Three Peas in a Pod...
Thursday, October 05, 2006
 

 
  ATTENTION...SITE ADDRESS HAS CHANGED...
Dear Readers,

This site is being discontinued. All of my blogging from now on will be at the new site, "Dumplings, Three". You can click on the name of it here (the colored link) and you will be taken there, or if you prefer to manually type it into your browser, the address is:

ThreeDumplings.blogspot.com

I hope to see you there!

(This site will remain (as sort of an archive) so that my older 500 or so posts will not be lost as I could not transfer them to beta at this time, but nothing new will be posted here from this time forward.)

~Monica
October 5th, 20006
 
Tuesday, October 03, 2006
  Just Overheard...
Darcy is sitting here at the table next to me working on her computer. Grant is here at the table doing bills. Rayna and Doug are downstairs watching a DVD. The basement door is ajar and the sound of their two voices are clearly floating up to us. A rhinocerous just made an appearance on their DVD. Doug exclaimed excitedly, "A DINOSAUR!!!!", to which Rayna scornfully replied, "That is NOT a 'DINOSAUR', Doug. It's a NOSTRIL!"

Rayna is always so EMPHATIC. I am sure that poor Doug is now trying to log in his memory that that impressive horned creature is called a "NOSTRIL", not a dinosaur. Yes, Rayna is ever vigilant for opportunities to set Doug straight and expand his education! With her help, he is sure to be speaking fluent English any day now!
 
Monday, October 02, 2006
  Aaron Hospitalized
My nephew, Aaron, was in a serious accident while driving back to school in Rolla from a visit to his grandparents in Kansas City, last night. The accident occurred five minutes from Raleigh. It was a one car accident. His car rolled. Aaron was life-flighted to University Hospital in Columbia. He has three broken ribs, a fracture of his thoracic spine and multiple abrasions and lacerations. He lost a day and cannot remember the accident or being flown to the hospital...but, when the doctor was assessing him and asked him to count backwards from 100 by sevens, he was able to spit them out in lightening speed, leaving the doctor open mouthed as he himself quickly tried to do the mental math to see if Aaron knew what he was saying. Obviously, that doctor didn't know much about our Aaron (the Pi Guy, himself)!...Aaron could be unconscious and still able to calculate math problems faster than a computer!

Aaron is able to move all extremities and still do math at the speed of light. He was to be fitted with an upper body brace today and they are thinking at this point that he will be able to get by without surgery. We all would appreciate your prayers as Aaron heals. (Jan and Eric drove up from Texas during the night and Mom and Dad C (along with Grant) went up last night.)
 
Saturday, September 30, 2006
  Your Opinion Matters
Okay....I would love to hear your opion...

I am experimenting with a different format. Please view particular post here and then click on the TITLE of this post (it is a link that will take you to the alternate blogsite). Read this same post THERE and then, comment either there or here if you have a preference for either over the other. I am most interested in hearing if either is more user-friendly to your eyes...text, etc...easier to read.

Voice your opinion...let me know!

Thank you for participating in this "survey"!

~Monica

  
 
 
Friday, September 29, 2006
  Darcy gets the INSIDE Scoop:
Click here for BREAKING NEWS about RAYNA'S INJURY...Darcy's blog scooped mine with all the details!
 
  Conversation with Jean
On our way back from the pediatric orthopedic surgeon's office, we stopped off at Buffet Garden for lunch. We were seated at the booth right next to where Amanda and her friend were dining! A little bit later, Amanda called her mom, Jean, to tell her she had run into us. Jean asked to speak with me and the conversation that ensued was quite informative. Jean asked to speak with Darcy...but, Miss Darcy, initially, would not stoop to speaking with Jean on the phone!...so, Jean had to pass her comments to Darcy through me. Jean made the request that Miss Darcy begin including more relevant FACTS in her blog reporting and QUIT WHINING!

There has been long-term, ongoing verbal jousting between Darcy and her daddy's cousin, Jean, as well as between Darcy and Jean's mother, Aunt Ruth...and between Darcy and her Grandpa C....and, now that I think about it, between Darcy and anyone who speaks with her for more than a matter of minutes! But, for once, I think Jean has a very good point...less whining would be very nice! (I think that about evens me up!...Darcy has been getting me good on HER blog!)
 
