Babies Posts

10 Things I Had Forgotten About Having a Newborn

The kids meeting Kaia for the first time at the hospital 3/31/13

So I casually forgot to mention that I had a baby.

I have been on self-imposed hiatus because I needed to focus on my business and step back from doing things that were tremendous time suckers!  I do love to write and share my random thoughts with you, though… and having a newborn (Miss Kaia Jordyn – born 3/31/13) is just perfect inspiration for blogging.

Each day, I am faced with something that reminds me how much I forgot in the three years since having a newborn.  Here are my current Top 10:

1. My baby smells amazing and only bathes once every 3-4 days.  I bathe daily and smell like a mixture of Eau de Spit Up, sour breastmilk, poop and some other unrecognizable scent that I’m praying only I can detect.

2. At first, babies sleep like 22 hours a day.  Then 18.  Then 14… and so on.  If you’re lucky, this goes on for blissful weeks on end.  Yet it’s always this grandiose surprise when one day you’re feeding the baby and then you are wondering why the hell she won’t fall asleep immediately and she looks at you like WTF are you doing with the lights off, rocking and shushing me?  Let’s party!

3. The 5 S’s from Dr. Harvey Karp’s The Happiest Baby on the Block still work to calm the crying – and the Miracle Blanket is truly a miracle.  You may disagree, but if you’re trying to calm your baby and nothing will work, humor me and try doing these 5 things simultaneously (that’s the key word):

  • Swaddling: Tight swaddling provides the continuous touching and support your baby is used to experiencing within the womb.  I use the Miracle Blanket.
  • Side/Stomach position: The infant is placed on their left side to assist in digestion, or on their stomach to provide reassuring support. “But never use the stomach position for putting your baby to sleep,” cautions Karp. Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS) is linked to stomach-down sleep positions.
  • Shushing sounds: These imitate the continual whooshing sound made by the blood flowing through arteries near the womb.
  • Swinging: Newborns are used to the swinging motions within their mother’s womb, so entering the gravity driven world of the outside is like a sailor adapting to land after nine months at sea. “It’s disorienting and unnatural,” says Karp. Rocking, car rides, and other swinging movements all can help.
  • Sucking: “Sucking has its effects deep within the nervous system,” notes Karp, “and triggers the calming reflex and releases natural chemicals within the brain.”

4. The baby makes terrifying sounds like she’s dying.  The grunts and choking noises have me rushing to her like she has a pinecone lodged in her throat.  Of course it’s all normal, but every time she chokes on her spit up, I’m sure she will need medical intervention.  Then when she’s quiet, I worry that she actually DID choke and I did nothing about it.

5. The “EEEE ER EEEE ER” sound of the breast pump and how I immediately transform from human to cow.

6. The ability to simultaneously smile and fart is cute when it’s the baby and not your husband.

7. Newborn babies are very squishy, curled up and alien-looking and this stage does not last long.  They do this eye blinking thing, “O” face and tongue thrust that is so very cute.  They are the best cuddlers EVER!  These days are fleeting.  Since she is not my first or even my second but my very last baby, every milestone hit is both a celebration and a goodbye.  The newborn-sized clothes have made way for 0-3 and we just graduated from N diapers to Size 1.  Sob.

8. YAY – the baby just fell asleep!  You now have a nice stretch of time to unload the dishwasher and watch an episode of The Office.  You gently put her down in some amazingly comfy apparatus so you can eat dinner.  Wrong, moron!  Why did you put her down?  You can’t put a baby down.  And you can’t eat dinner.  Just so dumb of you.  Now you have a 45 minute torturous road ahead before she’s asleep again and you will be eating dinner leaning sideways with one hand like you should have done in the first place.

9. The black hole called Morning.  I get up in the middle of the night and then again at 6:30 with the kids and somehow get them out the door for school.  Then some weird spell is cast over me and I turn around and see that the clock says 11:45 am and I realize that I have been sucked into the black hole yet again.

