Baby-bouncing playlist

15 Nov

Since I wrote about one particular night in the life of our precious Sweet Chuck, many people have been kind enough to ask me how it’s going.  The query usually goes something like this:

[hand on my arm, meaningful gaze, sympathetic tone] “How is it [pause] going?”

The truth is it’s really going very well.  That night I wrote about was a one-off; Sweet Chuck is generally very easy to please, and I couldn’t be happier.  She’s sleeping like a little champ, eating like there’s no tomorrow, and pooping like…well, pooping like a baby, I guess.  One of my favorite things to do is take pictures of her and Seabass together.  It has become quite the daily fashion shoot.

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On the rare occasion that I need to break out the yoga ball to bounce Sweet Chuck to sleep, I take the opportunity to listen to new music.  While in my former life (pre-kids) I used to have music on constantly, these days it’s either white noise, “Fire Truck” (by request, of course) or silence.  So a baby-bouncing playlist satisfies my craving while also providing me with rhythm for the task.  Can I share a few favorite tunes with you?  They run the gamut.

I don’t usually go in for super electronic, but there’s something about Bassnectar’s “Butterfly” that calms me down in the face of a screaming infant.

Other Lives’ “Tamer Animals” takes me back to a time when I painted my nails black and spent WAY too much time listening to The Cure.  And now I’m a mom.  Weird.

Not everyone loves Ryan Gosling (I’m looking at you Jenny Sargent), or movies in which dudes bash in each others’ skulls (hi mom!), or the 1980s (love you, Jake).  *I*, however, am a fan of all three, and the movie Drive really delivered.  This song by Kavinsky is from the opening credits.

I can’t remember where I found out about Still Corners, but I’ve been a fan for a few months.  Hooray for upbeat dreamy pop.

And, because it’s me, there must be a bit of Rage.  In addition to baby-bouncing ball time, I also like to blast “Renegades of Funk” from my new minivan.  I especially love when Seabass yells “Groove sucka!”

Explanation.

6 Nov

Not surprisingly, there have been a lot of questions about our recent descent into minivan shame.  In this post I will attempt to explain why I yielded my position.

If ever FORM and FUNCTION were personified by two people, it is me and Jake.  I like things to look nice, nevermind practicality.  Jake, on the other hand, gravitates toward things that work despite being ugly as hot sin.

Ms. Form

Mr. Function. And yes, I use this photo on purpose as retribution for making me drive a minivan.

 

When we used to argue about getting a minivan (Jake: for, Jaime: against), I would try to reason with Jake.

“They’re ugly.  They’re big.  They signify everything that I dread becoming as a mom.”

He called me vain, and I agreed.  “You wouldn’t wear a fanny pack just because it’s practical,” I said.  “You are vain too.”

This all probably sounds petty and minor to you, but I’m telling you: TEARS were shed over this issue.  On more than one occasion. And I guess I just grew tired of it all.

Soon after Sweet Chuck was born, my beloved husband and I went to a cafe to discuss cars.  Our crappy little RAV 4 had already shown itself to be miserably incompetent when it came to carting two kids around: heads hit on swinging doors, no space for a double stroller, and whoever was unfortunate enough to sit in the passenger seat had to make love with the dashboard just to fit an infant carseat in the meager space behind.  So on this little “discussion date” we hunted craigslist and Auto Trader for cars that fit our narrowly overlapping desires:

  • Must not be a minivan (my criteria)
  • Must not be an SUV (Jake’s criteria)
  • Must be big enough to accommodate our family, stroller, and dog comfortably
  • Must not break down
  • Must be under $7,000

Have you ever searched for a unicorn?  It was kinda like that.

