learning to be a mom one twist at a time

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Sunday, May 29, 2011

Happy Baby



Some still photos from the same time as the video was taken. I love seeing happy baby!

Thursday, May 26, 2011

4 weeks, 6 days: Video



My mom and her coworkers requested more video (as in, any) and who am I to disappoint?

Actually, I glibly said that all I had to video was Dev eating, sleeping, or crying. But then, she went and did this, just to prove me wrong. :)

Monday, May 23, 2011

4 Weeks and 3 Days: Happy Monday

How to tell it's a Monday when you're a stay-at-home mom:
  • Baby seems uninterested in breakfast for the first time in... ever. Which is not good when you and your husband are on a schedule so that he can spell you before he goes to work so you can take a shower.
  • Decide maybe baby is sleepy and take her upstairs for a diaper change.
  • Which is when you realize that her blanket is covered in poo.
  • Upon further investigation, you discover that she has pooped up her back, so her onesie is also completely soaked in yellow baby poo.
  • Realize that there is no way to get said onesie off the baby without spreading the poop from here to kingdom come.
  • Yell for husband to turn on the hot water and get out the sponge for an emergency baby bath.
  • Baby now has poop ALL over her back, even in her hair. She is, thankfully, cooing happily at you from the changing table, which is now also covered in poop.
  • And so are you.
  • Rush baby to the bathroom swaddled in burp cloths for an emergency poop-ectomy requiring multiple wash cloths. Thank your lucky stars that husband hadn't left for work yet.
  • Finally get all the poop off the baby, pick her up, start to wrap her in a towel—and realize she is urinating. All over you and the towel and the floor.
  • Have a good laugh, because really? What else are you going to do?
Happy Monday.

Sunday, May 22, 2011

1 Month Old


Dearest Devyn,

Today you are one month old, and I can't believe how fast the past four weeks have flown. You are already growing and changing before my eyes. This week you weighed 7.06 pounds, meaning that you're gaining almost an ounce a day now.

We've spent two weeks home alone together, and for the most part, it's going really well. Our days are mostly made up of eating, sleeping and changing diapers, but we do go out sometimes to change things up. It has been raining like crazy the last two weeks, so we haven't gone for as many walks as I would have liked, but you seem to enjoy them when we do go—at least, you enjoy sleeping in your stroller! I've been watching old episodes of The X-Files and catching up on episodes of Castle on the internet sometimes in the afternoon while you sleep.

We have been to the mall, out to lunch with friends, to a big consignment sale, to the grocery store and to the new mommies' group at the hospital. I hope we will make some friends for both of us at the group.

Yesterday I decided that it was time to start teaching you that naptime should be taken in your bed. Right now you pretty much only want to sleep in your sling during the day, and that predilection is starting to bleed over to the night time, so we definitely want to show you that it's OK to sleep in your own bed. So far... well, it's a little challenging. I'm sure you don't understand why I want you to sleep by yourself when you were perfectly happy sleeping strapped to me! Your Aunt Em gave me the very good advice to commit to trying it for two weeks, so that is what we're going to do. Our goal is one good nap in bed per day.

I can tell that you can focus on our faces now, which is exciting. I'm seeing more and more evidence of a smile when you're awake—you always smile really big as you drift off into dreaming—and you've started saying "GAH!" and "COO!" as happy noises, which is new and lovely.

You seem to like it when I sing to you, especially when you first wake up and aren't entirely sure you want to be awake. You also seem to enjoy bath time, whether we're giving you a quick sponge bath or a full sink bath. You love to be held and bounced, and you are starting to enjoy your bouncy chair, your swing and your play mat for longer times each day. You do NOT like to have your clothes changed, and you aren't always keen on going to bed when we think it's time, either.


Your daddy gave you your first bottle last week, and you took to it like a champ. As a matter of fact, you've never had much trouble with eating.

I am absolutely head-over-heels in love with you. Sometimes, I look at you and I am just undone by how big my heart has grown to encompass all the emotion I feel when I look at you. I read once that soul mates are two halves of a soul that found each other; if that's true, then you, my darling girl, are surely your daddy's soul and mine made whole again. You are such a miracle I can hardly stand it. You are definitely the best thing I've ever been a part of—and I'm starting to think that you are my life's work and greatest achievement.

