life in motion

Emerson started crawling on Thanksgiving (across the room rather than just one or two steps). Where was I with this announcement? It’s the biggest milestone we’ve experienced and yet I haven’t been posting my pride and nostalgia? Here’s a video to make up for it:



Emerson was obsessed with learning to crawl the minute she figured out how to get on all fours. It took her about six weeks to actually master mobility. But, the minute she could, she was already on to the next thing: standing. All this girl wants to do all day is stand. She can only do so if she has something to support her, but she’s all one-handed, barely holding on with this little smirk on her face like she’s showing off. And she will pull herself up on just about anything—furniture, the side of the bath tub, open drawers….she even grabbed my LIPS once and tried to use them for leverage. She has been very strong and physical from the beginning. I guess I shouldn’t be surprised by all of this….but, I wish she’d slow down.

this is our life: on the lesser of two evils

It’s late morning and time to give Emerson a bath. I sit her down on the bathroom floor and get all her supplies ready—wash cloths, cotton balls, lotion, hair brush, shampoo and body wash—all while singing our usual song: It’s time to take a bath, take a bath, take a bath. It’s time to take a bath, take a bath, take a bath. Emerson squeals with delight as she watches me fill her tub and sing. This girl loves her baths. And soaking mama with splashes. And drinking soapy water. Bath time is the best.

As the tub fills I take Em into her room to change her diaper. I unlatch the diaper and then wait for the inevitable flow of pee I know she’s going to unleash once diaperless. She always does this. Is it the cold breeze on her lady parts? Is it the freedom from a life shackled in binding diapers? I don’t know. But, I caught her in the act this time. Haha! 

I take Emerson back to the bathroom and plop her into the tub. I look down at the water and it begins to turn yellow immediately. Not twenty seconds in and she already peed in the tub. Obviously, this happens all the time. She’s a baby. It’s not a big deal, but personally I can’t stand the thought of bathing my child in her own urine, so I always empty the tub and fill it back up. I pull Emerson out and put her on the floor while I put some fresh water in the tub. Nobody likes being wet and cold, but Emerson never seems to mind when I do this because I turn the heat in the bathroom way up when I bathe her and have her towel ready so she’s nice and snug.

I put Emerson back in the tub. She pees again. Twice in a row? Hmmm. This has never happened. I feel horrible pulling her out of the tub again, especially since she’s playing and having a great time. She’s slightly displeased, but sits quietly waiting on her towel. Okay, now we’re going to have a bath. Or, so I think.

Again, I put Emerson in the tub. I look down and see something I’ve never seen before. At first I think she’s peeing again because the water is turning yellow between her legs. But, then. An explosion. It looks like a boat propeller is being started under the water. Particles are flying left and right. I’m being further initiated into parenthood. I’ve been dreading this moment, knowing it would happen eventually. I soon realize that Emerson is pooping in the tub and because she’s a breastfed baby, her poops are basically liquid, which means there is no containing it. The entire tub is filled with brownish yellow water with random bits of who knows what floating every which way. 

I stay calm for my child on a daily basis, especially when freaking out might cause some sort of complex for her. But nope. I can’t do it right now. My baby is sitting in a sewage tank. To her, of course, she’s just in the bath tub so she continues on with her bath time activities. Number one is kicking her legs as hard as she can, which normally means she playfully splashes the heck out of mama while mama giggles at her cuteness. In this instance, however, she is splashing poop all over me. And I just showered. I open my mouth in a gasp of horror, and she splashes poopy water….into. my. mouth. I start to scream. I cannot help myself. Emerson looks at me like I’m crazy and proceeds to put her hands in her mouth, rub poop into her eyes, and drink the bath water. I scream even louder. I’m completely losing my sh#t. I’m sweating on account of the heater being cranked all the way up. I want to take Emerson out of the tub to stop all the poop eating and poop splashing, but SHE’S COVERED IN POOP. HOW DO I GET HER OUT WITHOUT TOUCHING MORE POOP? I cannot figure out a plan of attack. This is when I call for Alex. Thank God for Thanksgiving vacation, because, otherwise, I’d be dealing with this one on my own. 

