Wednesday, August 18, 2010

How To Be Tactless

I'm having dinner with an old friend tonight. She's one of the very few people I am still friends with from High School and she lives in California now with her husband. They're expecting their first child in December, a boy. I put together a box of things I wanted her to have, some used and some never used. It has a luxe blanket, two lovies, a pair of sneakers, a cloth diaper, newborn socks, a newborn towel, and two sleepers. I expect that she will ask why I'm not keeping these things. The answer is both simple and complicated. I bought them for a hypothetical second child. A child who will never exist. For someone who always planned to have more than one child, and who will almost certainly have more than one child, this will be hard to understand. I expect that I'll have to explain why, which is where things get complicated.

Do I start with the high risk pregnancy? The precipitous labor? The PPD? Should I just cut to the chase and explain the infertility? All of these things are the reason, and yet there is more. When I found out I had an early miscarriage, and that I was suffering for Luteal Phase Defect, I wasn't upset. I was relieved. Even though we were trying to conceive again, I knew I didn't really want it. When the pregnancy didn't take, and when I found out it was highly unlikely that another pregnancy ever would take, I thought, "well, that settles that." I wasn't upset. It was great to have that weight lifted off my shoulders. I no longer have to tell people that we just don't want a second, although that is true most of the time, but that we can't have another. People are much more forgiving when you tell them you're infertile.

This is why I've always thought it tactless to ask anyone when they will have a child. It's impossible to know what someone is dealing with. They may want another child, and are unable to conceive. They may have been on the fence, like we were, and in the face of troubles, chose to retreat. No matter what the circumstance, it just seems so tacky to ask, "so when are you having another?" So, please don't ask me when we're having another. We're not. We can't. We don't want to.

Tuesday, August 17, 2010

Black & White

A lot of people seem to see aspects of parenting as black and white. If you do "x" then you are either a "good parent," or "terrible parent." People rarely stop to get the full story on any parenting decision before deciding that it's either right for everyone, or wrong for everyone.

I detailed my breastfeeding story and how Gabby just couldn't breastfeed. But, when breastfeeding advocates fail to get the full story, or even a brief summary of the story, they tend to judge. "Breast is best, you're not doing what's best." Ouch. That doesn't help anyone. For my child, breast wasn't best, formula was. Deal with it.

Anything in the "Attachment Parenting" genre seems to illicit some extreme reactions from both sides. Those int he AP camp think any parent that puts their kid in a baby swing, or lets a toddler cry a little before falling asleep, are obviously abusive and negligent (obviously). Meanwhile, those on the other end, people like my mother, think it's insane not to have a baby Cry It Out by the time they are six months old. Her thoughts on co-sleeping? Coddling. Let a child choose their own outfit? No way. A parent should choose all clothing until the child is 12 (no lie, she picked out all my clothes until I was 12, and then wondered why I rebelled and dyed my hair purple).

Parenting isn't this cut and dry thing, though. It's complicated, and you have to do what's best for each kid at that moment in time. I never let Gabby cry without being comforted for the entire first year of her life, and she cried a lot. When she passed a year, though, and decided to go on a very calculated sleep strike, I had to put an end to it. She was very obviously choosing to throw a tantrum every night when I would put her in her crib because she wanted to stay up and play all night long (she's a major night owl). There is a huge difference between a baby crying because they need their parent for some reason, and a toddler throwing a tantrum because they don't want to go to bed. Did I use CIO? I wouldn't call it that, but she did cry, and I didn't go get her. So, if I'm a terrible parent for that, so be it. However, after two nights, she learned that she needs to get all her playing done with before bed, and she's been just fine. Amazingly, she doesn't seem to have suffered any severe psychological damage either! Imagine that.

Based on this, some people would instantly write me off as "bad mom." They would assume that bottle-propped while watching Jerry Springer, smoking a Parliament, and ignored my kid swinging away in her motorized swing. Life isn't that simple, though, and anyone who thinks it is, is the simple one.

No, I never owned a baby swing. Gabby was worn in a soft-structured carrier from a month old until she didn't want to be anymore (about six months). I never bottle-propped, either. In fact, Gabby has never held her own bottle, ever. It's always been a very snuggly time (well, after she stopped writhing in agony during feeds, that is). I don't watch Jerry Springer, and I quit smoking in High School (err... umm.. I didn't smoke in High School, right. Shh...) For every choice along the road of parenting I've chosen the best choice for us, which is not always the "best choice."

