26 Aug 2009
Just for the heck of it, I typed “size” in google search. People are concerned about the size of their class, keyboard, home, car, body part ( top most concern ai-yai-yai-yai-yai 🙂 ), font, tire, database and the list goes on and on. But no mention about the ‘size’ I have on my mind.
When I was pregnant with Chula and Mieja, this is something I obsessed about every single day. My first two pregnancies came to an abrupt end in the first check up at nine weeks and at both times the doctor said, even before confirming a heart beat, ‘It is small. The sac is small and so is the fetus.’ So something in me started associating big baby = healthy baby.
At birth Chula was 6 pounds 11 ounces, 19.5 inches. A normal weight considering how petite R and I are. Owing to her serious spit up episodes and me believing Enfamil’s unrealistic suggestions, Chula was force fed and she was big. When Chula was six months, another desi mother whom I was seeing for the very first time at the park, blatantly asked me, “What do you feed her. She is huge”. This was her opening conversation, no niceties such as hi, hello, which apartment do you live! Oh….how I cursed that woman 🙂 I seriously considered getting the dirt that she stepped on and do some old fashioned hocus-pocus to remove her evil eye on my child. At Chula’s 12 month well baby check up, the doctor said, “If she continues growing like she is right now, she will be 6 feet by the time she is 15,” he paused, looked at R and I and said, “but that may not happen. She most probably has your genes. She will slow down.” And she did at two years!
Mieja gave us a scare. At the first check up at 6 weeks, the doctor couldn’t see a sac, he thought it might be another ectopic. Two days later we saw a small sac, two days after that we saw a tiny fetus and four days later we saw a heart beat. During the 18th week ultrasound, I could sense the doctor wondering about Mieja’s size. When I pressed him, he said, “She is a good two weeks smaller than her 18 week size. Other than that she is perfect. Why don’t we schedule another ultra sound for 30 weeks and see how she has grown?” And at 30 weeks, she was still two weeks behind. I was busy running around with Chula who was only a year old, I had only put on 12 pounds in 30 weeks, can you believe that?! On top of this Mieja came 15 days early. I was thankful that she was 5 pounds 11 ounces and 18 inches at birth. Whew, that was a relief….I was sure that I would pop a lizard.
With all this history every well baby check up, I would anxiously look forward for the height and weight check up and consider the markings on their height/weight chart as an yard stick to my parenting skills. Even now, I obsess about size, but not in the manner I used to. I see size affecting caregivers in a different aspect.
At home, Chula being and looking like a normal 4.5-year-old looks much bigger than Mieja who is three years and four months, but can easily pass for two. When the sisters stand together there is a good 12 inches of height difference. That coupled with the last child always being a baby in the parent’s eyes, Mieja gets babied a LOT. The same thing continues in school too. Mieja started school when she was two years and four months. When she started, she was the youngest AND the smallest in her class. Currently there are other children a good eight months younger than Mieja, but she is still the bottom 5 percent of her class size-wise. The little devil knows her potential and takes full advantage of that. She would open her eyes wide, shake her arms up and down and say, “But….but, I don’t know how to do it. Can you do it for me?” and the unsuspecting victim would end up doing every thing for her.
Okay, I am digressing, my point is, yes there is one, children come in different sizes and shapes owing to their genetic pools. I have to constantly disregard their size, bring the age of a child in to focus before I ask the child to do anything. School can be tough on children who look a lot bigger than their size. Adults around them, including their parents can at times place age inappropriate expectations on the child. So the mantra now is, “Don’t believe what you see. How old is this child? Not yet two, though he/she looks like 3.5. So asking this child to wear this pair of shoes with this kind of loop straps…. forget it. Okay, that one is two though he/she looks 14 months. So may be its time this child can get dressed independently.” And so the obsession about size continues, only now that I am forcing myself not to rely only on what I see 🙂
Technorati Tags: caregivers of young children, age appropriate expectations, developmentally appropriate practices in early childhood
9 Responses for "Size Matters"
Cantaloupe has always been avg in height and weight and Junior started out as this cute plump child but now is less than 20 percentile on the weight chart … and I have faced many questions from a lot of people about how she can be so thin … she walks briskly … yet people seem to think she has less strength in her legs …
And hey … I read some of your old posts … all I can say is we have a lot in common (I never knew of the GSC … you guys would have unanimously elected me the President) and apart from the same name, our husbands have a lot more in common 🙂
UTBT SAYS: Weak-speak…. Smetimes people don’t know how to start or what to say. For the lack of things to say, they comment on child’s weight, unwarranted advice to the pregnant woman..etc. CA, what is GSC, I have googled it to death and I must accept defeat now 🙂
I had big(in my eyes) babies, all were 8 lbs 4 oz and tall as well. Somehow now, my ten yr old is petitie, the 7 yr old is about average in her class. The almost 5 yr is one of the smallest and(not to mention youngest) in his class and the scrawny 2.5 yr old looks very small..
