Okay, here’s what you’ve all been dying to know: what does a typical day with newborn twins look like? What do you have to do with them all day? How is it different than having one baby?

Well, to answer the last question first, it is not all that different than having one baby. It is more work, and sometimes there are logistical difficulties, but mostly, it’s just feeding two babies instead of one. It gets really difficult when Sammy is around – especially if there is only one adult in the house. I try to avoid that situation as much as possible. Two days a week, I am alone with Leo and Zoe and Sam in the morning. If the babies wake up at different times and Sam is helpful about getting ready for school on her own, everything is fine. But when both babies wake up and want to eat at the same time, it gets dicey. That happened this morning. Luckily, Sammy has really stepped up to the plate, getting herself dressed quickly and not throwing any fits. More about how I handle that later.

Zoe and Leo are still on a three-hour feeding cycle, which is how they came home from the NICU. The doctors have told us to keep this schedule until they are at least two months old (they are seven weeks now), except at night, when they say we can allow them to go four or five hours between feedings. The doctors want the babies fed aggressively until they catch up to their peers – meaning when they make it on to the growth chart. Preemies do gain weight faster than full-term babies, and they do catch up, but it takes a while. I used to set my alarm at night and we’d wake them up if they slept too long, but I’ve stopped doing that. According to the doctors, both Zoe and Leo are eating well and gaining weight extremely well, so I don’t see why we shouldn’t allow them to sleep if that’s what they need. We need it, too. Most of the time, they go four or five hours between feedings at night anyway, but Leo has gone as long as six and a half. And sometimes they only go three, just like during the day. Those are the tough nights. But that’s no different than any single newborn, really, except that we can’t take turns – both of us are involved in every feeding.

Generally, we’ve tried to keep both babies on the same schedule, meaning that if they don’t both wake up at the same time, we’ll wake up the sleeper so we can feed them both at once. Every mother of twins I’ve spoken to (except one) and every book I’ve read and every web site I’ve browsed has told me to do it this way. In fact, keeping both babies on the same schedule was the number one piece of advice. I’m not sure why. It works for us most of the time, but mostly because we are feeding them both breastmilk and formula. Because they are preemies, the doctors told us that they both must have at least two bottles of high-calorie formula per day, so exclusive breastfeeding is out. (I wouldn’t have been able to do that anyway.) So, when there are two adults in the house, I nurse one baby and the other baby gets a bottle from the other adult. At the next feeding, we switch. If both babies are on the same schedule, this works out very nicely. If they are staggered it gets confusing because I might have to nurse one and then nurse the other almost immediately, which doesn’t work. So I’ll skip nursing that one and then go too long without nursing and my milk supply suffers.

But when only one person is home, you want them staggered so you don’t have to try to feed both at once. I suppose some parents find ways to feed two babies at once on a regular basis and enjoy the time-savings, but to me, it’s more trouble than it is worth. I haven’t even tried to nurse two at once, and I don’t intend to. The way that Leo squirms, it would be impossible anyway.

But sometimes I have to deal with both at once. Sometimes they both wake up to eat at the same time and I’m the only one home. I’ve tried a number of things to deal with this. Sometimes, I just let one cry until the other one is finished. That has to mean that Zoe is first to eat though, since Leo needs to be held upright for a long time after he eats and she’d be crying for an hour if she were second. So if Leo is screaming louder and I don’t want to make him wait, I’ll try to feed them both at once. I’ve done this by setting one up in a car seat on a coffee table in front of me, or on a chair next to me, and holding the other. I’ll nurse the one I’m holding and bottle-feed the one in the car seat. This works, but they never get quite a full feed, and I don’t like not being able to quickly burp the one in the car seat. I wouldn’t do this on a regular basis, not matter how efficient it is. I did it this morning, nursing Zoe and giving Leo a bottle. While I was doing it, the babysitter arrived to take Sammy to school and I gave her my keys and instructions for the day and said goodbye to Sammy and made sure she took her lunch and her umbrella. I felt like twin-supermommy!

I’m not sure how much longer the breastfeeding will last. My supply isn’t that great so a lot of time I’m nursing and giving a bottle to “top them off.” Then I have all the downsides of nursing, plus all the extra dirty bottles to clean. Leo has become a pain to breastfeed because he keeps popping off and squirming. He does the same thing with a bottle, but at least he’s not scratching and biting me in sensitive places that way. But I’ll probably continue, at least with Zoe, mostly because it’s still easier to nurse in the middle of the night, and because it does save money. The bonding was great, but I think I’m over that. I’ve bonded with both of them now, and they are starting to interact with us a bit more in other ways, so it’s not as big of a deal. Once they are both bottle-feeding and more mature, one person might be able to feed them both at the same time more easily, especially when they can hold their own bottles.