In the wider world this week, the Space Shuttle Endeavor launched for its last-ever mission, the Mississippi river is cresting in a 100-year flood, and President Obama gave an important speech about his ideas for peace in the Middle East. He said, “[W]e cannot hesitate to stand squarely on the side of those who are reaching for their rights.”

I can't wait to see what month two brings us!

Love always,
~your mommy

Friday, May 20, 2011

28 Days Old


I didn't get a ton of advice, or even many comments from strangers when I was pregnant, but now that I have an adorable little baby in tow wherever I go, the comments are flowing like a flood.

Most are totally harmless: "She's adorable," "How old is she?" "She's so little!" — that sort of thing. But I've had two that were just weird.

First, two ladies stopped me at The Container Store a week or so ago to oooh and ahhh over the baby. One of them told me how glad she was to see that Devyn was wearing a hat (it was cold and rainy outside) and how some young mothers just take their babies out willy nilly without proper attire. But then she proceeded to lecture me how I absolutely should NOT take Devyn into the main part of the mall, because she could get sick being exposed to all those people and their germs (apparently she didn't count herself among the germy masses, because she got right in the baby's face). She actually said, "Did you know that?" Like she was bestowing some priceless wisdom on me.

(We went to the mall anyway. And, shockingly, it wasn't wall-to-wall germy crowds on a Wednesday afternoon at 2pm. Thank god.) :P

Then, yesterday, Dev and I went to the grocery store, and she did NOT fall asleep in the car as I had hoped, so by the time we got to the produce section, she was screaming from her car seat in the cart. I stopped in front of the lettuce to give her some attention and try to calm her down, and an older woman came up to us. At first she was just making small talk, "She's so precious," etc. Then she started talking to Devyn, saying things like, "It's OK darling," which is all fine. But then she looked at me and said, "Are you going to pick her up, or what?"

I answered that I thought I would just keep moving because she likes the motion, and walked away. What a weirdo! I got the impression that if I said I wasn't going to pick her up, that lady would have done it for me.

And we all know I can't be exposing my child to lots of strangers. *SHEESH*

Sunday, May 15, 2011

23 Days Old


The Baby Bean had her first bathtub bath yesterday. After much contemplation about whether or not we really needed it, we bought the fold up foam tub that fits in the sink, and I'm deeming it a good buy. It basically turns my kitchen sink into a soft-sided tub, which is awesome.

And despite the faces she's making in these photos, I think she really likes bath time.

~*~

We continue to feel each other out in regards to what works and what doesn't in this new partnership. Gone are the nights that we needed to wake her up to feed her, but we are getting around three hours of sleep at a stretch overnight. I'm starting to understand that even if she thinks she wants to be awake for long periods (say, more than an hour or so) during the day, that's bad news and usually ends up with a very angry baby who has trouble falling asleep for her naps. It's also becoming apparent that she thinks 1 or 2am is an excellent time to be awake and not want to go back to sleep. And Brandon and I are both realizing that there is no television program worth more than going to bed early and catching a few extra hours of sleep—that's what Hulu.com is for. ;)

This new life is also teaching me a lot about patience, about mindfulness in practice. I have to remind myself sometimes when she's fussy and needs all my attention that there is nowhere else I need to be, nothing else I need to be doing. This is the reason I'm on maternity leave, the reason I stockpiled meals in the freezer. If I don't make it to the grocery store, Brandon can go later. If I don't manage to get us all out for a walk today, we can go another day. If the floor doesn't get swept or the laundry folded, they will still be there tomorrow. This time is about slowing down, living fully in each moment, trying not to over-think or second guess myself.

I read something once about children being the perfect zen teachers and that motherhood is a spiritual practice. I think it couldn't be more true. Every step I take rocking her to sleep is a step on my pilgrimage; every hour spent awake while I feed her in the dark of night is an opportunity for meditation and contemplation. I already know that Devyn is going to teach me so much, if I will only slow down and listen. The creases of her fingers are the lines of my zen rock garden; the whorls in her hair my mandala; each of her breaths my prayer beads. She is my path to enlightenment, if I am meant to have one at all; she is my road to peace.

