November 6th, 2009 | 3 Comments »

Then and now.
viking3

20091101_51viking

They seem so different, and yet, when viewed like this, they could almost be the same person!  In the first picture, BB is 9 months old.  In the second picture, LB is 14 months old.  They both started out at nearly 10-1/2 lbs (10lbs 7oz for BB and 10lbs 6oz for LB), but BB has stayed on the BIG BOY growth curve, whereas LB has shifted to the Little Boy growth curve.  (Actually, he’s still on the tall side, but he’s not ginormous like his big brother.)

Where did my brown haired baby go?  I have two blondies with blue-grey eyes.

Posted in children
October 30th, 2009 | 2 Comments »

My BB loves to draw, and I just love the things he comes up with.  I think he’s very good.  He uses different colors and makes designs and shapes and stays within the lines when he wants to, and beyond the lines when it suits him.  I love that!

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This drawing was a heart breaker.  It’s the first family drawing he’s made, and he did it the very day that Gadget left.  Look!  I have extra arms, because I do so much.  (Artistic interpretation taken liberally.)

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This one cracks me up.  He did this just the other day.  ‘Mommy, this is a sign.  It’s a no BB sign.  You put it on your door.’  Genius!  I swear, I have not taught him the sign symbol with the circle and slash that represents ‘do not’, and I can’t think of any on our normal routes.  Dora, Diego, or Sponge Bob must have taught him.  I do bark at him to stay out of the bedroom while I’m trying to put LB to sleep.  Every. Single. Night.  He just wants attention, but insists on demanding it at precisely the time when I need to be exclusive with LB.  Any distractions stir up the sleep cycle and the meltdowns commence.  It’s a precarious balance.

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“Mommy, this sign says ‘No running across the street and jumping in puddles or else you will get in big trouble because you could get hitted by a car and runned-ded over and have to go to the hobspital.’

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This one is very Van Gogh.  All the windows and lines.  I especially like this one.  The spaghetti sauce is a nice touch, too.  You know, real.  Authentic.

One problem about loving to draw is that one who loves to draw might, especially if he’s 4-1/2, draw on, oh, just about anything.  To help channel this love, I thought it would be good to provide an allowable space for artistic expression.  What could be better than a whole wall?!

20091027_191before

Chalkboard paint is a great invention.  It can even be tinted (within a limited palette), so I got blue.  Blue is, after all, BB’s favorite color.  Am I a thoughtful mother, or what?  BB being BB, however, was unable to resist the temptation to continue drawing on any available surface while waiting for the chalkboard paint to dry.  During this time he decorated my camera case and eventually had to do a little time for his crime.

20091027_193timeout

LB, not wanting to miss any of the action, joined him.  (How I wanted to get a picture of the moment when they were standing side by side, both noses to the wall!  It was short-lived, since the curtain was much more interesting.)

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Finally!  Let’s draw!  They had just come home from daycare and didn’t even wait to take off their jackets.

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He likes to draw aliens, lately.  These are inspired by ‘Galaxar’.’

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And here it is, in full splendor.  It makes me smile.

Posted in art, children, projects
August 30th, 2009 | 3 Comments »

I remember being four.  Summer.  West Orion Drive.  A dark cool basement.  Daddy longlegs on the screen door at night.  Walking barefoot, carefully, through the thistles in the grass.  The sound of my mother whistling from behind a door — peekaboo.  My dad, reading a newspaper, sitting in a brown recliner.  Being asked if I want to go to school.  Preschool.  A blue plastic sleeping mat.  I don’t want to take a nap.  I’m not tired and I don’t understand why everybody has to take a nap.  I lie there and don’t sleep.  Small stools painted like ladybugs.  I’m wearing red tights and I wet myself.  Crying.  Ashamed.  Scolded by the teacher.  A metal bathroom stall.  Sobbing.  Trying to take care of things.  I only remember that one day of preschool.  I wonder if I kept going?  Or do I only remember the first traumatic day?