Another thing we do is keep a log of all of their feeds and diapers. This is standard fare for twins also. I thought it would be a pain and maybe not worth the hassle, but it is so necessary. I can’t tell you how many conversations we’ve had like this:

Adam: Did you do Leo or Zoe last time?
Amy: I can’t remember. Don’t you remember?
Adam: Well, I know Leo pooped earlier and I changed it, but was that the last feed?
Amy: I don’t know. I think I fed Zoe last time. Right?
Adam: I don’t know. Oh, wait, I remember – I fed Zoe last time because I remember giving her her vitamins.
Amy: Oh yeah, that’s right. And I gave Leo his Zantac. But wait. Oh no, that’s right.
Adam: So that means that I feed Leo now, right?
Amy: Wait, now I’m confused. Who did you say you fed last time?
Adam: I don’t remember what I just said.
Amy: Me either.
Adam: Let’s go look at the log.

I’m not exaggerating. We have witnesses.

Having a video monitor has been super-helpful. We still can’t always recognize which one is crying. And it does matter. We ignore Leo’s crying much more than we ignore Zoe’s. Much of the time, there is nothing we can do to help Leo, but if Zoe is crying before feeding time, it probably means her diaper is leaking or she is lying in a pool of spit up or she has a poopy diaper. Those are things we can fix.

Another challenge with twins is keeping up with the supplies. We go through diapers and wipes at an insane rate. And then, preemies grow so fast! We were short on preemie sized diapers so I ordered another case from Amazon, but then a few days later, they had grown out of that size and we ended up with hundreds of unused tiny diapers. (We’ll donate them to the NICU.) Both Leo and Zoe grew quickly out of their preemies-sized clothing, too, and are now growing out of the newborn stuff and moving on to “0-3 month” size. For a while, I was rearranging their drawers every week. We used less than one case of newborn sized diapers as well – they were only in that size for a couple of weeks. Thank goodness for Amazon. I can get anything within two days without leaving my home.

It can also be difficult to keep track of whose stuff is whose. Pacifiers, clothing, half-used burp cloths, bulb syringes, syringes for medications, etc. We have to have a system for everything. Luckily, I enjoy system-building! I’ve got the whole house set up pretty well right now.

I was really worried about bathing twins because I had it in my head that I’d have to bathe both at once. Of course you don’t bathe both at once – at least not when they are newborns! The NICU gave us a little tub that we used a few times, but they grew out of it and then I tried using a little chair in the sink. But that doesn’t submerge them in the water and they hate it, so I use it to soap them up, then throw in on the floor and dunk them in the sink to rinse them. They love that. I hate using the kitchen sink, though. I never feel like it is really clean. I just bought an inflatable tub that goes in the regular tub to see how that works. I probably bathe each one about once or twice a week.

Of course, we have to trim their fingernails. No difference there between twins and a single baby – just double the work. Neither one has enough hair to brush, but Zoe has developed a bad case of baby acne and we have to wipe her face after each feed.

Laundry is pretty crazy. I didn’t do any laundry until recently because Adam and my parents and our babysitter did it all. Only now am I starting to take over that task. I’d guess we’re doing about a dozen loads a week. It’s not just the baby clothes and blankets and burp cloths – it’s also the 2-3 shirts a day that Adam and I each go through because of the spit up, and the extra outfit Sam wears each day since she has to change her clothes when she comes home from school (germs, you know, since they are preemies and we have to be super-careful about them not getting sick). It helps that we have lots and lots of swaddle blankets and wash cloths (which we use as burp cloths). It’s worth the investment to ensure that you can go three days without running out. I’d guess that we have about 50 burp cloths to cover that, and about a dozen blankets.

Speaking of swaddling, we’re not doing that this time around, whereas it was a mission-critical skill with Sammy. Leo sleeps in his car seat because of his reflux so can’t be swaddled, and Zoe doesn’t need to be swaddled to be happy. We keep Leo’s car seat in the crib to keep it off the floor, and we only have the one crib, so Zoe sleeps next to a giant car seat, and they can’t even see each other. That bums me out, but it’s the best method we’ve found so far. I just discovered that Leo loves to be rocked in the car seat so I’m going to buy a swing and see if he can sleep in that. But our dream of having them sleep together as babies probably isn’t going to happen.

