Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Why I wear bright colors in the spring


I pulled this dress out of the back of the closet on Sunday, and (with the help of my sports bra and 2 people helping with the zipper) squeezed into it for our first real springy Sunday.  Why?  

1. I really can't wear black and brown when the weather is so lovely.

2. I get reactions like this out of Henry:
"Mommy, I like your colorful dress!
Because it makes me think about Jesus.
It makes me feel so good inside my heart.
Because it makes me feel the Spirit."

With a response like that, what kind of parent wouldn't dress to match the season?  Happy spring, everyone! 

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

"I'm a Good Artist!"

Henry got to paint last week because he saw Mommy doing it and begged for his turn.  I wish I let him paint more often.  It's just so much effort, you know.  And we don't have any washable paint --  I should probably get some.  Needless to say, it's stressful for me -- hovering over him the whole time, making sure he doesn't paint the table, chairs, or his clothes.  But Henry had such a great time, it was probably worth it!  He said, "I'm a good artist" at least 50 times while he was painting, and I agreed with him every time.  You can see from the photo that Henry "performs all different kinds of pictures."  These ones are mostly snakes, birdies, and dinosaurs.  I'm just proud of him for being so excited about it and so confident.  Hopefully his enthusiasm will continue, and you'll see more of his work!

I can't help but add my own little bit of artistic fun from the week.  New projects have been reeling in my heart since our visit to that Cape Cod art gallery, and I couldn't help but let something out.  This one was for our dear friends' 50th wedding anniversary.  Made with wood-burner, paint, and paper.  Hopefully there will be more where this came from as well!

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

Cape Cod Weekend

The Griffin family fun continued with a lovely weekend at Cape Cod.  A few highlights:
 
The Easter Bunny managed to find our hotel, and he hid the baskets for the morning of "Easter Saturday."  Henry acted excited and surprised about the basket and its contents.  I made up some story about the Easter Bunny leaving the aforementioned Target bag at our house on accident a week earlier because he didn't get the memo about what hotel we would be staying at.  I think I got away with it . . .

Of course, Henry remembered exactly which items he had seen in the Target bag.  He wasn't accusing at all, but he pointed them all out: "Those are the bath toys I saw in the Target bag!"  Luckily we picked up just a few extra treasures that he HADN'T seen to throw him off a little.  Maybe next year I'll be good at this.

The Heritage Museum had a showroom with 37 classic cars, some of which had been owned by celebrities.  Henry was in heaven, practically running from one car to the next.  I was surprised at how everyone in the group actually loved this museum!

Here's Henry taking us all for a spin (he's driving us to the "Please Touch" Museum, as opposed to the "Please Don't Touch" Museum).

Tanner eating a sandwich and playing Slamwich in Sandwich (that's the name of the town).  We failed to talk my parents into taking us to Ice Cream Sandwich, also in Sandwich.  
Strolling along Main Street in Chatham (the elbow of the Cape).  This was Eliza's recommendation and we loved it!  I loved all of the shops, especially the cute little book stores and the candy shop.  My favorite by far was a little art gallery called The Artful Hand.  If this had been the only thing we had seen the whole weekend, I would have been satisfied.  The gallery had work from several of my favorite artists, including Brian Andreas, Curly Girl, and Sticks.  

Sticks is the artist that first inspired my use of woodburning as a medium!  It was amazing to see some current work and get ideas, ideas, ideas!  I've been thinking about new projects pretty much every minute since we left this place; I feel so inspired to spend ALL of my bounteous free time creating!  

Awwwww . . . the children.
Now for some beach pictures.  It was a gorgeous day, for April.  You can't beat the sand, the ocean, and being with people you love.  Thanks Mom, Dad, and Tanner!






We love you!

Family Week

One of the hardest things about living far away from family is watching how quickly my little boys grow, knowing that my parents are missing it all!  I called my mom a few months ago and told her she'd better get here QUICK before Ellis grew up behind her back.  She responded fairly quickly . . . we had Mom, Dad, and Tanner here for the week of Easter!

It was Dad's and Tanner's first time visiting us here.  We spent a lot of time just chillin' -- playing inside and playing outside, making sure everyone got their fill of my sweet boys.  Henry and Ellis had the time of their lives.  I suspect Grandpa Dave did too.  He played the role of Henry's official full-time playmate, which means he got his fair share of playing with . . . you guessed it: CARS!

