She Takes After Her Mother

I’ve been delighted to discover that Ruby has a real propensity for climbing. She has always liked standing up, and as soon as she could pull herself to standing, she began doing it all the time.

But now, her climbing talents are really beginning to shine through – she loves climbing stairs! As soon as we decided to let her (with supervision, of course), she attacked the stairs with relish. On each trip up the staircase, her confidence and agility grew, and now it takes her less than a minute to get from bottom to top, saying “up, up, up” all the way.

Most of the time, I make her go back down after she climbs up, so that she is comfortable with both directions. She’s not nearly as fond of “down, down, down” but is getting the hang of that as well. Her favorite part is getting to the bottom so she can then start back up.

State of the Baby

Ruby is 9 months old tomorrow. This is what she is like:

snow.jpg

  • At her doctor’s appointment a few days ago, she weighed 16lbs, 10oz. She was 27″ long. Her head circumference was 43cm.
  • Her eyes are brownish-green, although still trending towards brown.
  • Her hair is blonde and wispy. She’s starting to get some curls — she’s got one big one on her forehead and a few small ones on the back of her head.
  • She usually is happy to be out in public and meeting new people, although every now and then a new face will freak her out (the beginnings of stranger anxiety?). Mostly, though, she loves to smile and wave at everyone she meets.
  • She has just her two bottom teeth. She’s been drooling a lot the past few weeks, though, and for the past few days she’s been flicking her tongue out on one side of her mouth, so more teeth are probably imminent.
  • We’ve been on a nice schedule for the past month or so, although it’s been breaking down a bit this past week:
    • 6:20am: Ruby wakes up. Coincidentally, this is 3 minutes before Kate’s alarm goes off.
    • 7am: Kate hands Ruby to me so she can get dressed for work. We hang out in bed. I try to snooze, she tries to crawl off the edge.
    • 7:30am: Playtime!
    • 8:30am: Breakfast! A nice warm bowl of oatmeal with fruit.
    • 10am: morning nap
    • 11am: After waking up, visit Mama at work for a midday snack, or have a bottle
    • 2:30pm: Another bottle, and then afternoon nap
    • 3:30pm: More playtime
    • 5:30pm: Dinner with Mama and Papa
    • 7:30pm: Bedtime! Kate puts her to sleep.
  • As I said, this schedule is breaking down and Ruby is on the verge of moving to one nap per day. She’s also moved to an earlier bedtime this past month. Daily Savings Time had a lot to do with it, as did her changing nap schedule.
  • Ruby usually sleeps through the night without waking up.  She occasionally cries out around 9pm or 10pm, but doesn’t wake up (or goes right back to sleep).
  • Ruby is almost always in a good mood when she wakes up.  She’s best just after her naps.  Her mood then declines until her next bedtime.
  • To get her to sleep we usually feed her some milk.  If that doesn’t work then we either bounce on the ball or lie with her until she falls asleep.  Sometimes she’ll look like she’s fast asleep, but as soon as her back touches the mattress she’ll spring to life, crawl to the railing, stand up, and start bouncing up and down.  This can be quite frustrating.
  • Ruby is crawling with gusto. She can move at almost 0.5 miles/hour (actual measurement: 6 feet in 9 seconds).
