The Whole Dog & Pony Show

First, let me open by saying that the little girl in the story you are about to read is FINE.  I saw her the following day and she was her happy, charming self and was NOT MAIMED. Things did get a little exciting there for a while, thanks to a rogue umbrella stroller. (If you’ve never shopped for a stroller of any kind, they are called that because they collapse down very small, making them incredibly convenient for things like Metro trips, when you will spend part of your day someplace you can’t use your stroller, but are bound to need one at least once.)

Ian and Sophie at the Natural History Museum

After we spent an entire day downtown with the kiddos (Discovery Theater, Natural History Museum, Butterfly Exhibit, Carousel, and, finally, an in-depth tour of the restrooms in the Smithsonian Castle, thanks to my son’s continuing aversion to public restrooms), we were at last on our way back to the Metro for the trip home.  The kids had been absolute angels all day.  That included walking nicely and holding hands with an adult throughout multiple situations, which meant that Sophie had spent little, if any, time in the umbrella stroller her mother brought for her.

The way home after a full day of DC attractions, however, is the ragged edge of tired for anyone, let alone a two-year-old, and her mother had wisely put her in the stroller for the short-for-an-adult but long-for-a-small-child walk back to the Metro, and proceeded to step off a curb with her.  No sooner did the stroller get into the street, than it collapsed with Sophie inside it, much to all of our dismay.  Her mother, like mothers the world over, thought quickly and pulled back on the handles, thus restoring the stroller and making it possible to get the little one out of the street.  Or so we thought.  This “fix” was met with hysterical wails that steadily increased in pitch from the occupant of the stroller.

Let me pause here for a moment to point out that, when you’re a parent, the easy answer (“She’s mad.”) is never the right one, even if it turns out to be true in the end.  The worst case scenario is always with you.  You walk past a pair of lopping shears in a hardware store, and in your mind you don’t see the tree branches impinging on your front walk, you see your small child deciding to see what happens when they DO THIS.  So, because the worst case scenario is where I live, I started yelling, “Her fingers!  Check her fingers!”  Sure enough, one of her fingers was caught in the hinge of the stroller. My friend spotted this and said, “Help.  I need help!”

So, next thing you know, instead of processing safely to the other side of the street, our entire party is standing in the street, just off the curb.  We consist of three adults, one who has achieved approximately the color of chalk and is wearing a sleeping infant, a small child in a stroller screaming to high Heaven, and a three year old who is playing jack-in-the box, popping off the curb every few seconds.

I’m trying to pry the hinge off the finger.  (That worked about as well as you are probably thinking it did.)  My husband is looking for the release catch.  I’m not sure what my friend was doing other than seriously looking like she might faint and trying to explain to my husband how to collapse the stroller and free her kid, because I am too busy trying to simultaneously break a piece off the evil stroller and keep my kid from wandering into the street to pay attention to that part of the action.

That last is because my three year old, the afore-mentioned Jack-in-the-box, keeps coming into the street with us, saying, “I want to tell Sophie it will be all right.”  Every time he did, I picked him up and put him back on the curb, then started prying at the hinge again.  We must have looked like a bizarre riff on the Seven Dwarves- Panicky, Clueless, Futile, Pained, Sleepy, and Hoppy.  Too bad the seventh dwarf, Sensible, skipped the trip that day.  (As I say that, I think, “Yes! One more person playing Clown Circus in the street with us is JUST what we needed- they could have directed the car traffic to go around us.”)

After what seemed like eternity to the adults, and probably seemed even longer to Sophie, we got her free from the stroller.  My husband charged up the steps of the Castle, heedless of other pedestrians in his way, in search of ice.  I picked up Sophie and held her sobbing form long enough for her mother to pass the baby over to me so she could comfort her daughter.  Sophie promptly responded to all efforts at first aid for her swollen little digit exactly as any sensible person would.  She screamed, “NO! DON’T TOUCH IT! IT HURTS!” until we promised to leave her finger alone.  When she’d calmed down enough for us to move her (never enough to administer first aid), we all started toward the Metro.  Sophie, of course, was NOT getting back in that stroller, so her mother carried her.

Sophie took this opportunity to close this hideous chapter of her life by falling asleep.  As all sleeping children do, she got heavier the longer she slept, prompting a slow slide down her mother’s torso until my husband took her and carried her the rest of the way home.

So this story has two morals.  ONE: Go burn your umbrella stroller.  TWO: A man who will carry a sleeping, injured child with a dirty diaper from the Capitol Mall to Northern Virginia is one of the good guys, for sure.  Don’t leave home without him.

PS:  Please read what Consumer Reports has to say about umbrella strollers.

Wow! Butterflies!

Here is a photo of Ian screaming in terror as he attempts to flee the butterfly exhibit at the Smithsonian. Sorry it’s blurry, but he was moving pretty fast and I only got one take.  

It probably makes me a bad mother, but I laugh hysterically every time I look at this picture.  I’m not even sure why this hits me in my tickle spot, but it may have something to do with the fact that once we got outside, he ran directly to the window that looks into the pavilion and stood with his nose pressed up against it.

