A-OK Ultrasound

Owen was a trooper—he pretty much slept through the entire thing! That said, it wasn’t invasive (plus he had just eaten and taken a car ride) so he was good.

It was a quick, maybe five minute, procedure—and he loved lying over the towel on his belly. The tech took the pics to the radiologist and was back within two minutes saying everything looked good. :>>

The funny thing? Apparently babies get noticed, even in hospitals. Everywhere we went, people had to stop and look, ask how old, tell us how cute he was…

Oh, and we also got our first pacifier. The tech asked us if we had one and we said no, so she gave us a Soothie, saying it was highly recommended.

Lactation Consultation

The meeting with the lactation consultant went very well.

It turns out I was doing everything right—he was latching and eating just fine (she weighed him before and after eating, and he ate just about 2oz). He just has a very small mouth and I have a, well, very large chest. 😉

She likened his breastfeeding experience to us (as adults) trying to chew on a pack of gum at once, or trying to eat a huge jawbreaker: you would get tired attempting either of those (which is why he eats, then tires, and I have to agitate him to wake him up to keep eating).

She gave me a nipple shield to wear (size extra small), which will help make it easier (less work) for him to eat…as well as help give my sore nipples a bit of a break.

They assured me I was doing great and were thrilled that I seemed so excited about it and wanted to do it so badly.

Lastly, because the problems didn’t take too long to diagnose and I wasn’t there that long, they didn’t even charge me the full $80. YAY!

Spinal Ultrasound

The pediatrician wants to check out Owen’s dimple, so we have an ultrasound appointment at the hospital tomorrow. Even though she is sure it’s nothing to worry about and just wants to get it checked out…I am freaked out.

What is a spine ultrasound?
A spine ultrasound is used to take pictures of the spinal cord in a baby who is usually 3 or 4 months old or less. A baby is usually referred for a spinal ultrasound because of a dimple, hair patch, or discoloration of the skin above the anus. The study is done to look for an abnormality of the spinal cord.

What will happen during the procedure?
The baby will lie on his or her stomach on an examining table. Sometimes a towel will be placed underneath the baby’s chest to elevate it. The technologist or doctor will place warm gel (a lotion) on a transducer (similar to a microphone), and place this on the baby’s back to take pictures. The test takes about 15 to 30 minutes. The radiologist will see if the spinal cord looks normal and if it is in the normal position.

Odds and Ends

Yes, I am still working on the full story for the blog…but finding time has been a little hard. 😉 However, I do have some odds and ends to hopefully tide you over.

We are exhausted (big surprise, right?). Owen refuses to stay in his crib without crying—we can’t even make it out of the room before it starts…so we spend most of the night cuddling him and trying to get him to sleep (because, of course, we can’t have him screaming bloody murder). I know they can cry a little, but at this young age you’re not supposed to let them cry themselves to sleep. So yes, he’s a smart little cookie already and is winning the battle of wills. |-|

Anyway, after two loooooong nights of that, we were finally so desperate for a little uninterrupted sleep that we brought him into our room in a laundry basket, thinking maybe he just wanted to be in the same room with us. Yeah, that didn’t work so well, either (it was better, but not by much). So, we did what we said we’d never do (and what we know is technically not recommended), which was bring him into bed with us…which he LOVED and got us some much-needed sleep…but earned us the stink eye (and a mini lecture) from the pediatrician today. So it looks like tonight will be rough again—although we are going to try having him sleep in his car seat (which he apparently likes, from having him out and about today).

Breastfeeding has been going fairly well. It is still a battle of wills at times as he isn’t great at latching on quite yet, but I think we’re doing as well as could be expected. When we first brought him home, however, he wasn’t getting enough milk and was dehydrated…and not pooping. He went TWO DAYS without pooping and we were getting worried. Then we started almost force-feeding him (breast milk through a syringe and tube taped to a finger) to make sure he was REALLY eating…and then we had a great poop and now things are running like clockwork. (Actually, Tom is changing a really bad one right now. He’s great with diapering.)

Maggie still loves to check him out. The car seat is out now and she keeps going over to look in it. This morning, she managed to get a good face lick in before we could stop her (we think she was going for the milk left on his cheek). It’s so damn cute.

How do new parents do this?

Owen doesn’t like to sleep in his crib. He cries and cries and cries and it’s just a matter of wanting to be held because he will have just eaten, just been burped, and just had a diaper change. Of course, it kills me to hear it and I can’t take it for long (two minutes seems like at least 10). Of course, this means we don’t get much sleep as we’re up with him ALL night.

We thought he might just want to be in the same room with us, so we set up a laundry basket on the floor next to us…and…yeah…that didn’t work, either.

So we did what we said we’d never do—put him in bed with us, just so we could get SOME sleep. Of course, when the pediatrician asked about sleeping and we told her what we were doing, we got a mini lecture from her.

So tonight we have to try letting him cry—which she said was okay. And I know we can let him cry a bit, and then try setting him down again, lather/rinse/repeat…but I also know you’re not supposed to let newborns cry because they need to feel you are there and taking care of them—they aren’t manipulative [yet].

Friends recommended “The Happiest Baby on the Block” DVD so that was already ordered…and we couldn’t wait for it to arrive.

We’re also having breastfeeding issues which came to the forefront today…

I know your nipples are not supposed to hurt, and if they do, it’s because the latch is wrong…so one of my nipples was SO tender I thought I was going to die when he latched on. I thought his latch was right—the jaw was moving, the ear was moving, he was swallowing—but it didn’t look like he was latched the way all the pictures show (with lots of areola in his mouth)…so when my nipples started to get sore, I was sure I was doing it all wrong, and it snowballed from there, and I lost it. Poor Tom, LOL. So I decided to call the lactation consulting for an $80 consultation.

I knew this wouldn’t be easy, but today was a bad day.

Stay tuned.

Guess who came early?

I rolled over in bed about 1:30am…and my water broke! (At least it was at my own house in my own bed and not checking out cabbage at Kroger!)

