Monday, October 22, 2012

A new week

This week is a new week. Last week was one of the most challenging ever for me in regards to the daytime. It was pretty much the only time I've looked back on Matthew's newborn days and reminisced how easy that was in comparison (but so much less interesting). And I spent a lot of time thinking about how glad I am that at that time I realized how easy it was. But anyway. Last week, apart from sickness, was made up of a lot of random crying from Matt, lots of having my hair pulled, lots of being climbed on, lots of having to pick up and put down a toddler over and over because of his indecisiveness, and lots of complete exhaustion at the end of the day where I wanted hours (but settled for minutes) of not being touched or loudly jibber-jabbered at. Ugh.

The hardest thing for me about hanging out with this particular toddler all day is how very talkative and loud he is. It's pretty much nonstop. And not ignorable. I've never been a fan of lots of noise, and add that on top of the needs a kid has for near-constant physical contact and assistance, and it's overwhelming. Especially when I'm not feeling well. Especially when this toddler has been grabbing my neck really hard and those sore-throat lumps are taking the brunt of it.

But today has been pretty good. Matthew seems in better spirits. He's been less clingy, has had zero bouts of unexplainable/frustration crying, and is already taking a long nap. I'm still feeling kind of sick, but there's nothing to be done about that.

In other news, I've finally reached a weight loss goal I've been eyeing for a while. Whether it's a result of diet and exercise or sickness lack of appetite, I'm not sure, but either way... I'm also in a challenge at the gym to lose 8 pounds in 8 weeks. Weigh-in is after Thanksgiving. Everyone paid $10, and everyone who loses at least 8 pounds splits the money. So that's motivating. I think I only have like 2 pounds left to lose.

Insert spectacular conclusion here. 

Tuesday, October 9, 2012

A discerning palate

Matthew has, apparently, decided to expand his range of foods today. He has quite the discerning palate. This morning he ate most of a sticker of a train. Then he kept saying "boo boo" (his version of "choo choo").

Later, I handed him part of a leaf and said, "Trash," which usually would make him get really excited and throw the object into the trash can. Today––in the mouth. He chewed it up pretty good before I fished out the pieces. It didn't appear to be delicious, just nice and crunchy.

At lunch, I was eating uncooked spinach while Matt was eating chicken, one of his favorites. He started lunging at my plate from his high chair, so I gave him a piece of spinach. It was gone in a fraction of a second, and he was still lunging and fussing and grabbing! He chowed down like half my salad, just plain spinach, before returning to delicious chicken.

What will be next?


Friday, October 5, 2012

Chatty Matty, potty fun, tough times hopefully ending


Chatty Matty

Chatty Matty is a pretty funny guy. He's learning words like crazy; he can probably identify a hundred things or more by name (we test this all the time by saying, "Where's the flag? Where's the attic? Where's the basket?" You get the point). I'm constantly amused by how quickly he learns new words, which words he thinks are hilarious, and which words he thinks are different words.

For example, the other day I told someone that I hoped something wouldn't collapse. Matt started clapping. I was so confused. Then I thought, "Oh, right. Claps." Yesterday, I told him he could "go ahead and play with the blocks" and he started hitting himself in the head. I thought, "Huh, must not want to play with blocks." Then later I said he could go ahead and play outside. He started hitting his head again. Yeah, that time I figured it out.

The other thing that's so entertaining to me is how Matthew makes connections between things. For example, he makes a noise with his tongue when he sees a clock, like a clock-ticking noise. He tries to make a buzzing noise when he sees flying insects, or when he's apparently thinking about them (complete with spastic arm motions; I may have accidentally taught him that). Today Matt was playing with a kazoo and making noise through it, so I said, “Hey, play me a song with your kazoo.” Matthew got all excited, ran into the living room, and started using the kazoo to play notes on the piano. That’s one way to play a song with a kazoo, I suppose.

Some words cause Mattoddler to ROFL when he first hears them. It usually lasts a couple days before they just become regular, non-hilarious words, but it's so funny when he falls over laughing at them at first. If you're feeling a little sad, just say these words out loud, and soon you'll be rolling around laughing: pony, ponytail, tickle, mohawk, fauxhawk, zipper, peaches, buzz, kazoo. Hee hee hee. 

The one thing I'm not loving all the time is how Matthew is so very, very talkative. But not only talkative––aggressively talkative. How did we get such a loud guy? It doesn't make sense. I watched some videos of Matt when he was a baby, and, sure enough, he was still making noise all the time. When he says a word, he will keep saying a word until I confirm that I know what he's saying. Which is fine and all, but my goodness, the talking never stops. Must take after Jeff.

Potty fun

We've been having potty fun here this week! One of my friends posted on Facebook that her daughter has been using the potty a lot, and she's only a couple months older than Matt, so I thought, "Hmm, Matthew loves toilets. Maybe he'd like to use his potty now." Success so far! He's good at using it for solids, but I'm not sure he quite understands peeing right now. As much as changing diapers doesn't bother me, having Matthew use the potty is still way better.

In the past, I haven't had any views on potty training, but I've been reading some stuff and thinking about some stuff, and we're pretty much going to continue on with it. It's crazy how in other countries kids are potty trained way, way earlier than in the US, like by a year or 18 months. And that's how it used to be here, I guess, before 1950, when disposable diapers got popular. It makes sense to potty train younger, though, before the headstrong "terrible twos" get started. And one thing that really made sense to me is the comparison between teaching a toddler what's expected at mealtime or in social settings and what's expected for toilet hygiene. But in spite of how much sense it makes for us to be potty training now, I don't really have expectations for Matthew to be totally out of diapers by a certain point. We'll just see how it goes.

Tough times hopefully ending

It's been a challenging two years for me, physically. Here's the rough rundown: 
·      pregnancy (felt pretty good throughout)
·      terrible, terrible postpartum joint pain (and accompanying lack of weight loss)
·      umbilical hernia requiring surgery
·      joint pain subsiding and weight loss beginning as apparent result of stopping breastfeeding
·      working out more, playing roller derby, feeling good again
·      broken ankle requiring surgery
·      rapid weight loss as result of my broken-ankle workout plan (hopping and crawling everywhere)

And now, two full years later, I'm finally starting to feel good again. I'm almost my normal weight, and I can do some amount of exercise without being in terrible pain (though my ankle does still ache quite a bit). It's crazy how much I've taken for granted my formidable physical fitness and health my whole life until I didn't have it anymore. And it's crazy that I've had to have two surgeries this year for bad things that happened as a result of working out. Ugh. I have high hopes that now I can just be my normal self again, but we'll see what God's plans are.