First Kisses

There are only so many first kisses that a long term married person enjoys in their life. I got one a few weeks ago.  I had been waiting for it, anticipating what it might be like. Often, the anticipation of a thing can make the actual thing feel less than your hopes had built it into.  This was not the case for the first kiss my youngest son gifted me.  It was sweet and a wee bit messy, liquid.  It was joyful and intentional.

When Mary Tyler Baby was just a few months old I remember Googling something along the lines of, “When do babies start to kiss?”  Most of the guidelines left a broad window for baby’s first kiss, anywhere from seven to seventeen months.  On the mothering boards, lots of broads were bragging about their overachieving three month olds who were already planting wet ones on them.  Pffft.

I waited patiently.  I waited impatiently.  I was finally rewarded.  My heart burst into a thousand pieces.

Adler's lips

I don’t write about adoption much.  There are a lot of reasons for that, but mostly because when I am writing about something that extends beyond my own experience, I think long and hard about how my words might impact the other people in my life, including my son and his Birth Mother.  But more than that is the reality that our adoption has just been so much more complicated than I could ever have imagined.   There is not much to say about that specifically, other than I am learning how to put mothering first, before all other concerns and needs that come with adoption.  My son needs that and I need that.

So, blah.  Blergh.  Aarrrggghhh.  Adoption.  For better or worse, getting that first kiss felt somehow like a mothering badge of honor for me.  I was worthy of my baby’s kiss. There was no taking that kiss for granted, I’ll tell you that. Such a sweet and simple gesture from a baby that somehow heals me, validates me, reassures me.  I am his mother, I am his Mom.  No matter how complicated adoption can be, that is our truth.

So three cheers for first kisses.  Three cheers for motherhood.  Three cheers for creating a safe space to mother.  Three cheers for understanding that some relationships ebb and flow.  Three cheers for messy, liquid, juicy kisses from a loving baby boy.

Hip hip hooray!

Happy Valentine’s Day, good folks!  

Vaccinations and Fear

So much of our parenting these days is influenced by fear.  There are warning labels everywhere — on our bouncy seats, our cribs, our toys, serving as a constant reminder of the dangers our children face just getting through their days.  It is exhausting, this fear.

As a measles outbreak takes hold in America, every mom blogger and politician has been weighing in on the news.  Honestly, I don’t often think of vaccines outside the doctor’s office and have purposefully stayed out of the vaccine fray here on Mary Tyler Mom, but I found myself worried last week, thinking of my own baby.  He is a newly minted 17 month old and while listening to the radio I was reminded that the vaccine for the measles, the MMR, is generally administered in two doses.  The first, at ages 12-15 months, and the second, at ages 4-6 years.

There I was in the car, listening to this report, which was a follow-up to a news story about a daycare in a local suburb that had five cases of measles in young babies suspected.  Huh.  Surely, my boys were both vaccinated, right?  I mean, I play on Team Vaccine and as the mother to a child who was immunocompromised, I didn’t mess around with the stuff.

My kids have been vaccinated on schedule, with confidence.  This has been something my husband and I have been in full agreement on, both for the safety and well being of our own children, but also for our neighbor’s children, the children in the park, the children we still occasionally come in contact with through our time in Cancerville who are unable to be vaccinated themselves.  Solidly Team Vaccine here.

But still, I was worried enough to call our pediatrician’s office to confirm.  The baby was due for another well visit at 18 months, but that was four weeks away. With confirmed cases of measles close to home, I wanted the reassurance that we were as prepared as possible, that both my boys had the protection we feel is needed for them.

Sadly, I got the news that my youngest had not, in fact, received his scheduled MMR vaccine at 15 months.  His 15 month “well baby” visit turned into a “sick baby” visit because the flu was making the rounds at our house that week.  Mary Tyler Baby was sniffly and a little wheezy, prompting the doc to refrain from the scheduled shot.  I was told to reschedule when the flu and colds had cleared (mind you, it was me with the flu, not the kiddos — they had gotten their flu vaccines earlier in the season, thank goodness; I had not) .  I had completely forgotten.  December and January, because of the decline in my Dad’s health, were nothing but a steady stream of hospital visits and worry.

Dammit.  I went ahead and made the appointment to get the MMR, which happens to be this morning, grateful I had caught the mistake.

Vaccine

This is when the fear set in.  Because of all the measles talk in the media right now, I have been paying greater attention.  It’s been hard not to, as measles talk is everywhere right now.  I have posted a few articles I have read on my personal Facebook wall and have been genuinely curious to better understand what is behind the anti-vaccine movement.  How does a dreaded disease that was effectively eradicated on U.S. soil return? Why do people willfully disregard the science, the community obligation?  I was honestly curious.

I watched the CNN interview with the doctor in Arizona refer to his children as “pure” and state without hesitation that were his unvaccinated children to contract measles and pass the disease on to an immunucompromised child and should that child die as a result, he would feel no regret, “People die,” he said with his challenging eyes looking right at the camera.

I have read as friends and acquaintances have described the terrible and horrible symptoms in their children that they fully attribute to vaccines.

I have seen more than a few articles posted about how autism is better than measles, autism is worse than measles, and on and on and on.

Today, in less than two hours, me and the baby will be sitting in a doctor’s office, getting the scheduled MMR vaccine and I am worried.  I am worried by vaccinating my son I might be harming him.  I am worried that I will walk in the office with a happy, smiley baby who will leave that office gravely different — unresponsive, listless, untethered, missing his anchor.  I am worried that my baby will be that one in a million baby I keep hearing about that might have a terrible, horrible adverse reaction to the vaccine.

