Zuzu Day: Ballerina in Training

The highlight of Zuzu’s week is definitely going to dance class. She is clear that Wednesday is Dance class day. She gets up and starts talking about her leotard, her tu-tu, her tights and dance shoes. She debates pig or ponytails, a headband or clip, Hello Kitty necklace and bracelet versus the silver dance shoes bracelet. She knows she gets dressed for dance class and ready to go at home and brings her school clothes to change into once she is done. She goes to school and rides on the KSA bus with Ms. Miranda or Ms. Tandria with approximately 7 other little girls from school. She is the only one from her class. Miss Fain has been teaching dance for over 30 years in our neck of the woods. She has her own School of Dance and is quite fit herself. Her assistant Miss Trish is equally kind and tells me how precious they find our dear Zuzu. In swim class there was an ongoing issue of Zuzu wanting to get out of class towards the end and have Momma come get her. It worked once by telling her teacher she had to go potty and since no one wants the pool heated a little extra they take no chances. So it quickly became a pattern with each of the last few classes.

Well dance class is different. School takes Zuzu there. And Zuzu- well as much of a wildflower as I find her- she is a very good listener to her teachers. A couple of Wednesdays ago I had the day off; well it was Veteran’s day- so work was closed. We had a slew of appointments for the day including a lunch with the local moms at our delish Brioso, a photography session with a favorite mom and a pediatrician follow-up on the Quail’s pneumonia. But my true delight for the day was getting to sneak into Zuzu’s dance class and capture her in action. Above are a few of the fun moments. We also got our notice for the spring recital. May 15- mark your calendars! It’s in a professional auditorium that seats a crew. There will be professional costumes along with professional photographs earlier that spring. Let’s pray the growth spurt happens before the measurements are taken!

All in all, it was a lovely day and seeing Zuzu listen to her teachers so well, enjoy the activity and dance along warmed my heart. She is so lovely & amazing, that Zuzu of mine. How did I ever get so lucky?

Zuzu Day: Swim Classen Report

Swim Classen ReportZuzu finished up her first round of “swim classens” earlier this fall. I was a bit hesitant about signing her up for them for a multitude of reasons. She has tubes in her ears- and although the ENT said swimming in a pool was perfectly fine, I was still feeling a bit post-traumatic about her first year of life when she had ear infections from 7 months to over one year. For her ear infections included high fevers, a sad, weepy, wailing child in the night, an inability to lay flat so she slept in our swing most nights . So much so that Lovey took it upon himself to debunk the batteries and revamp it so that it ran via an electrical cord. Even after she had tubes inserted in her ears she still got about a half dozen ear infections. But at that point they were much more manageable.

Zuzu also has so much spirit- so very much- it’s what we love about her and will translate into pure passion as an adult. It does make typical toddler activities such as story-time at a quiet library and paint-your-own pottery a bit more of a challenge though. We also currently have such a full schedule between Lovey and I working fulltime outside of the home, my commute to and from work and early intervention and speech therapy 2 nights a week in the evenings.

But this swim class was 2 nights a week for a month. We figured we could manage for a month. We had just the few  months previously started taking Zuzu to the community pool on weekend mornings when the weather was uncooperative for park play. She loved, loved, loved going to the pool. It was a good exercise in learning to listen to other adults expectations as well. Each time we would go say Hi to the lifeguard and have her review the “walking feet only” rule with Zu. The kind life guards would get out buckets of toys for water play, a floatee vest and noodle and off we would go! Sometimes on our own and sometimes with a pal or two of Zu’s. The pool is a warm water pool with a 3 foot maximum depth and a 2 foot high bench and stairs running along side it. Perfect for a budding mermaid!

Zuzu loved going to class. She enjoyed Erin and Jared,her teachers,and would get ready each day at school and was bursting with excitement when I would arrive to scurry her off across town for the lesson.  Halfway through the session she discovered the joy and power of telling the teacher she needed a bathroom break, coincidently about the same time it was her turn to jump in for the umpteenth time.

