Some 10 years back I barely knew one or two families who had twins. Over the last 5 years I have known a few more. But lately the twin phenomenon seems to be going strong. Here's what I mean:
1. I worked for OSAF for 3.5 years and during that span 4 of us had twins
2. I take the kids to MyGym and among some 12 kids there are 2 sets of twins and the instructor herself has twins.
3. My kids are enrolled for a Music Class and among 8 kids there are 2 sets of twins
4. At ParentsPlace and last Friday I met 2 other moms with twins (among 15 kids)
5. Our local Mothers Club playgroup (ages 2-3) includes 2 other moms besides me with twins.
Is it that just because I have twins that I have begun to take notice of more and more twins around me or there is really some phenomenon going around that cannot be dismissed?
Wednesday, August 20, 2008
Thursday, August 14, 2008
3 is the new 2
In case you have been too busy to notice, let me tell you 3 is the new 2. Being in various classes all week with the kids and being part of the local mothers club, I meet lots and lots of moms and there is one pattern that stands out clearly. More and more families are going for 3 kids. Yes, brave ones indeed and I applaud them. I have also met moms who are having their third kid in late 30s and early 40s. I have tried prodding them to figure out what exactly motivates them to extend their families beyond 2. I haven't found a general answer except the fact that these people are just family oriented people. They enjoy babies and kids and as soon as their older kids grow up they miss having little ones running around at home and that's part of the reason. Having 2 toddlers at home, I can completely relate to them but it would take a lot more convincing to get me to have a third. I mean just the amount of work involved and support required single handedly tilts the decision in favor of no. In the past I have worked for a company in the mid-west where having more than 2 kids was the norm. Everyone around me had at least 3 or more kids. Yes, some even 5 and these are people of our generation. It is true that beyond a point, there is economy of scale but there is certainly a delta of work that must be done by parents.
Anyhow, kudos to those parents who are going for larger families. Especially kudos to Casey, who is having her third baby anytime this week while her older twins just completed a year 2 weeks back.
Anyhow, kudos to those parents who are going for larger families. Especially kudos to Casey, who is having her third baby anytime this week while her older twins just completed a year 2 weeks back.
Sunday, August 03, 2008
Wild day with Thomas
If you have a 2 year old, you probably have heard, seen, worn and eaten anything and everything resembling 'Thomas the Tank Engine'. What's a silly looking train has the kids by their wits. My 2 year olds' first toddler toothbrush, toothpaste and underwear had Thomas on it. And it doesn't end there, next comes t-shirt, shoes, books, bag pack and what not. So when a friend mentioned that Roaring Camp in Felton, CA was having this event called 'Day out with Thomas' I naturally jumped on it. It was a dream come true for the kids, actually getting to ride on Thomas and hearing some of their favorite tunes. Of course, for the $18 that they charged us per ticket they could have made the whole experience a lot better than just a simple train ride through the redwoods. Everything else was an add-on. The place was packed with parents and kids dressed in all kinds of Thomas ensemble. The place is fun besides the train ride too. There are jump houses, clown shows, hay stack structures, playdough and bubble stations. The kids had a smashing time. Needless to say, we came back home more tired than the kids.
Friday, August 01, 2008
5 dump trucks and counting..
Wednesday, July 30, 2008
What's up popcorn?
What's up with the different varieties of popcorn? What's happened to the simple old fashioned regular popcorn that we used to get. I visited a grocery store recently to pick up some for our movie nite. All I wanted was just regular popcorn.
I had to choose from:
1. movie theater butter style
2. blasto butter
3. light butter
4. kettle corn
5. caramel corn
6. unsalted and fat-free
7. 100 calorie
8. organic
9. buttery garlic
10. 94 % fat-free
11. fat-free
12. salt and cracked pepper
13. cheddar popcorn
14. Low-fat and low-sodium
Couldn't they just have one that is labeled "Regular"?
I had to choose from:
1. movie theater butter style
2. blasto butter
3. light butter
4. kettle corn
5. caramel corn
6. unsalted and fat-free
7. 100 calorie
8. organic
9. buttery garlic
10. 94 % fat-free
11. fat-free
12. salt and cracked pepper
13. cheddar popcorn
14. Low-fat and low-sodium
Couldn't they just have one that is labeled "Regular"?
Saturday, July 19, 2008
Vegetable Lasagna recipe

