Wednesday, September 12, 2007

Take your medicine like a 7 month old

Sam came back from our last trip with an ear infection that required antibiotics be given to him orally. The doctor told us that the easiest way to administer them was to put a syringe in the corner of his mouth and squirt it into his cheek. Well, Sam did not like this at all and was very resourceful in making it difficult. He invented the following ways to stop medicine from getting into his mouth:
  1. Tongue blocker - moving his tongue to block the incoming stream of medicine.
  2. Tongue blocker 2 - open his mouth just a little, but keep the tongue blocking the small opening.
  3. The Head Flail - moving his head from side to side to make it difficult for us to aim
  4. The Straight Arm- putting his arms straight out and hitting our hands as we attempted to get close to his mouth.
  5. The inflated face block - Sam would inflate his cheeks and pucker his lips to let us know we weren't putting anything into his mouth.
And of course all this was accompanied by lots of wailing.

So I found a way that was much easier and fun as well for all of us. I would make funny faces at Sam until he would laugh. As soon as he opened his mouth, I would shoot medicine in from 3 inches away, which would invariably surprise him, but never seemed to upset him. We would wait until he swallowed this portion of his medicine, and then repeat until he had taken his required dosage. This routine made taking medicine almost fun....almost. But today he's done, so hopefully it won't be an issue again for a while.

Tuesday, September 11, 2007

Help! My dad has me imprisoned in a laundry basket!

And away we go

Sam started crawling today. He's been dragging himself around the floor mostly with his arms and a little wiggles from his legs, but today he had the first official use of alternating arms and legs to travel five feet to where I was. Now, it wasn't pretty and there was lots of collapsing along the way, but I expect he'll be perfecting it shortly. I now look around our living room with a new eye...one that's a foot off the ground to see what he could get to if he wanted.
-Christine

Saturday, September 8, 2007

Father's Day Reflection (Belated)

So I (Dave) was asked to give a reflection back in June for the UCSD Catholic Community mass on Father's Day 2007. I had written my reflection in Word, but the copy that I read from had my handwritten notes on it that I wanted to put back into the original.
I just found the printed sheets with the notes yesterday and figured it was high time to recycle them, so I integrated them into the original. Our thought is that this blog is essentially Sam's baby book, so it seemed a good place to put it for safekeeping and sharing.

Father's Day Reflection

Wednesday, September 5, 2007

Sam-not-so-well

Sam got his first ear infection in his right ear on Monday night. We took him to the urgent care and got him antibiotics but he was so pathetic on Tuesday. He was still a little feverish and just lay there with a toy in his hand, barely playing. I've decided there's nothing more pathetic than a sick kid and nothing sadder than an Urgent Care full of concerned parents and sick, hurt children. At least Sam is now on the mend and nearly his old self again.
-Christine

Saturday, September 1, 2007

Mobility

Sam is getting better and better at moving around each and every day. Around the middle of August he perfected sitting up unassisted and even learned how to use his arms or stomach muscles to make gentler transitions to lying down. He moved on quickly to getting up on his hands and knees, which he practices with great enthusiasm. He has figured out how to get from a sitting position down into a crawling position, but still hasn't coordinated all those hands and feet to crawl. He moves slowly around by rolling and twisting, though I don't think it will be long before he decides to move faster. His inner curiosity is now showing as he has the ability to get to things that intrigue him though (like the laptop I'm writing on right now!).
-Christine