I wonder what my son will remember about being four.  Will he only remember an exasperated mother, yelling at him every day?  Don’t hit your brother.  [Deer in the headlights gaze.]  Why did you hit your brother?  “Because I like to.” Why did you do that“Because.” Why did you do this“Because.” Be careful.  [Deer in the headlights gaze.]  Pay attention.  [Deer in the headlights gaze.] Try not to spill.  [Deer in the headlights gaze; invariably spills.] Hurry, get a towel.  [Covers ears with hands and cowers.]  Why didn’t you hold on to it?  [Deer in the headlights gaze.] Eat your dinner.  “I done wike it.” Go to the bathroom.  “I don’t want to.” Wash your hands.  “I don’t want to.” Don’t throw things.    [Deer in the headlights gaze.]  Why are you whining?    [Deer in the headlights gaze.]  Please stop whining.    [Deer in the headlights gaze.]  Stop whining NOW.    [Deer in the headlights gaze.]  Close the gate.    [Deer in the headlights gaze.]  Pick that up.  “It’s too hard for me.” I TOLD YOU NOT TO HIT YOUR BROTHER.    [Deer in the headlights gaze.]  Time out.  “I done wanna go to time out.” Time for bed.  “I done wanna go to bed.” Do you want a spanking?  “I pwomise I won’t do it never never again.” Time to get up.  “I’m ti-wed.  I done wanna get up.” Get dressed.  “I done wanna get up.” Hurry up.    [Deer in the headlights gaze.]  Where are your shoes?  “I unno.” That’s not a toy.    [Deer in the headlights gaze.]  What did you just do?  “Nuffing”

I long to be laughing and giggling and hugging him, showering him with love and kindness, but I find myself frazzled and frayed, cross and at the end of my rope.  I give him options.  I tell him the reward — do this and you’ll get that.   The power of now is too much for him, though.  He almost always forgoes the reward, so that he can continue in the now.  How I want to give him the reward.  How I want him to learn to make good choices.  But it’s too much for him.  I can see him struggle and give in to the power of now.

In his eyes, he must wonder why I am so nice to the baby and why I am so mean to him.  And that breaks my heart.  I want  him to grow up happy and secure, knowing that he is wanted and treasured.  Only after a long, trying day, does he finally yield, rest his head on my shoulder, and fall asleep in my arms.

And sometimes, I hold him close, and let the tears roll down.20090826_29bb

Posted in children, motherhood
August 27th, 2009 | 8 Comments »

20090814_30lbOne singular sensation

20090814_114lbEvery little step he takes.

20090814_134lbOne thrilling combination

20090814_113lbEvery move that he makes.

20090814_143lb-slick One smile and suddenly nobody else will do;

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You know you’ll never be lonely with you know who.
20090814_122lb One moment in his presence

20090814_100lbAnd you can forget the rest.

20090817_23lbFor the guy is second best
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To none,

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Son.

Happy Birthday, my Magical Wonder Boy

Posted in children, motherhood
July 30th, 2009 | 6 Comments »

We had the 3-month follow up today and the x-ray shows improvement, but it’s not all healed.  The doctor is very happy with the progress and advised us to continue with what we’re doing, not allowing the boy wonder to sit.  We’ll check again in 4 months, and it sounds like we’ll keep on with this until at some point, if there’s not enough improvement, the MRI and surgery (to fuse the vertebrae) will be something to consider.  For now, we’re staying with the non-invasive course.

Anyhow, we’re happy that there’s improvement.  I was hoping for a fully developed bone, but at least things are going in the right direction.

I’d love to post new pictures, but I’m so full up with work that I can barely spare a minute.  Maybe in September.

Posted in children, family, health, me
June 27th, 2009 | 6 Comments »

20090614_45-aGuess who is ten months old today?

Yep.  My little guy.

Just this week he figured out how to pull himself to a stand.  Then he got so excited about it, because it was, you know, way cool, so he waved his arms in excitement, as he does…   …and went timber, straight back like a falling tree.  My, that was scary, for both of us.  It’s a good thing babies are so resilient and also so close to the ground.   Gravity might otherwise not be so kind.

He is stunningly gorgeous, too.  And I’m not just saying that because I’m his mother.  Well, yes, actually I am.  But look at him!

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Today we spent the day together, just the two of us.  Gadget and BB went to show off the boat, the boat that I want very little or nothing to do with, even though I paid for the blessed thing for goodness sake, but Gadget in his manipulative wonder managed to get me to go for it, and I really need to develop a backbone or something when it comes to dealing with marital strife see Gadget’s family up north, and my back was hurting and I was exhausted from a crazy work week, so I stayed home.  I just didn’t want to go.  We went last weekend, and that’s about all I can take for a month or two. So LB and I had a nice day together doing laundry and buying milk.  That little boy is very good at helping fold clothes.

