Author: marga (Page 81 of 158)

Cool Kids Soap Kit

coolsoap.jpgWell, I did end up going to Michael’s yesterday afternoon and buying the Cool Kids Soap Kit. At a about $10, I couldn’t resist. (Note that the kit is priced about $20 – but there are usually 40% off coupons on Michael’s ads, so you can get them for about $12, cheaper than online and no need to pay for shipping).
The kit comes with a block of transparent soap, a block of white soap, a small bottle of scent (Mika doesn’t really like it), three dies (blue, red & yellow), one plastic mold for 6 soaps (the ones pictured on the box), a loaf of daisy soaps and a loaf mold so you can surround those daisies with clear soap and then cut it into slices.
What the kit DOES NOT CONTAIN is any type of clear instructions. There is one badly photocopied page, that tells you how to melt the soap and how to make the daisy loaf. There are no real instructions on how to make the soap bars, however. Basically what it says is to melt the soap, add scent & color and pour into the mold – but that will not leave you with the two color soaps the box depicts. To do that, melt 2 squares of soap (either white or transparent), it takes about 10-15 seconds in the microwave. Add a couple of drops of scent and color, and then *very carefully* pour into the recess of the mold where the protruding figure is. If you spill some outside the figure, let it harden a little and then carefully cut the excess with the side of a teaspoon. Spray a little bit of rubbing alcohol over the figure (to prevent air pockets and to help it adhere to the rest of the soap). Once the figure has hardened, then melt 5 squares of soap, scent and color it, and pour it into the mold on top of the figure. Wait about 30′ for the soap to harden before taken it out. To do so, press on the mold evenly and carefully.
This is all based on the instructions for the Life of the Party Soap Designs Kit that I bought before – and that worked pretty well for the soap I made yesterday.
What I don’t know is how to make the transparent soap be dual color as the box shows some of the soap bars being. Perhaps you add the coloring to the soap solution, but don’t mix it in? I may try it in a future soap.
In any case, Mika and I had fun making two bars of soap this morning. We’ll unmold them and take pictures of them when she comes home from school. The only problem is that it doesn’t take long to make a bar of soap, so it’s not an activity we can do for a long period of time. Of course, if it was too long, she’d get bored as well. So I need to find some activities that last longer but not too long. Any suggestions?

Life of the Party Kits – Lotions & Soaps

spa.jpgFor Christmas, I got Mika Scientific Explorer’s Spa Science Chemistry Kit, a kit that lets you make a bunch of beauty products: oatmeal masks & soaps, bath fizzies & perfurmed salts. Mika was sort of interested and Camila enjoyed it very much, and I liked it too. Making those things is not too far from cooking, a matter of mixing things together, so I can get into it.
I decided to try other kits, so I’d have activities to do with the kids, and I bought Life of the Party Lip Balm & Lotion Kit. That wasn’t as fun, as all you do is melt the lipbalm solution and then add coloring and perfume, or just add color & perfume to the pre-made lotion. We have a lot of lip balm & lotion around, and it entertained Mika for a while, but it wasn’t worth the $21 price tag (though I bought it at Michael’s with one of their weekly 40% off one item coupons). It just wasn’t that fun.
lotion.jpgYesterday, Michael had a 50% off one item coupon (good only yesterday and today), so I decided to go and buy another kit. I settled on Life of the Party Soap Designs Kit because it seemed the most fun of the different soap kits they had there. This kit consists of a block of transparent soap, a block of white soap, one perfume, three colors (the box said yellow, green and red, but I actually got burgundy, red and green), a flimsy plastic mold with 4 shapes (rectangular, square, circle and rectangle) and 4 soap cutters (big heart, small heart, leaf and flower). These are made of metal, and are pretty thick and sharp – also small enough to fit within small to standard size soap bars. In other words, they are smaller than the cookie cutters you may have at home.
What you do is melt the transparent soap, add color & perfume, let it set, cut with the cookie cutters. Place the cut figures on the mold, then melt some white soap and pour it on the mold with the figures. Then you let it set.
I like that there are a few steps on making the soap – it feels like you are really making it – and you get to express some of your creativity in decorating the soap (though we followed the pictures from the box, not too successfully). So all in all this was a good kit and a good value at $12 after tax & the coupon.
I wonder if I could convince Mike to go back to Michael’s and get another kit today (with another 50% off coupon). I’m thinking of this one: Cool Kids Soap Kit
Even though it’s not comestics, I’m also thinking of getting Scientific Explorer’s Mind Blowing Science Kit for Young Scientists, because they have it at Michael’s and I have the coupon.

