Baby Care


This work week has been trying on everyone. Jayne has to get up earlier than she’s had to in many years of being a stay-at-home mom; Mr. W has given up his 4am gym runs; I’ve had to leave my baby and sit on my hands at work trying to calm myself between pumpings and processing backlogged divorce cases and settlement conferences. For Allie, as much as people say babies are more resilient than adults, it’s been “off” as well.

Monday, she had one shorter nap but over all it was a good day. Ate on time, slept on time, played well. I’d even made it home to nurse her for what would’ve been her third and last bottlefeeding, because she’d slept extra long that afternoon. Tuesday, all her naps got short, but they were still on time as with her 3 bottles. Yesterday was pretty bad. Looking at her sleep/eat chart that Jayne kept up with on the app (so that Mr. W could see it on his sync’ed app on his iPad at work), she took FOUR catnaps instead of 3 long naps, which was rather distressing to me because that would mean she’s not getting restorative sleep when they’re under an hour each, AND it means she’s cat-napping at a time when she ought to be awake, so that throws off her routine and sleep/wake rhythm. I was afraid it’d mess up her night sleep organization, too. If she developed day/night confusion, I would be frantic. Things got weirder when Mr. W observed that in addition to her 4 little naps, she also got a 4th bottlefeeding when she should’ve had 3. She was eating every 2 hours instead of every 3. What was Jayne doing? Was she aware she’s completely gone off Allie’s “norm?”

I was also concerned that Allie wasn’t napping long enough because she kept waking up and being unable to fall back to sleep when she’d roll to her side and then roll to her back. I called a few friends whose babies I know have started rolling over to ask how they handle those naps. The only person I got a hold of was Flip Flop Girl, who called me back and I spoke to her on the drive home. She wasn’t at all concerned about Allie’s extra feeding and “off” naps today, saying babies do go through these adjustment phases and it’s fine (so that made me feel better); she was more concerned about my communicating effectively with Jayne to see why she chose to do the things she did that day. “Just ask her, and find out what was going through her head. If she did something you’d rather her not do, just let her know that you would’ve preferred her to handle it another way, and in the future, to do it the other way. Hear her out. Who knows, you might go, ‘Oh, I see now. Thank you for doing that for Allie.’ ” As for the rolling in the naps, Flip Flop Girl said Allie is just going to learn to go back to sleep after her extra mobility, just as Allie has learned to go back to sleep after waking up to noise (which she’s better at now).

After we got back home, Jayne immediately told us it was a very peculiar day and informed us of the super-short naps, and the extra feeding. She was actually more frazzled about the baby falling off-routine than I was (which made me feel better). Jayne was stressed not knowing what was wrong because Allie was so tired and was rubbing her eyes and fussing and impatient, and Jayne tried everything to distract her, play with her, and nothing worked. I asked what was behind the extra bottle. Jayne said because Allie was actually screaming, on top of giving cues of hunger. Even as Jayne made the extra bottle, she was telling Allie, “You can’t be hungry, you’re completely off the routine today, and now you’re off on the feedings, too.” She was so concerned that we’d worked this hard at establishing a good rhythm and then suddenly it all went out the window. Jayne made a perfect imitation of Allie’s desperate hunger sounds and mouth motions, explaining that even as Jayne tried to be discreet in making the bottle, Allie kept lunging for it and sucked it down as if she were starving. So there was nothing I could tell Jayne that she didn’t already know (which again made me feel better). And she was clearly feeling very bad and concerned about both us and Allie, and she knew Allie well enough already to say this is not Allie’s normal personality. I reassured Jayne as best I could and she went home. I put Allie to bed early and she zonked out easily (all night).

At Flip Flop Girl’s earlier request, I called her back and gave her an update. I had mentioned that given that Allie’s a little over 15 lbs, her daily ounces of milk intake is 1.5 times her weight for 22.5 ounces daily, divided by 5 feedings, so that’d make it 4.5 ounces per feeding. I was concerned she was being overfed yesterday and wouldn’t be hungry for her bedtime feeding. Flip Flop said, “Are you sure it’s not 2.5 ounces per pound of her weight, and not 1.5 ounces?” I was pretty sure and didn’t consider anything beyond that.

Later, Flip Flop Girl texted me. She’d looked it up. The proper formula for what an exclusively liquid-fed (breastmilk or formula) baby is indeed the baby’s weight times *2.5* oz per pound of their weight, divided by the number of feedings a day. Allie was very underfed. So she wasn’t sleeping long because she was hungry and would wake up to ask to eat, and was screaming and cranky because she wanted more food (like a newborn). This wasn’t an issue before because she drank whatever she needed from me directly and I didn’t have a way of measuring what she’s taking out by nursing, so if a bottlefeeding wasn’t enough, in giving her one bottle a day, she’d just make up for the rest of the caloric deficit by getting more out of me in her nursing feedings. However, when I returned to work, she didn’t have 4 other nursings to make up for the insufficient bottle; she had 3 bottles in the middle of the day consecutively. So the caloric deficit had been building until day 3 when she reacted how she did. This explains so much — the fact that she didn’t have enough nutrients to poop since last Friday; the middle-of-the-night feeding she started toward the second half of transition week (when she was bottlefed more); the earlier wake-up times in the mornings. And of course, all of yesterday’s daytime crankiness and sleeplessness. With an extra feeding under her belt, she slept very soundly last night and this morning.

I’d called Jayne last night after Allie went down to check up on her and reassure her that she didn’t do anything wrong; Allie was just going through her own thing. This morning, I was happy to tell her we think we figured out the issue. It may not make everything perfect today because Allie is still going through teething, new caretaker, mommy being gone all day, new developmental milestones in the rolling over, BUT it should resolve one big issue and things will smooth over on their own after that over time. I certainly feel a lot better, and my confidence in Jayne (who read Allie’s signals all correctly yesterday) is much higher.

