Baby Food and Funny Faces

I’m totally turning into one of those moms who think her baby eating solid food is the cutest thing ever. And yes I’m going to share it with you, too. But trust me, it’s cute.

I was so sure Ethan was going to love solids because he was practically taking our forks from us at dinnertime before he started eating. But not so much. The faces he makes just kill me – I can imagine from looking at him what it must be like to taste some of these things for the first time. You’d think we were feeding him lemons or something.

baby making face

He’s got his act down – take a bite, make a face, swallow very carefully, shudder. Makes me laugh every time.

Oh here, you need to see it in action:

Okay, so he didn’t swallow that one. (Yeah, I know. That’s gross. Hey, you’re the one reading a mom blog.)

But seriously. That’s banana. What baby doesn’t like banana?!

The only thing Connor didn’t like at first was carrot. He quite adamantly refused to eat any, but with everything else he was quite happy to gobble it up. Based on Ethan’s reaction to everything else I wasn’t very optimistic that carrot would be especially well-received, but it was actually the first thing we fed him that he loved. He liked carrots better than pear! Weird baby.

Since we started him on carrots he’s been much more enthusiastic about eating in general. See?

baby with mouth open wide

He sits there like a little baby bird with his mouth wide open, and if we don’t spoon it in there fast enough he complains.

Have I mentioned this kid cracks me up? Just wait until we try to get him to eat meat.

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Disclosure: This delightful post was brought to you by Natrel Baboo. I am part of the Natrel Baboo Blogger Campaign with Mom Central Canada and I receive special perks as part of my affiliation with this group. The opinions on this blog (and disgusting videos of my kid eating mushed up banana) are my own.

Incidentally, you can get a coupon to try Natrel Baboo through the link below. Baboo is a dairy product made with fresh milk specially designed to ensure a smooth transition from breast milk or infant formula to regular milk for toddlers aged 12-24 months.

 

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Say What You Need to Say

I’ve been thinking a lot about resentment lately. I suppose that’s normal when your entry into motherhood is a crying-filled, sleepless smackdown and you subsequently have a second baby who offers you the sort of experience you expected to have when you became a mom. At least it’s normal for me.

“This isn’t the experience with motherhood I wanted you to have,” I remember my mom saying to me one day while I cried on the phone to her when Connor was a baby.

It wasn’t the experience I wanted to have either. It’s not that I thought having a baby should be lullaby perfect, but I didn’t want it to be filled with quite so much despair.

The moment my mom said that to me is a milestone in my motherhood journey. From where I stand now I see that moment like a marker stabbed into the sand on my path, noting what came before and what would follow after. This is how the beginning will always be for you, says the sign next to it. You can’t relive those earlier months and your motherhood picture will always be shaped by this experience. You don’t get to do it again and have it be easier, more fulfilling, more fun.

No, I don’t.

But do I resent Connor?

No, I don’t.

***bench-and-blue-sky

I danced with Ethan this morning.

He was full of smiles when I went to get him out of bed to start the day. I fed him and then he played happily in his high chair while I had breakfast. He splashed in the bath, experimenting with what happens when he kicks his feet.

We’ve been working on sleep lately and this morning, not for the first time, he had a nice, long nap. He woke up, pink-cheeked and laughing. I fed him and then thought he might like some play time on the floor, but he didn’t. So we danced.

“Say what you need to say,” sang John Mayer, as I held Ethan around the waist and placed my hand in his small chubby one. He put his nose in the crook of my neck and leaned his cheek against mine. He let me sing and he stuck to me as I swayed, breathing him in.

***

If Ethan had been my first baby, I wouldn’t have spent so much time bouncing a screaming baby. I wouldn’t have logged hours in his room trying to get him to sleep and wondering at what point my sanity would actually break. I wouldn’t have been anxious about doing errands or shopping for groceries in case he had a colossal meltdown in public.

I would have been able to go to play dates without dreading having to go home and deal with him by myself. I would have had more hot meals. I would have had more meals, period. I would have cherished the time and his laugh and those slobbery, open-mouthed kisses without wondering why the lovely baby stuff had to be overshadowed by so very much hard stuff.

