Sunday, December 28, 2008

Puppy Love

For those of you who know Todd, you know:
1. He loves board games.

2. He's not a big fan of animals.

Over Thanksgiving, Todd's sister babysat 11 puppies. In the evenings, Lynnie and Cassie would hold the dogs and play with them to tire them out before they went to sleep. One evening Todd wanted to play a game. Lynnie and Cassie said that it would speed things up if he helped them play with the puppies and get them ready for bed. So, being anxious to play a game, Todd agreed to help hold and play with the puppies. When I saw this, I couldn't resist taking pictures and making a slide show to this song. Hope the game was worth it Todd. Enjoy!

Monday, December 22, 2008

Cool

I saw the following post on Dr. Laura's blog and thought I would share it.

Blessings in Disguise

I have always been impressed with the mentality of the Mormons with respect to the issue of charity. I had a tour of their main charity facilities, and was amazed at what I saw and learned. There are absolutely no handouts – they barter!

Here’s how it works: if you could lose your home, or if you need food, clothing, medicine or toys for your children, the Church takes financial care of your needs. In exchange, you provide services to the very mechanism that rescued you. This means that folks in the bakeries are people who have benefited from the charitable services; those helping in the stores that sell thrift clothing, housewares and food are those who have benefited from the charitable services, and so on.

The basic concept is to preserve a sense of dignity and pride in those who have temporary need by giving them an opportunity to use their skills in the service of others. Walking around the premises, I felt the uplifted attitude of all who were there: smiles, waves, and straight backs.

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints provides for people all over the world – not only with goods and goodwill, but with the opportunity to not lose a sense of self when “things” are lost.

I probably sound like an advertisement for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints. I am not a member of their religion, but I am impressed with their charitable philosophy, because I believe it teaches our children their real value, while motivating and uplifting them at the same time.

Their young people who graduate high school are expected to go on two-year “missions,” reminiscent of the Peace Corps. These young people come back much more mature, as they’ve experienced the pain and need of others, and have sacrificed two years of their own comfort to be of service to others.
Other youngsters just don’t want to skip a beat in their acquisition of iPods, cell phones, and other “Internet in your hand” gadgets.

I believe that the economic disaster our country is in right now is a kind of blessing in disguise with respect to values. Without values, life just provides us with “things,” but not necessarily with any profound meaning.

Saturday, December 6, 2008

Thanksgiving Plus

     Well, it's been a while since I posted something here, although I did get sick (see previous post by LynMarie). Spencer and I are both doing well and we all had a good Thanksgiving. We went to Muffin's grandmother's house for dinner, then visited my parents for a couple of days over the weekend. It was great to see Alysha, who was home visiting from BYU. Not so great was the fact that Cassie was watching some puppies for some friends.... eleven puppies. Somehow I ended up helping out.



     I also got to play Die Macher, one of my favorite games. Although I really enjoy it, the four-hour play time means it doesn't hit the table very often. However, Cassie made a deal with me – she'd play the game if I went to see Twilight with her. The movie did have some entertainment value, though probably not in the places that were intended. Unless you're a big fan of the books and feel like you have to see the movie, I'd say… don't.

      But hey, I got a great game out of the deal. Die Macher is a game where each player represents a German political party, trying to win seats in a series of seven German state elections. You get points for each seat you win, for party membership, for media control, and for how well you match national opinion on the issues. I won the last state by one vote, giving me some last-second points, and after we totaled everything up, Cassie and I both had 366 points. There's no tiebreaker in the rules, but we'd agreed to play with a series of tiebreakers, the first of which is seats won, where I had a seven-seat edge. Four hours and it came down to the very end!

     Ok, on to what everyone really wants to see. Here's a picture of Spencer on his nine-month "birthday". He is pulling himself up on everything now, and starting to be a little more confident when he is cruising. He seems to have another gear when crawling, too. For example, he can be pretty fast when trying to make it through the office door before Daddy can get there and close it. One of his latest accomplishments is that he crawled all the way from the family room to our bedroom, which includes a full flight of stairs.



     He now helps out with the laundry, usually by spreading the clothes hangers all over the family room.



     He's still a really happy little boy most of the time, although having four teeth come in at once hasn't been very much fun. All four center ones on the top are poking through now, and it took several tries to get a picture that shows them all. You can click on it to get a closer view... just don't look too closely at his nose.

