Sutter.  Henry was an “A” student and an athlete, with a beautiful bass voice.  He graduated with Dallas and Ted from Eckley High in 1940.  Henry stayed home from college one year to help his folks – he thought it would be too hard for his folks if he left so soon after Charles’ death. 
     In 1941, Henry went to Greeley to college, where he worked in the rooming house cafeteria in exchange for room and board, took up gymnastics, and planned to become a math teacher.  He said he was always interested in veterinary medicine, but since there was no money for school, he settled on teaching.  After Pearl Harbor, and after he had received his draft notice for the Army, Henry volunteered for the Army Air Corps.  The officer at the recruiting station stopped the clock at 5 minutes to closing to swear him in.
Henry was a second lieutenant, who trained as a pilot on the B-25 bomber, which he loved flying; but to his profound disappointment, he was later transferred to the C-47 transport.  American leadership anticipated the loss of many C-47’s during the D-Day invasion, so more replacement pilots were needed.  Henry flew missions over Europe from England during WWII, towing gliders and carrying paratroopers and supplies over; and bringing back wounded and prisoners. 
     Henry knew how hard it would be for his mother, having so recently lost Charles, and fearing for Henry at war, so he wrote home every day.  His mother saved all those letters, which Hank’s son, Kurt, has transcribed.  Hank never flew a plane again after he left the service, and unless asked, seldom spoke about his experiences during the war.  Upon his discharge in 1945, his commission as a first lieutenant finally came through.
     After the war, Hank returned home to find his parents exhausted from running the farm and caring for his grandfather.  He moved the grandfather in with other relatives, and bought a pretty little 5-acre place for his folks in Boulder.  Once the Eckley homestead was sold, he headed out to see the country in his pick-up truck, traveling around much of the US.
     Somewhere in the South, Hank got on a city bus and took a seat in the rear.  The driver stopped the bus and admonished him for sitting in the colored section.  Hank retorted that he had not fought the Nazis in Europe just to tolerate the same kind of behavior at home.  When the driver refused to proceed unless he changed seats, Hank got off the bus and walked.
     While working in the salt mines under Detroit, he volunteered his time to make carpentry repairs to a house occupied by American Friends Service Committee volunteers.  One of those was a vivacious college graduate from Cleveland, OH, Cornelia Lybarger.  At the end of the summer, “Corky” and her girlfriend “Mike” hitched a ride west with Hank to Colorado.  When they arrived, Hank’s mom was surprised to discover that Hank’s buddies were both girls!   
     A year later, on June 25, 1949, Henry and Cornelia were married in Cleveland.  They returned by train to Ft. Collins, where Hank entered vet school at “Aggies” (Colorado A&M, now CSU) on the GI bill.  The newlyweds lived in a trailer park for war vets on campus, built by Hank and other WWII vets.  They lived in a tiny trailer, and shared a shower house with other residents.  During these years, two daughters were born – Debra in 1951 and Willa in 1953. 
     As graduation approached, Hank decided to change the spelling of his surname by removing the “ch” to make it easier for strangers to find his name in the phone book.  Then he ended up returning to Yuma County to start a veterinary practice, where everyone had known him since birth! 
     Hank and Corky moved to Wray in 1954.  With the help of banker, Raymond Mullison, they bought a little house and two acres on the east edge of town between the railroad tracks and the highway. Hank had a tiny office and operating room in the back of the garage, replaced in the mid-1960’s by a vet clinic on the same property.  After son Kurt was born in 1957, Hank dug out another basement bedroom by hand, carrying the dirt up in buckets, with help from his brother-in-law, Lee Lybarger. 
     Hank was a classic country vet, practicing out of the back of a pick up truck with a homemade shell, fitted out to hold his vet instruments, buckets, lariats, etc.  He worked long, hard hours, treating sick animals in all weather, at all hours – usually the coldest and darkest! – in pastures or sheds with no light or heat, miles from town, out in the sandhills of Yuma County.  He also charged like a country vet, which is to say not much, often carrying a balance for long periods for clients unable to pay.  He treated farm and ranch livestock and also family pets.  Gradually he built up a loyal clientele of crotchety old ranchers who swore they would never let any physician but “Doc” touch them or their animals! 
     Corky and Hank were pillars of the Wray community – active in the Methodist Church, both singing in the choir for 50 years.  Hank was a lifelong member of the Wray Lions Club, and with several others, developed a natural amphitheatre which he discovered in his pasture.  The Wray Lions Amphitheater became home to a local acting troupe, the Cliff Dwellers. The remarkable story of how this amphitheater was built by local volunteer labor and donated materials, with no government funding, was featured in a story that ran in the old Denver Post Sunday Empire Magazine.
     While their kids were growing up, there was a procession of unusual pets, including a baby skunk, a badger, and a baby bobcat, which grew up with son Kurt, and eventually became a rug on Kurt’s bunk bed.  There were also a pair of dachshunds (Spud and Robin) and an endless supply of German Shorthairs, as well as a bloodhound named Billy Buzz Bomb who could climb corral fences, and once got stuck up there over the stock tank, baying balefully!  Buzz also rescued toddler, Kurt, who wandered into a sticker patch on his way to the railroad tracks.  As Corky and Hank were frantically searching, they heard Buzz sounding the alarm.
     Hank, by contrast to his extroverted wife, was stoic and silent, extremely reserved, gruff in manner, with little to say, even – or especially – to his family.  Still, his children and grandchildren are all filled with deep affection for this good man who was their father and grandpa.  His character was evident in his every action throughout his life.  He was honest, upright, absolutely dependable, trustworthy and responsible, utterly unassuming, generous and kind.  He was a loyal son, a faithful husband, and a good father.
     Hank’s grandson, Chris Stillwell, also quiet by nature, says that with Grandpa, he could just be himself – no explanations necessary, because Grandpa understood him.   Chris said that when he was a teenager, it was the thought of Grandpa that stopped him from getting into trouble.  “I couldn’t bear to disappoint him,” he says.  Granddaughter Jillian’s husband, Nathan Hage,r wrote:  “Grandpa seemed like the kind of guy I'd be able to sit down with, introduce myself, and then we'd just sit, having understood each other already.”
     Henry believed in making do with what you have at hand, had no use or need for luxury in any form, never wasted anything, and taught his kids to always leave a place better than you found it:  Pick up your trash and pick up other people’s trash before you leave!  He was the genuine article, like many of his generation:  The offspring of homesteaders and pioneers, a product of the Great Depression, the Dust Bowl, and WWII. 
     Corky and Hank had been married for 61 years when she died in October, 2010.  Soon after, Hank moved to Good Samaritan Retirement Village in Loveland to be near family.  In early December, 2012, Hank held his namesake, great-grandson, Henry William Hager, 4 months old, for the first and last time.  Near dawn on 12-21-2012, the winter solstice, Henry Clayton Neuswanger slipped away in his sleep.  As Nathan wrote, “Another cowboy has ridden into the sunset.”


