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Proud owner of a Bazooka.

My husband likes to shoot guns. Not at a shooting range, rather out in the open field, directed at small, woodland critters. Yes, as in things die at the mercy of his hand. (I know, you’re thinking, how on earth can I love such a monster!?) He grew up doing this. I begrudgingly accept this as a part of our marriage. The first time James placed a shot gun in my hands, however, I had my first and only panic attack to date. Never again will he attempt such a foolish thing. I’ve come to understand that a dead bear or two will appear on the porch during our Thanksgiving holidays with his family, just as he’s come to accept that madras, seersucker, and popped collars will be present at any and all of my family’s gatherings. This is what marriage is all about. Putting up with the other person’s bullshit.

My one stipulation regarding the whole likes-to-shoot-guns-thing has been that guns shall never be housed in our home. At his family’s lodge at their Hunting and Fishing Club? Fine. That seems appropriate. But NOT under the roof where our sweet  baby girl sleeps.

Little did we know that said baby girl would in fact be her own weapon. Our very own poop-shooting little Bazooka. The first night we brought her home from the hospital we had yet to experience the magic of her canon-esque buttocks. Up until then, I’d felt like Br’er Rabbit swimming in black-tar-filled diapers (otherwise known as meconium), but nothing was catapulting out of that area until we were left to fend for ourselves outside the hospital walls. My clearest memory from that hazy first week home was one morning at 4 o’clock, James was standing at the changing table dealing with yet another dirty diaper (I swear babies must own stock in the diaper industry), when I hear a “HOLY HELL!” as my daughter rockets poop across the changing table and clears the diaper pail.

That was just the beginning. We’ve learned to race to cover her rump with a fresh diaper during each changing, for if left hanging in the breeze, we have a bazooka on our hands. Fully locked and loaded. Her favorite time to let loose is while she’s eating. In one end, out the other. It’s ever so flattering to be providing my child with her life’s sustenance, FROM MY BOOB, to have her pause, hold her breath, bear down, turn bright red, and FIRE IN THE HOLE right on my lap. She even manages to squeeze out a grunt, as though she’s dropping a major dooce like a dirty, old man. It’s even better when she blows out the diaper. Especially when we’re breastfeeding by the side of the road in a very public neighborhood of Ocean Beach in San Diego. I love being covered head-to-toe in drippy, yellow baby poop with my bare boob leaking breast milk while surrounded by tanned, chiseled, gorgeous surfers. Love.

There are times when I’ll turn to my husband accusingly after hearing an audible ass explosion, only to have him redirect my gaze towards our cherubic 10 lb infant.

This morning was a particular treat. You see, Sunny and I snuggle in bed together each day after James leaves for work. There’s ample space so that I don’t have to lie in panic that one of us is going to roll over and smother her to death. It is usually quite a sweet, Kodak affair, filled with rainbows and puppies and lollipops. So there I am, blissfully curled up next to my precious, sleepy daughter gazing in awe at her every perfect feature, studying each finger, each earlobe, inhaling that delicious baby scent, when BAM! The bed is literally shaken by her eurpting rumpus. She has started yet another California earthquake, and we are now both lying in her baby feces. Good morning to me!

The best part of waking up is with an ass hiccup! <sung to the tune of the Folger’s coffee diddy>

Somebody loves tummy time

NOT!

tummy time rage

I keep explaining that tummy time does wonderful things for her development, but she’ll have none of it. So irrational, I tell ya. Already my little rebel. I mean, just check out that punk rocker hair!

punk rocker

Say Anything.

The last time I took a leisurely bubble bath complete with candles, face masque and soothing-Enya-esque music was at 7:30 am, Sunday, May 17th, 2009. Why, you ask, do I remember this event so vividly? It is because on that morning I awoke to the lovely, searing pain of labor contractions signaling that this would be my last moment, for quite some time, that I would be able to indulge in such a luxury. So indulge I did (except every 9 minutes for 30-45 seconds when another contraction would strike). I read trashy magazines, shaved my legs, and splashed blissfully in those rosey-scented bubbles as I braced myself for months without such deliciousness.

Fast forward ten weeks later, and here we are, and until yesterday evening I had not in fact taken such a glorious bath since my daughter’s birth. My hubs must have sensed my growing anxiety over my mother’s departure, what with my little blow out claiming that he was an insensitive ass and he was leaving me ALL ALONE, hear me, ALL ALONE, to raise our daughter! Reality check: He is, in fact, one of the most attentive men I’ve ever met and he is neither a donkey nor is he flying the coop. He works a standard 9-5 while I waste away all of our  life savings and drive us into horrendous amounts of debt studying for my Masters degree. And no, not in a practical field that will guarantee I earn back the hundreds of thousands of dollars I’ve spent intellectually masturbating for two years. A degree in ART! PUBLIC ART! Whew! Just had to get that off my chest.

Anyway, where was I? Right, he sensed I was anxious. After dinner, he strapped the baby to his chest and wrangled our bouncing, whining, desperate-for-attention retriever onto a leash and headed to the park so I could have some “me time.” I walked into the bathroom and there, lit by the side of the bath tub, was my favorite cassis scented candle. A simple message left from James: “For the love of God, get in the tub woman and BITCH BE COOL!” And get in the tub I did. And bitch be cool I was. I have never enjoyed a bath more thoroughly.

I don’t think I’ve experienced anything so romantic since I was an EMO nineteen year old and my HMS* boyfriend threw rose petals around my dorm room for our what, two week anniversary? Needless to say, my roommate was less than pleased but I sure did feel like I had Lloyd Dobbler standing outside my window with a boom box blaring “In Your Eyes” by Peter Gabriel. Unfortunately for me and the HMS-BF, we did not work out like Lloyd and Diane Court. He was six inches shorter than me (mind you, I am SIX FEET TALL, a moose if you will), but I should have known it was destined for failure from the start. I can’t compete with a man who weeps as much as I do all while clad in a leather jacket and gel-slicked hair standing just below my chin. Cannot compete.

So James turned out to be my Lloyd, and while I’ve been waiting for it for almost six years, his boom box moment was yesterday, with the simplicity of a lit candle.

I didn’t know I could love someone this much.

*HMS also known as Hispanic Male Syndrome: A condition afflicting Latino males that causes them to overly emote in ways comparable to an angsty, love-sick, sixteen year old female.