5.29.2009

Anna's Room

Anna's room is coming along nicely. My sweet mom, who has painted every room in our house except our bedroom, volunteered to paint Anna's room this week. And it turned out beautifully, if I do say so myself. We were slightly more creative than we were when my mom painted Lexi's room, which is pastel purple on all four walls. This time around we decided to stencil flowers on one wall and paint the other three walls a light green (lightened Seafoam, to be exact). We'd never stenciled before, so that was an adventure. I've lost track of the number of Hobby Lobby and Wal-Mart runs we had to make, but everything worked out in the end. Here are some pics:


The flower wall!

Close ups of stenciled flowers.


Flower wall meets Seafoam wall...which is little bit darker than this pic makes it appear.

The finished product, with a dresser we may or may not keep.


I'm happy with how the paint turned out and excited to go bedding hunting. I'm also going to look for a solid pink or green fabric to make a curtain out of and to recover some ugly cushions on a white glider we have for the room. The dresser came from Pottery Barn Kids, but we don't think it is big enough for Anna to continue to use as a teenager. It'd be nice if this was the last dresser we ever bought for her! We'll see. We also have a white crib we need to assemble that friends lent us. Thanks, Miehes!

5.24.2009

Ouch

Friday night I was at home with Lexi while Elian, his dad, and his brothers were having a guys' night. I decided to make some yummy brownies. Our oven hasn't been working well, i.e., burning things, so I hung a thermometer right in the middle of the oven to see if the temperature in the oven matched the temperature on the dial. I cooked the brownies at 325, 25 degrees less than what the box said. When they were ready, I took them out and tried to read the thermometer. I wasn't at a very good angle, so I reached in the oven and tilted the thermometer. I learned 2 things: 1) the center of our oven was actually 375 degrees, and B. I'm a moron. My unprotected forearm touched the top rack of the oven. I pulled back in pain, which made my elbow touch the hot side of the oven door.

What little first aid I do know includes that burns should be placed under running cool water as soon as possible. I went to the sink and did that, observing that this was the worst burn I'd ever had. It wasn't just red. It wasn't just a closed blister. I had totally burned the skin off, exposing a bright white layer of live flesh I had never seen before. Hmm. The total burn was two inches long but less than 1 cm wide. The depth concerned me, so I did what any 26 year old would do - I Googled how to treat a burn.

I wish I hadn't.

A long list of articles popped up, and I clicked the first one. The very first sentence talked about how burns need to be treated very quickly in order to prevent further skin damage. SIXTEEN PARAGRAPHS LATER, this article still hadn't told me what those imperative steps were that I should have taken 5 minutes ago. Frustrated, I hit the back button and tried the next few articles. They all agreed with the cool water treatment I had already applied. Then they all agreed that, without a medical background, I needed to assess what degree of burn I had. Each article offered several descriptive terms of 1st, 2nd, and 3rd degree burns, but I was not confident in my ability to decide if I was staring at a 2nd degree or a 3rd degree burn. Unfortunately, I needed to know that before I could appropriately treat the burn. Plus, each website said conflicting things as to how to treat each type of burn. For instance, some articles told me to put a wet bandage on a 2nd degree burn. Others told me to dry off the area and apply a dry bandage. Some told me to use Neosporin to prevent infection. Some told me not to apply anything, as creams would hold in the burn.

Fifteen minutes had passed since the burn, and I was frustrated. My arm hurt. I was starting to feel nauseous, which totally could have been a coincidence given my current status of super pregnant. So I decided to call Elian and ask him if he would be willing to continue guys' night at our house, just in case I needed him. His instant reaction was, "Kelly, I need to take you to the hospital." I'm not sure if it was just hearing his voice, or if it was hormones, or if it was stress, but as I tried to downplay the seriousness of the burn, I started crying. This convinced Elian all the more that he should come home and whisk me away to the ER immediately. I was upset for ruining guys' night. I was afraid we were overreacting. I didn't want Elian rushing home to get me, risking his life by driving way too fast and running red lights for a silly burn. But, I finally consented and waited on him.

It was 8 PM by the time he got home. His dad and brother came over to keep Lexi while we went to the ER. On a side note, one annoying thing about living in Olive Branch is there is no hospital. It takes between 25 and 45 minutes, depending on traffic, to get to the nearest Baptist hospital. Which does not comfort me in any way. When one of my children is gushing blood from her head, I don't want to have to strap her into her car seat and listen to her scream as I hit every red light on Goodman/302 or Riverdale, depending on which hospital I choose. Not only would her screaming be extremely annoying, she'd probably bleed to death before we got to the hospital.

