Holden had his 9-month appointment earlier this week. Â His growth has slowed way down. Â He’s 21 lbs. 14.5 oz (79th percentile for weight) and 29 inches long (67th percentile for height). Â The fluid is almost gone from his ears after persisting for over a month following his ear infection. Â No signs of infection this time, though, which is also great news. Â He is healthy but we MUST do something about his sleep (or lack thereof). Â He does not like to eat during the day for fear of missing something more interesting or more important, so he concentrates his feedings at night. Â Additionally, Holden went from feeding every hour or so during the day to only feeding once every 4-5 hours during the day. Â This change in his feeding habits happened almost overnight. Â The result is that my body hasn’t had a chance to adjust its milk production and I have had two episodes of clogged ducts, while narrowly avoiding many other potential clogs. Â Plus, he has been teething like crazy lately, so he is a total crankpot during the day and will often wake up screaming every 1-2 hours throughout the night. Â This phase we are going through is WAY worse than when he was first born, which by comparison was a freaking cakewalk. Â We’ve tried Motrin, Tylenol, homeopathic teething tablets, frozen/slushy fruit, wet washclothes, cold teething rings, you name it. Â Nothing is making him feel better. Â We’re still trying to decide how to deal with this latest problem—I’ve always been OK with letting him fuss it out to go to sleep. Â But when he is screaming in obvious pain….that’s something that I just can’t ignore. Â We need to make some decisions soon. Â As for the milk supply, it’s probably time that I stop pumping for donation so that I can get my supply to dwindle. Â I know it’s weird to talk about having too much milk, but man, it’s a real problem. Â My body had to support an 8 lb. 10 oz newborn growing into a 19 lb. baby by 4 months—-and my body did this through constant, round-the-clock nursing in those early weeks. Â And now that Holden is being more reasonable about his feedings, my poor body doesn’t quite know what to do with itself. Â I discussed some of this with the lactation consultant when I was at the pediatrician’s office today. Â To say that she was unhelpful and rude would be severely understating the case. Â She actually said to me “I don’t really know what you expect to be helped with here….” Â WTF?! Â Lady, I am not sleeping, my boobs keep getting plugged, and I feel like crap…..I want help with THAT!!! Â She really had nothing to suggest about the plugged ducts; as for the night wakenings, her only suggestions were to ignore the crying or maybe offer him water instead. Â We tried ignoring the crying last night and offering water, but it did not go well. Â Neither of us felt OK about it, so we won’t be doing it again. Â You know how they say there is so much variability around developmental milestones—-so much variability, in fact, that you can expect certain behaviors to emerge during a temporal window that spans MONTHS? Â Why should feeding be any different? Â Maybe some babies are able to go long periods of time without eating from a young age and other babies just take a little longer to develop this skill—-I mean, metabolism happens to be a rather individualized process. Â To say that ALL babies should be sleeping through the night at 6 months is about as ridiculous as saying that all babies should be crawling by 7 months or talking by 12. Â We expect variance with other aspects of development, so why should feeding and sleeping be the exception? Â
Stupid doctors.
As for the fun stuff that Holden is doing these days, he gives mini high-fives to us. Â We raise our palm and ask for a high-five and Holden responds by steadying our hand with one of his hands and then repeatedly slapping our hand with his free hand. Â It’s really cute, but he refuses to perform on video. Â Every time we break out the camera to capture him in action, he stops giving high-fives and looks straight at the camera, in preparation to have his picture snapped. Â One of these days we will catch him though! Â Holden is also gaining some real fluidity with his movements….he goes seamlessly and effortlessly from sitting to crawling and crawling to sitting again. Â He is pulling himself up to standing often. Â He empties the contents of our bookcase routinely, tossing the likes of Sartre, Hesse, and Vonnegut casually over his shoulder. Â He isn’t satisfied unless he is around lots of people, a situation that isn’t always possible for me to conjure up for him. Â He eats everything we eat at the table and hasn’t shown any obvious signs of disliking any particular food. Â
Yesterday Holden got to spend the day with the nanny and his new little friend, Mallory. Â I am pretty sure Mallory “taught” Holden how to crawl. Â Once he started socializing with Mallory, his gross motor skills seemed to really take off. Â I don’t know if it’s just coincidence, but I would bet that having to keep up with another infant served as motivation for him to adopt a more efficient strategy for getting around. Â He really enjoys his time with other babies and I do best to make sure he gets as much exposure as he seems to need. Â
I have so much more to say but I am tired and need sleep. Â I am still in job purgatory. Â No word whatsoever. Â So we are determined to enjoy our weekend to get our minds off of things. Â We plan on going out for breakfast one morning and also going to one of the sugarhouses for Vermont Maple Open House Weekend. Â This will be a welcome distraction.