Friday, February 29, 2008

The Pride Runs Deep

Like all mothers, I am incredibly proud of my children.

Emily potty trained herself in a little over a week and has had only a few accidents since she started wearing her big-girl panties full-time. She's also made huge strides in her language and routinely makes me laugh with the funny things she says.

A small sample of the funny-ness.

  • She has started prefacing some of the things she says with "You know what?". Like, "you know what? Emmy have pee-pee comin'."
  • This morning, she was in bed snuggling with me when Lucy woke up. She slid over to lay on Mike's pillow and then told me to go get Lucy. Then she said "that would be helpful." So glad to know I can be of assistance, Em.
  • She can identify all of her letters on the VTech computer we have for her. I honestly have NO IDEA where she learned this, as it definitely wasn't from me.
  • She has started spontaneously saying "I love you" and doing the I love you sign, which makes my heart melt into a pile of goo. My favorite is when I tell her I am going to run downstairs or outside for a second and she says "OK, wuv you, bye."

Lucy is also a big source of pride around here. She is working so incredibly hard to crawl, it occupies her every waking moment. And around the same time that she started to be able to get up on her knees, she also started to use a pincher grasp to pick up cheerios and puffs. We can toss a small handful of puffs onto her highchair tray and she will happily pick them up and stuff them in her mouth.* This has made dinner time much less whine-filled, which is always a nice thing. I am also especially proud of Lucy's sunny-ness. She is one of the happiest babies I have ever met. Very little upsets her, and the few things that do (tired and hungry are big ones) don't even upset her for very long.

*I took a video this morning of Lucy eating her puffs, but YouTube isn't cooperating with me. I will update this with the video when it finally goes. Got it!! Yay.



This round of bragging and pride is brought to you by The Parent Bloggers Network and by Jenifer Fox. Jenifer wrote a book called
Your Child’s Strengths, a book that will give parents the tools to help their children discover strengths in three main areas: Activity Strengths, the tasks that make you feel engaged and energized; Relationship Strengths, the things you do for and with others that make you feel valued and competent; and Learning Strengths, the unique ways we approach and understand new information.

If you share how cool your kids are you'll be entered to win fabulous prizes, like an autographed book “Your Child’s Strengths", a choice of tee from Emotional Armor (www.emotionalarmor.com) — fantastic positive message tees, and a $50 Amazon Gift Certificate. There will be 2 randomly chosen winners. Go on, go! Brag!

Wednesday, February 27, 2008

Flood

These pants?
They are 2Ts. These pants have NEVER fit Emily properly.

They have always hung down around her hips. Now that she is wearing big-girl panties, it is even worse. And now they are too short in the legs. And this is how all her 2T pants are fitting.

But if I put her into 3T pants, the problem is almost worse because while they won't be all high-water on her, they will slide down her hips even more. And I don't want to put a belt on her because then she can't be as independent in the bathroom.

Another mom said that she keeps her daughter in leggings for the same reason, but I really don't want to do that.

But I'm not sure what else to do. Augh.

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Monday, February 25, 2008

So What's The Big Deal?

I don't want to be too hasty, but I think the strike might be over. Lucy has nursed well for the last 24 hours. She bit me at 7:30-ish when I was putting her to bed, but she had just nursed at 6 and so she probably wasn't all that hungry.

While I was in the midst of my Nursing-freak-out yesterday, part of me kept trying to figure out why I was so upset.

Why was I so devastated that Lucy didn't want to nurse?

Was it an ego thing? Is it a pat on the back to myself for feeding my kid with my breasts? I don't think so. But probably a little bit.

Was it a money thing? Sort of, but not very much. I can get formula samples from my pediatrician's office and coupons to go with them, so if we had to go to formula, the financial impact would definitely be lessened.

Was it a favoritism thing? A little. I think I worried that Lucy didn't like me as much any more. And that I had done something to cause that to happen. I know that all of that is baloney, but that's how I was feeling.

It was also frustration that I seemingly can't nurse my kids past 7.5 months, since that is roughly when Emily weaned due to lack of supply on my part.