  More Details on Rayna's Injury
Wednesday evening, Doug was pulling on Rayna's arm when the ulnar bone slipped out of place (an injury young children are prone to because their ligaments are so loose). This was the sixth time Rayna has incurred this injury in the past two years. The first time, an adult friend lifted her by her wrists. We took her to the ER and spent $500 for the physcian to spend literally 60 seconds with her...fifty eight seconds explaining the injury to me and two seconds popping it back into place. He explained to me how to pop it back into place because he suspected it might happen again. It did. The next five times it dislocated with the assistance of her brother (sometimes the right arm, sometimes the left). He cannot seem to remember not to pull her by the hands/wrists. The second through fifth times, I was able to pop it back into place myself very easily with INSTANT relief of her pain and inability to pronate her hand. Wednesday night, I did the same manuever that has worked before, but, this time there was no relief of her pain and no improvement in her ability to use the arm. So, I took her into the ER. The ER physician did the same manuever. She FELT the bone pop back into place, but, still there was no improvement in Rayna's pain or inability to pronate her arm. So, the ER doc X-rayed her elbow. Nothing showed up. She had us wait about an hour to see if there would be improvement after Rayna was medicated with some ibuprofen and allowed to relax. No improvement. Rayna continued to complain of pain in her elbow and wrist. We both assumed that the wrist pain was connected with her elbow injury and not a separate injury. The doctor put her into a plaster splint and sling with the instructions for us to leave her in the splint a couple of days, then, take her out of the splint and see how the arm was after that. The ER doctor was confident that Rayna would be completely back to normal after we took the splint off...but, on the outside chance that she wasn't, we were to take her in to see an orthodpedic surgeon for further evaluation and treatment.

This morning I removed the plaster splint. There was very little improvement. The only improvement is that she no longer is having pain in her elbow...but, she still cannot pronate her arm and she has significant guarding and pain in her WRIST, along with a bit of swelling. So, in to the specialist. This time they X-rayed her wrist. There was one possibly questionable area on her X-ray, but, the doctor thinks she probably does not have a fracture. She thinks that maybe Rayna's wrist is just sprained. She put her in a little velcro splint and said to keep her in it during the day, but to take it off at night. She said that if she begins moving the wrist and not having pain, to leave it off. If there is no improvement in 10 days, then I am to bring her back in to the office again and they will re-X-ray the wrist. There is a type of fracture that isn't visable until the body begins healing the fracture...then, the deposits of new bone are visible on an X-ray (usually 10-12 days after the injury). So, that is where we are at. At least she can move her arm freely now at the elbow without any pain. But, she cannot rotate her hand over (pronate it).

Supposedly, children over the age of five do not get this type of injury ("nurse-maid elbow") any more because by that age the ligaments have tightened up adequately. So...maybe in FOUR MORE MONTHS we can quit having this happen...theorectically. (Except...maybe that means "up to age six"? Didn't think of that until just now. Bummer.)

(My current theory is that maybe Doug twisted her wrist as he was pulling her and she had a double injury...the distal ulnar displacement and a sprain in her wrist. I don't see how she could possibly have a fracture from the simple pulling Doug was doing. I hope not, anyway.)
 
Thursday, September 28, 2006
  Sporting a New Cast:
Click here for THE REST OF THE STORY...
 
 
   
 
  What I Can't Talk About...
Well, having Darcy have her own blog SOUNDED like a good idea...but there has been and unforeseen consequence... Late last night, as Rayna and I returned home from the emergency room, Darcy's admonished me NOT to get on the internet before I went to bed. I didn't understand what her point was until she explained, "I want to write about what happened, Mom, so don't put anything about it on YOUR blog!" Oh. So that was her objection!

So, I guess there isn't much more I can write right now. You will have to check Darcy's blog to find out why Rayna is now sporting a little plaster half cast. (Of course Darcy isn't out of bed, yet, this morning...so it might be a little while before she gets the details put into print!)
 
Tuesday, September 26, 2006
  Costume Changes





(Tonight the little ones are again in costume. Actually, they LIVE in one costume or another every waking moment that they are home...changing costumes ten or twelve times a day. They DO have their FAVORITES, though...so, they tend to be in those costumes the most. In early November, I buy lots of costumes once Target has them down to ninety percent off. Can't beat that deal...costumes for a buck or two apiece! Tonight, they have only gone through three costume changes apiece, since their daddy and older sister left for band practice about an hour ago.)




