Monday, April 28, 2014

Family

Every year we spend the last weekend in April with Matt's dad's side of the family at an 8 bedroom retreat "cabin." This year was obviously Krassi's first year, and I was freshly aware as we traveled down that adoption doesn't just provide a child with a mom-dad-brothers-sisters kind of family, but also all of the family that goes beyond that - grandmas, grandpa, cousins, aunts, uncles, second cousins, etc, etc.

A year ago this boy belonged to no one.

Look at him now!
Krassimir has a family! Here he is, all lined up with all of the second-cousins from oldest to youngest (with the exception of 2 month old Abram sitting on the lap of the oldest on the far right, and a few adults thrown in to help keep little ones in their places because they either can't (Krassi and Evania) or won't (yes, that's Rinnah with her hands over her eyes and Grandma keeping her from running away!))

I've heard that the first six months home are critical months for bonding for an adoptive family. Krassi has just passed up six months home with us, and it was interesting to watch him over this weekend - he was so comfortable, and at ease, which is such a contrast from other potentially-overwhelming events that he's been to over the last six months. Christmas was celebrated at our house (so even a familiar setting), and was tough for him. We visited my parents house for his first time back in February, and though he did great during the day, the nights were rough for him, with him waking at least once nightly whimpering, and many tooth-grinding hours during the night.

This trip was so different - he was confident and curious, regularly going "exploring" around the cabin, doing just fine with all of the people around, most of whom he'd never met, and sleeping so soundly during the night that we didn't hear from him once.

And so many fun experiences for him! Playing with extended family (how neat for him to learn that it's not just us who like him and enjoy spending time with him, but there are other people in the world who think he's worth their time, too!)...
...or sitting with Grandma...
Don't let his expression fool you - he loves his Grandma, but he's a challenge to hold, so his look is reflecting the effort he's putting in to keep himself in a comfortable position.
...or playing out on the big lawn outside...
(I'm not quite sure how Matt managed to get a photo with no one else in it - usually the grassy area between the play set, where Matt is, and the cabin, is swarming with uncles and cousins playing baseball or soccer, or just running around!)
I don't have photographic evidence, but Krassi got what I'm nearly certain are his first grass stains ever! That's just what every nine-year-old boy should have on his pants, and it's little things like that that surprise me with the thrill they bring - Krassimir has grass stains on his pants!!!

And, because we traveled with a brand-new baby, Krassi also spent a fair amount of time just doing this...
...playing on the floor while I laid on the couch and did "nothing." But even that he seemed to enjoy pretty well.

And I sure enjoyed what I was doing!


I don't think I could ever get tired of holding my tiny little baby.

Wednesday, April 23, 2014

Introducing...

Evania Hope
Evania (ee VAHN yah) means "peaceful" and is the only name we've ever picked out completely after the fact (of birth) and was simply because this sweet girly is so calm and peaceful despite her busy surroundings!

Hope is pretty self-explanatory! ;) (see Romans 5:1-5)

Monday, April 21, 2014

Baby GIRL Glewwe

Here are a few photos for those if you who have been waiting...
Leah helping to support Mom during labor.

Dad, Mom and baby minutes after her arrival.

Rinnah was not too sure when she first came down after her nap, but as soon as she sat down next to Mom and baby, it was all over.  She immediately wanted to share her special purple blanket.  Reminds me a lot of how Owen immediately wanted to share his special yellow blanket with Reuben when he was born.

Reuben spent a few hours out of the house with some friends, but as soon as he got home, he was all about meeting his new sister.  Even with his thumb in his mouth, you can see the joy coming off his face.


Rinnah taking a close look at baby's small appendages.

Rinnah getting her first chance to hold baby.

Reuben getting his first chance to hold baby.

Reuben may not "hold" her the same way his other siblings do, but he definitely loves to have her in his lap and touch her head.

Leah waited very patiently for her turn to hold baby.  It sure looks pretty natural for her to be holding this baby.  Leah was really glad to get to be a part of the whole birth process this time.  She was a great help!

Owen was the last to hold his new sister after getting home from a friends house.  He just couldn't stop talking about how he thinks she is the cutest baby we have had yet.  