I tried to fall asleep again (because I was SOOOOOOO tired) but just couldn’t do it. I figured since I wasn’t having any contractions at all, I would wait until a decent hour to call my doctor—and in the meantime, pack my bag just in case.

When I talked to the doctor about 5:30am, she told me to get to the hospital… Long story short, I was checked in, was administered Pitocin about 10am, contractions started about noon, the epidural came about 2pm, the pushing started about 6pm, and after much excruciating hell, Owen arrived on the scene at 7:34pm weighing 7.1# and coming in at 19″ long.

There will be a more detailed entry as I piece together the string of events. 🙂

Owen’s Official Birth Story

Part 1: Labor & Delivery

I rolled over in bed about 1:30am and immediately knew my water broke. (Well, either that or I suddenly lost complete and utter control of my bladder.) At that moment, I knew the $65 we spent on a waterproof mattress pad cover was well worth it (even though it was originally purchased for accidental spills or pet accidents). It was a gushing sensation like I had read about—kind of cool, actually—until the gushing didn’t stop. :)) Well, it stopped momentarily as I got up out of bed, turned the light on, and announced loudly (but calmly) to Tom that my water broke. I think he asked if I was sure, and I think I told him to “listen” as the fluid ran down my legs and actually puddled on the rug in dripping sounds. I am pretty sure he told me it sounded gross. B)

I was not having any contractions, so I wasn’t that worried about getting right to the hospital. Besides, it was so early in the morning, and I was so tired, that all I wanted to do was shower and get back into bed to try and get more sleep—knowing if I went to the hospital, I would surely not be getting much—if any—sleep. So while I showered and cleaned up, Tom changed the sheets. I then laid back down on a towel and attempted to get to sleep.

Ha. Fat chance.

I was trying to remember all that I had read about when the water breaks—like how long I could go or how soon I had to get to the hospital. And I was thinking “I still haven’t packed my bag!” (I thought I still had at least a good week or two—or maybe more—left, as a lot of sources I read said first-timers could go longer than the due date.) And of course I was still leaking. So much for it being one big gush.

So I finally got up around 4:30 and took another shower, started gathering stuff for my bag, and got out my pregnancy books to see what they said about water breaking (I had read everything at least once, but apparently couldn’t remember anything). Turns out, I needed to call the doctor, as it is not recommended to go more than a few hours after your water breaks. So I ate a bagel (I was starving) and called the doctor’s answering service about 5:30. She called back within a few minutes and told me that yes, I needed to go to the hospital. She was actually scheduled for some surgeries at that hospital, so she would check in on me later in the day.

I went to wake up Tom and told him we had to get moving. I finished packing my bag and we were off, and I was checking into the hospital about 7am. I called my mom from the lobby to tell her and she said she had a few things to get done, but would be on her way as soon as she could be. Ironically, she had just been there that weekend… Sometime in here, Tom made calls to his mom and I think I called my dad (or did Tom?)—you think you will remember all the tiny details but you don’t. :no: Tom also called his office to let them know he wouldn’t be in.

Once on the mother and baby floor, I was admitted quickly and was put in an exam room so they could check the fluid (to make sure my water really did break—you just never know), do some blood work, and begin monitoring my nonexistent contractions. It was actually quite relaxing, as I just got to lay in a bed…and try not to think too hard about what was coming up. 😐 (For the record, years ago when I thought about the prospect of having kids, the birth was the thing that scared me the most and was a major deterrent to having a baby. This time around, I had barely even given it a second thought and wasn’t worried about it at all. I have no idea why the change in thought.)

Around 9am, they moved me to a private labor and delivery suite and hooked me up to more monitoring equipment and an IV (prepping for the Pitocin because I still wasn’t having any contractions). Again, this was nice and relaxing—the calm before the storm, as it were. We had brought the ipod so I could listen to some relaxing spa-type music (lots of Enya) so that was comforting. Tom pretty much just sat there with me, waiting. Unfortunately, I was hungry, but couldn’t eat anything…and wouldn’t be able to eat anything until after the delivery. Tom was hungry so grabbed lunch from the cafeteria, and I have to say at that point, a sandwich never smelled so good. 🙁

They started the Pitocin about 10am, and sometime thereafter (not sure exactly when) I started having minor contractions…mostly just like menstrual cramps. A little irritating and uncomfortable, but nothing major. Of course, as time wore on and more drugs entered my system, the contractions got worse and worse. I might have been a little bit of a wuss, because I never normally get cramps anyway, so the cramping was probably more bothersome than it might have been for someone else. When my pain level got to about a 5 or 6, I said it was time for the epidural. It was about this time (1pm) that my mom arrived.

Now, I know an epidural is NOT fun and is indeed painful. But I was in NO WAY prepared for just how painful it really was. I am convinced, however, that it was partially the fault of the anesthesiologist who had NO bedside manner and who, I think, was ignoring the fact that I was actually IN LABOR. Meaning I was trying to get on my side and curl up into a ball and I was trying to stay still… but you try staying perfectly still DURING A CONTRACTION. And he kept getting mad at me! I could hear him grumbling behind me about how I had to stay still and how I was not making this easy for him and how this was a very delicate procedure. I just wanted to say NO SHIT, REALLY?!?! He eventually backed away from me and basically said to a nurse “She’s not listening to me. Get her into the position I need.” >:XX

Thinking back (after the entire course of events), I think I may have needed more pain medication—I don’t think the initial shot of (lidocaine?) was enough to numb me and I felt absolutely everything he was doing. I was literally SCREAMING in pain while he was poking me. So overall I thought he was an ass and that was honestly the worst part of the entire delivery. (Yes, I will get to the actual pains of delivery—which were HORRIBLE—but I expected that pain. I did not expect the same level of pain for the epidural, so I think it was much worse.)

The contractions continued to get stronger—and while I could still feel them, at least the epidural muted the gut-wrenching cramping and the pain was more easily tolerable. Still not fun, but not too bad. I tried to rest during this time between contractions, while Tom and my mom tried to keep me comfortable and feed me ice chips. Since we took no birthing classes, I was on my own for breathing, although the nurses gave me some techniques to try which were helpful.

