Birth certificate

– 8:06 pm

Your mother is at the other end of the house talking to her parents. She has you in her arms. You were yelling a few minutes ago. She’s not letting you blow off steam as we agreed. But I’m also not contesting.

I had a blocked ear for days. Until yesterday. It’s been ongoing for some time now, on and off. But since having them cleaned, everything (and I really do mean everything) has been way too loud for me. I couldn’t believe how much of a racket your car seat made in the back when I got into the car to drive home from the clinic. All the loose bits rustling around annoyingly. I can now hear every mutter. And it’s giving me a headache. I currently have AirPods on but can hear the running kitchen tap as if I was standing next to it. What a gift and curse.

We were late for our 11:45 am appointment at the Westminster Registration Office this morning. I imagined a long and gruelling interrogation, filling in piles of docs and answering ridiculously tiresome questions. But the entire thing took about fifteen minutes. In hindsight, it could easily have been five. Liza described Neil, the registrar, as way too “theatrical” about every detail, very thorough but unnecessarily extended. I agree. He was a bit dramatic and thespian. There was a joke or sidebar with every request. A touch over the top.

At the same time, I couldn’t imagine a more perfect person for the role given how much he knew and eagerly talked about names, Cyrillic, countries etc. He pronounced ‘Jelizaveta‘ perfectly at the first attempt. When we showed pleasant astonishment, he joked about it being a perfectly normal name. Which it is but let’s face it, it’s a tongue twister.

Also, (and I mean this in the nicest way possible), Neil’s job doesn’t need to exist. It should be digitised and automated. At least the form-filling part. We had to tell him what to type, cross-checking his screen as he went along – as in, he would rotate his monitor and go “like so?” for us to confirm. And in the end, we had to proofread a printout for errors. Could it be as simple as just letting us fill in the form ourselves? I wonder… I mean… Yes, I’m talking from a pigeonhole view of the entire process but so far it sounds inefficient and a waste of brain power to make that someone’s job.

And. And. Why make us come all this way? Why not let us do it locally? Surely the same system can be accessed by an equivalent within Surrey? Strangely enough, we didn’t have to present any form of ID or legal documentation. But hey, it’s all done now. You have a birth certificate (and at least two passports to follow).


We then took an Uber to Japan House where we had “I can’t believe I didn’t know about this place” type of food. It was… that good. I’ll be back for sure, with or without your mother. Liza and I wondered if it was sponsored by the Japanese government or something. Downstairs looked more like a gallery. They had petit soup bowls on sale for £680 and an extensive range of Japanese whiskey I would love to someday try. It was more bits and pieces of random items, a carefully curated ad placement for Japanese culture. It didn’t look like it made any money at all, or planned to for that matter. But the service was faultless. We were very happy customers. I thought about it on the walk back to the car and ever since. It was good shit.

Like some dirty dishes

– 9:55 pm

Remember T from the shower? He stopped by to see you on Saturday. You have him to thank for the stylish set of clothes he brought with him. We had a great time just hanging out. He’s also very good friends with your mother now as well. They’re both readers.

It was a big wet day for you today. Your mother and I got to give you your first bath. It happened in a baby tub in the kitchen sink. We had zero expectations of you. Hate it or love it, you were going to get one and continue to for the foreseeable. But you got off to a great start. I must have had the temperature just right because you behaved as though this was something you did all the time. You didn’t cry. Not a beep. In fact, we could’ve left you there all day. I gave you a mild scrub with some baby shampoo using some gloves from Nic (Wez’s wife). You loved it.

The screams did come though when we got you out of the water and into a towel. You didn’t like that very much. The sudden drop in temperature that is. But that was to be expected given how quickly newborns lose body heat. We had the NCT classes to thank for the mental prep. So the application of lotion and clothing was hurried.

All in all, it was a great experience and I’m looking forward to the next one, and the one after that. You seemed even more relaxed and happier since. If you got any more chilled, you might as well be an ice cube.

PS – Your grandmother filmed the whole thing on Liza’s phone. So if you ever wonder what that was like, you know who to ask for footage. I’m typing this in bed and she’s next to me. Still completely clueless.

Three weeks later

3 weeks old

– 7:19 am

You’re eating a lot and growing faster than duckweed. I didn’t realise how big you were until I shared this photo in the family group chat and everyone reacted the way they did. It’s easy for us parents to miss. We see you all the time so the change isn’t always so noticeable. But we’re well aware.

