Category Archives: Motherhood

Why Did I Wait?

When I was pregnant in 2007, I remember a day when I came back from a walk (or maybe a trip to the grocery store) when my left knee ached. (There were several trips to Safeway when my foot stepped in something on the floor and I slipped. The management has improved maintenance since then.) I chalked up the pain to pregnancy hormones and hoped it would go away.

It didn’t. Then I assumed it was just my “advanced” age — you know, the fact that a mid-40s body has aches and pains that a mid-20s body doesn’t. I also figured that a visit to the doctor would result in my concern being dismissed with a recommendation to just put some ice on it.

When my sister E visited in December, she urged me to look into it. I did, and I had an MRI this morning. The result: I have a complex tear of the medial meniscus. I was referred to a surgeon and have an appointment for February 23 in the afternoon to review the problem and the options.

So, it is validating to know that my pain is real. I feel chagrined that I didn’t pursue this sooner. I could have been pain free at least a year ago! I also feel a little daunted at the thought of being laid up with a toddler and having to navigate our 27 steps in the townhome. Maybe the surgery will be less invasive and intense than my imagination manufactures.

One Step Closer

At Target, I stopped by the sippy cup aisle with Bean. She said “Milk!” and pointed to some cups, so I bought them. (We’re on our sixth different brand/style of cup.) Yesterday she took one sip. Today she walked around with the cup and took several small sips. I’d say that’s progress!

She also learned tonight how to crawl up on the ottoman by herself. Whenever things change, it seems they usually cover two or three accomplishments.

almost 17 mons

She Has My Heart In Her Hand

Struggling and Growing

Alas, Bean is still on a milk strike. She wants and asks for it, and becomes angry and cries when offered milk in the cup. This morning I handed the cup to her and she gave it back saying, “Put away.” Then she cried. I comfort and talk to her, and usually offer yogurt, which most of the time she accepts. I really, really, really want to give her a bottle. However, now and then she’ll pick up the cup and play with it and take one sip. Husband thinks we should wait her out. The other day I was at a play date, and Bean wandered in holding the toy bottle from my her playmate’s dolly. She brought it to me and said, “Milk?” Bean has also regressed a little in that she has been crawling more.

On the other hand, she devours solids now, and I think she seems a little bigger and sturdier. In the past week — since getting the rocking horse and learning how to mount and dismount from it — she has become more agile and steady. She mastered the slide at the park; she is now able to slide down and remain sitting up without holding on to anyone’s hand. (She used to flop on her back or ask to hold hands.) She also mastered the stairs and walking down the crawling ramp at preschool.

Bean certainly has become feistier in recent weeks. She has more tantrums. One day she went to the fridge, took the photos (laminated and hanging with magnets) off and threw them down on the floor while growling. When she wants to see her show, she will whine and cry about it if I say no, but I’m trying to be consistent. Our rule is no more than three times a day (90 minutes total): once before nap, once after nap, and at Mommy’s discretion, one more time just before Daddy gets home if it seems as though Bean is going to melt down altogether. I’m fortunate the tantrums only happen at home now, but it’s only a matter of time before I’m the parent with the screaming banshee that everyone else looks at and judges (either with compassion or derision).

She likes to narrate her activities. If she’s walking, she says “Walking!” and if she runs she says “Running!” and so on. Her words and sentences continue to accumulate. She’s also putting concepts together. We make towers with her blocks. The other day, I had stacked her little cups of food on the kitchen counter as I prepared us for an outing. Bean saw this and said, “Tower food. Tower food!” Yes, I confirmed, it was indeed a tower of food. Because she loves her television show (about a lion family who runs a library), she often asks to go to the library. We wander around, but she’s too active to sit long and read books. She says, “Hi!” to all people she meets. It’s adorable. Bean also recognizes two of anything and will say, “Two [whatever the item is]” When asked to count them, she counts to two while pointing at each one. She is flummoxed by any set of items greater than two, but she will count up to 20 with me as we walk down the stairs of our home.

She is amazing! And she is officially 17 months old today.

