The Day of Looooove

I completely breezed right over Valentine's Day and posted about Lent instead.  I didn't mean to skip the day of hearts all together, though.  Seeing as how it's Katie Wynn's first Valentine's Day, what kind of mom would I be if I didn't at least post a picture or two? The holiday started for her on the evening before when we checked the mailbox and found it full of red Valentines.  There was one from each of us, all mailed with love from Doc's parents.  Super sweet!  Here's KW and her dad reading her very first Valentine.

The holiday started that night for me, too, when I received a package from ProFlowers.com at the door.  I honestly hadn't expected anything from Doc and certainly didn't need anything, but as soon as I saw the box, a part of me secretly hoped they were tulips.  And they were!  Score one for Doc; he knows the way to my heart. :)

The day itself was just another work day.  Katie Wynn spent the day with her babysitter, but she did have on a special outfit!  My mom had given her this cute little heart shirt for Christmas and we had been saving it for this holiday.  She looked so cute in all her hearts and I'm glad we can wear it all the time now!

That evening, Doc prepared the most delicious meal for us!  And, as another gift to me, he photographed his process so that he could guest blog about it!  Woo hoo!!  So stay tuned...post from him is next. :)

Lent

Happy Valentine's Day, everyone!  Has your day been full of looooove?  Mine has, but we'll get to the details of it in another post. Right now, I want to tell you my goals for this Lenten season.  That way, you can help keep me accountable.  If I remember correctly, last year was the first time since, oh I dunno - high school? - that I didn't give up anything for Lent.  I was newly pregnant and figured I was already giving up enough.  :)  But this year I'm back at it and it may be my hardest year yet.  Here goes nothin'.

Give Up:

  • For the next 40+ days, while driving, the only thing I can do on my phone is talk on it.  That means no checking emails, no reading twitter, no scrolling through instagram.  There is nothing on any social media that is as important as the precious cargo I usually have in the car with me, so it's high time I put the phone down.  I don't think it would be possible for me to cut out the phone all together, which is why I'm still allowing phone calls.  And I plan on doing that on speaker phone (or hands-free if I can find my earbuds) as much as possible.

Add:

  • I will floss my teeth every day.  There, I admit it.  I'm not a regular flosser.  But that all changes now!  I'm actually due for a checkup at the dentist's office, but I keep putting off making my appointment because of this very goal.  Maybe if I get a couple weeks of flossing under my belt first I can trick the dentist and his assistants into thinking I've been doing it all along.  Ha.
  • Similar to the goal above, I will also wear my retainer every night.  My parents spent way too much money giving me straight teeth, and I'm slacking on my end of the deal.  I've noticed them shifting out of place for a while now so squeezing the ol' retainer back on them is going to be painful.  I dread it, but hopefully I'll get back in the habit of wearing them regularly.
  • I will exercise 3 times a week.  Now, don't go thinking this means I'm going to a gym.  Oh, heck no.  I'm not ready for that yet.  Doc has given me a short little routine to do to work on getting my legs and belly back to their pre-baby days.  We're talking ten minutes or less, y'all.  But it's more than nothing!

I know, I know.  Nothing says "I love Jesus" more than jello legs, bloody gums, and sore teeth.  What can I say, I'm a dedicated Christian.  (I hope you pick up the sarcasm in that.)  I could sit here and type that I'm going to do a daily devotional or spend 10 minutes a day in prayer or something like that but in my sleep-deprived state of late, I know I'd snooze right through that.  So I'm keeping it real and tackling these 4 things.  I also have a very loose goal to try to blog at least twice a week (I still can't seem to find time for this!).

Oh.  There is one other thing.  Doc and I will be headed out on a mini vacation to celebrate my birthday in just a few weeks and um...yea.  All goals are probably going to be off for that.  Let's face it, no one wants to stand in a hotel bathroom scrubbing their retainer or do any workouts when there's a beach to lay on, right?  So I guess my goals are really for the 40+ days of Lent minus the 5 days we're on vacation.

Do you give up or take on anything for Lent?  Tell me how you're preparing for Easter.

Sigh...I'm off to floss.

The Mighty Fortress

Doc and I played handbells in church again this past Sunday.  This performance was not with the full adult handbell choir, but with our quartet Lama Blast (our name comes from the first two letters of our names).  This is the third time we've performed as a quartet, and this was probably our hardest song to date.  Four people, 8 hands, 31 bells.  You do the math!  

 
For this performance, we set up in the choir loft so the whole congregation could see us.  We also ditched our music folders and laid our music straight on the table so everyone could see our bells. The video cuts out early (my memory is full - eek!) so the last ten seconds aren't on there.
 
 
There were a few mistakes, but overall I think it was one of our best run-throughs with this song.  (We only practiced 3 or 4 times.) We were all incredibly nervous this time!
 
 
Can't get enough?  To watch our first performance as a quartet, click here.  To see our Christmas performance, click here.  (Both of those videos are from practices before church; the video above is from the actual church service.)

