T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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21.1 | | CHCLAT::HAGEN | Please send truffles! | Wed Jun 13 1990 10:20 | 12 |
| There is a BROAD range for this, but I believe most kids start walking
unaided between 10 and 18 mos.
Matt cruised the furniture for a LONG time and I didn't think he'd ever
walk on his own, even though I was sure he COULD, if he just tried. Then
one day, about 2 weeks before his first birthday, he just started walking
down the hall from the living room into the bedroom, as though it was
nothing out of the ordinary.
� �ori
|
21.2 | I "DON'T" want to see JA walking "early"! | HPSCAD::DJENSEN | | Wed Jun 13 1990 10:34 | 25 |
|
Most of our friends' kids took their first "stroll" unassisted days
before their first birthday! So 12 months seems to be the average,
with a few kids a little sooner and several kids a little later
(or so "I" think!).
JA is also cruising, standing, climbing, swinging, running in her
pink Cadillac, etc. ... but she, too, won't dare take that first
"unassisted" step! And I'll tell you, I'm not encouraging her, as she
wears me out from everything she's doing "just shy of WALKING"! God, I
can't imagine the trouble that's going to follow her once she starts
walking!
Also, she'll stay in her playpen for an hour or so every other hour or
so ... and I think that's because she likes to cruise the playpen.
Once she's walking, I doubt she'll want a 40" square diameter! The
playpen is the ONLY SANITY time I get these days and I'll cry the day
she gives it up and gains infinite freedom!
I wonder if I can slow down her "walking milestone" by tieing her
ankles together? (only kidding!).
Dottie
|
21.3 | It will happen/some ideas | MAJORS::MANDALINCI | | Wed Jun 13 1990 10:39 | 30 |
| Pam,
IT will hapen in time - don't woory.
If you want to encourage him, maybe move some of the objects he use for
support further apart from each other so he has to take a step to go
from one to the next. Our coffee table was right in front of the couch
and Berk used to go from one to the other without a step. One day after
vaccuuming I didn't put the table back so close. It did confuse him and
he face planted a couple times on the couch but he very quickly learned
to take the step on his own. When my son was getting upright mobility
was really went crazy child-proofing the house and found we removed a
number of things, making some things further apart.
About running versus walking - all kids do that. They get so excited
they topple over. They just don't know that they have to move their
legs at the same pace. I remember talking very calmly to my son when he
started walking slone so he had a slower rhythm to walk with. I found
if I wasn't all smiles, grins and "come to Mommy" with clapping hands
and all the hoop-la, he didn't get outwardly excited himself and
concentrated on walking and not wanting to "run" to a very excited
parent. Then he got plenty of praise when he made it to me. I also
encouraged walking to (stationary, non-moveable) objects and not
always a person.
Don't worry. It will happen soon enough and you'll be wondering where
he toddled off to now the moment your back is turned.
Andrea
|
21.4 | | JAZZ::CHANG | | Wed Jun 13 1990 11:07 | 9 |
| Pam,
Eric cruised the furniture since he was 9 months old. I thought
he will be walking by 1 year old. But he didn't do it until he
was 14 months old. Be patient, it will happen anytime. Every
baby is different.
Wendy
|
21.5 | Peer Pressure Worked For Us | HPSRAD::CARN | | Wed Jun 13 1990 11:51 | 10 |
| Julia cruised at 9 months and we too thought she would be walking
very soon. However she seemed afraid to take that first unaided
step. AT 15 months our childbirth class had a reunion. All the
other children were walking. As soon as she saw the other kids
she stood up and started to walk on her own. From that day on
she walked.
Ron
|
21.6 | It definitely varies... | VAXUUM::FONTAINE | | Wed Jun 13 1990 12:06 | 19 |
| Pam,
Drew was "cruising" the furniture at 7 mos. and standing unassisted in
the middle of the room alone at 9 1/2 mos. He's got good balance but
now, at just 10 mos. he's contented standing alone. He has a look on
his face as if to say "look, I'm standing!!" but then thats as far as
he goes. I understand that the first "step" after standing unassisted
is just around the corner. I'll cheer him on proudly when he does take his
first step! But I will also be in for a new phase as far as
exploration goes, and I just have to prepare for it.
Good luck!
One more thing, it really does vary with kids, my husbands niece didn't
walk till she was 17 mos!
