Chill, new dads…

Today’s post is for the new dads and the soon-to-be new dads.

Chill.

Really… stop panicking.

I’ve been seeing a lot of new dads on the Facebook New Dad’s Support Group all ready to have meltdowns because they’re about to become a dad for the first time and they feel ill-prepared, unready, unsure that they’re going to know what to do, and so forth.

Don’t worry. A lot of newborns look like cats when you first get them home. The fur falls off within the first few weeks and the ears flatten and move to the side of the head. Relax, willya?

I’m here to tell you guys that’s it’s going to be okay.

It’s amazing how much common sense will guide you. Instinct, too. And going with your gut. For most of you, you’ll be starting out in a hospital and there are going to be loads of people there to show you the basics and answer questions. There will be health checks a’plenty so little in the way of surprises.

Should there be problems, there are also loads of people on hand to help out and walk you through that.

For the most part, though, don’t go in expecting problems. Go in expecting that the “instant love” for your child that you hear so much about isn’t bullshit, but pretty damn real. You’re going to love picking up and holding that kid. You’re going to love help caring for it. You’ll get over your fears pretty quickly.

You are never going to be fully prepared, but you’ll be as prepared as you can and there are resources available to help fill in the gaps. Take advantage of any and every resource the hospital or other birthing place has to offer. Welcome the help of friends and family.

When you get the child home, you’re going to worry about a lot of stuff. Sleeping. Feeding. Changing. Is the baby pooping too much or not enough? Is it getting enough nutrients. Enough sleep or too much? Should the child be levitating the cat like that?

All normal concerns. Use common sense. Talk to other parents you know. Contact your doctor if you think you should, but don’t panic. You’ll probably find that everything is normal–just no one has ever really thought to mention it before.

Look… all I’m trying to say to you new dads and dads-to-be is… come on down from the ledge. It’s going to be fine.

You’re going to love this.

Cheers!

–John

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Dear Jackrabbit #29 — Easter morning ramble

[NOTE:  I finished writing this Sunday morning but neglected to hit the “publish” button in WordPress and failed to notice that it hadn’t posted to Facebook or Twitter either. My bad, but not surprising given how off I was Sunday morning. So… without further ado…]

Dear Jackrabbit,

It’s Easter today. Happy Easter, although that really has no meaning to you right now. You’ll likely get a few toys today, but no candy. You’ll be dressed up in some kind of outfit that’s going to be too cute for words because… Easter.

An early Easter present was this swing.

Easter, for me, isn’t a major holiday. It’s kind of like Halloween. An opportunity to score some candy. Or maybe an Xmas-lite with a couple of small presents. For a lot of people it’s a major religious holiday. That probably has no meaning to you right now either. Suffice to say that it will be a bit of a family day, so there’s that. Over the years you’ll be indoctrinated into various Easter traditions such as Easter baskets inhabited with chocolate rabbits and hunting for Easter eggs–both real eggs and fake eggs with jellybeans inside.

So welcome to it. As I finish writing this up, I’m trying to figure out how much of a nap I can sneak in this morning while you and your mother are at church. No hard feelings, boy, but you kept me up kind of late last night with a more-than-usual bout of fussiness. It’s totally thrown off the rest of my weekend. But like I said, no hard feelings. Whatever it was that was making you fussy last night was, I’m sure, quite legitimate.

Here’s to better sleep for you and me. (And, in all honesty, I think you sleep better than most babies I hear about.)

But words of wisdom and whatnot are hard to come by right now. This weekend I’m working on a pile of projects. Let’s see… two film journals, a book on Chinese film studies, a collection of comics written by M*A*S*H‘s Gary Burghoff, a western novella based on the movie Winterhawk, a massive tome about Harvey Comics, and a couple of writing projects, so… yeah. Keeping busy. Four of these projects will be finished by Monday morning. The rest will be what keeps me busy for the rest of the week.

So… not the most insightful letter this week. They can’t all be winners.

But I must be winning overall–you and your mother prove that.

I’m happy with that.

All my love,

–Dad

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Recent Random Observations

[Note: I’m going to move the Thursday entries from morning to late evening. That’s just how my work schedule has been going lately. I’ll be keeping up with posting entries on Thursdays, but most of you will likely not see them until Friday morning.]