I must’ve known it was weight x 2.5 oz / number of feedings at one point, but it didn’t stick with me. I looked it up myself after Flip Flop Girl’s text. Typical ounces of intake a day is between weight x 2 on the low end, weigh x 2.5 for the high end, so for Allie, daily intake should be 30-37.5 oz, and all feedings being equal (which I know it’s not given that she still gets her first and last meals in a nursing), that’s 6 – 7.5 oz per feeding. We’d been giving her 4.5 – 5 oz in her bottles. *facepalm*

This is why I was an English Lit major. =P

Allie didn’t nap that well yesterday. Jayne greeted us after work with, “Her charts look horrible, we get an ‘F’ for today.” It wasn’t THAT bad; she had 3 naps, they were just short. They were also earlier than I’d napped Allie (not sure if the off-timing had something to do with their short durations) but that was out of necessity because she’d be up too long once she wakes up too early from her naps if the next nap isn’t advanced. I’m not sure that Jayne is letting Allie cry as long as maybe I would when Allie wakes up naturally around the 30-minute mark after one sleep cycle. I’ve found that if I can grit my teeth and deal with my anxiety attack through up to 15 minutes of crying, she goes back down solid for up to 2 hours. Jayne said she did let Allie cry to see if she’ll go back to sleep, but that Allie would appear to her to be unlikely to go back down, so Jayne goes and picks her up. There’s likely some developmental stuff going on, too, since Allie is now moving around a lot more in her crib. I’m hoping she’ll just take longer naps on her own very soon without waking up to cry after just the first sleep cycle. I still have a very hard time thinking about it or seeing it at work, so I look on the cameras as little as possible.

So yesterday morning, I was dumbfounded to receive this long text from Laura on my phone:
“I hope you don’t take this the wrong way. Its meant for good. FYI – for the benefit of Ali, I would and can work for $10 an hr, 11 hrs a day, no over time $ change and cash only. That would work out to be $550 a week so Ali could be home. Don’t worry about insurance either. If you are interested, let’s talk soon. I would need [Mr. W] to be on board with this decision too.”
I was so shocked I didn’t know what to do. Was she not there in our last phone conversation when she made any trusting relationship with her impossible? Was she not there when she sent me the text the day after to guilt me about the other position she wanted having been filled? How could she think anything would be salvageable after the things she’d said to me, not to mention that for this job, I’d have to leave the most important things in my life completely vulnerable to her (my baby, my cat, my home)? Did she think I was too dumb to pick up that I was being taken advantage of and bullied and berated?
And the way she said that she would “need” my husband to be on board with this too, as if she were advising me, “I know you want to jump at this, but hold on, you should talk to him, too.” My judge is hoping she isn’t trying to set me up for some loss of earnings lawsuit (she can sue, but she has no claim).
So I went in circles trying to think how I should respond. I got a lot of suggestions from friends, from advising me not to respond, to suggested responses such as “After in depth discussions with my husband, we have determined that your services will not be required.” I considered sending “Thank you, but we do not believe any agreement between us is possible. Good luck with everything,” “We are not inclined to change our current arrangements, but thank you,” but I didn’t want to allude to any “current arrangements” because I don’t want her to inquire or give her any openings for any further conversation. She appears to assume Allie is in daycare (which was the plan and still may be, depending on how Jayne works out), and I don’t want her sniffing around the house and making assumptions and accusations. I need to protect Jayne, as well as Allie. I was afraid she was a step away from boiling our bunny. So finally, I took Rebecca’s advice, and texted back the shortest more definitive thing suggested: “No, thank you.”
Haven’t heard from her since.

I was feeling comfortable enough with Jayne that I didn’t cry at all my first day back at work yesterday. I did find it hard to look at the babycam monitors and didn’t do it much, especially around the time she was supposed to go down for a nap, because I felt too emotionally fragile if I should see crying or struggling. I know that things will be fine and to expect a little adjustment period, but to see it or live it minute-by-minute would be too hard.

Work was good; I met the new supervisor (who is very nice and effective), a bunch of coworkers/friends came by to say hello and to welcome me back with warm hugs, and many judges complimented me that I don’t look like I’ve been off for maternity reasons. It’s rather amazing to me that so many coworkers observed that I appear smaller now than before I was pregnant. I am, but I didn’t think it was that noticeable. I wouldn’t have expected people to remember what my size was before I was pregnant, it was so long ago. Mr. W rearranged his schedule and got a coworker to cover for him so that he could take me out to lunch on my first day back. It was a nice day. I pumped the first time in judge’s chambers (because the jury room was being used for a mandatory settlement conference) and the second time in the jury room after lunch. We managed to make it back home in time for me to feed Allie her 4th feeding for the day, because her afternoon nap ran long. Jayne was fine and said it was a great day.

Allie’s first nap apparently went down like a dream; not a peep, not a protest. Allie’s second nap was reportedly “odd.” She had turned herself from her tummy to her side and struggled a little to turn back to her tummy but couldn’t. But she was tired, so she just napped on her left side, sucking her left thumb. Jayne said it was kind of a restless nap, but she did nap. The third nap was of course fine and ran long probably to make up for her less restorative second nap. Allie got a bath last night and didn’t cry and we started her bedtime routine a little earlier since she has been looking very tired and drowsy at 6:30p. She was fed and in bed by 7:15p, slept through the night again.

This morning, like yesterday morning, Allie woke on her own at 6:20a, saving me from having to rouse her myself at 6:15a. I’ve woken her once at 6:15a last Friday and I hated doing it. After I nursed her and brought her downstairs where Mr. W and Jayne were chatting, I asked how Jayne felt, whether she could see herself doing this long term. She gave a big smile and said, “Oh yeah, 10 years should be good.”

Today, I probably shouldn’t have looked at the monitor at 9:15a but I expected her to be already in her crib for her morning nap, which should’ve started around 8:30a all things being “normal.” Instead, I saw that she’d scooted herself all the way to the top of the crib, her head against the corner of the bumpers (thank goodness we put in her crib bumpers last week), propping herself up, looking around, running into the bumper corner, not sleeping. I was kinda messed up after that. Not to the point of tears, but the anxiety hit. I stopped watching immediately. By the time I looked again later, Jayne had picked her up and was bottlefeeding her, which was a good thing if she wasn’t napping. I’m hoping she didn’t miss her nap, she just had a shorter one. She was eating on time at 9:40a or so because her morning feeding was now 6:30a instead of 7a-ish. I looked next a little after 10:30a and saw Allie already napping in her crib. I assume she was giving sleepy signs early from her morning nap being short. And Jayne did the right thing; advance her next nap because she had a shorter first nap. Allie had against scooted herself up to the front end of the crib and her head was against or near the front bumper. I guess she’s just about to start crawling.

