Domestic Disturbance #1

8 Dec

Our friendly neighborhood disease-spreader.

Seabass puked for the first time the other night.  It was late at night – all we heard was a cough and then a scary choking sort of sound coming from his room.  Sure enough, he was on his back ralphing up the pasta he’d eaten for dinner, and…well, sort of swallowing it again.  Needless to say, he was a little disturbed.  So was I.

After I removed his wet pajamas and wiped his precious face free of barf, I held him in the rocking chair while Jake stripped the bed and remade it.  (Thank God for a loving husband who willingly shares the burden of parenting, even at 2 AM on a weeknight.)  As Seabass settled down in my arms, I caught a glance of a mouse scurrying across the floor, down the hall and into the kitchen.

What is this, medieval England?  Vomit, vermin…what’s next?  Scabies?

Story Behind the Photo

7 Dec

Setting: Baileyana Winery in San Luis Obispo’s Edna Valley

Time: Sunset

Backstory: The company I work for recently acquired some new staff members, so we needed some new group photos for our website.  Instead of hiring a professional photographer as we’ve done in the past, we went with a friend who had a nice camera and a little spare time.  I warned my colleagues that I had no childcare coverage for the shoot, so Seabass would have to come with me.  Expecting him to be a flaming nightmare, I was shocked that he was contented to munch Chardonnay grapes and observe our shoot from a picnic table.  Before everyone arrived, the photographer tested the light on shots of me and Seabass while my colleague Chanae made faces at him.  The result is a photo that encapsulates what it’s like to be mama to a precious boy of 18 months.

2nd Annual White Trash Pit Stop

30 Nov

I don’t know what it is about the drive home from Thanksgiving at Grandma and Grandpa’s mountain cabin.  Maybe it’s the fact that Seabass has been so spoiled from all the attention over the holiday, or that our minds have grown weak from all the overindulgence.  Whatever the reason, it is now an official tradition that we make a pit stop somewhere in Southern California and look as much like a circus as possible.  Keep your eyes peeled for our show at any fast food joint between Calabasas and Oxnard on the Sunday after Thanksgiving each year.  You won’t want to miss it.

I went into the In-N-Out Burger to pee and wash my hands of traveling grime while Jake stayed behind with the truck.  You see, we borrowed a friend’s truck to haul back a dining table and chairs we inherited.  Since we had the truck, Jake decided to load up on some other fun items like his dad’s old belt sander and hand truck. All of these were rather precariously secured with duct tape and dental floss in the truck bed, so someone had to stay behind wherever we stopped.  When I returned, the child I had dressed for mountain snow just that morning was stripped down to nothing but baby cowboy boots and a diaper.  Welcome to California, land of diverse weather and freaky road-tripping families.

 

Mmmm-MMM! Come ‘n get it!

28 Nov

I recently came across a recipe for Tater Tot Tacos.  Yup, you heard me right.  Tater Tot Tacos.

It’s from a website called “Moms Who Think.”  Always trying to keep the dinner hour fresh with new ideas, I sent the link along to Jake with a note to tempt him:

Guess what’s for dinner….

His response:

Don’t even.

And this is on a site called Moms who Think?  Think what?

Now, I’m sure someone put a lot of time and effort into drumming up ideas for quick and easy dinners that moms can use throughout the week.  I’m all for quick and easy – having kids necessitates it, and I appreciate the recipe author’s care in considering my busy schedule.

But this is not a “win.”  Please, Moms Who Think, take this one back to the drawing table, for all of our sakes.

 

 

 

 

 

Dude, where’s my lung?

21 Nov

I have a persistent cough that is sucking my will to live.

Okay, wait. It's not quite THIS bad. And by the by, what the heck is going on in this scenario? It's not so much a cough as a rocket launching out of his throat.

Seabass, thankfully, never got this cough.  He is running circles around me lately, especially in the morning.  He wakes up fresh and ready to pummel the snot out of the day while I am dragging along after having been up all night coughing.

