Here's Helene's room.
Which says it's good for ages '"0 to 5 months." Well, fuck. Because my baby is just about six months old so I'd better just take down this insanely mesmerizing mobile that I JUST PUT UP. Oh no. We're using that damn mobile, even if it means it stays up there until the baby can stand, pull it down upon her small head, and yell "I hate you! I have a dent in my head now and I will never have a prom date! You have ruined my life!" at her stupid mother who put the thing up in the first place. So yeah, the baby has a real room now that actually looks like a baby lives in it. I think she's taken a total of three naps in there now, looking all stranded and small in the giant island of her lovely dark wood crib. She hasn't slept at night in there yet. Because I can't let her yet. I am still too attached to placing a hand on her little body in the co-sleeper next to me to quiet her when she cries out in her sleep, or to just feel the soft, solid rise and fall of her breath in the velvet dark, or to slide her into bed next to me for a precious hour or two of snoozing in the early morning, so I can watch her stir and stretch, and see her big grey-blue eyes open wide to the morning, wide smile to follow.
And then there's this. The Precious Planet Jumperoo.
Because Helene loooves standing, loves being bounced up and down, cannot get enough, and Mama's arms are tired from being a human jumperoo every day (though it is helping my triceps). So I decided we needed to buy this most elaborate and complicated plastic piece of baby paraphernalia (definitely the biggest, gaudiest, plastickiest baby thing we've bought to date) so the baby could jump! And bounce! And spin! And entertain herself for maybe dozens of minutes at a time. The Jumperoo was dutifully purchased at a big suburban baby store, wedged in the trunk, hauled home, and assembled (despite the usual horrifyingly bad instructions). The baby was placed in the seat that looks like a giant monkey is eating her, and voila! Let the fun begin. Just one problem with this whole plan. Our darling, precious petite flower of a baby? Her feet? Do not touch the floor. So she just kind of....dangles there....in the monkey head. Sigh.
I should stop getting so attached to plans.
8 comments:
I know it sounds horrible, but I laughed hysterically at this point. welcome to parenting.
I meant post, I laughed at the post. grrr, dumb mommybrain.
Maybe a phonebook under her feet would work for the monkey thing. I love the "dozens of minutes" line. Ah, you are bringing back many memories.
Emily- it's cool - you were supposed to laugh hysterically at it. That's why I back-end loaded the post with silly stuff like dangling baby feet.
Lorie- Great idea about the phone book. If only we had one. We use the internet for everything, and I'm not putting my MacBook under there.
Hey! I had the same IUD problem! Except in my case, TWO. The first didn't show up on the ultrasound so they assumed it "fell out" without me noticing, and I was dumb enough to shrug and say, "Well, that doesn't sound like me, but... okay," and then get another put in, which went on to follow the path of the first and get lodged in my abdominal cavity. Painful. The surgery went well, but I was incredibly pissed.
Emily B. - SO SORRY. Ugh. I had a smart midwife who sent me for an ultrasound AND an x-ray. U/S tech could not find the IUD, but it did show up on the x-ray. Apparently, this kind of malposition is usually quite painful for the user. I felt nothing. Apparently? I have the UTERUS OF STEEL.
Loved this. LOVED this. Laughed really hard. If I have learned anything about parenting, it's that whatever I think should happen most definitely will not, and will actually probably go spectacularly wrong in direct proportion to how badly I wanted it to go the other way. My recent vacation, with grandparent babysitting so I could rest, that was sabotaged by the Preschooler Who Puked For Eight Hours Straight And Then Needed To Be Taken Home, comes to mind. All you can do is laugh and tell your friends, who will laugh with you and tell their own stories.
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