(This photo was taken a few nights ago. Doug had talked Rayna into dressing up in one of his old Power Ranger costumes. He couldn't wait to bring her down to the supper table to show everyone that she was now a Power Ranger with him! All through supper, he kept begging me to take her picture...so, I finally got the camera out!
 
Sunday, September 24, 2006
  postcards from holland: Learning to Love...
A year and a half ago I wrote "Learning to Love..." and posted it on the group blog, "Postcards from Holland". I'm not sure when Doug became rooted in my heart as deeply as my daughters are...but it did happen somewhere along the way...some unrecognized day in this past year and half.

I remember how it broke my heart as I wrote then that I would know when my heart loved him, because I would no longer be able to choose. As that realization reverberated through my heart, I remember fearing there might never be a time when I could not choose...but, somewhere along the way it HAS happened. I am completely his mother and he is utterly my child. I want to write another essay for "Postcards from Holland"--an essay from the other side...but, for now, these few lines in this blog will have to do, I guess.
 
  Creative Language...
Today, for the forty billionth time, I accidentally called Rayna 'Darcy'. Rayna exclaimed, "MOM! You called me "DARCY"!". I apologized and she quickly replied, "It's okay, Mom. It doesn't mind with me!" (Translation: It doesn't matter to me...OR: I don't mind.)

Later, she was sorting through her candy haul from today's pinata (at Mahaffie) and I overheard her telling her siblings she had a "Peanut-butter-scott candy". That is one flavor I, myself, have never run across before!

A little later, as we were walking through the Great Plains Mall, Doug sniffed and exclaimed excitedly, "I smell deep water, Mom!" (He evidentally thought he could smell a swimming pool!) It is so rare that HE comes out with a complete sentence, that each one seems memorable...but this one struck me as just plain funny!

After that, we had supper at Jack Stack's BBQ (really good!)... Rayna was drawing with her crayons on the children's menu. Presently, she motioned for me to watch her and she proudly proclaimed, "This is how you draw a BIG 'I'" (printed an upper case "I"), "and, this is how you draw a LITTLE KID'S 'i'!" (as she printed a lower case "i"!). I guess when she tried logging the phrase "lower case" in her memory, it turned into the much more sensible "little kid"!

All of which reminds me of something she said the last time we ate out... She had some baked apples on her plate. After her first tenative bite, she exclaimed, "These are delicious! They taste just like peach smell!"
 
Friday, September 22, 2006
  Batgirl's Blog
If you aren't a regular reader of Darcy's blog, you ought to click onto"Big Scary Stuffed Horse!"(click here...this is a LINK!) to read her latest adventure!

I am really pleased with how well Darcy has been blogging! She has been totally independent with the blog so far...except I have helped her with posting photos to it. But, I doubt that I will be needed in that capacity, either, much longer!
 
Thursday, September 21, 2006
  Remembering, "A Balloon to Chew"
Through the day there are so many little things that I think I will write about later on the blog...but, then, by the time I find the time to sit down at the computer, I can no longer recall what it was I had planned to write! There were a whole STRING of "Raynaisms" this morning that I mentally noted so I could replay them here later...but, alas, my memory is quite pitiful!

When Darcy was a toddler, I was quick to correct her grammar and her pronunciation. Along came my youngest...and, somehow KNOWING there will be no more babies, makes you in less of a hurry to grow the youngest one up. Instead of worrying about her poor pronunciation and dismal grammar, I found myself inwardly smiling at it and finding it rather adorable. (Such an unexpected turnabout on my part.) So, it is that I have wound up with a four and a half year old that has very "interesting" use of the English language...unlike her older sister who spoke precisely and with utter accuracy and an amazing vocabulary from about the age two onward....but, also unlike her mostly non-verbal older brother who has PROFOUND language disabilities. Maybe that has dampened my drive to IMPROVE her language skills...she is, afterall, so much further advanced than her older brother that it doesn't strike horror in my heart to hear her funny misappropriation of words and her mangled grammar and her slight mispronunciations. Things go unchallenged, for the most part...like her insistance upon speaking about "Batmaam" when she MEANS "Batman". Or, telling me that "Doug put chapstick on his lips because they were dryed off." DRIED OUT makes no sense at all in her mind...she thinks the rest of the world has it wrong and SHE has it right...lips dry OFF. Just like I cannot convince her that it is proper to say someone has a "cold". She insists on asking, "Do you have a cold nose?", if she thinks someone might be sick. To her, THAT makes a lot more sense. You have to have a cold SOMETHING, afterall!