However, I am very hopeful that this was just a minor bump in the road and I'll be able to continue nursing until Lucy decides to wean herself or she turns a year old, whichever comes first.

Thank you all for your wonderful comments and support. I really appreciate them.

Sunday, February 24, 2008

Trying really hard not to freak out

So far? NOT working.

Here's the deal. I try really hard not to be all Calamity Jane on here, where I post about all the little things that have me freaked out on a daily/weekly/monthly/yearly basis. Because I have a family member who seems to like living life from one crisis to the next and I get tired of hearing about it.

Anyways, I have to write about this because I HAVE TO get it out of my system.

Lucy seems to be on a nursing strike.

She is teething and she has bit me several times in the last few days. I do what any normal person would do when brand-new teeth are applied with force to a tender part of the body and I yelp. Loudly. And then I would say "NO BITING! YOU DO NOT BITE MOMMY!" And Lucy's entire face would crumple and she would burst into tears. If it weren't so heartbreaking, it would be funny, because her face is the absolute picture of sorrow and sadness.

Yesterday she nursed normally (i.e., without nibbling) for me at 8:30 am and again at 5:30-ish. She bit me at lunchtime and only nursed from my left side. She bit me and only nursed (coincidentally) from the left side again at 10:30 pm.

I tried to feed her again at 2:30 am and when I tried to latch her on my right side, she arched her back and cried. Lather, rinse, repeat until she finally fell asleep, exhausted, at 4:30 am.

When she woke up (or I woke her up, I can't remember now) at 8:30-ish this morning, I was ... getting full. I haven't gone that long without nursing (or pumping) in a looong time. I tried to nurse her on my right side and the same things happened: she arched her back and cried like her heart is breaking.

And that's when I started to really lose it. I called the lactation ladies at the hospital where I delivered Lucy and got some advice.

She recommended I give Lucy something to help her with her teething and then try to nurse. And when she latches to pull her really close so that she has to open her mouth wide and then she can't bite me.

That would have worked if I could actually get her to latch. So I called back, begging them to let me come in so that they could help me. The lady I talked with this time said she didn't think me coming in would do very much and that forcing her to nurse when she's on a strike like this will only make things worse.

I was able to get her to nurse from both sides this morning at 10. Since then? Nothing. She seems to want nothing to do with me. And it is breaking my heart.

I gave her some cereal at 11, mostly because she gets medicine in her cereal and I think that was a big mistake. But it's 5:21 now and she hasn't nursed yet and I don't know what to do. I feel like I should pump, but I'm terrified that if I do she's going to want to nurse as soon as I'm done and I won't have anything to give her.

I just want to feed my baby and right now I can't.

Friday, February 22, 2008

On the mend

You're feeling better;
laughing and smiling more, but
voice is still raspy

Ooh! Pee-pee comin'!
you've had a few accidents,
but you're doing great!

Ok, so I was going to try to do a haiku for every member of the family, but I got stuck. So, I did one for each of the kids and we'll call it good.

Have to go work now. Bummer drag.

Wednesday, February 20, 2008

Some Correspondence

Dear potty-training and sleep gods,

I am not sure which of you I might have angered recently, what with my slightly braggy reports of Emily's potty training success, but I repent. I am sincerely sorry if I ever indicated that any of Emily's potty success was my doing. I know it is not.

Please, please, please stop making Lucy wake up every 2 hours. And if it isn't too much trouble, could you please bring back Lucy's all afternoon nap?

Shaking chicken bones and doing the sleep dance,

Erin

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Dear Jerkwad who stole $200 from our PayPal account,

I hate you. May you have innumerable paper cuts and be forced to make lemonade and cut onions. Barehanded. I hope that when you get caught and sent to prison, that a large man named Tiny makes you his bitch.

You suck,

Erin

-------------------------------

My dearest Lucy,

Just because I have left the room does not mean I am gone forever. I am coming back. Please do not shriek or wail because I am out of your sight for 5 nanoseconds. I simply want to pee by myself.

