Friday, November 28, 2008

roo-2: 8 weeks

i finally go to the doctor this week - yeah! i am still hit and miss with the nausea. some days i feel totally fine, others i feel terrible. at least we will be able to tell people soon enough :)

from babycenter.com:

Webbed fingers and toes are poking out from your baby's hands and feet, his eyelids practically cover his eyes, breathing tubes extend from his throat to the branches of his developing lungs, and his "tail" is just about gone. In his brain, nerve cells are branching out to connect with one another, forming primitive neural pathways. You may be daydreaming about your baby as one sex or the other, but the external genitals still haven't developed enough to reveal whether you're having a boy or a girl. Either way, your baby — about the size of a kidney bean — is constantly moving and shifting, though you still can't feel it.

Wednesday, November 26, 2008

me too

quentin's new nickname at day care is "me too." he has to be wherever the "big boys" are, doing whatever they are doing. the big boys do not appreciate their new follower. nick says to quentin, "no baby, mine," several times a day, as quentin tries to get in on whatever nick is playing with. the two new babies have not started coming to day care yet, so Q is still the baby for a little while longer.

Monday, November 24, 2008

photos of a fidgety boy

we took Q to babies r us last night to get his 15-month pictures taken. despite having pre-scheduled an appointment, it took over an hour before it was our turn to go. Q went from being ok, to being super fidgety. one-year-olds are not good waiters. all this waiting for 7 minutes, yes only 7, of picture-taking. they came out ok, i guess, but they are not my favorite pics ever. i felt like the photographer was rushing because they were so behind and the store was going to close in like 10 minutes. plus Q did not want to sit still. oh well.

nooooooooooooooooooooo

Q has a new favorite word. all weekend long: "nooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo." we're not even sure he really gets it, but he certainly enjoys saying it.

Friday, November 21, 2008

roo-2: 7 weeks

another week down, a whole bunch more to go. i have now graduated to intermittent nausea and a complete lack of interest in eating. i am hungry, but i just can't think of anything that won't make me want to hurl. even when i think i've come up with something "safe", i make it, take one whiff, and have to throw it away. good times. thanksgiving should be loads of fun!
roo-2 is a blueberry. i could go for a nice blueberry smoothie. too bad there are no smoothie places near our house.
i had my pre-appointment medical history phone call today. the nurse asked me all kinds of questions about Q's birth, like when did my water break, that i just couldn't answer. still don't know that. also weird - mass general apparently does not do an 8-week ultrasound. they only do one, at 18-20 weeks unless you do all the optional genetic testing, then they do one at 11-14 weeks. weird.
The big news this week: Hands and feet are emerging from developing arms and legs — although they look more like paddles at this point than the tiny, pudgy extremities you're daydreaming about holding and tickling. Technically, your baby is still considered an embryo and has something of a small tail, which is an extension of her tailbone. The tail will disappear within a few weeks, but that's the only thing getting smaller. Your baby has doubled in size since last week and now measures half an inch long, about the size of a blueberry. If you could see inside your womb, you'd spot eyelid folds partially covering her peepers, which already have some color, as well as the tip of her nose and tiny veins beneath parchment-thin skin. Both hemispheres of your baby's brain are growing, and her liver is churning out red blood cells until her bone marrow forms and takes over this role. She also has an appendix and a pancreas, which will eventually produce the hormone insulin to aid in digestion. A loop in your baby's growing intestines is bulging into her umbilical cord, which now has distinct blood vessels to carry oxygen and nutrients to and from her tiny body.

Tuesday, November 18, 2008

free play at the gym

As Keira mentioned in the last post, Q now belongs to a kiddie gym. Two hours a week they have free play where the kids can just play with all the stuff. Ours has Tuesdays from 1230-130 and Thursdays 3-4. Anywho, I was on call last night and we finished rounding at a reasonable time so that I could potentially get Q from daycare and take him to free play. I got there in plenty of time and we had a great time. Q has become an expert climber as you can see from the pictures. He enjoyed climbing up the slide backwards and climbing a ladder to get to the slide. I was so surprised how easily he could climb a ladder. Nothing in our house is safe anymore!

