Friday, November 8, 2013

Reading

Williamsburg, 2013

So, one of my pre-baby # two resolutions is to read more. I'm starting a book club with some of the other women in my local mothers' group, and our first book is Sisterland, by Curtis Sittenfield. I've been meaning to read it for a while but it was good to have a deadline. And I just started The Circle, by Dave Eggers.

I've also been reading the usual online stuff. Here are some stories I've found compelling lately, if you're interested.

This article on parenting in the NY Times. I especially like the line, "“Baby, one day they’ll be able to get themselves a cup of water.”

This piece on which kinds of spending makes us happy, from The Billfold.

This post, on saying yes to your kids more often than saying no. A few people give the author flack in the comments for letting her son skip school, but hey, he is only three and a half. And childhood is short.

I've also recently discovered the blog NYC School Help. More on our search for a nursery school for Axel to come, but in the process I've found myself doing a lot of research on public, magnet, charter, and private schools in the area.

Yes, Axel's only 15 months old, but believe it or not, I had to apply for his nursery program for the fall of 2014 about two months ago; in New York you kind of need to have a plan. I've found a ton of useful info here, and I love that the site's author, Joyce, will do private consultations with your family to help pick the right school for your child.

Close Up

Axel, 2013


Axel went to a little photo shoot this morning for the baby clothes line Belle and Beanzer.

He was so good and the clothes are very sweet and very soft! The results, care of Jami Saunders (who did Axel's newborn and first birthday pictures) will be up on their website eventually, but I just wanted to share a few of him on set.

Wednesday, November 6, 2013

11211 Love

Williamsburg, 2013


As much as I've been flagging lately, it is dawning on me that in 3 1/2 months, I'll be back in newborn mode and that Will and I should take advantage of our relative freedom to go out in the evenings.

This list of the best restaurants in Williamsburg and Greenpoint just came out and reminded me that there are a few new places we should try.

Fifteen Months

Williamsburg, 2013


Fifteen months today! You woke up with a little stomach bug but seem to be happily napping away now.

Mama forgot to do a fourteen month update, but the last two months have been so much fun. You are such a little person.

Current obsessions:

1) Rasberries. If we let you exist solely on rasberries, strawberries, cheese, and milk, you'd be a very happy fellow. This is an expensive habit, but we are indulging it anyway.
2) Buckles. After you've finished your meals, you love sitting in your high chair for a bit and trying to figure out how the seat buckle works. You love to wander up to your stroller and investigate its buckle as well. Planning your escape, perhaps?
3) Relaxing. We have a little reading pillow on the floor in the living room and you love to sit in it while you drink your milk or find your way there to put your arms out in repose. Sitting like a grown up in big chairs is also a favorite pastime.
4) Cars, Balls, and Scooters. You are obsessed with cars you can ride on or sit in (we see a flare of your temper if we take you out of them.) At the playground, you'll happily chase balls for hours. If a big kid is there with his scooter, you are all over it.
5) Climbing. You are a walking, running, climbing machine. You love powering around on the playground and going down the slide on your belly.

Dislikes: Pasta! We are clearly not related. We also have trouble getting you to sit still through a book, though you'll happily look at them on your own.

Words: Mah (I'd like to think it's Mama, but really it's "more.") Uh Oh, Hi, Meow, Papa, Peppa (for Peppa Pig.)

Teeth: 4 that are fully in, with another two on the top peeking through.

Weight and Height: We'll find out on Friday at your 15 month appointment. Update: You are 23.5 pounds and 31.3" long!

And here's a look back at Thirteen Months OldTwelve Months OldEleven Months Old, and more:

Nine Months Old
Eight Months Old
Seven Months Old

The first six months:

Six Months Old
Five Months Old
Four Months Old
Three Months Old
Two Months Old
One Month Old

Monday, November 4, 2013

23 Weeks

23 weeks


I know, I know, I've been hopeless with the weekly updates this time around (here I am, 23 weeks pregnant with Axel!) The breakfast thing is still true...

In any case, all is well with baby boy #2. I think he must have been having some kind of epic growth spurt last week because I could barely make it through dinner most nights.