  • She is pulling herself up to a standing position on just about everything. We have babyproofed the lowest three feet of the playroom.  She has a big bridge-like toy which is designed for her to stand at and play.
  • Now that she’s crawling and exploring actively, she seems to be in a better mood throughout the day. She doesn’t get frustrated or bored as easily.
  • She chatters to herself a lot. When she’s happy she’ll whisper and make high-pitched noises and quiet squeaks. I think the most common thing she says is, “da da da da”. When she’s a little unhappy she’ll say “nay, nay, nay”. When she’s a lot unhappy she’ll just whine. She can say “Mama” and “Abpabpa”, although not always in the context you’d expect. When she’s being tickled or attacked by one of her stuffed animals she’ll scream quietly in mock terror.
  • She understands a few words like “milk”, “where’s mama/papa?”, and “no”. If you say “no” like you mean it she’ll start crying.
  • Her favorite toys are paper (newspapers), and string (like shoelaces). She also likes her jingle-bell rattle, an empty water bottle, her books, metal cups, and her blocks. Oh, and pulling off a sock and waving it around can be fun for a few minutes too.
  • Ruby likes to stand at the edge of a basket full of clean laundry (probably dirty laundry, too) and pull it out, one piece at a time.
  • She occasionally flips up the edge of the rug in the playroom to see if there’s any treasure under there.  So far, no treasure.
  • She has a few stuffed animals that she enjoys squealing at. There’s Clyde Frog (a frog), Oxana (the traveling teddy bear), Mr. Monster (an Uglydoll), Phil (a kiwi bird), and Mustard Bear (which she sleeps with). Her favorite is Clyde Frog.
  • Now that it’s winter her usual outfit is a long-sleeved onesie with a short-sleeve t-shirt on top, and pants.  If she’s going to be outside in the cold for a long time then she’ll wear her brown suede snowsuit.  Otherwise she has a puffy purple winter jacket which she wears occasionally, and a few warm sweaters.
  • She’s fairly tolerant of hats on her head, although sometimes she’ll pull them off.
  • She still uses her soother a lot — she probably spends half the day with it in her mouth. This is something we’ve got to work on.
  • Every time we put her down on the changing table, she starts crying. But it’s only for a few seconds and her soother usually stops it.
  • She’s eating two meals of table food each day, and we’re about to add a mid-day snack into the mix. Breakfast is oatmeal powder mixed with fruit. I enhance the oatmeal powder with ground flax seeds and teff. Dinner is a variety of things, but chicken, sweet potatoes, and peas are pretty common. Just about all of her food is hand-made by yours truly.
  • She can pick up small cubes of soft fruit or vegetables and feed herself. We sometimes give her cheerios after dinner if it seems like she’s still hungry.
  • We all eat dinner together when we can, although Ruby wants to eat at 5:30/as soon as Kate comes home from work, so if Kate wants to exercise before dinner I’ll feed her ahead of time. Kate and I take turns handling the spoon while the other person eats.
  • Ruby has a long list of foods that she’s tried, and has enjoyed most of them. We’re still avoiding the big allergens like peanuts, tomatoes, egg whites, citrus, and wheat. Wheat is due to come off that list pretty soon, though.

