7.20.2008

Photoshoot

So, since Hazel has been born, I think I have maybe one picture of the two of us together in which I do not look like a big pile of unwashed crap. Seriously folks, when you see Hazel and I looking cute together, please take a picture. And then give it to me. Everyone is all, "Oh, take a picture with me and Hazel!" or, as is most often the case, I am the one in charge of the camera taking everyone elses pictures for them and no one thinks that I might like to have a nice picture with my daughter. One in which I have applied a bit of makeup, am wearing real clothes, not sitting on the couch watching VH1. And if it could be at a flattering angle, that might be nice, too. If it could also not be a corny look-at-the-camera-and-say-"cheese" snapshot, that would be good. Honest to god, people...I am her mother after all.
So after expressing my extreme displeasure to Jamie, I put on some lipgloss, we went for a walk in Rockport and I gave him control of the camera. After a brief instruction in how not to emphasize double chins and to not call attention to the camera, he took these really pretty pictures of my daughter and I. Finally. Isn't she beautiful?


She was so busy staring at her dad and refused to look at the kind stranger taking the picture. He didn't feel like standing there all night.



Our corner.


I love it when she smiles with her whole body like this. Her face can't contain all the happiness.





I love that she is about to dive through the window so that she can put that curious thing in her mouth.



A Good Airing Out

I try to let Hazel roll around without her diaper as often as possible so that she can air out. Can you imagine having to wear a diaper 24/7? Just the thought makes me feel gross. Also, sun exposure is good for Vitamin D production and a total cure-all for diaper rash which Hazel has luckily never had. She loves to roll around in the breeze with her bare butt up in the air, and I love to watch her enjoy herself doing it! She could lay in the grass, screeching at the trees all afternoon.






Guacamole

So we were going to wait until Hazel was six months old to give her solids, and she was not showing any signs of readiness, so it wasn't really on the radar. I knew I was going to make my own baby food, and thanks to Jaymee, I already had a fully stocked baby food making drawer. All I needed was a new coffee grinder so I could make rice, oats, barley and eventually lentil and legume porridge. Anyway, Hazel one day decided that after a lifetime of eating 25 ounces a day, she needed 30 and she would like to eat that additional 5 ounces at 3:00 AM, please. So, a few days into this new schedule of hers, she is up on the counter in her Bumbo as I'm cutting up a banana for breakfast, and it clicks that I could try some solids with her, and if she isn't ready, I can stop. She isn't too far from six months old, and we don't have allergies in either one of our extended families...so I mash up some banana. And here is Hazel's first Real Meal:





She was do damned cute, but she wasn't totally into the food, either. So I decided to hold off on another feeding for a few more weeks. But that night on the phone with one of my momtorage, Emily she reminded me that I was going to start with avocado, not banana. It's true, but I thought banana would be more delicious and give Hazel more of a yum-response. So Emily convinced me to try avocado. And I did. And Hazel cannot get enough of the avocado. She will eat anything with gusto if it has some avocado mixed in it. "Guacamole y cerveza, por favor." She is sort of on the fence still about banana and sweet potato, but if we mix some avo in it, its down the gullet so fast and with such enthusiasm you wouldn't believe it. I do have video of her eating, because it is so funny, but again...cannot figure out the Handycam.

So, now that Hazel is a big time food eater, there is no stopping her....



So Hazel has had banana, Avocado and sweet potato. Next up we have pumpkin, summer squash, apple, mango and brown rice. As we go along, feeding each new food for three days without a reaction before it is considered "safe", I will be introducing spices like ginger, cinnamon, garlic and nutmeg. This week I will also introduce a sippy cup, which is another big step. I'm going to be putting diluted, cooled, chamomile tea in the cup instead of water.

7.13.2008

A couple of Silent Movies

I still can't figure out my Sony Handycam. I now know how to use it to film, in the most basic way, with the instructions open in front of me, but for the life of me I do not know how to upload videos, edit them, etc. I just don't get the concept. Call me old, call me a Luddite, whatever. Just take me back to the days of VHS. until then, I have figured out how to take 32 second videos with no sound on my digital camera and upload those to YouTube. Here they are. One video is Hazel learning how to eat her feet and another video is from Hazel and Maia's playdate.