Love always,

Mommy

-----------------------------------

Dear Patience,

Wherever you have gone, please come back. I have lost you and it's no good. I can't be a mom to 2 kids without you. Is it something I did? I know I have been leaning on you a lot lately, what with the sick children, and my own cold, and the newly potty-trained one, and the husband whose work project is merrily sitting in a handbasket in hell. If you just come back, I'll be better. Less needy. I promise.

Impatiently yours,

Erin

-------------------------------------

Dear The Boss Man,

My definition of irony is somewhat fuzzy, but I'm pretty sure that you talking to me for 15 minutes telling me the same things you said in an email on the heels of a discussion about how we need to cut back on staff costs is, well, ironic. Because I am so billing you for those 15 minutes.

And, if you have a meeting with a client and need a report from me, you might have better results if you called me before 5:30 the night before. Especially since the meeting has been scheduled for the better part of 2 weeks now. As my mom used to tell me, poor planning on your part does not constitute an emergency on mine.

Best Regards,

Erin

Tuesday, February 19, 2008

New World Record Holder - 20 Mile Dash to Pediatrician

Secretary: "Hi, this is the secretary at Fantastic Pediatrics, you left a message that you wanted Lucy to be seen by Dr. Sara?"

Me: "Yes."

Her: "Dr. Sara has an opening at 9 am."

Me: "Sold."

As I said that, I glanced at the clock on my computer (it read 8:05) and then looked at my still-pajama-clad self.

ACK! I needed to get myself showered, dressed, and get Lucy up, dressed, fed and out the door in 25 minutes. Could I do it?

I did. I hopped in the shower, threw some clothes on, did my hair, and pulled together breakfast and lunch for Lucy and some rice milk for me (that and a banana is the breakfast of champions around here). I got Lucy up and put her in the car in her jammies with a change of clothes in the diaper bag and had both girls in the car by 8:35. Not too shabby, if I do say so myself.

I wasn't so sure about how necessary yesterday's appointment was, but since Lucy had had a cold for about a week and then popped up with a fever over the weekend, I thought it wouldn't hurt to rule out an ear infection. I was pretty sure the doctor was going to tell me she was teething or it was a virus and that she would be better in 7-10 days.

Instead, she suggested a chest x-ray to rule out pneumonia. We went to the x-ray place (conveniently across the street from Fantastic Pediatrics) and submitted Lucy to the torture device (seriously - a chest x-ray on a 7 month old? TORTURE!). We sat in the waiting room for a minute while they read the x-ray and called Dr. Sara with the results. The tech came out and said that Dr. Sara wanted us to go back to Fantastic Pediatrics. Uh-Oh.

Yep. Instead of spending $40 to be told Lucy is teething, I was told it was a good thing we brought her in because she has pneumonia. Again. Ugh.

She said it is really mild and it should clear up with the antibiotics, but still. Poor girly.

Today is Mike's birthday. He's old. 33! I am sure he would love it if you left a comment detailing just how old 33 is. Hee.

Wednesday, February 13, 2008

He wants WHAT?!

This is my grocery list. I left it on the counter so I could add things as I thought of them. This morning I discovered an addition had been made to it.Yes, that reads "inflateable love 'companion'" (and yes, inflatable is misspelled).

I think Mike is trying to tell me something.

Saturday, February 09, 2008

P P Comin'!

Wow. This week has been amazing.

Emily told me Monday night that she didn't want to wear a diaper any more. And? She meant it.

She woke up Tuesday morning and cheerfully sat on the potty and then peed in the potty. This was a watershed (heh - literally) moment for us. Up to that point, any pee that actually made it in the potty was only accidental.

I kept her in Pull-ups all day on Tuesday, but offered her lots of opportunities to go potty.
Wednesday I did the same thing, but then after nap, I put her in the Elmo underpants you see at left. She had LOTS of accidents in the panties, but I think the connection was made because Thursday she had fewer accidents and Friday she only had one. And today? Today, she went all day including her nap in undies without ANY accidents.