The cars went to Boston and arranged themselves by color.  This is just one of many intensely fun car outings.
Henry also did his traffic jam puzzle with Grandma and Grandpa and then cleverly matched up one of his toy cars with each of the cars in the puzzle.  If you look closely, you can see his cars placed on top of the puzzle.

After appeasing Henry's obsession by day, we worked on Tanner's latest passion by night: strategy board games.  Tanner currently spends most of his waking hours either playing games, reading about new games on boardgamegeek.com, or designing his own games.  He even chose to play board games over sleeping several times during the trip!  And for a 17-year old boy, that's saying something.  The night before they left Utah, Tanner emailed me with a list of 9 games (and links to their synopses, instructions, etc. on boardgamegeek), wondering which ones he should bring.  He brought 6 of them.   The favorites?  Power Grid, Puerto Rico, and Dominion.  

Other noteworthy nightlife includes my parents super-gluing Tanner's feet.  They claim that super glue immediately "fixes" cracked skin by creating a barrier from the air, dirt, water, etc. that would otherwise get past the skin and make it hurt.  My favorite was Tanner's reaction 20 minutes after this picture when he realized his sock was super-glued to his foot!  They had to cut off the sock!  Good times.  More to come in the next post.

Sunday, April 05, 2009

Spring Break Roadtrip


Although we live far away from our parents, we feel very lucky to have so many other loved ones within driving distance of our home!  We decided to take advantage of this with a road trip down the East Coast for Ben's Spring Break.  Here's the skinny:

1st stop: New Jersey. Back to good old Jersey to catch up with old friends that feel like family! Hung out with church friends, playdate friends, neighbor friends, and many others.  Ate Ralph's pizza and made the mandatory stop at Shop-Rite.  Went to church at the old Paterson Branch. Introduced Ellis to everyone who hadn't met him yet.  Cried about how much we miss all of these people.  



2nd Stop: Pennsylvania.  Had dinner with Emily and Dave of Centennial fame.  Stayed with Christina and Mike of London Study Abroad fame.  Got to know Ava and Ezra.  Trip to the Please Touch Museum.  Covered the Philadelphia basics: the Liberty Bell, Constitution Hall, and Philly Cheese Steaks -- yum!






3rd Stop: Virginia.  Played with cousins, cousins, cousins!  Had late night conversations about family planning and the dream neighborhood.  Went to the Spy Museum in D.C.  Had an indoor picnic and movie night.

BIG LONG DRIVE: between Virginia and Connecticut.  The boys were stellar passengers.  Henry enjoyed the scenery, the DVD player, the Dairy Queen stop, and the time to just think.  Ellis caught up on some much-needed sleep.  Ben and Jenn loved the conversation time.  Nobody really loved the icky traffic in Delaware.
4th Stop
: Connecticut.  Played with Amy and Dave.  Played with JoDee & Brandon.  JoDee took amazing pictures of Ellis.

5th Stop: Home!  And now I'm tired of making this post try to look good, and I'm going to bed.  But thanks to everyone for letting us crash at your places and making it a fabulous trip!

Worst Mom Ever #367

Henry gets more and more clever every day.  Knowing this, I was pretty aware that the Easter Bunny would need to be a little more cautious this year than he has been in previous years!  We planned a special time yesterday when Ben could stay home with the boys, and I could run to Target for the Easter basket shopping.  I was careful to separate the Easter items from the other things I bought and leave the secret stuff in a bag in the car.  Then, when Ben returned from the Priesthood Session of General Conference last night, he snuck the bag safely into the house.  He set the bag on the kitchen table and, like the two sly little parents we are, Jenn and Ben went to bed.  

Lo and behold, Sunday morning.  Henry wakes up at 6:30 as usual.  Jenn opens one eye to greet Henry when he comes into the bedroom.  Jenn says, "Shhh.  Don't wake Ellis.  Go downstairs and play."  Ben sleeps on (Yes, this is pretty typical).  At some point, Ben hears Henry ask if he can eat some Cat Cookies for his "breakfast treat."  "Only 3," he responds groggily.  He fails to stop Henry from stuffing all three cookies into his mouth at the same time.

