Monday, November 1, 2010

Adventures in Constumery

The holiest day on the toddler calendar has now passed. Our Halloween teetered on the edge of disaster at a few points, but actually turned out quite splendidly.

Credit for this goes almost entirely to Ashley (it's Gabe writing). If it were up to me, we'd probably have skipped the pumpkin, bought a plastic mask at the dollar store, and then just come home and binged on kit-kats from the 7-11. But Ash, being organized and thoughtful, got Halloween going for the family. She carved the pumpkin, organized the trick-or-treating and executed the costume brilliantly.

More on the costume: after some soul-searching, we decided that what Ezra would most like to be in the whole wide world was ... a piece of heavy equipment. So we basically cribbed a design we found online for a crane: painted yellow-box body, cardboard boom, hanging hook, black tape accents and a hardhat to top it off. I fashioned the hook and engineered the counterweight system that prevented the toddler from pitching forward (accomplished by taping butterknives to the back for ballast), but Ash did the rest. It looked great. But I confess that I was skeptical it would last more than five minutes. Sure, it was well-made, but Ezra could demolish a Sherman tank if you gave him a few days.

At the beginning of our trick-or-treating excursion, Ezra momentarily forgot about the candy and took to tearing around the playground with his full gear on. I was certain that the costu
me wouldn't see even one front porch. But eventually we got him back onto his mission ("Darn it, Ezra, do you know what's at stake here? Candy for the entire family! This is bigger than you, son. This is bigger than all of us!")

Oliver came too, though he spent Halloween mostly curled up in the sling on mama's front. Ezra, though, got the hang of trick-or-treating quickly. When he'd start to flag, we'd pop a "Smartie" in his mouth, which would fuel him for the next several houses. He couldn't really walk up porch
steps (he couldn't see his feet!), so I carried him up those by his arms. The costume was an unmitigated hit with the public. We got so, so many compliments on it. I was escorting Ezra most of the time, so I unjustly soaked up all this praise. Even other little kids were looking on and saying, "Awww, that's so cute!" One guy took our picture and said, "Union, right?" Ezra loved it, didn't want to take it off, and somehow managed not to destroy it all evening.

In other news, Oliver is making robust (if nuanced) progress. He holds his head up very steadily, is continuing to smile more and doing it in response to things instead of randomly. He's begun reaching for toys and batting at them, and he's starting to rock on his hips when lying down -- a precursor to rolling over. He's still sweet as pie -- he has fussy patches, but he can generally be comforted (unlike a certain other Spitzer child at his age). The boys are getting along great. Ezra still likes to kiss him and wants to roughhouse with him, which requires some reining in. But so far our fears about intense sibling rivalry have yet to materialize.

In two weeks we'll change the guard -- Ash will head back to work, and I'll begin my 7 weeks of leave. I hope I will be a wiser dad this time than I was during my leave with Ezra, which I remember fondly but which contained a lot of frustration and tedium. On the other hand, we've been enjoying listening to some audio and watching videos from Ezra's first year, and reliving some of the joy and the fun we had. We're terribly excited to get to go through that again with Oliver, even as Ezra continues to surprise, delight, and occasionally unhinge us with each successive stage.

Much love,
Gabe, Ash, Ez and Ollie


2 comments:

K said...

It was a fun evening! glad to see the Ezra-crane in motion :)

Leigh Kminek said...

fabulous post! Can't wait to see you tomorrow.