Saturday, August 29, 2009

Virginia Family and Folks

Spud's Virginia grandparents came down from Blacksburg for a visit this weekend. His Grandma had major heart valve repair surgery right after he was born, and this is the first time she's been able to make the trip. Our family's very very old friends Bob and Dee Leggett (ok, Dee is not old) from Great Falls (and before that, Annapolis) also visited in their gargantuan 98-foot RV, which they docked out by the Motor Speedway, accompanied by a retinue of tugboats. It has a billiard table, a small indoor pool, a bowling alley, and an exact replica of that staircase on the Titanic.

This morning we all went to the farmer's market and bought various vegetables and fruits and exotic plants. I bought a watermelon and some zesty salsas.







Spud may have been a little overwhelmed by all of the people and noise and by the hot sunny day, but he took it in stride. Until he got hungry.

Later we drove to Price's Chicken Coop and purchased fried lunches. These consisted of fried chicken (or liver...gizzards are also on the menu, completely without irony), fried hush puppies, and fried tater tots, all wrapped up in a cardboard box, which was also fried. We then drove to the Daniel Stowe Botanical Garden, ate our lunches, and sat around for a while and listened to our arteries hardening up.





We toured the grounds and saw the orchids and butterflies and topiaries and flowers and fountains. Spud liked the splashy fountains the best.







At some point along the way, Claire lost her sunglasses. She has famously lost several pairs over the years, including the time a pair fell into a river. If, during your travels, you happen to come upon one of the pairs that she has lost, please return them.

Otherwise, a good time was had by all.

Tuesday, August 25, 2009

Day Care

We are two full-time employees with a baby. Claire had nine weeks off after the baby was born, and I was on sabbatical and then summer vacation and had a fairly flexible work schedule. Claire went back to work in late June, and we started splitting baby duties. I take the morning and early afternoon shifts while Claire works, then I bring Spud to school and toss him to Claire and I start working. Claire has hopefully finished working with horrifying caustic acids and pointy metal objects by this time of the day and can settle into her office and close the door and work on the computer and keep one eye on the baby. And hope he doesn't scream and annoy our colleagues, especially the ones who are [redacted]. She and the baby go home at 5:00 and I stay at work.

This is how it's drawn up on paper. In practice, every day is different and has a different set of complexities. We have managed to keep the baby alive and healthy and one of his parents has attended to his every need 24/7. And we have managed to keep our jobs afloat.

But it's pretty clear that this schedule isn't sustainable. Everything else in the world besides the baby and our jobs requires our attention too, and we've mostly been ignoring that for 4 months. I have mowed the grass once this summer. I have been watching with great dismay the progress of a horrible mutant weed, possibly from outer space, growing and spreading across my yard over the summer. This f*#@king mutant weed has taken over half of my yard and all I've been able to do is watch it happen (I have managed to kill some of it by covering it with a tarp, which denies it life giving sunlight and slowly, slowly ends its horrible mutant weed life.). The hot tub has giant slugs in it and a bee nest. I'd love to balance my checkbook someday. I don't get any work done in the mornings; when the baby naps, I shower and get dressed and eat lunch and that's about it. And if I go to work in the late afternoon, working a full day means I stay until 10:00 or 11:00 p.m. or so.

John: "I'm home!"

Claire: (looking defensive, protecting the baby, grabs a steak knife): "Who the hell are you?"

John: "It's me, your husband."

Claire: "Husband". (squints) "Oh, yeah, ok."

Now the semester has begun and I'm teaching classes again. They start at 3:30, so we are continuing the afternoon parent swap. I have grad students who are getting back to work and will occupy my time (was I ever a grad student?).

If I don't seriously get to work (full time or more) for the next year or so, I won't get tenure. And we certainly don't want Claire to have to quit her job. She has worked very hard to get Bachelor's and Master's degrees so she could get a job just exactly like the one she has, and in the same department as me. We are so very grateful and lucky that Claire has this job, and she likes doing it. We don't have any financial problems at all since we are both working. If Claire quits, not only do we lose her income, I'll have to pay for her health insurance, so I get the equivalent of a $7,000 or so pay cut.