Before Gabby was born, I knew I wanted her to stay in her rear-facing car seat until she was two years old. I had read all the studies that said it was much safer, and obviously, that was the best thing for my kid. I didn't count on her having a major digestive disturbance, and I certainly didn't expect her to get severely carsick on very short rides (five minutes was all it took). She was getting so sick on every car ride, that her doctor (my uncle), told us she needed to be flipped forward facing, the sooner the better. She was only six months old when he made this recommendation. I held out until she was 9 months old, but it was getting to be really bad. Even the car safety experts will say that when a child is getting sick because of rear-facing seats, it is better to flip them early, then allow them to continue getting sick on every car ride. Even though it's not the "best choice" to flip a kid early, it was for us. She's only gotten sick once since, and it was because my mom took us on a very windy ride, even I felt yucky afterward.

Judging other parents doesn't do us any good. It may make someone feel better to compare themselves to someone else, and say, "I'm better because I do xyz," but it's not true. You can't tell a whole story from a snapshot, and it's foolish to try. Blanket statements, beliefs and comments help no one, and the inflexible person, is the one that will be forced to break in the end.

Friday, August 13, 2010

Scary Boobs

Before I got pregnant, I knew nothing about breastfeeding. Literally, nothing. No one in my family had breastfed. I was the first in my social circle to get pregnant, so none of my friends were helpful. I just assumed I'd use formula, because it's what everyone did, and I knew nothing else. My husband, Lee, is a scientist, though. He did know a bit (not a whole lot, since he's a Physicist) about the benefits of breastfeeding, and told me that I needed to really look into it before coming to any conclusions.

So I did. Everything I read said that breastfeeding was superior to formula. Also, from what I was reading, it didn't even seem hard! Everything talked about how natural it was, and that there should only be a mild soreness. I could totally deal with that! I have a crazy high pain tolerance. So, it was settled, I'd breastfeed our child. I mean, how could I ever have considered otherwise? It was the most logical, natural choice!

I told everyone my plans to breastfeed. I was so pleased with myself. I said that I'd go as long as my child wanted, a year, two years, even three! In my small town, where no one breastfeeds, I was now an even bigger weirdo than I had been already. "You want to do that?," one of my coworkers asked in disgust, as she went on to talk about her breasts being "only for [her husband] to play with." She giggled, and I tried to suppress my urge to vomit.

I couldn't help but feel really good about myself. I was going to breastfeed. I was doing the "right" thing for my child, even when so many people around me didn't. I was, obviously, the better parent.

Then Gabriella was born. Even after our traumatic birth experience, I had high hopes for breastfeeding. Except that they kept her for hours after she was born. I had only held her for a single minute. When they brought her back to me, three hours later, she was fast asleep. She didn't want to breastfeed at all. So we waited. Eventually, she woke up, and a nurse helped me get her latched. It was odd, but not horrible. We switched sides, and for some reason, she seemed to get really upset. She sucked for only a moment, pulled off (painfully, I might add), and began wailing. What was wrong with my baby? What was wrong with me? Why did she hate me?

The lactation consultant was no help at all. She said, "everything is fine," and she never came back again. Meanwhile, Gabby just kept screaming. A little sucking, ripping away from me, and screaming. It was horrible.

It didn't get better when we got home. Instead the ripping away got worse as she got bigger and stronger. She started arching her back away from my breasts. She wanted nothing to do with them. She hated them. She cried all the time. I began to suspect that she had GERD, but her pediatrician said that we needed to "wait and see." She told me that even if she did have it, they were not going to prescribe any medication, and that I would need to find a specialist instead. They wouldn't even give us Zantac.

Then came the day when she refused to nurse. I couldn't even get her latched. She just arched away from me. I called her usual doctor, who asked if it was a "true emergency." I screamed at her that my child, "has gotten no fluids for the past 18 hours, did that feel like an emergency [to her]?" I hung up on her before she could answer, and called my uncle Tony, who is a pediatrician. Without seeing her once, he immediately diagnosed her with GERD, and told me that I needed to find a way to get fluids in her ASAP. He told me to try a bottle with Pediasure. I knew that you aren't supposed to give bottles if you want breastfeeding to work, but seriously, what else should I have done? My child was getting dehydrated by the minute! I gave her the bottle, and she reluctantly drank it. He told me I should try pumping and giving the bottle to see if she can handle that.