But it’s funny, when I tell people their ages and they go oh he is very big for his age to oh I thought he was 2 years younger than he actually is.
Size is all very relative, isnt it?
Hopped from Boo’s blog. I think I have left comments before..
UTBT SAYS: Sraikh, yes, size is relative in general. Considering the same setting and a two-three year time window, size is not that relative. In same age group classrooms, one knows for sure that all chilren are within a 8 month age difference. In mixed age group, one knows that the ages are different and he/she just judge by their size, create expectations based on their assumptions.
Saw the title in the reader and looked at the blog name again to make sure it was yours 😉 Good one.
Something I am guilty of too.. many a times I have judged kids based on their size, thank God never once told the parent. Dlittle is same as Mieja, people mistake her for a year old and say she’s talking a lot for a one-year old.
UTBT SAYS: Oh the things I hear about D and Dlittle! You must send some pictures sometime.
Ashu has a girl in her class who looks really small and all the kids baby her all the time. I did nt realize what the big deal was until the mom told me how the girl hates to be babied like that. Size matters everywhere, huh? 😉
UTBT SAYS: “Me big girl. I am not a BABY”. Mieja closes her eyes shut tight, makes fists and screams this at the top of her voice…..only if she feels up to it 🙂 On other occasions it is the ‘I am the baby so do this for me’ look.
Naren is the tiniest child in his class, which gives the other boys some advantage and when they get into a fight, Naren is the one that is coming out crying since he cannot keep up. This makes me think that size does matter for many reasons. I would love to have slightly bigger just so he can fend for himself. Sometimes when I see big kids and judge their age, I shudder to think, what might happen if that child were to pick a fight my scrawny one.
UTBT SAYS: Oh, Shobana don’t worry. Naren is learning self preservation skills. He may not be landing punches on his peers faces, but the small ones(in age as well as size) have a keen perception of what is going to come ahead and they tend to react fast/in advance.
“kangalaal paarpathu poi….” very apt in this matter 🙂 While M and N were babies, even though they are twins, they were good size babies and normal for their age. On the other hand Lily is teeny. I can easily fit her into 3-6 months clothing even though she is 9 months old now. But the second time around I take it a lot more easy and try to enjoy the phase instead of worrying about size. Totally enjoyed the post.
UTBT SAYS: ‘Fitting in to smaller clothes’ hi-five. Mieja is just about fitting in to two year old clothes 🙂 As of few weeks back she was in 18 months size. Her clothes cubby is overflowing with her two year old stuff, her three year old stuff, her four year old stuff(guests get a size bigger just to be safe), Chula’s 2,3,4 year old hand me downs.
Loved this post (as always)
I have been guilty of that as well, and it always annoys the parent when we get it wrong. You know whats a bigger issue for me, I don’t know what to expect from a child of any age if my child has not been through that age already. And if it’s been too long ago, then I forget about how they were.
So I might expect a 5 year old not to throw a tantrum and yet my almost 4 still does, and I don’t see signs of abatement, but 5 looked so far away when she was just 3!
UTBT SAYS: Poppy, we all judge. We do that constantly, even if we deny it. When we find the other person/situation similar to us, we tend to be more sympathetic/tolerant. Otherwise we tend to think, “wow 5 years, I thought that is big. This child has language, can express him/herself and is still thrashing and wailing?” It is natural.
GSC – Thats the club you guys had started sometime back … the club without R factor and only B factor … Green Sulk Club … 🙂
UTBT SAYS: Ooooooo, the GSC, I forgot 🙂 So the other R is also the same huh?! May be its the name. May be we can change their names to something else and see if there is any impact.
My daughter is tall for her age and everybody including the doctor have commented about it. People tend to forget her age and expect her to behave like an older kid given her size.
Our whole family (esp the girls) has had this issue since we are all heavy built and on the taller side. I guess she will have to learn to just take it in her stride.
UTBT SAYS: COS, K is what four years now right? I think she will understand if you talk to her and tell her that sometimes people think that she is older than she is. If K feels that something is confusing or difficult for her, she can verbalize, so the person who she is interacting has some kind of clue as to what is going on.
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