All during this time, the nurses kept checking me to see how close I was to delivering—and it was usually one small centimeter at a time. The doctor also arrived around this time (5ish) and inserted a fetal monitor (yes, inserted—stuck it to the baby’s head) because they were having a tough time getting the external monitor to pick up the necessary info. They also eventually inserted a catheter (OH MY GOD, NOT FUN—it ranked up there close to the epidural).

The contractions were getting closer together—and more painful—and I really felt I wanted to push. The nurses assured me that I wanted to hold out on pushing as long as possible, because once you started pushing, you were committed to the delivery—and they also assured me that as soon as I started pushing, I would want to go back to breathing through a contraction. I couldn’t believe that, as it felt like the baby was on its way out with each contraction and it felt like I was doing everything I could to keep it in.

But they were right.

I finally started pushing about 6pm—and oh the pain. Breathing sounded like a much better option, LOL, but there was no going back. Tom was holding one leg and either a nurse or my mom was holding the other. It was very hard to try to remember how to push—and they would keep telling me “Your face is red, you aren’t pushing correctly. Push with your butt, not your face. Don’t arch your back, push your butt down towards the bed.” The nurse had to tell me each time because I couldn’t remember, and it is harder than you think to push with your butt (like you are trying to poop) instead of from your chest or face. Everyone assured me I was doing great and the baby was moving (they could see the monitor cord moving) but of course it all felt the same to me—like I was doing all this work and nothing was happening. Then after one good push they told me they could see the top of his head—and he had dark hair and lots of it. I couldn’t believe they could see that, so I gave my mom permission to take ONE PICTURE to show me. (I have never been terribly modest, but when you are in labor, ALL modesty goes right out the window because you are concentrating on so much else. The president could have walked in and I wouldn’t have cared.) The picture looks kind of alien-y and I had to have them point out which small part was his head, but damn if you couldn’t see his hairy little melon!

And then my acid reflux acted up. From what, you’re probably wondering, as I hadn’t had anything to eat except ice chips since 4:30 that morning. Well, the only thing I can think of is that one batch of ice chips had cherry flavoring in it… So anyway, just imagine being in labor and needing to throw up. Trying to get into a sitting position and trying to throw up into a tiny bowl. Dry heaving. Then actually throwing up. Twas not fun. But of course I felt MUCH better afterwards.

Pushing went on for what seemed like F-O-R-E-V-E-R and then the contractions started to diminish. For who knows what reason, they had turned down the Pitocin!?!? So they turned it back up, and eventually the contractions got harder and stronger again, and it was back to pushing. And I will not lie: it was painful. It was THE hardest thing I’ve ever had to do in my life, and I knew it would only get worse when the baby was actually ready to be delivered. During a contraction, you might be able to get in 1-3 pushes. You are tired after the first push, but then you have to find the strength to push another time or two. (Unless, of course, you are superwoman and have the strength to push continually for the duration of the contraction…which I was not.)

I was just beginning to think the labor would go on forever when they told me that I was very close and the next contraction might be it. They were also tempting me with food, because I was STARVING and I knew Tom had made me a turkey sandwich and they told me I could eat it as soon as I delivered. 🙂 So on the next contraction, I gave it my all…and in one sudden gush I felt the most extreme pain of my life, followed by [momentary] sweet relief as the head emerged. In that instant I thought two things: 1) Why don’t they just pull him out the rest of the way? and as soon as I realized that obviously wasn’t going to happen…2) I could rest before the next contraction and pushing him out the rest of the way. Except the doctor was saying KEEP PUSHING, YOU’RE ALMOST THERE! Oh man, I had to keep pushing for that second and third time to push the rest of him out! Now, THIS was THE most painful minute of my life. I didn’t want to be one of those screaming-during-labor women, but I was. During this last contraction, pushing out the body, I screamed. A few times. (Tom assured me later I wasn’t THAT bad.) And then the same extreme pain as he came out, followed by the oh-so-amazing relief of the stretching and pressure being over. Just like that.

And then Owen was on my stomach and Tom was cutting the cord and then Owen was in my arms and it was all VERY surreal. (No, I didn’t cry. I think I was too exhausted.) I just held him and looked at him for a few minutes and then they whisked him off to the other side of the room to clean him up and do the newborn tests (his APGAR was 9 for those who are curious—I had to dig to find the information, as apparently most new moms have no clue and never ask, so they never thought to tell me).

Then, of course, all the happiness wears off for a bit as you realize you aren’t done. The doctor still has to deliver the placenta, take care of the cord, and stitch you up. XX( Delivering the placenta is harder than you’d think, because your contractions are done so there is nothing to help you push it out—you have to do it on your own. And it felt just like you might imagine it would feel—a wet squishy thing squirting out of you. Interestingly, the cord drove me insane. I could feel it hanging there and it was…tickling me…to such an extent that it was very uncomfortable. I was amazed at all that I could still feel, and I was positive the epidural had completely worn off (in fact, I believe I asked them to pump up the dosage during the delivery and they refused). Then the doc started stitching me up (I only needed two or three—apparently I was quite lucky) and I was practically crawling up the bed trying to get away from her. I told her it was VERY painful and I could feel everything. You could tell she didn’t really believe me, and asked exactly what I could feel. I told her “I can feel you touching raw skin and I can feel you stitching me up.” She was amazed, and gave me another shot of lidocaine. (She said later she hardly ever sees anyone that needs two shots…so maybe I do have some resistance to pain medication, and maybe the epidural hadn’t really worn off, it just wasn’t strong enough for me. It might also explain why the original epidural shot was so painful—the numbing shot he gave me wasn’t enough.)