Lately, though, I have been making a concerted effort to help her fine tune her language usuage. This morning, I found myself correct THREE sentences right in a row that came out of her mouth. She would say something. I would restate it correctly. She would not notice as she stated her NEXT item of business, which, I promptly restated correctly and, she blithely went to the third item of business (equally incorrect gramatically). Maybe she thought I was reflecting things back to her to demonstrate I was LISTENING? At any rate, it doesn't seem to occur to her that I might be wanting her to ROLE MODEL off my revisions of her utterances! She hasn't got time for unnecessary things like that!

It tickles, me though, how eager she always is to appropriate new words. She can hear a word just once and, sure as anything, she will make a POINT of using that word in the course of her own conversing later that day. Almost always, she has totally missed the actual meaning of the word. So, she comes up with some very interesting sentences!

Which, reminds me of a time when DARCY was just a little thing. She wasn't even quite two yet when we went on a roadtrip. As always, we stopped along the way to pick up snacks at a gas convenience store. I was craving bubble gum for some reason. (I hadn't chewed any around Darcy up to that point, nor had her father.) I tried to be discreet with my purchase because I didn't want my toddler daughter asking for some. Kids have that built-in radar thing, though! And Darcy instinctively KNEW I was trying to keep something from her. I saw her zero in on that pink wrapper as the cashier rang up our purchases. On the way to the car, I discreetly removed the gum from the sack and slipped it into my pocket. Once in the car, Darcy began asking for the pink thing. I played dumb. She dug all through the sack of snacks, determined to make me understand what it was she was talking about. But, it was no where to be found (hidden safely in my pocket!). I thought I was a pretty slick parent. A bit later, I carefully slipped a piece into my mouth. All was fine for about fifteen minutes. Then, I slipped and blew a tiny little bubble that I quickly sucked back into my mouth. Being in the front seat, I didn't think Darcy could see that from the back seat...but, she did! She didn't KNOW the word for "gum", much less "bubble gum" and I wasn't about to TEACH her that word, because THEN she would be asking for gum. It was easier just to play dumb. Ever DETERMINED to make herself understood, she tried yet again, this time calling out, "Mom," (she always called me "Mom"...never "Mommy", from the moment she began speaking),"I want a BALLOON TO CHEW!" With that one phrase, my toddler found my achilles heel! She didn't know the word "gum", so she made up her own name for it..."balloon to chew"! I was just so delighted with her creativity and perserverance that I gave the child a piece of bubble gum right then and there. She IMMEDIATELY logged the word "BUBBLE GUM" into her very large vocabulary...realizing at once what a USEFUL word it was! She wound up being one of the few two year olds in the world who could actually BLOW bubbles. But, then she had LOTS of opportunity to PRACTICE now that she knew the magic name of that substance that so tantalized her. There was POWER in words...she instinctively grasped that from a very, very early age!
 
Wednesday, September 20, 2006
  Darcy grew up so fast...






 
  The PHOTOS are MISSING!
Hmmmm...I've spent the better part of the morning trying to post photos onto my blog. Doesn't appear it is going to happen today, though! Blogger must be experiencing some down-time for some sort of maintenance or the other, I suppose.

Thinking about the band playing at Silver Dollar City got me nostalgic and got me to thinking about how much Darcy has matured and grown since she first started singing with the band (at age four...debuting in front of a large crowd at Silver Dollar City). I dug around and found photos of her very first music endeavor (the fiddle at age two), singing with the band at SDC when she was four (having to stand up on a chair in order to be visible!), her early banjo debuts (and the photo of her and her daddy performing at the Santa Fe Trails festival when she was about six years old...that photo was taken by an actual professional photographer and wound up in a magazine a few years later), and then more recent photos of her engrossed in pickin' on her mandolin or my old guitar just around the house. It just amazes me how MUCH she has grown up...and how quickly. Time really does fly so fast once you have children. Anyway, I FOUND all those various photos (had to scan a few of them from paper copies) and had planned to post them today...but, I've been thwarted in my efforts! Maybe I will be able to post that succession of photos later tonight!
 