We’re learning stuff just about each and every day. A couple of things that I’ve been noting and thinking about lately:

We could have saved a bit of money on toys had we realized that all we really needed was a couple of mostly-empty plastic water bottles. Really. Jack is fascinated by them. He’ll climb over stuff to get at them. If he’s fussy, they make serviceable distractions. When I set up a pile of toys and distractions beside me for when we’re hanging out, I make sure to include a water bottle.

Now, I’m not an idiot. The caps are securely on. Should he still be this interested in water bottles after he’s learned how to unscrew them, I’ll set up some special bottles with the caps glued in place.

That said, I don’t mean to suggest he doesn’t play with or enjoy his other toys. I exaggerate a little. He enjoys his toys–from the simple stuffed animals to the things that rattle or go beep-boop-beep. I think I was just surprised by how a simple, crinkling, plastic water bottle could also keep his attention.

Pacifiers. I’ve written about how they’re a veritable godsend when it comes to calming a child. Still, in the back of my mind I have also been a little concerned about a dependency on them. I sometimes see kids who look like they’re four or five still sucking on these things and, fair or not, I find it a little creepy.

Continue reading

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A Day In the Life…

What is my average day like?

It has changed over the past seven months here and there, but, for the most part, here is what my typical weekday (assuming Jack sleeps through the night) looks like:

  • 5 or 6 am — Get up, check e-mail, figure out what work is ahead of me, make some coffee and maybe grab something to eat.
  • 7 am — Usually get Margaret up and out of bed, take the dog out.
  • 7:30 am — If Jack isn’t awake by now, I’ll likely go and get him out of the crib, change him, then sit with him until Margaret is ready for first morning feeding. When she takes him, I go wash bottles, feed the dog and then go back to work.
  • 9 am– Up to this point, I’ve been working for the most part. Margaret will usually leave for work around now. I take the dog out again. Jack is either in his swing or in his exer-saucer watching Despicable Me. This won’t last forever. Around this time I’m wrapping up the most critical jobs and get ready to settle in with Jack.Over the next few hours I’ll monitor my e-mail on my phone in case I get an important e-mail from British clients.
  • Too much play and excitement… time to pass out…with all the dignity it implies.

    9:30 am or so — I’ve settled down with Jack. We play with toys, there may be a book being read assuming it’s not going into his mouth. We do this until he falls asleep. We nap.

  • Noon — give or take depending on when he had his last feeding before Margaret left for work, Jack gets his first bottle. He sucks it down. We sit and play or read. I may slip him into his exer-saucer for a few minutes so I can find some food and check my e-mail, check snail-mail, return e-mails if necessary, take the dog out, and other little things until Jack makes cranky noises. I will often dress Jack in his daytime clothes if I haven’t already.
  • 2 pm — Jack usually gets sleepy sleep again and we take a short nap.
  • 3 pm — Give or take, Jack gets his second bottle. We hang out. Play and whatnot. We keep this up until Margaret gets home. If she’s getting home later than usual, he might nap a little.
  • 5 pm — Margaret often arrives home around now. After settling in, she’ll take over Jack duties. I’ll do some household chores, take the dog out, maybe take a short nap depending on how much sleep I’ve had. If I have to go run errands, I’ll try to do those around this time.
  • 7 -8 pm — I’ll make dinner around this time. Margaret is giving the boy some food in the high chair. We then eat dinner–often quickly because the boy is bored and the dog is hungry. After this, we let the dog out one more time, feed him and the cat, get Jack into his PJs.
  • 9 pm or so — I start my evening shift of work. This is usually more meaty work than what’s done in the mornings. Layouts, photo editing, book or journal constructing.
    Sometime between 10 pm and midnight — Jack, after being topped off, gets put to bed. I turn on the baby monitor. Margaret and the dog go to bed around this time as well.
  • Depending on my schedule, I may take an hour to work on some writing–a blog post, a review column, a story, a piece of nonfiction– something. I try to do this every day. Then it’s back to freelance work. What’s nice about this time of day is that it puts me closer in synch to clients in California and Japan.
  • Around 2 am or so — Time for me to catch some sleep. I snooze with the baby monitor next to my head.

That’s a typical day. I sleep in shifts–sometimes with Jack laying atop me. My weird sleep schedule predates Jack by quite a bit, so it’s not a huge burden or anything. It seems to work for me and I rarely have trouble getting started on work. Stacks of bills will do that.