Ingredients:
1. Barilla Lasagna pasta sheets
2. Marinara Sauce - 1 bottle
3. Ricotta cheese,
4. Low-moisture, part-skim mozzarella cheese
5. Parmesan cheese
6. Chopped spinach
7. Zuchini
8. Carrots
9. Summer squash
10. Radish
11. Red/Green/Yellow peppers
12.Onions
13.Garlic
14.Italian Seasoning
15.Olive oil
Making the vegetable filling:
1. Slice up all the vegetables in thin, small strips
2. First fry the onions in olive oil, add garlic and once the onions are done, add all the veggies and cook them.
3. Add italian seasoning and some salt to it and keep is aside
Making the cheese filling:
1. Mix chopped spinach with the ricotta cheese,salt and some pepper and put that aside
2. Mix the mozzarella and parmesan cheese and keep it in a seperate dish.
Layering the lasagna:
1. Boil the lasagna pasta sheets
2. Take a large (9'x13') baking dish and cover the base with some marinara sauce
3. Put a layer pasta sheets
4. Add the veggie filling and top it with some marinara sauce and the mozzarella and parmesan cheese.
5. Put a second layer of pasta sheets
6. Add a spinach ricotta cheese filling
7. Add the third layer of pasta sheet, top it with marinara sauce and mozzarella cheese.
8. Bake it in the oven at 350 degrees for 15 minutes.
Thursday, June 26, 2008
Texan heat, here we come!
We are off for a family vacation to Dallas tomorrow. Yeah, I know lot of people have asked me why Dallas? When has Dallas become a popular spot for vacation and that too in summer. Well, my answer is 'Family'. Viral's family lives there and when you have kids there is comfort in going to places where you have family and home. I hear the temperatures there haven't hit the 100s yet so it may not be that bad. Besides there are lovely indoor pools and water parks to visit there. I will most certainly post the pictures after we are back. This is the third year in a row we are off to Dallas for the July 4th weekend. So Texan heat, here we come again!
Thursday, June 19, 2008
Cleaning is theraputic
When you are home all day with two toddlers, as naughty and hyperactive as mine, you need doses of energy supplements and pain relievers every now and then. And instead of popping half a dozen pills, you begin to explore solutions best available right around you. When I was single, meaning with no kids, shopping at a mall was the most effective means of beating my blues. Even getting a $5 trinket coupled with couple of hours of window shopping was best to get me in the best of the moods. Well with that being a luxury these days, I had to find other stress busters around the house. Lately I have realised that cleaning up and organizing household stuff had the same effect. Not necessarily scrubbing the floors or doing the dishes but simple stuff like organizing kids' toys in their bins, labeling them, organizing the closets, putting batteries in the toys, arranging books in the book closet, downloading photos from the camera onto the laptop and AppleTV and just simple things like that. Most of the stuff really takes 30 mins or less but at the end of the day there is a sense of having accomplished something. And again the rewards are in those countless genuine smiles that flash up when a dormant choo-choo gets going again or one of their favorite books that was misplaced for weeks shows up in the closet again.
Thursday, June 05, 2008
cherries, cherries and more cherries
Last weekend we set out for a picnic to Brentwood, the heart of Cherry farms in western California. The cherries were in full bloom but we missed other fruits like nectarines, peaches, apricots etc. We'd have to wait atleast a month more for those to be out in full bloom for picking but we were happy to just go pick cherries. Ripe, luscious and mouth-watering cherries were sitting in large looms waiting to be picked. The kids had fun picking at the low hanging bunches and shooting them straight into their mouths while we climbed the trees to grab the large ones looming at the top.


Tuesday, May 27, 2008
Viva San Diego
This memorial day weekend turned out to be quite memorable. Viral had to make a business trip to Santa Monica and like a loyal spouse I decided to tag along with the kids. Given my were parents visiting, they tagged along as well and it turned out to be one nice little vacation with the entire family. We spent a day in Santa Monica visiting the downtown and the next 2 days with Shamu the whale at Seaworld and elephants and the giraffes at the San Diego Zoo.


