Posts Tagged ‘milestones’

Verbose

Thursday, December 1st, 2011

“How old is Drew?” the sugary sweet toddler art teacher asks me.


“He’ll be two in January,” I reply.


“His verbal skills are incredible. He blows the other kids out of the water.”


“Oh, thanks,” I say, and scuff the floor with my shoe. I love hearing this kind of remark, obviously, but there’s something sort of awkward about it, too. I don’t want to be that parent who puffs up and yammers on about how incredibly bright I think my child is because, really, who hasn’t heard all THAT before? And I don’t want to minimize, either, as though he’s not worthy of praise. Often, I find myself awkwardly downplaying — “oh, yeah, heh, well, we’re very lucky!”

Today I wonder what it was about Drew’s speech that so impressed this teacher. Was it the fact that he, for some unknown reason, proudly told her six times in repeated succession that ‘Dada make chee-bubbas (cheeseburgers) on deck’? Or was it when he loudly started exclaiming, “SESSY KNOW IT!” at the top of his lungs, an approximation of the chorus from LMFAO’s “Sexy and I Know It” that has become–rather embarrassingly, to me–very clear to even the untrained toddler translator.

“Well!” the teacher had said in her ever-chirpy tone, “I think that’ll be the phrase of the day!” Nearly eight hours spent with toddlers today, and Drew’s refrain had topped her list of ‘kids-say-the-darndest’ phrases. I…I was proud?

Not only had Drew loudly exclaimed that he was sexy and he knew it, he had followed each proclamation with a mischievous grin and a certain twinkling around the eyes. I had sheepishly looked around the room for parental judgey face, fearing the other mothers had quickly concluded that I should be banished from parenthood for letting my child listen (and clearly, listen often) to such music.

Fifteen minutes later, Drew decides to narrate his bowel happenings for me as we drive through darkened streets on our way home. “Mama, I do pee pee,” he says.


“Oh? Oh yeah?” I respond, unsure what to do. He’s in a Pull-Up, and won’t use a potty that’s not positioned precisely in the middle of our living room floor where he can get a good view of a PBS Kids show. There’s no point in encouraging him to hold it until we get home; he doesn’t yet seem to have that ability.

“Yeah!” he says. “I have a poop.”


“You have to poop?” I ask.


“I make poop.  I make big poop.” My head begins a slow fall to the dashboard. “I! I have gas!” he goes on. “I have big gas.”


“You have A LOT of gas?” I correct (teachable moments, they’re everywhere).


“Yes,” he responds emphatically. “Yes.”

So many words, and yet, I’m speechless.

Trick or Treat

Wednesday, November 2nd, 2011

On the doorstep of our first house, nobody was home. At the second, Drew thought the idea was to walk in and stay awhile. We had to tell him that we stay outside on the doorstep. It’s sort of strange really, trying to explain to a not-yet-two-year-old how and why we dress up in funny outfits and walk from house to house with a bag, expecting candy. I mean, really, none of it makes any sense.

We coached him through all of his lines: saying ‘trick or treat!’, taking just one piece of candy, saying thank you, and turning around to head off to the next house. In most cases, he was rendered too shy to utter the phrases we were so proud he had mastered. The fact that he was wearing an over-the-top adorable costume helped make up for this lapse.

As we approached one house I saw the man standing outside call in to his wife, “Hon, you gotta come see this.” I looked around — we were the only ones approaching. “Hurry!” He urged his wife.” He had called her out just to see the little dalmation marching up his front steps, dragging his pumpkin-themed gift bag along the ground beside him.

With each house, Drew grew more confident and more excited. After hearing us say, “ok, let’s go to the next one” enough times he started loudly shouting “NEXT ONE” before we were even down the front walk of the previous candy-givers. And there he’d go, trotting off in his tiny Pumas, furry white tail wagging behind his just-under 3-foot frame.

By the last house, neighbors of ours who he knows very well, he was running down the sidewalk, waving his arms and yelling all sorts of gibberish. Back at our house, he took just as much delight in passing out candy to the trick-or-treaters who came to call on us. When there were lapses in door-ringers, he tried to will them to us. He’d assume a lunge position, point dramatically at the door and yell, “COME! COME!”

