Posted in Maternité, Thoughts

The Golden Rule

My mum once said I have always been someone who go with the rules. And I almost agree. I 95% live by the rules and schedules actually.

That explains a lot why I almost never skipped any classes during school, courses, and everything I joined. It gives me assurance to have certain schedule each day and knowing what to do, then be prepared for it.

That also explains why I don’t love surprises. Even for birthday gift. I prefer saying it in advance what I really want as presents. No money wasted for something I don’t like or need. Both parties are happy, aren’t they?

It goes same when we talked about seeing someone. As I do to my birthday presents, I have been already set and firm about what kind of man that I really want to date. I set the criteria first. I don’t do trial and error. Not when it deals with someone feeling.

That again explains a lot why I didn’t date anyone, except le husband. Yep, no ex-boyfriend(s). Haha. You’re lucky, Yobo. I rejected straight away those ones who once or more than once,  asked me for dating, simply because I was so sure that my brain and heart were not compatible with theirs.

Since the very first time I received that kind of declarations back in junior high, I rejected it (almost) all. I had someone I liked before le husband so I didn’t feel I had to deal with others. I am pretty good at doing multitasking, except this kind of task.

I wouldn’t waste my time to take care someone’s feeling just because I couldn’t say no so I wouldn’t hurt him. I think liking someone is one’s right, but how we will get the response is not ours. It’s the other party’s right and we have to deal with it. 

Another thing is, I almost never change my first answer. Once I say no, you can be sure it will be no forever. Of course it goes same with yes. Although I might change to no in the middle, it’s actually always been yes. In the end, it must be a yes.

This post is dedicated for little daughter. We might have lots of different opinions about many things, dear. But, can you spare me this one thing?

Don’t deal with someone’s feeling when you know right away you won’t be good with him.

How do you know?

Your brain and heart will directly recognize whether what he has will be compatible  with yours or not.

Trust them.

And of course, trust me.

Posted in Maternité, Thoughts

(Being a Geographically) A Single Parent

Having a baby whose father is currently doing residency makes one often feels like a single parent.
If someone ask me which group of mother I belong to, I am a full time mom and housewife and part time teacher. I decided to quit school job since it must be done in the morning. With all these baby stuff to do almost alone, it seems impossible for me to work in the morning. My hands are full enough.

Taking care three men and a baby are not something easy to deal with,but it’s still doable, with half sanity. But, when the time it feels very hard, I can’t help feeling angry with the situation. Of course, it’s le husband who will have to listen to my complaints. Who else?

Mostly, le husband is absence at the maximum of 15 days per month. The most stressful one I have been going through was the second month after Langit came and le husband had out of town shift for a month. I faced EVERYTHING alone. The tiring growth spurt, stayed awake all night long until morning, the anxiety of pediatrician visit, while at the same time, took care the other stuff at home. I decided to go back working after second month. It just added up my tasks and often drove me crazy. But, having no income from both of us in a month, merely survived by the saving, it made me even crazier. Beside, doing other thing outside home, at least it helped me to breath for awhile.

Even after one year, there are times I feel so stuffy. Especially after feeding started. It’s getting more and more work to do. When someone asked me about hiring some helps, it wasn’t that I won’t. But , I just can’t. For many reasons that I won’t discuss here. So, it is actually my own choice too dealing with all these craziness alone.

Taking care this baby for a year makes me realize how hard to raise a single little baby. I wonder how the real single parents out there do it alone. It makes me become less judgmental. And less lazier to give unnecessary comments about how ones parent their children. I believe every mother has been tired enough without having more judgements from others.

Is all that hard?

Nope.

I have been going through this first year with lots of little helps that matter. Helps from the visible ones and the invisible ones. For that, I have been so grateful. Langit won’t do this well without all those helps.

I really hope to be granted more patience and endurance to face for more years to come. More challenges to overcome and hopefully passing all the exams with flying colors. Amin.

Breath in, breath out, FIGHTING!!

Posted in Langit Senja, Maternité, Thoughts

The First Amazing Year

Alhamdulillah. Woohooo!