Reluctantly, I realized as we talked that if I just removed one item from that list of criteria, we could, perhaps, go on with the business of living our lives:

  • Must not be a minivan
  • Must not be an SUV
  • Must be big enough to accommodate our family, stroller, and dog comfortably
  • Must not break down
  • Must be under $7,000

And thus, in the spirit of moving forward, I ceded my vanity and told Jake he could get a minivan.  Mind you, it took me DAYS to come to this decision.  I agonized.  And, because it involved me not getting my way, there were more tears.

We bought our new minivan last Saturday.  I took it for a test drive.  It ran, which is all that mattered.  When we brought it home, Jake was seriously a-twitter, showing Seabass all the nooks and crannies, features, and counting the cupholders.

Me?  I got out.  I grabbed the baby.  I went inside.

Driving it is fine.  Seabass doesn’t hit his head getting in anymore, which is nice.  The stroller fits.  So does the dog.  We didn’t get power doors (do you think we’re made of money???) but the fact that they slide means we can park closer to cars in parking lots, I guess.  Other than that, I have nothing to say.

Here’s the thing about the minivan: As a friend of mine once noted, IT IS A BUBBLE FROM WHICH NO CUTENESS CAN ESCAPE.  That means I might be looking extremely cute one day – hair awesome, clothes fitting – you know, rocking it.  But if I’m in that dumb van, it doesn’t matter how cute I am.  My cuteness cannot penetrate the minivan’s force field of bland practicality and mom-ness.  And that sucks.

I brought this up with Jake.

“How are we ever going to pull up to a nice restaurant and feel cool in the minivan?” I queried.

Rav 4 for sale. Buyer must like Cinderella.

“Did you feel cool pulling up in a 1999 RAV 4 with faded paint and a Cinderella sticker on the back window?  Or how about the 1994 Civic with the cracked windshield and dog fur woven into every possible surface?”

I get his point.  Sigh.  Cuteness will just have to wait.

The darkest day of my life.

1 Nov

I will never be able to lift my head high again.

Operation Mom: COMPLETE.

No more babies.

29 Oct

Jake has scheduled the appointment.  The vasectomy train has left the station.

We’re all so very different, girls. I know several of you who were devastated to see your spouse go in for the procedure.  Your reason?  No more pregnancy, no more babies.  Finality.

I, on the other hand, am perfectly happy to let Jake get snipped.  My reason?  No more pregnancy, no more babies.  Finality.

This is not an impulsive decision – I assure those of you who want to jump down our throats for acting too soon, or for acting whilst in the throes of newbornhood.  Jake and I both grew up in families of four.  It’s what we know.  It’s also impossible to picture where another child would sleep in our little cottage.  Or where the money would come from to clothe them.  Or where the sanity would come from to parent them.

So we’re throwing in the towel, and we’re beyond excited to stop here.  Because seriously, how cute is this little bunch?  Best to stop while we’re ahead.

Our completed tribe.

Imagination.

25 Oct

My little daydreamer.

Considering that he is left to entertain himself quite a bit now that Baby Sweet Chuck is here, it couldn’t have come at a better time: Seabass has discovered his imagination.

Grandma Lewis first noticed it when Seabass used his fingers to walk like legs into his big fire truck toy.  Once she mentioned that, I watched eagerly for any sign of pretend play.  Shortly thereafter, he announced to no one in particular that his little excavator was picking up a giant load of dirt to dump on a pile.  And he started singing in his crib, in his stroller, wherever.  The sound of his singing nearly causes my fragile little mommy heart to burst.  I will treasure these sounds forever.

As a child, I was very independent and loved pretend play.  I remember sitting in my room for hours with a few dolls and a tea set, making up scenarios for my characters to act out.  I had been waiting for this to kick in with Seabass, hoping that his love of playing would be as strong as mine.  Because really?  What parent doesn’t want to see their child secure and content in such a simple – not to mention FREE – activity?