Halloween is a silly holiday, really. There is no meaningful significance to it, but oh, something about seeing Drew experience it for the first time was so gratifying. I was proud of him for learning something new so quickly and taking such a shine to it (although, really, who wouldn’t take a shine to getting handed free candy?!) and excited to see him experience and become a part of a cultural tradition, one that–refreshingly– celebrates little more than the simple joy of being a kid.

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Thirty

Wednesday, August 17th, 2011

Each year I celebrate a birthday and each year I smile happily (and, oh alright, smugly) that I’m still young. Not only have I always been young, but I’ve usually been the youngest of the group I associate with – youngest in my class growing up, youngest in whatever relationship I’ve been in, youngest in my social circle. So even as the years have gone on, I’ve still managed to remain feeling young by the company I keep. Mike is six years older than me, so thankfully I can still pretend to feel young when he’s an ancient 72 and I’m a sprightly 66.

This year it was time to come to grips with my age. While I have not yet reached the point where I qualify for certain medical checkups, and certainly have not become AARP eligible, I am now 30. I am someone my college self and friends used to point out at bars. “Look at that dude over there!” we’d snicker. “He’s like, 30!” And we’d laugh and throw back another mind eraser, all dewy and youthful and naïve. What would I say now to that girl? Well, I’d say a lot of things.

I’d start by telling her thirty comes faster than she thinks. Thirty arrives at the tail end of a decade that whirls you around in a blender as you find a first job, a first real place to live, (one that you furnish yourself, and not with hand-me-down armchairs from the 1970’s), find out what you really care about, who you really are, and how you really want to spend your time. Thirty is the place you land after you’ve tried on all sorts of versions of yourself and finally settle into the one that feels most true. Thirty is where you set aside your pretenses, less concerned with appearing a certain way for the benefit of others, and more concerned with doing what feels right to you. Thirty has your ego firmly in check. Hopefully by thirty you’re confident, but not overly so. You’ve left behind most of your insecurities, but kept small traces of a few, if for nothing else than to keep you human and humble.

Next I’d tell her that while so many other ages certainly were gateways to future adventures, thirty is most definitely one too. At thirty, you do still have your whole life ahead of you. Now you’re ready to take it on with confidence and grace and a good head on your shoulders.

Last, I’d tell her to look forward to thirty. Don’t fear it. Come at it head on, tired and spent from all the good fun and wild adventures that defined the 20’s. Land at thirty full of vivid memories and compelling stories. Use this to fuel the next decade, and the one after that and the one after that. There is so much to learn, see and do in this world. There are so many people to meet, impact and be impacted by. Thirty is just one pit stop on a long road of a full life. Drink it in and chase it down with even more curiosity and passion. After all, you’re only thirty once.

Let’s Talk About Boobs, Baby

Monday, February 28th, 2011

“Think of it like eating a cheeseburger,” she said. “You don’t just bite right into it. You gotta squash it down so it’ll fit.”

This was the first time I ever compared my breasts to cheeseburgers.[Note: If you’re a man, you may not want to read any further. I’m going to talk—at length—about breastfeeding. Fair warning.]

But the nurse had a point, and she was speaking a language I could understand, even in a state of utter exhaustion following 25 grueling hours of labor. In such a state, you need a tough-shelled, serve it up straight with a side of compassion real “New YAH-kur” kind of nurse.

I don’t remember that nurse’s name. But I remember that she gave me my first education on breastfeeding. And over the remaining 1.5 days that I spent in the hospital many other nurses whizzed in and out of my loud, crowded room to try to educate me on the finer points. There was one, an Eastern European with a lopsided face who came to my room in the middle of the night, sat beside me on the bed and repeatedly commanded ‘space for breathing!’ while jabbing her index finger between my nipple and Drew’s tiny mouth. She believed that I needed to be careful to ensure that my rapidly expanding, engorged breasts didn’t suffocate the little guy. I didn’t tell her that Cheeseburger Nurse was of the school of thought that babies instinctively know when to come up for air. I was too fixated on her face. I couldn’t help but wonder what had happened. Was she born that way? Was there a traumatic event? Is this what Bells Palsy looks like? Perhaps it’s better to fixate on these types of things when you’re suddenly faced with the reality that you your boobs are now responsible for keeping another human alive.