Another key with twins: have a place to safely stow a baby in every room of the house. (I call these devices, “baby jails,” since they are basically ways to keep the baby from getting out.) You never know when you’ll need to put one down and deal with the other. We have a couple of bouncy seats but the babies are really still too small to enjoy them. But we do have a super Ikea changing table in the living room which is like a hammock and can be used for naps. And the extra car seat is usually available. We have the Pack ‘n Play set up in our bedroom. They’re still little enough to safely leave on our bed or on the floor on a blanket without supervision. This will get more challenging later, so we’ll need more baby jails like swings and exersaucers and such.

So what is a typical day like for me? After a night of about 5-6 hours sleep (broken up into two chunks), I’ll wake up, feed two babies, and get Sam ready for school. Then I’ll have about an hour before the next feeding so I’ll try to feed myself and drink as much coffee as possible. (I’ve stopped worrying about caffeine in the breastmilk. They’ll live.) Then I feed two babies again and shower in my time off. There might be time for a quick nap here, or possibly some work on my computer like paying bills or writing a blog post. If I’m on top of things, I’ll unload the dishwasher and reload it with the previous night’s bottles and maybe start a load of laundry. Then I feed two babies again and then eat “lunch.” By around 2pm, I’m usually dressed and fed and ready to go out somewhere if necessary. (I’ve made a point of showering and getting dressed most days and even though it takes until the afternoon, it’s worth it.) Adam gets home from teaching somewhere in here on the days that he teaches. (When he doesn’t teach, he usually tries to work from home but will feed the second baby and help with laundry and dishes and everything else.) Someone picks up Sam from school. Sometimes that is me. Some days the babysitter comes around this time and entertains Sam and helps with the late-afternoon feeding. Babysitter or not, if any errands need to be run, someone tries to dart out between feedings. Some days I take Sammy with me to the pharmacy or the post office and call it quality time with her. (And really, we do enjoy that.) If I’m totally exhausted, I might take a nap in here. Otherwise, I’m shopping online or opening Amazon boxes or Putting Stuff Away. I can’t tell you how much time I spend Putting Stuff Away. If I go one day without Putting Stuff Away, the house becomes completely disorganized and that’s when I start to lose my mind. That brings us to around 6pm. Because we’ve had so much help with meals, I haven’t yet gotten into a rhythm of making dinner, so there might be a scramble here for food, or I might prepare something. But we almost always still sit down at the table – Sammy, Adam, and I – and eat together. Then we have to immediately try to figure out how bedtime for Sam will work, because a feeding inevitably overlaps with that long process. (We really need to get Sam’s bedtime down to a reasonable time instead of the hour-long process that it is now.) I wish I were more organized at the end of the day, but we don’t keep the twins on a rigid schedule, so we never know exactly how the timing will go. The free time after this feeding is usually reserved for dishes, making Sammy’s lunch, more Putting Stuff Away, other chores, and maybe a little bit of TV. Then there is another feed around 11pm which ends around midnight, and the adults go to sleep. Usually, we only have one true middle of the night feeding to deal with after that.

That makes seven feedings a day. Each one takes about an hour per baby, if you include changing their diapers, burping them, bathing them, soothing them, and doing whatever else needs to be done with them. That makes 14 hours per day of hands-on baby duties. (They sleep the rest of the time.) Most days, I only do a little more than half that. Maybe nine or ten hours, tops – sometimes only seven. The rest is handled by Adam or the babysitter. There really isn’t that much other work related directly to the babies (laundry and dishes and opening Amazon boxes, mainly), and Adam has been helping so much that it’s not overwhelming. (My parents also did a lot of that work while they were here.) And since I’ve been using Amazon for supplies, Peapod for groceries, and using every short-cut I can think of for meals (frozen food, pre-prepared food from the grocery store, pizza deliveries, ready-to-heat meal services, take-out, and mostly, lots of help from friends and neighbors), I’ve had enough time to do things like write blog posts, take Sammy to her gym, take Sammy to her dance lessons, attend a picnic, take Sammy to the playground, etc. On top of that, because of technology, I’ve spent most of the time while feeding babies reading books on my Kindle or checking Facebook or e-mail on my Droid. That time is relaxing and enjoyable. I don’t feel harried or overworked most of the time. The worst part is just the repetitiveness of it all – and the feeling that there is no way out of this routine for many, many months to come. And that is no different than it was with one baby. Oh, I take it back – that is the second-worst thing. The worst thing is listening to your baby cry and not being able to do anything about it. Thank goodness Zoe is so mellow and happy so it’s only Leo who is crying. If both were crying as much as he is, I’d probably be a wreck.

