About Me

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Massachusetts, United States
Wife to one, mom of three, low-energy-type coffee junkie (which, of course, goes hand-in-hand with motherhood), reluctant minivan owner, rock-n-roller, vegetarian, cloth diaperer, perpetual student (well, I'd like to be, but I'm well in the hole with student loans), abuser of parentheses (see previous uses) and ellipses (because so much is open-ended)...

Friday, March 26, 2010

A Comedy of Errors, Minus the Laughs

This week I had the rare opportunity to go to my monthly OB appointment sans baby (thanks, Mom!). A typical visit involves a constant vigil to entertain my incredibly active almost-toddler. Instead, I sat back on the couch in the waiting room and grabbed Pregnancy magazine, getting hooked on a two page ad for bumGenius cloth diapers, and its 10% off coupon. Not being one to surreptitiously shove office magazines into my bag, I held up the magazine to Kate, my OB’s aging hippie receptionist, and before I got my question out, she said, “Yes, take it, they’re free.”

When I got home, and without actually meaning to do so, I found myself reading the article, Dealing with Breastfeeding Bullies, written by Nanny Stella of Nanny 911. I guess I have a bit of a breastfeeding fire lit under my ass lately, most recently due to a gaggle of radical nursing Nazis on Facebook who were admonishing moms who formula feed. Naturally, it got me thinking about my own nursing experience with my youngest child, Kai. (Due to several factors, some of which are admittedly selfish, I never even attempted to nurse my oldest child, Trevor. Regrettably. That being said, I developed a devotion to nursing the next child.)

The plan was to nurse Kai upwards of a year, something totally doable considering that I am a stay at home mom. My husband and I invested in a Medela InStyle double pump and a ton of nursing necessities that quickly added up to a few bucks. Money well spent, right? Not really.

I began acclimating Kai to nursing when he was just an hour or so old. That was on a Thursday. By Saturday, my nipples were in pretty rough shape, my milk was coming in with a vengeance, and Kai began to cluster feed, a term with which I was unfamiliar and that translates to “Welcome to Hell!” But, hey, Kai made up for the cluster feed by sleeping all morning on Sunday. In fact, he had slept for such a long stretch that I suspected the nurses of slipping him a bottle of formula. I was told that his last feeding was with me, early Sunday morning. Paranoia unfounded.

Before being discharged that day, I attended a nursing class, for good measure, to make sure that I was doing all that I could to ensure a successful experience for both of us. All was smooth until 11:30 PM Monday evening, when Kai began to cluster feed again. It lasted until about, oh, 4’something AM Tuesday morning! (Now you know what cluster feeding is…)

The cluster feed came to an abrupt halt as my husband—beside himself with exhaustion and frustration from listening to my escalating sobs and Kai’s hungry screams—did the unthinkable. He gave Kai a bottle of formula. On one hand, Kai was able to satisfy his hunger (after all, he was a full 10 pounds at birth!) and we were all able to fall asleep shortly thereafter. On the other hand, Kai immediately began to refuse my nipples, which I was hoping wouldn’t happen.

Over the next day or two, I arduously worked on both getting Kai to latch on to me again, while supplementing with both formula and pumped breast milk, and getting my nipples back into shape with some APNO (all purpose nipple ointment—a pricey cure-all made by an apothecary pharmacy) cream. Just when things were looking brighter, I developed mastitis in my right breast, leaving me feverish and hopeless in bed, ready to give up on nursing, something that I naively thought was going to be easy and fluid. I was started on antibiotics (I could continue nursing on them) and immediately began to increase the frequency with which I pumped to increase my milk production and unblock the duct, all the while trying to get Kai to re-latch. I also began reaching out to other nursing mothers and got in touch my local La Leche League, desperate to continue nursing.

In the course of reaching out, a couple of women enlightened me about nipple shields and I felt like we would be back on track in no time! The universe saw differently, though. Kai had stringy, bloody, mucous-y poop in several of his diapers, alarming both his father and me. We went to Kai’s pediatrician the following day, armed with a plastic bag full of soiled diapers. “Oh, he’s got a milk protein allergy,” his doctor assured us. “Sh*t,” I thought. “Approximately 50% of all babies with a cow’s milk protein allergy are also allergic to soy,” she added. Double sh*t. We were sent on our way with some samples of Nutramigen formula and some stool sample slides.

Without a second thought, I decided to give up on nursing. I was pissed and defeated. Being that I’m a vegetarian who gets protein from some soy sources (but not in the soy milk/cheese/yogurt variety, more like Boca stuff) and calcium from dairy (and almonds), I couldn't imagine how I’d get my protein and calcium without taking supplements and starving myself. My reluctance lasted only a day however, as I began to rethink my selfishness and refocus on what was best for Kai. “I can do this,” I told myself.

So, a diet modification and some nipple shields were on the menu (no pun, in either case). But, no sooner was I on track again, pumping and dumping for a few days to clear my body of that which Kai is allergic to, that I noticed a tiny part of my c-section scar was open and oozing pus. The infection was confirmed and I was tested for MRSA because it had been making rounds in the maternity ward at my hospital for more than 6 months at that point. I was put on Bactrim, a very potent antiobiotic, and told that I could only pump and dump for the next two weeks. Several days later, my doctor said that my incision site tested positive for MRSA.