10. How amazing it is to stare at this beautiful life you created who depends on you for everything – and how happy you are to oblige.  How it makes you feel both invincible and helpless… all-knowing yet not having the answers… flawed, stretch-marked and imperfect yet somehow more beautiful than you’ve felt in a long time.

Happy Mother’s Day to all of you Moms and soon-to-be Moms out there!

A special thank you to my husband for being the most amazing Daddy that three kids could ever wish to have.  I am constantly in awe of how lucky we are.  You are a Daddy with many hats – protector, coach, playmate and entertainer.  Thank you for how present you are in our children’s lives.

 

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Three’s Company?

I need your help.

Not like a “Call 911!” type of help, or even a “Can you take my kids out of the house for an hour so I can get work done?” kind of help.  The kind of help that a woman needs when trying to make a big, life-altering decision.

Now it may seem weird that I’m asking you to help me work through a decision that should quite honestly:

1. Be none of your business

and

2. Remain between Cory and me

…but there are many things in my life that I can’t and/or choose not to discuss on this blog (ex: finances, what color loofah Cory uses in the shower) and this one I’m fine with sharing.  My blog, my truth.

What is it, you ask?

I can’t make up my mind about having a third.

Not a third pair of sneakers. Or a third glass of wine.

A baby.

It’s kind of a big deal and we’ve always talked about having three children but now that the time is nearing, I’m really, really confused.  I know the time is nearing for a few reasons.  One, I’ve been thinking about it non-stop.  Two, I don’t want to be pregnant forever.  I don’t want to get used to having parts of my life back and then starting over again.  I am 35 and with each year it will become more difficult to get pregnant naturally and honestly, I just want to know that we’re either done or that we’re going for it.  I definitely feel in-between.

Cory is conflicted, too, but his reasons aren’t for me to share.  We love our kids and we love being parents.  We love seeing the way Ryan and Alexa interact with each other.  There is nothing better than Ryan asking for a second goody bag, an extra snack or a toy at the dentist’s office “so I can bring it home for my sister Lexi”, holding her hand as they walk down the stairs, making sure his friends are gentle with her (even though he constantly tackles her to the ground), reading to her in his bed and calling her “sweetie girl”.  I love the way her eyes light up when Ryan comes home from school and she runs to hug him, her best friend and hero, holding onto him for dear life.

They have a relationship that I will never get to have, and whether I idealize the sibling dynamic or not, at least they have a shot at being friends and a support system for each other throughout their lives.  I know that there are no guarantees and that being born into the same family doesn’t mean that they will always like each other as individuals, but they will always share some sort of bond, having grown up in the same house and influencing each other just by mere proximity.  The thought of another child for all of us to love is wonderful, but it’s not that cut and dry for me.  Let’s start with the nagging worries that I have, the negatives that keep me from wanting to take the plunge:

We have two healthy, beautiful children.  Why mess with a good thing?

I have anxiety about this because although it only took 9 months to get pregnant with Ryan and I had two early miscarriages before Alexa, I have watched friends go through the heartache of infertility and I don’t know if I’d be pushing my luck. I feel guilt that I am conflicted about trying for a third when some people would give anything to have one.  I also worry that because of this greed, I will have an unhealthy child.  I didn’t say it’s a rational fear since there are plenty of families with three or more children, but it’s my fear.

What if it negatively affects Ryan and Alexa’s future?

Another child means dividing our time and resources even further and adding expenses that could affect our kids’ future.  Would it mean we couldn’t afford for them to go to the best colleges they get into?  Family vacations?  Weddings?  Plenty of people don’t factor in finances when having a family and say “you make it work” but at what expense?  And as for spending quality time with each child, the way it is now if Cory is having alone time with Alexa, I am having alone time with Ryan.  Easy.  If we had another child, would that time be harder to come by?  Would the kids feel cheated?

We would be outnumbered.

I can hold a kid in each arm.  One on each knee.  Two hands to hold when crossing the street.  Cory makes sure one doesn’t disappear while I keep track of the other.  Add a third to the mix and I just might lose one!

Three’s a crowd?