I seem to have romanticized my entire last pregnancy, somehow, and find myself shocked now when I feel less than stellar. The last time, I guess, I wasn't waking up with a teething baby, or schlepping around a 25 pound toddler, and so I could do whatever it was that I felt up to on that particular day. I do know I was easily tired when I was pregnant with Axel, but now I find it more frustrating, because I want to be able to spend time on the floor with him, picking him up, and chasing him around the playground. And I do. It's just that I go from 60 to 0 really quickly.

I'm also a little nervous about entering my third trimester in the midst of winter, when I am usually a bit low on energy anyway. We are embarking on a few nesting projects around the house, though, which I'm looking forward to, since it seems we never fully moved in after Axel was born. Hoping I can channel what energy I do have into those and somehow keep up with Axel too.

So far, we haven't so much as mentioned the baby to him. He understands simple directions really well, and he loves to say "Hi," "Uh Oh," and the like, but I feel like the concept of a brother might be a little far-fetched to him now. I think we'll start chatting about it in a few months.

Sunday, November 3, 2013

Weekend

Williamsburg, 2013


Warming up inside after a few hours watching the New York marathon along Bedford Avenue. I love the marathon nearly as much as I love the winter Olympics (which is a lot.) Seeing the marathon is one of my first memories of Williamsburg...ten years ago on this weekend exactly, I came out to brunch here, saw the runners, and fell in love with the neighborhood. I moved here a few weeks later, and the rest is history!

This time, thanks to Axel, we were up early enough to see the elite women and men as they forged their path down the course. We tried to spot a few friends who are running the race, but ultimately had to get hot cider and retreat back inside to our heating.

Other than that, we've been busy with my mom visiting and I think baby boy #2 must be going through some kind of growth spurt, as I've been exhausted to the point of a major sense of humor fail this week. Axel has been sleeping through the night again, thank goodness, but I'm just feeling rather run down at week 23. More on that tomorrow!

Friday, November 1, 2013

Treats

Williamsburg, 2013


When I was a kid, trick or treating meant scoping out the leafiest, poshest of D.C. neighborhoods where families went all out decorating their lawns. You made out with a giant pillowcase full of candy in just a few hours. It was the quintessential suburban American experience, and I remember it very fondly. You had to carry a flash light.

In Brooklyn, while there are tons of Halloween events here and there, kids trick or treat at stores and the occasional building lobby, since most people live in apartments and people without children are rarely home before 7 p.m. This always sounded a little lame and impersonal to me. For a few years, I'd defiantly buy some candy in anticipation in the hopes of costumed visitors, but no one ever knocked on our door.

Last night, Will and I took Axel trick or treating with his godmother and I finally sort of got what the urban trick or treating experience was all about. There were hundreds of kids walking up and down Bedford Avenue and there was a great buzz of excitement in the air. We bumped into friends and neighbors and chatted with local merchants and laughed at the insane costumes on display.

Axel is admittedly young to get much out of the experience, but we had a great time popping into yoga studios, coffee shops, juice bars, baby stores, and tattoo parlors to add a bit of candy to his little basket. Needless to say, some of the Williamsburg businesses went all out, like Mast Brothers, which gave out homemade chocolate truffles, and Oddfellows, which gave cones of cotton candy. The kids didn't seem to have the slightest clue that elsewhere in America you have to ring doorbells to get your mini Almond Joys.

Axel, 2013


Consider me converted.

Sunday, October 27, 2013

Weekend

Axel, 2013


Saturday was a bit of a confounding day, just in that naps were missed and we planned too much. We also didn't quite accomplish the one thing we had set out to do, which was go to the Greenpoint Halloween parade. By the time we got back from an outing to New Jersey, we didn't have the time to get it together.

We did get Axel dressed up in his owl costume and walk around the neighborhood, which wasn't quite a parade but was...something! So far, my trick for Halloween costumes has been to pair a set of animal pjs from Serena and Lily with a hat on Etsy. We did the same last year for his giraffe costume, and it meant I didn't feel we were wasting resources on something he'd wear just once. I figure those days will inevitably come when he wants to be Thor or Batman or whatever it is for Halloween, so why not do something simple for now? In the end, the owl costume was a little cold, so we had to break out the new winter coat. Hoping to take him out in costume on Halloween itself, but we'll see.

Today we spent several hours on the playground and met up with a friend whose son is a bit older than Axel and taking classes with Super Soccer Stars. Axel's a little young for such a structured class, but they do offer something for toddlers called Kick & Play that we might look into for the spring.

Fall is definitely upon us here, so I'm trying to take advantage of as much outdoor time as we possibly can.

