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Leaps and Bounds in Knoxville

After a round trip to Knoxville and a day of work in the office and training in just over 24 hours, I’m quite exhausted so this will be brief.  However, Riley started making a few strides which deserved recognition.  For the first time last night and to a greater degree today, Riley fed himself.  He has started grabbing his baby banana snacks with his fingers and putting them in his mouth, chewing them, and begging for more.  Now, he is not always successful in the self-feeding and if you don’t hand it to him he is frequently UNsuccessful, but he can do it.  He’s better at using his left hand which gives me a vague hope that he will be left handed (lefties are just smarter in general and I say this without the hint of bias, hehe).  It was a big step to see him put together grabbing, feeding, chewing, and swallowing, without needing our help much at all.

We arrived Thursday night in time for dinner with my best friend (and Riley’s godmother) Erin and her husband Taylor.  We ate at a Japanese place we loved when we lived in Knoxville called Wasabi, which Andy and I agree is our favorite Japanese steakhouse.  Riley showed off literally the whole meal, trying to stand up in his high chair, eat his own food, and drink from his sippy cup, in between giggles and smiles at Erin and Taylor, but mostly Erin who he seems to adore.  When we went back the their house, he was crawling on the floor with more success than I’d ever seen him make and worked out a system for making it about 5 feet in only a few seconds (which he’s never done here).  It was really exciting to see him leap forward so quickly.

Today, I was in the office all day, which left Andy with the baby.  He didn’t get as much studying done as he wanted, but I’m glad he had the experience of taking the baby by himself for about six hours.  Most dads don’t get that much quality time with their children sans mommy.  It wasn’t as hard for me as I thought it would be, though I will be glad to be working at home Monday morning.  I forgot how hard it was to deal with getting ready for work in the mornings, dress up, and drive to the office.  I have a renewed appreciation for my two-flights-of-stairs commute.  Despite all that, it was great to be in the office, meet some of my bosses, and touch base with the rest of my team.  All in all, a good visit.  Now we’re home, sleepy and ready for bed (with the baby already sound asleep).

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Mythstarters: Twinkies

One of the many dubious ingredients in the famous Twinkie is a lead salt.  This not only serves to prolong the shelf life of the saturated fat laden snack, but is also the secret behind their well-publicized ability to survive nuclear fallout.  Oddly enough, this ingredient is considered one of the least harmful contained in the snack cake.

Credit for the inspiration behind this myth goes to my good buddy, Andrew Deane who will be tying the knot in September!  Congrats Andrew!

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Catching Up: Christmas Day!

Probably one of my favorite parts of this year’s holiday season was having my brother, Allison, and our nephew Dylan come visit us for several days.  Andy hadn’t seen Dylan since he was five weeks old and I hadn’t seen him since he was about 6 months old, so now at 13 months, he’s changed quite a bit!  It’s been too many years since I’ve been with my entire family on Christmas (and we didn’t quite get it right this year since mom left the 22nd and I didn’t get to see my dad at all), but spending it with Chris, Allison, and Dylan was a great compromise.  The last two Christmases have brought major changes for all of us, with Dylan’s birth last November, Riley’s impending arrival in about a month, and our moves all over the country, so having our house here in Atlanta as a place to host everyone brought a sense of permanence and stability that we haven’t had recently.  Here are a few pictures from our Christmas (messy, wrapping paper covered living room included) – hopefully the amount of fun we had is evident in the pictures!

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Bonjour Paris!

We returned from Europe only a few days ago and we have been working at breakneck pace to try to get back into the normal schedule of everyday life.  After six loads of laundry, some cleaning, picking the cats up, and going back to work immediately upon returning, we’re finally ready to reflect upon our trip.  We were gone for about twelve days, two of them lost to flying, four days in Paris, five days in the Czech Republic, and a day and a half spent in transit around Europe.  To make these posts more palatable to the reader, I’ll break them up by country.

