Straight From the Bottle

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  • King Archer and the Nights of the (not so) Sound Fable

     

    Monday night was our first tough night and to be fair to Fable, it wasn't even that bad. Two hours of sporadic crying before she passed out was all -- but after more than two weeks of seamless nights (Fable's feeding every three hours but at night goes every four) I absolutely didn't mind. In fact, I was starting to feel guilty for my nights being so easy. 

     

    Pea in the Pod

     Fable: professional sleeper 

     

    What most shocked me, though, was that when Fable cried out at 2am? Archer didn't wake up. He didn't wake up at 3am or 4am either, even though our bedrooms are attached (Fable's sleeping with us for the time being and will likely stay with us until she's six-months, which is what we did with Archer.) Several times I checked on Archer through the commotion and there he was, passed the eff out like a drunk. 

     

    I had been worried that this was not so much going to be the case. Archer, after all, has always been a light sleeper. So much in fact that we don't usually flush the toilet when he's sleeping out of fear it will wake him. (Gross but quite necessary.) Now? We can flush again! PRAISE JEEBS!

     

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  • He Sleeps Like a Teenager

    his morning for the second time this week we had to wake Archer up. I figured eventually he would make his little stretchy-sounds and rise to his feet but uh... not so much. 9:00am this morning he was still Audi5000. I pulled the blankets off of him like I did yesterday (and the day before)...Like I have done on and off for the past couple of months when Archer's sleeping habits somehow went from early-bird gets the worm to, uh... late-bird gets the... perm?  His hair does look a bit curltastic in the mornings, or shall I say... afternoons, when he finally wakes up.

     

    IMG_3744

    wake up and smell my coffee!

     

    This morning was supposed to be Archer's first day back to preschool since the Ear-Infection-of-Doom (EID) but of course, getting up at 7:00am was out of the question (can I really blame him? 7:00's still pretty early) and then come 8:00 = still out of the question. I gave him until 9:00 (which was way ultra-generous, I say) and finally picked him up and pulled him out of bed. He was NOT happy. So unhappy in fact that he cried all the way to school and then on the field trip which we had to leave early from because we were upsetting the local celebrities at our undisclosed location (Gotta love Los Angeles) not to mention the other children in the class who kept asking "why is Archer so sad?" (note: agreeing to chaperone a field-trip on child's third day of school is not a good idea. You will be clung to and cried at... for hours. Or maybe that was just me. Sigh...) 

     

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  • Everytime You Gooooo Away, I Decide I Want to Sleep Through the Niiiiiiight

    Hal and I just got home from a weekend getaway in Joshua Tree. Awesome. Lots of fun. Met Gram Parsons' ghost. Kicked ass at Bocce Ball, even though I lost. Several times. Danced a lot. Passed out in the dust gazing at stars. But only for a couple of minutes. Got back up and kept dancing.

     

    Meanwhile, while the cat's away...

     

    The mouse will sleep. And sleep. Nap. Sleep though the night. Nap plus extra credit.

     

    For the past few months Archer has gotten up every night, crying to get into bed between Hal and me. The thing about a screaming child at 3am is that there is no energy to fight him or even argue. In fact, most of the time I never even remember getting Archer out of his crib. I just wake up with a foot in my nostril.

     

    "Did you get Archer last night?"

     

    "No. Did you?"

     

    "I don't think so..." 

     

     

    Napping

     

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  • True Mom Confession: Sesame Street is my Snooze Button

    I'm not a big TV person. I have my four shows: Big Love, Entourage, Lost and Project Runway and the occasional bad reality moment: Son's of Hollywood for instance, which I have decided is the greatest reality TV show of all-time. Randy Spelling kissing his father's star on the Walk of Fame in memoriam? Sean Stewart calling himself "A Ferrari Body with Jetta Brain...?" These are two moments in a million best-of-hits. But anyway...

     

    I would gladly delete every single one of my shows from TIVO to insure we have an infinite amount of Sesame Streets and Play With me Sesame(s) ready to rock at all time. Those are Archer's shows. His ONLY shows. And they have become my only salvation after anything less than four hours of sleep.

     

    I realize I have publicly admitted to being a morning person since becoming a mom but I totally lied. (Sorry, Babycenter.) I suck at getting up before 8am, especially because I'm usually not asleep until after 3. And anytime before 7:00? Forget about it, which is why, now that Archer is getting up at 6:30, I have had to make some  "arrangements."

