Tuesday 30 July 2013

Drew Barrymore's clever words

Just a wee thought...

Having been on maternity leave for 7 months now I have conquered many new skills, the swift ninja nappy change to prevent pee sofa/carpet/clothes, rocking the 'boke on shoulders' look like it's super fly, multitasking like a pro and mastering the day time TV schedule.  I no longer slum it with Jeremy Kyle ( ok, ok, sometimes I do!)  but have discovered Oprah on TLC channel.  Recently I watched an interview she did with Drew Barrymore.  On 26th September 2012 Drew Barrymore became a new 'mom' as the americans say.  A little baby girl 'Olive' - such a cute name, and I think Drew has done a great job in putting motherhood into words.





'Motherhood is like having the worst crush of your life.'

Well said.  So true.  I can relate.
In the early days I devoted so much love and attention to Joel and got nothing in return.  When he smiled my heart fluttered, 'Is he smiling at me? Did he like that silly face I pulled? Does he think I'm funny!!??"
When he smiled at someone else I was a bit jealous.  'Why is he smiling for them? Does he like them better than me?'
When I was away from Joel I spent my whole time thinking about him, wondering what he was doing, to the point I was distracted.
When I was returning home to him after going to the shop I was so excited to see him, climbing the stairs to my flat a little faster.
Thinking about him makes me smile.

I love her description of motherhood, and I also love her lobster suit for baby Olive.

Monday 22 July 2013

Cooking up a storm...

As I write this I am splattered in pureed fruit and veg, my dishes are piled in the sink, every bowl in my kitchen has been used and discarded across the kitchen counter and I am feeling an immense sense of satisfaction.

I have spent the the best part of this stuffy summers day, along with my husband acting as glamorous assistant, cooking and pureeing up a storm to feed my very hungry baby boy Joel.
I get great satisfaction out of monitoring all the ingredients that I put together and carefully cook for his culinary delight!  I love the enjoyment he gets out of eating my creations, his humming eating noises and his arms flapping when I am not spooning fast enough.

Current guidelines state that babies should have a mixed diet from 6 months.  I was determined to follow this rule, Joel was not.  7lbs at birth, Joel quickly shot up the percentiles and at 19 weeks old the health visitor informed me he weighed 18lbs.  Biggest baby on the street!  Milk definitely was not sustaining him and he began to wake more often during the night as he was hungry.  At 21 weeks I got the baby rice out!






Having tried and failed at breast feeding I saw weaning as the platform where I could redeem myself.  I researched weaning food and recipes and ordered books at the library, including Annabel Karmel, to be the best informed 'weaner' ever!  Yet again the world of baby information provided conflicting advice and a fair amount of scare mongering!  Baby led weaning or traditional weaning? How dangerous are nitrates? Which foods are most likely to trigger an allergic reaction? When will his digestive system be ready for different types of food?
This was one of those moments where it was necessary to take a step back from the information overload and use a bit of common sense.  My health visitor visited at 19 weeks, made it clear that she suspected that Joel would be ready for food soon and said she would be in contact between 6-9months.  The only advice she offered was to make sure Joel wasn't too hungry when offering his first spoonful.  It would be a new experience for him and if he was too hungry he would be too distressed to try the food.   She offered no advice or documentation on weaning methods or foods to avoid or include.  No sample menu was offered.  My logic is, if there was any information that was super important some kind of medical professional would be providing it.  They are not - common sense it is!

Joel has steadily built his way up from a taste of vegetable puree in the late morning to 4 meals a day.  No, that isn't a misprint, 4 meals!  Its been a process I've really enjoyed, despite the mess!


During the first week Joel moved from tasting a few spoonfuls of carrot or pear in late morning to having  a good lunch of vegetable puree followed by a few ounces of bottle.  Joel then progressed to having lunch and dinner purees along with his bottle.  By 25/26 weeks Joel was a confident eater and was eating 3 meals a day.

8am - Porridge with fruit puree, followed by 5/6 ounces of stage 2 formula.

11.30 ish - Meat and Veg puree, yogurt

2pm ish - 7 oz bottle

5pm ish - Meat and veg/ veg puree, fruit pot

8pm - 8 oz bottle

Bed.

