Sunday, December 28, 2008

Christmas!

Here's Brennan's couch photo at 4 months. This was taken the day after his last doctor's visit, where he weighed in at 14 lbs. 4 oz, measured 26" long, and screamed through 4 vaccinations.
It's getting hard to get smiling photos, because every time I point the camera at him he stares and gives me the "what is that?" face. His daddy managed to get one, though. He's playing his favorite game, Grab The Feet. In fact, it's becoming something of a challenge to take a picture of him NOT grabbing his feet. He's also Mr. Roly-Poly these days, which is fun when he's on a blanket on the floor, not so fun when he's in his bassinet, it's 3 am, and he's stuck on his belly and not happy about it.

And here he is, reading. He's advanced.

Brennan's biggest Christmas gift was one of those godawful exer-saucer things, a riot of plastic and beeps and rattles, probably made in some third world country by children not much older than him. He's a little small for it, so sometimes he prefers playing with his shirt to reaching for the fun stuff.

Laika enjoyed Christmas a lot. He even put something under the tree.
So, onto the presents!

No, we did not change his outfits multiple times during gift opening. In what will be a huge shock to NO ONE, he became overwhelmed pretty quickly by all this Christmas stuff. We could get through about 3 presents before melting down. This is a pretty representative photo of the experience.

So here's a multi-day Christmas gift montage.




Of course, it's not all screaming at wrapping paper all the time here. There's also bathtime - he's just about outgrown the bath bucket, but he still manages to grab those feet.
He's getting a little big for his newborn towel, so we've had to introduce the zebra towel into the mix. It's giant, so I can wrap him up like a baby burrito.
Whew. A lot of photos to wade through, I know. You must be tired.

Sunday, December 14, 2008

Getting Ready for Christmas

We've done pretty well avoiding noisy baby toys so far, but it looks as if we've begun our slide down that particular slippery slope.  Brennan has this new music duck - each extremity features a little tune played by an instrument, and if you press its belly, you get all 4 together - and he loves it.  He's able to trigger the belly music himself, although I'm still not sure if it's deliberate or accidental. There's also a frog that sings the alphabet song, but the dog commandeered it ages ago.  Sometimes Laika sets off the frog while Bren plays with the duck, and I get a brief preview of the cacophony in store for us.

It's been a few weeks since my last post, as I've been playing an exciting game called Keeping My Job.  Like many businesses these days, The Large Pet Hospital That Shall Not Be Named is experiencing some financial distress.  If I'm understanding things correctly, this is due in large part to hospital profits not keeping pace with the costs of running our shelter.  The hospital support of the shelter is our Unique Mission, which is unfortunately so Unique that the general public is largely unaware of it or misunderstands it.


This means, we have lots of meetings these days.  How to capture fees (which is practice management speak for, Quit accidentally or deliberately leaving services off the bill), how to improve public awareness, how to improve communication and efficiency, how to increase shelter donations, etc.  I'm hoping we get to the one where you build a pyramid out of office chairs soon, I've long dreamed of participating in bizarre business-y team building rituals.  These meetings typically take place on my days off, so Brennan has been seeing quite a bit of my workplace.  Here he is with one of the technicians, Angela, who was very sweet and came in two hours before her shift started to watch him.

But enough about me - what else has Baby B been up to?  Well, I've been trying out this Bebe Pod chair, which allegedly helps babies learn to sit up and strengthens their core muscles.  Or something.  Reviews so far are mixed, but I do love this picture for two reasons - one, the way I managed to position him so the seaweed decal is growing out of his head; two, the way he looks like he's saying, another martini, sweetheart, and make it snappy.  Bedtime and naptimes are going pretty well, and we're working on establishing a transitional object (parenting speak for, reassuring toy or blanky that is part of the bedtime ritual) - the soft puppy toy in the next picture.


Brennan has recently discovered his feet and loves to grab them, especially when I'm trying to change his diaper.  I sometimes catch him staring at his toes as if they hold the answer to the universe.  Check out the cute pants, by the way.  They were hand-knit for him by a GUY.  A straight one.  No, really.  He works with me at the Large Financially Strapped Pet Hospital That Shall Not Be Named.  Thanks, David!


Since I had the weekend off, we indulged in a family breakfast outing to Just for You.  An important part of my post-partum non-stop pastry parade is beignets.



We followed breakfast with a family Christmas tree outing, which involved double parking outside the hardware store and picking out a tree that wouldn't consume what little empty space we have left.  The tree skirt reminds me of a sweater I might have worn in the 80s.
Laika is very fond of the tree and likes lying under it with the Alphabet Frog.

A lot of Bren's play time is on a blanket on the floor, but we can sometimes entertain him (aka, keep him from crying) with the vibrating chair.  He can grab the dangling bunny and rip him off his velcro base.  Here he is watching me put lights on the tree.  Then he got bored.  So I finished the tree later, after I put the camera away.  And that, folks, is the extent of my holiday preparations to date.  A few days ago, I realized that Christmas had more or less snuck up behind me with a baseball bat.  I have no idea what to give anyone or how I'm going to get it taken care of in the next 11 days. Luckily, a new baby turns out to be a pretty handy excuse for all kinds of forgotten things and failures to show up, especially at a time when scaling back is a national trend.