Zoë, 7 months

2552348088_516f3f7267_m.jpgOh little Miss Pickles, how is it that the first year of your life is more than half over already? I know I talk a good game about "practicing being in the NOW" bullshit, but its become apparently that I really have no clue what I'm talking about and another thing? Eckhart Tolle puts me to sleep.. quickly... Better than an Ambien/Chardonnay shooter. Sorry Oprah, I have failed you.

I say this because I worry that I haven't been able to enjoy so much of your existence thus far out of a basic need to survive it. And it kills me. I lay in bed with you in the morning (Daddy brings you in, you nurse while I doze on and off) and I stare at you, intently trying to remember your face that very moment forever. Your perfect skin, your OHSOLONG eyelashes, your little hands finally getting just the slightest bit of chub around the wrists. I've tried taking pictures of these precious moments, but either I'm not that good of a photographer or our camera isn't all that great (AAA-MOMMYNEEDSACANNONREBEL-CHOO!) but none of the pictures can really be as wonderful as you are at that moment.

But then you start shrieking from the boredom of just laying there and the moment is over. People have no clue what I mean when I say you are high maintenance. They laugh at me and say "Oh, honey.. you don't know high maintenance" while they shake their heads and bombard me with stories of who's baby is worst. I'm not comparing you, and never once have I ever considered you a "bad baby", you just have needs. Needs that you want met when you want them met or there is hell to pay. You are just "dedicated to your cause".

As a parent, I will know that I have succeeded in raising you right if I can help take this dedication that's so innate in you, and guide you through putting it to good use. I joke that you are going to be the first female president (and its a joke b/c I really hope to god that HRC didn't ruin it for our gender for the next 50 years), because I see this passion in you already. This passion mixed with dedication can be such a good thing if channeled in the right direction.

When coming up with names, I liked the name Lola (your father did not, to him, you were always Zoë, it was the first thing he said when we found out you were a girl. "Well, at least we have her name - Zoë" I wanted to wade through other options, just for shits and giggles). Ultimately, the fact that I would never be able to say your name without singing that you "were a showgirl" soured me, but recently I said to your dad that the name may have fit. Because "Whatever Zoë wants, Zoë gets.."

Oh, dear Jesus, please help Bebe and me from not spoiling her TOTALLY rotten! I so know that its only a matter of months before I renege on my promise to never buy you baby True Religion jeans!

No comment Jason. Or Heather.

2551559781_1c85f409e8_m.jpgThis month you have also discovered something so amazing that it makes me want to cry. No, not the loud shriek that you seem to save only for dinners at small restaurants. But the love of, and for, your brother. Besides the sight of my boobs, there is nothing better in the world to you at this point. You also discovered that Daddy isn't all that bad - but no one holds a candle to Lucas when he's in the room. And Lucas will do anything it takes to make you smile - like repeatedly hitting his head on the back of his car seat. He bonks, you laugh hysterically.. so he does it again, and again.. yes, Lucas will apparently be the next Johnny Knoxville. When you are upset, nothing calms you quicker than Lucas serenading you with Twinkle Twinkle Little Star. And when he comes and jumps in bed with us for a morning cuddle, you immediately reach out and grab his hair to pull him closer to you. It is really one of the neatest things to experience.

2504053987_01b6892032_m.jpgPeople are still in awe of you everywhere we go. They stop and stare and emit high pitch squeaky sounds in effort to get you to smile. In turn, you just stare. You actually tilt your head down, lift your eyes up, furrow your brow and bore into their souls with your big brown-eyed gaze. Smiles are not given at will. You size them up and check them out, as if to deem if they are even worthy of the effort it would take to smile.

But the best thing about this month, hands down, is that after 7 months together, we have finally achieved the breastfeeding relationship that I thought was just nursing propaganda - a 'LaLecheLie' if you will. Nursing has become wonderful. It's become a time for you and I to sit, or lay, and be at peace and just be together as mommy and baby.

Change is in the (h)air

I did it. The chippity, chop, chop.2539778249_5cabe239f1_m.jpg 7 inches. 7 inches of hair that needed to just get swept away into the trash since you can't donate hair that has been chemically processed with bleach.

Yes, I am a "natural blond" - or at least I was when I was 16.

I like it. I'm excited that I did it. It was a very needed change and I'm very happy to report that I did not cry after. Yay!

But something was in the air last week, as undiscussed together, 2 of my girlfriends also chopped their hair off. Maybe its the approaching summer months? Maybe we've all been a big stagnant for awhile. While it's drastic for me, I know it's not a huge difference in the grand scheme of life. But hey, baby steps..

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Phone Home

If you have a preschool age kid that watches entirely too much 30 minutes a day of Noggin, then you have probably gotten asked about the "movie with the alien and the astronauts". The first time Lucas asked we had NO CLUE what he was talking about. He kept saying "The show on Noggin about the astronauts that kill the space alien!" and Jason and I are looking at each other wondering when Lucas learned how to really use the remote and watch the SciFi channel, which lead to me accusing Jason of watching Battlestar Galactica while the kid was awake. Later in the day, when the commercial promoting Nick's playing of the classic children's movie ET the Extra Terrestrial came on, Lucas nearly wet himself with excitement as he pulled me away from the computer  preparing nutritious and delicious all organic and low fat kids meals, to show me the movie he was referring to earlier. "Ohhh! ET! Yes! Of course you can see that movie!" I declared with sweet memories of a delightful movie of a boy and his alien friend came rushing back to me. I looked at Jason, "I think ET was the first movie I ever cried during!"

Of course, we forgot to set the DVR and totally missed the (edited) version on a children's television network.

No worries screaming, whining child! We will put it on our Netflix!

3-days later (hey, we had to return Elizabeth the Golden Years that had been sitting here for the past 2 months), ET arrive to the squeals of delight from the boy. We started to watch it last Friday with his little buddy, Tate, but Tate didn't like "when ET's neck got long" and he just wanted to continue to play transformers. No worries, we will watch it tomorrow. It was nice to have something inside to do during the COLD RAINY MEMORIAL DAY WEEKEND (what the f?!)

I was actually excited. It had been years since I saw the movie and I was looking forward to reliving a childhood favorite with my kid. Because thats why we became parents! So we sit down and watch it.. first scene.. wait?? Is the teenage brother playing poker with his friends and smoking?! Huh? What? And the mother is HOME and allowing that?! Wait - did they just say "shit"? Checking the sleeve for rating...

I'm getting a little nervous now. Maybe this movie is WAY too old for Lucas. I start worrying about nightmares about aliens in the garage, when Elliott jumps up and yells at his brother "Shut up PENIS BREATH!" and Lucas collapses on the floor giggling repeating "penis breath! penis breath! hahahahaha!!!"

Oh, crap.

Yea, guess it's best to re-watch movies before letting you kid watch them. But then it struck me, aren't we supposed to be this liberal generation? This generation that doesn't hide things from our kids and whose kids have been exposed to way more things than we ever were growing up? If that's the case, why am I so shocked by smoking and swearing in a movie? For all of our liberal "hipster" parenting ideals, we still don't want to be the parents of the kid who screams profanities in the middle of pre-k.