However, we received our report- as noted above and she did excellent- a regular fishie- that girl is! The part of the whole experience that brings me the most joy though is this- the little handwritten note across the top, ” Zuzu loves the water.Each time she gets in, her eyes light up”. How very precious. They do light up- and with so many activities- and what a great perspective- shaper for us to see another’s appreciation for her pure zest for life.  It was such a gift to have another person see that in her. Zuzu loves life- and we love her.

Zuzu Day- Food and Love week continued

IMG_1812October  4th, 3pm, the phone rings and a secretary from Greenville Memorial Hospital, tells me that they are cancelling my induction for tonight. The moon is full, the beds are all occupied and basically there is no room in the inn. I’m paraphrasing of course. I was instructed to wait for a call from my doctor for further instructions. Dr. Bradley, the one obstetrician in the practice I hadn’t met face to face and who’s ego preceded him called 4 hours later saying there is room at St. Francis Women’s and Family Hospital on the Eastside of Greenville if my bag is packed and I want to change locations. It is, I do and we stop for a snap of the last moment of my heart residing within me in the door frame and head out the door. I arrive, get settled in with an Ambien, a turkey sandwich, a kiss and wish for good rest from Lovey and a carefully placed cervidil. We drift off to the sound of my and Zuzu’s heartbeats entwined and amplified through their monitors. The next day she made her grand entrance at 1pm. I spent the next 9 hours attempting to nurse her. At 10 pm that night the angel of a lactation consultant arrives and starts arranging pillows, hands and the baby. By that point I already had severely traumatized myself and was in tears and tears. So a pump was brought in to try to harvest the colostrum and give me a little relief. The next morning, Carrie the LC came back to us to check on our progress. She commented that nowadays it seems to be mostly the teenage mothers that instinctively know how to nurse without instruction. That the rest of us, ahem, slightly older, more mature mommies  tend to need more help, positioning and training. Over thinking it perhaps?

We went home from the hospital 48 hours afer the birth with a feeding plan reminiscent of the one mentioned yesterday. A big challenge was keeping our little snuggled bundle awake. I remember crying through the failed attempts at latching, the pain of engorgement, the fear and paranoia of the hourly pee/poop/nurse/supplement checklists. I called the warmline at STF  Lactation Center at all hours far more than my pediatrician during those first weeks. Although we spent our fair share of time there as well. Along with new nursing came thrush, then reflux, then a dawning realization that Zuzu did not want to be set, let alone laid down to sleep. Part of that was the reflux- it physically pained her to lay flat and she would jerk and arch her small back away from the bottle or my breast as often as she would take it.

Part of  that was new parent jitters, hormones and frayed nerves. She’s crying, why is she crying, when will she stop, how do we make her stop? I remember distinctly fretting each and every time I walked in the room where the baby was. If she was laying down I fussed about why no one would hold her. If someone was holding her, I fussed about how she would never learn to put herself to sleep. I am blessed to have ever patient grandparents for the girls on both sides as well as an extremely connected, patient and accepting husband. They all watched my postpartum hormone shifts with just the right amount of disconnect to tolerate being with me and enough responsiveness to save me and Zuzu from them.

At the time I worried I wasn’t bonding enough and my new- mother-wings were leaving me flapping alone in midair with only a crash landing in my sight when I finally tired of treading air. I was shakey, sad, unable to lay down myself or hold Zuzu on my chest for any length of time. I needed sleep desperately but could not contain the onslaught of hormones enough to feel an ouce of mellowness necessary to snooze. After 3 calls to my OB over the next week and a half indicating I wasn’t doing well hormonally I was prescribed a low dose of Lexapro and assured it would help me relax and not harm Zuzu. It was sweet relief to hear the sound of help on its way and validation that once the hormone levels settled things would ease up and we would settle int a comfortable and caring routine. That this is not uncommon or foreshadowing of terrible inept parenting on my part to come. 

