Friday, June 29, 2007

iPhone Day


Daddy had to go back to work this week, so I have been bonding with mommy all day every day. I know that Monday July 2nd is looming all too soon- that's when mommy goes back to work too. I will really miss her every moment she's gone. But Gran is coming to Iowa on Sunday and she will take care of me. And Daddy will have an easier shcedule next week so he'll be around plenty. I have to get used to it. After one long wonderful summer of Grandparents and Cousins, I head off to day care September 1st. I would much rather stay home with my sisters, but mommy says that Skye is not quite smart enough to take care of me alone.


Daddy was home most of the day today, but then left for work early so he can wait in line at the AT&T store for an iphone! I hope he gets one. It will be perfect for showing off pictures of me! Daddy got mommy a color ipod to replace her old B&W version. She needed it so she can bring pictures of me with her to work next week!

Thursday, June 28, 2007

Sleeping




I did it! I slept through the night! On Tuesday night, I managed to stay quiet for almost 6 hours, sleeping from around 11pm to just before 5am. Mommy was so surprised at my accomplishment; she had assumed that daddy changed me earlier in the night and she hadn't woken up. I slept another 5 consecutive hours last night- not bad for seven weeks old.


Mommy and daddy have developed a bedtime ritual that works pretty well. Just before or just after a long, wonderful, soothing meal from mommy's breast, daddy gives me a warm bath. I love the bath! I always giggle when I first get in the water. I can't help it- it just tickles! Then, we turn down the lights so only the nightlight is on. My sisters gather at our feet to start snoozing with me. Mommy or daddy then rocks me in our Limbert 1904 antique rocker. If daddy is there, he plays 1960's folk songs and sings along to me. I like "Turn, Turn, Turn" and "Sitting on the Dock of the Bay", but my favorite song by far is "The City of New Orleans" by Arlo Guthrie. It's foolproof- I am always snoozing by the end of the song. Come to think of it, I have never heard the last chorus of that song! I wonder how it goes. . . Aunt Ada- can you help me?

Saturday, June 23, 2007

The Windy City: Photos

As promised, here are some of the photos from my shopping bonanza along the Miracle Mile!





I think I look very fashionable in my Urban Baby attire!











Mommy and I both wore graphic prints the first day.

So many shoes- so little time! So much chocolate, so little time!

The most amazing store by far was Sephora: it's a really cool cosmetics emporium that was drenched with the most fascintating lights and smells. I stared wided-eyed at everything as daddy carried me around. I couldn't get enough of the place!

Friday, June 22, 2007

The Windy City



WOW! What a great trip!

I love Chicago! There are so many wonderful people here that constantly ooh and ahh over my great looks. Mommy and daddy are so proud as they wheel me around in the Sophiemobile up and down Michigan Ave. I enjoy being out and about so much that I yell at daddy everytime he stops in a store for too long. Just a minute outside with the noise of the traffic and the smell of the city and I instantly placated.

Getting here was easy. Mommy and daddy drove me out from Iowa in the Subaru and I slept the whole way- just one stop halfway across for a snack at Culver's Butter Burgers (a midwestern institution). We have a wonderful room at the Talbott Hotel: a quaint English-style botique hotel that daddy says feels just like London. We're right across the street from incredible shopping and relaxing sidewalk cafes.

We took lots of pictures of me shopping: at Sur La Table, Anthropologie, Wilams-Sonoma, Lush, etc. My favorite was Sephora- an amazing store with lots of lights and smells that fasciniated me and kept me wided-eyes and alert the entire time I was there.
Time to go home- I miss my sisters very much!

Tuesday, June 19, 2007

Father's Day


We had our first Father's Day last sunday! It was great- we just stayed in bed, ate pancakes (dad's favorites), read the NY Times, and wrote my blog! Here's a picture of me helping daddy write. Our first mommy's day wasn't quite as good. I was still in the hospital on my second day of life. But I can't wait untill next year and help daddy make wonderful omelettes for mommy!