Jake isn’t feeling tippy-top either, but he gets to take Nyquil for it while I, the still-nursing-mom, am toughing it out with some all-natural so-called medicine crap that does nothing.

It was pretty funny, actually.  I went up to the pharmacy window at Rite Aid and asked if I could take such-and-such medicine while still nursing.  The pharmacist said, “Hold on, let me get my book.”  When she came back, she was flipping through a little book about breastfeeding-safe drugs.

“Yup, that one’s okay,” she said.  “I can tell because it has a little boobie and a thumbs-up next to it in my book.”  She showed me the page for verification.  Sure enough, there were lots of entries with little boobies and thumbs-up.  Glad to know it’s that sophisticated.

Speaking of me nursing still: I have lately received a couple of comments along the lines of “Isn’t Seabass a little old to be breastfeeding?”  Despite the fact that I keep my breastfeeding private at home, it still comes up from time to time for whatever reason.  I suppose I’ve just never thought of a reply to the question “Isn’t he a little old?” so my default response has been one of defensiveness (me? defensive? shocking!):

“In Europe, people breastfeed until their kids are, like, twenty-five!”

“Breastfed kids are super smart!”

“It’s the only thing I can do to calm Seabass down!”

And that last one is absolutely true.  I spent my first night away from home last weekend for a work event in Monterey.  When I walked in the door after having been gone for 24 hours, I anticipated a big smile, a slobbery kiss, and major snuggles from Le Seabass Extraordinaire.  But instead, the first thing he did was gesture like he was furiously milking a cow – the universal sign for “milk.”  He couldn’t even look at my face.  It was just “YOU. BOOB. NOW.”

The night away was nice, but my cold was blossoming, so I didn’t much feel like wine tasting.  But work is work (like I have any right to complain!) and those wines needed drinking.  After a three-hour tasting and a five-hour dinner that included four bottles of wine, my head felt like it was caving in.  Of course, the part of my first night away that I was most excited about was sleeping in, reading the paper in bed, and drinking coffee the next morning.  My male readers will wince to discover that I paid $24 for a bran muffin and a cup of coffee from room service – $24! – but it was worth every penny.  Treats like that don’t come along too often when you’re a mommy.  So zip it.

And happy Thanksgiving!

New favorite thing.

9 Nov

This is one of those high-low parenting moments where I was like, Awww, look how precious! while simultaneously thinking, He’s going to want to do this every time we leave the house from now on.  Why ever did I allow this?!?!?

Raising kids in a party town.

2 Nov

I hope you had a wonderful Halloween. We certainly did. Our neighborhood held its first Trick or Treat Promenade and the response was overwhelming. Kids I’d never seen before came out of the woodwork of our community, all in the name of free candy. Jake and I had major warm fuzzies strolling down the street with our friends, watching our little ones say please and thank you at each door, and managing the neighborhood-wide sugar crash that inevitably followed. It was sort of like a Norman Rockwell painting-turned-Salvador Dali. Still, it was lovely.

Is it just me, or are kids these days wearing more sophisticated costumes? Sure, there were the standard bumble bees, fairies, monkeys, cowboys, etc. But I had some pretty intense moments on our front doorstep, passing out candy and innocently asking, “And who are you supposed to be?”

Kenneth from 30 Rock.” (9-year-old boy.)

DJ Redfoo from the band LMFAO.” (7 years old.)

The Spanish Inquisition from Monty Python.” (10-year-old girl.)

Whoa. What happened to the sheet with two holes cut out?

Coordinating the masses of trick-or-treaters

The biggest shock of the evening was the ‘hood’s constituency of college students. Not only did they participate, but they rocked it with the kids! For some reason, I assumed they’d be too drunk or high or busy having weird sex to pass out sweets to little kids.