Then they cleaned me up (again, made a little difficult because I was very ticklish—I finally told them to stop being gentle and just do it—and it was better) and brought the baby back to me. And somewhere soon thereafter I was eating my sandwich. 😀

Anyway, it turns out I was only in labor for about an hour and a half. I started pushing about 6pm and he was born at 7:34pm. So, a very good (and quick) first birth. YAY?! 😛 He weighed 7 lbs. 1 oz. and was 19″ long. He had all 10 fingers and 10 toes, and they were all loooong fingers and toes at that. He had a whole head full of hair. And he was the cutest thing I think I have ever seen. We had been worried about having an ugly baby—because, let’s face it, not all newborns are cute. And we were fully prepared to say we had an ugly baby. But damn if he wasn’t SOOOOO CUTE!! The most impressive thing was Tom coming up to me and saying “You know what? He’s cuter than Maggie!” And if you know Tom at all, that’s a major statement, seeing as how much he LOVES his dog.

After a few hours of rest and a quick instruction on bathing him, it was off to the other side of the unit to our recovery suite…where the official birth story will pick up with part 2.

Part 2: Recovery

Part 2 isn’t nearly as exciting as Part 1. (And beware, there is some TMI stuff.)

After about two hours of recuperation in the labor and delivery room, it was off to the other side of the wing to the mother and baby rooms. By this time it was about 10pm. It was nice to get into our own room, but it was bizarre to be alone. With a baby. EEK! 88|

Oh wait, first.

My lesson in going to the bathroom.

As if the whole birth process wasn’t bad/disgusting/painful enough…now I had to deal with wearing diapers (basically) and having to complete a whole process each time I went to the bathroom. I knew there would be bleeding, and I knew there would be pain. I just didn’t realize the extent of either. I was floored when the nurse walked me through what I needed to do each time I had to use the bathroom.

First, I had to toss the blood-drenched pad/ice pack…which sounds easy enough, but is actually harder than it sounds because it generally either falls in the toilet or on the floor. Ugh. (I am sure I could have paged a nurse to come deal with it, but really, I couldn’t bring myself to do that.) So you either had to fish the big sopping wad out of the toilet or pick it up off the floor—and then deal with the blood drops/puddles all over so you didn’t step in it and/or drag it all over. (Again, I probably could have called a nurse, but…)

Second, now that you are on the toilet and have dealt with the pad—although, well, it might still be in the toilet, because if you had to pee bad enough, do you really think you were going to take the time to dig it out of the toilet before you peed? And really, what difference does a little pee make, since you’re dealing with a bloody pad anyway? I mean really. So let’s just assume you are now peeing. And it’s painful. At least for the first time or two—it feels like peeing with a urinary tract infection. On top of it feeling like someone kicked you square in the hoo-ha. And just the pressure of sitting there makes you cringe.

Third. Okay, now that we’ve peed and (let’s just assume) taken care of the pad, it’s time to clean and prep. You get a peri bottle (tiny squeeze bottle) that you are supposed to squirt at yourself to cleanse and rinse…which sounds easy enough…but…okay, where to begin? All you really want to do is get back to bed to rest so you want to rush. So you hate to wait for the water to run and run to get warm (luckily I could reach the sink/water faucet from the toilet)…or deal with cool or lukewarm water. If you are in a rush, guess which temperature you use? Even if you think to plan ahead and fill the bottle with hot/warm water…by the time you actually get around to using it, it’s cool/lukewarm anyway… So we’re rinsing and rinsing and…have you ever tried squirting the last bits of something out of a bottle when it’s upside down and at an angle? While trying to hit a specific target, mind you? Not easy. So you usually have to refill the bottle at least once because you get the best pressure that way.

Fourth. Okay, we’re rinsed now, so it’s time for the new pad. And wow are they huge. And hopefully you haven’t thoroughly soaked your disposable underwear and can keep those on for another go-round (otherwise you have to deal with taking them off and putting on a new pair (which is an uncomfortable dance if ever there was one). So let’s assume you have the mesh undies on, a new pad resting on it—oh, wait. Yes. The ice pack.

Five. Hopefully you’ve remembered to bring one in with you. At first, the nurses tell you to page them, and they will bring you one. But I hated calling the nurse every time I wanted to pee, so I finally asked for a bunch, which I then kept in the in-room freezer so I could pee at any time without having to call someone. Awesome, right? (Yes, it’s the little things in life that thrill you at this point.) So now you have to place the ice pack on top of the pad and—

Six, place a few witch hazel wipes on top of the ice pack (for soothing relief on your actual bits!). So, if you’ve been following along, we now have a stack that includes the disposable undies, the gigantoid pad, the ice pack, and the wipes—and now you have to stand up and actually PLACE everything where it needs to be (i.e. make sure the ice pack and wipes hit the area they are meant to) so it’s kind of a game, really, at which you can consider yourself a winner if you’ve placed everything correctly so that you don’t bleed on your gown or the bed (although they have a special blanket on the bed for just that reason).

So there you have it. All that it takes to go pee after you give birth. It’s amazing how good the ice packs feel, though, so really it’s all worth it, but damn those first few trips to the bathroom took a loooong time. And I fished my share of pads (and ice packs!) out of the toilet—hell, I even tried to flush them once in my exhaustion. And remember, you must do this routine each and every time! Even after you get home! The fun! That said, by the time I got home, I was zipping through a bathroom break like a pro.

Okay, so after Bathroom 101 it was time to travel. (They wouldn’t let you move rooms until you had peed at least once.) They swaddled Owen like the cutest little baby burrito ever (I don’t think he would ever be swaddled so proficiently again), handed him to me, and wheeled us to the new room.

Hubby was in charge of schlepping everything else (my suitcase, etc.). We got to the room and it was unbearably hot—something like 84º! The nurse said it did NOT need to be quite so warm, and turned it down to the recommended 71-74º.

Now, this is where it gets hazy, and why I should have written this much sooner than two months after the fact.

Tom stayed for a bit, but he had to check in at work the next morning (in order to check out for his 10 days of leave), so he was going home to sleep. Owen was sleeping and there wasn’t really anything Tom could do for me, so off he went about 11pm. My mom was already home, having gone earlier to let the dog out. It was VERY strange being alone in the room…with my baby. I really would have liked Tom to be there, but really, there was no point.