It’s not a bad schedule, and it has flexibility. Tonight, for instance, is our bi-weekly Pathfinder game. Jack will likely end up at grandma’s for a few hours, or he’ll be sitting in the game store with us watching mom and dad pretend to be elves or wizards and fighting off giant spiders and goblins.

Sometimes Margaret has a church thing which Jack may or may not also go. Some nights it’s chores like laundry or groceries… but for the most part. This is a typical day–for now.

As the weather gets nicer, Jack will get to swing on his new swing. I may put him in a stroller for a… um… stroll. What’s nice about our base schedule is that it can be fluid without causing a lot of chaos.

So… parenting win? Yeah, I’ll take that. Things will change over the next few months, I’m sure. We can handle that.

Cheers!

–John

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Dear Jackrabbit #28 — Our Little Secret

Dear Jackrabbit,

I’ll let you in on a little secret.

I apologize if this is going to embarrass you later on in life, but you’re just barely seven months old now and in no position to stop me. Sorry.

The secret…

I hug you… like… a lot.

From the time I pick you up in the morning out of your crib to when I hand you over to your mother for the last time at night, I take advantage of the opportunity to wrap my arms around you and hug you close.

Soppy, right?

Well, it’s not all my fault. You hug back, too. That delights me to no end.

Sure, it may not be a conscious decision on your part. It might be just a reflex to being picked up. But you do hold your arms out when you know you’re about to be picked up… so maybe it’s on purpose after all. To be honest, I don’t care. I’ll take the hugs regardless of reason.

Mind you, I could do without the grabbing of my hair or beard… but, again… not going to be picky. I’ll take the hugs regardless.

Daddy’s little de-stresser.

Dad gets stressed from time to time… especially lately. Work, bills, chores, various projects, national and world events, and so forth can make me pretty tense and down. Usually, the Teehan method for coping with stress is to repress it for as long as possible until it explodes at some inappropriate time and place. I’m not saying it’s a healthy method. It’s just what we do. It could be worse. At least I’m not drinking.

Your mother is great about keeping my stress at bay. She’s great like that and I love her for it. You’re my secret weapon against stress as well. Hugging you always, always, always makes me feel better.

So keep it up.

I know you will eventually come to an age when hugging your old man is not high on your list of priorities. I understand. I was the same way. I kind of regret that period. It didn’t really go away until I was old enough to get over myself. So I’ll understand it if, years from now, you don’t clutch at me like you do now.

But if you could do me a favor… from time to time… when no one is looking… give the old man another hug. Your mother, too.

It’ll be our little secret.

All my love,

–Dad

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Dear Jackrabbit #27 — Sicko!

[Note: I promised a Dear Jackrabbit entry for Thursday and it’s technically still Thursday for a couple of more minutes. Today’s topic is about being sick. We’ve been a plague house this week. We’re shaking off our various colds and flus, and now it’s time to play catch up.]

Dear Jackrabbit,

Welcome to the Plague House–the first of what will likely be many to come in the years ahead.

Yeah, so everyone is sick–even you, to a smaller degree.

This is my favorite cartoon about being sick. The caption reads “You’re a very sick poet.”

You may recall from an earlier writing that I had a touch of pneumonia a few weeks ago. That was unpleasant, but we managed it fairly well because your mom had my back. This time, your mother was the one who got sick first, so we got her back–letting her sleep as much as she could stand, feeding her, fetching tissues, and so forth.

Then you picked up a little sniffle. Nothing serious. Sniffles lasted about a day. A bit of coughing, a few more sneezes than usual. No temperature to speak of. The only real hassle is you’ve been a bit fussier than usual when it comes to sleep-time.

Then I picked up your mother’s cold just as hers got a bit tougher.

So we’ve all been sick. And we’ve found we can both be sick and still cover each other and take good care of you. Neat how that works.

So… how do we get sick? Lots of ways. Your mother works with a lot of different people, so there is that vector. I don’t come across a lot of people in the course of my work, but I do hang out with other people sometimes. Game night, for instance, could be a source for colds. Conventions certainly are. I rarely come home from a convention without some kind of bug ( we call it “con-crud”). Colds, flus, etc. happen.

We can’t really “cure” colds right now, but there are medicines to treat the symptoms–so that’s good.

