Archive for the ‘Nathan’s second year’ Category

2 years old


18 Feb

I started this blog a week ago, and am just now finishing it so please read it with this in mind since his birthday was on the 11th.

Nathan turns 2 today and I’m wondering where the last year has gone.  We seem to have been so very busy and yet we have done little.   We have spent lots of time at parks and other places away from home, simply because we don’t have the space for an active toddler in our flat.  That is one of the issues I find of living in a flat with young children, as there just isn’t the space for them to run around and do all the things toddlers want to do like kick balls and throw things.  So almost every day consists of getting organised and getting out in the morning, returning to the flat for a midday sleep, and generally staying home for the afternoon though we do try to get out for a walk somewhere even if it is only to the (small) playground at the front of our residential complex.  We will often do craft-type things in the afternoon and I fit cooking dinner in there somewhere.  Nathan loves helping cook where he can, so I get him to cut up softish vegetables and he will also stir things on the hotplate for me as long as the stirring is not too hard to do.

Sleep, now that is something that I spend an enormous amount of energy and time trying to make it happen and trying to work out how best to manage it.   There doesn’t seem to be any trend related to how busy/active he is during the day, how many hours he sleeps at night and/or during the day, or even how long it was since he woke from is day sleep.  What seems to work best is when he has an early day sleep (starting around 11:30 am) and waking up around 1 pm), but it’s by no means certain that this will result in a sleeping Nathan by 8:30 pm.  I’ve tossed around the idea of trying to cut out his day sleep, but that would mean that we could never leave the flat in the car or pram after about 11 am because he would fall asleep and there’s no way I can keep him awake (I’ve tried to keep him awake in the car and it’s nigh on impossible when he’s tired).  And it would be simply disastrous for his night sleep if he went to sleep in the mid afternoon!

Anyway, enough about sleep.  I have to admit that I didn’t know how quickly a baby grows up, how quickly they learn to walk and talk, amongst other things.  It never ceases to amaze me how interested Nathan is in numbers and letters, though he persists in jumping from 13 to 16 when he’s counting.  He knows pretty much all the letters, though there are a couple that he gets mixed up (like U and W).  He is so pleased that he can jump now, and likes to jump everywhere he goes.  He still loves kicking a ball (right foot only) but has not yet mastered catching at all. As for talking, he’s certainly got that under control though we do still have to decipher Nathanese at times.

I feel that all the effort that we put into elimination communication over the past 19 months has really paid off now that Nathan happily takes himself to the toilet (actually it paid off a long time ago since I haven’t had nappies, particularly pooey ones, to deal with for a very very long time).  He will move the step to the toilet, climb on, choose his seat (the toddler seat is inbuilt),  sit on it, close the lid and flush when finished, climb down off the step, move it to the sink, climb up and wash his hands.  Yes, we still prompt him to use the toilet a lot, and we do still have to help him undress (though he can take off his pants if they pull down easily and can nearly pull them up again), and we do still wipe him after poos (when do they learn to do that on their own without making a mess?). I’m sure he doesn’t remember a time when he didn’t use the potty, and I’m so pleased that I don’t have to start trying to toilet train my headstrong and willful child now!

I can certainly see a little, independent person rising up from babyhood.  He is a very helpful little person, but he knows what he wants and will try to achieve it on his own without asking for help.  This leads to clashes of willpower between him and Mummy or Daddy….Nathan who just wants to do what he thinks he needs to or wants to, and Mummy and Daddy who can see things going wrong as their little boy heads off without a thought of safety in his head.  Safety isn’t the only issue either; I just don’t think that we need all our eggs broken into a bowl simply because he loves cracking them and will go to the fridge and take out the eggs and put them in a bowl to achieve this.  And he doesn’t need to graze the fridge or pull out the milk by himself just because he decides that he needs some strawberries or a milk drink right now.   Still, I love that he enthusiastically helps with anything he thinks needs to be done.

