2014 in review

Happy New Year 2014

The WordPress.com stats helper monkeys prepared a 2014 annual report for this blog.

Here’s an excerpt:

A San Francisco cable car holds 60 people. This blog was viewed about 440 times in 2014. If it were a cable car, it would take about 7 trips to carry that many people.

Click here to see the complete report.

Polina’s Growth Spurt

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I have been so busy with the house the last few months (buying, renovating, moving) that Polina has really gotten the short end of the stick. Polina has not played with another child in two months. We haven’t gone to a kid-friendly activity since June. When I think about doing something special with Polina, I think about going to a park because I feel like I need time to catch up with her, even though she is “with me” all day. The time we have spent together the last several month is, for the most part, not quality time.  I attend to her basic needs, but a lot of times in the past few months, I was just trying to get things done.

So during the time I was occupied with my world, Polina has matured. In the past week or so, she started saying “bye bye.” Before, she used to wave her hand in silence. She knew what it meant, but said her goodbyes by grinning and waving. Rather suddenly (to me), she began saying “bye bye” one day. I think it happened when she said it to our rabbit one day after we got done playing with him. It was rather sudden. I don’t think I even said, “bye bye.” She waved, I picked her up so she could see him, and she waved again and said, “bye bye.”

Wait wait, I thought you were that girl. Now you’re this girl. My husband thinks it’s great that she is learning to talk. I’m not without nostalgia, because my little girl is growing up. One of the things that is hard for me as a parent of a young child is that she is not in one place for long. It’s hard because I get to know one person, and then this growth spurt happens and it’s different. (Well it would be worse if she didn’t develop, but it’s still hard.)

She is also saying “hot” instead of using sign language. She is saying “dog” instead of “ah ah,” which she insisted on saying for a year. I would say “dog,” or “sobachka” in Russian, and she would say “ah ah.” Now I kind of miss her saying “ah ah.”  I’ve started saying, “ah ah.”  She is saying “cat” instead of using sign language. She is still using the sign for “bird,” which brings me comfort. I want the best for my daughter and of course I want her to excel, but I feel that with these changes my daughter is like sand slipping through my fingers.

She is saying “faa” for fork and “spoo” for spoon whereas before spoons and forks were both “faa.” She insisted on saying “faa” even when I told her it was a spoon. When I gave up trying to convince her, she began calling a spoon a spoon.

She also entertains herself more. I remember when I couldn’t wash the dishes because she wanted me to play with her. I remember when I couldn’t get any chores done because she wanted my full attention. It was a really tough time. Now, when she sees me doing the dishes, she wants to sit on the counter beside me. When I’m sweeping, she asks for a broom so she can sweep with me. When I’m doing laundry, she sits on the dryer and rocks out to the cycle. On the rare chance I watch a video, she is there beside me. Sometimes I just sit and watch her play and occupy herself. She chooses the toys she wants to play with instead of me choosing them for her. To me these developments are monumental.

Sometimes I see older girls and I think Polina is going to speak and have opinions and… I’m scared. Childhood is long but short.

Polina has a memory. Today, she bought out a book I hadn’t read to her in six months. She remembered the name of the book and that there is a song in it before I even opened the book. Six months ago she was 22 months old. She remembered something now from when she was 22 months old.

Polina’s choice of food has widened. She is asking for butter chicken and last night, steak! She asks for things off our plates. Not too long ago, we were the ones encouraging her to eat and try different foods. She went through a period where no matter what we offered her, she ate Indian naan bread and rice almost exclusively. Now look at her go.

She has also started not only giving hugs and kisses but saying “haaa” when she wants to give or receive a hug. Before, sometimes she liked receiving them, but sometimes she squirmed. She didn’t use to give hugs or kisses. She is becoming more loving.

She is also becoming physically stronger.   Sometimes she still kicks, squirms and laughs when I try to put her pants on. Pete said I should say “no” more forcefully, so I make eye contact and say, “No!” She still thinks it’s funny to squirm and kick. She almost kicked me in the face a couple times. Today, I said “No!” and when she continued kicking and laughing, I slapped her butt. She made the sign for owie and her expression changed to one of hurt. I told her, “You gave mommy an owie. Your kicking gives mommy an owie.” Then she stopped and let me put on her pants and I felt she understood that she was causing me pain. I don’t like spanking her, but I haven’t been able to communicate with her not to do something any other way. There is nothing worse for me than Polina making an owie sign and pointing at me. I am ashamed that the first person that hurt my daughter is… me. Sometimes I wonder if she will like me, or even if she still likes me. Then she initiates a hug and kiss, and it makes me feel like things are okay.