He is also a master at scooting backwards.  He’s as fast as lightning and it makes me laugh, the way he scoots so fast.  It’s sort of like a frog hopping backwards.  I laugh and laugh, and I swear he knows it tickles me so he does it more, to put on a show.  His forward crawl is sort of like a sidestroke.  The ‘commando’ crawl, like GI Joe.  He gets up on his hands and knees to scope the scene, then plops into commando position to make his advance.  He gets to his feet from the kneeling position.  He sort of rolls back on his toes and straightens his legs, like a dancer.  Then he bounces and flails because he thinks it’s so cool to be standing, but of course he forgets and then falls.  Hopefully he’ll figure that out soon.  Dinglefuzz.

The other thing he does with amazing accuracy is turn on the DVD player.  No kidding.   He goes directly for the power button or the open/close button, and he’ll take the DVD out of the tray.  Little stinker!  We have a barricade of pillows in front of the TV stand, but he literally dives onto them, and then starts hurling pillows away with all his might, to get at those electronics.

And how are things on the feeding front?  He has five teeth, and several more on the verge of breaking through.  I still have him on stage two foods because he chokes and gags with the tiniest of fragments in his mouth.  I’m looking forward to him actually attempting to chew, but he’s not ready yet.  He’s not too thrilled with the frozen breast milk, either.  He takes it fine during the night when he’s mostly asleep, but in the day he fights it, so I mix it with rice cereal and feed it to him that way.  And as for weaning, I am nearly there.  I am down to one pump in two days, so the end is in sight.  My mood and emotions are all over the map, though, but that is probably to be expected.  It IS good to be getting my boobs back, I have to say.  There is much less pain, all around.  My belly pain is finally subsiding too.

Still hoping for a full night’s sleep, but it looks as though that is a pipe dream at best.

Still smitten beyond words with this little bundle of wonder, though.  He’s the bestest.

Posted in children, motherhood
May 26th, 2009 | 5 Comments »

20090510_12-1Hello there, Mister Squishy Pants.  Or is it Mister Stinky Pants?  It’s safe to say that if you are Mister Squishy Pants, then you are most definitely Mister Stinky Pants.  And vice versa.  Not that anybody’s complaining.  We like to know that all systems are go, yes we do.  So we don’t mind.  We don’t mind one bit.  And we try hard not to take these things for granted any more.  Now that we know about that pesky little vertebrae that we hope is well on its way to behaving and filling in properly.

You are growing and learning by leaps and bounds now!  In the last few weeks you’ve sprouted more teeth.  I see three, and several more just lurking beneath the surface.  And you’re such a giggle box!  Some babies are miserable when teething, but not you!  You giggle and shriek and squirm and kick.  You are so full of life, my beautiful boy.

You especially love it when I hold you under your armpits and swing you like a pendulum.  Tick Tock!  You giggle and kick the air and squirm and shriek and your smile goes from forever to forever.  You are contagious, and you make me feel so good.

You are an expert at rolling over and spinning circles, and you’ve just figured out how to move forward, instead of only backwards.  Oh boy.  You go straight for the baskets of DVDs.  Because you know you’re not supposed to.  And you press the red button on the toy dinosaur to make him roar.  How can you be so smart?!  You’re a genius!

You love your turquoise blue blankie, too.  You know which one it is, and you grab it and pull it over your head when you want to go to sleep.  I always pull it back, because I don’t like you to cover your face.  But I have to check on you often, because you are a stubborn little guy, and pull it right back over your face.

Finally, you wake only once in the night for another bottle, and finally you take more than four ounces!  So it’s only 5 or 6, but it keeps you satisfied for longer, and that means I get to sleep a teensy bit more, and for that, I am so very happy!  No shaking your bottle and splashing your milk all over your head, though.  You’re not allowed to play with your milk.  Nope, not allowed.

I’m glad you like your binky.  I know it may not be the best thing, but I prefer to keep that in your mouth while you’re exploring, because I’d rather you NOT put other things in your mouth that you find during your adventures.  Your brother has a tendency to leave a trail, similar to the wake of a tornado, so for everyone’s safety, the binky is best.  What?  You think I want to spend every waking moment following your brother with a broom or a vacuum?  I thought I would have been able to teach him to clean up after himself by now, but he’s very head strong.  Like his dad.  And so are you.  I can only imagine what’s in store.