Liza and I gave you your second bath last night. You loved it, kicking, stretching and yawning the entire time. You looked so relaxed. That you get from your mother. She can take a bath for days on end. I’m curious to hear from Julia and Valery how well you slept. They had you for the night.

PS – Yesterday made you three weeks old.

Pathfinder


Your grandparents confirmed you slept very well. Just as I expected. Julia said she didn’t even have to swaddle you. So the bath definitely helped, unequivocally. I think we’ll do it every other day going forward.

Valerie Valery and I had a very intriguing, enlightening, eye-opening honest conversation on what humanity will throw at you w.r.t race and culture. First, we talked about the history of Cameroon. His question was whether Cameroonians are ever taught their history from an insider’s perspective. Not the viewpoint of its colonial masters but something written and documented by Cameroonians for Cameroonians. Something less susceptible and prone to lies and fabrication. He basically worried that Wikipedia may not be the best place to source reliable information which he could pass on to you.

Unfortunately, I cannot speak to the accuracy of what I was taught at school. It needs to be held against alternatives comparatively to interrogate the delta. All I know is what I learned. However, I know now for certain that bits that don’t fit the overall narrative of colonial victory and success are carefully omitted and are difficult to source. We as a people didn’t just bend over. These are our lands. At times we fought and at times we won.

I know this because your uncle, Judex wrote a research paper documenting his findings on the history of Cameroon. It must have been pretty expensive to source and collate all that information. A selfless act for all. It’s a genuine search for the truth, without bias. But as Dave Chappelle put it, “those pages in history are stuck together”.

He called the essays PATHFINDER, meaning People Anxiously Thinking How to Find an Ideal Nation of Divine Eternal Reunion. A mouthful I know. You won’t remember it either.

The first chapter opens up with these thought-provoking questions, the bedrock for all that followed

  1. How do we explain ourselves to ourselves and how do we explain ourselves to our children?
  2. What are we going to tell our children about who we are and what we represent? Who are we? Who am I?
  3. How are we going to tell them so that they understand?

The story of our people. It’s worth reading for sure. I have drafts you can download at the end if interested. The more questions that come out of it, the better. I sent them to your grandfather as well. He’s also another factfinder so he’ll be right at home with these. In fact, I’m going to call your uncle to see if I can help to have this published because there must be like minds out there seeking this point of view. Perhaps.

Your grandfather also thinks I’m “racist proof”, teflon to it somehow. He’s hoping this is a trait I can pass down to you, genetically or otherwise. And despite being racially abused at least a couple of times, neither incident has left me feeling any less than myself. Those events don’t linger in my mind at all. In fact, I’d have to really try to even remember them. They serve as reminders of the reality we live in but nothing more. I’m not going around nitpicking every multiracial interaction looking to play that card. There’s more to life. There has to be.

Valery did however bring it up to say we’d have to do our best to prepare you for life based on your skin colour. We will. But I think you’ll be OK. I doubt you and I would get the same treatment in Eastern Europe. You might carry the cross but I’ll be crucified.

Some people are racist without even knowing. So my advice to you is to always try to see the best in people. At least in the first instance. And remember that no word can kill you. But your (re)actions can. Words have as much power as you give them. So don’t be blind to it but don’t be stupid also.

The stereotype goes, “black people are here to steal their jobs and live on benefits”. Kill them with success.

We also spoke about bullying, especially among teens. Not everything is about race. Your grandfather was a tall and skinny boy. They menaced him a lot for that. They called him a Russian slur which I can’t remember. He woke up every morning mentally preparing himself for a fight. Can you imagine how hard that is to do every. Single. Fucking. Day?

As he tells it, his stepfather thought him some self-defence techniques which saved his life. He recounts snapping once and beating another boy to a pulp – bloodied face, busted lip, the works. I can’t judge him for that. No way. Sometimes enough is enough and you just can’t take it any longer. And the only way out is to send a message to everyone via an example.

My experience wasn’t far away. I’ve always been quite small. So small one of my mates nicknamed me “Mbindush” during my boarding school days. It means exactly that. Small. But very early on, I knew that if I let the first person get away with bullying me, there’ll be a queue of them after. So I fought whoever tried. And soon no one wanted a fight.

I feel this is the only way to handle bullying, by the bull’s horns. To think you won’t get picked on is wishful thinking. You will be challenged at school, at work, and throughout your life. How you cope will depend on the foundations we as your parents have laid down.

So I’m hoping we can establish a relationship where we talk to each other freely. Regardless of the topic or gravity of the issue. We have to find a way to communicate without fear. Don’t be afraid (of anyone). I’m sure your mother would like to know if you’re being bullied. So would I. We’d also like to know if we have a bully for a son. Ideally, our style of parenting will prevent both before it’s serious enough to become a stat or case study. We’ll guide you the best way we can.


