
Testing w/ a picture of my hunny bunny. But I don't know how to use Picasa.....
Testing..1...2...3...Testing
Perhaps you have read in Time and Wired magazines that Sonja's blog has reciently moved to a new server. This is a test to determine blogger.com's ability to post on this new server.
Regards,
Jeff M.
shortsited.com tech support
My tough little guy, Daniel
So you are probably wondering why Daniel is wearing this ninja-like headband in all these photos...
Today started out pretty normal. It was a good day to see the Lord's care in action!
While we were visiting after church, Jonathan & Daniel went to the pastor's yard (the parsonage is across a small parking lot) to play with their little boy, Elijah. I was talking to someone & Jonathan comes running in, "Mom! Mom!!! Come quick!! Daniel's hurt! He's bleeding!" (Jonathan sounded pretty scared) So I run out there, and Jef & Daniel are standing by the car and Daniel is screaming. Jef tells me Daniel got hit in the head with an aluminum bat. So we look at the wound and it it pretty deep. Thankfully his nose & eyes did not get hit at all - just his forehead! We weren't sure how deep it was, but it was bleeding pretty badly, as head wounds do. Daniel was just crying and crying. He said it hurt really bad. We decided to take him to the ER. I figured it would be better to be safe than sorry and they could at least give him something for the pain.
Poor Elijah felt really bad. It wasn't like he did it on purpose - I'm sure Daniel wasn't paying attention. He is wont to stand next to people and not realize what they are doing!! We told Pastor Greg & Michelle that we would call them and let them know what was going on.
The trip to the hospital was long. It is weird, I am sure it didn't take any longer than usual, it just seemed like it!! When we got there, Daniel & I checked in while Jef parked the car.
The check in process was quick! The lady said, "Hi! How can I help you?" and I said, "He has this" and pulled off the washrag I was holding to his forehead. She said, "Okay!", got his name, and sent us to a room right away. She was there in a couple minutes evaluating Daniel. She gave him Ibuprofen pretty quick. We found out he weighs about 70 pounds! :) After another nurse came and got our insurance info and such, we were taken back to the Mary Bridge Children's Hospital ER. Everyone was very nice. Dr. Blake came and looked at Daniel and decided he couldn't just glue it (someone had said that was probably what would happen) because the wound was too deep.
Daniel was such a brave trooper. He was asked a dozen times what had happened, and he would reply (through tears), "I got whacked by a bat!" Totally cracked us up!!!
I really liked the nurse who gave him the anesthetic, because she told him the truth. She said it shouldn't hurt (the anesthetic she was putting on), but that it might sting. It did sting, and Daniel cried. The wound was deeper than we knew. But the nurse was good, and got a lot of the stuff inside. In twenty minutes, Daniel was smiling again. :) Seeing him smile was such a relief! The dr. did a great job, putting in eight stitches in all - two on the inside and six little ones on the outside. He did his best to make it so the scar will not be bad. :) The resident dr. who helped told Daniel to tell people he got the scar "defending a lady's honor". Dr. Blake, who sewed him up, said to tell people they should see the other guy!! :)
God is so good to us!! He takes such care, even with the boys. We are so thankful Daniel isn't hurt more than a few stitches. And Daniel is fine now. He told me tonight his head hurts a little inside, but it is not bad. :) (I'm sure compared to the pain he felt earlier, a headache is NOTHING!) The thing that freaked him out the most was the blood (head wounds bleed a lot!). And he said he was glad he didn't get hit hard enough that he forgot EVERYTHING. :)
That was our day. We came home after the hospital, had Safeway Chinese with Tina & Kamali and just hung out. Oh, and we called the pastor's family back to let them know Daniel was ok, and to try and cheer up Elijah.
Be sure to check out all the pictures -- I posted some of the boys in their new clothes and some of a neat thing called an analemma.

Here you can see a little of the wound & the stitches.

A closer shot of the head wound - you can see it a little under the gauze.

another look at the shirts

Silly boys!! Jonathan is making faces, Daniel is just laughing (he is good at that!!) and Nicholas is doing the "Cheeeeeese!" from Wallace and Gromit.

running a race before bed

A closer look at the shirts. Jonathan has Buzz Lightyear (from "Toy Story 1 & 2") and Daniel has Dash (from "The Incredibles").

Our boys modeling their new clothes. We caught an awesome sale at the Disney Store. Notice that Jonathan is posing as Buzz Lightyear. :) We got each of them a shirt ($3 each!!), Daniel a pair of shorts, and Nicholas a pair of swim trunks (which he has insisted on wearing every day since then!). Nicholas' swim trunks are Buzz Lightyear, too. Daniel's outfit is Dash from "The Incredibles". :)

Nicholas modeling his new Pluto shirt ($2 at the Disney Store!!)

the goofball brothers (now you know why we call them that!!)
Analemma explained


If you took a picture of the Sun at the same time each day, would it remain in the same position? The answer is no, and the shape traced out by the
Sun over the course of a year is called an
analemma. The Sun's apparent shift is caused by the
Earth's motion around the Sun when combined with the
tilt of the Earth's rotation axis. The Sun will appear at its highest point of the
analemma during
summer and at its lowest during winter.
Analemmas created from different Earth
latitudes would appear at least slightly different, as well as
analemmas created at a different time each day.
See also -
Wikipedia and EPOD
~Analemma~

This very unusual
photograph was recorded by Dennis di Cicco on a single piece of film that was exposed on 45 different dates throughout an entire year in a permanently mounted camera (44 images were of the sun, with an additional exposure to include the house and tree). It shows the sun's position in the sky at the same time of day on each date.