Category Archives: Baby

This Day

As I write this, Adlai is sleeping upstairs, and Koa is lying at my feet, cooing and shouting and occasionally puking or sounding like he’s going to need to be picked up soon, to be wound into the Moby wrap, to be burped and jostled and rocked.  But for now, my hands are free, and today is a good day.

The sun is out, which is a fairly new occurrence for England.  I’m sure we say it every year, but this was the longest winter ever.  It is May now, and it is 60 degrees today, and that feels tropical in relation to the weather last week, or the week before, when I was still making Adlai wear his thick coat and hat to the park…when we made it to the park.

This second baby – Koa David – I love him. But his arrival has nearly done me in.

For the past five weeks and four days, I have been tired a lot, and crying a lot, and wondering how in the world I’m ever going to make this work, what in the world I’ve gotten myself into.

I have missed Adlai.  Those who know me even a little bit know that for the past two-and-a-half years, Adlai and I have been the best of friends.  A week or two before Koa arrived, I dealt with the anxiety about all of that changing, and now I am dealing with the reality of it.  We are still the best of friends.  I hope we always will be.  But there is someone new here now, and he needs both of us, and we have to let go of the death grip we have on each other enough to let Koa in, to hold his hand too.

I think I’m finding this harder than Adlai is.  Every morning, when he wakes up, among “Where’s Mommy?” and “I just woke up,” and “Let’s go downstairs,” one of Adlai’s first sentences is, “Where’s the baby?”

And when people come round, Adlai proudly shows off his brother, and he always wants Koa to get in his bed at bedtime, wants to kiss him goodnight, wants to know when his baby will be big enough to go swimming with him.

The adjustment, for me, has been more severe.  I thought I was still in the baby zone.  I was not.  The lack of sleep has made me impatient. The lack of time I have for my own thoughts or my creative pursuits has made me feel stressed and lonely.  And the sharp drop in attention I am able to give Adlai at any given moment has riddled me with what I think is often called “Mommy Guilt,” although it’s a term I’ve always hated.

Again, I think I notice it more than Adlai does.  I watch him play and feel heartbroken that I have to say, “Not now” because I’m feeding Koa or trying to make dinner.  To be honest, he doesn’t seem to mind as much as I do, and I’m slowly realizing that it’s not going to kill him to wait, and he’s not going to hate me for what I’ve done – that is, giving him a brother.

Taking photos and writing here are the things I would do when Adlai was sleeping for two hours every afternoon, but so far, by the time he is asleep and Koa is fed, if he’s not crying and doesn’t require me to pace the house with him, I have only been able to stare at the TV, to check if anyone has texted me in the preceding hours of chaos.  And when those things are done, it seems more pressing that I make a dent in the growing mountain of laundry than pour my thoughts out here.

So that’s where I’ve been.  Figuring it all out.  Sometimes basking in my achievement that everyone is dry and fed and still has all their limbs; sometimes weeping myself through the afternoons.

I know it will get better, a bit easier, a bit closer to normal.  I know because I know moms who have two children and somehow make their lives work.  I know because I know moms who go on to have three or four or five, and who would do that if two did not get easier?

The sun is out today.  And I have written some words. And I have not cried.  And everyone is alive.

So today is a good day.

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Filed under Baby, confessions

Introducing…

MommyandKoa

On March 25, Koa David arrived via a quick and peaceful delivery.

More to come, as I re-enter the land of the living.

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Filed under Baby, pregnancy, women

The Fear

35weeksBW

Last Friday, I made a list of things people have said to me recently about my pregnancy.  Most of them were about my size, but one was just this:

“Come out, Baby Dwight!”

Before this past weekend, my response to that was a (sometimes aggressive) “No! Don’t!”

I thought it was because I had such a long to-do list of pre-baby practicalities staring me in the face, but over the weekend, something became clear to me: it was because of The Fear.

Saturday night, I got into bed and pulled out the little journal where I write letters to Adlai: things I want him to know when he’s older, things I want to remember myself.  I felt heavy as I wrote, and before I knew it, I was telling him I was scared.  And I was sad.  And I was mourning the end of this season of him and me.

Simon walked in to me scribbling hard and crying harder, and he asked what was wrong, and that was it.

It all came out.  Stuff I didn’t even know I felt, fears I’d been walking around with, holding onto, afraid to name.

I was scared.

Scared of how I’m going to cope with two small children.  Scared Adlai will feel abandoned.  Scared I won’t have what it takes.