Saturday, May 14, 2011

22 days old


I just added a book of poetry by Edward Lear to my Amazon baby registry, and after you add something, it always prompts you with things you "might like to add to your registry."

For Devyn and me? It suggested Lady Gaga's "Born This Way" album and the exercise program P90X.

Do you think Amazon is trying to tell me something? ;)

Friday, May 13, 2011

Three Weeks Old

When you're me, it's a great idea to give your child a two-syllable name, because it works with tons of songs. Like,

We love you Devyn, oh yes we do
We love you Devyn, and we'll be true
When you're not near us, we're blue
Oh Devyn, we love you!
(sung to the tune of "We Love You Conrad" from Bye Bye Birdie)


And

Who's tripping down the streets of the city
Smilin' at everybody she sees?
Who's reachin' out to capture a moment?
Everyone knows it's Devyn
(sung to the tune of "Windy" by The Association)

Those and "Good Morning" from Singin' in the Rain make up a lot of our repertoire at the moment.

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

Mobile blog test

Testing out blogging from my iPod.

Baby Nest Baby Carrier: Things You Can Do While Wearing a Baby


When Devyn was about four days old, my parents and my sister and I went to a cool baby store here in Denver called Eco-Politan so Emily could buy some specialty cloth diapers and accessories. While we were there, the owner let me try on the Baby Nest—with my baby in it—and I was completely sold. My mom bought it for us and I have worn it at least part of the day nearly every day since.

I had been in the market for a Moby wrap, but the Baby Nest seemed easier because you don't have to tie it; it's just two loops of stretchy fabric that you can wear in different ways to carry your baby (up to 35 pounds!). It's totally easy, I can put it on and off by myself, and Devyn LOVES it.

Turns out, you can do a lot while wearing a baby (who doesn't otherwise want to sleep during the day unless she's being held). You can:
  • blog
  • eat a meal
  • read the Sunday paper while standing up and bouncing
  • take a walk
  • do laundry
  • go to the bathroom (hey, I'm just keeping it real)
  • pick up clutter
  • file papers and pay bills
  • put your feet up and watch Doctor Who
  • put on makeup and brush your teeth
  • water plants
Things I have found are difficult while wearing a baby:
  • putting a fitted sheet on the bed
  • picking up anything off the floor
  • reaching anything high above your head
Not a bad ratio, if you ask me.

Monday, May 9, 2011

17 Days Old: Questions

how is your BABY??? how is being a mommy? is your mind boggled? are you grossed out? what? do you recommend it? i could use some recommendations. :)
–from an email from a friend


Baby is awesome! She's so amazing. I find myself just staring at her a lot. ;) And being a mommy is mostly awesome, although sometimes it is really hard. I've still got the crazy hormones going on, so sometimes I just break down and cry because she is crying! But most of the time, I love it. And yes, my mind is totally boggled. Brandon and I both sometimes look at her and are just like, "We have a DAUGHTER. How weird is that????"

Giving birth was pretty gross. Poopy diapers are kinda gross. Her umbilical cord stump that only PARTIALLY fell off and is now oozing? VERY GROSS. But somehow it doesn't seem to matter too much. We were at the photographer last week, and I was trying to get her calm for the photos, so I went upstairs to the photographer's little boy's room to nurse. We had gotten her naked for one of the photos, so I had her sort of half wrapped in a blanket while she ate. And then? She had an EPIC poop all over my lap. I yelled for Brandon to bring me the baby bag, and while he was helping me clean up, she did it AGAIN. All we could do was laugh.

Nursing hurts like a bitch. Everybody said it would, and it does. But everybody also says it starts to get better around week three, so I am crossing my fingers for that. Labor hurts like a bitch. Pushing hurts like a bitch and was super scary to me. I had three tears, and those hurt, and the stitches are uncomfortable. But I got through all of it. It didn't kill me. :) I guess my body actually does know what it's doing.