I shared my hospital room with another new mom. Not by choice; this was Manhattan, space is tight everywhere (except in executive offices). During the night, the woman had repeated breakdowns. Her little girl wasn’t latching on. She paged the nurses, cried weepy, frantic tears. The nurses reassured her in soothing tones, but only for a minute or so each time. Then, she was left alone to try again. And again. I sat in my bed, inches away but obscured from view by a thin ugly curtain, unsure what to do. I wasn’t having difficulties.

Or so I thought. Only hindsight made me realize that this probably wasn’t because I was such a pro, but rather because I hadn’t really been feeding Drew. Many of the well-meaning nurses had told me to try feeding him often so that we’d both get the hang of it and so that my milk supply would come in sooner. But unless he was wailing frantically, I didn’t really try. If he wasn’t crying, I figured he was fine. I’m not sure if I was in denial or clueless or a little bit of both. It’s all so overwhelming that first day. Looking back, I don’t think the kid really ate for the first day or two of his life.

Nurses, doctors, anyone with scrubs or a white coat asked me how nursing was going. “Fine,” I responded. I didn’t know how it was supposed to be going. I didn’t know if I was doing it right or if he was getting anything. He couldn’t tell me. I didn’t know how long I was supposed to feed him for, when to switch sides, how to know if he was full. While plenty of people were full of advice as to how to get him to latch on, the rest, I now believe, you just have to learn on your own. You’ll know when you know. But you won’t know until you know. You know?

Away from the hospital and settled at home, I kept up with nursing. I love a challenge, and I was determined to rise to this one. A close friend had continued nursing her son when her mother passed away from cancer. Through the funeral and tremendous grief she kept it up. I thought to myself, if she could make it through such challenging circumstances, what excuse did I have not to keep up? It was hard, yes. But it could have been much harder.

That friend promised it would get better. “I hated it for the first five or six weeks,” she said. “But then, I started to love it.”

“Love it?!” I couldn’t imagine loving a task so painful and so draining. I couldn’t imagine enduring four more weeks until even the possibility of loving it emerged.

The weeks passed, though, in a blur of endless, sleepless cycles. There were breakdowns. When the alarm bell of Drew’s cries went off every two hours, when my nipples cracked open and bled, when cluster feeding struck—feedings every hour for 13 hours straight—and I dissolved into overwhelmed tears—I am the ONLY person who can feed him!—I stuck through it. I do not like to fail. For me, stopping would have felt like failure.

It did get better. The periods between feedings grew longer. I grew to not mind it, then enjoy it and then love it. What did I love? How do I explain it? Physically, the feeling is a bit like that of finally peeing after holding it in on a long car ride. There’s a release. The pressure is gone, you feel empty again, free. Emotionally, now that’s harder to explain. Seeing your child nestled into you, sighing a tiny contented sigh then settling into a drowsy sleep because of something that your body provided—you feel proud, grateful, amazed, powerful. You feel like you could do it again. You feel like it’s worth the discomfort and the hassle. And I think, as much as I hated that it had to be me, all the time, I loved that it had to be me. We all want to be needed. Breastfeeding is neediness taken to an extreme degree.

So I did it again. And again, and again and again and again. Six months passed, then I figured I might as well go for the gusto and try for a full year. I set a new goal—to go straight from breastfeeding to cow’s milk, bypassing formula all together.

It’s true that I had grown to love it. I loved the warm and fuzzies but there were other more superficial things I loved too. I loved that it was free. I loved that I was losing weight at an incredible rate. I loved that I was losing weight at an incredible weight while still being able to eat an incredible amount of food. I loved not having to remember to bring any supplies when we went out (I am terrible about remembering supplies). All I needed to bring was me…and the baby.

