On wednesday, Gabbie and Rafa will be part of their Tito RJ's wedding. They will be flower girls. They have the same gown style, so I got them matching shoes.
Monday, April 22, 2013
Sunday, April 14, 2013
National Siblings Day
I've seen some of my friends in facebook post photos of them with their siblings and they captioned them with #nationalsiblingsday (yes, hashtagged like that) so I'm posting some pictures (in the iPad) of my girls doing things they both enjoy doing, aside from posing in front of the camera. Enjoy!
Wednesday, April 10, 2013
Rafa's New Bike
No more dangerous rides on ate's bike, she now has her own. I just got it this morning and she's like glued to it already. Looks like we're gonna have everyday walk around the village, morning and afternoon.
Tuesday, April 09, 2013
Summer activity
Taekwondo, for a change.
One time, Gabbie and her friends were playing hide and seek. When it was her turn to be "taya", she threw a fit. Tantrums galore. I asked why, and she said because she didn't want to be "taya".
Later that night, I explained to her that it's ok to be "taya", that in every game, there's a winner, there's a loser. She protested. I heard a lot of "I don't want to be a loser!" screams. I told her it's ok to be a loser sometimes, but she has to do her best the next time she joins any game so that she will become a winner.
For a child who has no idea or concept of losing, it was hard to explain. So I kept on explaining to her every time she lost in "bato bato pick" or even in simple activities like finishing the food or dressing up.
This summer, instead of enrolling her to a swimming class, we tried taekwondo for a change. We're hoping that through this sport, she will learn to control her emotions and will appreciate how it is to lose and strive to do her best to eventually win.
One time, Gabbie and her friends were playing hide and seek. When it was her turn to be "taya", she threw a fit. Tantrums galore. I asked why, and she said because she didn't want to be "taya".
Later that night, I explained to her that it's ok to be "taya", that in every game, there's a winner, there's a loser. She protested. I heard a lot of "I don't want to be a loser!" screams. I told her it's ok to be a loser sometimes, but she has to do her best the next time she joins any game so that she will become a winner.
For a child who has no idea or concept of losing, it was hard to explain. So I kept on explaining to her every time she lost in "bato bato pick" or even in simple activities like finishing the food or dressing up.
This summer, instead of enrolling her to a swimming class, we tried taekwondo for a change. We're hoping that through this sport, she will learn to control her emotions and will appreciate how it is to lose and strive to do her best to eventually win.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)