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November 22nd, 2010
definitely fried

We took the Peanut for his first official visit to see Santa this weekend. Unfortunately Santa was outside the entire time, in 35 degree weather, and I was wearing flip-flops. Sigh. The Peanut stayed quite warm, covered in blankets, but momma froze her freaking ass off. You’d think being a parent would mean your judgement improved, but oh no, that would make too much sense.

See, when the basement was ruined and then fixed, all of my shoes were down there. And they are all now covered in ick and I refuse to touch them. So yeah, I gotta go buy some shoes… but I’ve been a little busy (ha ha). So now it’s freezing cold outside and I keep wearing flip-flops because all of my other shoes are no good. What’s really sad is that everyone else had hats, coats, gloves and they were jumping up and down (we waited outside in a line… not the brightest idea) — and I had on a sweater and flip-flops.

Being a parent has fried my brain.

posted in: hilarity,parenting — @ 11:00 pm

November 21st, 2010
cuteness

posted in: awesome — @ 8:31 pm

November 17th, 2010
smiles and sleep

A couple of weeks ago the Chop had gone home for his sister’s wedding, so my parents came out to help me while he was gone. I can’t tell you how necessary that was. Trying to juggle working and a baby is slowly frying my brain. We’re exhausted all the time and work is getting done at about 1/2 the pace it was, which for some clients means I get really annoying emails every day asking if something is ready.

The Chop says I have spoiled them for years, turning work around at a very fast pace (ie, same day) and now they’re squawking about my taking a week to build a site (seriously, come on — a week is too long? bite me).

Before my mom left the Chop and I had our first outing sans baby… for sushi and a Sufjan concert. The sushi was magical and Sufjan was quite good too, but I think I would’ve appreciated it more had I not wanted to curl up and sleep, lol. People tell you about not sleeping, but until you’ve been severely sleep deprived (now for six weeks straight), you really can’t comprehend it.

The Peanut is starting to sleep for longer(ish) stretches — 3.5 hours, woot! — but I would kill for 6-7 hours of straight sleep. He’s had a bad bout of gas the past couple of days (omFg), but I think we’ve moved past those screaming fits (poor kid, you feel bad for him, but you also want to tell him to quiet down, lol). The books say he should spontaneously start sleeping through the night soon. I await that day with great anticipation.

He’s smiling now, though, so that pretty much makes up for everything. 🙂

posted in: hilarity,parenting,peanut — @ 10:56 pm

November 6th, 2010
Gettysburg Address – awesome

Gettysburg Address from Adam Gault

posted in: awesome — @ 11:45 am

November 1st, 2010
28

Today I turned 28. Last year on my birthday I knew I’d spend this one married… I didn’t know I’d spend it holding a baby. Who, incidentally, is having a growth spurt today and wants to eat constantly and hardly sleep. Fortunately he smells yummy and is generally adorable, so I don’t mind that my birthday was spent changing diapers, washing bottles and eating takeout while holding a fussbucket. 🙂

In a couple of days the Chop is heading to MN for his sister’s wedding, and while my mom is coming to help while he’s gone (thank god, he’s still only sleeping for two-three hour stretches at night), I’m still not looking forward to it.

The Chop, of course, is excited to get hours and hours of uninterrupted sleep… and so I also hate him just a little bit, lol.

28. I’m really on the downside towards 30 now, sigh.

posted in: about,hilarity — @ 11:29 pm

October 30th, 2010
the birth of the peanut

If you are in any way offended by some gross details, feel free to skip this one.

I was supposed to be induced September 30th, around 7AM. So on September 29th, we went out to dinner, worked late and hardly slept. At 5AM the hospital called — a lot of women had actually gone into labor (bitches!) and I was being pushed back. I went back to sleep (after telling my mom to get out of the shower, as we weren’t going yet) and at 9AM they called to tell me I wasn’t going to be induced.

Sigh. My mom took me for a mani/pedi that afternoon, which was a brilliant idea — the fluid that causes your feet to swell to the size of a troll had been paining me for weeks and the Chop was happy someone else was rubbing them for once. 🙂

October 1 (Friday) I called the hospital and they told me not to come in, but they’d call me later. Oy. Once you are past your due date, every day is really long and all you can think about is when is this baby leaving my womb. At 40 weeks, your stomach is massive. You ache all over, sleep is elusive, you feel twice the size you actually are and people KEEP ASKING if you’ve had the baby.

Plus, my mom was here and she kept smiling at me. And if I groaned or moved funny or grimaced (which frankly happened all the time, the Chop wasn’t even bothered by it anymore), she’d look over, her eyes would light up and she’d be all, has it started?

Sigh. Yeah. No.

Around 3PM the hospital called. “Did you think we’d forgotten you?” she asked. “Um, haha, kind of…” I replied. “Can you be here in an hour?”

Sure, I said, quite stupidly as we still had to load the car, drop off the dog and get lunch.