IMG_2060The grandmothers were so kind to each in turn extend their stays to help care for us, our home and this sweet baby. It was boot camp that first few weeks and fortunately for me everyone who came in tern to stay at the house was more than willing to step in for holding duty. Friends and family alike. Lovey, Zuzu and I are eternally grateful to you all. It really is a time like this that illustrates how you can’t and shouldn’t go through life alone. It is so very necessary to be able to reach out to those around you and let them care for you. It only serves to strengthen you and the bonds around you. Those first 3 weeks Lovey, Nana, Gramma and I took shifts at night with Zuzu using the SNS and later a bottle of pumped breastmilk during the night. I picture it now and everyone trying to stay up and hold Zuzu upright so she wouldn’t cry and can see the red flag  that she clearly needed reflux medications at the time when she slept propped upright against our softly snoring selves.

IMG_1995Around 3 weeks into our new lives I was still fretting over my new responsibilities. I remember dear Julie talking to me late at night and early in the morning and validating that if one bottle a day wouldn’t hurt Zuzu then do a second bottle so I can get some rest. Our pediatrician at the time, also a young nursing mother but miraculously full of energy and strength validated the same and also that if we needed to hold the baby or co-sleep we should do whatever works, safely, but whatever works. I struggled with the  decision to co-sleep and still do, but that’s another story entirely. My dear mother sat down with us; and as I write this with the wisdom and distance of 3 years of  having my own heart living outside of my body I can smile at her concern and desire to stop her own small one’s pain and struggle. She helped formulate a schedule of bottles versus nursing to try to ease some of the pressure off of a sobbing me. That is all it took a little hormone control, a little easing of the pressure, validation and caring from my own mother and suddenly it was fine. I didn’t need the schedule and I was fine nursing Zuzu night and day with just one feeding done by Lovey and a bottle. I still believe that was a large part of securing their strong bond. By this point I had physically healed some, the reflux medications started to ease off Zuzu’s pain and my own medication helped to start regulating my hormones so that I could see that life would go on one day at a time, not just one feeding to the next. Zuzu started to smile and respond to us and light up our worlds.

IMG_149618 months later she started to wake every 2 hours to nurse. At that point I hit my second wall and I did actively nightwean her. It took one night of telling her no and some perspective in my phrasing. We changed to an explanation that the neh-neh’s were sleeping and they would wake in the morning to nurse her. She cried that first night for an hour, the 2nd night she woke to ask if the neh-neh’s were sleeping, if the TV was sleeping and then settled back in between Lovey and I herself till morning. This went on for a week and then she ceased to wake during the night.

It was a few months later that the Quail was conceived and we struggled again with further weaning. At the beginning of the year when I told Dr. Bradley of our plans to conceive he had instructed me to wean first since there was a connection to miscarriage and nursing due to the contraction of the uterus it caused. I was in need of progesterone to sustain the pregnancy and he instructed me to call him back when Zuzu was weaned and we would go from there. I did the nightweaning but felt like I needed to try from there. In June that same year the Quail began to gestate within us. Lovey and I talked about weaning, both for the Quail’s sake and also unsure of what it would do to Zuzu to have to share her neh-neh’s and the responsibility, energy and effort it might take to tandem nurse. I started reading La Leche Leagues book on Tandem nursing and it calmed me and let me to the decision to not actively wean Zuzu. Midway through the pregnancy when the milk dried up I figured she would stop anyway. I remember those early summer nights lying in bed nursing Zuzu after we had transitioned her to her big girl bed and hearing the small cheaps and chirps of a family of wrens building their nest and expanding their own family in the nursery window.  I would read Zuzu three small stories of her choosing and then we would lie side by side listening to a collection of lullabies while she rubbed my belly and drifted off and I reread Catherine Newman’s, “Waiting for Birdy”.

