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My Twibling Survival Guide (So Far)

September 4, 2014 Julia Inserro
Twibling survival guide.png

I cannot tell you the number of people who say to me, “I could never have twins!  I don’t know how you do it?”  Well, aside from being a ridiculous statement (as parents we do what needs to be done, whatever it is, right?), I can tell you quite simply how I do it:  I have help; lots of it. From our full-time nanny/housekeeper (who’s salary negates the need for my daily therapy session); to my amazing husband; to my girlfriends who will listen to my babblings, deal with my memory-lapses (“What was I saying?”), bring my family dinner, and allow me to have a 2-minute conversation that takes 35 minutes due to all the interruptions; and to my parents and in-laws, who check in periodically to make sure we’re all alive and relatively sane.

But in addition to our “village”, there are also some tips I’m picking up along the way and holding on to for dear life.

1.  Pre-organization.  Taking the time to pre-organize things helps tremendously

Before heading off to bed, we prep the bottles so at a 2am feeding we’re not relying on our ability to count formula scoops.

And when I get home from an outing of any kind, I immediately re-supply the diaper backpack so it’s ready to go the next time.  Getting “three under three” out of the house is proving to be a mammoth task that I am bound and determined to get done in less than an hour… before they’re “three under fifteen”.

I divided all the twib clothes into age groups and gender piles and lovingly crammed them into grocery bags on which I wrote “Girl 9mos” or “Boy 12mos” so I could more easily grab what I needed when whomever moved into the next size range.

2.  Wait a Second, and Second-hand Means Second-chance.  First off, I did not race out and buy doubles of everything.  We bought a second crib and a second car seat, but everything else I held off on.  Dropping hundreds of dollars on double swings, double bouncy chairs, double jumperoos, etc. when you could very well have one twib who decidedly hates the swing or the bouncy, would be a significant waste.  After a few months, getting to know their preferences, I then sought out folks selling their baby gear and I bought things second-hand.  This also allowed me to buy some higher-end stuff that I otherwise might not have bought brand new.

3.  Diaper Bags are Cute (for one kid).  When toting around gear for a toddler (water, snacks, clothing for accidents, books, wet bags, and a travel potty), and twibs (diapers, wipes, clothes for accidents, bottles, extra formula, water, burp cloths, pacifiers, wet bags, etc.), I have found great solace in the standard backpack.  Not only does is hold three to four times as much as your average diaper bag, but it also frees up your hands, which you always need more of.

4.  Delivery, Please!  I spent a few days logging diligently our current use of diapers and formula.  And if you’re curious, for two-month-old twibs we go through, on average, 115 diapers and two-and-a-half tubs of formula (or about 65 ounces) in one week.  So, with those numbers on hand, I then put diapers, formula and wipes on online “subscribe” programs that got me the best deal and will deliver them happily to my front door on a regular basis.  These needs will change over time, the diapers will get bigger and the formula use will increase, but then I’ll just modify the subscription and life will continue.  Ahhh.

In addition to the wonders of Amazon.com, Target.com, etc., I’ve also found a wonderful local option for fresh fruits and veggies and basic grocery needs. I place the order online and typically later that day a nice man arrives at my door with fresh figs, mushrooms, nectarines, prepped spinach and the occasional sugar, toilet paper or dishwashing soap (as the need arises).  Thank you, khodarji.com!

5. Gotta Second? Do Laundry.  No matter how many hand-me-downs we have, or how many burp cloths I think is “enough”, or how many swaddlers we’ve acquired, laundry is proving to be a daily task.  We can wait a day, but only once a week.  Then we need to catch up.  Clothing five people, all of whom may end up covered in spit-up in a 24-hour period, is no joke.

6.  Jot, Jot, Jot.  Because it doesn’t really matter whether you have one kid or three, in the beginning you’re damn tired and your brain is on pure autonomic mode and therefore not much use for anything else.  So I’m learning to carry a notebook and just write everything down; whether I’m in the doctor’s office doing two check-ups, or meeting a new nursery school teacher, or remember that we need more detergent, as soon as anything important comes up, I jot it down.  I’ve learned my retention period is about 47 seconds; squirrels have greater attention spans than I do currently.

