Tuesday, March 13, 2012

SIX MONTHS!!!

 ELI MICHAEL
 September 13, 2011
7lbs 6oz
20 inches long


 March 13, 2012
17 lbs 4 oz
28 inches long


Go ahead and file this one in the "better late than never" category of life, but here are some pics and thoughts of Eli's first day on the outside. It's been an amazing and exhausting 6 months, worth every second.

Eli's birthday had been scheduled for about 6 months (think I'm a little type A?). It was a little strange knowing what his birthday would be, since it eliminated the element of surprise, but after all of the (terrifying) surprises that went along with Sully's birth, it just had to be planned this way. Still, I admit as his scheduled arrival date approached, I hoped to get the process started a little more naturally. My methods included: eating pints and pints of raspberries, dumping cinnamon on everything I ate and attempting to walk around as much as possible. I even managed to waddle in Old Bills Fun Run the Saturday before he was born. I joked with friends I met along the way that I hoped my water would break as the route passed near St. Johns. No such luck. Eli enjoyed being crammed into my pelvis. The night before the big event we drove over to Idaho to leave Sully with Auntie Lisa and Uncle Mark. It was rainy and getting dark, but we finally got around to snapping a picture of my giant belly with the pregnant tree on Teton Pass. We'd done it with Sully so we wanted to do it again with. Eli, but summertime is so nuts it was hard to find the time!

 September 12, 2011, TETON PASS

Mark and Lisa treated us to an excellent meal at a Victor eatery, and then we bid adieu to our formerly only child and headed home to get a few hours of sleep. I managed to sleep until about 3 am, until the anticipation got the better of me and I decided I should wash and blow dry my hair (the latter being a luxury I rarely indulge in, but I knew there would be pictures). I eventually woke Mike up around 4:45, and watched patiently as he grumbled about the early hour (really dude?)  Then I watched enviously as he filled his cup with hot steamy espresso and filled his water bottle with ice cold water (I was prohibited from eating or drinking anything).  After that,  we were off to the hospital.

That morning was shaping up to be one of those perfect, perfect, late summer days in the Hole.  My mind began to wander (as it often does) to the thought of how lucky we are to have a reason to celebrate the beginning of summer (Sully's Bday) and the end of summer (Eli's Bday).  We arrived at the hospital, just as the sun came up.

Once inside, we were at the moment I had been dreading and fretting over for months (years, actually since the fear of this moment had kept me from wanting to have a second baby for quite sometime), but I found myself oddly calm.  The nurse got us set up and started prepping me-putting the heart monitor on my giant belly.  It was at this point of Sully's birth that all hell broke loose and the hospital went on red alert to get him out of me since his heart rate was barely existent.  I held my breath and kept my eyes peeled for the little heart rate number to flash a good heartbeat, which it did.  When the amazing, awesome Doctor Roberts poked her head in to see how I was doing I joked- "we've gotten past the first 30 seconds of this thing, I think we'll be ok!"
This machine was our friend this time.

 After that, it was mostly easy going, joking with Mike and with the nurses.  Soon I was being wheeled into the OR,  another moment I had dreaded based on my last experience in there, but again- cooler heads prevailed and I was as calm as could be.  In fact I only panicked a little bit when the drugs started to immobilize my legs,  I really disliked the sensation of my brain commanding my legs to move and my legs failing to respond- that jarred me in a way I was not expecting.  But just as that was starting to freak me out,  Mike was brought in the room and his presence is always calming because nothing on this earth alarms that man.

Ain't no thang!

From there things went pretty quickly,  the nurses and Doctors seemed a little frustrated by the massive amount of equipment in the room.  Apparently the room was being used to store a lot of equipment because the county was preforming a disaster readiness drill that day and they had cleared out some of the other OR's to make room for the festivities.  It seemed that everyone was trying to figure out how to navigate themselves around all of that stuff-  to us it seemed a lot like that scene from Monty Python's The Meaning of Life:

 

 "Ahh, and this is the most expensive machine in the entire hospital!"

