Lennie: Week 13, The Beginning

Week 13 started with a bang. We went to the library and then to school to see the yearbook staff. It was nice to see everyone, and the kids thought Lennie was adorable. She fell asleep in her sling while I heard all about this year’s chaos. I really miss all of the problem solving yearbook requires, but I’m glad that I’m staying home with Lennie. I can’t imagine ever leaving her for more than a few hours, although I know I will eventually.

Friday night was a welcome return to our “date night” with Dave and Karen. It’s been a couple of weeks since we got to hang out and even longer since we’ve had a long evening to just talk. Zac was his usual adorable self, and Ella was amazing. She gave me five repeated (both up high and down low), and I almost believe she did it knowingly. She also sits up and is just generally an interactive person now. She’s not a fan of “This Little Piggy,” however.

Lennie was happy for most of the evening, but she got a bit fussy when her bedtime rolled around and we weren’t in her usual environment. She’s definitely a creature of routine like her daddy. For the last several weeks, she has been willing to go to sleep if I lie down next to her and nurse her, if I rock her, if Daryl carries her around like a football, or if he rocks her on the patio swing. Frequently the patio swing routine is all that relaxes her during a fussy period. A couple of times it has been raining when we really needed the swing. I think we might have to move it into the garage before it gets too cold to take her outside in the evenings. That will necessitate some clean-up, though, because we are currently a storage place for my brother’s stuff.

Saturday was busy for Daryl, but lazy for Lennie and me. Daryl and I had optometrist’s appointments at 9 and 9:30, and afterwards we went to the grocery store. Lennie had a gigantic poopy diaper in the store, so I ended up going out to the car before Daryl was finished and changing her in the front seat. Boy was she mad! After we got home, Daryl went back out to buy mulch and mums for the bed around our mailbox. It has looked horrible since the mint died, and I’ve felt guilty that the people across the street have been trying to sell their house while our yard looks so bad. I really wanted to help with the yard work; I was actually dying to, but Lennie wanted me to hold her, so we found a lawn chair and supervised. We didn’t have quite as many mums as we needed, so Daryl grabbed two potted rosemarys from our patio and planted them with the mums. My favorite plant in our yard is a gigantic rosemary beside the front door, so I’m hoping the new ones will resemble it.

Sunday was very lazy. I made a ring sling, and it’s a huge improvement on my pouch sling. The fabric is also much better. It’s two layers of t-shirt material, so there’s some give. It has made the vertical hold, which Lennie and I love, possible. I took her to the park to swing while Daryl worked on his web stuff. Later I cleaned the kitchen while he played with Lennie. She’s been all about Daddy this weekend, frequently preferring for him to soothe her. In the early evening, she rode in the sling while I made a pie crust. Daryl held her while I made the filling, and we ate dinner while my first blueberry pie baked. After dinner, we went out onto the patio to swing and to have a very important discussion about how we were going to get ice cream to go with the pie cooling in the kitchen. We called to invite Abbey and Andy over on the condition that they bring ice cream, but those punks turned us down. I ended up leaving my two red-heads swinging in the back yard while I ran to the gas station for ice cream (and some candy for my chocolate stash). Dessert was delicious, warm and berry-y with loads of melting ice cream.

Monday has been amazing. Lately I’ve been a bit impatient when Lennie refuses to nap anywhere but on me during the day. I’ll have a million things to do, and I’ll forget to enjoy having a warm baby puddle sighing and sleeping in my lap. Today I decided that if I was going to be a napping place, then I should enjoy it. Who cares about vacuuming? When she napped I didn’t think of anything except how nice it is to be close to her. I kept looking down at her rounded little forehead and her ski-slope nose and her long eye lashes resting against her cheeks. She’s so beautiful that I get a little weepy thinking about her. I love it when she almost wakes up, but she starts sucking her tongue and puts herself back to sleep. It’s also pretty cute when she does wake up a little, but after smiling a bit, her little eyes start to close and I can see that she’s too asleep to focus. Who would have thought that seeing a baby’s eyes roll back into her head would be so cute?

Lennie and I went to the park twice today and walked around outside at least three more times. Usually it’s too sunny to have her outside much without a hat, and she fusses when she has to wear a hat, but today was overcast. We enjoyed our long walk and swinging in the park. She really enjoys swinging high while she’s safe in the sling. Lennie fell asleep while we all ate our dinners, some of us one-handed, and she has been asleep ever since. At sunset there were two huge rainbows outside. It was a beautiful ending to a beautiful day.