The nurses and doctors were all very nice, and came in on and off throughout the night to hand over pain pills and stool softeners, to check my stitches, to check on the baby and maybe do a diaper change, and to see if I needed any assistance with breastfeeding (wait, maybe that was the second night, because I do remember Owen sleeping pretty much the entire first night). Yes, babies sleep a lot the first night—they are exhausted, too!

It was amazing how lightly I slept, even though I was so exhausted…every little noise he made woke me up—and his noises were terribly quiet. I did spend a lot of time just looking at him or reaching over to touch him—I was just in complete and total awe. I had a baby. I was alone with a baby. This was my baby. What had I gotten us into? 🙂 It was also hard to sleep because lights were on—since the nurses had to come in and out, it was required to have one light on. It was a pretty big room, but even one light was enough to brighten the entire room.

Tom and my mom came the next morning and just sat with me. I tried to nap but I wasn’t really THAT sleepy tired—and I wanted to visit with them and see the baby. He was still pretty sleepy, but was up enough for everyone to get a chance at holding him. He had to have blood work done (which he didn’t like at all, although he got over being pricked fairly quickly), he got his hearing tested, and he got a vaccination. A lactation consultant came in and helped with breastfeeding. I think we changed a diaper or two. (It really is a blur at this point, and it was only two months ago!)

Tom did stay with me the second night—and I am sure it wasn’t terribly comfortable for him, since he had to sleep on the couch. Of course, Owen was also awake a bit more this night, so we were up dealing with him. Tom did manage to sleep through more of Owen’s noises than I was, however. I guess mom hearing is much more advanced than dad hearing. 😉

And then it was time for the circumcision. I am not sure what I was expecting, but I certainly wasn’t expecting it would only take like 15 minutes, and I certainly didn’t expect to feel a sense of loss and sadness when they wheeled him out of the room (the first time he had been away from me since he was born), and I certainly didn’t expect to feel the huge pang of guilt when he came back screaming. :'( And I most certainly was not expecting the moments of sheer panic when we needed to change his first post-surgery diaper and he was screaming and the gauze was sticking to him and he had the yucky sticky meconium poop and I was still sore trying to stand up and we couldn’t manage to wrangle the wriggly baby…so I broke down and paged the nurse, who couldn’t even hear me because Owen was screaming so loud. They must have gotten the hint that we needed their presence, because a nurse was there within moments, and she successfully changed the diaper for us. I felt guilty that I couldn’t even manage to change that diaper…but she assured us it was normal—and of course she has done it a million times so she probably could have done it blindfolded.

Then there was more blood work for him (he was jaundiced), some blood work for me (I think), along with the repeated checking of my stitches and the continual handout of drugs. With a constant changing of the guards—I mean nurses.

And then all too soon it was time to go home—talk about a scary proposition! My mom was still there, which was nice, but we still walked in the house and the first thing I jokingly said was “Well, what now? What the hell do we do with this thing?” :>>

And the rest, as they say, is history.

37 Weeks

Baby GaGa:

You’re now officially considered full term and it’s the calm before the storm. Changes in your baby’s weight have leveled off with only a few ounces of fat added this week. At this point your baby should weigh in at around 7 lbs and 20 inches (with boys somewhat heavier and longer than girls). Happily, as far as internal organs go, they are now developed enough to function in the outside world although the oh-so-important immune system is still developing and will continue to do so after birth. With a large boost of antibodies provided by breast milk when nursing begins. Fighting infection and staying healthy should be well within their physical capacity when your little fighter is born.

25 Additional Random Things

I keep thinking about my previous list of Random Things, and reading other people’s lists, and I wanted to have another go at it.

  1. Back in the day, I was sure I was going to write the next great American novel someday. I guess I still have time, but it seems much more of a pipe dream at this point in my life.
  2. Sometimes I think I want four or five kids, because I love having large family gatherings—and it’s what I’m used to. But I’m not sure I want to be pregnant that many times!
  3. I knew the night I met my husband that we would get married. It was love at first sight.
  4. Someday I will live in my dream house—a ranch with enough space for everything, a great party kitchen with professional appliances, and a hot tub. There’s more, but that’s the gist.
  5. We’ve been on two cruises and I love them. LOVE THEM LOVE THEM LOVE THEM! I would go on a cruise every other month if I could afford it.
  6. I would love to live by family for the rest of my life, but I just don’t think we can live in the cold anymore.
  7. I hope that I can be a good parent. Everyone assures me I will be, but I just don’t feel it yet.
  8. I could eat an entire box of Krispy Kreme Original donuts if given the opportunity. Especially if they were Hot & Fresh.
  9. My favorite salad is mixed greens with Craisins, toasted pecans, feta cheese, and Amish Dressing (a sweet mustard dressing).
  10. Sometimes I want to sell everything and just start over.
  11. I am a PC person (we have three), but would be willing to give a Mac a try if they weren’t so damn expensive.
  12. I’ve always wanted to see Jimmy Buffet in concert and he’s coming here in August. I’m keeping my fingers crossed!
  13. I really want to travel around the world—one of my top places is Fiji, where we initially wanted to go for our honeymoon but never quite made it.
  14. I love music from the 50s and 60s. I guess it’s from growing up listening to it via my parents!
  15. I have never had a broken bone.
  16. I have been to the emergency room four times that I can remember: 1) when I jammed scissors into my hand when I was about seven or eight, 2) when I fell off my bike in high school, 3) when I sliced the tip of my finger off in college when working at Glen’s, and 4) when I fell down the stairs last year and twisted both my ankles.
  17. I love organization—storage containers/bins/baskets, shelving, labellers… Maybe because I’m a packrat as well?
  18. I hate my legs so rarely wear skirts or dresses unless they are ankle length. I hate shorts, too, but had to wear them in North Carolina to survive the summers.
  19. I miss reading. I couldn’t even tell you the last “real” book I read (real meaning NOT baby-related help books).
  20. I cannot believe our thermostat is set at 60 for a Michigan winter—and our heating bill is still $300.
  21. I just figured out that my numerology life path number is 5, which “suggests that you entered this plane with a highly progressive mindset, with the attitude and skills to make the world a better place.” Interesting.
  22. Someday I hope to have a job I truly enjoy. I can’t even imagine what that would be like. Heaven, maybe?
  23. I know I complain too much and am trying to get better about that. Or at least tell the same amount of “good” stories so people don’t think my life is ALL bad.
  24. I love love love my car, a 2001 Toyota Highlander purchased brand new a week before we got married. I would buy the same exact car in an instant, but the new Highlanders are NOT the same.
  25. I have a personalized license plate that says TRAVCTY. It was strange living in NC and having people know what it meant!

