In Case You Didn’t Know Where Babies Come From
May 23, 2009 at 8:53 pm | In Bad Daddy Moment, Savannah | 4 CommentsLet me set the scene . . .
Earlier in the day, Savannah and her friend Kate were drawing with chalk on the driveway. They drew a big colorful figure that had a vague resemblance to a shark. In fact, they named it “shark” and stated that it was going to get “bigger and bigger and eat all of us!”.
Later that evening, Kevin was outside with Savannah. He absentmindedly stepped on her chalk drawing.
Savannah: Daddy! You’re stepping on my picture!
Daddy: Your picture? What is it?
Savannah: A shark. The shark is going to drink lots of water and then have a baby!
Daddy: Oh, is that how you have a baby?
Savannah: Yes!
Daddy (who catches sight of our pregnant neighbor, Kelly): Savannah, there’s Ms. Kelly. Did you know that Ms. Kelly is going to have a baby?
Savannah: Ms. Kelly, you’re going to have a baby?
Kelly: Yes, I have a baby in my tummy.
Savannah: You drank lots of water?
Kelly (confused): Um, yes, I guess I drink lots of water.
(Here is where Kevin explained to Ms. Kelly where babies come from. She’s grateful that she now knows.)
Things Are a Little Hectic
May 18, 2009 at 10:41 pm | In Excuses | 1 CommentI’ve not posted in forever, and this blurb does not count. There is three weeks left of school, so I’m buried in assessments, Kevin’s taking his Oral Boards in 2 weeks, and we’ve had a lot of fun visitors. Decky is also getting FOUR teeth, so he’s pretty miserable. Also, Savannah’s 4th birthday is coming up in 3 weeks, so I have to put on my supermom hat and plan something fun. Any ideas out there (think easy and low-key)?
I really wanted to take pictures of my garden this year, since last year I posted pictures from when I first planted a bunch of stuff. About a week ago, the pink roses were glorious! Now, all the blooms have been blasted off by all the rain we’ve been having. So, I was too late. Any pictures now would just be lame.
Okay, I’ll be back again, hopefully soon!
Update on Nippy Trauma
May 7, 2009 at 9:10 pm | In Declan | 2 CommentsIt’s been 14 days. Dec still makes sucking motions with his mouth as he’s laying against my chest prior to being placed into his crib at night. His lower lip moves up and down, and little sucking noises are heard.
It’s so sad.
Nippy Trauma
May 1, 2009 at 10:33 pm | In Day to Day, Declan, parenting | 9 CommentsLast year at this time, there was BIG NEWS in the Nusz household. Savannah had relinquished her nippy. At the time, she was 2 years and 10 months old.
Last weekend was Dec’s coming of age. Why, you ask? After all, he’s only 21 months old. And a chronic whiner.
My theory about pacifiers has always been that if a child is old enough to really understand why the nippy is discontinued, they will cope with its loss better. I don’t think it’s fair to just have it disappear one day. I think I have a fear that they will subconsciously look for it for the rest of their life. So, I waited until Savannah was old enough to understand when I told her that she was a big girl and didn’t need a nippy anymore (and I snipped off the end of it, which helped her realize that she didn’t really need it).
We’ve been murmuring about getting rid of Dec’s pacifier for awhile now. A few weeks ago, his friend Sara successfully got rid of hers. Then his friend Madeleine did also. Did they fuss? Not really. Did they lose sleep? Nope. Did they throw themselves on the floor and scream “Momma! Nippy! Momma!” for days and days (do you see where I’m going with this?)? Absolutely not.
Things came to a head last Friday (April 24: 1 year and 2 days from the great nippy removal of Savannah Elizabeth). As Kevin and I readied the kids for school, I suddenly realized that I had forgotten to bring Dec’s pacifier home from school the previous day (he has a million, so he hadn’t missed it at bedtime). Kevin said, “Oh, I don’t think I remembered to bring one yesterday”. I was dumbfounded. His teacher hadn’t mentioned Dec not having a pacifier! Did he cry all day and his teacher didn’t mention it? So Kevin took the kids to school and asked Ms. Gina if Dec had used his pacifier at naptime. She said, no, he hadn’t. He had layed down and slept for 2 hours without the pacifier.
