Thursday, September 27, 2012

About time...

I realised I never shared my baby shower on here... those last few weeks of pregnancy obviously took over...

My amazing friend Hanna put on the most awesome winter baby shower for me. She set the stage for a cosy and fun afternoon with friends and family. She created this masculine, rustic, winterland theme in my parents home which was just amazing to walk into. I don't know how she found time with a busy toddler to sew all of the cushions and bunting and make not one, but TWO cakes! She truly went above and beyond to put this all together and was helped on the day by another really good friend of mine who filled the room with gorgeous fresh flowers. I'm so lucky to have great friends...

What a perfect day - it seems SO long ago now...






Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Stickygrams

I'm one of those people who never gets around to printing off photos - purely because I take SO many! I like to put my photos in photobooks using www.blurb.com, but it takes me a long time to get around to completing one and printing it off... our world trip in 2009 is still a work in progress... as is my maternity book, as is my albums for 2010 and 2011 and our holidays.

I find it impossible to keep up! It's a shame though because it's so nice to revisit memories by flicking through an actual book. I would very rarely have friends around and say "hey do you want to look at our holiday snaps?... hang on I'll just load up the hard drive" .Not likely.

Instead, the books I HAVE managed to do, which would usually reside in the lounge or on our book shelf, get flicked through constantly by friends and family, which is so nice... and this is how photos should be enjoyed.

Anyway - I have moved away from the point of this post, again...

The other day I came across this site www.stickygram.com. Given that a lot of our life now is documented on the iPhone using instagram, a lot of our memories end up stored on there and could easily be lost if we were to lose our phone or forget to back up (who remembers to back up??)

I ordered two sheets to start with to see what they were like. Result. Awesome! Within a week I had my own little instagram magnets in my mailbox. I can't wait to print more throughout the year and covering my fridge with moments of life. I took some normal photos from our other cameras and just instagrammed them on my phone to add them to the collection. I think I'm addicted...






Wednesday, September 19, 2012

Reality Check

I'm aware photos only show so much, I've said this before and will say it again.

My mum made a comment the other day during her visit about the very different picture painted on this blog versus the day to day reality of adjusting to life with a newborn. Ha! How dare she be honest.... We had a good laugh about it. 

It's true... here you see glimpses. You see a healthy, happy and beautiful baby boy smiling and cooing for the camera with his big blue eyes. What you don't see is those big blue eyes NOT closing for nap times... or the piles of washing covered in baby spew and poo. You don't see the old milk spew in my hair or the bags under my eyes or my tears of exhaustion at 2am trying to console a crying baby. Who wants to see photos of that?? No thanks. 

I won't lie, I don't feel motherhood comes totally naturally to me and I find this newborn baby stuff challenging, I think all first time mothers do though.  There are good days, great days, OK days and bad days. It's like two steps forward, one step back.  It's taking me a while to adjust to this new reality of ssshhhhing until my teeth go dry, rocking until my arms ache, walking until my feet hurt... and it's a full FULL time job. 

BUT - The best thing on this blog is I'm able to look at him in the photos, like you all do, and be reminded of just how god damn perfect my little man is and be reminded in my sleep deprived state that this is all worth it, that I'm a very lucky girl. I have an amazing husband who I watch being a hands on, fantastic dad to our son. Watching him bath Art always makes me smile, even though I stand there saying "babe watch his ears, babe his face went under"... Go away mum! We're having fun. 

This time is going to pass so quickly, so I don't have time to dwell on the negative. This blog celebrates the highlights of being a new mum and watching a newborn grow. Occasionally there will be moments or lessons learned that I'll share in the hope it may help others, but all babies are so different that what worked for one, probably won't work for another... 

At the end of the day, spew can be washed out of my hair, concealer can hide the bags (or hemorrhoid cream can fix them! haha), and the tears stop as soon as that baby smiles at me and I've had one more hour of sleep. 

My friend is fantastic for telling me to stop complaining about shit. She says " OK I'm sick of you whinging (mother of a toddler) about your baby not napping long enough or doing what you think he should be doing... no more complaining! I don't want to hear it... he is a baby!!! he does baby things! Get over it" 

They aren't her exact words, but close to it... and she's totally right (and awesome) for saying it. Shut-up and enjoy the journey. 


Less of this... 