7.  No one Died from Waiting Their Turn.  As difficult as it is to explain patience to a two-year-old, it’s a moot point when dealing with the two-month-olds.  So when both are screaming and I find myself trying to explain to one that, “Mommy’s coming, just wait your turn, sweetie,” I know that I’m just speaking out loud to comfort myself because no one else cares.

8.  Share the Love.  Whenever anyone asks me, “Can I hold one?”, I say, “Yes!” but not with such gusto as to raise concern.  I try to just smile and pass one over.

9.  Bend and Stretch.  Bottom line is be flexible.  Whether you’re parenting one, three, or twelve (oy vey!), flexibility is vital for maintaining sanity.  While I know my current survival guide is stopping me from curling up in a ball on the bathroom floor and eating my hair, I also know that the needs will change and therefore so will my “guide.”  So be it; bending and stretching, bending and stretching.

10.  Hold on to Hope.  And when I have those days where I long for a living room that isn’t a maze of duplo blocks, tea sets, potty books, baby rockers, burp cloths and baby swings, or 20 minutes of quiet solace (alone, damnit!), I try to just breathe deeply, then holler out to whomever is the loudest, “I’m coming!” and go address whatever need is pressing because I know that solace (and an adult living room) is coming.  They can’t be “three under three” forever.

In Marriage and Motherhood, Life with Multiples Tags life with twins, twiblings, two-month-old twins
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A Day at the Circus – Life with 5-Week-Old Twiblings

July 30, 2014 Julia Inserro

Ever wonder what life with twins would be like?  Double the fun?  Double the pleasure?  Well, the following is a true-account – like anyone could possibly make this up – of a random 24-hour period of parenting five-week-old twiblings and their two-year-old big sister. Oh, and our definition of “twiblings” is one biological child and one adopted child, born within 2 days of each other.  And yes, you’re not the first to think we’re crazy.

***

The performers under this Big Top include the following:

Mommy – myself

Daddy – my co-Ringmaster and calmer half

Bean – two-year-old big sister

BG – baby girl

BB – baby boy

***

Scene opens on a dark living room lit only by the flickering light of the television re-playing “Big Bang Theory” seasons on a continuous loop.  See exhausted Mommy dozing on couch, awaking to sound of crying infant.

2:10am – feed BG, change diaper (twice)

2:45am – feed BB, change diaper

3:10am – Mommy resumes cat nap

4:45am – wake up Daddy for his shift

5:03am – wake up Daddy, again

5:08am – Mommy sleeps

8:10am – awoken by Bean screaming her wake-up bellows; attempt to return to sleep

8:18am – give up and get up; find Daddy in the kitchen with Bean in high chair, BB in bouncy chair, BG in baby bucket on floor (re-purposed laundry-type container from Ikea); move BB to rocker in living room and take BG from bucket and feed

8:30am – overhear Daddy trying to convince Bean to eat breakfast

8:33am – Chuckles the cat throws up on carpet

8:34am – Bean turns fussing into meltdown; Daddy gives up and releases her from the kitchen

8:36am – BB wakes up in rocker; lets us know he’s starving now; Daddy preps bottle; I rock BB with big toe while continuing to feed BG

8:37am – Bean announces she pooped (without going to the potty)

8:38am – Daddy takes Bean to the bathroom and cleans her up

8:39am – I put half-fed BG down in rocker; pick up screaming BB and change diaper

8:41am – Bean all clean now; Daddy feeds BB; I resume feeding BG

8:55am – Bean requests a tissue; refuses to walk by cat puke on carpet

8:56am – I finish feeding BG

9:01am – I bribe Bean into finishing breakfast or no pool today

9:02am – recall I never changed BG’s diaper; change diaper; put happy (and grateful) BG back in rocker

9:03am – resume feeding Bean; start to wash dishes and tidy kitchen; quickly abandon and clean up cat puke instead

9:10am – Bean requests Elmo on TV; request denied; screaming ensues; manage to redirect toddler angst with reading books on couch

9:20am – peace ensues; babies fed, Bean reading, Daddy reading news; I grab breakfast and check email

9:33am – take continued peaceful opportunity to set up sewing machine; need to sew two straight lines; bobbin empty at half-way point; review manual for how to re-thread bobbin

9:44am – request from Bean for dancing; abandon sewing; turn on current favorite, “Mamma Mia,” and commence day’s first Tire the Toddler Out (TTO) activity with living room dancing