I think that Nathan is very accepting of Toby generally, though I think he misses  being carried on my back or just at any time when he gets tired of walking.  Breastfeeding is our biggest issue, with me trying hard to keep him to his 3 feeds a day while Nathan often wants additional feeds (usually towards the end of the day when he’s getting tired).  More clashing of wills happen over this topic. At other times of the day Nathan will happily sit beside me and read books, or go off on his own missions, while I breastfeed Toby.

Just for posterity, a typical day looks like:

6:00 (give or take an hour) Nathan wakes up and had a breastfeed.
Sometime between 7 and 8 am he has breakfast
Between 8 and 9 am we generally get moving for the day and head off to where we will spend the day.  Mondays it is the Attachment Parenting playgroup which is often held at Sydney Park these days (since I always suggest that venue).  Thursdays it’s the pool for his swimming class and sometimes we head off to the Red Bus afterwards to see Mel and Sarah, and Fridays we often catch up with some people from my Mother’s group.  Tuesday or Wednesday we will go shopping, and the other day is usually spent at a park or the beach, weather permitting.  Other things we get up to are singing and story sessions in the library (though we haven’t been lately) and the Magic Yellow Bus which we’ve just started going to (the Marrickville version of the Red Bus).
11:00 am, snack before bed (fruit, sandwich, sushi roll (if we’re at the shops), etc.)
Between 11:15 am and 12:00 pm drive home, Nathan falls asleep in the car and I transfer him to his bed when we get home.
Sometime between 1 and 2 pm Nathan wakes up, has a breastfeed and a small lunch, depending on what he ate before his nap.
2 – 5:30 pm we do some activities that don’t require driving anywhere and include getting dinner organised
6:00 pm, start dinner
7:00 pm, have a bath
7:30 pm, brush teeth and read books
8:00 pm (can be as late as 8:30 pm, depending on what time Andrew gets home from work and how unsettled Toby is in the evening), breastfeed.  Sometimes he falls asleep in 15-20 minutes, but when he doesn’t…….
8:30 -10:00 (or later) try to get Nathan to put his head on his pillow and lie still so he can go to sleep.
10:00 (hopefully), he’s asleep.  At worst, he’s generally asleep by 11!

Happy Birthday my little boy!

A few photos from the last month:


Very excited about his new bike (2nd birthday present)


Birthday dinner at the Sushi Train in Newtown


Going on the ferry (we love $2:50 family funday sunday tickets for public transport)


Reading to Toby


Playing trains (track built by Daddy)


Pretending to be a baby on the change table


Generously sharing his toys with Toby (or trying to bury Toby, not sure which)


Having the occasional (ok, not so occasional) meltdown


Visiting the city on Sundays


Having fun with Grandma and Grandpa

Potato Salad


06 Feb

A few days ago Nathan helped me cut the potatoes for potato salad.  The potatoes were cooked and peeled, and Nathan was a picture of concentration while cutting them into slices.

Tobery


31 Jan

Nathan has started calling Toby…Tobery.   He pronounces it….Toe-bear-rie, with the emphasis on the middle syllable.  I have no idea where it has come from!

Tandem Breastfeeding


27 Jan

Tandem breastfeeding is not something I thought I’d ever do, if I gave any thought to it at all.   Eh, to be honest, before I actually had a baby and learned a lot about breastfeeding, I had the standard sort of society values that we pick up somewhere along the way in life.  I thought that a baby was too old to be breastfed if it was some ill-defined age which was definitely before the baby was walking and talking.  Then I got pregnant and I started getting some accurate information about breastfeeding.  Not only did I discover that it can be quite difficult to do at the start, but I also learned that extended breastfeeding is not only good for the baby and mother, but it is recommended by agencies such as the World Health Organisation.  WHO recommends breastfeeding to the age of two years and beyond for as long as mother and baby are happy to do so.

I guess that one of the possible reasons that I thought that feeding an older baby was a bit weird is just that you don’t see many, if any, people feeding older babies.  Maybe I just didn’t see it because it never occurred to me that people do that, though now that I’m in that category I still don’t see many people feeding toddlers when I’m out and about.  I stopped feeding Nathan outside the flat a long time ago, so I’m certainly not helping the cause either.  Nathan was rarely interested in breastfeeding when we were out simply because there were new and wonderful things to excite him, and I assume that most toddlers are the same.

