We have a house full of toys.
Iris plays in the potted plants, moving soil from one pot to another and rearranging the tiny figurines.
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Anyone want some awesome toys?
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We have a house full of toys.
Iris plays in the potted plants, moving soil from one pot to another and rearranging the tiny figurines.
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Anyone want some awesome toys?
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I made up a recipe for sweet potato custard pie before Christmas.
Martin thought it was fantastic; I thought it was imperfect.
So I made up another one. This time I left out the crust. Really, I’m just interested in the formation of custard.
It was real yummy, but then I ate too much, which didn’t feel so good.
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Here’s my recipe, because I didn’t see anything like it on line, and because it’s the only thing I photographed today:
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2 cups (about 2 medium) sweet potato, boiled and peeled
Β½ cup sugar
3 eggs
Β½ Tablespoon cornstarch
2 cups heavy (whipping) cream
Β½ teaspoon coffee extract
tiny dash of cinnamon
bigger dash of ginger
blob of molasses; about 2 Tbsp
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Mix well everything but the eggs and cream. Beat in the eggs. Mix in the cream.
Pour into 4 custard dishes (equivalent of one 9″ pie)
Bake at 400Β°F for 40 minutes or until a knife inserted halfway between center and outside comes out clean.
Cool.
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Iris calls it pie. Now after dinner she chants, “Pie! Pie!”
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Now that my mom is Grandma, my grandma needed a new name: Iris needed a name for my grandma. Mom (a.k.a. The New Grandma) chose “Baba.” Thats what Grandma called her grandmother when she was little and a girl could run to the corner store to buy 2Β’ of sauerkraut to take home. But here, I am writing this. Grandma is my grandmother; Mom is my mom. Baba is Iris’ great-grandmother and “her Grandma” probably refers to Iris’ grandmother or my mom. “Iris’ mommy” is a roundabout way of saying “me.” Clear?
Grandma’s apartment has nice light. I wanted a portrait Iris with her Baba. It was difficult. Iris was being shy. Mom & Dad had the couch. Ari & I had the floor. Dan had a chair. I took lots of photographs. This one is my favorite:
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I like how the lighting turned out in this one:
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I like this one because it makes me smile:
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Tho this one makes me smile even more:
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This one also makes me smile, but Dan might make me remove it:
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Iris found a suitable Christmas tree in Grandma’s yard.
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It was about yay big.
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She cut it down with a handsaw
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and a little help from Grandma.
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They brought it inside
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Β and picked out some ornaments
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to hang on the tree.
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There are a lot of ornaments.
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Dan dressed the Christmas skeleton in tinsel
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and Ari found a heart
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to hang amongst the ribs.
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And with a bit of trumpeting and revelry,
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they decreed the work to be done.Β
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Ari and Dog take Iris and Kitty exploring around my mom’s yard: Grandma’s house.
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There are dangerous places
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and staircases;
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relics
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and paths to follow.
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It is good to see Ari again.
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Mom, Iris & I went to the Regional Market.
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Mom chose her cabbages by density.
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Iris tasted hot sauce again and again.
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It was good.
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Joshua & Iris exchanged gifts. Joshua got a new potty; Iris got a new bathtub toy.
Joshua used his new potty immediately.
“Do you want to try out your new toy?” I asked Iris.
“No.”
I turned to Heather. “Do you want to try out Iris’ new toy?” I asked.
“Yes,” she said.
We filled the tub and plopped in a couple of toddlers. They had a blast splashing one another.
Heather & I played with Iris’ new toy.
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About the time that Iris turned one, I started running once a month. That turned to twice a month and eventually once a week, interspersed with biking and general lazing around the house. Then winter came. General lazing around the house was suddenly interspersed with nothing. I started to go batty, not to mention gain a bit of weight. But every time I took Iris out, the temperature dropped and she came in with frozen footsie-pops. Poor baby! But I think, after a cozy test-run at -7Β°F, that I’ve finally got the outfit just right.
Let me back up a bit and define some terms. “Minimalist running” is defined by the footwear: the shoe structure is minimal. The shoe should have a 0Β° drop from heel to toe, none of that crazy “arch support” stuff, and a wide enough toe-box to let toes spread freely and happily as they will. “Running” is defined by a mid-foot strike. If you have a heel strike, no matter how fast you go, you’re still jogging. I run extremely slowly.
In high-school I used to slash my sneaks with razor blades to make them wider. In college, I taped each toe separately to keep them from rubbing. It was always a painful experience, but I pounded pavement faithfully. I enjoyed the running aspect of running. In fair weather and indoors, running was one of the few times I wore shoes. Unfortunately, at that.
Then this minimalist running craze happened. I got my first pair of those goofy-looking Vibram 5-fingers in 2008. They’re great! For me. In fair weather. But what to do in winter? Come the mukluk:
I’ve had these shoes for four years. They were the last decent pair of mukluk-type boots made by Sorel. Now it’s all fake-fur and pleather or veganaiseβ whatever you call that stuff made to look like leather that isn’t, lined with stuff made to look like fur that isn’t. Horrid. Anyhow, after four years they have holes just about everywhere you can get a hole and they’re re-sewn and patched all over. Yesterday I bit the bullet and ordered a pair of $200.00 Steger mukluks. Yikes! I’ve oogled them for so long… Now I just have to modify my ice-grippers so they don’t eat holes in the bottoms.
MY “MINIMALIST” RUNNING GEAR LIST; SUB-FREEZING:
(the extras are in case I stop a moment or go to a friend’s house; I need to change my soaking-wet clothing or catch hypothermia):
ON ME & MY SPARE CLOTHING:
mukluk boots (this is the one and only reason I can call myself as a minimalist)
ice-walkers
toe socks (x2)
neoprene socks or Gore-tex socks
wool socks (x2)
two pairs of leggings (x2)
long-sleeve T-shirt (x2 or 4)
bra (boobie-bounce arrester) (x2)
extra panties (I’m not going to tell you I wear panties. This is the one thing you must assume.)
wool camisole (x2)
hat (x2)
balaclava (I only own one)
jacket
fleece shirt in case I get cold
heavy wool sweater in case I stop at a friends house and want to look nice
snow-machine mitts
watch
two headlamps & rear blinky light
IN THE DOUBLE-WIDE CHARIOT, WHICH I PUSH VERY SLOWLY
all the extras (see above)
insulated bag with 2 canteens of warm water
backpack of useful things (potty seat, wallet, phone, crayons, clothing, lip goop, etc.)
camera & extra battery
TODDLER, wearing:
leggings
wool socks
fleece socks
Stones winter boots & boot liners
snow pants
long-sleeve T-shirt or dress
sweater with hood
thick fleece jacket with hood
mittens
rabbit-fur lined Mad-Bomber hat
then
I take a thick wool blanket, fold it in quarters, put half under Iris’ feet and fold the other half over her feet. I tuck my father’s huge Michelin-Man down coat around her and under her arms then top the whole thing off with a crib-size comforter.
And that’s it!
Totally minimalist.