Time passed, further weaning ceased to exist and the Quail’s arrival was upon us on that frosty February morning. My mother, after multiple rearrangements of her plans, due to my naive “planning” of the birth of the Quail arrived less than 24 hours before labor began and the next chapter of our lives opened up before us.

Momma Monday- Food and Love Week kicks off

IMG_1853A few of the families have been reminiscing or examining feeding with their baby that has Down syndrome. I had replied to couple of these posts but then realized it was time for me to put finger to keyboard and document our own experiences with this arena. The interesting thing about it for me is when I started to write about it, it was long, and tedious, and I think anyone who hasn’t been in this situation reading it would be put off by the amount of time, effort and struggle that has come along with it when the history is summarized here. But I’m as surprised as the next mom that there is so much to say about it. And yet I’m not. I think it is the examination of such a basic function in our lives that is long. We spend the majority of our day eating, planning to eat, thinking about eating. Especially when the scope of our thrills as a newborn involve how to become bigger. They eat, sleep and poop, God willing. Most of us are don’t need to examine how this eating and nourishment happens. It just does. Especially by the time we are rested and recovered enough from gestating and birthing our babies to actually reflect on it.

I came home from the hospital after giving birth to Zuzu with a feeding plan and a couple of extremely sore neh-nehs. It wasn’t easy then either. But now 3 years later, what I remember is what I see- a happy, healthy, bounding about faun of a girl. Not how we got here. Time often erases the intricacies and intimacies of our life before we are able to examine them too closely. For the most part that is good, it’s self-preservation. It enables us to go merrily on and think about re-creating again.  

The Quail came out 8 lb 12 oz on a frosty Sunday morning in February. A little bit early, but not a little bit light.  She came out with a wail much like her sister and we began the long dance between mother and child of learning to nurse. I chose to have her at the same hospital that I had quite by accident ended up birthing Zuzu at. The Lactation Consultants there are amazing. I spent more time with them after Zuzu’s arrival then with her pediatrician. I was aware how utterly consuming and complicated nursing could be due to multiple warnings from mommas that had gone before me. I was fortunate enough to push past society’s conventions and nurse through my pregnancy with the Quail. Lovey and I questioned the notion of doing this and whether or not we should be actively weaning Zuzu many, many times. This wasn’t a decision we took lightly. Of course you can’t know what’s to come while you are planning for it. Zuzu’s continued perseverence and need for connection and comfort is strong. She loved to nurse and rub my swollen belly during those months. And after the Quail came home she immediately sank into a routine of nursing and reaching for her sister’s small hand to hold while she let down the milk for her. It is truly the greatest gift I could hope to witness.

In the hospital, after the Quail’s arrival, before her official diagnosis, the LC came to work with us frequently. Since I had difficulty with Zuzu, I just assumed it was a similar difficulty of getting her to latch and once we worked through positioning we would be set to go. I was armed and ready to adjust her latch as needed to prevent the trauma to the neh-neh’s this time. I was queued to the art of baby language analysis and ready to respond to her neh cries. I had the LC’s number on speed dial and wasn’t afraid to use it. I was prepped for the pain of engorgement  and had my little weekend warrior ready to nurse it to a comfortable fullness until the Quail could handle the supply on her own. I had my boppy, my Nursing Mother’s Companion, and my trusty Pump in Style Advanced. I was ready for Lovey to do the middle of the night feedings with a bottle and not afraid of nipple confusion. I had a couple sets of supplemental nursing systems and syringes ready in the event of a rough start. But you know what they say- every baby is different. Yes. The truest, purest, most inargueable statement. With all that preparation- both mental and practical, the Quail still had areas I hadn’t known to account for. Long before we received the Down syndrome diagnosis we received a hypotonia diagnosis.