Multilingual

Ruby is making two interesting kinds of sounds, aside from “mama” and “papa” (the most interesting sounds of all).

1. She speaks to her stuffed animals in a quiet, extra-high singsong. This is a voice she doesn’t use with us or her other toys, but when we waggle Clyde Frog or Oksana the bear in front of her, she sings to them in the special stuffed-animal language.

2. Ruby can whistle! We have yet to capture it on video, but she does it pretty much every day. She likes to purse her lips, and when she blows in and out, there’s a whistling noise. I’m hoping she never loses the talent – it’ll save a lot of frustration learning how when she’s an older kid.

p.s. Don’t miss the photos of Ruby in the snow yesterday.

First Word Day

Although there’s still some debate about whether or not it actually “counts”, for the past few days Ruby has been saying “Mama”.  Not just babbling “ma ma ma ma ma”, which she’s been doing for a while, but a much more definite “muh-mah” that we’re calling her first word.  She says it when Kate is around, usually, although I’ve also heard it out of context.

On a related note, she also says “ba-ba” when I’m around, and we think those are her attempts to say “Papa”.

Of course we realize that we’re projecting a lot of context onto what could very well be just coincidental babbling, but you’ve got to call it at some point — and so today is Ruby’s First Word Day.

Vomit #2

Today we took Ruby over to a friend’s house for the evening.  She was playing quietly with one of our hosts when we got the report that she was throwing up.  Other than giving us a second look at her dinner, Ruby seemed perfectly fine (if a little quiet).  She went to sleep at our friend’s house on schedule and didn’t fuss during the transfer from pack ‘n play to car to crib.
Now we’re left wondering if there’s something in common between this incident and the last one.  Today’s dinner was sweet potatoes (which she eats all the time) and polenta (aka corn grits), which she hadn’t eaten before — although she has eaten corn in the form of hominy.  The common ingredient between the two suspect dinner was onions, although in very small quantities both times.

Maybe the onions are just a coincidence.  Maybe she picked up something from one of the kids at our parents’ group meeting yesterday.  Maybe she chewed on a bad nylon strap at the supermarket.  We’ll probably never know…

Communication!

Ruby is starting to make progress in two kinds of communcation recently:

1. Signing. She has been doing the sign for “milk” for maybe two months now, and tends to use it whenever she wants something or more of something. We were excited about it at first, but that subsided when she used it indiscriminately. Lately, though, she has begun to differentiate between her excited hand-grabbing movements and a more deliberate “milk” sign.

Then, just last week, we noticed her finally doing what appeared to be the sign for “more“. She doesn’t always do it, but what’s interesting is that she not only applies it to food (where we have been doing it), but also to games she likes (we haven’t been doing it in that situation). It’s exciting to watch her take that mental leap and apply “more” to all things she wants more of.

2. Speaking. She’s been babbling for a few months now, and her sounds keep getting more intricate. Now she combines several different consonant and vowel sounds in gibberish “sentences” which are fun to hear.

Just yesterday, we got the first glimmer that maybe she is learning words. Steve and I were playing with Ruby together, and noticed she made more “ma” and “muh” sounds when I was holding her, and more “pa” and “ppph” sounds when Steve was holding her. We could be imagining things, but we’re now listening more carefully.

Chomp Chomp

Ruby’s first tooth has broken through!  It’s her lower front tooth on the left.  There’s just a tiny little nub poking out, and it’s a little pointier than I’d thought it would be.  I’d love to show you pictures but Ruby’s not very cooperative about keeping her mouth open.

Does this mean we have to start brushing her teeth now?

(Loco)motion

Ruby is also starting to put her crawling pieces together.  She can now dig in her toes to drive her butt in the air and get her knees underneath herself.  In the process she drives her head into the ground.  However, the next time she looks up she’s moved a few inches forward.  Unfortunately, she only really does this when she’s feeling sleepy — otherwise, she’ll just hang out on her stomach and look around happily.  And she never seems very thrilled with her inchworm thing while she’s doing it.

I suspect that in two or three weeks she’ll be crawling with some purpose and enjoying it.  Bring on the baby gates!

State of the Baby

Today Ruby is 6 months, 8 days old. This is what she is like:

  • At her last doctor’s appointment (5 days ago), Ruby:
    • weighed 14lbs, 4oz.
    • was 24.25 inches long
    • had a head circumference of 41cm.

…which means her weight and head are essentially the same, but she’s grown a bit longer the past month.