Wednesday, May 07, 2008
Tomatoes, basil and more..
Spring is in the air and you can't fail to notice those little flowers blooming everywhere - in the parks, along roadsides, in people's backyards, everywhere. Even the city does a good job planting those colorful shrubs along roadsides. It has especially been a delight taking the early morning walk and enjoying the whiff of fresh morning air muffled with fragrances of fresh flowers.
Taking this delight a little further we decided to embellish our otherwise barren backyard with some plants this year. So we started off with tomatoes and basil and if they survive the next two weeks we plan to add bell peppers,lemon grass, some more jasmine and possibly some mint.
Freshly planted basil and

and tomatoes

Roses in bloom
Taking this delight a little further we decided to embellish our otherwise barren backyard with some plants this year. So we started off with tomatoes and basil and if they survive the next two weeks we plan to add bell peppers,lemon grass, some more jasmine and possibly some mint.
Freshly planted basil and
and tomatoes
Roses in bloom
Wednesday, April 30, 2008
Visit to the Natural Bridges state park
We discovered a true novelty of a place over the weekend : Natural Bridges state park near Santa Cruz. Pristine beach, clear water and beautiful warm weather. The kids had a great time playing in the soft sand making sand castles and tunnels. It was warm enough that we could take their clothes off and let them feel the ocean water, something that they don't get to do often.
We had to later make our mandatory stop over at the santa cruz boardwalk on our way back. The kids just can't get enough of the rides there. Ofcourse the cheese and garlic fries are an incentive enough for us adults to keep visiting the place again and again.