Our neighborhood is a strange mix of equal parts older folks who have lived here for 30+ years, randy college kids, and young families. Basically, the old folks and young families all dislike the college students for passing out on our lawns, screaming “YOU GOTTA WANT IT!” repeatedly while playing quarters in their backyard at 4am, and leaving a trail of red Solo cups wherever they go – but the young families have a little more grace with them since college was only a few years ago, and we haven’t completely forgotten what it means to have a good time. (The memory, however, grows fainter and fainter.)

Jake attended the local university but I didn’t, so my patience with these monkeys is perhaps scarcer than his. Our back neighbors are my main aggravators. Twenty-four kids live in something like 14 square feet, and everything they do is audible at any point on our property. They are renowned throughout the neighborhood as Trouble, and most of the old folks call the Police Department whenever they so much as breathe funny. We’ve only done it once, and it was after they ignored repeated requests to turn their crappy music down in the middle of the night.

In this particular instance, I didn’t want to leave things awkwardly unresolved, so I bought a case of beer, saddled Seabass to my hip, and walked over to make nice. As soon as I stepped foot on their driveway the unmistakable aroma of pot hit me. But this wasn’t just an errant wisp of pot smoke; No, this house was pulsating with weed. I considered making a new entry in Seabass’ baby book: July 13, 2011. Baby’s first hot box!

Undeterred, we knocked on the door and were met by two skinny guys high as kites. They were nice enough, gladly accepted our beer peace offering , and agreed to keep the blaring midnight Eminem sessions to a minimum.

That lasted about three months.

This past weekend, Eminem and Friends made another high-decibel appearance in the wee hours of the night. The next morning, I took the opportunity to remind the neighbor monkeys that they aren’t the only people who exist in the entire world. This time, I went alone.

A Seabass dressed as a giraffe!

We had been gardening that morning, so my shorts and shirt were covered in mud. My hair was nappy – perhaps even matted in places – and my armpits were on overdrive. Still, when the shirtless 21-year-old guy opened his door to find me standing there – NO EXAGGERATION – he put his arm up on the door jamb, eyed me head-to-toe, and said, “Well hello, hello.”

Really? Yes, really.

That arm came down pretty quick when he discovered that a) I’m his neighbor, b) I was pissed, and c) I was ready to stop playing the Nice Neighbor Game and get the cops involved again. By the time I was done with him, he all but dissolved into the floor.  Oooh, did that feel good.

Anyway, that’s why I’m shocked that the rest of the college kids in our neck of the woods were so great on Halloween.

One nearby house looks a lot like the one from Animal House, though I think these guys are probably rowdier than those in the movie. Apparently they’ve been visited by the Health Department a number of times for breeding rats or snakes or weasles or God-knows-what. But on Halloween, they were on the ball with creepy music, plenty of candy, and even guys yelling BOO! from behind trash cans. Another house full of college girls had jack-o-lanterns on the front doorstep as the girls waited with a giant bowl of candy for our little ones to trick or treat. It was awesome. I can’t wait for next year.

P.S. Here’s the official Halloween portrait as taken by Robyn Berry. I thought you might like to compare it to last year’s.

2011

2010

P.P.S. Seabass also made it into the paper! Well, the online version. Here’s the link – we’re the last photo.

Dear world: Here’s why I haven’t returned your phone call.

30 Oct

...and buh-bye.

Seabass’ Fall Photo Purge

26 Oct

A giraffe ate my baby.

What a lovely time of year this is when you have children.  Halloween used to come and go without getting so much as a passing glance from me, but oh how times have changed.  The smell of woodsmoke on the air, cheery pumpkins on every front porch, and kids in costume?  Count me in.

It had been far too long since I’d loaded photos to my hard drive, so here is a sampling of the fruits of my labor.  They include shots of Seabass in his giraffe costume at a free Halloween photo shoot (thank you Sharon and Robyn Berry Photography), at a friend’s house enjoying vintage farm equipment (thank you Other Sharon), catching Daddy’s annual beach football game (go alumni!), and picking pumpkins at the patch with friends.