Thursday, November 27, 2008

House of Sick

Every once in a while I'll get a cleaning bug and stay up really late and clean. After seeing my mom clean her stove with a Magic Eraser last week, I decided to try it on my stove. Then I tried it on the shower, floor, sink, and bath tub. I was hooked. Any way, I ended up going to bed at 2am. As I was laying there, I heard Spencer cough. I listened to make sure he was ok. His second cough didn't sound normal so I went to his room to check on him. As I picked him up, I could see that he was throwing up. This was his first official sickness and his first time that he threw up. He has had colds but those don't really count as sicknesses in my book unless they are really bad. Any way, we gave him a bath and changed his jammies. I think between 2 and 4 am he went through like 4 pairs of jammies and a few baths. By 11 am he had stopped vomitting and started to use the other end. Yep. Diarreaha (not sure of spelling). So, over the past few days it's been mostly diarreaha and a few vomits. Nontheless, he is probably the happiest sick person I have ever seen. We're lucky he hasn't run a temperature.

Coincidentaly (probably not spelled right either), we had his nine month check up on Mon. We told the doctor he was sick and she decided to reschedule his shots. ( I wonder if Spencer is smarter than we think and planned on getting sick to avoid shots=)?) As the doctor used one of those popsicle (I'm pretty sure I spelled that one right.) stick looking things to look inside his mouth, Spencer started to chew it. The Dr. said he is the first baby she's had who has tried to eat the stick. I thought that was cute.

Well, around Mon., or Tues., Todd started getting sick. (I guess that's what happens when you work crazy hours trying to rack up enough hours to take a few days off at Thanks Giving to spend with family, along with teaching seminary.) Yes. I'm a task master. I'm the one who suggested he should probably work extra hours if he wants to take the time off (He's self employed for those who don't know so he doesn't get paid time off. He also doesn't have a union to protect him from being over worked by me. Just kidding. I don't think I'm that bad.)

Any way, so far I haven't gotten sick. I may not have buns of steel, but I sure have an immune system of steel as I rarely get sick (knock on wood).

Well, Todd and Spencer seem to be on the mend and hopefully we'll be able to enjoy a gluttonous (I looked up the spelling of that word in the dictionary. =))Thanks Giving.

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

And that's final!

     As mentioned earlier, Monday was our court date to finalize Spencer's adoption. After waiting in the courtroom for over an hour, we found out that the judge who was supposed to preside wasn't coming, so they pulled a substitute from another courtroom. During the proceedings, Spencer hammed it up a bit for the cameras, as usual. It was a wonderful day and now he's legally ours, although we've felt since the first day we met him that he was supposed to be our little boy. Now we can't wait until he will be sealed to us next month!

     Thanks to everyone who came to share our special day, and to those who couldn't be here with us but called or emailed to wish us well.

Here we are sitting at the table while the judge asks us a few questions.


After filling out hundreds of pages of forms over the last two years, we provide the final signatures.


The actual moment it all becomes official, captured for posterity.



Us with Judge Ochoa:


Everybody:


All the Southworths:


Us with the social workers for our case, Laura & Terri:


Spencer afterwards -- I think he approves:

But he just started crawling!

     After crawling for a week or so, Spencer is apparently no longer content to be down on all fours. There's just so much more stuff to play with if you can get up on your own. By the way, I got sick of trying to upload the video to the blog, so I uploaded it to YouTube instead and just embedded it here. Ah, so much less hassle.

Sunday, November 9, 2008

Taking care of the choppers

     Well, not a whole not to report this week, but Spencer has started having his teeth (all two) brushed. He seems to enjoy it. Also, I caught a picture of him sleeping on Mommy.



Saturday, November 1, 2008

Time to put up the baby gates...

     I guess we'll be getting more exercise chasing after Spencer from now on. Here's a video from this morning.

Out of the Mouths of Babes

My sister in law told me that her daughter Josie who is in first grade asked her what proposition 8 was about. Lacy told me that after she explained it to her she could see Josie thinking. Finally, she asked "Mom. Which is more expensive two wedding dressess or two tuxedos?"

Friday, October 31, 2008

Inspiring

I saw the story of this family and their son on Oprah.com. It's a reminder to enjoy each minute of each day with your children.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qILw1iFzmIE

Wednesday, October 29, 2008

A Busy Day

     Yesterday we went to DCS and met with Spencer's social worker to sign some paperwork and then to the county Superior Court to file it. We then got to set a date when we go back and do the finalization for his adoption. On November 10 everything will be done and he'll be officially ours!

