Life is Good

I am (finally) finding myself enchanted with Stella again. Yes, she is still emotionally volatile, and impatient, and has to be bribed with stickers to keep her cool when getting into tenuous situations at school, but she is also funny, and sweet and we have the most amazing conversations. And, as the ultimate test of trust and confidence, I can leave her alone in a room with Porter and not worry that she will try to staple him to the floor while I am gone.

And, speaking of Cutie Von Cutenstein Porter, although he is not yet crawling, he can scoot and/or roll across the room with amazing adeptness, which is probably another reason I am not as concerned about leaving him alone with his sister – he can practically out-maneuver her. I shudder to think of what I am in for once both of my children move under their own power. I am hoping all of that sibling team building I have been working on doesn’t backfire and have the two of them huddling up against me. I know my children well enough to know that I won’t stand a chance.

As each day goes by, I am finding myself enjoying things a little more. I also find myself growing increasingly nostalgic. Sappily and pathetically nostalgic. Porter is my last baby and, thusly, I have realized that, not only is this the last time I will be experiencing all of this, but so much has gone by already. I was blind-sided with it over the weekend when I was at Rabia & Josh’s wedding reception, and ended up chatting with a woman who had a 6-week old baby boy. And when I say “chatted with” I mean cornered in the living room after my second glass of wine. Poor girl. I’m sure all she wanted to do was breast-feed in peace. I couldn’t help myself. After watching her carry him around in a front-pack all afternoon, snuggled up right against her chest, I couldn’t help but realize that those days have already passed. Porter has graduated to the backpack, and everytime I attempt to carry him in the sling, he spends his entire time craning his neck around to see what his sister is doing. I guess I am finally able to appreciate all that advice about enjoying it while I can because it goes so quickly. Advice that, when heard after the 6th consecutive day of 4 hours sleep, can sound a little hollow.

And so I am appreciating it. Every moment I can. Like when Stella came screetching into the kitchen, à la Tom Cruise in Risky Business, saying, “I know this song! I know this song!” and began boogeying down and singing along.

Apparently, my music collection crosses over with a 3-year-old, and apparently Jack Johnson is the Dylan of the pre-school set.

The Nocturnal Circus

This household has not known a full night’s sleep in, roughly, 5 months 6 days 13 hours and 5 minutes. Roughly. Okay, there was that one night, where we naively believed we would be lucky enough to have 2 children that slept through the night at freakishly early ages, but we were sadly brought to the reality that it was just Porter’s sick sense of humor. He is cruel that way. We have gone through one rollercoaster ride after another with him in terms of sleep. He’ll start inching towards longer and longer stretches – giving us 4, 5, 6 then 7 hours straight, giving us hope, and rest, and the reckless abandon to go to bed after 10 without the dread of getting up within an hour – only to blindside us with freakishly inconsistent patterns all over again.

The last time he did it I took him to the doctor to see if he had an ear infection. WHY ELSE WOULD HE ALL OF A SUDDEN BE WAKING UP EVERY 2 AND A HALF HOURS? Nope. Nuthin. Unwilling to accept the reality that he would be doing this for no actual reason, we figured it HAD to be that he was teething again. So we started drugging him with regular doses of ibuprofin. Because we are good parents that way. Funny thing about that – still no new teeth.

On Fridays at work, I often get the obligatory, “Hallelujah! Aren’t you glad it’s Friday?” To which, my response is to look at them with absolutely no sense of irony and say, “I have a 6 month old and an almost three year old who never got that memo. To them, the concept of weekends and sleeping in are about as meaningful as a new pack of vacuum cleaner bags.” All weekends have become is a blinding reminder of the fact that we aren’t sleeping in.

Last night was a perfect example of why all four of us can be picked out of a line-up based solely on the dark circles under our eyes:

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8:22pm: Stella to bed.

Sidebar: Stella has gotten into the habit, lately, of coming into our room at un-Godly hours, and requesting to get into bed next to me. In my compromised, sleep-deprived state, I have actually let her do it, and immediately ended up regretting it. Not only do I have to endure her signature snuggling, but I also have carelessly thrown the door wide open to establishing precedent. They say that 2 of anything and you have a collection. Well, when it comes to Stella and routines, it only takes once and it is as though she has been doing it her whole lifetime.