Daycare & Preschool (mine, that is)

Both my father and mother worked from the time I was a baby. I don’t know when my dad started working in Propulsora Siderúrgica, a steel plant (I guess), but before that he worked with my mother in the LEMIT (which I still remember stands for “Laboratorio de Ensayos y Materiales e Investigaciones Tecnológicas”). The Lemit was located right outside La Plata, a mile or two from where the bosque ended. My mom, who quit studying chemical engineering after a few years, and ended up with a degree on criminological social work, worked in lab’s library. I’ve no idea what she did there, but I remember going there as a child a couple of times. It was a large (but isn’t everything large to a small child?) tidy library, filled with reports and things of the sort. What I most remember was a ceramic ashtray which one of us had made in ceramic class and given to my mother. She didn’t smoke, so it must have been used by someone else.
You have to remember that I grew up in Argentina during a time of both social upheaval as well as great social schisms. Young people had associated themselves in large networks and groups with the objective of making significant economic and social changes. Some of that work consisted on teaching and helping people in the slums – a lot of it had to do with raising consciousness, but a couple of the main leftist groups had decided to take up arms in their struggle. Meanwhile, the right had formed a death squad to go after leading intellectuals, union leaders and other “lefties”. The majority of the lefty group members did not participate in any violence, but there were enough kidnappings, murders (including the one of a former military president) and bombings done by both sides to add to an atmosphere of terror and confusion. As a five, six, seven year old child I didn’t understand anything at all – but I knew that the Montoneros (the largest of the leftist groups) were dangerous, bad people, who put bombs. Indeed, it has taken many years, much reading and several former montonero friends to get rid of those prejudices. That which we learned in childhood, is difficult to do away with.

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More memories of La Quinta

My little sister – who was born 15 years after me and in the United States, and thus did not share my childhood in any way – called me earlier and told me she wanted to read my memories, learn how these lives in that country that she does not share were like. How we were like. So here I am, writing again, digging into the recesses of my mind for some tenuous memories. We’ll see what I find.

First of all, corrections. My mother – who also read my blog – says that the patio criollo was not the patio behind the house, but the one at the back of the lot. It was built by my grandfather and my uncle Tití. Tití was my mother’s older brother. She’s the third of eight children. I’ll talk more in the future, I’m sure, about her families and the memories she related to me.  Tití studied medicine and my mother studied chemical engineering (one of two women in that major – she never finished, but that, again, is another story). They were close in age and in topics, and I think they sometimes studied together. During those college years, they seemed to have been close.

After Tití graduated from college/medical school (there is no difference in Argentina, you start medical school as soon as you graduate from high school), he enlisted in the Argentine Navy as a pediatrician. He got married, moved to Punta Alta (near Bahía Blanca, one of the main Navy ports), had four children. In my childhood, I saw him only a very few times. Once, perhaps twice, we went to visit him in Punta Alta. The first time – I’m not sure there was a second time – was when I was 8 years old and we went to Bariloche on vacation. Bariloche being this beautiful town, in the even more beautiful Nahuel Huapí lake. There are tall mountains, glaciers, national parks. We went there with Michaela in our first family trip to Argentina, back in 2003. But I digress. Again.

