Archive for November 17, 2010

Who Needs Sleep (The Misadventures of a Sleep Deprived Mom).

Once upon a time there was a Mom.  And she had a beautiful little baby girl.

At the tender age of six weeks, the baby girl began to sleep through the night every other night.   By two months of age the baby girl slept through the night ever single night.  There were occasional bedtime struggles and the little girl had to cry it out for two nights when she was nine months old, but she graduated from that short unpleasantness and become a wonderful sleeper.

She would go to bed without complaint and sleep until the sun came up.  If she got up early, she was happy to to make a little bed on the floor and watch t.v. in her parents room until they were ready to get up (but she lost her pleasantness once eight o’clock rolled around, because 8 a.m. was the time you got up!  Chop! Chop!)

After a few years, another beautiful baby girl was born.  Her first night on earth, she slept well, but after that her ability to sleep began to wane.  She hardly ever slept at all.  She napped very little.  She would lay awake all day with her beautiful, muddy eyes watching her Mom.

When her Mom would tell people that the baby did not sleep all day, people told her that she was just underestimating how much time her baby’s cat naps added up to.  One day, the Mom wrote it down.  The baby only slept an hour or two in short snatches from the time she “woke up” until the time she “went to sleep”.

Those phrases were, of course, arbitrary, because the baby slept similarly over night.  She would only sleep in her mother’s arms and then fitfully and in short bursts.  A few times her Mother was so tired she was unsure if she should actually be driving.  She wondered if she’d leave the house half dressed or wearing different shoes.  The haze of sleep deprivation made the mother tired and withdrawn.  It was hard.  Very, very hard.

The mother and the father followed all of the experts advice.  The swaddled.  The let the baby girl cry.  They employed bedtime routines.  Nothing ever helped.  They turned off the t.v. that the Mother used to fall asleep in hopes that the t.v.s light was actually keeping the baby awake.  It wasn’t.  They moved the baby’s bedroom, hoping that maybe her mother’s presence was keeping her away.  It didn’t help.  The baby slept rarely.  She was never ill tempered or lacking energy.  She wasn’t fussy or sad.  She just never slept.

When the mother got pregnant when the second baby girl was two, she worried.  She wasn’t sure she’d survive with a non-sleeping toddler and non-sleeping infant.  All she could do was pray for the best and prepare for the worst, but magically before the third little girl was born, the second little girl began to sleep better.  It still took singing for twenty minutes, but the second little girl began to sleep MOSTLY through the night.

When her sister was born in June, things were looking up for the second little girl, but after some early successes the third little girl stopped sleeping well as well and the mother was back in the dance of sleep deprivation all over again.

I tell people it’s been four years since I’ve slept through the night.  That’s not entirely true, but the number of times I’ve gotten more than two or three consecutive hours of sleep since Littlebit was born in 2006 can probably be counted on my two hands.  I am now to the point where I can go two nights on fightful, small amounts of broken sleep.  After the third night, I get a stomach ache and feel like crying all day.  On the third night after not sleeping, I can;t really get much done around the house.  I leave the t.v. on and we watch it a lot because I really have a problem with functioning beyond that.

When I say we’ve tried everything with both girls, it’s not totally true.  My Peditrician at one point suggested leaving Littlebit to cry. And not go back to check.  And if she fainted or vomited, well, that’s what she did.  Big Daddy and I couldn’t do that.  So we didn’t.  That is the only thing we haven’t tried with either girl, but we’ve tried everything else.  Crying it out, routines, singing, rocking, co-sleeping, independent sleeping, night lights, no night lights, music, silence.  Really, everything.  All we can do, really, is be patient with Baby Bee as we wait it out and hope that it doesn’t take her nearly three years to sleep for the majority of the night.

Baby Bee is one step ahead, though.  She can, most of the time, put herself to sleep.  It’s the staying asleep that’s so hard.  As I type this, Baby Bee has been asleep around two hours.  She is currently fussing in her bed upstairs.  The debate begins as to when I go in, what I do when I go and whether or not this will be a “good” night or a “bad” night.  It is hard to be consistent at 2 a.m. when it’s the third time you’ve been awake since 11 and your alarm will go off at 6 (both the real alarm and the alarm that is Littlebit who, while sleeping through the night, rarely sleeps after the sun rises).

I only hope that it doesn’t take Baby Bee two more years of sleeping struggles to begin to sleep with consistency.