Owen is still cooking!

My blood pressure was good, which surprised me since it took 45 minutes to get to the doctor’s office for a trip that normally takes less than 10 (bad roads plus road construction made for an annoying trip).

There was a bit of a struggle to weigh me, as it kept jumping with about a 10# variable. Turns out it was an older scale and the base was a little jiggly, and I couldn’t get close enough to the scale with my belly, so I had to turn around. :)) As it ended up, I lost a pound since last week, which I attributed to being sick from the acid reflux plus just eating less overall (so I wouldn’t get sick).

Then the doc had to check me to see if I was dilating at all—and I’m not. I joke that I am still completely “sealed.” 😛

And so it goes…

So you would think with only eating half a sandwich, last night would have been better.

NOT. >:XX

I slept in fits throughout the night, waking up constantly with painful acid reflux.

This is SO not fun, I think I might be ready to have this baby NOW.

I decided for today I am eating as little as possible—just enough to curb my hunger—hoping that it would help some. So this morning I had one blueberry muffin and I am still in pain.

XX(

TMI Warning

The acid reflux/heartburn is getting worse.

I used to be able to take a Zantac and some Tums and combat most anything (especially if I was planning to have a big meal).

But it no longer works… last night we had a big meal (well, around 4pm) and I took my Zantac, and I woke up in the middle of the night just feeling horrible. Painful heartburn, even. Enough to make me pop FOUR Tums instead of my usual two.

This morning I felt okay, and of course I was hungry so ate a half bowl of cereal. Then when I was hungry again I ate a half piece of lasagna. Then later a PB&J sandwich. Then one blueberry muffin. Not that much food, really.

Or so I thought.

Tom got home early and we were up in the bedroom watching TV. I usually cuddle laying down next to him, but I just couldn’t do it. The heartburn was TOO much.

And then I just thought “I think I am actually going to throw up.” Less than 30 seconds later, I did. I think everything from the entire day came up. XX(

I felt better, of course, but the heartburn was still there. >:XX

I ate half a sandwich for dinner (I mean, I was hungry), and the heartburn is back. I hope I can sleep tonight without having to go downstairs to the recliner.

25 Random Things

I got tagged on Facebook to create a list of 25 Random things, facts, habits, or goals about myself. It’s great fun to read other people’s lists, and while you are reading their lists, you can think of a hundred things about yourself…until you try to write your own list. Anyway, I thought it was kinda fun, so decided to cross-post it here. Enjoy!

  1. Today I am laundering baby clothes for the first time.
  2. For the past month, I have spent just about the majority of every day on the couch with a laptop and remote at my side, and with a dog and cat on my lap under a blanket. It sucks being 7-8 months pregnant and having no energy.
  3. I really really really miss all our friends in North Carolina.
  4. We have no friends in Michigan (that are really close enough to do things with).
  5. I think I would go insane without our TiVo.
  6. I am aghast at the monthly gas bills here ($307 this month). That is insane, when you add the electric bill in, too. And we thought NC summers were bad!
  7. I love my Slanket.
  8. We have lived here almost three months and there is still unpacking to do. The basement is scary full of junk.
  9. BUT WE HAVE A BASEMENT!!
  10. Prenatal vitamins have done NOTHING for my nails. My nails are pathetic.
  11. Wooly Mammoth Crocs are the shit.
  12. I think our local Krispy Kreme should have a Twitter feed for when their donuts are Hot & Fresh so I know when to go.
  13. I love grocery shopping! You should see our freezer and pantry!
  14. I really don’t want to have this baby early, but DAMN I want to be rid of the acid reflux, heartburn, and neverending peeing.
  15. I thought I would love having wood floors, but turns out I don’t. They’re noisy and cold. At least in this house.
  16. I want fries.
  17. I am watching Bob & Tom Radio on WGN on the TiVo as I compile this list.
  18. I am trying to decide what shows to cut out of my viewing schedule, as I know that having a newborn will not be conducive to watching the same amount of TV as I do now. Damn kids. 😛
  19. I would KILL to go on a style show like Tim Gunn’s Guide to Style. I need a new style, a new wardrobe, a new haircut…and not the first clue how to go about it myself.
  20. I can’t wait until the day when we can have our dream house, in our dream location, with great friends, a basket of Bostons [Boston Terriers], and maybe one or two more kids.
  21. I watch “Jon & Kate Plus 8” because I figure if they can handle EIGHT kids, I can surely handle ONE.
  22. I really should be taking more pregnant pictures of me because, although I hate how I look now, I am sure I will want pictures of me later.
  23. I am not doing well on my everything-I-thought-I-would-get-done-while-I-wasn’t-working-before-the-baby-arrived to do list.
  24. Skip the Pet-i-Cure. It was great for the three or four times we used it until it died. That was $50 down the toilet.
  25. I am watching American Idol for the first time in years.

Burping?

Burping.

Seriously, burping??

At this point, you would think nothing would surprise me…but c’mon.

It just used to happen in the middle of the night: tiny burps which I attributed to after-effects of heartburn. But now it’s happening during the day.

And big burps at that!

Like I-can-hear-the-rumbling-in-my-guts first, and then voila—a huge burp.

