My Ten Pound Baby Is Not
by Lela Davidson on June 29, 2010
in Rugrats, Tweens, & Other Offspring, motherhood
My daughter turned ten last week. She wanted to see her birth certificate so we got out the baby book. There on the first page a blatant error stood out. Her birth announcement read 8 pounds 14 ounces. Shocked that I would make such a mistake I searched for other documentation. The hospital record of birth, her crib identification card, and in the doula’s notes all confirmed her actual birth weight: 8 pounds 14 1/2 ounces. Damn. My second baby, the one who had to be pried out of me under anesthesia, the one with the Apgar score of 1, the one who nearly killed us both was a TEN pound baby. Ten.
Okay, so maybe I exaggerated a tiny bit. But when you have a baby that weighs in a 9 pound 14 1/2 ounces, you are allowed to round up. It’s an ounce and a half for goodness sake. And that’s just what I did, from day one she was a 10 pound baby. I told everyone, have been telling everyone for the last decade that I birthed a ten pound baby. It indicates my kick-ass-ness as a mother and underscores her tomboyish toughness. But she wasn’t just under 10 pounds; she was just under 9 pounds. The fact would not reconcile with my myth.
“I don’t care what it says,” my husband told her. “You’ll always be a ten pounder to me.”
That’s our story and we’re sticking with it.
Contest: Occupy Your Baby, Or Else
by Lela Davidson on August 27, 2009
in Rugrats, Tweens, & Other Offspring, motherhood
When I was young and childless and really enjoyed grocery shopping, I recall once asking my husband why anyone would bring a small child into such a peaceful place as a grocery store. Ditto for a restaurant. He responded that sometimes they just had to. It didn’t make any sense until years later when I too had to cart unruly and unwilling children off to Safeway or my favorite sushi haunt. Sometimes I just had to.
I used bribery of the food kind. Once, when I really, really, really needed the special kind of torture that is TJ Maxx, my son went through an entire bag of Goldfish. One at a time. As well as that worked, now we have something better. It’s called an iPhone! And if you thought Scribble rocked, wait until you check out Occupy Baby.
Occupy Baby is an iPhone/iPod app that plays a continuous animation of a farm with animals that moo, crow and oink. That’s WAY less annoying to your flight mates than a whining toddler. To make it even more convenient, there’s another new product: iBends. This is a stand for your iPhone or iPod Touch. And the beauty of this gadget is that it’s made from a rigid piece of plastic that easily bends into use, and then goes right back to flat for easy storage in your wallet, purse or pocket so you can always have a place to hold your iPhone when you need it. iBends are great for watching movies on the iPhone too. Or even setting up your phone on your nightstand so you can see the time without have to reach for it or creating an instant night light anywhere.
Cool, right? You totally want these don’t you? If you have an annoying baby, the answer had better be yes!
Good news! I have three sets of iBends and three free app codes for Occupy Baby to give away. To be entered to win, all you need to do is share this post on Twitter or Facebook, and leave a comment telling us about the time you most needed these handy new tools. I’ll choose the winners at random next week!
Thanks for playing, and I can’t wait to hear your stories!

How to Crate Train a Child
by Lela Davidson on May 24, 2009
in Rugrats, Tweens, & Other Offspring
Crate training children: wacky new parenting philosophy or a helpful and overdue tool in the war against spoiled rotten children? It’s not hard to think of the many good reasons to crate train a child. Potty training comes to mind, as well as making travel easier. In addition, it’s much easier to manage teenagers who have been crate trained.
What are the Benefits of Crate Training?
Our parents’ generation got it almost right with playpens, but crates are easier to transport and, more importantly, extremely restrictive. Despite their confining nature, children can learn to love a crate just as they would their own bedroom. The crate becomes a familiar and secure place that is also mobile. Whether you need to take your darling on a long car ride, stay at a motel, or perhaps just out go for the evening, you can rest assured that your crate-trained child will be safe and contained.
Crate Placement at Home
Place the crate in an area where the child may be with you, or at least observe you at close range. Do not put the crate in an attic, basement, or other secluded portion of the house as the child will only cry incessantly and therefore negate the benefits of crate training. The kitchen or family room is an ideal location. At night you can place the crate in the child’s bedroom, or, if you are crate training as a cost saving measure so that you do not have to upgrade to a larger home, just leave it in the kitchen. If you are particularly attached to your offspring, put the crate in your own bedroom.
