Tov is definitely jealous

I tried really hard to not let Tov feel like he’s lost a mother when Woori was born.

The first time he met Woori at the hospital, I made sure she was in the bassinet, not in my arms. I held him and cuddled him and gave him lots of attention. I still bake with him as much as he wants. When I’m nursing Woori and he’s around, I am pushing toy cars on the arms of the nursing chair with him, singing songs with him, reading him books. I leave Woori in the car when I drop him off and pick him up at school, so that he has my full attention and I’m not hip-hugging him goodbye or hello.

But things have changed. I don’t put him to bed as much anymore; David does that. I don’t greet him when he first wakes up; David does that. I don’t give him baths; David does that. I’m not the one pushing his wagon when we go on walks; David does that.

Having two young kids under 3 is kind of like being single parents in the same household, each assigned to one kid. Honestly, it’s helped assuage some of the resentment I’ve had towards David about unequal parental duties, but at the cost of losing undivided time with Tov. When I am taking care of Tov, it’s almost always with Woori sitting on my lap, or me shuttling from one kid’s urgent need to the other’s.

So as much as I’ve tried, Tov is sensing the loss. He’s overall a very affectionate, sweet big brother— he loves kissing and hugging Woori, even though half the time he’s either squishing or head-butting or chokeslamming her, all in the name of brotherly affection. For the first several months, he didn’t show signs of jealousy. He would forget about her, then obsess over her, then run off to his own thing again— all the normal classic toddler narcissism, in which he has little emotional and mental capacity to consider anyone else but himself. But never jealousy.

And then. It’s starting.

Woori is now five months, and around the mid-four month mark, Tov all of a sudden started hitting her— not unintentionally in the spirit of fun, but willfully, deliberately, spitefully. I can see the shift by the expression in his face. It’s not hee hee look what I’m doing! but I’ll show you! He’s not giggling but serious— his lips pursed, his eyes hard, his brows snapped close with intent.

And there’s no guile or sneakiness about it, either. He doesn’t do it behind our backs but when we are watching. As if to make a point.

One morning, I was trying to nurse Woori to sleep when I saw him stomping into the room, his palm up straight and hard like a paddle. He comes stomp stomp stomping with a purpose over to us, and while I’m watching, while I’m telling him to step away, raised that palm up and smacked Woori over the head. Not once, but again and again, smack smack smack! I fruitlessly told him to stop it, trying to lift Woori out of the way, until by the third smack I had to physically push him, and he fell back on his bottom.

“I told you to STOP!” I yelled at him, and he stared up at me in amazement. Then he lifted his chin up to the sky like a wolf and howled. Fat globes of tears ran down his cheeks as he sobbed with sorrow, and I felt both sad and tickled at his theatric, but also very real and sincerely felt, emotions.

By then Woori was also wailing, startled awake from having had her head slapped in the middle of a drowsy feed. I shushed her as fast as I can, then put her down and picked up Tov and comforted the other heartbroken kid. She quieted down quickly, but Tov needed a longer cuddle. He didn’t need words from me about not to hit his sister— he hears that all the time— he just needed a hug that gave him both my arms and both my eyes.

Oh, how he sobbed. Like he had lost his mother, though he doesn’t understand that, doesn’t understand how and why he feels this way, cannot articulate it to me or to himself. It is a tough age to suddenly become a big brother, to share your parents with someone smaller and needier than you are, even though you are still very small and needy yourself.

I, too, was a big sister, though now at 37, I can’t remember how I felt when my parents brought home a newborn baby brother. I must have had big feelings then too, confusing and terrible feelings, but none of those feelings have left a mark on me 35 years later, so I know Tov will be fine, but I also know that right now, all these changes is a freaking big deal to him.

So I try. I try not to get mad at him when he mistreats his sister. I try not to have big reactions, which I suspect is what he wants— attention, any kind of attention, even the bad ones. I teach him to shake Woori’s hand instead of punching her, to cycle her legs instead of kicking her, and he seems to enjoy that. Now whenever he hits her, I look at him and he amends his behavior by shaking her hand, looking up at me for approval.

