Tuesday, May 29, 2007

Jumping Jacks

See Jack. See Jack on the chair. See Jack jumping on the chair.



See Jack fall on his fool head two seconds after I take the picture and warn him repeatedly "Sit on your butt. SIT ON YOUR BUTT. You are going to fall. I promise you, it will hurt."

Friday, May 25, 2007

Sleeping in the nude

I just went to check on Jack and was confronted with the family jewels.

He took a while to fall asleep tonight and we could hear him up there singing and talking and playing with his crib soother for almost an hour. But then he settled down and fell asleep.

Apparently, while he was playing, he managed to unsnap all three snaps on his onesie and removed his diaper. He was lying on top of it and thankfully, he had not yet peed.

Can you imagine if I hadn't checked on him? Pee everywhere! Wet crib sheets! Laundry at 3 a.m.!

I seriously laughed out loud when I saw him. I made Josh take a picture and then I got a diaper on him and snapped him back up. He was groggy and tried to just roll on his tummy with his butt in the air, which made it somewhat easier to re-diaper him.

This kid is getting too smart for his own good. Next he'll learn how to climb out of the crib. God help us all when that happens.

Thursday, May 24, 2007

Death of a dandelion

Yesterday we were walking on the grass in the park and Jack spied a dandelion stalk.

He toddled over to it and bent down to inspect it. As he went to grab it, the white fluffy part disappeared in his fingertips and flew away.

He looked confused, then tried with another one. Same result.

This time, he just yanked the whole stem out of the ground. He looked at it and then decided he wanted it back in the ground.

So he tried to stand it back up in the grass. It fell over. He picked it up and tried to stand it up again, this time using two hands. It fell down again.

At this point, I don't know if I should laugh because it was so cute or cry because it was heartbreaking to watch him learn from a mistake.

Monday, May 21, 2007

Triage at The Children's Place

Last week, as I was leaving The Children's Place with Jack, I was trying to manuever the stroller out the doubledoors while not bumping the tires on the glass and keeping the sun out of his eyes when I sliced the shit out of my foot.

One minute I was about to catch the door with my heel and the next I am practically seeing my tendons falling out onto the sidewalk. There was a lovely sharp piece of metal on the corner of the door, which I now believe is still inbedded in my foot.

Nevermind I am surrounded by children, 99% of whom are not my own, I yell out "SHIT" and grab my foot. I really don't know how parents are expected not to swear in such situations. I was in pain, it was a surprise. Can't be helped. The mother in the young boys' section should be glad I didn't drop the F-bomb in front of her kid.

Blood immediately starts pouring from my heel and I look down to see two huge gashes in my heel. My flip-flop is catching the rivulets of blood and I am not sure what to do.

Do I calmly try to walk it off, hoping I don't pass out from blood loss before I reach the Old Navy across the parking lot? Do I just drop in a heap in the doorway and hope no little children trample me when leaving the store? Do I go back inside and bleed out in the sundress section?

What to do, what to do? Of course, being the Drama Queen that I am, I go back into the store.

The security guard looks at my bloody stump of a heel and offers me a ratty piece of rolled-up gauze out of his pocket. It looks like it may have been there since the Reagan administration. I decline, not wanting to introduce the flesh-eating bacteria directly into my wound.

I ask if I could perhaps have a bandaid and a wet papertowel? The cashier looks over and the smile fades from her face when she sees the blood. The same with the customer, who says out loud, "Oh that's a bad one."

They have me go back to the storeroom, where they bust out a first aid kit. It contains an ice pack and sterile pads, but no bandaids or antibiotic ointment.

NOTE TO SELF -- If child is every injured at The Children's Place, run home to fix it. Do not attempt their voodoo way of fixing things.

After finding some of those icky brown paper towels you find in public restrooms, which, incidentally, feel like sandpaper on a gaping wound, I was reasonably cleaned up and decided to chance it on the mean streets of Lincoln Park without a bandaid.

I rubbed about a gallon of Neosporin on it when I got home. I also managed to hobble into Trader Joes before going home, so I could get an apple pie. Because pie is the cure-all for everything.

Tuesday, May 15, 2007

Shoehorned

This evening, Jack had his 15-month doctor appointment. It was after dinner and because it was raining, and my hair tends to curl like a mountain switchback at the slightest whiff of moisture three states away, I didn't feel like walking the five blocks over there.

Well that, and I didn't want Jack to get wet either. I am attentive like that.

So I decided to drive over and quickly got Jack out of his bath and re-dressed. I grabbed his sandals and put them on and away we went.

When we arrived at the doctor's office, I had to fill out new insurance info. Of course, the master squirmer was having none of that and insisted on being allowed to try to run out the office door into the parking lot.

I could see his little feet moving a mile a minute and thought, "Huh. That's weird. His toe is hanging over the edge of that sandal. We just got him new ones this weekend. How can that be?"

Then I look and announce out loud to the receptionist, "Bad mom alert -- I put my son's old, too-small sandals on him as we left the house."

"Correction, I put ONE wrong sandal on him. Ha ha, isn't that a riot? He's wearing two different shoes. Don't they look similar?"

"Umm, yeah, and he's also wearing the one old sandal on the wrong foot. I swear to you, I wasn't drinking before I brought him here."

(For those playing along at home, my little skinny-minny man is now weighing in at a whopping 24 lbs (50th percentile) and over 32 inches (90th percentile)! Holy gigantic baby batman! I guess all the fat in his diet and the whole milk is doing his body good.

Monday, May 14, 2007

The newest member of our family

Jack has a new cousin and Josh and I are now a proud aunt and uncle!

My sister, Beth, and her husband, Paul, are adopting a baby from Guatemala. After a three-year struggle with infertility, they were thrilled to receive their referral for a baby boy from Guatemala last week.

Introducing: Owen!
6 lbs, 17 inches
April 6


Jack will show him the ropes when he comes home this fall. We are so thrilled!

Monday, May 07, 2007

Chocolate goodness

You know what's the best part about having a 15-month-old?*

The fact that he drinks whole milk.

Because that means we only have whole milk in the fridge.

Have you ever made instant chocolate pudding with whole milk? Have you? HAVE YOU?

Because it's sinful. Decadent. Delicious.

*Well, besides the fact he is the light of my life and makes me laugh every day with something new and gives me big hugs and shares sticks with me at the playground and woofs when I open his door in he morning and smiles at me when I close his door at night.

Friday, May 04, 2007

Bubbly bubbles

Seriously. This is what we do all day.

Wednesday, May 02, 2007

Status changes

So...

No more diaper rash.

Hooray!

Three new teeth cutting through.

Not so hooray.

Being virtually a single mom four days a week.

Definitely not hooray.

I am trying to blog more, but during Jack's two-hour nap I try to eat lunch and work my ass off on Snarky Babies. Then after he goes to bed, I eat dinner, clean up the mess of the day and work more on Snarky Babies.

By 10 p.m. I am exhausted and it seems like writing is the last thing on my list. Weighing my choice of sarcasm or sleep, sleep wins out every time. So bear with me as I navigate my new situation.