I guess my answer is that looking into this tiny person's eyes, all the negative stuff was worth it. I don't know if we'll have any more, but if I had to make the choice again to get this little person, I would absolutely do it. In a heartbeat. Does that answer your questions? ;)

Non-Baby Stuff That's AWESOME for Having a Baby: Gaiam Balance Ball Chair


It's so daunting to register when you're having a baby. I remember being somewhat stymied by picking a china pattern and deciding how many place settings of flatware to register for as a bride, but the confusion then was nothing compared to the confusion I felt registering for my first baby, before she even got here. Did I really NEED a baby tub? I mean, our tub/shower isn't really conducive for bathing a baby, so maybe... Do we need a bottle warmer? What about a wipes warmer, touted by many as the ultimate in ridiculous baby accoutrement, but endorsed by my wise sister?

But some of the stuff that has turned out to be MOST important so far with this kid was never on our registry.

Take, for example, our Balance Ball Chair from Gaiam.

My father-in-law, a consummate garage saler, found this for me for $10 several months before we even got pregnant, but during my pregnancy and after, it has been an absolute god-send.

Early in my pregnancy, I used the ball—sans chair—for working out, as lots of the prenatal strength training exercises I was doing called for use of an exercise ball. And, once I started working from home, sitting at my desk on the ball chair for four or five hours a day was about the only way to make my work days not wreck havoc on my lower back.

When I grew more enormously pregnant, our sofa suddenly became a pale blue, overstuffed trap from which I had a great deal of trouble escaping. Add to that the advice my doula gave me about sitting up as straight as possible during the last month or two of my pregnancy and the ball chair moved permanently from the upstairs office to the living room next to the sofa that wanted to eat me. Being able to sit up straight, be comfortable and get up and down without the use of a pulley system was absolutely invaluable as I grew larger and larger.

But I assumed that once baby arrived, the chair would migrate back up to the office—not so. Almost immediately, my family and I discovered the bouncy potential of the chair for comforting a fussy baby. My sister, who helped immensely during those first few days when Devyn's "witching hour" fell between 8 and 11pm, endorsed "aggressive bouncing" for calming the otherwise inconsolable little bean baby. Two weeks in, bouncing on the ball chair remains one of our favorite pastimes.

New, the chair does not come cheap, but knowing what I know now, I would absolutely recommend a mom-to-be add one to her registry—either for that extremely generous relative who abhors stepping into a baby store, or for a gaggle of friends to collaborate on.

Sunday, May 8, 2011

16 Days Old: What I Love About Breastfeeding (and Happy Mother's Day!)


Eight to 12 feedings a day are starting to take their toll; last night I actually cried a little because it hurt so badly when my daughter latched on for her 3am feeding. But breastfeeding is something I'm committed to doing, and there are actually parts of it that I love, so I thought I would list those to give me something other than the soreness to focus on:

  • I love the snuggling time we get when I burp her
  • I love staring back into her eyes when she's staring up at me
  • I love the feel of her soft head in my hand or in the crook of my arm
  • I love the chance to slow down my thoughts and just be in the moment
  • I love the feeling of power that being able to feed and soothe my child gives me
  • I love the "chicken pecking" kisses I get when she's hungry and looking for lunch
  • I love that, even at only a few hours old, she knew how to wiggle down and get into position without any help from me
  • I love it when she clutches at my hand while she's eating
  • I love the opportunity to be still and be close to her—even when there are a thousand other things that need doing

Friday, May 6, 2011

14 Days Old


Devyn had her first doctor visit today, and got through it with flying colors. She is up to 6 pounds, 12 ounces and 19.5 inches long.

And all those things I was worried about? All perfectly fine and perfectly normal.

Wednesday, May 4, 2011

12 days old


Things that can happen (sometimes all at once) with otherwise completely healthy newborns:
  • Gas pains that make her shriek at octaves that would make most opera singers jealous
  • Hormones that make her have her first period at three days old. (And even though I actually did know that could happen, somewhere in the back of my brain, it is still NOT COOL to open up your three-day-old's diaper and see blood.)
  • Dry skin that makes it look like your baby's entire skin is flaking off.
  • Bleeding from the cord stump. Really, anything that involves an infant and her blood leaving her body is not fun for mommies and daddies.
  • "Newborn rash" that looks like she has angry red pimples or mosquito bites all over her (thankfully this is gone now).
It is really hard to be a big mommy, as my mommy would say, and not panic at all these things—which my parents, my books and my doula all assure me are perfectly normal. Mom, I'm sorry if I ever doubted you on that point. You are absolutely right.