9:55am – prep Bean for pool with potty-time, dress in swim diaper and swimsuit, prepare and pack snack and water for her, water for me, get in own swimsuit, get towels and change of clothes, load up stroller, walk to pool

10:10am – arrive at pool; “swim” with Bean (second TTO activity)

10:45am – get out of pool; change Bean into dry clothes; dry off self

10:55am – walk over to playground; let Bean play; chat with other mommies

11:10am – load up stroller with Bean, snacks, water, and make sure we have our towels, suits, etc.; walk back home

11:20am – return home; Daddy feeding BG; BB sleeping in rocker

11:22am – unpack stroller; head off to take quick shower

11:25am – Bean joins me in the bathroom to play with the shower curtain; hands me toys to play with; helps me put lotion on my legs

11:50am – Daddy changes BG diaper; I take over BG feeding; Daddy takes Bean to kitchen for lunch

11:57am – BB wakes up fussing; Daddy changes BB diaper and puts BB back in rocker; I continue to feed BG and rock BB with my foot; Bean has another meltdown in kitchen and refuses to eat; Daddy takes her to bedroom for a nap; refuses nap so returns to kitchen for lunch

12:04pm – BG falls asleep with bottle in mouth; I change BG diaper again; put her in rocker

12:11pm – BB and BG start stirring; I sing a few rounds of “Soft Kitty” while double rocking; they start to fall back asleep

12:27pm – BB and BG asleep; I overhear Daddy playing rhyming games with Bean in the kitchen; grab moment to skim next chapter in “Twin Sleep” book (suggests keeping sleep log, but the thought of adding a sleep log to our existing poop/feed log is too exhausting at this stage… will log later)

12:30pm – Daddy wipes down Bean; puts her down for a nap; does quick in clean up of kitchen and high-chair (in prep for next meal)

12:55pm – Mommy and Daddy doze in living room (cats, too)

2:15pm – wake up; check email; place order for third snot-sucker on Amazon (no sharing)

2:45pm – re-attempt to re-thread bobbin; re-review manual

2:50pm – BG wakens; Daddy diapers and feeds her

2:53pm – BB wakens; I abandon bobbin (again); get bottle and feed BB

3:10pm – change BB diaper (twice); BB resumes eating

3:35pm – put content BB in rocker; wake up Bean from nap

3:42pm – pick up non-content BB again

3:43pm – read “Ernie’s Big Mess” to Bean while consoling BB

3:47pm – re-read “Ernie’s Big Mess” to Bean (sigh)

4:03pm – put BB and BG down in rockers

4:04pm – read “Elmo’s Nursery Rhymes” with Bean (reading Cookie Monster’s Pat-a-Cake page, twice)

4:10pm – read “Barnyard Dance” while Bean acts it out

4:17pm – dig through Bean’s toy bin for missing Tigger figure (no dice)

4:23pm – BB and BG wake up; Daddy and I got to kitchen to prep bottles; ignore towering pile of dirty dishes

4:24pm – Bean announces she has to use the potty; abandon bottle and run to address potty needs

4:26pm – finish with potty needs; grab bottle from the kitchen; scoop up screaming BB and feed him

4:34pm – Bean hands me “Miss Spider’s Tea Party” to read; sits next to me and BB; asks for water; I ask her to wait a few minutes (difficult lesson to learn)

4:47pm – carry dozing BB to kitchen; get requested ice water for Bean

4:49pm – change BB diaper

4:53pm – swaddle BB and put down for nap

5:08pm – phone rings; Bean starts to squeeze Hug-Me-Elmo to get him to sing; I ask her to do something quiet while I’m on the phone and babies are trying to sleep (another hard lesson to learn)

5:15pm – finish with phone call; Daddy finishes feeding BG; changes her diaper; puts her down for a nap

5:16pm – fix Bean’s water bottle as it leaked all over me and the couch while I was on the phone

5:18pm – ask Bean to help me clear a foot path in the living room and put away piles of books, animals, a tea set, a tricycle, blocks, plastic people, and play food

5:45pm – I resume bobbin threading; re-thread needle; resume sewing straight lines

6:00pm – Daddy asks what I’m sewing (hearing me curse under my breath as I re-read the manual, yet again).  “I’m sewing a toddler pillow.  I’m just cutting an adult pillow in half and sewing them up again; really simple.  Plus it’s cheaper than spending $30 on a silly little toddler pillow.”