Say cheers to the first year!!!

If there were a CV needed for parenting job, I would surely put this one on the achievements box : Going through the first year safe and sound.

Being a mother for only a year might be nothing for others who have been on this bussiness longer. But for me, safely landed at this first year is another greatest journey I’ve ever had other than the Hajj with my mum.

It isn’t surely one without any bumps or turbulences. There were a lot, for sure. But, Alhamdulillah, all three passengers are well. Very well.

It made me reflect a lot about my mother. It made me missing her even more. Having your mother beside you, once you become a mother yourself is a blessing. Although it’s not always rainbow, still it’s very much a big deal. A presence always be better than an absence.

It made me wonder how she was doing well with three of us while I often feel one is more than enough. It made me really want to meet her more and tell her about many things inside my head like these ones above :

I’d like to tell her how hard it has been since she’s gone.

How I have been taking care of everything that she once did, which are a lot and not easy sometimes.

Other than that, I would also brag her about something which I think I have been doing good.

Tell her about how I proudly breastfeed Langit in spite of the hardships, one year and still counting.

Tell her about how I endure feeding which I dislike three times a day and no matter what, I won’t give up.

Tell her Alhamdulillah Langit has been healthy, hasn’t tasted any medecine because of an illness, and she grows up well. She must be very happy if she were here. My daughter is a cute one, mom.

Tell her, I have been doing okay with le husband. Although, the turbulences are many but still tolerable.

Other thing is I want to apologize.
Apologize to her for any hardships she had been going through because of me.

Last, I want to thank her for raising me very well. I really hope I will do as good as her.

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To the birthday girl,

Heyho, Baby! I really have so much to say. I don’t think a blogpost can cover it all.

I won’t tell any false sweet words just because it’s your birthday. Because all things happened on this first year are not all sweets. But, one thing I can say for sure, you have been very good to me. Very much better than I have been to you. It broke my heart when I remembered those times whenever I yelled, shouted, and being angry to you. Yes, I was (still) very far from good. Sorry.

You have been doing good in everything. You nailed almost every milestones. You didn’t give me that GTM phase like other baby did in feeding, you kept being healthy and didn’t let me spend more money on the pediatrician others than the vaccine shots you should have. You seem to understand very well since daddy is still doing his residency, money matters to us. You’re being healthy along this first year is such a big help to your parents.

You’re surely growing up fast. From that tiny little baby that I even too scare to hold and now you are becoming this big girl that I often feel too heavy to hold (for a long period of time). You sit, crawl, babbling, grabbing things, clapping hands and so many little things that you do that make me happy. You even start walking one or two steps before you’re really turning one! Me is very proud of you.

Beyond those achievements that you do, I am really lucky just to have you. I’ve never been learning so much more than this first year together with you. I really thank you for that.

Well, guess it will be too long if I keep writing everything here. Let’s just wrap it, shall we?

Happiest birthday, Langit Senja Almakirana. I wish you health and happiness throughout your life. Hope you keep growing well, be kind and tough. May Allah protects you wherever you are.

I hope I will be granted enough time to raise you well. Amin.

Much love,

Mommy.

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The smiling birthday girl

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“There is no other job more physically and emotionally taxing than parenting on the first year”
(What to Expect the First Year)

Toddler years, bring it on!

Posted in Maternité, Past learning, Thoughts

After Three Years Part 2

I spent a very intense relationship on my mom last days. Although I was pursuing my master abroad on 2012, once I finished in August, I became almost inseparable with my mom. We had so many things to do, Hajj, engagement, and the wedding, which were taking place within short interval from one to another. She was doing  all those preparations with her sickness which was getting worse as the Hajj coming.

Several days before our departure, I spent days going back and forth to hospital to accompanied her with all test. She even wanted to canceled her departure just two days before and drew it back on the next days. She went Hajj with enduring the pain and sickness.