Meanwhile, work is at a nice pace. I’ve had a few little hearings and events in the mornings, but nothing overwhelming and I’m grateful I didn’t come to work after being off for 5 months and walk right into the midst of a death penalty jury trial or something like that. Today, I did my first pumping in the judge’s chambers again. It seems to take a long time (20-25 mins) to set up, pump, store, and clean up (and I’m not even washing). I gotta figure out how to streamline it more, or if I’m gonna take the same amount of time wiping out the pump parts and pouring the milk together, I may as well do the pouring into storage bags and thorough washing of the parts so I can save myself that work when I get home.

I’m sure anyone reading this blog has fond childhood memories of frolicking to and fro inside a parent’s moving car, goofing off with a sibling or friend our age from the backseat or station wagon “trunk” to the front seat to the floor of the car and over the backs of the seats again. My judge even has memories of his teenage self taking off fast and slamming the brakes of his old Woody and laughing with his older brother as their youngest brother tumbled from where he stood behind their front seats to the rear of the car. (The kid brother is fine and is not traumatized by their horseplay.) In California, it has gone from that, to a law in my teens requiring seat belts to be fastened on all occupants of the vehicle, to another law saying all kids under age 6 and under 60 lbs had to ride in the backseat on a child booster seat, to this new change, effective January 1, 2012:

Any child under age *8* must ride in a child booster seat in the backseat. If the child is 8 years old or at least 4’9″, however, he/she can use a regular seat belt instead of a child safety seat or booster seat.
Violations mean stiff fines and penalties, and possible child endangerment criminal charges.

This is based on stats that show putting kids in a booster seat (instead of a seat belt on the vehicle’s seat alone) reduces risk of car accident injuries to that kid by 59%. Seat belts are designed for an average-sized adult, so it doesn’t lay right on a kid under 4’9″. Supposedly, the previous law endangers kids between ages 6 and 8 because they’re too big for child safety seats, but still too small for a seat belt to work effectively, so the new law bridges the gap by requiring the booster seat use until age 8. (Wanna read the actual law? See www.chp.ca.gov/community/safeseat.html)

Age 8 is 3rd grade. That’s old enough to be embarrassed. So what does this mean for a kid like Allie? …It means that she’ll be sitting in a regular seat using a regular seat belt by age 6.

99th percentile for height! She’s practically 3 feet tall NOW at 4.5 months.

They DO grow up so fast.

So Mr. W’s renter’s wife, Jayne (turned out it’s not “Jane,” it’s “Jayne,” which is so much prettier) came over to meet Allie. She came by yesterday afternoon when my parents were here. (My mom insisted on coming over because I didn’t respond to her texts on Wednesday and she didn’t know what was going on so she thought I was out doing something “foolish” and was freaking out.) I thanked her and hugged her at the door. As soon as she walked in, the entire energy was SO different. I didn’t really think about it, but I guess I wasn’t ever actually happy and relieved to see Laura. Maybe it was cuz she was usually a little bit late. And I didn’t realize there were so many MORE red flags with Laura until Jayne. For example, when Jayne came over, Allie was napping and I showed her cameras on the monitor. She immediately did this “Aww!” thing and I thought, “Hmm, I didn’t get that from Laura.” When I showed Jayne our bedroom and Dodo was napping in the closet, she melted in an “Aww!” again and went over to see if she could greet Dodo. Which made me realize that Laura in our bedroom had barely glanced at Dodo, altho she said she’d always had cats and grown up with cats, and knowing about Dodo’s kidney disease, Laura had said, “Now, he’s going to start having ‘accidents.’ I’d hate to see that ruin your nice carpeting. So maybe I can fence him in right here,” motioning blocking off the tile section of our master bathroom, which is like 8 square feet. What? You’re going to come in here and confine my cat in our bathroom? He’s already only in the bedroom. Who the heck do you think you are? Seeing my hesitation, she said, “Okay, maybe I’ll just close the bedroom door, then.” When Allie woke from the nap and I went to get her, Jayne melted and said, “She’s such a mix of both of you!” and kind of respectfully walked around with me smiling at Allie, and then later, asked, “Can I hold her?” Laura had just kind of come in and picked her up and held her as if she owned the place. I’d thought at the time, “Great, she’s comfortable here,” but knowing what I know now, she was totally audacious and bossy. Also, remembering how Laura was practically pushing us to evict Jayne and her family and get paying renters in there so that we can get better income to pay Laura and pay for her health insurance, I now realize, “What the heck. These are OUR major life decisions, she’s known us a WEEK, she doesn’t know the relationship we have with our renters and Mr. W had already told her they are good people and we like them, who is she to tell us what to do?” She told me how to feel, too. When I was a mess on Wednesday cuz my intuition was screaming at me, Laura had said, seeing my discomfort, “I think you should be pleased. Everything went really well here.” I watched my daughter screaming and crying in her crib to the point where she was rolling over. Rebecca said yesterday, “She’s YOUR daughter. She has intuition, too.” Jayne asked me how I do things, and wanted to watch me so she could learn how I want things done, listened carefully to me, kept saying she wanted ME to be comfortable. Laura, on the last aggravating phone call in which I disclosed how uncomfortable I had been, argued, “*I* was VERY comfortable.” It was such a difference. Allie seemed GREAT with her, too.

