21May

What’s Good For The Girls

I always try to keep in mind that guys come here to read. And that one day, my sons will read this hodge-podge of words. So when a big deal blogger says I can guest post in her space AND that I can talk about boobs if I want to?

SIGN. ME. UP.

I’ve made a list of my Top Ten Nursing Must-Haves and I’m sharing them today over at Megan’s at SortaCrunchy.

Breastfeeding hasn’t come easy for me, but I’ve given it the old college try every time, so I am not kidding when I say this list is really the best of the best. This girl has tried it all with the Ladies.

And now I share it with you, over in a space where it’s okay to say “nipple.”

*giggle*

Enjoy!

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Finn’s Birth Story

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The day before the exit began

It was Monday morning and I was still pregnant. I woke up, decided I would have to be induced in a week or two, and determined to go on with the business of living until then.

I started the laundry, put a roast in the crockpot, and read to the boys. I cleaned out all the random baby items I’d been storing in Finn’s crib. In a moment of insanity, I stood next to the bed and whispered to my belly, “See? I cleaned out your bed. It’s really all ready for you here now. You can come whenever you want.”

Two hours later, my water broke.

Andrew had taken Sam to art class and the children who weren’t napping were playing on the iPad in the living room. I’d been in bed watching TV when I heard the “pop.” I quickly texted Andrew: It’s Baby Day!

I called my neighbor and she came running over right away, even before she put her shoes on. I cried and giggled and hugged her neck. She managed to help me find my “last minute hospital packing” list on my phone and began gathering things while I sat and stared. Andrew arrived shortly afterward, finished the packing, and we headed to the hospital.

Andrew dropped me off at the door and went to park. I remember it feeling very surreal to take an elevator ride alone. And it felt even stranger to mosey up to the nurses’ station and announce calmly, “I’m here to have a baby.”

Once I was settled into my new digs (Room #7 for Baby #7!) and had my heplock in my arm, we began the waiting. I was contracting some but not much. I wasn’t dilated that far. But my last baby came in 8 hours, so we weren’t too worried.

Besides, Missy sent me her “birthing lioness,” and she has her kids at home like superwoman. That was good mojo, right?

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This time, however, progress was much slower.

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My hero who always makes me smile.

My doula sent me to take a shower, which sometimes helps get things going. I had Andrew turn on the playlist I’d labeled “power pushing” while I worked through the contractions in the shower. I giggled a little at the bizarre playlist I’d created sometime while under the influence of medication. Beyonce, Justin Timberlake, and, oh, wait, some Jars of Clay or Needtobreathe would randomly spill out of my phone’s speaker.

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No matter how bizarre the playlist, I squatted and swayed and contracted until I was shriveled up and tired of being wet. I went back to my bed to pace and squat while my cheering squad looked on.

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Then Andrew and I did laps around L & D. I’d make it one time around before I’d have to grab the side rails for another contraction. Andrew pressed on my back, lifted me up out of squats, and held me together.

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By midnight, my contractions were incredibly painful (I’d lost most of the amniotic fluid that acts as padding) but I was only dilated to 5 cm. I decided to rest for a bit, even though lying down during a contraction was torture.

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An hour or so later, my dad came into the room, along with Meme and my sisters. He held my hand through some contractions and prayed over me. I know he would have rather cut off his arm than sit and watch any of his kids be in pain, but I was grateful for the familiar touch of his big strong hand. A girl is never too old to hold her daddy’s hand, right?

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My contractions continued to get more painful and by the time my family and the cheering squad left, I was exhausted. There aren’t any pictures of the next few hours, and that’s probably a good thing. Because it got ugly. I got ugly. I cried and I prayed and I begged somebody to help me figure out how to manage the pain.

I’ve done this before. I knew I needed to just fall over the cliff, let the pain happen, and figure out how to cope. But I couldn’t.

I was SO tired. I couldn’t find a way to rest in between contractions. I couldn’t lie in the bed and contract, it made me crazy. But trying to get my big ol’ self out of the bed in time to deal with the contractions became impossible. My only relief came from listening to my “Peaceful Pushing” playlist. I could pray and worship and cry at will.

As always, Andrew was my rock. With every contraction, I’d squat down and he would help me up.

At 5 am, I was frustrated and terrified. When the nurse announced I’d only progressed to 7 cm, I panicked. I looked into Andrew’s eyes and said, “I think I’m done. I think I need some relief. I cannot go any further.”