 As Mike and I joked the team set about their business and while I'll save you the details of the sights and smells that ensued, I will say that after some pretty gnarly whaling on my abdomen,  a screaming, pink, little man was successfully yanked out of me and the rest, as they say, is history.

 "What the hell is going on here!?"

 "nice to meet ya!"

It took the team maybe 40 minutes to get me patched up, during this time Mike was with Eli as they did all of the post birth stuff.  I found myself crashing pretty hard from the adrenaline of it all, so I actually took a snooze on the OR table -that seemed odd to me, and I remember asking for permission to do so.

 Finally back in our room with Eli in my arms (I didn't have to wait an entire week like with Sul!)  all just felt right with the world.

Later that afternoon Mark & Lisa brought the newly minted big brother Sully to see Eli for the first time.  Sully had been pretty excited but mostly anxiety ridden about this whole situation- he was pretty concerned about the idea of his Mom being cut open.  So he sort of came into the room somewhat pensively, but once he saw Eli it was all over: "He's soooooooo cute!" he swooned.  Later that day, Mike had taken Sully home for a break, when he came back he had changed into his fancy clothes,  because Sully knows an important occasion when he sees one and demands to dress accordingly.  


The hospital stay was frustrating.  I felt pretty darn good and really wanted to get up and moving around.  But I was forbidden from doing much of anything, only allowed to eat ice, but not drink water?  (Um what?)  I was allowed to sit on the edge of the bed but not touch the floor (um, had it turned to hot lava?)  truth be told, when the nurses weren't looking I did what I needed to do, whether it broke the rules or not- since pressing the help button resulted in a 45 minute wait, if the help ever came at all- so screw it- I needed something from my bag, there was my bag, I went and got it! (in the nurse's defense, it was not their fault, they were understaffed and overwhelmed with 6 women in labor at once and a new computer system that apparently no one had trained them on)  I was discharged early,  I really couldn't take another night being there, after our most excellent St. John's new parent candlelight dinner and I was super-duper happy to sleep in my own bed!

YUM!
"I can't take another second here, lets goooooo hooooomeeeee!"

So there it is, the story of Eli's arrival.  The subsequent 6 months have been a blur but here we are- living the life with a babbling, drooling, demanding blue eyed little man.  We sure are glad he's here!

Friday, March 2, 2012

A Whole Lotta Pictures!

This week is in the books and it was.... wait for it..... totally manageable!  Its amazing how much easier life is with a decent night's sleep and a second family car!  Winning! I still have a few things to get done over the weekend, but its not like it has been: totally overwhelming!  Yay!

 Arg.

ELI MEET LETTUCE


Toothless Rabbit



CAN YOU TELL HIS PARENTS CAME OF AGE IN THE EARLY 90'S?
He's totally ready to join a garage band in Seattle.  
 





A HIKE ON THE DIKE: MUST LOVE DOGS
Its really fun walking along the river with the 4000 unleashed dogs and their stupid owners yelling frantically "Its ok!  He's friendly!" From 40 yards away as their dogs come charging full speed at my kids.   Its also really fun begging Sully to not stomp on their dog shit doody bags that they leave all along the trail for the shit fairy to pick up.  Dog owners of Jackson- you suck! 


 It was not as miserable as Mike looks, I swear!  It was nice!






MIKE AND ELI

Having a brother is great.... FOR ME TO POOP ON.

Ahh,  those eyes.


SULLY IS DIGGING FOR GOLD


  
SULLY INVENTS BREAKDANCING

THEY WON'T STOP MOVING!!
I was trying a different flash setting, because the normal setting was washing them out,  but of course,  they both move too much to make anything but the bright flash work. 







Cabin fever anyone?  Only 3 more months to warmth!!

Over and Out!

Monday, February 27, 2012

Introducing the Newest Member of the Team!!!!

Our new car arrived today! After a very long few weeks with only the jeep (the Volvo meet its end in a snowstorm) we finally have a second car again!!! Introducing:
ROVEY WADE THE LAND ROVER.