We don't have  any pictures of Krassi holding baby, mostly because he is not physically able to and also because she did not really seem to register with him yet the couple times when we brought her close to her or brought him up by where she was.  A baby is something that has no meaning to him...it is not something he has probably ever seen before.  He has no framework for processing what happened around here today.  It will be interesting to see what he thinks of her as he sees more of her.

Saturday, April 19, 2014

Who wants to see more painting photos?

Today we...painted! (We, meaning mom and Matt. Not me. I ran errands, including a trip to the pharmacy because Reuben's throat culture revealed that he, too, has strep.)

Here's a summary of what happened in the addition.
First and second coat in the laundry room. This is actually the color we chose for one small accent bump in the back part of the living room, but with a whole gallon, we had enough to do this small room, too.

The under-eave low closet in Matt's mom's bedroom now has its first and second coat of paint.

And the stair going up has been primed, and first coated. You can't tell very well because of the lighting in this photo, but the back wall and the center wall are slightly different color and tones.
And on the baby front, I had a sweet friend come over and take me for a walk after the light rain, which was wonderful, and then she offered me a foot and hand massage. Ahhhh. Now to see if anything gets moving - how neat it would be to have an Easter baby!

Friday, April 18, 2014

Work week

It was so nice of my mom to volunteer to come up for a work week on the addition.

Never mind the fact that it was "supposed" to be a week of caring for kids so I could spend time with a new baby.

Today Matt was able to spend a bit of time hitting a few last mud joints in the morning before tackling his necessary business-work to finish off the week, so by this afternoon when he had the last of his things sent off, those joints were dry and he was able to finish sanding, making the bedroom closet upstairs and the laundry room both ready for paint.
Mom spent her afternoon while kids were napping cleaning up after the dust of sanding so she could put primer on both the closet and the laundry room! (The laundry room is one of the easiest "small" rooms to photograph because we have a large planned hole in the end of it that will be covered with a decorative sheet of finish-grade plywood from the living room side, but gives very easy access for maneuvering and hooking up appliances when necessary.)
Rinnah was excited to go out and "help" Grandma paint by sitting on these yard-chair cushions and looking at books. This is also how she occupied her time Thursday morning while Grandma was painting when the rest of us were at Krassi and Reuben's therapy center, and she was looking forward to doing it again today. I like this photo because it's a great reminder that our access to the addition is still through what used to be an exterior window. It's great for keeping the dust out of the existing part of the house, and also gives this 41-week-plus-three-days-pregnant mama a chance to stay limber every time she goes between the two!

After sanding the two rooms that mom wanted to paint, Matt got to work on the upstairs hall and stairwell. He found a few little spots that want a touch more mud which he will try to do after church tonight, but other than that, that stairwell is all ready to be cleaned up and primed. So, since I'm apparently not having a baby any time soon, it looks like there's the potential to get a lot more work done out there tomorrow.


Thursday, April 17, 2014

Getting stronger

Krassi has made some big strides in the last week or two with what he is attempting physically. I guess I'm not surprised that this is coupled with his positive weight gain - a lot of that weight (all ounces of it!) appears to be muscle, and he's putting those muscles to work.
See how he can climb himself up onto these cushions? The bent knees and hips are a new thing for him as he's starting to try to use his legs to help him navigate instead of relying solely on his arms to pull himself around and dragging his legs behind him. As usual, you can see that he's both very proud of himself, and delighted by the camera being out. What a ham!
On this day he got himself completely off the floor and onto the cushion.

And even more exciting and impressive to us is how he's working on pulling up to standing. He is very much not capable of doing this on his own, but the big thing we've noticed is that he's trying. Someone from my parents' church wanted to make a Lego table for Krassi (which he can share with his siblings). It's super sturdy and a great height - and big enough for quite a few little ones can gather around it at one time. Krassi, though, still thinks that the method for standing up is to pull really hard with his arms until his feet lift off the floor and then set them down. This obviously doesn't work. ;) But it means that my job is to help him place his feet in such a way that he can feel what it is to use his leg muscles to push his body up. And then, to make sure that he doesn't tumble back down again because he really does not have a good sense of what legs are for!

I think Rinnah may have taken this one, since Owen uses his own camera, and Leah is in the photo... Not bad for a two-year-old!
It is so exciting to watch him working - he tries so hard, and is making strides in so many ways. We are so proud of our oldest little boy!

