When you’re not feeling well…

Bella has been ill for the past couple days with a tummy bug.  Her appetite has disappeared, the nights are full of vomiting, and the days are feeling longer and longer.  There’s fussiness, there’s endless demands for cuddles, and there’s a fair few meltdowns.

What do you do on days like this?

Lots of people default to screens.  Bella is now 2 years old, and most of us are aware that the recommendations are for under 2’s not to have screen time – something that we’ve tried to follow as closely as possible.  Some people have assumed that now that Bella’s 2yo, I’ll have done a 180° and allow her to sit in front of the TV for hours on end, but actually I intend to remain very light on screen time for as many years as possible.

Having said that, illness is a different story.  What I have learned is that TV can be really useful to reset our moods, especially when Bella’s having yet another meltdown and I’m that close to losing it.  The only show she watches is Something Special* (aka “Mr Tumble”) and she adores it, so we record the episodes automatically and it only takes a second to put one on.  It’s a nice way to let me have a little break from her clingyness and let her have something she enjoys.  Bella often asks for a second episode after we’ve watched it, but she also knows that that never happens so she just accepts my “No” and moves on.

Apart from the 30 minutes of TV, I’ve found that we need to keep busy.  But it’s a different type of busy.  It needs to be mentally busy, something that keeps her mind occupied enough to not notice the pains of her body, and obviously we try to keep things as physically undemanding as possible.  What can you do with a two-year-old that fits that bill?

Go for a walk

Obviously Bella is somewhat low energy, so we’ve been grabbing the heavy duty pram we bought for her at birth (as opposed to the lightweight one I usually use these days), reclining it back and letting her relax with her feet up while we pop to the shops or walk to the park.  I must admit, every time I hope that she’ll nod off, but that’s yet to happen.  At least when we arrive at the park, she doesn’t require much encouragement to sit on the swings and let me get the workout pushing her!

Sand play

I didn’t want a traditional sandpit cluttering up the garden, so instead I put some kinetic sand in a tub and threw in a number of tools and shapes.  Bella loves the sand tub and will often ask to play with it multiple times in a day.  I try to put it out on the patio when she wants it, because as much as I want the sand to stay in the tub, it rarely stays that way.  But I have now perfected a system where we can sit on a waterproof playmat indoors, and then gather everything to shake it out outside, without getting sand everywhere.  Win-win!

Water play

Bella has a water table outside and adores it.  She has a water turbine and a couple boats that came with the table, and then there’s also a few cups and accessories that we’ve added.  She’ll play for hours, and our only issue is usually the sun coming overhead.  I need to find a way to get proper shade on our patio!

Art

Watercolours are Bella’s favourite at the moment, and they involve sitting nicely at her table which certainly works in our favour right now.  We’ll grab some watercolour paper and paint away until she loses interest.

Board games

This can be a bit hit and miss, depending on the brainpower that Bella has at that moment in time, but we have some great Orchard Toys games that she’ll usually be happy to mess about with.

Thankfully it’s a long weekend here in the UK and it helps that my husband is at home to help keep her entertained.  I’ve got my fingers crossed that the bug will have passed by the time he returns to work!

[* I get lots of questions about why we watch Something Special, and not say, Peppa Pig.  Something Special is largely based in the real world, with real people – not animations or anthropomorphised animals.  This was particularly important as we follow the Montessori concept that children in the 0-3 plane shouldn’t be exposed to adult-led fantasy.  We actually learned about Something Special from a mum in the baby signing class I took Bella to, because the show is designed to use signing to communicate with children with learning difficulties.  So, we have a lovely way to keep learning new signs even though we don’t go to the class anymore, gain exposure to children that often don’t look or act similar to the children Bella knows, and keep learning about different aspects of the real world in every episode.  Need I say more?!]

A quick recap of the past few months

Things change quickly with a little one.  They change frequently, too.  We’re coming out of a tough few months, where we were called to help a close family member and had to give up a lot of our own structure and routine.  We just had seven consecutive days in our own home, which hasn’t happened since the beginning of November, and soon I think we might even just get a couple weeks in their entirety.  I can’t wait.

What’s been going on with us during that time?

Bella’s gotten free access to water.  We set up a water dispenser which drips onto an ice cream tub with holes punctured into it.  This has worked remarkably well for us.  She loves washing her hands, getting a glass of water, washing her toys, etc.  It’s lovely.  Yes, there’s some extra water on the floor these days, but that’s life.

After the water success, I decided to go the full Montessori and moved some of her art supplies in reach as well.  This did backfire on me, when I walked into my kitchen to find crayon on the walls, but you learn.  Particularly, you learn that WD-40 removes crayons from painted walls.  I hope that Bella has learnt that we draw on paper, not walls.  We’ll see how well that lesson has sunk in.  However, I’ve been delighted at how often she reaches for her watercolour paints now that they’re in sight.  She loves to dip her brush in the water in between each colour.  She also received an easel for Christmas, so she can draw with chalks on the chalkboard whenever she fancies.

We’ve massively stepped up our efforts to be bilingual.  I have been trying incredibly hard to speak more and more Bengali to Bella.  Bengali is my parent’s language.  I understand it fluently, but unfortunately my parents always prioritised English and so I never spoke it beyond the age of 3.  I never learnt to read or write it.  Bella and I have had a few great mornings where I think I’m hitting 95% of my speech being in Bengali (the 5% being words I don’t know).  I’ve got a tutor that I see once a week, and I’m learning to read it too.  Every morning, Bella hops into my bed and I read her some Bengali nursery rhymes before we get up.  It’s a lovely way to start the day.  We also watch occasional Bengali YouTube videos.  We’re generally screen-free, but this is my one exception.  I think it’s really important that Bella understands that Bengali isn’t just about me, but all these other people that speak it too.  I’m still working on getting the grandparents to speak it more to her!

 

Whew!  So there’s been a lot going on, despite not being at home!  In my next blog I’ll talk about what’s coming up next for us.