I officially switched her to my uncle as her doctor, even though he is over an hour away from us. He prescribed a few different prescriptions in an effort to treat, what was determined to be, severe GERD, and we fiddled with them until she seemed to be okay. Not perfect, but a lot better.

I continued to give her pumped milk for weeks while we were adjusting the meds just right. When things settled down, I tried breastfeeding again, but she wanted nothing to do with it. She cried as soon as I started to unlatch my nursing tank. She refused to latch. My boobs were absolutely scary to her. They were a source of pain, and sickness. For other babies, nursing is a source of comfort and bonding, but not for Gabby. She knew them to provide nothing but discomfort.

I kept trying for several weeks longer, and she continued to flat-out refuse. My uncle said she developed a feeding aversion when it came to nursing, and that it was very unlikely that she would ever get over it. He told me I could keep pumping, or I could switch to formula, which was "okay too."

I felt I needed to keep pumping; it was the least I could do at this point. Except, every time I would hook myself up that dreaded device, it was like the joy was being sucked out of me. Then one day, I thought, "wouldn't my family be better off without me?" I knew something was really wrong.

I was diagnosed with PPD, and the only medication that helped was one that was not safe for breastfeeding. There really was no choice to even think about. Without this medication, my child wouldn't have breast milk anyway, because her mother would likely kill herself. The choice was obvious.

My friends and family all said to me, "see we told you breastfeeding wasn't worth it," and, "we knew it wasn't going to work for you." Not the words of "encouragement" I needed. Online communities were no better. The breastfeeding moms would tell me that I did my child wrong. That I didn't try hard enough to get her back on the breast, that I should have "chosen" a PPD med that was safe for nursing. No matter where I went, I couldn't win.

It was my husband that really made everything better for me. He said, "Samantha, you are an amazing mother. Our daughter is so lucky to have you. Who cares how she is getting fed, the point is that you're feeding her with love." He's a great guy :-)

Now we have a 100% healthy, funny, smart 17-month old (can't believe she's that old!), and I'm 100% at peace with everything.

Infertility, really

Yesterday, I mentioned to a stranger on the blogosphere that I was experiencing secondary infertility. Like most people would, stranger commented that all infertility really is, is the failure to conceive after a year of trying to do so, and that 98% of people will go on to conceive after three years of trying. Now, if you've read any of my previous posts, you'll know that this is not "my infertility." This is how "unknown infertility" is determined, but it is not the same for those with known infertility. The cause of my infertility is Luteal Phase Defect (LPD), and it's not something that will just correct itself with time. It is something that will persist indefinitely if left untreated. B6 can work for some (it hasn't yet for me), but if not, the next step is Clomid, and that's a step I'm not willing to take. So even though Lee and I have only been TTC for a few months now, I know that I'm infertile, and that it won't "just happen eventually." The most that will ever happen, without Clomid, is a series of very early miscarriages. Something I don't want to keep dealing with, over and over again.

I appreciate people being positive and well-meaning, but I don't really need it. I don't want pity, or sympathy. My life is truly great. This is just something that made up our minds about a second child for us, and that's okay.

Thursday, August 12, 2010

Adventures in Cloth Diapering

So, I've been cloth diapering Gabby for over a week now, and I really like it! It helps that I'm strange, and enjoy doing laundry and tidying up.

I started with just 3 FuzziBunz OS diapers, and then followed that up with another 11. I now have a stash of 14 FuzziBunz OS. I really like the FuzziBunz so far, but I'm having a bit of trouble getting the fit just right. Every time I adjust the elastics, it either ends up too tight, leaving red marks, or too loose, causing gapping. I'm not really sure how to get that perfect fit, yet.

Today I ordered a small stash of Happy Heinys OS w/Snaps to try, too. I'm not sure how they'll work, but I'm hoping they won't be a full-out disaster.

Sometimes I wonder, do I really want another?

Last night, there was a big storm. It woke Gabby up and she cried briefly. I didn't need to go in, I never do anymore, which is a relief.

In the morning, I heard her wake up and start talking to her Elmo and Woody. I'm able to linger in the morning before getting her now, which allows me to really wake up first. Then I thought, "why would I ever want to deal with a newborn again?"