Well. I think that’s a sign. He’s ready. Let’s roll with this.
Kevin tells Ms. Gina to TRY and avoid giving Dec the pacifier at naptime. I wait on pins and needles all day, wondering if he’ll repeat his performance from the day before. He does. He’s fine.
So, even though Kevin’s brother’s family is coming into town that day for the weekend, we make the decision to rid our home of the pacifier. This is what I do:
1) I call my friend Kerry and ask her if we can use her baby daughter, Anna, for “Operation Nippy Removal”. She agrees.
2) I go to Target and purchase a big blue ball that Dec has been coveting.
3) After picking the kids up from daycare, we go to the doctor’s office because Savannah is complaining of her ear hurting. She has an ear infection. The doctor checks Dec’s ears too, just so I can be sure that when he’s crying over his lost nippy that he isn’t crying because of ear pain, too. His ears are fine.
4) We go home and eat dinner. Then I coach Dec through the process of gathering all his nippies together and putting them in a shoebox. We talk about how he’s going to give them to Baby Anna because she’s a baby and she needs the nippies. Decky’s a big boy and he’s all done with his nippies.
5) We climb into the car (the big blue ball is in the trunk, out of sight). Dec’s holding the box o’ nippies in his lap. We get to Baby Anna’s house and I park strategically so I can bring the big blue ball into the house without Dec seeing.
6) We enter the house and Dec is encouraged to give Baby Anna his gift. He does so, and we all clap. Baby Anna “gives” Dec the big blue ball, which is very exciting. Dec says bye-bye to the nippies and we go home. I’m so proud.
Fast forward to 7:00 pm. Bedtime. All my in-laws are visiting and are lounging in the living room. I read Dec his story and he asks, “Nippy?” I say, “No, you gave your nippies to Baby Anna”. He says, “Nippy bye-bye.” I agree. He says, “Nippy bye-bye. Ball!” I’m so pleased. He understands that he gave his nippies to Baby Anna and he got a ball!
As I lay him down in his crib and rub his back for a minute, I think, “Wow, this is working! I’m like the best parent ever!” As I leave the room, a screech fills the air. “NIPPY!!!!” I shut the door, feeling tearful. “NIPPY! MOMMA!” The sobs are loud and wet. Within minutes he’s gasping for breath, “Nippy! Momma! Momma! Momma! Wahhhhhh!”
It’s awful. Seriously. I feel like the worst parent ever.
After 25 minutes of listening to his pleas, I reenter his room. His face is swollen and wet. Boogers stream down his face. He’s sweaty and his pajamas are all twisted, as though he’s been writhing around in his crib. I rock him for a few minutes and we talk about how “nippy is all gone”. He says, “no, no, nooooooo”. I say yes.
I leave the room again. After 10 minutes of wretched crying, he’s blessedly quiet.
I’m worried that he died of a broken heart.
1:20 am. Screaming in the night. Rocking. Screaming. Sleeping.
4:00 am. Screaming. Rocking. Screaming.
5:00 am Sleeping.
6:20 am Up for the day. A day of listening to him crying about nippy. A day of me cursing those little brats Sara and Madeleine who made this look so easy.
The day passes in a blur of crying and blanket-clutching. During naptime, he screams for nearly an hour. That night, he cries hysterically for 40 minutes, then falls asleep. He sleeps all night. I do not, wondering if he’ll wake up.
It’s now Sunday. For short periods of time, he plays nicely. Once again, he screams during naptime. He cries for 30 minutes at bedtime and sleeps through the night.
Monday morning. We all wake up. Within 1 hour, I am stricken with a terrible stomach bug. My in-laws come over to watch the kids while I huddle in the bathroom for most of the day. My mother-in-law puts Dec down for his nap. He cries for about 5 minutes and falls asleep. The worst is over.
It’s now been exactly a week. He still mentions nippy occasionally, but now reaches more quickly for his blankie. I’ll take it. A blankie can’t mess up his teeth, delay his speech, or be laced with cocaine and used by high-schoolers (did you know they do that? I digress).
We are a nippy-free household. Although I think that at least one of us still has a broken heart.