And me, I went Hajj enduring the stress, which a high level one, Hajj with a sick person. When others were enjoying their Hajj like a holiday, mine was more like a bussiness trip with tight schedule. I didn’t want to miss the prayers too much at Haram just because I had to take care of her. I spent years to be here. I wanted to do the Hajj well without neglecting her.

So, I woke up very early to make sure I had done everything before leaving for the mosque. Made her the breakfast, cutting some fruits, and prepared everything she needed then I left for tahajud, subuh, until dhuha. Between subuh and dhuha, I was going for thawaf. And I was doing all that alone. No companions at all. It was the ultimate me-time I have ever had.

Finished dhuha, I ran quickly outside the mosque to catch the bus back to the apartment. It was time for my mom’s second meal. Near the apartment, I bought something like kebuli rice and lamb curry for us to eat. I skipped zuhur and ashar at Haram. Instead, I chose maghrib to isya. Thus, during that time, I did all the work again so I could leave peacefully.

Really, went Hajj with your sick mother was nothing easy at all. Five days of the Hajj rituals were one of the hardest day I have ever been through. Not only fighting with other million thousands people, more, it was the fight with yourself to be ikhlas.

Two days after arriving back home, my mom was admitted to the hospital. She spent two weeks there. I spent 12 out of 13 days at the hospital. I stayed with her all night, fed her, helped her to go bathroom, cleaned up her pee and poo, even on her last days, when she was no longer able to clean her ass by herself, I was doing it for her. She refused at first, but I said it was really okay.

I once tweeted this :
Taking care your parents in their old age is not a responsibility. It is pretty much an honour.

I really meant it. It was a greatest honour to hear your mother said that she only wanted me to stay with her at night since I was the only one who woke up in an instant once I heard she called. I was the one who felt comfortable cleaning her poo and pee, even cleaning her ass for her.

I didn’t do those to hear that. I just hoped to reduce her pain. It broke my heart everytime I saw she endured all the pain. I didn’t remember when was crying became a daily activity other than those days.

The greatest of the greatest was, I was the one who witnessed the vey last seconds of her life. I was the one who first noticed her saturated oxygen dropped very low, then I was the one who ran into hear ear to whisper tahlil and syahadat. Until her last breath.

After she has gone, I continue taking care of my dad. Not only about the meals, but even for those small things like toping up his phone credit. I always put him first, even before Langit and le husband. I do really care about how he feels. I am often afraid that he feels lonely being without my mom. Eventough  sometimes it feels tired, but I can’t deny I enjoy taking care of him. I can’t help feeling that he deserves as good as what my mom had from me. Thus, as long as possible, I really want to do well for him.

———————————

Is it pure me who is talking above?

To be honest, last days with my mom, I felt that I wasn’t my self during those days. The one who was me wasn’t that brave, kind, and patient. I even wondered where that kind of attitude came from. I felt like something made me those things. Something beyond my control.

Then, it’s only after three years, It becomes clear.

After three years, I finally understand, although I believe she didn’t want to trouble me in any possible ways, there are things beyond our control. And as a verse is saying that one will never get other than what he works for, so was my mom. She just received the payment of her work through me.

After three years, I find a lot of answers to my long lost questions as a child.

After three years, a one year daughter was sent to me to show me just a tiny part that my mom had been through in raising me well.

After three years, I finally understand why we could never repay our mother with anything we have, why mothers have three times bigger portion than a father.

After three years, I finally found a perfect reason to survive and do all those hard works my mom once did.

And why that ustad words hit me hard.

I was moved by all the hard works my parents were doing to me in the past.

Action equals to reaction.

For what I am now, the good ones of course, all credit goes to my mother, my mother, my mother, and my father.

Posted in Maternité, Past learning, Thoughts

After Three Years

The end of this November will be the third year after mom left. I really have a lot in my mind. Things that finally being understood after three years after she’s gone. Things I have been going through since becoming a mother for a year.

I finally understood every single thing she has done in the past. At least why. I am still wondering a lot about the ‘HOW’. How she could survive with these endless work for years, how she could survive handling and doing everything well. How she could survive and kept staying sane.