She started telling us on Thursday night when she thought she had to go (hence the title - that's what she says) and most times, she would actually go.

I know that this isn't the last of the potty training, and I know that she is going to have accidents and set-backs, but I am still so incredibly proud of her. She decided she was done with diapers and she wasn't kidding.

And? Her little buns in the Elmo undies? Are the cutest thing I have ever seen.

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My parents and I are working on easing into training for our half-marathon in Lake Placid in June so that we aren't crippled when the real training begins. Please consider clicking on the button up there on the right and donating something to our cause. We really appreciate your support.

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Wednesday, February 06, 2008

A story and then shameless begging

I met him in 1996, when I was 6 months away from my 20th birthday. He had jazz band practice across the hall from the auditorium where I was stage managing the college's production of Bye Bye Birdie.

He was nice, funny, cute, artistic and understood my love of theater. We were both seeing other people at the time and so we were just friends who shared Microbiology notes.

During the summer, we exchanged letters while I was in Michigan, working at the world's worst ice cream shop (it's now a parking lot - which is fitting on so many levels) and he was at home in a suburb of Albany.

In September, I went back to college as an RA in a dorm near his. I stopped by his room to say hi. The next day, we went to a concert at the gym. About halfway through, his hand found mine and we were inseparable from then on. He broke up with his girlfriend (in hindsight, that should have been my first warning sign) and we were an official couple.

We both graduated the following May. He had plans to go to another SUNY school in the fall, waaaaaay up in Northern New York. I decided to abandon my plans of going to Michigan State and followed him up there.

We lived together in an off-campus apartment with two other friends from our old school. Our relationship was starting to deteriorate, but I don't think I even realized it. I remember lots of discussions about how I had changed and how he wanted the old Erin back. He proposed to me on Valentine's Day in a Red Lobster. Then he took me to see a movie. What did we see? Fools Rush In. Hello Red Flag! Nice to meet you!

After two years in the deep-freeze of Northern NY, we graduated and made plans to move to Philadelphia so I could pursue a degree in Pharmacy. We spent the summer living in his bedroom at his parent's house in Albany. I worked at an Eckerd Pharmacy and he worked as a laborer for the town.

He used his computer a lot to talk online with someone he met in a chat room. Her name was Cheryl and she seemed OK, but I didn't totally understand what was happening. I had my head in the sand pretty deep.

After we moved to Philadelphia, things quickly spiraled out of control. Cheryl came to visit, then moved in and he told me that he didn't love me anymore. He would yell at me for the slightest things. Cheryl joined in frequently, usually berating me because I didn't clean the bathroom exactly as she felt it should be done or because I *gasp* went into my room to study instead of doing chores. I remember him waking me up in the middle of the night, just to yell at me about something.

Those days were awful. I remember feeling incredibly trapped. I didn't know what I had done to get myself into such a situation and I sure as hell didn't know how to get out. I was trying to keep it together at school, at work, at home and put on a good face for my parents, who were beside themselves with worry.

It all fell apart over money, of course. He wanted me to skip school and go get a loan of some kind (one of those easy, quick-fix loan deals that they send you in the mail). I told him that I couldn't skip school because I had an exam, but I would do it in the afternoon. He said something about how the money better be there the next day or there would be trouble. And I remember thinking, "Brace yourself."

I didn't get the loan. I got up that morning as though I was going to school. I packed a bag of things as quietly as I could. I remember taking my curling iron out of the bathroom, terrified that he was going to hear me.

And then I left. The relief I felt as I closed the door behind me was immeasurable.

But I was still terrified that he was going to come after me, that he was right behind me, angry that I was leaving.

(My heart is pounding just writing this)

I got in my car and went to a nearby gas station. I had no money, no gas, no food and I was scared out of my mind. I walked into the gas station and started sobbing. I am sure that I scared the lady behind the counter half to death. I managed to explain what was going on and she sat me down in a booth and had some of the regulars keep an eye on me to make sure no one would bother me. She then called my dad and he gave her his credit card number so that I could get some food and gas to get out of there.