Short blog this time- daddy got kinda sick the day after Father's Day and still recovering. But we're headed to Chicago tomorrow and we'll do much more writing then!

Sunday, June 17, 2007

Faries in the Garden

On Thursday evening this week, daddy insisted that mommy take a study break from her big presentation and come outside to see the fireflies. It was a perfect summer evening: warm, moist air illuminated by fading light that fell laterally onto the trees and grass, giving the land an otherwordly glow. Just as sun dropped below the trees that line the western horizon, it became just dark enough to see them: fairies dancing in the grass.

All three of us went out our front door together, as my sisters stood guard behind the glass door. We wandered through our front garden, delighting when we saw an occasional green spark of light whizz along the grass. Like tiny will-o-the-wisps drawing us deeper into the woods, we followed a small squadron of fireflies across the driveway and around the corner of our garage. The sight that greeted us stopped us in our tracks.
Looking out across our neighbor's yard, we saw hundreds of tiny points of light, dancing and bouncing along the grass and reeds at the edge of the forest. Our neighbor lives in the original Kimball farmhouse that gives our street its name. The last remant of that original farm is their large and very well kept vegetable patch; an oasis of level, open ground on the edge of the forested ravine that dominates our collective northern border. Our lawn rolls gently away from the house, a wave of black Iowan soil that blends into our neighbor's backyard-vegetable mini-farm. The summer pixies of twilight dominated the entire field, illuminating the pastoral with a magical glow that hypnotized anyone who gazed upon them.

It seems that fireflies are too ephemeral for conventional photography (the photo above was enhanced by photoshop). Only that biologic masterpeice of evolution, the human eye, can witness this scene in all its magical glory. The firefly's potential mates see only the enticing sparks of light. The hungry avian predators in the trees see only tantilizing dots of food. My sisters can enjoy most of this scene, but not the splendid color of the rosy-purple western sky or the green glow of the flying lights. The synthetic eyes of digital cameras can't detect the tiny sparks and get confused when trying to focus. The three humans standing in the driveway, jaws agape, take in this amazing scene while trying desperately to imprint it into their permanent memory- the only place where its ephemeral beauty will not be lost forever.


Here's a poem about fireflies I found on the web:
Fireflies
By Bruce Nichols

there is no moon tonight.
the warm air is moist and fragrant
with the smell of new mown hay.
leaves in the dark sentinel trees
rustle softly, rustle softly,
in the tender grasp of a gentle breeze.
settled in their grassy cloisters
crickets trill staccato mantras
across the tangled fields of night;

and all around the fireflies, the fireflies,
appearing – disappearing.
coming into bright existence,
dissolving into darkness,
then reincarnating, again,
any yet again, in luminous grace.

Wednesday, June 13, 2007

The Start of Summer


When does summer begin in the Midwest? June 21st? No. When school gets out the first week of June? Perhaps. The first day of 90 degree heat with 90% humidity? Usually, but not always.

The surest sign of summer is the first red ripe tomato in the garden. Mark your calendars, loyal readers! Summer 2007 started on June 13th as daddy and I picked the first ripe tomato of the year- a cherry tomato variety called "Sweet 100". Daddy was so proud of his little plants we have out growing by the front door, he couldn't help but brag to our neighbor as she walked by with her dog (a beautiful shorhair collie named Levi. He was very cool- he sniffed my toes and got really excited. I guess he likes babies!)

Daddy gave me the tomato to give to mommy and I clutched it tight in my hand. Thanks to the primitive reflexes that evolution has blessed me, I was capable of actually holding the tomato firmly and unaided! Since it was a little cherry tomato, it fit in my palm perfectly. We brought it to mommy in the house- she was so amused by my manual dexterity that she didn't have the heart to pry it out of my hand to eat it. She insited I could keep it. Daddy and I went back outside (don't worry, I was wearing sun protection!- see the photo) to continue to tend to the plants but I dropped the tomato and lost it. Daddy didn't seem to care- he pointed to the dozen new tomatoes turning a bright orange on the vine and said they would soon be red and we would have plenty of tomatoes all summer. YAY!