That’s not to say this milestone hasn’t come with its challenges, of course.  An imagination can dream up tractors busy on a construction site, a tea party, or…a nightmare.  Seabass has awoken several times at night yelling “Nooo!!  Nooo!!” and scared me and Jake half to death.  He has also started imagining up little scenes in his bed – no toys necessary – and refusing to fall asleep for his nap.  It takes a concerted effort on my part to convince him of the benefits of sleep.  I have also bribed him with sugar.

As parents, we anticipate so many milestones in our children’s development, from rolling over to first words to saying words like please and thank you without prompting.  But for me, despite a few negatives, this one has by far been the best milestone yet.  Take note, mothers of difficult infants! There is light at the end of your fussy one’s little tunnel, and you will cherish it all the more when it arrives.

Pity party: A night in the life.

17 Oct

The scene.

5pm – Start cooking dinner.  You know, something mild that Sweet Chuck can tolerate when she gets it via breastmilk.  In other words: no spices, no soy, no dairy (butter, cheese, milk, casein, whey), no broccoli, no cauliflower, no tomatoes, no onions, no garlic, and no nuts.  So fire up a pot of boiling water, cuz it’s boiled chicken and rice tonight, baby!!

5:11pm – Sweet Chuck starts wailing.  Stop everything, pour self a cold beer, and nurse with glass in hand.

5:30pm – Daddy comes home.  Don’t forget to accept his kiss and look him in the eye for half a second.

6pm – Restart dinner proceedings.  Clean up stove where rice boiled over.

6:30pm – Sit down to dinner with Sweet Chuck in bouncer between me and Seabass, as per his very specific request.  Pray in gratitude for the food.  Start to dish up plates until derailed by screaming Sweet Chuck.

6:32pm – Leave table to bounce Sweet Chuck on giant living-room-dominating yoga ball while inserting pacifier into gaping mouth.

6:50pm – Watch as Daddy and Seabass leave table and head toward the bathroom for a bath.

7pm – Make it back to boiled chicken and rice, now cold.  Sweet Chuck fidgets in bouncer nearby.

7:15pm – Seabass and Daddy finish bath, proceed to bedroom for ni-night routine.  Try to clean up enough of dinner to ensure that life can go on the following day.

7:30pm – Make appearance in Seabass’ room to say goodnight with ever-fussier Sweet Chuck in arms.  Feel crushing guilt that Seabass doesn’t get all of me anymore.

7:32pm – Change Sweet Chuck into pajamas, swaddle in Miracle Blanket, and nurse.

7:50pm – Bounce Sweet Chuck on yoga ball while inserting pacifier.

8pm – Lay Sweet Chuck down in bouncer, crank white noise machine to eleven, and hope for the best.

8:02pm – Brush teeth, wash face, note dull skin, dark eye circles and flabby tummy in mirror, wondering when I can reasonably expect them to go away.  Don pajamas that allow for emergency boob access.  Take vitamins, including stool softener and ibuprofen to ease inflammation in still-healing nether-region.

8:15pm – Pump breastmilk for a bottle that Daddy can feed to Sweet Chuck in next four to five hours.

8:30pm – Kiss Jake goodnight (oh yeah, he has a name besides Daddy!) and try to fall asleep while listening to Sweet Chuck cry with him in living room.

9pm – Fall asleep.

11pm – Rouse to sound of Sweet Chuck crying.  Force myself to stay in bed and let Jake handle it.

12:57am – Feel Jake shaking me for the changing of the guard.  Say goodnight to him again as he lays down in bed.  Pee.  Drink water.  Shuffle out to living room where Sweet Chuck is screaming for milk.  Attempt to change diaper, only to watch her pee all over changing table.  Remove changing pad, remove Sweet Chuck’s pajamas, find new pajamas.  Change diaper successfully.  Hear Sweet Chuck poop with the force of a jet engine as beginning to swaddle.  Cry.

1:20am – Finish getting Sweet Chuck dry, pajama’d, and swaddled.  Begin nursing.

1:45am – Finish nursing.  *Place Sweet Chuck in bouncer for bed.  Lay down on couch to sleep.

