Now that the cat is out of the proverbial bag and we have
outed ourselves as expecting parents once again, there is much to be done.
But before totes of newborn clothes and burp cloths get
hauled out of the basement, first things first: Explaining the new baby to our
3-year-old.
It’s not that I thought my toddler would really understand.
But I figured that the earlier we planted the idea, the easier time he would
have adjusting to a little brother or sister arriving this summer.
The first attempt was pretty anticlimactic. When I said I
had a baby in my belly, he blinked, turned around and started playing with his
dinosaurs.
A few days later, I tried again.
“Do you want a brother or a sister?” I asked.
“… I want … a big brother.”
“Well, you’re going to be the big brother,” I said.
“No, I’m gonna have a big brother,” he replied.
“Sorry, kiddo. Short of building a time machine, that’s not
happening.”
I occasionally tried again. The answers would range from “a
brother and a sister” to “I don’t want a brother or sister.” Once he said the
baby was going to hatch from an egg (he’s in a bit of a dinosaur obsession).
I decided to regroup.
Over the next few weeks, I went for a more subtle approach.
I figured focusing on the novelty wasn’t as important as the fact that the new
baby is a part of our lives now. The more I made it a certainty, the less
jarring it might be when we bring him or her home.
“Would you like to give the baby a kiss?” I asked him one
morning as I was getting him ready for daycare.
“Yeah!” he squealed and leaned in and kissed my belly. He
even laid his head on my abdomen and tried to point to where he thought our new
nugget was.
I thought it was considerable progress until he informed me
that he, also, had a baby in his belly. He lifted up his shirt and asked me to
kiss it.
Oh well, maybe when I start to look like I swallowed a beach
ball, it might be a little easier for him to comprehend.
— Sarah Leach is editor of The Holland Sentinel.
Contact her at sarah.leach@hollandsentinel.com
or Twitter.com/@SentinelLeach.