Were we really childless six weeks ago? How is that even possible? I'm watching the Baby Weasel as I type and am thinking (I don't know if we'll ever just call him Caden--the closest we get is "Caden Weasel." Poor kid.) about how life has changed. The last six weeks have been extremely challenging, but then he snuggles in to my chest to sleep or does something really funny like pee in the tub every single time we bathe him, and I'm amazed at how much joy he brings. Babies are smart that way. :)
Grandma G. was here this past week, and the big accomplishment of the week (besides actually scrubbing our bathrooms for the first time in six weeks) was her helping us to settle into a bedtime routine. It was like SuperNanny on steroids. She almost called social services on us when she found out we were only bathing the Weasel every few days, that we sometimes had him wear the same pajamas twice, and that he wasn't always swaddled during the day.
So began the schedule. Each day, Grandma G. would:
-Do a ninja swaddle in 2.5 seconds flat after every feeding except the last one.
-Pronounce it "bath time" around 9:00 p.m. (which, shockingly, the Weasel really loves--we put a warm washcloth over his little baby belly, and he goes all limp noodle and stares at himself in the mirror).
-Put him in a pair of clean jammies.
-Hold him sideways in her arms facing towards her and pat his behind to make him fall asleep.
And be damned if it didn't work like a charm every time. The whole week she was here, he went 6-7 hours between his night feedings. We're down to one feeding around 4:00 or 5:00 am.
That'll teach me to doubt a Grandma who had four kids, worked full time, kept an immaculate house and baked her own bread to boot. Here's to hoping it sticks!
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