Being a mother for a year, I have been a fussy one, I guess. I am not flexible, scheduled-oriented, I do sweat the small things. Sometimes I really don’t know who will have the most benefit by being this fussy. Me, Langit?

But, then I can argue. Looking back what I had been going through as a child, I thought my mother was one too. For some important things, she was pretty fussy. It made me unhappy. But again, those hard times were really paid-off. I witnessed  every single result of her hard works she had done to me.

I really remembered how persistent she was, taking me to YPM so I wouldn’t miss any single lessons according to the schedule. Even it took her so much troubles. Can you imagine, she sent me to the school by taking my little sister and my baby brother. We walked from home until the main street, then she left the stroller in one of small warung, and we rode on a mikrolet. After that, we still continued with bajaj until we arrived at the music school.

Then, how long my lesson was?
20 minutes. Yes, as long as 20 minutes only. So much troubles for a mere 20 minutes.

But, did she stop doing that? Nope. She kept doing it for thirteen years, although with different troubles. If someone asked me, I really couldn’t remember if I had missed any single lessons there. Even when I had my asthma, she really made me still attend the class. See, I really wonder how she could do that. How could she make me do that I mean. Not because of my asthma.

Even her friends were asking her why were taking so much troubles just for sending me to a piano.lesson? It was not even something very important. More, I wasn’t the one with talent too. Even more, she even didn’t have my father’s approval at the beginning. Did she quit? Absolutely not.

She really showed me hard work will never betray you. One by one, her hard works started showing results. Lots of results happened during my four years of college.

It started when I passed the audition for being a piano teacher and got my first job while I was only a second semester student. She was really proud of it until she couldn’t stop saying about her efforts to make me survived until the very end. She showed to those friends who once asked why went through so much troubles for  a simple piano lesson. Really, it made me seems to be the best child in the world, haha.

Guess I was really bloomed in my college years. After a job, I passed the English test which made me got a straight A without having to attend the class. It was only 5 students out of 101. Then, on the fifth semester, I once again passed another selection. A lecturer assistant for Basic Economics. It escalated my status also and it was even making me more famous, hahaha:))

It didn’t stop there. Along side with academic achievements, the personal things seemed doing well too. I really got pretty much attention from those guys around. From classmates, senior, even those from different majors. Yes, plural. Please, don’t throw up first until this story finished.

Saturday night at home spent by receiveing calls. Again, plural. Le husband had so many competitors back then when he called me on Saturday night. If you read this Yobo, please don’t discuss it later;)).

Was I happy? Yes, but surprisingly not really. Being famous and poured with so much attention were really not my thing. It gave me pressures. That was why I didn’t date, at all, during my college years. Not because I couldn’t but I chose not to. I enjoyed staying unreachable.

You may throw up now.

I was so grateful having those during my college years. The time when I had been mature enough. I couldn’t imagine if I got it during my high schools. I would be very tengil I guess.

Although those were my achievements, I almost never thought to take all the credits for me. Really, it wasn’t really me. It was all my mom’s. It was all her hard works for years. I was never being proud without remembering that was actually my mom’s doing. Had I have another mother but her, I would never ever reach those things. I would have never received all those compliments. I would have never felt so good about being myself. For that, I would never be able to thank her enough.

So, me being a fussy mother along this first year, is pretty much because of those things I wrote about. I couldn’t ask my mom how she had been doing with us technically since she wasn’t here. So I just can do what seems possible for me to get the same result. Things that my small brain thinks it fits well.

Two weeks ago, during my niece aqiqah event, there was an ustad who gave speech. There was something that really impressed me so much until I couldn’t forget it at all until today. He said,

“Jadi orangtua itu harus semangat. Semangat dalam mendidik anaknya dan beri yang terbaik. Kenapa? Ketika kita tua, anak-anak ngga mungkin ngga semangat ngurus orangtuanya”.

It hit me hard. Pretty hard.

Okay, since it will be a very long one, I think it will be better to make it two parts.

