Tuesday, March 9, 2010

Teething is a real pain


(Note: eyes definitely still hazel. My wish is coming true!)


Still no napping for this one. As I type this, he has just emptied both breasts, with attempts to lay him down after each one. I tried putting him down, completely out cold, into his pack-and-play. Fifteen or twenty minutes later, he's up. Walk around with him for a bit, then decide to try to nurse him in the darker upstairs, in his bedroom. Nurse again. His arms marionette floppy, I gently lay him down into his crib. Eyes pop open, and the little bastard starts grinning and laughing. Legs like little eggbeaters, kick kick kick kick. Mocking me. I've just snuck downstairs, leaving him alone up there, hoping he'll just, I don't know, forget about whatever's distracting him from sleep? Why does he want to be awake so badly? And what, exactly, does he find so fucking funny about it?

I can hear him whining a bit. "Enh. Enh. ENH."

I don't want to be one of those "cry it out" people, all ignoring their babies' needs, causing trust issues and brain damage. This is no slight at one good friend of mine (who tried this method for a spell), who had a VERY high-needs, colicky infant and actually had to regularly call those "please talk me out of strangling my baby" hotlines out of lack of sleep or peace. I don't have that baby, and neither do most people who think that you can spoil a baby by holding it too much, or that babies cry to manipulate people. Those people are completely insane, or at best misguided. And for what it's worth, I don't think it even worked for my friend, who found it gut-wrenching to hear her baby cry that much.

Fingers are fascinating

I mean, technically, he's not even crying or anything. I think he just knows that I always respond almost instantaneously to any slight fussing and is expecting my smiling face to pop up any second. And so it never really needs to escalate to full-blown crying (unless I say, clip off the tip of his thumb whilst attempting to trim his nails). Still, the annoyed (and annoying) whines are his cue that he's unhappy, and as his mother, I am supposed to be the Bringer Of Happy. But this time I'm ignoring them, just to see what happens. If he really starts crying, I'll go rescue him.

What's that I hear? Could it be...silence? He's either asleep, or he's staring at something quietly. I haven't figured out if I care which of those it might be. I know he needs sleep. "Sleep begets sleep!" chirp the helpful, childless doulas. And though I know this to be true from experience, I just can't force him to sleep. I can't wear him 24 hours a day, walking and nursing him into oblivion. But more importantly, I can't make my entire day focused on trying to get Zephyr to sleep. So what should I do?

Usually, I let him sleep on me after he falls asleep nursing. At least this way, he gets at least one good hour or two chunk. More often, though, I let him take several catnaps. I don't know if this is great for him, but I'm sure it's better than nothing. This time, I'm trying out the "leaving him alone in a dark, quiet place" technique to see if that yields results. At least this way I get a few minutes to myself.

...only a few minutes.


*****************

Milestones this week: rolled over from tummy to back, turned his head toward my voice when I said his name, and will laugh with me instead of just at me. Oh, and he is beginning to interact with other babies now instead of just staring at them like objects. With adorable results. Here he is with his bestie (and possible future soulmate) Sigga:

"Invisible Steering Wheel"


"Pshpshpsh I'm telling you a sekkrit!"

"Hugs", or "Attempted Carrot Theft"

4 comments:

  1. Editor's note: the day after I posted thus Zephyr has begun taking lengthy naps again. I assume this is to make me look a fool, or at least a liar.

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  2. Zephyr is an incredibly delicious baby. That first picture on this post of him smiling his adorable chubby gummy smile--I look at it a couple of times a day because of the extreme cute factor. I like your food posts too--although living in Wyoming I cannot access all the ingredients I would like to. At any rate, thanks for blogging!

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  3. Thanks! I look at that photo several times a day, too. :)

    You can sometimes order ingredients on Amazon, of all places. Now that shopping takes a bit more planning, I'm finding myself visiting Amazon quite a bit.

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  4. I could cook that little chubby boy and eat him for dinner. But I just had soup and an enchilada so he is safe for now.

    Cry it out works. It works like a hot poker in the eye works to solve an eyelash stuck in there. If him sleeping on you doesn't bother you then just do it. Maybe in a year from now he will sleep on his own. Maybe in a month. Point being, one day he will sleep. Right now he just has better shit to do.

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Yay! Thanks for saying nice stuff about my baby.