My name is: Matthew Robert
Mommy and Daddy’s special name for me: Sassifrass, Sassy, Tynes, Sassy-Tynes, Sweet Sassy Tynes, Sasser-sauce, Sassery-dassery-dock
My age: 18 months
My height: 33.94 inches (90th percentile)
My weight: 28 pounds, 0 ounces (75th percentile)
My biggest accomplishments in the last 6 months: Learning to walk and starting to talk. Mommy says I’ve decided to embrace my mischievous side and become a bit of a trouble maker.
When I grow up, I want to be: I’m not sure yet. I really love toys I can chew on. Maybe I’ll be a food critic? 😉
My favorite foods are: All of them. I’ll eat ANYTHING. Even non-food items. 🙂 I love juice, cheese, diced fruit, chicken nuggets, pasta, potatoes, hot dogs. The list goes on and on. There are very few foods that I don’t love.
I don’t like to eat: See the last question. 😉
My favorite toys are: Anything that I can shove in my mouth, cars, toys I can chew pieces off of.
My favorite “toys” of Mommy and Daddy’s are: Mommy’s phone, remote controls, the car keys, anything they’ve tried to put out of reach, the contents of the entertainment stand, the water in the toilet bowl, toilet paper. I really love getting into stuff they try to keep away from me. I guess that goes back to the mischievous thing Mommy talks about sometimes.
My favorite books are: Mommy doesn’t let me play with them much because she says books aren’t for eating.
My favorite things to do outside are: take walks with Papaw, run away from Mommy and Daddy, I’m not sure what else since it’s been a while since I could play outside.
My favorite things to do inside are: chase Ian, be chased by Ian, gnaw on my toys, and watch Little Einsteins.
My favorite things to do with Daddy: Splash in the bath
My favorite things to do with Mommy: Snuggle and hug
My vocabulary includes: Dada, thanks, bye, see ya, juice, bites, pat, blast off, dance, eyes, there it/he is, yay, whoa, down, go, no, yes, we did it, walk, night night, jump, ready-set-go, one-two-three-go
I don’t say as much as my big brother did at 18 months but that’s okay!
I like to “help” Mommy around the house by: Pulling out every single toy and making a giant mess!
When we travel I like to go: to Virginia to see Aunt Courtney, Uncle Jonathan and Andrew.
My favorite music to listen to on our road trips (or any other time in the car) is: whatever Mommy is listening to. I don’t care too much.
Right now I’m learning how to: feed myself with utensils, put things down without throwing them, and hear the word “no” without having a tantrum. Pretty hard stuff to do! All the same things my big brother was learning too!
I get very happy and excited when: Mommy & Daddy come home from work each night, snuggling with my blankets, watching Little Einsteins, eating dinner, drinking juice, and playing with Papaw.
I get mad when: Mommy & Daddy say “no” and when I have to wait too long for food.
I get scared when: I hear someone say “no” loud. It makes me really sad.
The best part about being a year and a half old is: being loved by so many people.
During the next year I hope to: Learn to say Momma and Grammy. Meet another cousin. Stop growing up so fast. My mommy put that last one in there for her. 🙂
Comments from the Mommy:
Matthew had his 18 month pictures about a month ago. The pictures above are some of the shots we got. Isn’t he adorable? 🙂 I call that 3rd picture his “bowl full of jelly” shot. It kind of fits since these were taken on Christmas Eve. 🙂
We took Matthew to his 18mo pediatrician appointment about a week and a half ago. He was REALLY good during the appointment. I think that was mostly because it coincided with his morning nap time and he felt pretty easy-going. He snuggled pretty much the entire time we sat in the examining room. He weighed in at 28lbs even (75th percentile) and 33.94 inches (90th percentile). He got the last of his vaccinations and his H1N1 booster shot. We go back in 6 months!
Can’t believe he’s already 18 months old! (19 months since I got this posted a month late!)
A group from our church was in Haiti doing some annual missionary work at an orphanage when the earthquake hit last Tuesday. Included in the group was the Pastor of our church, 2 high school students and a teachers aide from Ian’s preschool class. As you can imagine, our thoughts and prayers have been with the people in Haiti and particularly our church group as we watched the devastation unfold on the news and online.
Today, 12 of the 14 people from the group came home today. 2 other stayed behind to try to obtain passports and Visas for 2 children that the Pastor has been trying to adopt for years. At last word, Pastor, the other church member and the children had landed on US soil and were enroute to Buffalo.
Below is an article from the Buffalo News and a video from a local news station. The woman interviewed in the video is Ian’s preschool aide.
Tonawanda church group grateful to escape Haiti unscathed
Also thankful it can aid recovery
By Dan Herbeck
News Staff ReporterAt first, the Rev. Charles “Chuck” Whited wondered if his mind was playing tricks on him when a massive earthquake struck Haiti on Tuesday.
“I heard a wall crack. Then, I saw people running. Everything around me was shaking,” said Whited, a Town of Tonawanda pastor who is in Les Cayes, Haiti, with a missionary group this week.
“I got outside with my son, and everyone was running toward a soccer field. I felt wobbly, almost dizzy. Everything was waving back and forth. I thought maybe I was overheated because I didn’t drink enough water that day.”