The biggest difference between my first experience with an infant and this one is not that I have two babies. It is that I have perspective. I know that this time will end. Of course, I knew that last time, but it wasn’t real to me. I had no idea how much easier it would get, and how different things would be in a year. I feared that I had given up all my other values forever, for my sweet baby Sam. And that was scary. This time, I know that this period is an investment. And since it doesn’t feel permanent, I’m able to enjoy my two new sweet babies, Leo and Zoe, so much more. Some days are torture, and some are just filled with drudgery, but most of the time, I’m enjoying myself. No one is more surprised about that than I am!

Disclaimer: this post was written on little sleep and during extreme stress.

We f-ed up big time last night. We had friends over for dinner and allowed the twins’ schedule to fall apart. We wanted to talk and so the minute Leo or Zoe fussed, they got fed just to keep the peace. And they napped in the living room because it was easier than bringing them up to the nursery. Neither one slept more than a few minutes at a time. Today is a nightmare–they won’t eat a full meal but cry continuously for more as soon as I put them down. Last night they slept, but not in as long stretches as usual.

What I’ve learned (well, I already knew it, but it’s been reinforced) is that we’ve been doing so well with the twins because we’ve maintained discipline. Discipline means never feeding a baby just to stop its crying. They eat when we say they eat (although we take their signals into account and allow for growth spurts and such). Demand-feeding leads to snacking and short naps, which is good for nobody in the family. I don’t know how people can think that an infant knows what is best for it when it comes to food and sleep. Sammy is five years old and she still falls apart every time I get lazy and allow her to manage her own food and sleep. It is the parent’s job to encourage healthy eating and sleeping habits, which pretty much means consolidation of each. Sure, you let go little by little, and some kids can figure out what is best for them earlier than others, but it is pure insanity to allow a newborn infant to dictate when it eats and when it sleeps. Having two babies just makes it that much more clear. It takes discipline to act in everybody’s long-range interest. It takes discipline to hear your baby crying but say to yourself, I know what he needs better than he does, and to wait.

I think the problem for first-time parents is sorting out the difference between taking the baby’s signals into account and letting the baby dictate the schedule. It’s a fine line, and nothing but experience can teach you the difference. With Sam, I think we fell too much towards not listening to her signals. We were afraid that any deviation would “spoil” her, which was really stupid, in retrospect. A rigid schedule is just as ridiculous as demand-feeding. But the demand-feeding advocates make me more angry than the schedulers, just as subjectivists make me angrier than intrincicists. (And D’s make me angrier than M’s, if you know anything about DIM.)

Right now, I’m solving the problem we created last night by letting both babies cry. Earlier this morning, I continued with the short-range method of feeding them as soon as they cried, just hoping that they’d get back on track on their own. But they never did. Now I have to suck it up, and writing this blog post is a good distraction (and running the noisy dishwasher helps too). They have clean diapers, they’ve been fed recently (although neither ate much), they are warm and comfortable. But they can’t settle down because their rhythm is off. They will each be fed three hours after the beginning of their last feed and no sooner. In my experience, this “reboot” will fix the problem.

And now the three hours is up. THANK GOD!!!!!!!!!!!!!

A conversation between Sammy and her Grando (my dad):

G:  Sammy, when does your battery run out?

S:  I don’t have a battery! What do you think I am, a statue?

G:  Where do you get your energy?

S:  From all the chocolate!

One surprising joy of parenting a full-day school kid is preparing lunch. I’m absolutely loving putting together Sammy’s lunch each day. Because of the twins I haven’t been cooking at all, but putting a little lunch together gives me a small version of that value. I enjoy trying to make Sam’s lunch just a little bit different each day, and to put a fun variety of things in her lunchbox. There’s a real challenge in doing this day after day, especially when my grocery shopping is a chaotic mess and the choices in the kitchen are limited.

