Sunday, December 28, 2008

Christmas 2008


This was Abby's first Christmas. We spent it with Jen's family in Washington state where we enjoyed an unusually white Christmas. Olympia hasn't had this much snow since the 1980s. We barely got into town and once we got to her folks house we were snowed in for days.
Below are Kevin (Jen's brother) and his son Noah, and Brent (Jen's brother) and Nicole (his wife) holding Abby. Isn't this snow man awesome?

Abby received lots of little gifts, including this Alphabet Train that teaches the ABCs.I received a Fossil brand BYU watch. Go Cougs!
Jen's favorite gift was a tempo watch (a fancy shmanshy conductor's tool that tells you how fast you are conducting--the opposite of a metronome).
And midway through our visit Jen's sister gave Jen a new look--how do you like the short hair? Now she and Abby have the same style. I think short hair is hot, but you have to be beautiful to pull it off (see example below).
Well, we've got a few more days on our little trip here in Washington--I'll keep you informed if anything interesting happens, or if I find a useful video among the 200 clips people recorded. We had three cameras (often taking video) and three high def video cameras taking shots here on Christmas day. I think we've got every angle imaginable, but its a beast to sort through. Note to self--take fewer and shorter videos.

Friday, December 5, 2008

Abby in High Def, sort of...

Well, we got a high definition camcorder with the cash Jen made conducting for Ballet Arizona and the Phoenix Symphony. This is our first clip; unfortunately, I blogger cannot handle the high def format and youtube converts it into something a little less clear than standard definition. So, the clip below isn't as sharp as what appears on my screen, but I thought you might appreciate an update on Abby's crawling speed.


Thursday, December 4, 2008

Trying New Things

Does this look like the face of a child who eats cockroaches?
Maybe not, but when we found this today all the parts were not there.
Last weekend we visited my parents in Southern California. We went down to the beach and rode a trolley along the shoreline.

Abby rode on a carousel with my mom. She likes to experiment and try new things (see cockroach photo above), but this was a scary experience for her.

Thursday, November 20, 2008

More on Abby

At just over 9 months old, Abby is growing bigger and stronger (she now weighs 14 lbs.). She drinks her milk (almost exclusively--a frustrating story of its own) to build strong bones and muscles, and to get a little extra bulk she knocks out two dozen pull ups each morning.
With her now found strength she terrorizes the house. She is particularly fond of the closet, and does her best to unfold all the sweaters, disorganize the shoes, and pull down any hanging items that she can reach.
Fortunately, she is so cute that we dont mind. Her brown hair with a touch of copper is beautiful, and all the grown men in the ward fawn all over her. My biggest concern is the older toddler boy I've seen her flirting with at church--Tommy (See "Dave & Tiffany" on our blogging buddies). Dave, I've got my eye on him!
So, on to other things (for the one or two people who care)... Life is going well. Its very busy. Jen is wrapping up the semester with both schoolwork and her choirs. She's been a little ill lately but is starting to recover and in just a couple weeks she can rejoice in knowing there is very little schoolwork remaining (I think she needs one more class next semester). I just finished the defense of my prospectus, which means I advanced to candidacy and now have nothing more to do in school except write my dissertation (and teach classes). I've been doing interviews with folks and will continue to do that for the next few weeks, and then I've got to start producing. I am presenting at a prestigious conference in March and am a bit nervous that I've not yet finished the research. I am enjoying the work. In church things are going about as usual. Jen just finished up a large stake youth choir and incorporated all our musical friends into the production. We are excited for next month when we spend Christmas in Washington with all of Abby's cousins. We can't wait for her first Christmas. As usual, we'll do Thanksgiving with my family in Los Angeles, and my mom will love to show off Abby. I feel like the too many balls I've been juggling are slowly reducing in number--and that is a relief. For Jen, it appears, she's got to wait a few more weeks for that respite.


Sunday, November 2, 2008

Dad wins the race to Abby's first word! Here is the evidence:



Halloween










Tuesday, October 14, 2008

Abby is too cute


Heather's Wedding

Last weekend we drove out to California for my sister's wedding. Heather married Brandon Urry, so now it appears that the perpetuation of our family surname is up to Jen and I. Anybody know any boys up for adoption? Below are some photos from the weekend, in no particular order, and a professional photo of Abby we took last week.


