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MotherKao

Going Out! The Kao Kids

Not so fun day out

June 23, 2012

I’m convinced after today that my kids are somewhat different from other kids. I’d had always thought all kids loved crowds, carnivals and carousels. Not mine, apparently.

Fatherkao and I have an aversion to crowds and queues. As far as I can remember, we’ve never stood in a queue for anything for more than three minutes and generally avoided crowded places. We would never queue to eat at any restaurant or stand in line for a taxi. If we had to queue to pay for groceries at the supermarket, we’d rather put everything back and order stuff online. We don’t even queue to go to church. We just head straight to the Overflow Room. We don’t go to town and we don’t like waiting for a parking lot. We avoid the heartland malls in the weekends and find respite in the airport terminals where there’s plenty of space for the kids to run, lots of restaurants which we don’t need to queue to eat at, and GST-free shopping. We weren’t always like that, of course, but as we got older, we just felt that life is too short to be wasting time doing unproductive things like queuing up. If we needed to pay more to save on time, we would. If we had to queue to get something free, we’d rather not. Yes, not even if they were giving out free handphones and iPads. Or houses. Or cars. But I digress.

So it appears that our kids have taken after us in that way.

I won priority passes to the Drypers Little Day Out at East Coast from the giveaway at Daphne’s blog  and thought it would be nice to take the kids out to a carnival to have some fun before I officially start work on Monday. So when I told the kids that we would be going to a carnival, they were all yay and hooray; but when we arrived there, they started looking like the Grinch stole Christmas. They didn’t want to queue for the kiddy rides or the carnival games. At the bouncy castles, Ben asked me if I could make all the other children go away so he could play. They didn’t share the enthusiasm other kids had for chasing bubbles. They headed to find open spaces and stood there to watch the crowd, mostly for the one hour we were there. I actually had to tell Ben and Becks that we would go home if they continued to be so grumpy to get them to ride the carousel.

There you have it, signs of crowd aversion, just like their parents. I’m sure other kids had much fun, going on unlimited rides (they were free), playing carnival games, eating popcorn and cotton candy (they were free too), dancing with Alvin and the Chipmunks and watching the outdoor movie screening Chipwrecked.

Mine were just grouchy, until dinner time at a quiet restaurant. Only then were they back to their usual selves – when away from the crowd.

 

 

 

 

Becks Kao Milestones and growing up The darndest kid quotes and antics

Being two

June 23, 2012

My daughter has officially entered the Terrible Two one month shy of her second birthday, and not a day goes by without fighting epic battles of wills with her. She’s learning to assert her independence and testing the boundaries so much so that bathing / feeding / changing / sleeping has become struggles between me and her on a daily basis. She would choose what to wear and the colour of spoon to eat with. And if she decides to sit on her diaper-filled poop today, she is so going to.  She would not have you shampoo her hair if she doesn’t feel like getting it wet, and trust me, she will.give.you.hell if you so decide to get her out of bed to go out. She will lie in bed for as long as she wants, and any attempt to pry her away from her bolster and carrying her from the bed will result in a fit so hissy you’d rather go find a hole and bury yourself. When she has her tantrums, she can wail non-stop for more than half an hour and no amount of talking sense and cajoling can make her stop. I have videos to prove that she can cry and scream at the top of her lungs for that long.

And to make matters worse, she has night terrors. They started when she was about 14 months old. She has been sitting up and crying inconsolably at regular intervals nightly for a while now, usually about three to four times between 11pm and 5am. And the past week has been hell. She yelled the house down while in her semi-conscious state at least five times in the night. She had a viral fever the week before and I’m pretty sure it could have been the reason for the excessive partial night wakings.

So I have no respite, day and night.

This is Becks after three tantrums today. She refused to wear the pretty jumper I prepared for her and when I attempted to put it on, she kicked and fussed and shrieked. That was the first. When I finally decided that I was not willing to die on this hill in this battle and allowed her to choose what she wanted to wear, she chose her brother’s t-shirt. I said no, and wailing started all over again. That was the second. When she finally stopped, there were mucous and tears all over her face. I cleaned her up and made her drink some water. She refused to drink, and that started her third outburst. She was promptly sent to the naughty corner. When she finally calmed down, I allowed her to choose what she wanted to wear, with the exception of her brother’s clothes.

She wanted to be pink from head to toe.

I almost fainted.

