Showing posts with label Crib. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Crib. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 11, 2013

35 and 36 Weeks

Arlo is 36 weeks and 2 days old, and I need to get caught up around here. A lot has happened these last two weeks.
 
 
First and foremost, like I've said, my mother-in-law had a bad stroke on Thanksgiving, which has changed our lives immensely. She's still paralyzed on the left, but she's more or less "with it" mentally, which is a miracle in itself. The day after Thanksgiving, Danny and I hugged each other in the parking lot of the hospital, bawling hysterically because we were terrified she was wasn't going to live.
 
She'll be in a rehabilitation facility for at least a few more weeks, and we don't know where we'll proceed from there yet. It all depends on how much she improves. I should mention that she's an only child, Danny's dad died years ago, and Danny's an only child—so we're all she has. This means we probably won't be trying to make a baby brother or sister for Arlo any time soon.
 
How about a picture to break up a giant wall of text?
 
This whole nightmare has reminded us how lucky we are to have so many wonderful friends in our lives. My mother-in-law's neighbors cooked us the turkey she had in her fridge so it wouldn't go to waste. A dozen people dropped off dinner for us or watched Arlo while Danny and I went to the hospital or to work. I keep catching myself wondering what kind of terrible shit Danny and I must've done in our past lives to deserve catastrophe after catastrophe after catastrophe in this life, but our friends are proof that we must've done something so, so right, too.
 
Anyway, we hired a nanny, and she'll be starting this Friday. Arlo hasn't seen his Grammy in two weeks, and his little world has already been disturbed so much that Danny and I couldn't bear the thought of sending him to daycare yet. The nanny obviously costs more than daycare would have, but we'll feel better knowing he's in his own house, with his own toys and dog, receiving the one-on-one attention that he's used to. Eventually, we'll probably transition him to daycare, but we wanted to avoid too much change for him at once.       
 
Now, let's let some photos do the talking. My 30th birthday was five days after my mother-in-law's stroke, and our hearts were still heavy (they still are), but we did our best to celebrate.

Oh, that's what a person looks like after crying non-stop and not sleeping for 5 days.

We kept Arlo up to celebrate. He's was tired.

Arlo tried to eat my presents.
 
Let's see... Arlo had his first mini-cold, as well as his first boo-boo—courtesy of Scooter (but it was actually Danny's fault).
 
I kept trying to hide the boo-boo in pictures, but in retrospect, I wish I had a better photo of it. His left eye was a little bruised and scratched. (You can see it better in the candle-blowing photo above.)

He's still sprouting teeth like it's his job, and I don't even know what's going on in his mouth right now. I do know that he's always chewing on something, and he's already destroyed his crib rails.
 
 
Speaking of the crib, Danny and I are feeling confident enough that the reflux is gone that we ditched the bouncy seat, and Arlo is finally sleeping in his crib now, instead of in his bouncy seat in his crib. He wasn't too thrilled the first couple of nights, which made me wonder if his reflux was acting up, but his sleep is improving, so I guess he just didn't know what to do with all that space at first. Unfortunately, he enjoys sleeping flat on his face, which is unsettling, to say the least.
 
He's getting tired of crawling, so he's been "walking" with his hands and feet on the floor (you know, with his butt up in the air), and I can't even handle how hilarious it is. He's also mastered doing this to things:
 
 
Loves his Roomba.
 
He's become a pro at using his thumb and forefinger to guide food into his mouth, and he really loves that he can feed himself his own snacks. Danny and I love it, too, because it keeps him occupied while we eat. Needless to say, Scooter loves it, too—for other reasons. 
 

Lastly, we visited Santa, and my little elf couldn't have been more cooperative (which really wasn't a huge surprise).

 
Oh, and here's my favorite recent photo of Arlo:


Can't even tell you how much that smile does for me.

Monday, July 15, 2013

15 Weeks

Arlo is 15 weeks old today, and he's been very smiley and happy this week. When I ran home to visit him at lunch today, he was happy-hollering up a storm. He's been experimenting with consonants lately, and his "ghee" sound he busted out the other day was the cutest thing I've ever heard. His babbles are also becoming increasingly polysyllabic, instead of just "ooh" and "aah."

He's getting better at keeping himself occupied, and he can spend an hour in his bouncy seat now, talking to the hangy toys. It's a lot easier to get simple household chores done now that we're not all tethered to each other all day.

Content in his bouncy seat.

We survived our week without Danny, and it sucked about as much as I was thinking it would—but I was so busy that time flew by. It's a good thing, because thanks to my little non-sleeper, I was running on empty by the end of the week.

A grand reunion!

Speaking of Arlo's sleep habits, we're probably a little late on this one, but Danny and I bought a monitor yesterday and put Arlo in his crib for the first time last night. It was sad, but he did fine. He didn't sleep any better or any worse than when we co-room, which obviously wasn't the result we were hoping for. I can't tell you what we'd do for 4 solid hours of sleep. No, really, I can't tell you because I'M TOO TIRED TO THINK OF ANYTHING.

First night in his crib.

Like we say 10 times a night, at least he's cute.