Sunday, November 7, 2010
Catch 22
I've had so much to write about since Katherine was born. Yet there is no time to write about it. I've pondered whether I should put it all in one big long post, or many separate posts. I'm opting for the separate posts, and we'll see how long it takes to catch up. We'll see how long it takes.
Friday, September 3, 2010
Introducing...
Katherine Alice Perkins




And now, for the rest of the story:
(For those who aren't interested, a warning - this is the story about the labor and delivery part - Read at your own risk! No, it's not yucky or scary. Some people just don't care! :))
For about a week or so, I'd been having labor pains off and on. When I went in for my 39 week checkup, the baby was way low. The doctor said, "It'll probably come fast, call when you have your first painful contraction." I laughed, because the contractions were already painful. All throughout the week, I went to bed with contractions and was surprised each morning when I woke up with no contractions. A bit frustrating, really. But it was ok, because my mother-in-law wasn't in town yet, so we were hoping the baby would wait. It did. My mother-in-law got in safely, and I kept waiting. On my due date, I had a doctor appointment, still nothing. I was hoping the baby would be born that day because it was my sister's birthday, but again, the contractions never got regular.
Saturday morning (the next day), they started to get regular, about 10 minutes apart, but after 2 hours, they went away. I spent the whole day wondering if I should eat. When I had Erica, I wasn't sure if I was in labor, so I ate dinner. That was a mistake I didn't want to repeat. So I ate lightly. The contractions started up again about 2:30, again 10 minutes apart. But this time they didn't go away. At about 4:30, they were still 10 minutes apart, but they started getting stronger. So we called the doctor, got some things ready, and left.
We got to the hospital and instead of admitting me, they took me to triage to make sure I was in labor. That had never happened to me before - I'd always been taken straight to a room. In fact, when I came in for Zachary, before I'd even really settled in, the nurse started talking about calling the anesthesiologist for my epidural. Ok, fine, they checked, said I was likely in early labor, but I needed to walk around for 2 hours to make sure. WHAT?!?!?! That had definitely never happened before. I assured her that I was in labor, this was my 5th child, and I knew what I was talking about. I had left home because the contractions were getting stronger than I could bear, and there was no way I had it in me to walk for 2 hours. The nurse was unsympathetic, and that was the end of that. So she left, I cried, and since there was nothing else to do, bucked up and started walking the halls.
Shift change occurred at 7:00pm, and soon after I got a new nurse, I asked her to check me again. She did, declaring I was at a 7, and proceeded to admit me. Now I was nervous that the baby would come before I could get an epidural. I know many women get through birth without one, I knew I could if I had no other option, but I didn't want to. In. the. least. I don't deal well with pain.
So the nurse set up the IV, got the liter of fluid in me that she had to, and called the anesthesiologist. He came in and told me to lay on my side. All other epidurals I had received had been sitting up. He said he'd been trained different. So I laid on my side curled up in the fetal position. Let me tell you, that was the best epidural experience I'd ever had. Fast, easy, the contractions didn't hurt as bad curled up like that, so I was able to relax more and get it done. I asked him why all epidurals weren't administered that way, and he said that they just don't teach it that way anymore. It's a shame, it was great!
So the medicine took effect, and I relaxed. After an hour wait, it was time to push. Ten minutes later, there was Katherine! After she was born, the doctor commented that the contractions never got very close together - about 2 or 3 minutes apart at the end. I wish that first nurse had been there to hear that - even though my contractions were far apart initially, it didn't mean I wasn't in painful labor!
Katherine was 6lbs, 9oz, and 20", my smallest baby yet. Hooray - I like small babies! She was born at 10:07pm on August 28th, my sister-in-law's birthday. She is named after 2 of her great-grandmothers - Victoria Katherine Zaugg and Barbara Alice Black. James wants to call her Katie, I want to call her Katherine. We shall see who wins the war. :) But it's the first time we've ever agreed on a name from the beginning.
And we're doing great. Recovery has been fast, Katherine sleeps all the time and eats like a champ. Nursing is actually going well. It seems like after 5 kids I've finally figured it out. We're happy and the kids adore her. Even Zachary has been gentle with her and doesn't seem jealous at all.




