I'm not quite the only one here today. And I'm trying to accomplish something. Really, I am.
Wash ,'War Stories'
Natter 46: The FIGHTIN' 46
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
Sorta' like an extra emal address that you give out to organizations that might spam you.
Totally. Actually I was wondering if I could get a second line for my cellphone. Kinda like I have a professional email account (or two). A phone number with a serious outgoing message, for instance.
Some civil servants are just like my loved ones
They work so hard and they try to be strong
So are you trying to tell us not to worry 'bout the government, tommy? I certainly don't worry about Canada's...
train set sounds big and space-taking-up.
Not at all. Emmett's entire set (which is fairly extensive) fits in one plastic bin. And the setting up part is what the kid does. The tracks are just wood with little jigsaw cut-out connectors. Got some curvy tracks and some straight ones and some trains that you push around and connect magnetically. It's very zen for them.
The reason I loved Brio is that it was good for kids from about age 3 up through about 7 or 8. It's incredibly durable. It allows for lots of variation in play. You can get more advanced elements (trestles and double deckers and drawbridges) and build fairly complicated sets. It's compatible with Thomas the Train engine sets (a competing company, but they fit together perfectly). It's just a classic toy for that age.
Plus, the Brio trains are adorable.
Emmett was also a huge fan of pattern blocks. He made a lot of spaceships with pattern blocks.
msbelle, look! [link]
sara - THAT is what I am talkin about. no complaints from downstairs neighbors, no hurt cats, not as many broken things.
I know it will surprise you all, but I was a thrower and so I am planning for a child who express anger in a similar way. silly, I know. given the no shared biology thing, but I can only plan for what I know.
That's a pretty sound plan.
Dad used to take industrial shipping foam (not as common now, but the black/gray stuff) and cut them into blocks of varying shapes. They were a big hit, both with us and the preschool we went to (and mom taught at.)