Now, I know sometimes that when a woman says that, it means she’s in transition and it’s all over. That was not me. I knew things were still moving slow and that, for whatever reason, I could not relax enough to make progress. But I also knew that I was nearing hysterical levels and to keep trying to make that happen was only going to get harder.

My nurse was excellent. She told me that I could change my mind right up until the last minute, but because all the anesthesiologists were going to head to surgery soon, she’d need to get moving on the epidural right away. She promised to come back and check with me shortly.

Andrew looked in my eyes and could see how tired I was. He told me whatever I wanted was fine. I said I wanted to at least keep that option open. So at 7 am, I signed the paperwork and told the nurse I still wasn’t sure, but go ahead and call somebody.

Or maybe I yelled it, who knows.

This is the part where the room became a swirling mass of activity and God was merciful. I couldn’t have picked a worse time to ask for that epidural. It was shift change, so my nurse needed to give report to a new nurse. The anesthesiologist was headed for surgery. And my OB was getting ready to do some surgeries as well. Everybody needed to hurry.

Thanks to my quick-thinking nurse, the Candy Man arrived with the happy drugs in five minutes, which you all know is a medical miracle. He spoke quickly at me and said, “I gotta do it now, honey, or never.”

Another contraction rendered me insensible, but I managed to squeak out, “Do it.”

Andrew and  the doula were asked to leave, so my poor nurse had to give report to the new nurse while forcing a bag of fluid in me (remember all I’d had was a heplock, no fluids) and assisting the Candyman. Plus, she was stuck with a now completely hysterical pregnant woman, who was terrified at being alone, terrified of every contraction, and begging anybody within earshot to make it stop.

I’m not proud of it, but that’s what it was. I was utterly undone.

She calmly held me still, the drugs happened, and I was rolled over to wait for relief. Which came. Sort of…

There was a hot spot where the epidural wasn’t working. More yelling and begging ensued. But apparently what part of the epidural that was working had relaxed me enough that someone noticed I was fully dilated and it was time to push. They were all prepared to ignore me and get it over with.

I flat refused to push until they fixed that wretched spot.

My new nurse heard my pleas and gave me the magic bolus that shut me up so everyone else could do their job.

Relief and warmth spreading over me, I laid my head back and closed my eyes while what felt like 50 people came in and out of the room, trays were laid out, lights were aimed, and gowns were donned.

I opened my eyes to a quiet audience, waiting for me to do something.

I laid my head back and shut my eyes. Maybe I’ll do it later…

Sadly, nobody else was on my timetable and at the next contraction, they insisted I push. It took me awhile to get the hang of the pushing again with all the numbness, but I was not complaining one bit. My contractions spaced out with the epidural, which I loved because I could close my eyes and sleep.

The rest of the room? Not so patient. At some point, one of the pediatric nurses sniffed indignantly and said, “if she’d ever push it out…”

I believe someone shot her a dirty look. I hope it wasn’t me.

I honestly didn’t push that long. Thirty minutes, I think. But everyone else was tired of waiting, so it felt interminable. They had stuff to do. I’d dragged this mess on for 18 hours and the entire world was impatient to meet Finn.

And then we did.

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He reached for me and I reached for him.

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And then, because you know I do it with every kid, I cried.

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There was nobody else in the world at that moment but Finn, Andrew, and me.

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No more than two minutes after Finn was born, Andrew’s phone rang. It was his best friend, calling to wish him a happy birthday. I didn’t look at him, but I could hear the grin on his face around the words, “I  just got the best birthday present ever… a son!”

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Welcome to our world, Finnley Jack. You were worth the wait.

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*pictures courtesy of Allison Lewis. Her version of this story is much prettier…

*last picture courtesy of my friend Carrie.

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Poop On A Plane

While we sit around and wait for Finn’s birth day, my twins, my very first babies, have a birthday on the horizon, too. Here’s a story about them I’ve never told you…

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Sam and Ian, 10 months

When Sam and Ian were 10 months old, I took an airplane trip with them… all by myself.

Our floors had to be refinished and my youngest brother was due to arrive any day, so a trip Back Home seemed appropriate. I bought two tickets, one for Sam to ride in the carseat and one for me to hold Ian on my lap.

And then I discovered I was pregnant. It should have been my first clue this trip wasn’t a good idea.

When we checked in to the airport, the ticket clerk informed me that Sam had been tagged for an extra security screening. Sam responded to this insult by filling his diaper on the way to the checkpoint. I pulled him out of the stroller and handed him to the TSA guy.

