Saturday, March 20, 2010

The Power of Kate

As some of you may know, Kate has been taking Tae Kwon Do from Grand Master Kim for several months now. She really likes it, and has become quite good at going through the forms.
Every so often, the students "test" to determine if they can graduate from one belt color to the next. It starts at white, then goes to yellow, then orange.

Kate has been a yellow belt for a bit now, but today was her day to test for orange. She was very nervous of failing in front of the class, but calmed down and went through her fighting forms with great precision, speed, and the loudest post-strike "Hah!" in the room. Then came the moment she feared most -- board breaking. This time, she had to do it with a bare-footed front kick. One slip up, and there could be purple toes for weeks . . .

But as you can see from her determined face, there was no risk of that.

The board didn't stand a chance. The photo above is worth clicking on to see large. We are talking perfect strike there.

The Weapon.

The evidence -- good bye yellow belt.

Hello, orange belt!

That face is worth a billion bucks, if you happen to be her dad (don't tell Grand Master Kim that, though, he might raise testing prices!). Not a bad way to start a Saturday morning.

Falcon Kill?

Saw this in our back yard the other day. The feathers belong to a bird that never saw what hit him. I think this must be a falcon, just because one day, a long time ago in San Francisco, I watched out my work window as a Peregrine slammed into a pigeon at such unbelievable speed it left only an explosion of feathers in its wake. Still, even after looking at a guide, I am unsure what type of bird this really is. All I know is that he smacked that other bird dang hard. Any birder's out there? (Steve? Alan?) Would be nice to know what killer raptors are hanging out in the neighborhood!

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Grown Up Beautiful

It is long past time for me to write about being Keegan’s dad. Though I have called him Captain Trainwreck (and similar sundries) in past posts, when this picture came out of the camera I immediately thought, “OH! He is so grown up!” followed almost immediately by “My word, he is so beautiful!” (Hence the title of the post.) Time passes so fast, and life with Keegan needs to be recorded for the joy it is, before it all gets away from me.

I’ve been thinking about what fun he is for a bit now. During the last weeks of September last year, Keegan, who had been our champion sleeper, suddenly began waking 5 and 6 times a night in sheer terror, screaming, disoriented, inconsolable. Nor would he allow his mother to leave his side, even for a few minutes (also completely out of character). There began a long stretch of sleeplessness for us, with a third little body inevitably in our bed every night, kicking and thrashing away. Frustration grew; understanding did not. I was on the verge of being mad about it, but then one night at the Jager’s house in California we felt what seemed a huge soft spot just back from behind his right ear. This was no goose egg. This was mush.

Many questions and few doctor visits later, I found out that he had suffered quite a fall directly onto his head in September, and unbeknownst to all of us, had fractured his skull. Scans showed some internal bleeding, which the doctors believed was “resolving,” and would not need further treatment. It was, however, expected that the severe concussion-like symptoms would continue for months, with super-vigilance needed to keep him from jarring, falling or hitting his head again. (If you know Keegan, this task is impossible. Period.)

We seem to be through it now, and he is much improved (i.e. as big a goofball as ever, see Chocolate Frenchy, above). While it scared the stuffing out of me at the time, the ordeal has been a blessing in disguise, in some ways. First, I became the designated PKBP--Put Keegan to Bed Parent. He refused to go to sleep unless his mom was snuggled up with him – great for him, bad for mom and me, who slept very little lying next to perpetual motion incarnate. Desperation set in, and somehow we learned that if I sat in the rocking chair holding him with his head on my shoulder, patting his back while singing to him, he would fall asleep.

As a result, I have spent some of the best hours of my life with a beautiful little head on my shoulder, singing church primary songs. Our favorite is “I feel my Savior’s love, in all the world around me, its spirit warms my soul, with all the things I see. . . .” We also sing, “I am a child of God, and he has sent me here, has given me an earthly home, with parents kind and dear . . . “ almost every night. Other favorites include "Families can be together forever" and "How could the Father show the world."

I’ve discovered that everything you need to know about life you can find in a primary song. How I enjoy them, and how blessed I am to be able to sing them to this beautiful little miracle I love so much. When I am old(er) and much grayer (if that is possible), in my own rocking chair, I will still carry the memories of this time with me, and they will still make me smile.

