If there was *any* doubt that she is my kid … #kissingbandit a video by minjungkim on Flickr.
She measures 32″ and some change.
Weighs 24.5 Lbs
Blood pressure is a solid 90/58

There were some fun moments during this checkup.
Dr: “Does she run?”
Moi: “Hah. Yes. Everywhere. She even rock climbs up ramps and tries to climb ladders to get to stairs”
Dr: “And her communication?”
Moi: “Up to ~ 200 words or so.”
Amelia: “wuuuuhn, twooooooo, treeeeee, pourrrrrr, cincoooooo,”
Dr: “Can she recognize and identify body parts?”
Amelia: “Nose… Toes… Tummy, Cheek. Chin, Ears, Eyes”
Moi: “Amelia, where’s your butt?”
Amelia: (Lifts her hospital gown up to one side and smacks her ass with confidence)
Dr: “And sentences?”
Moi: “Like, ‘There she is!” Where’s Daddy?” “What you doing?” “Awww, it’s ok”
Amelia: “Knock knock”
Moi: “Who’s there?”
Amelia: “Banana”
A nurse comes in latter and says “How are we today?”
Amelia respondes “I’m fine.”
The nurse looks oddly surprised not having expected an actual response.
Amelia had 4 shots today to catch her up on immunizations. She handled it like a champ and cried for only a minute before she started on her knock knock jokes on me again.
Before
All in all, very happy with today’s visit to the Doctor’s.
For no other reason than I want to document what Amelia’s growing vocabulary is at. Since I don’t spend much time with other parents with children at the same age I’m not sure if she’s behind or ahead but it’s hard to ascertain without some sort of tally.
I will likely update and edit this list over the next few days since I don’t think I’m able to remember it all right now but I think this covers the bulk of her vocabulary so far.
Originally uploaded by minjungkim.
Baby fashion is typically pretty fun.
I mean, Amelia’s entire wardrope is pink and girly and includes rainbows and animals and ruffles and flowers and penguins and puppies. So there’s a lot to be enjoyed from dressing her up for outtings.
Granted, she’s no slave to fashion and not particularly fussy about what her mother tries to dress her up in.
I mean, see Exhibit A. Beautiful Clown Baby and mouse over the fashion notations.

But come *on*. Skinny hipster jeans for a baby?
Why cover up Amelias luscious chubby little kissable legs in skinny jeans?
Why maker her cute thighs feel like squished sausage links before her first birthday?
Seriously people? Skinny Jeans for baby?
Shame on you.
Somehow, as a veteran blogger, you’d think that I’d have seamlessly transitioned from writing regularly about myself to endlessly documenting the nuances and changes of my first born child in week after week detailed installments.
When in actuality I’ve managed to pull that off in photos but very little in prose.
I guess I still feel a little weird transitioning from talking about myself as my single mischievous carefree self to this supposedly mature and innately wise motherly creature.
And I feel like a fake trying to write as if I’m a confident and wise mother creature. And being fake about anything is an impossible feat for me.
I am, if nothing else, pretty direct and frequently embarassingly honest.
I haven’t written very much also because it feels like childcare doesn’t really permit an extended period of time that’s clearly focused. It is endlessly mildly disruptive. Not so disruptive as to be insane: but just enough so you wonder where your day’s gone and how come you’ve forgotten to eat and only managed to fold half of your laundry over the course of a full day.
So instead of writing anything about me and how I feel about sort of being a Mommy Blogger, I’ll tell you all about her.
My baby girl Amelia is nearly 6 months old now.
Her hair has grown long enough so that it lays down flat on her head.
She’s starting to teethe, crawl, and express her curiosity by reaching for and examining nearly anything within reach. She’s still mellow and generally cheerful in disposition and much like her earlier days, her favorite place to nap is on my belly.
In fact as I’m typing this, her head is in the crook of my right arm elbow and her hand is possessively positioned over my right boob.
Her nose is perfect and her eyes, closed in fitful sleep now, still vary from brown and green/hazel.
I can make her laugh with eskimo kisses, tickling and kissing her feet, snorting under her chin and at her neck, or sometimes just looking at her and laughing with her too.
She still likes the korean farting show and no longer hates Tummy Time as much as she used to. She still hates pacifiers and prefers her fingers in her mouth when my nipple is unavailable.
She wakes up around 8:00 am, and starts singing and talking to herself around 9:00. She takes a disco nap at Noon and 3. Her favorite stuffed animal in her crib is Eeyore. She’s like her mother and only poops about once every 4 days.
She’ll occasionally make yowling kitty cat noises. She actually turns towards you and recognizes when you refer to her as Madame Flatulencia.
Amelia can be amazingly well behaved while at church and finds the stained glass at St. Dominic’s to be fascinating.
She enjoys her baths and as far as I can tell, every color I put on her seems to make her complexion look brilliant. (I’m jealous — I’ve never been able to carry off green or yellow).
She still hiccups alot.
As a mother, I’ve only set two goals by which I measure my success with Amelia to date: is she happy and is she fat. The answer is yes to both. So I win.
So I was driving the other day with Amelia in the carseat sitting behind me. We’d been out running some errands and she was napping sweetly and quiet as we were heading back home.
I was anticipating doing another stop off and was attempting to gauge how much time I would have before absolutely needing to take her home to feed her.
Without an ounce of hesitation or self-consciousness I shoved my hand up the front of my shirt and gave my breasts a handle and squeeze.
While in the car.
With people in cars to he right or left of me.
To check and see if the boobs felt plump which is a good way for me to see if the baby might be hungry since Amelia’s nursing schedule had synched up with milk production.
At that point I realized, wow. I just felt myself up in semi-public.
And woah, I’m overdue to write this blogpost about what I’ve been going through with breastfeeding.
A nerdy metablogging aside: I’m kinda curious to see how well i can googlebomb this blogpost about a korean woman’s boobs, asian boobs, titties, breasts, tig ol bitties, jugs, melons, nipples, boobies, cleavage, rack, to really skew some search results.
My boobs are, pretty much, her most favorite thing ever. They are The Beatles, Elvis, and Jesus to her. Amelia is now 4 months old and fed nearly exclusively via breast. But it definitely wasn’t easy getting to this point.