Who held him at arm’s length and was grateful for the rubber gloves he was wearing.

I tried not to grin as the man grimaced and handed me my baby, declaring him free of all terrorist motives. Although that diaper he was wearing could have been a weapon of mass destruction.

I pushed the double stroller with a car seat piled on top to the gate and made sure everyone was freshly changed and fed before we boarded.

This was wasted energy. Ian pooped during take-off.

The flight attendant watched Sam so I could go dispose of the mess (Which, have you people ever changed a diaper in those tiny airplane bathrooms? I had to sit on the toilet with Ian in my lap. I gagged a lot.)

It was on my way back to my seat that I realized flying, baby poop, and early pregnancy didn’t mix. The poor flight attendant took one look at my green face and reached out for Ian. Then she flung a barf bag, some ginger ale, and a wet paper towel at me and shoved my head between my knees. “You don’t look so good, honey.”

Approximately 18 sips of ginger ale and 200 cheerios later, we arrived at our destination. I was asked to wait to unload my little circus until the last passenger left the plane. They said it was so they could “help” me but I suspect it was to keep me from slowing others down.

I sort of blacked out for the long walk from my gate to the baggage claim, but I know somewhere in there I made a pit stop and had to figure out how to pee with one baby strapped to me and another on my hip. And a backpack on my shoulders.

I emerged wearing pants, so that’s a victory.

At baggage claim, I discovered we’d taken so long to claim our bags, they’d been stolen by someone else. Now I had no clothes. And the twins’ nearly-finished scrapbooks, which I had foolishly checked, were gone forever.

Happily, I was reunited with family and got to meet my new baby brother, so the trip wasn’t simply an opportunity to lose my luggage or my dignity.

That was reserved for the journey back…

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The twins and their new uncle

Our return was delayed because our floors were refinished in the wrong color and had to be re-refinished, plus my lost bags couldn’t be found. By then I’d figured out the trip was cursed and spent a lot of time on the phone with the airline, crying and eating pudding pops.

Eventually, though, I was back on a plane with my two toothless escorts.

Who both found take-off equally inspiring and promptly pooped in their diapers. Again.

Only this time, the flight attendant was a MAN who said it was “policy” not to watch children for mamas who needed to use the facilities. I asked him what he expected me to do for the next two hours about the stench my sons had created. He said he’d hold up a jacket so I could change them right there. In my seat.

I blinked up at him. “Really? You’d rather I do that?”

He squirmed uncomfortably and then said, “Yes.”

I was certainly not the most popular passenger on the plane by the time the aroma of both my boys’ britches had been recycled 800 times mid-air.

The boys really were excellent travelers, except for those excitable bowels of theirs, and never knew their mama was teetering on the brink. We arrived back home, dignity in tatters, and I vowed never to leave home again. Or, at least, to never leave without Andrew…

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(That’s my sister holding the boys and not me, by the way. I’m a young mama, but not THAT young.)

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Indoor Plumbing Is For Wimps Like Me

We are officially in “sit and stare at The Belly” lockdown here. I’m at 39 weeks and the doctor thinks Finn is “imminent,” but I caught bronchitis at Blissdom so I’m trying to rest and get better before I start power-walking this baby O.U.T.

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Speaking of Blissdom, we haven’t yet discussed The Wonder That Is My Husband during Blissdom weekend. He cheerfully kept all the kids and kept his day job. He rocks. Officially.

I came home to millions of little paper soldiers Andrew printed out for the boys. They’re currently obsessed with the Revolutionary War so they spent the weekend taking turns being the French, British, and American soldiers.

I am told there were a few Hessians included for accuracy, as well. They are frightfully specific in their battle portrayals.

The day I left for the weekend, however, would have tried a lesser man than Andrew’s soul. I will not toy with your patience by giving you all the logistical details as to HOW Andrew came to be making a two hour road trip with the whole gang in the Beast, just trust me, he did.

Back home, he pulled into the driveway and discovered that, for all of our logistical planning, we’d neglected to consider the issue of keys. I was three hours away with both of our house keys in my possession.

Frantic texting and calling ensued to track down the neighbor who had our spare key. In the meantime, pretty much the entire non-diaper wearing population of the van announced their need to pee.

I have all kinds of sympathy for their plight.

Andrew pointed to the boy who was wiggling the most and said, “Backyard. Trees. Go.”

