Saturday, May 25, 2013

Cloth diapers

William now has cloth diapers.

My first attempt:
From 2013 May

And then a second one, using leftover scraps of fabric from the quilt I made for Nicholas before he was born:
From 2013 May

And I must admit that I am proud of how they turned out and surprised that I managed to pull it off without even one call to my mom.

Thursday, May 23, 2013

Thank you notes

I came up with a simple and yet effective idea I want to remember: no playing with gifts until the thank you note has been written.

Yes, it is cruel, but we clearly needed a new system since we only made it halfway through our Christmas thank yous before I gave up (in March).  And given that most of our family and friends live far away, Nicholas rarely can say thank you for presents in person when they are given and so needs to send notes.

Using this system Nicholas finished all the thank yous for the presents he got at his party in 5 days:
From 2013 May

I didn't take pictures of the insides, but he wrote the friend's name and his own name and dictated the rest.  Asking him to write any more than that would have spelled the end of the project.  Writing is definitely not an activity he enjoys, but given that he can write most letters at almost 4, I figure there is no need to push too hard.

Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Nicholas notes

A couple random entertaining things Nicholas has said about the baby recently that I want to remember:
1. Nicholas asks how big the baby is at least 3 times a day.  I am using his stuffed animals as approximations (which, really, just make so much more sense than fruit).  So right now it is about the size of his dolphin, but it can't come out until it is the size of his monkey.  But really it hasn't grown enough in the last week to upgrade to the next animal and I think he is getting discouraged.
2. To distract Nicholas while I was trying on maternity clothes the other day he and Joe went to pick out an outfit for the baby.  But it needs to be gender neutral at this point.  We explained that this was because we don't know yet if it is a girl baby or a boy baby.  Nicholas' comment?  Yeah, but when it comes out if it has long hair then we can buy girl's clothes.

Monday, May 20, 2013

Introducing . . . William

Written 5/11/13:

No, we don't know the sex of the baby.  No, if it is a boy, it will not be named William.  This is William:
From 2013 May

William was Nicholas' "you're going to be a big brother" gift/practice doll.  Honestly, he's been so interested in playing with the dolls at school for so long that I had contemplated getting him a better babydoll for his birthday anyway, but decided to go with this association instead.  And after looking at the miserable collection of babydolls in the stores (seriously, what is going on?), I convinced Joe to go full-out Cabbage Patch.

Nicholas loves William! (By the way, after the "door" suggestion for a baby name, we gave Nicholas three choices for the doll's name and he chose William over Alex and one other one I can't remember.) And he apparently totally understands newborns.  According to Nicholas, William's diaper needs to be changed about every 5 minutes and he is constantly sticking his pacifier in because William is crying.  Sounds about right to me.  Oh, and he knew how to change William's diaper all by himself without any prompting. 
From 2013 May
When I asked where he had learned how to do that he said at school.  They really do go above and beyond at that school.  Learn to write your name, learn to count in Spanish, learn to change diapers . . .

I have no idea if this will actually help him with the adjustment or not, but I figure it can't hurt and it warms my heart to watch Nicholas care for William. 

Not that it is all tender.  Today I walked into the room and Nicholas proclaimed, "Look, William can stand on his head!"  At some point we will have to discuss what cannot be done with the real baby.

Overall, I am very satisfied and am glad we went the Cabbage Patch route.  My one complaint is that they've changed the diapers since I was a kid and they now mimic disposables. I don't object to that on its face--afterall, that is certainly the only type of diaper Nicholas has ever known.  The problem is that the tabs have already lost their stick . . . after 2 days.  So today I looked up patterns online for making cloth diapers for dolls and this evening I worked to adapt the pattern I found to his doll's size.  I think I've figured out a size/shape that will work and I have enough fabric scraps to do it, but I need to get some velcro and break out the actual sewing machine to finish it.  Maybe tomorrow.

I love this little boy and I love how much he is already taking to his new role.