And now, for the rest of the story:
(For those who aren't interested, a warning - this is the story about the labor and delivery part - Read at your own risk! No, it's not yucky or scary. Some people just don't care! :))
For about a week or so, I'd been having labor pains off and on. When I went in for my 39 week checkup, the baby was way low. The doctor said, "It'll probably come fast, call when you have your first painful contraction." I laughed, because the contractions were already painful. All throughout the week, I went to bed with contractions and was surprised each morning when I woke up with no contractions. A bit frustrating, really. But it was ok, because my mother-in-law wasn't in town yet, so we were hoping the baby would wait. It did. My mother-in-law got in safely, and I kept waiting. On my due date, I had a doctor appointment, still nothing. I was hoping the baby would be born that day because it was my sister's birthday, but again, the contractions never got regular.
Saturday morning (the next day), they started to get regular, about 10 minutes apart, but after 2 hours, they went away. I spent the whole day wondering if I should eat. When I had Erica, I wasn't sure if I was in labor, so I ate dinner. That was a mistake I didn't want to repeat. So I ate lightly. The contractions started up again about 2:30, again 10 minutes apart. But this time they didn't go away. At about 4:30, they were still 10 minutes apart, but they started getting stronger. So we called the doctor, got some things ready, and left.
We got to the hospital and instead of admitting me, they took me to triage to make sure I was in labor. That had never happened to me before - I'd always been taken straight to a room. In fact, when I came in for Zachary, before I'd even really settled in, the nurse started talking about calling the anesthesiologist for my epidural. Ok, fine, they checked, said I was likely in early labor, but I needed to walk around for 2 hours to make sure. WHAT?!?!?! That had definitely never happened before. I assured her that I was in labor, this was my 5th child, and I knew what I was talking about. I had left home because the contractions were getting stronger than I could bear, and there was no way I had it in me to walk for 2 hours. The nurse was unsympathetic, and that was the end of that. So she left, I cried, and since there was nothing else to do, bucked up and started walking the halls.
Shift change occurred at 7:00pm, and soon after I got a new nurse, I asked her to check me again. She did, declaring I was at a 7, and proceeded to admit me. Now I was nervous that the baby would come before I could get an epidural. I know many women get through birth without one, I knew I could if I had no other option, but I didn't want to. In. the. least. I don't deal well with pain.
So the nurse set up the IV, got the liter of fluid in me that she had to, and called the anesthesiologist. He came in and told me to lay on my side. All other epidurals I had received had been sitting up. He said he'd been trained different. So I laid on my side curled up in the fetal position. Let me tell you, that was the best epidural experience I'd ever had. Fast, easy, the contractions didn't hurt as bad curled up like that, so I was able to relax more and get it done. I asked him why all epidurals weren't administered that way, and he said that they just don't teach it that way anymore. It's a shame, it was great!
So the medicine took effect, and I relaxed. After an hour wait, it was time to push. Ten minutes later, there was Katherine! After she was born, the doctor commented that the contractions never got very close together - about 2 or 3 minutes apart at the end. I wish that first nurse had been there to hear that - even though my contractions were far apart initially, it didn't mean I wasn't in painful labor!
Katherine was 6lbs, 9oz, and 20", my smallest baby yet. Hooray - I like small babies! She was born at 10:07pm on August 28th, my sister-in-law's birthday. She is named after 2 of her great-grandmothers - Victoria Katherine Zaugg and Barbara Alice Black. James wants to call her Katie, I want to call her Katherine. We shall see who wins the war. :) But it's the first time we've ever agreed on a name from the beginning.
And we're doing great. Recovery has been fast, Katherine sleeps all the time and eats like a champ. Nursing is actually going well. It seems like after 5 kids I've finally figured it out. We're happy and the kids adore her. Even Zachary has been gentle with her and doesn't seem jealous at all.
Thursday, August 19, 2010
Summer update
Long time, no write. Because we have done NOTHING this summer. No trips to the pool, beaches, or museums. We did make it to the movies once and to the playground once, but that's it. My kids have done their chores, played together, and played the Wii a lot. Did I mention that it's hard to be pregnant during the summer?

We did buy bunk beds for the girls. We bought them unstained and James modified them a bit and stained them. They turned out beautiful. Unfortunately, we don't have a beautiful still camera, so the picture's not all that great. We looked for a camera once, but that's been about it. Did I mention that we've done NOTHING this summer?
Since the girls had the bunk beds, the toddler bed went to Zachary, in preparation for the baby. He got right in it, no problem. Then he got right back out of it, no problem. He's finally starting to stay in it, although he does usually get out once or twice a night. He zoomed right up the bunk bed ladder, too, which made me nervous. He did ok, but Jessie pushed him out of the top bunk one day (it's amazing the falls that kid survives), so the ladder came off. We keep it on the top bunk and then put it down at night for Jess to get up.