7:30 happens.  Jenn and Ben stretch and revel in the gift Ellis has given them of "sleeping in" this late.  Mmmmmm hmmmmmm.  Jenn turns to look at the clock.  Suddenly the kitchen table and secret bag flash before her eyes.  She realizes that Henry must have been in the kitchen already because he asked for Cat Cookies.  There's no possible way he could have gone into the kitchen without spotting the Lightning McQueen Easter basket poking out of the Target bag.  Aah!  "Ben, did you hide the stuff?"

Ben rushes downstairs to find the contents of the secret bag strewn across the table, and Henry handling some of the secret treasures.  If Ben had been thinking fast, he would have pretended it was Easter today and that the Easter Bunny just didn't have time to make the baskets look pretty (I think that really would have worked).  Instead, he mumbles something about "You're not supposed to open that," and then Jenn walks in and rambles something like "Did you see what I bought for you?  I mean what the Easter Bunny bought for you?  From Target?  Uhhhhhhhh . . . "
Perhaps the damage is already done.  Any ideas for explanations we can give to the ever-shrewd Henry? 

Saturday, March 14, 2009

Strawberry Salad Dressing

Here comes one of the greatest inventions of my life.  I think I am a bit too prideful about it, actually.  I might even dare to call it phenomenal:

Strawberry Salad Dressing

¾ cup sugar
½ tsp. salt
1/3 cup apple cider vinegar
1 cup vegetable oil
8 strawberries, stems removed

Purée strawberries in food processor or blender.  Add remaining ingredients and blend (blending helps incorporate the oil and makes dressing a little creamier).  Serve over a delicious bed of greens and other salad trimmings (I like berries, nuts, cheese, bacon, chicken, other fruits, etc.).

This may look vaguely familiar to anyone that already has "my" poppy seed dressing recipe.  Many people have told me that recipe has changed their lives.  It has certainly changed mine (thanks to my cousin Lindsay, I believe)!  So yes, the strawberry dressing invention happened when I ran out of poppy seeds and started experimenting.  One of those happy accidents.  I will include the original salad recipe here for any of you who don't have it!  This salad has definiely kept me up at nights (in a good way).  Sorry, I can't get it to not double space:  

Spinach and Swiss Salad

2 bags (10 oz) baby spinach (or 1 bag Romaine lettuce)

½ red onion, finely chopped

½ cup sliced mushrooms

¾ cup grated Swiss cheese

½ lb. bacon, cooked and crumbled

Dressing:

¾ cup sugar

1 tsp. dry mustard

½ tsp. salt

1/3 cup apple cider vinegar

1 cup vegetable oil

½ Tbsp poppy seeds 



Friday, March 13, 2009

Morning Funnies

1. After Ben and I finished our scripture reading over breakfast, Henry asked, "Now can I read MY scriptures?"  What are we going to say to that?  He has been doing this for several weeks now, and it's so precious, and this morning I had the sense to capture it on video.  Here you go:

2. Ellis woke up around 10:15am.  I kept waiting and waiting for him to wake up, and it just never happened!  He has a bit of a cold, so I guess he really needed the rest.  When I finally went to get him, I unwrapped him and found this:

Two legs in one hole!  This is what happens when I am called out of a deep sleep at 2:00am and asked to change a diaper.  Can this really be safe?  I often worry about Ben getting up with the baby at night because he sleep-walks, says creepy things, and pretends to stab people in his sleep.  Maybe I should not be so confident with my own night-time childcare skills!  Hmmmm.  Bad mom evidence #379.

Monday, March 09, 2009

6 Months



Are you kidding me?  How on earth did six months already pass?  Every time I turn around, this kid is bigger, stronger, and doing something new.  Rolling over?  Check.  Eating baby cereal?  Check.  Grabbing at and tipping over Mommy's lunch?  Check.  Today I hardly believed the doctor when she said Ellis is old enough for a sippy cup and can even try Cheerios soon.  No, lady, you must be mistaken.  This one is a little baby, not a big baby.  What is this?  Do life, motherhood, and children just keep spinning faster and faster until they just pass as a blur before our eyes?  SLOW DOWN, buddy!

P.S. There is an ongoing debate in our house between a) the blurry but nicely colored pictures taken with no flash on our camera, or b) the clear but washed-out pictures taken with the flash.  Really, we probably just need a better camera.  Any thoughts?  Votes?