Playdate

On Friday, I met my Internet mom-friend for a walk and beach day. I met her when she joined the online message board for February 2008 moms back when we were both pregnant. She lives a few towns south of me, so we met in the middle. She came to the mothers group at the hospital after her daughter Maia was born, too but this was the first time that the girls got to spend any quality time together to get aquainted, and they hit it off! Maia is two weeks younger than Hazel, but I don't think that the age difference bothers them.
And, yes I am aware that Hazel is wearing the same outfit two days in a row. She also slept in it. Jamie was out of town, and I did what I needed to do to get by. If she doesnt spit up all over herself, then guess what? The outfit has a second life!










7.11.2008

Rolling With Her Homies

Hazel rolled over yesterday, from back to front, all by herself! She gets onto her tummy, and can push up on her little arms. She gets so proud of herself and just grins and grins (until she pukes, which she always does when she is on her tummy). She isn't wasting any time, though since she has already started trying to pull herself across the floor. She can't get up on her hands and knees yet, but once she rolls over onto her tummy, she immediately starts to claw her way across the rug with her hands and KICK KICK KICK so hard with her feet. She expends all of her energy and only moves a couple of inches, but she certainly knows the next step and is eager to figure it out. Now there is no stopping her. As soon as I put her down, she starts rolling and rolling and rolling........



Picnic Weather

So this week (between funerals) Hazel did a lot of visiting and traveling. We went up to Maine on July 4th to visist with the Langfords and Donovans at the lake house for the afternoon. Normally, we go to Warren Vermont so that we can assisst our friend Hardy in staffing the Sugarbush float in the anual parade. This year we were unable to do it because we were having to leave for Rhode Island the following day, and it was getting to be too much. So we killed the afternoon at the lake house and were home before fireworks started. It was for the best; Hazel is still too little to be staying out till all hours, sleeping on the floor in Vermont after marching all day in the sunny parade full of drunken friends and loud music. Next year will be much better.
On Thursday, Hazel again hooked up with her BFF, Magnolia and they packed up a picnic and headed out to Castle Hill for the Thursday night concert. They danced, had a few beers and then fell apart from overtired-ness. I think we are going to be regulars at the Thursday night concerts this summer, despite the fact that it goes two hours past poor Hazel's 7pm bedtime.
Hazel and Magnolia playing before we leave for the concert...they share the same interest in toys!
Hazel is giving The Lip. You can tell she is so tired because her eyelids are red.

The girls dancing!

Porkpie listening to the music.

Hazel and Magnolia being coy.

A picture of Hazel and I, since no others seem to exist. This one is particularly unflattering.

The view from the lawn to the ocean.

Dancing on the lawn in front of the Main House.


After dark, looking down the Grand Allee to the ocean.

Laurie making Hazel giggle, even though she was so tired after her long night of dancing under the stars.
Another example of Hazel's new sleeping habit. This is her nest in our bed, and here is her little washcloth that she has pulled over her face for naptime.
Grandpa Donovan getting his love on at the lake house.
Gazing at Forest Lake

Thinking about a swim.

Jamie and Hazel at the lake house.

7.09.2008

Prayer

Every night that I put Hazel down to sleep is a spiritual experience. People who tell me, "You shouldn't rock her to sleep because then she will always want to be rocked to sleep," are missing out on the most intimate, beautiful moments. I hold Hazel in my arms after I feed her and we just rock and gaze at each other. She and I are so calm and relaxed, and our breath falls in sync. She reaches up and touches my face and I drink in her smell. Her eyes get heavier and start to droop and cross...it's so adorable. Lately, she has been clutching a baby washcloth when she falls asleep and she rubs it on her eyes. She starts working less and less on her pacifier (I call it her sucker; I hate the word "binky",) and as she drifts off, it falls out of her mouth. She sleeps with her mouth open a lot these days. We rock and her head lolls back and forth. I love these moments because she feels so safe and secure, and that puts me at peace.

