Careening & Gestating

In which I document my voyage through the mysterious and bizarre lands of Creating Life.

What Amelia Needs February 7, 2009

Filed under: fun, just plain life — andreamiddleton @ 9:00 am

Amelia loves it when I sing to her. It’s pretty great to finally be able to identify her likes and dislikes, now that she’s older and in less pain. She really enjoys Cole Porter songs, Bob Marley, and Texas Swing tunes. Some hits include “My Heart Belongs To Daddy,” “Get Up, Stand Up,” and “I’m From Texas Too.”

This is what she looks like when you sing to her.

This is what she looks like when you sing to her.

Recently I made up a little song for her that she likes very much, as well. Here are the lyrics:

What Amelia needs, what Amelia needs is kisses (kiss, kiss), kisses (kiss, kiss)

What Amelia needs, what Amelia needs is kisses (kiss, kiss), kisses (kiss, kiss)

She doesn’t need to eat at Joe’s,

She doesn’t need to touch her toes,

She doesn’t need to buy a suit,

She doesn’t need to play the flute!

What Amelia needs, what Amelia needs is kisses (kiss, kiss), kisses (kiss, kiss)

What Amelia needs, what Amelia needs is kisses (kiss, kiss), kisses (kiss, kiss)

She doesn’t need to build a house,

She doesn’t need to catch a mouse,

She doesn’t need to learn judo,

She doesn’t need to make it snow!

What Amelia needs, what Amelia needs is kisses (kiss, kiss), kisses (kiss, kiss)

What Amelia needs, what Amelia needs is kisses (kiss, kiss), kisses (kiss, kiss)

The verses are all made up on the spot, so part of the adult fun is finding rhymes – and the song can go as long as you want as you continue to make up verses. At every (kiss, kiss), you kiss her twice on one cheek, alternating so that she gets 2 kisses on each cheek for each line of the refrain. One of these days I’ll record it so you can hear the tune.

Care to make up a verse or two? I promise I’ll sing them to her!

 

Working from home February 4, 2009

Filed under: abject terror, breastfeeding, guilt, just plain life, motherhood — andreamiddleton @ 9:09 am

I am stealing time from work to write this.

It never seems like stealing time from work to check my Gmail, reserve a library book, pay bills online, or IM with my pals while at work.  It just seems like a pleasant break from the grind, something that will make me more efficient because I’ll stop worrying about whether we paid the cell phone bill last month.

But because I am sitting on my couch and the baby is ASLEEP, this is prime working time for me, and it’s very guilt-inducing that I am not writing an email right now.

This is how working from home goes, for me:

5-ish am, wake up and frantically put in contacts, pee, and change out of pyjamas as I keep an eye on the baby I left alone in the bed with all sorts of pillows that are just waiting for me to turn my back so that they can suffocate my child.  But we’re supposed to elevate her because of the reflux, so you tell me what I’m supposed to use to do that.  All we have is potentially murderous pillows, so I maintain constant frantic vigilance.  Keyword for the day is: frantic.

it-takes-two5:30 am. nurse Amelia back to sleep, put her in the buzzy chair with a blanket over her. Worry that I overheat my child on a regular basis, also a SIDS no-no. Put her in the pink buzzy chair, which lets her lie straighter and not crunched up into a C like the blue buzzy chair does, but turn on the “womb” sounds of the blue buzzy chair because Tom just discovered that she’ll sleep to that for a long time.

5:35 am, make oatmeal with froz. blueberries, flax meal and brown sugar (no dairy, bah) and eat it as fast as possible.  Take vitamin & probiotic (so I can digest possible allergens better) with water.

5:45 am, pull end table in front of couch and set up work laptop on it.  Set up baby supplies on & around couch: boppy pillow, blanket to tuck under one end of boppy pillow (to incline her as we nurse), 2nd blanket to lay over baby in case she gets cold (and because she sleeps better when warm), spit-up rag, remote control, glass of water, rattle.

6:00 am, start replying to work emails ridiculously early in the day to prove to my bosses that I do indeed work from home and I get up early to do it besides.  Keep eye on kid as I do so – the pink buzzy chair turns off its buzz after 5 minutes and sometimes that wakes her up. Womb sounds also turn themselves off, not sure if on same timing.

7-ish am, change/snuggle/nurse awake baby as I type work emails with one hand and check my gmail.  Read multiple Yahoo mommy group digest emails and dread the day I have to deal with colds, separation anxiety, crawling/walking, etc.