Instagrammed

Time for another post full of Instagram pics!  Just like last time, I'm sorry to those of you who follow me on social media and are seeing these same photos for the second or third time.  But, also just like last time, there are a few that I didn't post to my feed, so they should be new to everyone! Trying to go somewhat chronologically...a few weeks ago we put together the jumparoo we got as a gift.

Katie Wynn's legs are just a wee bit too short right now, so we added a DIY book.  Fitting, I think.

Hanging out on Mom and Dad's bed.

"Excuse me, but I mustache you a question."

"Nevermind, I'll shave it for later."

Little Alice has a mustache too!

These two girls are sweet little friends.

My girl can't hang; she falls asleep everywhere.

  

  

The other day, she was sleeping in my lap when her furry sister jumped up for some cuddle time.

  

Speaking of sleeping, she is now spending nights and naps in her big crib!  I like taking pictures of her in it...it makes her look so little.

  

  

Happy girl at church.  (Not sure why she has black eyes in this?)

Some randoms.

  

  

  

  

There was no way I was leaving Target without these sunglasses.

This weekend, we introduced our girl to rice cereal.  We're two days in and so far, so good.  For the first time ever, she actually sat and waited patiently while we prepared her food (as opposed to crying and screaming like she usually does when she's hungry).

  

Her brother was at our house for the big first taste of "food."  Everyone says she looks like him.  What do you think?

Doc fed her the cereal while I videoed and photographed.  Wyatt also had Doc's parents on skype, so she had quite an audience.  It surprisingly wasn't as messy as I expected it to be.  She didn't necessarily love it, but she didn't hate it either.

  

  

Wyatt had a junior high dance to go to that evening, so he got cleaned up and ready to go.  Katie Wynn couldn't take her eyes off him.  She's pretty infatuated by him (and vice-versa too!).

  

Saturday afternoon I put her down on her belly for a nap.  She takes a much longer nap if she's on her belly (because she's not swaddled).  She loves to sleep with her face down, which always scares me to death.  I'm guessing yesterday she slept face down on her hands.  What about you?

I think that gets us pretty caught up on the life of Katie Wynn!  I can't finish without a picture of my fur baby, though.  Lolli had a sleepover with some friends a few nights ago, and she was so worn out the next day!  Here she is asleep on the couch and dead to the world.

Ok, let's pick favorites again.  I have several...the one of her standing up in the blue shirt (one of my old dresses!), the two of her asleep in her angel wings, reading with Mimi and drawing on my phone.  I love the sunglasses pic too.  And the one with her handprints on her face is just hysterical.

Shots Suck

Sorry, Mom, for my choice of words in the title.  But, after Wednesday, I think you'd agree that it's appropriate. Katie Wynn's 2-month shots were so easy and not-a-big-deal-at-all that I kinda rolled my eyes at all those other moms that always talk about dreading shots day and fevers and tylenol and blah, blah, blah.  I think God used our 4-month shots checkup as an opportunity to put me in my place.  And God?  If you're reading this?  Point taken.  I got it.

The day started out fine, luckily.  The previous night our little town was in the path of a massive storm that was predicted to arrive around midnight.  I had silently cursed Doc for going out of town and leaving Katie and I alone to hunker down and ride out the storm together.  No, of course we had never discussed where the safest place in our new home was.  And where the heck did he put all the flashlights?  I finally found one, put it on the bedside table, and got everyone tucked in and asleep before the weather got bad.  Even Lolli lucked out and got to sleep in the bed with me.  Either it didn't ever get very bad, or we're all hard sleepers, cause we didn't wake up til my alarm went off the next morning.  Phew!  Crisis averted.

Wait, this was supposed to be about shots.  Ok, so the day started off fine.  We slept great, got up and ate, bathed, got dressed, and hit the road for our 9:00 doctor's appointment.  For this checkup, we were visiting a different location in our doctor's practice.  Five minutes of sitting in the waiting room and I was about ready to leave.  Seriously, can parents not read?  Why is your snotty-nosed kid sitting on the "Well" side and trying to touch my not-sick baby?  (I realize that will probably be my snotty-nosed kid one day, but still...)

We got called back in a record amount of time - only 18 minutes of waiting!  Past the waiting room doors, the office redeemed itself.  It was much nicer back there where all the doctors and nurses hang out.  Wonder if they've ever seen the waiting room?  Maybe they should be required to spend their lunch break out there.

The nurse we saw is one we've had before.  She calls my girl "Miss Katie" except she doesn't really pronounce the two s's, so it sounds like "M'Katie."  M'Katie likes it; she gives the nurse good grins.  I strip Katie down so the nurse can get all her stats.  She's up to 24.5 inches long - five inches longer than when she was born.  That puts her in the 75-90 percentile for height.  I didn't catch her head circumference but it's in the 50-75 percentile, as is her weight.  We're up to a whopping 14 pounds, 8 ounces.  Almost exactly double her birth weight!

The nurse leaves us and we wait for the doctor.  I snapped this pic of my happy girl.  She was wearing a sleeveless onesie underneath a little jacket that the nurse had told me she could keep on.  I thought it was hilarious that it looked like she was rocking a muscle shirt.