Friday, October 25, 2013

BTDT

Williamsburg, 2013

Before I had Axel, I had a few notions about parenting. Some of them turned out to be pretty spot on, but some of them kind of make me laugh now. Here's what I thought, pre-baby, and here's how it turned out.

- I can't believe that family is letting their toddler run wild/make that terrible noise/throw food everywhere. Can't they control him? 

Ha! When Axel was first born, we'd occasionally go to brunch with family friends who had children who were 2 or 3, and who were throwing their pancakes all over the place and running around the tables. Or I'd take him to our baby boot camp classes in the park, and there would be runny-nosed 14-month olds toddling about, trying to poke him in his stroller, or drink from his bottle. Generally, I saw toddlers running around restaurants or making those insane screeching noises they make and think, "Really? Can't the parents do something?" Sure. They can not bring them to brunch. But if they do want to venture out in public, well, toddlers are kind of loose canons, and before they are verbal, there's only so much you can do without physically restraining them, or picking them up and moving them from place to place. And you are tired, and just want to drink your latte, you know? Axel now weighs as much as a large kettlebell, so it's a physical endeavor. Obviously, behavior, manners, and all the rest of it are all important, but to a certain extent, newly mobile, pre-verbal toddlers have such a drive to explore that you can't (and don't want to) tamp it down completely. So you pick and choose your battles and have to decide, on a case by case basis, whether you'd rather go out for a quick bagel than a sit down brunch, which may well challenge all of you and probably irk most of your fellow restaurant patrons. When we were in Palo Alto and in France, we generally had to take Axel out to restaurants morning, noon, and night. Sometimes he did okay, but there were plenty of times when it was a squirmy, frustrating experience for all of us. You do what you can. P.S. Toddlers are terrifying. Including my own.

- You don't need to change your lifestyle completely because of a baby. Hey, French people don't!

I'd say this is kind of true, at least in Brooklyn. There are obviously a few caveats. Among a lot of urban types we know, who tend to have children later in life, there's definitely a sense of pressure to keep up with your old lifestyle, plus baby. We were almost militantly determined to keep up with our friends and maintain our sense of spontaneity after Axel was born. We took him straight from the hospital to Enid's for brunch and, when he was under about 6 months old, we took him out to dinner a lot. We quickly figured out where we'd be welcome with a stroller, and where we'd get dirty looks. Fortunately, there were more of the former, and they had nice wine lists and good lighting too. We had dinner parties, we brought him to house parties with our pack 'n play, we got him his passport and took him to across country to Seattle when he was 11 weeks old and to a black tie wedding in Scotland and to London when he was four months old. We also went out, just the two of us, as much as we could. But sometime around Christmas, burnout started setting in, at least for me. I was also working full time, and I was so, so tired. Yes, you can do it all. You are just going to be pretty worn out. Obviously this pregnancy has forced us to slow down considerably, and it's given me the freedom to say no when I need to, and to dial back on the social occasions. Can we take Axel pretty much anywhere? Could I go out five nights a week? Yes. But as Axel has become more aware and his little personality shines through, I'm more and more conscious that what makes him happy, makes me happy. So a child-centric morning spent watching him on the playground doesn't feel like a sacrifice. I could tote him to museums and stores, but I know he'd be happier with freedom to play. And everyone fares a lot better when I'm in bed by 10:30. Every decision you make has consequences, even if it just means you're cranky and not at your best the next day.

- When people say they won't travel with small children, they are just being wimps.

True and False. Part of the reason I've felt that I should be able to travel with Axel is that Will's sisters, who each have three children and live in Singapore, have made the 24-hour trek to the U.S. every year, with their children at every stage of the game, from 3 months old to 9-years-old. If traveling without children can be arduous, traveling with them is obviously more so. There's just so much stuff. Still, it can be done. Flying with Axel at 11 weeks was actually very easy, and he slept on the tray table. Though I do remember my despair anytime his pacifier or whatever it was would fall on the airport floor because I had visions of him getting cholera or somesuch. At 14 months, he did pretty well, but it was more stressful for us, wondering if he'd freak out and want to run up and down the aisles. And everywhere we go, we seem to have forgotten or lost something along the way, whether it's a sunhat, or a bottle, or some other integral piece of gear. Once we're there, wherever there is, I'd say it's worth it, but obviously very different from the travels we did when we were younger. And with two, it will be logistically harder. I remember trying to disembark the TGV in Lyon this summer, holding Axel amidst a big crush of people, while Will carried like 5 bags, and thinking, "What happens with two kids?" I think the answer is that it becomes more expensive. Will's parents, who had four children and have lived all over the world, always joke that the family had to take two taxis, use porters for luggage, and it was a pretty chaotic scene. They did it anyway. Still, I'm relieved my pregnancy means we'll be in New York this Christmas.