There seems to be an impression that breastfeeding is a natural and instantaneous bond between mother and child that requires no adjustment or learning. After all, it’s an animal and primitive process that has managed to keep the species going for thousands of years. Right? Right.
Now, I’ve never really been a boobie girl. People rarely, if ever, remark on my rack and I myself and written more than once on my annoyance at my lack of boobage. During the pregnancy I noted that a few physiological changes were odd for me including the change in areola color and general nipple morphology changes from something that used to not be pokey to well… pinky nubbin-ish. I hadn’t thought too much over breastfeeding during the pregnancy, just assuming that things would work itself out and happen in stride.
Though, now that I think about it, I do recall being slightly horrified by the flashback image I had of my maternal grandmother and her jugs. Now, harlmohnee was a cute and delightfully funny woman who, while we couldn’t communicate with each other very well, shared a bond of suffering through my harabohjee’s snoring during the summer that they came to visit and slept in my room with me. Harlmohnee was approximately 4″8, slightly round, and completely covered with wrinkles. She resembled a sharpei. But one that would do shots of Johnny Walker black with you on New Years Eve.
During the summer visit in 2000 when I went to Korea, it was, I believe, one of the worst heat waves in recent history. I was staying in the countryside at my aunt’s home and sharing a bedroom with my harlmohnee. Harlmohnee slept topless. Time and the fact that she’d nursed my mother and 6 other children were not kind on her boobs. And frankly, with her short stature as it was, her breasts, without any hyperbole whatsoever, hung to her waist.
I think I’d blocked that image from my mind until this exact moment.

Now, Amelia, being an emergency c-section baby, threw a few kinks into the plans re: nursing.
For the first few weeks after Amelia arrived, breastfeeding was extraordinarily stressful for me. Because my body was going through extensive stress post-surgery to repair itself and get me back on my feet, I simply wasn’t producing very much milk at all. So we were supplmeneting significantly since she wasn’t regaining the weight she’d had at birth.

This was emotionally very disheartening since it’s so easy to readily assume that your body would automatically be fully capable of providing for your most precious cargo. This brought back wful feelings for me from the previous miscarriage about my own body betraying me in not being able to take care of my baby. Add to that some haphazard early latching and the nipples were in nearly constant pain. White, hard, and somewhat itchy. Pumping didn’t seem to help and I despaired on whether my milk would ever “come in” sufficiently enough for Amelia.
By the 5th or 6th week after Amelia was born we were still supplementing nearly half of her meals. Which of course makes reading anything/everything from La Leche League make me feel guilty or angry that I was getting lectured by a bunch of boob fascists. Hubbycakes had picked me up Fenugreek pill supplements that were supposed to help with lactation and I was still trying to find a solution to why my nipples kept hurting. Reading forums about how some women orgasm while breastfeeding made me want to punch things. Oh the humanity! Why were my boobs so lame!