Yeah, that's right his name is Rovey Wade (Suck on that Santorum!).  We are super psyched about this car for many obvious reasons, but also because it can do this:


Saturday, February 25, 2012

Chuey, Pterodactyls, Bananas, School Learnin' and Extreme Sleep Deprivation

Greetings from the end of another week in the lives of Team Solis.  I feel as though I'm getting fairly redundant so from here on out you can imagine I have said the following:  This week was crazy, busy, a doosey, exhausting, etc.  This week has also had the extra benefit of a baby who can't sleep for more than 45 minutes at a time and a Jen who does not do well without adequate sleep.  So it goes I guess. Honestly my muscles are so sore from lack of rest that I think a really hot bath would help, however, my exhaustion level is so high I feel there is a pretty good chance I'd pull a Whitney Houston, so I just don't dare.  

Despite his refusal to sleep,  Eli is still mostly pleasant and enjoyable during the day, so at least I have a break from the tortured screaming during the daylight hours.  Enjoy the pictures,  not many this week.



ELI THINKS HE'S A PTERODACTYL.  

He has screeched like this since he was a newborn. Its pretty funny.  Lately he's started to break out his pterodactyl routine in public to get adoration from strangers.  Its a pretty solid method.  Chics dig it.


VIVA EL CHUEY





I found this picture on my iPhone this week.

Where Sully goes, so goes the Chuey. 



SULLY THE ARTIST
 Sully is not too much into drawing yet.  Stick figure family members occasionally has been the extent of it.  But this is the first thing he saw fit to draw.  A truer Holio there never was, now he is insisting on going to ski school next year (most of his friends already go).  I guess its time to start saving money for gear and passes!



Here is a photo of Eli sleeping.  He probably woke up screaming 5 minutes later.



Hey Mr. Tambourine Man,  take a nap for me.  Please.  For the love of God. Please.




NANNERS FOR NANNERS


This thing he's chomping on may be the handiest device ever invented.  Its a little mesh bag on a rubber ring.  You stick chunks of food in there and then babies can knaw on it and not choke.  We didn't use one for Sully, all though I have no idea why?  Its great.  So far Eli has eaten grapes and banana (pictured).  Its really useful because it gives me a chance to eat my dinner and keep him happy between bites of barley mush.  I think tonight we'll try out some carrots and sweet potato.


SO THIS IS HAPPENING....


In just a few weeks, we'll be registering Sully for kindergarten!  (how the F&$K did that happen?).  He's pretty anxious about it because he realizes this means he won't be going to preschool with Ms. Kara next year (and that would make anyone sad really). But this week we got to visit the school and I think Sully got pretty excited about the place, he's also pretty psyched about the idea of riding a school bus so I think he'll come around. 

We went to a presentation at the school about their dual immersion (Spanish/English) program.  I guess I always assumed I wanted Sully in this program, and I do really want him to be bilingual,  but honestly, Mike and I were just not sold on this program.  It seems like an amazing and crucial opportunity for the native Spanish speaking kids, but more of a risky endeavor for the native English speakers.  My particular hill to die on was the math part of program.  The children in the program (Half native English speaking half native Spanish speaking) spend 1/2 of the day learning exclusively in English and the other half exclusively in Spanish.  But the math portion of their education is in Spanish all the time.  I am just not comfortable with that.  I believe that Sully is inclined to think mathematically and its is imperative to us that he get a solid foundation in that area so he can excel later on.  I just don't think we can risk messing with that by having him learn the fundamental concepts in his non-native tongue?  That just seems too risky to me in too important of an area.  So, I guess we'll just think about other ways to introduce him to Spanish and to make sure he is accepting of other cultures (I kind of don't see the last part being a problem anyway he's pretty much an equal opportunity kind of kid).

Anyway, this turned out longer than I meant, but its literally the first down time I've had all week long and I'm milking it for all its worth,  even though Mike and Sully have both asked me what's for lunch about a dozen times in the past 10 minutes.  Back to the grind I suppose....


Over and out.