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  • Who are you?

    When do we become who we are?  Are we ourselves from the time we're thrown out our mothers' wombs?  I know when I feel like myself - whatever that means.  When Axel grabs at my face, and then slips his thumb into his mouth, it seems like he knows that I'm separate from him - and if he knows other things and people aren't him, then does he, on some level, know that he is himself?   Oh, I think I'm giving myself a headache.   

     

    I'm watching Axel become a little person, and his emerging personality makes me wonder where all this person-ness comes from.  At just five and a half months old, he's got strong opinions - and he's not at all shy about expressing them.  No one in the same room - or house - as he is wonders where Axel stands on just one more bite of rice cereal (Horrible!) or silver cellphones (Genius!) or rattles (Fantastic!  Unless they hit you in the eye - then very, very bad!).  He's generally a pretty happy fellow, and he spends long chunks of time merrily chatting with track lights and the bushes we pass on walks.  Axel wants to be wherever the action's at - if we move into the kitchen and he's still in the living room on his mat, he lets us know he doesn't appreciate being left out.  His favorite form of punctuation is the exclamation point.  He's never still, unless he's just noticed something interesting - like our dog walking by, or a cute blonde in the grocery store.   Axel's a hundred pounds of excitement and energy in a thirteen pound package. 

     

     

    On Saturday, we went to brunch with friends who have a baby almost two months younger than Axel.  While Axel sat up in a high chair, contorting himself to stare up at the ceiling, then flapping his arms wildly, our friends' son was a calm, chubby angelic baby, just relaxing in his car seat, taking it all in.  You could imagine them in a few years - Axel as the crash test dummy of the pair, riding his trike at full speed off of a porch, while his friend hangs out and takes a more relaxed (and slightly less likely to cause scars) approach. 

     

    About halfway through the meal, Axel moaned and squawked loudly, demanding a change in the suddenly intolerable situation of being strapped in a chair, forced to stare at four adults eating omelets and pancakes.  Sean turned the high chair to the side, so that Axel faced the movement of the restaurant, and, feeding off of the energy of the mid-morning brunch crowd, he was again content.  Our friends' baby let out a few sweet grunts when he wanted to get out of the car seat - the baby equivalent of, "Hey, guys,  I'm a little sick of the car seat.  If you wouldn't mind, can you take me out for awhile?"  Anyone want to guess which boy is sleeping thorugh the night?  Yeah, that's right, not our hyper (yet adorable) babe.  My brother asked me why Axel's not sleeping more, since he's so active during the day.  Because the child runs on sunlight and milk, and doesn't need rest.  Really, I think the answer is that Axel gets so excited about the world - he can move his arms, together, on purpose!  There are daffodils sprouting in the neighbor's yard!  When he pushes a yellow button on his exersaucer, it talks to him! - that it's challenging to slow down.

     

    It's the never-ending nature versus nurture question.  How much of Axel is wrapped up in his DNA?  I don't think we could have taught him to be cheerful, though I'm sure that our happy responses to his smiles reinforce that part of his nature.   And, while I bounce my legs if I'm sitting for too long and feel really cranky if I don't get to exercise or walk around enough, I don't think I could have already taught Axel to be on the energetic-verging-to-hyper side.  Maybe we're all built with tendencies - like a leaning toward tea versus coffee, or emotional moderation on one end versus being more tempestuous on the other.  Perhaps environment can slide us a bit up and down various scales, but can it rewire us?  I'm not sure.   Axel's so much more of a person now than he was as a three-day-old warm lump of baby smells, but is that because he knows how to control his facial muscles and communicate his moods in ways I understand now, or has his character somehow become fleshed out by the act of living?  Probably both.  It feels like I've always known him, and known Axel as himself, with the personality he's showing now, though that can't be true, because, when he was a newborn, I couldn't see beyond the mewing, sleeping, swaddled baby to any nuances.  He will change more, as he grows, and my sense of him will, too, as I watch him develop. 

     


  • Heartbreaker

    My baby breaks my heart ten times a day.  He cries, and I want to (and sometimes do) cry, too.  I think of the things that will happen to him when he's older - that he'll fall in love with someone who won't love him back, that he'll get sick or break bones, that he'll try to achieve something and will fail, and that I won't be able to help.  Sometimes, when he's snuggled in my lap and a sleepy smile spreads across his face, I'm flooded with love for him so deep that I feel like my joy can't be contained.  All of these kinds of heartache, the good and the bad, I expected; they're deeper and more encompassing that I could have guessed, but I'd heard about them from other parents. 

     

    But sometimes, I feel a little heart broken because I don't think I love my baby the way that I should.  Sometimes, he seems like nothing so much as a warm, pudgy robot.  Who is he?  What is he?  What could he possibly be thinking?  And how did he end up in my house, demanding so much that I'm not sure I can give? 