By the 9th week or so, my milk production was finally beginning to come in and nearly all of Amelia’s meals were by boob. On the occasional “clusterfeeding” growth spurt we’d feed her formula and “top her off” with boob. And I’d finally found some helpful results re: my nipple pain. Apparently – early “Nipple Trauma” had damaged some ducts and caused them to be overly constricting. Taking a few ibuprofen daily pretty much made the pain disappear within a few hours and I started taking these every morning with my vitamins and fenugreek suplement. Still, the notion of “Nipple Trauma” cracks me up. It sounds like the boobs went to Iraq and came back with a disability and needed to hang out at the VA hospital with other veterans to talk about the “good old days”.

This is also around the time that my boobs turned into a bio-alarm clock. Where I was finally generating enough breastmilk that I leaked onto my teeshirt and woke me up in the middle of the night, just about 5 minutes before Amelia started fussing for a feeding. Since then the boobs have been a pretty good guage on if Amelia should be hungry or not.
Of course, the baby doesn’t *just* enjoy the booby for nutrition.
There’s comfort booby.
And sleepy booby.
And bored booby.
And play booby.
There are times when Amelia is so sated that she is limp, as if drunk and other times she is wailing in between suckles while beating at the boob with her tiny fists.
And the occasional times she sucks on the breast and then snaps her head back in dramatic flourish, stretching the nipple like a rubberband to snap back. Then releases to put her head on it like a pillow, a possessive hand gripping it’s side.
Which I know, makes the hubby jealous. Because he claims it used to be *his* booby. And makes him occasionally scold the child by saying “Those are only on loan to you. I get those back soon.”
So Amelia’s now at the 4 month mark with an anticipated 2-3 months more of pure breastfeeding before teeth come in or she’s ready for semi-solid foods.
Crazy.
That by the time that I’ve finally gotten the hang of this thing, I can see the end approaching.
Magnolia Bakery Red Velvet Cupcakes Recipe.
Photo by Caleb as found on Flickr.
I’ll be making 100 of these (hopefully with some help from some friends) for Amelia’s 100 day party.
Those who know me know I’m not particularly traditional but I do find lots of traditions really heartwarming and I appreciate any excuse for a party.
Baek-Il (100 day) is a traditional time of celebration for a newborn. In some ways it’s the 1st birthday for a baby (consider 9 months in the womb and 100 days and it’s about a year) and also a “coming out” party for a baby to extended family.
From what I’ve scoured off the internet, wary of the high infant mortality rate, historically, new babies in Korea were not exposed to the outside world or extended family/friends/community until the 100 day mark. They weren’t even allowed to wear anything other than white clothing as white was easiest to sanitize for their health.
Baek-Il celebrates the child’s life and incorporates a few traditions that I plan on keeping.
1. Colorful clothing for the baby
I’ve found my own baby hanbok and plan to dress Amelia in it. It’s old, old fashioned, but lovely. Remember, prior to the 100 day, oldschool babies would only wear white.
2. Lots of Pictures of the baby
There are typically very few images/photos taken of the baby for the public before the 100 day celebration. It’s considered unlucky or, well, cocky to tempt fate. Well. I’ve clearly screwed that one up. Thank goodness modern medicine is on my side.
3. Food signifying wealth, health, prosperity, longevity
Pyramids of fruits,candies and ricecakes are usually showcased on a table in front of a “baby throne” that the newborn is seated on. I plan on having a small display of fruit, some ricecakes and cupcakes. RED VELVET cupcakes. I figure that’s both lucky and contemporary.
There’s more traditions that I can’t seem to get enough detail on regarding string (for long life) that’s worn around the baby’s waist, rice cakes placed in 4 directions of the home to honor the gods, praying to Samshin – a grandmother goddess who’s watched over the newborn, and gold rings that are given to the child at the 100 day mark.
Can anyone give me more details?
With all the hubbub about the baby, I’d just like to take a moment to share what is clearly not common enough knowledge on what is the appropriate, nay, ideal apparel post birth when you’re at home, recovering, and adjusting to the new joys of breastfeeding (which I will expound upon another time).

Yes with all seriousness, I’m saying that the Kung Fu silk pajamas are the BizOMB for at home, post birthing loungewear.
To which my rhyme was inspired the other day.
Baby has Kung-fu Grip. On my Nip. With her Lower Lip.
I like to believe that Bruce Lee would have approved.
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