We call this one "Gangsta Abby"


Abby and her grandparents (Jen's side), Mark & Karen

Isnt Jen GORGEOUS?

Brandon's sisters

Here is Heather with our parents, Granny, Jen & Abby

Brandon tried to eat Abby--she is that cute.


Brandon's family--he's the only boy.

My old best friend from junior high & high school, Harry, drove in from Sacramento with his wife, Lisa, and their three children.


How is it possible for a woman to be this beautiful?






Uh-Oh. Jen has some competition in the beauty competition...


Brandon & Heather


Saturday, October 4, 2008

More on Politics

How about a quick review of historical patterns of economic growth and depression in the US?

1820s – 1830s economic growth stemmed from the market revolution (expanding production & proto-consumerism); John Quincy Adams’ pro-growth “American System” sparked economic growth by dumping state and federal dollars into internal improvements, heavily taxing imports, and highly regulating economic policy. GOVERNMENT INVOLVEMENT = ECONOMIC GROWTH.

1837 – 1842 economic depression stemmed from Jacksonian era deregulation and speculative banking practices. LACK OF GOVERNMENT INVOLVEMENT = ECONOMIC DEPRESSION.

1840s-1880s economic growth and polarization of social classes stemmed from (1) government subsidized industrialization (ex. US gov paid for transcendental railroad with land grant and massive loans to big business) and (2) government's alliance with moneyed interests to put down labor organizations. GOVERNMENT INVOLVEMENT = ECONOMIC GROWTH.

1865-1890s economic stagnation in the South occurred as millions of dollars in property (slaves) disappeared and the region resisted the market revolution that transformed the north forty years previous. In this case, government involvement technically led to economic depression but only because it was government who freed the slaves.

1929-40 – depression followed ramped unregulated growth; Hoover’s hands off policy, even after the crash of 1929, demonstrated that LACK OF GOVERNMENT INVOLVEMENT = ECONOMIC DEPRESSION.

1945-70s – cold war growth as the US government dumped tons of cash into the military industrial complex. GOVERNMENT INVOLVEMENT = ECONOMIC GROWTH.

2008 – Crash following thirty years of deregulation in energy, transportation, communications, and banking. LACK OF GOVERNMENT INVOLVEMENT = ECONOMIC DEPRESSION.

So, what is the pattern?

I’m so sick of empty rhetoric arguing that the economy does best when government stays out; it simply isn’t true. American history shows clearly that the economy does best when Congress and the President work to regulate and guide the economy, often dumping federal tax dollars into various sectors.

Conversely, “trickle-down economics” (the idea that lessening taxes on big business with strengthen the economy and trickle down to the middle and poor classes) doesn’t work.

The only time the non-rich get any help is when government uses social programs to give back to the working classes what big business has unfairly appropriated through unrestrained capitalism. No, I don’t advocate communism, but no matter how good you are at a job you don’t deserve to make tens of millions of dollars a year more than others. You’re not that good—nobody is. The wealthy don’t deserve to jump to the top of transplant lists, they don’t deserve to live longer than everyone else because they have better health insurance (paid for by money they appropriated from the working classes), and they don’t deserve to more money than they know how to spend. When we look at all the high paid CEOs and how they get paid ridiculous salaries (many as they drive companies into the ground) I can help but think (1) "do they really deserve those inflated salaries," and (2) “is this the best use of money?" The answer is no.

Monetary value isn’t created by speculators on Wall Street; at its most basic root it stems from labor and resources—labor put in by working class Americans. High prices and low salaries allow big business to appropriate the value of the working classes' labor; however, through systems like social security and a national health care plan that hard earned wealth can be returned to the people who created it and truly deserve it. That sounds not only fair, but economically wise when we consider how beneficial government involvement in the economy has proven.

Think about it.

Saturday, September 27, 2008

Today at the Phoenix Zoo

Today the Smithsonian sponsored a free museum day across the nation and that translated into free tickets to many places, including the Phoenix Zoo. Here are a few photos.








And this photo from last Sunday was just too cute to leave out. Abby is such a big girl!