It is for this reason that I take the opportunity during story time to have a lengthy conversation with her as to when is the appropriate time to come get in bed with us. Repeat after me. Middle of the night: not okay. Morning-time: okay.

8:36pm: Stella up. Stalling tactic. Sent straight back to bed.
8:42pm: Porter to bed.
9:05pm: Me to bed.
9:35pm: Steve to bed. (The first time he has been to bed before 11:00pm in weeks.)
11:37pm: Porter up (with me).
12:05am: Porter back to bed.
4:30am: Porter up (with Steve).

Sidebar: Porter’s routine, of late, has been to get up twice, usually the second time being somewhere around 4:30. This is, hands-down, one of the worst times because it brushes up so closely to the first alarm (which is 5:00). Basically, what this boils down to is, whoever gets up with him is pretty much up for the day by 4:30. Not only this, but he is unusually hard to get back to sleep – further clarifying that you are, indeed, up for the day. Eventually he will go back to sleep, but not without a bunch of racket and not usually in under an hour.

5:30am: Porter still up and yelling (not crying). Unable to sleep through it, I intervene.
5:36am: Porter back to bed.
5:37am: Stella up. Wants into bed with us. I hold firm: “Nope. It’s still night time. Back to bed.”
6:05am (still dark outside): Stella’s up again. I cave and let Stella climb into bed next to me.
6:05am – 6:40am: Stella wiggles, and kicks, and pulls hair, and plays with the cat, and eventually goes from a whisper, to a regular voice, to a shrill cackle.
6:40am: Porter’s head pops up over the side of his bassinet.

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Figuring it is unfair that Steve, Stella, Rosie and myself are all in bed together, I bring Porter over to join in the festivities. And so completes a typical night with the Walstons.

One of the biggest things that is different for me being a parent the second time around is having the benefit of perspective. Although nothing will change the fact that we have to suffer through this sleepless insanity, I at least have the ability to see it as finite. I know that, someday, it will end, and that, bizarrely enough, I will be nostalgic for the moments where all of us are piled in bed together at 6:45 on a Sunday morning.

Stop. Breathe. Reflect.

As you may have noticed, I have been conspicuously absent lately. At best, I can manage to throw a photo up here and there, but when it comes to putting word to page, I have been either distracted, unable to write a sentence worth reading, or just plain exhausted. At the pace that my life is moving right now, I am expecting Stella to come ask me for the car keys in about a day or two.

This realization has hit me like an aluminum bat to the back of the head about a dozen times in the last couple weeks: Stella is growing up. And not just the already-wears-a-size-4 kind of growing up, but the no-longer-an-anger-management-poster-child kind of growing up. Our lives have such insane momentum right now, it is often hard to get perspective of the big picture. I have seen little things here and there that make me hopeful we are turning the proverbial corner with Stella, but it wasn’t until this morning – while dropping her off at school – that I realized the transition that is afoot.

Over the last week or so, Stella has gotten into the routine of crying as I leave her at school in the morning. I get the sense that she gets over it pretty quickly, and for the most part, does it out of a sense of routine. Then, this morning I saw something I have never seen before. She stood at the window, waved her sweet little hand and conjured every ounce of energy she could muster in trying not to cry. I watched her chin quiver and her eyes well up ever so slightly, but refrained from her usual bellowing of “Nooooo, Mamaaaaa” as I left. Just pure and total determination that she would not cry – not this time. Now, I have seen Stella exert control over her emotional response about as many times as I have seen a unicorn gallop through our backyard. Watching her brave little face made me want to cry. That is the second time she has done this to me in a matter of weeks.