Share

Christmas Countdown-Six Weeks to Go

If you want to read last week’s countdown tasks, check out Seven Weeks to Go

Thanksgiving is next week.  This year has flown by.  This year, for only the second time in 12 years we won’t be having Thanksgiving with my family.  We’ll be taking the 8 hour car ride to Illinois to spend it with Big Daddy’s family.  I’m a little sad.  I like things to be the same.  Particularly traditions.  I’m sure we’ll have a good time, though, and it will be nice to be back in Illinois.  The girls and I haven’t been back since we moved to Small Town in June.

There are only 38 days until Christmas.  What kind of Christmas are you hoping to have?  What do you envision?  What can you do to make the Christmas in your head match the Christmas you’re going to have?

Week 6 To-Do List

1) Remember that gift list I keep yammering about?  Keep plugging away at it.  I promise you won’t be sorry.  I mark when I’ve ordered gifts, when they’ve arrived and when they’ve been wrapped.  There’s no surprises and having the list there means that I don’t have a chance to forget anyone last minute.  I’ve had months to think things over and write things down.

And, again, being able to shop around saves you money.  I don’t know about you, but Big Daddy loves when I can shave some coin off the bottom line

2) What’s for Thanksgiving dinner?  Are you having company?  Do you have a menu?  If not, get planning!  What are you waiting for?  Next Wednesday??  Additionally, if you’re going to be hosting over the holiday, it’s time to think about who you’re inviting, what to cook and a shopping list, if you’re so inclined.  Call the butcher to order your turkey.  Call to ask Aunt Joan if she’s bringing her sweet potatoes this year.  Part of my stress surrounding Christmas is how much stuff I have a tendency to leave to the last minute without really assessing how much time those things take.

Not getting a hold of the butcher on a Wednesday in November is a pretty non-deal, but a week before Christmas and you’ll be in a frenzy.  At best.

3) Get pictures of your kids for your Christmas card (if you send them).  Last year, I ordered our cards from Shutterfly.  Right now, cards are 25% off and for a small fee, Shutterfly will stamp, address and mail your cards for you. I paid for it last year.  My cards arrived early, but I saved money on the order AND the stress of addressing, stamping and getting the darn things in the mail.  Getting the cards out is especially important this year because we’ve moved and I’d like people to have our new address.

4) Begin penciling in your holiday shenanigans.  The year Littlebit was one, I actually ran out of time to see Santa.  I just assumed we’d fit it in and we didn’t.  Honestly, seeing Santa is a priority right now, so penciling it in and finding time to do it is a big deal.  What’s important to you?  You can’t do everything.  Really.  No matter how hard you’d like to try, so it’s most important to figure out what you want to do the most, pencil it in and then fill in around it.

5) Last week, I recommended you clean up your master bedroom and bathroom.  This week, I’d advise you take on the most unpleasant task of sorting through your kids clothes, books and toys.  Look, I know that job sucks, but you’re not going to be able to do it once they’re off school.  I won’t be sorting the Princess’s things (except for her clothes, if she asks me) because she’s old enough to sort her own (I also think a toy, clothes and book purge every six months keeps things from getting too disordered).  It also gives you an opportunity to take inventory of what the kids have before people start asking for lists.

And, if your kids are like mine they will suddenly love every broken happy meal toy and naked, half crayon and you won’t be able to toss out ANYTHING.

6) Lastly, is your weather still mild?  Our fall has been lovely.  Warm and dry.  Big Daddy and I hung our Christmas lights in the good weather last weekend (but we won’t turn them on until a Thanksgiving).

Share

Menu Plan Monday

We’ve had a bit of a warm up over the past week.  It’s a little bit exciting and gave me some time to get a little bit of much needed yard work finished.  Littlebit still remarks every day, as she looks out on the frost, that it’s almost snow.  Big Daddy bought the snow shovel last week, so I guess we’re officially ready.

Monday

Sloppy Toms and Sweet Potato Fries

(sweet potato fries are very delicious and extra yummy.  If you’ve never tried them, you should and even though the above recipe is Paula Dean’s it’s pretty healthy.)

Tuesday

Beef and vegetable casserole

Very good.  Everyone liked it.  You have to let it set after it comes out of the oven.  Otherwise, it’s hella runny.

Wednesday

Salisbury steak and mashed redskin potatoes with veggies

Thursday

Um….yeah.  We had take out.