Wednesday, March 04, 2009

Netflix Oops

This is the movie we ordered from Netflix (as per Jana's suggestion, based on the Agatha Christie mystery novel): 

This is the movie we got:


It came in the right envelope, just the wrong DVD.  Pretty mysterious . . . just a little different than the mystery we were planning to watch last night!  It was pretty compelling, but we didn't quite finish it.  We'll try for Christie tomorrow night.

Signs of Spring


One thing's for sure: when spring gets here, I'm going to be ready!  We had one precious day last week that reached 60 degrees.  I was sure spring was on its way . . . but I didn't want to take any chances.  I promptly got my boys ready and took them outside for a nature walk.  As we walked, I told Henry we were on a mission to find "signs of spring."  I was just sure we were going to discover all sorts of little buds and blossoms, if not tacky Easter decorations that we could call "signs of spring."  Unfortunately, I was wrong altogether!  We actually did see one tree with a few early buds growing and probably about twenty total blades of green grass (or were those moss-covered blades of yellow grass?), but that's about it.  We saw more "signs of Christmas" than anything else (I think I counted 30 Christmas wreaths!  THIRTY!).  

Henry kept asking, "Mommy, what are those signs you were talking about?"  He is really into road signs right now and constantly points out, "I saw a no U-turn sign!,"  "I saw a 'do not enter' sign!," and my favorite: "I saw a John Deere sign!" (a deer crossing sign).  So I took about five minutes of our walk trying to explain that some signs are not actually big pictures stuck on poles sticking out of the ground, but some signs can just be symbols of something great, like spring, and those signs are little things like leaves growing, birds chirping, and people rolling their car windows down.  Unfortunately, this explanation didn't make any sense to a 3 year-old (it probably didn't make sense to you either), and Mother Nature didn't feel like helping me out
 with any concrete examples.  We gave up on looking for signs of spring and decided it would be lots more fun to name the make and model of EVERY vehicle we walked past ("Toyota" is no longer an acceptable answer.  "Toyota what?").  

Alas, I was probably jumping the gun by getting a little hopeful about spring.  Perhaps there were no signs of spring because it ISN'T spring yet, a fact of which I was reminded when yet another giant snowstorm hit (pictured above) just a few days later.  So folks, if you're hoping to find signs of spring in the first week of March, you'd better look somewhere other than Boston, MA.  Do I dare start hoping for April?

Tuesday, March 03, 2009

Mahna Mahna


My birth-month has officially extended into March!  I got this fabulous custom-designed T-shirt in the mail yesterday.  If you can't remember what on earth "Mahna Mahna" is, watch this video.  You will quickly be reminded!  Once again, I have the coolest brothers on the planet.  Thanks, Brady and Tanner!

Tuesday, February 24, 2009

H was here


I wonder if our neighbors will be able to figure out who stole their sidewalk chalk and wrote the letter H all over the front porch. Pretty sneaky, Big H. Good one (I'm just excited that he finally has the fine motor skills to draw 3 straight lines!).

Sunday, February 15, 2009

The Fiscal Stimulus: Ben's take

Okay, everyone, it's time for Ben to get on his economic soapbox.  Buckle up!

This past week I've have at least 5 conversations with friends and family about the stimulus package that just passed through congress and will be signed in to law by Obama tomorrow or Tuesday.  At the insistence of my good friend Brittany, I'm posting my thoughts on here for everyone to take a look at, and I'd love to hear back from everyone about what your thoughts are.

First off, I believe that, in theory, when unemployment is high the government can effectively spend money to improve economic conditions.  Essentially that's what fiscal stimulus is: government expenditure designed to jump start a slow economy by either creating jobs directly or giving people money to spend which will increase demand and hence create jobs.  A stimulus is usually either a increase in government spending or a reduction of taxes or both.  In this case, it's both.

Now, the small amount of research that I've read on whether this actually works in practice is very mixed.  Some studies find benefits from fiscal stimulus, some find no effect, and some find that it can actually hurt the economy.  The fact of the matter is, we don't really know how well it works, or under which conditions it will work.  The trouble is that there is no control group for a stimulus, so when you look at a historical event (e.g. the Depression) you can't really know what would have happened had you not increased government spending.  So determining this stuff using actual data turns out to be quite difficult.  But, the fact that the results are so completely inconclusive suggests to me that either (1) fiscal stimulus has a very small effect or (2) the effect is extremely dependent on the circumstances, and we don't understand this relationship.  These two options make me very worried that we are gambling nearly $800 billion on a package that either (1) won't do much or (2) has the possibility of really hurting the economy.

