How to Tell Them Apart
When asked to bring you something (a rubber band, a banana peal, Daddy’s Blackberry) J will bring it to you. F will run away, laughing.
When asked to bring you something (a rubber band, a banana peal, Daddy’s Blackberry) J will bring it to you. F will run away, laughing.
This entry was posted on Thursday, September 13th, 2007 at 6:32 pm and is filed under 12 - 15 months. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. Both comments and pings are currently closed.
Giving Back
Donate to the Zoë and Lennox Simpson Memorial Fund
Shop Amazon through THIS LINK and the 529 college savings accounts get a kickback.
LLL Breastfeeding Helpline - US Call 1-877-4 LALECHE (1-877-452-5324) for 24 hour toll-free breastfeeding helpline services.
Need Milk? Have milk to donate? Contact the Mother's Milk Bank of New England or a milk bank in your area.
St. Paul hit the nail on the head when he said, To the pure all things are pure, but to the impure nothing is pure (Ti 1:15). It is a tragically impure world that labels the purity of a baby at the breast as "gross." For those with the purity to see it, a nursing mother is one of the most precious, most beautiful, and most holy of all possible images of woman. (source)
Comment policy: I moderate out spam. I don't moderate out rude idiots. Usually. Be too rude to regular readers and you're out. You can be as nasty as you like to me. Anonymous cowards are generally ignored by me but may be trashed at will by others; have the courage to own your words if you want people to take your arguments seriously.
Entries (RSS)
and Comments (RSS).
23 queries. 0.724 seconds.
September 13th, 2007 19:33
Hmmm. That’s one way to tell MY son and daughter apart, too.
Perhaps it’s that double X chromosome. a/k/a “The Contrary Gene”?
September 14th, 2007 01:09
Hey, mine too!
September 14th, 2007 08:28
That is hilarious. I look forward to making such distictions with my two soon.
September 14th, 2007 08:31
Sorry about the misspelling - distinctions — what can I say twin mommy brain is real — oh so real.