6:05pm – Daddy takes Bean outside in garden to play (third TTO activity); I could finish sewing or start on dishes; sewing wins

6:13pm – finish sewing my two “straight” lines; I check out my work, uneven, dropped stitches everywhere and my “straight” lines are actually zig-zag

6:17pm – put away sewing machine

6:24pm – complete Amazon purchase of new toddler pillow and case

6:54pm – stick my head outside to watch Bean watering our grass with the hose (under Daddy’s supervision)

7:15pm – Daddy and Bean come in; Daddy gives Bean a bath; Bean comes into the living room for her nightly toga-towel show

7:22pm – Daddy showers; I put Bean in her high chair; prepare little pizzas and listen for baby bellows; try to explain cooking time to Bean who wants her pizza NOW

7:37pm – BB wakes up; I prepare bottle; Daddy sits in kitchen with Bean waiting on pizzas

7:38pm – I feed BB

7:55pm – change BB diaper; resume feeding BB

8:15pm – finish feeding BB; put down in rocker; wake up BG for feeding

8:19pm – overhear Daddy giving Bean lessons on how to eat pizza, “No licking it!  It’s not ice cream!”  (Bean laughs)  “See, isn’t that better?  You are now an official pizza eater.”  (pause)  “Cheerios don’t belong on pizza!”  (Bean laughs, again)  “See, this is how a baby dinosaur eats pizza!”  (whatever works)

8:30pm – BB fussy; Daddy finishes with dinner and wipes down Bean; Daddy picks up BB; Bean goes and gets her baby doll

8:31pm – Bean announces she’s “nursing” and lifts up her shirt for her baby doll; then squinches her face and says, “Fussy,” and grabs the bottle instead (mimicry, indeed)

8:37pm – story time with Daddy, Bean and BB in the recliner; I change BG’s diaper

8:38pm – resume feeding BG

8:45pm – Louie the cat comes through screaming for dinner

8:47pm – finish feeding BG; put her down in the rocker; feed the cats

8:50pm – do quick pick-up of toys and books (more for safety than aesthetics)

8:56pm – take dozy BB from Daddy; Daddy takes Bean to go get ready for bed (brush teeth, get pajamas, etc.)

8:57pm – change BB diaper

8:53pm – hand BB off to Daddy; grab BG; traipse back down hall to Bean’s room for nightly family sing-along (“She’ll Be Coming ‘Round the Mountain,” three verses, “Old MacDonald,” three verses, “Row Row,” and “Twinkle Twinkle”); kisses for all

9:10pm – put babies back in rockers

9:14pm – I heat up dinner and attempt to eat

9:20pm – BB hungry; put dinner down; go get bottle; feed BB

9:24pm – Bean bellows (we tell her to go to sleep)

9:48pm – change BG diaper

9:50pm – all three start settling down; finish snarfing (cold) dinner

10:01pm – BG fussy; wants to be held

10:09pm – BG falls asleep in my arms; put back in rocker

10:25pm – BG fussy again; try feeding, but she’s not interested; wants to wiggle

10:35pm – BG finally eats

10:45pm – BG done with eating; Daddy takes her from me and puts her in the rocker

11:05pm – Mommy dozes on couch

12:35am – BB grumbling; I get up to get bottle; Daddy heads off to bed

12:37am – feed BB; change diaper; re-swaddle and put in crib

1:33am – BG grumbling; I get bottle; feed; change diaper; re-swaddle and put in crib

2:00am – Mommy dozes on couch

2:12am – BB fusses

2:16am – move BB from crib to rocker; rock with finger while lying on couch

2:21am – change BB diaper; feed BB

2:50am – re-swaddle; put BB back down in crib

2:54am – fussing continues; move BB back to rocker; rock with finger while lying on couch

2:59am – BB asleep; Mommy dozes

4:00am – wake up Daddy for his shift; head off to bed

***

So… who’s coming to visit first?

In Adoption Tales, Marriage and Motherhood, Life with Multiples Tags five-week-old twins, living with newborns, twiblings
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