Today, Jayne came over in the morning as a trial run. She and her husband had talked and figured out how to work the ride situation. Having her help us out had come up long before at her husband’s suggestion, and at that time, I was instantly happy and at ease, so relieved picturing this, but when I’d called her and she’d said it wasn’t possible because she had to drive her daughters to school and work, I’d been disappointed and nearly in tears again. This was before the nanny sites, before Susanne. She and I talked a long time then and she’d been trying to find people from her church and social circle to help me, but nothing long-term or full-time came from her leads. Now suddenly, very recently and unexpectedly, her older daughter got her license, and they just got her a used car. She suddenly was able to do this, and she found herself suggesting this to her husband when he told her about his meeting with Mr. W over the rent issue, thinking, “I can’t believe I’m suggesting this, and feeling completely at peace with it.” So they decided they could rideshare, drop him off at his work on the way to our place, and the younger daughter that needed a ride to school could get it from her boyfriend, or a neighbor friend and they could even pay the neighbor a little gas money. Her husband said that getting in to work at 6am is a good thing for him because then he could take calls from the east coast and midwest clients, pick up more business that way. Things totally just lined up to where even Jayne was amazed. (My dad noted that this was a major personality difference: Laura wanted us to cater to HER needs and wants, even to our detriment, and was ungrateful and demanding; Jayne and her husband were trying to figure out how to arrange their lives and routines to accommodate us and our needs because they appreciated us and wanted truly to help, and were turning an inconvenient situation into a blessing, i.e. the time difference working to the husband’s advantage.)

So today, the husband dropped Jayne off at our place, and came by later on to pick her up. She spent a day with me, and did EVERYTHING, including putting Allie down for her noon and afternoon naps. Allie cried for 10 minutes during the soothing, and then fell asleep on Jayne. When Jayne put her into her crib, she awoke cried for about 10 seconds, then settled into a peaceful nap that lasted an hour and 45 mins. Jayne was scared I’d be dying downstairs watching the monitor while Allie was crying, so after awhile of the crying, she came out and said, “Do you think something is wrong?” I said no, she just needed to be held a little lower so her head has somewhere to lean. After that, it was fine. I saw that as Allie was crying in the crib, Jayne was torn about whether to pick her up and resoothe her, so I ran up and motioned Jayne to come out of the bedroom and let Allie settle on her own. I was totally at peace thru the whole thing, unlike when Laura was doing it and I was watching Allie go into hysterics in her crib and I lost it crying in the car on Wednesday. I knew intuitively it was fine, and told Jayne her protest crying is going to be shorter and shorter each time until she got used to Jayne, it’s not a problem. The afternoon nap, Allie cried for FOUR minutes during the soothing, and maybe 30 seconds in the crib after she fell asleep and was transferred, and this time Jayne knew to come out and let Allie settle. Allie settled and napped an hour and a half, very long for her afternoon nap. She even had two poopies. The chart for today looks BEAUTIFUL. Jayne and I also had great chats, getting to know each other better during Allie’s naps. I chatted with Laura during Allie’s naps, too, but I always felt slightly uncomfortable, and forcing myself to kind of make an effort to act friendly, even tho in the back of my head I was already feeling guarded.

Rebecca called me to check up on me yesterday, and she had said that the energy with Jayne was “right,” and that as two couples, we’d be good friends in maybe 6 months. She said Laura didn’t respect us, but Jayne saw me as an equal except she would defer to me as Allie’s mom and would do things the way I would want her to. That certainly turned out to be true, from napping to bottle-washing. I didn’t even realize that Laura never asked me stuff about how I wanted the bottles and nipples cleaned until Jayne asked me and watched me clean a bottle to see the attention I gave the nipple and how I used the nipple brush hidden inside of the bottle brush handle. I had noted that the nipples of the bottles that Laura washed were hazy and I had rewashed everything. Now I’m thinking she just rinsed them; she never even asked me where the dishwashing soap was.

So I’m totally comfortable and at ease now. I’m looking forward to work on Monday, as much as I may be crying in the car on the way there, not because I’d be scared or nervous about Allie at home, only because I’d miss her.

Tomorrow we’re meeting up with Jayne and her husband in the afternoon to discuss placing a value on this arrangement. They were thinking her working as our nanny could partially pay for each month’s rent, but their total monthly rent is actually well LESS than what we would’ve been paying Laura monthly. I’m happy with her care covering their entire rent each month, and still giving her paid holidays and vacations.

Laura texted me earlier:

Thought you should know. The Saddleback position was filled because I let them know I had a job. They filled the job before I could let them know it had fallen through.”

That is of course none of my business and the ONLY purpose for texting that is to continue to make me feel guilty. However, the more she does this, the more transparent it is and the less I’m going to feel bad given her own way of being vindictive. I see Susanne online all the time and I leave her alone. I was considering texting Laura back, “You were and will continue to be in my prayers, and I will add to them that He reveal to you soon why he used our financial situation to keep you from those positions, since even if we had you continue for a month, it wouldn’t have changed those things.” To sort her bring her back from her anger at me to realize that this is something that likely happened for a reason.

And then moments later, when I was considering responding to her with the above, I get notification of Idlehouse’s comment to the prior post. It was so en pointe that I decided, this is the Universe’s way of telling me, “Do not go there with her.” So I am not going to respond at all. Thank you, Universe; I’m listening. And thank you, Idlehouse, for your caring and your comments.

It took me almost 3 hours to fall asleep last nite, and Allie had a 4am awakening and feeding, and that took me another hour to start to doze afterwards, so Mr. W’s alarm woke me up right when I started to doze after that, and the snooze alarm after that. I got about 3 hours of sleep.

I really loved the first Kindercare I visited; they had a brand new infant room as they’d just switched the infants who were there into the toddler room (they “graduated”) and were accepting a new class of infants. It was new cribs, new sheets, new mattresses, new everything. I met the director and the infant room teacher, and they were very loving, professional, and knew a LOT about kids. The director had 25 years of experience and the teacher had 8. There were kids around and they knew everything about those toddlers, what each cry meant, what they needed with a certain behavior. They interacted with the kids, no TV, all age-appropriate and developmental activities. They say it takes the average baby Allie’s age about 3 days to adjust and then the napping goes on according to the baby’s routine and scheduled provided; they’re not conformed to a routine for the location. Teacher-infant ratio is 1 to 4 so they had room for 1 more. Their first new infant goes in mid-month, with an addition of another one each week afterwards for 3. The place was sparkling and their system seemed amazing. I was surprised how much they provided — sippy cups, etc. And it was going to cost less than $320/week for a 5-day plan, less for 3 days and 1 day plans.