What the hell??? :crazy:

CPR for Family & Friends

We took our CPR class tonight. (Aside from the breastfeeding class, this is the only other class we are taking. I hope that doesn’t come back to bite us in the ass.)

I think the last time I had any CPR training of any kind was in—get ready—elementary school! I know—through all my years of babysitting and high school science and health classes, nothing. Tom has had training since he entered the military, but I wanted him to have a refresher, especially since it had an emphasis on infant CPR.

It wasn’t nearly as difficult as I thought it would be, but of course I still never want to have to do it. The CPR or the choking assistance, egads.

But at least I have a clue, now.

I *will* know when I am in labor, right?

This last month is going to be agonizing for me… I am paranoid that I will go into labor early and be caught totally off guard and be completely unprepared.

I have read about the differences between Braxton Hicks and normal labor but in the middle of the night when you wake up and feel something—hell, anything—you think the worst. Just the other night I had pretty bad heartburn (even having taken a Zantac) and then woke up in the middle of the night sweating and thinking I was 2 seconds from throwing up…and started thinking that just HAD TO BE a sign of labor that I forgot about. 😳

I have been reassured by many that I will, indeed, known when the labor is real…and I am sure I will. But in the meantime, this waiting is killing me. Not that I want it to happen sooner rather than later (I still am waiting for the burst of nesting energy I need)…but the suspense is killer.

Meeting the Pediatrician

Tom and I met our potential pediatrician tonight…and after a somewhat interesting start, it ended well.

She is about 15 minutes away—which isn’t that far, honestly—but it feels like quite a distance since most things are a bit closer to us. We pulled into a huge medical building with hardly any cars, which kind of worried us…although I suggested that maybe since this was her late night, everyone else was already gone.

We walked into the building and it was under construction and there were no signs, so we just wandered a bit. The office we needed was on the opposite side of the building—and we noticed a lot of cars in the rear parking lot…so we obviously just parked on the wrong side.

Anyway, we checked in about 10 minutes before our scheduled appointment and sat down to wait in the tiny waiting room, interested at how long we’d have to wait (one of our questions). Unfortunately, by the time we were called back to a room AND the doctor came in, we had waited about 40 minutes (30 minutes past our scheduled time).

She apologized, saying that apparently a lot of people were sick… and they take walk-ins which is why they were a little behind. Well, I didn’t like them being behind, but I was thrilled they take walk-ins! She said they schedule 30-minute appointments so she has plenty of time with each patient, plus it gives her time to take walk-ins or return phone calls…things which we both liked.

She also takes questions via email and is always available via pager.

Oh, and the offices under construction are hers. YAY! A brand new, larger, office!!

So overall we were happy with her.

Phew!

Bi-Weekly Appointment

This was my last bi-weekly appointment. Now I have every-week appointments!

My blood pressure was fine and apparently my weight was fine because she didn’t yell at me. 😛 I think I maybe gained 4#, which is 2# more than I should have, but oh well. I don’t feel like I am eating too much or too much of the wrong things, so I guess it’s all good.

They did the Group B Strep culture and the doc told me I have yet another yeast infection. Lovely. And of course I can’t have the lovely one-dose $3 co-pay pill, so it’s off to Rite Aid to spend another $20 on Monistat. Ugh.

But the baby looks good and I am good, so all is well.

Hilarious Birth Story

Three years, one month, and ten days ago.

I was reluctant to share this story, because it feels self-indulgent, somehow (unlike, say, the rest of this blog? This blog that is all about me?) but then I read this and thought, hell, that’s good reading!

So here’s mine. This is not for the squeamish; there are bodily fluids and shrieking and Dan Rather sightings.

It was fourteen days exactly before the baby was due. I was at my weekly midwife appointment, and I was leaking. “I think,” I told the midwife, “that my water broke. Or, you know, is breaking.”

My husband was there. Because I was huge and cranky and exhausted, he had offered to come with me. I wouldn’t miss an opportunity to make him go to one of the endless number of appointments I had endured, so I said yes.

CLICK THE LINK ABOVE TO CONTINUE READING…

Cost of Kids

—Thanks to Mom for forwarding this to me. 😀

The government recently calculated the cost of raising a child from birth to 18 and came up with $160,140.00 for a middle income family.

Talk about sticker shock! That doesn’t even touch college tuition.

But $160,140 isn’t so bad if you break it down. It translates into $8,896 a year, $741.38 a month, or $171.08 a week. That’s a mere $24.24 a day! Just over a dollar an hour.

Still, you might think the best financial advice says don’t have children If you want to be “rich.” It is just the opposite. What do you get for your $160,140?

  • Naming rights—First, middle, and last!
  • Glimpses of God everyday.
  • Giggles and outright, deep belly, flat out infectious laughter more times than one would ever believe.
  • More love than your heart can hold.
  • Butterfly kisses and Velcro hugs.
  • Endless wonder and pleasure over the simple things: rocks, ants, clouds, and warm cookies.
  • A hand to hold.
  • A partner for blowing bubbles, flying kites, building sand castles, and skipping down the sidewalk in the pouring rain.
  • Someone to laugh yourself silly with no matter what the boss said or how your stocks performed that day.
  • For $160,140, you can live through your childhood again; You get to finger-paint, carve pumpkins, play hide-and-seek, catch lightning bugs, and believe in Santa Claus for a while again.
  • You have an excuse to keep reading the Adventures of Piglet and Pooh, watching Saturday morning cartoons, going to Disney Land, and wishing on stars.
  • You get to frame rainbows, hearts, and flowers under refrigerator magnets and collect spray painted noodle wreaths for Christmas, hand prints set in clay for Mother’s Day, and cards with backward letters for Father’s Day.

For $160,140, there is no greater bang for your buck.