What if two get along great and one is always left out?  Odd numbers are hard.

Middle child syndrome.

This actually doesn’t worry me too much because Alexa would be the only girl or the big sister.  But do the oldest and youngest unknowingly get a different kind of attention as a result of their place in the family?

I have days when I don’t think I’m doing a good job handling the two I have.  Three would put me over the edge. 

I’m thinking about those super fun weeks in February, April, June, August and December when everyone is home from school.  Then the thought of coordinating three different playdates, plus shuttling between games, practices, recitals, Birthday parties and school functions is overwhelming.  Making sure three kids do their homework?  Packing three lunches according to individual pickiness?  Keeping track of them on a playground?  I’m sweating just typing this.  Oh G-d and the laundry!

I could be finished – right now – with infancy, round-the-clock feedings and total sleep disruption and be steps closer to building my business, fully committing myself to the gym (since the threat of pregnancy wouldn’t be in the picture) and moving closer to getting myself and my time back. 

It would be great to know that I’m completely done.  Knowing that those boxes of clothes, baby toys and bottles will never be dusted off again.  Knowing that I will have difficult times ahead as the kids face more complicated realities, but knowing that the baby stage is over and I can look forward to the next stage where our family is older and we can enjoy each other in a new and different way.  I find pregnancy to be an amazing experience, but I could do without the sickness, physical discomfort and the loss of sleeping on my stomach!  As someone who hardly sleeps and loves to nap, I don’t know if I’d have enough energy to take care of the two I have with pregnancy hormones coursing through me.  This thought truly frightens me.

Of course there are positives as well.  Otherwise this wouldn’t be such a dilemma.

Yes, we have two healthy, beautiful children.  So what’s wrong with wanting more of a good thing?  My kids are amazing.  They make me laugh harder than anyone.  They say and do the cutest things.  I am like an annoying Grandmother who is constantly talking about what they’re doing, showing pictures and videos.  Like most parents, I am completely in love with them most days and other days wish they would get shipped to Boarding School.  Being a Mom is really all I ever wanted when I was a kid.  (Also a singer, writer, teacher and Madonna.  But always a Mom.)  I could stare into their faces and kiss and tickle them for hours.  They are sweet little balls of fun with the best personalities and they make my life complete.  Why wouldn’t I want more of that?

Being an only child, I was always envious when friends would tell stories about their huge holiday gatherings complete with crazy aunts and uncles and tons of cousins.  When I went to friends’ houses who had two or more siblings, I usually noted their interactions.  Whether they were close or not (in age and/or in their relationship), I can remember a lot from those little glimpses into their lives.  Playmates.  Built-in entertainment.  Protectors.  Jealousy.  Fighting.  But mostly playing.  As I got older, those friends’ houses were full of noise and laughter.  A revolving door of friends raiding the fridge, watching movies, coming home from school and gossiping about the latest drama.  I loved the noise and the energy.  I know that Ryan, Alexa and their friends will create plenty of noise on their own, but I love the thought of even more kids growing up together in our home, sharing holidays, stories and experiences.

I know if we had another child, I would never regret having that child and it would feel like it was meant to be.  But I may regret not having another one.

We will probably be pushed to our limit, feel massively overwhelmed and wonder why we’re even allowed to be in charge of human beings.  But I often feel that way right now so what’s the difference?

Three kids in pajamas cuddling on the bed, listening to a book.  (Cozy and cute.)

Another option for whose house to live in when we’re old and grey.  (Good insurance.)

Increased probability of grandchildren. (A good thing.)

Looking into the face of another gift that Cory and I made for each other.  (Priceless.)

So I turn to you. 

First, I just want to apologize if I have offended any of my readers who feel this is in some way means I think having no children or anything less than three does not make a full house or family.  This is not even close to how I feel.  Or my readers who struggle with infertility.  I do not mean to be insensitive.  This is just my personal journey.

