Keep up to date on Alexandria Leah and Natalie Andrea and how things are changing in the lives of Sarah and Stephen as parents
October 25, 2007
Moving Day
Having my parents here to help with Lexi and the cleaning was a god-send. I really don't think we would have been ready without them. The baby needs someone on call for most hours of the day.
We leave Geneva on Tuesday morning. We already feel that we will be loaded down with luggage and have joined the ranks of those annoying families who get in your way with all of their luggage, kids and kid accoutrements. This will be Lexi's first time in an airplane. I am praying that she likes it! She has been very good lately - not all that fussy - so we are hoping that continues.
After our whirlwind tour of the US, we leave for Nairobi on the day after Thanksgiving. That will be two 8.5 hour flights with a 6 hour break in Amsterdam. We hope to get in a shower and a nap in that time.
I think I am really looking forward to this next adventure of ours. I am starting to get quite excited. We have a house lined up - 4 bedrooms - so you can come visit! We are taking it over from an American who is moving to Uganda. It's not far from where I work so I may even be able to come home at lunch time. We may also be getting house help which seems bizarre, but may work out well if Stephen finds part-time or even full-time work. He will be responsible to Lexi as well.
Next you hear from us will probably be from North America!
October 22, 2007
Creating memories with Grandma and Grandpa
One of the reasons Paula and Leroy came to visit was to be here for Lexi's baptism, which was yesterday at our church. Leroy, an ELCA pastor, helped perform the baptism with our pastor. It was a meaninful service of baptism and a special day for Lexi and the rest of us. Another baby boy, the son of some other members in the congregation, was baptized at the same time, so there were a lot of people around the font. I did some work to personalize and customize the service. Each family had obtained water from parts of the world that were somehow significant to them, so we had water from five different places:- Puget Sound, an inlet of the Pacific Ocean that Seattle sits on, where Stephen grew up
- the Mississippi River, to represent Sarah's roots in the Midwest
- the Elbe River in Germany, birthplace of the other boy's mother
- Lake Geneva, the body of water that we all currently live by
- the Jordan River, which has significance to all Christians
As a gift to Lexi, I played the prelude on the organ, and Paula played a piece on the organ as well at the beginning of communion.
Lexi behaved quite well during the baptism. She cried a little when the water was placed on her head, but then she quickly calmed down. She looked so pretty in the long white dress she wore, which was the same dress that Stephen's maternal grandmother wore for her baptism 92 years ago and which subsequent generations, including Stephen himself, have worn for their baptisms.
Lexi's sponsors/godparents are Stephen's two older siblings, who live in Seattle and New York. Because each of them came to meet Lexi in September, they were not able to come back for the baptism. Therefore, we asked a third sponsor, a friend of ours from Chicago who is a member of our congregation here and whom we've known well since we arrived (Bill Strehlow, husband of Karen Bloomquist), to represent the other two. After the water was put on her head, Lexi sat in the arms of Sarah's mother and grinned for a minute or two at Bill, who was standing next to her.
(See pictures of the baptism by clicking on the link at the upper right of this page.)
Otherwise, Lexi is still a good-natured and happy baby. She is still smiling a lot and quite easily. When you look at her and talk to her, she'll smile back at you. She's also turning into quite the chatterbox. She's developing some additional sounds, although when I make the same sounds back to her, as if I'm talking to her in the same "language," she looks at me like I'm strange. She's doing a lot more of the sound that sounds much like a Geiger counter, a sort of continuous grunting. Tonight at dinner, while she was lying alone on the couch and the rest of us were two arms' lengths away at the table, she was taking long breaths and making this sound on and on and seemed able to entertain herself quite well doing this.
Grandma and Grandpa have been dividing their time between watching Lexi and doing a thorough cleaning of our apartment as we pack up all our things and get ready to move out of Geneva. At just a few months old, Lexi will be a well-traveled baby. She will visit most of her relatives in the U.S. before moving with us to our new home in Nairobi.
October 8, 2007
Happy two-month birthday, Lexi!
Lexi is two months old today! That's a relatively short amount of time, but we feel like so much has happened and that we've learned so much about parenthood in this period.Vaccinations
The doctor said Lexi might be a little fussier or get a fever or maybe want to sleep a lot. While she got a little warm, she didn't have a fever of note and it's hard to say if she was a lot fussier than normal. But she's had a lot more poopy diapers than usual. We are hoping that is shot related and gets back to normal soon!
On the stats side, she is very close to weighing 5 kilos and is 2 cm longer than she was 5 weeks ago. All other systems are working well.
October 2, 2007
'Who's this strange man?'
Anyway, I was supposed to take this eight-day trip in late July, but Sarah was late in her pregnancy, and we had just been through the unexpected process of turning the baby, and Sarah was worried about the rest of the pregnancy. So I postponed the trip and found time last week to squeeze it in before we leave Europe. Sarah was still gracious enough to let me do it in late September, even though we now had a baby on our hands.
Even on the evening of the same day I left, I was missing Lexi, and every day on the trip was hard being away from her. Immediateily when I got home, I picked her up to hold her, and she took a look at me and started to cry - one of those "I'm afraid" type of cries. Indeed, I think she forgot who I was. But I do realize that being gone for a week in the life of someone who's really only seven short weeks old is a long time. It's like if you were 70 and your father had been absent for a whole decade somewhere in the middle of your life. You might forget him too or at least write him off!
But after a few kisses and cuddles, I think she warmed up to me again and remembered that I was not there to harm her.
To Lexi, my eight days in Germany were a long period in her short lifetime. Even though I consider it a short period, it seems that newborns can change noticably in just a handful of days. The shape of her face has changed a bit, as it has been doing since she was born. And I think she's developed her scream quite well - she can do a pretty long and smooth and loud wail now right in her throat with her vocal chords, rather than a series of short whimpers from her belly. She might be ready to join the choir at church now!
Well, now that I've discovered and connected with one of the "fathers" of my faith/denomination, it's good to return home and be a father myself to my girl again.
September 30, 2007
Sleep
September 26, 2007
Lexi goes to the doctor
But the hole in Lexi's heart is very, very, very tiny so she hardly has a heart murmur at all any more - the intern couldn't hear it but the professor could. In a year from now, we will have to get her checked again, but it should be gone by then.