Now, let's suppose that a good fiscal stimulus actually would help to jump start the economy.  What would this "good" stimulus look like?  In my opinion, first and foremost it would restore confidence that the world is not going to fall apart.  When individuals and business have confidence, they are more willing to spend and invest, and that's what makes things start ticking again.  So, if they believe that the stimulus bill is going to save the world, there is a self-fulfilling prophecy effect where no matter what the bill actually accomplishes, the economy begins to recover as people have more confidence.  Unfortunately, the government has basically no control over this aspect of a stimulus package.

The tax cuts in a good stimulus package would be focused on those who are most hurt by the economic downturn.  In this way you get more bang for your buck, since you are helping out the very people who are being dragged down by the bad times.  So, for example, you could give a tax break to individuals who have been laid off and wish to return to school, or perhaps to families who have lost their homes to foreclosure.  A fair portion of the 2009 stimulus includes these types of tax cuts.  It also has some dumb ones.  One example is that it includes a tax break for anyone who buys a car in 2009.  If people are considering buying a car, they are probably doing okay economically (not great, perhaps, but surviving).  So this is focused on the wrong group.  Also, it's going to put a lot more cars on the road, which is certainly not what the nation needs.  Lastly, it's a direct subsidy to car producers, when we would be a lot better off letting a few car companies fail.  I know that if you work for GM you probably feel differently than me about that last sentence, but the economic reality is that we have too many auto makers, and subsidizing them forces a deadweight loss on the economy.  Why not let them file for bankruptcy, reorganize into a productive company, and help any who are unemployed get more schooling or find other jobs?

Lastly, the spending portion of a good stimulus bill would be on investments that pass a cost-benefit analysis.  Just like any company, the government should not spend its money on projects that will not pay off in the future.  We could hire one group of people to dig holes and another group of people to fill those holes in.  We could even hire both groups to run around digging as many holes as possible.  But unless those holes actually start producing something useful, all we'll do is provide temporary relief to the hole-diggers (via wages), and end up with a bunch of debt and a lot of useless holes.  If, however, the money is spent on projects that increase productivity, then the future economy is also better off, resulting in more future tax revenue so the debt can be repaid.  Here's a quick example of the wrong type of project from the current stimulus:  The bill provisions a bunch of money to be spent specifically on building new schools and refurbishing old ones.  On the surface this sounds like a good idea, and undoubtedly some building and refurbishing is a good idea.  But as far as I have read, the quality of the physical school building has little effect on the quality of education the students receive.  A better idea would be to use a bunch of money to raise teacher salaries significantly.  This would stimulate the economy, since current teachers would spend more money, and at the same time it would attract high-quality individuals to the teaching profession, which has been shown to help students.  

Here's a link that has a breakdown of all of the spending and tax cuts that the bill contains.  It's a really long list.  As I glance over it, I see a lot of projects that might be good ones, some that I'm not so sure about, and some that I think are bad.  But what really worries me is that there is no way that Congress has had the time to really analyze each of these projects to be sure they pass a basic cost-benefit test.  I think that a lot of this money is going to be spent just digging holes.

To summarize, I've got two big problems with the stimulus bill:  1) It's a lot of money to gamble with when there's no real proof that it will work.  2) Even if it would work, I don't think that congress is capable of passing a bill that will meet the requirements to be the kind of stimulus that stimulates.  Not because Congressmen are dumb or evil, but just because the politics won't allow them to do so.  I just have no faith that Congress can actually spend $789 billion dollars both quickly and properly.  The two are mutually exclusive when politics are involved.

So, what would I do if I ruled the world?  I'd make the bill much smaller, and target only a few specific areas that I knew I could help with.  With the rest of the money, I'd use a portion to permanently eliminate the corporate tax, which would instantly provide an incentive for foreign companies to invest in the U.S. and domestic companies to expand operations.  Then I'd find someone a lot smarter than I am, and give them all of my resources with the charge to unfreeze financial markets so that investment can start flowing again.

In other words, I'm against the stimulus package.  But if the government mails me a check, I'll cash it.  :)

Friday, February 13, 2009

Which cup is different?