Today, she’s having half a turkey and butter sandwich (one of her favorites), a wedge of Laughing Cow cheese (which she picked out at the market), a few snap pea pods with a tub of leftover ranch dressing from Popeye’s Chicken (I have 2 ounce cups with lids for ranch dressing on order from Amazon but I was pleased to have figured out a way to do it in the meantime), a small plum, a leftover fortune cookie, and a container of shelf-safe milk.

Someday she’ll prepare her own lunch and I’m sure I’ll be relieved, but for now, I love this little way of caring for her.

I think this is going to do it for Sam’s 5 year photo. It’s almost a month late, but at 5 years old a month doesn’t make much difference. Adam made the sign a few days after her birthday, but it sat around so long that it got “decorated.” Hey, it just reflects the reality of our lives. And Sam does not like posing, so we had to get her while she had a baby in her lap. Oh well, it’s good for perspective, right?

No, those are just rationalizations. The reality is that my new parenting motto is: Good Enough!

Adam calls Zoe, “Z,” and I call her “Zo-Zo.” I wonder which will win out as her nickname, if either. We tried to pick two nickname-proof names, but I guess there is no name that can’t be mangled.

Zoe had a checkup at the pediatrician today and I took both babies all by myself for the first time. (Adam had to pick up Sammy from school.) It was easy!

Zoe is now newborn size, at least what passes for newborn size in our family – 6 pounds, 8 ounces – 4 ounces more than Sammy weighed at birth. She’s gaining weight at exactly the right pace and continues to be perfectly healthy.

While undressing Zoe to have her weighed, a potato chip fell out of her clothing, right in front of the nurse. How embarrassing. No wonder she’s gaining so much weight – munching on chips behind my back! (It took me a minute to realize that I had gotten her dressed on my bed, where I had been eating potato chips the night before. Even more embarrassing.)

At the doctor’s office they have a computer for self-check-in. You have to enter the first two letters of the patient’s first and last names. Zo-Mo. Maybe that will be her nickname!

Best of all, we have the first sign of the twins coming out of the blob stage: Zoe is beginning to make her first cooing noises. Up until now, all we’ve heard from either of them has been crying or grunting. Now we’re getting some real vowel sounds – mostly “ah.” And for once, Zoe is first!

Here they are, doing their Big Things. It was almost impossible to get a photo of Leo when he was not moving. The boy is just constantly in motion! Zoe, on the other hand, kept her eyes open and held still.

Leo

Zoe

Zoe and Leo are one month old! Actually, by the time I publish this, they’ll be well over that age. I don’t think we’re going to be able to keep up with the monthly photos as well as we did with Sam.

I’m actually enjoying my babies and all the things that go along with them. I had set in my mind that the first year would be hell and that it was an investment in the future. I didn’t enjoy Sam’s infancy much at all. It has nothing to do with my feelings for her – I just didn’t like the utter dependence of a baby. And with L&Z I still don’t like it, but I’m more accepting of it. I also know that it will end soon enough. So I’m focusing on the good parts, and I’m finding that there are enough good parts to make the whole baby experience somewhat pleasant.

Of course, we’ve had a lot of help this first month. My parents have been here almost every day, doing a lot of the household chores, grocery shopping, cooking and cleaning, etc. My mom has also helped feed and change the babies quite a bit. We also have our “mommy’s helper,” I’ll call her T., who has been coming some afternoons and also helping Sam get to school when Adam teaches. My parents leave in a week, but we’ll still have T. I think I’ll wait until then to say whether this is easier than I had expected.

There’s not too much to report about Leo or Zoe themselves, beyond what I said in my earlier post. Leo continues to grow quickly. He is over seven pounds now. Zoe is still smaller at around six pounds, but she is growing steadily. They still mostly just eat and sleep. Occasionally I’ll give them a bath or put them on a blanket for some tummy time (video!), but most days we change diapers, feed them, and put them right back to bed with no activity at all. They usually pass out in bliss after eating and there’s no waking them.

We have Leo on Zantac now for his reflux, and he sleeps in his car seat in the crib since he simply can’t tolerate being horizontal. We only have the one crib so far, so Zoe is sleeping there next to the car seat. The car seat and the Zantac are helping somewhat, but Leo still cries in discomfort a lot, which is the most difficult thing for me to deal with. We try to comfort him, but there isn’t much we can do, so quite often we just have to listen to him cry. Zoe is still the “easy baby.” The worst thing she does is that she seems to like to poop during a diaper change. I actually find it quite funny. Sam got to see it happen the other day and it was hilarious to see her look of revulsion after all the poopy hell she has put me through over the years. I really should make her the official diaper-changer. Well, maybe not.