At this point, Emerson starts wailing. She can handle a lot of things, but watching mama freak out is not one of them, especially when she knows she is causing the upset. Alex comes upstairs and rescues a red, screaming Emerson from the poopy tub and attempts to calm her…without touching her. Emerson poops some more on her towel. I go into panic mode and start spraying every cleaning spray I can find in the tub, scrubbing furiously and cursing the fact that I buy non-toxic products. I need some chemicals up in this biatch STAT. And listening to poor, cold, wet Emerson cry is making me even crazier than I already am. 

After a good scrub down, I figure the tub is clean enough for another bath so I put my baby back into some warm water. 

And.

She.

Poops.

AGAIN.

I’m just cursing at this point. Cursing and shaking from the stress of every surface and person in the bathroom being poopified. I mean, my hands are literally shaking. And Emerson is melting down as I pull her from the tub for the fourth time. I scrub the tub once more wondering why this initiation into parenthood must be so thorough and unfair. I actually would have preferred a solid, formed poop floating in the tub over what is basically diarrhea being splattered in my face, and Emerson’s face, and coating the sides of the bath tub. The fact that I’m even having this conversation in my head about wishing for solid, formed poop is just upsetting, but that’s what it comes down to in parenthood. There are so many gross or less than ideal encounters on a daily basis, so which would you prefer? Which is easier to clean up? Which can be contained to a smaller area? Which poses less health risk/disease potential/injury? Yes, I’ll take the solid poop, please.

I finally get Emerson into a (somewhat) clean tub and quickly wash her before any further excrement decides to leave her body. I have beads of sweat trickling down my face and cleavage, my hair looks like I just journeyed through a rain forest on account of all the humidity in the bathroom from hot water and a hot heater, my face is bright red and frazzled. Emerson looks a bit traumatized and can’t bring herself to splash or play in the water. She just sits there as I silently soap her up and rinse her off. She cries as I attempt to dry her and put her lotion on. 

I spend ten minutes snuggling and nursing Em, and then hand her off to Alex as I inform him that I’m going to need a solid half hour, alone, in the bathroom to decontaminate and recover mentally. Alex retorts, “what would you have done if I was at work and you had to deal with this all by yourself?” I’m nearing a panic attack just trying to imagine it. I say nothing and close the bathroom door, defeated. 

Later, I google “what can happen if my baby drinks bath water that she pooped in.” 

This is our life.

this is our life: on sex after baby



It’s 4:00 in the afternoon on a weekday. Alex just got home from work. This means we have a half hour before it’s time for one of us to start cooking dinner and then the bedtime routine begins. There is no leeway. Emerson is on a tight schedule and she lets us know that she is less than pleased when we deviate from her plan. So, a half hour is what we’ve got. Every time we have a window like this, I panic. These windows don’t come around too often, so I obviously want to use this time wisely, but I’ve got a running list of about 789 different chores, business to-do’s, emails to respond to, phone calls to make, and things I could do to just relax or enjoy myself so it’s a tough call. I can’t decide. 

Alex plops himself down on the futon in the playroom, looking completely defeated by his day at work. 

“Funky Town?” he asks with a deflated attempt at a wink. (Parenthood fans out there?)

I look at my husband. He hasn’t had a haircut in almost two months. He used to go every two weeks, religiously, and I didn’t realize how much I appreciated it until we moved to the middle of nowhere, had a baby, and he stopped looking in the mirror. He shaved his head over a year ago, thinking this would simplify things, but really it requires more maintenance in order to not look like a Chia Head. Falling in line with his lax approach to his appearance, he’s also stopped shaving. Because, you can’t have an unkept head and tidy beard. No. He’s gone all Alexander Supertramp on me.

Then I see my reflection in the sliding glass doors of our sunroom. I’m wearing a pair of maternity yoga pants. It’s been SIX MONTHS since I gave birth, and I am WELL beyond the still-kind-of-look-pregnant-and-need-maternity-pants phase. I just don’t have any clean clothes. Or the time to raid my wardrobe in search of something else that does not say “Motherhood” or “Gap Maternity” on the label. So, I’m wearing maternity pants with the stomach panel folded down….several times. On top, I have a tee-shirt that is way too big, but it’s a v-neck and makes for easy access to my boobs…for the baby. And then there’s the sweater I grabbed without looking as Emerson was crying—a very Mr. Rogers-esque looking zip-up cardigan. Don’t get me wrong, this cardigan can be cute when worn properly. But, with the aforementioned items of clothing, it’s frumpy and shameful. It does, however, go well with my mess of hair—half curly, half straight due to a lack of styling time, unwashed for three days with random sections sticking up thanks to my daughter’s love of pulling on and eating my hair.