All Boy
April 20, 2009 at 9:21 pm | In Declan | 7 CommentsDeclan is a bit of a nightmare. And I mean that in a good way, of course. But he gets into SO MUCH TROUBLE. I have a vague memory of slouching on the couch while an 18 month-old Savannah danced along to The Wiggles, giving me several minutes of down time at the end of the day. I remember sitting motionless as she tried to comb my hair. I can recall her sitting for 30 minutes next to me in a restaurant, quietly and methodically placing stickers on the back of my sweater. Ahhhh . . . the good old days. One kid. One calm kid.
Things that I’ve experienced/witnessed recently:
1. Declan squatting down to write on the garage floor with chalk. As he does so, a fruit snack falls out of his mouth and falls wetly to the floor, immediately becoming covered in chalk, grass, and dirt. Before I can say anything, I see him pluck it from the floor and pop it back into his mouth.
2. Declan poking Kevin in the back of the head with an umbrella while Kevin was driving.
3. While standing at the top of the slide, Declan steps backward and topples off the top. I catch him mid-air.
4. Declan sitting on the counter as Kevin administers his acid reflex medication. Dec reaches behind him, grabs a pair of scissors, and precedes to fall backwards off the counter. Kevin grabs him by the back of his pajamas, and Dec hangs suspended for several seconds before Kevin lowers him down. Dec still clutches the scissors in his hand.
5. Dec crouches on the driveway, intently watching a small spider as it skitters across his path. Suddenly his finger presses down on the spider, crushing it. He then immediately puts that same finger into his mouth.
6. As Kevin pulls weeds nearby, Dec climbs onto a wooden bench which sits in the garden. He topples off onto a pile of decorative stones. A small amount of bleeding ensues.
7. As Savannah colors serenely nearby, Dec methodically removes all the caps from the markers and writes all over his hands and face.
8. As I get ready one morning, idly listening to the kids play noisily and gleefully, I look over to see that Declan has played so vigorously that one arm has come out the top of his pajama top. The empty arm hole is flapping behind him as he runs.
9. While sitting in a chair eating, I see a movement out of the corner of my eye and duck reflexively. A plastic ball slams into the wall behind me. Dec grins and says, “Ball, Mamma, ball?”
10. I enter a room to see Dec standing on the ottoman, gazing down in anticipation at Savannah. Savannah is laying on the floor, holding a pillow on her chest. Dec braces himself to jump, and I shout his name. He’s startled and falls on top of Savannah. Both are okay.
11. I enter the bathroom and hear a crunch under my feet. I turn on the light and find approximately 1 million goldfish scattered on the bathroom floor. An empty snack bowl sits nearby.
12. One minute before we’re supposed to leave for a doctor’s appointment, I see Dec reach up to grab a full glass of water off the table. I watch helplessly as he tips it to drink and it cascades down his face and clothes. I call the doctor’s office and explain that we will be a few minutes late.
13. When he enters the library, he has both shoes. When we arrived home, there is only one. And a very dirty sock.
14. While walking down the aisle in a store, a woman says, “Ma’am? Is that your son?” I look over to see him clutching handfuls of Savannah’s hair as she holds a box of Dora fruit snacks out of his reach.
15. While in the library, I glance up to see Declan throwing a piece from a wooden train set in the general direction of the window. Luckily, his aim was poor and the puzzle piece lands on top of a nearby bookshelf. I mouth, “I’m sorry” to the disapproving librarian.
This is just what I could think of in the last 10 minutes.
I need a nap.
Easter Festivities
April 6, 2009 at 9:55 pm | In Day to Day, Declan, Savannah | 3 CommentsEaster festivities are upon us. For a family who has no religious affiliation, this has to be one of my favorite holidays since having children. Easter baskets, egg hunt, jelly beans, decorating eggs, wearing spring colors . . . what’s not to love?
On Saturday we took the kids to an Easter Egg hunt in a nearby small town. It was supposed to start at 11:15 am, and after lining up with his bucket, Dec seemed to instinctively know what to do. He was chomping at the bit to get started, even breaking the tissue paper barrier at the starting line. Everyone watched as I repeatedly snatched Dec back just as he darted forward, his chubby little hand reaching for a plastic egg . . .