7:30 am, carefully slide sleepy baby onto couch, still propped up on boppy pillow, with blanket over her, and start typing with both hands (heaven!)

8:00-10:00 am, juggle emails and baby.  Don’t answer cell phone while baby is awake because having a crying baby in the background is slightly unprofessional.  Use Skype with headphones to make calls out ONLY while baby is nursing or COMPLETELY asleep.  Roll shoulders back when possible because 2-handed typing over your nursing baby will make your shoulders hurt.

10:30 am, eat a little something if baby will let me

11:00 am, continue to juggle laptop and baby.  Try to calculate how many hours actually worked that morning to see if working after noon (only 5 hours of work from home is needed per day, as I work 10 hour days at work 3 times a week).  Look forward to being able to shut the laptop and just attend to baby.  Start strategizing for this afternoon’s outing (probably doctor’s visit or diaper pickup/dropoff in town).

12:00 pm, decide that even if 5 hours of work were not accomplished, there is no more energy for any more work.  Chill with the kid while watching some DVRed Ramsey’s Kitchen Nightmares or The Daily Show. Think that you might get an hour or so of work done this afternoon.  (This never happens.)

That is on days that I do NOT have a deadline.  Twice this month I have had a proposal due on a day I work from home, and that’s infinitely more tense.  I will say that I am much more able to work efficiently since I got work to buy me an iPhone so I can email while in the pediatrician’s waiting room – it’s much easier to type one-handed on that little screen, too!

Many days I don’t know if it’s really better for Amelia to have me caring for her with half (or less) of my attention, or if a stranger who was actually able to attend to her full time would do a better job.  I don’t think we can afford a nanny, honestly, and I don’t know a better way to do any of this right now.  She’s what Dr. Sears calls a “high-needs baby,” who hates being put down unless she’s asleep – and frequently will not even let you sit down while holding her if she’s awake.  Hoping the magical age of 4 months (only a month away!) will ease some of this needyness, but what if it doesn’t?

 

The weekend January 25, 2009

Filed under: family, just plain life — andreamiddleton @ 8:23 pm

We had a pretty decent weekend – I took Amelia all day on Saturday so Tom could get some plumbing chores done around the house that had been bothering him (valves & faucets & whatnot), and we stayed up late (9 pm!) to watch an excellent episode of Dr. Who. Amelia saved her fussing for the evening, and only put about 90 minutes in, and even that was in spurts.

This morning we got up early so I could make some delicious home fries (white + sweet taters) to take to the very first Tara House parents’ group Sunday potluck brunch. The mamas’ group organized around my midwife, which meets at her office Tara House, had arranged this gathering before I had to stop attending the mamas’ group, which meets on Fridays (a day I work from the office).

It was a riotous good time, with about 7 families with new(ish)borns and older kids, and it was fun to meet all the other mamas’ husbands/partners. This is a pretty “crunchy” bunch of people (as in granola), so we have a fair bit in common with them OTHER than the fact that we all planned home births with the same midwife and have little babies. I’m glad we went, and look forward to deepening some of those relationships.

Did some grocery shopping on our way home, and our friends Josh & Jessica came over; josh to take Tom out for a beer and Jessica to play with the baby while I cooked for the week. What with all the things I’ve cut out of my diet, I pretty much can only eat home-cooked stuff, so it’s important to have enough food on hand during the work week when everything’s crazy. Jessica excels at baby duty, and we had a grand time venting about discussing the varied foolishnesses of people in our workplaces. So I got some girlfriend time as well as making some mushroom barley soup, poached salmon, roasted sweet potatoes and shitake mushroom quinoa. Then Amanda dropped off a meal too, so we are golden in the food dept! Always a good feeling at the beginning of a week.

Amelia remains very fussy, but I have a new trick in which I nurse her while walking around (not my most glamorous moment but oh well) that soothes when nothing else will, so far. Nice thing about kids is, everything changes all the bloody time.

And so it goes.

 

How do you know if you’ve broken your toe? January 18, 2009

Filed under: just plain life, motherhood — andreamiddleton @ 1:27 pm

Because I think I did, when I ran into the kitchen step stool.  For something made by Ikea, it’s pretty bulky.

We had a pretty peaceful day yesterday, though she had her normal 2-3 hours of fussiness in the evening.  We dodn’t get to bed until 9:30, and so she didn’t sleep as well as she could have.   But up at 2 and 5 is not so bad, considering.

Today, she’s been more fussy.  But we did get the house cleaned up, and I made some chicken and wild rice soup.  I packed the soup with vegetables, chopped up in my new food processor.