Out of the picture

– 3:16 pm

You, your mother and grandmother took the car for a walk. Hampton Court I’m told. Since resuming work, you and I don’t get to hang out as much. Sad but inevitable. An alternative perspective is to see it as an opportunity for you and Julia to spend as much time as possible. Her stay with us has an expiry date so I’m letting her soak it all in while she can. She’s cherishing every moment. It’s obvious, even to Stevie Wonder.

You’ve been joyfully listening to a medley of her childhood ballads (and all music in general) and learning Russian. She only speaks to you in Russian. I find it peculiar but exciting that one day, you’ll become a non-white person fluent in the language. It reminds me of this guy’s story. Russia has a bad rep at the moment because of the war in Ukraine but who knows how another language will serve you in the future.

I, on the other hand, have been speaking to you in French, English and Pidgin English. I pick at random, unmindfully and playfully based on the mood I think you’re in. Whichever flows, I swim with it. But most of the time, I use all three, simultaneously. Good luck telling them apart. Writing this has got me wondering when a good time is to start teaching a child multiple languages. My gut says whenever. Let’s see.


With your grandad returning to Riga (he misses you a lot by the way), we’ve been taking turns looking after you. Each night is split into two shifts. After eleven, you tend to wake up between 1:30 and 2 am. That’s the first shift and the first changing of the guard. From then, you typically sleep through the second shift to six. I’m usually out of the picture beyond then, getting ready for work.

As anticipated, I spend most school working nights on the sofabed in the basement. Once I’m up, going back to sleep is very hard. Regardless of the hour. You already know this. My mind thinks it’s the best time to start showcasing all the different things I have to do. Imagine having to sit front row to a catwalk of tasks twirling at the front of the runway, to and fro, in the same outfits, repeatedly. Yeah, fuck!

My body soon joins the nightmare after a while, at which point it’s near impossible to sleep until the early morning hours when I actually have to be up. Somehow, I find it difficult to disconnect when I have incomplete to-dos. I have a lot of to-dos. Your uncle Manu once asked me how I manage to do all these things, when do I sleep? I don’t. That’s how. Looks like only death will free me too.

There was a time I used to drink to sleep. A bit of gin and tonic to shut my mind up was the remedy. Every time I did, Liza would go, “are you drinking every day now?”. It was never daily but I got tired of hearing it. I knew it was her way of calling out a red flag. But the conscious inaccuracy of the question was super annoying. So I stopped. Probably for the best. You’d have a drunk for a father by now. And believe me, you don’t. I would know.

I’m also a super light sleeper. Any sound or fidgeting will wake me up. Right now, all you do is wriggle. A lot, especially during the second shift. You also make these choking outbursts with every twist and turn. It doesn’t only wake me up but it’s also worrying and anxiety-inducing. I have to keep checking the camera feed to make sure you don’t have a muslin over your face, suffocating in your own vomit or something dreadful. So to sleep, I’d have to smother you. That’s the only way. Your mother won’t allow it so I guess I’m downstairs for the time being. I overheard her saying to you, “you’ve split up the family”. She’s not a fan of this new sleeping arrangement. Fact. But we need this cadence to make this work.

In other news, you’ve also started making new sounds. We can tell when you’re happy and playing versus discomfort. You’re evolving very fast.

We’re also going to tilt your crib to reduce the effects of reflux. One of my friends told me he wished someone had told them about that when they had their first. In his words, these were “THE MOST stressful times”.

On track

– 9:37 am

I’m at the Shy Horse charging the car for a trip to Southend to pick up my work laptop. Don’t ask why it couldn’t be posted. Some gibberish about security. Mmkay. But they’re paying me for it so, whatever. The risk-reward ratio isn’t mine to establish. Their money, their rules.

A health visitor showed up as planned to record your weight. Liza just messaged to say you are tracking well at 5kg, in just under a month. That’s ace! Dashing back to pick her up now. She’s coming with. You’re spending the afternoon with your grandmother.

A month today

– 7:19 pm

And just like that, a month has gone by. I look at you and think just how meaningless the concept of time can be. It’s a man-made construct unworthy of the hyper-focus and attention we give it. Whether it’s Monday, Thursday or Sunday is irrelevant to you. Your needs remain the same. There’s a life lesson in that I’m sure. Today is tomorrow and tomorrow is today.


