Thursday, June 14, 2012

Three

Last week Ruby turned three.  It is surreal to think that three years ago, we were here and will be again in a few short days/weeks.


I am thrilled to report that I made it through all of the birthday celebrations without going into labor, so that the focus could be on Ruby and how far she's come in the past three years.


The Sunday before her birthday, we threw a big birthday party at our house.  I wavered back and forth for a long time about whether we should have a very small, low-key party or go all-out and have a big party.  On the one hand, I was 37 weeks pregnant the weekend of her party, and I feared I would not have the energy to plan and host a large affair.  On the other hand, we really wanted to give Ruby a very special birthday not only to celebrate the anniversary of the day all of our lives became more than what we ever thought they could be, but also to cherish the final birthday of Ruby being an only child.  With Ruby and Baby Sister's birthdays being so close together, there is a likelihood of many joint birthday parties in their future, and we wanted to give Ruby her "last hoorah."

I happened to meet a woman through my search for interior decorators who specialized in performing random creative tasks, including planning parties.  We decided to enlist her help in planning and decorating the party so that I could enjoy the day without over-exerting myself.  She ended up creating an event that was, aside from our wedding, the most beautiful party we've ever (and probably ever will) throw.







The theme for the party (because all modern kids' parties must have a theme) was music, hence the vintage sheet music pinwheels and the musical chalkboard placemats that were given out as favors.  Ruby's favorite music teacher, Andrew put on a performance that was enjoyed by both kids and adults, and especially by Ruby.





It was such a wonderful day, and we were so happy to spend it with so many of Ruby's good friends!



We spent the day of Ruby's actual birthday last Thursday doing some of Ruby's favorite things as a family.  Steve took off from work, and my parents had arrived just before the birthday party (and plan to stay through the summer to help with the new baby).  We started the day with waffle-making and the reveal of Ruby's big birthday present - a dollhouse!








One of Ruby's favorite pastimes is riding on various forms of transportation, and top among them are boats.


We took a paddle boat around Stow Lake in Golden Gate Park, and Ruby was our fearless captain.






After the boat ride, we enjoyed high tea at the Secret Garden Teahouse, where Ruby nibbled and sipped and exercised the manners of a proper little lady.



Happy birthday, Ruby!  You are an amazement at every age!








Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Belly shots

Once again I've attempted to document the weekly growth of my uterus during my pregnancy with Baby Sister.  I'm sorry to say that this time around I was much less consistent, and several weeks of photos are missing.  Some were due to not having any mirrors installed in the house when we moved, some were due to my iPhone breaking a couple of times, but most of the missing photos were due to not finding an opportune moment to snap a quick photo.  What I can gleen from this series in comarison to the last time around is that expansion occurred much earlier but then eventually evened out.


12w4d



13w1d


 14w4d


15w4d


16w4d


17w4d


19w6d


21w1d


23w0d


25w1d


26w0d


27w0d


28w4d


32w1d


33w0d


35w2d



36w0d

Monday, May 28, 2012

Plus Two

It's hard to believe that it has been more than 3 years since we began this blog, hoping to capture our experiences of preparing for and adjusting to becoming a family of three.  Now the time has come for both our blog  and our family to undergo some major changes.  By the end of June, little Ruby, who was a fetus at the time this blog began, will become a big sister.




The closer we get to 40 weeks gestation, the faster this pregnancy is going.  As always, the first trimester seemed interminable.  Starting with the wondering, "Am I pregnant?  Do I dare take the test?"  This time around, I had a hunch that I might be pregnant, as this was a very planned baby, timed to be born early enough so that Ruby would have time to adjust to big sisterhood before making another major transition of starting preschool and late enough so that we were sure to be living in a completed, construction-free home.  I am extremely impatient and hate not knowing with matters such as this, so I made the mistake of taking the test too early (although the box advertised that it could be done) and got a false negative.  However, a few days later, I woke in the middle of the night and couldn't return to sleep until I took it again.  This time, I got the very faint affirmative line.


