Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Zeyde's portraits





More portraity shots are here.

Thursday, November 20, 2008

We have tooth.

Odessa has a tooth. Yes, not the beginnings of a tooth, but a tooth that's in and biting. Took about 3 weeks to come in. Just the one. It's... I don't know. Cute! Very square, as they often are. Tiny and porcelain-looking, when we're allowed to see it.

Everyone is playing together now. We steal toys out of hands, pacifiers out of mouths. Sometimes, when it's done to us, we complain, but mostly we just find something else to grab and chew. Apples are especially delicious, when there's a bite out of them and we can lick the white part. They bounce nicely and make a loud thump.

We have nice grins. Georgia's is, as always, pure flirty sugar. Odessa's has gone from the excited gaping maw to a big wide smile that seems positively joyful. We laugh at each other and smash our hands up and down when we see each other. Or the cat. Animal sounds are funny. Life is pretty fun. Also, all the grown-ups we know are pregnant, which seems very promising.

Saturday, November 8, 2008

O & Geo show off their sitting skills

 

Boo!


Who would have guessed you were going out for Halloween?  Then Mama called to say you should be delivered to her office at 6 pm for the Halloween party.  (Mama was dressed as Joe the Plumber -- by the time you read this an obscure political reference that will need explanation).  Uh oh -- what to wear?  Your Zadie and your Nana piled you into the stroller and set off for Main Street Tarrytown to survey the costume possibilities.  Lucky us, we found just the thing!  

Wednesday, November 5, 2008

OBAMA!!!! OBAMMAAAA!!!! Day one of the new world.

Babies, there's hope! There was hope before, but it was theoretical. Now you can touch it. We went to flip the levers! There were lots of people, lots of first-time voters (not young) and people like Mommy who hadn't voted in a long long time because there wasn't much to vote for, lots of kids being shown the polls -- Christiane Amanpour said that New York City looked like places she'd covered where the first democratic election was happening, where people were so excited about casting their vote because it feels like it actually matters, and that really is what it felt like.

When we woke up on Tuesday morning it felt like Christmas! What is that feeling? Excitement, possibility, knowing that everyone else is going to show up in the living room all shiny and full of the same feeling... Not just hope, but having the exact same hope as billions of other people. When does that happen?!

And you were there, babies. We were too excited to take decent photos but look some up when you come back to read this because it was really something...

After voting we went to the diner, as you do, and you passed out from the excitement. Then later we saw the early returns in some plasma-TV-filled sports bar, where your moms nervously watched the first states come in for McCain, and you entertained some Brazilian ladies in the booth behind us; and finally to a news-watching party at Aunties Lili and Leki's, which moved upstairs to Roz and Craig's house.

We watched as some Republican talking head said that McCain had run badly and Anderson Cooper cut her off to say "ah, we have a projection," and then one more state came in and then OBAMA!!!! O-BA-MAAAA!!!!!! OBAAAAMAAA!!! and everyone was cheering and jumping around, and we ran onto the balcony and everyone outside was whooping and we could hear the roar from Times Square. We went back in and waited what seemed like forever for Obama's speech, watching the crowd in Grant Park going crazy with happiness and crying... McCain gave his concession speech to a pretty scary-looking audience, and Saida said it was like Peanuts -- just "wah wah wah" because we didn't care what he said anymore. And finally, at last, Obama came on and we listened to him on TV, and heard every word again a few seconds later, coming from the huge screens in Times Square and rolling down every street in the city. You were there.

Your moms haven't completely lost their edge, babies. But what happened on election day can't ever be taken back! It demands at least a completely fresh try unburdened by the tries that tanked before. We hope the world you're about to receive stays changed like it was last night.

xoxo
Mommy

More photos of canvassing, post-vote nap & election watching here.