Posted by: lgreenberg | January 19, 2009

one month +

This is a quick post because I can hear Mateo gurgling in the background–possibly waking up?  Mateo is now five weeks old and it has been an amazing journey so far.  I absolutely love and adore every single inch of him.  He’s started smiling now and is becoming more playful–he enjoys baby yoga (stretching and playing with him) and dancing to music.  Tummy time still isn’t a favorite but the little guy’s got to strengthen his muscles so he can one day crawl and scoot himself all over the place.  He’s also plumping up quite a bit–those thighs are looking mighty juicy!–but is still only in the 25th percentile.  Perhaps best of all, Mateo’s finally learned how to breastfeed properly!  There’s soo much to write, but I have to keep it short and let some pictures do the talking.

Posted by: Ilya Haykinson | January 5, 2009

This is a bit quiet (so turn up your volume if you’re interested), but it’s a quick little video of Linda singing Mateo to sleep… 🙂

Posted by: Ilya Haykinson | January 5, 2009

First bath

Mateo really protested this first real bath (as opposed to just wiping him down with water). However, by the second bath time he was much better already.

Posted by: Ilya Haykinson | January 4, 2009

New Year 2009 – Tummy Time

Sorry for the cheesy camera work; I’m still trying to figure out what will work and what won’t.

Posted by: Ilya Haykinson | December 28, 2008

first video


Enjoy our first video of Mateo. I generally prefer to post videos less frequently, but edited together so that the video becomes watchable. Let me know if you would instead prefer raw footage…

Posted by: Ilya Haykinson | December 27, 2008

bottle feeding

Earlier this week, Mateo decided to stop liking the SNS. This coincided with us introducing a bottle to make the feeding faster — we realized that I was spending 8 hours a day with my finger in Mateo’s mouth, the finger was getting swollen and we weren’t getting any sleep. Overall, the SNS method took well over an hour and a half, which meant that soon after we were finished feeding him it was time to start the next feeding cycle.

The bottle certainly helps make this all a bit faster: Mateo can gulp down a bottle in about 15-20 minutes. He’s also getting better at eating at the breast (albeit with a nipple shield). However, ever since he’s realized that the bottle gets him milk faster he completely abandoned the SNS, crying incessantly as soon as my finger went in.

Linda’s doing well — we’ve been going on walks every few days and while last week we started at half a mile and built up to almost a mile, today’s walk was a mile and a half. Most of the walks tend to also include the purchase of a pie from a local place. Of course overall she’s very tired, and sore from having to feed and pump so often. We have rented a rather nice breastpump from the hospital), so the pumping is at least going well: there’s definitely enough milk to feed not just Mateo but also a small contingent of other infants. We’re starting to freeze some of the milk now so that we have enough supply for the future.

Mateo, meanwhile, is growing. On Monday (when he was 10 days old) he regained his birth weight (actually he went even above it, clocking in at 6 lb 11.5 oz, or 3048 grams). And today his umbilical cord has finally fallen off. So, I think we’re progressing as we should.

Posted by: Ilya Haykinson | December 18, 2008

Snuss

  Linda is doing well, as is Mateo. He’s actually climbing back up in weight — though not up to his birth weight yet.

The one thing he’s not doing, however, is latching to the breast. The whole time in the hospital after birth Linda was trying to get him to latch on and start sucking. Sometimes he’d suck, but not be latched on (and thus not really get any good suction). Sometimes he’d look like he latched on, but he’d just fall asleep. Apparently, combining these two activities in one time was too much to ask.

Since he clearly needed to eat, we started feeding him a bit of expressed breast milk (and supplementing with formula). The way to do that was to insert a finger into his mouth, and hold a little syringe with a pipette-like tip in the same opening of the mouth where the finger is. Fill the syringe with milk (or formula) and slowly push the plunger of the syringe to get the liquid in. Mateo responded by sucking it and 5 minutes later the feeding was done. He was left with a desire to suck some more, but that was kind of secondary to actually getting fed. Of course while we started with one syringe-full (15 ml) we quickly had to go to double that as Mateo’s a growing boy and needs more food every day.

The syringe trick worked for quite a while, but it wasn’t really helping him learn how to suck. So on Tuesday of this week Linda went to a breastfeeding clinic with Mateo (men were not allowed: apparently the clinic is just all women with their tops off, walking around with their kids). There the lactation consultant (the wonderful and oft-recommended Susan Orr) tried to identify the problem — she thinks that Mateo’s tongue is just not sticking out enough to properly suck. She did, however, provide an alternative tool called SNS, or “snuss” in the vernacular. The SNS is a bottle with a capillary-like tube coming out of the teat: sort of like an IV, it is designed to slowly drip out its contents. The advantage of the SNS is that it encourages the baby to suck properly, developing its sucking reflex and hopefully turning it into proper usage of the real breast.

So the new method is for me (or in theory Linda or someone else) to thoroughly wash our fingers, and tape the capillary tube from the SNS to the finger with some paper tape, fill the SNS with pumped milk, and stick said finger in our son’s mouth. The milk flows, the son sucks, and everyone is happy. With the exception of the finger: since the capillary is small, and Mateo these days eats 60ml or more per feeding, it takes about 45 min to an hour to go through a feeding bottle. We also supplement with actual nursing for a little bit, and take short breaks for tummy time and burping.

Posted by: Ilya Haykinson | December 15, 2008

Binary days

In order to affirm Mateo’s future geekiness, we will be trying to celebrate his binary days: round numbers of days in the binary numeral system. So, we’ll be celebrating his first, second, fourth, eighth, sixteenth, thirty-second, etc day since birth.

For the coming year, the following are the binary days:

Power of 2 Value in Decimal Value in Binary Day
2^0 1 1 12/13/2008
2^1 2 10 12/14/2008
2^2 4 100 12/16/2008
2^3 8 1000 12/20/2008
2^4 16 10000 12/28/2008
2^5 32 100000 1/13/2009
2^6 64 1000000 2/14/2009
2^7 128 10000000 4/19/2009
2^8 256 100000000 8/25/2009
2^9 512 1000000000 5/8/2010

If you use iCal or Outlook or something similar, you can even subscribe to the calendar with a list of his binary days.

Posted by: Ilya Haykinson | December 15, 2008

first pics in verse

A relative in Russia, Olda Talapova, had sent the following poem, in reaction to the photos from the previous post:

Original English Translation
С восторгом смотрели на личико Моти:
Вы глазок красивых таких не найдете!
И весом приличен, и ростом хорош,
На маму и папу он разом похож!
With fascination we looked at the face of Mateo*
Such pretty eyes you wouldn’t find
The weight is decent, and height is good
He’s at once like mom and dad

Thanks, Olda!

*We’ll have another post about the nicknames for Mateo…

Posted by: Ilya Haykinson | December 12, 2008

first pics, then sleep

Not to keep y’all in the dark:



Ok, now I sleep for a couple of hours. Linda’s probably resting at the hospital while I take a break at home.

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