Saturday, May 18, 2013

Birthday Party

Nicholas had his very first birthday party today and, per the custom at his school, we invited all of his school friends.  And it was chaos.  Luckily only 10 of the 21 were there or I don't know how we would have managed (seriously, how do the teachers not only manage every day but keep them so calm and organized all the time?).  He had a lot of fun and it was an overall success, but it was loud and a little wild and overwhelming.  We will not be doing this often, I can promise.

Now, some of the chaos was our own fault.  The facility provides water, punch, and lemonade for the kids, but I hate when we go to parties and they serve punch because Nicholas goes crazy when he has it, so I had put enough of the boxes of milk we pack him for school in the fridge that the kids could all have milk instead.  And I planned to ask the facility to not even put out the punch and lemonade, only offering water and milk.  But when the kids lined up to get their clubs the woman told them to tell her whether they wanted water, punch, or lemonade to drink, Joe and I looked at each other and suddenly realized that we'd left the milk at home in the fridge.  And then the ice cream cake was so frozen that it took a long time to cut and so some of the kids spent close to 10 minutes sitting just drinking punch.  So of course after they were done with their cake they were literally running around in circles and no amount of effort on my part to corral them into a game or anything calmer worked.  Joe finally had them line up and march in a parade (they all had those party favors where they blow the paper strip) out to the lobby as a way to signal to the parents that the party was over and it was time to go.

But before that things went really well.  The kids were all loud and hyper and a little manic, but within reason and mostly able to listen. As they waited for the others to show up they played on the toys in the lobby, although we refused to give them money to make them move.
From 2013 May
I just love watching how well they all get along.
From 2013 May
They would all pile on to the car and then count how many kids there were and talk about the number of clowns in the clown car (they did a circus unit a few weeks ago). They then played mini golf and thankfully we had the whole place to ourselves (booking the party for as soon as it opened worked beautifully) because they were basically taking up the entire place. And they played so quickly (because they were moving through one or two kids on a hole at a time and so not waiting for everyone to finish any hole) that when we got back to the lobby the woman at the counter looked a little panicked (the cake wasn't ready) and so suggested they go play another round. So they played 36 holes of golf (well "played," with some following more rules than others) in under an hour. And Nicholas was so excited and wound up, his voice was an octave higher than usual. But he still mostly played by the rules and had fun.
From 2013 May
From 2013 May
From 2013 May
Nicholas had a great time, but man did it wear us down. Another week of birthday fun awaits.
From 2013 May
From 2013 May
From 2013 May

Care Package

Written on May 7th:

Uncle Brian and Aunt Shayna certainly know the way to a pregnant lady's heart.  We just received a congratulations care package containing 2 Chicago pizzas and a triple-layer fudge chocolate cake.  Now, technically the package was addressed to all of us, but I think I get at least 2 shares.  Right? 

Thursday, May 16, 2013

Big Brother Announcement

**This is the first of a handful of posts I've written in the past week but wasn't yet ready to post.**

Written May 6, 2013:

Yesterday we told Nicholas the news about Cashew.  Although, come to think of it, we never used that name.  Hmm, and actually I'm wondering if we should keep it that way.  It will just confuse him and if we stick with "baby" around him then "Cashew" can be our secret code word.

Anyway, back to the point of the post.  We told Nicholas about the baby yesterday.  And I sneakily turned on the video camera, which I had placed unobtrusively on a cabinet, so I could record his reaction.  And his reaction was great!  But the camera apparently didn't actually record.  So we'll have to go based on my pregnancy-brain fuzzy memories of the event.

One of Nicholas' teachers had a baby last month, so he is well versed in the idea of pregnancy, having watched and talked with her through the process.  I opened with: "Nicholas, we have something very exciting to tell you.  I have a baby in my belly!"  And his face lit up and his eyes widened and he said something along the lines of "Really?  Yay!" 

