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#21031 |
(he/him/his)
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Karma: 80074820
Join Date: Jul 2010
Location: Sunshine Coast, BC
Device: Oasis (Gen3),Paperwhite (Gen10), Voyage, Paperwhite(orig), iPad Air M3
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No suggestions for how to manage your baby. I suspect you'll find a way that works for your situation.
![]() Keemun Ho Yah 'A' in my cup. A good quality Keemun, though not up to the Keemun Xing Zhang I got from TeaSpring. |
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#21032 |
Tea Enthusiast
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Karma: 75384937
Join Date: Jul 2010
Location: Somewhere in the USA
Device: Kindle1, Kindle DX Graphite, K3 3G, IPad 3, PW2
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He got his first set of shots today which has made him a bit more fussy and clingy. His appetite is a bit off. Hopefully tomorrow he will back to his normal self. We are trying to avoid using props but he is too young to try any method of self soothing and there are times when he won't sleep on his own. I have a feeling that day care will handle some of these issues for us.
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#21033 | |||||
Opsimath
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Karma: 187123287
Join Date: Mar 2009
Location: Chiang Mai, Northern Thailand
Device: Sony PRS-650, iPhone 5, Kobo Glo, Sony PRS-350, iPad, Samsung Galaxy
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![]() In a war that was bound to end all wars Oh I must have killed a million men And now they want me back again But I ain't marchin' anymore It's always the old to lead us to the war It's always the young to fall Now look at all we've won with the saber and the gun Tell me is it worth it all For I flew the final mission in the Japanese sky Set off the mighty mushroom roar When I saw the cities burning I knew that I was learning That I ain't marchin' anymore Now the labor leader's screamin' when they close the missile plants, United Fruit screams at the Cuban shore, Call it "Peace" or call it "Treason," Call it "Love" or call it "Reason," But I ain't marchin' any more, No I ain't marchin' any more ![]() ( http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OgAiuHIBlVs ) Boy, I sure got in a whole ration of trouble when I played this at a gig the Officer's Club back in the day.... But that's another story. Good morning, everyone! Sunny skies and fair winds... Looks as if it will be a good day. It's starting right, with some "Yorkshire" tea from Taylors of Harrowgate, and a plate of babbaganoush, although the garlic in it might melt my keyboard. I 'may' have put in a bit too much... (as if there really could be such a thing as 'too much' garlic! Ha!) Quote:
It actually isn't hard to learn to use them if you remember just three things: 1. Only the top stick moves. The bottom one NEVER moves (or shouldn't...) The bottom one is wedged into the webbing of your thumb and against the end of your ring finger, and it just sits there doing nothing. I prefer it to contact the tip of my ring finger while my wife contacts hers on the side near the tip. 2. The upper stick is held sort of like a pencil, using your first two fingers and thumb. That's the stick that moves, and holds the food against the bottom stick. (Do you know the Italian version of 'giving the bird?' Three fingers instead of just the middle finger? THAT is how the upper stick is held! 3. The tips must be even. After you've placed them correctly in your hand, tap the tips against the bottom of the dish to even them up. Watch this video and you'll see exactly what I mean. Or this one. I keep 'my' thumb a little further back than in this video. I get more control. Hold the sticks closer to the end rather than to the food for better control. If you keep in mind threes three 'bold' ideas, it shouldn't take you more than 2-3 minutes to learn to use chopsticks to pick up larger solid things like a piece of chicken or a chunk of bamboo shoot. After 10 minutes you'll be able to pick up a grain of rice. Do NOT try to pick up soup. Quote:
Except for.... Quote:
Personally, I like lacquered wooden chopsticks that have serrations at the bottom to help hold the food. The plastic Chinese chopsticks are a pain to use with noodles unless you use them the 'traditional' way; holding the bowl right against your chin and just starting the noodles into your mouth so you can hoover them up without the chopsticks. The Chinese in Singapore use their chopsticks to pick up food and load it onto spoons held in the opposite hand, then spoon the food into their mouths. Quote:
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![]() Stitchawl Last edited by Stitchawl; 08-30-2012 at 10:06 PM. |
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#21034 |
Wizard
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Karma: 2081110
Join Date: Jan 2011
Location: SW Australia
Device: Eco Eclipse, Sony PRS 350 (pink), Ipod Touch, Kindle Touch
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I sometimes wonder how my kids survived, they both slept on their stomachs from day one, which is what was in vogue then, both were offered dummies (pacifiers) but only one wanted it. One would only go to sleep in my arms, the other only in his crib... you'll work it out, or rather Noah will teach you what he wants.