     

    IMG_1506

     

     

     

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  • Save My Sleepless Soul

    Please. Help me. S.O.S. Or whatever. Just tell me what I have to do and I'll do it. I'm exhausted. I have slept four hours total over the span of three days.

     

    My child refuses to sleep. An hour here and there. And then, up at 5am. He wants to play. So I put him back to bed. I throw some toys in his crib and a few books and say goodnight. He throws his books at me. I stub my toe on the door trying to find my way back to our room. I get into bed. He starts to cry again. I put the pillow over my face. My toe's bleeding. I don't care. I get that jolty feeling in my belly when he cries. I try to ignore him. La-di-da-da-daaaaaah... But I can't.

     

    "Go to sleep!" I say. "Pleaaaase."

     

    I feel like I'm in prison:


    Bars

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    Posted Feb 08 2007, 08:13 PM by GirlsGoneChild with | with 12 comment(s)
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  • The Science of Sleep

     

    Stare Down

     


    The first night we brought Archer home from the hospital, my husband asked if we could please put him on EBay. Archer had been crying for five hours straight and we were both at wits end.

     

    "I just can't live like this," he said. "I think we should put him up for adoption."

     

    I would like to say that he was kidding. He wasn't. So I cried. ("How could you!") And Archer cried (for hours more) before falling asleep at my failed tit. (Breastfeeding was not my strong-suit. But that's another post for another day.)

     

    As the weeks went on, Archer learned to sleep like a champ. The six-week point marked his sudden breakthrough. He slept from 8pm-8am. At first I thought he was dead. Then I thought I must be dead or dreaming because twelve hours? Twelve glorious, triumphant hours?  It was a miracle! I cried out in joy!

     

    Archer went on to sleep twelve hours every night. Like clockwork. 8 to 8. And every parent I know wanted to kill us. (Jealousy.)

     

    And then? Fuck. I don't have a clue. Let's just say the under-the-eye circles have returned. The acne. The emotional wreckage. I think I have even managed to gain ten pounds... Because when your child doesn't sleep you have no energy. And when you have no energy, even taking the dogs for a walk is pushing it. So I sit. On my ass. And feel sorry for myself. And I ask Archer why. WHY? And he runs around in circles like an insane person with all the energy in the world. And once in a while he stops to throw a puzzle piece at my head.

     

    Archer's best sleep in the past six weeks has ironically been at a hotel in Boulder, Colorado, where we stayed for Thanksgiving. We're still trying to figure out if it was the altitude or the very plush King-sized bed that knocked his ass out. (Either a bigger bed is in order or we're going to have to move to the hills.)
     

    Asleep in the Hotel


    I have been designing mathematical equations to solve these sleep-issues. For instance:

     

    Up@2am+ 1 cracker (8 minutes of Tivo'd Sesame Street) / 2 1/2 lullabies = A good hour of sleep

     

    10:30pm Scream-fest = 10 minutes of cry-it-out = another hour of sleep

     

    5am Wake-up call + 1 cup h20 - 1 dirty diaper (three kisses on the nose) + Brown Bear, Brown Bear, What do You See? in bed = Happy playtime in crib for >1 hour.

     

    There are a number of scientific equations for Archer's wacked-out sleep schedule. Do they work? Sometimes. In fact, it's amazing what a cracker and a cup of water can do. We have also been keeping spare pacifiers in the crib and that seems to be working well, at least until 2am. The only problem? I work until 1:30.

     

    Last night I slept an entire hour before Archer woke up and wanted to party. We pulled him into bed with us where he promptly began bitch-slapping me into the wee hours of this morning. I managed to somehow fall asleep during an extreme eyeball twisting session and woke up, just like I did the night before, with clumps of hair on my pillow. This morning, as the son rose and Archer played my belly like a drum, I looked over at my husband who was shaking his head with his hands over his eyes. He looked back at me and said, sadly, "Bec, I'm sorry but I just can't live like this. Tomorrow I'm putting Archer on Craig's List. I'll need you to email the cutest photo of him you can find. Preferably one of him in his crib so people will think he spends time there."

     

    I cried. I called him insensitive. Then today I took this picture: 

     

    Perfection.

     


    ...And just like that, we're back to week square one.

     

    ***



in

About the Blogger

rebecca woolf

Rebecca Woolf in LA

Who says becoming a mom means succumbing to laser tattoo removal and moving to the suburbs? This young writer and mother of two gives it to you Straight From the Bottle.

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