“Sooo, Funky Town, babe?”

“Honestly, your beard is getting so long it smells like dreadlocks. I can’t even talk about your hair. And I look like a bag lady. We’re not very sexy. Maybe tomorrow?”

We both laugh, not in the least bit offended. 

“What happened to us?” Alex shouts out.

“We used to be so sexy!” I yell to the sky, one fist clenched.

Alex collapses back into his seat and closes his eyes while the baby plays on the floor beneath him. I use the half hour to do chores.

This is our life.

six months of emerson

My sweet baby is six-months-old today. And the past month has been insane. Insane, because Emerson has become a completely different child, and is no longer a “little baby” that we can plop down where ever we please and expect her and/or her surroundings to remain safe. And insane, because this has been the most taxing month (on mama) of all six months that Em-to-the-er-to-the-son has been alive. For real. I cannot count the number of times I’ve felt myself slipping toward the edge of insanity/delirium.

Emerson started sitting up at four-months, earlier than I expected, and decided at five-months to get up on all fours and go crazy (also much earlier than I expected). I was emailing with my aunt about Emerson the day it all began, and my aunt was telling me how my cousin started pulling herself up and crawling at five-months-old. When I read that, I had a feeling in my gut this was about to happen to me. Sure enough, that afternoon, Emerson got up on all fours and started rocking back and forth. What the? And she started pulling herself up (still not a pro at this, but can do it). Not to mention her curiosity has multiplied enormously. Also, she’s started escaping from her bouncy seat (just turn to the side, push off with legs, and you are free from the harness….although, you will end up head first on the floor, but that’s okay).

All of which means our house is a disaster and mama is exhausted.

It’s amazing what an impact such a small person can have on a house. Every room she enters is left a little bit destroyed. For example, this is how the dinning room looked by the time we finished dinner last night:

  • All napkins on the ground
  • Place mats missing
  • Table runner balled up and thrown to the side
  • Nine toys littering the floor
  • Hurricane vase centerpiece removed from the table after Emerson mistook it for a giant glass and tried to drink from it
  • Three piles of tissue paper crumpled up and half-eaten after Emerson removed them from a box that came in the mail
  • Baby shoes and sweatshirt discarded on table (by Emerson)
  • You get the point, etc. etc.

Most frustrating to everyone in the household right now is the fact that Emerson can only take a few steps forward or backward crawling. Emerson yells and cries as she practices and will. not. sleep. Because she’s too obsessed with moving her body. Which means, mama isn’t sleeping. Yes, I am more sleep deprived now than I ever was when Em was a newborn. My baby was born a good sleeper, but oh, how things have changed! The past month has been one long fight to get Emerson to go to sleep, night and day.

I tried to reintroduce a little bit of coffee into my system (which means into my breast milk) to deal with the new state of affairs and girlfriend FLIPPED out. So, I’m apparently going to remain uncaffeinated for quite a while. And other than the ten months that I was pregnant, I have never been able to take naps during the day no matter how exhausted. I just lie there and never fall asleep, then end up more exhausted than before. It’s absolutely maddening. So, I’m surviving all of this with no crutches, just brut strength (and a lot of homemade baked goods).

But, I love you, dear Emerson Winter. Even when I am empty and depleted, I will find some scrap of something special to give to you. I will give until I can give no more….and then, I will take a twenty-minute break….and give some more. I have one pair of old corduroy pants and a pair of yoga pants with a hole on the left butt cheek, to my name. My two closets full of rows and rows, piles and piles, of expensive clothes from my former life, will never fit me again. Because I gave my body to you, as well. I birthed you through these hips. And while I may miss the wardrobe a tad, I do not miss those old hips, because they could not birth a baby. And so, I wear the same two pair of tattered pants, both of which always seem to be dirty because I cannot afford to put them in the wash and be without, over and over. Because, I want you to have clothes first. I want you to have everything I have to give even when I am dizzy with frustration because you won’t stop fussing and not sleeping and needing and and and. So, when you see me turn my back to you, stomp the floor and let out one loud, unintelligible noise, don’t worry. Because, I am going to turn back around, pick you up, and tell you that you’re doing a great job, that I am proud of you, that you should be patient with yourself, that you will crawl all the way across the room soon and it will be amazing.

