Sophia’s Six-Month Check-Up

Happy Baby
Sophia had her six-month check-up on Friday. She is twenty eight inches tall/long and weights fifteen pounds and fourteen and a half ounces.

Sophia has been working on sitting up for the past two weeks. She still needs her boppy pillow but she’s getting a lot more steady. When she leans forward she can self correct and sit up again, but if she falls back she’s a flailing turtle. She tolerates being on her tummy, but still doesn’t use her arms to push her torso up. As a matter a fact if I put her into the half push up position she’ll slide her arms out to her sides. She absolutely refuses to use her arms to support her weight in any way. She knows her arms exist – ok maybe she only knows her hands exist. She’s been using them to grasp and pull objects towards herself and ultimately into her mouth since she was about three months old.

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Baby weed milestones

Tonight was bath night and I’m not going to jinx things by saying she likes baths, but she did tolerate it very well. Not only did she not cry, but she didn’t even fuss. She was curious about the water tonight. I use a little plastic dish to pour water onto her and she kept trying to grab the water. It was very cute and funny. I’m sorry I didn’t get any pictures or video of it – maybe next time.

After her bath I put her in her not-a-walker and Kurt discovered that we needed to raise it a notch because monkey butt is getting taller. She likes the not-a-walker a lot better than she did at first. I don’t remember if she was able to move the not-a-walker back and forth like she can now, but I do know it didn’t take her long after her first introduction to just sit back and use her legs to push it around in a circle. Now she’s proficient in standing up and pushing it forward as well.
not-a-walker
Yesterday we noticed that she had figured out how to get her feet all the way up to her mouth and suck on her toes. I haven’t captured a picture of that yet. This will just have to do for now…
the cute

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Brief baby updates

On Saturday (February 2nd) we gave Sophia a taste of her first doctor and mommy approved solid food. Baby’s first solid food

Tuesday (February 5th), Sophia learned to roll from her back to her side.

Wednesday (February 6th), she began pulling at her ears. I didn’t know what that could mean until a friend of mine suggested that it could be teething. The facilitator at our “living with baby” class confirmed that by saying about pressure building in the ears when their teeth come out and that it’s worse when they lay down. Well, last week it was sort of hard to tell if she would have trouble sleeping since I kept waking her up to go to the hospital. Last night she woke up at midnight to eat, but she didn’t fall back to sleep right away like she usually does at night. This morning she woke up at six am – about an hour and a half before her usual on time schedule. Her ears were red. She had scratches on the side of her face leading into her ears and blood inside her ears. Poor baby. For her morning nap I gave her Baby Orajel. Oh what a beautiful product. Sleep! She slept for two and a half hours. Hint for other parents of teething babies – don’t get the “nighttime” formula. The ingredient list is the same, the product amount is less, and the price is higher – talk about marketing.

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Sophia’s Four-Month Birthday

Sophia’s four-month birthday was on Friday (hence the Baby Squeezins: Diaper of the Month post). At four months, this kid has great control of her head now. She can lift it up to look around weather she’s on her back or stomach, but she absolutely refuses to use her arms while on her tummy to do the half push up (oh I hope she’s not going to be like her dad – more on this at the end of this post). If I hold her hands she can repeatedly push herself from a sitting to standing position and she can also stand for longer periods of time while just holding our fingers. A couple weeks ago I bought her the new set of rattles and within the last week she has figured out that if she can’t reach them with her hands she can use her feet to bring it up to her hands. On Monday I had her propped up with the Boppy pillow and a blanket behind her in such a way that she was sitting up straight. I’ve only seen her do this once, but she actually leaned forward to the point of bending herself in half to reach for a rattle and then she actually pushed herself back to the sitting position. She still has to be propped up to sit, but never the less I was impressed that she got herself back into that position.

Tuesday Sophia had her four-month check-up. She is thirteen pounds, thirteen ounces, and twenty-five inches tall/long. Poor baby received two shots in each leg plus one oral vaccine. Her tiny little left leg now has two welts. :( The shots on the right leg didn’t swell up like the left. The doctor said we can start her on solid food anytime. He said to start with a very thin consistency cereal first, specifically rice because it’s the one thing that doesn’t cause any kind of bad reactions. She has really been eyeballing our food for the last couple of weeks, so we’ll give sold foods a shot this weekend if I can make it to the store. The doctor said to stick to baby cereals for a while then alternate with fruits and vegetables. Try each new thing for a week before adding another new item, and no eggs or meats for a while.

four month vaccinations

On Tuesday I pulled out her doorway bouncy jump toy thing. As you can tell I have no idea what to call it, but I knew little Miss Kicks-a-lot would love it.

jumper toy thing

She doesn’t like the “stationary entertainer” *eye roll* that I pulled out of the garage on Wednesday very much, but she’ll tolerate the not-a-walker for a while. She figured out how to make the yellow squeaky (by her left arm in the picture) work and she was very pleased with herself. She hit it about three times before getting board and moving on to something else.

