Posts Tagged ‘Momma’s Anxiety’

Thomas the Train & The Ozone Blaster

Sunday, July 18th, 2010

We probably should’ve known after reading some of the reviews online.

“There was an overwhelming smell of septic from the minute we arrived. The restaurant looked dirty, I did not even go in. Our room was very dirty. The rug by the fridge was stained and moldy. The ceiling was water damaged and rotted.”

“Well,” I’d said to my husband, “maybe this was written by a New Jersey housewife or something.” I was trying to be optimistic. Our reservations had been made and it was too late to cancel.  But he persisted, now with a cackle in his voice:

“The inside is very dated and filthy. The carpet was dirty. There was dust stuck on all the walls. The blankets look like they are 30 some yrs old. My daughter had some interesting reading when laying in bed – obscene graffiti on the bottom of the top bunk that dated over 20 years old. BUGS EVERYWHERE!!!!”

I peered over my husband’s shoulder at the computer screen.  The last bout of exclamations points had me concerned.

Nevertheless, we packed up the boys and made the six-turned-eight hour trip to Pennsylvania.  My father and his wife were waiting for us as we pulled in.  First impression? CUTE.

Since we were late, we quickly tossed our stuff inside and went to the dining car–no, really–to grab some dinner.  It was, you know, still cute-ish.  But the novelty was easily rubbed off by a chatty, child-fearing waitress who informed us at every turn that “Oh, sorry, we’re actually out of that dish tonight.”

We ordered hamburgers and hotdogs.  They came without buns.

Getting back to the room, I tried not to look too hard for bugs.  Sure, the room was old, but it was a TRAIN CAR, people. Of course it was cool. In spite of being covered in wood paneling.  Then there was also the impossibly small shower stall.  After having roamed the grounds to check out the playground and petting zoo–complete with fearsome chickens and sinister goats–my husband was given the duty of bathing the boys.  T9, after all, had picked up a hand full of unidentified turd-looking material.  Soon thereafter, it become identified turd-looking, um, turds.

Into the stall they marched.  After loads of silly giggles and slightly fewer, more barotone, “STOP THAT!”s, the otherwise typical cleaning session suddenly went awry.

My husband let out a grave shriek of pain.  At first I’d just assumed the boys got him in the balls again. HAPPENS ALL THE TIME.  But when they emerged, my husband was covering his eyeball, shielding himself from the overhead lights.  Later, he asked me to look at it.  Probably a bad idea, in retrospect, since I think splinters are potentially deadly if left untreated.

In the end, his bright-red-visibly-scratched-by-a-3.5-year-old’s-fingernail eyeball could not be slept off. At 2:00am, my husband blindly drove himself to the nearest hospital.  Sure, it makes no sense NOW, but at 2:00am, it certainly made at least a little bit of sense, and so I relented to his, “I’ll be FINE”’s in exchange for keeping possession of my pillow.  As he fumbled in the dark for his keys, I told him to ask if he could keep his eyeball if they had to remove it.

Cut to the next morning.  It’s time to see Thomas the Train and–miraculously–my husband is still symmetrical.  Tired? Deliriously. But canceling out the BUY A SEEING EYE DOG off my to-do list was somewhat invigorating.  We head to a Waffle House for some disappointing breakfast before our day out in the sun.  Over pecan waffles, my dad starts unraveling the events of their evening.  Turns out we hadn’t been the only ones awake at 2:00am.  He tells us how they’d woken up coughing.  Well, first it was coughing, his wife corrected.  Then, it was, you know, the absence of breathing.  “Yeah,” he agreed, “it was kind of like my throat was so dry that it was closing over or something.”

I’ll have you know right now that I fully resisted the urge to WebMD his ass, because CLOSING OVER?! Jesus H, DAD.

Eventually, he said, they sat outside for some fresh air.  Seemed, fitting, I thought, if we were maybe IN A HENRY JAMES NOVEL.  He, his wife, and my husband smiled and shook their heads with a collective sort of “OH WELL! HOW SILLY AND STRANGE!”  I distracted myself by shoveling more food into the baby’s mouth.  No wonder I’m unstable. Do you see my family tree?