Nancy
|
21.7 | | FDCV07::HSCOTT | Lynn Hanley-Scott | Wed Jun 13 1990 12:13 | 13 |
| As you can see from the replies, there is a real range for when kids
start to walk. The fact that your son is "actively cruising" suggests
that he's close to ready, and will do when he wants. We used to make a
game of it - I'd sit about a foot away and Ryan would lunge towards me,
both of us laughing hysterically. Like your son, Ryan was standing at
7 months, and cruising soon thereafter. He started walking unassisted
at 10 months. He "best little friend" at daycare didn't walk til 14-15
months, and I've known others who were older than that.
I've also heard what you described - some children NEVER walk (or
crawl) - they go straight to running.
|
21.8 | when they're ready! | TIPTOE::STOLICNY | | Wed Jun 13 1990 12:28 | 11 |
|
A little off the subject but we were at the park the other day and
ran into a woman with two little girls, one of whom appeared to
be Jason's age. She was crawling in the sand box and walking
occasionally. I asked the mother how old she was, how long had
she been doing these things, etc. Her reply was "this must be
your first...by the second, you'll figure out that they do
EVERYTHING when THEY'RE READY!"
cj/
|
21.9 | DON'T RUSH IT!!!!!! | MCIS2::DUPUIS | | Wed Jun 13 1990 13:51 | 8 |
| I guess I'm the only poor soul out here whose children couldn't wait to
walk.....Lauren (now 3) walked unassisted from 7 months on. We thought
we'd get a break with Amanda (now 16 months) but at 8 months she too,
was up and about.
/red
|
21.10 | varies, even within the same family sometimes | TLE::RANDALL | living on another planet | Wed Jun 13 1990 13:57 | 8 |
| It varies, even with the same family. Kat was walking unassisted
at about 9-10 months, after starting the cruising business at
around 7 months. Steven started cruising at about 9 months but
didn't walk until about 14 months. David is cruising at 8 months
and looks like he can't wait to walk, but we'll see.
--bonnie
|
21.11 | | RDVAX::COLLIER | Bruce Collier | Wed Jun 13 1990 15:15 | 48 |
| I think cj (.8) has a major insight - the fascination that first-time
parents have with this development. I can remember to the _day_ when
Aaron (now 8) first pulled himself up. I could probably reconstruct
Eric's (now 4) walking age plus or minus a year.
I would also say that the basenote child already IS walking, just not
at the final stage yet. As I remember the taxonomy of walking from
Aaron's infancy, threre are about 7 distinct stages, roughly as follows:
1. Pulling to standing position (but no lateral movement).
2. Cruising with at least one hand holding tight all the time.
3. Cruising with sliding hands on continuous support.
4. Switching between non-continuous supports, but always touching
at least one.
5. Crossing short non-support gap without continuous touching (at
first the motion must be parallel to the supports).
6. Crossing wide spaces, but path still determined by supports.
7. Navigation without regard to support placement.
It's actually more complex, as both 6 and 7 can be subdivided further
based on the mean distance between falls. It is a looonnnggg time
before falling ceases to be an issue, and truely "carefree" walking is
taken for granted. What point counts as "real" walking? Take your
pick.
The development scheme is real, by the way, and followed by almost all
kids, though the time between stages varies greatly; I'm pretty sure I
originally learned it from Penelope (though I think this version is a
little more finely divided). Aaron reached Step 1 at 7 months plus one
week. He reached Step 5 one month later, and Step 7 (with lots of
falls) one month later. That's an earlier start and a bit faster
through the sequence than most kids; and since Aaron was _not_ an early
_crawler_, he spent very little time on all fours. As I said, I don't
remember Eric's milestones, though I could probably figure some out
from old videotapes.
One other vaguely related development story. Although early at some
other skills, Aaron was rather late with words; he just didn't seem to
be interested in them. Then, just as his parents were getting ready to
start being genuinely worried, he walked up the refrigerator one day,
pointed, and clearly and unmistakably said "I want milk." He has
scarcely stopped talking since (except when he's reading).
So, as cj's quote says, kids learn to "walk" (or talk, use the toilet,
eat meat, eat veggies, or whatever...) "when they're ready."