At the starting line . . .


Daddy and Dec at the Egg Hunt

Sara J. got distracted from hunting eggs and hunted Dec instead . . .

Daddy and Dec planning their strategy . . .

Dec gave the Easter bunny a high-five, then started to cry.

Savannah shaking the Easter bunny's hand . . .

Grandma and Grandpa Egan sent a package! What's in it????
Big Sister
March 26, 2009 at 8:37 pm | In Day to Day, Savannah | 2 CommentsTONIGHT BEFORE PUTTING SAVANNAH TO BED . . .
Savannah: Mom?
Me: Yes?
Savannah: Can I have a big sister?
Me: Nope, sorry.
Savannah: Why?
Me: Because you’re the big sister.
Savannah: And Declan is the little brother?
Me: Right. You’re the first baby that Mommy and Daddy had, so you’re the oldest.
Savannah: I am? I’m the first?
Me: Yes, that’s right.
Savannah: (silence)
Me: Okay, good night sweetie.
Savannah: Mom?
Me: Yes?
Savannah: When I have a big sister, can I name her Emily?
Me: Sure.
Try to Contain Your Excitement . . .
March 18, 2009 at 9:07 pm | In Dissertation | 9 CommentsHere’s the pic of the bound copy of dissertation . . . better late than never.

And here’s the pic of my actual degree . . . still not framed, though.

Try to hold in your whoopin’ and hollerin’.
In Memoradum . . . Almost
March 12, 2009 at 11:06 pm | In Day to Day, Patrick | 3 CommentsNormally weekends in the Nusz household are a bit hectic, but rarely do we ever have to be somewhere specific at a particular time. This weekend, Kevin and I were looking forward to taking a Group Power class together at our gym (we never get to work out together) at 10:15 am on Saturday. Then we found out that there was a presentation by our homeowners association about how to take care of Bermuda grass (and we’re pretty sure that the presenter, who is our neighbor, would have cried if we didn’t attend, as the state of our lawn haunts him at night. Justifiably.). Then we realized that Savannah had a birthday party at noon, to which she has been counting down for about three weeks. Oh, and Patrick the Cat is sick, and so he has an appointment at the vet’s at 10:45 am.
So, Group Power is ditched. We decide that Kevin needs to attend the lawn presentation (saving Dennis the Neighbor from a mental breakdown), so that means that I need to take Patrick the Cat (who weighs 17 lbs without the pet carrier), Savannah, and Dec to the vet. We need to be back from the vet by 11:30ish so I can pass Dec off to Kevin and take Savannah to the birthday party. I make a note to put on some makeup when I return from the vet, as the parents at this party are the same parents who attended Olivia’s Zoo Party and will probably be dressed to the nines. I figure I can at least wear some eyeliner and non-cat hair infested clothes.
Remember my post about taking the kids to the library? Well, throw in a seventeen pound cat, a teething Decky, and a little girl whose wearing crocs for the first time this season (and cannot stop looking down at them to admire them, even after walking headfirst into a door). Nightmare.
