I just tucked little Addie in bed after another sweetly ordinary sequence of nightly rituals.
1st: read 2-3 books.
2nd: read scriptures.
3rd: get a train ride on daddy's back to the bathroom for teeth brushing and pottying.
4th: family prayer.
5th: dad helps her do a huge jump into bed.
6th: I lay next to her and tell her a bedtime story (usually a new adventure of Light-bulb and Pom Pom, two characters we made up that live in an oven at the dump. Cute, huh?)
7th: She tells me about a new kind of animal that she's made-up, right down to what color its nose is. Usually its a variety of animal that she calls a Buffer. Buffers, according to Addie, like to live with people and people let them into their houses. The New Buffer, as I have been told, has black fur, a red tail, and yellow eyes.
And then she's ready to go to sleep. I love age 3.
So, the exciting news for today is that our new oven finally arrived! After two failed attempts by Sears to properly order and deliver it and two months without an one, we have a victory. I have gotten handy with a crock pot and electric skillet, but I sure have missed pizza and muffins and stove-top popcorn and pasta and cookies and bread and so many other things. We are still in the process of hooking it up (after 8 hours and 4 trips to Home Depot we're still working on it...who knew it could be so complicated?) so I haven't been able to use it yet, but just having one in the house is a good feeling. Yay for civilization!
Addie has been in to drawing pictures of monsters lately. See:


(I drew the first two on this one, and then she drew the potato monster and pickle monster.)
This one is of our family. I drew her with the giant candy cane and then she drew me (with a giant bagel) and daddy.She makes me laugh with her drawings- she's into potatoes, mustaches and eyeballs. She did a monster birthday party one for my dad and drew a big cake with eyeballs all over it. I should scan that one, too. She makes me laugh with the funny things she says, too. Here's a few I remembered to write down before I forgot them:
I asked her what she wanted for lunch the other day, and she answered, " A buy one get one free burrito." She's a lot like her dad in many ways.
We talk about the baby sometimes and what he'll be like. We were talking about him last week when she said, "I will teach the baby how to exercise and how to eat." That's really all a baby needs to know, I guess.
We were in St. George a few weekends ago for a short, last-minute work trip for J. All three of us slept in one big bed. One night, as we all climbed into bed, Jason said, "I need a back rub." Instantly Addie replied, "I'm too tired, Honey."
Addie's big into knock-knock jokes these days, but she hasn't quite got the idea yet. Here's an example: Knock knock. Who's there? Bowl (or whatever she sees in the room). Bowl who? Let us out, it's cold in here! Or she'll mix up the punch line and say, "Get me out of this rice!" Or another common one is, "Get me out of these mashed potatoes!" And then she giggles so hard, and so do the rest of us, but not because its a funny joke. How dull our lives were before Addie came along!