I remember driving down the expressway toward school and looking at my engagement ring. I was so tempted to pitch it out the window. Instead, I took it off and put it in my ashtray. I went to school and went to the counselor's office. I had been working with her to deal with my crummy grades and depression (gee - I wonder why I was depressed?!). She helped me withdraw from school for medical reasons. I went and took the one exam I felt capable of passing and then called my cousin Erica.

She came and got me and brought me to her house to hide out until my parents could come get me. I don't think a 5-star resort could feel any more like an oasis than Erica's condo did on that afternoon. I took a nap, talked with my parents on the phone, talked with Erica and just relaxed.

My parents (all 4 of them) came down to Philadelphia the next day, December 10, 1999. I was supposed to go back to the apartment to pick some things up. Instead, he opened the door to six of us on the step (6=me, my 4 parents and a constable, who was there to help mediate (and maybe intimidate)).

We packed everything I had in the apartment, including dismantling a water bed, in less than 3 hours. And then we got on the road to come back home to NY.

The months following my departure from Philly were incredibly hard. I was an emotional wreck. I was incredibly ashamed that I had allowed someone to treat me that way. I was in debt up to my eyeballs; from school loans and credit card debt.

I started working for a large company in their tech support department in January and my first day a bunch of mentors came in to meet us. In that group was a cute, tall guy named Mike.

And the rest, as they say, is history....



OK, now for the shameless begging.

I am coming to you with my hand out, asking you to help me. My parents and I are going to walk a half-marathon in Lake Placid on June 15, 2008 (my 6th wedding anniversary, as it happens). We are walking to raise money for a charity called Safe Journey. They are a not-for-profit organization that provides assistance to survivors of domestic violence. They offer counseling, self-defense classes, advocacy for court and housing issues (did you know that many of the women who leave domestic violence situations are denied housing?), career assistance and mentoring and social activities.

My situation was slightly different in that I had a support structure able to get me out of the crisis situation and also help me get back on my feet. I wasn't legally bound to Butthead (as he will forever be known to my family) and leaving was less complicated. So many other women aren't that lucky.

Here's where you come in. Click on the button below and donate some money (please!) to support our walk and support Safe Journey.



100% of the money we raise will go directly to Safe Journey to help women get back on their feet after surviving domestic violence. Those who donate will get a button to put on their sidebar, proclaiming them to be awesome. Note: When you fill out your information, put a note in the Apartment/Suite field that says you are a blogger and I will email the button code to you.

Thank you for reading my story. Thank you in advance for donating. Thank you to my family and friends for getting me out of that situation and for putting up with the scars that linger. Thank you to Butthead for well, being a butthead and showing me what a bad relationship is so that I can appreciate the good one I have now all the more. Thank you to my Mikey for being my Mikey. ILY!

PS: Thank you , also, to Jenny from Absolutely Bananas for designing my pretty, pretty buttons.

Monday, February 04, 2008

Shhhhhhhhh!!

[whispering]

Tonight, as I was getting Emily ready for bed, she asked to use the potty. I repeated what she asked a couple times, to make sure I was hearing her right and then off to the potty we went.

I sat her on the potty and started the timer for 5 minutes (to offset the possibility that she was trying to stall bedtime by asking to potty). I gave her a (very) small squirt of lotion as a reward for sitting on the potty and we hung out in the bathroom until the timer went off.

And that's when all hell broke loose.

I told her the timer went off and it was time to get up. She started crying and sobbing that she wanted "more potty." I told her no, it was time to get up. She cried through the whole process of getting a new diaper on, putting jammies on and getting into bed. She finally settled down as I was covering her up and then she said "No Emmy wear diaper."

Say what?

I asked her, "You don't want to wear a diaper any more? Do you want to wear underwear?"

"Yes!" (sob, sob, sob).

So I laid out the following plan with her. We're going to have her sit on the potty for 5 minutes at a time, several times a day. When she sits on the potty, she gets a small squirt of lotion. If she goes pee**pee or p00*pie in the potty, she gets chocolate. And she gets to wear Elmo underpants when she hasn't had any accidents for a while.