Keep going to the second, if you want.

Posted in Maternité, Thoughts

A battle To Win

This one is written when the heart and mind are not in its best shape and mood. This will be a long whining post which will make me look so ungrateful, selfish, and maybe a very bad mother. But, who cares?

I am someone with so little patience. In spite of those things I had written about this and that which look like such cool parenting advices, trust me, no theories can be easily applied when you are facing the real battle. So does it in parenting.

I really feel sorry about this little baby for having such an impatient mother. I won’t give any excuses to make me look better as well as give any explanations how good my daughter is. Instead, I will clearly say the truth of how I feel about this.

Motherhood is no joke. It’s tiring, emotionally draining, head and heart-aching, less sleeping, lots of works, demanding, high pressure, no definite break time and the best part of it, no resigning.

If this one is being considered as a job, I don’t know how to put a price tag on this thing. I don’t know what number would be good enough to pay someone to do such job.

Guess I really needs some space and time to think clearly. As for now, I’ll keep reading those texts le husband sent me to keep me sane.

image

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It made me feel even worse because he said all the truth.

It’s a very tough battle to win, on the rough road to walk.

Posted in Maternité, Past learning, Thoughts

Inflexible Parent(ing)

On Parenting post few months ago, I wrote back then that I had a really great parents. It was such a long post describing how great they were. But, as I believe that nothing good comes easy, then something great must take no easier, right?

Definition of good and great surely might be different from one to another. It depends on what values one hold. So, this one is probably very subjective.

My parents were pretty much inflexible for certain things when we were kids. Even for several things, they were still inflexible until we were come of age. If I looked back, truthfully, they were inflexible in almost everything, haha. Well, now I can laugh, back then, don’t ask me.

They were strict about school, praying, playing, toys, sleeping, eating, extra-culicular activities, what else any children would do?

They were not only inflexible, but also very non-arguable. But, my generations were those whose parents were mostly strict, hardly ‘listen’ to their children, and the time where physical punishments were acceptable.The children too were those who didn’t talk back to their parents. They did as they told.

It’s pretty much different with current situation when these days parents are quite flexible with their children. Those parents,who were once raised by inflexible parents, decided to become different parents from theirs.

Which one is better?

For some reasons, I believe being inflexible for certain things to the children is the best thing that parents should do. A little child will never know right from wrong if they never to be taught. Teaching that is not easy at all. It needs consistency for long time until the habit become character. Teaching something good  will never be easy.

Even after teaching them something continously at home, there is no guarantee the children will totally acquire it. Some real example that I witnessed was about doing five times prayer.

I went to Islamic school for kindergarten and elementary school. The place were Islamic values and rituals were applied in daily life. It were exposed to the students intensely five-eight hours per day, six days a week, almost entire year for six years (plus three for me).

After elementary, I continued junior high school in public school. It surprised me at first. Spending nine years in a school where once adzan was heard, the students would go to the mosque or else the teacher would make them too, then seeing how empty the mosque was at this current school. Once adzan for dzuhur prayer was heard, the most crowded place was the canteen.

Some of them might pray after eating, but mostly didn’t. And those were including the ones who went to the islamic school before. It happened also during my high school. I went to another public school too and at this school, it was like a reunion since I met so many friends from my elementary school, even one or two from kindy. Most of my elementary friends continued their junior high at the same school. So, practically, they spent almost the entire of their basic education at an Islamic school.

But what happened? Half of them were almost never prayed. We had two breaks at that time. First break at 9 am, some were doing dhuha prayer, and the second break was at 12 pm, the time for lunch and dzuhur prayer. Those friends who spent their nine years, or other were eleven years at an Islamic school, didn’t even bother to go to the mosque to pray. Let alone doing the sunnah pray, they didn’t even do the compulsory one. And they seemed easy about that.

Something was surely missing,right?

Yes, something was definitely missing : the force.

There were no longer those teachers who nagging them to pray once adzan was heard. No direct punishments when they didn’t pray as before. Only those were missing?

Nope. I believe there were an important thing that was missing right from the start.