I knew I wanted more than one child because of my own desire to have a sibling.  This is probably also the rationale for wanting to have more than two children.  I had a small family so with a “grass is greener” mentality naturally thought about having a larger family of my own one day.  Just as I know people who grew up in huge families who went on to have one or two children as a result of feeling hidden and burdened by their family’s size.

My mother had three miscarriages before I was conceived and was placed on bedrest for most of her pregnancy with me.  Seeing as though they had a healthy child, my parents decided not to go through the ordeal and heartache again.  It makes sense.  I may mourn what could have been but I have had many blessings as an only child which make me the person I am today.  My best friends are like sisters to me.  I have a very full and happy life.

I just don’t know if our book is closed or not.

I’d probably have my answer if someone told me right now to throw out the boxes of baby clothes and toys that sit in my basement and ask me if I feel okay about it.  But it just doesn’t feel so black and white.

What affected your decision to have one, two, three or more children?  Did your family size growing up have something to do with it or was it beyond your control?  My friends have told me everything from “Don’t do it – it will ruin your life!” to “I’d have ten children if my husband would let me.” 

I would love to hear your thoughts so please comment below and thanks for visiting!

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Our First Grandchild

I have a new photo on my desktop of Ryan hugging his best friend Emma, taken at the park the other day.  It’s really cute and actually a pretty rare shot.

By rare, I mean that Ryan is not a hugger

Well, technically that’s not true. 

He hugs the heck out of me and the immediate family.  And he always has to give a hug and kiss to people before they leave the house.  A hug and kiss on the leg is his standard goodbye with his friends’ Moms (their legs are at his eye level – chill) and I’m pretty sure he’s even tried with the Chinese food delivery guy.  But one thing is for certain – it is a rare occasion when he hugs a friend.  I don’t know what this means exactly, but something about it makes him feel weird or uncomfortable.  Which doesn’t explain why he was just fine doing “belly cheers” (bumping bare bellies) with his friends for close to a year until I bought some books about privacy and inappropriate touching.  But hugging?  Too personal – or something.

So when he showed this awesome display of huggyness, I saw wedding bells. 

Because everyone likes to plan a wedding for their four year old.  Duh.

So I asked him if he’s going to marry Emma.  He said yes.  Then I asked if he’s going to have kids with her.  He said yes, eight.  Nice!  So I asked what he’d like to name the first baby.  Only because it’s important to prepare for your future.

He paused, cocked his head to the side and studied the picture of himself hugging his future wife.  He traced his finger up and down their arms on the computer screen, seemingly lost in thought.  What a touching moment.  I was sure he was contemplating a special name for my first grandchild. 

“Well, I think Alissyullsee.”

“I’m sorry, what?”

“Mom!  You didn’t hear me?  I like the name Alissyullsee.  Say AL-ISS-YULL-SEE.”

“Alissyullsee.”

Sigh and an eye roll.  Obviously I’m slow.  Or he detects a foreign accent.

Mooooommm, how many times do I have to say it?  It’s Alice You’ll See.  Do you think Emma will like it?”

“Um, sure.  But won’t it be difficult to buy anything with her name on it?   It’s kinda long.”

“Huh?”

I guess I can wait on the 8 grandkids.  Only because Alice You’ll See is a totally crappy name.  Ryan surely needs to mature.  I’m a little disappointed he’s taking this so lightly. 

Anyway, can you imagine the cuteness when we do the video montage on their wedding day?  Here are just a few of the gazillions we have of them together…

First picture together

 

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Baba Black Sheep

I feel like the only person on Earth with a bottle-addicted toddler.  Of course it’s all in my head, you probably have/had one, too.  Or at least you can pretend you did to make me feel better. 

Yeah yeah, she’s only 16 months old, last month you all told me not to panic and to try again later.  But I started panicking about my little girl with a baba at her Baba Bat Mitzvah and I knew I had to try again. 