I’m a huge fan of breastfeeding, but not for the reasons you hear most often. I’m not 100% convinced that breast milk is any better nutritionally than formula. (I suspect they both have their advantages.) I guess breastfeeding is cheaper, but as Tori points out, the typical analysis ignores all the costs of breastfeeding; it is certainly not free. It’s more convenient at times, but it can also be a hassle when you have to pump and deal with leakage. I could go on…

What I love about breastfeeding is the bonding. I enjoyed it so much with Sammy. It was hard to imagine having a baby and not breastfeeding. There is just something wonderful about giving your child sustenance directly from your body. But it is also the most interactive thing you can do with a newborn. You spend a lot of time looking at your baby; it’s not a passive enjoyment, but a time of active observation that allows you to get to know your child’s personality just a little bit. You have to learn your baby’s signals and your baby has to learn yours. When you both learn how to do it, you achieve a kind of symbiosis that is very fulfilling. For those of you who’ve never experienced it, I’d liken it to the feeling you get when you learn how to control a dog or a horse; when you both understand each other and work together, everything becomes easy and you experience the true joy of teamwork. It’s also like the concept of flow, but between two people instead of just an internal state. Everything just feels right when you are nursing.

But with Sammy, I had no differentiation for my observations about bonding through breastfeeding. I had nothing to compare it against. I only had one child, and I breastfed exclusively. Not only that, but Sammy never even had a bottle of breast milk because I was unable to pump effectively. All I knew was nursing.

With Leo and Zoe, I’ve learned so much more about this bonding. Mostly, I’ve learned that my conclusions were right.

Since Leo was born bigger and stronger than Zoe, I was able to nurse him almost immediately. I can’t remember the exact dates, but I think I began nursing Zoe at least four days later. I only nursed Leo once a day, but in those days I felt much closer to him than I did to Zoe. I had a relationship with him that was simply absent with her. I’ve been able to continue breastfeeding both children at home and to this day, I feel closer to Leo than I do to Zoe. That could be due to other factors, but based on that early experience, I think it has a lot to do with the breastfeeding. But they are only one month old and I expect that to change.

I’ve also bottle-fed both of them, and I’m surprised to find that the bonding that takes place with this kind of feeding is very similar to that of breastfeeding. You still get a lot of the interaction. Both baby and parent must pay attention and adapt to the other. It’s possible that the only things missing are the skin to skin contact and the hormones. Adam never got to bottle-feed Sammy, and he is thrilled to be able to do so with Zoe and Leo. I asked him if he now feels cheated that he missed the chance with Sammy and he gave me a (friendly) sarcastic reply about how, yes, they just don’t have a connection between them. (Adam and Sammy have just about the best father-daughter relationship that I can imagine and they are super-close considering that he is not the primary caregiver.)

So in the end, I don’t think any of the bonding is relevant to future relationships. I find absurd the idea that, if you don’t breastfeed an infant within 5 minutes of their birth, something will be forever lacking in your relationship. My relationship with Zoe is growing deeper by the day and just because it started out slow doesn’t mean it won’t catch up. And I don’t think bottle-fed infants suffer from some kind of lack of love. Of course, I don’t even buy attachment theory, so there you go. Breastfeeding can be a wonderful thing, but it’s really just icing on the cake.

Songs

Both, to the tune of Mr. Sandman:

 

Mr. Leo
Wearing yellow
You eat so much
As we all know
It is your job
To grow and grow
We love you, Mr. Leo

 

Little Zoe
So very pretty
We have to clean up
Your poo and your pee
But we don’t mind
It’s not a duty
Cuz’ we love you, Little Zoe

Photos!

Update 9/20: I fixed the link to the Picasa account.

Finally, I got all the photos and videos of Zoe and Leo uploaded and organized. Here is a selection of the best of them.

 

Zoe and Leo’s First Month

 

 

If you want more, you can go to my Picasa account. (There are some great photos from Sammy’s birthday there, too.)

Sammy no longer calls our Honda Odyssey, the “Honda-See.” But she still calls hand sanitizer, “hanitizer.” You have to admire her creative contractions.

I’ve almost got our photos organized and will have tons of pictures of the twins to share soon. But I just ran across this photo of Sam at her Montessori school from last spring and had to share it immediately. Look how grown up she is!