Ummm, WTF? Seriously. I was beside myself and feeling utterly hopeless about breastfeeding. How could something that is so natural and beautiful and efficient be such a nightmare? To boot, when we brought Kai’s stool samples back to his doctor, she confirmed that he wasn’t responding well to the formula and switched him to Neocate, a 50 dollar per can hypo-allergenic, amino acid based formula. The prescription was written for 10 cans a month and if our insurance company didn’t cover the cost, we would have been forced into a life of crime. Well, not really, but you know…

I gave up. With a big, grand “Eff It,” too. I felt crushed. I felt like less of a woman. And I felt tired. Yes, I could have pumped and dumped for those two weeks and continued with dietary changes, but I chose not to because I needed a break, coming off two solid weeks of infections, healing, sleep deprivation, crying, doctor visits, and hopelessness.

Lactivists, as nursing Nazis are affectionately called, would say that I should have and could have hung in there, but I made a conscious decision to stop. I intuitively felt that it was more important to decompress and relax with my new baby, and enjoy him in ways that I just wasn’t during our nursing experience.

This next time around, the plan is to dust my ass off and get back on the horse. Giddyup.

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Stand and Deliver

Let’s face it, pregnancy sucks. Don’t misunderstand me—I am awed by the complicated process of getting pregnant and being able to, dare I say, miraculously sustain a life in my womb. Obviously, the end result is the single most intense and amazing reward one gets in life. It’s the journey that is a monumental pain in the ass, rife with anxiety, fatigue, a mile-long list of things that can go wrong, and an even longer list of things that do go wrong. Or at least awry, and usually temporarily.

First up, the mood swings—wanting to hurl blunt objects at strangers in the supermarket just because. They are frequent and, well, uncomfortable, often leading to tears. My husband can attest to that. (But, please, there is no real need for you to comment should you happen to read this…) Then, there are the middle-of-the-night muscle spasms in my calves that so rudely jolt me from an already restless sleep. Hmmm, how ‘bout those, ahem, hemorrhoids!? Next, are the wild bouts of intense nausea, followed by periods of eating a week’s worth the food in one sitting with a Tums chaser (one of the few “medications” a pregnant woman can actually ingest). These are but a few of my personal pregnancy peeves, though I could write at least another two paragraphs.

In case it was assumed I was going to write an unrelated paragraph, here is a long list of annoying pregnancy symptoms, some of which I have personally experienced in one, or all, of my pregnancies: pigmentation changes, varicose veins, bloating, vomiting, ligament stretching, vaginal pain (yeah, like weird shooting pains around the vulva area), cramping, frequent urination, physical and emotional exhaustion (the likes of which can only be described as how you would feel if someone beat you, then kindly gave you a half dozen Xanax), leukorrhea (coined “Cheeseburger Crotch” on WebMD), throbbing breasts, itchiness (breasts and stomach, especially), excessive hair growth (think Sasquatch), food cravings and aversions (including a strange phenomenon called “Pica,” an inexplicable occurrence during which people crave inedible things like dirt and motor oil), insomnia, heartburn, constipation (best friend of both bloating and hemorrhoids), and a perpetually stuffy and/or bloody nose. Please feel free to add any that I missed in the comment section below.

In my experience, managing pregnancy symptoms requires keeping your eye on the prize, a bottle of Tylenol, a heating pad, cold compresses, a humidifier, and an extremely loving and patient husband. Oh, yeah, and good friends who don’t cringe when you mention “Cheeseburger Crotch.”

Thursday, March 4, 2010

The X Contribution

This might sound strange, but what am I going to do with a girl? Even now, at 18.5 weeks pregnant, I have her tiny preschool body wrapped around my legs, whining and pleading for a tiara and princess gown in a crowded Target aisle. She’s throwing fits about coral (ewwww) fingernail polish and methodically matching her underwear with her outer clothes. Worse, she’s a pubescent teenager, fighting off randy boys; worrying about whether or not her physique “stacks up” in comparison to all of her underweight peers; and wanting us to drop $300 a month at Sephora and the trendy, overpriced clothing store du jour.

Some of my irrational fear-of-a-girl stems from the fact that I listen to too many people. I keep hearing the voices of strangers, family members, and friends on a loop, “Girls are so much harder than boys.” Harder? Are you kidding me? As if mothering boys is a cinch, something one can do with an arm tied behind their back while blindfolded in a drunken stupor.

The fact is that I’m used to boys, plain and simple. I’m used to my oldest’s vile socks and armpits (he’s a 10 year-old-in-training for proper hygiene practices) and his many years of not giving a damn about what he wore until recently (he had a penchant for choosing heinous outfits, like tie-dye and camouflage). I’ve grown accustomed to my little one’s “wild boy” disposition and a home full of trucks, Legos, and action figures. My house is a whirlwind of testosterone, flatulence, and potty humor. And, honestly, I don’t really mind most of the time.

A revelation unfolded yesterday during a telephone conversation with my mother that having a girl will, among other things, provide me with the opportunity to exorcise some of my demons. I’m going to have to squarely face my self-image pitfalls and cut myself some slack. After all, I’ve clocked in 38 years, 11 months, and 2 ½ weeks on my body, and I’ve birthed two boys. I have stretch marks, cellulite, and what is known as a “mother’s apron.” In turn, dealing with my issues will help me to more effectively navigate my daughter through her own difficulties.

That said, inevitably, we pass our not-so-desirous personality traits onto our children. I think it’s unavoidable. But c’mon, I don’t want to pass off some of this crap. (I also didn’t want to pass on the drama gene, but I’ve managed to do that…) In many ways, which I won’t address here for brevity’s sake, males have it easier than do females—perhaps that is really why people say what they do about raising girls. If I’m still blogging in 13 years, I’ll let you know. Regardless of sex, gender challenges, or character development, I’m in for a ride.