Weekends are the nicest because we don’t have to do anything but care for the baby and ourselves.  Watch your step, though.

 

Texas weather December 10, 2008

Filed under: just plain life — andreamiddleton @ 11:47 am

It was 75 degrees yesterday afternoon when Lloyd the cable guy came to hook us into the hive mind.  This morning:

My poor sister Adrienne is flying in from Oregon today and probably thought she was going to get a break from cold, dreary weather.  Well, it’ll be 70 degrees again in a few days.  Welcome to Texas, Adrienne!

Currently watching Dharma & Greg reruns.  Yay, cable.

 

the decline and fall of western civilization December 7, 2008

Filed under: an entirely new person, family, just plain life — andreamiddleton @ 10:01 pm

We’re getting cable.

Probably we should have made this decision a month ago, when I STARTED maternity leave, but whatever.

Some backstory: I lived without a TV for most of my 5 years in Mexico and without cable or broadcast TV for about 4 of my 5 years in the Virgin Islands. When Tom & I moved to Austin, we got his TV out of storage but didn’t get cable, and only watched Netflix DVDs. Abotu a year ago, we started watching broadcast TV. In the last month, I’ve watched more than my share of TV and Instant-Watch Netflix.

Last week, we caved.  The reality is that we’re going to be stuck at home for a long time, caring for the baby. I’m not proud, but I’d rather not spend a large part of the next year watching reruns of Knight Rider and Airwolf.

Thus, we embrace popular culture with both arms, exposing ourselves to the blinding light of the Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless American Mind.

On a more intimate note, Amelia has been learning how to be fussy in the last weeks, hence some of my absence on the blog.  She really hates being put down for very long, and is unwilling to be boxed in to any one soothing method or sleep pattern. All the people who told me that babies are unpredictable were not whistling Dixie, my friends.

 

Huge December 4, 2008

Filed under: just plain life, milestones — andreamiddleton @ 9:28 pm

Long time no post, I know.

I’ll catch you all up on the Thanksgiving weekend tomorrow,  but for now, I just need to share this milestone:

Today, wearing the baby in the Moby D wrap, I cooked dinner.  I didn’t warm something up or  just brown some ground beef and pour a jar of sauce over it.  No, I made pecan-crusted flounder and arugula pesto spaghetti.  And it was GOOD.   And Amelia was all nestled up against my chest, sleeping or looking around in amazement, the whole time.

Also I slept in until 9 AM today.  It was a good day.

 

wiggle worm November 18, 2008

Filed under: abject terror, an entirely new person, just plain life, motherhood — andreamiddleton @ 9:02 pm

One of the most beautiful things about my baby today is how she moves when she’s alert and (mostly) awake. She loves to kick her feet and wave her arms and stick her tongue out.

Amelia’s jaundice is starting to recede (according to Tom who hadn’t seen her all day and is thus a more reliable source than I am), and she’s starting to get on a more reasonable nursing/sleeping schedule. Though, I will say, she does occasionally binge on breast milk: she’ll nurse and nurse until she’s spitting up, and then she still insists on hitting the booby for more-More-MORE!

We went to the grocery store together today. I thought a small outing would be a good way to get ready for our bigger outing tomorrow afternoon, when we’re going to drop off the used diapers and pick up clean nice ones. (We’re too far out of town for the service to come pick them up.) Driving was a real trip – I was all hesitant and nervous, and felt rather checked out. Grocery shopping was equally trippy; it felt wrong to be attending to Things Not Amelia. The whole world seems way too big for my little girl… how do all those other parents do it?

 

duds November 7, 2008

Filed under: an entirely new person, just plain life — andreamiddleton @ 8:15 am

What I am also learning about having a little girl is that no matter what you register for, people (especially people with vaginas) can’t resist buying you baby clothes.  Not complaining here!  Just I think it’s interesting how much women interface with each other through clothing even in vitro.  Socialization has a lot to answer for. ;-)

 

I’d be very happy November 4, 2008

Filed under: Preggo, just plain life — andreamiddleton @ 9:10 pm

If my daughter were born in to a country that had elected Barack Obama as President.

I’m currently sitting at a friends’ house, watching the largest TV in the world as polling results flicker and flash before us.  Everyone is steadily drinking their courage but me.  Maintaining my sangfroid, sober, in the face of these stakes and the painstaking bombardment of polling results is challenging, I’ll admit.  But I’m also sleepy and still a little hungry after two pieces of pizza and a quarter log of summer sausage.

This country is quite colorful and attractive in HD, I will say that.

Good luck to us all!