The parents who taught them to pray and made it as daily habits at home.

We mostly move to different school once a certain level is done, teacher and friends surely come and go, but there is no such thing as moving to other parents nor come-and-go parents.

This is one of the reason why I believe for certain (or maybe many) things being inflexible is suitable for children. Sending them to a good place is probably not (good) enough. Nine to eleven years being wildly and continously exposed to lots of Islamic education doesn’t make one do at least the mere daily prayer.

Parents need to nurture the children themselves at home. It needs consistency and much inflexibility. Because you know, children are smart. They know how to manipulate and negotiate. Once you’re being (too) flexible on something very important (well, in my case, I highly considered doing five times prayer is important), children will know that they can negotiate with this. Maybe at first they will do the prayers because they are told to do it or because they are afraid of the punishment they will receieve for not doing that, but later, they will do it because they want to and they need it as they need to eat.

Parenting goals mostly are the long-term one. There is no instant process nor shortcuts. Being stern and inflexible are the way to tell the kids how important some matters are. Some matters that they can’t take it lightly if they don’t do it. Some matters that will later help and protect them to deal with this harsh life since the parents won’t be forever around.

On the bright side, pain and gain come in one package. There is no such useless effort. We will only reap what we sow. The result of the teaching will come in front of our eyes before we realize it. Once the habit stays, it will be hard to dissapear.

My question for me is, can I go through and bear those hard times while teaching my kids that ‘some important matters’, as well as my parents did with me?

Since I expect at least the same result, so I must, mustn’t I?

Parenting is surely one of the toughest job in the world. And there is no choice of become either part-time, freelancer, nor seasonal.

It’s full time job for a lifetime.

Posted in Langit Senja, Maternité

Baby’s Sleeping

Writing this at 5 am while Langit is still sleeping. Talk about sleeping, I often heard others were being surprised when I told them Langit always sleep in her own crib, and more in a separate room.

She starts sleeping by herself from the very first day at home. She sleeps in the same crib as I did 30 years ago. Yes, 30 years ago. The crib is nothing like small crib, but a big jati wooden one, that you can continue using it until so many years after. I remembered I was still sleeping there during elementary school.

Alhamdulillah, she has been comfortable on her own crib. Until this one year, not a single night she spend the night sleep other than on her crib. This is one thing that I am really grateful for. I like having a good night sleep after a long-tiring day, and it’s been comfortable to sleep peacefully without worrying about the baby.

Not only for me, Langit seems agree with me. She can’t sleep (for too long) other than on her own bed. Since 4 month old, she has been able to sleep through the night and you know how babies are doing while sleeping. They move everywhere,from here to there, and the bed will be very messy. Since she sleeps on her own crib, it’s very safe. I don’t have to worry about her falling down from the  bed.

This is also an advantage once she started standing and walking. Few these months, before calling us that she wakes up, she will play by herself inside. She goes around the crib, playing with the Pooh, the bolsters, the sheet, even kelambu. She will call me when she is bored and the bed is already at its finest messiness -___-.

The only one who longs to sleep together in one bed is le husband. He really likes to bring Langit to.our bed and end up sleeping by himself while the baby is still playing around. That is how the reality is different from the expectation.

On this eleven months, she sleeps once after breakfast or morning snack, after lunch, and the night sleep around 7-8. Before feeding, sleeping was something that I was being really strict about. Up until 6 months old, she rarely went outside. When I had something to attend to, it would do according to her sleeping time. When guest were coming, I wouldn’t allow them to wake her up for the sake of their want to play with her. Even to my mother in-law.

Why? It took so long until she fell asleep. Long breastfeeding and it was exhausting. I needed to recharge until the next waking time came. It wasn’t funny to play with a baby whose mother put lots of effort to make her sleep. The guest would leave once they finished playing, and what about me? I should repeat the whole process from the very start, all by myself. Wasn’t it a bit cruel?