I realized I don't have a good answer to that question. I know Gabby will be a bit spoiled if it's just her, but she is naturally outgoing and empathetic. I don't really worry about her being a nasty little princess.

The selfish and nervous part of me wants to have a second "just in case," but I know nothing would ever lessen the blow if something happened to her.

Then realize that the most intense reason I want a second child is because it's expected. It's what my friends, family, and society expect of me. Another compelling reason is for the "do over," the chance to do it better the second time around.

When I get right to the heart of things, I love my life, as is. I want Gabby to have a close bound with me and Lee, and another child would just get in the way of that. Financially, and emotionally we're better off with one. I just feel all this pressure to have another, and between that and hormones, it's hard to keep my wits.

We got the girl we both wanted. She's everything we could want, why mess with perfection, right?

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

dreaming of a homebirth

I know it's presumptuous of me to even think about any kind of future birth, let alone bemoan the fact that I won't be able to have the type of birth I would most desire. However, I keep stumbling upon stories of homebirths and can't help but feel a twinge of sadness that if I am able to have another child, I have no choice but to deliver in a hospital.

My pregnancy with G-baby was going great up until the last trimester. I conceived pretty quickly (after only 3 months of actively trying), had no morning sickness, and was feeling generally really good. Not to mention, actually enjoying my body for the first time in my whole life. On New Years Eve, we went out for our annual New Years dinner. That night, right around midnight, I woke up from my sleep, went into the bathroom, and threw up the whole meal. I hadn't been thrown up in almost 20 years. Something wasn't right. Then, two weeks later, while I was on break for the MLK holiday, I painted Gabby's nursery. I went without eating for a few hours, and got incredibly lightheaded and very irritable. Not usual for me.

At the end of January, I took the test for GD (gestational diabetes), and even though I started pregnancy at 105 lbs, and had only gained 15 up to that point, I tested positive. The rest of my pregnancy was consumed with blood tests, dieting, non-stress tests, and ultrasounds galore. Then, around 32 weeks, I started to feel like Gabby's head was literally between my legs. My doctor did an internal, and sure enough I was already 2cm dilated and 70% effaced. At 35 weeks, I was at work, and for several hours had been ignoring the strange pangs in my abdomen. Except at lunch, they got pronounced enough that I couldn't eat. My doctor had me go to the hospital. I was 3cm dilated and 80% effaced. Once at the hospital, the contractions started to peter out, and I stopped progressing. I was sent home on modified bed rest until 37 weeks.

Gabby held out until 39 weeks. I was going to be induced in days, because of the GD. The whole night, I had needed to pee a lot. It was like she was just pummeling my bladder. Finally, she seemed to stop, and I tried to sleep. Except then it felt like I had to go #2. For an hour, I sat on the toilet, wondering why I couldn't seem to go. I gave up, and when I stood, saw the bloody show in the toilet bowl. I woke Lee, and we went to the hospital.

Once at the hospital, the nurses didn't think anything was urgent. I didn't seem to be in a lot of pain and was handling conversation well. I sat in triage waiting to be examined for about half an hour. A resident doctor came in to check me, and was astounded to find that I was 7cm, 100% effaced. She wheeled me down to the L&D suite. On the way, the nurse mentioned sending for my epidural, to which I responded that I didn't want one. She told me, "No one ever does it without one."

Once in the room, they hooked me up to the fetal monitors, and IVs with fluid. They started asking me when I first noticed the contractions (around midnight), and other questions. When my doctor arrived, he asked again if I wanted an epidural. I told him I didn't, and he broke my water. This was the first time I actually felt my contractions. I started to question whether I could do it without the epidural after all.

I believe it was a half hour after he broke my water that I told Lee I felt the need to push. Lee went to get my doctor, and sure enough, it was time. I started pushing, and was astounded by the pain. It was worse then I was expecting. The nurses scolded me for screaming. The same nurses who had never witnessed anyone give birth without an epidural.

After a few pushes, the doctor told the resident that Gabby was "in distress," and that he wanted to use the vacuum to get her out faster. He performed a level 3 episiotomy, but before he got the vacuum ready, I had another contraction. I pushed with all my might, and got her out on my own. Lee didn't get to cut the cord. The scooped her up and took her away to the other side of the room.

Lee went with Gabby while I was being tended to. She was just fine after all. They had her for 15 minutes, doing all the usual stuff. Then, they let me hold her very briefly (literally, one minute), before taking her to the nursery for about three hours. I never thought to make them keep her with me.