So: daycare. We'll still do the parent swap, with just a few hours (4 or 5) in the afternoon when we can both be working.

This feels bad. Mostly we feel like we are going to abandon him and let some strangers take care of him so we can get to our jobs and careers. We're also worried about swine flu returning and sweeping through the daycare center like a wildfire (or a mutant weed) and wiping everyone out. We thought that since we had somewhat flexible academic-type jobs that we might be able to avoid this. But we can't avoid the math: 2 full time jobs + baby = daycare. It sucks.

Monday, August 24, 2009

Giant Baby Seen on the Outskirts of Tokyo !!

He's 4 months old today, that means another visit to the pediatrician and another round of vaccinations.

I'll get right to the stats:

Weight: 15 lbs. 6.5 oz (50-75th percentile)*
Length: 26 3/4 inches (95-97th percentile)
Head Circumference: 17 1/4 in (90th percentile)

*I think he outweighs our cat Cricket now.

His new nickname: Gigantor. Notice how he towers over the tanks and army men sent to do battle with him. But it is futile. He is too enormous. Flee! Flee for your lives!

Friday, August 21, 2009

Anybody Speak Baby?

He has a lot to say. It sounds important.



Spud is learning to feed himself. He still needs to work on this skill a bit, as you can see in this next video. It's especially heartening to see that he is developing some patience as well. Notice that when I remove the bottle, he placidly waits for me to return it to his mouth. Calm and relaxed and patient, just like his daddy.





Next week we learn to use knives and forks!

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

South Florida Family and Folks

While his daddy toiled and did nerdy stuff in the labs at U. Florida (home of the BCS Football Champion Florida Gators!), Spud and his Mom hung out with Grandma and Grandpa Grimm in Naples.









He also got to meet his Aunts Janet and Georgina and his Uncle Mike, and his great grandmother. This is a picture of 4 generations.



He also got to hang out with his Mom's friends Lisa and Lindsay. Spud's dad thinks they may have all been drinking heavily before this photo was taken.

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

Baby, You're No Good

We drove down to Gainesville last Sunday. This was Spud's first-ever long-distance trip, the shakedown cruise if you will, for the baby's navigation systems. He performed admirably over the 8 hours. We thought he would, since: a) we take him out in the car nearly ever day, and b) he has no real concept of time (He has no real concept of anything but boobs. This will not change for the next 25 years or so.). There was one period toward the end of the day when he was tired/poopy/hungry/sick of the car seat that he started to fuss pretty loudly. There was nowhere to immediately pull off of the interstate to attend to his needs, so we endured the wailing. A perfectly apropos song came on the radio just then, and Claire and I began to sing along together ("You're No Good" by Linda Ronstadt):

You're no good
You're no good
You're no good
Baby you're no good

I'm gonna say it again
You're no good
You're no good
You're no good
Baby you're no good

Oh, oh no
You're no good
You're no good
You're no good
Baby you're no good

But he really was good, mostly. It was a very long trip for such a little baby! We took this voyage so I could work at the University of Florida (Home of the BCS National Football Champion Gators !!! Woohoo !!!) in the geochemistry labs. We stayed at my PhD advisor Mike Perfit's house (thanks Mike!). Claire's Dad drove up from Naples to pick her and Spud up on Monday (thanks Joe!) so I could work. While we waited we introduced Spud to the Bull Gator statue outside of the stadium.



Didn't Steve Irwin get into some trouble for doing something like this?



More pics from Gainesville (Did I mention this was the home of the BCS Football Champion Florida Gators? I did?).



