I've been meaning to write an update on our girlies for a long time . . . and many nap-times, I just don't know if I should choose blogging, cleaning my house, running errands, or making Christmas presents . . . ahh!
Well, today I choose blogging! Actually, Ruthie is the only one who naps these days, but she's a super duper napper at that, sleeping usually 2-3 hours in the afternoon, but sometimes longer!
Rhyming and spelling with her fridge-magnet letters are two other favorites, and I think she's doing a great job starting to learn her letter sounds and how they fit together! She can read a handful of words from sight.
I'm also very proud of the physical endurance she is building up! She frequently goes to the gym with daddy and a couple of times a month we walk somewhere to eat dinner, and she has been known to run along and keep up for well over a mile. She can run about half a mile without stopping. :) She just loves being outside and will pretend outside for hours! She still can't properly jump, even though for a while every time she got to the last step on the stairs she would pause, try, and pronounce "Gemma jumps!" while taking a dramatic leap with one foot landing first.
Ruthie, my little pumpkin, is going to be 23 months old next week. She still asks for milk once in the mornings and has developed a will of her own. She does this adorable little jump-dancing thing when she is excited, flapping her arms like wings. She likes to try to give me hair clips or my phone when I'm in the shower.
Ruthie's favorite baby :)
Ruthie's gross-motor skills are quite impressive--climbing, etc., though she has yet to do anything really dangerous. Her fine motor skills surprised me, too, since she learned how to unzip zippers and open screw-tops much earlier than Gemma did.
She likes to sit on the potty and prefers to wear a pullup instead of a diaper, so I tried some potty training with her last week. After three days, however, she still hadn't told me when she needed to go, so we decided to back off on the underwear for a while. She still sits on the potty a few times a day to read books, however, it's always her idea, and she wants to sit on the big potty now!
And, finally, she has truly entered her language explosion. Of course she learned the word "no." :) On a Sunday about a month ago, I asked her if she had had a good time in the nursery, and she surprised me with "no." At the time I wasn't sure if she understood what she was saying, but a month later there's no doubt.
Her only phrase so far is to say "Hi ---" to baby, daddy, or whatever. (Oh, and she loves to point to her baby and say "baby" and to herself and say "mama" (which comes out as "baba," which is distinctly different from "baby"). It's adorable!) It's almost all the more amazing since Gemma didn't say a phrase until after she turned 2, and for a while we were quite concerned about Ruthie's speech development. The ear tubes most certainly helped. She still puts some words through her nose, however, which makes me wonder if her hearing is still a little funny. We work on her with it, though, and are mostly thankful for how normal she truly is. Do you know how unmotivated I was to write an update on her when we thought she was delayed? All the cute things seemed unimportant in light of our serious concerns, but also it's almost embarrassing to brag on a child who is learning everything late when everyone else is bragging on their child learning everything early. The Lord has helped me to have an increased love for children with special needs and their families. Though our world is marred by sin, yet He does all things well, and even genetic abnormalities can be redeemed and used by Him for good!
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