Along with the excitement came the worrying, the fatigue, and the nausea.  They say you don't worry as much with your second pregnancy, but I suppose my capacity for worrying is vast because I agonizingly worried.  It did not help that I had a lot of spotting during early pregnancy, which prompted the nurses to send me in for a "viability ultrasound" before my first scheduled prenatal appointment.  Let me just say that during early pregnancy when you have no idea what is going on in your uterus and only a mish-mash of symptoms as your clues, Google is not your friend.  Going in for this ultrasound (with both Steve and Ruby since we didn't have childcare, and I didn't dare go by myself) was a stomach-sinking, heart-pounding experience.  We were so fortunate to see almost right away the flicker of a heartbeat on a normal, 8-week-old fetus.


Right around when Ruby was dressing up as Little Red Riding Hood for Halloween, the nausea began.  I was really lucky to not have had many early pregnancy symptoms at all with Ruby.  I remember bracing myself for nausea and occasionally thinking, "Maybe this is it?"  Now that I've actually experienced the constant nausea for weeks on end, it's clear that I wasn't really nauseous the first time around.  The fatigue was also much more pronounced, probably due to having to care for and entertain a 2 year old who doesn't nap day in and day out.  Whereas when I am my normal self, I fill most days up with activities and feel restless if we don't get out of the house enough, during the first trimester, I barely made it through our morning class and wanted nothing more than to lie on the couch the rest of the day.  I felt badly for Ruby as she puttered around, playing with random things in our temporary apartment and watching way more TV than she ever had before.  The only reason I made it through those couple of months was because Ruby is such an amazingly calm and easy child.  Whenever I would drift off on the couch, she would stay right next to me and play quietly, although she'd often do things she knew she wouldn't be allowed to do if I were awake.  One time, she sat next to me on the couch and meticulously pulled out all the threads from my throw blanket.  Another time she grew either so tired or so bored that she rested her head on me and fell asleep while still standing up!



Christmas brought the glorious end of the first trimester and the return of my energy.  We were also finally able to share the news with friends and family, which is always a welcome relief. 



Since Ruby had attended the 8 week ultrasound, she was clued into the presence of a "baby" in Mommy's tummy, but for the first half of the pregnancy treated the matter with healthy skepticism.  When we would ask, "Ruby, is there a baby in Mommy's tummy?" she'd respond, "Nooooo ..."  And when pressed, "Then what's inside Mommy's tummy?" she thought for a moment and said, "Maybe lots of food in Mommy's tummy."

We decided to take Ruby with us to the Anatomy Scan, where we would find out, among other things, the gender.  When we asked Ruby if she thought the baby was a boy or a girl, she answered without hesitation, "A girl!"  Turns out she was right.



Although there is a lot of truth to what parents say about not caring whether the baby is a boy or a girl, as long as they are healthy (especially when you know the myriad things that can go wrong during the formation of a new little person), I think in most cases there is, if not hope, then some expectation.  I expected Ruby to be a boy, and when I found out she was a girl, it took some time to wrap my head around it and re-imagine my baby as a daughter.  This time around, I think both Steve and I imagined and hoped that this baby was a girl.  Aside from the fact that we had saved every article of clothing Ruby had worn in her life for the possibility of another baby girl, we hoped that Ruby would have a sister who she could grow up with, be friends with, and have as support for the rest of her life.
The pregnancy after the start of the second trimester has gone as smoothly and as easily as I could have hoped for.  In some ways it has been even easier than my first pregnancy.  Although being a stay-at-home mom to a toddler is more physically draining than grad school life, the psychological stress of my daily life is insurmountably less.  I still cringe when I think about trying to squeeze in a thesis committee meeting before going on maternity leave and receiving 10 pages of reviews and revisions for my paper the day after my leave began.  Also, the activity I get with Ruby seems to be a lot more ergonomic than sitting at my desk or at the lab bench, and I've had much fewer lower back problems and muscle aches this time around.

The main downside to this pregnancy has been that I've had significantly more doctor's visits and tests due to the pregnancy being categorized as "high risk."  Due to some medical issues that were discovered last year (basically some elevated auto-antibodies that puts the fetus at a slightly higher risk for a particular heart condition), I had to have fetal echocardiograms every other week throughout the second trimester.  Fortunately, all of the fetal echos were completely normal, and no more follow-up is needed.

