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Dinosaur Milk
Tonight, while her frazzled, exhausted parents tried to relax for a few and watch a DVR’ed episode of No Reservations…
K: MOM! where is my baby’s bottle?
CM: I have no idea where it is…it might have already been packed with the other doll toys.
K: awwww! but my baby is hungry (she dragged her little doll cradle into the living room and had one lonely, hungry little doll marooned in there with no blankets, pillows, or other baby-doll accoutrements)
CM: sorry honey but even if it isn’t packed, I have no idea where it is and it is really late so I’m not going to go hunting for it tonight.
K: awwwwwwwww (dramatic slumped shoulders and sad face)
CM: why don’t you find something to pretend is a bottle?
she runs in and out of the room a few times with various toys; I wasn’t paying close attention at this point.
K: MOM! hold my baby, I need to get her milk ready.
CM: um, ok…
K: good job, now let me hold her and you can feed her. (she hands me a toy dinosaur and instructs me to insert the tip of the tail in the baby’s mouth to give her some dinosaur milk)
CM: hahahahaha dinosaur milk?!
It hurts
So I was catching up on this mommy blog that I really enjoy reading…and the author mentions that her 4 month old son has been sleeping reliably through the night for about the last month, and doesn’t require a bottle anymore as part of his bedtime routine.
I finished reading that part and then died inside a little. Just kidding, but really, it hurt. Yeah, yeah, I know–don’t compare your kids to anyone else’s but REALLY, my evil genius daughter still doesn’t reliably sleep through the night, and still really needs her bedtime bottle. Not for any physiological reason, but just emotional and habitual. And yes, I realize that her nightly waking-up-and-coming-to-our-bed thing is a habit that we could (and will eventually/gradually) eliminate through sleep training.
But she is a really high-intensity child and even the smallest of changes can turn her into a raving maniac (a raving maniac that vomits at the drop of a hat, no less*). So we try to make small adjustments gradually over time. For example, when we took the crib rail down and converted her bed to toddler style, she freaked out majorly and tried to refuse to sleep in her bedroom altogether for about 2 weeks.
I just don’t know why she couldn’t have been one of those really easy-going kids that falls into a routine easily and rolls with changes. (yes, this is another of those reasons why she is still a single child and may very well REMAIN THAT WAY.)
*sleep deprivation is one thing, but being sleep deprived and up every night at 4am with vomit to clean up as well…just shoot me.
