








We're back in action with a brand new camera! Be warned. ;)
Ignoring for a minute the symbolism of her pushing a shopping cart, there's something I really like about this picture. Molly has been actively turning objects into walkers. Pretty much anything more than a few inches high or less than 3' tall and movable. She's all about walking. She loved pushing this baby-sized shopping cart around at Habitot this morning. The only problem was that it actually has wheels, so, unlike the chair she pushes around at home, it moved relatively easily. Placing my hand on side not only gave it enough resistance that she could stay upright, but also steered it away from all the other toddlers storming the place.
I caught Molly & the neighbor's baby discussing the location of the camera. I think they're holding it for ransom, but it's unclear what their demads are. (No more naps? No more diaper changes? Unlimited Pirate's Booty?) So, the camera is still on vacation.
I'll be the first to admit that I'm a sucker for trying new "gear", particularly baby gear, and particularly baby gear that's billed as being "green." My latest experiment is yet another diaper system.
actually can be ripped open after use & dumped into the toilet. Fancy. The say it can also be composted (sans poop). As one commenter noted: she wants to do the right thing, but that's awfully hard in a small NYC apartment with no washer or dryer.







Yes, she is.And, of course, scientists have something to say about why we think so.
... As a species whose youngest members are so pathetically helpless they cannot lift their heads to suckle without adult supervision, human beings must be wired to respond quickly and gamely to any and all signs of infantile desire...
Also interesting (but not related to Molly!):
...The human cuteness detector is set so low, researchers said, that it deems cute practically anything remotely resembling a human baby or a part thereof, and so it ends up including the young of almost every mammalian species; fuzzy-headed birds like Japanese cranes; woolly bear caterpillars; a bobbing balloon; even a colon, hyphen and closed parenthesis typed in succession...
...At the same time ... the rapidity and promiscuity of the cute response makes the impulse suspect, readily overridden by the angry sense that one is being exploited or deceived. "Cute cuts through all layers of meaning and says, Let's not worry about complexities, just love me," said Dutton, who is writing a book about Darwinian aesthetics. "That's where the sense of cheapness can come from, and the feeling of being manipulated or taken for a sucker that leads many to reject cuteness as low or shallow.".
Molly, don't worry, no one feels exploited or deceived by your extreme cuteness.