The Chop and my mom were both on their phones, so I went into the bedroom and started putting everything together. The Chop came, still on the phone, and asked what I was doing — we’re going to the hospital, I said. He got off the phone. 🙂

We dropped off the dog at daycare, picked up lunch at Panera and arrived at the hospital around 5PM. There was a bit of traffic (and a car accident RIGHT at the hospital exit), but we actually drove there in pretty good time.

We checked in, got our fun bracelets and headed to our labor and delivery room. Our first nurse, Yanna, was Russian. She was very sweet, but was concerned about getting my IV in, so she called an IV nurse — it took two weeks for the IV bruise to go away. She ran through her checklist of questions, and they started the pitocin drip.

I expected instant, painful contractions, but got nothing. As it turns out, pitocin can take awhile. By 8PM I was blogging and my mom was getting ready to head home to sleep. I had some mild cramping, but in general, was feeling OK. The Chop and I watched Blue Bloods (I love Donnie Walhberg, he’s a fantastic actor) and NCIS reruns.

Around 11PM they checked to see how far I was dilated and stripped my membranes again — fuck if that doesn’t hurt like hell. They’d done it the week before, at my doctor’s office, but this time it was twice as long and twice as painful.

Then they offered me my first pain meds. A drug cocktail, one in the IV and one “in my bum.” Um, no, I said. I’m all for the IV, but I don’t want one “in my bum.” Yanna was confused and said, but that’s the one that lasts longer, you need them both. No, no, I said, I don’t want that one.

She left to get the drugs (and the doctor) and I looked at the Chop. He agreed, none in the bum.

The nurse and doctor came back and she again offered me the one in the bum. The needle is small, she said. Needle, I said?

As it turns out, the Chop and I both assumed that “by in the bum” she meant a suppository. Why, you ask? I don’t know. The way she said it? The accent? Whatever it was, I was not keen on a suppository, lol, and the Chop was in agreement. The needle comment was what gave it away. “In the bum” meant a shot in the ass, lol.

So first came the nubane in the IV. Magical, wonderful and my only drug of choice, it’s like getting smashed on vodka, without the hangover or the nausea. You’re just instantly (and I mean within seconds) floating on a happy cloud (and apparently slurring, according to the Chop). The world is very hazy and your body feels wonderful.

Then of course came the Demerol shot (in the thigh instead of the ass, incidentally), which really and truly hurt like hell. But the next four hours I was in a drug induced sleep, feeling next to nothing at all.

Around 3:30 they offered me the epidural, and by then the Demerol had worn off and the pain was starting to be a problem.

The anesthesiologist, with exceedingly cold hands, did a great job getting the epidural in. It was definitely uncomfortable, plus hands on my back make me jump, but the Demerol shot had been far more painful. It was just weird, and disconcerting, having a tube inserted in my spine. Thinking about it now, I still shudder a little.

Once the epidural kicked in, I went back to sleeping. Sadly I was woken up regularly to ask how I was doing (I always forget that sleeping in hospitals is impossible — you sleep for what seems like five minutes and then someone comes in, repeat ad nauseam).

At around 6AM the doctor came in to see how dilated I was. Sadly it was just a few centimeters, 4 I think, but they broke my water and I went back to sleep.

The rest of the day was basically a haze of being checked on, being drugged and sleeping. The Chop slept in some, got up and showered, went and got lunch; my mom called, but was waiting to come in until the labor really started, so really I just dozed in and out.

Around 5PM the nurse checked and I was 8 centimeters, finally, so the Chop called my mom to have her come. By the time she got there, around 6PM, I was being checked again. OK, the nurse said, it’s time.

The next three hours were some of the most excruciating of my life. The epidural didn’t make me completely numb — I had tingling in my legs, and the “pushing pain” (an overwhelmingly painful feeling of needing to void something) was in no way lessened by the drugs. Due to the baby “possibly” being too big, they didn’t want to use forceps or the vacuum, so in order to get him out, I had to push with no assistance—and if I couldn’t we had to move to C section.

I have honestly never been in so much pain in my life. The contractions were coming 2-3 minutes apart and the pain was indescribable.

At 8PM I wanted to give up. Demanded a C section, started crying uncontrollably and frankly just wanted to die. 10 more minutes, they kept saying to me, we can see his head!

FYI, they’d been saying “we can see his head” for over an hour at this point. Apparently you can see the head for A LONG FUCKING TIME before it actually comes out.

They brought in the anesthesiologist to give me “an extra boost” down the epidural, and somehow I managed to pull it together for the next 50 minutes and get him out. There must’ve been magic in that boost, because I’m still surprised I didn’t die. Especially when he crowned. They call it “the ring of fire” and it truly is like having a white hot poker swirled around down south — it’s like, no, it can’t get worse and then OMFG IT JUST GOT WORSE.

Once his head was out, the rest kind of whooshed out in a massive flood of liquid (gross I know—apparently it was the most disturbing part of the whole thing for the Chop—well, that and the “stretching” he said) and the relief was fabulous. He had the cord around his neck once, so he came out greyish-purple and I only held him for a quick second before they whisked him away to do his tests and get cleaned up. He pooped on me, of course.

