Friday, May 28, 2010

Pardon me, but we've got a baby with manners...

Continuing with his discovery of his hands, Atticus now prefers sucking on his fist instead of his chuppie, what our neighbor calls pacifier (It's Spanish & such a cute word that I have to start using it). He sticks about half of it into his little mouth and slowly gnaws. At first, watching him do this is a little disconcerting because he looks like he is trying to stuff his entire fist into his mouth. But, no, he is just looking to suckle.

Robby & I have also caught him staring as his hand as he touches the wall next to the changing pad. He also tends to touch the bottoms of his feet together when we change his diaper.

Atticus also pays more attention when I read to him. I like to read to him in bed because he'll often fall asleep after a few board books. Yesterday, as I reached the end of The Hungry Caterpillar, he started jabbering away. I put the book down, gave him a kiss, & got out of bed as he stared out of the window. When I returned 5 minutes later, he was fast asleep. This boy loves naps.

Best of all, our boy has manners! Robby remarked on Atticus polite demeanor last night when he described their conversation: "He always waits for you to stop talking before he starts. Did you notice that?" This is how we're able to converse with Atticus; we talk back and forth. He doesn't always emit sound, but he tries. Who knew he'd turn out so polite?!

Friday, May 21, 2010

I have hands? Where did they come from?

Atticus has recently discovered his left hand.

We were walking through my favorite paper store, Papersource, in Palo Alto, when Robby noticed that while Atticus sat in his car seat, he was staring at his hand under a blanket. He was moving it back and forth slowly & following his hand with his eyes.

Wow.

This morning, as we lay in bed, he stared intently at our hands. I was holding his left hand about 5 inches from his face, & we both watched his little pudgy fingers grasp my palm.

Atticus is also learning how to blow raspberries. I don't know where this term comes from - I just heard it for the first time last week. He blows his lips out and makes a sound like a motor. Our raspberries will shush him. When he pouts, he blows them unintentionally.

We love our starfish!

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

Bath Time

Tonight, I dared to give Atticus a bath by myself. Usually, Robby & I tag-team.

Atticus had woken up from a two-and-a-half hour nap, fed, and sat happily in bed smiling at me. I gingerly placed him on the bathroom counter & slowly took his sleeper & onesie off while talking to him animatedly. I tickled his belly, then carefully lowered him into the hammock of the baby bathtub. Instead of running water straight into his bathtub, we usually place a large bowl under the faucet & pour water over him from a cup. He was still staring intently at me when I turned the faucet on. We heard a sputtering in the pipes & a deluge of cold water suddenly shot our of the shower head. In a state of shock, Atticus froze then shrieked loudly. His face immediately turned beet red. I was as shocked as he was, and when I saw his little body wet and cold, I picked him up and hugged him until he settled down.

Luckily, Atticus does not begrudge us of our duties. He let me bathe him after a few minutes of consolation. I'm surprised that he even let us put him back into the bathtub so quickly after that brief traumatic incident.

Sunday, May 9, 2010

Mothers of the World, Unite!

This year, Mother's Day has taken on a whole new meaning for me. Today, I woke up feeling exponentially special because I'd be celebrating my first year as a mother.

My first gift was a spectacular nighttime surprise: Atticus slept ELEVEN hours for the first time. Previously, the longest he had slept in one nighttime stretch was eight hours, already an astounding feat for a 2-month-old baby. The second gift: Even after such a long sleep, he did not leak out of his diaper. Phew! Needless to say, we had the most pleasant morning.

I called the mothers in my family to wish them a happy mother's day. I was especially appreciative of my sisters. One has three children (7, 4, & 2) and the other has two babies. One sister bakes cakes from scratch, assembles bento boxes for her kids' lunches, and drives the eldest daughter to 6 extracurricular activities every week. The other sister gives her babies lavender baths, wakes up 4 times a night, and goes to mother support groups after work. I have a new-found amazement for the efforts and accomplishments of mothers. A part of me wants to be a lazy mother, to do the minimal possible for what it takes to be a "good" mother, just so that I can maintain my own independence and identity. I know it sounds selfish, but when I think of child rearing, the only word that comes to mind is "tethered." I won't be making bento boxes for Atticus, but I will find my own way of showing my love and keeping my sanity.

Today felt like Christmas.

Robby gave me a card from both Atticus and himself. He held a pen in Atticus's hand & wrote a short, messy note. In his card, he called me the hub of the family and Atticus & he the spokes in the wheel. He went further: most importantly, the wheel was greased with breast milk. I love Robby's cards - he makes the funniest analogies and metaphors.

So happy mother's day to all the mothers in the world. We carry the future in our bellies, pop them out in excruciatingly painful ways, feed them around the clock, scrub yellow poop from their clothes (Robby draws the line here, so it's a Mommy duty), send them off to school, and learn to let go of them. Sometimes, thinking about it all makes me sad - the letting go part of raising a child - but that's just the way of life, I guess, like the inevitability of death and loss.

For now, I'm going to enjoy every moment I get to press heads and cuddle with Atticus until he pulls away and becomes his own person.

Friday, May 7, 2010

All smiles


Atticus is a big smiler. When he is well-rested and well-fed, he will smile at anyone. His big toothless grin masks the acrid poopy smell lingering from the trashcan, the achy-ness we feel in our necks and shoulders from carrying him... All of the unpleasantness that comes with baby-raising dissolves when he smiles, kicks his legs in the air, and throws a mudra with his fingers. Tonight, he slept on Robby with his middle finger sticking out. I don't think that's a mudra.

He also goes through a long period of stretching after being released from the swaddle or the car seat. He arches his back, then extends his legs and arms at the same time.

Why are babies so cute?
I think that the strange proportion of their body parts attribute to their cuteness. First, his arms fully extended barely reach over his head. Second, the length his head from top to chin is about a third of the length from his neck to his toes. Therefore, he's got a BIG head. Good for television, I've heard. Big-headed people always look better on TV. Lastly, he's chubby. How can we not gush at pudgy toes and fingers?

My mom always comments on how his face seems to grow horizontally. When he was smaller, his face would get wider and wider. When he sleeps, his face is all lines - his eyes, his mouth, his little pig nose.

Oh, the review for the new movie Babies is out. I love the movie critic A.O. Scott. I always prefer reading his reviews over watching most movies themselves. The worse the movie, the more acerbic his review, which makes for entertaining reading. He gives it an okay review. What isn't there to love about babies? There doesn't even need to be any subtitles for the four families from different countries. Here's the trailer if you won't end up seeing the movie. It's very CUTE.

Saturday, May 1, 2010

We've got a sleeper!

Robby & I are such lucky parents to have a 2-month-old baby who sleeps 5+ hours a night. A few nights, he has even slept 8 hours! No, I'm not feeding the child Benadryl. All he drinks is breast milk. We are so grateful to have a baby who sleeps & fusses only when he has important needs to be met, like hunger, gas, over-tiredness, or a dirty diaper.

Atticus has an abundance of smiles to give us. He smiles as if he hasn't seen us in ages. & when he sticks his chin out and gives a toothless smile, I forget about the hassle of breastfeeding and changing poopy diapers.

Robby thinks that he will be an actor because he has some special & distinct qualities. He...
- can lift his eyebrows independently of one another,
- has dimples,
- looks ambiguous in his multiple ethnicities,
- has two swirls on the back of his head (hair is easy to comb into a mohawk), and
- is extremely handsome.
Plus, there is a kids' acting school next door to our apartment.

It's LA...We're allowed to dream!