Monday, November 17, 2008

interesante

i can't eat most things without wanting to hurl, yet i can eat mexican food. hmmmm.

baby gym class

over the past few months, we have realized that quentin has a ton of energy. the boy can go and go and go. and now that it is always cold and dark outside, running around the yard to wear him out is no longer an option. and his play area in the cellar is nice, but it gets cold down there as well preventing extended play times. we had pretty much resigned ourselves to running laps around the first floor of our house, chasing him as he runs. then we found it. i saw a commercial for My Gym - a kiddie gym with classes for babes as young as 6 weeks! on saturday we took him to a free trial class to see if this might be a good fit for him. quentin is a "waddler" (14-22 months) but the class we can actually attend on saturday mornings is a "tiny tykes" (7-13 months) and waddlers combo. he had a blast. they did a nice mix of structured activities and free play and always kept the kids moving. they do "circle time" with singing and hand movements to develop fine motor skills. quentin also got to swing on a trapeze, climb up a log cabin, walk on a balance beam, swing, and more. we learned that he is fearless and these classes are a good thing for him. so we are now full-fledged members. we figured it is a good way for him to expend some energy and interact with kiddies his own age. our membership entitles us to one class and one "free play" hour a week. most of the other waddlers classes and free plays are during work hours, but between jeremy's weird work schedule and my upcoming holiday vacation days, i think he'll be able to get to a bunch of them.

Friday, November 14, 2008

roo-2: 6 weeks

lentil! getting so big already! still feeling pretty ok, though i do have moments of nausea. i am just waiting for it to kick in all the way.
This week's major developments: The nose, mouth, and ears that you'll spend so much time kissing in eight months are beginning to take shape. If you could see into your uterus, you'd find an oversize head and dark spots where your baby's eyes and nostrils are starting to form. His emerging ears are marked by small depressions on the sides of the head, and his arms and legs by protruding buds. His heart is beating about 100 to 160 times a minute — almost twice as fast as yours — and blood is beginning to course through his body. His intestines are developing, and the bud of tissue that will give rise to his lungs has appeared. His pituitary gland is forming, as are the rest of his brain, muscles, and bones. Right now, your baby is a quarter of an inch long, about the size of a lentil bean.

Thursday, November 13, 2008

security!

quentin has officially declared a security blanket. "blueberry" is never far from his side. he has one at day care and two more here, just in case. you can't tell from this picture, but blueberry is a bear / blanket. i think he likes the bear part ok, but really digs the satin.

Sunday, November 9, 2008

15 month check-up

quentin had his 15-month appointment on election day. he is doing well, right on track. here are the stats:
  • height: 31 and 1/4" (55th percentile)
  • weight: 25 pounds, 12 ounces (68th percentile)
  • head: 47.8 cm (68th percentile)

i'm guessing we have a growth spurt coming soon. he's got the little pot belly he gets right before he gets taller :)

Saturday, November 8, 2008

sooooooo big

quentin demonstrates one of his favorite games: "how big are you?" "sooooo big"
he also shows how he eats a peanut butter sandwich... messily.

Friday, November 7, 2008

roo-2: 5 weeks

we've survived our first week of knowing about roo-2. and i'm not sick yet, though i am sure it is coming. i am obscenely tired all the time and freaking ravenous. might as well stock up on food now though, in case roo-2 is like roo-1 when it comes to super-extended morning sickness!
Deep in your uterus your embryo is growing at a furious pace. At this point, he's about the size of a sesame seed, and he looks more like a tiny tadpole than a human. He's now made up of three layers — the ectoderm, the mesoderm, and the endoderm — which will later form all of his organs and tissues.The neural tube — from which your baby's brain, spinal cord, nerves, and backbone will sprout — is starting to develop in the top layer, called the ectoderm. This layer will also give rise to his skin, hair, nails, mammary and sweat glands, and tooth enamel.His heart and circulatory system begin to form in the middle layer, or mesoderm. (This week, in fact, his tiny heart begins to divide into chambers and beat and pump blood.) The mesoderm will also form your baby's muscles, cartilage, bone, and subcutaneous (under skin) tissue.The third layer, or endoderm, will house his lungs, intestines, and rudimentary urinary system, as well as his thyroid, liver, and pancreas. In the meantime, the primitive placenta and umbilical cord, which deliver nourishment and oxygen to your baby, are already on the job.

Sunday, November 2, 2008

Saturday, November 1, 2008

roo-2: 4 weeks

wow! still can't believe that there's a roo-2! roo-2 is 4 weeks along. from my good friends at babycenter.com:
This week marks the beginning of the embryonic period. From now until 10 weeks, all of your baby's organs will begin to develop and some will even begin to function. As a result, this is the time when she'll be most vulnerable to anything that might interfere with her development. Right now your baby is an embryo the size of a poppy seed, consisting of two layers: the epiblast and the hypoblast, from which all of her organs and body parts will develop. The primitive placenta is also made up of two layers at this point. Its cells are tunneling into the lining of your uterus, creating spaces for your blood to flow so that the developed placenta will be able to provide nutrients and oxygen to your growing baby when it starts to function at the end of this week. Also present now are the amniotic sac, which will house your baby; the amniotic fluid, which will cushion her as she grows; and the yolk sac, which produces your baby's red blood cells and helps deliver nutrients to her until the placenta has developed and is ready to take over this duty.