Alexa drinks water out of a cup, but still not milk.  She has fits about her freaking bottles – there are times when she refuses to get up off the floor until she sees a frantic Mommy filling up her baba.  But I refuse to be a pushover just because she’s cute.  In the past couple of weeks, her comprehension and communication has soared to new heights, even though the words are still stuck somewhere in her head.  It made sense to try again.  I also realized that by delaying this, I’m just setting myself up for a worse addiction as time goes on.  (Did I ever mention that I introduced the paci to Alexa at 6 months after her not caring about it at all?  And now she hops in the crib and searches for it like she’s digging for gold?  Yup, I’m a moron.)  That aside, it’s either a scream-fest now or later.  And since Alexa is getting three molars at once and we’re up in the middle of the night now anyway, it’s a great time to add to the unpleasantness. 

Sunday night, I took all of the nipples off of the bottles, put them in a drawer and replaced them with yellow Born Free sippy cup tops.  Basically, it’s still the bottle on the bottom, just with a different top.  This is a great ploy by Born Free to make parents feel like they’re taking some big step when really they are doing nothing. 

This is what our big girl baba looks like. 

Not impressed?  Me, either. 

But we made a big deal about it and I’m not taking those nipples out of the drawer – ever.  She drank from it tonight before bed.  A bit tentatively, but she drank some. 

Night #1 was a toss-up.  I can’t tell if she took almost two hours to fall asleep because she had three blood-lined molars busting through or because she hates me. 

The following nights went smoothly.  Now I only give her the “big girl baba” first thing in the morning and last thing at night with straw cups during the day, so today I actually told my friend that Lexi doesn’t drink out of a bottle anymore.  I know it’s a lie and I told her the bottom half is still the bottle but it makes me feel better that I took a baby step for her. 

She’s freaking cute with that bottle.  If she can be my baby a little longer, I won’t mind.

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Reader Letter – Lonelyville

To the Mommy stuck in Lonelyville,

Usually I’d just write back a personal response, but – LUCKY  YOU! – I decided to draw it out and turn your letter into a post because I’m really feeling you right now and I’m sure others are, too. 

I’m a new Mom with a 4 month old daughter and I feel really lonely most days.  I love spending time with her, but I could really use some adult conversation.  I go to the park in my neighborhood, but haven’t met anyone yet who I clicked with to the point that we’d exchange info or anything.  How did you meet people when Ryan was born?

I totally feel you and wish I could come over and play right now!  Don’t despair – there are people out there – you just haven’t met them yet. 

Now I can’t exactly tell if you’re on maternity leave and heading back to work or if you’re at home for the long haul, but it doesn’t really matter because people everywhere are looking for friends – weekday or weekend – you just need to look in the right places (and I will help you find some of those places – and hopefully some commenters will, too!) 

One thing I will stress is that when looking for new friends, you have to keep an open mind.  The first few people I met didn’t seem like my “usual” kind of friend and I thought all we had in common was that we had babies in the Spring of ’07, but those were the same girls that invited my depressed, lost, cheerless self into their homes and kept forcing me to attend gatherings of human beings and for that I am forever grateful.  And surprise, surprise – I am still in contact with them. 

All I wanted when I went on my “find a friend” rampage search was someone who lived close to me.  Preferably someone who thought I was worth spending time with.  Like, every day.  And maybe we would have sleepovers.  With wine.  And go on vacations together.  Perhaps a Mommy BFF who wanted to wear the other half of my heart necklace.  Okay but really, I just wanted to meet one freaking person who got me excited about being at home with my kid and made me want to shower and get dressed and get outside.  And someone who definitely wanted to chat about more than breastfeeding, napping and poop.  Although that would be allowed, of course.  A lot of pressure for that one person, but whatever, that would be their problem. 

I found two such people.  G lived in my apartment building and I met LB in a baby class.  They pretty much restored sanity to my life.  They both had baby girls born in March and we would take walks, go to the playground and to lunch. 

Our first friends - G, LB and their beautiful daughters at our apartment for a BBQ

Eventually, G went back to work but we still hung out at night and on weekends, LB and I met other people through our baby class and a bunch of us joined music and gym classes together, went to lunch and found tons of places to hang out in the area. 