Pesonalities

So far, one of the most awesome things about having twins (and there are many) is that we have a much better idea about what is common to all babies and what is unique to Zoe or Leo, and even in retrospect, what was unique to Sammy when she was a newborn. We know because we can compare two babies who are at the exact same developmental level at the same time. Their differences highlight their personalities, and tell us that these things are not “just the way all babies are.” And when we see something that is common to all three of our children, we have to consider that maybe that is something more universal. We’ve already discovered things we thought were unique to Sam that turn out to be just common baby behaviors.

Now, we don’t want to make the mistake of translating infant behavior into projections of adult, or even childhood personality traits. A fussy baby does not equate to a wild teenager. And we don’t want to pigeonhole Leo or Zoe by “labeling” them, something my favorite parenting authors warn against. (I put that term in scare quotes because I’m not completely comfortable with it – I’m not sure it has a clear definition and I suspect it might be a package deal. I have to think about it more before I decide one way or another.) And yet, comparing them gives us such wonderful information about them!

Some things we’ve learned:

  • Leo loves pacifiers (we call them suckers). Zoe could care less about them. (Sammy never wanted a sucker but we weren’t sure if it was her or if we just didn’t push the idea hard enough. Now we know it was her.)
  • Leo almost always cries first. Zoe doesn’t cry much at all, but when she does, you don’t want your ear within 5 feet of her mouth or you’ll go deaf. Still, we call Zoe “unflappable.” Nothing seems to faze her. Neither Leo nor Sammy could be called “sensitive,” but they certainly react more strongly, especially in negative ways. Zoe is just chill and I hope she remains that way. It would be nice to have one like that. (We used to think that Sammy was a fairly “easy” baby, but, at least for now, Zoe seems to be proving us wrong about that. So far, Zoe is the easy one.)
  • Leo seems to have reflux, or some kind of digestive system issue. Zoe doesn’t. (Sammy did.) He arches his back and cries in a way that sounds like he is in pain and spits up much more than Zoe. Related to the previous point? Quite possibly.
  • All three of our children are great breastfeeders. Either that, or I’m good at it. Or a combination of the two.
  • Both Leo and Zoe can be calmed quite easily just by picking them up. (When Sammy would get herself wound up, there was really nothing we could do but let her work it out on her own.) I hope this is not something that changes when they get a bit older – I can’t remember when it started with Sam.
  • Leo really, really needs to be swaddled. Zoe is happy in a swaddle or a loose blanket. (Sammy needed the swaddle.) Again, I wonder if this is related to reflux, or whatever the problem is.
  • Apparently, all babies make essentially the same faces when they have to poop. And they won’t poop while they are eating. It’s a whole big production which is fascinating to watch. (Leo is the cutest pooper because he makes these grunts that are absolutely adorable.)
  • Zoe and Leo can sleep through just about anything. Zoe sleeps through Leo’s crying right in her ear all the time, and they both sleep through the dog barking, the vacuum, and Sammy’s high-pitched happy squealing during tickle-time. Sam was awakened by any loud noise when she was a baby. Do you remember the scene in Marley and Me when Jennifer Anniston puts the kids down for a nap and lies on the bed and takes a huge, deep breath, and you see the tension just flowing out of her into the mattress and you know she’s about to fall asleep in an instant but then she hears the beeping of a truck in reverse and she bolts upright and says, “Oh no, oh no,” in absolute horror because the dog is about to go crazy barking and wake the kids and that is indeed what happens and she totally loses her freaking mind? Well, that was me when Sam was a baby. Toby is lucky to still be among us. Thank goodness for the NICU with all of its noise.
  • Physically, they are looking more and more different as they fill out. Leo has a triangular face with a pointy chin which I believe he got from The Italian (as I call our egg donor). His nose, so prominent when he was born, now seems just right for his face. Zoe has a rounder face and is kind of jowly. She also has much darker skin and hair than Leo which obviously comes from The Italian.
  • Leo’s Big Thing – the thing that stands out the most about him – is that he is physical. He moves, he squirms, he uses his hands in amazing ways for a 4-week-old infant, and he is strong. Within a few days of his birth, he had a reputation in the NICU. We kept hearing how he would escape his swaddle and his diaper and then pull off his leads. We were told “He’s all boy.” When I asked what that meant, the nurse said that he was very physical. She warned us that he’d be climbing the refrigerator in a year. He was also called a “superstar” in the NICU because of his quick progress in becoming strong enough to go home. (Premature girls usually do better than boys so it was doubly impressive.) He can already hold his head up for quite long stretches. At his first pediatrician appointment, the doctor suggested that we put his mattress up at an angle to help with his reflux, since, “he can’t really move around yet so you don’t have to worry about him ending up upside-down.” Well, we had already put the mattress at an angle, and he is perfectly capable of ending up upside-down, thankyouverymuch. Leo is The Mover. And I love that about him.
  • Zoe’s Big Thing is her vision. She looks at everything. When she was first born, she’d open her eyes and her eyeballs would roll up in the back of her head because she couldn’t control them yet, but she’d open those lids anyway. By Day 2 on this planet, this tiny little 4 pound baby had her eyes open all the time and was focusing on anything that was close enough. She keeps them open much more often that Leo does, and she looks at faces much more intently than he does. Her eyes are very prominent, and there is something about the way she uses them that is utterly captivating and endearing. Zoe is The Looker. And I love that about her.
  • I wish I could look back and compare Sammy as an infant to these two, to determine what her Big Thing was. But the details are gone now. I remember my own judgments about her – my conclusions – but not so much the facts that gave rise to them. What I do remember is that we always called Sammy “highly opinionated.” From the beginning, she seemed willful, stubborn, and independent, and the term “highly opinionated” actually came from one of our midwives and was seconded by her pediatrician. But what particular behaviors made them and us see her that way, I don’t recall. Still, I think we were right, because I can’t imagine calling either Leo or Zoe “highly opinionated,” but it still describes Sam to this day. Sammy is The Rebel. And I love that about her.