There was more texting and scurrying and waiting before he had a key and could go inside. Most of the children had wandered off to play. Ellen met him coming in from the backyard, barefoot.

Andrew was immediately suspicious.

“Where are your shoes?”

“They’re wet.”

“Why?”

“I tee-teed on them.”

“Where?”

“In the backyard. You said to go in the trees…”

She’s got three big brothers. It’s hard to argue with that kind of logic. Who needs indoor plumbing when there are plenty of trees and you have more than one pair of shoes?

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*******

In case you are of the misguided ilk who prefers Facebook to Twitter, the Vitafam Blog has it’s own page on Facebook now. I’ll put extra pictures and random thoughts up for you there so as not to bombard you here. If you like the Random, go say hi!

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Let me know if you have a website or business and want to sponsor the Vitafam blog this month. I can make room. I can also guarantee an exciting month around here. Don’t miss it!

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The Bump Goes to Blissdom

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I’m a little embarrassed to admit that I took a road trip at 38 weeks gestation, but some day, I want Finn to look back and be absolutely certain that his mama was crazy.

I’ve been to Blissdom three times and each time I learn something. It’s like finding the Mother Ship and realizing, “These are my people.” They love writing and relating to people online. And they’re nice.

So I bought a ticket like I do every year and didn’t bother to count up just HOW pregnant I would be at the conference.

Math, it eludes me.

I made this trip with doctor and husband approval, plus a best friend by my side (who was great for laughs but very hard on my bladder control.) And I met some nice doctors at the conference who graciously agreed to be “on call” for the weekend.

A fountain birth at the Opryland hotel would have been EPIC, but I’m so glad it didn’t happen.

At my last Blissdom stint, I discovered what I do here in my corner of the internet is called being a “memoirist.” I write to remember. I took that lesson and came up with the bloggy mission statement you see up in the right-hand corner.

This is our memoir for our kids. We picture them at 30 and try to write the stories and thoughts they might want to know. We write the Now Stories for their Future Selves. And we humbly share them with you.

This conference, I stuck mostly with the writing track at break-out sessions and was surprised to discover by the end of the weekend, all the bits and pieces I took from each session were easily distilled into one personal mission statement.

I emerged from the blur of a crazy year, a crazy pregnancy, and a crazy weekend with not “Who I want to be when I grow up” but “Who I am right now.”

When you’ve been medicated for four months, this is handy information.

I AM… the Legacy-Maker, the Wisdom-Sharer, and the Way They See Christ.

I wrote this statement after I thought about my strengths, my weaknesses, and what I value most. I am this person to my kids, to my husband, to my friends, and to all of you, oh, internet eyeballs.

  • Legacy -Maker - For so long I’ve only thought of myself as the one who records the memories. But my husband and my kids need me to be purposeful to help them make the memories. And I need to Live with them, be in those moments. Writing is important, but it only means something if it comes after the living.
  • Wisdom- Sharer – I don’t often feel like I know anything, but it’s my job to give what I do know to others. I encourage and  speak truth to the people God sends my way.
  • The Way They See Christ – I point to Christ with my actions, whether it’s in a good way or a bad way. My People and all of you to see Jesus in the way I live life every day and write about it, including His grace and mercy when I goof up.

Right now, all my kids know about Blissdom is that Mommy comes back with applesauce and cereal bowls. (Yay for Swag!) But I hope they read this some day and know I wouldn’t have invested the time in going away for a weekend if it wasn’t to learn something important.

And now I’m ready for The Next Thing.

I’ve had a deep breath, a long look around, and I think I remember who I am now.

Here’s hoping I wear my identity well.

And that the Next Thing in life includes better bladder control…

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February Sponsor Giveaways – Celebrate 38 Weeks With Me?

Well.

38 weeks, people.

Behold: The Bulge.

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To celebrate, how about we let this month’s sponsors do a little giveaway for you?

Babychickie – an Etsy shop that is raising money for adoption!!! – will give you your pick of any doll bedding set in the store. (The handmade dolls are adorable, too!)

Ellen isn’t old enough for American Girl stuff yet, but I’ve got mine stashed for her and ready for new accessories! Cute, huh?

And then there’s the darling Cheeky Maiden, who will cheekily toss some Chunky Soap and a Muscle Soak Bath Bomb your way. You would not regret this win.

Leave a comment to win. Extra entries (make sure you put them in separately!!) for tweeting this giveaway or liking either shop on Facebook.