And although this last photo may seem somewhat disconnected, it's still a fun one to share - Krassi found a bag of bags sitting by the back door of the kitchen, and, well, you can see the results. He was pretty pleased with himself - loved the sound, loved pulling them over himself and scooting out from under them. Even though this isn't an example of muscular strength in the same way that the others are, there's still a thrill for me to see him getting to play this way - I'm sure he's never had an experience like that before! Also notice his bare feet. It is NOT bare feet weather yet, but he loves to pull socks off - anyone's socks, including his own. And he, unlike Reuben, who's still working on the skill, taught himself how to do it! That's my boy. ;)

More paint

Guess what - we got to push the painting further forward today!

Oh. That wasn't the news you were hoping for? Well, I was kind of hoping to be snuggling a brand new baby today myself instead of more of the same old routine, but I must say that having each day that I don't have a baby be a day that more gets done out there is somewhat of a consolation. 

Today Mom put the first coat of real color on the bathroom.
Looking in from the hallway (the durock and blue sheetrock that aren't painted will have white subway tile on them. And the bathtub isn't really blue - that's just the protective plastic film. There's a white tub under there!)
And this photo is taken standing in the back corner looking out into the hallway and toward the stair. You can see Kelley working on mudding in the stairway. We have been SO glad that we've had him and Korey putting in time out there for us! They're charging us a very reasonable rate, and even though they can only work at odd times, it's still pushing the project forward, and they're doing a beautiful job.
So what will tomorrow bring? More paint? Or a baby?

Wednesday, April 16, 2014

Paint

Yes.

I know that "Paint" is not a very exciting title for a post when "Introducing Baby..." is what many of you are hoping for, but paint is the best I've got at the moment!

Since there's no baby yet, and since my mom is up here, she, Matt, and Owen have been out painting Barb's rooms! On Monday they did the priming...
...and Tuesday morning put on the first coats of final color paint in both the front sitting room, the hall closet, and the bedroom!
This photo doesn't do the color justice - it looks more mustardy here than it really is - in real life it's more golden. Really love this color - we're using it a bit in the stair well and the front living room, too.
The bedroom color is more tame, and is slightly more to the green side than we had anticipated, but I still like it very much. We will use this color here, in the basement, and on the ceilings on the main level. The peek at the front room on the right hand side of this picture does a better job of capturing what it looks like in real life...at least on my computer monitor!
Today they were able to second coat all three of these spaces, and Matt found the can of paint leftover from when we redid our main bathroom three years ago that we will use in the bathroom up here. If Baby doesn't come tonight, that's on Mom's agenda tomorrow.

Matt's still juggling plenty of work items this week on all fronts: he's got small projects for both of the firms he contracts with as well as a final set of drawings for a large remodel/addition for one of our own clients that's due this week. This limits the amount of time that he can spend out in the addition, but he's managing to get quite a bit done. But not tonight. Tonight he's sleeping in the living room because we found out this afternoon that he and Rinnah are victims #4 and 5 of the strep that's been working its way through our house! I think we've had every possible combination of symptoms that you can have with strep. Leah had a crazy sore throat and couldn't eat or drink anything (but no fever). I had no fever, and only a very mild sore throat, but had had it for a while and it wasn't going away, and on the drive home from finding out she had it, realized that I was aware of every swallow, which isn't a good sign. Yep. Strep. Krassi was next - no fever, no sign of sore throat (as demonstrated by a healthy appetite), but tiny, tiny red dots on his cheeks, then his arms, then his back - scarlet fever (with no fever? who knows. But that's what they call it.)

Matt was pretty miserable last night with an increasing sore throat, so we sent him AND Rinnah in today (she had a mild fever, has been rather cranky, and when asked if her throat hurt, said, no, but her tummy did *ding ding ding - sore tummy - strep symptom!*)

What a crazy time to have a Baby. ;)

So that's where we're at, and hopefully the next post will have news of someone new! (Or else photos of a painted bathroom. Who knows?) ;)

Monday, April 14, 2014

Waiting and painting

Still no baby, but since my mom decided to come up Sunday anyway, we DID get some painting done today! Just primer, but primer in Matt's mom's bedroom, sitting room, bathroom, and hall closet, so tomorrow all of those rooms will be ready for the first coat of real color! (Or it will be Baby's birthday. I'm not sure what I think about Tax Day for a birthday, but thankfully I don't have to choose.) (And, by the way, there are no impending signs of Baby coming. Though with my mom in town, Matt and I did get to go out for our "last time before the baby comes" date night, which we've done before every other birth, but didn't know if we'd get to this time! We had dinner and went to Home Depot to buy tile. ;) Totally our kind of date.)