With time, our circle of friends expanded.  I knew this would be my Mommy support system – I knew there were girls out there that I could depend on if I needed to drop Ryan off in an emergency, if I needed a doctor recommendation or just to talk.  To this day, I consider some of them my closest friends.  Not all remained – some moved out of the area, others went back to work and naturally some of us simply grew apart, but each one made a profound difference in my life and for that I am so thankful that we crossed paths. 

It felt so amazing to create a new life for myself.  It was hard work, but it needed to be done.  I had gone from having a work schedule, a community of people and a place to go every day to waking up and … well, nothing. 

I actually need to work at this again, now that the 4-year-old set is in camp all day and Lexi and I talk openly about how she needs some friends.   I’m currently stalking a woman from our MyGym class and begging my neighbor to pop out her 3 month old fetus now so we can hang out.  Nevermind that she has a 6 year old and a 4 year old in camp and probably wants to enjoy her quiet summer before she goes back to work.  But that doesn’t stop me. 

I’m close to printing a sign and hanging it on all of the neighborhood trees with a sad looking picture of Alexa beneath the bold headline “Looking For Friends”, and my contact info on it.  For sure someone would contact me immediately.  Probably the police, but someone nevertheless. 

Okay, I’m sure you’re thrilled that I turned your letter into a post, because in no way have I answered your question and you’ve been reading this for waaayyy too long and you’re annoyed because you could have been out making friends and instead I’m disappointing you.

So here goes…

1. Meetup.com

Meetup is a website where you can find groups of people from Pet Lovers to Singles Over 50 to Lonely Mommies like you.  By zip code!  So try a search there and be creative with your search terms.  Just be careful if you join a group that only has 1 or 2 members.  It very well may be a startup, but if the group was founded a year ago and nobody has joined, you’re probably not going to find what you’re looking for. 

2. Stroller Strides

Stroller Strides is a way for you to get back into the exercise game, meet other people and use your baby as a dumbbell.  Just kidding, sort of.  Check it out – they are all over the country and you can take a free trial to see what it’s all about. 

3. Music Together

Music Together is an internationally recognized music and movement program for babies through kindergartners and their caregivers.  There are tons of music programs out there, and I tried to stay away after something like 5 semesters with Ryan because I was afraid of a growing addiction (I actually started listening to the CDs in the car by myself when I didn’t even have to) but I’m back there again with Alexa and loving it. 

4. Search out your local YMCA, library, church, synagogue, other place of worship or community center.  You may be surprised at just how many free or low cost classes are offered just minutes away.  Especially at the library – you can find everything from Storytime to Zumba to Drivers Ed. 

5. Pick up your town’s free parenting magazines.  There are lots of community events going on throughout the year and you can get great ideas about where to go (once you’ve made that friend to share your necklace with).  Everything from farms to museums to playgrounds to gym classes (The Little Gym, MyGym, Gymboree, etc.) to indoor play spaces can be found inside these little gems. 

6. Websites.  I have a bunch of sites bookmarked that have great ideas for places to go and things to do in my area.  One of these is Mommy Poppins… but obviously do your own search (although I’d love to hang with you!)  Online Birth Clubs are another way to meet people.  I have friends who have a whole online support system from BabyCenter and BabyZone.  There is also the MOMS Club.  Play around a bit…

One final thought – treat this like you’re scouring the Mommy Dating Scene.  You’ll get out of it what you put into it.  Talk to people at Birthday parties, say hello on the street, ask people you know if they know anyone.  If you’re like me and give off a stand-offish vibe when you meet a new person and cannot imagine blurting out, “It was great meeting you – let’s get the kids together!”, you’ll have to get over it.  Now is the time to be your most outgoing self.  Try not to make decisions based on how she carries her baby everywhere in a sling, co-sleeps, breastfeeds exclusively and makes her own baby food while you maybe can’t imagine doing any of that.  That doesn’t make you opposites, you just have different parenting styles.  The woman who doesn’t seem like your “normal type of friend” may just be the one who helps you out of Lonelyville. 

Good luck!