And we talked for a little bit and he was excited and then he caught himself stumbling over pronouns, mostly using feminine pronouns but hesitating.  And so he asked if it is a girl baby or a boy baby.  We don't know yet, but it is exactly the expectation of that being important to his understanding that had already led us to decide to find out the sex and share it.  We just figure it will help make the baby more real to Nicholas.  I honestly don't think he has a preference, but he just likes having all the information.

We showed him pictures, which he was excited about the idea of but then underwhelmed by the actual pictures (which I don't blame him for--you can see the features so clearly during the ultrasound itself but then when they freeze the frame for the print-out it gets really blurry). 

The only other thing of note (at least that I can remember) from the initial conversation was that at one point he asked me if that meant I was going to get married.  I have absolutely no idea where he got that one, but it really fascinated me.  I can't think of anyone he knows or would have heard us talking about who got married when they had a baby or were pregnant.

After a few minutes he was done and ready to move on (back to his work grading papers--can you tell it is finals season here?) but we wanted to make sure to give him the timeline.  So we got out his calendar to show him.  I started by asking him if my belly was as big as Ms. Naomi's.  He laughed at that idea.  So I explained that the baby was still really tiny and had to grow much bigger before it could come out.  So we flipped page by page and went through, "It has to grow for May, and June, and July, and August, and September, and October, and then after Halloween when it is November, then it can come out."

After he did a few minutes of grading
From 2013 May
we asked if he'd like to call anyone to tell them his exciting news and prompted him with members of Joe's family (who didn't know yet and it seemed to be both a good way to tell them and a way for him to feel ownership of it).  And I did get part of the first one of those phone calls on video, so you can see a little of his excitement:
From 2013 May

Given that we have plenty of time to get him acclimated to the idea, we didn't push it much after that, but it just so happened that someone in the complex was moving and had discarded a kid's dresser by the dumpster that will be perfect for Cashew's clothes (in the closet in the kids' room because the room itself is out of space).  I convinced Joe to let me salvage it and it is now in our hallway. 
From 2013 May
Nicholas was very excited about the idea of that being the baby's dresser (although he did at first ask if it was a cage for the baby before we put the drawers back in), which led to a series of additional questions.  And I have to give the kid credit--he is all about the practical questions.  He wanted to know where the dresser was going and when I told him it would go in his room, probably in his closet, it triggered for him a thought of other baby furniture, so he asked where the crib was going to go.  I explained that when the baby is really little it will be in our room but then when it gets a little bigger it will be in a crib in his room.  And his response?  Without any prompting from me, even in tone, he exclaimed: "Oh, thank you, Mommy!  Thank you so much for saying that your baby can sleep in my room!" He then gave me a huge bear hug.  I know that excitement won't last when an actual crying child is in his room, but it made me happy nonetheless.  Also, I find it both odd and cute that he calls it MY rather than the baby or our baby.

Oh, and last note: Nicholas' name suggestion?  Door.  (Although to be fair, he started by asking me what the baby's name was, not making suggestions and only came up with "door" when I asked for his thoughts.).

Wednesday, May 15, 2013

Cashew, the Fighter Baby

Some of you may remember that when Nicholas was still Peanut we came up with our own goofy naming system for future children.  According to that, baby #2 was supposed to be Cashew.  And ever since we have referred to hypothetical second child as "Cashew," even if only to ourselves.

Well, it is now time to introduce you to Cashew!

From 2013 May
Due to arrive in early to mid November.

This picture is now 2 weeks old, but as you can see Cashew already looks more like a person (without arms, in this picture, but its arms were actually resting on its head as it slept, in a position that looked JUST LIKE NICHOLAS) and less like a nut (or amorphous prehensile creature, as it did in the early ultrasounds), but its name has always been Cashew and so Cashew it will remain. 

****Warning: the rest of this post is personal and unfiltered.  I feel I need to write it and have it as part of this family log, but it may be too much information, so stop here if you don't want to go down that rabbit hole.****

We don't know much about this child yet, but we do know that it is a fighter.  We actually debated changing its name from Cashew, but couldn't come up with a nut that sounded any more boxing-like.  Because I have to tell you, I have already learned not to count this kid out, that he or she is resilient and tenacious and not to be messed with.