We left the Waffle House, the boys adorned with silly hats, and went on to have a really wonderful time riding on trains and sitting on the laps of freakish-looking cartoon characters.  My parents drove home the next day, and we continued our journey to western New York to see family.  We skipped stones on Lake Eerie, let the boys run through grape fields, and did the laugh/cry routine with old friends and (older) family.  It was certainly ideal.  Memorable.  Amazing, even.

Amazing, that is, until we contracted the plague.  First it was T9 with boogers and a fever. Luckily, I’d packed infant Motrin, so things seem to remain stable. Then Plus One started hacking and spiked his typical 104-and-rising-exponentially fever.  Turns out there’s a website that tells you how to convert doses if you need to give a normal kid his baby brother’s meds.  And it’s even accessible at 4:00am!  WHO KNEW!?  The next morning, when the boys were playing with some old family toys, my husband and I realized it might be time to pack up our things.

The drive home, I’ll say, is when things started to fully unravel.  And by “things”, I mean my my and my husband’s collective MINDS.  Unable to keep Plus One’s fever in check, we resorted to buying supplemental Tylenol at one of the more bizarre truck stops I’ve ever seen.  (Let’s, actually, not talk about it.)  Then, there was T9’s endless shrieking, presumably his way of raging against the dying of the light.  And about three hours into it, I started to get the sweats myself. I plopped the kids’ thermometer in my ear: 102.  I may have started to weep, but I can’t be certain for sure.  I either blacked out or since scheduled a lobotomy for that area of my memory bank.

And, there, my friends, would seem like a good place to draw a close to this neverending story.  But a few days later, my father called:

Father: So, you’ll never believe it…

He sounded excited.  My mind went immediately to the lottery. Naturally.

Me: WHAT?!

Father: That night that we were having trouble breathing?

I was defeated.  Yet intrigued.  Why are we excited, exactly?

Father: Well, I remembered seeing this bizarre machine in the room when we first checked in…

Me: …bizarre machine?…

Father: When we got back, I rememberd the name of it, so I googled it.

Me: …what KIND of machine, Dad…?

Father: It’s called an Ozone Blaster, and supposedly the thing emits ozone to eliminate odors.

Me: OZONE BLASTER?! That didn’t alarm you at the time?

Father: Turns out that it’s toxic for humans! It affects the mucus membranes, and you’re not supposed to be in there when they’re on.  The industrial sized ones are even fatal!

I told my father to reduce his enthusiasm, lest I reach through the phone to reenact that having-trouble-breathing thing. Remembering the lottery, I told him to lawyer up.  He laughed.

Guys, it really was a pretty good vacation.

Pass the Bottle

Friday, May 14th, 2010

It’s always been part of the bedtime routine. When he was a newborn, he’d fall asleep soon after nursing.  A full belly and a baby smirk sent him off to twitchy-baby-dream land.  Food coma does run in the family; just ask my husband.

Now that T9 is older, drinking whole milk,  getting the occasional bottle, and scoping out which of his brother’s toys he’ll DESTROY next, this feed-and-slumber is still part of the routine.  About an hour after dinner, I slide his chubby legs into his footsie pajamas, grab his favorite blankie, and then head to the kitchen to pour him a nightcap.

Which, in this case, is milk warmed for exactly 33 seconds in the microwave. (No, 30 seconds is NOT enough time, actually. This is what I *do* people.)

Sure, the articles tell you not to do this–not to combine the bottle with nighttime.  But, eh.   It’s not like I’m laying him down with the thing.  Neither of my kids have ever had an ear infection, either.  So in the end, I’m never above plugging my ears and LALALALA-ing the great faceless THEY who preach such things. My bottom line for you? Giving a kid a bottle before bed will not lower his IQ, keep him awake all night, or make him hate his parents.  This all happens much later. In college.

But anyway, the other day, as I was bringing T9 around to say goodnight to his DAH-DEE and BRAH-VAH (”brother” that is. My son sometimes slips into foreign tongues).  As I handed him to his dad, however, the boy clung to me like a monkey.  One hand grabbed my shirt (and breast, unfortunately. OW.), the other my hair, and I’m pretty sure his big toe was tangled in a belt loop.  He may have a future in movies folks. If they ever need a new Gollum, that is.

