Saturday, March 31, 2012

Saturday morning

After breakfast, a lazy morning spent lounging in bed, reading and playing games before getting dressed to go outside.

RWF did "push ups" using Gianna.  She absolutely loved it and kept going back for more.  I want to eat those baby legs!

I love their smiles here.
I love P's face here.


I love RWF's face here.

Coming in for a kiss!

Mwah!





See ya.

Coming back for more.



Okay so I know that I was supposed to post a monthly update for Gianna (and tomorrow, Bode). But I am too tired. I am zonked, and have already stayed up way past my bedtime.
Happy weekend.
xo

Friday, March 30, 2012

First...

pigtails!

When I hugged Bode "good morning" bright and early today, he stared at me for a long time. And then he announced, "Your hair is like a siren."

I had no clue what he was talking about (oh, okay, I had a small idea that he was referring to my bedhead) and just said, "Thank you, Bode!" (I think that sounds like a song title, or maybe a poem: Your hair is like a siren)

Then, when I went downstairs, I was talking to RWF and saw all these random hairs moving around while I talked to him.  I walked over to the mirror and found that Bode was right:  my hair was standing on end, in lines and squiggles.  I wouldn't call it a "siren" but "Medusa" did come to mind.

I laughed out loud.  I told RWF what Bode had said to me this morning.  RWF replied, "Well, he's right."

Maybe this is why I decided to experiment with Gianna's hair this morning.  Because honestly, her hair didn't look that much better than mine when I got her up for breakfast.

Another reason is that I'm trying to keep her hair out of the stitches/bandage area.

Behold, first pigtails on our baby girl:








It was not easy scooping that fine, curly baby hair into pigtails and securing them. I just did a quick, messy job as an experiment. And Gianna wasn't so hip to the pigtails, either.

Here she is checking herself out in another mirror:








I think the pigtails lasted 5 minutes.  She walked up to me later, holding the hairbands out, like, "Here, these are of no use to me."
Today is the 30th, which means Miss Mia is 21 months. We are so close to the big 2. I can't believe it. I plan to write her monthly update tomorrow...stay tuned!
Happy weekend.
xo

Wednesday, March 28, 2012

First...

dermatology appointment!  Mia Gianna was referred by our pediatrician to see a dermatologist.  She has had a (ahem) 'growth' on her shoulder that was...not going away.

I honestly didn't give this appointment much thought. I mean, usually when any kind of M.D. is put with my child, a whole lotta anxiety follows.  But this time, I was like, easy-breezy, "Oh, she's going to get that thing frozen off. It will take 20 seconds."

That was not the case.  The dermatologist looked at it, pronounced it a "poly-blah-blah-la-T-da" and then said, "I need to remove it."  I nodded confidently, knowingly ("Of course you do.").   But then she went on to say, "I can remove it tomorrow afternoon."

Uhm. Wait a minute.  We just spent 45 minutes in your waiting room, another 10 minutes in the exam room waiting for you to bless us with your presence, and after looking at my baby for 10 seconds, you want us to come back tomorrow?

You want us to come back tomorrow so that you can do the thing that we came here today to get done?

I don't think so.

(This post has been edited a lot.  I cut all the yelling and complaining I did while we waited 45 minutes.  Yes, I yelled.)

I was firm. "I don't think that's a good idea. I think you need to do it now."  My blood pressure was rising dramatically.

The derm frowned and considered. She probably considered how red my face was getting, and then thought about the anger I had displayed just about 10 minutes ago.  Because she said, "Okay. As I told you earlier, we are here for the patient and that is why we sometimes run late."  Uh, huh.


She then explained that she would put numbing cream on Gianna's shoulder, and then give her 1 shot.  And then...then she would surgically remove the uhm, spot from Gianna's shoulder.

Uhm. Wait a second.

I was not prepared for that.  I hate needles, blood and all things associated with needles and blood (and doctors, really).

But I held Gianna during the shot, and then the 2nd shot (that the derm deemed necessary, suddenly).  I held Gianna while she threw up on me. And then I held Gianna while she screamed and cried while the derm removed the spot from her shoulder.  And I held my squirming, sweating, red-faced, vomit-y smelling, freaked out baby while the doctor put three stitches in her shoulder.

We did it.  We survived.  And now I get to play Nurse  to my daughter for the next 9 days, monitoring the care and cleaning of her stitches.

This poor baby. She has been through so much in her young life!  I keep telling myself that she's getting it all out of the way now, so she won't have to deal with it later.  That makes me feel a little better, anyway.