 

You see, first I pick this block up…
and then I throw it on the floor with
the others. And I stare at them all
down there….for a while.

 

 

this is our life: on improvising

 

Emerson is going through a new phase. She now fusses and cries from 5:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m. every night, making dinnertime….challenging.  Most nights I’m not even sure what I ate, because this time has become a chaotic blur of try-to-distract-Emerson tactics. Our first attempt is Emerson’s little tabletop seat with her tray piled high with toys. Emerson violently bangs said toys against the tray (and her head) and whirls them in every direction while blowing angry raspberries. Last night a rattle ended up on my plate. This situation quickly becomes unmanageable (and quite frankly, unsafe) for all involved. The next step is mama holding Emerson. Emerson digs her head into my shoulder, intermittently biting me (and occasionally giving me hickeys) and blowing slimy raspberries all over my neck. She pulls my hair. Attempts to detach my nose from my face. Grabs at my fork or smacks her hand down right in the middle of my rice. I tell Alex to eat faster, I give him looks of disbelief when he stops shoveling his food into his mouth for even a second. Emerson has had enough of sitting down. I stand up, press her cheek against mine, and ballroom dance with her (she loves this). After a few spins and dips, I toss her across the table into Alex’s lap. He pretends she’s flying, he stands her up on the table and makes her put on shows for me. I’m 3/4 of the way through my meal, but I can’t handle the fussing (or at times, all out sobbing). I put down my fork.

We all head upstairs—I go into the bathroom to brush my teeth while Alex takes Emerson into her room to change her diaper and put on her pajamas. This is the apex of the madness. Emerson wails as Alex tries to negotiate four flying limbs and somehow diaper a baby who is spinning over and over like a cyclone on the changing table. I cannot stand the tortuous cries of my baby for long so I decide to brush my teeth while standing next to her. The sight of mama calms her a bit, the fact that I’m brushing my teeth distracts her. She stares at me in silence for a moment, enormous tears painting her face, her eyelashes wet and matted together. Then she remembers she is being tortured and proceeds to sob. I cannot pick her up, because Alex is currently wiping her bum and she still has no pajamas on. And I need to brush my teeth so I can get in bed with her. She is bright red, I can see all the way down her throat as she cries a cry so mighty I wonder if she’s in some sort of physical pain. On other nights, I’ve tried picking her up, calming her down, and then resuming the diapering/pajama-ing again. It doesn’t work.
Panic. Panic. Panic.
And then. With one hand I continue to brush my teeth. With the other hand, I free my right boob from my shirt, bend over the changing table and stick it in her mouth. Silence. Happiness. Emerson looks up at me with a surprised, but pleased look on her face as to say, “genius mom, pure genius.” And there we are—a butt naked Emerson holding my boob with both hands and both her feet (yes, for real), Alex trying to get a diaper around a curled up baby body, me in some strange, downward dog type position with my boob dangling over my child’s face….while I brush my teeth. I look at Alex, and mumble with a mouth full of foamy toothpaste, “annnnd, this is our life.”

this is our life

I’ve been struggling to post on a regular basis for the last few months. There are two reasons for this: #1, I had a baby and need to readjust my expectations, and #2, insecurity. I won’t get into #2 in this post, but I am trying to do something about #1. 

I am not skilled in the ways of being brief. My husband likes to say that I “talk in essays.” This is true. Also true, I write in essays, and that is more than I can do most days of the week nowadays. So, I’m trying to learn the art of cutting to the chase. To that end, I’ve come up with one solution to my posting problem and it is called: This is Our Life. “And, this is our life” is something Alex and I started saying in the middle of crazy parenting moments that sometimes seem totally bizarre objectively speaking, but feel totally normal to us (or sometimes, don’t, but it’s still our life). As I was saying this very phrase to my husband last night, a lightbulb went on and this idea was born.