I have also paid a little more attention to the great things about Keegan during this time--all the things he does that makes him special and keeps us laughing. In no particular order, here are a few of the things you should know about Keegan:

He is so expressive. I challenge you to not grin from ear to ear just watching him talk -- it is simply impossible. All the joy of life, and all the emotion in it, seem to burst from the seams of each word he utters. Eyes big with wonder, hands a parade of motion, chest out with the deepest breath possible for a little guy, just to make sure he has enough air to say all he wants--it is pure fun to engage him in a conversation.

He is enthusiasm incarnate. Every little person seems brim-full with joy at being alive in the world, but never has that joy been so disproportionate to the size of the person holding it. It bounces in every step Keegan takes – never a walk; always a life-loving strut, arms swinging wide, head up and looking all around, determined, diaper-wiggling steps, or all-out run. He is even enthusiastic when he sleeps, as his hair will attest. (It is like this every morning and the boy hates hair brushes!)



He has the world's most beautiful eyes, and gives the world's greatest hugs. His eyes can express more emotion in a glance than most people can using everything they have. And don't even get my wife going about the eyelashes -- long as the prairie is wide. But best of all, he gives the greatest hug in all the long history of hugs. Every one starts with a full running leap, followed by arms flying as far around your neck as their short little selves can manage, feet kicking, teeth grinning, eyes shut tight amidst the biggest squeeze ever made by such a little guy. To be hugged by Keegan is to know the meaning of a hug.

He is very perceptive. Batman never smiles, and Keegan knows it. Just try to get him to smile while in character as the caped crusader -- never going to happen, even with a well placed tickle. He notices plenty of other things as well, at least one of which is quite troubling. A little while ago, we had the following diaper table conversation, which tells you just how much a three-year old really knows about how the world works:

Me: “Keegan, hold still!

Keegan: “Why?

Me: “Because you are supposed to obey me when I ask you to do something. I’m the dad.”

Keegan: “No dad, I only obey you if you obey me too, ok?”

Me: “That is not the way it works Keegan, I am the dad and that makes me the boss, so you have to do what I ask.”

Keegan: “Dad, YOU are not the boss. MOMMY is the boss!”

Just to make sure I understood the point, a few nights later, he was insisting on sleeping in our bed again, and as usual, I was arguing with him about it, and told him he could not sleep in my bed. We went back and forth in yes/no fashion a few times, which drew this final response from him: “Dad, mommy didn’t say no, so I win.”

Dang. I hate it when kids know more than they are supposed to.

He always seems to get what he wants, one way or another. Here he is in his best "King of the World" pose, which is so appropriate. Case in point: as his condition improved, I sought to reassert my authority (yeah right) to control my own bedroom--by trying to make him sleep in his own bed, without his mother. One night, after at least a half an hour doing everything I could to get him to stay in his own bed, he escaped my grasp and ran upstairs, with me chasing behind him and yelling, “Keegan, why aren’t you sleeping in your bed?”

Keegan, running his little legs as fast as they will go, yelled back “Because I am sleeping in mommy’s bed!”

Me: “Oh no you are not!”

Keegan: “Oh yes I am!” At which moment he slammed and locked my bedroom door right in my face (and pushed his mother away when she tried to open it from the other side). We were both laughing so hysterically at that point, at just the audacity of the whole thing, and we didn’t have the heart to force him back down to his room. Somehow, I don't think that is the last time he will get his way over my strenuous objection.

He is not ticklish. Really. The other day, Grandpa Bailey was engaged in a favorite Bailey household activity – tickling Keegan, who laughs hysterically at the slightest of touches. In mid-belly laugh, he stopped suddenly, and announced very seriously, “Actually, Grandpa, I am not ticklish!”

He already hates being short. For most of his life, Keegan has been about 5th percentile height and 50th percentile weight (no shots from the peanut gallery on where he got those genes, please). He already doesn’t like it. The other night he and Alden were bathing together, as usual, when Keegan said, “Stand up Aldy, I want to see how tall I am.” They both stood up and hugged, belly to belly, and Alden said, “Not taller yet -- you are still up to my chin.” Keegan responded, “Darn, I really want to be tall.”

Sorry little buddy, it is just not in the genetic cards.