     All the paperwork and trip to the courthouse took less than three hours, so we took Spencer to Disneyland for his first time to celebrate. Here we are just inside the front gate.



     Of course we had to take pictures by the Dumbo ride. Spencer seemed to like watching everyone fly their elephants.







     We went on several of the Fantasyland rides, including Snow White, Pinocchio, Alice in Wonderland, the Storybook Land canal boats, and the Casey Jr. circus train. Spencer was looking around at everything but didn't seem particularly excited. I think the most fun part for him was while we sat on a bench and he got to play with the bush behind us. Here's a picture of Muffin and Spencer -- we rode in the monkey cage on the train.



     Spencer tried on some Halloween-themed ears but went with the Sorcerer's Apprentice ears. There's plenty of room to grow into them so he can wear them for years to come. He fell asleep after a few hours and LynMarie and I were both tired too so we decided to come home.





Tuesday, October 28, 2008

Playing with Indy

     For some reason this video disappeared when I tried to add it to the previous post, so hopefully you can all see this...

Weekend with Wuglet

     Since my parents were up at BYU with Alysha for Parents' Weekend, LynMarie, Spencer and I went out to stay with Cassie this past weekend. We got to go to her soccer game on Saturday, where she scored the goal in a 1-0 victory! Sweet! Also, a shout out to her for already memorizing all 25 New Testament Scripture Mastery scriptures! I didn't think to take pictures at the game, and the other shot I took was too blurry, but I did surprise her with this shot.



     Spencer seemed to enjoy himself this weekend. He had fun playing with the dogs, especially Indy. Here are some pictures:









     Spencer also played Power Grid with us -- he was on Mama's team.



     We played the Italy map. Below are a couple of pictures of the board at the end. Coal was in high demand, with none left in the market by the end of the game. In the last round, two good power plants got bid up, with Muffin and Cassie paying 135 each for them. I was last in and picked up a "5 wind" plant for just 44. That left me with enough money to build to 17 cities and end the game a round earlier than they were expecting. Final scores: Todd - 15, Cassie - 13, Muffin/Spencer - 12.



Monday, October 20, 2008

...AND a bonus video clip!

OK, I've been trying to get this on video for a few days. Spencer has figured out how to go from lying on his tummy to a sitting position. I actually hadn't even seen it until today -- I'd always been out of the room when he did it -- but he did it several times this evening and I was able to get most of one "sit-up" on tape. Here it is:

Sunday, October 19, 2008

Bonus Pictures

     OK, three posts in less than 24 hours is not going to be the norm, but LynMarie wanted to take a couple of pictures of Spencer in the outfit he wore to church today, so I thought I'd put 'em up. Enjoy.



Saturday, October 18, 2008

Eight Months

     Yes, our little boy is eight months old today! The only pictures I got today were from bath time. Spencer really enjoys splashing in his bath. I went to take a picture of him splashing and of course he stopped and looked at the camera, but I managed to get another picture after he went back to his bath time fun.




     He seems to have slowed down his weight gain for now. We tried to weigh him using our regular bathroom scale and he's still about the same as last month. We'll get an official weigh-in next month at the doctor's office. LynMarie wanted to get a picture of him in this sailor outfit before he grows out of it, though.



     He's now started eating fruits -- he's had applesauce, bananas, and prunes, but seems to like pears the best so far. Also, his first tooth just poked through the gums a couple of days ago. It's hard to see, so no picture of it yet, but we can feel it and hear the clicking when he's biting on things.

     He hasn't officially crawled yet, although he took about half of a "step", or whatever the equivalent is for crawling. He can sure cover quite a bit of ground when he wants to, by rolling and scooting. The other day during family scripture study he managed to move about ten feet across the family room, got over to the basket that holds his toys, tipped it on its side, and pulled out the toy he wanted.

     I'll post a couple of pictures of Spencer modeling a possible Halloween costume to finish off here, and then a video clip that LynMarie took so you can see him in action in his bouncer.



                    

Thanks to Ryan and Amy

Well, we finally used the IKEA gift certificate that Ryan and Amy got for us last Christmas. We bought a dresser for Spencer's room and I had a fun couple of hours putting it together. Thanks, Ryan and Amy!

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Sometimes Politicians do the Right Thing!