Lennie: Week 12

Lennie’s 12th week was pretty exciting. Not only has she done so many new things that I I don’t know where to start, her Aunt Ashley came home from college for the weekend. We didn’t get to see a lot of Ashley because she had so many people vying for her time. She just moved four hours away from her boyfriend, so obviously they needed to hang out. Fleda, Bo, and Terry also miss Ashley like crazy, so she spent a lot of time with them. We got to see her for a few hours on Saturday morning while Abbey, Fleda, Ashley, Lennie, and I were shopping for bridesmaids’ dresses for Abbey’s wedding. Lennie was pretty fussy, but it was still tons of fun. Ashley, Fleda, and I were all in one large, mirrored dressing room trying to squeeze our plump behinds into dresses and laughing uproariously at the sight. Meanwhile, Abbey was holding Lennie in her sling and having multiple pictures taken by the photographer who follows along at all bridal functions.

After shopping, Ashley had to run off to the UT/Florida game, but Lennie did get to see Terry when he picked Ashley up. This was probably their best visit to date. I suspect that he was hesitant to hold her when she was all floppy, but now that she’s bigger, he’s interested in playing.

That reminds me that we still need to pick a name for him. Daryl’s dad is already “Granddaddy” to our niece and nephew, so his title is taken care of. My dad has been calling himself “Papaw,” which I had intended to use for Terry because the kids call him “Papa.” Abbey suggested that Lennie call Terry “Pops” to stay close to papa without duplicating papaw. I suppose she’ll give him a name on her own. As for the grandmothers, Daryl’s mom is already “Grandmommy,” and my mother will be happy with nothing other than “Nanna,” which I’m not at all comfortable with. I called my grandmother that, and it’s not an option for anyone else. Mom can be “Grandma” or “Gram” or whatever else she wants, but nanna is off the table.

To return to topic, Fleda came home with Lennie and me after a stop to check out Andy’s aunt and uncle’s house, where Abbey and he will be getting married next May. It was cool, and the kids were adorable. Abbey, Andy, and Fleda all hung out for a while, and we ordered pizza.

On Sunday Daryl led a discussion on the philosophy of art, and Lennie fussed. I missed most of his talk while she was fussy, but I also had some fun with her by sitting her on the table (while I held under her arms, of course) and talking to her, which made her coo.

The week days were pretty normal other than Lennie’s developmental changes. She has become a sleep-through-the-night (most nights, anyway) baby. Her sleep schedule has become predictable. I know that if I start rocking and feeding her at any time after 8:30, I can expect to get her into bed within the half hour. She also predictably takes a nap around lunch time, in the early afternoon, and in the evening.

She has started gnawing on her fist and fingers constantly. We had started to think that she might be left handed, but now I think that we may have been premature. Her drool output has dramatically increased; she’s soaking through a couple of bibs each day. She’s easy to sing or talk out of a fussy spell now. She lights up when I sing or talk to her. I can fix most things with a rousing chorus of “Weenie Man.” She has started letting me shower while she sits happily in her bouncy seat on the other side of the clear shower curtain. Sometimes she does insist that I sing for my shower, though.

Abbey and I took Lennie to see my dad on Wednesday. We saw a beautiful blue heron eating a fish and hanging out in his front yard. I took a couple of pictures. We had a nice visit, and I hope we make it back over soon. He’s really good with her, and I know he enjoyed getting to see her again.

In not-so-positive news, Lennie has refused to take a breast milk bottle all week, though she took some formula from her dad on Thursday during a 45 minute crying jag when I went shopping with Abbey. She also isn’t interested in taking a pacifier any more. I am glad that she no longer likes her pacifier, but the bottle is problematic. Now that she’s sleeping through the night, I have to pump before I go to bed at midnight or wake up in pain in the wee hours of the morning. As a result, I have tons of breast milk in the freezer, and if the kid won’t drink it from a bottle, I have no use for it. I would give it to a human milk bank, but when I contacted the closest one, which is in Raleigh, NC, they explained that they have enough milk and aren’t taking new mothers. I hate to waste perfectly good milk, but it appears that I’ll have to. Another reason this is bad is that I had almost talked Daryl into a date with just the two of us. I think we could use a little alone time. Unfortunately, if Lennie won’t take a bottle, she may get hungry when we’re out and cry inconsolably as she did when she was alone with her pop on Thursday. I was gone for around an hour and a half, and she screamed for 45 minutes of that. Daryl was thawing breast milk, but when that wasn’t happening fast enough, he made a formula bottle, her first in well over a month. She drank a bit of the formula bottle, but promptly projectile vomited it onto Daryl. Then she wouldn’t take any of the breast milk bottle when Daryl tried to switch over. I’m flattered that she prefers to spend her meal-time with me, but I do wish that she would take the occasional bottle.