Every one tells me I should be grateful for the way things worked out. I am, partly. I'm obviously glad that Gabby came out healthy. I'm not happy with the fact that she was kept from for me the first several hours, though. I'm not happy that the people at the hospital made me fear a natural labor and then chastised me for shouting when it hurt. If I were to give birth in a hospital again, I would expect each of these things to be remedied, and I would also expect to be discharged after 24 hours, not 48, because I want my whole family to be together as soon as possible.

I'm not eligible for a homebirth, and not even a birthing center. I'm a "high risk" patient, with a history of precipitous labor (all in all, it was between 3-4 hours from the time my first contraction hit to Gabby's arrival). Doesn't mean I have to settle for a subpar hospital experience, though.

Tuesday, August 10, 2010

Secondary Infertility (I hate you)

I always wanted my children as close in age as possible. After Gabriella was born, I wanted to start TTC our second child at the six week mark. Instead, I found out I had severe PPD, and started taking a medication that is not safe for pregnancy. I needed this medication until just after she turned one, at which point I went off, waited a few months to be sure all was well, and we started TTC. Then I found out about my secondary infertility. This is my first cycle treating the issue, and I don't know if it's helping or not. Only time will tell.

However, everyone around me is expecting! Just yesterday, a family who used to live near us, the Duggetts, announced that they were expecting their second child. They're first, Michael, will by two in December. My cousin and his wife are expecting their second child in January. Their first, Carley, just turned one in June. A friend from college, whose daughter is just shy of two, is due with her second child at the end of the year. Not to mention the countless people I know who are currently pregnant with their firsts, and the one person I know who is expecting her third!

With all this, I am just left wondering, what is it about me? Maybe God is trying to tell me something. Maybe he doesn't want me to have another child. Of course, there is no point in wondering. Only time will tell.

Sunday, August 1, 2010

magic

This is going to be a two part post, in which the two parts seem to have little/nothing in common.

Part one:
There is an underlying current of magic that courses through my life. I know that sounds a bit silly, or childish, but it's totally true. I met Lee on the internet. On AIM, to be exact, back when people still used AIM (do people still use it?) My screen name at the time was Lord of the Rings related, and had to do with Hobbits (AKA, my kin-folk). This screen name led to a long conversation about Lord of the Rings, which, apparently was the main thing that Lee found attractive about me. If it weren't for Lord of the Rings, I would never have intrigued him enough for him to want to meet me in real life.

After Gabriella's birth, I was struggling a lot. It's hard to have a baby with a severe feeding issue, who never sleeps and cries in pain all day long for her first six months of life. I found my refuge in Harry Potter. Those books are what kept me going day after day. JK Rowling saved my life. The magic gave me something to believe in. Something amazing. It helped me see that the world is a truly magical place (even if there is no real magic).

Part two:
As I am a very Earth conscious person, who loves this planet and wants to save it from people who are callous and don't care about it the way they should (Hello, people, we've only got ONE planet!!), I had great environmental plans for parenting. I would breastfeed, of course, use cloth diapers once things got "settled," and only feed my child organic foods. So far, I've only achieved one of those things, and she's certainly had some non-organic foods in there, so even that one is not 100%. I am now going to take the steps to cloth diaper, at least most of the time. I bought 10 FuzziBunz diapers, a FuzziBunz diaper bag, reusable wipes, and some wool dryer balls. I'm really excited to start using the cloth diapers. I did an obscene amount of research on cloth diapers before choosing the FuzziBunz One Size diapers, and feel really good about that choice. I can't wait to get them! I ordered 6/10 from a local company, so I also feel great about supporting local business! I do, however, have a large stash of disposable diapers, that will likely get returned to Target by us and my mom, because I don't have receipts and I'm sure it's more than $100 worth of diapers. Maybe I'll give some away to the disposable diaper users I know, too.

I'm also looking forward to a "green" festival that's happening in two weeks right down the road from where I live. I hope there are good vendors there and that we meet cool people.

Thursday, July 29, 2010

To treat or not to treat, that is the question

So, as a Christian, I firmly believe that all things in my life are in God's hands and that all things are meant to be and happen for a reason.

