She like this game a lot.
Caelyn and Nigel
The most exciting thing that has happened to them is that they now have reliable wheels. They are both working very hard at college. Wendy has been cutting a molar and has had an upset tum with it. Recently, she has broken her arm, had a holiday in Wales which was fantastic but it wasn’t her house, been to nursery for a couple of sessions and had her life turned upside down by her parents going to college. She is a bit unsettled by all these things, but she is coping. She is lucky compared to lots of other children though, as she has had both her parents look after her for most of her life and when they can’t, she is looked after by someone she knows and loves, in a familiar environment. She was 18 months old before her mum left her for several hours at a time, and she was left with her dad or her gran or her great gran or auntie Michelle. A lot of children don’t ever have that ongoing constant care.
Its surprising that she still has so much fun with the brick trolley.
Wendy won't eat alone. Dolly has to be offered food too.
Josie
Josie has made the sweetest offer. Now that everyone is studying, she has offered to cook for the Friday Night Family Night In. That will take a lot of pressure off us. We enjoy our Friday evenings but feel a bit bogged down by the studies, so her kind suggestion is very welcome indeed. Wendy did her hair too after she finished Richard’s hair. She now has a new mobile number because the rest of us are on the O2 network and they are offering a good tariff, so she has joined as well. You can ask for a free sim card on the internet and they post up to 4 to your address.
Our O2 mobiles
We all own our own handsets and we are on Pay-as-you-Go. We are on the Favouriteplace tariff. We have to top up with £10pm, but that £10 does not pay for Favouriteplace, because those minutes really are “free”. With the £10 top-up, we buy a text message bundle. I get 200 texts for £9.99. So for my £10 top-up, I get 500 minutes from my city postcode to call landlines or other O2 phones, plus 200 texts. That is a good deal. The postcode is not my specific address, it is for the town itself. So if I chose a Tonbridge postcode, the free minutes would apply to the whole of Tonbridge and not the specific house or street in the postcode.
500 minutes is 8 and a half hours, and those minutes can be used at any time of the day or night. If you want to use your phone in another postcode, the tariff is a reasonable 25p per min for the first 3 min of a 24hr period, then 5p per minute after that for the rest of the 24hr period. You can change your chosen postcode every month if you want to.
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