 

Zoe Comes Home

Finally! Our Zoe is home with us. Our baby-making journey is complete. Our family is complete. And now the real adventure begins!

Zoe came home yesterday after 22 days in the NICU, exactly twice the length of Leo’s stay. By the end, we were getting quite frustrated because we couldn’t figure out why they were keeping her so long. When to discharge an infant is a judgment call on the doctor’s part, and I think Zoe just ended up with more conservative doctors. To us, she seems more solid than Leo was when he came home. She’s over five pounds now, eating and sleeping with no problems.

Both she and Leo are now more or less regular newborns. Their gestational age is almost 38 weeks now – exactly when Sammy was born. They’re still a bit small, but they have already outgrown much of their preemie-sized clothing. They probably sleep a bit more than a full-term newborn. We basically change their diapers, feed them, and put them back to bed.

Sammy, who was so much more excited about having a little sister than in having a little brother, wasn’t as moved by Zoe’s homecoming as she was Leo’s. Of course, it’s the same thing that I experienced when they were born. The first one has an impact that the second just can’t match. Hopefully this will be the last time that Zoe will necessarily be second. Maybe we shouldn’t have given her a name that starts with “Z”.

Still, Sammy is clearly thrilled. She didn’t spend as much time with Zoe upon her arrival, but later, she drew a picture of Leo and Zoe together, and wrote their names on it. She wants to kiss them and touch them as much as possible. And last night she woke up for a middle-of-the-night feeding and stayed for the whole thing, just like she did on Leo’s first night home.

With Zoe coming home on a Sunday, it was trial by fire for me and Adam. He teaches on Mondays, which means he has to do class-prep on Sunday nights. It also means that he has to wake up early and leave the house around 8am, so this morning I was on my own with all three children. With just Leo, on teaching nights I was doing the night feedings and letting Adam sleep, but with both babies, I needed his help. So we both got up at 2am and 5am and each took one baby. Thank goodness both of them slept very well and we had an easy night. And somehow, between 7:15 and 8:30am, I managed to feed both babies myself plus wake up Sam, get her dressed, get her breakfast, brush her hair, and everything else that goes along with getting her ready for school. It was not easy logistically – I couldn’t plan ahead because I didn’t know exactly when the babies would wake and which would wake first. I ended up doing a half-feeding with Leo before Sam awoke, then put him back to bed while I did my thing with her, then I fed Zoe and finished up with Leo while Sam took care of herself and finished getting ready. My babysitter arrived at 8:30 to take Sammy to school and we were all ready, no stress, and almost no crying at all! It was great! I hope I can manage it that well every time, but I know these class-day mornings are probably going to be the hardest part until the semester ends in December.

I’ll write more soon about Leo and Zoe (or, I suppose I should say Zoe and Leo) and their personalities and what we’ve learned about them and how we’re bonding and what it’s like to have two babies. But right now, Leo is ready to eat. Oh, he’s first again!

 

 

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