I breastfed Nathan beyond 12 months not because it was recommended by WHO, but essentially because Nathan loved it.  It really is a great tool for the parenting toolbox.  Not only does it provide nutrition and antibodies to the child, but it helps the wakeful toddler get to sleep, it calms and soothes a hurt, sick or upset child, and is quiet time and cuddles with Mummy.  With all the trouble we have getting Nathan to sleep, I wasn’t about to wean and have to deal with his sleep in other (generally less efficient and often less happy) ways.  So when I became pregnant with Toby, I figured I’d just keep feeding until Nathan weaned himself at some stage during the pregnancy which I thought he might do.  From what I’d read, many women stop producing much (or any) milk during pregnancy and so the baby weans, or the baby may decide he dislikes the changed taste of the milk and wean. Keeping in mind that Nathan was only 13 months old when I became pregnant, and I thought he wasn’t ready for weaning then anyway, I just thought I’d keep feeding and see what happened.

I should have known that Nathan was such a keen breastfeeder that he wouldn’t give it up even if I was pregnant.   As I got towards the end of the pregnancy I had to start thinking about what I would do when the baby arrived. Trying to deny Nathan the breast only made him very upset, so I figured that the two or three times a day that I was feeding him wasn’t onerous and I could easily do that when the baby was born.  That was when I was thinking rationally while not feeding.  I actually got to hate breastfeeding Nathan, though, because it hurt a lot and was even worse when Nathan wriggled which he did a lot.  I also hated the way he pinched me while he was feeding too.  We ended up with a host of rules including ‘no pinching, no wriggling’.  I was really worried that the hatred of breastfeeding that I felt while I was pregnant would endure and affect my breastfeeding relationship with the baby, but again in my rational moments I assumed that the pain, which mostly caused my negative thoughts about it, would disappear when I was no longer pregnant.

What I didn’t foresee was that Nathan would want to breastfeed more when the baby was born, nor was I prepared for feeding both of them at the same time. But that decision was taken out of my hands hen Nathan decided he wanted to breastfeed when Toby had his first feed in hospital.  Nathan had been through a lot that morning and not only was it a form of comfort for him, but I think it helped him to bond with the baby by gently touching him as he fed.

I’ve been reading a book I borrowed from the Australian Breastfeeding Association library called Adventures in Tandem Nursing – Breastfeeding during pregnancy and beyond.  It is written by Hillary Flower, and I really wish I had read it while I was pregnant.  It is an excellent insight into the emotional and physical side of breastfeeding during pregnancy and continuing to breastfeed a toddler after the new baby is born. It discussed how the milk changes as a baby gets older, and what happens during pregnancy. It talked about some other cultures and discussed the ages of weaning, weaning (or not) during pregnancy and their beliefs on which their decisions were based.  It went into what other mothers have experienced when breastfeeding during pregnancy, and dealt with a lot of other topics as well.  The author explained the negative feelings I had towards breastfeeding Nathan while I was pregnant, and includes a lot experiences from other women so I got an idea of how others did things and dealt with their issues.  It’s really normalised all the feelings and issues I had with feeding while pregnant and tandem feeding.

This parenting gig is a big learning experience.  I’ve learned lots from books,  online sources, sessions in real life with various people, and talking to other mums in all sorts of settings ranging from the informative ABA sessions, meetups with people interested in baby carrying, cloth nappies, elimination communication, my mother’s group, and simply by observing my own babies and how they react to various things.  I’ve had to use my own common sense, learn to trust my instincts, learn to ignore those who don’t support my/our decisions, change my ideas on parenting, and change my mindset on many issues to accommodate Nathan and now Toby’s needs.  No, I never thought I’d tandem breastfeed, but then I never thought I’d co-sleep or practice elimination communication either.  I can’t say that I enjoy it, because I don’t.   What I can say is that it seems to be the best way I can provide for the needs of both my children at the moment.