So it was in this moment that my husband and I simultaneously noticed that the boy was forming an—say, unhealthy? absurd? PAINFUL?–attachment to his bottle.  I looked at it in my hand, connected the dots to T9’s focused gaze, and frowned a bit.  AFTER releasing my boob from his clutch.

I pouted not because of the challenge that lay ahead, but because my world had become a bit darker with the realization that the bah-bah bonding time was coming to an end.  T9’s, however, apparently became brighter.  Bright white, to be precise: cool, white, dripping with milk, and topped with a latex nipple.  In fact, there appeared to be one attached to my husband’s head, as T9 more or less tried to suck on it rather than offer up his typical MMM-AH! goodnight kiss.

bottle headHouston? Um, this is awkward.

So that was it.  A decision had been made.  It was time to get T9 completely off the bottle.  It wasn’t going to be a total shock, as he’d already been getting sippy cups throughout the day.  Bottles, you see, were strictly still a sleepytime thing. A sleepytime, let-mama-pretend-you’re-still-a-newborn-as-I-rock-you-and-grasp-to-your-last-ounces-of-infancy kind of thing.

Perhaps *mine* was the unhealthy attachment.

Ahem.

The next day, I tried it out at nap time.  T9 looked at the cup, then looked at me.  “Bah-bah?” he asked.

I corrected him, “MILK.”

He nodded.  “MIYL.” Then he grabbed it and walked toward his bedroom.

And that?  That was it.

Did the kid protest? Of course not. He’s still trying to figure out how to remove his toes once he gets his shoes and socks off.

Did I protest? Damn straight I did. I was all, “BUT MAH BAYBEEE! *sniffle* *snort*  WAIT–I have an idea! Quick! Hit him with a tranq dark or something to stunt his growth and development. Oh FORGET IT!  WAHHH.”

This was mental protesting, I should add.  I hadn’t yet gotten out the poster board or fully launched my Twitter ribbon campaign.

And here we are.  Day 3 off the bottle.  And he’s still a snuggle bear with a reverse bald spot who can barely chew meat.

photo(2)

I think I can live with that.

Camping! (With Children?)

Tuesday, April 27th, 2010

I used to be a mountain woman.  Well, in the sense that I hiked whenever I had the chance, camped every year, and generally didn’t mind bugs.  No, really.

(Well, ‘cept for that time I was living in Saranac Lake and a black fly entered my ear canal. For HOURS.)

In fact, when my husband and I first met, one of our first dates was a nice nature walk near the Shawangunk Ridge.  We eventually progressed to leg-jellying hikes and scrambles.  Kind of a metaphor for our relationship, really.

It’s only natural, then, that I’d be gung-ho when he suggested we take our boys camping this summer, then, right?

Ehhh.

campingYou see, once I add the variable of children, the very thought of camping–in a tent–fills me with anxiety and dread.  From the close quarters to the diaper changing to the wild animals to the fire pits.

Why, I’d say camping with children is looking eerily similar to the 7th level of Hell.

Every time he brings it up, I tell me husband he’s free to go with the boys on his own, but that–for the sanctity of our marriage–it’d be best if I stay home.

“But the point is to make it a FAMILY trip, wife.”

I’m not sure who’s going to win this debate: The Hub or I.  When I lamented to my good friend, she seemed to think I was making a big deal of it.  Then I reminded her of the diapers. And the sleeping.  And the non-sleeping.

“Oh, yeah…well…maybe wait a few years.”

Exactly.

What’s Red, White, & Rashy All Over? (Um, My Baby.)

Sunday, March 14th, 2010

First things first: I must offer my apologies for being a bit out of touch over here. You see, my husband is currently suffering from being ONE ARMED (well, kind of) and that has made things a bit busy in our household with the recent snowstorm and everything.  Take this, for example:

[Scene: The entryway to our house, me shaking off the wet, matted snow from my hair, hat, and coat.]

Me: Man, this blizzard is a freaking sonofabitch.

Him: [On couch, drinking warm things, with warm slippers and a warm, fluffy robe] Wha…?