Now, Patrick was clearly sick. Hadn’t eaten in two days, he was walking slowly, and in general, he seemed uncomfortable, and I don’t know, sick. The kids were beside themselves with excitement that we were taking Patrick in the car. We get to the vet’s office, I race in with Patrick in the carrier, drop him by the front desk, and race back outside to bring in the kids from the car. We enter the waiting room and Dec immediately attempts to pet all the dogs, even those who clearly don’t like husky blond-haired boys. He dumps over a stack of Cat Fancy magazines. As I’m cleaning them up, I see him actually reach into a dog’s mouth to touch its tongue. Thankfully, the dog simply shook his head, extracting Dec’s slimy little hand.
After, like, a year, we get called into the examining room. How can a room that’s nearly empty–save for a bench, an examining table, and a few flyers–look like a war zone when the vet enters five minutes later? Flyers are scattered, Dec is making a ridiculous amount of noise by opening and closing the lid on the metal garbage can repeatedly, Patrick is frantically shedding hair due to being so stressed out, and Savannah is arguing with me about how “it’s not dirty here, we can have a snack” while trying to search through my bag. At this point, I’m wondering if the vet can euthanize me.
The vet enters, examines Patrick, and says that it’s very serious. She says a bunch of stuff, but I was busy trying to keep Savannah from forcing her crocs on over Dec’s shoes, so I didn’t hear it all. I did hear that he has a bad heart murmur, and recommends bloodwork. I agree, but ask if I can leave immediately after the blood draw and learn the results later (the birthday party is looming). She tells me to call the office first thing Monday, and gives me an appetite stimulant and a blood pressure medication for Patrick.
We hustle out of the vet’s office, and I call Kevin on the drive home. He leaves the fascinating lawn presentation, and I practically push Dec out of the moving car in my haste to get to the birthday party. Makeup is abandoned, and I resign myself to not keeping up with the Jones’s at this birthday party. At least I remembered to bring a gift.
Birthday party. Twelve screaming 4 year olds. Chuck-E-Cheese. Nuff said.
As we leave the party, I check my voice mail. It’s the vet. She states that she needs to speak to me immediately, as Patrick may have a very serious condition. I call her back at her home. She stops nursing her baby to tell me that she looked at the blood test results and examined a blood smear under the microscope and it appears that Patrick may have been bit by a tick that infected him with a dangerous protozoa that typically causes death in cats in 2-7 days. I wonder if Patrick has expired while we were at the birthday party. She tells me to take Patrick to the emergency clinc (it’s Saturday; her clinic is closed), get a second opinion, and consider euthanizing him before he dies a sudden, painful death. Most likely on Savannah’s bed.
Kevin and I chat, he researches the condition, calls the vet back and speaks with her himself, then prepares to take Patrick to the emergency vet. I tell Savannah that Patrick is very sick and needs to go to the hospital. She says, “Is he going to die?” (Um, I didn’t know that she even knew that word.) I say yes, he might die. She begins crying and says, “But then we won’t have a cat or a dog!”. I say, no, we won’t. She says, “We need a new cat!”. I say, no, we’ll just think about Patrick and think about what a nice cat he was. She says hopefully, “Then we need a new dog?”. No, no dog either. I tell her to say good-bye to Patrick. This is her tearstained face as she pets Patrick for the “last” time:

Dec, on the other hand, didn’t know that he should be using this as an opportunity to lobby for more pets. Instead, he crawls into the pet carrier, where Savannah promptly locks him in.


Kevin hustles off to the vet. Blah, blah, blah, day goes on, and we intermittedly discuss Patrick’s inevitable demise. Savannah seems to understand the Patrick is not coming home. Kevin calls around 5:30 pm. Patrick is alive! The vet at the emergency clinic thinks that the other vet’s diagnosis is wrong. He doesn’t have a lethal protozoa. He has a heart murmur, but he’s not at death’s door.
Kevin brings him home and Savannah is so glad to see him. As she pets him she says, “Patrick’s not that dead yet, is he, Daddy?” Um, no. I guess we don’t really know what “dead” means. That’s okay. That’s a lesson that I hope she doesn’t have to learn for a really long time.
She is still telling people, 5 days later, that Patrick is “not that dead yet”.
Random Stuff
February 23, 2009 at 11:05 pm | In Day to Day, Declan, Savannah, The husband | 5 CommentsSometimes I end up neglecting my blog because I feel like I don’t have anything momentous to say. Not that I’m saying that my written words are life-changing or inspiring or anything, but I at least need to be motivated to write something. I’ve decided to stop having lofty goals of writing things that are particularly witty and interesting, and just write about my day to day musings.
So, what’s going on around here?
DECLAN:
He’s 19 months old, just got his second big-boy haircut, and has recently learned to jump. By jump, I mean that he musters up his momentum and throws his arms upward, resulting in him clearing the floor by nearly two full inches. He will gladly jump on command. He is good at going up and down the stairs, although he insists on walking down like a big boy (holding the railing), which worries me. He is also proficient at getting a plastic stool and placing it in front of furniture so he can climb up onto it.
While still not the most advanced in his verbal skills, he can say the following: Daddy, Momma, Nah-nah (Savannah), night-night, more, ball, mine, hi, bye, yes, water (wah-wah), walk, cheese, yogurt, gum (num), teeth, shoes, bath, balloon, nippy, book, blanket (but it doesn’t really sound like that), snack (‘nack), baby, hat, doggy, “what’s that?”, please, thank you, I love you, Ella (our neighbor), Sara, Declan, hot dog, cookie (doesn’t really sound like that), and all done. He can also make several animal noises, with his favorites being a monkey and a horse. His speech is very unclear, and he often resorts to whining.
He still has acid reflux. A few weeks ago I tried tapering down his medication in order to see if he’s ready to discontinue its use. Within 24 hours he was vomiting small amounts, which completely disgusted Savannah. So back up to the full dose he went.
SAVANNAH:
Savannah is 3 years, 7 months. She has a great vocabulary, and much of the time, I can reason with her. She continues to mix up her pronouns, making statements like, “Her coming over?” instead of “She’s coming over?”. She can write her name, although her “N’s” are backwards, and her “S’s” often have an extra curve. When asked her name, sometimes she says her first and last name, other times, she says “Savannah Banana” since that is what we call her (ironically, my parents’ nickname for me as a child was Tara Banana–I have no idea why).
In general, Savannah is pretty well-behaved. She’s most likely to get in trouble for taking Declan’s toys or taking excessive amounts of time to do something (this last trait is exactly like Kevin, who is probably the slowest moving man on earth). If a punishment is delivered, the most effective appears to be denying her TV time or withholding her evening snack. The girl loves her snacks, particularly goldfish and fruit snacks. She responds really well to positive reinforcement, so she remains well-fed and up-to-date with the latest Dora episodes.
Savannah is very social, and loves her friends. She loves Kate, Ellie, and Gabi (from school) the most. She plays nicely for the most part, and gets giddy with excitement when invited to a birthday party. There is one for her friend Zoe at Chucky Cheese in a couple of weeks and the countdown has begun.
KEVIN:
Kevin is in the midst of beginning his negotiations for becoming a partner at his ophthalmology practice. This means that consultants have been hired, buy-in price is getting calculated, and financing is being arranged. Kevin has also been eating healthy, exercising regularly, and being an all-around A-plus dad and husband.
ME:
I finally received my bound copy of my dissertation in the mail (must take picture) and the certificate of my doctoral degree (must frame). Now that I have them in my possession, I don’t feel like such a fraud when my coworkers refer to me as Dr. Nusz.
I have also joined a Biggest Loser’s Contest, created by my friend Katie. Basically, 20 people each put in $50 for a grand total of $1000. Another person (me) joined, and that ‘extra’ fifty dollars will be used for a mini-prize, to be distributed to the person who has lost the highest percentage of their body weight by March 15 (half-way point). The contest runs from January 1 until June 1. Now, I’m NOT a competitive person. I don’t care if I’m good at sports (I’m not), I don’t care if I win a board game, I don’t care if my pay is higher than other person’s, etc. But for some reason, I am acting competitive about this contest. Each week, I keep flipping between first and second place, and if the wind blows my way on March 15, I could be the proud recipient of my original entry fee. I keep telling Kevin that if I win my entry fee back, I’ll be happy because at least I won’t have wasted any money.
So far, I’ve lost 14 pounds. Nearly 7% of my body weight. I’d love to lose 10 more. In my quest, I’ve altered my eating habits and upped my exercise considerably. I really want to lose it in a healthy way, so I’m following the South Beach Diet and exercising 3-5 days per week. No cookies. Limited amounts of bread. No sugary cereals. And sadly, no frosting. I rarely cheat, I’m beginning to really enjoy the exercise, but I’m frustrated at the fact that despite eating 1400 calories per day and exercising approximately 4 days per week, the scale hasn’t budged in nearly a month.
What else is going on with me? Oh, there’s a mom’s group that meets once per month. It’s a relatively small group (7-8 women) and we do things like game night, go out to dinner, bowling, etc. and it’s a blast. Most of us are relatively new to the area, and it makes us all feel more settled to have a group of girlfriends who we can spend time with on a regular basis.
Okay, this post is really long, but you’ve got an update about what’s been going on around here.
Peace out.
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