He is figuring out what bodies do, sort of . . . We have been trying to potty train Keegan for what seems like a year now, and unintended consequences are about the only thing we have to show for it. On any given day, you can hear Keegan repeatedly saying, in mixed company or otherwise, “Dad, when you eat, you poop!” (Said as if it was really big news every time). Also one day, in less than ideal circumstances, Keegan emerged fresh from a bath and ran around the house naked, shouting, “Hah! My Penis has a Gun!” over and over again. Where do these things come from?

He can melt your heart in one sentence or less. Just before Christmas, Kathleen used a sharp tone with Keegan after he made a mess for the umpteenth time. He said, “Mom, it is supposed to be happy holidays, not mad holidays.” Later, when his mom and I went out on a date together for the first time since he fractured his skull, we returned to him grabbing us both by the neck, giving us both a hug like only Keegan can, and saying, “Guys, I really missed you. I am so glad you are home.”

He loves being chased. Our little man is a certifiable adrenaline junkie, and there is absolutely nothing he loves more than goading you into chasing him. So, for all the girls I am sure he will one day lure, with ease, into that favorite sport--there is one last thing you should know about Keegan:

His first french kiss was a Dog! (And don't think the old man isn't going to pull that photo out a time or two starting at age 16!)

Sunday, January 17, 2010

Zion in Winter

For Christmas we gathered almost the entire Bailey family together -- my mom and dad, brother Ryan and his wife Hanni, Sister Shalise and Steve, (brother Matt was a scrooge), and with all of our kids spent the weekend in St. George. It was cold. Dixie of Utah my foot. Phoenix has nothing to worry about, believe me. But in Phoenix, you can't see Zion in winter, and that is worth frozen extremities any day, if you ask me.

Intrepid souls that we are, ice and snow did not dissuade us from taking at least a couple of short hikes. And was it ever rewarding. Not only did the kids get to "ice skate outside" (much to my horror at times), we were rewarded with views that could not be beat.


This picture does not do justice to the Great White Throne. There was no way to capture the scale of that thing. Amazing.


Here we are at the gateway to the Narrows. The shot below perhaps gives a sense of the immensity of this place.


Here I am with my dad and boys along the Narrows trail. Dad and mom both worked here after graduating from high school in the 50s. It was nice to be back with them some 50 years later.

After leaving Zion, my dad, mom and Shalise's family spent some time with my family in Snow Canyon, playing on the sand dunes there. The photo below is Keegan and my dad. (Check out the look on Keegan's face-- he is full of it, I'm telling you.)

My only memories of this place were as a kid many years before, with my parents watching me and my siblings as I now watched my kids. Coming back with my kids and my parents was an interesting experience. Sweet with both memory and new fun, of course, but also odd to be here as a parent, together with my parents.

I found myself wishing hard that my parents were young again. They treated us to such wonderful times as kids, and I wanted them to have the same experience all over again with my kids, to share in what I was feeling watching them. As much as they enjoy my kids (and frequently remind me that it is much more fun to be a grandparent than a parent), with my parents in their 70s Father Time hangs a little heavier over the joy of these moments. It makes carefree, uninhibited exuberance a bit harder to come by. How nice it would be to have them as same-aged family or friends, seemingly with time to spare and just watch my kids enjoy life and grow up. I don't really believe in regret, it is a pointless emotion, but if I have a regret in life, it is that Kath and I did not start our family a little sooner. Nothing to do about it now, of course, except make the most of the time we have left with all of us on the same planet, and so that is what we did.

Here is Kate taking a flying leap.

Alden and his cousin Liam were in heaven. Just blow that picture up and look at their faces -- everything that is wonderful about little boys can be seen right there.

Needless to say, a little sand in the hair is a small price to pay in a place like this -- good thing there were showers at the house we rented.

Here we are at the end of the day, a great day to be alive and with family. I will post later about more fun with the Bailey Fam in St. George.

Sunday, January 10, 2010

Where have we been (2009 edition)?

Okay, so we have been away for a while. Sorry. Where have we been? Partying, of course! You see, from October 31 to Christmas is always a big party for the Baileys. First comes Halloween, a perennial hit, then in order: Brett's birthday (Nov. 5th), Alden's birthday (Nov. 10th), Keegan's birthday (Nov. 24th), Thanksgiving, then Christmas. Wahoo! Between that and work, I have had little time to do anything else. I will try to make up for it though. Below, posts from each of those events (except Thanksgiving--too busy cooking, I guess).

