Today, I received a book that Ayumi had ordered for me from Amazon—two-day delivery from Seattle, Washington to our door!—on Early Communication Skills for Children with Down Syndrome, by Libby Kumin. It looks to be excellent, and hopefully will give us (and Justin) a head start on the months and years to come, but it's also daunting, and not a little enervating, even to peek into. Meantime, as you can see from these images, Justin continues to thrive. It's just a pity he thinks he's a bat: having slept pretty much continuously from 3-8pm today, he's now awake and set to snuffle through the early night-shift...
[Note: this piece is not about about my family, nor does it involve literary or musical criticism. I’m not anticipating any attractive illustrations or other lures, and no musical accompaniment either. So if that’s what you came for, look away now. There will be more such articles in the future, I hope, but this is not one of them. You have been been warned.] Tokushima Naruto Whirlpool (Shikoku Excursion) Events of the last few days have left me, both literally and figuratively, in a painfully disordered state of mind. In plain English, I’m stressed, and my head aches. Actually, it twinges, rather than aches, but the precise description matters little; at all events, the pain ‘comes and goes’, as they say. (Where pain goes to, when it goes, is a puzzle in itself. I have this anthropomorphised image of Pain, like some peripatetic poison dwarf, doing the rounds of the neighbourhood: “Hi, Nigel didn’t want me this hour, so I’ve decided to drop in on you for a while. Don’t worry thoug
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