By Dawn’s Early Light

As sunrise comes earlier and earlier every morning, so too come my kids into my bedroom and into my bed earlier and earlier every morning.

Ian was up at 5:30 this morning with Jonah right behind him. (I should be in bed now, but I got sucked into watching the Shawshank Redemption for the 100th time.)

With that early rising, Ian was a goner by late afternoon. He fell asleep on the floor at 5:45, which as any parent will tell you is a really bad thing. If he wakes up after an hour or two, then you have no chance of getting him to bed before 11:00. If he stays asleep, he could either wet the bed in the middle of the night or wake up for good at around 4:00. Nothing good.

So, I tried to wake him up. I put the radio on loudly. I shouted “Wake up, Ian.” I tickled his toes. I even bounced him on my knee with his head waving about, but his eyes stayed close.

Then I gave up and let his warm, heavy body rest upon mine. I brushed his hair off his forehead. Still such a baby. We sat there for a long time thinking about how few days I have left of sleeping babies on my shoulder.

3 thoughts on “By Dawn’s Early Light

  1. Didya see Dooce’s solution?
    We spent a year in Surrey, just south of London, when #2-Son (the autistic) was turning one. I had a lot of fun trying to explain to a El-Lay-born, autistic, 11-month-old that even though yes, the sun was waking up, it really wasn’t his wake-up time yet and Mum would really appreciate it if he’d go back to sleep or even just lay quietly until, oh, say FIVE A.M.
    BTW, for the less-than-geographically-inclined, London is on the same latitude as Bangor, Maine. I was infinitely glad we hadn’t moved to Edinburgh!

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  2. Lest you think that the child was not a good sleeper…
    He slept through the Northridge earthquake when we moved back to El-Lay six months later. And looked at us like we were idiots when we got him out of bed to evacuate the business-temporary apartment we were in while waiting for our house sale to close.

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  3. Didya see Dooce’s solution?
    We spent a year in Surrey, just south of London, when #2-Son (the autistic) was turning one. I had a lot of fun trying to explain to a El-Lay-born, autistic, 11-month-old that even though yes, the sun was waking up, it really wasn’t his wake-up time yet and Mum would really appreciate it if he’d go back to sleep or even just lay quietly until, oh, say FIVE A.M.
    BTW, for the less-than-geographically-inclined, London is on the same latitude as Bangor, Maine. I was infinitely glad we hadn’t moved to Edinburgh!

    Like

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