 P.S. Anyone else, please comment with suggestions.  I am more than confident that I’ve left out other great ways to meet people. 

 

 

 

 

 

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A Birth Story

Photo Credit: Kelle Hampton

Everyone comes into this world with their own story. 

Some believe we write our stories as we journey through life, our decisions creating unique twists and turns.

Some believe our stories were written for us by someone or something larger than ourselves. 

Kelle Hampton is just one woman who is not unlike someone you may know.  Blessed with good looks, she has a husband, children, a talent for taking breathtaking photographs and writing about the wonders of life in her blog, Enjoying the Small Things.   

Like you and me, she has a story.  It is not the first story of its kind.  But what makes her story so remarkable is that she wrote about it.  One defining event written in raw, honest detail.  To share with others how life sometimes throws a wrench in our plans, forces us to change the way we think, to challenge us in ways we could never imagine. 

I have so many things I want to say about her story but most of all, I want YOU to read it.  So sit back (with a box of tissues) and allow Kelle to take you on her incredible personal journey – the birth story of her second daughter, Nella Cordelia:

http://www.kellehampton.com/2010/01/nella-cordelia-birth-story.html

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First Steps

Our baby girl took her first steps today!  Congratulations, Alexa.

March 12, 2011 – 10.5 months old
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Posted by Dani in Babies

Mother’s Intuition

4:00 a.m. Wednesday morning and she’s at it again.

How is it that Alexa slept through the night for 10 days in Florida and now it’s back to broken sleep?

Except this time it’s more of a scream than a cry.  I go in and hold her.  She’s not warm, her diaper isn’t full, her nose isn’t running.  She stops.  She’s okay.

4:20 a.m. and she’s not okay.

I go back in to hold her and rub her back, my shirt absorbing her tears, my heart beating out of my chest with sadness for her until 5:00 a.m. when she passes out from sheer exhaustion. 

She’s fine during the day.  I chalk it up to a rough night.

3:58 a.m. Thursday morning and her screaming cries pierce the air.  Same deal – no fever, nothing outwardly wrong.  I’m at a loss.

It takes another hour before she falls asleep for good.

I run through any obvious signals she may have sent my way aside from the sound of her cry.  No ear pulling or anything.  There was the poop-up-her-back incident at lunch yesterday where thankfully one of Ryan’s friends let her borrow his shirt because her sweater was, um, no longer wearable.  Aside from that, just a feeling. 

I asked around – is it possible to have an ear infection without a fever?  A few people said yes.  Most said it was probably adjusting to being back home.  The plane ride could have done something to bother her.  The pool.  Just one of those phases she’s going through.  Separation anxiety.

All totally plausable, but I just had a feeling

So I made a better-safe-than-sorry doctor’s appointment.

At the office, her left ear checks out just fine.  Perfect, actually.  A part of me is actually disappointed.  Not because I want my daughter to be in pain, but because I really felt like something was off and would rather have an answer than questions. 

But everyone has two ears.

And her right ear was not fine.   

And so I conclude – always trust your intuition when it comes to your kids.  You may have some days when you feel like everything you do is wrong (and sometimes it is), but no matter how old your kids are, you are their voice.  Their biggest advocate.  Their eyes and ears.  For something as little as an ear infection or as big as bullying  – trust your inner compass and never let anyone or anything lead you astray. 

As for my little baby, she gets a free pass for tonight but that Amoxicillin had better kick in soon or I’m going back to Florida…

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Posted by Dani in Babies and tagged with , ,

Road Rage

I’m in the car with the kids yesterday after a playdate.  We have a ways to go since it’s rush hour and I’m facing traffic.  Lexi is drinking her bottle.  Ryan is playing songs from his mix on the iPod. 

I begin to get lost in my thoughts….

“Mommy?”

“Yes, Ry?”

“Remember my dream last week about the dinosaur and the big, huge egg?”

“Yes.  The egg was so huge!  And blue.  I remember that – good memory!”

“I think it was a T-Rex egg, right Mom?”

“Sure, maybe it was a T-Rex egg.  I bet I don’t remember as well as you do.”