And while I'd like to say that this was Gianna's first and last dermatology appointment, that is not the case. We have to return to the derm to get the stitches removed (and to discuss the results from the lab).
Send my baby some love!
xo

Tuesday, March 27, 2012

When you were mine

My iPhone refused to turn on for me this morning. It was unresponsive, and completely oblivious to my pleas, tears, foot-stomping and then, outright anger.  It had left overnight, while I slept.

If I am honest with myself, I knew that our relationship was doomed. I knew that my iPhone had already been writing a Dear John letter to me.  We lasted for over two years, far longer than most cell phone relationships last. I'm a long-term kind of girl. I don't flirt around. Once I see something I like, I pretty much stick to it for years.    But a third party had entered our twosome.  "She" is cute and fun, but abusive.  "She" and the iPhone would take off together, alone. They'd disappear for awhile, and then come back.  "She" would casually toss the iPhone aside, already bored and onto the next shiny thing that caught her eye.  The iPhone would be sporting a new knick or crack in its manly black case.  Even I knew that this threesome wasn't working out.  But I couldn't break up with either one of them.



And then, just two weeks ago,  "she" slowly walked up to me. "She" looked a little guilty but also, dismissive.  "She" gave me the iPhone back. iPhone's face had been smashed to smithereens.  "Oh no, my phone!" I gasped.

iPhone was still working for me though.  I promised iPhone that I would buy another new protective case immediately. I told iPhone not to worry, that I had heard of a place in the mall that worked on smashed iPhone screens. I reassured iPhone that I still loved it, no matter what it looked like.  I wasn't about to replace it for a shinier, faster model.

We had so much history together. 

But it wasn't enough. 

It wasn't enough because "she" is still in the picture.  Even though I have forbidden her to touch iPhone, it  just wasn't enough.  iPhone left us this morning, never to return.  
xo

Saturday, March 24, 2012

The possessive

Thursday afternoon, we were in the playroom.  I was about to start dinner. I got up from the floor and just glanced out the window.  I saw these HUGE birds.  They were enormous!  There were 7 of them, and they looked menacing, all packed together.  Then, they started strutting across our land and as I looked more closely, I saw that they were actually turkeys.  I felt a thrill.  Later, alone in our dark bedroom, I would wonder if I had actually seen turkeys, or some kind of demonic bird, a sign of the Apocalypse. 

It was early Friday morning when I got my answer.  I actually heard them "gobbling."  Pretty neat, huh?

Tonight, I was in the playroom and I looked out the window and saw a deer munching something in our yard.  I called to RWF and told him to quickly look out the window. RWF and the babies were in our bedroom reading bedtime stories.  RWF answered, "Yep, that's a deer!"  Then the babies wanted to see it, and in their (loud) commotion, they startled the deer and it ran off.

It is so cool to look out your window and see wildlife in your backyard.

It is also so cool to look up and see your children play together.








Friday afternoon, I was feeling tired and defeated.  I had the end-of-the-week exhaustion that settles into my bones and brain, and I was struggling to see how I would make it through dinner, bath, and bedtime. So I sat in the driveway and watched Bode and Gianna while they ran around. Bode would tease Gianna by riding his bike too close to her, and then speed away.  He would do other things that would make her cry. I hate to admit this, but I am protective of Gianna. My default toward Bode is, "You know better," But really, I know better. I know that he's just a little boy, and he doesn't mean anything by what he does. He is only having fun. But as usual, I ran interference, jumping up to soothe Gianna, or running over to Bode and telling him to not do that, or to not do this, blah, blah, blah in his ear. Sometimes I feel like such a nag to Bode. It seems like I am always correcting him. Part of it is being a parent, helping him to 'grow up' by giving him social cues, like, "What do you say?" (say: please/thank you/you're welcome). Other times, it's short orders, like, "Take off your shoes when you  walk into the house!" or "Wipe your hands on your napkin, not on your shirt!" But I do think that sometimes, I am constantly droning  to him to do one thing or another (or to not do one thing or another). I get into a rut.  This happens easily when I am tired and frustrated. It is easier to admonish Bode for not taking off his shoes than to stop what I am doing and help him. It is easier to yell from the kitchen to stop teasing Gianna than to walk into the playroom and try to find a game that will interest them both. (Note: It really isn't easier.)  It is these times when I am like this that I go to bed with so much guilt.  It is these times when I need to stop the possessive thoughts, drop the "you are my son and you will do this" mindset and take a deep breath. Take a deep breath (or five, or ten) and step away. So Friday, I was at that point, where I was a nag, and constantly correcting my son. My 3 year old son.   And I stopped. I sat in the driveway and read my dinner recipe. But the cries from Gianna and the maniacal laughter from Bode continued. I was trying to concentrate on the recipe before me, and not let the commotion cause me to interfere. "Bode," I would warn, without looking up.  After a few minutes, I thought about it again, "Why am I yelling at him?  They need to do this. Gianna needs to get used to this from her big brother. They need to figure this out for themselves."  So I stopped the verbal warnings and just let them work. It took awhile, but I started to hear them 'talking' to each other, and then giggling from both. I looked up at them. They actually started playing together.  They had found two trees close together, and were peeking through the trees at each other and giggling.   I put down my recipe and  watched them instead. It was so nice to see them interacting together and having fun.  Later, they would walk around the yard together, playing some kind of game known only to them. 