This is when I start to think about all the mamas in the world, rocking their babies to sleep tonight, too. I think about all the mamas who don't have their babies tonight. Mamas in Iraq and Afghanistan who rock their babies fearfully. Mamas whose babies are sick, who stay up watching their babies sleep, wondering if tonight is the night. Mamas who rock, but don't know where their babies are at bedtime, if they are safe, if they are scared, if they are alive. I think about mamas who rock and wonder how they are going to feed their babies tomorrow. I think about all the mamas who don't feel the peace that I feel when I'm rocking Hazel, and I try to send it to them.

So when people tell me that If I keep rocking Hazel she will always want to be rocked, I think, "I can only hope so."

A Very Horrible Week

I have been very negligent in posting lately. We have had a very difficult week with Lorna's wake and funeral, a mandatory trip out of town, Hazel's first night away from home which has totally thrown her into chaos, the unexpected death of my cousin Johnny, another funeral and Jamie out of town in Houston again. We are not exactly normal over here. Hazel is taking a quick nap now, so I am trying to briefly update so that people don't think that we have up and left this domain for good. I don't have time to download, edit and upload many pictures right now, so instead I thought I would include this list of parenting tips for all the mamas and dads out there. Some I love, especially numbers 48 and 46.
While we were spending time with family after Lorna's funeral, I was talking to Jen about how much I loved Lorna's unselfconscious silliness. She would dance and laugh at her daughters and nephews, make up silly songs and names and just enjoy herself and her children with such sincerity. I really admired that about her, and it's the kind of mama I want to be for Hazel. The only laughter in my house growing up was at someone elses expense, and I don't ever want Hazel to feel like she has to edit herself for fear of being shamed. I'm really looking forward to stupid dancing, bad singing, silly hats, and ridiculous water fights.
I will also be my daughters champion, and never play Devil's Advocate with her. Who does that serve? And so many parents do it, including my own. It's shaming and invalidating and I hope my daughter will always feel (like I have said before) that Jamie and I are her Home, where she is safe, and can be herself. And that she can always come back.

The 50 Best Parenting Tips Ever
By Diane Debrovner

1. Grant a wish. Take an hour or two each week to do exactly what your child desires without interruptions or distractions -- even if she wants to play a game you hate or build block towers and then knock them all down.

2. Start and end each day with "I love you." We often think we show our love for our children through our actions, but kids want and need to be told that they're loved.

3. Think ahead about safety. Anticipate what your child's next step is likely to be, then babyproof accordingly. If your 9-month-old is about to stand, now's the time to put up the gate, cover the sharp corners of tables, and keep pot handles turned away from the edge of the stove.

4. Praise your partner. Never finish a day without acknowledging -- at least once -- your spouse's role in the life of your children.

5. Choose child care carefully. Spend as much time researching your options as you did the last time you bought a new car. Call others who use the facility, talk with the director and the staff, and spend lots of time observing the children there at play.

6. Leave the scene. If your child is having a meltdown, pick her up from behind to carry her away. Too much face-to-face interaction will escalate the situation.

7. Don't rush to punish. Every child has a cup that needs to be filled -- and refilled -- with love, attention, affection, and respect. A rough day, a big frustration, or a harsh word empties the cup. If your child is acting up, give him a hug, listen to him, and spend time together. He'll be more cooperative, and you'll both feel closer.

8. Never take a bath break. When you bathe your baby, don't answer the phone unless there's a portable one right next to you. An infant can drown in seconds if left unattended.

9. Look the other way. Once a week, ignore one of your child's small transgressions -- bad table manners, forgetting to clean up right away -- and remind yourself that you're not perfect either.

10. Sleep when your baby sleeps. If you keep to your old sleep schedule, you'll be sleep -- deprived, which makes you more likely to be cranky and can contribute to postpartum depression.

11. Don't panic about picky eaters. They won't starve, so just continue to offer a variety of foods and small, frequent meals. Let your kids see how much you like vegetables.

12. Act now, talk later. Respond to your child's misbehavior in the heat of the moment, but talk about the incident later in a "planned discussion," in which you lay down the rules and your expectations.