Potty Training the Crate Trained Child
A key principle of crate training is to teach your child that you don’t mess where you sleep and eat. While human children do not naturally possess this instinct, consistent crate training will eliminate the need for agonizing potty training later. Every time the child goes in his diaper, just put him in the crate. He’ll get the message soon enough. Remember, children should never be given free reign of the house because they will end up impossible to train, potty or otherwise.
Crate Discipline
If your child whines or complains while in the crate, administer the appropriate admonition. Never, under any circumstances take a child out of a crate when he is fussing. That only rewards and reinforces bad behavior. You may want to give your child a special toy or treat just for when he is in the crate. Something Benadryl-filled works well.
Crate training may seem extreme, but I predict it’ll catch on quick. Please share your success stories and helpful tips in the comments below.
Something tells me this is nothing like what the folks at Parent Bloggers had in mind for this post. For traditional potty training, try something like Pull-Ups.
Making Babies…. Oh the Glamour!
by Lela Davidson on March 3, 2009
in Uncategorized
I had my last baby when I was thirty. And when I say last, I mean that’s it. I won’t be one of those women taking prenatal vitamins and Boniva at the same time. I don’t have the energy. I waited until the ripe old age of twenty-eight to have my first child, then followed up with a second only twenty-two months later. I had to work quickly because way back then we were afraid to get pregnant after thirty-five. A lot has changed in the last ten years. Pregnancy over forty has become accepted and, if you believe the celebrity photos, easy.
As I inch toward forty, the biological clock still ticks. Instead of have-a-baby-have-a-baby, it now says just-one-more-just-one-more. I fanaticize that if I had another baby, I’d do everything right this time. I would coordinate perfect outfits, put on makeup, and shower every day. I indulge this dream for about a minute before I remember the sleepless nights, continuous feeding, and far-flung emotions. Between post-partum, PMS, and peri-menopause I can’t imagine what older moms are going through. I’m pretty sure if you knocked on their doors at nine in the morning, they wouldn’t be red carpet ready.
Despite the reality of baby rearing, glitz and ease is exactly what we see in those magazines we peek at in line at the grocery store. People may complain that Hollywood glamorizes young pregnancy by holding up Jamie Lynn Spears and Ashlee Simpson as role models, but I’m more offended by the forty-is-the-new-twenty-two celebrities that are selling us regular women a bill of goods.
- Gorgeous Naomi Watts recently gave birth to a second son at age forty. She claims to have lost all her baby weight breastfeeding. I’m sure it had nothing to do with the live in personal chefs and trainers.
- Forty-year-old Australian actress Rachel Griffiths plays an American on Brothers and Sisters. She’s pregnant with her third and like our homegrown celebs, she has a penchant for unique names. She has a son named Banjo. Let’s hope age has wised her up. If not, she may end up with a cute little Fiddle or Harmonica.
- Desperate Housewife Marcia Cross gave birth to twin daughters at age forty-five. Seriously? At least she’ll be able to use her AARP travel discount to take them on their senior trip.
- Supermodel Stephanie Seymour recently had another baby at forty. Paparazzi caught her frolicking in the surf. Is it wrong to hate her? There’s not enough Pilates in the world to get me into a bikini post childbirth – and I started ‘young’.
- Perhaps the wisest is none other than the daughter of the King himself, Lisa Marie Presley. She welcomed twin girls last year. She was forty, but she was prepared. Ms. Presley had two other children 16 and 19 years ago, so now she’s got live-in childcare. That’s what I call planning ahead.
Show me these A-listers at nine o’clock in the morning. Show me these beautiful people frantically chasing down a toddler, trying to get neon poop out of the carpet, and dripping in spit up. Then I’ll be impressed. My advice? If you’re planning to get pregnant over forty, do yourself a favor and cancel your subscription to People magazine.
Cloth Diapers Are Not For Earth Mama Wannabes
by Lela Davidson on August 28, 2008
in Uncategorized
I grew up on the west coast. I lived in Seattle when I had my first child. I shopped at Trader Joe’s across the street. I tried to be an Earth Mama, I really did. When my son was born I was determined to at least attempt the cloth diaper route, despite the fear of diaper rash. Even with memories of a smelly white bucket my mom used to rinse out my brothers nasty skivvies, I still tried to be a Good Mother.
I blame the hospital for my failure. Or maybe the custom of circumcision. Who came up with that? See, I had my boy circumcised before we left the hospital (oh yeah, that’s a whole other issue) and so we had to use disposable diapers for the first week or so. That’s what they told us. So I did and everything was fine.