I just called the govenor's office and he already vetoed the following bill. Good job Arnold!


Subject: "GAY" DAY IN CA SCHOOLS?

AB 2567 has passed the California Assembly and the Senate and is awaiting Governor Schwarzenegger's signature or veto. This bill will set aside May 22nd as a special day to celebrate the life of homosexual politician Harvey Milk in the public schools. Harvey Milk will be honored in the same manner as our Founding Fathers and Martin Luther King, although the only thing he is actually known for is being proud to be a homosexual! If you haven't heard about this bill it is because the liberal media is downplaying this bill so that it will pass.



Though this is set as a California issue, it will soon effect everyone.



You know the old saying, 'as goes California, so goes the nation'!


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Legislature Passes Bill for 'Gay Day' Celebrations in California Public Schools
By Peter J. Smith
August 8, 2008, SACRAMENTO (Life SiteNews.com) - California public schools soon will be planning 'gay day' celebrations every May 22 unless Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger vetoes the legislation. Thursday the California Assembly approved AB 2567, which designates May 22 as 'Harvey Milk Day.' The 43 to 26 vote occurred on party lines with Democrats for, Republicans against. Earlier this week, AB 2567 passed the California State Senate on another party line vote 22-13 - Democrats for, Republicans against. The bill will require all public schools to 'conduct suitable commemorative exercises' in commemoration of the anti-religious, homosexualist agenda of the late San Francisco Supervisor Harvey Milk. According to a Senate analysis of the bill, 'This bill requires the Governor to proclaim May 22 as Harvey Milk Day…The designation of a day of significance triggers statutory encouragement for public schools to observe and conduct commemorative exercises suitable to the day.' 'This bad bill will teach impressionable schoolchildren the anti-religious, homosexual-bisexual -transsexual agenda of Harvey Milk,' warned Randy Thomasson, President of Campaign for Children and Families.

'If signed into law, AB 2567 will mean an official day commemorating homosexuality, bisexuality, and transsexuality in California government schools…This will harm children as young as kindergarten. '
For the love of God, parents and their children, we implore Governor Schwarzenegger to veto AB 2567'Thomasson said.

Saturday, October 11, 2008

Another Prop. 8 Video

This video shows some of what is already happening in public schools in Massachusetts, where same-sex marriage is legal.

Friday, October 10, 2008

Wednesday, October 8, 2008

Poor Guy

Ed Macmahon sure isn't waiting for a government bailout. Look at the link to see what he does when times get tough.
http://www.popcrunch.com/ed-mcmahon-rap-videos-freecreditreportcom/

I haven't actually been able to find the video. If someone happens to find it, send me the link.

Never Thought I'd Agree With a Liberal

September 22, 2008
Contact: Jennifer Kerns, 916-446-2956
SACRAMENTO, September 22 -- The Los Angeles Times has published an Opinion Editorial which shows arguments against same-sex marriage due to its detrimental effect on our children. What is noteworthy is the source: the author of the Op-Ed piece is a Liberal Democrat, which underscores the broad support for Proposition 8 in order to protect marriage for society, our institutions, and for children in California. Read the full text here:

Protecting Marriage to Protect Children
Marriage as a human institution is constantly evolving. But in all societies, marriage shapes the rights and obligations of parenthood.
Los Angeles Times
By David Blankenhorn
September 19, 2008

I'm a liberal Democrat. And I do not favor same-sex marriage. Do those positions sound contradictory? To me, they fit together.

Many seem to believe that marriage is simply a private love relationship between two people. They accept this view, in part, because Americans have increasingly emphasized and come to value the intimate, emotional side of marriage, and in part because almost all opinion leaders today, from journalists to judges, strongly embrace this position. That's certainly the idea that underpinned the California Supreme Court's legalization of same-sex marriage.

But I spent a year studying the history and anthropology of marriage, and I've come to a different conclusion.

Marriage as a human institution is constantly evolving, and many of its features vary across groups and cultures. But there is one constant. In all societies, marriage shapes the rights and obligations of parenthood. Among us humans, the scholars report, marriage is not primarily a license to have sex. Nor is it primarily a license to receive benefits or social recognition. It is primarily a license to have children.

In this sense, marriage is a gift that society bestows on its next generation. Marriage (and only marriage) unites the three core dimensions of parenthood -- biological, social and legal -- into one pro-child form: the married couple. Marriage says to a child: The man and the woman whose sexual union made you will also be there to love and raise you. Marriage says to society as a whole: For every child born, there is a recognized mother and a father, accountable to the child and to each other.

