Entry tags:
Oswin and colic
I promised you Oswin updates.
She's starting to get the hang of this growing business. She's taking a lot more milk now and her arms and legs look a lot longer (though that's partly because she stretches out more now) and though they still look thin, they don't look like matchsticks any more.
She's about the size of an average newborn now. (she's just over two months old)
She's very cute. Tuesday night is RPG night, and Oswin has colic at the moment, so I volunteered to take her while Mummy Lindsey had a chance to do some gaming (I'll rejoin the game when the colic passes, but it really isn't fair to inflict screaming baby on the gaming group).
Luckily for me, she settled down and went to sleep in the baby sling as soon as she'd had her feed (Magic granny superpower), so I went out for a walk and showed her off to my friend Janet. Then I went for a walk round Co-op, where she was drooled over by various passing women. Then I went home and met my next door neighbours who were also united in adoration. It's partly the size that does it - really tiny babies are irresistible to a large proportion of the female population. Add in soft fuzzy hair and smooth skin and you have a killer combination. (I'd add in grey eyes, but she was asleep, so didn't even have that part of the weaponry available)
She's far more aware of people now. Very responsive to sounds, turns to listen to things, but now she can focus on faces and turns to look at your eyes. Saw something that I like to imagine was an early smile.
The colic is a killer though -both parents are really drained. I'm lucky, my children didn't have it, but an awful lot do. My friend Janet said she assumed that all babies had it. All hers did and all her grandchildren to (breastfeeding or bottle feeding makes no difference on this front). No one really knows what causes it. It may have nothing to do with tummies at all.
The NHS website says "Colic is the medical term for excessive, frequent crying in a baby who appears to be otherwise healthy and well fed. It is a common yet poorly understood condition, affecting up to one in five babies."
The only good thing about colic is that babies grow out of it after several months. But several months is a long time when you have several hours of screaming baby every day.

She's starting to get the hang of this growing business. She's taking a lot more milk now and her arms and legs look a lot longer (though that's partly because she stretches out more now) and though they still look thin, they don't look like matchsticks any more.
She's about the size of an average newborn now. (she's just over two months old)
She's very cute. Tuesday night is RPG night, and Oswin has colic at the moment, so I volunteered to take her while Mummy Lindsey had a chance to do some gaming (I'll rejoin the game when the colic passes, but it really isn't fair to inflict screaming baby on the gaming group).
Luckily for me, she settled down and went to sleep in the baby sling as soon as she'd had her feed (Magic granny superpower), so I went out for a walk and showed her off to my friend Janet. Then I went for a walk round Co-op, where she was drooled over by various passing women. Then I went home and met my next door neighbours who were also united in adoration. It's partly the size that does it - really tiny babies are irresistible to a large proportion of the female population. Add in soft fuzzy hair and smooth skin and you have a killer combination. (I'd add in grey eyes, but she was asleep, so didn't even have that part of the weaponry available)
She's far more aware of people now. Very responsive to sounds, turns to listen to things, but now she can focus on faces and turns to look at your eyes. Saw something that I like to imagine was an early smile.
The colic is a killer though -both parents are really drained. I'm lucky, my children didn't have it, but an awful lot do. My friend Janet said she assumed that all babies had it. All hers did and all her grandchildren to (breastfeeding or bottle feeding makes no difference on this front). No one really knows what causes it. It may have nothing to do with tummies at all.
The NHS website says "Colic is the medical term for excessive, frequent crying in a baby who appears to be otherwise healthy and well fed. It is a common yet poorly understood condition, affecting up to one in five babies."
The only good thing about colic is that babies grow out of it after several months. But several months is a long time when you have several hours of screaming baby every day.