Day Two

Bean woke at 7:15 a.m. and started the day well. She didn’t ask for milk until late in the morning. She still refuses milk in a cup and gets mad when it’s offered. But she’s eating a LOT of other food, including 9 ounces of yogurt today.

While I cooked this evening, I offered milk in a “take and toss” cup — a simple plastic cup with a lid. She sat on the kitchen floor and played with it. Then she took a sip and had a whole conversation with herself, most of which was garbled — she has her own language and syntax. But we did hear her say “bottles” and “fairy” and “milk” and “cup.” Then she began playing with the cup and dripping milk on the floor. I stopped that after a few minutes, but the fact she took a sip and was talking to herself about it is heartening.

Oh, and she skipped nap today. We put her down but she wouldn’t sleep. So we went out to look at houses and go to a park, where she enjoyed herself thoroughly. I also had a long conversation with another mother I met there with whom I felt a connection. We traded email addresses, so perhaps something will grow out of it.

We Survived

We survived the first day. Bean is on a milk strike. She won’t accept milk (plain, chocolate, or strawberry) offered in any container that is a sippy cup, tumbler, or with a straw. The times she requests milk disintegrate into tantrums and crying, with her pointing at the fridge crying, “Milk! Milk!” and swatting away what is offered in the cup. Bean has developed a habit of saying “I saw-wy” when she gets hurt; it’s her way of communicating that she is hurt. At one point she ran to me crying and saying, “I saw-wy! I saw-wy!” and it was very hard for me to stay stoic. Much of the day she wanted to be in my arms. I expected this. It’s very upsetting to lose a beloved ritual and object. I provided all the cuddling she needed, and Husband and I talked to her about how the Bottle Fairy came and did this because she’s a big girl and can do it herself.

However, the day wasn’t really that bad. When she didn’t get milk the way she wanted, she asked for other food. She also requested yogurt. By the end of the day she had eaten 16 ounces of yogurt, along with many servings of fruit, cinnamon toast, vegetables, chicken, bologna, and a hot dog. She also compensated for the absence of milk by drinking a lot of water, so there’s no risk of dehydration. (And what goes in must come out. She produced six very toxic diapers! Oy!)

We went to three open houses in an area of San Jose that I wasn’t certain I’d like, but one of the houses I did like well enough. We’re still debating our options. After that trip we took Bean to a park we like a lot — it’s always very busy with families playing — and then treated ourselves to a bad-for-us dinner at Popeye’s.

Bean loves her rocking horse. She spent the day riding it and by the end had learned how to mount and dismount by herself. Husband also brought home a discarded keyboard for her to play with, and she’s very happy to “press the buttons” when she’s not rocking.

happy with horse

The Bottle Fairy Cometh

The Bottle Fairy comes tonight. When asked what the Bottle Fairy does, Bean answers, “Bye-bye bottles,” but of course she has no true understanding about what this really means. The Bottle Fairy will bring a present — a rocking horse, since Bean loves to rock and finds it soothing — and take away the bottles, because Bean is a big girl now and can drink milk out of sippy cups (she drinks water from sippy cups just fine).

The challenge has been that she doesn’t want to let go, and I haven’t either. We have a ritual. Over the first year of her life she gradually began refusing to take milk from anyone else but me, unless it was a middle-of-the-night feed, and then Daddy would suffice. She will not drink a bottle of milk on her own. I’ve never left her with a bottle in bed or while she plays. We sit in the same place in the same position, and I sing to her. Milk time has been a quiet cuddling time. I have not wanted to give this up. And yet in the past month I’ve begun to feel restless during our feedings and have found myself wishing she’d take the bottle on her own.

The problem this milk routine has generated is that whenever I’m gone and she wants milk, the person left to care for her (Husband, babysitter) ends up with a lot of grief. Also, the pediatrician has been prodding me to get her off the bottle for reasons I don’t think are compelling — risk of cavities, earaches, and poor jaw development; I don’t leave her with a bottle in her mouth and we brush her teeth twice daily, her ears are just fine as of a doctor visit a week ago, and she doesn’t suck a bottle often enough to cause jaw misalignment. Yet between her and Husband (who agrees with the pediatrician and is tired of the struggle), I feel pressure.