Polina knows some letters. She is interested in letters and books and words. I am too, but she also has my parents’ genes, both of whom went through books like water. This girl is interested in the fine print, like the pages about book publishers and copyright information.  I think her favorite letter is the letter “O.” She makes a face like an opera singer and says it slowly and carefully, “Ooooooh.” If she doesn’t know a letter or word for something, she guesses at it or makes it up herself (she has a few words she made up for things, like when she points to something but doesn’t know what to call it she says, “dadn.”)

Polina has a curious mind. I try to support it as much as I can, because my mom didn’t say, “no” too often and I didn’t take advantage of that freedom or turn into a rebel. Quite the opposite. While my peers were eager for “freedom” in adolescence, I just continued in the realm I had lived in, and I didn’t feel any pull to do crazy things. Just the opposite- freedom taught me to be cautious and conservative. I’m not saying this would have worked for everyone, but it worked for me.

Sometimes I observe what parents say “no” to their children about and I think, “yes, I understand why a child would want to do the opposite after so many years of living under rules that don’t always make sense to them or really aren’t that important.”

Since the title of this blog is “Growth Spurt,” I want to add one more thing. Polina’s pants have turned to shorts. Shirts that went down to her wrists are now just below her elbows. I read that in Feng Shui, you’re not supposed to constrain your child in small clothes. (They are not tight and I do use the shirts for undershirts.) I think I’m subconsciously constraining my child. I should be happy that she is maturing, but I’m not. I’m scared. I will support it of course, but I’m scared, because she is one day closer to growing up and living her own life and… leaving. I don’t want her to leave. She’s only two, and I’m not ready for her to leave. Thank goodness for long childhoods.

My Little Epiphany About God

 

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I had a small epiphany today that I wouldn’t have had if I were not a parent.  I thought about God and how often people pray or ask Him for things, and it occurred to me that maybe He is just tired, like any parent would be about their child’s desires that don’t fit their game plan.  Perhaps He is even tired of our crying and misbehavior.  Maybe that is why there is so much misfortune in the world.  God is just worn out from being a parent to all these children.

The Creative Mommy Gene

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There are some people that have what I’m calling a “creative mommy gene.”  These are creative skills that I lack but really appreciate in others.

For example, yesterday, when I went to pick up my daughter from the day care at my gym, she greeted me with a fabulous hairdo- a pony tail to the side with about eight small hair clips arranged diagonally in the direction of her pony tail. (I would have taken a picture, but I didn’t have a camera.)

I’ve known for a while that Stella, one of the day care workers, has a talent for doing kids’ hair. When Stella is working, Polina comes out looking glamorous. Her hair is tight and the lines on her scalp are perfect. She looks like she is ready for a photo shoot. Stella says she does it for fun, but she definitely has talent for designing kids’ hair.

Stella said Polina asks to get her hair done with her. She was kind enough to offer to share with me her secrets next time. Polina’s hair is so perfect after day care I feel a bit sad when she takes a nap afterward because I have to undo Stella’s beautiful masterpiece.

I am not creative in that way. In fact, I have difficulty keeping my daughter still to make her pigtails. Polina likes to lean backward and smile, or lean forward and stick her butt up in the air.  (That is her new thing now- sticking her butt up in the air in a “downward dog” pose when she doesn’t want to do something- brush her teeth, go to the bathroom, get her hair brushed, etc.)  Even if I manage (or more accurately, Polina allows me) to fix her hair, I have difficulty making the pigtails neat without the rubber bands breaking. The result? Loose pigtails that come apart by midday, or sometimes, no pigtails at all if Polina doesn’t cooperate.

Now, a two year old’s hair may not be important for most people, but as I’ve learned in mommy world, people actually pay attention to this stuff.  Polina’s hair is wavy, so even when I brush it and let it be au natural, it can look unkempt.  That’s when I started borrowing ideas from Stella for fancy pigtails and ponytails.  I haven’t gotten to decorating hair with clips yet.

Compared to my childhood, Polina is lightyears ahead.  After all, I didn’t get a professional haircut until I was a teenager, much less had my “hair done.”

Hairdos isn’t the only reason why I started to write this story. Polina picked out a dress yesterday that is big on her, so big that one of the straps falls off her shoulder. Polina loves that dress, so I let her wear it. I noticed when Polina and I got home that the dress fit tighter and neither one of the straps was falling off. I looked closer and saw that someone in the day care fixed it with scotch tape.

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The magic of scotch tape.  I left the top open for the “before” effect.

Now that’s ingenuity. Why didn’t I think of that?

There are so many things I haven’t mastered as a mother.  I know people say nobody has, but there are definitely people that have, shall we say, more skill in the area?

Who We Are

Polina, my heart and love of my life.
Polina, my heart and love of my life.
Peter, my husband and partner in life since 2000. As you can see, he loves motorcycles.
Peter, my husband and partner in life since 2000. As you can see, he loves motorcycles.
The author with Polina when she was about 18 months old.
The author with Polina when she was about 18 months old.