I tearfully forewarned Laura before I left (so little time because she came a few mins late again and I had to be at the Kindercare at 10) that Mr. W’s conversation with the renters the day before was not good and it looks very likely that we would have to put Allie in daycare. It was extremely uncomfortable to leave Allie with Laura just those few hours. I checked the cam once and Allie was still down for the morning nap that I’d put her in. Once more, didn’t see anyone and the baby was no longer in her crib. I checked it again on the way home from the bank and saw Laura soothing her in her room, and was surprised because it had barely been over an hour since she woke up. At a red light, saw Allie doing the same thing that happened last time when Laura tried to nap her — Allie was rolling over and crying, unable to soothe herself in the rolled over position. She did not do that when I napped her, she went peacefully, and this likely isn’t Laura’s fault, it was just different for Allie. But I lost it. I was in hysterics. And I also knew I couldn’t do it with Laura. When I arrived home, Allie was laying listlessly in her crib with her eyes open, but soon fell asleep in a different position for her. I tried to gently tell Laura what was going on and the direction headed toward. I explained the financial impossiblity of having her. I wanted to spare her of all my “red flags” about her because there was no point adding insult to injury, I thought, and it was all a moot point anyhow as we can not pay a nanny, especially what she’s demanding of us. And I paid her in cash the hours she’d been at the house for the past 3 days.

The problem with that is that she obviously tried to salvage her job, so she tried to convince me to evict the renters, to keep her on for a few months in case things got better, to try to turn my prior words against me about how Susanne flaked on me and I said I wouldn’t do that to someone else but here I am in that position. I told her no decision was made, I was telling her where things are as soon as possible so that she could put herself out there and not cancel out on other potential jobs, etc. She said she was already committed to this job so it was too late (altho she again didn’t say anything about Saddleback so I think she’s still potentially a hire there). It was uncomfortable and her daughter stopped by while I was still in tears to go with her to their plans. She left soon after because it was apparent I needed to be alone.

I put Allie to a nap around 3p and Laura called me again from there. She wanted to negotiate and threw at me all kinds of things designed to guilt me into keeping her on at least for the month. Given the stuff she was saying, I became less and less inclined to deal with her and felt increasingly uncomfortable by the way she was trying to verbally back me into a corner. I told her I’d talk to Mr. W about her offer and get back to her that evening, but it was a loooong pressure-filled conversation.

Mr. W’s daughter came over with her boyfriend for dinner (she hadn’t been around for a few weeks) and I put Allie to bed, after which, and after many chats with Rebecca with her saying I must cut Laura off immediately because this was going to get worse and I can’t keep her for a month because this is just the beginning of her true colors, I made the call. It was basically her berating me for an hour about what a horrible person and hypocrite and liar and bad mother I am, altho she never used those words. She demanded to know how I could do this given that Susanne did it to me; I tried to explain that Susanne took a better deal for herself, whereas I was in an unexpected situational change and my baby comes first. I did have to tell her how I was uncomfortable with the month because I’d wondered about her priorities being her kids over Allie, which is a good thing for her and I hope to be as good a mother as she is, but bad for me as Allie’s mother. I need to think about the baby’s needs first. She said “Wow, I guess I shouldn’t be honest and tell people about my relationship with my daughters.” It was a lot of comments like that, it sounded like she couldn’t understand or accept what I was saying, didn’t see anything wrong on her end re my feeling insecure about the fact that she wasn’t there as much as I needed during a transition (she said that in every baby book, it says the transition shouldn’t be long, and should be as short as possible, so she already had felt that a week was unnecessary and that a couple days at most was best, but she imposed that on me, not the other way around, and she’d never communicated that. either way, she ought to do it the way *I* need to be comfortable, not the way SHE wanted), said that I had to understand SHE was going thru a transition with HER kids as well cuz when she starts the job she wouldn’t be around for her daughters as much. (They’re grown! And they were allowed to visit!) I was basically passive and explained the things she demanded of me, listened to her rail me and I simply told her I understood how she felt, but that I didn’t feel I have the time she seems to, to drag this on another month at her request. I didn’t feel like I could handle a month of limbo and then another transition after Allie got attached to her. She claimed Allie woudln’t have problems transitioning, so I should allow HER the courtesy of a minimum 2-week notice before termination. I said this isn’t a corporate job situation, this is my baby. She said she would’ve at LEAST done that for ME and I was going back on my word of our agreement. I said we were in a transitional, pre-trial period, it wasn’t to the point of agreement yet, but she disagreed. Besides, after all the berating, I KNEW I could not be comfortable leaving my precious baby alone all day for weeks with her while I was helpless an hour away at work. “I’m just so SURPRISED at your BEHAVIOR,” she kept saying. In the same tone she had said during negotiations, “Well, don’t YOU get paid when you take vacation?” to say why we should pay her full base pay plus any overtime on days of our vacation and her vacation. It ended with her demanding how I could do this, why, how was I different from Susanne? Didn’t like what I said, said we were going in circles, cried, and then hung up on me.

She has my sleep book, and I don’t want to get it back from her.

I had a loooooong talk with Rebecca after that. Rebecca strongly supports me and doesn’t feel I did anything wrong; of course Allie had to come first, and Laura was the beginning of bad news. If she was that demanding already, and controlled things in a way that I was uncomfortable with so immediately, it was going to get worse if she stayed and had a month to attach more — even to the point of lawsuit. Right now, because she’d only been on part-time for 3 days, the courts would see her as just a temporary babysitter who got proper compensation for her time. We were not in a contract period; we weren’t past the tryout period, and I DID give her early notice as soon as I knew things had changed; I didn’t stall her in the dark for a month just to get some use out of her and then say it wasn’t working when I had other things in place. Rebecca found her controlling behavior, and the things she said to me over 3 long conversations to be “appalling,” said I was manipulated, and asked me to put myself in Laura’s shoes; would I tell a new boss or a new judge I’m working for, “You want me in when? No, I’m going to come in later. No, I won’t be in that day, I’m going do spend time with my daughter instead.” Nope, especially not the beginning. And I certainly wouldn’t guilt him for having a problem with it afterwards. She basically feels wronged, and I get that. But to protect Allie, I can NOT have someone like this alone with her. Besides, she was due to take Allie back to her place next Wednesday when the cleaners are here, and we never got the invitation to her place nor do we have her address, all of which were supposed to be covered in the 1st transition week which she blew off.