  • You get to be a hero just for retrieving a Frisbee off the garage roof, taking the training wheels off the bike, kissing a hurt, filling a wading pool, and coaching a baseball team that never wins but always gets treated to ice cream regardless.
  • You get a front row seat to history to witness the first step, first word, first bra, first date, and first time behind the wheel.
  • You get to be immortal.
  • You get another branch added to your family tree—and if you’re lucky, a long list of limbs in your obituary called grandchildren.
  • You get an education in psychology, nursing, criminal justice, communications, and human sexuality that no college can match.
  • In the eyes of a child, you rank right up there with God.
  • You have all the power to heal a boo-boo, scare away the monsters under the bed, patch a broken heart, police a slumber party, ground them forever, and love them without limits, so one day they will, like you, love without counting the cost.

ENJOY YOUR KIDS AND GRANDKIDS !

Pediatrician

So, one of the things I hadn’t thought about was a pediatrician. Well, don’t get me wrong, I had known we’d need one, but I hadn’t thought much about actually finding one ahead of time…but one of my baby books suggested as much, so that the pediatrician could visit the baby in the hospital. Ah yes, makes sense.

So I asked by OB for a referral, and she gave me one (her actual pediatrician for her own kids) but said she didn’t know if she took Tricare (military insurance). I put off calling because I just knew she wouldn’t, and then I’d have to actually start researching and making calls to find someone.

But today I decided to just do it. And what do you know? They are JUST starting to take Tricare AND they are accepting new patients.

Oh, lucky day! 😀

I am going to assume that had I not waited as long as I did (really just like three weeks), they would not have accepted Tricare when I called, and I would have had to find someone else…but because I was a slacker, it paid off! YAY!

I go in to meet her next week. I want Tom to go, but his schedule most likely won’t permit it…

Ultrasound

I had an ultrasound today, just to check measurements of the baby. I thought the doc had said she thought I was “measuring a little big” but the ultrasound tech said that the baby was actually in the 50th percentile.

He weighs approximately 5.7# and is on his way to being about 8.5# at birth! She also said he was going to be long—his legs were quite long (and really all cramped up together).

I asked what part of him was at my exact midsection (the part that is always the hardest/most taut) and she said it was his butt. 😉

So, without further ado…

His profile:

His face (tilt your head to the right):

And I asked her to make sure it was a boy. He is. I just didn’t scan that one. :>>

Oh, and the thing that frightened me the most? The 11cm head. >:XX

Breastfeeding class

I can sum up the entire 3-hour class in one word: WOW! 88|

I really want to breastfeed, and I knew it would be a lot of work. But after actually learning about it, and realizing just how often a newborn needs to eat—and how long each feeding takes? Wow, just wow.

I think I am actually feeling MORE overwhelmed now, rather than less overwhelmed as I’d hoped. I think Tom was really surprised, too, at just how much work and energy would be involved (which is a good thing!).

The one thing I wasn’t expecting? If breastfeeding is going well, you should do it for at least 3-4 weeks before introducing a bottle or a pacifier. That sort of ruins my plans for having mom or Aunt Marge help with the middle of the night feedings. :no:

I am sure it will all be second nature in a few days—and be worth it overall (once the exhaustion is over)—but in the meantime it’s going to be hard work.

Sleeping. Ugh.

Well, sleeping is becoming more and more uncomfortable.

As time wears on, I find I can spend less and less time on each side before something goes numb. I tried the pillow between the knees but found it didn’t do much. Turning over has become a major chore. And of course, I am still up every few hours to pee.

The only somewhat good thing is that I seem to fall back asleep fairly quickly.

Week 33

For all the weight and bulk you’re lugging around these days, you’d think your little champ should weigh much more than a mere 5 lbs and be a measly 17 inches in height, but nope, that’s about the average size for a baby in its thirty-third week. In terms of appearances, they’re getting cuter and pudgier every minute as they pile on the baby fat for those adorable little wrist rolls and chubby toes. And as we’re sure you’ve already noticed they’re getting stronger with every passing day. Nowadays, it’s possible to observe a well-placed kick just by watching your belly—but you already knew that didn’t you? Although they’re getting stronger, your bigger-by-the-day baby is losing space to move around, so the actual rate of movement will drop off in the last few weeks, despite that powerful drop-kick they’ve been working on. Hey, did you know you’ll continue feeling their movements even during labor?

Everything looks good.

Basically all my appointments involve now are a urine, blood pressure, and weight check; a pelvic bone to uterus measurement; and a listen for the baby’s heartbeat. All said and done, about five minutes.

So…

Urine? Fine.

Blood pressure? Fine.

Weight? I gained 7# since my last appointment, but only 4# since the previous appointment (a month ago—remember, I lost weight at the last visit). I told her my weight has ALWAYS varied like that, and she said she wasn’t worried.

Measurement? Fine. But she said I was measuring a little big. 88| But she didn’t seem worried at all…

Heartbeat? Fine (150bpm).

I asked if I was going to be getting another ultrasound (as family members wanted to know how big he was!) and she said yes. Unfortunately, I have to schedule an appointment at the hospital and do it there. I was hoping to be able to do it right in the office, but I guess I was just spoiled by my specialist in Jacksonville—if I hadn’t gone to him, my appointments (and ultrasounds) would have been at a hospital, too.

Lastly, I got a prescription for more prenatal vitamins.

Heartburn and Hips

I am just plain ol’ tired of heartburn. How fair is it to go to bed JUST FINE and then develop heartburn in the middle of the night? And/or then wake up with it? >:XX

And sleeping is getting harder and harder. I am flipping more often now (it just used to be when I got up to pee, which was about 2-5 times a night) but now it’s probably every hour or two…because whichever side I am on gets numb and my hips hurt. Apparently hurting hips are common, due to the additional weight being distributed unevenly…but at least in my case, it only happens at night, and not during the day.

Fun, fun, fun!

32 Weeks

WebMD:

Your baby measures about 18.9 inches long from head to toe and weighs almost 4 pounds. It fills almost all the space in your uterus now. A layer of fat is forming underneath the thin, wrinkly skin. Baby’s practicing opening his eyes and breathing. Most internal systems are well developed, but the lungs may still be immature. You may continue to get backaches and leg cramps and you may notice colostrum—a yellowish fluid that precedes milk production—leaking from your breasts.