Abbey wants me to note that Lennie has the gas of your average 300 pound truck driver. Thank goodness she isn’t as smelly as she is loud. Abbey and Andy like to accuse me of making the very loud noises that the baby makes. She also grunts and groans when she has a visit from the poopy monster, who is a recent invention. He has a slightly tidier buddy, the peepee monster. Lennie is supposed to tell me when either monster tries to befoul her diaper, but the kid just won’t warn me. When I changer her, she laughs and laughs in response to questions about why she doesn’t tell me the poopy monster has been sneaking around.

Captcha

Thanks to this plugin, I’m now able to cut down on the amount of comment spam I have to moderate. Only recently (presumably with an increase in traffic thanks to my affiliation with the Spread Firefox project and my own authorship of a couple of apparently pretty popular Word Press plugins) did I start to get much spam. And even now it’s not that much. But after having to delete four or five spams from the same mouth breather within a few hours today, I figured I’d better look around for a solution that doesn’t require my daily intervention. Here’s hoping this’ll keep some of the automated spam out. Many thanks to Gudlyf for saving me the trouble of writing captcha code.

Alphabet Soup

Extracted from a developer forum, this little inadvertent quatrain has it all, from a sort of “In the beginning” to questions of epistemology and even, debatably, a sort of theology.

It began, and MYSQL was installed with RPM.
How does it at first, and make contact?
How does it know that MYSQL moves?Teach.
Incidentally, the server being used is LINUX6.1.

In other malapropism news, check out this Slate piece on some Bush family dirt as told by Kitty Kelley, in which we learn that while the young Bush apparently knew how to open the thesaurus, he did not know how to keep his finger on the word he was trying to use so that he didn’t confuse it with another vaguely similar word. Not “lacrimae,” but “lacerates” ran down his cheeks when, as an Andover student, he wrote an essay about the death of his sister. Sometimes the small words are better, even when you know what the bigger words mean.

Incidentally, many will no doubt cackle at how evil the Bush family is after reading that piece. Some of the things mentioned are pretty bad, but we all do questionable things and say dirty words and overindulge. So I can’t really get on board with deriding the Bushes for a lot of this stuff, though some of it does seem (if true) to be pretty damning. I’m trying not to cast the first stone, though, as I may not be qualified to do so.

Amazon Wishlist Plugin Updated

Tomi Junnila was kind enough to submit two edits to the Amazon Wishlist plugin. They include the ability to search non-US Amazon stores and an enhancement to the way multiple pages of results are fetched. (Formerly, it had been one page or all pages, with a request sent per batch of ten. So if you had 600 items in your wish list, you were sending 60 requests in order to print a single random item. Tomi’s change allows you to specify the number of pages of results to return, affording you more than the default ten results without blackholing you into request hell. Thanks, Tomi!

Download from the usual link in the nav bar.

I know a Weenie Man

    The Weenie Man Song

I know a weenie man.
He owns a weenie stand.
He sells most anything from hot dogs on down.
Someday I’ll change his life.
I’ll be his weenie wife.
Hot dog, I love that weenie man.

This is Lennie’s favorite song. I’d never heard it before I bought a collection of children’s songs, but now we sing it all the time. She definitely responds to it by smiling and generally lighting up around the third line.

I like to make up alternate versions such as:

I know a daddy man.
He owns a piece of land.
He makes most anything from websites on down.
One day I changed his life.
I became that daddy’s wife.
Hot dog, I love that daddy man.

I find that just starting the song by knowing a daddy man and letting the rest just come to me results in the most fun, though.

Other favorites are “Apples and Bananas” and the original creation “Who’s the Pretty Baby?” (Lennie Lou, that’s who!)

100 hours, 1,000,000 Downloads

Within 100 hours of the launch of the Spread Firefox site, Mozilla logged over 1,000,000 initiated downloads of Firefox. The site, which uses the same software that made the Dean for America online campaign such a success, had some initial server glitches, but it’s churning along now, thanks to a great effort on the part of the Mozilla system administrators. This site has the potential to be a great grassroots initiative, and it’s exciting (and very taxing!) to be a part of it. If you haven’t checked in yet (especially if it was because the site was unresponsive), go ahead and give it a shot. Go ahead. All the kids are doing it.