Happy Fall.

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I have seen the pit of hell, and it looks a lot like my toilet.

17 Oct

Noooooooooo!!!!!

It’s been a rip-roaring week here in the Lewis household.  Seabass was nursing what we *believe* to be an ear infection, and I stared into the toilet bowl off and on for five days battling Montezuma’s Revenge.  It was a tummy bug that came from Seabass’ daycare.

Thankfully, my mom was here for the first bit.  But when she left, all hell broke loose.  Seabass awoke from his naps screaming like he’d been personally visited by Satan, and often had a spiky fever to go with it.  I went to bed one night feeling nauseous and woke up burping that all-too-telling pre-barf burp.  The vomit didn’t come for a while – in fact, the whole illness was pretty uneventful.  Like, if on a scale of one to five, five is puking your brains out and one is just feeling a little icky, I was a solid three.

That is, until I started puking my brains out.

I defy anyone to identify a feeling worse than nausea.  Okay, amputation or childbirth is up there, but for all-around unpleasantness, nausea has to be the worst.  Today is the first day in an embarrassingly long while that I haven’t laid drooling in my pajamas intermittently on the couch and on the bathroom floor, holding back the honk.

There was a time in my childhood that my family went sailing in Florida, and I couldn’t handle the motion sickness, so I curled up on the stern of the boat and tried to fall asleep.  My dad labeled me “The Drooling Eggroll,” and that’s exactly how I felt this past week.  Of course I’m not completely over this bug, so the mere mention of any food other than unsalted crackers makes me slightly uncomfortable.  Egg rolls=shudder.

Here is the blessing in all of this madness: I have discovered how much some people love me.

  1. My husband.  OMG.  He is a rock star of the highest pedigree for what he took on this week.  When I couldn’t so much as cut an apple for Seabass – let alone comfort him in the midst of a harrowing earache – Jake was there to take him on walks, feed him, play with him, and nurture him in all the ways I usually do.  In fact, I’m pretty sure this was the best bonding weekend for those two ever.
  2. My neighbors.  On Wednesday afternoon, Jake couldn’t come home from work and I was barely able to turn on a video for Seabass to watch without losing my lunch.  In a moment of clarity, I phoned our neighbors down the street – whom I don’t know all that well – and pleaded with them to watch Seabass for the afternoon.  They graciously handled all things Seabass for the next three hours so I could get some rest.
  3. My friends.  I had scheduled to have dinner with one of my best friends from out of town Saturday night, and although my stomach was screaming “NO! NO!  GOD NO!” as we left the house, I wasn’t about to let a little queasiness interrupt something I’d had on my calendar for months.  Jenny was so understanding.

“Dude.  Are you pregnant?”

“I couldn’t be pregnant.  The timing just doesn’t line up.”

“Uh-huh.” [Looking at me askance as I gag down a bit of dry toast.] “But you don’t know for sure, now do you?”

“No.  I suppose weirder things have happened.  Do you think I should pee on a stick?” [Pee on a stick=take a pregancy test.]

“I don’t think you need to.  You’re pregnant, dude.”

Well, as it turns out, I’m not pregnant. But I’m thankful that Jenny went to CVS with me and stood outside the cafe restroom while I prayed against any surprises.  If I have anything to say about it, I won’t be having a second child anytime soon, or maybe ever.  That’s not to say we don’t completely adore Seabass and love what he adds to our lives.  That’s also not to say that we wouldn’t fall head over heels for another child if I’d in fact been pregnant.  But this experience forced an interesting conversation between me and Jake that showed how unready I really am.

“You know,” he said, obviously choosing his words carefully, “If you are pregnant, it’s okay to be excited.”

“Easy for you to say,” I retorted.  “I’m still very much on antidepressants and have only just now – at seventeen months – begun to get a grip on my life.  I would be terrified.”

So, in this instance, thank heavens it was just a stomach bug.