23 Months Old


17 Jan

Just running a little late with this update….anyway, a big part of this last month for Nathan has been adjusting to being a big brother.   He generally is great with Toby, perhaps a bit rough at times though with good intentions.  He started biting out of frustration or temper around the time Toby was born (usually Andrew cops it but I also get the occasional bite as well) though the last week there hasn’t been any biting (hope it continues), and he can get distressed and cry hysterically over seemingly little things.  Nathan also wants the things that Toby has….he wants to wear nappies, lie in the baby bouncer, sit in the car capsule and generally be a baby. I think it’s just that Nathan doesn’t remember ever using these items, so he just wants to play with these new items.

Nathan now mostly talks in sentences thought he can still be quite difficult to understand at times as there are still many sounds he can’t pronounce yet.  He also has his own ideas and will argue a point with you if he thinks he knows better.

The big developmental leap this month has been learning to jump.  He’s been trying for such a very long time, but this last month he started getting both feet off the ground at the same time.  Admittedly it might just be a few centimeters but it’s a start!

What Nathan has been doing this last month:

Big stomping!

Getting upset easily

Climbing on ropes (and confidently climbing up ladders)

Learning about letters and words (he loves finding the letters for the words)

Trying out the car capsule

Riding Shadow (a Christmas present from his grandparents)

Looking after Toby in many ways, including reading to him

Visiting the Opera House

Washing my laptop keyboard (replaced because he tipped water over it and stopped it from working)

Learning about caterpillars (they ate our lettuce)

Nathan’s last swimming lesson for the year

Responsible Big Brother


13 Jan

When I change Toby’s nappy on the change table, Nathan usually climbs up the change table shelves so that can watch.  One of our nappy changes today went like this:

Me: put Toby onto the change table

Nathan: climbs the change table to watch

Nathan: Mummy, go away

Me: You want Mummy to go away?  Why?

Nathan: Nathan look after Toby.

🙂

Lizards


10 Jan

Nathan’s new interest is lizards,  ever since we saw someone catching blue tongue lizards at Sydney Park to show to his kids.  Now we have to go looking for them every time we are at the park, and if we don’t see any then Nathan will lie on a bridge over the rocks that the lizards are often found on and tell the lizards to wake up.  In the video below he’s saying “wake up lizards”.  😀

Um is good word


08 Jan

For a while now Nathan has been using the word ‘um’, particularly before a ‘yes’ or ‘no’.  We have been trying to convince him that it is not a real word and talk him out of using it.  He, however, thinks it is a good word.  Our conversations go something like…

Nathan: um, yes.

Mummy: um isn’t a real word, just say yes

Nathan: um is word

Mummy: um is not a word

Nathan: Um is good word!

Andrew decided to get me to look it up in the dictionary to convince Nathan that it is not a word, asuming it wouldn’t be there.  Of course it was, and  now Nathan calls the dictionary the ‘um book’.

2 weeks in….


05 Jan

I went back to read what I wrote when Nathan was 2 weeks old, and it seems that it’s been much easier the second time round in most respects.  Part of that was knowing more about babies, part was that I didn’t have to stay in hospital, part was because I didn’t have surgery this time, and part is probably due to baby temperament. I didn’t have swollen ankles/legs this time, Toby (so far) can be put into the hammock while asleep (in contrast to Nathan who I couldn’t put down because he’d wake up, but then we didn’t have the hammock when Nathan was a newborn) which means I have a little more capacity to do other things around the flat, breastfeeding has been a lot easier and not painful at all this time round, and Toby is generally sleeping around 6 hours at night.  He is a very noisy sleeper, much noisier than Nathan was, and I’m always worried he’ll wake Nathan up!

