Category: parenting

  • Where is the poop emoji?

    Where is the poop emoji?

    Photo by Igor on Pexels.com

    I can’t find it on my phone’s messaging app. What category is it under? House? Snowflake? Hamburger gallows? These baffling hieroglyphs.

    My wife sends me the poop emoji all the time, and it always brightens my day when I’m at work, because it means that Skylark, who is now three months old, will feel better and stop fussing. When my wife is at work and I’m home, I’d like to be able to return the favor, but I can never find it, so I send fireworks and 1st prize medal, instead.

    Pooping has been less of an issue for her since we switched to the Similac Soy Isomil formula. The old stuff could back her up for days, and the empty bottles stank like rotten meat. Now? Smooth as cake frosting.

    Still, it doesn’t always happen, so it remains an event worth texting about. Apart from messaging, there are a few apps that have been helpful with baby, or least partly helpful and partly baffling.

    Ovia sent us little factoids and articles during the pregnancy. Today the baby is as big as a kiwi, and her fingerprints are starting to develop. You could pick fruits, animals or French pastries to compare baby size to, and you could read a longer article for details. It was a fun way for us to learn, and it gave us a reason to chat through the day, especially when we were feeling apprehensive. Lots of people use this one and recognize the fruit sizes when you mention it

    How many buttons do I have to push to record the feed time? When did she last eat? The app says it’s been five hours. The app didn’t sync. Where’s your phone? It’s only been an hour and fifteen minutes. Oh, it must be something else then. Check her diaper. The stripe has turned blue. We’ve got something. Is it a poop? It’s just a little pee pee diaper. That’s okay we love a pee pee diaper, too.

    FeedBaby tracks diaper changes, feeding times, sleeping times and other events and displays them on a timeline or exports them to an Excel spreadsheet. With daily timelines stacked up, you can see where the tick marks start to line up and schedule emerges. You can also sync the data with another smartphone, but you both have to buy the app. I see there’s now a pro version in the Google Play store at about double the price of the version we bought. I’m not sure if I like it that much, but it’s pretty good, and it could especially useful for coordinating with a babysitter. It’s worth paying for an app like this, especially early on, to have an answer for what’s wrong when the baby starts crying.

    Is that foolish? Maybe. Older mothers laugh when we tell them about logging her poops on an app. “Oh, I never had anything like that!” they say.

    And I would like to respond, but I don’t, “And look how badly we all turned out! If only you had had an app, our entire generation could have been something, but now Skylark is our only hope. We have the app, we have access to the data, and we can use it to make good decisions about providing appropriate care for her.”

    Anything that even helps keep track of time is a good thing. Baby time has no minutes. The hour hand moves that fast. It turns as you watch in the dim swirling light from 3am to 4am to 5am.

    At first, even a tenuous sleep demanded total darkness. She was so twitchy, and her breath so shallow. The least light disturbed her, like a handkerchief laid on her skin. But when it was too dark, I couldn’t see her breathe well enough. So, we had to find a careful balance between her need for a comforting blackout darkness and my need to make sure she was still alive. And it was easy in those dim hours to imagine the worst things that could happen.

    • What if I trip on the stairs and fall on top of her?
    • What if the storm breaks the window and the pieces fly into her crib?
    • What if she can’t breathe with her head turned that way
    • and I’m watching her die even as she seems to sleep contentedly?
    • If I accidently killed my baby, I think I might plunge a dagger into my heart like they used to do in Greek plays all the time, was it . . . Sophocles?

    Now, Skylark sleeps with all the lights on and the coffee grinder running and a nature documentary about Komodo dragons roaring in the background. Her breathing is steady, and she can hold up her head and say “Hoo!” when she’s excited.

    Dim early mornings are less a time to be anxious and more to sing silly sleep-deranged songs like this one, helpfully transcribed by my phone with the Google Docs app voice recognition feature:

    When you’re a friend with a baby,
    You’ve got to keep them safe from the ‘gators and snakes,
    You’ve got to step up, step up, and fight the big wolves, too.
    It just goes with the territory that your friendship with the baby will bring you into conflict with big predators, so you’ve got to accept that going into it and get yourself some arm medicine to fight them strong.

    The poop emoji I had been searching for suddenly appeared on my phone just a few days ago. My wife looked for it, too, and she knows how to use her smartphone. It just wasn’t there before. She had the idea to copy/paste over and over so it would appear in my quick access emoji hotlist. Maybe it worked. Maybe Samsung left it off the emoji menu for whatever reason until specifically requested by the user like that. Maybe it was the Rosicrucians

    In the end, it looks like apps are here to stay, so you may as well try to make some kind of peace with them. Some can be useful for parenting if you don’t expect too much. You may scoff . . . there’s no “but,” just feel free to go ahead and scoff whenever you want, I’m going to do my thing over here.

    Until next time!

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  • Hiking with baby

    Hiking with baby

    How’s it going? I’m Chris Mohnacky, and this is my daughter. I’m not sure how much it’s safe to share about her online, so I’ll call her Skylark for now because that’s the song I sing to her when we’re out hiking and because, like Kanye says, every hero needs her theme music.

    “Skylark, I don’t know if you can find these things, but my heart is riding on your wings”

    Chris and Skylark hike among bamboo
    Hey look, it’s us.

    We hike out in Wissahickon Valley Park, part of Philadelphia’s massive Fairmount Park system, starting from the trailhead on Hermit’s Lane. There’s an isolated 19th century mansion there and, somewhere in the woods below, a hermit’s cave of meditation.

    It sounds like something a dad would lie about, as in “water towers are actually bird baths built to placate the deadly pterodactyls,” but a German mystic named Kelpius actually did come here in 1694 to meditate and prepare for the end of the world.

