Keep up to date on Alexandria Leah and Natalie Andrea and how things are changing in the lives of Sarah and Stephen as parents
March 31, 2008
A Wrestling Match
It was very odd to spend 3 nights away from her and Stephen. They did very well together and Lexi is sleeping better at night, though still getting up once. She is also napping longer during the day which we also appreciate. When I got home later Friday afternoon, I think she did recognize me right away - she squealed anyway and flapped her arms like she does when she is excited. She has also been very cooperative at meal time which she wasn't when it was just Stephen alone with her. So maybe she recognizes that I am home.
March 30, 2008
A mind of her own...
March 29, 2008
Next she'll be learning Chinese
Lexi's development is really happening fast, even by the week and day. Case in point: When she has dropped something that she was holding, she can now recognize where it went and look down and, if it's reachable, pick it up again. This was not happening even as early as last week. And already, in just a few days, she is pushing herself forward in her walker chair after doing it only backwards for a couple of weeks and can get through doorways or over to a shelf or the stove to play with things (like the dish towels hanging from the oven door handle). We need to do some baby-proofing around the house.
Second, yesterday I was sitting at the dining room table, eating my lunch. Jane (our nanny/househelp) was in the pantry, sitting on her plastic chair (don’t ask my why she relegates herself to this confined spot in this huge house, but yes, the pantry off our kitchen is big enough for shelves of food, a clothes-drying rack, and a tiny sitting area for Jane), with Lexi on her lap, feeding her her lunch. Lexi made one of her noises, a repetitive sound that I’ve heard many times before (though not a lot lately). Jane did it back to her, and then I realized – it’s the same sound the birds in the trees above our backyard make (well, Lexi doesn't squawk exactly like them, but she makes the same rhythm)! Jane said that yes, Lexi has been imitating these birds for a while when they sit outside on the plastic chair together, which they do a lot every day.
This also explains Lexi's constant arm flapping – she’s trying to fly! We've got a baby bird on our hands here! We've been trying to raise her as a human this whole time. How did we get it so wrong? And how did we end up with a young one of a different species?
Leaving Lexi with Dad
But the last nights here at home have been bad. She has woken up midnight or so and then 4 AM and sometimes, she really doesn't go back to sleep. She isn't hungry in the wee hours of the morning. I am thinking that maybe she is cold (Oh, how I wish she could TELL us!). It is fall here and definitely cooler in the house which has no heating system. We have a small heater in her room, but we are nervous about leaving it on when the whole house is asleep. We could put blankets on her, but she rolls around so much, they would soon fall off. I think I might try putting a hat on her tonight....wish us luck!
March 26, 2008
Our squirmy wormy
The major observation she made about Lexi was how active she is, that she is constantly moving around – that she’s very squirmy. As we have mentioned many times on this blog before in our own observations, because this is our first baby, we don’t necessarily know what is normal for a baby in each stage of development. Not having been through this process before, we don’t have any other babies of our own to compare Lexi to. Of course, we know plenty of other people who have had babies as well around the same time Lexi was born, and we are more observant of other young babies now too when we go out or travel. But we’re not with any of these babies enough to know their minute-by-minute behavior and habits, which we know with Lexi. Comparing Lexi to the closest baby, the one who lives physically nearest to her, Freddy, the youngest child of the British family who lives at #7 in our compound (he’s a month or two older than Lexi), Lexi seems dramatically more active with her bodily movements. When we see Freddy, he’s always sitting very still and simply gazes up at you with big blue eyes with a very questioning look. Freddy is bigger and chubbier than Lexi and just seems to be a sack o’ potatoes who doesn’t move much.
Part of this, we know, is simply a normal part of learning about her body, and she’s very close to figuring out how to crawl. And I know that young children love to just roll around and push themselves around while lying down – squirming by themselves or wrestling with each other.
So again, we don’t know if all of this behavior is normal or unusual, but we’re so much more aware of it now that an outsider, Auntie Lora, has pointed it out to us. Now I have a bit of fear that some doctor will eventually diagnose Lexi as being hyperactive or having ADHD. But for now, I’m just content to know that she’s probably just a very curious baby with a lot of energy and can’t absorb all the new things she’s discovering in the world around her quickly enough. I have told her that there’s plenty of time to learn new things. After all, I’m still enjoying traveling around the world or observing the news and learning fascinating things that I never knew existed a full 35 years after my birth, and even though I finished my schooling many years ago. Well, I know there are many basic things that she needs to fill her mind with in her first several years just to function at a “normal” level.
Even after almost eight months, much of my fascination of this young creature, this emerging person, has still not worn off. It’s still baffling to my mind that this thing, a person, a human being, something so complex and priceless, could be created from essentially nothing. (To me, a writer and a journalist, whose business and skills are to observe and articulate in written words, it’s still a struggle to describe these thoughts here. It’s like trying to describe love in words. How can one really do that?) It’s still so amazing to see how a person develops and acquires the skills and behaviors she needs to survive and simply be in the world. As adults, we take so much of what we do, think and behave and how we move our bodies for granted. Dish towels are so ordinary to an adult, or you never think about how being in water (in a bath or a swimming pool) is different than being out of water, but to a 7 ½ month old baby, these things are really new and different, and there’s a lot to experience by touching, feeling and trying out with them!
March 4, 2008
More advanced discourse
She is making one sound that arguably is a word. In fact, her favorite sound in this “speech” she is making is a “dada” word. Sometimes it’s just “dada,” while other times it’s “da-da-da.” Now Sarah and I are debating whether this can be counted as her first word or not. Of course, I think she loves her daddy so much and has quickly learned to call out for me. Sarah isn’t willing to recognize it as a real word yet. Perhaps what it actually could be is a Kiswahili (the local language in Kenya) word that Jane, our nanny/housekeeper, has taught her. We have told Jane to speak to Lexi only in Kiswahili, which she does in the many hours a day they spend together.
In all the speaking and playing Jane and LExi do together, Lexi gets revved up with excitement and still does some good screeching. Yesterday I was in the kitchen with Lexi and Jane, and Lexi was doing this, and it hurt my ears. I know it’s only the beginning of ways that she will touch a nerve.
As this “speech” evolves, Lexi is making her popping (sort of a quiet smacking) sound with her lips less often. That seemed to be an entertaining game with her. It seems to have been replaced by quick breathing through her nose, something we recall Olivia, her cousin on Sarah’s side of the family doing, a few months ago.