The Birth Story — Part 2

I don't remember much about the drive to the hospital except hanging onto the handle during contractions. I had my eyes closed most of the time. We pulled into the hospital and Brandon pulled up to the door to let me out, at which point, I said, "YOU'RE LEAVING ME?????" and we decided that I could walk the short distance from the parking lot.

We parked and walked in. The only person in the lobby was the security guard. He asked if we wanted a wheelchair, but I just wanted to keep moving, so we said no. He called up to the maternity floor to let them know we were on our way.

When we got to the third floor, the nurses met us, took our information and showed us into a delivery room. I got into a hospital gown and they put me in bed, strapping me up with the fetal monitors and so on. I think Brandon gave the nurses our birth plan, but things were happening so fast I'm not sure anyone had time to read it. I was pretty much just concentrating on getting through the contractions at that point.

My main nurse checked me to see how far I was dilated—and then she asked the baby nurse to check me too. I think she couldn't quite believe what she found, because they announced I was already 8 centimeters dilated. I was relieved; I had been hoping I would be at 5 centimeters when we got to the hospital.

Just a few minutes after that, my water broke. All the books and stuff console women that most of the time, you'll just feel a little trickle (so they don't have to worry about their water breaking in public and being embarrassing). No tiny trickle for me. WOOSH and there was no question what was happening.

The next while is a little bit of a blur. I know Brandon called Whitney and our parents to let them know that we were at the hospital and the nurses brought in the doctor. My contractions were getting closer together and incredibly intense. Brandon was awesome, getting in my face to help me focus and keep me breathing.

I think I was starting to panic a little bit because we were actually at the hospital and they weren't sending me home saying I was in false labor—that's right: I still wasn't 100 percent sure this was actually happening.

At some point, one of the nurses said, "OK, honey, looks like we're having this baby naturally!" To which I replied, "No. No, no, no, no, no, no..." (ad nauseum).

Afterward, someone said, "I thought that's what you wanted?" Sort of? Maybe? I guess? To be honest, I didn't think I could do it naturally. I thought I would want the epidural by the time I was ready to push.

And that wasn't going to happen.

Even if they had called the anesthesiologist the second we walked through the door, I'm not sure we would have had time for an epidural. We got to the hospital around 3:30am. Devyn was born at 4:22am, less than an hour later.

The idea of pushing really freaked me out and I definitely panicked a little bit when I started feeling the urge to push and they put my legs up in the stirrups. I was starting to hyperventilate. They gave me oxygen and everyone kept yelling at me to slow down and breathe. When they actually started telling me to push, I was—quite literally—screaming at the top of my lungs. The doctor told me, "You're wasting energy screaming," and I wanted to tell her where she could shove her wasted energy, but I didn't have the energy. ;)

They kept telling me to push, and I thought I was, but apparently I wasn't. They would say, "PUSH!" and I would say, "I DON'T KNOW HOW!" But eventually, I guess I figured it out.

Pushing wasn't as bad as I imagined it would be, all things considered. It was ridiculously weird to be able to feel the baby moving down the birth canal. And that "ring of fire" sensation I had read about was definitely unpleasant, but not nearly as painful as the contractions had been.

As Devyn was crowning, the doctor asked, "Do you want to touch your baby's head?" And I said "NOOOO!" Ha! I think they assumed, since they thought I wanted to do it all naturally, that I was super crunchy granola, but I was pretty freaked out by the whole thing. Thank god no one offered me a mirror! Brandon looked, even though he swore he wouldn't, and he said it didn't look much like a head at that point.

And then, suddenly, they were telling me I had a baby. My response? "It's over?!?" That made everyone laugh.

They barely cleaned her off before they laid her on my stomach. She cried two or three times and then she was quiet and contemplative. I couldn't believe it. It was totally surreal. But she was perfect and tiny and so amazing.

And that's about when Whitney got to the hospital. She drove as fast as she could, but Devyn was just a little bit faster. She stayed with us for an hour or so, helping me try to breastfeed, answering questions, and generally being a nice calming force in the room.

Brandon barely remembered to call our parents back to let them know we had a baby. I think everyone was completely shocked that it had happened so fast. We didn't even have a camera with us, as we'd just grabbed my labor bag out of the car—which we didn't even end up using at all.