Tití lived in what I remember being a small apartment in the base. He was still a lieutenant. In the Argentina Navy (and I imagine in other Navies as well), the higher your rank, the nicest your home. Or at least it was back then. I remember my tía Lelé and my cousin Fernando (who perhaps one day will read these words, I haven’t talked to him in 3 decades but I googled him once and found some postings from him in English). I remember that we got to visit one of the Navy ships. It was large, but all I can picture is the deck. I also remember that we got a kilo of ice cream. Ice cream in Argentina is very expensive (more expensive than in the US, even though people earn ten times less than here). It had many flavors, it was a treat. And then, the only other thing I can picture are some swings, perhaps a slide, in the green outside his house. It was probably a cloudy day. It was December 1978.

Tití, Lelé and Fernando (his three younger daughters were to be born later) came to La Plata a few times. Probably for Christmas, which was when my aunt Beatriz and my two favorite cousins, Marito and Marina, came to visit us as well. I remember how each of them looked, but I don’t remember playing with Fernando. We must have, though.

Many, many years later, after I got involved in human rights and started the work that consumes me on the “disappeared” in Argentina, I was to wonder how much my uncle knew of what was going on in the Navy while he was there (and he was to be there for many more years). Did he know about the abductions in the middle of the night? of the tortures, the secret detention camps, the mass killings? How could a man like my uncle, nice and gentle, a doctor committed to saving children’ lives know and remain in that force? But then again, how could he not know? Everybody knew – most everybody in the Navy took part in the extermination plans. I never got to ask him, but I knew he would have dismissed the question.

Tití died a few years ago, of a sudden heart attack. So had my grandfather three decades earlier when he was a few years older. Despite the doubts, I mourned him. The man he was and that I remember with affection.

I don’t remember if Tití was there that fateful day when our lives were to change forever. The day my baby sister (for she was only 9 month old) got sick. It was January 1973. I would turn 4 in May. So little, and yet I have a couple of images burnt in my mind. One is of someone saying that Iaia (as she named herself later, when she started talking) had eaten some leaves from the ligustro, the hedge that separated the patio from the area I described earlier with the swing and the kumquat tree. I also remember someone (Tití?) giving her a baby bottle with coca-cola – which, I guess, was thought to have medicinal purposes. In any case it wouldn’t help. Days later Gabriela would be diagnosed with hemolytic-uremic syndrome and my family’s odyssey of hospitals, dialysis and transplants, would begin. And that will also be another story.

But as I’m still here, one of my girls is in school and the other in a play-date, I think I’ll stay in the casa quinta and my toddlerhood some more.

What more can I tell you? Remember? Lili for one. She was the girl – she must only have been 12 years old or so – who babysat us from time to time. She lived in the house next to the fondo of our property. I think there might have been a chain-link fence between us. I know that they raised chickens. I don’t remember Lili well, I can only picture her long black hair, in a ponytail. My only memory of her was my mother being concerned that she would pass on a cold that she had once. I wonder if Camila will remember Jennifer, our occasional babysitter, when she grows up. Unlikely.

As I think I mentioned in my last post, there was also Doña Petrona, who lived down the dirt road from us. From the time I was walking, I’d go to her house to buy eggs. I can picture myself in her patio once, but I may have been older. I remember that I had a special monedero, or coin purse, where I had the money to pay for the eggs. I picture it as big – and of course it would have been big to me – with a standard trapezoid shape, light blue. But that image could be of any of the many purses I saw through the years. In any case, I do remember I loved that monedero.

I want to say that I was five when I was invited to some girl’s birthday party. My mother bought a set of colored bracelets as a gift. I wanted them. Badly. I probably even threw a tantrum about them. My mother offered a deal, I could keep the bracelets and give the girl my purse. I agreed. I had the bracelets for quite a while, I think, but I continue to mourn that monedero.

I only remember playing with children once when I lived (or was it later? when we visited?) in that house. I remember a brown-haired boy. He might have lived in the big house in the corner, the one with the well-kept lawn and the dog house (I think that was the only dog house I’d see in person during my childhood, thus it’s impact). But he might have belonged to one of the other houses down the road. I have no idea what his name was. And all I remember is the story I told yesterday, of finding a caterpillar in a tree and being afraid to touch it, lest it hurt us. To this day I’m afraid of touching caterpillars (not that I’ve seen many since), because doing so would hurt. I think I did it once and it did hurt. And wanting to prove my memories right, I just looked it up, and indeed contact with a caterpillar can be painful (and even dangerous).