Last night, I still felt rotten. I hope to get over it very soon.

Day 2 of this transition week. I was so not feeling it after Monday that before Laura arrived this morning, I had to enact a Plan B. I’ve made two back-to-back appointments with the 2 closest branches of a chain daycare for tomorrow.

So here’s how today went. Laura arrived at the agreed-upon time of 10a (a few minutes late). Allie was still sleeping from her morning nap, so we got a chance to talk, and altho she’d said yesterday that given the short day, she insisted on not being paid, today she said to apply the hours she was here yesterday toward “banking” as credit, i.e. she wants “credit” for the hours she’s worked yesterday to apply later when we’re on vacation. So now I have to keep keep a log of hours she’s “preworking” that are going toward future “credit” to be paid for, and days that we’ve paid full wage for her that she hasn’t yet worked that’s owed to us as time. It’s going to be an accounting nightmare.

When Allie awoke from the morning nap, I’d explained how to add a little bit to the 4 oz bag after it goes in the bottle to make a bottle between 4.5 to 5 oz. Then I left her to that as I went to change Allie. When I came back to the kitchen, I saw that she’d overfilled the bottle so that it was past the 5 oz line to where I estimate it was about 6 oz, but I’m not sure cuz that particular bottle size doesn’t have any markings beyond 5 oz and the bottle shape changes a bit as you get to the top. I mentioned she overfilled and that I didn’t want to waste milk that Allie can’t finish. She said as Allie drank all 5 oz yesterday at her bottle feeding, that she feels Allie can finish this, and that it wasn’t THAT much over 5 oz (I disagree), and then asked what I wanted to do, pour some back (which I’d initially suggested) or give it to her? I relented and said she could try feeding it to Allie as I pumped. When I came back downstairs from pumping, she said I was right, and there was a full ounce left over in the bottle she couldn’t get Allie to drink. We managed to salvage that by putting the bottle immediately back into the fridge and deciding to have 2 bottle feedings that day. I’m glad she chose to tell me rather than dump it so that I wouldn’t be upset or know she was wrong.

Allie took 2 great naps that I put her down for; 2 hours 15 mins for the morning nap (which Laura wasn’t here for because she didn’t want to come in early when I was still here), and 1.5 hours for the noon nap that I put Allie down for as Laura watched on the camera downstairs. She’d watched me put Allie down for one or two naps yesterday as well. She didn’t pick up on the details, though…when I had her put Allie down for Allie’s 3rd nap of the day, she bounced Allie around instead of swaying her by gently shifting weight from foot to foot like I do, and it was too much motion to lull Allie to sleep. She also patted Allie’s back and I heard occasional talking to Allie, so it was more stimulation than Allie’s used to. Allie was popped up on Laura’s shoulder and started fussing and crying. So I was thinking, “Just put her down, just put her down,” so that Allie would at least soothe herself to sleep in her crib instead of feeling the strangeness she wasn’t used to. But Laura tried to keep soothing, and kept readjusting Allie, trying to move her hand, move her head, move her positioning. Finally, eventually, Allie had her head down against Laura’s chest altho she never got into instant soothing position like she does on me and never sucked her thumb, but as she started getting sleepy-eyed, Laura put her down in her crib, but didn’t do a transition with her hands like I do, turning Allie sideways and then sliding my hand out once she’s in position. She basically picked Allie up by the armpits, dangling her over the crib, and that woke Allie up even more. Allie ended up popping up in the crib, moving around, crying, and learned to roll over for the first time. So now she was on her back, crying, not used to being on her back during the nap, awkwardly positioned against the side of the crib, staring at the ceiling in the room that she’s not used to seeing from that angle in the daytime. Basically, she cried and moved for half an hour, and ended up not going to sleep. I finally went and got her at 4:30p so that I could feed her, feed her again at 6:30p and put her down early for the night to make up for missing her afternoon nap. (Allie was so tired that as soon as I walked with her into her room to throw a diaper away or to get anything, she thought she was getting her nap and would go into soothing position on me. And she kept yawning, and when I nursed her at 4:30p and 6:30p for an earlier bedtime, she couldn’t even stay awake for a full feeding both times. I’m afraid to think what that’s going to do to her sleep tonight.)

As Laura was getting ready to leave, she asked when I’d like her in tomorrow. Well, given that it was a short day at HER request so that she could leave early, I thought she’d be in at the regular time in the morning since this IS transition week. She didn’t want to do that. She said as she’d expected to be in for the full normal days Thursday and Friday, on Wednesday (tomorrow) she wanted to come in later, even tho she was leaving earlier, too. So I’m going to put Allie to nap at 8:30a, she’ll be here at 9:30a (which cuts it close for me but that’s what she wants to do), and I’m going to leave at 9:45 so that I can make it to the first Kindercare by 10a for a tour, meanwhile Laura is here alone when Allie wakes up and she’ll change Allie’s diaper, bottlefeed her, play with her, and put her to nap around 12p; meanwhile I go straight to the 2nd Kindercare for a 11:30a tour, and I get home a little after 12p when hopefully Allie has been put down and is napping, and Laura leaves with her daughter between 1:30 and 2p. Her daughter offered to bring some Lee’s Sandwiches for us for lunch when she meets her mom here. Just writing all that I’m leaving to Laura tomorrow makes me nauseated. I’m so scared. I guess you can say I don’t have the confidence in her.