Still, I know he’s jealous. When I give Woori anything, Tov snatches it away. I give her a rattler; he wants it. I give her a teething toy; he wants it. I give her a wooden bus; he drops everything and rushes over to grab it out of her hands. I give her a ladle, then a spoon, then a Tupperware lid; he snatches them one by one away until he’s amassed a hill of items that he doesn’t care for other than the fact that he doesn’t want his sister to have it.

Poor Woori. Right now she’s defenseless, and doesn’t know even to protest when her oppa rudely wrestles her toys away from her little fingers. But one day she’s gonna fight back. Like the time when Tov rolled over her and her hands closed over his thick tufts of hair and pulled hard, eliciting yelps of pain from her brother.

Did I tell Woori to stop it? No, no I didn’t. Because Tov kind of deserved it, and he needs to know his jealous bouts have consequences.

Tov, you gotta watch out. Woori’s not gonna take this lying down for much longer.

Woori’s Baekil (100th day)

This sweet little girl is 100 days old.

To be accurate, she is 106 days old now as I write this. She is a healthy baby, not very chunky but sprightly and smiley and oh so snuggly.

Only 106 days old, and I can’t imagine a world in which she didn’t exist. I was hugging her the other day, smelling the sweet powdery scent of her little head, and thinking how crazy it is that she’s only existed for three months, how still so new and fresh she is as a life on earth.

Baekil (100 day) is a big event in Korean culture because so many babies back then didn’t live past 100 days. 100 days is a milestone that the babe made it this far. To mark the event, Koreans traditionally made white rice cakes, because “baek” is also pronounced the same as the Korean word for “white.”

For Tov’s baekil, I baked a white cake, cooked noodles (white and also a symbol for longevity) and dumplings, and bought white rice cakes from the Korean market. We kept it really low-key— no decorations, no hanbok, no guests except for a couple church friends.

For Woori’s baekil, I did the same: white cake, noodles, dumplings, rice cakes, and church friends.

Guess who didn’t appreciate it in the least.

Woori. She didn’t give a crap whether it’s her 100th or her one millionth day; she was yowling in indignation that she would be so cruelly neglected while I hurried and bustled around trying to shop and get things ready. It was Thanksgiving the next day, so I was prepping for the next day as well. It was a busy, hectic, flustering day, despite me trying to keep Woori’s baekil as minimally fussy as possible.

On the agenda for that day:

  • Prep the maple bacon cinnamon rolls for Thanksgiving, so that it’s ready to be baked in the morning.
  • Talk to the Ferguson rep to finalize orders for all the bathroom and kitchen plumbing things for our new house.
  • Thaw and cook pork butt in instant pot for dinner.
  • Run to Korean mart to pick up ingredients and rice cakes.
  • Make frosting and frost the three-tier Greek yogurt white cake.
  • Chop veggies, boil noodles, make sauce, and fry dumplings for dinner.
  • Wipe down every surface because one of our guests is severely allergic to everything we eat on a daily basis: dairy and nuts.

It doesn’t seem like a lot, but add to that needing to feed Woori every 2 hours or so, and Tov being home because school is off for the week, and the day turned out to be quite frantic. Usually just one grocery trip is a big enough task for the day for me.

I’m always, always shocked by how little time I actually have…and how much time it actually takes to get one thing done.

It didn’t help that I burned the bacon for the maple bacon cinnamon rolls, which meant I had to stop by Vons for more bacon. I burned it because the call to finalize plumbing orders took over an hour, much longer than I expected.

While Tov was napping, Woori and I rushed to the Korean mart, then stopped by Vons to get bacon. By then Woori was hungry and screaming in the car.

“I’m so sorry, Woori, wait just a little while longer,” I said, while silently cursing all the cars on the road that was causing unnecessary traffic.

She screamed, I cursed, she screamed some more. The traffic inched along, chocking with harried people who were probably doing last-minute shopping like I was.

I was so tempted to just forget the stupid bacon, but then it wouldn’t be maple bacon cinnamon rolls, would it? And whose genius idea was it to make freaking maple bacon cinnamon rolls? Why couldn’t I have just made it easy for myself and bought a freaking pumpkin pie from the store?

“I always do this to myself,” I yelled in the car. “Why? WHY?!”

Got the bacon. Rushed home. Found that Tov had already woken up from his nap and was crying in his crib. Fed Woori while Tov begged to play with me, pulling on my arm. We compromised by him bringing a book to me so I can read it while nursing Woori.