This giveaway is now Closed.

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How To Party Like A Two Year Old

Today, Mira turned two. We did her cupcakes yesterday so Gran and Pops could participate. I made her chocolate cupcakes with chocolate cream cheese icing from scratch, so I do get points for making a cake. (Not that anyone is counting but me and the kids I have that keep score.)

But since I knew I would be Large & Weepy for Mira’s birthday, I cheated a little and ordered Bubble Guppies (Mira’s favorite show) cupcake toppers from some sweet lady in Wisconsin.

This was a brilliant brain wave on my part. I was totally satisfied with the shipping and the handiwork. Highly recommend. Look how cute!

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Mira recognized them right away as her beloved “Gup Guppies!!!” And she ate every last crumb.

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Per Vitafam tradition, we snuck into her room late last night and put up balloons for her. Andrew made these balloon flowers and we hung them around the room. (Please note: the weird looking rag hanging from the chandelier is what is left of Ellen’s “boinket.” To ease her transition to doing without her Beloved, it hangs on the chandelier so she can see it. It’s creepy, I know.)

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Mira slept through all the decorating.

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But she was awake the next morning when we entered her room to sing “Happy Birthday.” And she’d already been acting every bit the two year old by removing her pants and her diaper before we arrived.

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A few cuddles with Daddy made up for the fact that we totally busted her.

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We gave her a fancy microphone for her birthday and she loves it. I’ve got great video of her singing into it that I will share eventually. But for now, trust me, she’s adorable.

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I let her play drums on my belly, another birthday treat. Finn didn’t really appreciate it. (Can you see all the scratches on my belly from where I keep hitting it on things? I’m utterly ridiculous.)

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And we finished the day with her favorite meal of beans and rice. (I used this recipe and it was yummy! Even after I burned it!)

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As you may have noticed, I’m a bit of an accident waiting to happen these days, so I’m really glad we started planning the birthday stuff a few months ago and that we kept things simple. The day felt celebratory… and definitely safer, because of it.

But mostly, it just felt GOOD to party with our TWO year old.

Happy Birthday, Mira!!! We love you! (And thanks to all of you who left such nice comments. They were much appreciated!)

Brace yourselves, people, because we are in the middle of what we call “The Birthday Month.” We’ve still got three more birthdays to go in the next three weeks, and I’m not even counting Finn’s big arrival. It’s what is known as a marathon, not a sprint… Stay hydrated.

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Waddling Toward THE Wall

****WARNING: I’m closing comments on the Baby Birthday Guessing on Thursday at 7 pm CST. So get your guess in!*****

I had a glorious unmedicated week. I reveled in being able to wipe down the countertops or remembering to change out the kitchen towels. I realized just how bad I felt before and gave up all the guilt I felt about all the things I couldn’t do for 18 weeks. Now I know why: Because I was DRUGGED out of my mind.

But I’m not drugged any more. My baby is healthy, contractions are welcome, and I can take care of my people. I’m not saying I rearranged closets or anything last week, but I helped meet needs and it felt good.

Today we reached 37 weeks. Overall, I’m feeling fairly comfortable for my girth. Sure, I waddle, my back hurts, and I have to pee every time I bend over, but I’d say I’m pretty content. I’m feeling so blessed and happy to be able to enjoy these last moments of pregnancy.

If you ask me if I’m ready for the baby to come, I’ll tell you I’m ready to meet my baby, but I’m okay if he wants to cook longer. I’m not anxious or desperate.

Not yet anyway…

Which leads me to this: I may feel pretty good for the third trimester, but I’m still IN the third trimester. You know that creepy-crawly feeling you get where you just want to peel off your skin?

Yes, THAT.

All my clothes feel too tight, they itch, I hate all those maternity panels, my pants are too small or they won’t stay up, my shirts don’t cover my belly…

So this is how my kids are accustomed to see me waddling around the house now:

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I finally admitted defeat and did what every pregnant woman hates to do but we all end up doing anyway: buying one or two new shirts for just those last few weeks.

Gah.

Andrew took me to Target. I waddled with purpose back to the maternity section and began pulling shirts on and off hangers and on and off my body like a mad woman. “No, this is too itchy, this bunches up, this makes my arms feel like they’re suffocating…”

While I ranted and raved like a lunatic, Andrew held my purse and artfully dodged the shirts and comments I threw in his direction. ”Oooo, this fabric feels good. Can I just wear this out of the store? What do you think of this color? Does this make me look fat?”