The thing is, boy, is you’re gonna get sick from time to time. It’s going to suck. Your head will feel like it’s full of wool. Your breathing will sound like a broken buzzsaw. Snot is going to pour out of your nose like a New Orleans levee. Your head will pound. You will feel hot. You will feel chills. You will sweat and shiver at the same time.

It’s going to happen.

How do I know?

Because it happens to everyone.

Everyone.

I don’t say this to diminish your experience or pain. I say this only to remind you that it will pass. Take heart.

Case in point, I’m fairly confident I’ll be shaking off my cold by the weekend–just in time to spend the weekend catching up on work I’ve missed. Your mother is considering going to work tomorrow. You seem to be doing fine, and we’re making sure–to the best of our ability–that

Sick happens. It sucks, but it happens.

So buckle up. The good news is that gettng a cold or flu won’t happen all that often in the grand timeline of your life. It’s a sometime thing.

Hokay… as for me… it’s time to take some more cold medicine. See you on the other side.

All my love,

–Dad

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Sleep Regression Is Apparently a Thing…

Sleeeeeep…

Today’s topic. And a couple of days late!

Wonder why that is.

Oh, yeah! Kiddo got me up in the middle of the night. Three nights now.

Originally, I was going to write about how well Jack has taken to sleeping. About how I’ve been seeing articles about the pros and cons of encouraging children to sleep alone in their own bedroom as opposed to, I guess, some kind of community sleeping with his parents.

Fighting sleep…fighting sleep…

Generally, Jack took to the crib fairly easily when the time came. Sure, more nights than not I’d hear him make noises over the baby monitor, but at most I just had to climb upstairs (I’d usually still be awake and working), pop a pacifier in his mouth and maybe straighten him out–then he’d be out like a light until around 7:30 in the morning.

Pretty easy routine. Once every couple of weeks there would be some gas issues that required more attention and often sleeping together on the couch, but for the most part he was a great sleeper.

Apparently sleep regression is a thing, and its time has come.

This means he awakens more easily and more fully. He naps for less time. He’s no longer bound by that infant sleep schedule.

All in all, I suppose it’s a good thing. Sleep regression around this age is an important developmental milestone. This is the boy engaging in and exploring more of the world around him. It’s him soaking up information.

How could that be a bad thing?

Sleep wins!

Well, if I were more selfish, I’d be complaining about how it affects my own sleep schedule, but I suppose it could be worse. I’m here right now typing this, right? (Actually, what I should be doing is working on editing over 700 photos for a massive book about Harvey Comics, but my “mouse hand” hurts after five days of cold wet weather and me not being 20 anymore. Straight typing is easier so tonight is a writing night.)

The point is, I still have time to work which is a good thing. I have several hours between dinner and bedtime. If the boy wakes up and decides he needs to stay up, I can take care of that and eventually get him back to sleep with me on the couch. Later, I can sneak him back to the crib or, if it’s almost time to be getting up anyway, to a rocker in the living room. From there, I can get in a few more hours of morning shift work.

So it’s all good. We’re adaptable. Margaret takes over when she’s not at work, and that frees me up. The boy does manage to get his sleep in, too.

So, as I said, it’s all good.

Just gotta roll with the flow, as it were.

Now… back to work.

Cheers!

–John

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Dear Jackrabbit #26 — Tidbits of Youth

Dear Jackrabbit,

I never knew much about my dad’s younger days. Occasionally, when we were both older, I got a few tidbits, but rarely any day-to-day, mundane sort of things that gave me an impression of his youth. The same–maybe even moreso–with my mother. Remember those photos I posted a few weeks ago? I have no idea why she was on that farm, or for how long, or even where it was.

With that in mind, I’m pulling a few items out of the memory back to share now. Nothing really earth-shattering, but real. So, in no particular order… just some memories that came, almost unbidden, as I chose this letter’s topic:

A picture of the Westerly Public Library from 1937. Floating above? That’s the Hindenberg which would go up in flames a few days later in a field in New York.

Books and writing have always been a big part of my life. I had a miniature printing press when I was around eight. I started writing stories around then as well. I was a volunteer librarian at the Westerly Public Library’s children’s section, and a volunteer librarian during junior high. In junior high, I also started a literary journal (one for seventh and one for eighth grade) where my friends and I published poorly-written adventure stories. I worked in my dad’s bookstore and another bookstore over the bridge in Pawcatuck. I was editor of the school newspaper in my junior and senior years of high school. In college? More of the same.

