My progress, since weight loss surgery 8/8/07

Sunday, June 3, 2007

For all Moms of toddlers Past and present the terriable two's


Think you have had a OMG moment with your child? I DARE you to top this poor mom's story:

Toddler stomps monks' sand creation
Design that took two days to create was too tempting for Mo. child to resist
May 24: Tibetan monks who had spent two days working on an intricate sand painting in a Kansas City mall will continue after an unsupervised child destroyed much of their handiwork.
Watch the Video here

Updated: 7:23 p.m. ET May 24, 2007
KANSAS CITY, Mo. - The little boy spotted the pretty pile of colored sand on the floor of the vast hall and couldn’t resist. Slipping under a protective rope, he danced all over the sand, ruining the carefully crafted picture.

Never mind that it was the creation of eight Tibetan monks who had spent two days cross-legged on the floor of Union Station, meticulously pouring the sand into an intricate design as an expression of their Buddhist faith.

They were more than halfway done with the design — called a mandala — on Tuesday when they ended their work for the day and left. The little boy showed up sometime later with his mother, who was taking a package to a post office in the hall.
“He did a little tap dance on it, completely destroying it,” said Lama Chuck Stanford, of the Rime Buddhist Center in Kansas City.
'No problem,' monk says
A security tape shows the boy’s mother returning to the mandala, grabbing her son by the arm and walking out of camera range.
The monks saw the destruction Wednesday.

“No problem,” Geshe Lobsang Sumdup, leader of the group from the Drepung Gomang Monastery in southern India, said through a translator. “We didn’t get despondent. We have three days more. So we will have to work harder.”

The monks are on a yearlong tour of the United States and Canada to raise money for their monastery. The original monastery in Tibet was destroyed.

In a ceremony Saturday, they will sweep up the sand and offer bits to onlookers for their gardens. The rest will be placed in the Missouri River.

“The belief is that it will carry the blessings all over the planet, from the Missouri River to the Mississippi to the gulf and to all the oceans of the world,” Stanford said.

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