- Bruce
|
21.12 | *I* thought it was funny... | OXNARD::HAYNES | Charles Haynes | Thu Jun 14 1990 00:38 | 13 |
| Re: .0
> Hi everybody! I have a question that I'm sure every parent has
> but did a dir/keyword=walking and got "no such note".
:-) They still will...
... and your title doesn't have "walking" in it either!
(Actually I just added keyword "walking" to your .0)
-- Charles
|
21.13 | cj's got it ! | SHIRE::DETOTH | | Thu Jun 14 1990 05:29 | 13 |
| Same experience as Lori of .1 but at 14 months... and hardly any
cruising before - she liked "strolling" around in one of those walking
chairs...! She'd scoot around to her heart's content then sit a while
and then scoot some more... The result of this device was she did
practically no crawling until after she started walking (would you
believe it ?!), refused to sit in the push chair for any length of time
in one stretch... So I spent from 7 - 14 months bent in two
holding those tiny little hands so mademoiselle could walk around...!
CJ has it right - they do it when they're ready !
Diana
|
21.14 | The walker ... Result: early walker, late crawler. | HPSCAD::DJENSEN | | Thu Jun 14 1990 07:02 | 27 |
| Huumm, the mention of the walker in an earlier note reminded me that:
My Mom mentioned that although JA could totally navigate her walker
since about 6 months, she would never learn how to crawl if we didn't
put her on the floor. Trouble was, JA loved her walker so much, that
she found being on the floor very frustrating (couldn't do anything!).
Also, at that time, she was still falling over (from the sitting position),
which really upset her. So it was just so much easier to leave her
spend most of her "awake" hours in her walker.
So JA was an earlier "walker" (cruising at 7 months, which I attributed
to use of the walker) ... however, I didn't think she would ever learn
how to crawl (which really bothered my mother and sister). They
babysat JA a few days and must have spent the whole time showing her the
concept of crawling. Then I got better about putting her down on the
floor. She must have been almost 8 months old before she decided to
chase the dog, got up on all fours and took off in a flash!
So JA was an earlier walker and late crawler ... and I do believe that
they "let go" when they're ready, but Jim/I credit her walker (and some
of her other development "tools") for motivating and challenging JA, as
well as lots of "showing and teaching" from Mommy/Daddy.
Just my two cents!
Dottie
|
21.15 | crawl at 8mos = late?? | TIPTOE::STOLICNY | | Thu Jun 14 1990 09:04 | 7 |
| Dottie,
FWIW, 8 months is NOT a late crawler according to all the books
that I've read. I believe that 9 months is the average!
cj/
|
21.16 | re walkers | FDCV07::HSCOTT | Lynn Hanley-Scott | Thu Jun 14 1990 09:27 | 10 |
| My doctor made an interesting comment months ago that I tend to agree
with - her feeling is that walkers are basically for parents; children
will stand, walk, crawl or basically MOVE whether they are exposed to a
walker or not. Some children are basically very active and will pull
themselves up to stand and cruise. Others basically go from sitting to
running (when they get to that stage).
FWIW, many babies never crawl - they simply walk when they decide to.
|
21.17 | focus | TLE::RANDALL | living on another planet | Thu Jun 14 1990 10:03 | 14 |
| re: Bruce's remark about his son and walking and talking:
Our pediatrician told us that it's very common for a child to
concentrate on one aspect of development and leave another for
later. A kid who's very intent on learning to walk will be trying
to practice it all the time and won't care about imitating sounds;
a kid who's very involved in fine motor skills, like learning to
manipulate the buttons on the busy box, might not care about
moving around. But it all balances out and it doesn't mean the
kid is "behind" in anything. They'll pick up the skills they're
ignoring sooner or later.
--bonnie
|
21.18 | Its very basic. | KERBER::SUTHERLAND | so don't let go.. | Thu Jun 14 1990 10:37 | 7 |
|
Favourite words from the last 2 notes = -.2 'basically' and -.1 'very'.
*8^). *;-).
|
21.19 | | FDCV07::HSCOTT | Lynn Hanley-Scott | Thu Jun 14 1990 10:41 | 3 |
| I basically never use the word basic :-)
|
21.20 | Two Different Styles | COGITO::FRYE | | Thu Jun 14 1990 14:48 | 21 |
| My daughter never really crawled, just al little bit around 13-14
months - long after she began cruising furniture. She also didn't walk
unaided until 15 months. She waited until she was very sure of
herself. The result was that when she did walk she was very steady on
her feet and we had very few falls and bruises. A point of interest -
she also had an extensive vocabulary by that point and was already
putting words together.
