Showing posts with label Grandparents. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Grandparents. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 31, 2008

2008 In Photos

2008: The Year in Photos


In January the kids got buckled into the car for school, backpacks and lunchboxes in hand -- Shea, for the first time.



In February the kids got spoiled all kinds of rotten.


In March the kids and I climbed up Diamond Head together.
This is the view from about halfway up.


In April, still getting used to the whole concept of preschool, Shea cried through most of her Easter parade. Afterwards, her brother comforted her.



By May, Shea had long-since figured out which of Finney's friends were the cute ones and flirted accordingly.



In June, we posed for a family portrait in our backyard because I needed to submit something for my
20-year high school reunion brochure. 20 years.


In July, while visiting California, the kids got to wear fun hats in a photobooth at
Frankie Dino's 6th birthday party.


In August Finn kept a keen eye on the competition at his school's jog-a-thon.



In September the kids watched The Red Balloon on my computer, wearing next to nothing and loving it.



In October John showed Shea how he shaves every morning.



In November we all watched history being made by
someone who can actually bodysurf Sandy's.


In December I actually talked Shea into wearing a dress AND a hat.
Which she wore for about 10 minutes.


Here's wishing you a fantastic 2009!

Sunday, August 24, 2008

San O: A Tale of Six Summers

During the summer of 2002, when Finney was about a month old, John and I took him to Old Man's at San Onofre State Beach for his very first beach day. Here's a rough scan of his baby scrapbook, marking that momentous rite of passage as a Southern Californian.



A year later, that little baby somehow became a toddler, and it was at San Onofre where he practiced taking his first steps.


Then, when that little toddler turned two, we held his birthday party at San Onofre, under the
Dogpatch palapa. Here's a scan of his baby book page commemorating that day.



The next year we welcomed a little sister for Finn, and promptly initiated sweet Shea into the San Onofre lifestyle.


And, just like her brother, that small babe turned into a toddler, stumbling across the sand, growing more confident with each wobbly step. Again, we visited San Onofre.



And yet again.



And then we moved to Hawaii, which has countless gorgeous beaches, but no San Onofre. So we were delighted to visit our old summer playground -- "San O" -- for an evening barbecue and campfire with
Cari and her family during our mainland vacation.















Tuesday, August 12, 2008

Back To Where I Once Belonged

This is my family.


The other half of my family, the half that made me. This is also the family with only TWO kids -- one who used to live in Hawaii and now lives in California, and one who used to live in California and now lives in Hawaii. Funny, that.

Speaking of which, here's my brother Eddie, who drove down from Northern California in a single, mind-boggling, 14-hour shot to spend a week with us during our visit. He would sit here in the back family room of our parents' San Clemente home nightly, holding court over spectacular sunsets, making his evening plans with his many pals around town.




Never one to shirk my responsibilities as a pain in the ass older sister, here I am harassing him with my camera as he tries to wrangle his feral mane of blond hair into a manageable pony tail after using gobs of this product:


And finally, a shot of our faces fewer than 24 hours after Eddie had a nasty Pacific Ocean run-in with an errant body boarder whose errant swim fin scraped errantly across my brother's entire left eye. After which Ed grumbled a few errant expletives but restrained himself from taking the young but oblivious grommet on a one-way trip to Errantland.


But back to Grandma and Opa, who were our gracious hosts for the majority of our nearly one-month visit to California. We had a chance to spend lots of time together.




Better still, Grandma and Opa enthusiastically took on a significant amount of childcare detail during our stay, so John and I had plenty of chances to spend lots of time together. Away from the kids.

I had forgotten how nice a quiet meal can be. Thanks, guys!

As for the kids, though, here's just a photo sampling of the prince and princess during their reign in the Land of Perpetual Yes, where every whim and heart's desire was indulged. Week after week.



For Shea, this meant, among other treats, homemade pancakes for breakfast every morning.



For Finney, this meant someone being available to play repeated games of SkipBo with him at a moment's notice.


And for both kids, this meant being able to bake cookies, go for walks, have ice cream in the harbor, go to the circus, spend a weekend in Big Bear, go to the San Diego Wild Animal Park, or, well, you get the picture.

Or in this case, the pictures.