    I sing out loud as we hike down the trail. “Skylark, have you anything to say to me? Won’t you tell me where my love can be?” The melody begins on a major sixth, like “All Blues” or “Mack the Knife,” giving it an up-in-the-air quality, as if it were breezing over the trouble below and nothing could touch it. My daughter leans way back in her carrier and listens intently with pinched eyebrows not to my singing, it seems like, but to the song the song reminds her of, distantly, mysteriously.

    “Hey, look! It’s another baby,” a woman says, coming off a side trail. She wears all pro hiking gear with her baby in a backpack rig. Two friends are with her and we meet in a big circle. I keep my distance because Skylark hasn’t had all her vaccines yet, but they’re cool and don’t try to get up in her face.

    “How old is she?”

    “Two weeks.”

    “Good for you! I took her out at two weeks. People said ‘you’re crazy,’ but the air is better out here than inside, and they stay warm next to your body like that.”

    In my BabyBjorn Baby Carrier Original, Skylark rides facing me. She stays warm pressed against my chest, and I can keep an eye on her and make sure she’s breathing okay and she’s not too cold or overheated. She can’t see anything past my face, anyway, so the trail views don’t interest her. The hiking mom’s backpack style carrier is for older babies with neck muscles fully able to support their outsized heads. Her baby is bright-eyed and bouncing, piping and curious and following the conversation with big eyes. She’s plainly loving the adventure, out hiking with her intrepid mom.

    “Our pediatrician said dress her in one more layer than I’d be comfortable in,” I recited, “and then just keep her away from crowds at the grocery store until she’s had all her vaccines.”

    “Avoid crowded and enclosed spaces,” the hiking mom and her friends confirmed.

    I know—now that I’ve been a parent for a few weeks longer—that this is when I should have said, “Enough with the small talk, who’s your daycare?”

    Philadelphia, more than any other city I’ve lived in, runs on personal connections. It is the city of brotherly love, true to its advertising, but you have to make friends or you will never get a job or find out about anything.

    For instance, you go to see some of these daycares, trying to find a place accepting any new kids, and the apathy is just undisguised. “Well, there’s not much you can do with an infant, you know.” Then, you find a place where you can see that everyone is caring and engaged with the kids, but they’ve got a six month waiting list. And it costs all of your money. So, then what? Nanny sharing? What even is that?

    To help sort through all that, it’s really vital to get advice and recommendations from other parents in the neighborhood. Facebook and Meetup groups are good resources, but walking around your local park apparently works, too.

    “There’s a new playmate for you,” the hiking mom tells her baby as we all say goodbye and take off in opposite directions, they back to the neighborhood and we deeper into the interior. We haven’t met them on the trail again yet, but it’s late December now, and too cold for hiking most days.

    “Skylark, have you seen a valley green with spring, where my heart can go a-journeying?”

    If it weren’t for my daughter, I would never sing out loud. Now that I’m a dad, I don’t care what other people think. I go around all the time now saying sentimental things without irony, telling strangers she’s the treasure of my heart. I don’t feel self-conscious about singing for her because it isn’t about me showing off. It’s about calming her and making her feel close and paid attention to.

    The trail splits, and a marker offers us a choice of Lincoln Drive or Hermit’s Cave. Which one? We want to stay out awhile and give Mama some free time at home, but Lincoln Drive is up and down a steep hill. Hermit’s Cave is shorter, but potentially more dangerous. It’s been a long time since Kelpius, and goblins may have moved into his cave since then. Skylark is curious and not afraid of goblins. “All right,” I say, “but goblins are not to be underestimated.”

    We take the steeper trail down the hillside, over knotted tree roots and craggy rocks. We pass dark groves of bamboo where tigers nap secretly among stone ruins. It gets harder to sustain the long notes of a slow ballad.

    The Cave of Kelpius
    The Cave of Kelpius

    When we find it, the Cave of Kelpius is a frightening void in the hillside framed by elemental slabs of quarried stone. There is a monument beside it with an engraved legend, but we don’t get close enough to read it. It probably says, “Go on in and make yourself at home, the goblins will be with you shortly. If you want, you can get cozy in one of the bloody burlap sacks provided.”

    “Nope,” I say. Skylark agrees, and we leave the goblins to tempt less wary travelers.

    On our way back, we take some extra time to investigate the trail where the hiking mom and her friends came from. This trail leads to underneath the Walnut St. bridge, where a bridge troll lives who will challenge you to answer a riddle.

    “Stop, travelers, and answer my riddle,” says troll under the bridge.

    Chris and Skylark meet the troll under the bridge
    Mesl, the bridge troll.

    Nope,” we say and run away.

    “Wait!” the troll calls after us. “That was just a conversation starter!”

    We hike back up the way we came, past the bamboo forests, past the Hermitage Mansion, back to the blacktop on Hermits Lane, on our way home.

    “Oh, Skylark, won’t you lead me there.”

    In its last few bars, the melody rises up and skips over that cool, detached major sixth interval it began with. Instead, it reaches the dark, troubled minor seventh, then climbs higher still to the bright, optimistic major seventh, before finally resolving to the octave above. Skylark soars away, free even from the hopes of the ones who watch with love from below.

    Someday our daughter will fly away, too, but that is a long way off. She sinks down in her hoodie with her nose tucked in and her little hands over her eyes, fast asleep, and we go home, safe and sound and warm.

    In conclusion, I’d like to encourage other dads to go hiking with their babies, and to sing songs and make up stories, or name the plants and trees or just talk about whatever. It doesn’t feel like a task that can go wrong like swaddling or putting a diaper on quickly enough to keep her from screaming her face off in the middle of the night. It’s pure enjoyment and it’s a chance to see the world new again and be close with your child.

    Until next time!

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