Then as I was making the frosting for the cake, of course Tov wanted to participate too. He screamed because there is no flour needed for the frosting, and he loves measuring and dumping out the flour. And then he insisted on helping me frost the cake, though he lacks the proper skills. I let him muck around for a bit, and then had to hurry things along because I hadn’t all day.

“Here, let umma do it.”

He whined, gripping on to the icing spatula with a death grip.

“Come on, let me do it!”

I grabbed the spatula, now all sticky and gross from his frosted fingers, and we played tug of war for a good few minutes.

“No, no. Drop it. It’s umma’s turn.”

“Aaaaah nooooooooooo!!”

Give that to me!”

He tilted his head back and howled like a wolf that’s been kicked in the gut, big fat tears rolling down his cheeks and soaking his t-shirt: “Waaaaaaaah!!”

Meanwhile, Woori was starting to fuss on her bouncer, either getting hungry or restless or tired or all of the above. Her grunts escalated into howls as well.

Tov mercifully stopped howling then, as though surprised that someone else is as anguished as he is. “Bebe crying,” he told me.

“Yes, you’re both crying, and you’re driving me nuts,” I said.

And then— “Ah, shit.” I didn’t make enough frosting. I quickly turned on the Kitchenaid mixer again, tossed in the vegan butter and sugar. Whip whip whip.

I finished frosting the cake at record speed after another wrestle match with Tov and then let Tov lick some leftover frosting from the Kitchenaid paddle. Whatever it takes to keep him quiet.

OK. What now? Oh yes. Candy the bacon— no burning it this time! Roll out the dough I had prepared in the morning. Slather the butter and cinnamon sugar. Crumble candied bacon on top. Roll roll roll. Cut cut cut. Clear the fridge so I can make room for the cake and the rolls.

I get a text from my church friends saying they’re on our way. Yikes, gotta speed things up!

Chop chop chop vegetables. Let Tov make a mess next to me on the countertop to keep him occupied. Stick out a foot to rock Woori’s bouncer whenever she starts fussing. Grate grate grate the vegetables. Pull the pork. Whip the sauce. Boil somen noodles. Fry the bulgogi dumplings. Wipe the tables and other surface areas.

By the time my church friends arrive, my hair is in disarray, my clothes are marked with frosting and soy sauce, and I still have groceries from the Korean mart sitting in their bags on the dining table.

But at least the cake is frosted, the pork is tender, the noodles are sauced, the dumplings are crispy, the vegetables are cooked, and the rice cakes are sitting on a wooden cake plate.

All in celebration of Woori. None of which Woori can eat.

I don’t know why we do this. Make busyness for ourselves. To put so much significance into certain things. Celebrating baekils doesn’t really make sense anymore in today’s modern world, when the vast majority of babies survive infancy. But we still do it, because, I suppose, it’s an excuse to gather. It’s a heralding of a life that’s worth that fuss, even if that person doesn’t know how to appreciate it yet.

We all squeezed into our dining table and ate the food while Woori sat on her bouncer staring up at us, unable to even taste a single bite.

The irony of it tickled me: She had been lugged here and there when she wanted to nap, bounced vigorously when she wanted attention, smacked in the face by her over-affectionate, over-enthusiastic brother, sitting in a poopy diaper for who knows how long because her umma forgot to check her diaper, fed inconsistently because her umma was busy scraping dough and speed-chopping shiitake mushrooms. All because we wanted to celebrate the fact that she’s still alive.

She may not appreciate it now, but she’ll come to see this moment as an investment in her. The church friends we invited are a family of four (soon five) with two toddlers aged 3 and 1. They came risking their older son’s allergy flareups, knowing our house is full of potential allergens, medication ready in case he breaks out in hives (he did, sadly— despite my best efforts). They left their house almost an hour early and arrived at our house just in time— which means they spent an hour in traffic. They gave us a good chunk of time despite their kids’ bedtimes. They were investing in us as a family.

I didn’t need to do anything for Woori’s baekil. But I did something because it’s one opportunity to build that community David and I have been praying about, the community Woori is named after. I didn’t care for a huge elaborate party. For Woori’s baekil, I just wanted one family to show up and be present, because Woori matters to them, because we matter, because any reason to gather as a community is worth it.