However, I did have a realization about our routine that gave me pause and has provided the impetus to change. The question arose: what is behind my resistance?

I haven’t wanted to let go, because I am clinging to my child and the memory of her infancy, yet infancy is long past. Previous attempts to get her to drink milk in a sippy have generated a lot of crying and tantrums, which I don’t like. I want this to be easy. I was hoping this would just disappear. But parenting is not about doing what suits my wishes or brings me comfort and convenience. Life brings transitions, losses, griefs, and my role is to be with Bean as she experiences them. I can’t protect her (or myself) from them. When I make decisions about her care based on my own comfort and desires, I might be doing a disservice to her. I’m putting my ego needs ahead of her well-being and growth.

Bean will be sad and mad about the change. I’m sure the new toy won’t really compensate. And I’ll just need to suck it up and be there to hold her (emotionally and physically) while she copes with the transition. We have lots of cuddle time; we read books, I hold her and sing, we dance together, we sit on the sofa and watch Between the Lions with Bean tucked under my arm. It’s time to cross this threshold. We’ve talked for several weeks to Bean about the fairy’s impending visit and what will happen. Tonight we will have a little ritual to say good-bye to the bottles before she goes to bed. Then we’ll see how tomorrow goes.

Please wish us well. Particularly, please think positive thoughts for me to maintain my resolve and be brave in the face of her unhappiness. Sometimes I find it hard to do the right thing — I want my child to be happy, and I’m tempted to give in to anything, anything at all, as long as she stops crying, and this is not always the right thing to do.

A friend of mine will keep the bottles at her home to help remove temptation. Our agreement is that if I call and tell her to give them to me, she is to refuse, and only if Husband also calls and makes the request is she to give them back. It’s like the nuclear weapon procedure; there must be two people to turn the key. 😉

the bottle fairy

Words Words Words

Here are some things you would hear from Bean if you visited:

I did it!
Oops, I drop it.
I cooking.
I tooted. (passed gas; this is always followed by a giggle)
Mommy busy.
Daddy home!
I helping Mommy!
Mommy potty.
Kiss-es
Huuuuuug
I wuv oo.
Word! (meaning spell a word with my letter blocks)
Ah-coo-me. (“Excuse me”, which she says after she burps or coughs)
Anks. (“Thanks,” said without prompting sometimes)
Pwease. (“Please,” said with prompting)
Up! (always, always wants to be up to see what’s going on)

When you ask, “What’s your name?” She says “Bean!” (She can almost get the phoneme correct.) And to “How old are you?” she responds, “One!”

Bean is the kissing-est child I’ve ever known. She also pats things to show affection. I have seen her kiss and pat pictures of trucks in her books, as well as pictures of many animals (including spiders), her Little People toys, blocks, puzzle pieces, and of course her menagerie of stuffed animals. Yesterday she made me laugh when she kissed and patted a cracker she was eating. What a little character — or rather, a big character in a little body!

gooey hands

Motherly Advice

In one of our conversations before Bean was born, my mother told me there would come a day (many days actually) where I would need to forgive myself, because I am human and bound to do or say something mean to my child.

Yesterday was such a day.

It’s been a difficult week since she got sick. And my knee hurts worse now. It not only hurts to walk, it hurts to bear weight on it. In fact, it pulses with pain and radiates down my leg even as I sit here typing, and I’ve already taken 800 mg of ibuprofen at 12:30 p.m. for it (and at 6:30 a.m. too). And because I’m unconsciously trying to lighten the pain by shifting my body weight when I stand and walk, other parts of my hurt: my left heel (remnants of plantar fasciitis) and the big toe joint on my right foot (possibly the warning of an eventual bunion). Some of this is just due to getting older. Bleh.

I’ve got an appointment to see my primary doctor next week (Thursday morning) to discuss this and request a referral to one of the doctors I’ve researched. I want to see a specialist who is board certified and experienced.