Before our gardening adventures, we went back to the hospital this AM (yuck!). I had my regularly scheduled 1 month appointment. No shots this time, thank goodness! But they wanted to take some X-ray pictures of my bladder because of the urine infection I had after I was born. It was pretty awful, but mommy held my hands and let me suck on her finger the whole time- that made it much better.

After the Xray, I met with the pediatrician and we found out I now weigh 9lbs 12oz! WOW! I gained 2 lbs in only 2 weeks. That twice as fast as normal! Apparently, my weight is finally catching up to my height, which is still 90 percentile for girls (yay! Basketball scholarship, here I come!). The dreaded immunizations come next month. I'm not looking forward to it, but dad says he'll feel a lot better after I get something called "pneumoccocal vaccine". Sounds scary to me, but I guess it's important and saves lots of little kids lives. Whatever I need to be safe!

ENJOY SUMMER!

Tuesday, June 12, 2007

Home With Daddy

Now that I can drink so well from the bottle, mommy thought it would be OK for her to do some work at the hospital. This is the week of the big Iowa Head and Neck Surgery Course and she is working on her presentation. We all went to work yesterday- mommy, daddy, and me.

Bad idea!

I hated being there; it brought back awful memories of IV's and nurses and thermometers and beeping monitors and not being at home. By taking me to work, my well-meaning parents took me out of my element, out of my rythym. They took me away from my playful sisters, my peaceful nursery, and my beloved forest outside our windows. I was stuck in the sterile, taupe, carpeted, windowless halls of the hospital. I fussed and yelled the whole time we were there. My bellowing got results- mommy and daddy beat a hasty retreat back home after only a few hours.

Today, however, mommy left me with daddy and my doggie sisters at home while she went to to the library to work. Before she left, she made sure she pumped out plenty of her wonderful nectar for me to eat. Daddy, deathly afraid to be stuck at home all day with a crying baby, offered me the bottle every time I asked. I feasted like a true princess! I was so full of milk I was too sleepy to complain about mommy being gone.

Daddy wore me in the baby carrier while he did house chores. I got to help fold the laundry, water the plants, feed Denali and Skye, and even write this blog! We fell asleep on the couch after a big lunch: daddy with a ham and chees sandwich and me with my precious breast milk. Denali and Skye slumbered at our feet. I was so content! Daddy did an adequate job for one day, but I still need my mommy!

Sunday, June 10, 2007

First Visit to Granmimi's Farm


Today was very special. Not only did I start drinking from the bottle (see below), but I also got to visit the farm for the first time. Granmimi's farm is a lush 6 acres enveloped by classic, rolling Iowan cornfields. It's located in nearby West Branch, a quick 15 minutes down the Herbert Hoover Highway. We can take the interstate (I-80) to get there, but Sister Skye gets frightened by all the huge trucks rushing all around and making lots of horrible noise. So we stick to the country roads, rolling and bouncing along at 50 mph. I am told the sensation is something like a roller coaster. All I know is that the ride is a lot of fun and my sisters definitely agree. Mommy and daddy are very careful not to say the word "R-i-d-e" out loud, unless they really mean to go.

Once we arrived at the farm, Skye and Denali took off out of the car like they were shot from a cannon! 'Nali ran around like the yard like a thoroughbred racehorse, stretching her legs and chasing a demon of boredom that had welled up within her. She loved meeting Marilyn, Granmimi's newest Saint. Skye went straight for the outdoor kennel, where the other terriers (Kiwi, Josie, and Rocky) were enjoying the sunny afternoon. My sisters love coming here- they get to play, chase, bark, hunt, and generally act out their wild instincts. For a few wonderful hours they get to act like real dogs, not the domesticated, integrated family members that they are at home.