Then came the exciting day of delivery from the diaper service. (Not only is using cloth diapers good for the earth, but any time you can use a service for a household chore it’s a bonus.) They showed up with this enormous stack of diapers and the contraption I was to keep the soiled ones inside until the next week when they swapped out the stinkies for fresh.
I quickly went to work trying out the new diapers. We blew through four outfits that afternoon. Seems I wasn’t quite into the knack of getting the things on properly. Instead of the one little disposable packet I had been managing, I was now faced with maneuvering not only an unwieldy piece of fabric , but also the little plastic pant that went over top. (I’m sure they’re much better now, but was ten years ago and you pretty much needed an engineering degree to figure them out.)
Still, I was determined. I was totally into it until it came time to pack. There’s nothing like timing to help you make a decision. We were off to visit the family for a weekend – two days. I counted out the diapers I’d need. Turns out you go through a LOT more cloth diapers than disposable on account of those throw-away kind hold about a gallon of pee. Cloth diapers hold more like a teaspoon. So here I am with this mountain of diapers on the bed. I filled a whole suitcase with them. Then I took them out of the suitcases, loaded them back into the sack they arrived in, and made a phone call.
Six hours of cloth diapering? Not bad, for a latte sippin‘ Earth Mama Wannabe.
Birth: You Can’t Plan It
by Lela Davidson on August 16, 2008
in Uncategorized
The morning my daughter was born the sun rose, birds chirped, and I timed contractions. Then I called my doula, whose job it was to ensure that all doctors, nurses, anesthesiologists, surgeons, friends, family, and husbands, stick to — The Birth Plan.
In case you’re unfamiliar, The Birth Plan consists of detailed instructions for how your baby will enter this world. It is formulated in the comfort of your living room while you and your doula sip tea and admire each other’s pedicures. The actual birth takes place in a greenish room where instead of chamomile, you would accept heroin from a street dealer should one conveniently appear.
After having suffered through childbirth, most women would worship the doctor who offers a cesarean. Not me. I wanted to actualize my womanhood. I needed to push that baby out. Having had a cesarean with my first, I opted for a VBAC, and in so doing also made my choice for minimal pharmaceutical assistance.
“Natural childbirth was fine, honey,” my mother said. “But that was before we had the drugs.”
For hours I labored according to The Birth Plan. I breathed, counted, and groaned. It sucked. I got stuck in the bathtub, unwilling to move. Even when the water got cold I wouldn’t budge, but remained there moaning like an injured cow. The contractions came so fast and lasted so long that it seemed like one continuous, gnawing, increasingly unbearable pain.
After eight hours, the pain brought me to my senses. I agreed to the drugs. Just a little mind you – just enough to take the edge off. But Demerol is a gateway drug. Forget nature, I wanted the needle. My Grape Nut eating, placenta-keeping doula was disappointed when I requested the epidural, but supported me anyway. It was, after all, a legitimate stipulation in Plan B, paragraph 3 of The Birth Plan.
I spent the next several hours turning from side to side, elevating one or another part of my body, and visualizing my baby descending the birth canal. (WAY easier when you’re high!) But my baby didn’t want to come out. We would get her just to the brink and she’d twist herself so that we thought she’d be stuck up there forever. After hours of monitoring and changing position and measuring, we decided to get her out.
My husband smiled, the doula frowned. I surrendered. Nurses shaved me and counted instruments, then rolled me to the OR. Suddenly I felt a sharp popping sensation unlike the slow and steady agony of labor. When I told the doctors, eyes opened wide and the surgeon ordered the nurse to check the baby’s heart rate. Again.
“You’re going under,” the doctor snapped. I watched the mask cover my nose and mouth.
***
Before I was fully aware, someone handed me a wriggly, sweet smelling, bundle. Her fresh skin peeked out at me from beneath soft flannel. She squirmed in my arms and arched her disproportionately large head toward my breast.
I couldn’t have planned it better.
For New Mamas
by Lela Davidson on September 6, 2007
in Uncategorized
In honor of my friend SA and the new Baby Girl she’s expecting soon. (And also because I’ve applied for a blogging job at BumpBelly and wouldn’t I so rock it?) Here’s some unsolicited advice. Okay, some MORE unsolicited advice.
How and When to Stop Breastfeeding
The Truth About Labial Adhesions
How to Choose a Biblical Baby Name
How to Cope With Breastfeeding Challenges
How to Record Your Child’s Life in Words
Breast Care 101 For Nursing Mothers
How to Start Bottle Feeding Your Baby