1:47am – Hear Sweet Chuck start to squirm.

1:49am – Sweet Chuck now completely awake.

1:51am – And now screaming.  Get on yoga ball and insert pacifier whilst cursing.

2:01am – Lay now-sleeping Sweet Chuck into bouncer.  Lay down on couch once again.

2:03am – Hear Sweet Chuck start to squirm.

2:05am- Sweet Chuck now completely awake.

2:07am- And now screaming.  Get on yoga ball and insert pacifier whilst cursing.

2:09am – Lay now-sleeping Sweet Chuck into bouncer.  Lay down on couch once again.

*Repeat this sequence of events for next hour, punctuated by repeat attempts to nurse fussy Sweet Chuck and consumption of two bowls of cereal.

3:15am – Neighbors home from bars and obnoxious outside window.  Nice touch.

3:30am – Actually get Sweet Chuck to sleep.

3:45am – Fall sleep.

4am- Wake to dog barfing up God-knows-what in dining room.  Decide to leave it there until someone else notices, or until I slip in it and die.

4:30am – Wake to cries of hungry Sweet Chuck.  Change diaper.  Twice.  Nurse.

5:30am – Sleep.

7am – Daddy up for work and eating breakfast four feet away from Sweet Chuck.  Rustling cereal bags and spoon-against-bowl noises rouse Sweet Chuck.  Nurse.

7:30am – Seabass up and demanding breakfast.

7:32am – Frantically turn to coffee maker for salvation.  Remember that caffeine might irritate baby’s tummy.  Pity self.

All my children.

2 Oct

Um, since when was Seabass a full-grown man? And what’s he doing in that stroller? I mean, for being a full-grown man, can’t he WALK?!?

Children.  Child-REN.  I’ve never felt so very matronly.

OMG I can’t believe we have more than one.

Le birth.

25 Sep

I am pleased to announce the newest addition to our little family:

Sweet Chuck

born September 20, 2012

9:10 P.M.

9 pounds, 3 ounces

22 1/2 inches long

While the inspiration for her older brother’s nickname, Seabass, is perhaps a bit less lofty, Sweet Chuck (or S.C.) is named after a term of endearment for the Princess of France in Shakespeare’s comedy, Love’s Labors Lost.

…the king would have me
present the princess, sweet chuck, with some
delightful ostentation, or show, or pageant, or
antique, or firework.

I chose this name above all others because there is something in this child’s mild temperament that is so lovely and sweet, I couldn’t go and give her just any funny ole name.

That being said, I’m delighted that her name also references Chuck Norris, because she, like Chuck Norris, can kick something fierce.  I know this from several months’ intimate experience.

Anyway: The birth.

Forget banana bread, enchiladas, castor oil, or twiddling nipples.  The sure-fire way to send an overdue woman into labor is Cumin and Ancho ChickenThis meal involves rubbing chicken thighs with 3 tablespoons EACH ancho chile powder and cumin, then frying it in a little bit of vegetable oil.  Now, I love spicy food, so the heat on this chicken wasn’t a problem for me.  The rest of my family, however, was coughing and sputtering the entire time I fried the thighs, just from the scent of chile powder in the air.  I’m pretty sure the dog even coughed once or twice.

As I slaved away in the kitchen, I took a total of three bites before I realized I was contracting.

“Um, I think I should announce to the group that I’m undergoing contractions,” I said.

“You are not,” replied Jake, who was working on some home improvement project in the living room.  (I seriously think he remained unconvinced that we were having a baby until she slid out of me.  In fact, he even left the garage open later that night, in case he wound up with “time to work on stuff.”)

“MMMMMmmm, yes I am.”