5 Months!

Levi was none too sure about the camera this time...

LEVI at 5 months:

~Is a happy, smiley boy.  For a while he'd have sweet cooing conversations with anyone who would stop talk to him.  But since his motor skills have improved, he's much too busy trying to touch his world!

~His eczema is looking much better, now he has only a mild rash and no rough patches.  His cradle cap came back with a vengeance, too, but a stiff combing and a rough scrubbing keeps that in check nicely.

~Sleep...oh sleep.  Levi's sleep schedule, which had been wonderful since birth, was broken right before he turned 4 months.  No idea what happened.  We walked with him for hours, let him stay up late with us, tried to put him down early, left him to cry it out for 3 nights (KILLED me. I'm a strong mommy, but that had me in tears.) and NOTHING worked.  He would scream until he fell asleep out of pure exhaustion.
     And then all of a sudden he was fixed.  WHAT!?!  One night he went down after his last feeding without fighting sleep and SLEPT THROUGH THE NIGHT!!!  He doesn't always stay asleep, but it he does wake up we go into him every few minutes to reassure him he's not alone and that we love him, and he's back to sleep within the hour.  Not sure what changed, but MAN I'm glad we're done with that stage.  It was bad.

~Is officially into 6-9 month clothes.

~Rolled from his back to him tummy for the first time on Jan. 4, but can't do it consistently yet.  (Which is good, 'cuz I have a feeling I'll be spending my time chasing a rolly-polly across the floor once he can do it whenever he desires!)

~Has a tooth poking through!  (Which could maybe explain the nights time screamies...)

~Took his first airplane ride at the end of December.  My Grandpa passed away on the 21st, so Levi and I flew to Denver the day after Christmas while Kurt stayed home with Grace.  It was a bittersweet time. Nice to see family and the hometown, but sad to say goodbye to Grandpa.  I am VERY thankful that his spirit is once again housed in a healthy, vibrant body.
     Levi was a pretty good traveler   I think he screamed through security both coming and going, but wasn't overly fussy on the plane.  He slept in the moby wrap through the entire funeral service, and slept in the car while we buried Grandma and Grandpa's ashes in the FREEZING wind.  I couldn't ask for more.


Grace is getting more and more verbal everyday.  Its shocking, really!  Here are a few of our favorite "Grace-isms":

~While watching Kurt and I eat sandwiches, Grace asked for "Bwead and cheese."  I got her half a bun, put some cheese on top and handed it to her.  She looked at me and said "C'ose it, Mommy.  C'ose it" while indicating she want the top bun.  What a smart way to use her vocabulary for what she needed!

~One day, while I was making Bumps on a Log for her lunch, Grace exclaimed excitedly to Kurt "Yook at my dinnuhs, Daddy!"

~We've been teaching her to say excuse me when she toots or burps.  So every time she does, she says "Mixin me."  Generally, we think that means excuse me.  ;)