Me: Did I wake you? OW. I think I messed up my knees shoveling this second foot of snow off our driveway.

Him: Lady, I don’t want to hear it. I’m the one who had SHOULDER SURGERY.

And then, the very next day, he REALLY showed me. As I huddled with the kids in our powerless living room, he one-armedly put on his snow pants and boots,  one-armedly drove to my parents, one-armedly fixed their snow blower, one-armedly loaded/unloaded it into the truck, and one-armedly plowed out the neighborhood.

THEN?  He got our son to crap on the toilet.  I am not even kidding you.  After weeks of my fruitless labors, I came home from grocery shopping and BAM. Plus One had crapped on the toilet. Without looking back either.  Going on two weeks straight now.

My husband?  My husband is *such* a showoff.  (Or really sweet. I haven’t yet decided.)

So.  That.  There was all that.

And then after the snow stopped falling, my youngest, T9 went in for his 15 month visit to the pediatrician.  Naturally, I brought my one-armed husband in case we encountered a BEAR or something.   After hearing that he’s healthy and all that we guiltily schlepped him over to the nurse where he had his first MMR shot. He cried, I cried, and we headed for the car.

They sent us home with a sheet of paper that says something about a possible rash and fever.  I heard the nurse as she explained it, but I was also busy repenting to my son with kisses.  I didn’t really pay attention.

Then, exactly 8 days later, T9 got a fever.  I cursed the germ gods in my head; I mean they’d just gotten sick like two weeks ago.  And this fever was a stubborn one, too.  I had to alternate Motrin and Tylenol just to keep it around the 100 mark.  The craziest part, I kept telling everyone, is that he has no symptoms! Like, there was a fever, sure.  But where was the illness?  The boogers?  The cough?

Well, two days later, this appeared, and well.  I mean, just LOOK AT IT.

MMR Vaccination Side Effects

MMR Vaccination Side Effects

My baby.

I cannot even tell you what the voices in my head sounded like at that point.

And now, about 48 hours later, it seems to be retreating.  Which is good, because I have been mind-bulleting the shit out of that thing.  That thing on my baby.

And I’m showing you in case you’re out there, right now, freaking the hell out like I was.

It’s scary. I’m feeling guilty.

T9 and Plus One, partners in crime.

T9 and Plus One, partners in crime.

But I think the boy’s gonna be okay.

“Mind Over Matter” Doesn’t Apply to Poop

Monday, March 1st, 2010

Okay, so remember all that talk about OH POTTY TRAINING’S NOT THAT BAD!

Well, I take it back, people. I TAKE IT BACK.  I am not built for this, I’m afraid.  In fact, I just looked it up on WebMD, and I’m pretty sure it’s fatal.

If you don’t believe my hyperbolic proclamations, then 1. you’ve been here before, haven’t you?! and 2. let me offer some proof.

First, a run-down of the supplies that this household has acquired in an attempt to get one stubborn three-year old out of diapers:

1. One immediately-rejected, music-playing training potty.

2. One somewhat-tolerable kid-sized potty seat.

3. Another more decorative,and apparently less-tolerable kid-sized potty seat. (Should’ve stuck with #1…it’s not like you can return them.

4. A Travel potty, for the day we felt brave enough to venture further than 10 feet from our home bathroom.

5. Travel potty covers. (I’m not even sure how to use them.)

6. Pull-ups. I caved.

7. Several packages of big boy “underdies,” which are just as much fun to poop in as diapers!

8. Sticker chart, complete with the COOLEST stickers EVER.

9. One basket full of potty-time-only books.

10.And, a piddle-pad, for the car seat. Because sometimes, your kids are kind of like un-housebroken puppies.

But, unfortunately, this spectacular collection has not cracked him in the slightest, I’m afraid.  So we’ve resorted to mind-bending.  Oh, that’s right. I’m not above mild psychological experimentation.  AAAAND, SCENE!

*****

Me: [*knock, knock*] ARE YOU IN THE BATHROOM, DADDY?!

The Hub: [Muffled voice bellowing from behind closed door.] YES, I AM! I’M IN THE BATHROOM, MOMMY!

Me: OH, BOY! WHAT ARE YOU DOING IN THERE?!