Let me tell you what should have happened in a perfect world. In a perfect world, the pediatricians or lactation consultants that examined her- and there were a couple of each, should have explained hypotonia in lay terms and brought in their OT or SLP that is trained in oral-motor weakness to examine her and start either a referral to someone to work with us ongoing. They should have been weighing her after nursings to notice that she wasn’t pulling any colostrum out. But it’s normal for any baby to lose some weight after they are born and before the milk came in.

In hindsite I can say that should have been the plan. I guess, really, I wish that plan for mommas that come after me. In some respects there wasn’t an obvious problem. Except this. They did say hypotonia. The pediatrician’s that examined her couldn’t say definitely that she had Down syndrome until a karyotype could be completed. But the 3 things that led them to think she had Down syndrome were: 1. her hypotonia, 2. the difficulty she was exhibiting nursing 3. and the micro-expressions we would witness that bore some resemblance to classic portraits of a baby that has Down syndrome. The LC did print out an article about nursing a baby with Ds and the difficulties of it, an email address for a woman who she used to know that had nursed all of her children, including a baby that had Down syndrome a couple of decades ago and a vague suggestions to be sure to ask for an OT or SLP referral from my pediatrician. I went home thinking there might be problems ahead of us but not really understanding that indeed that was a definitive. Late in the afternoon, the day after we arrived, the LC had given a brief warning that if the baby wasn’t able to eat well then we would be extending our stay in the hospital but that it would be the pediatrician’s call when he examined her the next morning. We were given a stock of newborn bottle caps and extra syringes to work with. Fortunately I had a milk supply already established and my colostrum had already began the transformation. On that first day I was able to pump an ounce at a time and began the routine of pumping out what I could every three hours and trying to nurse the Quail according to a feeding plan that gave me a distinct sense of deja’ vu and a false sense of confidence.

It went like this:

1. Pump for 10-15 minutes to get the let down reflex activated and start to establish a good milk supply 

2. Set up a ‘just in case” bottle

3. Undress the Quail down to a diaper and start to wake her.

4. Begin brief oral-motor stimulation exercises such as rubbing the inside and outside of her cheeks,  gums and roof of her mouth for a minute or 2 to stimulate her suck-swallow-breathe reflex.

5. Bring her to the breast and attempt to nurse her for 5-10 minutes trying a variety of positions: cross-cradle, football, dancer’s hold

6. If at that point she has not successfully established a latch and began to draw out milk then move on to another method of feeding her so that she won’t be too worn down to eat. 

7. The choices are SNS or syringe with your finger inside her mouth to elicit the sucking reflex.

8. Repeat process every 2-3 hours.

9. If she doesn’t root, cry for milk prior to 3-4 hours, wake her and initiate the process on your own.

10. Document the number of wet and poopy diapers daily to ensure she is getting enough nutrition. She should have 6-8 wet diapers and 1-3 poopies each day. If you are not able to get that many call your doctor.

There’s alot of guesswork in those first few days of determining wet-newborn- nappies. We did our best estimations and 48 hours after the Quail’s arrival the pediatrician was comfortable with our level of understanding and dedication to feeding the Quail and agreed to send us home. Other then a few new vocabulary words this was not unlike our experience with Zuzu’s entrance into the world.