Throughout the second trimester, the prospect of actually having a new baby in our family seemed like a very far-away reality.  When I was only 20something weeks pregnant, the due date seemed somehow in the unreachable future.  It wasn't until a few weeks ago that the realization set in that we will have a human baby in the house in the near future.  Then I started to panic a little because we have not prepared a thing.  At this stage in pregnancy the last time around, we had already spent months visiting every baby boutique in the city, researching strollers, assembling nursery furniture, packing the hospital bag, and lovingly washing and folding baby clothes.  As of now, with less than 1 month to the due date, the nursery is still a storage unit, we've not bought or assembled a single piece of furniture, and we have no newborn sized diapers except for the few that Ruby uses on her dolls.  So in the past few weeks, at a frenzied pace, we've begun to prepare for the baby.  So far, I've interviewed and selected both a doula to guide us in labor and delivery and an interior designer to furnish and decorate the nursery.  The rest of my time has been dedicated to making the absolute most out of the time that I have with just Ruby.

Ruby today is as ready as an almost-3-year-old can be to having a new baby sister.  A year ago, I could not have imagined having another child because Ruby was permanently attached to my hip.  She needed me, and only me, for everything.  These days, although she is not and probably will never be the most independent kid, she has grown up so much.  She can play by herself for extended periods of time; she walks down the street holding my hand instead of demanding to be carried; she cheerfully says "Goodbye Mommy!" as she heads out the door with her dad or the nanny.  At the same time, she is still my little buddy, and our day-to-day life together is more fun and relaxed than it's ever been.  I feel like I can take her pretty much anywhere and at any time of day, since she doesn't need to nap.  We sit in cafes, picnic on beach when the weather is nice, take the shuttle bus just for fun, and sometimes stay out from breakfast until dinnertime just because Ruby is having too much fun.  As much as we will welcome and cherish Baby Sister, I think we will both mourn the loss of this very special time that's just the two of us.










Ruby is going to be a wonderful Big Sister.  She talks all the time about how she's going to make food for Baby Sister and teach her how to play with her toys and keep her away from choking hazards.  Several times a day she asks to hug Baby Sister or pretends to feed her (my tummy) food or stuffs her teddy bear in her shirt and says SHE has a Baby Sister in her tummy.  The other day she said, "I want Baby Sister to come out NOW!"  I told her that Baby Sister would come out soon, in just a few weeks, hardly believing it myself.

Before I can fully dedicate my mind to preparing for the baby, I have to take care of the unfinished business of celebrating Ruby's 3rd birthday, which is now just a week and a half away.  We are planning a big birthday party for her next Sunday and then a special day filled with her favorite things on her birthday the following Thursday.  I am determined not to go into labor before then.  I just cannot believe that Ruby, who Steve and I still often refer to as "The Baby," is going to be a 3-year-old preschooler and Big Sister.  Baby Sister, we all are so looking forward to meeting you and holding you and getting to know you.  Just stay in there a little longer if you can!

Wednesday, February 15, 2012

Moving on up

For the third time in 18 months, we are T-2 days to Moving Day.  I'm sorry to say that we have developed a "moving routine" by now.  My mom always arrives a few days before to help entertain Ruby while we pack.  The day of the move, I bring Ruby over to share care buddy Ian's house.  I'm also responsible for buying lunch for the movers and for shuttling some of the more fragile boxes and things in the refrigerator to the new place.  Steve "supervises" the move and is also responsible for breaking down and setting back up furniture.  Number one priority when we get into the new place is setting up Ruby's room so that it is usable for sleeping.  Then we typically ride the adrenaline high over a few days of intensive unpacking until the house is about 90% set-up.  The remaining 10% then lingers on indefinitely.

