Monthly Archives

August 2014

Baby’s cries explained

August 30, 2014

Crying is baby’s way of communicating. Baby’s eardrum-piercing, patience-testing way of communicating.

Experts say that parents get to know their child’s sounds, eventually distinguishing a hunger wail from a boredom cry. After a full six weeks getting to know my new baby, I can assure you this is true. I am now fluent in newborn — and this is the language my baby speaks.

The Wet Diaper

Sound: Sudden and distressed. The same sound I used to make when I’d wake up hungover and discover all the drunken texts I’d sent the night before.
Reason: Needs a new diaper for the 17th time today.

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The Meh

Sound: Dismal sobs. The melancholy of a Morrissey song meets the sad mime in a snooty French film.
Reason: General malaise. Just felt like crying.

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The Red Eye

Sound: Frustrated bleats. A sickly goat.
Reason: Eye is goopy and cannot open it. Or eyes are closed and forgot to open them, making the world a dark and scary place.

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The Albatross (aka The Rime of the Ancient Momminer)

Sound: Squawks that grow incrementally louder and more forceful in their refusal to be ignored. Plus the burden of knowing that you are cursed and everyone in earshot hates you.
Reason: Wants to be held; needs to hang from your neck.

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The Duran Duran

Sound: Raspy, panicked yips, like a rabid woodland creature. Hungry like the wolf.
Reason: Nipple NOW.

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The Dick Cheney

Sound: Part movie villain cackle, part power saw.
Reason: No reason. Just wants to break you.

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The End of the World as We Know It

Sound: Brassy and shrill. The wail of a fire engine that starts small and builds to a traffic-stopping scream.
Accompanied by: A purple face. Tiny fists of fury. Inconsolable rage.
Reason: It’s too cold. Now it’s too hot. The car seat strap is too snug. The sunbeam is too close. A sock fell off. Basically it’s the worst day ever.

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By the numbers: The first two weeks

August 5, 2014

I have a baby now, and he’s like Ohio weather. Unpredictable. Mercurial. Sometimes stormy, sometimes sunshiny, sometimes both at the same time. Also — and this is the most important part — he is different every day. Every. Damn. Day.

Just look at what a difference two weeks makes!

From baby jerky to baby fat.

From baby jerky to baby fat.

 

He was such a little squishy bean at the hospital.  But now I wake up and look down into his brown-grey eyes and never know what I’m going to see there.

Squishface.

Squishface at the hospital.

 

Actual human child.

Actual human child at home.

 

So I’ve been taking a zillion photos. I’ve been searing everything into my memory — every cuddle, every cry. And I’ve been tracking baby’s daily activities on a fancy phone app, which gives me a stupid amount of data and graphs that I will never use.

Here’s how Everest is growing up so far:

Age in weeks: 2

Weight at birth: 7 pounds, 1 ounce

Current weight: 7 pounds, 12 ounces

Diapers changed: 166

Times I’ve been peed on: 11

Times I’ve been shat on: 3

Total feedings: 231

Time spent feeding: 80 hours, 48 minutes (I just have to draw attention to this part right here, because WOW. Breastfeeding is literally my full-time job right now.)

Shirts stained by spit up: 4

Days I’ve forgotten to shower: 4

Meltdowns, baby: 3

Meltdowns, me: Countless

Sleepless nights: Many

Cuddles: Endless

I can’t wait to see what the next two weeks bring.

Some days are hard.

Some days are hard.

 

Some days rule.

And some days rule.