Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Henri sitting up

Henri by mdelagrange
Henri, a photo by mdelagrange on Flickr.

Here is Henri sitting on the couch in our hotel room. He seems to prefer the couch to the floor when it comes to practicing sitting up.

The view outside our hotel window

View out window by mdelagrange
View out window, a photo by mdelagrange on Flickr.

This was supposed to be the "before" picture of the view outside our window Pre-Typhoon - but lo and behold the typhoon never made it to Taipei - despite all the international schools calling a typhoon day and everything!

Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Breakfast at the hotel

Breakfast at the hotel by mdelagrange
Breakfast at the hotel, a photo by mdelagrange on Flickr.

Nearly everyday we eat at "the cafe" for breakfast. I pig out on an assortment of muffins, pain chocolat and fruit. The coffee is amazing!

Henri the Popular

Here in Taipei I have noticed that the locals like them some baby. They aren't very subtle about it, either... In Chicago maybe a baby lover would venture to gaze lovingly into your stroller - the more daring might even bend down to get a better look - and the bold would touch a cheek or a hand (only for me to coincidentally adjust the shade of the stroller to effectively block such unwelcome contact)... 

Here it is a constant love fest. 

I miss elevators that I have called because during the wait Henri's fans have gathered around the stroller to admire him. When I'm walking outside the hotel with him there is constant rubber necking to see inside the stroller.  They love his eyes and the ones who speak English all say "his eyes are so big" with the accompanying hand gesture of jazz hands sprouting from the sides of their face. 

Today during lunch I was standing Henri up in my lap and he was facing behind me. I notice he's smiling so I turn around only to find two ladies assembled behind me waving at him and talking to him.  

The staff here at the hotel are starting to take an even deeper interest in him - today one of the assistant chefs asked if she could make him some baby food since I couldn't and I accepted -  Puréed sweet potatoes and carrots arrived a few hours later from room service! One of the asst. managers gave Henri a bag of rice wafers for teething. A different manager even held Henri while I ate once when I was on my own.  

Anyone who has been around me since Henri was born knows that I'm a bit protective - I think I nearly tackled a lady once for just looking at him when he was a newborn (to be fair, she was a bend down into the stroller gazer). All of this affection towards Henri is forcing me to ease up a little. Of course outside of the hotel I remain vigilant and uber protective. And today I did want to pull one young ladies hair who I had never met who literally ran over when she saw us and bent over in his face, started grabbing his sides and making the mandarin equivalent of "boogie woogie boogie" noises. I let it slide since she works at the hotel...

Overall I think the attention is sweet and it makes me feel quite welcome in the hotel.

So Henri is a little star - at least around the hotel. 

Monday, August 22, 2011

Prelude to a crawl?

Prelude to a crawl? by mdelagrange
Prelude to a crawl?, a photo by mdelagrange on Flickr.

Henri has started getting his legs under him and is able to scoot around quite well... Could this be a prelude to a crawl?

Henri prefers his bib

Henri prefers his bib by mdelagrange
Henri prefers his bib, a photo by mdelagrange on Flickr.

I continue to try and interest Henri in solid foods. However, it would seem that he is much more interested in tasting his bib than tasting pears..

Henri strongly prefers his bib

Friday, August 19, 2011

Henri stats

August has brought a couple of firsts on the Henri front... Henri decided to cut not only his first but second tooth last week! (both on the bottom). He is also able to do the "tri-pod sit" once I get him into position. 

First experience with solid food...

Upon arrival in Taipei I set out to find baby cereal to get Henri started on solids. I visited the stores that are supposed to have a fair amount of western products and had some difficulty finding cereal. Oh there were large cans of what looked like what I was looking for but I guess somewhat predictably it was written in Chinese. So Maxime's assistant, Margot, accompanied me to the store and we chose something that I hope is single grain rice cereal. I really don't know... Margot was very kind and read the instructions for me and wrote down the ever so complicated "30 ml to one scoop." Awesome, I can do that... But when I opened the can there wasn't a scoop. I have no idea how large the scoop is supposed to be. I guessed. The results are below.

Rice Cereal (?)

Rice Cereal (?) by mdelagrange
Rice Cereal (?), a photo by mdelagrange on Flickr.

Sampling the rice cereal

photo.JPG by mdelagrange
photo.JPG, a photo by mdelagrange on Flickr.

Not a fan

Not a fan by mdelagrange
Not a fan, a photo by mdelagrange on Flickr.

Sitting up (sort of)

Sitting up (sort of) by mdelagrange
Sitting up (sort of), a photo by mdelagrange on Flickr.