- Babies don't have to be expensive. After all, they don't need 90% of the stuff you see on baby registries. Our budget won't change all that much, at least not until we are really in the kid phase.

This was true-ish while I was breastfeeding, in the very early days. We had a baby shower and received a ton of hand me downs. Once we switched to formula and eventually solid food, things started getting more and more expensive. This kid eats a lot. Those little organic fruit pouches are like $2.50 each around here, and half the time they eat a third of them before you accidentally leave them in the bottom of the stroller overnight and have to throw them out. Formula is crazy expensive. As is whole organic milk, at least in New York. Now Axel will practically only eat rasberries, at like $5 a tub. We were well equipped for a newborn, but then came the next stage, where we needed convertible car seats, stroller covers for winter, and he started growing like a weed. And we seem to lose a lot of things that need replacing (stray socks, bibs, etc. Where do you all go?) Plus there are all the things that you want for your child, like swimming classes or artful picture books or cute winter hats from little baby boutiques. I mean, yes, you don't have to buy all of this stuff, but it's dangerously tempting and when you are feeling guilty, say, about being away from your child because of work, buying them this or that feels like a salve. Then there's child care. In a big city, no matter which route you go, this is like paying another mortgage. I used to think I'd be able to freelance with a baby at home ("during naps"), but while this may have been kind of true with a three month old, with Axel now I'd be lucky to get an hour of work done a day, which is essentially fruitless. And don't get me started on nursery school. My conclusion is now that babies are frightfully expensive. Pretty much all of our disposable income goes to Axel.

- I don't think I am naturally inclined towards attachment parenting. Babies should sleep in their own beds and you won't find me nursing an 18-month old.

Yup. Attachment parenting was not for us, as suspected. I once heard someone joke that people basically read whatever baby rearing book affirms the philosophy they already hold. I read Bringing Up Bebe, and the like. I did go out and buy a pretty Sakura sling, but I think I used it exactly three times. The carrier was useful when we went into the city, but I found it pretty claustrophobic otherwise. Plus, a stroller can carry a week's worth of groceries! Axel slept in his crib, in his room, from six weeks old, and we all slept a lot better that way. I stopped breastfeeding at around six and a half months, mainly because pumping at work had become untenable and my supply had diminished dramatically. I do wish I had kept up a morning or evening feeding for at least another two months, but when I hear about people breastfeeding babies Axel's age...I don't judge, but I certainly don't feel wistful or wish that were us. The good news? Axel is incredibly happy, good natured, and seemingly securely "attached", whatever that means.

I'm sure I'll think of more as we get closer and closer to baby number two...

Teething

Axel, 2013


For about a month now, we've been in the throes of some major teething drama. Axel was a toothless wonder until about 3 weeks after his first birthday, and since then he's gotten four giant teeth in rapid succession (he takes after his papa in the giant teeth department); plus there's two more on the top that are peeking through.

During the day, you wouldn't especially notice anything is amiss, but at night, a few times a week, our usually sound sleeper often wakes up around 1 a.m. moaning and can be up for hours. It's not his 'I'm upset' cry, it's something that sounds much more like discomfort, and it can be really tough to console him. We use infant Tylenol from time to time, and let him snuggle in our bed with milk and a few episodes of Peppa Pig on Youtube, but last night nothing seemed to make him comfortable.

I've read all sorts of things about chilled washcloths and frozen fruit and the like, but in the middle of the night the last thing he wants is something shoved into his mouth. He doesn't even seem especially "teeth-y" in terms of wanting to chew things, at least, not any more than usual.

We eventually get him back to bed and he wakes up at the usual time perfectly cheerful and ready to go, while we feel completely run ragged, with pounding headaches from all the sleep disruption. Somehow, the unpredictability of it all makes this stage feel harder than the newborn phase, when it was usually a simple case of feeding him back to bed. Only 16 more to go...?
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