Tuesday, September 19, 2006
  Because Aunt Ruth Always Asks:
The band has been quite busy lately. They played September 14th in Lee's Summit at the Life Christian Center...September 15th in NKC at the HABOT Fall Show...and September 16th in Pleasant Hill for Railroad Days. This Saturday will find them in Louisburg playing at the Ciderfest at noon, 2:00pm, & 4:00pm. Sunday they will be playing at Mahaffie at 1:30. Then the following weekend they will be back at Louisburg once more. The Ciderfest is one of the places the guys enjoy playing most. But, of course, everyone's favorite gig is Silver Dollar City in Branson...which will be October 25th, 26th, 27th, and 28th this year.

Other dates this Fall include the G.I.G. Festival in Eldorado Springs on September 30th; the Living History Fall Festival in Harrisonville on October 6th and 7th; The New Theatre Restaurant Picnic in Shawnee Mission on October 9th; and the Church of God in Appleton City on October 29th.

So, now I have dutifully updated everyone!
 
Monday, September 18, 2006
  Photos for YOU, Jean!!!

Rayna and Doug went to Doug's best friend's birthday party Saturday evening. Luke, Doug's best friend, had a fish-fry/pizza party for his birthday this year. Of course, he also had a pinata! (Latin American tradition, I think!) There were twelve or so kids at the party. They had a blast taking turns swinging at the pinata as Luke's dad jerked the other end of the rope to keep it constantly moving up and down, back and forth! The kids also had a blast on the trampoline. (Darcy was invited--she and Luke's older sister are friends, too--but, she decided she needed to go to the band performance with her dad. She sang with the band at Pleasant Hill for RailRoad Days while her siblings and I were at Luke's birthday party.)

Doug watched closely as his buddy opened each birthday present!
Darcy working on her math this morning! She HATES the Dive CDRom that accompanies her Saxon Math curriculum this year...but her MOTHER likes it! She spent most of the lesson talking back to the Dive Instructor...being rather sarcastic with him...something she could NEVER do with her mother, were her MOTHER explaining the lesson to her! (Actually, she had me cracking up with some of her remarks and the falsetto voice in which she carried on her running dialogue with her on screen instructor!)
 
Sunday, September 17, 2006
  Breaking News...
I would like to announce the auspicious beginnings of a brand-new blog. About a year ago, Darcy abandoned this particular blog address...so, I (her mother!) took it over. But, as a new school year is beginning, Darcy learned that she was going to be required to "journal" this year. Given her choice of whether to do so in a spiral bound notebook (or in a bound journal, etc) or on her computer, she chose the computer. Given the options of just keeping a journal in "Word" that would be private (other than Mom checking spelling, punctuation, form, etc) versus journaling on a blog open for all to see, Darcy chose to blog. Thus, she is returning once more to the world of blogging. She set up her site today, but won't begin writing in earnest until Monday. Anyway, feel free to check in on her site regularly! You can find her at Batgirl's Blog. (Just click on the preceeding highlighted link.)
 
Friday, September 15, 2006
  I-M-N
A-CRO-NYM
...overload!


Say that like you are reading a line from Dr. Seuss!

I have been slammed by a barage of military acronymns in my new mileu...the VA. But, that isn't really what has fried my last remaining brain cells... It is all the PAIRED private sign-on monikers and verify codes that I am having to remember, keep straight, and type flawlessly in to NUMEROUS different applications a bazillion times a day. I can't keep straight which pair to use with what...not to mention which sign-on names go with which verify codes. I like to keep life simple...one code for EVERYTHING in the world...be it my personal computer, my e-mail accounts (there are three of them here at home, in addition to two at work, now), my e-bay code, my Sonlight curriculum ordering code, the site meter codes on both my blogs, etc, etc, etc.

Even at my former workplace, I used my well-worn, used for everything "secret word" to sign on to the software there and sign into the medication vending machine (not its technical name!). They encouraged us to "use at least one number and symbol and a mixture of capital letters and lower case letters to create a SECURE password". Forget it! I am into creating a password I can always remember...which is the one word I have used the last umpteen jillion years for EVERYTHING that requires a password. Simplicity in a world determined to be complicated.