So, I will post very real, very small (and hopefully very entertaining!) unfiltered morsels of our life—sort of the blog equivalent of Twitter updates. This will be a series, stuck in amongst the other series pieces I’ve been working. I hope you like it! The first will be posted on Monday….as long as I don’t lose power courtesy of frankenstorm/moonapocalypse. Oh, please. No, we will not lose power. In fact, we’ll be totally fine and untouched by disaster. Just putting that out into the Universe.


five months of emerson


Emerson turned five-months-old on Friday and she seems more like a person and less like a baby to me every day. She decided to start sitting up at four and a half months, which I was not at all expecting. Alex and I were literally discussing this milestone and how it wouldn’t happen for a little while and an hour later, while I was reading her a book, Emerson sat up. Pow. I felt so excited and proud of her in that moment, but also a little terrified, because sister is growing up (and becoming mobile) so fast. In the past month her repertoire for moving herself around has grown enormously—scooting, wiggling like a worm, sitting up, reaching, arching her back to free herself, jumping, rolling, pulling herself from place to place. She is On. The. Move. And I’m so not ready for it.


It’s incredible to watch a child development, and incredible to watch them behave exactly as a book tells you they will behave. The good old Dr. Sears Baby Book warned me that Emerson would become excessively clingy and fussy just before hitting major milestones, and that she’d have to come back in (to me) a little more as she goes out into the world (in exploration) a little more. And right on cue, so it was. I had the most horrendous week with baby girl (the week before last), so much so that I took her to the doctor’s office sure that something was truly bothering her. I got the you-are-such-a-first-time-mom half-smile from her doctor and was sent home with my baby still whimpering non-stop all day and waking up sobbing at night. But, the next day, she sat up. At the same time she seemed more aware, made new sounds, became much more independent and just seemed “grown up” in some new way I can’t put into words. At that point, the (maddening) all day fussing stopped just a day shy of me completely losing my mind. 

Now I have this new grown-up baby who currently needs to cuddle extra close at night, sometimes sleep on my chest like she hasn’t done since the first few weeks of her life, and wants to nurse connnnnstantly. And you know what? I will let her have all those things. It’s exhausting to be “on” for someone else all day (and night), to give more than I thought was possible to give, to try to fill as many needs and wants as possible (not my own, of course). But, I cherish the exhaustion, cherish the opportunity to do all those things, because Emerson won’t always need me. She’s already growing more independent at five months and I know it will continue to infinity (it may seem contradictory that she is newly independent and desperately clingy, but that’s how it goes). I’m not saying that I don’t break down at times or get frustrated, because I do. Oh, do I. But, I always return to a place of enjoying this closeness I have with my baby right now. This phase of her life is so short in comparison with any other. Even when I’m overwhelmed by the needs of my child, and motherhood in general, I still never feel like I want things to be any other way…..I still know with every bit of my heart, that I will cry when she’s not a baby anymore. I will miss these (exhausting/stressful/chaotic/messy/confusing/long) days. Always. And forever. I will miss the enormous give-a-thon that is my life right now.

Other new developments: Emerson has quite a few obsessions. One is turning the pages in books. If she sees anything resembling a book she will launch herself in its direction and sit there until she has turned every last page. We read to her all day so it only makes sense that she wanted to become more involved in the process. The only problem is she obviously has no idea when to turn the page so we either have to be able to recite the book from memory or continue to tell it with large chunks of the plot missing. Emerson doesn’t seem to mind. She has a job to do, and takes it very seriously. 

One of Emerson’s other obsessions is teeth brushing. She loves to watch mama brush her teeth and will break out in giggles at the sight of it. Then she will reach for the brush, which I let her hold onto so she can “help” me brush. She loves it. I don’t get it. She is, however, very upset by Alex brushing his teeth (perhaps because he doesn’t let her help?). This girl continues to crack me up. Children are so curious and engaged in life and love to help, even at five months! 