We hope that after this move, we will not be relocating again for a very long time, if ever.  This Friday represents the end of a 6-month long remodel project where our house was essentially gutted and rebuilt.  The transformation is enormous, and when it's all done, I'm sure it will be so beautiful that it will make my eyes hurt. I wish I could say it was already finished and sparkling clean, but in reality finishing touches will still be in process as the movers are driving up on Friday and most likely for a couple of weeks thereafter.  That being said, Friday is the date we planned to move back into the house from the very beginning, so the project has gone as close to schedule and with as little issues as could be hoped for.  I had hoped to post pictures of the construction as it progressed, but that is another thing that got away from me, so now you will get to see the complete transformation from demolition to finished product just like on TV.

It's hard to believe that this remodel, which was the largest and most daunting project Steve and I have ever undertaken, is coming to an end.  As thrilled as I am to be moving back home, it's also a little sad to be leaving our temporary home of the last 6 months.  Ruby and I have had a wonderful time exploring the neighborhood, going to classes at the local rec centers, and meeting new friends.  In fact, as I've spend the majority of my time as a SAHM in our temporary apartment, we now have more friends in this neighborhood than we did in our old neighborhood.  Ruby has also loved living here.  She runs to the elevator every morning and knows how to hold the doors for people.  She's made friends with the staff in the front office and loves to go collect packages.    However, she still remembers our house well.  When I ask her about her old playroom, she says, "Remember Ruby and Ian play in there together?"  (Because that's where they used to play when she was in the share care every day.)  She also remembers the backyard with her play structure ("Remember two red slides and the red tunnel?") and the lemon tree.  It will be wonderful to once again be able to walk everywhere so that I might be able to get some more exercise.  And I'm sure we won't even be able to appreciate how wonderful our house is until we are living in it and enjoying it every day.

As soon as we get the house into a presentable state, I will post pictures.  Right now I have to tackle a stack of still-empty moving boxes before the movers arrive in less than 36 hours!

Saturday, February 4, 2012

Please describe your child

Even though there is lots to share about major things going on in our lives right now, I have been sidetracked from updating the blog as of late in favor of writing Ruby's preschool application essays.  I had thought when I was writing my essays for graduate school that I would be safe from writing admissions essays for the rest of my life, but little did I know of the preschool admissions process in San Francisco.  Most of the essay questions were reminiscent of college applications, i.e. What attracted you to our school?  Why do you feel our school is a good fit for your child?  How do you see yourself contributing to the community?  Many of you may find this level or rigor in preschool admissions ridonculous, as I certainly did when I first heard of such things.  However, these are all schools that are really wonderful and convenient to our home, and they are all VERY difficult to get into (admissions rates lower than the schools Steve and I attended for undergrad and grad school).  We have no feet in the door at any of these places, we don't know anybody on the board, and we don't have any money to donate.  Therefore, I felt the best thing we had going for us were these darn essays.

So that my efforts are not lost to everyone except the members of the admissions committee for these schools, I thought I'd share one of the essays here.  It's the one that asked us to describe our child.  What I wanted to write was that if you could come to our house and spend some time with Ruby and really get to know her, you'd be paying us to spend more time with her.  But instead I just hope I was able to capture at least a fraction of her spirit and the light she brings into my world every day.


Ruby is the type of kid who makes people who swear they never want kids reconsider.  Usually it's after they've had a meal with her in a restaurant and witnessed her sit quietly for 2 hours, slowly and meticulously eating her food, occasionally offering to share with me or her dad, and spontaneously breaking into dance along with the background music.  If she gets really comfortable with them, she may even sing a song or offer a tentative one-finger high five.

When I think of Ruby, I think of happiness.  Almost every day, she is a bundle of giggles and cheerful chatter from the moment she wakes to the moment we say goodnight.  She loves music, and she loves to dance.  Throughout the day she will break out into song, sometimes surprising me with a song I had no idea she knew.  The other day, she started singing a song from last season's Music Together class while strumming on a guitar that she fashioned herself using a piece of wooden train track and a rubber band.  She breaks into dance at the sound of music or any kind of beat, one time dancing to the ticking of the timer on our toaster oven.  She loves playing with her friends, and at the end of each day excitedly recounts everyone she saw and what they did to her dad.  Even though she often cannot catch up with a little friend who is running circles around the playground, she will trot along after him, sometimes with an outstretched hand full of Cheerios, asking in a voice not quite loud enough for him to hear, "Here, want a Cheerio?"