Even so, I managed to sit at the table and share an entire taco of spicy chicken with everyone before feeling the need to walk.  As Jake and I walked the neighborhood, I used a fantastic app called Full Term to record the length of each contraction and average the distance between each of them over time – rather handy when you aren’t sure if you should leave for the hospital.  (E.g. sweet husband asks “Are the contractions two minutes apart and lasting 60 seconds each yet?” To which demon wife yells “I DON’T KNOW I’M TOO BUSY EXPERIENCING THEM AND WANTING TO DIE OH AND P.S. I HATE YOU FOR DOING THIS TO ME.”)

Anyway, after walking for a bit, we returned home so that I could hop in the tub and do my business in a warm bath.  I didn’t realize it, but Seabass was still awake and being put to bed by his Grandma.  As I moaned and swayed through another wave, I felt four eyes boring holes into me.  Sure enough, I looked up and found that Jake and Seabass had snuck into the bathroom to watch me.

“Mama doing?” my precious boy asked, tentatively.

“Oh sweetheart, Mama’s just taking a bath,” I said, “Nothing to worry about!”  But I could tell he was unconvinced.  I gave him a brief kiss, told him I loved him no matter what, and then shooed them out of the room.  I was in labor, after all.

After the bath, I managed to get dressed before heading to the living room to moan on the exercise ball a bit.  Jake decided to call the doctor, who heard our tale and told us to depart for the hospital whenever we were “ready.”

“Are we ready?” asked Jake, pretty well spun-up at this point, but still a little unsure that I was in labor.

“Let’s do this,” I grunted.

From this point on, things are a little bit blurry.  I remember being in the car and having a couple of long contractions, walking up the stairs to the hospital birthing center and trying to smile at the nurses, who whooped and giggled that a baby was about to be born.  (God bless the nurses of French Hospital! What an amazing group of people.)  Our main nurse, Marian, informed us that the tub room would be available after she cleaned it and filled the tub – in about an hour.  Until then, we were welcome to use a temporary room.

Hearing her say that I’d need to wait an hour before going to the tub room was like dying a little death.  I can’t do this for another hour.  It was right around then that my contractions started to get more intense.  And by intense, I mean moaning became yelling.  From my “temporary” hospital bed, the nurses asked me to get up and go to the bathroom to pee into a cup or something crazy.  When I did, my water broke with a vengeance, all over Jake’s shoes (I’m 0 for 2 on that, by the by – yessss, fist pump).  My contraction then went out-of-control painful.  “Should we keep moving toward the bathroom?” asked Jake, trying not to slip in my amniotic fluid.

“Nope – she needs to back in the bed,” said Marian.  “This baby is about to be born!”

Everything started moving really fast at this point.  Someone asked that the midwife be called, even though I’d planned on delivering with a doctor.  Stainless steel tables were wheeled around the bed.  There were A LOT of people in the room.  Oh, and my yelling became screaming.  Like, at the top of my lungs, in the manner of a woman being stabbed repeatedly with a rusty garden spade.

The mysterious Sandra arrived and introduced herself between two soul-crushing contractions.  “We’ve called Doctor M, but he won’t be here in time.  I am the midwife who will be delivering your baby.”  It turns out she was just about to leave the hospital after an earlier birth.  This was to be the last labor and delivery of her 30-year career.

It’s incredible how a light at the end of the tunnel – a finish line – can inspire me to complete a task.  When Sandra told me she would be delivering my newborn child in a matter of minutes, my body and mind rallied in such a way that cannot be described.  One pushy contraction (“GET THIS BABY OUTTA ME!!!!”), two pushy contractions (“UNBELIEVABLE PAIN!!!”) and suddenly the head was crowning.  I refused the offer of a mirror or the opportunity to touch Sweet Chuck’s emerging head, just wanting to be done with it all.

The stinging, searing pain of an emerging baby came upon me as I did a handful of little, grunty pushes.  And the next thing I knew, she was in my arms, crying a lusty, beautiful song of entry into the world.

Fresh from the oven. Note my glistening forehead.