I used to make my dad sandwiches for him to take to work for his lunch. He always liked my sandwiches because I was rather generous with the meats and cheeses. I made thick sandwiches. This was pretty easy to do because, as far as I knew, the sandwich supplies just appeared in the fridge like magic. I even used the dreaded mayonnaise because my dad liked that kind of thing. Feel free to make me sandwiches–but no mayonnaise. Mayonnaise will get you a time out.

I spent a summer when I was 16 practically living on the beach. A friend lived in a house two blocks from the beach and I used to spend my time working at a snack shack or hanging out with him and other friends either body-surfing, playing volleyball, or hanging out at his house playing D&D. I would bike home (about six miles) every couple of days, but for the most part I spent most of my time at Misquamicut that summer.

The Kelly Nature Center at Yawgood Scout Reservation where I would spend the summers of 84 and 85.

The next two summers (1984 and 1985) I worked at Yawgoog Scout Reservation as a camp counselor. Specifically, I worked in the Nature Center running classes on environmental science and leading hikes all over the place. More than 30 years later, I still know most of those trails.

I was in England for a few months doing research for a thesis and getting some exposure to another country. Money was tight, so I earned some extra money by playing a guitar on a street corner of the busy High Street. I did all right considering I wasn’t very good. I later used the experience as inspiration for a story I wrote and sold called “Digger Don’t Take No Requests” about a guy who played guitar for tourists on the moon.

Also while in England I went camping in Wales for a few days with some friends. One night we made camp on someone’s farm near Caernarfon. We had hiked up and down Mt Snowden the day before and I was _beat_ by the time we went to sleep in our tents. I woke early because a chicken had wandered into the tent and a sheep had stuck its head in through the tent flaps. Rude awakening.

There were a number of abandoned granite quarries near where I grew up. Sometimes these flooded and made great swimming areas. Kids from all over would congregate at these places during the summer to cool off. This was pretty illegal and incredibly unsafe as there was no bottom to touch and, if you went deep enough, you might come across abandoned construction equipment which was pretty dangerous. Needless to say, there was no adult supervision and yes, there were a couple of fatal tragedies. In retrospect, I wouldn’t recommend swimming at places like these.

Likewise, abandoned granite quarries also had a huge number rough stone laying in mountainous piles. It was possible to squeeze between these big pieces of stone and go “cave exploring.” The possibilities in getting injured or stuck buried under a ton of granite were very real. Again, I wouldn’t recommend this now. I’m sure if my parents knew what we were getting up to, they would have put a stop to it.

(Really, it’s a miracle I’ve survived this long. I did a lot of stupid things when I was younger. I hope you’re going to be more sensible.)

I used to roadie for a band called Roomful of Blues. Aside from working at a bunch of local clubs, I rode on the band bus for a bunch of New England-based shows and would occasionally meet famous musicians. The coolest would have been having a beer with legendary guitarist Stevie Ray Vaughn at a club in New Hampshire. Bonnie Raitt was a disappointment. She struck me as a kind of diva without really having any reason to be.

Worst drum kit ever, but I had fun.

I was also in a band myself. It was a garage punk band called Gothic Snowtire (previously Lack of Foresight, previously The Wide Men). I was the drummer and it was a lot of fun. Eventually, however, I had to choose between that and school and school won out. I was able to play witht he band in a couple of interesting clubs in RI and Massachusetts, but missed out on playing CBGBs. You, Jack, are partly named after the guy who was our lead singer, Chris Reilly.

Chris Reilly, front for Gothic Snowtire in our practice space.

When I was in the third grade, I had the job of sweeping and mopping the train station. I think I got five bucks for the privilege, but looking back it was probably super illegal to have me doing that. Still, five bucks was five bucks, and in 1976 that was a decent amount of money. The train station was recently closed which made me a little sad. It was a beautiful station and originally one of the Works Progress Administration projects that helped lift people out of the Great Depression.

Quality time with my dad often meant going to the library, finding a good book or two, then going to the Bee Bee Dairy across the street to read while drinking coffee and eating french fries. It’s also where I first acquired a taste for fried whole-belly clams. Good times. During the school year, I sometimes worked at that restaurant as a dishwasher. Quality time with my mother was usually also reading–or sometimes filling in coloring books or playing board games–around the kitchen table. I drank coffee, she drank herbal tea. Also good times, although it would be decades before I acquired a taste for herbal tea.