     

    If a car fell on top of him, I don't think I would be overcome by one of those heroic motherly bursts of strength and be able to lift it off of his body.  At times I feel like I love him on the same level - okay, a little more, but not dramatically - as I love my dog.  And I'm not one of those dog-obsessed people who tries to bring their dog to dinner parties.  I recognize that my dog is not a person.  So I guess that means that my baby doesn't feel like a person to me - probably because he doesn't use much nonverbal or any verbal language, and he's such a tumultous mass of bodily functions.  People say babies develop personality after a few months, and, though Axel certainly seems to be showing glimmers of being chatty like his father,  generally cheerful like his mother, and headstrong like both parents, it's a shadowy version of person-ness. 

     

    Shouldn't I, as his mother, feel a gushy sense of love for him constantly, instead of vascilating between adoration and detached thoughts about my son's resemblance to all of the drawings I've ever seen of big eyed, bulbous-bellied aliens?  Shouldn't I be able to automatically say that, if there were some horrible deathly virus spreading the earth and I could only save one person, I would pick my son, instead of knowing that, in that highly unlikey situation, I would have to really think about it?   Shouldn't I automatically want to change his diaper when I hear him poop, rather than thinking that it's not so bad for him to sleep a little longer and he'll be fine if he stays dirty for awhile, and having slight twinges of, dare I say, unreasonable resentment that he couldn't have gotten all his poop out before I changed his diaper just ten minutes ago? 

     

    He still, after six weeks, feels so foreign to me.  Moments after I wonder if he's just a crazed little beast come to drive me batty by screeching in my ear, he flashes me a grin and burrows his head into my shoulder, and I tell him, honestly, that I love him more than I can say.   I adore my son - in ways I could not have guessed that I would, and just the thought of losing him threatens to rend my aorta to shreds - but also, in some ways, less than I thought I would.  My mom always says that she liked me and my brother more as we grew older, as she learned more about who we were and as we could talk, and tell her what we were thinking and what we needed.  In some ways, I think that means she loved us more, too  - though she'd never say that - and that her love for us evolved and changed as we did.  I'm still in the midst of falling in love with my boy, in my own slightly chaotic and bumpy way. 

     

     

     


  • Que Sera, Sera

    As the baby kicks more, I feel like it's a real, live little person, with developing thoughts all its own - maybe not much more than "Hey!  That's my hand." and "What the hell is that slimy thick cord sticking out of my gut?" but thoughts just the same.  And, as it feels less like an "it" and more like an extremely close family member I've never met, I find myself thinking more and more about what and who this baby will be.

     

    This weekend, my mom gave me my baby book, including in it letters she'd written on my first, second, and third birthdays about my developing personality, favorite things, and growth.  Here are a few of the highlights:

     

    Age One:

     

    "You were born easy-going and good natured."  Hopefully, people still think of me that way, at least most of the time.

     

    "Your hair keeps growing, but only in the back."  Luckily, my hair grows all over my head now.  For a time, my folks called me Ben Franklin, due to the large hair-free spot in the middle of my noggin.  I think the pink bow was supposed to distract from the bald spot.

     

     

    "You really show your feelings, and usually they are happy ones."  Twenty-nine years later, I'm still incredibly transparent.

     

    Age Two:

     

    The bullheaded streak starts to show: "You are very particular about which glass youd rink out of, and ask for the "blue" one, meaning any other color than the first one I showed you."

     

    "You are definitley an Oz, our nickname for you.  We loved the name Astrid...the name of one of my college roommates, who was very lively.  She smiled and laughed a lot and did crazy things, and she also had some very strong opinions.  And you are much like her in those ways."  Did the name feed the personality, I wonder?

     

     

    Age Three:

     

    Big embarrassing moment (thanks, Mom!): "You seem to be more conscious of gender than your brother was...who has a penis and who doesn't and what size it is.  So you have caused a lot of laughs over your ratings of the sizes of all of our friends' boy babies' anatomies."  Luckily, I have outgrown public commentary related to the penis.

     

     

    And so, as I read through my mom's detailed notes in my baby book, I wonder, will this baby be easygoing and cheerful, or will it be serious and contemplative, or fussy and full of baby angst?  Will he/she, regardless of gender, love to ride bikes as much as his/her daddy does, and tumbling down muddy hills at high speeds?  Talk a bit too much about private parts?  Will he/she devour books - perhaps literally gumming them to pieces at first?  Have an enormous head and a small body (my head was in the 85th percentile for size, while my body was stuck in the 5th percentile for height and weight). I think more about our baby-to-be's personality and likes and dislikes than hair or eye color.  Given its parents, I'll be shocked if the babe doesn't have something of a stubborn streak.  The the rest, for now, will remain a mystery.

     



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About the Blogger

Oz Spies

Oz Spies in Denver

Oz Spies lives in Denver, Colorado with her husband, a firefighter; their son, Axel; and a slightly obese dog and cat. She has a MFA in Creative Writing from Colorado State University.

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