Saturday, April 12, 2014

Time-bound

I should know better than to think a due date means I'm going to have a baby to hold. ;) Rinnah was my only "early" baby, coming two days before her due date. Being, today, four days past should not surprise me.

But this whole week I've found myself increasingly distracted and unable to plan my time. What should I tackle next? The answer to that question is different if I have one hour left, or five days left, or something in between. And I've found this conundrum to be rather debilitating this week.

And then late Thursday, kind of out of the blue, I realized quite clearly that I never really know how much time I have left. Time is not mine to control, and the only difference at the moment is that I'm aware of this truth instead of living oblivious to it. My realization of my time-bound nature automatically brings to mine the timelessness of God. He, unlike me, is not bound by time, and is not limited to seeing time one moment at a time, and living it it only one direction. As the creator of time, he is outside of time.

Not that that reminder meant that suddenly my Friday and Saturday were productive and useful and distraction-free, but it does mean that now I have a place to direct the fight when those thoughts of the unknown future threaten to take over. God's hands have been so intricately involved in the timing of things that have been happening over the past months, that I can choose to believe that he has the arrival of this little one all planned out, too.

And because pictures of cousins are always appreciated by my two-year-old niece far away across the ocean, here is a peek into what we've been doing while we've been waiting to meet the newest member of our family!
We finally got out to pick up a car seat for the baby, and Rinnah got right to work testing it out.

Leah's baby has spent quite a bit of time in there, too.

She almost looks real!

Ha! Even Krassi, who is always into new and different things, was checking it out.
 We spent lots of time outside last weekend boiling off our sap all in one big blitz this year (I hope to back-post about this sometime.)
Reuben was thrilled beyond words (well, words are pretty much always beyond him!) to be able to help Dad feed the fire this year. He kept that thing cranking!

 Krassi really liked being outside.

And he got a chance to swing for a while that day, too.

Owen was able to do a lot of the real work tending the boiling sap this year.

Leah loves to color with chalk.

More sap tending

And, oh yes, another prenatal visit (on my due date). Reuben the midwife was back at work again. I love how he's got the cat in a head-lock while he listens to Baby's heartbeat. There's multi-tasking for you!

And more lovely days outside. Reuben picked right back up on one of last year's favorite activities - hitting things with sticks.

And since the ground wasn't quite dry enough for sitting on, Krassi spent this afternoon in the wagon. Rinnah was happy to join him here and there.

Monday, April 7, 2014

A small milestone

Krassimir likes to eat sweet things, but he has a very narrow range of temperatures that he will tolerate for his foods. When we were still in Sofia we tried feeding him ice cream one night with less than favorable results. We don't do ice cream a lot, but we've tried offering him some a number of times since he's been home, with similar results - he either won't try or will take one bite, make a terrible face, and refuse more.

Tonight we tried again with raspberry sherbet. He made a face...and then...a hint of a smile! So I tried a little more, and he opened right up! He didn't want a lot - maybe 5 or 6 small bites - but how fun to see him enjoying an after-supper treat with the rest of us!

Another first for him today was the slide. ;) We spent some time out in the nice warmish sunny day, and Reu and Rin were taking turns down the slide on our playset. I decided to try to give my 40-weeks-less-one-day body a workout and maneuver Krassi up as high on the slide as I could reach from the ground. The first time down he was pretty emotionless. Then Reu went again, then Rin, and then it was Krassi's turn. He was maybe a little more interested, but on it wasn't until his third time down that he ended with a smile. By the fifth time, he was so excited by the bottom that his whole little body went stiff (a typical response for him because of his CP) and he was full of smiles.

Simple moments and good times - so neat to be able to be building these memories into his life and ours!