 

Family life as we know it The Kao Kids Thunderstorm days

My week in numbers

June 15, 2012

40: the reading on the thermometer in degree Celsius on Monday night when Ben had a viral fever

10: number of times Becks woke up this week to ask for milk in the middle of the night (twice nightly for the past five days)

5: average number of times my son coughs into my face a day

3: average number of times Ben and Becks fight over nothing in a day

2 and 387: number of days before Nat starts infantcare and number of times my heart ached this week at the thought of it

I didn’t have a great week and I’m dreading the next. Come Monday, this mother will be crying buckets as she sends her littlest to a place where Mama is no longer his world and his everything. He will meet new caregivers and have to learn how to drink from the bottle, somehow. A good deal of crying and starving might follow.

My heart is aching so bad now. My baby will be searching for Mama and I won’t be there!

Excuse me while I go and dry my tears.

Becks Kao Ben Kao Going Out! The Kao Kids

Hokey Pokey Fun

June 14, 2012

Last week the husband told me he wanted to go to the PC Show. IT Show, PC Show, Comex, Sitex… I can never figure out what’s the difference, and why men would love to be found in crazy fairs like these. He said he would zip in to get something real quick, and I could go walk about Suntec City with the kids.

I decided not to walk about because there is no way any walking will happen with two toddlers. They run. And touch things. And do funny things. Like sit on the floor in the middle of nowhere when they are tired.

So I whisked them to the new indoor playground at Level 3 which I’ve read about in some mommy blogs.

Hokey Pokey was a little different from the indoor playgrounds my kids have been to. Unlike the usual helter-skelter, gym-like play structures that involve plenty of climbing, sliding, rolling and running, kids can actually sit still to play at Hokey Pokey. In my opinion, they’ve cheated a fair bit – the only bit that qualifies the place as an indoor playground was the soft structured slide – the rest were all masak masak, Little Tikes rides and educational toys. Hokey Pokey divides the area into the Pretend Play section, Discovery Corner, Interactive Play area and Music Corner. I wasn’t too impressed, to be honest; twenty-five bucks per kid for something my kids would get Mondays to Fridays at their daycare, and weekends at home, plus having to share all the masak masak with a lot more other children than those in their playgroup at daycare. At least in school, they play with children their age. Because this place admits kids six months to six years, my daughter had to put up with two older girls bossing her around and telling her she wasn’t allowed to touch this and that when she was trying to bake me a chicken / pour me some ketchup / serve me a pizza at the little cooking corner. She was constantly terrorised by other kids who would snatch her donuts and pots and plates. In school, if this ever happened, I’m sure it would have been a teachable moment. Unfortunately, most kids there were accompanied by their domestic helpers, so you can imagine that they themselves were also busy making new friends all around.

Nonetheless, Ben and Becks enjoyed themselves. I made fatherkao wear the baby to the PC Show, which got many heads a-turning, and so he claimed, so I was free to have pretend tea with my daughter and watch my son stack colourful birthday cakes. I also watched my daughter cook and my son explore wooden trains and musical instruments.

I did feel a little silly to be paying money to do so though. We do this all the time at home. But at least the husband got his shopping fix.

More details:
  • Hokey Pokey is at Suntec City Mall, Level 3-027E/F. next to the Groupon Store.
  • Opening hours: 10 am – 7 pm from Sunday to Thursday and 10 am – 9 pm on Friday and Saturday
  • Admission is $25 on weekends per kid for two-hour play and $15 for unlimited play on weekdays. Members get discounted rates. One accompanying adult per child only.
  • The place is well-maintained and the staff ensured the kids and adults sanitised their hands. I saw them cleaning and scrubbing after the bubble play. There is also a diaper change table for babies, lockers for bags and some seats for the adults who want to kid-watch.

 

Ben Kao Milestones and growing up The Kao Kids

Farewell, my bunk bed

June 11, 2012

I’ve shared a little on how tough it has been trying to train the kids to sleep on their own.

Just that very night after I posted, fatherkao had a terrible time co-sleeping with Ben and Becks. He has had many nights of terribleness so far and it seems to be getting worse. Becks would have her witching hour nightly and it usually happens between 2 and 4 am. As for Ben, he would wake his father up religiously at 1.30am and ask if he could sleep with him. If fatherkao says no, he would sit on the floor and be really stoned out, looking pitiful and all, so usually the father says yes and they would be vying for space on the sofa bed.

And every morning fatherkao would wake up looking like a truck’s ran all over him. I think his eye circles are darker than mine. Already I’m waking up a few times in the night nursing the baby, who is having growth spurts.

Which was why he announced yesterday with no sentimentality whatsoever that we are getting rid of the fire engine bunk bed. No more funky stuff in the room. We’re gonna have to lay mattresses on the floor and everyone can all huddle like refugees. Don’t need to compete for space, don’t need to worry who would fall off the bed, don’t need to force the kids to stay, and sleep, on their beds.

