Showing posts with label child care. Show all posts
Showing posts with label child care. Show all posts

Friday, September 9, 2011

Rollin'

I've been meaning to update on how we're doing with baby-parenting and development, and today, Andrew gave me a reason.  That's right folks, after working on it for a long time, our boy rolled over from his back to his front this evening.  It was before his bath, stripped down to his diaper.  Free of clothes, he finally got his hip over the top and his shoulder to follow.  As the icing on the cake, he got his arm pulled out from underneath him, too.  Here he is post-roll, looking very proud of himself:


I tried to take a video, but as it was rather late, he seemed to only give half-hearted attempts at it after his first success.  We're still a ways away from rolling front to back, but this was just awesome.  And I'm so thankful that he did it for the first time when I was here - one of my greatest fears about working is missing his developmental milestones.

Also today, before we knew it was going to be such a momentous occasion, we tried out the high chair for the first time.  He did pretty well with it, buckled in and propped up by a pillow, and seemed to enjoy the view.  So exciting!!  He looks like a big boy.



My mommy moment of the day was that after i came home from work I nursed him, and he dozed off.  When I shifted a little he opened his eyes, smiled at me a sweet, sleepy smile, then closed his eyes and drifted back off.  So lovely.

So what else can I tell you?  Andrew is 19 weeks old, and according to The Wonder Weeks, we are smack in the middle of the 19-week developmental leap.  Rolling is most certainly a part of it, but it seems like he's adding new tricks every day.  A couple weeks ago he started blowing raspberries.  He's grabbing things with both hands, and has much better aim when reaching for things.  In the bath, he puts his arms and legs under the stream of water I pour from a cup, and then he twists around to watch me move the cup above his head to wet his hair.  He's smiling almost constantly now, and talking a lot.  He hasn't *really* laughed yet, but he reacts when tickled and the laugh is almost there.  I think he's starting to respond to his name, though Travis thinks he's just responding to someone talking at all.

Of course, along with the leap comes some clingy-ness - he's had a couple of days of not wanting to be put down... ever.  Last weekend in Wyoming, he decided he didn't like to be alone in the backseat because he couldn't see us, and so he started crying every time we rode in the car for more than 5 minutes (which, when you are visiting Wyoming national parks, is a lot).  It's also been interrupting his sleep.

He had started at 12 weeks sleeping one long block of 5-6 hours followed by 3 hrs followed by 1-2 hours and up for the day.  He did that for about 2.5 weeks before getting totally messed up again by what I presume to be the four month sleep regression, combined with my going back to work.  Now, he is sort of back to that schedule, where he feeds at those two times, but he also wakes up 1-3 more times in there and needs to be resettled with a pacifier and soothing.

To handle this sleep schedule and me going back to work, Travis is "taking the first shift" by sleeping on the futon on the floor in Andrew's room with him in the crib until 1:30am or the wakeup thereafter, while I crash in the other room and get real sleep.  Then, I go in to feed him and go back to sleep on the futon, either taking Andrew with me or putting him back in the crib, depending on his mood and willingness to sleep, while Travis gets the quiet room.  So far it's working really nicely - I am getting the best sleep I have gotten since his birth.  I'm hoping he'll come out of this sleep regression and get back to more consistent blocks, but we're up for teething next, and then the 26 week developmental leap, so... possibly I shouldn't hold my breath.

Speaking of my going back to work, it's going pretty well for me.  I'm reminded how much I do like my job, and I like the people, so it's not difficult to be there.  I miss Andrew, but I don't spend all day wishing I were home.  I'm pumping like a fiend three times a day, and most days I pump a whole extra feeding's worth to stock in the freezer, so my supply seems really good.

Travis is doing really well with the daddy-care.  He spends a lot of time playing, and Andrew eats and sleeps well most days.  It remains to be seen how long we'll continue with this arrangement, but for now it's so great that the boys get to hang together.

I really like Andrew's one day a week at in-home day care, and it's not as scary as I feared.  The care provider wears him a lot in her Baby Bjorn, and she shares a lot of the same ideas about parenting as I do - she lays off the pacifier except for naps, is experienced with handling breastmilk, etc.  The kids at the day care really love him and he revels in the attention.

Breastfeeding continues to go well, even with the four-month distractability.  He's more efficient about it, and has way better head and body control, so we've given up the Boppy for nursing.  I love the bonding aspects of it and the way we reconnect after I get home from work.  I can definitely see continuing to nurse for quite a long time.  Like I said, I'm pumping and that's working out.  Andrew takes the bottle from daddy very well.

Next up in terms of feeding for us is Baby Led Weaning - this is where you skip pureed food altogether, and let baby have solid foods when he is able to and has the interest to feed it to himself.  I've offered him a slice of lemon and a stem of broccoli in the last two weeks, and they both ended up simply pushed around the table.  So... not ready for food yet.  But soon.