Speaking of doing nothing, I guess I did do something. I made a baby blanket, and if we have a girl, I'll keep it. :) I started on it while watching the Olympics, then finished it this summer while Erica was in therapy - about 3 hours every week.

A friend of mine told me about a corner-to-corner blanket, and I wanted to try it. You start at one corner with one square, then add on two squares, so it looks like stairs. Keep going until you reach the middle, then decrease in the squares until you get back down to one. I really liked doing it. I like the diagonal stripes. Also, when you go diagonally, about the time you get tired of doing it, you start decreasing so it doesn't take as long and you feel like you're making fast progress.
The kids have chores they have to do everyday, one of which is cleaning their rooms. One day, instead of picking up the toys, Jessie decided to dump everything out, including 3 of her drawers.

She's on day 2 of getting it all cleaned up. This picture was taken after she had picked up some of the things already. I haven't yet figured out what motivates her to get work done. She mostly sits there and does nothing. Oh well, she'll get it done eventually, right? We shall see.
And that's all that's happening for now. We're anxiously awaiting the baby, hoping and praying that it will wait 1 more week for reinforcements to come, but I'm not sure I'm going to last that long. Again, we shall see!

We did buy bunk beds for the girls. We bought them unstained and James modified them a bit and stained them. They turned out beautiful. Unfortunately, we don't have a beautiful still camera, so the picture's not all that great. We looked for a camera once, but that's been about it. Did I mention that we've done NOTHING this summer?
Since the girls had the bunk beds, the toddler bed went to Zachary, in preparation for the baby. He got right in it, no problem. Then he got right back out of it, no problem. He's finally starting to stay in it, although he does usually get out once or twice a night. He zoomed right up the bunk bed ladder, too, which made me nervous. He did ok, but Jessie pushed him out of the top bunk one day (it's amazing the falls that kid survives), so the ladder came off. We keep it on the top bunk and then put it down at night for Jess to get up.

Speaking of doing nothing, I guess I did do something. I made a baby blanket, and if we have a girl, I'll keep it. :) I started on it while watching the Olympics, then finished it this summer while Erica was in therapy - about 3 hours every week.

A friend of mine told me about a corner-to-corner blanket, and I wanted to try it. You start at one corner with one square, then add on two squares, so it looks like stairs. Keep going until you reach the middle, then decrease in the squares until you get back down to one. I really liked doing it. I like the diagonal stripes. Also, when you go diagonally, about the time you get tired of doing it, you start decreasing so it doesn't take as long and you feel like you're making fast progress.
The kids have chores they have to do everyday, one of which is cleaning their rooms. One day, instead of picking up the toys, Jessie decided to dump everything out, including 3 of her drawers.