After two miscarriages in the fall (which are honestly posts/stories I don't know that I will ever write), I was primed to be hesitant and suspicious.  Honestly, those wounds were still really raw.  And so when things seemed to be following a familiar pattern in late February, I figured I knew the rest of the script.  I felt very strong pregnancy symptoms for about a week and then they went away.  It had chemical pregnancy written all over it (that is what the first miscarriage officially was).  I wasn't happy, but was okay.  After all, I now know that there are way worse things than a chemical pregnancy.  Better for it to end then than a few weeks later.  And this time I was primed because I knew what it was--I wouldn't get my hopes up. 

The following weekend I had strep and remember thinking, well okay, now it makes sense.  This is why I couldn't be actually pregnant right now, because the strep and the fever would be really dangerous.  So I was okay, at peace, glad I wasn't pregnant.  But because I still technically could possibly be pregnant, I sent my brother out in the middle of the night for Tylenol because I was at my parents' house and they didn't have any pregnancy-safe fever reducers.  I apologized to him, saying I knew it was silly since I was so sure I wasn't pregnant, but to just humor me (which, let's be honest, he has been doing his entire life).

Two days later I decided to go ahead and take a pregnancy test.  I was certain I wasn't pregnant, but I was late and I knew given the history the doctor would want some data about what was happening.  And it was positive.  Hmmm, okay, well I figured that likely just meant the hormones from the chemical pregnancy were still in my system.  I expected them to be gone by then given the previous pattern, but it didn't mean anything.  In fact, I didn't take a picture (I had two previous sets of pictures that were just painful and, okay, I was both jaded and a little superstitious) and promptly threw the test in the trash.

I called the doctor's office to ask what he wanted to do now.  I figured we were still in diagnostic mode and he might want to do some bloodwork to check things out.  And sure enough in I went for bloodwork.  And when the numbers came back I began to get my first glimpse of hope.  Because the numbers were good.  I still wasn't excited, I still wasn't believing, but it was a step.  Actually, at that point I remember feeling very conflicted.  It was good news, but to me it was also bad news.  Because now I had reason to hope and hope was scary.  When I was certain there was no hope I was at peace.  I was okay with not being pregnant.  I was even okay with a chemical pregnancy.  But if it was a real pregnancy, then things could go wrong.  Could I go back there?  And oh no, the strep!  Panic.

They then proceeded to draw blood every 2-4 days for what felt like forever but in reality was less than 2 weeks.  At that stage it is the only thing they can do to check the progress of the pregnancy because it is too early to see anything on an ultrasound.  And so they watched hormone levels go up.  And with each positive call I started to get a little more hopeful.  But I also remembered.  I remembered that the number was just under 10,000 when they did a draw right after the last miscarriage so no matter how well the numbers were moving in that direction, I knew I wasn't safe.  And then at just about 6 weeks the phone call with the blood results was more measured.  The numbers had still gone up, but they had slowed down and were lower than they wanted.  It wasn't awful, it wasn't necessarily a sign of things going wrong, but it also was not reassuring.  At that phone call the nurse declared us done with blood draws.  Instead of a blood draw on Monday morning (this was a Friday afternoon) we would do an ultrasound.  It was still to early to see a heartbeat and she prepared me that realistically it might be too early to see anything at all, but it was the only way to get any information about what might be going on because the numbers were now not telling us for sure--they had become gray.

I figured it was over.  I wasn't drinking or taking any other risks, but mentally I figured I knew what was coming.

Going in Monday morning I knew the best we could hope for was continued gray.  And then the tech showed us the heartbeat!  It was still too early to see a heartbeat--how was this possible?! The baby was still so tiny (I swear it looked like just a dot) that the flicker of the heartbeat made it look like the entire baby was flickering, like the heart was the entire thing. 
From 2013 May

And I cried.  Not with joy, but with pure relief.  Tension and fear that had been so bottled up came rushing out.