It was a bizarre and scary experience, but Whited is thankful that he and 13 other members of the missionary group from First Trinity Lutheran Church walked away unscathed.
They arrived in Haiti on Monday — one day before the quake — for their annual visit to help out at the Children of Israel orphanage, which was adopted by the Town of Tonawanda church six years ago.
Whited, 50, was on the second floor of the orphanage when the quake hit.
Les Cayes is about 120 miles from the capital city of Port-au-Prince, where the earthquake did its most horrific damage and is believed to have killed tens of thousands.
Because of fears that an aftershock might cause the orphanage to collapse, the group slept outside Tuesday night, laying blankets on the stony ground. Since then, they have slept indoors.
“The Haitians were really cold that night, but we weren’t cold. We’re from Buffalo,” Whited said with a laugh.
“Buildings were damaged here, but what we’ve experienced here is nothing like what they have seen in Port-au-Prince,” said Whited, who spoke to The Buffalo News by telephone Thursday.
“We had eight to 10 aftershocks after the earthquake. A nonsupporting wall in the orphanage fell down, and we’ve been fixing that and some other damage. Some water lines were damaged, and we’ve been helping out with them, too.”
On the day of the quake, communications and the news media in Haiti were pretty much shut down. Members of the church Tonawanda group had to send text messages back home to try to get information about the damage.
Wednesday, the group was able to watch some TV reports, make some use of their cell phones and limited use of the Internet.
Thursday, church members spent part of their day unloading supplies at a crowded hospital in Les Cayes.
“I use the term ‘hospital’ loosely,” Whited said. “It’s the kind of place where, if you are a patient and you want something to eat and drink, your family has to bring it to you.”
In one way, Whited’s group caught a huge break. They flew in to Port-au-Prince on Monday before boarding a bus to Les Cayes.
“If the earthquake had come one day earlier, they would have been right in the middle of it,” said Jason Christ, director of student ministries at the church.
Members of First Trinity have been praying for Whited and his group since the quake hit Haiti.
“I was devastated when I heard about it. I’ve been so frightened for them,” said Susan Brese, the church’s choir director.
She said church members are praying for Whited for another reason.
For more than two years, Whited and his wife, Susan, have been trying to adopt two children from the orphanage, Lovelie, an 11-year-old girl, and Whisken, a 7-year-old boy.
The Whiteds have had an agonizing time working through Haiti’s complex adoption regulations.
They thought they were making some progress last year, but — in an incident unrelated to the adoptions — the Haitian lawyer who was helping them was kidnapped and murdered.
Whited said he was hoping to arrange to bring the children home with him this year, but the earthquake has made the situation much more difficult.
The pastor said all the paperwork he and his wife filled out may have been destroyed in the earthquake. He has been unable to reach any of the necessary Haitian officials to complete the adoptions.
“Unless some [government official] from the U.S. can help me, I don’t know what I’m going to do,” Whited said. “My understanding is that the earthquake is going to push the whole process back even further.”
In addition to team leader Sue Steege and the pastor, participants on the trip include the pastor’s son, Jon, a student at Christian Central Academy; Shannon Taylor, a student at North Tonawanda High School; her mother, Kim Taylor; Anne Miller; Dan and Renee Gietz; James Pyrak; Tina Allsop; Chelsea Olson; Sharon Wolff; Dale Jaenecke; and Zach Ashley.
Steege is now a veteran of two natural disasters.
In August 2005, she was in New Orleans, helping to organize a youth convention, when Hurricane Katrina blew into the city, killing more than 1,500 people and leaving tens of thousands homeless. Steege was stranded in New Orleans for several days.
The group is scheduled to return from Haiti to Tonawanda on Monday, but after the earthquake, church officials started making phone calls to try to help them fly home a few days early.
Steege halted that effort Thursday, sending Christ a text message saying nobody in the group wants to come home early. “Our feeling is that God has put us in this place at just this time,” Whited said. “We’re here to help and comfort the people of Haiti in every way that we can.”
The church at 1570 Niagara Falls Blvd. was open for prayers for Haiti Thursday evening, and a special prayer service will be held at 6:30 p.m. today.
When asked if she had anything to say to people in Buffalo, Steege sent a text message expressing the hope that this week’s tragic events will make people realize how much help Haiti — the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere — needs. “They often feel forgotten and ignored by the world,” Steege said of the Haitian people. “I am praying that God will use this to bring light to their darkness.”
Find this article at:
http://www.buffalonews.com/home/story/923134.html
News video of their homecoming:
Mom and I went with Rachel to Brides World 2010 yesterday.
I’m not so sure Rachel was ready to flaunt her Bride-to-Be status but the wedding vendors were ready for the fresh meat. The vendors nearly knocked me and mom out of the way to accost her. LOL
It was a good time. 😉
Rachel met her new BFF (the white haired gentleman):
She signed up the wedding party for tuxes and that required about 3 hugs from him. Like I said, BFFs. 😉
We practiced our self-portrait skillz when taking breaks from flyer-gathering and cake-sample-eating.
Rachel spun this wheel and ended up winning a voucher for $200 off limo service on her wedding day.
I took pictures of wedding cakes and dresses.
And we enjoyed 2 rounds of the fashion show.