“It was a T-Rex or a Stegasaurus or a Brachyasaurus or one of those, right?” (He started watching this show Dino Dan recently on Nick, Jr.)

“Yeah, maybe it was one of those other dinosaurs.  I just remember it was HUGE!”

Lexi drops her bottle and starts wailing.  I have to drive four minutes before I can stop, reach around and get it for her.  Crisis averted.

“Mommy?”

“Yes?”

“Dinosaur sounds like ‘dynamite’, like from my song (the one by Taio Cruz) - see, listen – dinosaur, dynamite!  Did you hear that?  Dynamite dinosaur.  Like my dream with the huge huge egg.  It was a dynamite egg from a dinosaur.  They rhyme, right?  Dynamite and dinosaur?”

“Mmmmm.  Not really.  The beginning sounds…”

Lexi drops her bottle again and she’s letting me know how unhappy this makes her feel.  This time I’m on the expressway.  Five minutes pass and I’m frantically looking for a shoulder to pull over onto, but no dice.  Eight minutes.  Meanwhile, the conversation continues…

“Mommy?”

“YES, Ry?”

“Do you remember my dream where the dinosaur had a huge huge egg and it was blue and so scary and what did I do with the egg?  Did I throw it in the trash?  Did you see it?  I think I lost it.  Remember you saw it, too? 

Does he not remember we JUST had this conversation?

“Why is Lexi crying?  HEY, LEXI!  We’re almost home!”

Whew, got the bottle back!

“Hey, Mom?  Did you hear Lexi saying ba ba la blblblblblblblblaaaaa blblblblblbaaaaa?  She’s sooooooo funny!  LEXI!  Say BLBLBLBLBLBLBLBLAAA!!  LEXI!  SAY IT!!”

“Mommy!  She spit up!  EWWWWWW, LEX!” 

“MOMMY!   What song do you want me to play?”

I hear the bottle drop again.  Someone shoot me.

“OH MY GOSH.  Play any song.  Doesn’t matter.  Ry, I’m trying to drive and figure out how to get Lexi’s bottle back.”

“Pick your favorite!  Here, is THIS your favorite?  Do you hear it?  Are you listening?  MOMMY?”

“RYAN, PLEASE!”

“Mommy?”

My blood is boiling by now.  I’m thisclose to shouting an obscenity.  I literally have to take a deep breath and remember a video I saw a couple of years ago that I never forgot.  I cry every time I see it.  It reminds me of this car ride.  I don’t think I’ve ever truly SCREAMED at Ryan, but I’m pretty sure today will be the first.  But this video saved me. 

For today.

Maybe it will save you, too.

Father. Son. Sparrow.

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Posted by Dani in Babies, Boys and tagged with ,

How to Starve Your Child: A Primer

Alexa is a “petite” baby.  At her 9 month checkup, she was in the 50th percentile for height and between the 10th-25th percentiles for weight.  Because Ryan was a normal chubber before he began walking, people assume Alexa is smaller because she was breastfed longer.  But the real reason is because I have inadvertently been starving her.  And I’m pretty sure this is part of the reason why she’s been waking up waaaaaayyyyy too early recently. 

This is how you, too, can starve your poor, innocent baby (tongue-in-cheek, of course):

1. Stop breastfeeding and then completely lose track of how much she drinks and eats in a day, since you’re used to feeding on demand.

2. Go to the doctor for a well visit and when asked about her food intake, mention something like 32 oz plus 2 jars of food.  (Doctor said she should go up to 3 jars.)

3. Go home and actually keep track of her food intake and realize that she’s actually somewhere around 24 oz plus 2 jars.  That’s like the equivalent of missing a whole bottle!  Turns out she doesn’t finish all of the bottles and those leftover ounces really add up when you count them…

Do you think she hates me because I was starving her or is secretly glad because she doesn’t have my thighs? 

P.S. Today she got 28 oz and 3 jars.  I tried, but she fell asleep on the bottle. 

I suck.

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Posted by Dani in Babies
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