And finally–not because I’ve run out of memories, but I need to cut this letter off at some point (I promise to revisit this topic again) … after the blizzard of ’78 (a topic unto itself), the snowplows left a mountain of snow in our front driveway because we were at the end of a short cul-de-sac and there was nowhere else to put it. It made parking for my dad tricky for a bit (he ended up walking to work for a few days), but where other kids had impressive snow forts following the blizzard, we had a snow _castle_. We even carved steps along one side so we could have two levels to defend the castle from. I’m not a big fan of snow, but when you’re a kid with a snow castle… well… that was pretty cool.

Hope you enjoyed some of these tidbits.

All my love,

–Dad

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Roll For Initiative

Last year, a few months before Jack was born, I wrote a piece for the geek website Forces of Geek about gaming for kids: RPG Gaming With Kids: A Preview for Me and a Report for You. It was a fun piece to research with a bunch of great ideas for introducing the boy to role-playing games–a past-time I greatly enjoy.

Little known fact – Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood was the original setting for the Keep On the Borderlands adventure model. So, so, so many goblins.

Tonight, we’re having friends over to enjoy a bit of role-playing, dice-slinging fun. I won’t give away any details of tonight’s fun on the off chance the wrong person will read this, but last time our intrepid adventurers saved an innocent caravan from a bunch of bird-headed bandits in the middle of the woods. That was just a taste of things to come.

Why bring it up? Well, it’s a hobby I enjoy greatly. One that I first got into back in 1979 or so thanks to an ill-conceived Christmas present my parents thought might be a lark… a passing fancy. How were they to know?

So as much as I’ve lately been reveling in watching Jack develop in this first year, I also await with great anticipation his ability to form words and to develop a bit more reason so that I can, soon, hear him utter the immortal line, “Roll for initiative.”

But I suspect it will still be awhile. Right now I don’t even dare put the dice within his reach as they will go straight into his mouth and they’re the perfect size to get stuck there. I guess I’m also glad they don’t make miniatures out of lead anymore. (Personally, I’m not a fan of the light plastic ones either–probably why I don’t go out of my way to use miniatures much.)

In any case… if you’re a fan of role-playing games, know people who are, or are interesting in learning about them in order to play with children and introduce them to this particular world of imagination, check out the article.

In the meantime, I have an adventure to run.

Cheers!

–John

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Teething Season Opens?

So seems that all doubts have been removed and we are now in the Teething Season. You can feel his little chompers when he gnaws on your finger. It’s a little unsettling, but if I could get used to being gummed, I can get used to being chewed on.

All kids seem to handle this differently and, thus far (knock on wood), it’s not so bad. The boy is a bit fussier at times–particularly if he’s tired. He’s been holding his cheeks a little.

This kid seems to be ahead of Jack in the teething stage and he looks happy, right? So…no fear.

But otherwise… it’s not the constant yelling that seems to be the common cliche.

Naive of me, probably, to think it’s going to remain this easy. I do feel for the boy. Dental pain is just the worst. It’s almost impossible to escape save through the use of painkillers and sleep–the former of which we don’t want to rely on too much for various reasons. So it’s chew toys ahead. Teething biscuits. Toys, distractions, and lots of patience.

It’s just another one of those stages of development.

I swear, though, you have to give some mad props to Mother Nature in how these stages are doled out. Just as we’ve grown accustomed to things like the occasional diaper explosion, we’re given teething which doesn’t seem so bad now that we’ve had to wipe poop off odd places. The boy’s grabbiness doesn’t seem like a big hassle compared to the onset of teething.

It’s like Mother Nature knows just how much to mete out and at what pace so that we parents can maintain a sense of perspective on each new change.

Good on her.

So, as with so many other things, we’ll deal with this as it comes. Jack has a doctor’s appointment next week, so we’ll have a chance to make sure that all is well and normal, and to get sound medical recommendations should we need them.

All is well, and we’re very thankful for that.

And it’s not cost me too much sleep, yet, although he naps for shorter periods now during the day. That might be a little rough as those daytime naps are how I make up for my late work hours. But if it means I have to adjust again, adjust I will.

It’s all good. Whatever the kid needs. This will be a rough time, and it’s my job to make it easy, if possible. Or, at least, a little easier.

Cheers!

–John

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