While my sisters catered to their wild-at-heart nature, mommy took me on a brief tour of the farm. I wasn't allowed to visit the barn animals yet, since I don't really have an immune system. But I got to see Granmimi's house and meet her house dogs, Lola and Betty. Lola recognized me even though I never met her before! She had frequently sniffed mommy's tummy while I was still inside. I guess I must smell pretty similar now, becuase she accepted me right away. I liked the farm and I look forward to spending more time there. Daddy wants me to learn to care for all the animals. Maybe some day I will raise a goat or plant a garden or help whelp a puppy. 4H here I come!


On a sad note, the farm seemed more empty without Diego, who passed away on Wednesday. We will always rember his gentle-giant demenor. Also, Suzi the Basset Hound lost her solitary puppy as it died during birth today. Thankfully, Suzi is unhurt and will recover completely.

My First Bottle!


As of Friday morning, I have been living on this planet for one complete month. According to the textbooks, my growing brain should be sufficiently "wired" by now to be able to drink from a bottle with a minimal risk of "nipple confusion". I'm not sure what those textbooks are talking about, because as long as it drips the precious nectar of mommy, I'll suck on just about anything.

Mommy and daddy prepared carefully for this special occasion. They made sure I was plenty hungry (actually that was a mistake- I was so mad I couldn't concentrate on what they were doing). The textbooks say that mom shouldn't be around when I'm offered the bottle becuase I am supposed to prefer her breast. Her presence is supposed to distract me and keep me from taking the bottle. Apparently, all those baby textbooks didn't bother to take into account my voracious appetite.

When dad was trying desperately to calm me down just enough to eat, mommy came back in the room. Mommy held me, made it all better, and I took to sucking on that bottle like a fiend. When it turned out there was only 1 ounce in the bottle, I screamed even louder: "What a tease! You get me all worked up to taking this bottle thing and then you only give me one lousy ounce! Don't you people get it? I AM HUNGRY! I DON"T CARE HOW I GET THE MILK, JUST GIVE ME MORE MILK!"

I hope we have adequately cleared up this minor misunderstanding.

Thursday, June 7, 2007

Pret a Porter

Thank goodness that modern fashion has finally liberated infant atire. Take it from me, a budding young princess: wearing pastel pink every day gets really boring. News flash to the fashionistas out there: we babies like bright colors and contrasts; our young developing eyes respond to it very well. So I was very pleased with the gift of a few blankets and burp cloths that have fascinating stylized floral patterns set on bold stripes.

Every morning, with the first diaper change after sunrise, daddy picks out the new outfit for the day. He selects a "onzie" and then matches up a swaddling blanket to complement the color scheme. His favorite is a onzie and blanket depicting an owl. Yes, the owl is my spirit animal and is very important to me, but I think dad goes to the well a little too often with this choice. He needs to challenge himself with some more inventive combinations.

Check out the wonderful colors and arrangements we've come up with this week. In the outfit to the left, we've paired a more traditional onzie with a fun burp cloth (that's the orange stripes behind my head). The onzie has the standard baby lime, but it definitely enhanced by the fun label played out across my chest that really ties the whole thing together. To your right, you can see my favorite doggie "sleeper" that honors my beloved sisters and loyal guardians. You can see a swaddle blanket with a little bolder pink than most baby stuff. The tiny white polka dots on the cloth really sophisticates the appearance. And speaking of sophisticated, can you believe that boppy cover poking out underneath the blanket? That is so modern, so fun, so COOL!

Uncle Mike came over yesterday to take care of me. Thank you so much! I felt so comfortable in his big hands. He can come and care for me anytime! He told me all about the wonderful land of Pennslyvannia! I can't wait to see it. Aunt Ada is my biggest blog fan. Thank you for reading and contributing your comments!

Monday, June 4, 2007

Stormchasing


When the Midwestern Spring slips into Summer, the weather can get a little rough. Cool air from Canada carried by drenching Pacific storms roll into Iowa from the northwest and meets up with warm moist air snaking up the Mississippi from the Gulf of Mexico. These conflicting atmospheric juggernauts collide over the open, flat plains of the heartland. Without mountains or Great Lakes to moderate the effect, the storms swirl and drive up massive charges of electricity, much like shuffling your feet on a deep wool carpet. The end result is, needless to say, spectacular.