Despite getting this mound of food, featuring a healthy appearance from all the food groups Joel was still waking during the night for a night feed.  Between 2am and 3am he was starving and would devour a 7 oz bottle!

It was my next door neighbour Jenny and my mother in law who made the same suggestion within the same weekend, What about supper?  My mother in law said all her children had porridge before bed and Jenny said her daughter took 2 Weetabix followed by 6 ounces.
That was a week and a half ago and Joel has not needed a night feed since.  At 7-7.30pm Joel has another feed of porridge and bottle and that seems to be doing the trick!  And who would deny him a supper, long been my favourite meal of the day, theres nothing better then a slice of toast and a hot cup of tea in front of the tv before bedtime.
I am unsure if this is a common practice in other families but so far it seems to be working for Joel and after 6 months of broken sleep I am glad he seems to be settling at night. 4 meals seems an awful lot and I seem to spend my day dictated by his intense eating scedule but he is a growing boy learning lots of new skills so he must need it!

Today we wizzed up;

Apple puree
Pear puree
Melon, apricot and pear puree
Summer fruit puree
Sweet potato, apple and carrot puree
Vegetable stew
Leek and Potato puree
Salmon, leek, pea and potato puree
Salmon, sweet potato and carrot puree
Beef and sweet potato puree
Chicken, apple and carrot puree

BEFORE
AFTER

Believe it or not we are celebrating by ordering in chippie food for ourselves, in fact don't ask me the last time I had a vegetable.  The wee brute gets it all!

Tuesday 16 July 2013

6 months on..

My new mummy friend started a blog 'Sonny's Mummy' and it got me inspired to get clicking on the keyboard too.  I have been a diary keeper, a useful way of decluttering the mind but a public blog seems rather scary! Well today I am giving it a go.

My beautiful son is now over 6 months old.  He is no longer a tiny, scrunched up infant but rather a happy, bouncing, active baby boy.
Having all too quickly reached this stage I find myself glancing in prams and assessing the the age of tiny babies and thinking to myself; 'Aww, remember when Joel was that size?'.  I cannot deny that pang of jealousy when strangers coo over the tiny new baby in the queue in Asda rather than Joel.  Old news son.
However it is important to pinch myself, take off the rose tinted glasses and recognise that those new mums with the tiny babies deserve the attention and the fuss.  It is their prize for making it out of the house after only 2 1/2 hours sleep, constant night feeds, unexplained crying and entertaining countless unexpected/unwanted visitors.  I have no idea how I made it through the exhaustion, emotion and confusion of those first few weeks.  Life as a new mother presents many challenges; lack of sleep, self doubt, advice overload to name but a few.

Lack of Sleep
After 3 days of labour, 4 days in hospital, fighting a kidney infection and recovery from an instrumental delivery its safe to say I was exhausted, and having a new born by the bed side means no rest, no way!  I was very lucky and had my own private room at the Ulster Maternity Ward but the walls were closing in on me and without the support of my husband I was fading fast.
Nearing the end of my pregnancy I was thinking 'I cannot wait to be not-pregnant, to be able to put on my own socks, wear normal clothing - bliss!'.  Boy was that short sighted!!  I was aware that having a new baby would be hard work but I was not prepared for the recovery from the exhaustion of labour.  Normal clothing? Ha! My body was definitely not my own.  My poor swollen ankles wouldn't fit in any of my slippers or shoes to leave hospital.  The pain of the stitches meant that I struggled with tasks and movement.  On day 4 when my midwife said to me 'We are going to try to maybe look at getting you and baby Joel ready for home' my eyes filled with tears.  TRY??? MAYBE???  I NEEDED to get home, NEEDED the support of my husband.
For his support I am eternally grateful, he picked me up from hospital and transported me to our spotless flat and ushered me off to bed for an extended nap.  A quivering new parent himself, he put my needs first, recognised my need to recover and made sure I got all the rest I needed over those first few weeks.  I'm not sure if he realises the value of his sacrifice, without him I could not have functioned.