Soon you will learn to sit yourself from a stand or a crawl.  You are already trying.  You might not be happy when that happens, because I will keep putting you back on your tummy.  That’s what I’m going to do.   Just so you know.  We’re going to give that pesky little vertebrae every chance we can to fill out the way it should.  You might thank me when you’re 40.  Maybe.

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You have the look of a deep thinker, too.  You are so different from your brother, the boisterous bull in a china shop boy.  You are boisterous, but in a different way.  There’s something about you, my LB.   Something about you.  And I, I am smitten, over and over again.  First with your brother — I didn’t think I could be any more smitten, and then you came along and I’m smitten all that much more.

Nine months!  Happy Nine Months, my beautiful boy!

Posted in children
April 28th, 2009 | 13 Comments »

Children’s Hospital is a fantastic place.  It’s really quite incredible.  It’s like an art gallery with sculptures, murals, paintings, and mosaics.  It’s light and bright and cheerful and friendly.

sculpture garden entrance

sculpture garden entrance

They are very serious about security.  Everyone must wear a photo ID that is issued at the door.  There are several layers of reception and check-in/admitting.  While waiting for the actual appointment, one is given a pager.

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The lighting is stunning.  Art glass everywhere.

aquatic art glass ceiling fixtures

aquatic art glass ceiling fixtures

art glass wall sconce

art glass wall sconce

The floors are terrazzo with aquatic themed inlays.  There are fish and turtles and all manner of sea creatures everywhere you look.

walking with the turtles

walking with the turtles

Giant wall murals morph into etched glass walls.  Simply stunning.

20090428_15All this beauty to behold.  But it still doesn’t detract from the real beauty within those walls.  Children of all kinds.  Children with reasons to be there.  It’s almost too hard to think about, these children, and why they are here.

Why we are here.

probably the best baby in the universe

probably the best baby in the universe

He has a congenital spinal defect.

notched vertebrae

notched vertebrae

The vertebrae in the middle of the picture has a notch in it.  It’s underdeveloped.  If it doesn’t get a chance to fill out properly, the spinal cord could be damaged.  If it doesn’t grow properly, there may need to be surgery.  But it could resolve on its own.  That is my deepest hope.  He’s too small for a back brace to keep him rigid.  We’re told to discourage sitting.  He can be on his knees or his tummy or he can stand, but he has to avoid sitting.  He can only sit reclined, to keep the spine elongated.

less of this

less of this

We go back in three months for more x-rays.  The good news is the ultrasound showed his kidneys and bladder are all normal.  We will hope that the notch becomes less pronounced with time.  I want to avoid the MRI if at all possible.  The thought of general anesthesia for my infant makes me very sad.  So if his progress is good, we may be able to forego the MRI.  And surgery.

giant whale swimming through space

giant whale swimming through space

And we will spend very little time with the giant whales and sea creatures.

sea creatures everywhere

sea creatures everywhere

20090428_27It’s a beautiful place to visit.  It’s a more beautiful place to leave.

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Posted in children, health
April 26th, 2009 | 4 Comments »

BB has been sick.  There seems to be a correlation with visits to the school playground.  I was feeling like such a good mom, taking my kids for a walk, letting BB play on the slides and monkey bars, spending some time together outdoors.  And then the sick.  Granted, it’s only happened twice in the past few weeks, but considering he hasn’t been sick for ages until then, it seems to be more than coincidence.  I can hardly shield him from playgrounds, though, and eventually he will be in school, amidst a veritable melting pot of germs.  He needs to build up his immune system.

Having a sick child stirs an entirely new range of emotions.

I was going to start the weaning process, but LB gets some of my antibodies, and so far, we’ve not been sick.  I’d like to keep it that way.   I feel helpless enough waiting for the sick to work its way through BB.  I don’t want to deal with vomiting and diarrhea with an infant.   It’s not so much the mess, but the helplessness and the concern and the heartache for my suffering child that I want to avoid.  I don’t want him to suffer.  I could do without the mess as well.

He did catch a cold, recently, concurrent with the emergence of his razor sharp lower front two teeth.  I’ve heard that’s not uncommon, for a child to get a runny stuffy nose and a mild fever when teething.  He is no fan of the nasal aspirator, and cries and thrashes while I use it, but like a light switch, he’s all giggles and smiles the instant it’s over.  I love that.