Though it’s been done in much, much less time, I find it incredible that, from start to finish, my labor lasted less than three hours.  First contraction around 6:15pm. Dilated to 8 cm when we arrived at the hospital. Last push, 9:10pm.

Though midwife Sandra delivered the baby, our doctor did finally arrive to do damage control. Here’s a great shot of him discussing my bottom half as framed between my knees after the birth. Did I take this picture?!? What was I hoping to document, exactly?!? And how did I expect it to be received?!?

Emotions of every strain and color are colliding in my little world.  The sheer joy of new life.  The pain of recovery.  The guilt of abandoning Seabass.  And the guilt of sharing that Sweet Chuck is, indeed, so much easier than Seabass was at this stage.  Of course, the fat lady hasn’t sung on that one quite yet.  There’s plenty of time for our little Sweet Chuck to become Chucky instead.

A kiss on the head for sister.

Seabass received a gift from Sweet Chuck when we came home from the hospital, hoping to soften the blow of big changes in his life. This is a shot of him playing his new dog-guitar. Thank you Jesus, he has not yet lost interest in it completely.

Recipe for the famous labor-inducing banana nut bread.

20 Sep

Nope, haven’t given birth yet.  Let’s just get that out of the way.

I was nine days overdue with Seabass, so the whole baby-not-here-yet thing isn’t new.  All the same, it really, really sucks.  Through this experience I have realized, yet again, that what I dread most in life isn’t death or nuclear war or losing my house to a flood.  (Such quaint, specific fears!)  No, I dread the unknown.  I dread a lack of control.  You can see why parenting has been challenging for me.

I had an appointment with my OB on Monday.  Seeing as I have gestational diabetes (read: MONSTER BABY) he asked if I’d like to be induced this weekend.  I said I’d prefer not to be pumped full of chemicals, no.  Then he “checked” me (such a harmless word for such an uncomfortable procedure) and found that I was 50% effaced and 2 cm dilated – both good signs that labor would kick in before the weekend anyway.

But here we are.  On Thursday.  With no indication that my body has any clue what it’s supposed to do.

Everyone has a suggestion for how to bring on contractions. I’ve been told I need to eat spicy food, have sex, twiddle my nipples, walk downhill a lot, and get a massage. (Jake has gone one step further and suggested I pour Tabasco sauce DIRECTLY onto my cervix.)  And then there are the specific food suggestions.  One friend swears he has catapulted dozens of women into labor with his enchiladas.  Another believes that a pizza place in Sacramento does the trick.  But when I was one week overdue with Seabass, a friend shared the recipe for her family’s magically labor-inducing banana nut bread that appeared to work, since I went into labor the day after consuming it.

So last Tuesday, I pulled out Seabass’ baby book (where the recipe lives) and whipped up a loaf.  To my infinite dismay, the bread did not budge baby.  But it sure was delicious.

 

Me looking like a friggin whale in my apron. Notice birthing ball in corner of room, gathering dust.

 

Great Grandma Schirnmer’s Labor-Inducing Banana Nut Bread

  • 2 c. flour
  • 1 1/2 t. baking powder
  • 1/2 t. baking soda
  • 2 eggs
  • 1/2 c. oil
  • 1 c. sugar
  • 1 t. lemon juice
  • 1/2 t. vanilla
  • 1 c. mashed bananas
  • 1 c. chopped walnuts

Sift flour, baking powder and baking soda together in a small bowl.  In large bowl, mix eggs, oil, sugar, lemon juice and vanilla.  Add bananas and walnuts.  Stir in flour mixture and pour batter into greased and floured loaf pan.  Bake at 350 degrees for 45-60 minutes, depending on size of pan.  Test for doneness with a toothpick.

Despite this bread’s failure to launch me into labor this time, I still highly recommend it.  Just let your pregnant friends know before they eat it that they’re playing with fire.

 

Image

Happy due date to me.

17 Sep

9months

Come on out kid. We know you’re in there.