I also loved when one landed on him, and, while I was busy appreciating the wonder and beauty of this special creature, my son was screaming, “GET IT OFF! GET IT OFF GET IT OFF GET IT OFF!”

Good thing this exhibit is free on Tuesdays, because I’d be surprised if we used two full minutes of our allotted 15 minute time slot.

Friendship Firehouse

What could be better than a visit to a historical firehouse with a friend? Well, how about following that up with a trip to the candy store? We enjoyed the Friendship Firehouse and then we went to The Sugar Cube, where we enjoyed free samples, the holiday atmosphere, and the old-fashioned pleasure of choosing and scooping out candy to purchase.  Santa should stop by- it seems right up his alley.

The fight for Zero

One in eight babies is born too soon.  Fortunately, Ian was not one of them- he was born at 41.1 weeks gestation.  (For those who don’t know, that means NINE days past his due date.  Waiting for Christmas as a kid now looks like a piece of cake in retrospect.  We are talking about the LONGEST NINE DAYS OF MY LIFE.  And thank God for every minute of them, because they clearly did him only good.) With a little luck and as much medical care as we can possibly get, Baby 2.0 (Michael has begun referring to this unborn child as “El Segundo,” but I still prefer my standby, Spazzface 2.0.) will also be full term and robustly healthy.

I plan to have a healthy pregnancy, so you’ll see me out there this spring, Marching for every baby with my curly-top kiddo and my hippopotamus belly in tow.  Because this matters.  I think about the 1 in 8 of my kids’ age mates who were or will be born prematurely.  Some of them won’t make it.  The others will be my children’s friends.  They’ll go to the same schools, play on the same playgrounds, and have all the same advantages- except one.  Some of them will struggle all their lives with the effects of being born early.

Doesn’t every child deserve the chance to be born full term and healthy?  Please visit the March of Dimes and see what you can do to help.

My favorite Shutterfly Card

I’m currently in love with this Thank You Card from Shutterfly.  I really enjoy Shutterfly’s personalized stationery options- they’re very high quality, easy to produce, and reasonably priced, even compared with non-personalized cards.

Hands down, however, my favorite way to use these cards is to send them to my dear godmother, whom I love very much.  Sadly, she has Alzheimer’s disease and can’t always put the pieces together on exactly who she’s looking at in a photo, and this is so frustrating for her.  She knows it’s someone she loves, and she knows they’re important, but, for instance, a snapshot of my beautiful son isn’t enough context for her to figure out what she’s looking at.

Shutterfly’s beautiful card designs allow me to create a layout that shows my whole family in one place, with all our names, so she knows exactly who we are.  And I can customize each card to the occasion to make it even more special.  And when I’m done, Shutterfly will mail it directly to her.  This deal is hard to beat- in the same amount of time it would take you to send a “virtual” card, and for not much  more money, you can send the real deal directly to someone you love to brighten their day.  My godmother LOVES to get mail, and I think this year for Christmas, instead of a gift she’ll use up, throw away, and forget about, I’m going to send her 25 days of my family, using Shutterfly’s amazing cards.

Do you want to get started on your own card?  Just visit http://www.shutterfly.com/cards-stationery/5×7-folded-greeting-cards and you’ll find everything you need.  Planning to pick YOUR favorite Shutterfly card? Let them know!

Posh Pinstripes 5×7 folded card
Unique party invitations and announcements by Shutterfly.
View the entire collection of cards.

Lost in Translation

Ian and Sophie

Ages ago we told Ian the story of his birth and have repeated it many times.  Recently, however, it has come to our attention that something got a little lost in translation.  Ian was born, for anyone who does not know, via emergency C-section.  Our first clue that we had explained this procedure poorly came recently when he asked if they had cut mommy’s neck to get him out.  Of course I explained that babies grow in their mother’s bellies, and showed him my scar so he’d understand that no, he did not come out of Mommy’s neck.  He seemed to understand and accept this information quite well.

That is, until we showed him the pictures of Spazzface 2.0 and we started talking about The Baby in Mommy’s Belly.  His first question was, “Is it MY baby, Mommy?”  He was promptly told that, “yes, sweetie, it’s your baby, Mommy’s baby, and Daddy’s baby.  This is OUR baby and it will live here with us. ” (So far this has, thankfully, put paid to his efforts to convince us to adopt our friend’s infants.)

Predictably, his next question was, “Can they get it out of yours belly, Mommy?”  And, naturally, we explained that yes, we will get the baby out when the baby is ready, but it’s still very tiny and we’ll have to wait a LONG TIME before that happens.  “And then they will cut off yours head and get my baby out, Mommy.  Let’s get my baby out of there!”

I, to be perfectly honest, was laughing too hard to talk, but Daddy, for some reason, took a dim view of this talk of cutting off my head.  Michael immediately and emphatically replied, “NO! We are NEVER cutting off your mother’s head.  NEVER.”  So that’s settled.  (Also, we’ve told Ian he MAY NOT watch them get the baby out of Mommy’s tummy.)