This is the nightgown Emerson wore home from
the hospital. I put her in it the other night and
was hit with nostalgia….
and how incredibly different she looks today.
Action shot. She’s mid-roll.
Look at the concentration of that face.
Annnnd, she’s over.
A ruffled bum is just the cutest thing ever.

four months of emerson

I have tears in my eyes as I write this. I wanted to throw on some soothing music while Em sleeps, and noticed that I’ve been neglecting a playlist that is perfect for nap time. It was hidden amongst a bunch of playlists that I made for labor and birth, and have not played since then. Not realizing how emotional this was going to make me, I hit play. As the music started, so did the tears. I listened to this on repeat for many, many hours four months ago, as I waited to meet my baby girl, so when I heard the soothing sound of chimes and rainmakers today, it brought me back to that magical time, and to the moment when I finally held one of the loves of my life in my arms. Combine the music with the hundreds of images of Emerson populating my computer screen, as I attempt to cull the most special ones to share with you all (and HOW can I do that? They are all special. Sigh. Seriously. She’s, like, amazing. And beautiful. And I have tears in my eyes again. You will just have to deal with being assaulted by more photos than usual, because I, personally, can’t deal) and I’ve become an emotional mess.
When I first came home from the hospital with Emerson, I was obsessed with her birth (okay, really, I still am, but to a much lesser degree now). I flipped through the hundreds of photos of the labor and birth, stopping to gaze extra long at my favorites (one of Alex helping me through a difficult contraction, and one of the moment Em’s head emerged from my body—amazing). And then there was the 5+ hours of film footage we had taken. I started watching it, totally enthralled, but then stopped after a few hours. I skipped the most exciting part of it: the birth! I won’t get into the many reasons I didn’t watch it back then, but I recently did watch the end….finally.
Watching myself give birth—especially after taking a “birth break” for a couple of months—was un-be-leivable. The way I remembered it, and even the way I wrote about it in my birth story, was all wrong. Sure, the emotions of it were right on, but the way I thought I handled myself, the way I thought I pushed my child into the world, was a total misconception. I remembered being ridiculously calm, composed, strong and happy during most of my labor, but I thought that ended as soon as I fell deep into a pushing trance. But, no. From the outside, as I could see on my TV screen, I remained that way. I thought I had screamed like I was being murdered, I thought I looked like a woman who was just losing her sh*t. In reality, I looked like a woman giving birth, and beautifully so. The “noise” I had remembered emanating from my mouth was minor in comparison to my memory of it. The room was silent, calm, peaceful. It was amazing to see. And amazing to then hug my baby in real time.
Something I also noticed in my birth video was what happened after I gave birth. There is about an hour’s worth of footage after the birth, during which my new baby is lying on my chest. And what I noticed was the difference in the love I expressed for that new baby. I know that I fell in love with Em somewhere around the time my belly became noticeable swollen during pregnancy. And then, when I began to feel her move within me, the love grew. As I waited for her, it grew some more. And at the moment of birth, the emotion was overwhelming. No doubt. It was the most incredible moment of my life thus far. And the love….sigh. But, to be honest, the love that fell in tears down my cheeks as I began to write this, was far more overwhelming. The way I know my baby now is the best feeling there is. There is a rhythm to our relationship…harmony…symbiosis. A deep love. That’s the great thing about love: it grows. It is why we value relationships more as time goes on. And it is why I suddenly felt so blessed and excited realizing that this love and relationship I have with Emerson will continue to overwhelm me.
Being a mama is it. The “it” of life.
Emotions aside, Emerson is an incredibly vivacious little girl. The changes in her from month to month are startling. For instance, I thought she had learned how to use her hands last month….puh-lease. Girlfriend swipes everything in sight now—exciting, but sometimes dangerous. It’s amazing to watch her reach out and touch the world around her, but I find her reaches toward me more precious. She will grab my face between her hands and “kiss me” (aka, put her wide open, slimy mouth on my face). When I read her books, she reaches up and places one hand on my cheek as she listens. When she’s hungry, she tries to pull my bra open. When she’s lying next to me in bed sleeping, she drapes one arm across my chest. It all just kills me. Kills me.
Other than the crazy use of her hands, Em has proven to be the most verbal infant I’ve ever known. She squeaks like a porpoise sometimes and it’s my favorite. I know there are a plethora of milestones I’m forgetting to mention, but I think I’ve exhausted and emptied myself with the giant emotional fit I’ve just had in the last four paragraphs. So, I will instead assault you with an unnecessary amount of baby photos….
Other notes…Oh, how I love the many faces she makes…She spends a great majority of her day in the Ergo….I love that she sucks her fingers. So. Adorable.