That is when we knew--this child is a fighter.

After a couple days the relief faded and the fear gripped hold again.  We weren't safe.  My doctor had already scheduled weekly ultrasounds given my history.  Not that there was anything he could do to prevent another miscarriage but maybe just maybe he could give me the peace of mind to keep me sane.  Even with those I will admit that there was one dark moment in between scheduled ultrasounds when I called the office in a panic, convinced it was over, and they brought me in to take a peek.  And the baby was fine.  And I felt stupid.  But I was apparently more scarred than I realized.  Those early weeks were hard.  I was so scared.  And felt so helpless.  But I also began to hope in our fighter baby.  That is actually what I called it in those weeks instead of Cashew.  I would plead, "Please, little fighter baby, keep on fighting."  Because there was nothing I could do.  I was at the mercy of God and this tiny clump of cells fighting so hard to develop.  It was a reminder of just how powerless I am as a mother, just how little credit I can take for who Nicholas is, just how much he is his own person.

And fighter baby kept fighting.  When we got to 10 weeks I started to breathe a little.  When I started feeling the baby move at 11 1/2 weeks I felt the beginnings of joy and excitement for the first time.  When we watched the baby sleeping with its hand on its head like its big brother at 12 1/2 weeks it became real.  And when we told Nicholas last weekend it became a part of our lives.

I won't say I don't still worry, because I do.  But it is manageable.  It is like this child knew that I needed those early motions.  Seriously, how is it possible to feel motion at 11 1/2 weeks?!  That really shouldn't be possible.  But, as I told Joe, if that wasn't the baby I needed to see a GI doctor because my intestines were literally tying themselves up in knots (the kid must have been doing somersaults).  And I don't think intestines respond to a jolt of liquid sugar (Sprite) by jumping around manically.  So now when I get anxious, I wait for the baby's reassuring motions.  They have become less frequent and noticeable actually in the last week, oddly enough, which I am trying not to let worry me (the heartbeat was still great at Monday's scheduled doctor's appointment, so no need for you to worry either).  But so far so good. And while it is really scary for me to go public (it feels like a jinx somehow), it is time.

Friday, May 10, 2013

Breakfast in Bed

Nicholas declared at dinner tonight that on Mother's Day all mothers have to eat breakfast in bed.  He then very seriously ordered me, "So on Sunday you can't get out of bed.  You have to stay in bed and eat breakfast."

Twist my arm.

Saturday, May 4, 2013

May

It is May and this year this means only one thing in our household: Nicholas' birthday is coming!  I know, it isn't for another 3+ weeks, but it is all Nicholas talks about. 

He was so eager to turn the calendar page that he started asking 2 days ahead of time and when we got home on Tuesday night he was insistent that changing the calendar be the first thing we do.  I didn't understand why, but humored him.  Then as soon as I hung up the calendar, he shouted, "Now it is May!  My birthday is in May!  It is almost my birthday!"  Ah, I see.

This year Nicholas is having his first birthday party beyond the family and he is so excited! 
From 2013 May
We have invited all his friends from school and apparently all of the preschool set enjoy mini golf as much as Nicholas does.  And the place we are going for mini golf is a place that makes its own ice cream so the party includes a homemade icecream cake!  Score.  And, yes, I am probably as excited about this as Nicholas is, or at least close.

On the day of his actual birthday we will be getting on a cruise ship with Joe's family, a trip that I'm pretty sure Nicholas thinks is one big birthday celebration for him.  Ah, to be 4 and the center of the universe.

One thing that makes me happy is that Nicholas' excitement about his upcoming birthday seems to have nothing to do with presents.  He hasn't talked about them at all and when people have asked what he wants, he only has one suggestion.  Given how acquisitive he was leading up to Christmas, this makes me happy.  He seems to be most excited about being the center of attention and having things be all about him.  I'm not exactly sure how this is different from usual, but he must think it is.