So we’re saying goodbye. It was good while it lasted.

 

Ben Kao Going Out!

My mother, my Science teacher

June 6, 2012

I cannot teach my children Science. Or Maths, but that will be for another post another day.

Last weekend, we decided to go to the Bukit Timah Saddle Club, have breakfast at Riders Cafe and look at horses. I wanted to open Ben’s eyes to the equestrian world.

I’ve always been fascinated with the art of horse riding. I’ve never been on a horse and it has been my dream to. As a little girl, many a nights have been spent dreaming of riding a black handsome stallion and being able to steeplechase and play polo. But I soon learnt, as I grew up, that the equestrian world is a rich world only for the elite few, and my hopes of donning a sexy pair of jodhpurs and leather riding boots and reining a horse soon melted like butter on a hot day.

But still, I love horses. And I’d thought this would be a great chance to teach Ben something about them. And get him to sit on the saddle, riding a real one, instead of putting a one-dollar coin each time we see a horsey kiddy ride.

So we walked around the stables and I taught him that domesticated horses are those we can ride; that horses have hooves and manes; that a baby horse is called a foal; that they graze by biting off grass and other vegetation.

I would have loved to tell him more: that these majestic creatures move with four basic gaits (and the coolest is the gallop!); that they are intelligent mammals with excellent spatial discrimination abilities; that the Bedouins were the first people who bred extensive pedigrees of Arabian horses. But I will save that for a later time.

He got quite excited when I told him he’d get to ride a pony. All I needed to do was to pay ten bucks. And then he asked, “What’s a pony, Mama?”

And I replied, “It’s a baby horse.”

Stop it, I know you’re laughing at me right now. Because I’ve been an ignorant fool who probably slept through all the science lessons in primary school. I didn’t even know I had taught my son the wrong stuff. And he went round yelling “I’m gonna ride a baby horse!” all through breakfast at Riders Cafe.

Until fatherkao came to my rescue and told him that a pony is a small horse, alright; but not a baby horse. A horse is a horse because of its height. A pony is under an approximate height at the withers (the tallest point of the body of a four-legged mammal), and like a horse, there are many different breeds of ponies. It is certainly not a foal. And it is not another horse breed.

He also told me in the car I had better not teach Ben science-related stuff when he goes to primary school.

Agree totally.

More details:
  • Pony rides at Bukit Timah Saddle Club on Sundays (10am – 1pm) for $10. The BTSC website says Saturdays and Sundays but we chatted with the people there and they said they won’t be doing this on Saturdays anymore, starting this month.
  • Breakfast at Riders Cafe: Be prepared to wait 30 – 45 minutes for a table if you’re walking in. I couldn’t get a reservation for a month! And I tried booking through CHOPE and there seems to be no way to get a table online for breakfast for the next few months. Breakfast there was great, but not worth the wait if you find the weather a little too humid.
  • The other restaurant to try is The Marmalade Pantry. I hear their cupcakes are fantastic. Will be trying the next time we’re there.
Getting all sentimental now

Letter to my littlest

June 6, 2012

To my precious Nathanael,

When you came, my capacity to love expanded.

I’m so in love with you.

I see your face and I remember that night when you came to me. That night when I first held you and cried and wondered if I could be a good mummy and give you my best even though it would seem daunting to have to juggle life with three children from henceforth.

And you made it all too easy for me. You were such a good baby. You latched well. You slept through the night when you were two months – four hours, six hours, then eight. You didn’t even fuss when you were ill. You allowed your siblings to prod you, shove you, tickle you and smother you with hugs and kisses, complete with mucus and all. Whenever they are near you, you’d just smile and look at them with your soulful little eyes, as if you can’t wait to join them. I could carry you in the Beco all day and do all sorts of things: hold their hands, feed them, run in the park and catch bubbles in the playground. I could go on lunch dates with your father. You would just sleep and let Mama spend good time with everyone. And when they are finally asleep everyday, when you have Mama all to yourself, you would hold my finger with your tiny hands, rub your face repeatedly on my chest and lay your head on my shoulder. It’s like your way of saying you’re glad I’m yours now for the rest of the night.

We have long conversations about our hopes and dreams for the future daily. Mama tells you you are made to conquer; that you’d be a mover and shaker of your generation; that you have a destiny. And most importantly, that you are mine and I love you and we are family forever.

I will miss everything about you when I return to work. I will miss your chatter and chuckles and our conversations. Already I am having separation anxiety, even before you go to daycare! Oh, how I wished the day would not come!

I’m getting all sentimental because, you, my littlest, are growing up way too fast for me to handle. But we will get through this together, I know we will.