(Claire really likes Starbucks)

13 hours, 750 miles, and 1 cool baby

We drove all-lllll the way back home from Naples today. We decided to go half way (Georgia-ish), see how Spud was doing at that point, and then get a motel if/when he decided he'd had enough. But he did really well! Mostly, he slept. He got a little cranky a couple of times, but he was just hungry or had a poopy diaper. We stopped a few times so he could get outta the damn car seat and stretch his legs (and we could too!). He is a cool little travelin' dude.

We had a really great time, as you can see from this photo of us in the car.



I have no idea how that dog got in the seat behind me.

Spud kept nagging from the back seat about how fast we were going. I told him that travelin' up I-95 ain't like dustin' crops, boy! Without precise calculations we'd bounce too close to a star or pass right through a supernova and that'd end his trip real quick!

I also told him to watch his mouth, or he'd find himself floating home.

(Someday I will utter these words to him: "Riding a Big Wheel aint like dustin' crops boy!").

I'll post many pics from his Florida adventure soon. Must sleep now. Caffeine...wearing...off...

Sunday, August 16, 2009

A Year in Babyland

Today is our wedding anniversary, either the 6th and/or the 2nd (long story). Exactly one year ago today (our 5th and/or 1st anniversary), I awoke to Claire grinning at me.

Claire: "Hey." [pokes John until one eye opens]

John: [With one eye open] "Wha."

Claire: "Hey. You want to see something cool?"

We had been officially "trying" to get pregnant (i.e. we had pulled the goalie, so to speak) for a month or two, so I had a pretty good idea what the cool thing was.

One year ago this morning:



We also took the first of many Claire belly pictures that day.



And here she is eight months later, just a couple of days before Spud became post-uterine:



I know! Holy crap! Um, I mean, isn't she beautiful?!

Anyway, so Spud has been the headline for exactly a year now. We celebrated by abandoning him. OK, not really. Claire's parents babysat for us tonight (Thanks Joe and Valerie!) while we went for a nice dinner and a walk on the beach. When we got home, he didn't seem to notice that we had been gone.

Earlier today, we played in the pool. Spud enjoyed it very much, except for that first bit when you first get your bits wet. But nobody likes that part.



Saturday, August 8, 2009

The Baby is Covered in Fire Ants

He's had a couple of really really really wild-ass loud and fierce crying fits in the past week or two. Off the charts. These are known as "The Baby is Covered in Fire Ants" events. Is this colic? Is he starting to get teeth? His diaper is clean and he's been fed. He may be tired, but instead of going to sleep, he freaks out. Normal crying can be cured with the sling, or distraction, or of course, food. But not TBICIFA events. The cure: bathtub. He has outgrown the little plastic infant bathtub. Now he's in the big people tub. The second he's in the warm water, he's fine and smiling. Apparently the fire ants can't swim.

"Who me?"



Mostly, he's a great baby. He's "talking" more (play the video below) and grasping things more and seems to be learning more about his world every day. We will probably keep him.

Tuesday, August 4, 2009

Car Seat Montage

A minute in the life of Spud, who has an ever-expanding range of emotions and expressions. And sounds. And smells.









Monday, August 3, 2009

Afterbirth: It's What's For Dinner

David Lane sent me this article, from Time magazine. Thanks David! Yuck. The fact that I even SAW the placenta still haunts me to this day.



Afterbirth: It's What's For Dinner
By Joel Stein

There is so much you can't know about your spouse when you get married, like that one day she will want to eat her placenta. But there are two things you don't argue about with a pregnant woman: what she eats and that being full of life indeed looks sexy. So when Cassandra told me that for $275, a woman would come to our house, cook Cassandra's placenta, freeze-dry it and turn it into capsules to help ward off postpartum depression and increase milk supply, I said, "$275 is a bargain compared with the $20,000 I'll have to spend to tear out our kitchen immediately afterward."

Most mammals, Cassandra explained, eat their placentas, to which I countered that most dogs eat their poop. I stopped arguing there, figuring that like many of Cassandra's hippie ideas — the compost bin, rubbing lemon on her underarms instead of deodorant — she'd give up on this in a few weeks. Even as the due date approached and she was still set on eating her placenta, I couldn't imagine that she'd remember to request it from the doctor after the most physically draining experience of her life. This is a woman who, 9 times out of 10, forgets the bag of leftovers at the restaurant.

