It seems like Lucy has done nothing but grow for the past few
weeks. She showed us just how patient and content she can be on our to and from California to meet her Aunt Crystal, Uncle Tim and her four cousins for the first time. I was EXTREMELY worried about germs after 8 airports and 6 flights, but this breastfed baby is going strong after being home for over a week. Although our visit was short, we had a great time. Miss Lucy got to be in the sunshine and fresh air without full coverage for the first time in her life. She laid on a blanket with Auntie Crystal and Uncle Tim while Gim and I played on the playground with the big girls. She seemed very adaptable and never stressed about new environments and situations. She enjoyed being read to by all of the girls and receiving their snuggles. In hind sight it was probably crazy to take a six week old across the country, but it was well worth it. That will probably be the easiest cross country trip of our lives with her considering she is not yet mobile and thinks my chest is the most interesting place in the world.







McGooster is now really maintaining eye contact with not only Jim and I, but with anyone who is holding her and willing to talk in the embarrassingly high pitched mommy voice babies love so much. She is DEFINITELY smiling intentionally now and learning that if she smiles we get even crazier over her and that if she does it again, the whole world is about her. She is started to get along better with her tummy and we are figuring out how to help her. Baby yoga, massage and adequate sleep all make an enormous difference. Her epiglottis is still giving her a hard time and it is just awful to watch. She starts to gag so badly sometimes that she can't catch her breath. All three of us have a chiropractor appointment on Friday and I am hoping that can help things flow more smoothly. I am also giving her infant probiotics daily. The jury is still out on whether or not this is actually helpful or beneficial.
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Lucy wearing the outfit Daddy Bear wore home when he was born. |
The car seat. Good golly the car seat. It took us three hours to get home the rock climbing gym in Syracuse on Sunday. THREE HOURS. In a five minute time span she got so worked up that she threw up twice. It is absolutely excruciating for all three of us. We stop as soon as we can, give snuggles, change her diaper, nurse her, more snuggles. Because we have to eventually make it home, I put her back in the seat (and I am so contorted I might as well be in there with her) and before we have a chance to get to the next exit, she is distraught. This doesn't happen every time (although it certainly does feel like it). It is making me want to stay in the house and never go any where, which is just not a healthy option for anyone in our family. We are going to try to associate a song with good feelings in the house, then in the seat in the house, then the seat in the car. We are also going to get a car seat blanket that I will sleep with for a few nights and see if my scent helps her (as if she can't smell me when I am smushed up against her in the seat). I have been reading
Sweet Sleep and believe that Lucy falls into the highly sensitive, highly adaptable temperament (among others). She doesn't seem to get stressed out about being in a new place, but she does hate getting there. She seems to get car seat fatigue from her high sensitivity levels. If there was one thing I did not want to pass to her, it is my heightened sensitivity for all things. We do not plan to treat her any differently and give her a self-fulling prophecy over my intuition, but we do want to be aware of her needs based on this observation. Hopefully this gets better. For now, we are not going any where in the car seat outside of a one hour radius. A two drive could take five hours! Not worth it.

Last weekend we were lucky enough to have a visit from Aunt Tracy. She picked out Lucy's outfits and helped give her a war evening massage. We even got to bundle up and go down to ChiliFest on the Commons. It was a really nice weekend and all three of us are thankful that Aunt Tracy could meet Lucy before she got to grown up on us.

We had lunch today with Judy Hoffman, which was a wonderful treat. Because of the terribly cold, snowy weather and the whole car seat issue we haven't been going much of any where. I also wanted her to have a nice long, comforting break at home when we got back from CA (more for me than her?). Judy offered to come here, but we met at Carriage House Cafe, which is just 1.5 miles from our house. Lucy fell asleep in the seat and stayed that way for about 45 minutes. This mama is baffled. On any account, it was great to see such a great friend and to have her spoil Lucy with some love. We talked about lots of mommy issues, like my new and sudden fear of dying from a blood clot or car accident. Apparently I am not alone in my-crazy, home alone all day, I am doing everything I can for baby-brain. I am meeting with my boss on Thursday to discuss transitioning back to work options. I am hopeful that that conversation will help me organize my thoughts on work, scheduling, childcare, bottles, etc...

I was able to swim for the first time since the evening before i went into labor this evening (lifting is out of the question currently due a prolapsed bladder- awesome). Jim was darling enough to meet me at the gym so I could nurse Lucy and immediately pass her to him. I swam 50 lengths which is less than my pregnancy mile swims, but we had to time things just right for nursing because I haven't been able to convince myself to try a bottle with the Sweet Potato just yet. She abhors a pacifier. I can't imagine she will love a bottle. She does love her daddy bear and being walked riding in the Ergo so it worked out perfectly. The lifeguard watched my phone for me and the front desk folks were ready to come get me. It felt great, though, and I am grateful for my husband and his willingness to gentlty support me.

By my persuasion Jim and I have decided not to "sleep train" Lucy. We have started something of a bed time routine around 8:00pm to try to get her to bed before 11:00, which seems to be going well. We start with a little baby wearing while I "putz" around the house doing normal things and basically ignoring her fussing and just letting her blow of steam while close to mommy. Sometimes she falls asleep for a cat nap and once the sleep endorphins are going I can nurse her to sleep in bed and there she stays. Other times she nurses once I get her out of the baby wear-carrier and give her a massage with dimmed lights and some singing followed by nursing. (Most of my activities begin and/or end with nursing :-). If she is still futzy we have been bundling up and taking a short walk through the neighborhood, which works almost every time. Again, sleep endorphins engaged, I take her out of the wrap and nurse her to sleep in bed. Last night she feel asleep for the cat nap at 8:30 and we were both sound asleep in the bed by 10:45, which is a much earlier than 11:30/12:00 for the first cat nap. This seems to be making everyone happier and better rested. Lucy tends to sleep better and longer at night if we can get her there before she is overtired and then exhausted.

We are learning from each other more and more every day. We put one foot in front of the other, drink in every moment of the bliss and imagine how life ever was without Lucy.
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