RWF had a business trip this week. He was supposed to return early Friday evening.  But then I got the call from him. His flight had been delayed.  I was so angry. "Don't ever fly through Chicago again!" I yelled. "I hate O'Hare! It is nothing but trouble!"  I fumed into the phone for a few more minutes.  When I had finished, his only response was "Okay."  He sounded quiet, resigned. The noise and bustle of the airport hummed through the phone. In our silence, I thought about how angry I was that I was going to have to wait another evening before he came home. I thought about how I had told Bode that he would see his daddy tonight before he went to bed.  And then I switched gears. I thought about how tired RWF must be, traveling through airports, attending meetings, sleeping in hotels, always moving with a bag or two tethered to him.  I took a deep breath. "I'm sorry," I said, and then acknowledged how hard his week must have been, and how I was sorry that he was stuck sitting in an airport when I knew that he'd much rather be at home.  I swallowed the knee-jerk reaction to add, "But you don't know how hard this week has been for me," Instead, I focused on him.  I told him that he needed to get some water and find a comfortable waiting spot.  I told him that I hoped that he didn't have too long of a wait, and that I hoped to see him soon. We got off the phone in much better spirits.   Five minutes later, RWF called me.  They were putting him on a different plane, and he would be on his way home shortly. Hooray.



It was overcast Saturday morning, and we had decided that RWF should ride in the morning,  just in case rain hit us in the afternoon. I decided that I would take the babies to the park.  I put them into the car with their fleece jackets and away we went.  We got to the park and I stepped out of the car.  It was windy and cold.  I opened Bode's door and he shivered. "It's coooold!" he said.  It was indeed. And I wondered if I had made a mistake.  I thought about just getting back into the car and driving home.  Instead,  I gave the choice to Bode.  "Yes, it is cold," I agreed. "Would you like to go home and put on a warmer jacket?"  Of course the answer was "No!"  I rummaged through my bag, and found two hats, a sweater and a fleece vest for them to wear. It wasn't enough to keep them super warm, but the extra layer might help.  I decided that we would stay for 15 minutes, and then head home. We were the only fools ones at the park. I had on a light fleece jacket and I was freezing.  I had unselfishly (ha) given Bode my hat. The babies played on everything, impervious to the weather. I kept suggesting that we go home, but was always answered with, "No!"  I stood in place and shivered, wondering where Spring had run off to, and why we were suddenly back in freezing Gloomsville. We stayed, through rain and wind, for 45 minutes.   I am still chilled to the bone.  But the babies had fun.






Happy Saturday.
xo

Thursday, March 22, 2012

Today we enjoyed...

Walking around the house in only a diaper (Gianna):



Lots of fresh air and sunshine while riding a bike (Bode Wm.):



The first sign of Spring arriving at our house (all of us):


Gianna sez: Pretty frowah

First cereal bar ever (Gianna) and sipping Mommy's ice water on a warm, 80 degree day:

Check out my snackilicious, crumby fingers

I am beat. Tomorrow is full of appointments and a long to-do list.  I have a long list of things that I need to get done this week, and before the end of March. I know, I know...I know that I am not the only one.
On my list:  interview babysitters, put away winter clothes and gear (which includes deciding what to store and what to donate), Spring cleaning, pulling out the Easter decorations (hooray!),  laundry (always on my list), meal planning, and deciding what to do this weekend. 
Tomorrow is Friday! Woot! I am so ready for the weekend! What are your plans?
xo

A visit to Aunt Dawnie and Uncle Craig

We returned yesterday from a quick visit to Aunt Dawnie's and Uncle Craig's house.  We visited with Nana and Aunt Debbie (and Aunt Dawnie and Uncle Craig, too, of course).

I had reservations about my first solo (overnight) trip with the kiddos.  This is what the packing looked like:

This picture does not include 1 large package of wipes, 3 milk bottles, 3 sippy bottles, 2 snack cups, 1 penguin, 1 pink bunny, and the 5+ assorted cars that were brought along.