Happy Baekil, Woori. May you always be surrounded and loved by people who invest in you, because you’ve invested in them.

Woori’s first smile

There are many precious “first” moments in parenthood. Even though this is my second child, every “firsts” still feels as novel and precious and magical as my firstborn’s. And for me, the most precious “first” is that moment when the baby looks you in the eye for the first time and cracks her first smile.

Woori gave me her first smile when she was about 10 weeks old. It was such a surprising gift for me, because Tov didn’t smile until he turned four months.

But there she was, looking up at me, her round eyes folding like origami into crescent moons, her cheeks rounding, her toothless mouth curving into a soft laughter. I had been busy in my mind, as I always am, but when she smiled, every other thought flew out of my brain to allow space to wonder at this most beautiful, uniquely human expression: the genuine smile.

Babies look so serious most of the time. They yawn so seriously. They stare so seriously. They burp so seriously. And occasionally they look at you with an expression of disgust or confusion, like, where the heck am I? Who the heck are you?

But that’s what makes their first smile so astonishing and amazing. It’s the first sign that they recognize a human face. That they know how to peer into human eyes, your reflection glinting in their pupils, and meet you, soul to soul. Instinctively, guilelessly, they sense someone made in the same image as they, and they greet you with a smile of recognition, of delight. I think it might be the same sort of smile Adam gave Eve when God first brought her to him: What! Hello there! You’re like me! But not me. Who are you? I can’t wait to get to know you.

There is so much beauty and power in the life of a human being. Scripture says all creation— the sun and moon, the shining stars, the hills and seas, the wild animals and small creatures and flying birds— all worship and give praise to the glory of God.

But no creation reveal as much glory of God as the one and only being created in His image: Humankind.

You don’t have to be a parent to know this truth deeply. You don’t need to be a Christian to love humanity and see its goodness— in fact, some non-Christians do it better than professing Christians like me. But for me, because I can get so irritable and cranky and cynical, I need to experience being a parent of a newborn to remind myself of that truth, to witness that first smile, presented like a gift personally and only for me, and gasp. To gaze into this little human being’s eyes, so clear and innocent, and see God’s original creation, God’s own image. To tear up, because it’s just so dang beautiful there is no words to describe it except to weep helplessly at the magnificence of human life.

I write this the day after Election Day. I woke up to the official confirmation of Trump as our next president, but I went to bed already knowing he won. I thought I had been pretty apathetic about politics and the election, but I suppose I still have a lot of emotions buried inside me, easily triggered from memories of 2016 and 2020, from all the toxic news and social media content, the online and real-life comments I’ve read and heard for the past eight years.

So this morning, with images of Trump lifting his fist in triumph, those emotions frothed out.

“WTF is wrong with our country?” I texted my friends.

And by this I mean WTF is wrong with those people? And that one sentence exposes all the stereotypes, the tropes, the contempt and disgust and rage I have for people who think differently from me. They are flattened to images— images of my neighbors who hung “Get Back America!” flags on their balconies and front yard, neighbors who drove obnoxious, mega-loud pick-up trucks that fluttered humongous USA and Trump 2024 flags as they roared down the streets in a cloud of diesel fumes.

I was frustrated and exasperated and enraged, in part because I had no control at all. We were given two terrible candidates, neither of whom intrigued or excited me. I didn’t vote for either of them. My personal conscience didn’t allow me. And so, in that helplessness and lack of control, I felt nihilistic.

America will reap what she sow, I thought. Let her crash and burn for all she deserves. In that moment, I wanted people to hurt, to be disappointed, to despair, all so I can satisfy some weird, short-lived self-righteousness and masochism. I actually wanted to revel in the destruction of humanity.

And then it was time to feed Woori again, and as I nestled her on my lap, she gazed up at me and gave me a big, happy smile, even letting out a little squeal, so excited was she to meet eyes with me.

I smiled back. I laughed. She smiled even more and cooed back. She doesn’t speak words but we were communicating, on the most basic level, a most basic human expression: Hello! I see you.

Ah yes. I see you, image-bearer of God. I see you. And I see them. Thanks for the reminder. Thanks for opening my eyes again.