Update

Just wanted to update you on Winter of Discontent 2008. I have made the decision with the support of my husband and Baby Girl's pediatrician to wean the little sucktopus onto formula until she is 12 months, at which point she can wear one of those helmets with the two long straws piping two big bottles of the bovine milk into her system. Or soymilk if she likes. Either way, it does a body good. So for the present, we're still doing a couple of boobfeedings a day and I do my best to distract her and offer her the sippy cup o' powdered nutrish even when she is pawing at my chest like a lion cub wanting to play tetherball. She is a good little girl, and very snugglicious and cute, so this is a bit of a hard thing to deny her. Still, I'm ready to go on my meds, I think it is the best thing for everyone, so I am doing my best to advance the process.

At this point, though, we're still conducting creative negotiations with the Sucktopus, whom we love very much.

***

Hey, you, come over here. Just because it's in a sippy cup doesn't mean it's poison.

squirmbot

Give it a try. Whaddayou say?

negotiations

I'll give you a cupcake bath bomb if you drink 2 ounces....

cupcake bath bomb

Don't look at me like bribing is something you're all above now.

seriously?

Well, now or later, kid. Either way, you're okay with us.

lovenin

Seasons of Love

If I'm relying on stats from "Rent," and there really are 525,600 minutes in a year, then I can say with some measure of confidence that at least 99% of those minutes in the last year have been well-spent. I think a lot of people view time differently once they become parents, and in a really morbid sense, I imagine it is a lot like experiencing grave illness. You just don't know how much time you've got left...and so you savor the moments you're given, you take a picture with your Canon or with your mind's eye, and all the things that once vexed you seem frivolous and you see as a complete interruption of the time you would rather be spending in front of a highchair with a sucktopus reluctantly strapped in, the tray laden with Eggo waffle crumbs and a sticky larvae of grape jelly and cornflakes, and you are trying mightily to recall the verse to "My mother gave me a penny...to go and buy a (?) uh...a henny (?) but I didn't buy a henny..." because these theatrics are what magically make the food go down, and you ARE Mary Freaking Poppins. And it is amazing. Too bad these moments can't be bottled and stored on a shelf for twelve years until the person sitting across from you at dinner is no longer in a high chair but is maintaining what appears to be the third day of a solo campaign for the Advancement of Silence as a reaction to you for having the audacity to come inside the school gym WEARING WINDPANTS to find her after coming to pick her up and waiting twenty minutes in the parking lot.

***

She's such a good little helper now...

swiffy Soon ::sniff:: she'll be off and running away from me, though....

antique nekid

Nine Months (since we picked her from the patch)

My baby turns nine months today which means that she has lived outside of me for the general ogling, snuggling, and worrying over just as long as she was in my belly for the general ogling, snuggling and worrying over en utero. Sometimes I still catch a look at her, particularly when she does something so...human?...and which demonstrates character, like this morning when we went to Itsy Bitsy Yoga and the teacher wasn't there and she sort of looked up at me like, you interrupted my nap for this? and I wonder, How did you get this way? How did your little downy newborn head slip out of my Texas quarterback grip and roll nine months away from me? That is what the visceral experience of having a nine month-old is like. She is nine months away from me. In nine years she will be nine years away from me. I feel the tug because, as Rachel Cusk writes in the book quoted yesterday, she was in my consciousness for nine whole months and therefore she will forever be in my consciousness. I feel strange, skinned when she is not with me, and yet I feel a mournfulness for my old, untethered life when she is with me. She is developing her own personality, her own set of likes (banana slices, chucking pacifiers into the pacifier junkyard behind her crib) and dislikes (green beans, having her diaper changed) and these are outside the realm of my control. They exist in a sphere that is all Madigan, penetrable by countless influences, of which her father and I will be competing all day and all night for the rest of her life. This is the best and hardest part of being a parent. We can and will mightily love her enough that she will know that she can always return to us; we are her place of origin. We can and will mightily train her enough that she will know that she is not meant to remain forever with us in this place of origin. But knowing our responsibilities and executing them accordingly does not mean they are any easier.

One thing that has gotten a bit easier, though, in light of this responsibility is contending with other afflictions and dilemmas. I used to completely crumble at insensitivity, used to obsess Carrie Bradshaw-style about conversations I would never have, about e-mails i would never send, about people that really should not have pulled such weight in my decision-making. Now those pestilences are but pesky little gnats at the corner of my consciousness. I squint to see them, swat randomly at them, and get on with the business of developing a sound and godly character in my daughter. Who has, at times, been known to give me the most joy I have ever experienced in this life.

***

Can't you just hear her? "Dad! You're doing it wrong. Can I drive?"

making pbj Red Bull, a fascinating and totally ergo can for the holding.

red bull

The baby books don't tell you this: By nine months, child will totally pose for pictures with face mashed up against mesh pack n' play netting because child will know it is funny.

pack n play