Max Isaac L's online diary (December 1995-March 1996)
This diary is pulled together from updates that my dad sent to his
friends about my progress. Don't just read --- send him a note!
The entries here are arranged from most recent to least recent. That
way you can find out the latest news easily!
Tuesday, March 26th
Here are three quick and funny Max stories in the meantime.
Sangeeta, a friend of Lisa's from medical school, was visiting with
her spouse Michael a week or so ago. Sangeeta introduced Michael to
Max by saying, ``He has the same name as your Dad.'' Max replied,
``Dada?''
The next day I was explaining to Lisa's parents why Max says ``na na''
instead of ``banana.'' I said, ``Basically, Max doesn't use any words
with more than 2 syllables.'' Max replied, ``ba ba ba ba!''
Recently, I was lying on my back on the floor, and my sweatshirt hiked
up a little revealing my bare belly. Max walked over to me and said,
``cakn cakn cakn!'' while tickling my belly.
What's new with me?! (3/16/96)
- I know about 50 words and can echo back about 4 syllables.
- My dad has begun to keep track of my vocabulary and my major milestones.
Saturday, March 16th
Yesterday was very special. Max and I returned to ``Discovery Zone''
with Lauren, Molly, Anne, and Jonah. All the kids had a great time.
Molly went up and down a sliding board all by herself. Jonah walked
around the entire place at record speeds. Max enjoyed sitting in the
``ball pit'' and pushing the balls around with his hands and his
chest. The kids enjoyed playing with each other as well. Max and
Molly held hands and played ``Ring around the Rosie'' with Max falling
down at the end. Molly chased around an older girl causing Lauren to
lament not being able to make an older sister for Molly. I don't
think I can quite capture the excitement of the day, but, when we got
home, Max needed a 3 hour and 12 minute nap to recover!
In other news, Max made his second two-block tower recently; he plays
with his little activity center and can press the push button, flip
the wide switch, but can't turn the dial switch or the rotary dial; he
pulls the string on his musical dog to hear the song; he sticks out
his tongue without saying ``bleh.''
Friday, March 15th
Max is indeed walking (jogging now), as you guessed. His talking is
steadily improving. Today he revised his pronunciation of ``egg''
from ``eg-GAH'' to simply ``egg'' and ``up'' from ``up-PAH'' to
``up.'' A few days ago his word for ``banana'' changed from
``bah-bah'' to ``neh-neh'' (a little better). No, he hasn't learned
the quadratic formula yet, but I have been playing some simple
math-like games with him. I make the sound ``cha'' some number of
times (between one and five) and he echoes it back to me. He
consistently gets it right if I do two, three, or four ``cha''s. Five
is still a bit beyond him. I've tried the same game with younger
babies and I haven't met any that could go beyond two. I'm not
entirely sure this is a ``math'' skill, but it's probably good for
something.
Thursday, March 14th
Lisa in the process of finishing up residency (Ob/Gyn). (Her first
year of residency was when I was at CMU.) Carrying Max for as long as
she did under the stress she was under was no mean feat. After Max
was born, Lisa stayed home for the 3 months he was in the hospital and
then for 2 more months after he got home. Eventually she was told to
she needed to go back to work and at that point (a little over a year
ago), I took over.
I've been home with Max almost every day; we go to playgroup and
Gymboree and even swimming lessons last fall. It's been a pretty
amazing experience. I worked on my thesis during nap time and left
Max with a babysitter for a few hours each week so I could go to
school to catch some meetings, use the printers and visit the library.
Max is such a great baby that I was able to finish my dissertation
pretty on time without too much stress.
Max is turning out to be a great little guy, so staying home with me
hasn't broken him. And it's been great fun for me!
Tuesday, March 12th
Max is doing great and seems to be feeling much better. He has been
acting a little funny lately when waking up from his afternoon nap
(thrashing and fussing for about 20 minutes), so I'll be watching him
closely.
Max can play an auditory repetation game up to about 4 (I say ``la la
la,'' he says ``la la la''...). I wouldn't call it counting, though.
Max likes it when I juggle, and sometimes picks up my clubs and shakes
them in the air. It's pretty cute.
Wednesday, February 28th
This is a non-traditional entry.
Well, I finished my disseration and successfully defended it. I ended
up buying Max a very cool Tonka truck to thank him for letting me do
the work I had to do.
