Dear Baby Toddler Girl,
You have become walker. An official Please Leave Me Alone While I Am Carrying Out This Very Important Task of Walking Completely Unassisted Without Assistance of Any Kind Walker. I'd rather hoped that you might wait another couple of months. I thought maybe you could wake up around Halloween time and just decide to walk then. Right before the baby. You had other plans. That's ok! I think some members of the family might have been worried that you were still not walking, so we at least set their minds at ease. I love nothing more than to see you walk toward me with your cup in one hand and your much loved (and might I say getting a bit worn looking by the minute) strand of plastic pearls in the other. You carry a sense of pride when you walk. I remember when your brother learned to walk. He had, and still has, a cool confident air about him so that when he learns new things you would never know if he was proud or not...everything sort of just was what is was with him. If he was excited about walking, you didn't know it. You on the other hand? I can see in your eyes that you have been holding this special trick in your pocket for awhile and just waiting for the right moment to share it with us. You are proud and we are proud of you.
I keep telling myself that this...THIS is my favorite age. You are able to let us know when you are unhappy and we can usually figure out the problem within seconds. This doesn't happen much. You are such a happy child. Some might mistake your strong will for being upset or stubborn or difficult. I know better. I am your mother and I know that you are a determined little person with very strong opinions of how you think the world should be run. Once you accept that your way is not the only way...you will be fully equipped to run our country just as well, if not better than, our current leader.
The last one and a half years have been full of ups and downs. The one constant positive in our lives is knowing that we have done a good job with our children. You and your brother make me more proud than anything else I have ever done. They say that you should not live solely for your children or let your life revolve around them. That you need to keep a piece for yourself. This is true. One day you will grow up and possibly have children of your own. I want you to take these words with you. As much as you might try to be the complete opposite of your mother (which is your god-given right as a female...we'll discuss other perks later) I want you to learn one thing from me. Be good to yourself. If you are happy, your family will be happy. If you are content and healthy, so will they be. If you are stressed, on edge, sad and mean? You can bet that your family will feel the same emotions. Don't do this to yourself, and don't do it to the people you love. Make time for you to be happy. Make time for you to be secure. You will need it. Being a mom is so unbelievably hard but so unbelievably worth it.
You jumped from the 25th percentile for height and weight way up to 50th this month. You still love to eat and will put anything in your mouth and chew it up and swallow. This is quite foreign to me since your big brother has all of three favorite foods that are allowed to pass his lips. You talk all day long and even put two words together the other day as the cat walked out of the room and you yelled, "KITTY GO??!!" Even the cat stopped in her tracks and backed up to look at me like, "Did the child just say what I think she said?" and I was all, "Hot damn, I think she did!". My little Einstein. Maybe all of those DVDs are paying off!
You are slowly but surely growing some hair. We tease that you have a mullet since most of the hair you have is concentrated at the base of the back of your head. You can't defend yourself, so we do it. I promise that when you get older we will be more sensitive about making fun of you. By then we will have another child to make fun of. It's the circle of life.
You are pointing out shapes to me...star, circle, square. You know your belly, eyes, nose, hair, ears, mouth, toes, hands and a gazillion other words that we aren't even aware that you know. You kiss and hug and give cuddles (mostly to the cat and your blanket, but whatever, baby steps). You are a precious little person who is more social than I have ever dreamed of being. Your brother's hour and a half soccer practice is spent entertaining all of the other parents while you flirt and bat your lashes. One mom especially gets your undivided attention with hugs and pats on her leg. I sometime feel bad that we don't watch our kids actually play the sport we shelled out lots of cash for, but you are just so damn cute.
I'm trying to get you ready for your role as Big Sister in the next couple of months but I don't know that you will have trouble. I know that I worry about your baby brother's safety, as you can be a bit rough sometimes, but I think that you will adapt to your new life as middle child (DUN dun dunnnn) with ease. I hope. I really, really hope. Please, please adapt easily. Please? Thanks.
Here's to you for making it to 1.5 years without a hitch. If you need a hug to get you through that next tooth, or that inevitable bump on your head from walking straight into the wall when you are up past bedtime? Come and get it. My arms are always open for you. I love you, Bootser Bootsie Boo.
Love, Mommy