Vote For Me @ The Top Mommy Blogs Directory Vote For Me @ The Top Mommy Blogs Directory

July 11th - Daddycamp day two

Today we started up Zephyr's chatbot, gave Lyric some dedicated reading time with his 91 year old Nana, and took an architecture walk to appreciate the Beaux Arts styles of two Cass Gilbert masterpieces.  

For Zephyr's chatbot we established a Facebook page and filled it out with an image of ZRR-Bot, which stands for "Zephyr's Reading Recommendation Bot", (pronounced "Zurbot", but you can call it "Zurby"). Zephyr drew a picture of ZRR-Bot for its image icon:

The weird string arms were something Zephyr insisted upon.  

And then we started building a conversation for ZRR-Bot on octane.ai. Hopefully we'll have the start of a working model by the end of the week. 

Meanwhile, Lyric was supposed to be reading with his Nana, but when we picked him up later we found he'd been unwilling to go there with her and resistant to reading. I wasn't thrilled with the effort there from him, but that's Lyric sometimes - he doesn't always perform on cue. I think if we keep at it we'll get him to a point where he gets into it. 

Also meanwhile, my kitchen sink started spewing out black goo because of some plumbing problem, forcing me to pass off the kids for a little while to their grandparents for lunch. Yuck city. 

But after the plumber came, we were able to take a walk (with Grandma Andi) to see Cass Gilbert's US Customs House and Woolworth building, and talk a bit about the architectural and sculptural details that made them great:

The three of us under the statue of the personification of America at the Cass Gilbert US Customs House.  

I love these two buildings and the conversation they have with one another, and I was thrilled to share that with the kids. Plus it was great to see it with my Mom, and I even learned a new architectural term...

Oh yeah, and Lyric's tongue apparently caught on fire.  

July 10th - MUSEUM MONDAY at the Met!

So Daddycamp is underway, Museum Monday #1 is in the books, and so far WE ARE CRUSHING IT. We set a personal best for time spent at a museum yesterday, found a needed Pokémon for our pokédex, and learned something along the way!

So one thing I've found is that a great way to keep kids interested in a museum visit is to make it into a scavenger hunt. Here's the scavenger hunt we did yesterday:

We replaced Demeter with Poseidon on the fly (on Zephyr's suggestion) because he's way easier to find in art.

Another hot tip: people think museums are closed on Mondays, so it's a great time to go and get a minimal crowd experience. We hit the Egyptian wing first to knock off the Sphinx of Hateshput and (for the first time in a while) got to explore it without being mobbed.

Something sphinx in here!

Next we hit a gallery I'd never been in (in the Thai art wing) to find the 18-armed Durga.I used the met website to find the galleries the art was in... I don't consider that cheating, it was still a challenge to find things. You just have to get to the gallery and then tell the kids to search for the specific pieces.

This gallery was on the rarely-used third floor of the Met. It had a special elevator and everything

We had lunch at the American Wing Café, and the Daddycamp "no snacking" policy paid immediate dividends when the kids ate (and enjoyed) a quinoa/arugula/tri-color carrot salad for lunch! Plus I got to tell them there was a god around in the American Wing atrium, and got to watch from afar as they searched and used their reading skills to find the statue of Diana/Artemis. We headed out for a quick playground break, but found the Perseus/Medusa statue on the way out:

Excellent Gorgon face from my man Z.

Lyric enjoyed pulling Zephyr's hair a bit too much, so I had them reverse the position to teach Lyric about reaping what you sow. It looks like Zephyr was gentle here, but he got a few good yanks in before this, trust me.

After hitting the playground on 85th and 5th (Fun spot if you can deal with losing track of where your kids are exactly), we went resumed the hunt. The kids put up a little resistance, but the pull of finishing the scavenger hunt (and getting the associated prize points) did the trick to get them back in it. We hit the Greek and Roman galleries looking for gods and found a Hermes and another Artemis, but kept it moving. Constant motion and not lingering too long kept it interesting for the kids.

Passing through the Oceania gallery, we found this giant 20 foot monster headdress from Papua New Guinea as "something that surprises you":

Seriously, this thing looked like some early Tim Burton jams. The tiny arms and legs MADE IT.

Next we hit the Rei Kawakubo for Comme des Garçon exhibit, and if you're reading this before September 4th 2017, SEE THAT SHOW, yo. It's outstanding.

FLuorescent lighting: oddly beautiful in here.

Next we hit the modern galleries and Lyric found Roy Liechtenstein's "Stepping Out" all by himself:

Man oh man was he proud of himself for finding it.

So with 5 out of 6 pictures found, we intensified our hunt for Gods and Goddesses in European paintings. We found a few Venuses (Veni?), and this awesome Odillion Rédon picture of Pandora we thought Mommy would love. So we all sat and drew a version of it:

It looked like the kids were losing steam at this point, so we decided to just find the last picture (Pan by Riccio) and call it a day. But a funny thing happened in that last gallery: it turned out there were plenty of gods depicted in art there! We picked up a Minerva, a Mars, a Vulcan, a Jupiter, and a Neptune! That just left a Bacchus and a Juno, and Zephyr found a Bacchus in the next gallery! So re-energized, we consulted the met website to find our last missing goddess: Juno. And it turned out there was a Juno andiron in a secret gallery way in the back of the museum!