It took a few weeks due to a computer upgrade and hospital documentation system changeover for us to get the results of the kareotype. Three weeks later after 4 follow up phone calls to the geneticist and our pediatrician’s office, Lovey and I were having dinner with his parents and we received an early evening phone call from our Pediatrician, Dr. Dean informing us that he finally received the Quail’s FISH analysis back and the good news was it was negative for Trisomy 13 and 18 but did show 50 out of 50 cells analyzed a f inding of Classic Trisomy 21. He started down a litany of expected medical concerns that may accompany the syndrome, hyperthyroidism, hearing and vision loss, the need for routine follow up with our newly established pediatric cardiologist for an early diagnosed small to moderate ventricular septal defect and possible pulmonary hypertension; potential delayed developmental milestones and the possiblity of mild to moderate cognitive functioning that can’t really be predicted this early on. Lovey and I sat on the phone quietly listening together and then I asked for a referral to Babynet to get started finding out what services would be available to guide us through the next 3 years. After we hung up, Lovey and I hugged and I did cry a few tears of anxiety. I tend to run towards the anxious side in general.  Lovey went back out to the kitchen to his parents and I called mine who had recently returned to their home in the middle of the country.  I distinctly remember a shift happening in my thought process earlier that afternoon as I waited for that phone call. I had been pressing the doctors to get a definitive diagnosis back to us and suddenly, probably about the same time the final fax was received in Dr. Dean’s office I saw the blessing of getting to know the Quail without a diagnosis attached to her. I had been able to spend a few hours actually grateful for not seeing her through the diagnostic light.

Babynet, our state’s Early Intervention service or Birth to Three provider; called back a few days later to schedule an intake, and a couple of weeks later Jodie came to meet us and the Quail. We told her of our main concern of how the first few weeks of feeding the Quail had gone and how we had not yet successfully established breastfeeding and when she drank from a bottle a fair bit dripped out the right side of her mouth. We related the struggle to get enough food in her the first couple of weeks. We had been spending approximately 45 minutes every 2-3 hours following the letter to the plan.  Our saving grace was that the Quail was an excellent sleeper. So after she ate, whether it was due to her exhaustion from the nursing session, regular newborn sleepiness or the breastmilk jaundice she had for the first month, she always went back to sleep easily.  When Zuzu was home her first week we had done a similar plan but she was mostly nursing and we were using the SNS for a couple of feedings with Lovey during the night so I could rest. During one call to the LC after the first week they pointed out that the SNS was really only for the first 5-7  day to get started. After that point the amount of milk needed with each feeding couldn’t be sustained with the SNS. It was about this point with the Quail as well that feedings were becoming too drawn out for us to continue our current plan. At the end of the first week she was staying latched on my breast and making a nursing motion long enough to look like a full feeding and acting contented mostly afterwards- well actually wiped out would be more accurate. After one day of just having her nurse she proceded to not poop for the next 36 hours. At that point I realized that although she was latching she wasn’t strong enough (the hypotonia at play) to draw the milk out. I panicked and got out my box of bottles from Zuzu’s early days. We started with a Dr. Browns which had previously been the bottle de’jour to coordinate with nursing. It was too difficult for her to get milk out of. After fumbling around briefly with a series of other bottles that were either too difficult or the milk leaked too eaily out of her mouth we settled on a Soothie. She still leaked milk but it was better then the alternatives. She gradually sped up her drinking in the next week and we were able to get 3-4 oz in about 20-40 minutes. I was still attempting to nurse but the frequency was dropping off as my success plummeted.

Jodie referred us to an agency that had a couple of SLPs who focused on feeding issues in newborns and they set us up to come in fairly quicky, still by this point we were 2 months into it. We met with the SLP and explained how long it was taking the Quail to drink, the milk leaking out while she did and the lack of success in nursing. She also by that time had begun throwing up frequently and in what looked like large amounts with almost every feeding. Both immediately after and throughout the following hours. Fortunately she wasn’t distressed or obviously pained by this. Unlike her sister who started reflux meds at 3 weeks due to her pained behavior, arching away from the bottle and tears (hers and mine)  with each feeding.