The labor I had and the labor I'd thought I would have were completely different. All my planning and thinking and preparations went out the window with the reality of the situation. The more I think about it, the more I think it's a pretty good metaphor for parenting in general.

We stayed in the labor room for three or four hours. We weren't in any hurry to move, and the nurses were doing their shift change. We sat and stared at our daughter and watched the sun come up on her first day.

Our daughter. Devyn Fae. Welcome to the world, my darling.

Monday, May 2, 2011

The Birth Story — Part 1

The morning of Thursday, April 21, my contractions started around 6:30am. They were completely mild and innocuous, reminding me of the cramps I sometimes get to signal the start of my period. I had three or four, about 15 minutes apart and didn't think much about it.

Around 9am, I had a few more contractions still about 10 or 15 minutes apart. I texted Brandon to let him know, and also told him that I had decided to go on with my plans for the day as normal. He was excited, but both of us were thinking we didn't want to get our hopes up.

I made plans to have lunch with my friend Stephanie in Longmont before going to get a manicure and pedicure at a spa up there. I got to the restaurant a little early, and was sitting in my car listening to the radio when my mom called to tell me that my friend Ken was on the radio in Dallas. I told her that I had been having contractions on and off all morning, and she was very excited. I was careful to tell her not to get TOO excited, because it was probably nothing.

Stephanie and I had a nice lunch, and when I told her that I had been having contractions, she too got really excited. She wanted me to go into labor right then so she could have the honor of taking me to the hospital! Alas, the buffalo chicken tacos I had did not send me into spontaneous labor.

After lunch, I drove to Sunflower Spa and settled in for my mani/pedi, which was lovely. I had asked Whitney, my doula, if it was OK for me to have a pedicure, having read or heard somewhere that foot massage could send a woman into labor. She said I was at 38 weeks, so even if it did, it wouldn't be an issue. I had another couple of contractions while I was there, but they were still really mild and far apart.

I met Brandon at home and we had dinner. At around 6pm, I had some more contractions, a little stronger and definitely 10 minutes apart, but I only had about three before they stopped again. We still were not thinking it was go time.

Between 6pm and 9pm, things started to move. The contractions were getting a little stronger, but they were still somewhat erratic and at least 10 minutes apart. Starting at around 9, the contractions were coming regularly 10 minutes apart and they were starting to get stronger. We decided to call Whitney a little before 10pm, before it got too late, and she told us to get some rest if we could.

We couldn't.

After we called Whitney, the contractions started to get really strong, though they were still pretty short, lasting only 30 to 45 seconds. Sleeping between contractions wasn't an option for me, and because Brandon was focused on helping me through contractions, it wasn't an option for him either. The weirdest and most difficult part for me was that most of the pain was concentrated in my upper thighs; I had thought the pain would be in my abdomen, and having it in my legs was surprisingly hard to deal with. I had prepared myself for pain in my belly or pain in my back, but none of the different laboring positions we had learned seemed to help the pain in my legs at all. I remember several times just saying, "WHY? Why does it hurt in my legs???" But of course, Brandon couldn't give me an answer. ;)

The contractions got progressively more intense, but remained steadfastly 10 minutes apart until around 2am when they suddenly jumped from 10 minutes to about 3 minutes. They were still only 30 seconds long as they had been the whole time. I was starting to get a little frantic, trying everything I could think of to find even a little relief. I was afraid to walk or stand during contractions because the pain in my legs was so intense I was afraid I would fall. I ended up sitting on the edge of the bed taking a lot of weight on my arms for most of them.

We decided to call Whitney again, and she gave Brandon some ideas to help me with counter pressure on my hips and legs. She told us that if the contractions got longer, closer together, or more intense we should go to the hospital.

I was somehow fixated on the idea that the contractions would get longer, so I never really thought it was time to go. In fact, I was starting to consider getting in the shower to see if that would help with the pain. Brandon, however, decided pretty quickly that the contractions were getting closer together and more intense. I would have a contraction and then he would disappear, and by the time I was going into the next contraction, he would be back with his jeans on, or carrying our bags, or asking me where my shoes were. And that was when I realized we were going to the hospital.