I have seen these little moments more and more these days, and have also started realizing that although the trials and tribulations of our transition to life as a family of four is far from over, we have at least hurdled the first jump. Granted, we tripped over it, dragged it and skinned all of our knees and elbows in the process. But it’s a start. For instance, Stella started calling her brother Port. We don’t call him that. And usually, pretty much every funny or quirky thing we hear come out of her mouth can be somehow traced back to something that we say. Like when I winked at her across the table at dinner the other night and without missing a beat, she looks at me, scrunches up her face to one side and says, “Arrrg, Me Matey!” Hmm, I wonder where she would have picked that up?

In going through all of this craziness over the last 5 months, I have also marveled at how nature, in all of her wisdom, has dealt us the ultimate hand. The yin and yang of our two children is almost frightening. Stella oozes energy from every pore in her body. She is constantly on the go, inquisitive and irrepressable. Porter is – as Celene so aptly put it – “so chill!” He can sit in his office for what seems an eternity, watching his sister scamper and gyrate around the kitchen. It is common for him to sit there, transfixed on her every move: back, forth, back forth, up down. He waits patiently in his car-seat while I de-sand Stella each day after school (I swear, I could send that kid to school in a HazMat suit and she would still come home with a bucket’s worth in her hair and shoes.), and has given me the most amazing gift of all: the ability to be put into his bed, awake, and fall asleep on his own. It is such a wonderful thing that I don’t even hassle him about the fact that he still won’t give us a full night’s sleep.

I guess what I am saying is that, although still hectic and harried, life has gotten a tiny bit more stable. We all seem to be enjoying each other rather than just being exasperated by one another. And for this, I am eternally thankful.

stella & porter

stella & porter

stella & porter

stella & porter

stella & porter

stella & porter

Watching

Today I was reminded that one of the best ways to reset the frustration-o-meter is to watch my kids when they don’t know I am looking. I had the opportunity to do this, individually, with both of my kids today, and was quickly reminded of what it is all really about.

Watching Stella walk around the playground, ding-dinging away on the musical triangle and watching Porter intently try to stuff his foot in his mouth – without a doubt – made my day.

stella and porter

The Recap

Months back, Steve and I were at the park with Stella, and we began chatting with one of the other Dads who was there with this wife and two children. One of the kids was Stella’s age and the other was an infant, lounging lazily in a carseat perched on a nearby picnic table. This was all way back before we had even considered thinking about the idea that another child would ever enter our lives. We had our hands full, and told him as much. He, without hesitation, related the wisdom that having two was really like having three. I am reminded of this conversation often these days and wish I could track him down and call him a LIAR! Having two is NOT like having three…it is like having SEVEN!

Then, there was the conversation Steve and I had the other night wherein we wondered, out loud, what our lives would be like, right now, if we had not had kids. There was the obvious talk about how our careers would probably be in different places, and how our house would not feel like the Old Lady in the Shoe, and that we would have no idea of the going street value of a good night’s sleep, but mostly, we realized that unless we had undertaken some big hobby that involved expensive equipment and extensive travel, we would probably be bored.

Juxtaposing these two revelations is how we keep from succumbing to complete and total implosion.

  • Upon making new car purchase, realize that we now have two kids and station-wagon. Official ruling requires that 50 points are deducted from our overall coolness score.
  • After having Stella – literally – push me to the brink of tears numerous times over the last couple of weeks, decide that I need to have a shirt made for her that says “Worlds Most Irrational Human” and make her wear it as a reminder that you can’t negotiate with a terrorist.
  • Stella now officially attending Pre-School. Out of desparation, will be requesting a copy of their discipline packet.
  • Witnessed the emergence of two jagged white peaks emerging from Porter’s gumline – his first real defense mechanism against an unrully older sibling.
  • Shake fist at ceiling each time Stella refuses to spit out her toothpaste – (instead choosing to eat it). Fight the urge to throw myself into traffic when she decides that – in a pinch – the best way to get my attention is to make spit bubbles drip down her chin. I think this is what you call irony. I call it a reason to pull my own hair – as it redirects my pain.
  • Take lovely vacation alone with husband, while children are foisted upon unsuspecting grandparents. Return rested. Within 24 hours, exhausted again.
  • Sell the Neon.
  • Put Porter in day care.
  • Finally get to see Talladega Nights.

Ending on a high note: Insanity averted.