Though I am exceedingly squeamish, when my son was born, I was shocked that I saw only the beauty of childbirth. Until the placenta came out. There are many normal human reactions to seeing a placenta, ranging from screaming to vomiting to warding it off with a cross. For those of you who have never seen one, the placenta is to the baby what Stephen Baldwin is to Alec Baldwin. It's what your liver would look like if it got into an accident on the autobahn with one of those aliens from Mars Attacks! and their bloody carcasses threw jellyfish at each other.

When the placenta did come out, Cassandra, dazed from 21 hours of labor, somehow made sure the nurses delivered it to us in a flat plastic container, which I put into an ice-filled Monsters vs Aliens cooler I brought. When I asked if I could keep the placenta overnight in the refrigerator out in the hall, the nurses looked at me like I was crazy. When you gross out people who work at a hospital, you have accomplished something.

In a fog, I drove the placenta home, where I wrapped the container in a bag and wrapped that bag in a bag and wrapped that bag in every remaining bag we had in the house. I slept at the hospital that night, grateful that my son will never remember what his parents just did.

The next day I drove back to the house to meet the placenta lady, Sara Pereira. To my surprise, Sara did not look unkempt, frumpy, heavy or in any way like a Wiccan. She got into placenta-cooking after taking a Chinese-medicine course and has already prepared more than two dozen placentas this year — and orders are picking up rapidly. When I asked Sara if her parents were embarrassed by what she does, she told me that her father sells bull semen.

By law, Sara has to cook the placenta at the placenta owner's home. But to my great relief, she brought her own equipment, gloves, sponges and even more detergent than I'd hoped, scrubbing constantly as she worked. If I ever kill a man in my own home, I am totally calling the placenta lady.

As she steamed the placenta with some herbs, the kitchen got that ironlike smell of cooked organ meat, with vague undertones of a consciousness-raising group and a Betty Friedan rally. Sara said Cassandra had a particularly robust placenta, and she hoped to get 120 pills out of it. As she sliced the cooked organ and put it on parchment paper in a dehydrator, she told me that some people drink the placenta raw as a smoothie. "I do this for a living, and I couldn't do that," she said. The pills, she explained, were superior, since Cassandra could stretch their hormone-rich benefits much further, perhaps even freezing some for menopause. Sara did not understand that when Cassandra's looks fade in her 50s, there's no way I'm putting up with this crap.

I drove back to the hospital where, thanks to my experiences, the food looked good. When we got home the following day, Sara gave us a truly beautiful placentapill presentation: a pretty glass jar, a card, a CD of lullabies and a satin pouch. In which was part of my son's umbilical cord, fashioned into a heart. When I asked Sara what the hell I was supposed to do with that, she said people often use it to keep a baby's first tooth and lock of hair. That's when I realized that placenta-eating is really just the beginning of how gross we humans are. And I went to change my first diaper.

Sunday, August 2, 2009

100 Days

Spud has been post-uterine for 100 days! During this time, we have consumed (according to some quick out-of-my-backside calculations) approximately:

- 700 diapers
- 2800 wipes
- 1500 tissues
- 400 paper towels

Despite his near total physical immobility, he has personally destroyed this lush virgin forest in its entirety (photo taken April 23rd):



Like a tiny pinkish Godzilla.

He celebrated hitting triple digits and this important benchmark in planetary devastation by: peeing on Claire and the wall during a diaper change, puking up perhaps the highest-volume puke EVER (on Claire), creating and ejecting an unusually large booger, and visiting Goodwill, the mall, and the Daniel Stowe Botanical Gardens with Claire and 'Aunt' Lindsay, who is visiting from Florida.



At the end of the month, his dad will be 16,436 days old (yes, I added leap days).