Friday

Pizza and movie night!  The Princess and I have been watching Harry Potter in preparation for the release of The Deathly Hallows.

Saturday

A very special holiday themed family movie night.  Check back in on Saturday for our menu, craft, movie and dessert!

Sunday

Chicken Oregnao, asparagus and couscous.

Share

us-part iv

There’s more to this story.  Check out part 1, part 2 and part 3

Big Daddy and I sat next to each other at lunch. My hand inside his big, warm one.  He smelled wonderful.  Like leather and my favorite cologne and something else that is just how Big Daddy smells (does that sound werid?  I think Big Daddy and the kids all have a unique smell.  It’s not body odor or anything.)  We conversed with our friends.  We smiled a lot.  I tried to eat.

My heart felt like it was trying to escape my chest.  Every time Big Daddy squeezed my hand under the table, I felt my insecurities flitting farther and farther away.    All of the millions of tiny concerns that had plagued me for so long and that had kept Big Daddy and me apart flew away like fluff off a dandelion.  All of them just ceased to exist.

After lunch, we decided to drive about a half an hour up the river.  It was a beautiful fall day and there’s a lovely boardwalk.  Big Daddy and I walked off from our friends where we were…uh…inseparable.  ;) (Which basically means we made out until the last possible minute when we had to jump into the cars and drop me off at work.).  Big Daddy and I didn’t talk a lot.  We had done the talking.  We’d talked for hours and hours for days and weeks and months.  We didn’t need to talk.

We still don’t.  The best thing about Big Daddy is that I can be silent with him.  That we can sit for hours and never have to say a thing.  That’s the idea that launched this series.  The day Big Daddy and I were laying on the couch together, in complete and yet companionable silence and how I think our entire story brings us to this place.  How we can talk about everything and nothing with the exact same success.

After Big Daddy dropped me off at work, we had a plan made.  The next weekend I was getting into a car and I was driving half way to Big Daddy.  We were meeting in the college town where one of my best friends was going to University.  We were spending the weekend together.

I couldn’t wait!

I expect my Mom wanted to vomit.

But I was 22 and what could anyone do?  And honestly, had they pushed me or tried to prevent me (I was still living at home.  They were paying for school), I was prepared to do something rash, which is really out of character.  And so, on the Thursday afternoon before Sweetest Day in 1998 I got into my car and drove the 3ish hours to Kalamazoo.  That night I got dolled up.  I went out to the bar.  I danced.  I drank.  I refused slow dances.

Big Daddy was coming.  After work on Friday and I wanted no complication.  I was loyal.  I was head over heels in love.

Share

Link Love

It feels like it’s been so long since I’ve shared some of my stumbled upon favorites.  I’m collecting some goodies for a Thanksgiving themed one next week, but until then here are some recent favorites.  Enjoy!

Love Dr. Seuss?  Mental Floss shares ten stories behind your favorites. As an aside, I’ve never read nor heard of The Butter Battle Book.  I may need to look for it at the library

Love fancy scarves but you’re not very knitty?   Check out Today’s Mama for two adorable no-knit scarf tutorials. I’m still wearing my “potato chip” scarf and my “I’m-a-big-nerd-check-out-my-Gryffendor-scarf” scarf, but a new scarf might need to happen this year

You might be using cloth or canvas grocery bags, but are you still using plastic produce bags?  Tried and True has a reusable produce bag tutorial so you can leave those plastic bags behind for good.

I love lemony things and these Lemon Melting Moments from Itty Bitty Kitchen look divine.   Divine.

These sunflower cookies are simply adorable.  Leave it to Make and Takes to have something so easy and adorable.

Okay, I admit that I’m not the hugest broccoli and cauliflower fan, but this recipe for roasted vegetables with shells and goat cheese dressing?  Well, I think I could choke down some broccoli for that.

I love this book apron from Instructables. A few of my cookbooks are in miserable shape due to cooking splatters and other incidents.  Of course, it’s super easy to find my favorite recipes.

Dollar Store Crafts does it again.  This time with an ADORABLE no-sew felt playhouse!

These spelling bean bags are adorable and Chez Beeper Bebe has patterns for not only the alphabet bean bags, but numbers as well.

The weather is forecast to be beautiful here this weekend and we’re going to be snatching every bit of mild weather we can get, but hopefully you’ve found something to do here to keep you busy during the winter doldrums.

Share