Sophia has been able to spin herself around in the crib since she was about two months old. More recently she learned to push herself away from the edge of her bassinet/playpen/crib with her legs while she is on her back. I’ve been placing her on her tummy after diaper changes to put her pants on and while I walk away to wash my hands for the past few weeks. On Wednesday I put her on her tummy to put on her pants as usual and she spit up. I rotated her in a way that her face wouldn’t be in the spit-up if she put her head back down, but I still positioned in a way that she can watch her crib mobile while I went to wash my hands. While I was gone I heard much fussing and screaming emitting from her general direction. After finishing I went back to see that she had her legs under her body in a crawling stance and her arms spread out flat on her mattress with her head down and up against the side of the crib. She had basically done a lower body half crawl with her face sliding through her spit-up. Her hair on that side was all wet – eeeww! :P Apparently when her father was a toddler he had an aversion to using his arms as well. His family lovingly dubbed baby Kurtie “Unicorn boy” because when he would trip or otherwise begin to fall he NEVER put his arms out to prevent his head from hitting the floor. The child had a permanent bruise in the middle of his forehead.

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Baby Squeezins: Diaper of the Month

Sophia lay across my waist on the Boppy pillow nursing while I sat upright in our recliner with my laptop on a tiny portable table. I was typing out a post about her new nap and nighttime sleep habits. Halfway through Sophia was finished nursing. I kept her on the pillow and she smiled, and cooed. Then I heard the wet peculating coffee sound from her diaper. I made note, but otherwise ignored it. I new there was more to come and I wanted to make sure she was done lest I get splattered while changing her. That hasn’t happened yet. *searches for wood to knock on* She has let out a couple little farts while I’ve changed her before, but nothing actually hit me. *finds that wood to knock on*

She let out her second set of “productive” farts and suddenly I felt something warm. OHMYGOD NO! EEEeeewwww! I pushed the table away. I kept Sophia in place by holding the Boppy pillow and keeping it all pressed against me till I made it upstairs to the nursery where I could lay it all on a changing pad. The Boppy pillow got out of it completely unscathed but the front of my pants and the shirt that tucked in them were both soaked. I needed to change clothes without a doubt and probably a shower.

I took Sophia’s onesie off without getting poop on her face, but with her arms and legs flailing and her latest development of an obsessive compulsive foot fetish – the child and I both needed a bath. This was the very same day she discovered her feet and thus my new annoyance with diaper changes. Poop was on her hands, arms, legs, and my hands. It was a mess under that onesie and diaper. Of course, she had to do this when we were sort of in a time crunch. I needed to get started on the bread pudding I was taking up to Bellingham for the football game later that day (poor Packers lost against the Patriots).

I (heart) mommy - diaper blowout

The thing that really had me scratching my head, aside from the fact that she was wearing the “I (heart) mommy” onesie that Kurt bought at Christmas, was when I took my shower Kurt popped Sophia around the shower curtain and I gave her a kiss. I never ever thought I would kiss someone minutes after they literally just shit on me. Just so we’re clear – no, I’m not into that.

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Reaching out

Sophia got a rattle from her great grandma for Christmas and she wrapped her little fist around it and shook it, but it wasn’t until the last day of 2007 that Sophia learned she can reach out and manipulate objects with her hands. I bought a toy that was meant for her to start spending time on her tummy, but that still doesn’t happen very much. This toy also has tabs to fasten things above baby’s head to reach up and grab. One of the toys was an orange mirror that she seems to like. She grabbed it, pulled it toward herself and tilted it from side to side in order to see herself in it. I’m not sure if she knows that she’s the baby in the mirror yet, but she did like looking at the other baby. *wink*baby smile

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Sophia’s two month milestones

Sitting like a big girl

  • Sophia responded to sounds right from birth as her father can attest. As they carried her to me for the first time Kurt said something and she very clearly recognized her daddy’s voice and seemed to be trying to find him. It must have been all his yelling into my belly while I was pregnant.
  • At two to three weeks of age I swear she had authentic smiles, not just the gas induced type.
  • Somewhere between three and four weeks Sophia could hold her head up for quite a while. We never timed it but it seemed like a long time for a baby that age. She could also turn her head from side to side when on her belly or back.
  • Five to six weeks she “discovered her hands”. She will now suck on her fist, wrist, and thumb (I think that one time I saw her with her thumb stuck out was probably just coincidence that her thumb was sticking out).
  • Around six weeks she began spinning around in her bed. No, I’m not talking Exorcist like spinning. I mean that if I lay her parallel to the long side of the crib she will migrate and might be parallel to the short side of the crib. She also learned to push herself up from a sitting to a standing position, lock her knees and hold her weight in a standing position for a few seconds while we hold her by the armpits to keep her upright. She’s a strong little girl!
  • At seven weeks she began her baby babel with, “ngun” and “agah”. She smiles a lot more (she’s awake more) and will smile when playing peek-a-boo. I have also heard her laugh in her sleep on two occasions. She has yet to laugh while awake though, so I’m not sure that she’s actually laughing.

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