Anyway, we chose to go to the Southaven hospital. We'd never been there before and traffic was light. There was no wait in the ER, either! They took me right back, put me in a comfy chair, and gave me the remote to turn on the NBA Playoffs. The doctor came back, was casual about the burn, and told me it was a 2nd degree burn. She had the nurse clean it out and apply an antibacterial cream to prevent infection. They bandaged me up and sent me home with the cream so I could continue to apply it until the sight of my disfigured arm no longer freaks Lexi out.

I still don't know if we overreacted. We asked the doctor what she thought, and she gave the stock I-don't-want-to-get-sued answer, "Well, if you were in pain and were concerned, you needed to be seen."

As they discharged me less than 2 hrs after I had entered the hospital (that's an ER record, right?), we remembered that our ER copay, which used to be $100, had sky-rocketed to $250 when our insurance renewed in February. Doh!

5.13.2009

Potty Training: Part 1

As Lexi's 2nd birthday approached, I decided to start thinking about potty training her. I went to the library and got a few different books on the subject. After perusing them, I couldn't decide if now was the time to train Lexi or not. She is showing some readiness signs, like interest in the potty, staying dry for a couple of hours at a time, and a willingness to sit still on her potty for at least 10 minutes at a time. But she can't really finagle her pants by herself yet, she doesn't care if her diaper is wet or poopy for long periods of time, and, the biggest strike against her, a new baby is coming in 10 weeks. All the experts say don't even bother to try to train your child if a new baby is coming soon - they will inevitably regress to diapers once the baby, who wears diapers and seems to get all of Mommy's attention, arrives.

On top of these concerns, I couldn't settle on which approach to take with Lexi: the aggressive train-in-a-weekend approach, the slow-but-steady train over several weeks approach, or the let-them-train-themselves-when-they're-three-and-a-half approach.

I decided it would be nice if Lexi were trained before Anna gets here so, at the very least, we won't have two in diapers at the same time. So this week I took a stab at it.

We've had a potty for 6 months now. We've also been reading potty books for about that long. All we needed was underwear/training pants. So I took Lexi to Wal-Mart and got her both in Dora prints. Very exciting.

Monday morning, after breakfast, I put Lexi on her potty for about 20 minutes while she watched Backyardigans. After about 15 minutes, I thought I heard something. I asked Lexi if she peed. She came out of her TV trance long enough to say, "No, ma'am." When I got her up 5 minutes later, there was lots of pee in her potty. I praised her and acted very excited. She got a sticker on her potty chart and everything. That was the first and last time she really used the potty. The rest of Monday morning she peed in her training pants without warning me she was going to do it and without telling me after she did it. When it came time for her daily poop, which I can tell is coming due to her deer-in-the-headlights look, I told her to sit on the potty to go poop. She wouldn't budge. She refuses to move while pooping.

Tuesday morning was a repeat of Monday, minus the successful TV-induced pee.

Wednesday morning I forgot all about training pants until about 10 AM. At which point I decided Lexi doesn't care to train yet, so neither will I. She can't tell when she's about to go, and she doesn't tell after she goes, so why waste the time and money (training pants are expensive - why are there no off brands??), especially if she is just going to regress once Anna gets here?

I'm sure most experts think I threw in the towel too soon, and I probably did, but until they volunteer to come train Lexi for me, I won't lose sleep over it.

5.05.2009

Things I Love About My 2-Year-Old

Lexi turned 2 on Thursday. Time to reflect.

-She calls the kitchen the chicken.
-Her love languages appear to be physical touch and quality time, just like mine.
-Sometimes when she is drinking from her sippy cup, she still looks like a baby suckling on a bottle.
-She loves to hug and kiss my pregnant belly and occasionally lifts up my shirt so Anna can watch TV.
-She sings songs all day long but omits non-essential words. For example, Twinkle Little Star goes like this: Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Sta', How wonder what are. Up 'bove, Like diamon' in sky, Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Sta', How wonder what are. And she sings it in .2 seconds flat.
-She calls Diego Dego.
-When the occasion arises that I need to wake her up, she keeps her eyes closed and says, "No, no."
-When I get out of the shower, she likes to put on deodorant and lotion too.
-When she knows I'm about to turn off her show, she says, "Lexi watch show jus' a minute."
-When she experiences something new she likes, she says, "LOVE IT!!"
-When she tries a new food she likes, she rubs her belly and says, "Mmm, mmm, mmm, mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm! I like it!" just to make sure we get the point.

I'm sure there are more I will think of later.