
Ash Attack is not sleeping. Maybe there's a developmental thing going on here or something, because it doesn't seem to worry him much. He is just awake.
It's 3am and I hear "hehehe" coming from his room. I go in and he is just walking around his bed. Just walking. Doesn't want anything, just awake.
This has been giving me a lot of time extra time, as I can't sleep while he is awake.
A couple of nights ago, while listening to him singing through the baby monitor at 4.27am, I came across one of the blogs I wrote while I was pregnant with him, and thought I'd post it here:
Things I've learned since having a child:
1: Breastfeeding does not come naturally for some.
Before having my son I was told romanticized stories by the older female relatives in my life about the "wonderful bonding experience" that breastfeeding was. While not entirely convinced, I still decided to go ahead with it, mainly because of the added health benefits, but also because of this magical bonding. What did I get instead? Pain. Screaming. Exhaustion from feeding up to 16 times a night. There was no time for bonding, I was just grateful he wasn't crying for ten minutes. I lasted about a month before introducing a bottle, and that's about the time the bonding kicked in.... possibly because I was in such a zombified state before that that I was incapable of most human emotions.
Also, breastfeeding in public? Now, I am not at all opposed to other people doing it. I am just not comfortable doing it, something about being half naked while surrounded by complete strangers seems a bit unsettling to me. And before anybody goes down the "It's the most natural thing in the world" path, I'd just like to say that going to the bathroom is pretty natural, and I'm not planning on doing that in public either.
2: The human ability to cope is virtually limitless.
I remember when I was sick pre-child. I would stay in bed all day and feel like if I had to get up for any reason at all, I would just die. Now, not only do I get out of bed (At some un-godly hour no less because children have no concept of "sleeping in") but I clean dishes, do washing, and make bottles and snacks, I sing and dance and get down on the floor to play. Granted, some of this activity is interspersed with bouts of vomiting, and as soon as Connah goes down for a nap, so do I, but I get it done because I have to.
3: The world is a terrifying place.
Now, I don't believe that the world is either good or bad, I kinda just think it's neutral, sometimes bad things happen to good people, and you take what life throws at you and deal with it. This was fine when it was just me, but now that I have a child, when I think of everything that could go wrong, the world turns into a dark twisty evil place and I can't believe I ever let him leave my sight. There are kidnappers lurking behind every corner, all dogs are waiting for the opportunity to attack, every stranger is a potential pedophile, the car is just a moving death trap. I could go on and on here, but I think the point that I am paranoid to the point of mental exhaustion has been made.
4: You can get used to anything if you're exposed to it enough.
I was not one of those people who were disgusted by the idea of changing dirty nappies before I had a baby.... don't get me wrong, I have a pretty weak stomach so I wasn't looking forward to it, but I thought "Hey, it can't be that bad".
That was before I saw some of the stuff that came out of my son. In the beginning I was a bit of a mess. Not so much with the dirty nappies (although being sprayed with feces from four feet away at 3 in the morning was seriously not a highlight) It was more the vomit that got to me. Trying to calmly reassure a vomiting baby, while you are fighting the urge yourself (I'm a sympathy vomiter), and then having to scrub it out of the carpet/bedding/clothing/hair ect, is not a fun way to spend a Saturday night. Now, even if I'm interrupted in the middle of a meal, I can clean up the child and the mess (with only the occasional dry heave) and then go back to eating without a second thought. (Except for worrying for the rest of the night that he may have an incurable illness.... but I think the fact that I'm paranoid was covered in #3....)
5: Your life will be completely taken over by someone else.... and you won't mind.
Let's face it, babies are sponges. They scream to get what they want, their cry is pitched just right to make us frantically try to fix whatever is wrong. It's a survival instinct, they can't do anything else so it's all they have. But that doesn't change the fact that they take and take, and give very little back. (bodily fluids don't count.) I sat and pondered this one day, as I was staring at my 8 week old (Sleeping) son, and having one of those "My baby is the cutest baby in the world" moments.
You see, I expect a lot from the people in my life, so much that I'm often disappointed in them for not living up to my standards, (I don't blame them.... my standards are quite unrealistic) so how can this little child who takes and takes, have never disappointed me?
I don't really believe in unconditional love. If my husband cheats on me, that surely would taint how I feel about him, and if my sister tried to kill me with an ice pick, that might also be a problem. Not unreasonable I think, but still conditions, ie: Condition 1: "Don't cheat on me or I won't love you anymore." Condition 2: "Don't try to kill me with an ice pick or I won't love you anymore."
In my pondering, I came to the conclusion that this is as close as I can get to unconditional love. It doesn't matter what Connah does, or doesn't do, how he acts, or what he says. I love him regardless. Maybe because I know pretty much everything about him, so I can understand the reasons behind his actions, even if I don't like what he's doing. Or maybe because of the whole "sponge" thing, my emotions are not all tied up with how he makes me feel about myself, the way most other relationships work. Probably both.
Whatever the reasons, I don't do anything or go anywhere without first considering how it will affect him. I know it wont always be this way, and am kinda looking forward to the day that I can make a completely selfish decision again, but for now, my life revolves around one small child, and I don't feel that I'm missing out on anything at all.
xox