Henry learned this game from National Geographic Little Kids magazine. He lined up these three cups and then cleverly asked, "Which cup is different?" If you think it's the one on the left because it doesn't have a straw, you are wrong. Think it's the one on the right because it's the only green one? Wrong again. The middle one is different "because it's so orange." Henry gets me every time!

Practically Perfect

My 27th birthday was practically perfect in every way, thanks to Ben and many others. But mostly Ben. His first gift to me was a full night's sleep on the night of the 10th. It's been about -- let's see -- 5 months since I have had a somewhat decent night's sleep. It felt SO good! Ben got up with Ellis at every waking and brought him to me in bed. I guess I had to wake up a little to get him situated for a feeding, but I didn't have to sit up or anything. It was heavenly.

By the time 6:45 rolled around, I felt so good I just popped out of bed. To my delight, it was 37 degrees outside (the warmest morning since winter hit), so I went out for a jog. All by myself. It's been a while. It felt amazing. When I got to the really hard uphill part at the end of the jog, I thought to myself, "Who am I kidding? It's my birthday. I don't have to do anything!" And I stopped and walked the rest of the way.

At 9:30, I went with Henry and Ellis to a Valentine party put on by the Watertown Family Network and one of our favorite children's musicians, David Polansky. We enjoyed singing, dancing, and being with friends. On the way home from that, I felt like eating a really good salad. My birthday mantra echoed in my head: "It's my birthday; I can do, say, have, and eat whatever I want." Hooray! I drove with the boys to Panera and got a fabulous appley salad that I brought home to eat with an amazing panini made by Ben.

Did I mention that on the way home, I turned the corner to the long hill leading up to our house, and there was Ben, just beginning his ascent? I have always dreamed of our schedules coordinating so beautifully. I was meant to buy that salad. And Ben was done with class for the day (at noon!) and ready to spend the rest of the day with ME! I graciously offered Ben a ride home, and we ate the aforementioned salad and panini.
I opened lots of presents (look at that stack -- Ben knows where to shop!), including, but not limited to an mp3 player, a mini food processor, a cd player, an electric sander, and a cocoa latte gourmet hot chocolate maker (thanks everyone!). Oh yes, and a very useful homemade cat, compliments of my sister Kati. We then ate cookies and "Take the Cake" ice cream. Mmmmm Hmmmmm!

After naptime, Brooke from church came over to babysit while Ben and I went out for a divinely authentic Italian dinner at Grappa. It felt very North End (Ben ordered veal parmesan because I wanted him to be like the guy on The Parent Trap). We got cannolis and a lemoncello tortufo for dessert. Wow. Let's not talk about how Ellis cried the whole time we were gone. And let's not admit that we came home and caught the end of Idol while I returned my hundreds of well-wishing phone calls. I think I got like 3 million facebook birthday greetings. Everyone loves me. They should, because it's my birthday! Or at least it was. And it was a good one, just like I knew it would be.

Thursday, February 05, 2009

A Request

So I'm told by the techies out there that when you make a request for something on your blog it is called a "bleg."  Here's a quick bleg, then, for everyone:

I'm looking for a good book on WWII.  I've read 1776 and John Adams which gave me a good feel for the Revolutionary War, a while ago I read Gods And Generals and The Killer Angels about the Civil War, and I also read The Things They Carried about Vietnam.  Seems like I'm really missing WWII on that list.  If anyone has any good ideas, let me know in the comments.  Thanks!

Monday, February 02, 2009

Groundhog's Day Random Link

It's about time that SOMEONE got started defining every word in the English language in limerick form.  Check it out here.

Friday, January 30, 2009

Squeaks and Giggles



Another post created mostly for my mom, or other people like her who can't stand the fact that Ellis is growing up approximately 2,348 miles away from them. And let me tell you, he's growing fast!

His latest new thing (besides sleeping for 4 hour stretches at night -- hallelujah!) is laughing. We love all of the squeaks, giggles, and other crazy sounds that come out of this precious, chubby, kissable bundle. We all can't help but do anything and everything to try to make him smile and laugh more and more. It's addictive. And apparently making video clips of him is too. Here are three:


Squeaks and Giggles from Ben and Jenn on Vimeo.

Squeaks and Giggles 2 from Ben and Jenn on Vimeo.

Squeaks and Giggles 3 from Ben and Jenn on Vimeo.