I recently discovered that I have a luteal phase defect, meaning that the second half of my cycle is too short to allow a fertilized embryo to implant. In fact, this is almost certainly what happened this past month, when I had a multitude of pregnancy symptoms, and "felt" pregnant, only to get my period a few days earlier than I would have expected to. There were only about 9 cycle days after I ovulated, and an embryo doesn't fully settle in the lining until closer to 10-12 days. If not for this short luteal phase, there is a very good likelihood that I would be 5 weeks pregnant right now.

Supposedly, the luteal phase doesn't change, unless forced to. Pregnancy can change it, as it clearly did for me, in a negative way. In my case, it seems to be caused by high levels of Prolactin (the hormone that makes breastmilk), as my supply never fully dried up, even now 15 months after breastfeeding. B6 vitamin supplements can fix it, though. When I found out about this defect, I went ahead and started supplementing with B6 vitamin, just to at least try to get things back to normal. However, I don't think this is something I want to take longer than a month or two. I'm mostly taking it to try to finally dry up the rest of my breastmilk, because I'm tired of constantly leaking.

So, after that point, if my luteal phase isn't fixed, I will remain infertile. The odds of officially conceiving would be very low. However, I am okay with this. If it doesn't happen, then I kind of feel like it's God's will, and we should simply honor that. I'm not "treating" it now for the purpose of conceiving, I'm just trying to lower the Prolactin levels so that my body can get back to what it was pre-baby.

I don't think fertility treatments are bad, or unethical, and if I didn't already have a child, I'd probably be very tempted to do whatever I had to in order to conceive. But, I do already have a wonderful child.

Missing: One Empathy Chip

Have you ever met someone who seemed to lack empathy?

Lee and I get a lot (A LOT) of judgement around the fact that we're truly unsure about whether or not we will/should have a second child. Our hearts say, "yes," but our brains say, "are you nuts?!?"

For people who have never had a difficult child, the idea of not having a second seems absurd. I would imagine that if Gabby had been easier, this would be a piece of cake decision, and I'd probably already be well into my second pregnancy right now. However, G-baby wasn't easy, and still isn't. She only uses one word with any regularity, "up." She says this one word almost all day long, begging to be picked up and carried around the house. It's like having a newborn, except instead of crying to be held, she's demanding it with words, and crying if she's refused. I don't want to deny my child affection, but it gets pretty grueling carrying around a toddler all day long. This is one of those things that just can't be if we are to have another kid. I can't be Gabby's human chariot if there is a newborn baby to care for, too.

Right now, our official plan is one of "wait and see." I tell people that it's just a matter of timing, and eventually we will have a second child, we're just waiting until it's an appropriate time. The problem is that the appropriate time may never arrive. Right now, I'm home with Gabby, and I love it. I don't drive and I don't have a car. Before entertaining the thought of becoming pregnant again, I need to get my license and a car so I can take myself to appointments, without needing Lee to do it. I also need to start classes to get my teaching certificate, something that seems somewhat pointless given how hard it is to find a teaching job in this area.

It would be great if Lee had a job with more consistent hours then he does now, and more room for growth.

The brunt of the burden really falls in Gabby's shoulder's, though. She needs to:
- be able/willing to walk everywhere
- not expect to be held all the time
- be able to feed herself
- be able to dress herself
- be toilet trained
- be able to talk/communicate effectively
- be starting/in preschool

Basically, the earliest I could see having a second child is when Gabby is 3 1/2, because that's when she'll start preschool. At that point, she should be able to meet all the other criteria, too. I'll have to hold up my end, with the driving, at least. I'm not sure if I should bother with a teaching certificate, though, because it will just yield so much more debt, and very little chance of getting a job :-/

Monday, July 26, 2010

Times are changin'

The late twenties is a very interesting age range. I feel like it's the age group with the biggest variety in lifestyle. I know people who are still single and hitting up the bar scene regularly. I know people who are newlywed. I know people who have kids. I even know people who are divorced. Yet, we are all the same age. I can't imagine too many other times in our lives when there would be this much variety in lifestyles. It's just so interesting to me.

Today I made myself a salad with lettuce from our garden. I love that we have lettuce in the garden, because it's so convenient. However, it can be a pain to get clean, and I definitely just ate a piece with dirt still on it. Ew!