![]() Off to make a chai latte. |
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#21035 |
Tea Enthusiast
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Karma: 75384937
Join Date: Jul 2010
Location: Somewhere in the USA
Device: Kindle1, Kindle DX Graphite, K3 3G, IPad 3, PW2
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Hehehehe
I know. I was the first kid in the family to have a car seat, my two older brothers did not. I slept in the back of the station wagon without a seat bel, the seats were folded down so we could sleep comfortably. I didn't own a bike helmet until I was 15 and a summer camp required one. It is a long list of no nos today. The back thing we take seriously. My Dad was babysitting a neighbors child who died of SIDs with my Dad just across the hall. They were living in an apartment at the time. Dad checked on the baby every 30 minutes. The first time he was comfortable being left with an infant after that was with my son a month ago. It took 45 years and even then the cleaning folks were in the house. My Mom took a look at the list of what I can and can't eat, medicines that were approved, and other pregnancy instructions and commented on how much things have changed. It is a very different world. |
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#21036 | |
The Grand Mouse 高貴的老鼠
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Karma: 317184274
Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: Norfolk, England
Device: Kindle Oasis
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Quote:
But when you have tens or hundreds of millions of people, and billions of journeys, that small probability turns into thousands of deaths per year. The small changes in safety legislation concerning cars and roads in the UK has, over the past 40 years, reduced deaths and total injuries from 7,499 (356,000) in 1970 to 1901 (203,950) in 2011, while motor traffic miles have gone from 124.6 billion miles to 303.8 billion miles. In total, it has reduced the chance of death from one every 16.6 million miles to one every 159.8 million miles. It's almost ten times safer (in terms of risk of dying) on UK roads now than it was 40 years ago! Even counting any injury, it's gone from one every 350,000 miles to one every 1.49 million miles. Over four times safer. Wow. I knew it had got better, but until I looked up these figures I didn't realise how much better it had become. Coke Zero #1 in my cup. |
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#21037 |
Opsimath
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Karma: 187123287
Join Date: Mar 2009
Location: Chiang Mai, Northern Thailand
Device: Sony PRS-650, iPhone 5, Kobo Glo, Sony PRS-350, iPad, Samsung Galaxy
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That's why I always push my motorcycle for the first two miles before I get on and ride. The statistics says that most accidents happen withing two miles of home...
Tea, glorious tea! Stitchawl |
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#21038 |
The Grand Mouse 高貴的老鼠
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Karma: 317184274
Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: Norfolk, England
Device: Kindle Oasis
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#21039 | |
Wizard
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Karma: 35207650
Join Date: Jun 2011
Device: iPad
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#21040 | |
Wizard
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Karma: 35207650
Join Date: Jun 2011
Device: iPad
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Quote:
Err... if they have spoons, why use chopsticks? ![]() |
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#21041 | |
Opsimath
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Karma: 187123287
Join Date: Mar 2009
Location: Chiang Mai, Northern Thailand
Device: Sony PRS-650, iPhone 5, Kobo Glo, Sony PRS-350, iPad, Samsung Galaxy
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Quote:
That's right... Just strip away the last shreds of sense of self-protection I may have had, and force me... nay.... drag me kicking and screaming into reality. Nice... real nice... ![]() I think I'll go eat some worms. (They're not fattening, are they?) Stitchawl |
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#21042 | |
Wizard
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Karma: 35207650
Join Date: Jun 2011
Device: iPad
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Quote:
Guess I'll go eat worms, Long, thin, slimy ones; Short, fat, juicy ones, Itsy, bitsy, fuzzy wuzzy worms. Down goes the first one, down goes the second one, Oh how they wiggle and squirm. Up comes the first one, up comes the second one, Oh how they wiggle and squirm. |
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#21043 |
Opsimath
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Karma: 187123287
Join Date: Mar 2009
Location: Chiang Mai, Northern Thailand
Device: Sony PRS-650, iPhone 5, Kobo Glo, Sony PRS-350, iPad, Samsung Galaxy
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You ever try picking up noodles with a spoon?
Spoons are pretty common all over Asia but knives and forks are not. One of the important parts of food prep in most Asian cooking is cutting everything into bite-sized pieces that can either be picked up with chopsticks or spoons. Singaporeans usually eat with chopsticks in one hand and a spoon in the other (these are the big-bowled Chinese style spoons.) Malaysians eat most of their food using large western-style soup spoons as the main tool, but use chopsticks in the other hand as a secondary. Japanese use their chopsticks for just about everything, loudly slurping long noodles, but use large bowl Chinese spoons for 2-3 dishes such as 'curryrice' and 'ma pwo tofu.' These two are ALWAYS eaten with a spoon! Chopsticks for everything else and 'usually' drinking miso soup by picking up the bowl. Ramen soup, however, is drunk using a spoon! This holds true for the Chinese too. Stitchawl |
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#21044 |
Wizard
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Karma: 35207650
Join Date: Jun 2011
Device: iPad
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#21045 |
Guru
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Karma: 9155462
Join Date: Jul 2010
Location: Tampa, FL
Device: See signature
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Then: Large Iced Coffee
Now: Water Stll a bit sick. |
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languages, tea enthusiasts, what is in your cup? |
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