Max had his ``18 month'' checkup today. He is actually 19 months from
birth and 16 months adjusted age. The pediatrician said a few things
that were a little hard to hear: Max's ear may always look funny, he
may never grow to be full size, his hypospadius repair doesn't look
great, we shouldn't give him a bottle to help put him to sleep.
Still, I think the pediatrician was pretty impressed with how nicely
Max is developing. He asked me about Max's vocabulary, so tonight,
Lisa and I sat down to try to document it. We decided to break things
down into categories that correspond to his level of comprehension.
Things he can name
Momma, Dadda, Grandma (baba, bapa), Grandpa (bapa), cookie, cracker
(cackn), pickle (gahkn), brocolli (gackn, bakcn), cheese (keez), keys
(keez), bottle (botn), banana (baba), ball (bleh), balloon (bblun-ah),
egg (eh-gah), pasta (papa), pizza (papa), berries (baba), crayon
(cackn), dog (eh-eh), jelly (yeh-yeh), bear (buh), cat (buh), dust
buster (brroom), car, truck (eeeehhhhh) toys and real ones, book
(baba), bunny (sniffs), flower (sniffs), piccolo (cahkn), bulb (baba),
bib (buh), Grover (rohver), Big Bird (bih-bih), pots and pans
(eh-gah), Max (mah), Jennifer (na na, na na na), tongue (bleh), lion
(aaahh), cow (moo), chicken (gahkn) both food and animal, duck (khh
khh), snow (poo), Pearl (poo), apple (bah pah), Gymbo (baba)
Things he can point to given their name
computer, window, nose, hair, toes, mouth, teeth, eyes, cheeks, belly,
X's belly (etc.), Ernie (etc.), Molly, Jonah, window, tree, hair,
xylophone, shoes, feet, wagon, floor
Names he can repeat
yellow (yeh-yeh), blue (boo) sometimes, Ph.D. (aytch-tee), Cookie
Monster (cakn), Who knew? (ooh rooh), Unsinkable Molly Brown song (ba
baba bah bah bah bah bah), truck backing up sound, tick tock song, oh
boy (ah bah), uh oh (uh uh), up (uh-pah), backpack (ba-pa), shampoo
(heh PAH), (doesn't say finger anymore)
Things he can do on request
march, jump, reach for ceiling, get the X, kiss X (sometimes), make
nice to X, kick, drink from cup (sloppily), how big is Max? (baah
bah), knock (hand open), hammer (with hand), yes? (nods), no? (shakes
head), I don't know (shrugs and purses lips), cry (makes sad face and
says ``ehh''), rock, blow kiss, wave hello and goodbye, peek-a-boo,
roll over, ready for snuffle? (lays down to be tickled), dance,
pounce, talk on telephone (hand to ear), smell X, clap hands, sit, lay
kehpie, brush hair, brush teeth, hands up, yawn (eeh), give X to Y
Wednesday, February 14th
His favorite activity lately is climbing onto things (short tables,
toy chests, low chairs) and standing up on them. I guess he likes the
perspective it gives him. He also seems to like when I carry him in a
way that lets his feet dangle against the ground. He's really fun to
have around.
Sunday, February 11th
His walking is getting more and more natural. He still looks like a
little monkey when he trots along, but at least he does it without any
visible effort. Yesterday, he began experimenting with walking
backwards. I had tried to get him to learn about walking backwards a
month or so ago by saying ``Max, walk backwards,'' while pushing him
off balance slightly with my fingers on his chest. Unfortunately, he
made the wrong association and simply poked his tummy whenever I asked
him to walk backwards. Last night, though, he seemed genuinely
interested in the walking backwards part.
He's also getting very tricky with climbing and balance; he enjoys
finding things to stand and sit on. Some examples include throw
pillows, a short ``writing'' desk toy, and his wicker toychest. It
always looks dangerous when he puts himself on one of these perches,
but the look on his is so proud that I can't bring myself to make a
big deal about it. Of course, I'll kick myself the first time he gets
hurt, but I hope it won't come to that.
Verbally, he's made very very slow progress over the past few months.