We walked to Marc and Jess‘ place yesterday. Time flew by as we talked for hours. It was great catching up with them and their family. Their kids are so big now. Noah and Luca couldn’t be dissimilar if they tried. We almost forgot you were with us.

The problem with air

– 4:26 pm

You’re out with your mother and grandmother to meet Rozalia. You guys should be back soon I imagine. I hoped to work in your absence but to be honest, I haven’t been up to much. It’s been a rather unproductive couple of hours. I do have a crockpot going though so dinner’s looking very enticing.

For lack of better adjectives, yesterday was… interesting. You were vocally unsettled when Liza brought you back home. She’d been out catching up with Gianna. You are currently the trophy she proudly parades and presents to all her friends. A major life accomplishment. It was Neta before Gianna, the women from our NCT group before then and Rozalia today. She flaunts you with triumph and jubilation. Thankfully, you seem to also love being out so the relationship is very much symbiotic. All parties get a piece of the pie.

But yes, yesterday. Interesting. Apparently, you were fine (as usual) until they tried to car seat you, which is when you went hysterical and ballistic. There was no comforting you either which for a parent (as sensitive as your mother) can be very stressful. To worsen things, you weren’t hungry or needed changing. Liza said you cried halfway through the journey back. I’ve heard you cry son. It can drive a car into oncoming traffic. Kudos to her for bringing you both back sane and alive.

The roundtable at home deduced you were probably gassy and needed relief. That’s all the prognosis I needed. With that, I took to the internet streets, combing for answers. I stumbled onto this and this which helped normalise the situation by explaining why and suggested methods of relief, respectively. Both were insightful and very helpful.

Though silent in Julia’s hands, I could see the strain and discomfort in your face, wrinkled like that of a 90 year old. Taking you from her came with screaming and yelling, so loud I’m astonished your lungs are still in place. I placed you on a square blanket on the floor going through the exercises in the video. God, you’re loud. I ignored it and before long, you were quiet again. I carried on. And soon, you were your usual self. It worked. Like a charm. Phew!

You stayed on the floor a while, happy to be left alone, enjoying your own company. You got all chatty and smiley. I don’t have the event in pictures (and if I did, I wouldn’t call myself a fit father). But I do have some from the week just gone.

Black and white

– 7:08 pm

Another health professional showed up yesterday. You’ve gained a whooping 20g. Not taking giant weight leaps is normal she said. Besides, given how big you came out (and continued growing), a plateau was expected.

Notwithstanding, you’ve grown in other areas. You’ve got some control over the stability of your neck. I mean, it’s still loopy as fuck and you’re pretty much a bobblehead figure but there is a noticeable difference. So here’s to time (and milk) which should help in that department.

Oh! I was going through some trousers and found the coin I picked up when we were in the hospital. That was oddly satisfying. You should always check your pockets before you get rid of your clothes. Who knows, you just might find a facemask and a pound.

Speaking of growth, a lot of your clothes are too small for you now. Thankfully, your mother doesn’t need an incentive to buy you stuff. So obviously, she’s gone to town adding to your wardrobe. She didn’t stop with the bits from John Lewis the other day. No, no, no sir. A delivery arrived today with some Autumn/Winter clothing. The package had Polarn O. Pyret written on it.

I have to tell ya, those Swedes have mastered the art of everything kids. That extends from clothing to lifestyle and education. Where were they when Eminem was growing up huh? They had the chance to ruin him with happiness but passed on it. Now, all we have is this great music to deal with.

We’re not moving to Sweden anytime soon but those fuckers really know what they’re doing when it comes to the well-being of children. The rest of us are mostly winging it. So yes, unsurprisingly, the outfits are cool and very practical i.e. zips not buttons. By the way, I am exaggerating when I say “gone to town”. You do need bigger clothes and she’s not been excessive at all. Hell, I had to buy bigger swaddles the other day. You’re such a reptile.

Going through Beiens visual stimulus cards

Most interestingly though is your reaction to these Beiens visual stimulus cards, along with this fold-out board. You get all excited and talkative looking at them. It’s pure voodoo the way you get spellbound and start chanting gibberish.

All the while, I’m wondering if it’s the same squares and triangles the rest of us are seeing.

We have a six-week check-in tomorrow at the hospital. Liza has the details. It’s on the calendar invite I’m sure.

…checking…

Yea, at Portland with Dr Maalouf. I have no name jokes to go with that. Maybe tomorrow. But we’ve got a few questions, like how do we know if you’re allergic to anything? We aren’t, but you could be. And we don’t want to find out at A&E.