Posts Tagged ‘milestones’

Crying It Out To Radiohead, Late Milestones, and Advice-Crazy Mothers

Saturday, November 7th, 2009

My baby had been sleeping in the Pack-N-Play bassinet in our bedroom since she was born. When she hit 4 months old, I figured it was time to let her use the nice crib in her own room. As with most new parents, the idea of having her so far away from me at night (meaning the next room over) terrified me since I was still paranoid about listening to make sure she was breathing. I did have an audio monitor, but you can’t use that for breathing, so that wasn’t reassuring. Plus, my daughter’s cry is LOUD, so I didn’t even need the monitor. You can honestly hear her cry if you’re in the shower, with the bathroom door closed, and she’s in a room all the way down the hall with her door closed. On the first night that I tried to put her in her crib at night by herself, I had first prepared myself by reading some tips online from people to make it work. A lot of people suggested the timed “cry it out” method, where you go in every 5, 10, 15 minutes to reassure the baby that you didn’t abandon them. This is a sleep-training method invented by Dr. Ferber. Well, we tried it. As with Colic, breastfeeding, and teething, it broke my heart hearing her scream, and we both were in tears. BUT, I have to say, she did fall asleep at the 20-minute interval. (So that was a total of 50 minutes.) We continued to use this method the next day for naps. On the 2nd night for bedtime she fell asleep at the 15 minute interval. By the 5th day she was asleep at the 10 minute interval and that was good enough for me. Two weeks later she barely cried for 2 minutes and then she’d fall asleep. We did use the pacifier so every now and then I’d have to run in her room to put it back in her mouth, but I could deal with that. I know that a lot of people don’t agree with the cry it out (CIO) method, but it was the right choice for me- at least the progressive time one. I would never let her cry more than 20 minutes straight.

A fun development that happened at 4 months was she started to blow “raspberries.” I was hoping that she’d do it because I know that not all babies do every particular milestone. I mean I was already getting comments from my mom on how her friends’ grandchildren were rolling over already, and shouldn’t my daughter? No she wasn’t rolling yet. Who cares! I don’t know what’s more annoying: getting unsolicited baby advice from people when you’re pregnant -OR- getting comments from people comparing your baby to other babies. I tried to tune people out when they made the comparison comments, since they were usually said in a negative, concerning matter, and who asked them anyway. As the books say, every baby is different. My baby wasn’t rolling yet, but she was making raspberries. Plus, she showed preferences for certain modern rock songs that I liked. So there. :)  Her favorite that month seemed to be Radiohead. She would quiet down during “No Surprises” or “Fake Plastic Trees.” During the day when she would hear more upbeat music, she would start to rock herself in her bouncy seat, especially when my husband would play guitar for her. I don’t mean she’d gently rock herself in her chair. Instead, she looked like she was trying to win a rocking race, and she’d kick her legs like crazy with this super serious look on her face like it was her JOB to move like that when the music was playing. We have it on video and it’s pretty funny.

As for her size, she was still huge- 95th percentile in height & weight at 17.5 lbs and 25.75 inches. But I loved every chubby inch of her. Actually she didn’t really look chubby; she just weighed a lot. Oh, and this was another thing that dear ole’ mom had to get her say in about. “Should she be this big? Maybe you’re feeding her too much.”  Okay, first she didn’t like me breastfeeding because she thought I wasn’t feeding her enough since she couldn’t measure how much milk the baby got; and now she doesn’t like me breastfeeding because she thinks I’m feeding her too much. Ah, mothers. Oh wait, I’m one now. I mean, ah…mothers from a different generation who don’t want to get up on the times. :)

Baby At 1 Month Old - Bloody Poop, Smiling, Babbling To Music, and Still Not Sleeping

Friday, October 30th, 2009

I think I finally started to enjoy being a mom, at least a little bit, when my daughter was about 1 month old. Before then, I confess it was the most stressed I’ve ever been in my life. She cried non-stop from colic, I was severely sleep deprived, and I actually weighed less than I did before I was pregnant because I didn’t have any time to eat.  But once she was 1 month old I finally was rewarded with that first “real” smile, you know, the non-gas kind, which made it seem worth it. She has two huge dimples and a really wide face so she truly looked like a Gerber baby; a cherub. Where that cherub was from remains a question because she definitely wasn’t an angel baby. Haha.

My husband and I would sing to her almost daily, everything from nursery songs to Stone Temple Pilots. One morning I was singing to her and she just started babbling back. But it wasn’t her normal babbling that she did throughout the day. This was a specific babble that she does while being sung to, like a trill almost, and she would go up and down the scale. It’s really funny to watch because she’d belt out an off-key note and hold it while her eyebrows came together, like she’s REALLY concentrating on the note, or maybe she was just trying to poop, who knows. She would always “sing” whenever my husband or I would sing to her. But she also would babble a lot throughout the day, like she was talking to you about everyday stuff. Some of my friends’ babies weren’t really babbling much yet, so this was one area which she seemed to do early.

As a parent of a baby, my newest interest became baby poop. The amount, the frequency, the consistency, the color, etc. When they send you home from the hospital with your baby they want you to pay attention to poop, and I don’t think you ever stop paying attention to it!  If you were to put two very new mothers together, especially breastfeeding mothers, the conversation would quickly turn to this subject. Her poop was mostly the standard watery, yellow, mustard-seed poop that breastfed babies produce. But every now and then she’d have dark green, mucousy poop, and there would be tiny (and I do mean tiny) streaks of blood in it. It scared me to death! The doctor said that babies sometimes can have a little tearing from pooping so frequently, or that it could be a sensitivity to something I was eating. They said that dairy is usually the culprit, so I cut back on my dairy intake again. It seemed to help.

Unfortunately, she still didn’t sleep. She was sleeping a little at night, but naps were pretty much non-existent. I didn’t know about schedules or anything at the time, so I wasn’t aware about trying to put her on one. She fell asleep in her bouncy seat when she was tired during the day, and when she did sleep it was only for maybe 20-30 minutes. I always thought that the only thing young babies did mostly was sleep, at least that’s what everybody told me and what was portrayed on some episodes of the TV show Bringing Home Baby, but not my daughter. She never slept. That’s why I never had time to eat, cook, clean, or do anything else. This was another area where I tended to get a little jealous of my friends’ “easy” babies, versus my little diva.

I was still successfully breastfeeding, which I was really proud about considering how hard it was for me. I think it paid off because when she went to her 1st month check-up at the doctor, she was in the 95th percentile in height/weight at 11 lbs and 23 inches. I didn’t realize how big she was until the doctor laughed and said that she’s considered a huge baby, but not to worry about her being an Amazon Woman when she’s older because they can’t tell that until children are about 2 years old. That didn’t  reassure me much, but at least she wasn’t overly small. I’d rather her be a big baby than an overly small baby. The only issue that her height/weight presented to me was clothing. It killed me inside that she was only able to wear some items once, or not at all, because she quickly outgrew everything. This child had gorgeous outfits that people had given her, but she couldn’t wear a lot of them. I’m dealing with the mental torture of that by holding onto them and hoping that if I ever have another child that it will be a girl. This way I’ll feel like the clothing was used more.