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What Summertime Memories Are Made Of

This post is sponsored by Natrel Baboo. Thank you, Baboo!

The t-ball season is on. You know what that means.

It means untold hours upon hours of hanging out at the t-ball diamonds and the practice fields with two other kids in tow. It means that the most meaningful summertime memories my toddler is going to have won’t be of sitting in the sandbox with mom, splashing around in the wading pool, making chalk art on the patio stones, blowing bubbles or making daisy chains. We’ll do that stuff too, a little bit, but mostly we’ll be hanging out with the t-ball players.

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Eleven Months Old

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Mary is eleven months old now. My baby is eleven months old and it suddenly hits me that I’m running out of babies altogether. It feels kind of like my own 24th birthday. Or like my 29th and my upcoming 34th. The milestone before the big one carries all the weight of lost youth and missed opportunities. The new age bracket hovers menacingly on the horizon, daring me to grow up enough in time to meet it. And then I turn 25, 30 or 35 and I’m over it. The actual milestone is rather anti-climatic, allowing me to celebrate like it’s any other birthday.

I went to New York for four measly days and Mary seemed like a whole other baby when I got back. Maybe I had some dated memory of her, I don’t know. But I came back to a giant-sized baby who likes to point at everything, asking, “Dat? Dat? Dat?” I returned to a baby who will hide behind a chair or her own hands to play peek-a-boo. She eats almost everything, transitions happily between bottle and breast, mom and dad, or nice-enough looking strangers. And she loves nothing more than to hug and kiss her big sister’s baby dolls, even though she is supposed to be a baby herself.

Colum was walking clear across rooms by eleven months, Irene not long after. But Mary is the only one who can speed crawl across the main floor of a house at the first sign of an open door, desperate for some water play in the toilet. She can also climb an entire flight of stairs in the blink of an eye and get on and off a low-slung sofa in our living room. She has just started to show some passing interest in walking around holding onto your hands. Third babies know if they want to get places, they’d better learn to do it on their own. And then this morning, standing up at the fridge, she let go to better manipulate some letter magnets and remained standing all by herself for several beats.

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She’s into cards. Playing cards, sports cards, Pokemon cards, you name it, just as long as they are precious and dear to her big brother.

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She has a keen interest in audio/video technology.

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She digs bikes.

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It only took me several hundred attempts over the course of a few months to get a decent shot of her on the swings. Be proud for me.

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“What do you mean I’m going to have to start wearing pants?”

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Perseverance is her middle name. Well, it’s not really. It’s actually Elizabeth. You just never know these days.

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I had to get Mary her own cell phone. But there’s no way I’m signing up for unlimited data. Kids.

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She’s becoming one of them.

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Happy month before your first birthday, Mary. All of your firsts are my lasts, but I’ll try not to weep too loudly.

 

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Third-time Firsts

Ah, firsts.

I remember diligently listening to my doctor’s recommendation to begin introducing Colum to solids with runny rice cereal mixed with breast milk and then to sloooowly introduce one food at a time, looking out for signs of allergies. I bought organic, brown rice cereal and painstakingly expressed fresh milk for each feed.

Irene had a similar start only I had wised up and just kept a bottle of breast milk in the fridge to use for cereal at first. I soon realized that pureed fruit make an excellent baby cereal vehicle too.

Both times I thought long and hard about what and when I would introduce my baby to solids. I looked forward to it. It was a big deal.  This time I thought maybe I’d skip the baby cereals altogether since they’re really only so much filler and the iron absorption rate for babies is low. I would probably buy some organic produce and start with that and then move on to meat for iron. And I’d definitely wait until she was fully six months. I thought.

Fast forward to last Saturday. My hand is cramping up from squeezing the manual breast pump for so long and I still only have six ounces of expressed breast milk. That’s actually not a bad, uh, harvest? I just haven’t started pumping early enough to get as much as I wanted. I’m attending a couple sessions of Podcamp Toronto and then meeting some friends for dinner and may be gone as long as six or seven hours. I think about dashing out to Shoppers for some “just in case” formula, but  don’t want to spend a lot of money on formula we’ll hardly use and I’m already running late.

“Here’s six ounces of breast milk,” I tell Ed, “Give her two three-ounce feeds and there’s a jar of baby apple sauce and some rice cereal in the cupboard. Feed her a little of that in between to fill her up. It’ll be fine.” And then I leave.

Yep, two ingredients instead of one; non-organic, ultra-processed rice cereal given to me as swag from somewhere; and a jar of organic baby food Santa had put in her stocking for the benefit of her older sibs. Oh, and she’s still two weeks shy of six months. And you know what? It’s fine.

Ed was kind enough to record this milestone for me. Let’s watch together:

She’s saying she wants more, Ed! Why aren’t you listening!? Thanks for having your sister’s back, Colum and Irene.

I’ve continued giving her a little pureed apple at dinner time (which is when she really wants to join in and eat with the rest of us) sans rice cereal. Last night I put some steamed broccoli from our dinner through the baby food mill and she gobbled it up. Interestingly, she had an easier time swallowing the more textured broccoli than the super-smooth jarred apple sauce that sometimes was thrust back out. I think it’s because it’s less like a liquid and therefore less confusing. I really don’t get why babies over five-months old need super thin purees.

The only thing I’m really sad about? Breast milk poop! Oh how I’ll miss that mild-smelling, water-soluble poo. Here comes months of mushy, stinky, real food poo and new adventures in cloth diapering. I’m really going to need a lid for the diaper pail now.