The only ``new'' word that I've noticed lately is that he has started
to say ``burr'' (with his lips puckered out) for bear instead of ``ba
ba,'' like he had been doing. This is especially important because he
uses ``ba ba'' as a catch-all word for anything that starts with a
``B'' (banana, bunny, book, etc.). He's starting to understand
compound phrases a bit better---I can ask him to go to his room and
bring back a toy, for example. He did one funny thing a few days ago
in which I said ``Dada kiss Max's head'' and then kissed his head,
then I said ``Max kiss Dada's hand?'' and he thought for a moment and
thrust his hand toward my face. Interesting. It is likely that word
ordering isn't carrying much information to him at this point.
Last little thing to mention is something he started doing yesterday.
Lisa had him out of the house all day (they went to Mystic aquarium)
and I was home working. Max was happy to see me when he got back, and
he walked over to where I was working on the computer, put his chin on
my leg and smiled up at me. I hope he stays sweet like this forever!
Oh yeah, also, he had his first bout of throwing up (sorry for
mentioning it). He was so sad, but afterwards we got him cleaned up
and he felt better and went to sleep in my and Lisa's arms with a
smile on his face.
Saturday, February 3rd
He's doing great! Some of his more recent tricks include pretending
his toys are ``dust busters'' (he just loves those things), and saying
``Grover'' with his lips puckered out (``ROW-foo'').
What's new with me?! (2/3/96)
- I'm eating with a fork and drinking from a cup---messily!
- My sense of pitch is improving. I can now make a distinction
between high notes and low notes when I sing ``ba ba ba.''
Sunday, January 21st
Lisa, Max, and I just returned from a trip to NJ. We saw a close
friend of Lisa's who is now roughly 25 weeks pregnant. I found it
weird to think that her baby (still inside) is bigger than Max was
when he was born. Lisa's friend's pregnancy is progressing very
normally and it is likely that she'll have no problems at all. While
we are very, very happy for her, I can't help feeling sort of envious.
Lisa enjoyed being pregnant and I couldn't wait to feel Max kick from
inside her belly. (Hmm, that's a dangling particle, if I ever saw
one.) Maybe next time.
Wednesday, January 17th
Max is doing very well. He was fairly indifferent to the snow,
although I think he enjoyed watching it fall one day when we were
outside in it. He doesn't like when I put on his snow suit, though; I
think it's a bit confining for him. We're about to have Max's final
Olin Mills picture taken today. I got email from a stranger
yesterday, who said that the picture of Max on the home page made him
cry. The stranger said that he had been watching Max's web page last
year, lost track of it, and then rediscovered it to find that Max was
growing up beautifully. It was very touching.
Friday, January 12th
Because of Max's challenging beginning, he is eligible for the state's
Early Intervention program. It's a service that try to identify
deficits as quickly as possible, so that the kids can get the help
they need to be productive members of society. When we first started
out in the program, we had a developmental evaluation that found him
slightly delayed for his adjusted age. We were concerned that a
slight malformation of his thumb would cause him problems later, and
we discovered that an infection on one ear (associated with the
strawberry birthmark he has there) was making it so that he refused to
turn his head in one direction. Anyhow, the results of the first
evaluation were concerning.
We stayed in the program, and I believe a second mini-evaluation at 4
1/2 months showed that he was catching up with his standing, but still
needed work on sitting and rolling. Recently, at 12-13 months, he
experienced a burst of development (walking, talking, responding to
requests, etc.) so I was very excited at his 14 1/2 month evaluation
that he would do very well. Apparently, the major deficit they
discovered at this evaluation was ball throwing. Most babies his age
can catch a rolling ball and either roll or throw it back. Max and I
don't play that game at all, and so he flunked that part of the test.
So we've got homework again, but it doesn't seem nearly as serious as
the earlier stuff. In fact, he scored well enough in related areas
that the ball throwing simply brought him down to the low part of the
average range for gross motor skills---no significant delay.
The high point of the evaluation was the cognitive test. Max was able
to accomplish three tasks that most babies his age can't do. The
first involved placing circular and square puzzle pieces into their
correct places. He did the circle very easily, but needed to be
encouraged to get the square into place. The next task was to find a
way to get to a toy that was behind a piece of plexiglass. Max put
his hands on the plexiglass (something he had never experienced
before), then found the edge and pulled it open like a door. Once the
toy was exposed, he didn't bother to go after it; I guess it wasn't
enough of a challenge at that point. The third task went like this.
