Archives for January 2008

Now It’s A List Of Four

Damn.

I still can’t believe Heath Ledger is dead.

28 years old. Father of a two year old. Such a promising future ahead of him.

I’ll admit it: I had a fangirl crush on him. When I first heard the news, my chest felt heavy and my throat tightened. This is a sick joke, I thought. He was on my List of 5, after all, and earned his spot on that list from the first moment I ever saw him on the short-lived TV series Roar.


I had noticed that he didn’t look as put-together recently. Ever since his split with Michelle Williams, he seemed to stop taking care of himself. The low-key yet still stylish sense of fashion was replaced by unwashed hair, wrinkled clothing, and a worn-out, troubled expression on his face. Maybe he was depressed over his relationship issues. Maybe his latest roles had taken too much out of him. I can’t say. But the change was noticeable.


We all stop and gawk when a celebrity dies, especially if they’re young. But I guess this one is hitting me hard because he wasn’t one of the usual suspects. He wasn’t a celebrity party-boy, he wasn’t in trouble all the time, and he seemed like an average, quiet, down-to-earth type who just wanted to do his job and be left alone. You didn’t look at him and see another Anna Nicole Smith in the making.

At this time, there’s still no answer as to what happened, but it seems that investigators have centered on two theories, either accidental or intentional overdose on the prescription sleeping pill Ambien. I’d like to think it was accidental, because I find it so hard to wrap my mind around the thought that a man who professed how much he loved being a dad would intentionally leave behind his two year old daughter. And now that daughter will likely never remember those happy times they had together.

It sucks, and I am sad that I will no longer be able to see more from him. I enjoyed his acting and respected the decisions he made in the roles he accepted. But I’m also sad for his family, and seeing this tragedy makes me hug my two girls a little tighter and be thankful for each day I am here for them.

You’ll be missed, Heath.



Cordy-isms

Cordy walks into the kitchen.

C: Mommy? I need help.

Me: With what?

C: My cup. It’s broken. (Puts sippy cup on the counter.)

Me: It’s broken? What’s wrong with it?

C: It’s empty. It needs juice. Fix my cup, mommy?

Me: (laughing my ass off because in college we’d always talk about our “broken” [empty] drink cups at parties)

***************

In the car.

Mira: Aaaaawaaaaawawaaaaaaeeeeeaa (longest I’ve ever heard her vocalize – must have been 15 seconds without a breath)

Me: (looking at Aaron and laughing in amazement) What was THAT?

Cordy: (totally serious from the back, with a sigh) That was MIRA, mommy.

I could practically hear her rolling her eyes at me.

**************

In the living room. Cordy is behind me.

C: Mommy, get me gone?

Me: What? Get what?

C: Get me gone, mommy!

Me: Get you gone?

(I turn to see this:)

I have no idea how she snuck the box into the living room.

Me: You want me to mail you somewhere?

C: Yes!

Me: OK, where should I send you?

C: To outer space!

Me: Hmmm…I don’t think we can afford the postage, sweetie.



Where’s Your Umbrella? It’s Shower Time!





One of the best things about the mommyblogger community is being able to virtually celebrate when we all can’t be together in person. I remember the baby shower thrown and attended by some wonderful bloggers out there for me, Liz, and Tammie.

And so now it’s time for another baby shower. Julie (mothergoosemouse) is due to have her third (!) baby very soon, and unlike the first two, she’s having a boy this time. Her shower hostesses are asking everyone to come celebrate and give Julie some advice on raising boys.

Sadly, I have little advice. I am the mom of two girls. I was an only child to a single mom. My close family growing up consisted of a grandmother, two aunts, and one great aunt. So as you can see, I don’t have a lot of experience with boys. The only male I’ve ever lived with is my husband.

(Geez, it sounds like I was raised in a convent. Not true! I knew of boys! I just kept my distance. You know…cooties and all.)

But from what I know of Julie, her girls aren’t exactly being raised as the next Disney Princesses with pinky fingers up while drinking their tea. They are rough and tumble as much as they are girly. Maybe more rough and tumble, even.

So I think the best advice I can give Julie is this: keep doing what you’re doing. You already have two great kids, and I’m sure a boy won’t be a challenge for you at all. You’ll let him play with dolls as much as he does with dump trucks. And sure, his plumbing might be more related to a fire hose, but any mom of a girl knows that girls are just as capable of peeing all over you during a diaper change.

No worries, hon – you’re going to do just fine. And seeing how I have no knowledge of boys at all, I’ll add: better you than me.

Anyone have any better advice for Julie?



Haiku Friday: Nursing School Back in Session

Moms and new babies
My clinicals start today
Nursing can be fun

I’ll be waking up at 5am today to get into scrubs and drive downtown for my second quarter of clinicals. This time we’re focusing on mothers and infants, so we’ll be spending seven hours each week on the labor & delivery and postpartum floors of the hospital.