Sunday, April 6, 2014

weight stat

I had the "opportunity" to get a good precise weight on Krassi yesterday, and looks like he's solidly done losing weight, as we got 33 lb, 6 oz on him yesterday! Yes, he was wearing his braces and a bigger sweatshirt, but even that puts him at likely a pound up from just over a month ago.

After mild complaints on Friday, Leah woke up Saturday with a throat so sore she wouldn't eat or drink anything. She wasn't running a temp, but we had her checked for strep anyway (thus the opportunity to weigh Krassi on a scale more precise than the one we have at home), and, guess what - she's got it! Which left me the rest of the afternoon wondering if *my* increasingly sore throat was heading that way, too. So I took a quick trip out for a strep test at the Target clinic. The rapid test came back negative, much to my surprise. We won't hear about the longer culture until Monday, but I woke this morning feeling slightly better, whereas if it was strep, I'm nearly certain I would be feeling worse.

God, in his incredible mercy, has kept me well through a three-week stretch where Owen, Leah, Reuben, and Matt have all been sick - vomiting, no appetite, crazy high fevers, now strep, and I've made it through clear so far.

I am going to set a personal record, though, for "most weeks of church missed in a row" I do believe! Three weeks ago I was home because Leah had thrown up the night before. Last week Owen was throwing up Saturday night. Today Leah's strep is still contagious, so no church for her, and depending on when this baby arrives, I could likely miss next week, too! That leaves Easter Sunday, followed by our yearly family reunion on Matt's side, which will be another miss. This is getting kind of old! ;) So maybe Baby will come early enough this week that I'll be up for a trip out next Sunday!

Friday, April 4, 2014

Update on Krassimir

I realize that it's been a while since I've taken the time to share about how our oldest is doing. I figure this is an appropriate time since 1) I haven't had the baby yet so I still have the luxury of some spare time after the kids are all in bed and 2) he's been home for nearly six months (10 days from now will be exactly six months since we picked him up from his orphanage).

In many ways, there are no major milestones to report, but gradual changes are still changes, so I will try to pull some of those thoughts together.

Eating - eating has long been a challenge for Krassi. For starters, he's not very good at it (everything still has to be pureed, and since we found out he has silent aspiration, we have backed off on the drinking from a cup, and are giving him his liquids thickened from a spoon, so everything he eats goes in off a spoon held by mom). After his rocky first two weeks with bowel movements (too few or too many!) he has settled into a pretty good rhythm. At the beginning we were using Miralax to keep him regular, but now three stewed prunes a day (mixed in with his oatmeal and "power milk" in the morning) and plenty of juice keeps him moving well. It's nice to be able to do this with diet, and only use the Miralax occasionally as needed. We have not gotten an updated weight on him in nearly a month, but part of our strategy for meal times has been backing way off on the pressure, which meant that for a little over a week he was eating hardly anything because we were letting him decide (by pushing food away with his hand) when he was done instead of trying to push a few more bites in past the hand. This seemed to help him substantially with his comfort level at mealtime, and now he will eat to the point that we almost run out of ideas to feed him at some meals! And sometimes he'll eat hardly anything, but then will make it up at the next meal. I had been very concerned about his weight loss (gradual though it was), but decided to take a bigger view of the whole matter - he is very tiny, but is still significantly bigger than he was two years ago (at age 8 he weighed 22 pounds, and now weighs just over 32 - nearly a 50% increase in weight!), and, more importantly, seems to have plenty of physical energy to do the things he wants to do. He doesn't appear weak or lethargic, so I let that be my guide more than the scale for a while, and it seems to be paying off.

He rarely cries about eating itself anymore, which is a wonderful thing, but he will cry about having to put down his toys to go eat. Supper tonight was a great example. He had found an empty egg carton late this afternoon while I was cleaning out the cardboard recycling, and was having a great time banging it on the floor, the cabinets, and the oven. The curiosity in that boy never ceases to delight me - he loves exploring new things! But then it was time to eat. I had just changed him, and he had willingly without prompting put the carton down so I could put a new sweatshirt on him (he helps push his arms through the holes), and then I picked him up telling him it was time to eat, and he broke into heartbreaking sobs. With tears streaming down his face as I was buckling him into his chair, I had to stop at just the lap buckle, and try to snuggle him close, stroking his hair, and telling him it was okay - we were going to eat - his toy will wait for him - we put our toys down when we eat - it will still be there when we're all done eating. And something twisted inside of me as I realized that the environment he grew up in has created a nine year old boy who is devastated when he has to leave an egg carton (in sight!) on the floor so he can sit at the table to eat. It took him quite a while to calm down...but he did! And I was able to hand him the plastic spoon he often holds at meal time (not to eat with because that's still way beyond his skill level, but just to bang with!) and he ate a fantastic supper.