I was not impressed Laura’s still reluctant to be here for the full hours, even tho she’d be paid for them. We went for a stroller walk between the 2nd and 3rd (failed) nap, and that went okay. We also played with Allie outside for a bit (Laura took her out while I was cleaning the pump parts). I noticed that she’s not doing anything developmental with Allie. Just playing with her, laughing, talking to her. When we were on the big outdoor bed thing, I suggested we give Allie some exercise so she’d use up some energy before her nap, and Laura said okay, asked what I suggested. I suggested tummy time. She didn’t know what that is. It’s just terminology, but it’s such current common terminology that childcare providers really ought to know them. Mr. W mentioned that he watched Laura try to burp Allie thru the cameras, and agreed with me that she is rusty with infant care; he said she had Allie sitting on her lap like I do trying to burp her, but when Allie didn’t want to sit still and kept straightening her body, instead of burping her in another position, Laura would just pat her back twice, and keep try to readjust Allie’s sitting, then pat twice, while covering Allie’s mouth with the burp cloth with her other hand. Basically it wasn’t working. She wanted to use the Boppy to bottlefeed Allie (which she’d seen me use a few times to nurse Allie), but couldn’t figure out how to use it. She had it turned out so that it made a reverse “U” in front of her instead of going around her waist like a donut. When I turned it for her, she placed Allie in her lap in the hole instead of on the Boppy, meanwhile looking confused. Not a big deal again, except that it shows how she’s very out of date with the infant care thing. And Mr. W has told some people at work about how much we’re paying Laura monthly, and he said everyone balked. When he mentioned that she wanted to be paid max pay for the days she’s taking off, the days she’s on vacation, the days WE’RE on vacation, AND wanted us to pay half her health care, people REALLY balked. I think Laura feels that this is fair because she feels that $11/hour is a super-low wage so her compromise is to get us to pay her consistently whether she’s here or not.

I’m really, really not feeling it. I was in tears this afternoon. Mr. W is increasingly not happy with the arrangement the more time he has to think of it and its ramifications, as well. Taxes, etc. make her even more expensive as we finish the trial period.

Mr. W met up with his renter after work today. The renter is saying stuff like he’s not able to pay like he’d expected once again, and that maybe Mr. W would want to think about putting someone else in the property who could make the regular monthly payments, and meanwhile the renter will move his family out to someplace cheaper and still try to pay back what he owes to Mr. W. This is a scary thought — the implications are that the renters are admitting defeat in getting caught up. Mr. W explained about how it’s going to be very tough for us from now on covering for that mortgage without getting rental income for it because of what we’re going to have to pay for a nanny. When the two left each other, Mr. W got a phone call from the renter with a business proposition. The renter’s wife was a nurse. She’s also a mother of two girls, same ages as Laura’s girls. The renters offered to have the wife nanny for us for free, to sort of “work off” their debt, and that would help us by letting us save on childcare costs. I’m not sure how ideal this is, because I no longer have time to do another transition week with someone else. Plus, I don’t have the heart or the energy for it. I’m so stressed at it is doing it for Laura. I feel like the renter’s wife is in the same boat where she’s also going to be rusty with infant care, so I’m really trading one for the same person, with the exception being that one of the women is free. Also, can I do this without screwing over Laura, given that she appears to have chosen this as her job for the next couple years? Maybe I should talk to her tomorrow about keeping her options open and not writing off the church or the school district job, yet. But would that screw me over as I have to turn Allie over to another stranger?

Watching Allie wake up and toss in her bed earlier, having this discussion with Mr. W, I was ready to hurl.

Nanny Laura came over yesterday and spent half the day with us. She does seem to adore Allie and was trying to get the feel for our routine so far. When Allie went down for her nap, we talked about the terms of her employment. There were several points we had to negotiate and I think we’ve reached a compromise on all of them.
* She wants her average day’s pay (which includes any overtime) on holidays that she’s getting off. We asked to just pay her base time. We ended up agreeing to her request.
* She wants 10 days of vacation a year, to start accruing immediately, and wants to be able to use them immediately. We wanted to abide by the typical rule of her being able to use 10 days vacation a year starting with her 2nd year of employment. The compromise: she starts accruing immediately and can use those days immediately, but if she takes a 5 day vacation in the summer (like she wants) but has only 2 days accrued, she’s not getting paid for the other 3. But then she suggested getting paid as an “advance” on her vacation days, and Mr. W agreed. So pretty much she’s getting what she asked.
* She wants health insurance, but it’s expensive at $400/month from her estimate. The compromise: She pays for it on her own, but once Mr. W’s renters start paying their rent regularly, knowing it could take 6-8 months, we pitch in for half. This was her idea of a compromise, and we agreed. She felt bad that Mr. W is 5 figures in the hole from lack of rent collected but still paying mortgage on the place.
* On days when we don’t need her (such as when we have vacation or are home for a day to take Allie to a doctor’s appointment) but that she’s able to work, she wants full pay, including any overtime she would’ve worked had we needed her. We offered her half. She said she needed regular income for her financial stability and refused to take any cut due to our not needing her. This was troublesome, considering we used to take 4 weeks of vacation a year, so including holidays and her own 2 weeks of paid vacation, we’re basically paying her for something like 2+ months when she’s not even here. So my offer of compromise, which everyone agreed to, was that on days when we don’t need her but that she’s willing and able to work (not including her vacation or holidays), we can “bank” it as “credit” with her. She gets paid for these days with the understanding that on an agreed-upon Saturday or a holiday that she otherwise would’ve had off, she’d come and take Allie for some time without charging extra, so Mr. W and I can have a date, or go see a movie, or go have a meal, go to the gym, etc. That way, she would roughly be working the same number of hours annually that we’re willing to pay her for, but with the days rearranged.

Rebecca has said that she’s very professional, and I’ve found that to be true in her requested work benefits. Most nannies don’t make all these requests, and health care? Really? We’re not corporate employers. So I feel a little disgruntled that she has so many demands that are out of the ordinary for nannies, altho I also feel that her demands are not unreasonable for someone taking employment. She’s never done the nanny thing before so she’s treating this as she would a regular corporate job, altho she makes allowances keeping in mind that it’s not a matter of bargaining with a company, we’re people who are still trying to survive and we have physical limits on what we are ABLE to pay her, it’s not a matter of what we’re WILLING to pay her.

