gift for baby learning to walk image
Jess
This will be my sons 1st Christmas and we want to make it special for him. He will be 9 months old. We usually start buying for Christmas now (so we don't get hit all at once with the bills). I'm just looking for suggestions of the one big gift we will get him, maybe something that he can play with for a long time (grow with it). Thanks in advance!
Answer
My daughter will be 7 months old around Christmas time and the one big gift I plan on getting her is a push walker.
One of them that I am been looking at goes from a push walker to a ride on toy that older toddlers can use, it's for ages 9 to 24 months and so can be used for longer then most push walkers.
The other push walker I am thinking about seems more sturdy to me and better for a child to use who is learning to walk. It has 6 different positions to help aid in a baby learning to walk and it lights up and plays music, according to how fast or slow a baby walks it. This one says it can be used from 9 to 24 months old too, but doesn't turn into a ride on toy like the other one does.
One of my friends got her 10 month old son a 3-in-1 sports center for Christmas last year and even now at 19 months old he still loves to play with it, as does his twin sister.
Another of my friends got her 15 month old son a ride on toy that turns into a scooter for Christmas 2 years ago and he stillloves using it, he just started using the scooter part now. It's for ages 18 to 4 years, so would be a little old for your son, but it's still something you could get him and he could use when he gets a bit older.
- Amy
My daughter will be 7 months old around Christmas time and the one big gift I plan on getting her is a push walker.
One of them that I am been looking at goes from a push walker to a ride on toy that older toddlers can use, it's for ages 9 to 24 months and so can be used for longer then most push walkers.
The other push walker I am thinking about seems more sturdy to me and better for a child to use who is learning to walk. It has 6 different positions to help aid in a baby learning to walk and it lights up and plays music, according to how fast or slow a baby walks it. This one says it can be used from 9 to 24 months old too, but doesn't turn into a ride on toy like the other one does.
One of my friends got her 10 month old son a 3-in-1 sports center for Christmas last year and even now at 19 months old he still loves to play with it, as does his twin sister.
Another of my friends got her 15 month old son a ride on toy that turns into a scooter for Christmas 2 years ago and he stillloves using it, he just started using the scooter part now. It's for ages 18 to 4 years, so would be a little old for your son, but it's still something you could get him and he could use when he gets a bit older.
- Amy
How come when I ask people why they voted for Obama they can't answer?
The Cool p
I walked up to this group of African Americans who all had Obama shirts on, and were happy he was elected. I asked them if they could tell me one good thing he has done, or is planning on doing. None of them answered.
Answer
I'll tell you why I voted for the president. He stands for the working middle class who take two trains and a bus into work 45 hours a week and who work hard to put food on their table. He supports public education so that the future generation can go to college and learn skills that will help them earn good wages. He supports equality and a government that doesn't discriminate based on race, creed, ethnicity, gender, religious affiliation or sexual orientation. He doesn't think government should be just small enough to fit inside a woman's uterus. He doesn't think we should repeal Roe v. Wade and take a time machine back to the 1950s. He doesn't make inane comments about "legitimate rape" or spout his opinions on how a baby born out of rape is a "gift from God." He didn't stand in a palatial mansion in front of a room full of people who just paid $50,000 for one plate of dinner so he could say that 47% of this nation felt victimized and wanted the government to pay for their housing, food and health care and that they refused to take personal responsibility for their lives. He didn't buy out a company, fire its employees but not before he made them build the stage where they would stand and announce that everyone was out of a job, their pensions and their benefits. He did not make millions being a greed infested parasite that fed off others so he could buy an elevator to fit his many cars in his garage. He was a community organizer who came from nothing to become the Commander in Chief of the United States of America. He understands the working middle class because he was part of the working middle class.
As far as the good things he's done, he's decreased unemployment, created nearly five million new jobs in the private sector, he ended the war in Iraq, he's bringing the war in Afghanistan to an end, Osama bin Laden is dead and General Motors is alive.
Does that answer your question?
I'll tell you why I voted for the president. He stands for the working middle class who take two trains and a bus into work 45 hours a week and who work hard to put food on their table. He supports public education so that the future generation can go to college and learn skills that will help them earn good wages. He supports equality and a government that doesn't discriminate based on race, creed, ethnicity, gender, religious affiliation or sexual orientation. He doesn't think government should be just small enough to fit inside a woman's uterus. He doesn't think we should repeal Roe v. Wade and take a time machine back to the 1950s. He doesn't make inane comments about "legitimate rape" or spout his opinions on how a baby born out of rape is a "gift from God." He didn't stand in a palatial mansion in front of a room full of people who just paid $50,000 for one plate of dinner so he could say that 47% of this nation felt victimized and wanted the government to pay for their housing, food and health care and that they refused to take personal responsibility for their lives. He didn't buy out a company, fire its employees but not before he made them build the stage where they would stand and announce that everyone was out of a job, their pensions and their benefits. He did not make millions being a greed infested parasite that fed off others so he could buy an elevator to fit his many cars in his garage. He was a community organizer who came from nothing to become the Commander in Chief of the United States of America. He understands the working middle class because he was part of the working middle class.
As far as the good things he's done, he's decreased unemployment, created nearly five million new jobs in the private sector, he ended the war in Iraq, he's bringing the war in Afghanistan to an end, Osama bin Laden is dead and General Motors is alive.
Does that answer your question?
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