My grandson
is now 4 months old. Although he’s only 15 pounds, he takes up a lot of space,
at least his accouterments do. Along with the crib he hasn’t used yet, due to
new research claiming babies should stay in their parent’s bedroom for at least
six months, he has a Bugaboo stroller that adjusts to so many positions it
reminds me of the transformers my son played with in the 80’s, and a Britax car
seat with enough straps and padding it looks capable of lifting off and reentering the stratosphere.
He also has
a mini-bassinet that vibrates as he sleeps, a Rainforest Jumperoo that
bounces while the toys around the rim emit rattling, chirping and crackling sounds, a
white noise machine, a swing with six different movement controls and tunes to
match, an umbrella stroller, (my purchase because I couldn’t figure out how to
collapse the Bugaboo) an Ergo infant carrier, another one that goes over the
shoulder (again my purchase because adjusting the Ergo is beyond me) a tub that
has an ever fresh water supply, an infant gym with
owls and fish that make animal noises, booties that jingle or crunch (I can’t
remember which) and, thank goodness, something recognizable, books. Lots of
books.
Once upon a
time I, too, had babies, two of them. They each had a crib, a stroller, a
car seat and, eventually, a high chair. I seem to remember a rocking horse and
something that attached to the door frame and bounced. They also had toys and
books. Lots of books. Life was crowded, but nowhere as crowded as my daughter
and son-in-law’s small apartment.
The rules
are different now. No putting babies to sleep on their tummies and all car
seats must face backwards for TWO years. A
pediatrician posted an interesting comment about backwards car seats: “My own babies screamed so much facing the
back seat that even though I would never advise patients to do this, I turned
my own children around.” Her rationale: “They
were in far more danger with my twisting backwards to check on them than they
were from whiplash.” Now, however, there is no choice in the matter. It’s the law. Babies must face backwards. The list goes on: no solid food for six
months and then, vegetables instead of rice cereal because rice cereal is no longer considered nutritious, no upright position in the
stroller until a baby can sit up without support, no bumper guards in the crib,
etc. etc.
Our baby doesn’t
sleep well on his back. He doesn’t like lying flat in his stroller
nor does he like facing the back seat in a moving car. “Safety is paramount,” my daughter, ever the
rule-follower, tells me. "Studies show that SIDS is down as a result of the
new rules.” I agree that safety is important and I’m relieved that SIDS is
down. Of course, I observe all the “new” safety rules. After all, the baby isn't actually mine and he appears to be surviving his restrictions. He
coos and babbles, sucks his fingers, smiles, laughs out loud (when he’s not
in his stroller or car seat) and rolls over, front to back, all milestones of a healthy 4 month old
infant. My daughter is a good mother, loving and vigilant, patient with her baby and with me. She is also very particular and so meticulously clean that sometimes I wonder if, all those years
ago, I brought home the wrong baby. I'm sure she wonders the same thing...only sometimes, I hope.
Ohhhhhhhhhhhh Jeanette ... I know EXACTLY what you mean! Sometimes I can't IMAGINE how my 2 children survived the few rules of the day I carefully followed when they were tiny! But look at that smile ... he's worth it all!!! I'm so happy for you. =)
ReplyDeleteI am so enjoying him. I love to make him laugh. Thankfully, he's outgrown colic and now he's a happy little guy. But he's sleeping, at night anyway and I see him at least twice a week.
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