Lennie's Eleventh Week

Our baby was 12 weeks old yesterday, and today it occurred to me that I would love to have a more detailed record of her life than the baby calendar that I update religiously. I’m going to try to write an entry each week. I hate that I didn’t start sooner, but this having a baby stuff is exhausting.

Let me start by saying that it hasn’t escaped my notice that my interest in blogging Lennie’s life coincides with her shift from technically sleeping through the night, defined as sleeping six consecutive hours, to really sleeping through the night, sleeping for eight hours or more. I can’t help it; I’ve always required a great deal of sleep, and she only recently started allowing me what I really needed. Last night was her third night of eight hours of sleep, for the record.

Friday:

So what did Lennie do this week? She started the week by catching her first cold. She and I went shopping with a very congested Ella and Karen on Friday. Our destination was the Carter’s outlet in Pigeon Forge, but we dinked around for hours before we got there. Lennie had a blow out in the very first store, ruining the adorable outfit I had picked out the night before. I changed her in the dressing room floor of the second store, a fancy children’s clothes boutique that nearly made me want to go to church just for an excuse to dress her in those beautiful dresses.

I carried Lennie through the pre-lunch stores in her baby sling, feeding her on demand as usual. Karen assured me that no one could see what I was up to. We went into a leather goods store that smelled amazing as we walked by. We ended up buying Ella’s Grandma Jan a cute purse with a J on it.

Soon enough the babies were pitching a fit to be fed and changed, and Karen and I were hungry, so we found a restaurant and called my mom’s friend, Cathy, to join us. Cathy lives in Gatlinburg, and she’s closer to me than any of my actual aunts, but she hadn’t made it to Knoxville to meet Lennie yet. She’s busy with her own three kids, ages 15 to 9 or so, but they were in school, so she made it for lunch. She brought me flowers and loved the baby. I had planned to ask her which baby she thought was mine, but I was feeding Lennie when she arrived, so it was pretty obvious. When Lennie finished eating, Cathy held her and played with her. Lennie laughed and really enjoyed the visit.

After lunch, we made our way to the Carter’s outlet because time was running out. The whole purpose of the trip was to outfit Lennie for her next growth spurt, but we spent the morning shopping for ourselves instead. Lennie screamed almost the entire way to Carter’s. I ended up scrambling into the backseat at a traffic light. I wedged my butt between the two car seats and tried to console both babies. (Ella was doing a bit of sympathy crying.) It worked, and Lennie fell asleep just before we arrived. Karen and I decided that it would be smarter to run in one at a time to do our shopping while the other mommy stayed with the babies in the car. I ran in first, and I don’t think I’ve ever spent a hundred bucks faster. Lennie’s good to go until summer, and the most expensive thing I bought was $7. Not bad!

Saturday:

My Uncle Tim, his wife, two daughters, and son-in-law came over for dinner and Trivial Pursuit. We were so busy talking and playing with the baby that we never got to the game. I actually got to eat my dinner while it was hot because we passed the baby around. At one point my cousin Frankie was finished and I wasn’t, so I told her it was her turn to hold the baby like doing so was a horrible chore. She was thrilled, of course. Frankie might as well be one of my little sisters. I was, for lack of a more precise term, her live-in nanny the summer she was 10 and I was 18, so I get to boss her around and make her help out just as if she really were my little sister.

My actual little sister Abbey and her fiancé Andy stopped by after Abbey left work. They’re fixtures around here, which I love and encourage. I actually wish we had a mother-in-law apartment so she could move into it. It’s ridiculous, since we fought like cats and dogs, or well, actually like sisters, when we had to share a room as kids, but I love her. She’s a weird combination of my best friend and my first daughter. I would have said first child, but Willem is older than her, and I sort of feel like his mom too. Poor Lennie, that sort of thinking makes her my fourth daughter and sixth kid. Scary!

Sunday:

We went to a book club meeting. Lennie was great during the socializing time. She cooed at Anne L. and generally brightened up the room, but as the meeting started she got fussy. That was a first for the group, and I should have realized then that she was starting to feel bad. I fell asleep leaning my head against the pillar in the middle of the room with Lennie in the sling in my lap. I haven’t done anything like that since the time when I was 8 months pregnant and left the meeting to sleep on the table in the hall. Michael L. and Charlie caught me that time, and I was embarrassed, but Michael didn’t say anything about my nap, and Charlie moved to Canada last month. I suppose that when I nodded off I should have realized that I was starting to feel bad as well, but I did not.