That sign in the sand is right. I don’t get a motherhood do-over, though my experience with Ethan has given me a glimpse of what might have been.

With a different baby, my early days of motherhood might have been more peaceful. They might have been more fun. They might even have been diaper-commercial sweet. With a second, very different baby, I can see it now.

***

Do I resent Connor?

No, I don’t.

I don’t resent him, neither the baby he was nor the boy he is now. But do I resent my introduction to motherhood and wish it had been different?

Sometimes. A little bit. I do.

Say what you need to say.

 

In his Element: Ethan

We sit like this nearly every day around 5 p.m. As the end of the day nears he needs a break but often won’t heed the call of his crib. Instead we sit together, quietly, both of us winding down.

Five months in, we have a lot of practice at this dance. I hold him facing me and slip him onto his right side. He tucks his right arm under my left and wraps it around my waist, then places his head snugly in the crook of my arm as I make space for him. His small mouth opens into an ‘o’ as he waits for a soother. I have one waiting; I give it to him and then pull him close.

We rock.

I sway slightly and he follows my lead, but I don’t talk and I don’t sing. This isn’t the time for whispered stories.

Occasionally he dozes, but today he just stares blankly out the window, his need to turn down the sensory dial so like my own.

He breathes quietly. I can feel his tummy pressing into mine – in and out, in and out.

Suck, suck, suck goes the soother. Then a pause. He’s watching shadows.

He doesn’t look at me, but he does stroke my chest. A recent development, he traces the line just below my collarbone, first in one direction, then the other, a rhythmic reassurance.

His hands are small and soft and chubby, his knuckles still just dimples.

Fully relaxed, he drops his soother and I can feel his breath on my left cheek. It smells like milk, and him.

I’m aware in these moments how precious this time is, how quickly the months will pass until one day we won’t fit just right anymore. He is part of me, this child. He is my own soft breath. He is the lump in my throat.

There are other things that make him who he is, of course – his wide, wide toothless smile and his giggle, laughing on the inhale. His love of stories. His enchantment with song.

But this is what I will most remember. Years from now I will feel his warmth and his weight on my arm. I will remember what it’s like to have a small tummy pressed to mine. I will remember his sweet breath and be glad we had this time, just the two of us, when he was small and we fit just so.

Like I did with Connor, this is an attempt to capture Ethan using descriptors of how I see him in this place and time based on a writing exercise from Use Your Words: A Writing Guide for Mothers*. (And, since I first wrote this, he’s stopped needing this cuddle, which makes me sad but also very glad I wrote about it.) As with Connor’s piece, I’ve deliberately chosen not to include an image in this post and have instead focused on the words. 

(*Same deal: Damn right that’s an affiliate link. I highly recommend this book for anyone wanting to work on their writing (whether a mother or not) and if you buy it I want the two pennies I’ll get from having steered you towards something fabulous.) 

 

 

In his Element: Connor

He is four, almost five, and his world is all LEGO, all the time. The entire collection is in his room now, sorted into bins by colour (his dad’s strategy—one he attempts to thwart on a daily basis—for making it easier when asked to help find a certain piece).

This is where Connor is in his element.

And this is how I will always remember him in this time.

He builds from instruction booklets, he replicates from pictures he’s seen online, he creates from his own imagination. The age range on the box means nothing to him; he only occasionally needs help.

Our home rings with the sound of LEGO as he sorts through pieces – loud, rough, like gravel shifting. His fingers stir the bins, the pieces crashing and tumbling, creating a wave of noise. He finds what he’s looking for – a piece attached to another from a previous creation. He grips the locked pieces in his teeth (despite the many times I’ve asked him not to) and pulls determinedly. They click as they come apart.

Occasionally he will disappear, his whereabouts traceable by the rumble from beyond his walls. Hidden behind a closed door and surrounded by multi-coloured bricks, he hears nothing else and has to be called multiple times for dinner.