We left Nashville in the afternoon on Friday and arrived early Saturday morning.  After several wasted hours waiting for our shuttle, we eventually arrived at our hotel, checked in, and headed out for a day of sight-seeing.  In the first day, we saw a ton of very important sights: we went to Ile de la Cite to see Sainte Chapelle (home to some of the best stained glass displays in the world), the Palais de Justice, the Conciergerie (once a palace, then home to prisoners like Marie Antoinette before being executed), the Archaeological Crypt (the site of old Roman ruins from Lutetia underneath the city), and my personal favorite, Notre Dame.  We had our first lunch at a cafe near Notre Dame and it tasted fantastic, though we were all starving and hunger, after all, is the best seasoning.  In the afternoon, we went to the top of the Arc de Triomphe and wandered the Champs Elysees down to Place de la Concorde.  It was a very full day, but it did keep us from going to sleep (that and a lot of coffee) and adjusted us to Parisian time quickly.

The next day was filled primarily with a trip to Versailles.  It was so crowded, there was a constant sea of people all around us.  We wandered through the chateau and rented a golf cart to explore the gardens fully.  Unfortunately our camera ran out of batteries when we made it to the gardens so we have almost no pictures from that.  We also went to the gardens of the Tuileries before dinner at the Gare de Lyon train station at their famous restaurant, Le Train Bleu. It was a very traditional French meal, complete with cheese course, amazing desserts, and very rich (delicious) sauces; dinner lasted a very long time – it was about three hours from beginning to end.

Day three was a museum day. We went to the Louvre in the morning, practically running through it to see the most important pieces (Mona Lisa, Venus de Milo, Winged Victory of Samothrace) and glancing past the important Italian Renaissance, Egyptian, Etruscan, Iranian, and Medieval art.  One fun surprise happened when Andy and I were staring at the Mona Lisa and he asked me why it was such an important painting, why everyone was gathering around it.  I didn’t really know the answer, but suddenly, an American woman turned to us and asked if we really wanted to know the answer.  Of course we said yes, so she explained that she was an art history professor and she told us the significance of Da Vinci’s work and La Gioconda (the Mona Lisa).  It was a really unique and fantastic experience.  In the afternoon we took a guided tour on medieval Paris, culminating in a stop at the Cluny Museum for medieval art.  Our guide, a PhD in medieval studies, explained the significance of the museum’s most important tapestries, the Lady and the Unicorn series, as well as explaining medieval life and society.  It was very interesting and not something I knew a significant amount about.  In the evening, Andy and I went to the Eiffel Tower (though we didn’t go up it) and took a river cruise on the Seine.  This was the high point of the trip for both of us.  The food was delicious (foie gras, veal, filet mignon, ratatouille, chocolate mousse, champagne, and more), the sights were wonderful (seeing all the sights along the Seine by twilight), and it was incredibly romantic with their live band.  I had a wonderful conversation with our waiter (in French) after dinner, asking about the EU, Turkey, multi-lingualism, Obama and American politics, and Parisian real estate (an apartment on Ile Saint Louis costs approximately 14,000 euro per square meter – the most expensive place in Paris).  As Andy and I were walking across the Champ de Mars back to our metro stop, the heavens opened up and a violent thunderstorm began.  We raced across the park, the sky lit up with lightning, the cobblestone streets teeming with water, and us laughing hysterically.  My poor Stuart Weitzman ballet flats did not fare too well after the storm, but it was totally worth it.

Day four was our last full day in Paris.  Andy and I began our morning at our favorite cafe of the trip in Place Saint Augustin, then went to the Opera Garnier and the main department store, Galeries Lafayette.  The store, if you haven’t seen it, is housed in an impressive building, complete with stained glass dome.  Andy started feeling a little sick, so I took him home before going out to the Musee d’Orsay by myself.  In the evening, Andy felt better, so we went to Notre Dame to see it by moonlight and strolled Ile Saint Louis for crepes and ice cream.

By the end of the night, our time in Paris had come to a close.  We know we’ll go back to Paris (as soon as we have the time and money), but it was a great introduction to the city for Andy, who had never been.  I’ve been a Francophile for as long as I can remember (second grade, I think) and it was so gratifying for me to know that Andy enjoyed himself as much as I did.  I know if he had his way, there would have been fewer museums and more crepes and more ice cream, but I think we did well with the limited time we had.  Up next in the series: traveling to the Czech Republic.

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