
- Sleeping a 6 – 7 hour stretch at night
- Napping sporadically throughout the day
- Nursing/ 4.5 oz. bottle (when Mommy is at work) every 3 hours
- Lifting head pretty good
- Sucking thumb (just started)
- LOVES smiling
Avery and Emerson got a visit from the Paci Fairy this weekend and I am happy to say that they have given up their pacifiers and it could not have been easier! I came up with the idea of the Paci Fairy while at work Friday afternoon. I thought it would take a few days of Justin and me talking about it with the girls before we could implement it successfully. Well I was wrong…it literally took five minutes! I brought the idea up to the girls just before they were going to bed Friday evening. It was so preliminary that I hadn’t even discussed it with Justin yet. I told them big girls don’t use paci’s and asked them if they wanted to be big girls and give their paci’s away to the little babies. They said yes right away so we went with it. We immediately grabbed a zip lock baggie and took turns placing their pacifiers in it. We sealed it tight and then all walked to the front door where we placed the bag outside for the Paci Fairy to come get during the middle of the night. The girls said they wanted the Paci Fairy to bring them balloons…something that the Paci Fairy could easily handle I’m sure. The girls went to bed with no problem and slept through the night no problem. They were excited when they woke up to see that the Paci Fairy had not only brought them each a balloon, but also play-doh. The girls each asked for their pacifiers a few times over the weekend, but once they were reminded that they gave them away to the Paci Fairy, they were fine! Seriously, I am still amazed at how easy it was! I’m hoping potty training is this easy!
This past Sunday Justin and I drove to Ohio to take Avery to see Dr. Hertle. I think we always kind of knew at some point that was in her plan, but it always seemed so far away and it is hard to believe that the appointment has already come and gone. We left on Sunday right after lunch…just me, Justin, and Avery…so sort of like a vacation in a sense being that we only had one kid…lol! The drive to Ohio was only 5 ½ hours…for some reason I had thought it was much longer than that. The drive was absolutely beautiful, especially the first 3 hours. I had actually never driven those roads before so I was probably expecting normal highway conditions but for the most part it was a two lane not heavily traveled road through mountains and picturesque scenery that looked like it came straight out of a book. We could not have picked a better day of the year or a time to do the drive. I truly mean that as even the drive back was not nearly as gorgeous as the drive there as MANY of the trees had already begun to lose their leaves. The fall foliage coupled with the natural scenery was just breathtaking. Justin was driving and I know he wanted nothing more than to be able to take pictures of it ALL! Sadly, we didn’t take a picture of anything.
We started talking to Avery about the appointment a few days prior and she understood that she was going to see Dr. Ellis’s friend Dr. Hertle and he was going to look at her eyes. (It is just so crazy how much kids understand from an early age especially when it comes to a medical condition.) The appointment itself went well. We were there for about 3 ½ hours. We first met with a nurse, and then Dr. Hertle for the initial consultation. Avery then had three types of testing done. The first was done by the nurse and Avery was presented with white cardboard slides that had zebra stripes on them with increasing degree of difficulty in identifying the striped zebra lines. They did the test three times…once with both eyes open, and once with each eye patched. It was determined that with contacts and using both eyes, Avery’s vision is actually not that much worse than the average child her age. When utilizing one eye at a time, her vision further decreased, but that is typical for any child when one eye is covered. The second test was an Eye Movement Recording (EMR). This was interesting as Avery was supposed to sit still for this as she looked at images on a screen (Elmo, Big Bird, Ernie, etc.) While she cooperated, she was a 2 year old cooperating and kept moving her head, but the doctor said he got what he needed…hopefully he really did. The third test was a Visual Evoked Response (VER) which electrodes were attached to Avery’s head as she watched a red dot on the screen. The red dot was covered by spiders on a stick that Justin had to use to entertain Avery to keep her eyes focused on the red dot. We made up every story we could think of with the spiders…they went to the park, to the grocery store, to the park again…it was quite comical…it kept Avery’s attention though and that was all that matters. Even when we got back home, Avery was still talking about the test and the button (electrode) and the spiders (red dot cover up).
After those tests were performed, Avery’s eyes were dilated and she was further examined by Dr. Hertle. Dr. Hertle basically confirmed a lot of what we already knew but we probably needed to hear again by him. With regards to her diagnosis, he feels that the small eyes alone were enough to cause the nystagmus as the first few months of a child’s life are crucial in visual development and with a lot of the components of her eyes just being a little smaller (optic nerve, cornea, retina, pupils, etc.) she didn’t have the “camera” that she needed to develop normal eyesight. He further said she would have likely developed the nystagmus even without the cataracts just as a result of the small eyes. He said that her eyes basically stopped developing at 6/7 months in the womb. He felt that her care to date has been great and that she has been seen by some of the top doctors in the country. He said that her eye sight will continue to improve even into her teens and her nystagmus will become less noticeable and the physical appearance of her eyes will likely get a little bigger as well. With regards to the next step, he does feel that she will benefit from surgery; surgery to correct the strabismus, but also the nystagmus and the null point (those would be improved…not necessarily corrected.) Previous doctors have also told us that the nystagmus surgery can be done as part of the strabismus surgery by cutting additional muscles. Dr. Hertle has been the first person to suggest that Avery does have a null point. He feels that her constant head down, lid down position is in part due to light sensitivity but more so due to the fact that when her head is in that position her eyes move less in that position….thus her null point. Dr. Hertle suggests operating on the null point as well although he was up front that the measurements for the null point portion of the surgery are small, medium, and large and because it isn’t exact as well as the fact that children’s null points can change during child hood, he said 20% of children will require a second surgery. (Personally I think the statistics are even higher than that based on the persons that Justin met at the ANN Conference this summer). Dr. Hertle said the important piece was getting Avery to see him to have the tests run so he can determine the type of nystagmus. He said he would happily do the surgery, but also happily work with another doctor who could perform the surgery. He would just want a follow up again at his office at some point so he could redo the tests to determine the results of the procedures. Dr. Hertle also said that he would suggest surgery sooner than later but sooner could be anytime within the next 9 months.