Shortly into our wait, there was a knock at the door and in walked Mimi!

With Mimi there, I was able to pull out the baby tylenol so that we could prepare for the shots.  Last time she took the tylenol no problem.  This time I squirted it in and she promptly spit it all back out, all over that nice white shirt she was wearing.  How could she not like that grape flavor?  I'm not gonna lie, it smelled so good that I kinda wanted a dose for myself.

We tried again and got a smidgeon of it to go down before the doctor came in.  I really like this doctor, she is incredibly friendly and seems to love Katie.  She's very thorough in her exam too, which I love.

This is where the day started to go south.  Katie seemed to be checking out ok everywhere - eyes, ears, mouth, hips, belly, booty.  Everything looked good.  Then I picked Katie up and asked the doctor about her stork bite.  I was pretty certain it was harmless, but I wanted to make sure.  The doctor confirmed that it was, but then she started feeling around at the base of Katie's head, right where it meets her neck.

"Have those always been there?"

"Have what always been there?"  I had no idea what she was talking about.  She showed me two little fatty areas and mentioned grabbing another doctor to come in for a second opinion.  I started getting nervous.  She threw out words like lymph nodes and hermangioma which my ears put together and heard as lymphoma and before she could say "don't worry, it's nothing serious" my overactive mind had diagnosed my daughter with cancer and tears sprung to my eyes.

The doctor, bless her heart, saw my face and back-pedaled as fast as she could, convincing me that there was absolutely no need to worry.  She was pretty sure it was nothing at all, but just wanted another doctor to look at it to double check.  I took a deep breath and calmed down.

While our doctor went to get another doctor, the nurse came back with those dreaded shots.  Like last time, Katie was scheduled to receive one oral vaccine and three shots.  And just like the tylenol, she spit most of the oral vaccine right out.  I hope enough of it actually made it down to count.  The nurse seemed to think so.  With the last set of shots, she had a very delayed reaction and didn't scream or cry until the needles were already done.  This time we were not so lucky.  The tears and screaming came early and her little legs had to be held down.

She calmed down quickly, but not before sticking her bottom lip out at the nurse she had just earlier been grinning at.

Our doctor came back and brought not one but two other doctors with her.  Having three doctors in the room made me nervous again. I held Katie still while they all rubbed the back of her little head.  After less than five minutes, all three doctors agreed that it was nothing but a couple of fat pads.  Baby fat, if you will.  I suppose I should've been triple relieved to hear that, but my nerves were already too far shot for that.  Two days removed, though, and I think I've already kissed those little fat pads a hundred times!

The rest of the morning and afternoon were fine.  I assumed we were going to have a repeat of 2-month shots where my baby was totally fine afterwards.  However, by evening she was not fine.  The fever had started (her first ever) and I couldn't get her to drink any of her bottle.  She had already skipped one and was still showing no interest.  I'd tried giving her tylenol two more times and both times she'd spit it back at at me.

With Doc still out of town, I'd decided we were staying the night at my parents' house.  The downside to my baby never being sick is that I had no idea what to do!  My dad made it home from work and was able to get her to drink a little formula around 7:00.  He's a baby whisperer of sorts, but don't tell him I said that.

Later that night, my mom and I got her back up to wash her off (she was sticky from spitting out tylenol all day!) and put on her pj's.  For the first time since those yucky shots, we got a smile!

Mom was able to get her to drink one more bottle before bed.  She was still feeling hot so we tried one more time to give her tylenol.  This time I squirted just a little bit in her mouth at a time, and then gently blew in her face to get her to swallow.  It was working well until the very last squirt of tylenol.  I think she gasped when I blew in her face and it made her choke a little.  I'm sure it was for only .005 seconds, but I panicked and yelled "BREATHE!"  My mom quickly sat her up, just in time for her to throw up the entire bottle she'd just had (and the tylenol).  It even came out her nose.  I normally hate, HATE throw up, but I was really glad she was breathing!

So much for those smiles.

At some point in the evening we also realized that she had not pooped all day.  (I swore I would not be a mom that talked about poop, yet here I am...)  Seriously, shots?  Fever, no appetite, sore legs, and constipation?  That's just wrong.  My poor girl also had a tummy ache, but even with us massaging her belly and legs, we couldn't help her.

That night was the first time she'd woken in the middle of the night in a looooong time.  She spent most of the three o'clock hour crying, but finally fell back asleep.  Thankfully, she seemed almost back to her normal self the next morning.  Oh, and just in case you're wondering (I'm sure you're not), that poop didn't come until 4:15 the next afternoon, and the babysitter said it was baaaaad.  Kinda glad I didn't get that diaper change! :)

I am thrilled to say my little girl has returned to her happy self.  I am also using this experience as a reminder that some parents deal with sleepless nights, fussy babies, fevers, or much worse, all the time, and that I should count my blessings and be thankful that we don't have days like these often.  But that doesn't mean I won't be wishing for a better experience when 6-month shots roll around!