Some students seem disinterested by this, but I’m thrilled. This is why I decided to switch careers and become a nurse – I want to work in OB, helping new moms through this difficult and amazing transition. It’s going to be hard, since this is the first time we’ll be actively taking care of patients (last quarter we did only a few basic care duties in a nursing home), so I hope I’ll do well.

PS – Be sure to check out Mommy’s Must Haves today, too, where I’m reviewing The Wheels on the Bus: Mango’s Big Dog Parade DVD for the Parent Bloggers Network. Roger Daltrey (remember him from The Who?) is one of the character voices, and that’s not even the best part. Bonus feature (from me, not the DVD): another new photograph of Mira!

To play along for Haiku Friday, follow these steps:

1. Write your own haiku on your blog. You can do one or many, all following a theme or just random. What’s a haiku, you ask? Click here.

2. Sign the Mister Linky below or at Jennifer’s blog with your name and the link to your haiku post (the specific post URL, not your generic blog URL). If you need help with this, contact Jennifer or myself.

3. Pick up a Haiku Friday button to display on the post or in your sidebar by clicking the button above.



I Should Be A Nominee For Clueless Mom of the Year

As many of you know, I had a lot of trouble trying to breastfeed Cordy. She was given a bottle in the hospital because of low blood sugar, and after that she was never interested in the breast when she could have a bottle that required far less effort. That’s my girl – doing only the minimum to get by. I pumped and made her try feeding at the breast each time, but she got less than half of her early nutrition from me. By four months I had given up entirely.

Mira has been far more interested. She was a breastfeeding pro from her first hour in the world. It took us over a month and buying one of every bottle made to convince her to take a bottle of pumped milk occasionally. Hitting the six month mark for breastfeeding was a huge accomplishment for me.

Then in December, Cordy was kind enough to bring home from school a gastrointestinal virus with her art projects and letter tracings. I had nothing to eat or drink for nearly two days, resulting in a decrease in milk. Afterwards, I drank lots of water and thought that my milk supply would bounce back without any problem.

Mira started to get really fussy in December. OK, she’s always been fussy and cranky, but it seemed like December was even worse than normal. I chalked it up to teething as she was putting her hands in her mouth and crying all. the. time. She woke up twice a night on average, and her naps were short and restless. I’d give her Motrin on the really bad nights and put her back to sleep fussy. She would often have to cry it out, since otherwise neither of us would sleep at all.

My mother said to me over and over, “You need to feed her more! I think she’s fussy because she’s hungry.” But I breastfed on demand and gave her three or more jars of solid foods a day. She had to be full!

Turns out my mom knows my child better than me.

I checked her weight about a week ago, and was surprised to learn she weighed exactly the same as she weighed at her six month check up. In a month and a half, she gained nothing. How? I’ve been breastfeeding around the clock, and the daylight hours are filled with spoonfuls of yogurt, oatmeal, and pureed fruits and veggies.

“Give her one bottle of formula and see how she does,” my mom urged. I didn’t want to. I was proud of breastfeeding this long – I could produce what she needed to grow! Only she doesn’t seem to be growing now, so I reluctantly agreed to give it a try.

Mira went to sleep without any crying after that bottle and slept through the night for the first time ever.

I tried it again right before a nap: she slept three hours for that nap and woke up happy. A bottle at bedtime again resulted in another undisturbed night.

Turns out, I was starving my child. I feel like shit just typing that out.

No wonder she’s been crying so much lately. She was hungry and I totally misread the cues. It wasn’t teething, it wasn’t reflux, and it wasn’t a result of her being a crabby baby. She cried and fussed from hunger. She slept poorly because her growling stomach was waking her. And she cried herself to sleep at night because she wanted to eat, not go to sleep.

The one problem with breastfeeding is that it’s hard to tell how much milk is actually being produced. It’s not like we have ounce markers on our breasts. I thought I was still producing plenty, but a quick pumping session revealed that my supply is a lot less than it used to be. It’s no wonder she wasn’t gaining any weight.

I feel so dumb for not figuring this out sooner and putting my infant through a month and a half of hunger as a result. Shouldn’t I have had some kind of motherly instinct to guide me to this solution? My mom figured it out before me, and she hasn’t had a baby in 31 years.

Mira is still breastfeeding, but I’m now adding in two bottles a day to satisfy her hunger. She’s already sleeping better at night and taking longer naps. She’s happier during the day, too – smiling, playing, content. I’m thrilled to see her in a better mood, but part of me still feels like I’ve failed. It’s crazy – my logical brain says this is no big deal, formula isn’t poison and you raised your first on it with no problems, but my big, mushy, emotional heart hates to concede that I can’t make enough milk to feed my child properly. I would have been less upset had Mira simply decided to wean early.

I need to remind myself of my own philosophy that I’ve shared with others so many times: do whatever works. I’ve never been someone who stuck to rigid parenting rules, instead choosing to believe that if it’s working and no one is getting hurt, it’s all good. In this case, formula and breastmilk together work for Mira, and that’s what needs to be done.

Still…I feel incompetent.

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