The look of victory!

We completed the scavenger hunt, and the kids were AMPED about it! I awarded them 50 prize points each, because when things were hard, they tried harder and didn't give up.

We left a little after 4 (more than 6 hours at the museum!) and in a sign of approval from the gods, found a desperately needed Pokémon, Forretress. Thank you based NYC Pokemap. We walked through Central Park and went to friend's soccer birthday, and when we finally got home wrote down what we had learned that day:

Seriously going to do this every day now. A day you learn something new is a good day.

So one day of Daddycamp down, more to come! Stay tuned!

Daddy Camp begins July 10th!

Okay, starting a new experiment here on the #MorningFunManifesto blog... 

I'm taking some time this summer to run a mini-camp experience for the kids in NYC! Highlights will include:

  • Museum Monday scavenger hunts at New York's finest cultural institutions!
  • Zephyr and I making a chatbot together with Octane.ai!
  • Lyric getting some prime dedicated reading time with his Nana! 
  • Making some films with a SUPER SPECIAL GUEST STAR (hint: 🥞) 
  • and lots more!

I'm establishing a few ground rules for the kids, in order to give a little structure to the experience. 

There's going to be a few weeks off in the middle as the kids go to a real camp in the Poconos and we vacation on the beach in Connecticut, but otherwise it should be a crazy ride. Again, it's entirely experimental, I haven't done anything like it before, and I'm somewhat making it up as I go along. I'm going to try and document it here on the blog and with the #MorningFunManifesto hashtag on social media, so join me and follow along! And hit me up if you want to join in on any Museum Mondays. 

Summer fun ahoy! 

April 17th - Jet Lag

London was great, but hokum smokes was I jet lagged this morning. I barely slept all night. The kids, meanwhile, seemed unaffected despite getting in at midnight... they were up and about at 6:30 with the sun, like always.  

That's pretty much what traveling with kids was like... it's not quite a getaway, it's more like an intensive 24 hour a day program of parenting. Another parent I know described it as "both an internal and an external journey". It's certainly work, but it's exceptionally rewarding work. I could really tell how much it made the kids happy to have so much uninterrupted time with their mom and dad. That's one of the major reasons why I started this whole project, because as a parent you want to give your kids anything and everything they want and need to be happy, and the universal thing they want and need most is attention from their parents (up to a certain age / stage of development of course... I expect tweens and teens to be a whole different ball of wax).

We definitely gave the kids lots of walking time in London, and had exceptionally busy days.  We took the kids to some amazing restaurants (Damien Hirst's Pharmacy 2 and David Shrigley's Sketch, for example) and they were relatively well behaved... it was easier once we started thinking of it like taking the Sex Pistols out to a fancy meal. You're going to have to chide them now and then for putting their knees up on the table and being too loud, but if they don't make too big a scene it counts as a victory. 

Hoping for a Ritalin cocktail at Pharmacy 2

We took the Tube EVERYWHERE. I loved how whenever I read Station names I'd hear Morrissey singing them in my head. 

Everywhere the Carnabytian army marches on, each one a dedicated follower of fashion

Illuminati status: confirmed (at the Library and Museum of Freemasonry) 

April 7th - All About London

We leave for Spring Break in London tomorrow, and so to help the kids understand what we're about to experience, I wanted to devote this morning to learning all about London's history. I tried reading up online on a children's history of London, but man! I'm not sure if you've heard this but London is REALLY REALLY OLD. There's a LOT of history there. 

We ended up watching some videos about the City of London (which is distinctly different than London), like this one: 

My wife Chay has also been including London Fun Facts in her daily lunch notes the past week or so, so between those factoids and the video factoids we had enough for a quick quiz.  

Zephyr got that there's two cities in London (City of London and City of Westminster) , both got that London is in England and England is part of the UK, and Zephyr got that the name of the bell in the London clock tower is Big Ben. Lyric thought it was Big Bob, but CLOSE ENOUGH!

For Prizes I gave them some fresh Pokémon luggage tags! Now we're traveling in style! 

Come to think of it, they do an awful lot of traveling in Pokémon without luggage.  

I expect blogging opportunities to be slim while I'm in London, but follow me on Instagram and Facebook and Twitter for the latest updates. Zephyr and Lyric on Carnaby Street promises to be high style indeed. 

Cheers! 