Self Doubt
Coming from a work background in childcare people expected me to be a natural and this expectation weighed heavy on me.  Nothing prepares you for the waves of self doubt that you must swim against.  For me it began when new baby boy Lucas was placed on my chest, I suddenly thought, 'Oh Christ, can I do this? Phil and I are getting on well in our wee flat.  We go out for dinner, drink beer, watch movies, I'm suddenly not sure if we are ready for baby responsibility!"
Joel cried and screamed the whole time in hospital and for about the first 5 weeks.  My internal doubter constantly chattered; 'Why do the midwives not help?  Is this a test?  Should I lift him?  Am I spoiling him?  Should I ask for help or am I supposed to know all the answers?  Will they judge me?'
at home Phil appeared to calmly cope with the new parenting experience much more than me.  I was pretty certain Joel hated me and I had no idea what he wanted when he cried and my hormones were all over the place.   I would eyeball Joel nervously every time Phil said he was going to nip to the shop. Help! When would I feel normal again?  Where was this unconditional maternal love and understanding the Parentcraft classes promised me?  Joel was stripping me of my identity and confidence and I wasn't enjoying it.
In the first 3 weeks I experiences some very dark days and I dreaded the thought of Phil going back to work.  My lifeline was a girl I used to work with who had given birth to her son 2 1/2 months before.  Her honesty and bravery in sharing her experience with me gave me the strength to believe I was normal.  Others find it hard too.  I can do this.  My conversations with Ruth were like a breath of fresh air compared to cooing family members; 'Oh isn't motherhood wonderful?  Couldn't you just look at him all day?"
 Ruth lifted a weight off my shoulders and helped me feel like I'm not an awful person.  I'm not sure she knows how important she was to my recovery and my mental health but I have made a vow to be a 'Ruth' and be open and honest about my experience as it could help someone else who is struggling.

Advice Overload
From doctors, to health visitors to midwives, from friends, family and strangers, everyone offered their two cents.  At the start I was desperate for people to tell me what to do and I soaked up every bit of this advice soup I was being spoon fed.  But it became too much, it began to contradict,  it didn't match my baby and I became stressed.  Its a cliche - but cliches exist for a reason - every baby is different!  There is no baby dictionary.  There is no harm in tapping into the experience of the community around you but I learnt to use my mummy filter and follow my inner instinct and gut feeling.
To my neighbour and close friend Teresa I am thankful.  Having had a baby just 9 months before, during my pregnancy I held her up to be mother guru thinking when this baby comes I will have advice on tap!  But when Joel was born, after an initial cooing visit, I rarely heard from Teresa.  Not because she abandoned me but because she knew the overwhelmed feeling of motherhood, she did not bombard me with advice like the others.  But Theresa never missed a call when I needed her and she always had her door open and her tea brewing when I needed.  She offered to pick up milk, had a listening ear and a reassuring 'I know, its hard' when I needed to vent.  Thank God for good neighbours.

When removing my rose tinted glasses and remembering the tough times I nod to those that helped me in my first few weeks, and those who continue to stand by.  Becoming a mother changes you and inevitably your friendships but I am a lucky girl with some great friends to rely on.  My school friend Laura was my cheerleader through pregnancy and has behaved convincingly interested in all sorts of birth/nappy/weaning details.  Catherine continues to uphold our oranges and tea and gossip ritual around Joel's routine.  Gemma includes Joel in all lunch dates considering my travel with him and pram accessibility!  Great mates!
Motherhood also forces new friendships from shared experiences.  Sonny's Mummy and I can chat for hours about poop, nappies, weaning without a flicker of boredom! We have genuine excitement in each others mothering milestones and slimming world achievements!
And where would any of us be without our mummies?  She is the superhero who makes sure I have warm tea and who I want to be when I grow up.
But my rock and soul is Baby Joel who at week 5 gave me a big gummy smile and made every dark moment worth while, and ancient history.



When I see those new mums with wrinkled babies and pass that pang of jealousy, I hope for them they have the support I had.  I hope they have Laura's and Teresa's and Ruth' and Phil's and more!  I want to lean over to them and, in the vain of the new SMA follow on milk advert tagged 'You're doing great', give them a reassuring squeeze and say, 'It gets easier, I promise.'