And when we were done, I got to clean him off, take off the buckles, put him on the floor, and with my own hands and a smile, give him back his egg carton. "See, Krassi? Your toys are still here! We're all done eating and you can keep playing with your toy!" I wonder how long it will take before he begins to understand the permanency that is part of this new life.
After supper, curled up in a happy ball on the kitchen floor with his egg carton within arms' reach.

Hey, smiley!
I've gone back and collected a sampling of photos of what Krassi's been up to over the last month, just to share a range of what he's interested in and how he's occupying his time. We've had a few spots of warmer weather, and it's been SO nice to get outside. We have even taken a few short walks. Krassi very much enjoys being outside - something that we owe to the new director at his orphanage and his baba. When we met Krassi for the first time just over a year ago, his baba told us (through our translator), that the summer he was eight years old was the first time in his life that he'd ever been outside, because the new director both allowed and encouraged the babas to go out with their children. She proudly shared how he had at first been terrified, but that over the course of the summer had become accustomed to it and grown to like the sounds of the outdoors. She had one more summer with him before last fall when we brought him home, so he's an old pro at this outdoor stuff now. ;)

Krassi's orthotics are still an on-and-off all day long routine, as they put quite a bit of stretch on his little legs and feet. He can tolerate them for a few hours at a time now, but still needs periods of relief throughout the day. Here, during one of the times when they were off, he grabbed one, and was in fits of laughter as the velcro on the braces was sticking to the roads-rug that Reu and Rin had been playing with earlier in the afternoon.

We took a morning to go to the zoo as a whole family (since we still all fit in the mini-van!) Matt in particular was excited to see what Krassi's reactions to the animals would be. Although much of his morning was spent fairly uninterested in what was around him, he did seem to enjoy the newer penguin exhibit. Here he is with his hand pressed up against the glass following a penguin just rising from a dive. It's still somewhat surprising to me how little interest he shows even in the three cats that live with us. He is aware that they're around, and will sometimes touch them if they are nearby, but I guess I am always puzzled by his apparent lack of engagement with them.
I didn't notice until after I'd taken this picture that Baby was in the lower corner! ;)
Krassi still spends most of his time pulling himself around on the floor, and I love this shot of Reuben laying down beside him. I've mentioned in an earlier post how proud I am of the increasing gentleness and restraint that Reuben is learning to show toward Krassi (and all of us!) so I'm not nervous about having him this close to Krassi as I was a few months ago. It's pretty sweet seeing the two of them laying around near each other!

One way in which Krassimir differs significantly from his age-peers is his desire to mouth on things. He does the obvious toys in the mouth thing (though usually banging them against his teeth more than mouthing and chewing the way a typical infant plays with toys) but also seeks out unusual things like this to put his mouth on: the underside of a chair. (What???) As I took this photograph he was alternately pulling himself under the chair to mouth and pushing back out to grin at me and laugh. He was having a good time. Daddy, on the other hand, thought this was pretty disgusting!
He still very much enjoys licking the floor - any floor! - as evidenced by this example from earlier this evening. This is not just a casual lick, but a very deliberate, tongue full on the floor over and over kind of licking. I don't know what he's finding down there, but whatever it is, it must be good! [I must add, too, that this really grosses me out, which is why in his first weeks here, we tried to discourage him from licking floors. I've since realized that it's probably grosser for me than it is for him, and likely is not terribly damaging to him (I still don't allow it at other places - like the library, for example!) so decided it was not an area worth making a big deal over. Finding the right balance of indulging his curiosity and keeping him (and things around him!) safe is something we are constantly working on.]