April 5th - Sweet Ninja Moves

Continuing on yesterday's breakthrough having the kids run the camera, I let them film me running the same sort of "Jump / Duck / Dodge" game we did last week for Sweet Ninja Moves, and the results were awesome (after a few attempts at showing how you had to leave your finger on the screen to keep recording and how you properly delete bad footage). Here goes:

Sweet Ninja Moves! Now more exciting, with camera work by Zephyr and Lyric! #morningfunmanifesto

A post shared by Robert Sosin (@chompyduchamp) on

April 4th - Hide and Seek Championship

This one came out really cool, I think, for an unexpected reason. This was the first day I gave the kids control of a livecast as I hid for hide and seek by their school... Zephyr did a pretty good job of it, and Lyric... well, he's learning. But it was really cool to see them actually running the camera and filming something. I'm DEFINITELY going to do a lot more of it, and give them more hands-on experience shooting.

March 30th - Fighting and Feats of Speed

Today was supposed to be Feats of Speed, but when I suggested it, Zephyr wasn't into it. "We're having a Pokemon battle," Zephyr said, and I didn't want to get in the way of him playing with his brother. So I watched them play a bit.

Feats of speed postponed for a Pokémon battle. I feel like I should insist on physical fitness but dudes are INTENSELY embroiled in imaginative play. #morningfunmanifesto

However, it descended into them fighting with each other. Way not cool. Zephyr took a toy from Lyric, Lyric grabbed it back, and Zephyr took it again. And then Lyric hit Zephyr in the face, and I immediately sent him into the corner for time out.

Zephyr was really upset (as would be anyone who was hit in the face). He had that delayed reaction, as if he couldn't believe what just happened, and then he started crying.

Importantly, I tried to remain calm. I didn't want to show too much sympathy for Zephyr, I wanted him to toughen up a bit and accept it.

This can be a hard lesson to learn, but that's my feeling on fighting: Brothers are going to fight. You have to allow that's going to happen. Obviously you can't encourage it, but you have to let them learn lessons from it. Let them learn to defend themselves, how to deal with adversity, how to respond, and how to forgive.

Zephyr is very sensitive, in so many ways.

  1. His immune system is sensitive: He's been highly allergic to eggs and dairy (although he's gotten over those) and peanuts and sesame.
  2. His nervous system is sensitive: he's EXCEPTIONALLY squirmy at the doctor's and dentist's office. His mom is a redhead, and as we found out during her pregnancy, redheads have been clinically proven to need 25% more anasthesia than people with other hair colors, so it's possible he just feels pain more vividly (Of course, Zephyr himself isn't a redhead, but those genes are very present in him).
  3. Zephyr is definitely an emotionally sensitive young kid... he feels things very deeply. He's not at Wells For Boys level, but man oh man did that skit just NAIL it. 

Sensitive people need to be able to experience the world on their own terms and they deserve that, but when you're raising a sensitive child you have to allow them to take a few hits and realize it's not the end of the world. So I didn't rush over to Zephyr, but instead kept my distance, verbally reassuring him that I saw everything and would handle it.

Zephyr really wants to be the one who can punish Lyric, but that responsibility is of course for Mom and Dad only.  However, as sensitive as we've established Zephyr to be, I think on a certain level Zephyr is starting to see these moments as opportunities: getting toys through punishment. This is because I've started using the power of toy-taking justice.

For example, when Zephyr lost one of Lyric's Pokemon cards under the neighbor's rug, I decreed Lyric could take any of Zephyr's Pokemon cards in return. I felt like King Solomon on that one, I could tell just by their reactions that the judgement was fair and true. They're at an age where their individual property means a lot to them, where correctly dividing their stuffed animals between their bunk beds is of tantamount importance. So legislating who has what is a valuable chip to have over them.

So I sent Lyric to time out in the corner and talked to him, in front of Zephyr, about how wrong it is to hit your brother. I stressed how conflicts should NEVER come to violence. I forced them both to run down the hall for Feats of Speed. And I told Zephyr to leave the room while I had a moment alone with Lyric. Zephyr hit Lyric a bit with the door on the way out, which I bet was intentional, but I allowed it.

I told Lyric he has to get better at letting things go, and he has to be nicer to his brother. And I held him and put him in my lap to help get on his sneakers. And then we went outside to race in the hallway.

My neighbor was throwing away something in the compactor room. We waited for her to get back in her apartment, and then gave Lyric a five second head start. And then Zephyr ran to catch up with him. It looked pretty tight, and then Zephyr pushed past Lyric and Lyric fell to the ground, crying. Again, looking back on it, I think this also probably was intentional retribution by Zephyr. But that's allowable fighting for brothers.

I comforted Lyric, checked for him that he was okay and not bleeding, and let them try racing again. Our other neighbor's kids had come out to see what we were doing. The tears stopped and everyone went to race together.

Lot of lessons learned this morning.

March 29th - Sweet Ninja Moves

chompyduchampIt's all lovey dovey until Sweet Ninja Moves "dodge training" begins #morningfunmanifesto

The boys got a comically large sword from Mumsie last week, so I used it to play "Jump/Duck/Dodge" with the boys this morning for sweet ninja moves.  It was pretty fun, and definitely got the boys having fun. Next time I'll have Zephyr film me doing it with Lyric... maybe next month.