It’s weird. The pain and debility comes and goes. The pain gets worse when I walk any real distance for a length of time. This makes a fitness plan impossible. It’s affected my mood.

Anyhow, Bean and I survived yesterday. I didn’t do anything horrible or that I find difficult to forgive in myself. I raised my voice at her for the first time to a decibel I rarely hit (and hurt my throat in the process). Then we both collapsed on the sofa, Bean lying on my belly, and fell asleep. A trip to the doctor in the afternoon showed no earache, no strep, no hand foot mouth disease, but she has a very red throat which will likely go away in about a week.

She’s likely to wake any moment, and I want a sip of my freshly brewed coffee…

My Little Ham

It’s been a rough weekend. Bean has manifested some loud and distressing screaming sessions. She sounds like Katherine Turner, Demi Moore, or Marlon Brando (take your pick). Her doctor says there’s a lot of illness focused on the throat that turns into a croup-like cough. She’s tired and pale too. This evening her sweetness returned for awhile. I hope she gets better soon. She behaved like a little martinet all weekend, including today. I wondered if it’s the beginning of terrible toddler tempers, but the doctor thinks it’s just pain and feeling poorly.

Here are some photos I took a couple weeks ago. Bean recently has discovered frowning and likes to do it, but she knows she is being funny and has a hard time keeping a serious face.

consternation 1
consternation 2
consternation 3

Quick Update

Bean’s fever broke on Thursday, and yet she still isn’t quite well. She never fully bloomed into a cold (no sneezing, coughing, runny nose), but her voice is hoarse and she is cranky, cranky, cranky.

Meanwhile, it was 71 degrees today; our average is 59.

Not Alone

On Monday and Tuesday, Bean didn’t seem herself. She clung to me at Little Gym and in music class. She was subdued and had low energy. She seemed fragile. I felt concerned and thought it was probably more teething. Bean woke a lot last night crying; Husband takes care of nights and he comforted her. When I got her this morning she felt warm. She had a fever, and I called the doctor because it was 102. They had us come in and did a quick exam. No ear infection, everything looked okay except her throat. It was red. The doctor said it was probably a cold presenting first with a fever. (Most of Bean’s colds have started with sneezing.) She spent most of the day in my arms, though she did nap three hours in her crib too. When she awoke from that her fever was 103. We’re giving her acetaminophen to help with the discomfort.

Ironically, today was my day to bring snack to preschool. I’d baked sweet potato bread and bought whole wheat crackers. It figures, on the day we miss class! I called my friend A (Fia’s mom) who is also in the class, and she picked it all up on the way, sparing me an extra trip with a cranky child. Later another friend called to check in and offered to pick up milk and juice at Safeway for me.

After that, Bean’s babysitter came by and ran an errand to the post office and grocery for me (because of course I’d forgotten them on the earlier list). The sweet thing is, she didn’t want me to pay her for her time. I was not comfortable with this, since I do want to compensate her properly. I could appreciate her kindness, however, so I suggested I’d donate her wage to Feeding America instead, and we settled on that.

It feels so reassuring to know people who can assist in a pinch, and just being checked on feels all warm and fuzzy.

My mood the past few days has been rather low for reasons I hadn’t pinpointed, but now that Bean is sick I wonder if it was a little mother’s intuition that not all was right. Also, I was without internet access for the day — the router was down — and learned something: I didn’t die! 😉

One of the reasons for my mood is connected to my own ego. The thing that does worry me is how to help Bean negotiate life. We go on playdates with other kids or to classes, and other kids are just much bigger or more aggressive. It’s all age-appropriate behavior. I’m not saying Bean doesn’t try to take a toy from someone else sometimes. But she does have passive quality in her response to things; when other kids take a toy from her or hit her, she lets it happen and looks perplexed. Occasionally she will follow the child around to get the toy back (without succeeding) or will cry, but usually she just looks a little helpless. I struggle with a desire to overprotect. I also struggle with my own memories and pain from being a very petite and passive kid; I was a target for bullies, and I got plenty of their attention. I remind myself not to project onto Bean, but I do wonder how I’m going to do this part of parenting.