This style of being *really* ready to do something has shown up in
other endeavors she takes on and seems to be a part of her personality.
She wouldn't let us take the training wheels off her bike in spite of
the fact they had been raised to the max and rarely touched the ground
any more. And when they did come off she was already solid and no
running after her holding the seat was required.
My son, on the other hand, crawled at 6 months, walked unaided at 9 3/4,
barely spoke until 18 months and has already gone through a fortune in
bandaids....
Norma
|
21.21 | Runs the Gamut | HYSTER::DELISLE | | Wed Jun 20 1990 11:06 | 16 |
| re .21 - Hi Norma!
FWIW
Nathan walked at 9 months
Kristen walked at 15 months
Jacob walked at 13 months
Josh 10 months old, crawled just 4 weeks ago, cruising everything,
walking? who knows when.
It's all the individual kid, and in the overall scheme of things the
age at which they walk bears little reflection on ANYTHING else in
their life, as far as advanced or delayed development. Walking,
talking, teeth, eating, toilet training, all progresses at its own rate
for each child.
|
21.22 | He was ready today | ELMAGO::PHUNTLEY | | Wed Jun 20 1990 22:29 | 10 |
| Just an FYI....
Yesterday was Joshua's birthday and he decided to walk. It's kind
of funny--his dad and his uncle both walked on their 1st birthdays,
too. Of course, we caught those 8 steps with the camcorder!
Look out world-here he comes! (and escpecially you, kitty, don't
think it is going to be as easy to escape from him now! ;-))
pam
|
21.23 | | CSC32::DUBOIS | The early bird gets worms | Thu Jun 21 1990 14:36 | 8 |
| For Evan's first birthday, his grandmother came out from California and
several family friends came over for the party, too. Grandma flew back
a couple of days later, and 4 days after his birthday Evan decided to
walk.
What timing! :-}
Carol
|
21.24 | | RDVAX::COLLIER | Bruce Collier | Fri Jun 22 1990 11:22 | 6 |
| Gee, there's an interesting pattern here. Aaron first pulled himself
up and started to cruise quite out of the blue while on a Christmas
holiday visit to his grandparents. Do you suppose that walking is
caused by a virus that can only be transmitted by grandparents?
- Bruce
|
21.25 | or by great-grandparents | MCIS5::WOOLNER | Photographer is fuzzy, underdeveloped and dense | Fri Jun 22 1990 12:11 | 7 |
| Alex walked at 13 1/2 months (like her Mom) on one of our last
visits to Great-Grandma. The moment was immortalized on VHS, to my
chagrin, actually, because Alex didn't walk *to* Great-Grandma, but
*away* from the visiting area and all the way down the hall to the
nurses' station, where there was raucous encouragement, of course.
Leslie
|
21.26 | It must be the grandparents! | ISE004::MATTIA | | Fri Jun 22 1990 13:01 | 7 |
| You know, we could have something here. My son Jason walked at
11 months. His first steps were to is Grammy on one of her visits too.
He got so excited to see her, he just let go of the couch and walked
about 8-10 steps towards her.
Donna
|
21.27 | Grandparents' house, too | POBOX::GREEN | Gail | Fri Jun 22 1990 13:36 | 2 |
| My son walked 10 days before his first birthday, at his grandparents'
house.
|
21.28 | double no here . . . | TLE::RANDALL | living on another planet | Mon Jun 25 1990 10:14 | 7 |
| Kat: church basement in the middle of a pot-luck lunch because
she got scared standing alone in the middle of all these strange
ladies and had to run to catch up to Mama.
Steven: family room after supper one night, at Dad's coaxing.
--bonnie
|
21.29 | Grandparents | CSC32::DUBOIS | The early bird gets worms | Mon Jun 25 1990 14:16 | 9 |
| I dunno, Bonnie. Had their grandparents *phoned* lately? :-)
This reminds me that the first time that *I* walked was to my grandmother.
She had a shiny compact (you know, makeup container, not car) that I wanted
to see, so I crossed the room to get it. As soon as I got over there, I
fell backwards and didn't walk again for 3 months. I had been 9 months
old that first time.