13. Be your baby's favorite toy. Instead of always offering a plaything, amuse him yourself. After all, you move, you make sounds, you can take turns with him and respond to what he does, and you are warm, soft, and safe.

14. Double-check your carseat. Improperly installed child-safety seats are a major cause of injury. Whenever you put your child in his carseat, make sure it still fits correctly.

15. Be romantic. Go out on dates, kiss in front of your kids, and say, "I love you" to your partner (with your kids in earshot).

16. Keep emergency numbers close at hand. Print and laminate several copies of an emergency contact card that includes the phone numbers for your child's pediatrician and poison control. Store one in your car and keep the others at home for your child's caregivers.

17. Make photo albums. Take two hours a month to create lasting, organized family memories. As you gather photos or souvenirs, you'll have time to reflect on the preciousness of your life.

18. Soothe your baby's dry skin. Keep a jar of thick emollient at the changing table, and massage her legs and thighs at each change.

19. Coin a nickname. Call your child by a special moniker that reflects your unique connection to him. A child with many names is a child loved many times.

20. Read all food labels. Always know what your child is eating, especially if she has food allergies. For instance, whey and casein, common ingredients in packaged goods, are really just milk.

21. Present a united front. When you and your spouse disagree about how to handle misbehavior, keep talking and reading about it until you reach a consensus or a compromise.

22. Make family rituals sacred. Once a week, do an activity together, such as reading a book out loud, taking a walk, driving to the woods, or having Sunday breakfast at the same diner or coffee shop. These are the types of memories your kids will treasure most.

23. Nip aggression in the bud. Don't ever let your toddler hit or kick you, even if you know she's angry or frustrated. Block the hits immediately, and firmly say, "No, you do not hit me."

24. Teach your child simple songs and nursery rhymes. Rhyming and playing with sounds is fun and tunes your child in to the specific skills that are needed for reading.

25. Put your baby down when she's awake. Letting her self-soothe is the key to her sleeping through the night. If you nurse or bottle-feed her before bed and she falls asleep, change her diaper one last time to wake her up.

26. Make amends. One of the most important things you can say to your child is "I'm sorry, I messed up." Admitting you're wrong also gives your child the right to make mistakes.

27. Never make your love conditional. You should love your child just because he was born, not because he plays the piano or aces math tests. Tell him often that you'd love him no matter what grades he got and that your love for him grows bigger every day.

28. Monitor yourself. You are your child's first and most powerful moral teacher, so make sure you set an example that you want her to copy. Ask yourself nightly, What did my child learn from my behavior today?

29. Trust your instincts with child care. If you have reservations about a caregiver or feel that your child isn't doing as well as he could, you're probably right. Don't worry about hurt feelings or awkward conversations. Your child's needs come first.

30. Don't be overprotective. You shouldn't try to shield your child from all disappointments, failures, or stressful situations. Kids need to learn to handle difficulty in order to cope with life's challenges.

31. Avoid vicious cycles. If your child is misbehaving in a particular way and you've told him 100 times before not to do it, don't issue warning No. 101. Instead, make it easier for your child to behave. If he always leaves his coat on the floor, for example, install low hooks in the closet.

32. Let your toddler explore. Parents often don't want their children to bang big pots or do other things that are annoying or messy, but that's the way kids learn.

33. Wake a sleeping baby. There are times when doing this is a good idea -- during a morning nap so he'll be sleepy enough for an afternoon nap, or during an afternoon nap so he'll be sleepy enough at bedtime.

34. Ban bad-mouthing. Kids aren't born to hate -- they learn it. Refuse to allow discriminatory remarks of any kind. Help your child discover the positive traits of people, and teach her to focus on the similarities rather than the difficulties.

35. Bait and switch. When your child is misbehaving, distract him with something that's incompatible with the misbehavior. For example, if your child is grabbing food from someone else's plate, hand him a glass of milk.

36. Encourage friendship over popularity. You can't guarantee that your child will be liked by everyone, and it's not your job to make her popular. Support her friendships, but don't try to micromanage her social life.

