Year: 2006

Babytalk

Leilani is making further languauge progress: Her word for food has been “Nam-Nam” for a while now, it is German babytalk, and she can say “ball”… Today on our walk I picked up a round avocado that the wind had just blown off a tree. Leilani said “ball” and I explained to her it was an avocado that we’d eat for lunch. She thought for a few seconds and then said “Namnam ball”. New words now are “Pa” for brush (don’t ask me why) and she signs washing hands (more to tell us she understood what we want than to ask for it :-) and she has made up the cutest sign for flower – she crinkles up her nose and sniffs, because many flowers smell good. She does it without really smelling when we show her a picture of a flower and ask what it is. The most important word that we are working on now – she repeats it but doesn’t use it on her own yet – is “Weh-Weh” German babytalk for pain.

I noticed (from reading “Dear Abby” and mothering.com that the nation is divided on the subject of babytalk – so I need to add my two cents too. We do use babytalk on certain words to teach her much easier words, with easier sounds. “Ei-Ei” – means pet the cat gently (or don’t hit …, instead touch gently), “Weh-weh” – pain, “night-night” – sleep, “num-num”/”Namnam” – food (basically she started saying that on her own, I think it was banana that she tried to say, one of her first solids, but now nana -banana and num-num are definitly 2 different words)… These are words that are much easier for children to master than the adult version – the German “Essen” is a very hard word, so is the english “sleep”. Most often we use both, the adult word in whichever language we are speaking, and the baby word. When she says something understandable we echo her word back to her together with the translation – the dialog goes something like “Wawa!” (translated from German->) “You are saying Wawa, Mommy is saying Wasser (Daddy is saying water) wawa – water – wasser – would you like to drink?” “Wawa” … at this point the water for her is ready too and she drinks. We also use a high pitched voice and speak much more slowly and simplified, but still try to keep the grammer correct. Even though we planned on (and are still trying to) using more sign language we are still sticking with baby talk, signing is more efford than one would expect (hands out of direct field of vision, baby is beeing carried or crawls, hands full)

It is pretty important to me that Leilani learns to communicate as soon as possible, because it will decrease her frustration, not to brag about it or as a sign of intelligence (the person I regard as the most intelligent of all at all times, Albert Einstein supposedly started talking at the age of 5 years, and I personally know a bright 7 year old boy who started talking when he was almost 4). Leilani is a very active, and a little highstrung and nervous baby, who already throws pretty bad tantrums (screaming at the top of her lungs, throwing herself on the ground, hitting back of her head to the ground…) if she doesn’t get what she wants / needs. Unfortunately sometimes these are essential things like food, water, nursing, a nap (or important non-essentials like Tylenol for teething pain) and we sometimes are too busy to read her pre-verbal early signals. My theory goes that at least 2/3 of her tantrums could be prevented as soon as she uses language consistantely – I might be wrong and maybe she will throw tantrums just for the sake of it like some other mothers imply, but I want to try.

Feed Me!

Recently a friend asked what Leilani eats – my answer was not very enlightening… Just about everything we eat. So I paid a little more attention, among the things she had in the last 2 weeks were:

Homemade:

  • Veggie casserole (eggplant, okra, purple potatos, carrots and spinach) with tofu and Feta, lots of garlic and herbs
  • Andy’s french beef (gardenburgers in that case) in carrot – wine sauce (the alcohol evaporates completely when cooking)
  • Pan fried gardenburgers with pea sauce (with garlic)
  • Turkish almond – (raw) garlic – yoghurt dip once with bread once with noodles
  • Chinese stir fryed vegetables (wit garlic / ginger / black bean sauce)
  • Steamed vegetables (carrots, eggplants, okra, leafy greens…) with grains (often quinoa, amaranth, white or brown rice)
  • Pasta with pesto
  • Polenta with tomatosauce
  • Fish (salmon, cod, butterfish, pollok) grilled, steamed, panfried, in spinachsauce (fake sorrel sauce)
  • Guaccamole with bread, very few cornchips on the side
  • Salad (no aruggola) drenched in olive oil and cut finely
  • Carrot – pea sauce with tofu
  • Creamed Okinawa spinach (one of her favorits)
  • Homemade lasagna (spinach – tomato – feta – cheese)
  • Bread with: Butter, cheese, veggie lunchmeat, avocado
  • Toaster waffles (her favorite breakfast food)
  • Pancakes (with ground nuts and almonds)
  • Amaranth Flakes, puffed cereal
  • Organic fruit loops and raisins (her desert)
  • Small amounts of fruit: Bananas, papayas, persimons, apples, pears, sugar-apples (or attemoyas, not sure)
  • Freeze dried peas (her absolute favorite) and rasberries