  • Her hair is coming in a very light blond color, and is pretty fine. It’s now long enough to be ticklish if you brush your face against it. It’s not long enough to be mess-up-able. She still has the bald patch on the back of her head, although it’s shrinking.
  • Her eyes are still a strange combination of blue/brown/grey that is looking greener, but that changes a lot depending on the light.
  • Her skin is clear. She has a few rough patches (around her ankles, for example) from eczema. The back of her head still has red bumps. Every now and then, her face will exhibit a small self-inflicted scratch.
  • She generally goes to bed around 8:30pm, and sleeps until around 6:30am. She occasionally wakes up at 4:30 for a snack, but these are becoming less frequent. After her 6:30am wake up, she may or may not go back to sleep until 9am or so. If she doesn’t, then she’ll have a morning nap around 9am.
  • She naps two or three times per day, and each nap is about an hour long. Her nap times are generally about 3 hours apart. They’ll be further apart (and her naps will be shorter) if we’re out of the house, and they’ll be more frequent and longer if we’re at home.
  • We bounce on a yoga/exercise ball to get her to go to sleep. This usually takes about ten minutes. Getting her to fall asleep without bouncing is tricky.
  • She’s eating a lot of table food. The first table food she ate was an apple picked from our garden off a tree I planted three years ago. The list of foods she’s eaten is: apples, bananas, rice, avocado, amaranth, yams, plums. Coming soon are flax seeds and something green (peas?). She’s liked everything we fed her so far!
  • She eats a half-cup (or more!) of table food at a time, and she eats table food once or twice per day. Feeding her is easy, and a lot more fun than having to rush through dinner to calm a fussy baby like we were doing last month.
  • Now that she’s on table food, her poop is very putty-like and smelly. Not as smelly as when we first gave her formula, though, and much easier to clean up.
  • She’s still breastfeeding, of course. Kate feeds her once (or twice) in the morning, and then once or twice in the evening. Three days each week, I’ll bring Ruby in to see Kate at work for a mid-morning snack. In addition to Kate’s milk, she’ll get one or two bottles (of formula or pumped milk) per day.
  • Ruby is getting happier on her stomach, but is still not crawling. We think she’s got all the individual skills, but hasn’t figured out how to put them together. Instead of moving when she’s gets frustrated from being on her stomach, she’ll drop her face to the ground and flail her arms and legs about. She can push her entire torso off the ground, push up style, and I’ve seen her do a downward-dog-type faceplant a few times.
  • When she’s on her back, she’ll do a lot of abdominal crunches: she’ll left up her head and legs and look around. It looks like she’s straining to sit upright, but isn’t strong enough for that.
  • If we pull her to a sitting position, she’ll sit upright for a while — maybe ten or twenty seconds — and then fall backwards again.
  • Half the time when we attempt to pull her up to a sitting position, she’ll dig in her heels and go straight to a stand.
  • Yesterday she showed us two new interesting behaviors. The first one is where she’ll hold her hand out and twist the palm. It’s kind of like a beauty queen wave, or like she’s scooping something out of the air, or maybe she’s revving an invisible motorcycle throttle. She did it over and over and will watch her hand, fascinated, while doing it. At first we thought she was trying to make the sign for “milk”, but now I think she’s just doing it because it looks/feels neat.
  • The other behavior is a sudden expansion of her vocabulary. Whereas previously she was stuck with “da”, yesterday she started saying “dit” and “doo”. She would string them all together in random combinations: “didadadidyoooo”.
  • Ruby is still attached to her soother (and it is attached to her). She’s able to find it if it’s within reach and put it in her mouth, although it’s fifty/fifty whether she’ll put the right end in, and sometimes she forgets to let go and yanks it right back out again. She’s especially reliant on the soother to fall asleep and after meals.
  • She’s been lots of fun to play with lately. She responds to us with giant smiles. We wrestle with her a lot.
  • In the past few weeks she’s started to get cuddly when she gets tired. She’ll put her head down on our shoulders and snuggle in, although she seldom stays there for longer than a few seconds — she’ll pop her head back up and look around some more. Still, Kate and I both adore those few seconds of cuddling.
  • She doesn’t have any favorite toys right now — she’ll play with various rattles, stuffed animals, and some stainless steel mise-en-place bowls. A few days ago we bought her an exersaucer thing (which we call “the throne”) and she loves to sit in it and play.
  • In the past month we’ve taken Ruby on her first hike, to the Bumbershoot music festival (which included a rock band and some roller derby), to restaurants, and to various friend’s houses.
  • Ruby still enjoys riding in her jogging stroller, although I tend to be more careful about the timing so that I don’t take her out when she’s in a fussy mood. She also likes to be carried in a sling, although sometimes she’ll fight against the tight space and want to stand or stretch out more.
  • She’s still comfortable around strangers and smiles at them. She doesn’t mind being away from Mama and Papa. “Stranger anxiety” hasn’t set in yet.
  • Still no teeth. She’s gone through a few intense spells of wanting to bite and chew on things. Her drooling has decreased considerably the past few weeks.