Marriage is society's most pro-child institution. In 2002 -- just moments before it became highly unfashionable to say so -- a team of researchers from Child Trends, a nonpartisan research center, reported that "family structure clearly matters for children, and the family structure that helps children the most is a family headed by two biological parents in a low- conflict marriage."

All our scholarly instruments seem to agree: For healthy development, what a child needs more than anything else is the mother and father who together made the child, who love the child and love each other.

For these reasons, children have the right, insofar as society can make it possible, to know and to be cared for by the two parents who brought them into this world. The foundational human rights document in the world today regarding children, the 1989 U.N. Convention on the Rights of the Child, specifically guarantees children this right. The last time I checked, liberals like me were supposed to be in favor of internationally recognized human rights, particularly concerning children, who are typically society's most voiceless and vulnerable group. Or have I now said something I shouldn't?

Every child being raised by gay or lesbian couples will be denied his birthright to both parents who made him. Every single one. Moreover, losing that right will not be a consequence of something that at least most of us view as tragic, such as a marriage that didn't last, or an unexpected pregnancy where the father-to- be has no intention of sticking around. On the contrary, in the case of same-sex marriage and the children of those unions, it will be explained to everyone, including the children that something wonderful has happened!

For me, what we are encouraged or permitted to say, or not say, to one another about what our society owes its children is crucially important in the debate over initiatives like California's Proposition 8, which would reinstate marriage's customary man-woman form. Do you think that every child deserves his mother and father, with adoption available for those children whose natural parents cannot care for them? Do you suspect that fathers and mothers are different from one another? Do you imagine that biological ties matter to children? How many parents per child are best? Do you think that "two" is a better answer than one, three, four or whatever? If you do, be careful. In making the case for same-sex marriage, more than a few grown-ups will be quite willing to question your integrity and goodwill. Children, of course, are rarely consulted.

The liberal philosopher Isaiah Berlin famously argued that, in many cases, the real conflict we face is not good versus bad but good versus good. Reducing homophobia is good. Protecting the birthright of the child is good. How should we reason together as a society when these two good things conflict?

Here is my reasoning. I reject homophobia and believe in the equal dignity of gay and lesbian love. Because I also believe with all my heart in the right of the child to the mother and father who made her, I believe that we as a society should seek to maintain and to strengthen the only human institution -- marriage -- that is specifically intended to safeguard that right and make it real for our children.

Legalized same-sex marriage almost certainly benefits those same-sex couples who choose to marry, as well as the children being raised in those homes. But changing the meaning of marriage to accommodate homosexual orientation further and perhaps definitively undermines for all of us the very thing -- the gift, the birthright -- that is marriage's most distinctive contribution to human society. That's a change that, in the final analysis, I cannot support.

David Blankenhorn is president of the New York- based Institute for American Values and the author of "The Future of Marriage."

Monday, September 29, 2008

Spencer's New Crib

It's been a couple of weeks, so it's time to post something here. First, a quick update on me and LynMarie. In the past couple of weeks, we've had fun knocking on doors for Proposition 8, my first annual Game Day Birthday Party, and our ward's Primary program. Here's the old man with his cake:


Now on to what everyone really wants -- a Spencer update. Spencer is seven months old, and we're going to have to switch car seats really soon, because he weighs 21 pounds. He eats oatmeal, barley and rice cereals, carrots, peas, squash, and seems to especially like green beans and sweet potatoes. Here he is eating a Farley's Rusk. They basically melt when they get wet, so he can eat them even though he doesn't have any teeth yet.


He sits up on his own, stands if he's holding on to something, and rolls wherever he wants to go. He can also turn around on his stomach so he's pointed the way he wants to be. The past few days he's been pushing up onto his knees, so crawling probably isn't too far away. He can move around a bit in his walker on the kitchen floor.


This bassinet is what he used to sleep in, but now it's much too small.


This cradle is what he's been sleeping in for the past couple of months -- still too small.


Sometimes he takes a nap in mommy and daddy's bed, but it's too big.


But now that it's done, he sleeps in his own room in his own crib, and it's just right.

L.A. County Fair

Here are some pictures from the fair -- we went about three weeks ago on the first day of the fair, so we got in for a dollar apiece. We took Spencer and our nephew Lincoln, who is 21 months old.