I feel today that Life was nudging me to stop. Stop rushing through my tasks, my lists. Stop wasting time on cyberspace. Stop and listen to music and breathe. Bean spent a lot of the day in my arms. She napped three hours in the crib and cuddled the rest of the time. She’s exceptionally affectionate today — saying “I kiss you” and giving kiss after kiss. It feels sweet, and it also pokes my heart a little because I’m sure it’s an expression of need and appreciation while she feels unwell.

And now I should tuck myself in if I hope to be All Things Nurturing all day tomorrow.

Play All Day

It’s late. Here’s this week’s work for Creative Every Day. This is one of the things I do all day. Every day. Don’t let the brevity of my text lead you to think I dislike this or find it a chore. I enjoy each day, even if I do find it a little challenging to keep thinking up new stuff to draw (or to keep repeating the same thing because Bean’s focused on it. For example, one day it was the letter X. She wanted me to write X all the time.) No, the shortness of this post (in terms of word count) has to do with my level of exhaustion. In this case, several pictures are worth several hundred (or thousand) words!

play 1
play 2
play 3
play 4
play 5
play 6

And here is what the bottle fairy looks like! (Created on the fly. No pun intended.) We’ve been telling Bean about her. She can say who it is when she sees the picture, and she says “Bye-bye bottle” when asked what the fairy does. I don’t know that she comprehends what is really coming, though. Time will tell. I’m waiting on delivery of the item that the fairy will leave. I also need to get to a point of mentally committing to doing this, and to let go of my attachment to this particular way of being intimate. We have many many other cuddles and intimate times. She’s getting almost too big to hold like a baby anymore.

the bottle fairy

If Only I Were A Ladybug

Husband is a researcher. For months he has diligently tracked the housing market to see if house prices will enter a range we can afford. In the past couple of weeks, we have taken field trips to various parks in San Jose neighborhoods to see if we like the area, and to see what our money could buy. Unfortunately, this also means a much longer commute for Husband. He works in Mountain View, although this is not a given forever. Yet we cannot afford to buy a house north of Santa Clara.

So far, we’ve learned that the house we want (about 1,400-1,700 square feet, two baths, and a small yard) we can’t afford in certain neighborhoods (or we can only afford a town home, but those rarely have yards), and the houses priced so that we could buy are in neighborhoods that are run down or downright scary. It still galls me that $500,000 can only buy a shack. But we will continue to look, to eliminate areas and narrow down a few regions we might afford. Then we’ll see what happens to the market. It continues to move in our favor, but we’re still talking scads of money. Since we already pay $2,200 a month for rent — and since we know it will go up again this year — we might be better off at least getting some equity built up (though it will take many, many years for that to happen).

I took the photo below at the San Francisco Zoo. If only my housing issues were as simple as a ladybug’s. This looks like an inviting place.

sf zoo leaves 1

Stealing A Moment (At 16 Months)

While Bean naps (fitfully today, I might add), I’m going to crank out a post about her.

First of all, her language acquisition is amazing. When asked what a rooster says, she replies with “Cocka do do!” When she eats food she likes, she says, “Mmmm, ‘licious!” (for delicious). She is game to try saying any word or phrase and often comes very close. She always asks, “Doing?” and we describe what we are doing to her. She is saying short sentences, such as “Mommy brush hair,” or “Daddy go potty.” Her fourth molar is nearly through completely, thank goodness. Then we’ll have cut the four canine teeth and then some peace until the last molars come in around 24-36 months.

She has quite a will, and it shows in several ways. For example, in the first year of her life, on rare occasions we would go upstairs to watch a PBS show called Between the Lions. It’s a language show featuring a muppet-like family of lions that run a library. (The pun is twofold — you go between the lions into the library, and you can read between the lines to understand more.) Anyhow, she had seen it maybe ten times in her first year. About five days ago, Bean stood at the bottom of the stairs, pointed up and demanded, “Lions! Lions!” and made her lion roar. When we understood what she wanted, we took her up to watch an episode. Now it’s a daily request. It doesn’t matter if she’s seen the episode before; repetition is how kids learn, after all. So I figure 30 minutes a day won’t hurt. We watch with her, although we do this in part because the room is NOT child-proofed. I also reserve the right to say no, but this usually creates a tantrum.