She looked very relieved when she left and gave me a hug, and I’ll type up the agreement at some point (I gave her a copy of our notes and terms). But we still have the understanding that the first few weeks are “trial;” if she finds she can’t survive on what she says is a paycut from what she’s used to, or we find that we can’t afford to pay what we’d agreed upon thus far, we’ll have to figure something else out. I’m thinking the “something else” is going to be daycare. I’m just so sick of this, and I’m totally stressed over how we’re going to do the week she wants off in the summer so she could vacation with her kids. If there were someone out there who knows Allie’s routine who come stay with her for a week, we wouldn’t need a nanny to begin with. Maybe I could take a personal day, Mr. W could take another personal day, and my mom could take the other 3. But she’d have to be here at 6:30a and it’s a long drive. *sigh* I feel like I should be relieved with a nanny in place (like I was with Susanne, who in retrospect was giving us a hell of a deal), not more stressed, like I am. I’m hoping Laura “proves herself” in the next few days so that I’d feel more comfortable, because right now altho I feel like her heart is in the right place with baby care, she’s rusty. She did offer to take the sleep book (“Healthy Sleep Habits, Happy Child” by Dr. Marc Weissbluth) and read it to understand my parenting/sleeping philosophy and to “brush up” on her infant knowledge. So far, my impression of her is that her priority is her kids and she’s willing to take a lot of time off to be with them, which is great as a parent, but I’m afraid it’ll screw us as her employers. She already asked for Wednesday afternoon off of this transition week so she could go with her daughter to see a church’s Easter exhibit and run a personal errand. True there’s some flexibility since I’m still on maternity leave, but I don’t feel like she’s that concerned with our needs as much as she is with her own leisure activities. Again, fine if you’re in a corporate job, the work can wait, but in this job, we’re dealing with a human baby and parents needing to feel like they’re leaving this human baby in competent and caring hands.

So yeah, after ironing out the details with Laura, I’m still not “feeling” like she’s a fixture. It could be just angst from my imminent return to work, as Mr. W suggests, or it could be intuition again.

Remember a couple of days ago when I didn’t know whether my feeling that Laura wasn’t going to stick around was intuition or paranoia? Turned out it was intuition.

She called me earlier. Her appointment this morning is to meet a plumber at the property she’s renting out, because her renters called over the weekend and reported a water heater leak. She said she took the liberty of arranging for a plumber today, so she’d get it taken care of earlier in the week rather than later, but wanted me to feel comfortable that if she had Allie full-time and I was back at work, then she would’ve rescheduled or done something else; she wouldn’t have flaked on Allie. So that’s fine. Her plumber window is between 12-2 this afternoon, so she’s going to come as soon as she can after that.

BUT…after I told her about my feelings that she’s holding back and that I had wanted to talk to her about it today to see why my gut was telling me this about her, she said that I am intuitively correct. She’s still having ongoing discussions with Saddleback Church, so she hadn’t written them off after they’d met last Monday. Also, prior to her emailing me about the nanny position, she’d taken a test with the Huntington Beach School District for an education-related job, and she’d said there was only 1 position open and there were so many people there that she left discouraged, feeling like she wouldn’t be able to beat everyone for that one spot. However, over the weekend, she received an email from them saying congratulations, she scored in the top 10 and they would like to set her up for an interview. So now she feels like whereas before, she had no doors open to her, now many doors are opening to her at the same time, and she’s torn about which to enter. She said she’s trying to figure out where God wants her to go. She wants to take the nanny position with us, but doesn’t want to make a mistake, or step into something unclear. She asked me to put the agreement terms for her employment together so that she could sign a contract with us, and that way, with all the details securely ironed out, she would refuse the school district’s interview and come onboard. I noticed she didn’t give such a resolution about Saddleback Church, however.

I had been wanting to iron out the details of our arrangement, also, but she didn’t make herself available last week or over the weekend, so I had been planning on negotiating all terms this week when I saw her. I also don’t want a situation where an unexpected sticking point blows the whole agreement up, so I’d rather handle the details sooner than later. I told her that even with an agreement in place, if it turns out some way we’re doing things isn’t working, I’m open to talking about and renegotiating the issue. She was happy and relieved.

Another thing I’d felt over the weekend intuitively was that her daughters were a huge concern to her and that she may be “flakey” based upon their needs. If she quits it’d be because she decided to spend more time with them at home. That turned out to be pretty right on, also, because Laura said the reason she’s less inclined toward the school district job is because it would take an hour each way to commute there, and then working all day, that would make her unavailable to her children at a time when she believed, from hearing a Christian radio show discuss this early on, was the most important for a mother to be around her children — their teenage years. I don’t disagree with her, because I get that peer influence is at an all-time high at that age. The kids need to know that a parent is available and will be there to hold them accountable for their actions. That alone prevented me from doing a lot of bad stuff when I was a teen (“my mom would KILL me!” was a very common thought). I asked her if the long hours working for us would give her the same concern. She said no, because we’re close to her home, AND because I’d already said that her kids are welcome in our house when she’s here working. I confirmed that. She said her teen had already said, “Oh, then I can go over and do homework.” I’m all for kids doing homework at our house, as long as they aren’t too noisy. Besides, her mom will be here the whole time supervising. I don’t expect a teenager is going to be distracting Laura from caring for Allie. Another toddler, that’s a different story.

Intuitively, I feel somewhat a sense of relief, like a heaviness lifted partially. So I know I’m on the right track. It’s not completely lifted, yet, but it’s nowhere near as heavy as it had felt this weekend. This weekend, it was almost like Laura was nonexistent in our future when I tried to project forward. I’m so tired of this, though. I think if Nanny Laura doesn’t work out, I’m ready to turn to daycare. My cousin Jennifer’s having a great experience with her baby Alexis in daycare right now, and the people I know who’ve placed their infants in have only positive things to say. I’d just prefer that Allie be a little older, but it may not work out that way. At least she’s getting MUCH better with the noise issue, just like the pediatrician said she would. She slept through neighbors’ gardeners today (she moved and turned her head a couple of times, but settled back down without really waking up), and other outside noises over the weekend.

Laura just called; she’s on her way. I have the points of our agreement written down as notes and we can talk about other points and then fashion it into an agreement.

Another problem, one that I didn’t see coming… I was about to scoop out the pee clumps in Dodo’s litterbox this morning when I noticed raisin-sized blood stains in the center of each of the 2 pee clumps. I’ve put a call into the vet. 🙁 It looks like the pee stream ended with some blood coming out of my kitty. He’s doing better with the overnight yowling; he pretty much only does it early evening, and/or early morning (5am), so I figured he’s feeling better. The vet called back and left a voicemail when I was putting Allie down for her morning nap. I tried to call back after I put Allie down for her noon nap, but the doctor was with a patient. So we’re still playing phone tag.

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