I am just completely blown away at the turn of events tonight. I can't decide if I misinterpreted her "no Emmy wear diaper" comment or if she really is finally ready.

I have been very (very!) laid back on the potty training thing. She's been in pull-ups for several months and she just hasn't shown a whole lot of interest in sitting on the potty. When we ask if she wants to sit on the potty, she usually breaks out in screaming and sobbing, like the seat of the potty is made of acid* and electrified. So, we usually don't ask.

I guess we'll see what the rest of the week brings. I am sure you are dying to know how this ends, aren't you? I knew it. You are just dying to know the minute details of potty training Looney Bin style.

[/whispering]

*Mike and I frequently joke that the diaper wipes we use to clean faces and hands after meals are "battery acid wipes" for all the screaming and squirming we deal with.

Practicing my deep breathing

I hate insurance companies.

I mean, I like the fact that for $20 we can go to see a doctor and all of that, but the rest of the insurance company baloney is for the birds.

Where is all this pent-up insurance ire coming from?

Lots of places, really, but the most recent insult to injury given to me by my good buddies at PC is over Lucy's medicine.

Dr.Sara gave Lucy a prescription for Singulair a while ago because that seems to be resolving the constant hacking cough the poor kid had since Thanks-freaking-giving.

So the time comes for me to send the prescription to the mail order service that we are required to use, lest we be charged DOUBLE THE RETAIL PRICE if we go to, say, Target. Yes, double.

I send the prescription in and having been down the mail-order pharmacy road a couple of times already, I made sure I was armed with nearly 2 weeks of samples so that I would have plenty of medicine to get us through while the prescription is sent to me via what feels like a slow boat from China. (Funny story, Mike works with a lot of companies in China who make products for him and then they send him stuff on a slow boat from China. Ok, maybe I'm the only one who thinks that's funny.)

Friday night, Mike and I got home from our date to a message from the mail-order pharmacy. The message? They couldn't fill my prescription. Call them back for more information. In the meantime, they'll go ahead and send my prescription back to me. And I'm in the background, screaming NOoooooOO! Don't send it back! That's 0.41 you're wasting! MY 41 cents!! AAAH!

I talked with a lovely woman at 1030 Friday night who helpfully informed me that I need to call PC to get a prior authorization so that they can fill the prescription.

I called PC this morning and she explained it all to me.

I talked with the doctor's office and they were kind enough to give me a few more samples so that I can keep Lucy on the forbidden drug until PC agrees with her doctor that she actually needs this drug.

I figured while I had the nice PC lady on the phone, I would follow up on a couple of other things. I asked about a vitamin prescription both girls take (we have well water, which doesn't have fluoride added like city water does). I was told by the mail-order pharmacy that they don't cover the vitamin and I couldn't get it from them. I asked this lady about that and she said her records didn't show that the MO pharmacy doesn't cover it and so I would be charged double soon. She (nicely) agreed to look into that for me.

I also asked her about a grievance I filed that has apparently fallen into the grievance black hole (it's that circular basket by the side of the mail room desk). I've called 3 times for status and strangely enough, no one can find any information about whether or not it was even received, let alone give me a status on it. She said she would look into that for me, too and, just to cover all the bases, I suggested she send me another grievance form so that I could fill it out again (because that is SO much fun) just in case the other one is lost forever.

And that is why I hate our insurance company today. Because I am talking to them way too much. Tomorrow's reason might be totally different.

PS: I know that there are lots of people (1 in 7, an annoying PSA tells me) that don't have insurance and we are very lucky and I know that, and I thank God for the coverage, but at the same time, the bureaucracy? It might just kill me.

Friday, February 01, 2008

Girlfriend is MOBILE!

Lucy started here.

And, after several minutes of hard work, she ended up here:

And now, a few minutes after those pictures, she's by the coffee table you can just see on the right side, behind the washed-out puppy dog.

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