37. Wear rose-colored glasses. Your upbeat attitude is critical to your child's self-image. Change your language so everyone views him more positively. For example, instead of saying, "My child is overactive," say, "My child is so energetic."

38. Listen before you give advice. The most crucial moments in parenting are when your child is experiencing an emotion such as sadness, fear, anger, disappointment, or embarrassment. First, help your child label the emotion, and validate how she feels. Then, and only then, suggest ways to solve the problem. That way, your child will be more likely come to you for help.

39. Demonstrate differences to your toddler. For example, your child might like one kind of food (say, sweets) while you prefer another (salad). This is of endless interest to young children, who are learning that people can have different perspectives and tastes -- an important life lesson.

40. Don't be a slave to developmental milestones. Children develop at different rates. Try not to push your child -- he will let you know when he's ready to start crawling, walking, or reading.

41. Limit rewards. Help your child develop his own internal reward system so he congratulates himself for a job well done. Change your pronouns: Instead of "I'm really proud of you," say, "You should really be proud."

42. Don't help too much with homework. It's your child's obligation, not yours. If you pitch in, she'll feel she's not capable of doing it herself.

43. Make honesty a priority. Never lie in front of your kids -- for example, don't tell a telemarketer that your husband isn't home when he's really sitting on the couch.

44. Share your loves. Whether it's a favorite hobby, a wonderful song or poem, a great recipe, one of your favorite childhood memories, or a fun game, it will be remembered and cherished.

45. Set your child's sleep routine. By 3 months, your baby should begin sleeping where you want her to be sleeping at 1 year. After that, it will be much more difficult for her to make a change. If she's in a bassinet, move her to the crib; if you won't be cosleeping, move her out of your bed now.

46. Take your child's side. If you don't know what happened in a particular situation, don't play devil's addvocate. For example, if he says, "I hate the teacher! Today she made fun of me in front of my friends," don't immediately say, "I'm sure you were giving her a good reason."

47. Don't worship expert advice. Believe solely in your children, not in Mozart CDs, baby academies, or flash cards. No one will ever know what your children need or who they really are better than.

48. Be very silly. Dance, burp, laugh until you cry, and spit watermelon seeds at your kids.

49. Plan meals together. Let your kids help choose dishes to make and take part in the preparation - they'll be more likely to eat what's served.

50. Break the rules sometimes. Have ice cream for dinner, or wear pajamas all day on a snowy weekend.

7.01.2008

Hazel's Song of the Day

This is a new string-band standard, originally recorded by Old Crow Medicine Show, but inspired by an old Bob Dylan song. I love it because it reminds me of my old hobo days, hitchiking on the west coast. Hazel likes it because I dance her around singing and the hook is really poppy.

Headed down south to the land of the pines
And I'm thumbin' my way into North Caroline
Starin' up the road
Pray to God I see headlights

I made it down the coast in seventeen hours
Pickin' me a bouquet of dogwood flowers
And I'm a hopin' for Raleigh
I can see my baby tonight

So rock me mama like a wagon wheel
Rock me mama anyway you feel
Hey mama rock me
Rock me mama like the wind and the rain
Rock me mama like a south-bound train
Hey mama rock me

Runnin' from the cold up in New England
I was born to be a fiddler in an old-time stringband
My baby plays the guitar
I pick a banjo now

Oh, the North country winters keep a gettin' me now
Lost my money playin' poker so I had to up and leave
But I ain't a turnin' back
To livin' that old life no more

So rock me mama like a wagon wheel
Rock me mama anyway you feel
Hey mama rock me
Rock me mama like the wind and the rain
Rock me mama like a south-bound train
Hey mama rock me

Walkin' to the south out of Roanoke
I caught a trucker out of Philly
Had a nice long toke
But he's a headed west from the Cumberland Gap
To Johnson City, Tennessee

And I gotta get a move on before the sun
I hear my baby callin' my name
And I know that she's the only one
And if I die in Raleigh
At least I will die free

So rock me mama like a wagon wheel
Rock me mama anyway you feel
Hey mama rock me
Rock me mama like the wind and the rain
Rock me mama like a south-bound train
Hey mama rock me