With all my love, and then some more,

Your Mama

 

Milestones and growing up What to Expect... As a Mother

Sleep training history

June 4, 2012

The trickiest bit to parenting, in my opinion, is training the kids to sleep on. their. own. by. themselves. And it’s not just the toughest battle but the most arduous. Even with advice aplenty out there – sleep coaching, crying it out, no tears approach – it’s usually easier said than done. When Ben was born, fatherkao and I decided to preserve the sanctity of our bed and so we agreed that we will never co-sleep with our kids on our bed. I ended up co-sleeping in Ben’s room instead. I gave up running in and out whenever I heard the baby monitor, so we bought a sofa bed that I could sleep on in the nursery. That worked out quite fine because the husband got his rest and I could get my son to relieve much of the engorgement I had suffered in the night. Even when I found out I was pregnant with Becks and no longer had milk supply, I did the co-sleeping thing still because I was a needy mother, and being with my son at night had become more of an addiction to fix my withdrawal symptoms which I had earlier suffered in the day at work.

When I was pregnant again, we needed the cot for the second baby. So we hurried Ben’s graduation from cot to bed by (making the huge mistake of) buying him a bunk bed, thinking that it would make him want to sleep in it and on his own. Even with a funky fire-engine for a bed, he would be found on the sofa bed with a very pregnant me in the middle of the night. I was too exhausted to put him back to his bed every time he came down, and if I ever did so, I would have spent more time waking than sleeping, really. The plan was to hang on in there until the baby was born because I needed to give him as much assurance as I could (he was only nine months when I was preggers again) and fatherkao would take start training him while I co-sleep with the other baby.

But who would’ve known that fatherkao would suffer a sports injury so bad one month after our daughter’s birth that he had to be wheelchair-bound for the next eight months. I was back to co-sleeping, this time with two needy babies. That period was the darkest for me. The husband wasn’t mobile and needed care; Ben was bewildered and insecure with the changes at home, and Becks was a screamy bundle of terror. We huddled on the sofa bed every night for a year.

When fatherkao recovered and became mobile again, we attempted to proceed with the plan. Co-sleep with Becks but at least train Ben to sleep on his own, alone in his room. Stay with him till he sleeps. And when he does, come back to the master bedroom. Unfortunately, whoever puts him to bed hardly returns, largely due to extreme exhaustion.

We recently graduated Becks from cot to junior bed (a month before Nat was born). The two children are now sleeping with fatherkao in the same room. I am sleeping with Nat. Three years have come  and gone, and still, Ben cannot sleep without one of us being around. He can’t even just go to sleep with his sister in the same room. It’s like, he has the ability to feel the parent-presence. The moment that presence is gone, he is awake. And strangely, this ability is genetic. His sister has that power too. That is why when fatherkao wakes up to use the bathroom in the middle of the night, you will usually also hear two kids whimpering / whining / moaning, “I want Dada!”.

I’ve been quick to blame myself for never really training the two of them with all the methods that I’ve read about from parenting books. Good thing is, my children usually don’t have problems falling asleep as the routine is pretty much set: dinner, warm bath, bit of TV or story-telling, milk, brushing teeth, a prayer and some songs, and they’ll soon be drifting off to slumberland. But to ensure they stay there for an uninterrupted length of time, there must be the parent-presence. Take it away and you will see two jokers in pajamas suddenly wide awake asking why you aren’t in the room with them. Sometimes, if I’m the one doing the tucking in, Ben wants me to hold his hand. He says I must hold it at all times. This afternoon, I tried taking my hand away from his after an hour. That promptly ended his nap.

I’m kinda at a loss right now as to how we should proceed with this sleep training thing with three kids. I don’t have a big enough house with rooms to lock every kid in and try the CIO method. Neither do I have the money to hire a sleep coach to train my kids to sleep without the parent-presence. I guess I may have to settle for all five of us huddling on the sofa bed someday.

Or perhaps, finally giving in and letting everyone loose (*gasp*) on our bed in the master bedroom. And then when the kids are finally asleep, we’ll dress two bolsters up with our clothes, play a broken record of sorts of our breathing and sneak into the children’s room and sleep together (finally) on the sofa bed.

Sounds like a plan to me.

The darndest kid quotes and antics

Big Sister Becks

June 3, 2012

Overheard today between Ben and Becks…

(rumbling of thunder in the distance)

Ben: Mama, I’m scared. I don’t want to hear the thunder.

Becks: Don’t worry, darling. I’m here.

 Overheard today between Baby Nat and Becks…

Nat: Bawaaaaaaaaaah!

Becks: Ohlalala, Nat Nat, don’t cry. I’ll carry you…

And she isn’t even two.