That worry makes me angry.

I am tired of parenting in a culture of fear.  Exhausted by it, actually.  Having lost a daughter to cancer, I know fear intimately and tingles of it turn into waves within moments.  Thank you, PTSD.

I don’t know what the answer is.  I wish I did.  I do know I will be at that pediatrician’s office at 9:45 for the vaccination.  I will hold my baby and comfort him as he will surely cry in response to being stuck with a needle.  I will pick him up, and dress him back in his clothes and coat.  I will hold him and whisper to him that everything will be okay.  I will hope that it is true, that everything will be okay.  I will remember that vaccines are about the greater good, a personal and community obligation.  I will take a deep breath and trust in the science.  I will curse the fear that runs rampant at every turn. I will turn off the radio and shut down the screens.  I will kiss my sweet, sweet baby.  And I will wait for signs that all is well, the smile, the joy, the laughter, all intact.

 

 

The Best Socialist Kid’s Birthday Party Ever

It was time.  The time to answer the dreaded annual question of our children’s younger years, “How will we celebrate the birthday this year?”  I say dreaded rather pointedly, as I am not a huge fan of the classroom birthday party.  I pretty much loathe them.  When Mary Tyler Son was three and in his first year of preschool, the invitations started coming.  I had no idea.  He got about 12 invitations that year.  Many a weekend were spent standing around the periphery of some big common space or other celebrating a child’s milestone.  He loved them, every one.  I didn’t.

Don’t I sound like the worst Grinch ever in the history of Grinches?  Also, if you are one of the mothers who invited me, I am absolutely, positively, definitely not talking about your child’s birthday party.  Your child’s birthday party was exceptional and amazing.  I loved it.  Truly.

Around that time I remember chatting with his teacher one morning and telling her I would be writing a blog post about our decision not to host a classroom party.  She gently pulled me aside and told me I probably shouldn’t, that I might want to hold off until he no longer went to that school. Whoa.  Welcome to the World of the Child’s Birthday Party as Political Landmine.  I had no idea about that either.

This year, Mary Tyler Son entered kindergarten.  There are 28 children in the classroom.  Surely, I thought, this would mean the end to all the classroom parties, or parents, very sensibly, opting out of inviting the whole classroom.  I was wrong.  Lots and lots of families were hosting lots and lots of big parties inviting all 27 other kiddos.  Yikes.

We had already decided against a classroom birthday party when another mother approached us with the idea of combining a party for three of the boys in the class whose birthdays were grouped together.  What’s that, you say?!  We were intrigued and it took us about 30 seconds to commit.  To date, that might have been our best decision of 2014.

The party was held last weekend and it was an awesome success.  Not because it was better than any other party we have attended to celebrate a young classmate’s birthday, but because the cost and labor were split by three.  It was the best socialist birthday party ever!

Think about it.  Those parties are a lot of work.  With 28 kiddos invited and many parents opting out of drop-off practices at this age, we had a bunch of adults, too — about 50 people total.  That means pizza and cake for 50, not just 28.  It adds up.  And speaking of adding up, our grand total was just shy of $700.  And this for a modest park district party with all food from Costco.  Nothing fancy here, folks.  Plastic tableclothes, a few balloons, chips, fruit, cake, vegetables with dip, water, juice.  That is what $700 gets you these days.

The beauty, though, is dividing up cost and labor makes the socialist birthday party for kiddos totally commonsensical.  It’s genius, parents, and I highly suggest you consider it for your own little ones!

It also makes hosting a party for our son feasible in a period of time that has been chaotic at the very least.  My Dad has been hospitalized since mid-December, we had a holiday vacation thrown in there, then a few days of school closures thanks to extreme weather conditions.  Seriously, there is no freaking way I could have pulled this off alone, financially or labor-wise.

The only thing that gave me pause about the whole event happened when I was standing in line to purchase decorations.  I looked down into my cart and realized there were three “6” birthday candles.  The way they were arranged I saw “666” — now no one wants to go to that party!  It proved not to be an omen, thank goodness.

As for the boys, they seemed to love it.  Not a one seemed miffed that they were not being celebrated enough.  They blew out the candles together. They didn’t even miss birthday gifts — keeping with the socialist nature and not wanting to suggest every guest bring three separate gifts, the three hosts asked for no gifts and instead encouraged book donations (new or used) for the classroom library.  Win freaking win!

A beautiful day for a fire.
A beautiful day for a fire.
So good to be outside after the deep freeze!
So good to be outside after the deep freeze!
Cue the soundtrack for "The Omen" here.
Cue the soundtrack for “The Omen” here.
It was a nature themed party with an outdoor walk and games about bird migration.  Hooray for the park district!
It was a nature themed party with an outdoor walk and games about bird migration. Hooray for the park district!
After the walk, the kids were led in a bird feeder activity that involved spreading Crisco over pine cones and then dipping them in seeds.  Yeah, ain't no way I would have done that on my own either.  Crisco + kids = disaster!
After the walk, the kids were led in a bird feeder activity that involved spreading Crisco over pine cones and then dipping them in seeds. Yeah, ain’t no way I would have done that on my own either. Crisco + kids = disaster!
Bought ONE balloon instead of three.  Much better and no Satanic references here!
Bought ONE balloon instead of three. Much better and no Satanic references here!