  My roasted veggies tonight were enhanced with a smoky flavor when the oven caught fire. It was so much less trouble than setting up the grill, too.
Although my spouse went to a good deal of trouble putting out the fire and scraping out the char while I lay on the couch getting drooled on by the baby. I keep watching for signs that the baby might be urlLink an Indigo child . One characteristic is: They come into the world with a feeling of royalty (and often act like it). Yes, my five-month-old expects me to wait on him hand and foot, as if he's entitled to the service.
Also: They simply will not do certain things; for example, waiting in line is difficult for them. I can already see the signs of impatience in him, when his bottle isn't ready or he's been ignored for more than five minutes. He may grow up really different from normal children, who happily wait in lines for hours at a time.
These urlLink new children are really special - some of them even refuse to do homework. I'll have to buy a book, to see what discipline methods work with such a child. I don't believe in spanking, except between two consenting adults. On to today's fun with etymology. Guess which of these three words are etymologically related: urlLink galaxy , urlLink lactate , and urlLink lettuce . Give up? All three of them! They come from the Greek, Latin and Old French words for milk .
So, the Milky Way galaxy is kind of redundant. The newest descendent, according to urlLink Wordspy is lactivist , a person who strongly advocates breastfeeding. Breastfeeding an infant can be a wonderful experience, but a lactivist can be tiresome. 