I also recently introduced crayons and a spiral drawing book. (I tried the toddler crayons, but her hands are too small to hold them, and she prefers the regular shape anyhow.) Several times a day Beanrequests “Crayons! Crayons!” I take them out and draw pictures for her, then write out the word. She says, “Again!” and “Drawing, writing.” She tries to scribble and is still working on her grip. Her grandparents gave her wooden blocks with letters, and more than making towers, she loves to have us spell out words with them. Her other grandma gave her a Leapfrog game (but it cost much less than the Amazon price) that resembles a computer (she is dying for one of ours) that teaches letters and sounds. Several months ago, Bean knew the letters O, Q, T and X; since Christmas, she has learned to identify A, B, C, D, F, G, H, I, J, K, L, M, R, S, W and Z. I’ve lost track of her vocabulary, but it’s large.

The last area where her will is formidable is the milk in the bottle issue. She still refuses milk in a sippy cup. She still wants to take milk in a bottle with only me holding her. She can produce a huge tantrum if other options are offered. So, I’ve got a plan. Did you know there is a bottle fairy? She comes to children who are ready to drink milk out of cups and takes away all the bottles and leaves a gift! (A mother at preschool told me this idea, which she said worked with her 19-month-old.) I talked to our pediatrician, and she loved the idea; she thinks it’s a gentler way to introduce the transition (though there will still probably be tears). She suggested I talk about this to Bean for a couple weeks; tell her about the fairy, show pictures (which I will have to draw), and build it up. The gift that the fairy will bring is a rocking horse. At the holiday party last weekend, Bean monopolized the rocker there, and since then she has tried to rock on every type of rocker she has seen at the park and preschool. Rocking soothes her (she does it a lot even without a rocker). I couldn’t find one locally I liked, so I ordered one from Little Tikes.

I will say this: she has relatively few tantrums, and usually it’s due to a thwarted desire and not to frustration over being misunderstood. We have the good fortune that she speaks as many words as she does and that she enunciates so well. It could be worse!

We adore her so much!

Family Traditions

We have family we are born into, and we have family we create, and since our culture beckons us to wander in search of better opportunities, we are often far from our born family at holiday time; so we turn to celebrating with our intentional families. Today was such a gathering. The core of the group is three men who’ve known each other many years. They met “back in the day” at college and at their first professional job. They’ve seen each other through flush times and rough times, called-off engagements and divorces, the death of a parent, cross-country moves, weddings, and the births of their first children. Husband, M, and S, and those “born to” family members nearby this holiday gathered to feast and catch up today. Bean, as usual, loved the party. She is a smiley ray of sweet charm. She managed to rise to the occasion despite the discomfort of two molars pushing through (but they are almost done, thank goodness).

me and a wiggleworm

Year In Review

I usually recap the previous year by posting the first sentence written here for each month. Here is the one for 2007. I thought I’d done it previous years to that, but I can’t find it in the archives.

January: My day isn’t over yet.

February: Bean napped four times yesterday, only 30 minutes each.

March: From an email I wrote to a friend who has several children (but it was also me talking to myself and thus worth it to me to post):
Please tell me the fact that my daughter isn’t sitting unassisted at six months is okay.

April: I’ll face reality.

May: I originally knit a baby hat and an adult hat.

June: This was a work weekend.

July: I made Bean’s hat and trusted the pattern.

August: The simplicity of this photo belies the amazing life activity that is constantly occurring within.

September: Bean is an amazing little person.

October: My good friend Ambrosia just welcomed her little girl, Gwendolyn Rose, at 6:33 this morning.

November: This year, my efforts with AEDM will probably be simple, the result of quickie creativity cobbled together from stolen moments.

December: Today was Bean’s first day at the parent-participation preschool session.