Day 287

Dear Sweet-Child-Who-Is-Still-In-My-Womb-8-Days-After-Its-Official-Due-Date,

Firstly, I don’t blame you. I blame my body and its inability to realize that preganacy actually has an end point. It did the same thing with your sister who, after 42 weeks and one day finally granted her release from the warm confines of my uterus (but not without some hormonal enticement). Honestly, I just can’t figure out why my body isn’t leaping at the chance to regain shape, circulation and the ability to go a 24 hour period without getting a new stretch mark.

With that said, I need to address some logistical issues with you. You see, we have tickets to see Wait Wait… Don’t Tell Me this Thursday and Easter Sunday is quickly approaching. Not only is your Grandma Dani here, but your Grandpa Bill and Grandma Judy arrived on Saturday. Additionally, your Aunt Celene and Uncle Thad are due for arrival this coming Saturday. So, if you could work it out with my body to either come right now, or sometime after Thursday, that would be great. Oh, and your dad is off work for the next two weeks also. But no pressure.

In the meantime, we are busy trying to keep your sister from becoming a 2-year-old dictator (considering there exists statutory prohibition in regards to children going to day care when grandparents are present). Getting her to stick to any kind of a schedule has been tenuous, at best. I am trying to think of, and address, every possible undone project or purchase that will require an act of congress to complete once you are born. I have also managed to spend the better part of the last week getting my ass kicked at Scrabble by your Grandma Dani. Oh, and speaking of your Grandma Dani – if she tells me I have “dropped” one more time I am going to kick her in the groin.

Today I go in for an ultrasound to make sure your swimming pool of amniotic fluid is still at reasonable levels, and then we will go in for a non-stress test wherein they will hook me up to the contraction-o-meter and the heart-rate monitor to make sure my body isn’t holding you in there against your will. For all I know you and my body have some agreement worked out wherein you have agreed to just chill out as long as necessary. I hate to break it to you, but ultimately, you are going to have to come out.

So, little one, all I can say is this: At most, you have a week. Live it up while you can, because a world of Walston awaits you.

Love,
Mama

No, still no baby.

Today officially began the first day of my maternity leave. I am now 3 days overdue with no clear end in sight. Not exactly shocking information. I am facing the realization that this child, much like Stella, will have to be forced from my womb at gunpoint.

My mother (1/2 of the Walston labor coaching team) is camped here for the long haul and we are now spending our days trying to pretend we aren’t tired of waiting for this child to SHOW UP ALREADY! I received four phone calls on my actual due date and have received at least 3 a day every day since asking me if I am in labor yet. And for any of you who are wondering right now: No, I am not in labor.

Salon Girl

One of things Stella inherited from her father (aside from her worship of the alimighty enchilada and the need to explain the most obscure details of any given situation) were two gigantic side-by-side cowlicks square on the crown of her scalp. They caused her to have an Alfalfa-style hairdo until she was, roughly, a year old. (The covergence of these two swirls caused the hair to collide in a way that forced the hair straight up.) As she got older, and her hair got longer, the weight finally allowed for her to no longer resemble one of the Little Rascals.

Instead, the affect is that the majority of her hair now grows forward, causing her bangs to start somewhere around the back of her head. Think sideways comb-over. This most unfortunate of hair growth patterns will, I am sure, drive her into therapy by the age of nine.

I never had any intention of giving her bangs, but somewhere along the line I realized that Stella had a rare disease that caused her hair to grow in a mullet-like syle, with bangs naturally forming and reaching all the way back to her ears. Again, I blame her father for this.

It is time I face the facts: my daughter is follically challenged.

Once I was able to come to terms with the reality of the situation, I made the decision to seek professional help. Just the look on the hairdressers face said it all: you have a long road ahead, but I will be with you every step of the way.

Salon Girl

Salon Girl