But, recently, I have been very much flexible, especially during daytime. Like yesterday, when my in-laws came and she just slept for 15 minutes after lunch  I allowed them to wake her up to play. It was because I knew she would sleep again later. And it was true.

Well, that is all. It’s 6.30 already and I still haven’t heard any sound. I starts feeling anxious since it’s late and I haven’t even started my first battle in the morning. Sigh.

Bonne journée!

Posted in Langit Senja, Maternité

MPASI Updates 2

Here are some of updates of Langit’s eating experiences after five months starting her first food :

1. Eating is went well, alhamdulillah. Not easy at all, but still manageable.

2.  Eating Rules are still applicable. All those five rules are truly my principle of bearable feeding.

3. Langit has been mostly eating what the adults eat for the last two months. Only the texture needs a little bit adjustment.

4. Her food is nothing fancy like Salmon or any expensive ingredients. She eats what is available. Meat, chicken, any kind of fish like bandeng, tongkol, tuna, kakap, gurame, nila, even cuek. Yes, you read it right, ikan cuek. All is good.

5. Tofu or tahu is almost always available and be present in everyday meal at least once.

6. Compulsory fruit is Avocado. Given between breakfast and lunch. The other fruits are replacable such as mango, papaya, melon. Those are given together during breakfast before she eats her main course.

7. The last meal the day is flexible. It’s either fish tofu porridge, macaroni chicken cheese, or sweet potato oatmeal. Usually, it comes with a glass of orange squash if it is available.

8. I don’t do BLW. Almost never.

9. Glad no allergic signs appears until now.

10. My patience has been so much upgraded.

Keep fighting!

Posted in Langit Senja, Maternité

About feeding

Lately, half of my energy went to this thing called feeding. For this one thing, I had to give up several things so I could concentrate about this. Things I really like such having an aerobic exercise on Thursday, just because it didn’t go well with this feeding schedule.

Comparing to other moms stories, maybe Langit is slightly better since she almost never refuse the food that I serve for her. I remembered few of that she refused back then, but never directly refused. She would try some until she couldn’t take it. Another good thing is she rarely doesn’t finish her plate. For this one, I also really push and insist to finish what have been served until the last spoon.

BUUUTTT, all that is not easy. I have to think 1001 ways to make it. That is why I think, beside love and war, all is fair too in feeding a baby.

What I don’t mostly like about feeding because it is messy, and emotionally draining. During feeding, I also did some works like picked up every small rice that fell on the floor. I hated the way the rice would stick in the feet when others stepped on it. Only ones that fell on the floor?

Not.

I also cleaned those left on the chair, on the toys, on everything that we used during the feeding.
Other than that, I also did singing, playing kastanyet, tamborine, and any possible things that could keep her on her seat. It has been harder lately since she started learning to walk. So, she pushed me to take her out of her seat and move her either to the floor or stand up while holding on my sitting body.

No wonder I always feel so exhausted once the feeding is finished -___-.

But then, no matter how hard it takes, I will still do it every single day. Why? Because I consider it as one of the three most important things that my child deserves from her parents. As stated on my previous post, I believe that good nutrition, health, and education are the three things that every parents should give to the children in order to let them live well, not only for current being, also for long-term. So, those three things become the major reason why we have to work hard.

It makes me also become inflexible when it comes to feeding. Inflexible means I don’t allow others to take it lightly like saying Langit didn’t like the food or she had enough when seeing her being a bit cranky while eating. Or else when we wanted to go somewhere, it had to be done according to her meal time. No such thing like we went first, or she could eat later once we arrived at our destination.

Sorry, it is a BIG NO.

Better being late or cancel it than going without she finished her meal. I won’t deal with feeding when we were out.

On her 10 months to be, she has three big meals a day, breakfast, lunch, and early dinner. She has also fruit snacks between breakfast and lunch and sometimes after dinner or altogether with dinner. So, practically, I have this feeding battle at the very least three times a day.

What makes it paid-well is when the result of those hard work show through her good health and when those people acknowledge it when they see her. That is good enough for me.

Well, hopefully, we can continue doing well. Amin.

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