We had to later make our mandatory stop over at the santa cruz boardwalk on our way back. The kids just can't get enough of the rides there. Ofcourse the cheese and garlic fries are an incentive enough for us adults to keep visiting the place again and again.
Monday, April 21, 2008
Drums, Maraccas, Triangles and more..
Friday, April 18, 2008
An interesting article by Khuswant Singh
An interesting article on prejudices, Islam and the Prophet by Khuswant Singh.
http://www.telegraphindia.com/1080216/jsp/opinion/story_8909500.jsp
http://www.telegraphindia.com
Tuesday, April 15, 2008
a Mom's story...
Many years back this email (attached below) was forwarded to me and I remember feeling overwhelmed with nostalgia at how closely this related to my mom's life back home when we were growing up.
Yesterday when I read this email again I could appreciate it from a completely new perspective, from that of being a mom, and I have to say not much has changed since the last generation.
--
Mom and Dad were watching TV when Mom said, 'I'm tired, and it's getting late. I think I'll go to bed'
She went to the kitchen to make sandwiches for the next day's lunches. Rinsed out the popcorn bowls, took meat out of the freezer for supper the following evening, checked the cereal box levels, filled the sugar container, put spoons and bowls on the table and started the coffee pot for brewing the next morning.
She then put some wet clothes in the dryer, put a load of clothes into the washer, ironed a shirt and secured a loose button.
She picked up the game pieces left on the table, put the phone back on the charger and put the telephone book into the drawer. She watered the plants, emptied a wastebasket and hung up a towel to dry.
She yawned and stretched and headed for the bedroom. She stopped by the desk and wrote a note to the teacher, counted out some cash for the field trip, and pulled a text book out from hiding under the chair.
She signed a birthday card for a friend, addressed and stamped the envelope and wrote a quick note for the grocery store. She put both near her purse.
Mom then washed her face with 3 in 1 cleanser, put on her Night solution & age fighting moisturizer, brushed and flossed her teeth and filed her nails.
Dad called out, 'I thought you were going to bed.'
'I'm on my way,' she said.
She put some water into the dog's dish and put the cat outside, then made sure the doors were locked and the patio light was on.
She looked in on each of the kids and turned out their bedside lamps and TV's, hung up a shirt, threw some dirty socks into the hamper, and had a brief conversation with the one up still doing homework.
In her own room, she set the alarm; laid out clothing for the next day, straightened up the shoe rack. She added three things to her 6 most important things to do list. She said her prayers, and visualized the accomplishment of her goals.
About that time, Dad turned off the TV and announced to no one in particular. 'I'm going to bed.' And he did...without another thought.
Yesterday when I read this email again I could appreciate it from a completely new perspective, from that of being a mom, and I have to say not much has changed since the last generation.
--
Mom and Dad were watching TV when Mom said, 'I'm tired, and it's getting late. I think I'll go to bed'
She went to the kitchen to make sandwiches for the next day's lunches. Rinsed out the popcorn bowls, took meat out of the freezer for supper the following evening, checked the cereal box levels, filled the sugar container, put spoons and bowls on the table and started the coffee pot for brewing the next morning.
She then put some wet clothes in the dryer, put a load of clothes into the washer, ironed a shirt and secured a loose button.
She picked up the game pieces left on the table, put the phone back on the charger and put the telephone book into the drawer. She watered the plants, emptied a wastebasket and hung up a towel to dry.
She yawned and stretched and headed for the bedroom. She stopped by the desk and wrote a note to the teacher, counted out some cash for the field trip, and pulled a text book out from hiding under the chair.
She signed a birthday card for a friend, addressed and stamped the envelope and wrote a quick note for the grocery store. She put both near her purse.
Mom then washed her face with 3 in 1 cleanser, put on her Night solution & age fighting moisturizer, brushed and flossed her teeth and filed her nails.
Dad called out, 'I thought you were going to bed.'
'I'm on my way,' she said.
She put some water into the dog's dish and put the cat outside, then made sure the doors were locked and the patio light was on.
She looked in on each of the kids and turned out their bedside lamps and TV's, hung up a shirt, threw some dirty socks into the hamper, and had a brief conversation with the one up still doing homework.
In her own room, she set the alarm; laid out clothing for the next day, straightened up the shoe rack. She added three things to her 6 most important things to do list. She said her prayers, and visualized the accomplishment of her goals.
About that time, Dad turned off the TV and announced to no one in particular. 'I'm going to bed.' And he did...without another thought.
Thursday, April 10, 2008
First Art Class
Tuesday, April 08, 2008
Being a mom today
Like a babycenter mom put it, "What does it mean being a mom of this generation? We have vaccines for our kids, disposable diapers, dozens of jogging strollers to choose from, option of working from home, shelves full of parenting books, partners who cook, clean and watch the kids and mom friends who are only a phone call or an email away.
But flip that coin and life doesn't look that rosy. There's controversy about the vaccines, guilt over sending those disposable diapers to landfill, way too many choices over what you want to buy as a parent, the need to work more hours than we like, the media messages are getting louder, the world in general is moving faster and the pressure is increasing. So whether this is the best times for the moms or worst is one of the hotly debated topics.
To get a better sense of what modern motherhood is like, we have a discussion at our mothers club in the next upcoming meeting.
I personally think this is a better time. The best part of being a mom today is access to information. Even though it may get overwhelming at times, I would much rather have access to it than none at all. I love choices and the fact that I know what effect each choice has. I am sure there are moms who can argue for the cons and it will be interesting to hear the other perspective.
But flip that coin and life doesn't look that rosy. There's controversy about the vaccines, guilt over sending those disposable diapers to landfill, way too many choices over what you want to buy as a parent, the need to work more hours than we like, the media messages are getting louder, the world in general is moving faster and the pressure is increasing. So whether this is the best times for the moms or worst is one of the hotly debated topics.
To get a better sense of what modern motherhood is like, we have a discussion at our mothers club in the next upcoming meeting.
I personally think this is a better time. The best part of being a mom today is access to information. Even though it may get overwhelming at times, I would much rather have access to it than none at all. I love choices and the fact that I know what effect each choice has. I am sure there are moms who can argue for the cons and it will be interesting to hear the other perspective.
Monday, April 07, 2008
Sunday, April 06, 2008
This amazing thing called the 'play-doh'
Ever since I became a mom and have been exposed to all the wonderful toys developed for the kids of this generation, I strongly feel that we had a deprived childhood. Just walk into a toy-store and they practically have a miniature toy for everything an adult uses at home. The other day I saw a toy shaving kit and I couldn't stop laughing
Just recently I discovered this amazing thing called 'play-doh'. Why didn't someone think of this 30 years back? Not only are the kids having fun playing with it, but I have taken a liking to it myself. I have to admit, I have been stealing chances of playing with it whenever the kids are busy with other things. How this little soft dough of clay renders beautifully between the moulds of your 2 hands.
We started out with some standard shape moulds and then gradually moved on to creating more interesting objects like the bouquet of flowers as shown below.

Just recently I discovered this amazing thing called 'play-doh'. Why didn't someone think of this 30 years back? Not only are the kids having fun playing with it, but I have taken a liking to it myself. I have to admit, I have been stealing chances of playing with it whenever the kids are busy with other things. How this little soft dough of clay renders beautifully between the moulds of your 2 hands.
We started out with some standard shape moulds and then gradually moved on to creating more interesting objects like the bouquet of flowers as shown below.
Thursday, April 03, 2008
Our little 'Zoo' project
When you are a full time mom, your brains are operating on full steam looking for projects to keep the kids busy. Here's an idea I picked from a book. I got some animal stickers and cut out a big sheet from one of the cardboard packages we received in mail recently. I drew a basic landscape of a zoo - some grass, a few trees and a pond and had the kids stick the pictures of the animals all over it. Apart from some 'minor' discrepancy of crocodiles floating on trees and horses in the pond, the kids seemed to have a gala time working on this.
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