At any rate, he's doing just fine on mama's milk.  He's entirely skipped the 6 month clothing size and jumped straight from 3 months to nine months.  And his arms are even a little long for some of the 9 month stuff.  His daddy says, "Welcome to my world!"

They are right when they say it goes fast.  He seems so grown up already.

Monday, July 18, 2011

the state of the union

Here's a round robin update on how we're doing here.

Breastfeeding: I'm shocked at how much more efficient Andrew is lately (10 minutes each side, 13 if he's dawdling) and shocked also at how much I miss when he would lollygag for 30 minutes on each side.  We have continued to go to a breastfeeding support group sponsored by our lactation consultant, which has been awesome for us, and for me to socialize with other new moms.

Sleep: Andrew defies all conventional wisdom on baby sleep.  He only needs 9-10ish hours a day, including naps.  He rarely takes long naps, mostly just cat naps - except for today, because we apparently wore him out on the weekend.  If he goes to bed before about 9:30pm, he wants to get up for the day (or at least throw a party) around 330-4am.  I thought babies were supposed to need a lot of sleep!  I'm working on letting go of the idea that "what the books say" doesn't necessarily apply to us, and things are getting much easier for us.  We co-sleep at night for the most part.  Once he started to be able to sleep by himself in the crib, I started putting him down there for the first 3-hour segment and then bringing him in to sleep with me, so that I could get some more restful sleep myself.  The problem I had with that is that I would put him down and then stay up to get things done or just spend time with my Travis, and i ended up more exhausted than before.  So we are back to full time co-sleeping, and he goes to bed when I do between 9:30 and 10:30.

Travis has been sleeping in the spare room since his paternity leave ended. This works out really well for us because he gets enough sleep for work, and then if Andrew does decide to throw a 4am party, he is freshly ready and able to entertain him, and I can get rest, and we both end up with a reasonable amount of sleep.

For naps Andrew will sleep in the crib in the nursery, in the cradle in the living room, or in the swing in the dining room.  I'm encouraged that after a rough start of needing to sleep on someone ALL THE TIME, he seems to be rather flexible in his sleep situation.  We swaddle him whenever he is sleeping by himself to help him not get distracted by his own hands.

Cloth diapering: we are also using and loving the BumGenius 3.0-4.0 one-size models.  I'm definitely loving the cloth diapers.  We do disposables on the road/for travel days and I can't wait to get him back into the cloth at the end of the day.  He has stopped pooping overnight, so I've been doubling the liners and he's been going all night on one diaper, which gets me even more sleep, because now when he stirs, I just roll over, start him feeding, and drift back off to sleep.  I don't even have to wake up.  Not bad.

Currently my biggest stress is going back to work.  I am in the throes of trying to determine what childcare is going to be and I'm completely freaking out about it.  I'm having visions of him being left in a crib to cry, and I have the same nightmare for a nanny as I do for a day care center.  He's pretty much the easiest baby in the world - never cries without a reason, always very easy to soothe - which is why leaving him to cry would be absolutely tragic.  I'm getting emotional just typing that.


On the positive side, some of my pregnancy pounds have melted off.  It's never been easy for me to lose or maintain a healthy weight, and so to see some of it slip off so easily is ridiculously exciting.  I attribute it some to breastfeeding, some to getting back to exercising, and a lot to cutting out dairy.  I may want to continue that diet even after Andrew is okay with it again!

That's my world right now.  Here are some pictures and highlights of this week:


Daddy gives a bottle of mama's milk.

Sitting up supported! Like a couch potato.

Grandpa and Andrew play on the baby gym.

My new friend, Maulee Brown

This beautiful girl pictured above followed Travis home from his morning walk the other day.  She's a pit bull. I have rarely seen a dog so obedient and well-behaved.  And so friendly and affectionate!  She hung out on our porch all morning and didn't seem to know how to get home even when I took her on a walk to the vicinity of her house and said, "go home!"  When her mom came to pick her up, she was grateful that she was found by people who were friendly to her - some in the neighborhood apparently don't appreciate her very much.  It was hard not to be friendly to such a wonderful dog!

It's gotten very warm again, so we decided to do Andrew's bath on the porch:
Bathtime still life.

Naked baby!

Tub with a view

After the bath, we went out to get some exercise and walked from Morrison to Quincy and Wadsworth (~7 miles) through Bear Creek Lake Park.  We pushed Andrew in the BOB.  It was quite the adventure.


We've had lots of storms.  With storms come rainbows. And internet outages.

We took Grandma and Grandpa off-roading.  First we drove over the (smooth) Boreas Pass Road.  Then we attempted Georgia Pass:




The family cradle now lives in Colorado.  Andrew broke it in with a three hour nap today.

Grandma got to give Andrew his bottle.  Andrew is still getting used to the bottle thing.