The SLP’s  first concern was if drinking from a bottle; which is easier then nursing, was causing the Quail any distress. It is common in babies that have heart conditions to have their oxygen saturation level  drop while drinking as well as their respiration rate increase. We started each session with the Quail drinking her bottle while hooked up to an oxygen saturation machine. Fortunately for the Quail she didn’t have trouble with this. The heart condition made the SLP pretty nervous and she consulted with the cardiologist who reassured her that there was no trouble with the Quail learning to nurse.  The other main concern with a lot of babies with heart conditions is their growth rate. And with the Quail throwing up so frequently as well this could have been a major factor. Fortunately her growth has always stayed consistently between the 25%- 50% average on the standard growth charts. For a baby that has Down syndrome and a heart condition and refluxing behavior, that is really phenomonal. We spent the next 3 months with every other week appointments with the SLP essentially doing the exact same thing. I would ask each week about learning to nurse and she felt we needed to get to the point where the Quail would clearly not need open heart surgery to repair her VSD before moving on to practicing that. I continued to ask and she continued to say the same thing. I finally asked outright for her to give me a list of exercises that would teach the Quail to nurse. She said that there weren’t any.

At that point we decided to take a break from the sessions for a couple of weeks and I started asking around to other mommies if they had suggestions for ways to help us learn how to nurse. More to come on that and how we spent the last 3 months  to come later this week.

Right now I have to go put up the night’s pumped milk, lay the baby down to bed and nurse the toddler.  And I feel so very blessed to be able to do just that.

Zuzu’s Day- Holiday Highlights continues

You’ll notice Zuzu is on the move in the majority of this blurred collection of photos. What a difference a year makes. Last year in trick or treating she was a bit timid, shy and scared. This year it was all I could do to dart after her and try to keep up. WordGirl was the perfect costume in that it seemed to capture the essence of her nature right now. Her vocabulary is blooming, her speed unprescendented and her delight unending!

Zuzu day- First Ride

We gave Zuzu a tricycle for her 3rd birthday a couple of weeks ago. It was a most excellent find at a local thriftshop. Real shiny red metal and monkey stickers to boot! I found it a few months ago and had grabbed it and then must have willed the desire for one into Zuzu’s psyche because a few weeks ago we were shopping and out of nowhere she said, “Momma, I need a bike!” And I had the good fortune to remind her that her birthday was on the docket and maybe she could get one then! She took one look at it and squealed with delight. Later that evening on the phone to Gramma she announced, “My bike doesn’t have a basket!” Dohhh! I guess we know what to look for for Christmas!

Zuzu Day- Out of the mouth of babes…..

Zuzu

Zuzu

You can’t take back something you said earlier, but you can say you are sorry; you can try to do better and you can try not to laugh where the small ones can hear you. Zuzu is, ahem; a verbal child. She likes to talk. Just ask my mother- she gets it from me. I would estimate that she talks from sun up to sun down; but honestly one of the first conversations of each every day is about the fact that it is still dark outside and who in and out of house is awake and who is still asleep. That should tell you something about which wee hours of the morning the conversations begin in our house. You really don’t know what you sound like until you have heard yourself coming out of the mouth of babes. You can wonder if “the things they say” are something your child heard at the market, or at school or on television. But really, I know it’s me. Well, Lovey too sometimes, but yeah; probably mostly me; actually.  Probably and actually being 2 of the first words we realized we must say all of the time without noticing as they became peppered into her vocabulary at about 30 months.

Talking and listening are the area we struggle most with in relation to Zuzu. The joy of her being so verbal is getting a fairly clear picture of how she thinks. The hardship of her being so verbal is getting a little too clear picture of how we talk. She is; in all fairness, 3 years old. The brain of a 3-year-old isn’t well developed in terms of insight and judgment. This is what makes 3 year olds so fun- and also so raw. Often when I’m frustrated I have a hard time remembering to keep it to myself; in terms of facial expression, tone and volume. We all tend to talk a lot in our house. When Zuzu senses trouble is headed her way, she is quick to head it off with a redirection of the issue. The other day I was chained to the pump. Zuzu starts popping her head in the room and chatting me up. At one point I was fairly certain I smelled a warning flare and heard a barking spider or two. I asked Zuzu what she is to do when she has to go poo-poo. She quickly parroted, “I listen to my body Momma. I go poo-poo in the potty”. Good- so far. Then a few minutes later I smell and hear a oncore. Just as I raise my voice to get Zuzu’s attention I catch the clear grunt on her face. I call out; still fairly calmly, but perhaps a bit more sharply, “What did we just talk about Zu?”. Her response- ” Welllllll Momma, you have to be nice to people when they are trying to go poo-poo.” This conversation continues in vain until I can get Lovey’s attention to go attend to someone’s bummy- in terms of wiping that is.