Yesterday, we had ideal conditions for a constant, repeated string of squall lines, swirling winds, and "pop-up" thunderstorms. The sky was so impressive; anvil shaped thunderheads dotted the horizon in every direction. The sunlight was bright, then dim, then dappled, then absent, and then bright again, all in the span of a few minutes. The weather was way too cool to be wasted on sitting around the house. We loaded up the car with the whole family, including sisters Denali and Skye, and set out down the road to enjoy nature's big show. We drove through bands of rain showers, basked in glorious displays of jacob's ladders floating down from the heavens, and marveled at the clouds ephemerally painted on the ever-changing celestial canvas, then erased, then painted again, then erased.
More later- I need to eat now . . . . .

Saturday, June 2, 2007

Iowa City Arts Festival

On this beautiful, perfect June day, the whole family went out together to the Iowa City Arts Festival in downtown IC. But this particular fine Saturday began with a very long Friday night. I was up all night with horrible gas, so mommy and daddy were up as well. One nice thing about the night is that nature blessed us with a spectacular thunderstorm. Sister Skye stayed by my side all night, watching over me and supporting mommy and daddy through their sleepless pain. Sister Denali was hardly the same degree of a team player: she just stayed on her bed in basement and slept soundly through the whole ordeal.

When we all had recovered late into Saturday morning, we set off for downtown: mommy, daddy, Skye, Denali, me and my stroller (the Sophiemobile). Downtown was awash with color, music, wonderful smells, and lots of people. Unlike my Farmer's Market trips, this time I was not the center of attention. Every child we passed insisted on petting my sisters. They were very obliging of all the attention.


The abdundant artists with their pottery, paitnings, photographs, sculpture, and clothes were fascinating. I even saw an applique collage of a owl, my beloved spirit animal. Skye and Denali didn't notice- they were too busy soaking up the affections of yet another small child. They did very well; they stayed amazingly calm despite the throngs of people. I have never seen that many people together before! WOW! Mommy and daddy say that we're going to Chicago in a couple weeks and that we'll see even more people together. I can't imagine such a thing! I like our quiet, peaceful home just fine. Here's a nice picture of me and mommy back at home after our outing, showing off the new dress I wore in honor of this amazing day!

Friday, June 1, 2007

The Fab Four

"It was twenty years ago today, the Sergeant told the band to play . . . "

OK, so it was actually 40 years ago today, but you get the point. On June 1st, 1967, The Beatles released their masterpiece, Sgt Pepper's Lonley Hearts Club Band, which carries an opening line celebrating a mythical anniversary. Now, we have the opportunity to reflect on the real anniversary of that day when to paraphrase Don Mclean, the "Sergents played a marching tune."

Daddy wanted me to hear this album in its entirety. Something about how the whole of the work is even greater than the sum of its parts, or something like that. I fell asleep pretty early into the music, but I am sure daddy will try again soon. Since daddy is a Beatlemaniac and mommy doesn't get why the Beatles are "such a big deal', I am sure that daddy is trying to indoctrinate me with their music. I'll be fair and listen for a while, but if I don't like it I can always cry until mommy feeds me or just fall asleep, like tonight. I have no doubt that mommy has some music she'll try to get me to like, so I guess I can't get away from it.

The choice of music in the nursey, thus far, has been far less controversial. I have been soothed to slumber and serenaded while feeding with Bach's Brandenburg Concertos and Mozart's Night Music. Classical music is wonderful! So complex, so soothing, so stimulating for my little growing brain! I can't wait to hear more! I have a toy in my crib that plays four different pieces when I push the shapes- it's very cool. Mommy and daddy want to take me to a concert alongside the river this summer, outside our university auditorium. I hope they play some Bach! They can skip the Beatles . . .

Next time: The Iowa City Arts Festival