 

 

 

All I think when I see the back of Emerson’s head is:
DAMN. That head is wide.
And then I remember how difficult it was
to get that large head out of me.
Will I ever stop thinking that when I see my child’s head?
Maybe when it’s size is
hidden underneath a bunch of hair?

 

 

 

***

a friday night in parenthood


This past weekend, we were up in Maine at the family house for my baby sister’s wedding. Naturally, there was a lot of fun and revelry to be had….on everyone’s part, but the parents of an almost 4-month old baby. We are deep in what I’ve heard referred to as the “baby cave” right now—the little bubble that one lives in when they have a baby(ies) at home. Life is not the same for that span of time—normal, adult sleep/wake schedules are disturbed, it takes an hour to get everyone packed up with clean clothes and clean bums and all the gear they require, nights out are replaced with (many) nights in, it’s ridiculously difficult to travel, and you are constantly preoccupied with and discussing things like poop, nap routines, the amazing thing your child did that day, parenting philosophies, etc etc

It’s difficult for others to understand “the cave,” because life keeps on moving for those outside of it. And so, on Friday night, I watched as my sisters put on pretty dresses and makeup, as I put on pajamas and super absorbent breast pads. They went out to meet all the wedding guests at a local bar and enjoyed adult beverages and adult conversation, as Alex and I climbed into twin beds next to each other, and had a conversation via Facebook chat so as not to wake the baby slumbering by my side. As we typed back and forth, I thought “wow, this is quite the snapshot of parenthood.” 

Here’s our (somewhat abbreviated) IM convo (which makes a lot more sense if you’re familiar with Dr. Seuss’s Fox in Socks):

7:39pm Alex says:

Facebook!

in Maine…

Not bad so far

I’m really tired though, I was thinking about passing out

at 7:45


7:41pm Alexa says:

I’m usually asleep by now, but I’m all wired from the action of the day

I really need some sleep though

I do feel bummed to be in bed while everyone else is out having fun.

Life with a baby

We’re in the baby cave


7:43pm Alex says:

Haha, true, felt like a loser there for a second

7:43pm Alexa says:

I’d love a drink

and to dance in a bar to loud music


7:43pm Alex says:

Yeah, sounds nice about now

7:45pm Alexa says:

Shhhhhh! You’re making so much noise over there!

You woke the baby

7:45pm Alex says:

Ooops.


7:45pm Alexa says:

She’s going back to sleep

Phew.


7:45pm Alexa says:

It’s hard to type with one hand

and it’s my non-dominant hand


7:45pm Alex says:

It’s hard to do a lot of things with one hand, but we’re learning (since

one hand is always holding the baby)


7:46pm Alexa says:

It feels like a vacation when I have the use of both my hands


7:47pm Alex says:

Wow, the speed of your typing makes me feel like I’m communicating with a paraplegic


7:48pm Alex says:


7:49pm Alexa says:

It’s this little barnacle on my nipple

Slowing me down
Would you trade places with Em if you could?


7:50pm Alex says: Alex says:

Hmm, good question

Probably not, cause she’s a chick and I like being a dude


7:50pm Alexa says:

Lying next to me with my boob in your mouth all night


7:50pm Alex says:

Haha, oh that

Well… she does have it pretty nice there

Then again she can’t walk, talk, ride a bike, eat food

or pretty much any of the other pleasures of being human


7:51pm Alexa says:

Well yes, you do have a lot of great skills


7:52pm Alex says:

Her future prospects are good though


7:52pm Alexa says:

You can also pee in a toilet


7:52pm Alex says:

Well, debatable

depends on who you talk to about that…


7:52pm Alexa says:

That is true

I do end up cleaning up just as much of your pee as I do Em’s

Em and I have talks about daddy’s pee every morning right before I sit on it


7:54pm Alex says:

Wha?


7:54pm Alexa says:

Sit on your pee

7:55pm Alex says:

Was that a directive: go sit on your pee?

Well, go eat your poop


7:55pm Alexa says:

No, it was the end of the previous convo

I will not eat my poop here or there


7:55pm Alex says:

Would you, could you in an outhouse?