My old workplace's software wasn't smart enough to detect if I chose to ignore the instructions on how to create a more secure password...just as it was also not smart enough to recognize that I used the same password for over six years even though we have to change them every 90 days. (You just change your password (as instructed!), but, then, promptly call the IT Help Desk and ask the technician who answers the phone if you can change your password. He establishes you are who you say you are, and then does something magically on his computer that resets your password to a word like, "happiness"...then you enter back into the system with that word and are immediately prompted to create a new user password...at which point, you can type in the same one you have been using for six years. The system is happy. You changed your password to something different when prompted at the 90 day interval. Then immediately called the Help Desk so you could change it once more. The system doesn't recognize that the FOURTH (and final) password is identical to the FIRST password that it, only moments earlier, insisted you get rid of!) Yes! A simple life. All is well. All is good. Passwords are never forgotten...they become familiar, old friends. Ahhh...those were the days.

And they are passed.

The VA's system KNOWS if I don't use at least 8 characters with symbols and numbers mixed in. I am instructed not to use any words that appear in the dictionary. And, 'lest I simplify my life and try to use one set of characters for EVERYTHING, they construct it so that I can't even use the same USER NAME in my many pairs of User Names/Verify Codes....aarggg! The other morning, on the way into work, I counted it up...I have TWELVE different user names and verify codes JUST FOR WORK, now. I can hardly figure out how to log on to anything (CPRS, KanVISTA, BCMA, PIXIS, Metaframe, the VA Internet Educational site...) because, even if I DO remember my various user names and passwords, I can't remember which ones fit together...and, even after I remember which ones are paired, I can't recall which pair goes with what program! Then, every door on our unit (not to mention every door on the OTHER units I float to) have locks that you must key in numbered squences in order to open...all different from each other, of course! I can understand the MED CARTS being locked...but, why do I have to know a sequential code just to open the door that guards the ICE MACHINE????!!! (There isn't ANYTHING in that closet sized room EXCEPT an ice machine and a water faucett that barely trickles the water out. But, we MUST keep it locked!!! An unathorized person might try to access our ice machine, after all!)

If I lose my hold on sanity, just chalk it up to acronym/password overload!





 
  Do They Have Salsa in China?: It's a girl, and another girl!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Do They Have Salsa in China?: It's a girl, and another girl!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Click on the link above to see the original referral announcement!!! One of the 517 comments the blog announcement received really interested me...that person observed that there had only been 50 twins referred from China since international adoptions began and, since there were just recently three sets of twins referred, she had been amazed that Mary-Mia and Rod received referrels for twins, too...the fourth set in just the last few months! (Grant and I requested twins when we were adopting Darcy...but, by the time we filled out the paperwork to adopt Rayna, I didn't even THINK of asking for twins until AFTER our paperwork had already been sent off to China (too late!). But, I'm glad for my absent-mindedness...because we NEEDED to get Rayna! (Actually, I am certain that even if we had ASKED for twins, we would have still gotten Rayna...even if she had been the only NON-TWINNER in the bunch! We DID request that our second baby be from JiangXi (like Darcy) and were surprised when the referrals came and one of our acquaintances in our same city, going through the same adoption agency, received a referral for a JiangXi baby the same day we got our referral for an AnHui baby (Rayna!)...the other couple hadn't indicated a geographical preference...yet, they got the JiangXi baby instead of us! And I am SO GLAD THEY DID!!!! Just goes to show me, I usually do not know WHAT to ask for!!!)

Anyway, click on the link above and see the adorable twins that will soon be arriving home in Texas! Then, click on the link in the post beneath this one and watch a video clip of the parents calling the grandparents with the news...that is just too much fun to watch!
 
  Do They Have Salsa in China?: The CNN-like video taping of the referral call
Do They Have Salsa in China?: The CNN-like video taping of the referral call is just way too cool to watch! Congratulations Rod and Mary-Mia on the referral of your twin baby girls! May you receive speedy permission to enter China and bring your daughters home!
 

Pictures and stories of the day to day life of Darcy (born in LinChuan of JiangXi Province in China almost eleven years ago), of Doug (born in Kaohsiung City in Taiwan almost eight years ago), and of Rayna (born in DingYuan of AnHui Province in China four and a half years ago)...



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    There is but one beautiful child in the world...and every mother has that child.
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