The Hub: I’M GOING PEE PEE ON THE POTTY!

Me: WOW! YOU SURE ARE LUCKY!

The Hub: THAT’S RIGHT! GOING PEE PEE ON THE POTTY SURE IS FUN!

[Dear God. Look at what has become of us.]

[Shaking my pride to the floor, I peer stealthily around the corner to see if my toddler has been swayed by the commotion.  He glances at me, and for a moment, I am hopeful...The Hub emerges, drying his hands on a small towel.]

The Hub: Hey, bud!

Plus One: Daddy? Why are you shouting at Momma?

Me: Oh, nono…Daddy wasn’t shouting…he was just, eh, excited about going potty, and…uhm…

The Hub: You need to go potty, buddy? Don’t you want some Spider Man stickers?

Plus One: [Nervous.] Umm, no thank you. [Scurries away.]

I’m pretty sure we’re doing this wrong. Next step? Pull up the carpeting and let him run around like a nudist. (Then call on grandma to watch him while I check myself into a, ah, “spa treatment facility.”)

straight jacket

“Don’t stare at the potty-training mother, kids. It’s RUDE.”

*BURRRRP*

Saturday, November 14th, 2009

It’s like the Holy Grail of early motherhood.  The shiny toy at the bottom of the Cracker Jack box.  The Pharaoh’s treasure.

Yes, ladies.  I’m talking about the burp.  Of all my motherly neurosis, I think the burp has a firm grip in the Top Five spot.  Because, really?  It’s kind of ridiculous.  Having said that, it was not uncommon for my evenings to go something like this:

burping the baby

And let’s not forget about the directives I’d leave for the babysitter.  Which were followed up by texts.  And, ultimately, a phone call:

Babysitter: [Surprised.]  Oh, hi Mrs. C…just got your text here.

Me: [Anxious.]  Hi! Yeah, well just wanted to follow up in case…you know.  So, did he drink his bottle?  You warmed it up like I asked, right?  And he had his blanket?  After jammie time?  And with a clean diaper?

Babysitter: [Stifled sigh.] Yeah, I did all that. And he drank 6 ounces.

Me: [Alarmed.]  ONLY SIX?! Well, did he have to burp?  You burped him, didn’t you?! PLEASE TELL ME YOU BURPED HIM.

Babysitter: [Audible sigh.] Yes, Mrs. C. He burped.  And I offered it again, but he wasn’t interested.

Me: [Dramatic sigh.]  Well, I guess he’ll be fine. One ounce [yes, really] shouldn’t make too much of a difference.  But he did burp, right? Because sometimes he even has to burp tw—

Babysitter: [Sternly.] He. burped. twice. Mrs. C.

Me: [Resigned, embarrassed, ordering wine.]  Alright then!  Well, just wanted to check in!  We’ll let you know when we’re on our way ba—

Babysitter: OKAY! BYE! *click*

(Next week, I’ll offer my tips on how to hire and keep a babysitter.)

I Don’t Think We’ve Been Introduced

Monday, October 12th, 2009

I feel like I haven’t fully introduced you to me, I mean, my boys.  This, however, will probably give you more insight than you’d ever wanted.

*****

I’m nothing if not completely aware of the dangers of stereotypes and the duty we have as AMERICANS to end their dirty cycles of ignorance. However, in some situations…in MY situation–the situation of mothering BOYS–sometimes such stereotypes are self-serving, somewhat accurate, and therefore totally worth perpetuating. In other words, my two boys are crazy, hardcore, badass little em-effers.

But I’m still not completely sure if THEY will be the death of ME or if I/THEM.


Because, people, I am That Neurotic Mother. I know. But before you get all SIGH and ::rolls eyes::, I’ll let you know that I am in therapy. I am also quite familiar with the red wine section of my local liquor store. This helps. (The wine.)