Abbey and Andy invited us to play football with Andy’s family in the afternoon. Andy’s family, which is nearly as big as ours with five siblings, does something athletic every Sunday afternoon. We’ve gone before, but this was the first time since Lennie’s birth. They said to invite Dave and the kids if we wanted, so we did. At the beginning of the game, Lennie was asleep inside with Andy’s mom and aunt, who promised to come get me if she woke up. Abbey promised that they didn’t mind and that they might actually like having enough babies to go around since they generally have to share Andy’s neice, Chase. When Lennie woke up, I brought her outside and played with her and Ella on a blanket while the daddies played. Daryl and Dave offered to help out, and I let Daryl help when the girls got fussy and Zac got tired of playing in the tree house with Chase’s big sister because he had had twice as much playing time as Dave, but I was enjoying seeing the babies together on the blanket. Ella frequently grabs Lennie’s foot. It’s really sweet to watch.

Monday:

Lennie was fussy most of the day and felt hot around four o’clock. I took her temperature, and when she had a fever called her pediatrician’s office to ask how much baby Tylenol to give her. I wasn’t particularly worried, just wanted the correct dosage for her age and weight, but the nurse said to take her to Children’s Hospital because of her age. She would have needed to go to the doctor’s office, but it was closing too soon for that. When Daryl got home, we took Lennie to the emergency room, where she was looked over. Shockingly enough she had a cold and needed baby Tylenol. For this they scared me to death with talk of spinal fluid checks for meningitis! I love the medical system! I guess it’s better safe than sorry, but the result of that seems a bit ridiculous sometimes.

Tuesday:

Abbey came over after class to hang out with us. She had taken some pork chops out of her freezer to cook, but when Andy ended up working all week, she needed a reason to make so many. Daryl grilled them, and they were great. We made a plate for Andy, who stopped by after work to eat his. After dinner, Daryl was holding Lennie in the kitchen while Abbey played with her and I did the dishes. Abbey discovered a dimple on Lennie’s right cheek. It’s the most adorable thing I’ve ever seen. It’s out a centimeter or so from the right of her mouth and a little below her bottom lip, and it appears when she grins. It trembles a bit as her grin revs up, but it’s definitely there. I couldn’t stop cooing at the baby when I saw it. Daryl almost pulled a muscle trying to crane his neck around to see it.

Wednesday:

Nothing particularly interesting happened on this day, so I’ll just summarize some general developments.

Lennie has started trying to sit up when she’s on her back or in a seat. She looks like she’s doing crunches. She has also started getting fussy when she’s sleepy. She’ll cry and cry, which is unusual for her, and it turns out that the trouble was that she needed a nap. Another new trick is that she’s really sucking on her hands now. I’ve been a bit worried about how little she uses her hands to grab at things, but she seems to be coming around. She is starting to react to toys more, and the Happy Apple is a favorite. I put it between her legs when she’s propped up, and when she starts kicking and it starts chiming, she loves it. Finally, Lennie now refuses to take a bottle, even though her bottles are always breast milk now. She only wants her milk straight from the tap. I sense a picky eater in my future.

Thursday:

Lennie is 12 weeks old!!!!! I took the standard picture of her in her red chair to chart her growth. She’s getting so big that I can’t imagine what I’ll do when she’s not a baby anymore. I know I’ve said we should only have one baby, but she makes me want another. My heart breaks a little when I imagine her not wanting me to cuddle her anymore or her not needing me anymore. I can’t help thinking how nice Karen has it having a boy and a girl. Zac and Ella are so sweet together. Then I think about Lennie not having siblings to lean on when she needs help, as I’ve leaned on mine just this week. Of course, thinking about my siblings also reminds me of Fleda’s mishap of today; I’ll write more about that in a minute to preserve this entry’s chronology.

Today was a big day for another reason as well. Lennie stayed with a babysitter for the first time other than the time I was in the emergency room when she was three weeks old. Both times she’s been without Daryl or me, she has been with Abbey, but I think this time counts more because we planned ahead. The two were alone for about two hours, and Lennie did pretty well. I went to a meeting about teaching home-bound or hospital-bound kids. I might take a kid who isn’t contagious for the extra money and the mental stimulation as long as doing so doesn’t put too much of a strain on Daryl. He’s been insanely busy lately, and I’d hate to add extra child-care responsibilities when he’s already giving up sleep to fulfill his programming responsibilities. I won’t even consider taking a student until his schedule has calmed down a bit, but I needed to go to the meeting anyway if I thought I might want to teach a home-bound kid this year.