He arrived at 8:50PM exactly four weeks ago, on October 2. He was 8 lbs, 4 oz and 21 inches. And he came out completely bright-eyed and bushy-tailed.

The Peanut, shortly after birth, being weighed.

The next thing I know I’m being stitched (and FEELING IT, FUCK) and a nurse is beating the shit out of my uterus. Stop, stop, I cried, why are you doing that?! We have to get the blood clots out, she said, unless you want the doctor to stick his hand up there to get them out — and trust me, you won’t want anyone to stick anything up there.

So there I was, being beaten by a nurse, while the Chop and my mom had deserted me to hang across the room with the baby. Eventually they came back to my side, my mom holding him and telling me “thank you for my grandson” multiple times, and both of them sending picture messages of the little cutie to our friends and family.

My mom holding him about 10 minutes after birth — notice how I am ignored in the bed next to her!

They took him out after that, to do whatever it is they do with babies, while I got cleaned up. Then I realized I was starving. To death. I am not kidding. I have never been so hungry in my entire life. I ate Chris’ leftover lunch (turkey wrap, piece of cake), my mother’s chocolate candy bar (Hershey’s with Almonds) and then we ordered a pizza and salads (hello, did you know labor and delivery stocks take out menus for this reason?).

We were moved to our maternity room around midnight, by then my mom had gone home and the Chop and I were dead exhausted. Chop went and checked on the Peanut in the nursery (before we crashed), but he wasn’t brought back to our room until 3AM.

We spent the next two and a half days in that room, the Chop only leaving to go to the cafe or the kitchen. We were visited every shift change, and sometimes in between, by nurses. My OBGYN came every day, as did the Peanut’s pediatrician and the lactation specialists (they really are very full service). My mom brought Starbucks every day, too. My favorite part of being there was getting three meals a day brought to me, lol. I was really hungry every single day and it wasn’t until we were home a week or so that I wasn’t starving constantly.

In his bassinet in our room — wearing his Gloworm hat 🙂

The day we left, bearing flowers and awesome cupcakes—and an adorable baby—the Chop and I spent 20 minutes attempting to get the car seat buckled in while the car was idling at the front door. We finally moved the car to a parking spot (we felt very conspicuous) and realized we had been trying to put it in backwards.

Mmm, cupcakes from our friends — so very good.

Great start, we decided. 🙂

10 days old — and yes, worth it. 🙂

posted in: memories,parenting,peanut,porkchop,randomness — @ 8:50 pm

October 21st, 2010
skills

I am inaugurating a new category on the blog… parenting. As in, OMFG, how are we allowed to be parents? WTF do we know about being parents? And seriously, they let us take an infant home?

The people have finally left and the Chop and I are on our own. Just us, the baby, a dog and two cats — it’s a riot. Having my mom here for so long was amazing and frankly, if she wanted to move in, we’d welcome her with open arms. Laundry was done, dishes were washed, food was made, the baby was watched while we napped — and more than one night she walked and bounced Peanut until he fell asleep, allowing the Chop and I to get some much needed sleep.

We had so much family in and out over the past two weeks though, that the Chop and I hadn’t really gotten a chance to just experience having the baby (outside the womb) by ourselves. And aside from him eating nonstop (omg, my boobs), we think we’re doing a pretty good job.

Of course, we decided to walk to coffee and CVS today, in 50 degree weather, with him in short-sleeved pajamas (with a hat!), with only one blanket in a Moby wrap. Did I mention it got windy? And started raining right after we got home? And that he started crying in CVS and I had to walk out of the store? We didn’t actually make it to coffee — once he started crying in CVS, we decided to head home. Of course, then he fell asleep on the (short) walk back home. But no worries, once we got in the house and stopped moving, he woke up looking to eat.

Things they don’t tell you: babies eat ALL the time. Like every 1.5 hours, and that’s from the start of them eating — and if they eat slower, you could be feeding them for an hour and then thirty minutes later, it’s snack time again!

posted in: parenting,peanut — @ 7:14 pm

October 14th, 2010
definitely the cutest baby

It’s incredibly amazing to me how much time/energy/work babies actually are. Staggering, really. I’ve been trying to find time to write out the “labor” story — mainly because I need to remember it — but it’s honestly next-to-impossible to take care of a newborn and try to get any work done at all, let alone a long blog post about excruciating pain.

In the meantime, my fabulous friend did his newborn photos and yes, my baby is the cutest baby of all time, feel free to sing his praises, etc. 🙂

posted in: peanut — @ 6:08 pm

October 9th, 2010
1 week old

A little over an hour ago the little peanut turned 1 week old. I know, I know, yes we have become those dorks who thinks their baby poops rainbows and cries butterflies. Whatever. Babies are cute and my baby is the cutest, so nyah.

posted in: awesome,peanut — @ 9:58 pm

October 7th, 2010
the cuteness monster

posted in: peanut — @ 11:23 pm
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