The jealousy never goes away, I’ve come to believe. It doesn’t even make sense anymore, because I have the baby now; it’s not a matter of other people having what I want. The anger made sense, the depression made sense, the overwhelming sadness made sense. And for the most part those all went away when Kate was born. But this jealousy? It doesn’t make sense. And it’s not going away.
I hate it. I hate that it comes out of nowhere, when I don’t expect it. I hate that it gets in the way of relationships, that it makes things harder on me than it should be. Didn’t I go through enough already? Can’t I just let it go, enjoy Kate and let it go? Apparently no. Apparently I don’t get a say in this.
It’s my lasting, unhealing scar. The others all get better with time. Not this.
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Kate is growing up in all kinds of ways, changing so much in just a week, I feel like I am forgetting so much, getting behind on my writing and record keeping. It’s hard to keep up when the baby throws a fit whenever I sit at a computer. Awake, asleep, apparently I am not allowed to use it at all. I am writing this from my new Droid. Thank god for smartphones.
She is so much more vocal than ever before, she’s constantly babbling at random objects now. She has long conversations with the yellow “warning” sticker in her carseat and with our laundry baskets. My favorite time is first thing in the morning when she wakes up, nurses as she’s waking, then lays there smiling, babbling, and kicking with delight. I am not a morning person by any stretch, but that makes me wake up feeling like life is damn skippy.
She’s also developing some good trunk control, and her head I don’t even worry about anymore. She will tolerate laying on her back for a short time, especially now that she can suck on her fists, but she still lasts only a minute out two on her belly before getting very pissed off. Being a “bad mommy” I just rarely even bother doing tummy time on the floor with her. But, despite that fact, when I tried her on our bed the other day she lifted her head up and pushed her chest off the bed. She’s small, she’s strong, and she’s determined.
She just really hates being helpless and dependent – which is really hard, considering she’s a BABY. She doesn’t like to lay down. When people hold her they automatically cradle her on her back like a normal infant, and we hurry to correct them while Kate strains forward and turns red before freaking out. She has to be held vertical; facing out when she is awake, in when she needs a nap.
During the short portions periods when she is laying peacefully on a blanket I try to engage her, but she shows very little interest in toys dangling above her. She wants to sit up and be in charge of the toys. I have to hold her upright so she can sit and play. I tried her in her exetsaucer, even though she seems way too small for it. I had to stuff a pillow behind her for extra support, but she loved that. I think she was finally in a position she liked. …Unfortunately she only does well until she realizes she can’t quite make her arms do what she wants them to and she has another fit. She can’t wait until she grows up. This baby thing just pisses her off mightily.
We get babysitting offers from well-meaning family, but really? I think it would just be a disaster. Unless you know her and know all her “rules” you would just end up with a screaming baby the whole time. And when I know she is screaming and upset I will not have a good time – I will not have even a halfway decent time. And that is not a reflection of what we think of the would-be babysitters, it’s just a matter of us recognizing that we have a high-needs baby. It is frustrating that no one seems to get that. (It’s like how no one believes me when I tell them my dog has a severe social phobia. Even dog trainers – or maybe especially dog trainers – think they can soothe her. I can only roll my eyes as they try and fail.)
But Kate and I, we’re figuring it out. I’ve figured out driving with her, so I try to get out of the house once every day. She has to be tired, and there can’t be any stoplights. So we always go the long way. Even if it seems stupid to go all the way around the town to get to the other side, I’d rather a quiet 30 minute drive than her screaming the while way for a 15 minute one. It’s great to be able to drive with a relative certainty that she won’t cry while I’m driving, it opens up more options for things to do and makes life much more pleasant.
Though did I mention all the construction in this town? I am normally a very patient, calm driver, but when I get stuck in a line of traffic for yet another construction project when I specifically took this road to avoid the other two big construction projects that are on the other two roads, and Kate wakes up and screams at the to of her lungs as I inch forward one car length at a time, well, there is a large party of me that wants to roll down all of my windows and swear a blue streak. Fixing things is all very well and good, but do they really have to do it all at the same damn time?