Wednesday, January 30, 2008

More of a Toddler Than a Baby

Yesterday when I got home from work, Luke was playing on the floor. He was in the crawling position on his hands with his stomach down, facing the other way. He heard me taking my coat off, so he turned his head and saw me. He then rotated 180 degrees on his spot almost immediately.

Luke's new mobility has been slowly progressive, but it's been more visible lately. It's not uncommon for us to turn our video monitor off with him facing one direction in the crib, then turning it in a couple minutes later to find him in a completely different position. We finally lowered his crib depth a bit to make sure he doesn't pull himself out.

While not crawling yet, he's certainly close. He usually gets frustrated and gives up, but once he figures it out we think he'll never stop moving. He's so close to moving around that I finally hit the "baby-proofing" stage of parenthood. I'm going to have to seriously lock all the cabinets, cover the outlets, get a new coffee table, etc.

Luke's favorite toy is his electronic musical instrument toy. This garage-sale bargain makes noise whenever he pushes keyboard keys or random buttons. Luke hasn't really figured out how to "push" a button; it's more like smashing. Regardless, the toy is making plenty of noise and lights, and he loves it.

Luke is eating enough food to fuel his ludicrous growth. His transition to solids is complete, and he's eating 3+ meals a day as solids. He still takes 6-8 ounces of milk with a meal as well.

Feeding a baby solids is hilarious. I thought Luke would show us which foods he likes and dislikes, because he made faces of confusion and disgust when we started feeding him solids. We figured he'd just didn't like the food we tried (rice). However, we soon learned that he makes that face with EVERY solid food. That first look is priceless, though. "What the heck are you feeding me?"

Surprisingly, Luke almost immediately took to spoon feeding. I expected it to be a painstaking and slow learning curve. However, it only took a couple feedings for him to have his mouth wide open and ready for the next spoonful of food.

It does get messy sometimes, but usually not. Granted, we're feeding him, and I'm sure things get a lot more interesting when he starts feeding himself. Still, it's nice that we can get through a meal with him in just ten minutes or so, without him being a total mess in the end.

He's a lot more talkative, but his vocabulary is still mostly incoherent. Dada and Mama are common, but he'll say it while looking at anything from me to the cat to his dirty diaper. We've started to try to teach him sign language, but I usually find he gets too distracted to pay attention to me.

Luke's greatest progress is at night. Due to the solid foods, we now have him sleeping a fantastic 10-12 hours straight. He stirs in the night only rarely, and usually we can let him settle down on his own. We used to have to feed him at 11:00 , but we've cut that out so his last feeding is at 6-7. It basically means we have our evenings free again!

Still no teeth. His hair is very blonde and very long; it looks like we've had his hair cut, but we haven't. He's six months old and we're transitioning him into 9-12 month clothing. I'm predicting 6'6".

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