Baby food:

  • Spinach lasagna
  • Rice / oat / mixed cereal with soymilk
  • Fruit in jars

Restaurantfood:

  • Mexican: Rice, beans, guaccamole, veggie burrito, fish burrito
  • Chinese: Steamed seabass in onion – ginger sauce, mixed vegetables
  • Pizza

Measurements

Leilani was at the doctor’s October 24th for a vaccine, but the nurses thought it was a check-up and did all the measurements. I’d been meaning to post the results, so here they are for the record:

  • Height: 29.5 inches = 75 cm = tall
  • Weight: 20.5 pounds = 9.5 kg= average
  • Head circumference = 14 inches = 36 cm = normal – Updated in December: that was a wrong measurment… see below

I just found the “official” 9m checkup paper that was made 2 weeks before that:

  • Height: 29 inches
  • Weight: 19 pounds 2 Ounzes
  • Head circumference = 17 1/4

Standing on her own two feet

Today Leilani stood up from a full sitting position all by herself for the first time.

We had finished lunch, and she was crawling around on the floor, eating puffs and peas as we usually let her do so we can finish our meal after feeding her. We were clearing the table and talking and facing away from the kitchen where Leilani was. When I turned around, there she was standing by herself in the middle of the floor, away from anything that could’ve helped her up.

She looked fairly confident and pleased with herself, and we cheered her. She stood for at least 10 seconds and I walked over as she swayed a bit, but she eventually sat down without falling. I got the video camera and we asked her to do it again, but she wouldn’t. So I’m not sure how she did it, probably from a 4-legged position like most kids. I wonder if she was motivated by us standing nearby, because I clearly remember we were standing around talking and not paying attention to her.

Communication

Leilani is doing really good talkingwise. The 3 new words now are up, this and me. Me (or more often Me Me Me Me!!!) means “I want that” and “I am not going to give it to you”. This means “What is this?” and “I want to look at this / smell this / examine this closely”. Up means “Pick me up”, “I am climbing the couch / chair”, “Up”, “Out” (of the house, of the water) and sometimes “Down” (as in on the floor out of the highchair). Fortunately she is pointing a lot, that makes it easier to understand.

I need to get more consistent using the signs, and also learn more of them, but she seems to pick them up very fast. She still can’t say “U” and her “O” is pretty bad, but she’s mastered a surprising number of consonants

A few days ago I dismissed her pleas “Up, Up, Up” as babbling when she was in the swing and I was hanging laundry. Then she called “Mama, Mama”, and when I looked over she said “Mama, Baby up”. Of course I took her out right away to reward great communication!

She now often signs “Milk” when she wants to nurse, which is a big improvement over saying mecc (or screaming). Andy looked at a picture book with her yesterday, and she saw a picture of a goat with nursing kids, and signed milk – that’s pretty smart! She also signs crab – which is indistinguishable from milk, Andy taught her that sign just 2 days before we looked at the Signing DVD. I am now trying to teach her to do the crab with both hands, but usually the context makes it pretty clear what she means.

I think I mentioned “Wawa” (water) before, she is now really good at telling us when she wants to drink, but she also points out the other waters (in bottles, glasses, faucets, ocean…)

She woke up the other day and saw Mikey sleeping next to her. She adores him, but he runs from her when she is awake, only comes close while she is sleeping (she is pulling tails these days) So she looked at Mikey with a big smile and said “Mei” I said “That’s right, that is Mikey” and she said “Ki”!