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  1. You can blame the poison ivy thing on me… now I’ll break out because I read the words in your blog.

    Comment by Dad — May 11, 2007 @ 12:09 pm

  2. Oooooo, those arms do not look like they’re feeling good! I’ve been fortunate enough to avoid poison ivy my entire life… so far… probably due to an unreasonable fear of it. If it looks like it has “leaves of three”, I “let it be” by running in the opposite direction. =)

    Little girlies in their sunhats – can I say that’s a cute picture? Are you tired of the word “cute” yet?

    Comment by Angela — May 11, 2007 @ 5:01 pm

  3. Dad: THANK YOU! :)

    Angela: You are so lucky! And no, my arms do not feel good at all! And having the baby makes it worse; holding her, picking her up, etc. Yuck!

    Also, no, I never get tired of the word cute. I use it at least two hundred times a day. Yikes! Those hats were super cute!

    Comment by Rebecca — May 11, 2007 @ 6:23 pm

  4. Cute pic! Oh and by the way…TAG!

    Comment by Marisa — May 11, 2007 @ 8:35 pm

  5. … and sure enough, I did…

    Comment by Dad — May 13, 2007 @ 5:53 pm

  6. Um, not sure how I feel about women breastfeeding in public. I guess it should be done discreetly, but there probably shouldn’t be a law against it. I guess I’ve never seen a problem with women using breastfeeding as an excuse to wave their body parts around. I wonder how this even came to be an issue?

    I don’t get poison ivy! Every year I test just to make sure and roll around in it. The other day I petted some with both hands while on a walk in the woods. Come to think of it, a week later I WAS a little itchy on one forearm. Hrm.

    Comment by Ben — May 16, 2007 @ 4:36 pm

  7. Thanks for your comment, Ben.

    a) I don’t know how nursing in public became an issue. Some uptight people must have decided it was a problem and then the herd mentality took over. No mother wants to expose herself at the mall/ballgame/restaurant- she is just feeding her child. End of story. I wish more women would do it so that breastfeeding is seen as normal.

    b) You are incredibly lucky. Poison ivy is no fun at all. Be forewarned, however, I’ve heard that immunity can come and go throughout life…

    Comment by Rebecca — May 17, 2007 @ 3:22 pm

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