We have a three month old, who Henry affectionately refers to as “His baby!” All of us love Elliot so much – it would be impossible not to, since his go to mood is smiley and calm. This kid really cannot stop smiling – he interrupts nursing sessions to smile up at me like I’m the best person ever, he smiles at his brother getting in his face to play with him, and he smiles at everyone who makes goofy faces trying to get him to smile.
He is up for 1.5 to 2 hours at a time during the day, followed by naps 30 minutes to three hours long. Currently, his longest nap is in the afternoon, and I’m always thankful when it occurs during Henry’s afternoon nap (so I get a nap in, too!) He falls asleep for the night between 8:30 and 10, and then gives us an awesome 5-6 hour stretch of sleep, followed by a couple more three hour blocks. I’m getting up to nurse him 2 to 3 times a night; it’s nice to have predictability (I know it’s only a matter of time before it all changes, haha, so I’m embracing the moment!)
Things He Loves:
Looking at his reflection in the swing’s mobile – he literally laughs out loud and can’t get over his reflection
Intentionally reaching for and grabbing objects like his plastic rings, Oball, and Muslin blankets
Tummy time – he easily raises his head 90 degrees and holds it steady (he’s very strong, maybe because he really wants to play with Henry)
People’s faces
Being held and loved – this is his favorite; he loves cuddling
Things He is Not Wild About:
Henry screaming in his face
Baths (sometimes)
His car seat
Other motor milestones include him rolling from front to back (only twice, by accident), rolling from his back to his side (his preferred sleep position), talking by saying “ah-goo”, and bringing both hands together before cramming them in his mouth. He is a healthy and fun little guy!
Why do people tie a baby”s ability to be a “good baby” to a baby’s sleep? It’s ridiculous. I absolutely cannot count the number of times I was asked if Henry was a good baby. And people meant, “Is he sleeping through the night yet?” This started as early as one month of age when babies cannot sleep through the night without eating because their bellies aren’t large enough. And it isn’t other people’s questions about goodness that perpetuate this; new parents’ reminisce that if their first kid is a great sleeper, they think they are doing everything right. So we have internalized a child’s goodness based on his or her ability to be quiet and sleep.
Newsflash – this is not true! Parents of children who sleep through the night earlier are definitely better rested and able to be better functioning adults in terms of life and parenting skills, but these parents have won the sleep lottery and are incredibly lucky. Yay for them! Seriously. I wouldn’t wish sleep deprivation on my worst enemy; there’s a reason it is used as torture.
But what about the poor parents whose kid(s) don’t sleep well right away, or until months or years later? Your kids are good kids, too. They haven’t figured out this whole sleep thing yet. My son is awesome at so many things. He has hit all of his milestones early so far (with the exception of being able to get dressed and undressed; he can’t get his act together with that which is probably good because he would always be naked), and is generally happy and excited for life. He has gone through several sleep phases, however, that did not involve quality sleep for anyone. And we tried anything and everything (systematically) to get him to sleep. This includes nighttime sleep and naps.
After the newborn stage where he ate every 3-4 hours around the clock and slept most of the other time, until he was six months old he only woke up twice most nights to eat, which was totally doable because he would eat for about 10 minutes and then immediately fall asleep. Right before six months, things changed. He began crawling (without bothering to know how to sit up first), teething, and eating solid food all at once. The solids were no problem, the teething (and to some extent the crawling) definitely were. And our sleep suffered majorly for it for several months. We refused to do cry it out, but tried everything else we could to get him to sleep and stay asleep (at this point I can’t remember what we tried). We ended up co-sleeping a lot, which worked best for Henry, but not for me.
When Henry turned one, we decided to cut out night nursing, which involved Keith taking the reigns on quieting him at night and spending several nights sleeping on his floor. Keith can sleep anywhere like the dead so it wasn’t so so bad, but definitely not ideal. Hen got the hang of it quickly, realizing no mama milk would be forthcoming, but would not fall asleep unless Keith or I stayed in the room until he passed out. This new routine lasted a year (same for naps) – staying in his room until he fell asleep, then sneaking out like a ninja and hoping, wishing, and praying he wouldn’t wake up and we would have to return. He became better at putting himself to sleep when he woke up in the middle of the night using his Sleep Sheep (http://www.amazon.com/Cloud-Travel-Sound-Machine-Soother/dp/B000J6CDY6/ref=pd_sim_75_2?ie=UTF8&refRID=07BXX5T5DP1GHZTPP0XQ), but never his Sleep Giraffe. If he ever had his Sleep Giraffe in his crib it was literally, “No, Giraffe, No!” when he had his midnight wake up. At this point, we would only need to help him quiet down once or twice a week in the middle of the night, which entailed telling him to go back to sleep and laying on the floor until he resumed sleeping in his crib. It got old, but it worked and I loved my own sleep so much I was willing to do whatever means necessary to keep it up.