7:56pm Alexa says:

I would not, could not in an outhouse


7:56pm Alex says:

I think Fox in Socks is making me lose my mind

The rhythm of it will come to me at entirely inappropriate moments

7:57pm Alexa says:

I seriously could get lost in that book, like the people who get lost in an acid trip and never get out.


7:57pm Alex says:

Hahah


7:58pm Alexa says:

I mean what the fuck is that Fox talking about????


7:58pm Alex says:

And where do they start?

Why the hell are they building stacks of random crap?


7:58pm Alexa says:

Things get really messed up for me when Fox starts sewing hoses and roses on some old crow’s body. I mean what the hell is that about? Who would think to do something like that?


7:59pm Alex says:

And who the hell is this Mr. Knox guy?

I think he’s connected with the mafia or something

I mean the way he plays dumb the whole time, then shoves the guy in a bottle!

7:59pm Alexa says:

Yah, there is something really fishy about that

And why doesn’t anyone have any fingers?

Just a thumb and a mitten-like appendage


8:00pm Alex says:

What kind of animal wears a tunic?

Dog? cat?

And good luck guessing the gender

The Fox in Socks is ironically the only one who makes any sense

I mean, it’s a fox

wearing socks


8:00pm Alexa says:

Really. I like that Fox is at least identified as a fox

Also, how can bricks get sick? I’m really disturbed by a whole mess of bricks lying in bed, crying because they are sick


8:00pm Alex says:

They don’t cry, they “tock”

There is something really existential about that

I could definitely write a research paper on this.


8:02pm Alexa says:

Knox is a man, Mr. Knox.

So we can at least be clear about that.

But, he’s wearing a full length tunic so it’s a bit confusing


8:02pm Alex says:

Hmmm.. that’s true, unless he’s a hermaphrodite


8:02pm Alexa says:

Maybe that’s what he’s trying to cover up with that frumpy tunic


8:02pm Alex says:

Perhaps it’s a transsexual who would rather be identified as Mr.

or even more terrifying, the Fox is just mocking her for looking mannish

or wearing that stupid ass tunic


8:03pm Alexa says:

Well, the fox is running around naked wearing only socks, so he really shouldn’t talk


8:04pm Alex says:

Haha, that’s a bad dream

Wake up wearing nothing but four socks

in a classroom of your peers

Talk about kinky

It’s amazing Knox takes so much crap from him


8:05pm Alexa says:

Also, I’m uncomfortable with the explosive rage on Knox’s part in the end. I mean dude just loses his shit and shoves that fox into a bottle with a bunch  of battling beetles

and this is in front of children?


8:05pm Alex says:

Em hates the beetles,

to her credit


8:05pm Alexa says:

She always moans when the beetles come on the page!


8:05pm Alex says:

True!

She gets upset every time they roll around


8:05pm Alexa says:

She so does

They have really mean faces, maybe that’s it

She doesn’t care for their attitudes


8:05pm Alex says:

I was reading in Nurture shock

that kids get their violent tendencies from the stuff they read and watch


8:06pm Alexa says:

Oh, great


8:06pm Alex says:

Something like 70% of the stuff that’s out there,

including classics like Grimm’s Fairy Tales,

has someone harassing or injuring someone else

and in like 95% of them, the harassing party doesn’t apologize or make nice


8:06pm Alexa says:

I believe it. Fox in Socks is kind of a dick.

Maybe we should rip out the last few pages, all the ones with the battling beetles and the bottle shoving

8:07pm Alex says:

Haha

At least in this one Knox gets revenge


8:07pm Alexa says:

Knox tells him again and again that he can’t play this game and that it’s upsetting him and that he wants to stop and Fox keeps on and keeps on-

won’t leave the guy alone

That’s why I say that Fox gets what he deserves in the end

But it’s still not a great message


8:07pm Alex says:

But, it’s no wonder our kids start harassing and kicking the crap out of each other

They include one like from Sponge Bob square pants

I’ll butcher it but…. Sponge bob says to his friend “How can you go on living knowing you’re a complete moron”

And the others watching just laugh and cheer him on


8:08pm Alexa says:

That’s awful

I would never let Em watch Sponge Bob.
It’s 8:08. I’m up way past my bedtime.