Carol
|
21.30 | | WMOIS::B_REINKE | treasures....most of them dreams | Mon Jul 02 1990 18:36 | 9 |
| I can't recall the first steps of any but my youngest..
she walked at her uncle's wedding, and the grandparents were
present.
but I don't think that the granparents we involved in the other
three kids first steps.
Bonnie
|
21.31 | hairbrush for support! | ASABET::HABER | kudos to working mothers | Mon Jul 09 1990 16:01 | 7 |
| my son walked at just under 11 months -- across his room to his
grandmother, holding on to his hairbrush for support. my daughter was
sort of 'forced' into walking at 12.5 months -- i couldn't carry her
any longer -- but right now i can't honestly remember her first solo
steps.
/sandy
|
21.32 | They walk when the want too. | COMET::BOWERMAN | | Wed Jul 11 1990 13:36 | 43 |
| I have had children that have walked earlier that 1 year and my friends
have had children who have walked later that 2 years. It depends on the
child and what his/her ditirmination and fear/pain level is.
My oldest daughter was walking befor 11 months as we would find
her standing in the middle of the room if we left for a moment and
came back. No matter how hard I tried to catch her she somehow
senced when her dad or I was watching. She was still at the point
where she could only pull up from a low table or couch and cound not
sit down with out going boom.
My youngest was a detirmined little fellow. He started pulling up and
letting go imediatly. Drove my Provider and mother crazy(my mom goes
to Providers house to be with my kids daily). After 2 months my
provider suggested that we consider a soft sided play pen if only to
give her a break from worring about his injuries. He fell down 10 to 20
times a day and still would not stop trying to walk and when he could
finally keep ballance enough to make a few steps he started immediatly
to speed up. When he was about 14 months old he fell less frequently
and was working on high speed turns(He could only walk in straight
lines and would fall every time he tried to turn around. My Mother
and Father -in-law were watching him for a week while he was going
through this stage and were pleased as punch when he finally mastered
the skill. After that he would practice and for every turn he made
without falling he would run back for Grandpop and Grandmom and
beg for a hug"What a Good Job John". He was so oviously pleased
when ever he accomlished what he had set out to do. He was really
transpartent or I have learned to read baby body language better.
I do believe that average children will achieve the goals that they set
for themselves. Some children chose not to walk. Why should they, mom
or dad will give them a ride whenever they want right.(those are the
more brilient kids that know how to work smarter not harder).
John Impressed me with his detirmination to learn balance before his
body was ready for it. His detirmination is a good part of his
personality. He remembers long after I do what his original intent
was and has learned to accept our distractions and attempt what he
wanted when we think he is distracted.
janet
|
21.33 | update | ELMAGO::PHUNTLEY | | Fri Jul 13 1990 14:24 | 8 |
| Just an FYI--can't believe it's only been a month since I started
this note. Joshua is now running across the living room! How quickly
they learn!!!! And yes, he is running, not walking. Next week
he will move into the next room (1-2s instead of "babies") and has
been visiting all week to get used to the new enviroment. It is
phenomenal to me to see the growth/development in 1 month.
Pam
|
21.34 | WALKING TOOO EARLY | JURAN::QAR_TEMP | | Tue Aug 14 1990 13:54 | 18 |
|
Hi everyone,
My son (Joey) just turned 1yr. July 12, and has been walking since he
was 8 months. A lot of parents at daycare commented. My husband and
I would always walk him around the house as well as using his walker.
Till one day he started standing up against furniture and just giving
himself that push on his own, he would fall but get right back up.
Today on the other hand, all he wants to do is go out. He's very
self-dependant, I can't help him do anything!! I would take him out in
the backyard and he would run around try to walk UP the slide in the
yard - he would also climb on my picnic table then from the seat climb
up onto the table and just sit there and laugh cause he knows he is
doing wrong. He's TOO cute & TOO smart! I just pray that the day
won't come TOO soon when he will climb out of his crib. (ah)!
-Nadine
|
21.35 | Toes point out when walking/running | BTOVT::GROUT | | Thu Jun 06 1991 14:59 | 16 |
| At 17 months, my daughter walks and runs with her toes pointed out and
the heals in. My questions are:
- Is this normal? That is, as her legs and muscles develop will her
toes draw in naturally? Is this even a problem?