Scared of having a horrendous labour.  Scared this baby will be sick, like Adlai was, and will have to go to the neo-natal unit and I will have to worry and cry over him, like I did for Adlai.

I was scared that the good God had done in Adlai’s first year of life – the healing He did in our marriage through us walking through the fire of sleepless nights and not communicating and learning to love each other and Adlai all at once – that it would be undone.

I was scared that the good God had done in my heart – the healing He did through my feeling like an outsider everywhere I went, through my sitting on the fringes, having to leave parties and church for feedings, feeling like a spectator – that it would all be undone.  That I would have to start from scratch.

All of it poured out there, tears on the pages of Adlai’s little journals, snot running down my face, great heaving sobs pouring out of me uncontrollably at 11:30pm, while I tried not to cry so loud I would wake Adlai in the next room.

Simon sat there on the bed and listened.  He got me a tissue.  And when I was done, I laid down, and he held my hand and prayed.  I fell asleep soon after, spent from being 39 weeks pregnant and from pouring myself out.

It took a little while on Sunday for it to sink in.  For me to realize the difference.  But I felt it.  The Lightness.  The Readiness.  And when someone at church said, “When’s he coming?” I said, “Soon, I hope.” And I meant it.

Often, great healing can take weeks, months, years.

But sometimes all it takes is one night.  One night of pouring your heart out, then resting, and waking to find the burden has been lifted.

The Fear is gone.

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Filed under Baby, being afraid, confessions, spirituality, writing

Five Things Friday

Five Pregnancy-Related Things People Have Said to Me This Week

38weeks

1. “It doesn’t look like your baby has dropped yet.” For anyone not well-versed in pregnancy speak, a baby generally “drops” (also known as engaging) just before they’re ready to be born.  When a pregnant woman’s bump looks a bit lower, it can sometimes mean labour is just around the corner.  However, my midwife tells me babies rarely engage before labour after a first pregnancy, so…yeah.

2. “Your bump looks a lot lower!”  See above.  These two observations were made on the same day.

3. “Are you sure you’ve only got one baby in there?” Yep…pretty sure.  Although Adlai does keep laying his head on my belly and saying, “one baby, two babies.”  Maybe he knows something I don’t.

4. “Your bump is so neat!  You don’t look nine months pregnant!” Again, see above.  Am I huge or not? (Don’t answer that question.) I’m so confused.

5. “Come out, Baby Dwight!” No, Baby Dwight.  Please don’t.  I need the weekend to wash your onesies and tidy my room.  I’m happy for you to come any time after Monday, capiche? Love you. xxx

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Filed under Baby, pregnancy, Uncategorized

Answering the call of the quiet buffalo

via

It was never my intention to not write for two weeks, but these last few weeks of pregnancy have done something strange to me: they have turned me into an introvert.

A friend of mine in her final stages of pregnancy wrote a few months ago about this same phenomenon, this intense desire to be around close friends, coupled with a strong realization that she needed time alone.  She likened herself to a quiet buffalo.

At the time, I had just emerged from my glowy second trimester.  I was full of energy and my hair looked great and I felt like a fertility goddess.

Now?  Not so much.

I have heard the call of the quiet buffalo, and I am answering.

It takes all I have in me to text a friend back at the moment, much less write three blog posts a week.  I have big plans for every naptime and bedtime, but when it comes down to it, all I can do is climb into bed and go to sleep, or curl up on the couch with a big glass of ice (Sweet Jesus, I have never loved ice so much as I do now) and an episode or two of Parenthood. 

I want to be alone.  I’m not sad or depressed, and I don’t hate everyone (although if one more person asks me if I’m sure I’m only having one baby, I might lose it).  I just feel a deep, primal urge to be by myself, to rest, to be quiet and still and solitary.  That same friend said her sister pointed out that many animals do this – that they go off by themselves to give birth.

So I’m going to try and do better, but I can’t make any guarantees for the next couple of weeks.  I had Adlai at 38.5 weeks, and as of yesterday, I’m 38 weeks pregnant.  I don’t plan to have this baby this weekend, but who knows?  Until he comes, I’ll do my best.  I’ll write when I feel like I can, but I’ll mostly be napping, and turning my room from a campsite into a baby-friendly haven, and just staring at my husband and my firstborn son.

And when this new one comes, well, I don’t know what life will look like then.  But I feel confident this buffalo will, at some point, make way for the extrovert to return.