Ruby has always been a very cautious child who is somewhat reluctant to venture into new situations.  This combined with a low frustration tolerance is most likely what contributed to her not crawling until she was 14.5 months old and not walking until she was almost a year and a half.  When she finally did walk, she rarely fell down.  It was as if she had to be sure she could walk safely before she would walk at all.  Ruby is meticulous and thoughtful in everything she does.  All of her toys and books are in Like New condition.  She points out specks of dirt around the house and asks, "Can you wipe it, Mommy?"  Her activity level has always been low relative to her peers.  Oftentimes when we go to the playground she will ask to just sit on the bench and have a snack.  She enjoys observing the other children and excitedly points out interesting things that they are doing.  She has always had a very long attention span.  Even when we were taking our baby sign language classes when she was only 7 months old, she was the only baby who sat for the entire hour, listening intently to the teacher.  Today, whether it be reading books, making Chinese dumplings out of play dough, or eating her meals, Ruby is able to engage in a single activity for an impressively long period of time.

Ruby has a very mature soul, and sometimes I wonder if I am hearing the wisdom of a 60-year-old woman coming out of her mouth.  When I was nauseous with morning sickness a couple months ago, Ruby looked at me earnestly and said, "Eat something, Mommy.  You feel better."  Sometimes it seems like in her mind, she is the adult in our family.  At dinner when she saw that I did not have a glass of water, she directed, "Daddy, please get Mommy a cup!"  And later, "Mommy, you forgot to say 'Thank you very much, Daddy'!"  She is a natural nurturer.  Much of her play involves pretending to buy and prepare food for me and her dollies.  She loves to and often insists upon sharing her food, running to bring me or her dad the first bite of even her most favorite snack.  When I was sick in bed one time, she brought me toy after toy until I was buried, and nowadays if ever I look tired, she tells me, "Go lie on the bed, Mommy.  I bring you a toy."  When I'm with her, it sometimes feels like I'm with a good friend and other times feels like I'm with little baby, but she never fails to at least once a day stop me in my tracks with amazement.



P.S.  Here is the video of Ruby singing the Music Together song:  (The lyrics are supposed to be "Walking down my street, feeling good in my feet.  Boom chicka chicka chicka boom chicka chicka chicka boom boom boom!")





Addendum 2/13/12:  Today Ruby was accepted to our first choice preschool, Peter's Place!

Wednesday, January 4, 2012

Christmas at Lao-lao and Lao-ye's house

This year for the first time, we spent Christmas at Lao-lao and Lao-ye's house.  Lao-lao and Lao-ye live very far away, so we have to take an airplane just to get there.  I like riding on the airplane because I'm allowed to watch as many Elmo videos as I want and also Mommy packs an entire carry-on bag full of snacks for me.  I also really like Lao-lao and Lao-ye's house because there are lots of stairs, and I get to have my diaper changed on an extra-large changer called a chaise lounger, and there are always plenty of grown-ups to wait on me hand and foot.  This year, my Uncle Hao-hao came from Los Angeles to play with me!  It was fun to share my toys with him, and he is also really good at coloring.

Many other people also came to visit me.  I got to see my Uncle Allan, his Mommy (my Great-aunt), and Mommy's friend Andrea who always brings me Hello Kitty things.  I even got to play with my little buddy Johann!  When Johann was even younger than I am today, he was the ring bearer at Mommy and Daddy's wedding.


Now he is a Very Big Kid.  He really likes to play Angry Birds, and I like to cheer him along.





Since it was Christmastime, Mommy and Daddy gave all of our visitors a present, and then they all gave me a present!  If you think that's a lot of presents, then you won't believe what happened on Christmas day!  I found one million presents under the Christmas tree, and we opened them all!



Some of the presents were for Uncle Hao-hao ...




Some were for Lao-lao and Lao-ye ...





Some were for Mommy and Daddy ...



But most were for me!!!







I can't remember what Christmas was like last year and the year before, but boy oh boy was it fun this year! As much as I liked all of my presents, my favorite part was spending time with my family!