Avery was very well behaved not only at the appointment but all weekend. She did great in the car and each way slept for 2-3 hours and the remaining time was content to hold her blankie, her baby, her paci (yes, I know I need to take that away soon), sing, and talk to Mommy and Daddy. She was constantly on the move in the hotel room and we had to keep reminding her to stop dragging her blankie on the floor. We let her jump on the bed as part of the hotel experience (she only fell off once and to be precise she wasn’t jumping at that time). She even went to bed without any pushback despite the fact that she was in a pack n play and Justin and I were right there in the room. The second night we even rewarded her with ice cream for being so well behaved at the doctor appointment.
The visit to Dr. Hertle was well worth it. I think we are leaning towards Dr. Repka doing the surgery and probably sometime this spring. We need to get some things squared away at home first and think more about the surgery and further questions to make sure we are fully prepared and educated. But I don’t think we feel too rushed to do that and I also don’t feel overwhelmed about the outcome of the appointment. It was further validation that Avery’s condition is random and not genetic in the sense that Justin and I passed it down to here. Furthermore, Dr. Hertle said Avery’s chances of passing it along to her children are even less…for example 1 in 25,000. And the truth is we don’t need any doctor to tell us Avery is going to be okay. A lot has changed since Avery was 3 months…at 3 months we were wondering if the cataract surgery was truly successful….at 6 months we were wondering if Avery could see….and at 2 years and 3 months, Avery has proven that not only can she see, but also that she is independent, smart, competent, loving, and quite the comedian.
This year I had wanted the girls to be princesses for Halloween since they had received princess dress up costumes as a gift for their second birthday. While they love princesses, they don’t like putting on the princess outfits for some reason. I tried and tried but after several failed attempts, I realized they would have to go as something else. We even went out to Target one night and searched the Halloween costume aisle. The girls refused to try anything on. They have some sort of tag fetish and refuse to try anything on if it has a tag! We left the store with plastic pumpkins (which they loved) and a Mama that was wondering what in the heck I could have them dress up as that they would actually wear. I knew it had to be something they were into….thus the idea came that they were going to be chefs as they LOVE cooking and their play kitchen. Even when I prepare food in the kitchen these days, they immediately pull a chair right up so they can watch. So I bought two chef outfits online and they were the cutest little chefs in town.
Neither one of them were into taking pictures.
They finally sat still so Justin could snap a few and they put on their best cheese face.
We had been rehearsing the whole knocking, trick or treat, receiving candy and saying thank you process for a few weeks and the girls actually remembered it and lasted for a lot more houses than I thought they would. They were a little frightened at times due to some of the scarier house props and Avery wanted to be carried for the most part, but overall they did quite well and really enjoyed trick or treating.
Harper dressed up in a Halloween onesie.
She stayed home and gave out candy with Grandma and Grandpa while Mommy and Daddy took Avery and Emerson out trick or treating. When we got home we put her in a pea in the pod outfit (yes, the same one the girls wore and without the hat as I couldn’t find it).
I was able to get Emerson to sit down with Harper for a picture. I was trying to get Avery in the picture as well; however, she has a mind of her own and had her costume off before we could even snap the picture.
We all had a great time and are already looking forward to dressing up and going trick or treating again next year!
On the Monday before Halloween, we decided to carve the pumpkin to get the girls in the Halloween spirit. It was late already that evening since Justin worked late but he said it wouldn’t take long and he was right. The girls were already dressed in clothes that I didn’t care about getting messed up (you’ll see why as I remind you it is October still) so preparation took only a minute. Justin’s job was to carve while mine was to take pictures…easy enough! The girls were very much into it!
Not only did they watch, but they even helped out some, especially Avery.
At first Harper just slept through it all.
But when she woke up and saw all the joy in Daddy’s face, she just wanted to be a part of it and wasn’t afraid to let us know.
Maybe next year Harper:) The final result was pretty simple but turned out great. In fact, Harper the pumpkin next year will likely look much the same as Mommy and Daddy’s artistic ability is quite limited.
While the girls enjoyed the pumpkin carving, once the light was turned off and the pumpkin became a jack-o-lantern, the experience took a little bit of a turn in the wrong direction.
So we put the light back on and had to gain the girls trust that the jack-o-lantern was still the same old pumpkin they had just helped carve. In fact, we even ended up naming our pumpkin….Puma. The girls happily said good night to Puma and when they woke up in the morning the first thing they wanted to see was Puma.