Halloween 2009

We started off right, with Keegan being as big a goofball as he could possibly be (and trust me, that is big) during the carving of pumpkins.

The kids were, respectively, Hermione Granger (Kate), a Star Wars Clone Trooper (Alden) and Batman (Keegan). We bought their costumes early, and I think Alden and Keegan did not take them off for a moment during the full week before Halloween. They were in heaven.


In case you didn't know this, being Batman is very, very serious business, and he never, ever smiles when his mask is on. Never. In fact, if you feel you have to smile, it requires lifting the mask, letting everyone know it is really Keegan, and then smiling.

Cousin Jude was our first trick or treater. They look like they could be trouble one of these first days, don't they? It was a very successful evening, with Keegan even eating so much candy in one fell swoop that he said, "I'm sick" and promptly threw up. Nice finish, no? Who are that kid's parents anyway?

Aldy's Birthday

This boy is something special, no doubt about it. He is the most persistent force on the planet (next to gravity and erosion, of course, though he is gaining on the latter almost daily). He knew what he wanted, and wore his mom into going to Target with him three weeks before his birthday to make sure she bought the correct presents (Star Wars Legos and a Batmobile). She did so on the condition that he would not open them before his birthday. He agreed and kept his word to the letter, but proceeded to tote all three boxes (which were too big for him to carry in one load) into every room he occupied during the three weeks, as well as carrying them with him on every car ride. At night, he would line them up in his room and fall asleep looking at them. One day, he lined them up very precisely on the breakfast table while eating and, looking dreamily at them said, "Dad, don't you just love how my presents look?"

Needless to say, what it lacked in surprise, Aldy's Birthday made up for in sweet anticipation. Here are a few photos.


Here he is doing his best Scooby Doo impression with Grandma.

Uncle Ryan and aunt Hannie came by, with a Star Wars toy that did not require assembly, thank goodness.

Here he is opening a transformer from Grandma and Grandpa, with my family around him. It was one of the few surprises of the night, but a big hit--at least after the 2 hours it took two or three adults to figure out how to transform it. The engineer that makes up those directions needs to be pushed off a very high bridge somewhere for the sake of parental sanity.

Post party he spent literally hours on end, without interruption, assembling his Star Wars legos. (The one on the right had like 400 pieces and was incredibly complex.) He spent every minute of the assembly process with his tongue hanging out, intensively following every step of the 100 page instruction booklets (Transformers need to hire that guy). He did the entire thing by himself, with minimal help. Just amazing.

The result was severely chapped lips (just take a close up look at those) and a proud self discovery. At the end, he said, "Dad, I am good at building things, aren't I?" There can be no doubt about that. He really shows a discipline and ability to concentrate that is beyond me even at age 47 (impending senility could have something to do with that, I suppose). In any event, he is just a great boy, who is so endearing we can't help loving him completely and dearly.

Keegan's Birthday

If Alden is endearing, Keegan is "cheeky," as my very english Great Grandma Mim would say. He is just a character. Here we are holding hands and singing happy birthday to him. Note the persistent Batman regalia, almost a month after Halloween. You can guess what his birthday wishes involved.

As you may recall, he is a big cake and icing eater -- and nothing gets in the way of that, ever.

Did I mention he was cheeky?

Bat Copter's and Bionicles, and he was a happy little man, especially once the construction expert in the family put the latter together for him.

Christmas 2009

We followed all that up with a great Christmas day. Keegan's brother and sister helped him figure out the finer points of present opening, and we were off to the races.


By the way, anyone who thinks he is not seriously beautiful just needs to get their eyes checked. Dang, he is a handsome little guy. Thank goodness I married up -- no other explanation for it!

Kate scored an iPod this year (as well as the new Percy Jackson book) and was off to her own world quicker than you could say boo. Teenager-dom is so close I am already shaking in my shoes and thinking about buying my first ever gun.


Aldy scored an Optimus Prime and a huge bionicle thingy that kept him occupied for most of the next two days.





Keegan got a Blue Beetle to go with his Batman set, and was happy as a clam. He carried it around with him for days.

Here he is with Grandpa, saying that this was "just what I always wanted." I don't think he even knew what it was.

Grandma Gayle made a special quilt for Kate, who really does love her Grandma very much.

We finished off Christmas Day with a great Moon family gathering, and it was a perfect way to top off the day. But that was only the beginning of the fun. More to come in the next post!