I wasn’t sure if the group midwifery thing really worked for me, though it was a bit complicated by the fact that Bec had a sick child of her own that she had to look after which meant that I didn’t see her for a couple of my visits, but looking back I think it was a great move.  I didn’t have as many appointments with this pregnancy, and Bec seemed pretty relaxed (she said because I was always so relaxed at the appointments) and so I didn’t even have appointments as often as I was told I would.  Bec even came to the flat for one of my appointments, because she was in the area and thought it would save me a trip to the hospital while heavily pregnant.  It was a little unfortunate that she missed the birth by a matter of minutes, but she did take over afterwards and it was nice to be looked after by someone I knew rather than a hodge podge of hopsital staff.  She then came to the flat three times to check on how Toby and I were going, and I’ll have my 6 week checkup with her in February.  All in all, I think the continuity of care has been a beneficial change, from the point of view of the pregnant woman.  I asked Bec how well it worked from her perspective and she said it suited her, particularly as it was possible for her to juggle her sick child and all his hospital appointments with her work, but because noone now officially looked after the Birth Centre (as your assigned midwife goes to wherever you give birth which obviously may not be in the Birth Centre) there were issues like supplies of various items could run out.  Overall, I was really happy with this new system.  Not only did it provide continuity of care, but I had a phone number and someone specific I could contact if I had any problems along the way.  All they need to do now is offer a homebirth service, which I believe the hospital plans to do at some stage.  🙂

My parents came to Sydney for a week, arriving just 2 days after Toby was born, though they didn’t stay with us this time since we’ve run out of space in our flat to put up an airbed.  They came over every day, though mostly we didn’t do anything terribly exciting and just stayed around the flat.  It seemed really difficult to get out of the flat together, as every time we thought we were ready to go Toby would start crying and need another feed.  We did manage to get to Sydney Park a couple of times where Mum and Dad met up with us.

We had a lovely Christmas.  Andew bought a whole heap of fancy foods and a nice ham on the bone, and mum brought a pudding that she’d made for dessert.  Nathan didn’t really get the whole Christmas thing, but was happy enough to open presents and help others open theirs.

So far I’d say that Nathan is adjusting to having a baby brother quite well, though it all depends on how tired he is. He loves to give Toby kisses, often asks to hold him, brings Toby toys and food, shows Toby how to do something if we say that Toby can’t do it yet (like crawling).  Nathan also wants what Toby has, so Nathan loves to sit in the bouncer, climbs onto the change table to lie there, wants a wrap behind his head in the car (I roll up a wrap and put it beside Toby’s head so it doesn’t roll around in the capsule when we’re driving), and has been wanting to breastfeed much more regularly than he did before Toby was born. Nathan even tries to fit into the car capsule!  It’s also been hard to get him to sleep at night.  I generally try to breastfeed him to sleep because he just will not relax otherwise, but Toby feeds almost constantly at night until he goes to sleep for his 6 hour stint and often I don’t get a window where he’s happy (or asleep) so I can help Nathan get off to sleep.  Andrew has been trying to help, but so far Nathan has only gone to sleep with him once.  The pram has made several appearances when we’ve become desperate, but Nathan knows that we bring it out to get him to sleep and he doesn’t like it and just wails when we put him in it.  He’s so miserable that it breaks my heart…he cries, screams, and ends up saying “Mummy” over and over and over again.  So even the pram isn’t a good option for us these days, as I just don’t want Nathan to be so miserable while going to sleep every night.

Andrew has one more week off work, and I’m almost dreading him going back to work and leaving me with the two kids.  I don’t know how I’m going to manage to get a meal on the table at night as it was always hard enough to manage that before Toby was born.  I guess we’ll just have to see how it goes.

Toby’s first bath (he fell asleep)

Nathan brought Toby a good selection of animals…

…and then read him a book.

Oma with Toby.

Opa with Toby.

Nathan and Toby cuddles.

Toby having his hearing tested.

Toby using his Potty Bowl.

In the car.

Nathan swimming


20 Dec

Nathan loves to swim, and now that he’s competent with a back float he can go where he wants to without our help. Here are a couple of recent videos of Nathan swimming, the first is in the pool in our residential complex and the second was just a few days ago at his last swimming class of the year.

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