Sometimes I get asked to play, my role (or perhaps just presence) crucial for reasons that are not always expressed. Sometimes it’s to help find “cool” pieces. Sometimes it’s an invitation, a command: “Let’s get building!”

I’m never sure what he’s building until he’s done. His masterpieces, without fail, include details I could not have imagined.

It’s The Joker’s birthday today, so indicated by the inverted orange cone placed like a birthday hat atop the green hair of the small figure. Two flat, round pieces—formerly a part of an engine, possibly? Though I can’t identify them, he would know exactly what the pieces were and which set they came from—pressed together form a birthday cake, the flame pieces from a firefighting set standing in as candles.

He’s not just building; he’s creating. It’s all about the details. He adds pedals to a vehicle of his own design (this one has two brakes) and constructs a propellor for a helicopter when he can’t find one. Each window in each building is carefully placed. If he wants lights, he builds them. The door knobs always face the right way, the wheels are functional and if he can find a place for a chain or a net he will MacGyver it on.

Each character he adds to the scene has carefully chosen qualities – a policeman can’t have a “bad guy” face; rarely does a LEGO head go without an appropriate hat. Sometimes, as anyone with an imagination knows, a plainclothes hero needs a cape.

I get asked to build certain things sometimes, like a platform or a plane, but rarely get more than a few pieces in before the architect’s vision takes over, relegating me to observer and occasional part locator. I get annoyed by this, but only very slightly.

His instinct is to create; mine is to watch in awe.

This is an attempt to capture my son using descriptors of how I see him in this place and time based on a writing exercise from Use Your Words: A Writing Guide for Mothers*. I’ve deliberately chosen not to include an image in this post and have instead focused on the words. I’ll post Ethan’s tomorrow. 

(*Damn right that’s an affiliate link. I highly recommend this book for anyone wanting to work on their writing (whether a mother or not) and if you buy it I want the two pennies I’ll get from having steered you towards something fabulous.) 

The Newborn Phase

You know when you find out a friend is pregnant with her first baby? And you want to share everything you know but don’t want to overwhelm her or be the one who tells her to sleep now because she won’t sleep again for years? I had that dilemma recently. I’ve come to the conclusion that there’s no point trying to convey what having a baby is like to someone who hasn’t had one, because you really, truly can’t know what it’s like until you get there.

Luckily in this case, my friend wanted to talk baby stuff — strollers, cribs, nursery decor — instead of sleep or the frequency with which babies poop. And that’s all stuff I can talk about with great enthusiasm.

I have grand ideas about “doing” our house, but I’ve never done it. Not in any really deliberate way. But when it came to putting together baby rooms I was all over it. (And Rich was too.) There’s just something about having a room specially designed for the baby you’re about to welcome. When we did Connor’s room it was a little less deliberate – we had everything we wanted and needed except stuff for the walls, but I bought jungle decals in a panic a couple of weeks before he was born. Because there was NO WAY I could bring my baby home to a room that had nothing on the walls. (Never mind the fact that he slept in our room for the first six weeks.) Coordinating nursery furniture

We had a ton of fun doing Ethan’s room too. We weren’t starting from scratch because, while we got rid of a lot of our baby stuff before we moved, we did keep the crib and changing table/dresser, which are two pieces we really like. And I was also smart enough this time not to buy a whole set including stuff we’ll never use (like crib bumpers).

So that’s what we talked about with my friend. We did a tour of Ethan’s room and talked about the wall decals. We gave our perspective on the changing table/dresser combo compared to the standalone change table option. We whipped out the stroller and talked about why we like ours.

Between that conversation and the recent sort I had to do on Ethan’s clothes (because the little bugger is growing out of stuff – why do they have to grow so fast?!) I’ve been feeling a bit nostalgic for the newborn phase. Especially, it must be said, because when he was a newborn he slept whereas now we’re having an increasing number of visits during the night. But I digress…

I guess that’s the nice thing about having friends who are having babies. As another friend of mine said, I don’t actually want another baby but I do want friends to have babies I can snuggle (and not at 3 am, preferably).

Do you miss the newborn phase?

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