LB has been such a dream baby in many respects.  He likes his routine.  He starts squirming and showing a little agitation around 6:30-7:30 p.m., indicating he’s tired.  I put him in his hammock with a bottle and he settles in almost immediately, and sleeps peacefully until 5-6 a.m.  He semi-wakes at regular 3 hour intervals for a feeding, and when he’s finished, I deftly swap the bottle for the pacifier and he nestles right back into his comfy position and continues to sleep.  However.  The other day, during his agitation phase, he was able to flop himself completely over while in the hammock, which is no small feat.  Once on his stomach, it’s almost impossible to right himself, so the hammock is no longer a safe place to sleep.  Enter the crib.  And the unhappy antics of a child whose routine has been altered.  It’s been three days now, and he’s doing better.

I do wish he’d take more than 4 ounces at a time.  If so, he might sleep longer than 3-4 hours at a stretch.  Which means I could too.  Selfish me!

Posted in children
April 6th, 2009 | 4 Comments »

Hayfever bites the big one.  When the sun is shining, the sky is blue, and daffodils are bursting with color, one might think such glory would be cause for jubilation.  And it would, if it weren’t for this wretched lack of tolerance for so many varieties of pollen.  Bah.

It’s going to be a very busy work week.  It was going to be busy anyway, with Athos out on vacation, but now Porthos is out for the week as well, with a family matter.  Which leaves me (Aramis*) to hold down the fort.  All of it. And I tend to have a full workload of my own anyway, and even more so this week due to an impending major deadline.  That’s the flip side to specialization.  With very few backups, occasionally one is left holding the bag.  I am glad to have a bag to hold, though.

Part of me is wrestling over the weaning decision.  How I look forward to life beyond the pump, yet, at the same time, I almost don’t want to stop.  Maybe because it marks the end of a path I’ll never walk down again.  I won’t be having another child.  I won’t be making milk again.  I will be wistful, when it’s time to close that door.  I’m wistful now, just thinking of it.

There is also a part of me that is trying not to be afraid.  I thought LB’s lower back looked a bit more hunched than I remember BB’s looking at that age, and inquired about it at his 6 month well-child checkup.  His doctor didn’t think it seemed too unusual, but ordered an x-ray as a precautionary measure.  The report came back with some frightening words and we were referred to a specialist.   When we got there, the diagnostic imaging service had put the wrong x-rays on the CD (it’s all digital these days), so the specialist couldn’t look at them.  He said that we could take more, or reschedule for a later date, since he wanted to order an ultrasound anyway, to look at the kidneys and thereabouts.  I chose to reschedule.  I don’t want to bombard my baby with any more radiation than absolutely necessary.  He also mentioned that an MRI might be needed, but I don’t want to make that decision until we have more information from the ultrasound results, and the evaluation of the x-rays.  With an infant, an MRI requires general anesthesia, and I don’t want to put him through that unless it’s necessary.  Anyhow, there are many hanging questions, and there may be nothing at all wrong, which is my deepest hope.  I’m doing my best not to allow myself to worry over the what ifs until or unless there is cause.  But it’s very hard for me.   I’m not so good at letting things roll.

I guess it shouldn’t be a surprise that I’ve been feeling a bit melancholy of late.  Consequently, I’ve been overly indulgent with the food scene.

I’ve also been feeling more aware of my age, for some reason.  I don’t feel old, per se, but I clearly remember thinking how old my own mother was when she was 42, and here I am, 44.  When she was 42, I was in college, and had made the decision to give up the big V, being that I thought I was an adult and all.  She wasn’t very happy about that news, when I shared it with her.  That was the end of our mother-daughter-friend-friend relationship, which in retrospect was mostly a sham anyway, initiated by me under some self-imposed sense of what a mother-daughter relationship should be like.

Poof.

Anyway.  She was 42 and I was ‘grown up.’  I’m 44, and I have a baby.  Different worlds.  Different generations.  In my world, now, I’m going to try to be a real friend to my boys.  To listen.   To hear.

This means, of course, that I need to get over myself, so I can be there for them.  Not so easy.  At least, not for me.  Else I’d have managed it by now.  Getting over myself, being 44, and all.

~~*~~*~~*~~

*Okay, so I watched Slumdog Millionaire this weekend, and it’s fresh in my mind.  Excellent movie.