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Filed under Baby, pregnancy, writing

Full

All day Saturday I felt this baby boy moving inside of me.  And I mean all. day.

I pointed it out to Simon, who watched from across the room as my belly pulsed and rolled, and I put Adlai’s hand on my tummy at bedtime, to let him feel his little brother kick and wiggle.  He says, “yeah Mama,” when I ask him if he wants to touch the baby, but he struggles to be still long enough to feel anything.

Me, I cherish the brief, quiet moments when it is just me and this new one, when he reminds me he’s coming.

Now, it’s 1pm, and Adlai is sleeping. We were at playgroup this morning, which is always fun and noisy and exhausting, and I have work to do this afternoon – laundry and sending invoices and copywriting. But I am sitting down now, because I am tired. And because I want one little moment with my littlest one.

I can feel something hard at the top of my belly, and I’m pretty sure it’s his bottom. So I push it, and I feel his hands or his head press against the other end of my abdomen.

Soon he’ll be out here with us.

“Baby comin’,” Adlai says. “To Ah-gai’s house.”

Soon he will kick and wiggle on a blanket on the floor. My belly will be empty, but my house will be full.

Full of stinky toddler diapers and stinky newborn diapers. Full of breast pads and juice boxes and rattles and bikes. Full of hysterical, tickle-induced laughter, and frantic feed-me-now cries.

Full of little pieces of my heart, moving around outside my body.

Full of my family.

Full of my boys.

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Filed under Baby, pregnancy, writing

It’s a…

In which I clear up the sex of this baby…

Anna Naphtali Photography Favorites_699MastBrothers_lrg20-56boys’ room | Mast Brothers| Mario Bros.

Let’s hear it for the boys.

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Filed under Baby, family, web finds

To My Son on His Second Birthday

Dear Adlai,

It seems fitting that you’re turning two today, on Thanksgiving Day.  I’ve only ever been as thankful as I am for you today for one other thing, and that is your Daddy.

On the day you were born two years ago, you were the answer to so many of my prayers: prayers for a child, prayers for a boy named Adlai, whose name means “my witness.”  I prayed you would witness God’s faithfulness from the moment you were born, and you did – we did – when you spent two days in the neo-natal unit and recovered quickly, miraculously.

Since that day, God has answered so many more of my prayers through you: prayers that He’d teach me more about His amazing love, His amazing grace.  Prayers that He would use you to reconcile broken relationships, to heal broken hearts.  Prayers that you would be kind, strong, patient.

All answered.  All come to fruition.

Your middle name, John, means “God’s gracious gift,” and that’s what you are, sweet boy.  A gift to me – one that personifies the word “gracious”, because I have done nothing in my life to deserve you.  You bless me every single day.

You wear me out sometimes, you silly boy.  Some mornings, you collapse on the floor and flail about, arms and legs kicking, desperate not to put your coat on, to put your shoes on, to go where I need you to go.  You sleep solidly for weeks at a time and then, one day, decide you’d like to wake up at 2am and stay awake till 4, just for the heck of it.  Then you wake again at 6:30, ready for the day.

I am tired a lot.  I have no idea how to discipline you now that you’ve got a will of your own and a personality that is different from mine.  I would love to sit and drink a cup of coffee and read a book for an hour.  I would love to walk to town by myself and look at clothes in TK Maxx without you wriggling out of your pushchair, begging to go look at tractors.  I would love to sleep till 9am.

I never really understood before when I heard parents say, “It’s all worth it.”  I couldn’t imagine anything being worth never sleeping again.

But I’m one of those parents now.

It really is all worth it.  You are worth it.

No single thing has brought me greater joy than getting to know you over the past two years.  I am truly honoured, in the deepest sense of the word, to be your mother.  To spend my days with you.  To know you.

And I can’t wait to know you for the rest of my life.

With all my love,

Mama

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Filed under Baby, women

On Teaching a Toddler to Talk

Sometimes teaching Adlai new words feels a lot like this.

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Filed under Baby, web finds

Family Photos

In addition to the photo I used on Friday to show you my baby bump, my friend Sarah took quite a few more of me and Simon and Adlai while we were in North Carolina earlier this month.  What you can’t tell from these photos is that we were being eaten alive by mosquitoes – Sarah did a good job of capturing some beautiful shots between all the slapping and swearing.

Here are some of my favorites…

Also, if I’m honest, my “bump” in these photos is probably 40% due to eating too much barbecue.

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Filed under Baby, family, marriage, photography, pregnancy