- What are the consequences for leaving this as is? ie: is it a
self correcting issue, or is corrective intervention required
before her muscle develpoment progresses?
We have a Well Baby Check up with the Pediatrician next month and I
intend to have her walk for him.
Doug
|
21.36 | walking peculiarities | USEM::ANDREWS | | Thu Jun 06 1991 15:54 | 10 |
| I don't know how normal this is for a 17 month old. We just saw our
Pedi on Monday for our 13 month old who walks on the inside of one foot.
The pedi explained that when children first walk, they sometimes walk
with their toes pointed out, on the insides of their feet, or with
their legs a little farther apart than is normal. She told us to wait
until our daughter had been walking for 2 or 3 months and if she
continued to walk like this, they would recommend a specialist. She
said that in most cases it corrects itself.
Good luck.
|
21.37 | gee, us too. | STAR::LEWIS | | Thu Jun 06 1991 16:54 | 13 |
| Gee, we've noticed this in our 12 month old son. The woman at the shoe
store also noticed and said not to worry about it until he was walking
on his own. If the problem continued then I should notify the pedi. She
said sometimes they prescribe special shoes or instruct the parents to
reverse the shoes. I have a neighbor that's a physical therapist so she
checked Andy over a little and she said that she thought his feet and
knees were just fine. She noticed that he was tremendously flexible ,
especially in the hip joints. SHe thinks that's the cause of the
outward toe-pointing. We're also guessing that's why he creeps, not
crawls. He has a well-baby in July; I'm trying to remain calm until
then.
Sue
|
21.38 | DR say toes pointing out is nothing. | BTOVT::GROUT | | Fri Jul 12 1991 13:56 | 19 |
| RE: .35, .36, .37
Just got back from the well baby check, and I had our daughter walk for
the ped.
- Yes, her toes do point out; but he says to leave her be. In days
past efforts were made to alter muscle development with special
shoes, without much real success or benefit.
- I'm still apprehensive. I'd hate to miss the window to correct
something early. But the Dr's opinion is similar to that given in
.36 and .37. It's second opinion time to settle a father's
nervousness. Thanks for the earlier replies!
Doug
|
21.39 | After cruising how long till the big "W" | JUPITR::MAHONEY | | Tue Aug 13 1991 14:19 | 26 |
| I looked for a note on Walking, but came up wih nothing.
So I'll post it here:
My daughter is 11 months old she will be a year old Sept 9th. She has
been cruising the furniture for a couple months. Just the other day she
started to let go and walk no more than 5 steps before falling into our
arms or falling on a HUGE teddy bear she has. My question is, going by
what nost of you mom's have seen, how long before your babies actually let
go and kept going? I now you can't really estimate but I thought that once
the child was doing that it's usually soon after they are walking
unassisted.
Also, she is a chubby baby (23 lbs).So I can understand if it takes a
little longer.
I had tears in my eyes the other day because i was so thrilled she walked
as far as she did. I'm not rushing her along, it's just the biggest
milestone to be reached in the first year and I can't wait for it to
happen.
Like to here how your babies acheived the big FEAT!!
Sandy
|
21.40 | Won't be long now! | SHALOT::KOPELIC | Quality is never an accident . . . | Tue Aug 13 1991 14:44 | 9 |
|
Stephanie seemed to move VERY quickly from cruising to walking. Two
weeks ago she started what you mentioned - let go and took three steps
to fall into our arms. Today she can walk the entire length of the
room, turn around, and keep going. There are still plenty of falls
(the scariest part of walking) but I agree - it's so exciting! Oh,
she'll be 10 months next week.
bev
|
21.41 | it's a few steps now... | GRANPA::LIROBERTS | | Tue Aug 13 1991 17:39 | 13 |
| Well, you both have only just begun...Evan started that about two
months ago. Now is not only walking and turning around...in our house
you can go in a complete circle in the downstairs...just the other nite
he started walking around the whole house with either a picnic jug or
his little lunch box say..."Bye-Bye". It really was pretty cute. I
even noticed that he is trying to run a little. He is now 14 months.
Have fun this time goes so quickly. It seems just like yesterday, my
oldest son was doing the same thing. Now he is getting ready to start
kindergarten.
Lillian
|