He began to grin. “Ah. There it is.”

“What?”

“The End of the Road Crazy Woman I remember.”

He bent over and patted my belly fondly. “Finnley? Your mother is about to hit THE Wall. Your eviction notice is coming, man. Get ready.”

I snorted and rolled my eyes and went on stretching and pulling. But I suspect he is right. The end is near, folks. I’m gonna try and savor it before I lose my mind.

Or get arrested for indecent exposure…

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Guess The Birth Day

So Eunice the Uterus is off her leash. And while I’m still content to cook this baby a bit longer, some of you have requested that I open up the guessing NOW, because you are convinced I’m going to spontaneously combust.

So, it’s time to guess when this baby is coming!!!

Now, from past experiences, I can assure you that Eunice is unpredictable, at best. In my head, she’s very much like Maggie Smith on Downton Abbey, in looks and attitude. “I’m a woman, Mary. I can be as contrary as I choose.”

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Before you start guessing, here’s some pertinent info:

Of the two babies that have been allowed to come in their own time, Ellen came at 38ish weeks and Willa was 9 days late.

Adam came around 36 weeks because I am a graceful swan who fell and went into labor. The twins were a special case.

In other words, from here on out, anything can happen.

While I am very much afraid now that I’m drug free I will stay pregnant forever like I did with Willa, there are some differences of note.

First, Finn has cheeks. Massive ones.

They are very similar to Ellen’s cheeks, which were legendary at birth. She came voluntarily at around 38 weeks and weighed in at over 7 pounds. This bodes well.

I will also admit that despite stronger medicine this time around, I have contracted MUCH more. And they’ve picked up in the last week. So it stands to reason this trend will continue.

HOWEVER, there are people that just contract and contract and nothing happens, as my doctor reminded me. I could be one of those.

So.

Take a look at that belly. I’m 36 weeks.

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Think over the possibilities. And then leave a guess for me in the comments. Tell me:

Birth Date

Time

Finn’s weight and length

The closest guess, statistically speaking, (and I’ll have Andrew run the numbers) will win a spectacular prize.

Last time, I insisted that nobody guess a date after my due date and then Willa was ornery and wouldn’t come. So I will not limit you cruelly. But this time, my due date is March 8 and my doctor goes out of town on March 17. He has guaranteed me a baby before he leaves. So anything after March 16 will be WRONG.

And remember that I hold a very long grudge and if you wish an overdue baby on me, you may win a prize, but you will also win my wrath. I’m just sayin’…

*To make it fair, I’m only going to leave the comments open for one week. So get your guesses in soon!


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The Last Pill

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I just swallowed my last no-contraction pill. Tomorrow, I will shake off the cobwebs, stretch my creaky joints, and rejoin the world.

Except that I’m in the part of the pregnancy where I am rendered utterly helpless by sheer volume. My brain will go from medicated-mush to just really-pregnant-mush.

It’s like setting a two year old loose on the world. I’m hampered by a short attention span and poor motor skills.

But I feel the Little Man wiggling in my belly and it makes me happy. He complains against the confines of his spaces with strong kicks and rebellious stretches. My tummy rolls in waves, reflecting the healthy baby within.

And I am so grateful. I’m grateful to rejoin my family. I’m grateful to be without fear for my baby. I’m grateful to ignore the contractions, to start to enjoy them for “progress” rather than “items of concern.”

I’ve been mentally fighting against having a baby Too Soon for so long that it’s nice to relax and start to think about just having a baby.

I laughed when my friend talked about feeling her inner lioness come to the surface as she got ready to face a delivery. I’ve been scared of delivery for 18 weeks. And now, suddenly, I sense a little lion cub in me, flexing and stretching its claws. Maybe I can do this…

Already I feel my fight coming back. I’ll be weak and weepy in two weeks, no doubt, exhausted and overwhelmed from re-entry. But just right now, just tonight, I want to feel The Brave.

I want to draw strength from that Quiet Place that has been sitting and trusting God’s grace, “even if the worst happens…” That Quiet Place of trust now ready to rely on His grace if the best happens… That Quiet Place that rests in Him, no matter what.

I want to shake my shoulders, tap my boxing gloves together, and step into the ring.

Tag me in, Boss. I’m ready…

I can do ALL things Him who strengthens me. Philippians 4:13

*photo at 34 weeks, courtesy of Carrie.

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