But REALLY. I’ll offer an example from just the other morning. My youngest, T9, is almost 11 months old. He was pulling himself up to stand at our living room coffee table when I saw his hand slip and his face land on the bottom shelf. I CRINGED, grunted, and hoped at least one tooth remained intact. Like, dude head-butted the table with his mouth! When I opened my eyes, I heard a little whimper, so I scurried over to pick him up BEFORE I called 911. But by the time I had lifted him to see the blood trickle from his lips, the boy was SMILING. My infant son had karate chopped a piece of furniture with his face and thought the blood stained wood was amusing. I spent the next hour trying to ascertain the size of the puncture wound his tooth had made in his lip, and whether it needed stitches. He laid there, fighting for freedom by attempting to bite my fingers off.

I will not survive this, people.

Then there’s my eldest, Plus One, who’s nearly three. Luckily, he’s a actually a bit milder than his young protege. However, the FATES are INTERVENING, and so he still manages to invite trouble. Perhaps you would like an example? The three of us were in Target the other day, doing a great job of not being THAT family as we strolled through the aisles (I only busted out the hand sanitizer ONCE! CLAP FOR MOMMY!).

Plus One was in the cart area, eating a muffin while I made bank in the safety and disinfection sections. Suddenly, I saw his muffin lunge up from the cart and onto the floor. Before I could scold, I heard him shriek and simultaneously try to climb over his brother and into my arms. By the time I got around to pull him out, I saw THE BEE. People, we were 20 minutes into our shopping trip, INSIDE the store in effing OCTOBER. Have I SINNED? WHAT ARE THE ODDS OF THIS CRAP?!

(Related: As I was nursing Plus One’s throbbing hand, T9 attempted to hurl himself out of the shopping cart. He was very nearly successful. A rubber-necker came to the rescue. T9 thanked him with a head-butt.)

Come ON!

So there. Those are my boys. And they are badass, with all their bloody grins and ballooning limbs. But while I’d like to blame my neurosis on all this, this nonstop CATASTROPHE, the truth of the matter is that I’m pretty sure I’m just, well, crazy? This isn’t the correct term, I’m sure, but it’s similar to what resonates from my husband’s “Oh, Wife” after I tell him these THINGS.

Later that night, after I’d put the kids to bed, checked T9’s pulse, and re-sealed Plus One’s plastic bubble, I headed back to my bedroom where I found my husband. He appeared to be, well, nursing his tenders, if I might borrow a line from Kung-Fu Panda.

Me: YOU TOO?! What’s wrong? Did the kid jump on you again?

Him: Nah, I just did too much walking downtown this afternoon. It was hot. You know…sweaty?

Me: Ah. Hang on a sec…[I quickly skipped down the hall and emerged again with a small tube.] Try this.

Him: Desitin?!

Me: What? It’s the unscented kind! And while I’m sure the kids won’t notice if you borrow some, I must draw the line at application.

Him: Oh, Wife.

Perhaps my husband won’t survive this either.

Lady, You Ain’t No Peter-Cottontail

Monday, September 28th, 2009

There are so many frustrating things about being a new Mom.  But I’m almost certain that the absolute most irritating for me is when random people insist on familiarity just because an infant is involved.

I mean, REALLY.  What IS it about strangers who insist on touching your baby?

For me, taking my kid out of the house–to a store or other breeding ground for germs–is stressful even before you introduce pesky old women into the equation.  I would either keep him strapped in the safety of his stroller, or if I was feeling bold, bring along a shopping cart cover and a package of antibacterial wipes.  On one such outing, when my first was still an infant, I even had him strapped to me in his Baby Bjorn.  But not FIVE MINUTES into WalMart (should’ve known) some odd woman was trying to pinch his cheeks, even as I put my arms around him to suggest “UM, NO THANKS LADY.”

And just yesterday, I was back at WalMart (do I ever learn?)  gathering some decorations for my front yard.  My oldest, now nearly three, was trying to push a cart around with Grandma while I had my youngest in the cart with me, his blue cart-cover protecting him from possible contaminants.  Out of nowhere, there was a WalMart employee, her grin suggesting something more sinister than friendly.  My first intinct was to dive upon my son to shield him.  But I’ve been told such measures are “rude” or “over the top.”  Some people!

But ayway, at first she was within a reasonable distance.  But something about those babies…it brings the crowds, I tell you.  Within seconds, she was at the side of my cart, attempting to elicit a smile from my poor child.