The evaluator (a school psychologist) placed a small toy in her hand
and made a fist around it. She then put both hands behind her back
briefly and then brought them back for Max to see. Max then reached
out and touched the hand that had the toy in it. She repeated this 3
times, switching hands each time. He got 3 for 3. The psychologist
was very impressed.
From what I've seen at home, he might have gotten a bit lucky on the
test, but I'm willing to believe that he's a smart little guy. In
spite of meeting the program's requirements in 4 ways (spent time on a
ventilator, more than 2 months in the hospital, birthweight under 3
pounds, born more than 2 months early), the Early Intervention people
feel he no longer needs to be part of their program. Yay! I feel
like I should throw him a little graduation party. Jacelyn's invited,
of course.
Wednesday, January 10th
Max is doing very well, I think. I had him in today for an
evaluation. Apparently his development is perfectly normal for a 14.5
month old (the age he should be). The only category in which he was
outside the normal range was in cognitive skills (problem solving,
short term memory) in which he was slightly above the norm. So we're
pleased that he seems to have survived his difficult beginning totally
intact.
What's new with me?! (1/5/96)
- I finally learned how to say ``momma'' to mean my Mom!
- I know dozens of tricks including pointing to body parts, and
making animal sounds.
Thursday, January 4th
This is not an official entry because I haven't emailed it to
anyone. However, no one would want to receive a message like this
anyway!
Max's tricks (1/4/95)
Today he learned to say ``ma ma'' and he means it!
- Says: Da da, balloon (b-b-b-ooo), cracker (cackn), crayon
(cackn), bottle (batn), finger (gungung), Ma ma, Max (maa!)
- Has words for: Cookie Monster (cackn), flowers (ba ba)
- Points to: head/hair, eyes (blinks), nose (with thumb), mouth (makes
sound), ear, belly, feet, tongue (bleh), teeth (grin), toes,
knees, (can't seem to get shoulder)
- Plays with: blocks into slot, push button squeeze toy
- Makes sound of: lion (aaah!), cow, duck (kkkew with tongue), cat
(baa), sheep (baa), dog (eh eh), yawn (aaaah!), bunny (sniffs)
- Shakes head no and yes (though might not understand yes)
- Kisses everyone, blows kisses, makes nice, (doesn't really hug on
command)
- Acts: Brush hair, brush teeth, blow air, smell flowers, claps hands,
raises hands, hands up!
- Pretends: jump (bends knees), blow whistle/piccolo (laaa!), talk on
phone, hammer
- songs: na na na (goodbye, associated with Aunt Jenn), ba ba ba (Molly
Brown)
- Hands people books to read (``ba ba!'')
- Walks, climbs onto couch, plays babysmash, goes up/down stairs, can
sort of walk backwards, pounces, (doesn't really run)
- Tower of two cans
Monday, December 11th
As of a day or so ago, Max is walking! In addition, he has figured
out how to stand up by pushing off the floor. I'm told that this is
usually a much later development, so it is likely that Max was ready
to walk weeks ago. He was probably holding off until he fully
recovered from his surgery.
Psycholinguistically, he's making some serious strides. He has words
for: bottle, cracker, crayon, Dad, Mom, balloon, hairbrush, baby,
purple, pasta, pizza, keys, cheese, and a few other things. I don't
remember whether or not this is common, but he seems to be in a
``homophone'' stage; in that he gives several words that he uses
differently the same pronunciation. Some of the pairs are fairly
reasonable (cheese and keys are both ``KEE kee'' or ``KO kee'', pasta
and pizza are both ``PA pa''), others are less so (crayons and
crackers are both ``KA kn''), and others are just unforunate (Mom and
Dad are both ``da da'').
In any event, he seems to be right on track, for which I'm very
glad. It means I haven't ruined him yet!
What's new with me?! (12/8/95)
- I'm walking!
- My vocabulary is getting bigger, too.
- My dad finally put a copy of my book on the web.
Friday, December 8th
We're doing ok. Max has a great personality! He enjoys my stupid
jokes and prat falls and funny faces. He likes being tickled and
wrestled. The big news is that he started walking yesterday! It's
hardly perfected, but he can get around pretty well. It's adorable.
Surgery-wise, on Tuesday we had the last followup appointment from his
recent urological surgery. The surgeon seemed very impressed with
Max's healing, so it looks like we're totally in the clear. There are
no more surgeries scheduled or anticipated!
I don't have an official definition of walking, but I would say
that he started walking last night. Very exciting!