Six months turned into a year turned into nearly 14 months. The weaning process was rather drawn out. I had to come to terms with the fact that I was no longer so ‘needed’, at least not in this way. My approach was to drop a feeding, let a week or two go by then drop another. By the end, I was nursing only at bedtime. When two weeks had passed, the typical amount of time I let lapse before dropping a feeding, I made excuses. I said that he still seemed to need it, and I worried aloud that he wouldn’t be able to fall asleep without it. I knew, though, that he didn’t ‘need’ it any longer. And he would fall asleep, even if it wouldn’t be as gracefully.

I struggled over ending this bond that only he and I could share. The physical act was ending, yes, but I needed to realize that our bond was cemented, and could now grow in so many other ways. One night I finally worked up the courage to drop the feeding. We still settled into the same rocking chair, snuggled close, but this time I brought a sippy cup of water and some books. When Drew turned to me and pointed around in confusion, seemingly wondering when we were going to nurse, I shook my head and said, “No, no we’re all done with that now.” And we are.

Wednesday, January 5th, 2011

Letter to Drew (for one day when you can read) –

Dear Drew,

You are one today. Dad and I have been trying to tell you that you’re one, and tell you what to do when someone asks you how old you are. We show you how to hold your index finger up to signal one. Really, it’s just a change in direction as all you want to do lately is point that finger straight ahead at whatever’s in your line of sight. Lately, that’s the Christmas tree and the sign in your room that says ‘Andrew’, your name.

Each morning when you wake up you pull your crazy bedheaded self up to standing and rest your chin on top of your crib, waiting for someone to come get you. One of us scoops you up and immediately you point us towards the sign. We spell your name: A-N-D-R-E-W and say ‘that’s you!’ You smile and point and kick your little legs. You are fresh energy in the mornings and thank the good God in Heaven your mornings now begin a little later than they used to. You are smiles and murmurs and grunts but you are still snuggly. You don’t want to be let down or set free first thing. You want to stay close, grab at my glasses, pull my hair, rub Dadddy’s balding head, hog the remote and change the channel to public access programming.

We love to watch you watching the world. We try to anticipate what you might like when you get older, and the type of person you might become. Maybe none of the things you like today will inform what you become, but in case they do, here are a few (You like that? Kinda Seuss-y wasn’t it?): BOOKS, BOOKS, BOOKS! You have one shelf on the bookcase just for your books and you could spend all day there without any other entertainment and be perfectly fine. You love to flip through books as fast as your little fingers can carry you, and when you’re done you turn the book over, right side up and flip again. I love books and if you grow up to be a book lover I can be content that I’ve done one thing very, very right. Wherever you are in your life, in this world, a good book can take you somewhere exciting, calming, transformative, healing or just plain fun. No one ever regretted a love of reading, and I hope I can give you that love. It will never let you down.

You love music and sound. You seem to have rhythm, a gift I can take absolutely no credit for. That’s all your dad. You giggle when I turn on the radio, shake your little butt, rock back and forth. One song I will always associate with you is Gentle Hour by Yo La Tengo. It calmed you down when you were a fussy newborn. Every. Single. Time. Later, you liked Little Lion Man by Mumford and Sons. As we drove to and from the pool this summer and the song came on the radio you would perk up, look at me and giggle. These days, you like just about any song, it seems…even the obnoxiously annoying ones that peal out of your brightly colored plastic toys. But that’s ok. If it makes you happy, I’m happy.

You love to go fast. When we are out shopping and you are perched high in the shopping cart I speed you through parking lots like we are in a race. Sure, the other shoppers might think I’m nuts, maybe even a reckless mom. But you throw your head back and laugh your heart-melting little boy chuckle and all I can do is run faster (and keep a keen eye out for errant cars). Your hair flies straight up in the wind we create and you turn your head this way and that, taking in the world as it looks in high speed.

We think you’re happy, smart, funny, sweet, mischievous, outgoing and adventurous. If none of these turn out to be you–if the opposite turns out to be true–we will still love you endlessly. You are our boy and we couldn’t be prouder.

Where am I??

bluer than blue