We had to stop about an hour into the journey because Miss Mia Drama Queen had to go and throw up not once, but three times, on herself.  The first time she did it, I wasn't sure and had to ask Bode, who gave me a vague answer.  So while I was searching for an exit ramp, Gianna took this long delay as complete disregard for her plight. She thought I was ignoring her cries.  And so the poor baby got even more upset, and threw up again. I guess she got car sick, and then "emotionally" sick.  It was icky and gross.  I was ill-prepared to clean up all that sickness.  My poor girl was so distraught (who likes throwing up?).  When I had changed her, and cleaned everything up the best I could, I announced that we would be on our way again. Bode looked over at Gianna and said, "Don't spray your milk like that again, okay, Gianna?"  

P-U did our car smell nice on the ride over to Aunt Dawnie's!  But we (finally) got there and seeing everyone made the "milk-spraying" trip worth it.  Smiles and hugs were exchanged. 

During our visit, the toy box was inspected, new toys were opened, more gifts were given, stories were read, tummies were tickled, and everyone giggled.

Nana enjoying her youngest grandson.

Gianna was more interested in playing with Aunt Dawnie's tchotchkes than the toys.

Uncle Craig came home from work and started his second shift as Chief Entertainer and Story Reader. He was also the Grill Master. He grilled delicious burgers and portobello mushrooms (for moi, merci!).   

While he was there, Bode worked on Aunt Dawnie's window treatments. Maybe this little guy has a future as an interior decorator (or not).



Just like Christmas, Gianna and Uncle Craig had their own special game going.  Uncle Craig would make a noise, Gianna would giggle and imitate him.  This went on for quite some time!  Gianna enjoyed  silly Uncle Craig.



I was worried how the babies would do overnight, sleeping in a new place.  They both did beautifully. Then again, they were probably so whipped by all the excitement and fun!

The next day we had a quiet breakfast and enjoyed a few more stories with Aunt Dawnie.  Then we hit the road, Jack.


Thankfully Gianna did not get car sick on the way back. We had books and music, but I turned out to be the entertainer/driver.  Bode had me tell him about a hundred different "Cars" stories while we drove.  I was having a hard time coming up with different scenarios for Lightening McQueen and Mater. Even so, I thought, "This is a memory."  We'd sing some songs. Then Bode would say, "Now I want you to tell me another story."  

We'll be back for more visits. The goal is that Bode and Gianna get to know their family, and that visiting is not a big deal but second nature.  I want them to know their Nana, their Aunts and Uncle.  I did not have that opportunity when I was younger because our family was spread out across the country.  So we are going to capitalize on our proximity to our "New York" family! 

Our weather has been beautiful.  We played outside yesterday for a long time.  The babies were definitely tired from the visit.  As usual, they were soooo good. I'm so blessed.



Have a happy Thursday!
xo
PS GO ORANGE!!!

Go Orange!

After school today

Sunday, March 18, 2012

Sunday by Mia Gianna

This morning I woke up and Daddy put my brother's Elmo slippers on my feet.  I think Elmo is da bomb!

Nevermind my bedhead

After naps, we went outside because Mommy and Daddy said it was a beautiful sunny, warm day.  I wore a sunhat and a pretty dress.


My brother worked on his car. Boys!


Daddy and I did push-ups in the shade.


Doing push-ups is exhausting! 


My brother did push-ups, too.  First, he ran around until one of his shoes fell off. And then he refused to put his shoe back on.  Boys!

Daddy tickled my brother. I think he was trying to distract Bode while he put his sneaker back on his foot.



Then Mommy said we had to go inside because she was worried I was getting too much sun.  Sometimes Mommy doesn't make sense. What happened to the "It's a beautiful sunny day, we should be outside"?  Anyway. I wore a pretty dress, but I did not wear the matching bloomers.  My rabbit, Hop, wore the bloomers instead. Doesn't Hop look pretty?  I think so.


Priscilla loves me.  I think she's the cat's meow, too.  By the way, that's just an expression. She's not a cat. She's really a dog! Or as I say, a "woof-woof."


 My brother played with his cars. Again. Boys!


While Mommy ran out to pick up dinner, Daddy gave my brother and I a bath and then put us in our jammies.  Daddy put me in my Christmas jammies.  He also put my diaper on backwards. When Mommy saw that my diaper was on backwards, she laughed and laughed.  But then she hugged Daddy and thanked him for getting us ready for bed "early." Whatever. She's still going to have to read us 3 night-night stories.
 Snaps don't go in the back, Daddy.

Love,
Mia Gianna
xo