Getting to Taipei

And so on August 4th Maxime, Henri and I left the U.S. for what is Henri and I's first expatriate experience. The previous month was made up of a whirlwind of activity from getting passports and visas to family visits. Now we were finally headed over the Pacific (via L.A.) for Taipei. 

Our first 4 hour flight with Henri went surprisingly well - after his bottle during take off he went to sleep, only to wake up just before the descent. I removed his blanket, planning to change his diaper before preparing his bottle for the descent when I smelled the most horrendous smell that had ever emanated from my son. I realized that at some point Henri had one of his infamous poo poo explosions and that it had soaked through not only his outfit but the car seat cover as well. The next few paragraphs are not for the faint of heart...

Upon realizing I had a huge mess to clean the pilot made his announcement that we were headed down into L.A. and that he would soon be turning on the fasten seat belt sign. I was up against the clock. Being that the car seat was full of poop we carried Henri in it to the front lavatory. Little did we know the car seat was actually leaking poop so we left a nice trail behind us. I plunked Henri down in the tiny changing table positioned above the toilet and went to work, stripping him naked and using up nearly an entire package of wipes (thanks Mara!). Meanwhile the plane is descending and it's bumpy - Henri is crying so I keep stuffing the pacifier in his mouth instructing him to suck! suck! as he was supposed to be drinking a bottle for the pressure in his ears at this point, not having his entire body scraped clean of poo. 

Meanwhile, Maxime is trying to clean the car seat only to realize it was beyond a quick fix. The flight attendant gave us some trash bags to line the seat - Henri was now in his only spare outfit for the trip and we rushed back to our seats (still leaking excrement) with no time to spare. We landed and picked up the car seat to find a puddle of poo beneath. Other than just being gross and a little  embarrassing this meant we couldn't put anything in the boot of the stroller - and anyone traveling with a baby overseas (or anywhere) would know, we don't travel light. So now there is a fair amount of schlepping going on. I'm just imagining us walking through the terminal, dripping poo, with a stink cloud surrounding us, repelling innocent bystanders with our odor. Henri is now laying on garbage bags instead of a soft seat and I'm pretty sure I'm covered in poo.

My original plan was to call my friends and family during our two hour layover in L.A.  Instead I spent the majority of the time in the public bathroom by the gate scrubbing and disassembling the car seat and attempting to find the source of our leaking problem. Not only am I elbow deep in it, I'm spending a significant time in a stinky public bathroom which is incredibly unpleasant to begin with. Lucky for Henri he had a spare outfit - I did not - so I went into the only store in our terminal and bought the ugliest Los Angeles tee shirt and sweatshirt you have ever seen. Now I look the part of a frumpy American tourist. 

Now that the car seat was as clean as it was going to get, we lined it with the airplane blankets we had stolen from the first class seats on the previous plane. 

Now we were on our way. My plan B was to call at least family from the plane. We were first to board so this shouldn't be a problem. We find our bulkhead seat and begin to settle in. We started to strap Henri's seat into the chair and a flight attendant comes over to "assist." Apparently they are very concerned that they can't buckle it in as firmly as they would like. They start telling us that we may have to check our poopy car seat which is distressing to me considering I just spent the last couple of hours making it usable and we purchased a seat so we wouldn't have to hold the baby for 13 hours... There are 3-4 of them standing around the seat, speaking in mandarin, shaking their heads. Meanwhile frumpy me is standing nearby in just about everyone's way, trying to at least connect with my mom before take off. In the end, they let us keep it - but once again, my plan to call family was thwarted. I spoke to mom for maybe 30 seconds before being told to hang up my phone.

And so our trip to our new home started a little messier than planned. We spent the next 13 hours getting the occasional whiff of poo - Henri did great which I have come to expect from him. He slept a great deal and I don't remember any crying episodes (maybe some fussing here and there). 

I was worried about checking in to our hotel (The Shangri-La -Maxime's new place of employment/our temp. home) looking like a hooligan but Maxime assured me no one would notice at midnight, which was when we were arriving. We were picked up at the airport in a van with wifi, so we were finally able to call home via Skype. 

We arrived at the hotel and were greeted by a welcoming party - the chef, Maxime's asst. f&b, etc. So there went sneaking by in my embarrassing clothes...  Oh well. 

I spent the first week of our stay here getting adjusted to the time change - it  took poor Henri a week to straighten out day and night - a 13 hour time change is rather challenging for a 5 month old - but he's back to sleeping through the night - about 10-11 hour stretches. 

The second week has brought some new experiences which I will share in future posts (which I promise to make much briefer).

I will leave you with a picture of Henri having a little tummy time at the roof top pool.

Tummy Time Post Swim

Tummy Time Post Swim by mdelagrange
Tummy Time Post Swim, a photo by mdelagrange on Flickr.