She's on day 2 of getting it all cleaned up. This picture was taken after she had picked up some of the things already. I haven't yet figured out what motivates her to get work done. She mostly sits there and does nothing. Oh well, she'll get it done eventually, right? We shall see.
And that's all that's happening for now. We're anxiously awaiting the baby, hoping and praying that it will wait 1 more week for reinforcements to come, but I'm not sure I'm going to last that long. Again, we shall see!
Tuesday, June 22, 2010
We've Got Talent
Near the end of the school year, the third graders put together a talent show. Eldon told jokes and played the piano.
Sorry about the quality of the video. We were way in the back, so I had to zoom in quite a bit. That made every little jiggle of my hand show up quite a bit on the video. I also didn't have a program, so I didn't know when he was getting on stage. They announced his name, and by the time I got the camera ready, he was already into his act. So I missed 1 or 2 jokes, but you get the idea. :)
For the piano, I knew when he was coming up, so I got ready. But he started playing the second he sat down, so I still missed the first part of it while I was pushing the record button. I love the way he messes up when he sees Zachary. I think it's cute. This song, called "Pumpkin Boogie", is a variation of a song from one of his piano books. He likes taking songs and putting his own spin on it.
After his performance, the MC said she had to practically force Eldon to play, and I believe it. He HATES practicing the piano. And on that note, it's over. We decided that the peace we didn't have in the family was worth more than having him be able to play the piano. We told him it was a "break" (on advice of his teacher), so maybe he'll still play around with it, but it will likely be a permanent break. He does like playing, he can play on the piano for hours, but he hates practicing. So, anyone want a piano?
P.S. Did I mention he hates practicing?
Sorry about the quality of the video. We were way in the back, so I had to zoom in quite a bit. That made every little jiggle of my hand show up quite a bit on the video. I also didn't have a program, so I didn't know when he was getting on stage. They announced his name, and by the time I got the camera ready, he was already into his act. So I missed 1 or 2 jokes, but you get the idea. :)
For the piano, I knew when he was coming up, so I got ready. But he started playing the second he sat down, so I still missed the first part of it while I was pushing the record button. I love the way he messes up when he sees Zachary. I think it's cute. This song, called "Pumpkin Boogie", is a variation of a song from one of his piano books. He likes taking songs and putting his own spin on it.
After his performance, the MC said she had to practically force Eldon to play, and I believe it. He HATES practicing the piano. And on that note, it's over. We decided that the peace we didn't have in the family was worth more than having him be able to play the piano. We told him it was a "break" (on advice of his teacher), so maybe he'll still play around with it, but it will likely be a permanent break. He does like playing, he can play on the piano for hours, but he hates practicing. So, anyone want a piano?
P.S. Did I mention he hates practicing?
Sunday, May 2, 2010
Baked Roses
The Saturday after we returned from D.C., a friend of mine wanted me to make a cake for her girl's birthday party. Before we left, her daughter had drawn a picture of what she wanted - a 2-tiered heart-shaped cake, with fondant roses, butterfly, and writing. Easy schmeasy.
Because I have 4 kids, I started on the roses on Monday. Plus, fondant roses are a lot easier if you let each layer dry completely before putting on the next layer. And there are 4 layers. All went well. By Thursday evening, the decorations we completely finished, including 21 roses. (I had started with 24, but Zachary had eaten 3 before I caught him.) Beautiful, wouldn't you agree? All I had to do on Friday was bake the cake, ice it, and place the decorations on it. Easy schmeasy.



So, Friday morning I needed to go to the store to buy eggs to make the cake. The store didn't open until 9, so I got the pans ready, made the icing, and then went to the store. When I got home, I turned on the oven, mixed the dry ingredients, measured out the wet, and was about to mix them all together when the phone rang. It was the school nurse, calling to say that Erica wasn't feeling well. She'd had a slight cold all week, but that morning I wondered if she was going to make it through school - just seemed a bit more lethargic. Oh well, I thought, at least I hadn't really gotten into the cake yet. Good timing!
Little did I know how good the timing was! As the kids were getting their shoes on, I smelled something funny. And all of the sudden, it hit me. You see, to keep prying fingers and mouths out of my cake decorations, I often store them in the oven. I'm very careful to put them on my bed and lock the bedroom if I need to use the stove or oven. Except this once. This very day. When I REALLY needed to not have this happen. So I ran to the oven, and sure enough, disaster had struck. The roses, which were neatly placed on toothpicks into a box to keep them upright and well-shaped, were now melted blobs neatly placed on toothpicks on a very warm box. The letters, number, and butterfly had been in a Tupperware container. That Tupperware container was now melted all and dripping all over my oven. Oh, and it was on fire too.


And the birthday girl told me today that it was delicious! :)

My first problem - how to douse the fire. I didn't really want to get the fire extinguisher out. You see, I was in the middle of making a cake, and had cake ingredients out that I didn't feel like ruining. Second, my one experience with a fire extinguisher turned out very messy because the fire extinguisher wouldn't turn off. (Want details? Ask my sister Karen. That was her fire.) Luckily, in a recent conversation with Karen about that fire, she had mentioned that you could use baking soda to put out a grease fire. I know this wasn't a grease fire, but I knew smothering it would work. So I got out the baking soda, threw it on the fire, and voila! the fire was out. Jessie thought that was hilarious - throwing baking soda on a fire. Wanna see what dripping Tupperware looks like? It looks like this:

Anyhow, I took the racks out of the oven, turned on the outside fan, opened the windows, and left to pick up Erica. And that's where I feel fortunate for the timing of the phone call. Because the nurse had called 5 minutes earlier, I might have left before smelling the melting Tupperware. Erica's school is only a few blocks away; I would have definitely left the oven on while I picked her up. And the fire could have grown bigger. Or the box could have caught on fire. Then I would have come home to a real problem.
So I let the oven cool down and started scraping off the goo. Fortunately on the racks, because it was dripping, it was mostly on the top of the oven racks, so I was able to pry it right off. For the parts that were stuck harder, I went downstairs to get James' chisel and hammer. Oh, did I mention James just built a new table down there. And that it's nearly impossible to get around said table. More especially so if you're pregnant. Not so fun. So I cleaned up the oven, baked the cake, and went to work on the decorations. Since Erica was sick, I cancelled her therapy, which actually gave me more time to finish the decorations. Since I'd spent all week making roses, I was a pro at it now, and it didn't take much time. Unbelievably, it all pulled together. Here are the results:

Art Show
Every year our city has an art show to showcase students' works. This year one of Eldon's art works and one of Erica's art works were showcased.

This is two people playing beach volleyball, with a third person riding a shark.
This is a vase/bowl of flowers that Erica made. We're proud of their hard work!
Washington D.C.
During spring break, the kids, my friend Malisa, and I went to Virginia to visit my sister Karen and tour D.C. Malisa is my visiting teaching partner, and months before we were talking about spring break. I said I'd like to go to D.C., but couldn't go because James couldn't take the time off work. Malisa said she'd never been and would like to go. When I reminded her that I have 4 young children and she still was crazy enough to want to go, plans were made. See, good things can come of visiting teaching!

Inside was beautiful. There were a lot of stained glass windows. Unfortunately, my camera does not work well in low light, so I didn't get much. But I got this stained glass window. There were many beautiful ones.
It was great, because although we'd been to Virginia a few times to visit my sister, I hadn't done the tourist thing, although I had been there about 10 years ago when my friend Christie lived there.
We left on Monday and the kids were good. They've always been pretty decent travelers. I was a bit concerned about Zachary getting bored, but he was pretty good and only fussed for a few minutes before falling asleep. I only got lost once, and that was going to Malisa's house (I guess my brain wasn't turned on yet!) And Malisa stopped me from going east when I should go west, so all was good. We hit D.C. traffic, as we always do, but once we got into the HOV lane, it was smooth sailing. And it took us quite a bit of time to get the DVD player set up, but then we got creative and everyone was happy.
Tuesday we went to the Smithsonian Hirshhorn Museum of Modern Art. Cool thing about the Smithsonians in D.C. - all free! Can't beat that price. Jared had taken the day off work to go with us, but when he realized we wouldn't all fit in one van, he volunteered to stay home and babysit Zachary. So nice!

Here's Jess in front of a cryptography statue thingy. (Thanks Malisa for the pic from your blog!)
A cool perspective painting.
And another one. Erica liked this one the best. She started to get bored, as she generally does, so I let her take some pictures to keep her occupied.
Wednesday was a rainy day, so Karen stayed home with the kids while Malisa and I went to the Freer Gallery of Art. But first we went to the Natural History Museum to see the Hope Diamond. It wasn't as big as we thought it would be. In fact, Malisa walked up to it, declared it was small and not worth seeing, and turned right back around. It was a priceless moment!
So then we walked to the Freer Gallery. I'm not a huge art fan or very knowledgeable about art, but it was cool to see painting by artists I'd heard of - Van Gogh, Picasso, Rembrant, Vermeer, etc.
After that excursion, we really wanted to try and see the White House. We had a map and a GPS, so away we went. Well, the road that you used to be able to drive on to see the White House is closed (probably because of 9/11). But the GPS didn't know that. Which was the problem we had the last time we tried to see the White House. So we drove down random roads that we thought might work until we saw it. Hooray! Unfortunately, this was at about 6:00pm. I have NEVER seen traffic so horrible. I now know what gridlock means. It means traveling 0mph, honking your horn a lot (yes, I honked just to be part of the full experience), and getting nowhere for a long time, but laughing the whole while!
Thursday was take-your-child-to-work day, so Joe went with Karen to clean houses. When they got home, Joe babysat and we went to the National Cathedral. Very large and cool.
Inside was beautiful. There were a lot of stained glass windows. Unfortunately, my camera does not work well in low light, so I didn't get much. But I got this stained glass window. There were many beautiful ones.
On Friday we went to D.C. with all the kids and visited the monuments. Lincoln Memorial, Vietnam Memorial, WWII Memorial, Washington Monument, and the reflecting pool with baby ducks (that was the kids' favorite). Zachary slept while we were walking around, very cute. Then we bought yummy overpriced ice cream treats from a vendor by the Lincoln Memorial. Erica's ice cream bar fell off her stick, but we caught it. So I had to feed it to her out of my hand. Very messy. And sticky. And gooey. And funny. Good thing we had wipes. Since I was covered in chocolate and ice cream, I asked Malisa to get the wipes out for me. She pulled out a package that had one dried up wipe in it and looked at me with an "are you serious?" look. Luckily, I had a newer package in there too with plenty of wipes. I can only imagine what went through her head when she saw me and Erica covered in ice cream and one wipe for the both of us.
It was a great trip and I'm so glad we went. Thanks, Karen, for letting us take over your place!
Since my camera wasn't working well, Malisa took most of the pictures. You can see her blog entry to see a few more pics. I'll update the post again with more pictures when I get them.
CAUTION: Construction Zone
Since the whole family except for James was going to be in D.C. for a week, we decided it was a good time to redo the boys' bedroom. He started the Saturday before we left, so I got some shots of it.
First, we had to move all the furniture out of the room. The bed is in the living room, the dresser in the office, with all the closet clothes stacked on top of it, the crib in our room, and various other things in the basement. Zach helped with the moving: (for those of you who get this by email, you really have to go to the blog and watch the video - it's too cute!)
Before you call the press because of his strength, I will let you in on the secret that James was pulling the other end. But it was adorable how he wanted to help.