This has become a standard phrase in our house.  Sometimes it is embellished by her proselytizing to me along the lines of, “Momma, you have to be nice to be a good Christian, Momma.” But often it is just a reminder that I have to be nice when a person is …..(insert action here such as putting shoes on, changing dresses, eating their spaghettios). It is still charming. It’s nice to know there is an emphasis on the importance of being nice to one another.  And Lord knows I need the reminder as much as the next Momma does.  And frankly she is right on the money when she lets me know, “No one likes it when you are frustrated Momma.” as well as the accuracy of her findings that, “You make people sad when you are frustrated Momma.” All this from a newly minted 3 year old. I can only imagine what we’re in for as their powers of reason advance and as the small ones equal and maybe one day outnumber us older, slower, grumpier ones. Usually when she lets me know about my need to hone in my haughtiness, I take it in stride and smile, because she is right. No one likes it, least of all me. She doesn’t always win the match point though.  This weekend as she was being sent to her room for time out for the third time in the hour, I could hear her bemoaning, “NO! Not again!”; as she stomped off with her pigtails swinging out behind her.

When Zuzu was about 15 months old she was eating her snack sitting in her little booster-space-saver chair in the kitchen. Her snack accidently got knocked to the ground. She looks over the tray, says “Oh, shit” and then goes back to eating what is left of her snack. Fast forward to this past weekend. Once again we are at the kitchen table. She is actually eating a meal with us. Mealtime is challenging in our home. What the pre-schooler likes one day is likely to end up pushed to the side the next. Recently Zuzu has decided that chicken is indeed tasty and worthy of her devotion. She looks to Lovey and asks for more, he points to his plate in explanation of there being no more. She turns to me with the same request. I inform her that, indeed we are out of chicken, but if she likes it we can add it to the grocery list again for next week. Her tiny person response cuts me to the quick as she stares at her plate and exclaims “Dammit”.  When she hears no acknowledgment from the grown-ups; she looks around and repeats with a little more emphasis. “DAMMIT!”  After she leaves the table, Lovey looks over and asks me where I think she got that from. Ummmm…let’s hope not Sesame Street. Yeahhhhh, probably me.

And no, she did not get sent to Time Out for that one. I’m not much of a fan of hypocrisy. And, well no one likes it when I’m unfair either.

3 years ago right now

last call

last call

tryptaphan & ambien

tryptaphan & ambien

I was a week overdue with rising blood pressure 3 years ago tonight. I was scheduled to go to one hospital only to receive a call that there was a full moon, the weekend was coming and there was no room in the inn. Well- that’s how I remember it at least. My OB called (oh yes- the only one I hadn’t met in the practice and had heard horror stories about his meanness and ego). He called saying he heard the hospital said there was no room to induce me and bring this little one into the world, and how was I feeling; and if I would like and had my bags packed; then yes he could make arrangements for me at another hospital if that was agreeable. My bags were packed, my tears wiped dry and off we went with one last pause in the exit of our life as two for a photographic still.  When we returned, God willing; there would be three and life would never be still again…

We drove to St. Francis Womens’ & Children’s Hospital in Greenville; a mere hour away. The cervidil was placed, Lovey tried to make himself comfortable on the fold-out chair for a night in wait; the machine turned on to monitor and record the smooth, quick rhythms of  the last hours our hearts would beat nested together. An ambien offered and turkey sandwich administered, whispered wishes of good luck and health and cheer for the day unfolding ahead of us….