After the big day, I had a hard time sleeping, so I was lying in bed at nearly 1:00 AM trying to fall asleep when my cell phone rang. I’d left it in the living room, and it stopped ringing before I could even decide whether I wanted to answer it or not. I lay in bed debating whether or not I should bother to get up, but I finally decided to after telling myself that I’d hate myself if Abbey was stranded on the side of the road in the remnants of Hurricane Ivan, or if Fleda or Bo needed me for something, or if Willem and Victoria were having trouble with their baby, or if a thousand things were happening. I’m a worrier from a long line of worriers, as should be obvious by now.

Anyway, I got out of bed after a couple of minutes of mentally beating myself up, and discovered that the call came from Fleda and Bo’s house. I called back, and my step-dad, Terry answered. He told me that he had been calling all the numbers on their caller ID because he couldn’t find Fleda, who was supposed to have gone to the football game that night to play with the band. He thought that the game had been canceled, but had no way of finding out at one in the morning, and he had run out of people to call. And people make fun of worriers! I would like to say I didn’t panic, but that’d be a lie. I was picturing her lying raped and dead on the side of the road and couldn’t think very clearly, but I finally decided that Abbey might have an idea. I called her, and she called Ashley to see if Ashley had the phone numbers of any of her still-in-high-school band buddies. Meanwhile, Terry discovered a detailed note from Fleda explaining that since the game and the next day’s school was cancelled due to flooding from the tiny bit of the down-graded hurricane that made it to Knoxville, she was going to spend the night with her friend Heather. Spending the night with Heather is fine. Leaving a note about doing so is fine, so long as Terry knows early enough to go get Fleda if spending the night isn’t fine. Unfortunately, she left the note on the stove instead of in the usual spot on the clock, and he didn’t look for a note until he had already been driving back and forth to the high school to meet the band bus, which should have arrived not long after 11. He’d only been worried for three hours because she was supposed to be at the game. Fleda has a cell phone on the way, and I gave her a major guilt trip in addition to whatever Terry did to ensure that this never happens again. I definitely can wait for Lennie to be fifteen. Having a fifteen year old daughter is scary.

Anyway, sometimes having siblings isn’t so great because the people you love can scare you to death. I guess Lennie will be okay either way.

Spreadfirefox.com

For several weeks now, I’ve been puttering away my evening hours working on a site whose goal is to spread the word about the Firefox Web browser. Spreadfirefox.com (dubbed sfx by some of us) will serve as the hub of a grassroots movement to promote this great Web browser. The software that drives the site is the same software the Howard Dean presidential campaign used during its successful online effort (the online part was effective; it was the offline part that failed). Mozilla released a preview release of Firefox 1.0 today, and we went live with the site simultaneously.

The site launch did not come off perfectly cleanly thanks to a Slashdot blitz that had me scrambling to cache images, perform CPR on the Web server, and ultimately stick a static page out in front of the dynamic content to serve as a speed bump easing load on the server. In spite of these issues, within four hours of the Slashdotting, we had managed to have 600-plus people register as site members. We’re anticipating thousands of users, but that’s not a bad start.

Maybe you’re not into evangelizing a given browser and so won’t find much of interest at sfx, but if you’ve found your way here and you’re using an insecure browser like Internet Explorer, I hope you’ll at least download Firefox and give it a shot.

Lou Who?

Who would have thought that we’d wind up unanticipatedly calling our baby by a name shared with musicians, athletes, and [the actors who play] genetic freaks of note? In all the name vetting we’ve done for years, I’ve been the nay-sayer. “We couldn’t name a boy Lucas because of that movie starring Corey Haim.” “I like the name Finnegan, but he’d get his butt whipped every day after school.” I can’t think of any of the girl names I rejected on the off chance that some bizarre child could find a contorted way of using the name to abuse our child. But rest assured that there were many.

We liked the name Lennon, and though I wasn’t especially turned on by the middle name Louise, I was ok with it because it’s a family name that means a lot to Mleeka. We had intended to call the baby Lennie, and we do. We had also joked about calling her a sort of redneckish Lennie Lou, which we have actually sort of appropriated precisely because it sounds so silly. You’re supposed to talk silly to babies, after all. What we hadn’t anticipated was that we might settle on just Lou. I’m not quite there yet, but it’s not uncommon for Mleeka to address Lennie as Lou, and I have to admit it’s kind of growing on me.

See if you can pick Lennie Lou out from among some of the celebrities she’s beginning to share a name with:

Lou Lou Lou Lou Lou