This is the boys' room before. Seriously. It's looked this bad for nearly 5 years.

Eldon was super-excited to get to be part of the destruction. He was only allowed to work on the outside walls so he wouldn't destroy the interior walls on the connecting rooms. But it is curious that our room ended up with 2 Eldon-height holes in the wall. Hmmm.....
Why James allowed him to have a hatchet - with a sharp edge - I'll never know. But he managed to not chop anyone into bits.

A shot of all the walls torn down. Those are exterior walls. With. no. insulation. Brrrrrr cold in the winter and steamy hot in the summer. One of the reasons the drywall went down.
INSULATION!

The drywall. James and two men from our ward helped with the destruction and putting up the walls. Thanks, guys!

This is the room as it currently sits. Another friend from the ward helped James mud and tape. The trim still needs to be put up and painted and probably a million other little things that get the room ready. But it's progress! The walls are jazz blue and the ceiling is planetarium. We'll put glow-in-the-dark stars on the ceiling. Eldon wanted it black, but he didn't finish practicing piano in time to go pick out the paint colors with his dad. But we made it darker to try and make him happy. I think he likes it. I'm not sure if he knows about the stars yet. I'm sure he'll like that!
Zoo
It seems like forever since I've been able to update my blog. Looking at the number of pictures on my camera, I'd say I'm right.
On Good Friday we went to the Beardsley Zoo in Bridgeport, CT (about an hour from here.) It's a small zoo - no large animals. But just the right size - about the time you think you're ready to go home, you realize there's only one more section left to look at, and then you can go home. It was beautiful weather, the perfect day for an outing.
First, we measured everyone's wingspan to see if they're growing well.

Eldon's a good-sized turkey vulture.

Jess measured about the same.

Yep, 3 turkey vultures.

Then there's the obligatory picture in the peacock.

Groundhogs peeping out of their holes. The white cylinders behind them are tubes you can crawl into and pop up out of the ground to get the full groundhog experience.

This is a peafowl. We learned that the males are peacocks and the females are peahens. Who knew? (Yes, Dad, I know you did. :))
Saturday, March 27, 2010
Whose side are you on, anyway?
1st Haircuts
James keeps telling me that Zach needs to get a haircut. I hated to cut off the cute curls. Plus he's so young, I wasn't sure how well he'd do. A friend of mine told me about Scissor Kids, which cuts kids' hair. Later that day Jessica gave Zachary a haircut, so I decided it was time to take him in.

They have little cars for the kids to sit in and a TV to watch. Zach still wasn't too thrilled, but they're *fast*, so he didn't have time to get too fussy.
James keeps saying that Jess needs a haircut too. Her hair goes to the middle of her back, and it gets tangly. But no way was I going to cut it. Jessica keeps saying she wants a haircut (she hates having it brushed), so I figured I could let her get a trim to keep her happy and hopefully keep the scissors out of her hair!

She, of course, was still during the haircut. The hardest part was pulling her away from the TV. This place even has a little playzone for toddlers. It has walls all the way around it that are about waist high so that toddlers can't escape. Most of the toys were covered in hair, however, so I wasn't too upset when Zachary didn't want to play in it.

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