Something else we're noticing is an increase in Krassi's motivation to pursue things that he's interested in. This is the same green chair as in the photo above, but you'll notice that there is a balloon and a ball behind the chair. Krassi managed to get himself all the way under this chair to get back to the two toys he was eyeing up - and that even with his orthotics on! He's getting quite adept at getting around with those on.
Somewhat related to that, we've noticed a lot more griping from Krassi over the last week or two. He appears to be experimenting with exerting his will (something new!) and then complaining when he can't have his way. For example, he and Rinnah and I were playing at the library earlier this week while Owen and Leah were participating in a library program, and Rin and I tried to interest him in a simple wooden toy with spinning parts. No such luck. He wanted to go after the magnetic numbers and letters and pull them off the board. Until someone else's one year old started playing with the wooden toy. He suddenly dropped the magnets and took off at top speed (for him) for the toy, got near to it, and started crying. I don't know that I can fully explain the mental process or the emotions that are going on inside of him at times like this, but it seems as though he's experimenting with ideas of mine/yours and similar boundaries.

Or take tonight - Matt's doing his first sap boiling, so during supper I was in and out of the house, bringing him food and one time came back into the house to find Krassi holding onto the lid of the peanut butter jar. Hmm. Now this is something we do not let him do while he's eating. If he's given something to hold, that's one thing, but just grabbing stuff off the table is a no-no. When I came in, he was laughing, then saw me, and put it down and got kind of a sad face. I, of course, praised him up and down for putting it down of his own accord. So many levels to that action! First, he knew it was something that we did not want him doing! And secondly, without needing to be told he did what he knew I would ask him to do, even though he didn't really want to do it!! The cognitive damage to this boy's brain is profoundly deep, and yet there are little glimmers like this that show us that he is capable of learning and growing, and that is so exciting to see! Even better, losing the peanut butter jar lid did not result in the same devastating breakdown that the egg carton left on the floor had caused less than half an hour earlier.

Krassi isn't just spending time under the furniture, but he's also enjoying spending time up on the furniture.
When he first came home, I would frequently prop him up on the couch to give him a change of position and a chance to look around. This was also a convenient way to feed him. He was so immobile back then that I could leave him on the couch and even felt comfortable leaving the room for a moment here and there because he just didn't move.
October, 2013, on his second day at home

October, 2013, on his 5th day home
What we're still uncertain about, and not ready to trust, is his comprehension of the danger of falling. Here's another shot from last week when he was up on the couch for a while. I am very nearby, and carefully monitoring his every move as he pushes the boundaries of what is safe and what is not. We do this at least once a day, and he has never needed a rescue yet, but I know I am not comfortable with how far he pushes himself! Besides, there's not enough weight in that little bottom to ballast the leg and the head! ;)
I'm slowing making progress on his quilt. I've made one for each of the kids, and had the advantage of a one-year head start with Krassi's, but it's still not done yet. His is the same pattern as Owen's, but a slightly different set of colors.
Although this post from earlier this week is more typical of routine school work, there are also days when I'll bring Krassi to the table while we're working on a project there. He doesn't ever appear to be very engaged, but at the same time, I figure regular exposure is the best tool I've got to get him more interested in things happening around him! (We are trying this same strategy with reading books - something he has no interest in whatsoever, but whenever Reu or Rin wants to read, we try to sit by Krassimir to do it, and every once in a while he will take a look at what we're doing. Still a ways to go on that one!)
Owen and Leah are learning about surface tension, immiscibility, and movement on the molecular scale in science right now. This demonstration was way neater than I'd been expecting. You cover a plate with a thin layer of milk (a homogenized mixture of fat and water), drip a few drops of food coloring onto it (essentially water), and then touch a dish-soap-dipped tip of a toothpick into the food coloring - ta-da!! the color spots explode outwards! You'll notice Krassi's hand reaching in the bottom of the picture. I have to point out that Krassi did not appear to have any interest in the demonstration itself beyond just wanting to slap his hand in the milk and bang the plate on the table.
Milk splashing and plate banging were not options, but he was equally delighted with hand holding. ;) Here's my hand...

...and here he is with Leah. The picture's fuzzy, but I love the way he's looking so deliberately at her. His ability to make eye contact is so dramatically improved from when he first came home!
So there you go - a little glimpse into what life is like for Krassi these days!