Another memory of the time is of being hurt emotionally rather than physically. And my fault too. I didn’t have many books when I was growing up. Books in Argentina are expensive (just as expensive as here, and again, people make 10x less). But my parents had bought me one of a little girl whom they called “la llorona” (the cry baby). I liked the book because the cover had one of those whatevers that changes faces when you look at it from a different angle. I had another one of those books as well, which also brought me tears.

The llorona was a girl who cried whenever she did not get her way (hmm, that reminds me of Camila). One day she cries because she wants the moon and can’t get it. So her parents bring her a bowl of water, on which the moon reflects – but when she goes to grab it, the water moves and the image breaks. I don’t remember how the story ended – it has been at least 35 years – but I cherished the book. And one day I lost it. How, I don’t remember, but I remember looking for it amidst the tall grasses in the zanjas (ditches) by the road. I didn’t find it, my parents were probably mad, I was (and still am!) sad.

The other book with the shifting face, one that I can still picture, I think I got later. It was the story of a clown and a little dog. The part I remember was that there was a big fire in the circus, and the clown passed out, but the little dog saved him by pulling him out by his cloth. But the little dog couldn’t escape the fire, and died. My god, what a horrible story! What the hell was the writer thinking? I remember crying and crying when my father read it to me (just liked I cried in Bambi, another horrible story to show little children). So my father made up an alternative ending. He told me that the clown cried so much over the little dog, that his tears made him come back to life. I told you my dad was a nice man 🙂

Are there any other stories of la quinta? I remember one time when Gabriela (Iaia) fell on an red ant-hill. It could have been me.

I also remember the bathtub where my mother would bathe us. It was made of hule, I think, which the dictionary translates as oil cloth. It had long wooden legs so that my mother didn’t have to kneel to wash us. I think I have a picture of me in it. But most often, I would take baths at my grandmother’s (granny’s) house, sometimes with my father. My grandmother had a sponge which I think was real, it was very big and had a strange texture. She had a hand shower. After the bath there was talcum powder.

Someone, perhaps granny, made me a one-piece pajama that opened up in the butt (so you can put the child in the toilet without taking the whole pajama off, which in a cold night, can be very uncomfortable for the kid). I wonder who got that pajama after I outgrew it. But the stories of granny’s and Glady’s house, some of my most cherished ones, should come later. Now, I’m still at the quinta.

-My mother washing our diapers in the sink, which was outside. Later she’d complain about the cold water. Did we have warm water in La Quinta?

-My siblings and I taking all the labels off the can food – my mother was not amused as she had to open them without knowing what was inside.

-We playing with all the pots and pans and making music. But there is a picture of that, so maybe it’s not a memory.

-My looking forward to my sister being born (it couldn’t have been my brother, he is only 17 months younger than I), so that we could play the little train.

-Drinking a bottle with hot chocolate. David would drink strawberry milk and Gabriela plain milk. There is also a picture of the three of us with baby bottles in our mouths. I was pretty old to be drinking out of a bottle. One time, in preschool, the teacher told us that if we didn’t give up the pacifiers, a witch would come and take them away. I remember waiting for the witch by the main door, with a broom in hand, waiting to fight her off.

-The story of Doña Flora, who put a box of eggs in the oven, and next time she knew, she had chicks.

One thing I don’t remember is having little chicks myself. My mother says that she got me cute little yellow chicks when I was little, and I loved to touch them and chase them around. But they grew up and became ugly, and I cried asking where my pollitos were. Today, I wonder where my babies went.

It’s weird, you have this little thing that needs you so much, and that you love and care for, and one day, without you realizing it, she is gone. The feelings I have for my girls today are different from those I had from my babies, so when I look at the pictures I can’t really recognize them as the same. It is as if someone had taken away my babies. I think that may be the reason why some women keep having children.

Ack! I just realized I need to pick up Mika in 10 minutes. I was supposed to start dinner at 2 pm and now it’s almost 3. I guess we’ll be eating pretty late 🙁

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