So, lately I've been wondering if there is a genetic link to certain breastfeeding issues. I know most people will simply say, "no," but I think it's worth considering. In my own case, I know that my mom has severely inverted nipples, which is why she was unable to breastfeed. 26 years later, I discover that I have one inverted nipple, and encounter troubles with breastfeeding because of this. Why wouldn't nipple type/shape be inherited? Makes sense to me. In fact, in the days before formula, this may have been something that would have been "weeded out" by the fact that a woman with seriously inverted nipples (like my mom) wouldn't have been able to feed her offspring, and they would have likely died. Thus ending the line, and the nipple issue. I would imagine that genuine low supply issues are the same way. I know I'm glad my mom had me in a time and place when formula feeding was available and safe. Otherwise, I would have been an infant mortality statistic.

Saturday, July 24, 2010

Recipe: Black Beans & Brown Rice

2 Cans black beans (15-oz each) drained & rinsed
1 avocado, chopped
1 cup salsa
2 tbsp fresh parsley or cilantro, chopped
1 medium tomato, chopped
1 lime, juiced
salt
pepper

Cooked brown rice

Pour black beans, avocado, tomato, salsa, parsley/cilantro, and lime juice into bowl. Mix together, gently. Add salt and pepper to taste. Serve over cooked brown rice.

The happenings

Gabby is 16-months old today! In the last five days, she's had a verbal explosion, and is not only saying all of the words she had previously seemed to forget, but has added many others, including "love," "ball," and "poop," among others. So exciting! Here I was starting to feel like she was never going to really speak. What a relief!

However, this verbal explosion seemed to be triggered by a tumble down the stairs. On Monday, I was upstairs trying to clean our room. Gabby was in the bathroom, and I assumed, incorrectly, that the door into the hallway was closed. All of a sudden, I heard a really loud "thud," and for a moment thought, "what did she drop?" Then I realized, she dropped! I ran out into the hallway at the same time that Lee was running up the stairs. There was poor little Gabby, laying on the landing, crying. She had no visibly damage, and was just shaken up badly. Of course, I blamed myself, and then I blamed Lee, for not installing the gate upstairs as I had asked him to do months ago.

Lee's mom and grandma were on their way over for dinner. Of course, great timing, right? I wanted Lee to call them and tell them not to come. I wanted to take Gabby to the ER. Instead, we called my uncle Anthony, Gabby's pediatrician. He said to just monitor her for six-hours. So, Dale and Cecilia came over. Lee didn't even tell them what had happened, but they kept taking darn flash pictures of Gabby. With every flash, she would stumble, and finally I looked at Lee and said, "I really don't think the flash is a good idea!" Dale and Cecilia looked at me like I was being a bitch, and I just turned to them and said, "she fell down the stairs right before you came." I don't know why Lee didn't want to tell them. It would have done me a lot of good. I'm sure they were wondering why I was in a sour mood.

Thankfully, Gabby was fine, and now she's talking up a storm! Weird. Oh, and Lee put up the safety gate that night before Gabby went to bed.

Thursday, July 22, 2010

A beginning...

I should have started blogging a long time ago. Maybe when I was planning my wedding (2006), or when I got pregnant (2008), or heck, even when my daughter, Gabriella, was born (2009). I'm a little late to the blog party, but I suppose it's better late than never, right?

So, let's just sum up. I'm Samantha. I'm married to Lee (yes, it's a boy's name, too). We have a 16-month old daughter named Gabriella. I'm a stay at home mom, but I used to teach Emotional Support students. Someday, I'll teach again, but for now I love being at home with Gabby. We live in a suburb outside Pittsburgh. It's where I was raised, and I've never lived anywhere else. I'd like to, but with my whole family here, it's not likely to happen anytime soon.

We're hoping to have a second child sometime in the next 1-1 1/2 years, and are going to start "trying" this coming Autumn. I recently discovered that I have a Luteal Phase Defect, so I just (like, literally, today) started taking B6 supplements to try to fix my cycles. If the Luteal phase isn't long enough, there is no chance of a pregnancy.

Gabby is pretty much the coolest little kid ever. She was a total pain in the rear early on, though. She had severe GERD and almost needed a feeding tube because she had such a severe feeding aversion. I wasn't able to breastfeed her, and that's something that still annoys me. I hope I'll be able to breastfeed if we have a second kid, but I have an inverted nipple (just the one...), so it might not work out. Bottle feeding is just so annoying.

Anyway, now that Gabs is a toddler, she's so great! She's really cuddly, sweet and loving. I couldn't have imagined a better child!