around one year old
When Henry was around 22 months old, he regularly started climbing out of his crib. This was unsafe, of course, and although he wasn’t getting hurt, we decided to convert his crib to a toddler bed. The first few weeks were rough. He didn’t want to stay in bed and definitely not in his room. He also wanted to play with his toys instead of sleeping. Our solution was threefold: (1) Keith flipped the lock around and we lock him in for sleep so he doesn’t wander the house and get into trouble; (2) he can sleep wherever he likes in his room – on the bed, the floor, even under the crib; and (3) we put his larger toys in the locked closet, keeping smaller toys and his books available if he’s not quite ready to sleep on schedule. It works! For now he’s sleeping better than he ever has before. It will change, I’m sure, but for now I feel like I’m winning at sleep.
Henry turned 9 months old last Saturday, and in between when he was born
and now I fell off the wagon in terms of posting to our blog. Well, no
longer! Henry’s 9-month check-up went well. He weighs 21.7 pounds and is
30.25 inches long putting him in the 78th and 98th percentiles,
respectively. He’s a big guy, but dropped from his 93rd percentile in
weight at 6 months because he is always on the move.
He is rarely still. He crawls with lightning speed; luckily he plops his
hands down so loudly that you can hear him coming from one end of the house
to the other. He also likes to giggle and make noises when crawling because
it’s just so much fun. He also cruises all around the furniture and is just
now getting brave enough to stand without holding on to anything except his
toys. He tries to have a toy in each hand when he stands alone – maybe for
balance – maybe to just look cool and carefree. Finally, he loves to dance.
If I put on the right music (The Roots or Beatles iTunes radio stations),
then he starts bouncing up and down and occasionally does the “Single
Ladies” hand dancing. He definitely has his own rhythm. And I love it.
Observations: up to 4.5 hours of sleep without waking; still gassy sometimes, at least once a day; kicking strongly…painfully strong kicks; looking for things to look at; smiling more and making more noises that aren’t crying…
Observations: definitely smiled, maybe chuckled; still enjoying baths; still growing; likes to be naked and sprawl; must have gotten used to Mom walking, because all he wants to do is be moved from place to place; over 10 pounds…
Observations: gassy sometimes (mom doing diet journal), quiet a lot, much more attentive, enjoyed second bath, still great at eating, was that a smile? …
Observations: umbilical cord stump fell out, traumatic first bath, loves reading with momma and hanging out on his activity mat (until it becomes too much to handle), approaching 9 pounds…
Observations: loves breaking free from his swaddle, strong kicker (like in utero), took his first immunization shot like a champ, great eater (barracuda!)…
We have a baby! Henry Micah Walbolt was born at 1:35pm on Wednesday, May 1, 2013, after twelve hours of labor including nearly two hours of pushing. I’m not going to go into details with the labor process (worst thing ever to produce our best project ever!), but generally here’s what happened.
Around 1am on May 1st I was getting ready to go to bed and all of a sudden I felt my water break. No real contractions, just water breaking a little at a time. And since water breaking was one of a couple situations where my doctor told me to go straight to the hospital, off we went. Due to the lack of contractions, I was put on pitocin, which creates overly strong and long contractions compared to the normal process. I lasted about four hours without any drugs, and then it became too much. I was spending too much energy fighting each contraction, so I decided I needed drugs for the pain. First, I got a shot of something and an IV drip of something else which pretty much made me too high to care about the contractions. I don’t recommend it, and probably would have gone straight for the epidural if the nurse had properly explained what was happening. A few hours later (once the narcotics wore off), I got an epidural numbing everything enough (I could still slightly feel contractions) until it was time to push.
Pushing was the worst. I kept second-guessing myself each time because I literally could not breathe by the time the third push during each contraction rolled around. Somehow I made it through, and Henry was born…with the umbilical cord wrapped around his neck. So Keith didn’t get to cut the cord originally, but he did get to do a secondary cut later.
Henry weighed 7 pounds, 3 ounces and was 20 inches long at birth. We think he’s perfect, even though no one is actually perfect. He’s perfect to us.