Employee: [Hardly talking to me, but more to herself.]  Aww, hey little guy!  Wait…it’s a boy right?  Boy those cheeks are something.  [Reaches out and strokes his cheek.]

Me: [Thinking fast...how to be clear but not rude?!]  Oh, yeah he’s not great with strangers, actually…[Starting to shift cart.]

Employee: [Following the cart.]  Aww, but I’m no stranger…he can see my badge!  That means I’m okay!  [Grabs my son's fingers.]

Me: [Suddenly noticing THE COTTON IN HER EAR.]  Okay, well let’s say bye-bye now!  [Darting after my mother who is hiding with my older son.]

cottonearPeople, the woman HAD COTTON IN HER EAR.  The last time I’ve seen that was when I was like five and it was MY ear.  You know, because it was INFECTED.

I screeched around the corner of an aisle and whipped out my anti-bacterial wipes.  That was pretty much all my neurosis could handle for one shopping trip.

Which, I should probably disclose:  I’m as neurotic as they come.  I mean, like when they were portioning out “nerves” to New Moms, someone slipped up and gave me seconds (okay, maybe thirds, fourths, and fifths).  But really.  I think I need to draw the line at cotton in the everloving ear.  I mean, MY GOD.

So now I turn to you, the lovely readers.  How would you Mommas handle this kind of situation?  I suppose slapping is out of the question, and my tactics never seem quite firm (nor polite) enough.  Any suggestions?  Or maybe you have some insight that might help me be more, um, kind? compassionate?, to such strangers?

I Didn’t Know This Would Involve Civil Disobedience

Saturday, September 26th, 2009

Teething.

The word alone is enough to make a seasoned mother’s eyes roll or a novice, like myself, shiver.

I’m currently experiencing my second round of teething with baby #2 and, I’ll tell you, it does not seem to get much easier.  It does however, seem to get less–eh–insufferable?teething

You see, with my first, who is now nearly three (!), he got ‘em fast and furious.  At the time, I didn’t realize quite how lucky I was to be enduring only a few days of acute teeth-cutting rather than weeks.  But can you blame me?  All I knew was that he’d spike the occasional fever, get the occasional diaper blowout, and, well….stop eating.

Really.  The kid went on hunger strikes that would rival Gandhi himself.

I still remember the worst of those days–sitting in his nursery, sobbing, pleading, as he rejected the bottle once again.  He’d had maybe an ounce or two since he’d woken up, and it was now nearly noontime.

So I sat there in that nursery with my son on my lap and I pretty much lost it.  My mind was shouting things like, HE’LL DIE!  HE’S GOING TO BE MALNOURISHED!  And lots of other things that equaled THIS IS THE END OF THE WORLD! and I’M A TERRIBLE, TERRIBLE MOTHER!

Just the other day, my neighbor texted me about her son who seems to be experiencing a similar bout of, let’s call it “feeding resistance.”  My response to her was calm and reassuring–something that probably would have made me roll my eyes at myself about 2 years ago:

He’ll be okay…things will all even out and he’ll start eating again when he’s feeling a bit better.

Now, let me be clear I’M NOT A DOCTOR, people.  But I am a mother of two, and if there’s anything a second child has taught me, it’s this:

It’s pretty much a guarantee that us mommas will worry, but it’s not really essential (or productive) to have utter meltdowns in the nursery, while your confused (okay, probably more like AMUSED) child mocks your pleas to end the hunger strike.

My second, now almost ten months old, has 6 teeth, and recently spent about two weeks reducing his solids by about 2/3.  TWO THIRDS, people!

But guess what?  He’s still alive.  He didn’t fail frail.  There were no doctors visits.

Just lots of patience.  And DEEP breaths.  (Okay FINE, there was still lots of that pesky ANXIETY.)  But I’ve still got (most) of my hair.  Sure, you can try a medicine dropper.  Pedialyte pops.  Mesh feeders.  There’s lots of tricks.  But there’s also the essential act of relaxing and letting (mischievous, perhaps sadistic?) Mother Nature take her (insufferable) course.

So what am I saying here?  I think I’m getting the hang of this teething thing. And you will, too.   (But maybe we’ll check in again when it’s molar time.)