More of this...



Ahhh that's better. 





Monday, September 17, 2012

He thinks I'm pretty funny

I should have known... farting noises would make him laugh. Now I find myself making farting noises at my baby in an attempt to coax those beautiful smiles... The things we do..



Friday, September 14, 2012

Thank you Grandma


My mum is seriously a knitting machine. I mentioned we wanted some chunky knit proper boy beanies for the little man. We like to go outside a lot for walks, so he needed some warm head gear. 
Two days later, Grandma turns up with a beautiful soft grey beanie... too small! So two days later Grandma turns up with a bigger grey beanie - perfect! 
We suggest blue might look nice on him too. 
Two days later Grandma turns up with a blue one. 
Grandma gets cuddles. 

xx





Grab a snack...

Taking another baby break here... just brief though!... you know I'm addicted to him right?

I thought we'd change the subject to food, since we all eat it. I found when I was at home, I struggled to come up with ideas of what to eat when I needed a snack or a light, easy to make lunch. It's too tempting to leave the house and walk to one of the many local cafes in the area.
That can be a rather expensive habit, so I've had to explore a few other options. With Mr D popping home for lunch most days, we like fast, tasty lunches that don't take too long to prepare, so we can play with Baby Arthur.

Here's three things I'm loving at the moment.

Bruschetta.
So quick and easy to prepare and a great way to use up bits and pieces in the fridge. I call it bruschetta, but it really is just toasted Ciabatta with a variety of toppings.
There are a few toppings I love...
1/ Cherry tomatoes (or very ripe Italian vine tomatoes), melted parmesan, fresh basil
2/ Rocket, shaved fresh parmesan cheese, drizzled with some balsamic vinegar, rock salt
3/ Salami, melted cheese, tomatoes, fresh basil
4/ Buffalo mozzarella, basil, tomato, drizzled with balsamic vinegar



Loaf Slice
I'm officially addicted to this muesli slice from Loaf. A small piece is really filling and has been great for a really fast snack just before feeding Art to keep my energy levels up. It is so delicious! I buy mine from Farro Fresh, but I'm sure they have many stockists.


For winter lunches, this is great. We share one packet of soup between the two of us which is plenty. Served with some freshly toasted bread... It always hits the spot. I love the Kumara flavour. These are about $5 sometimes on special at the supermarket, so a really inexpensive lunch for two people. 





Now I'm hungry...




Sunday, September 9, 2012

One Month

He is one month old... kinda not much older than the previous post... but you know... it's pretty addictive taking photos of those big blue eyes.

At one month, he's loving walks in the pram, eating, looking at the prints on the wall in the lounge, staring at the window above our bed, and has started cooing and smiling lots. He can still be a total grump if he doesn't get his beauty sleep... but that's like all of us. Loves tanning his bum in the morning sun and did I mention he likes eating?




Thursday, September 6, 2012

The First Month


We've spent four weeks so far getting to know each other. I stare at him often, amazed at how this perfect little human grew inside of me. It blows my mind. 

Every day is different, and brings with it new highs and lows, and new challenges. As time is progressing I'm learning more, and growing more patient and accepting of the challenges this motherhood thing throws at you. 



We've started introducing a bit of routine to encourage a little more sleepy time and less Mr Grizzle time. So far so good. I know this 'routine' (trying to use that term very loosely here), will change often, but this morning was so successful that I hope we can have a few more nights and mornings like it. 

We just started working with the pattern he had sort of self established and tweaked it a little bit to suit us as well. A great thing about this routine is that I'm only up once at about 2ish to feed him in the night, after the final 10.30-11pm feed, and then up again at 6.30, so I don't feel absolutely sleep deprived. I'm able to feed him at 6.30, pass him over to Daddy for playtime in bed, and then have time to myself! Shower, wash my hair, apply moisturisers, get dressed.. eat breakfast... put on washing, feel human... It's the best! Thanks Art for co-operating today... please keep it up. 

He stirs... time to feed... 



Making a house a home

A little break from baby posts...

Just before Art was born we moved back into the city. We haven't had a lot of time to get the house set up prior to his arrival, and being a rental, we aren't doing any improvements to the property... so to make it more of a home we like to hang pictures on the wall, to define each space and bring some of personality into it.

Here's a little peek into our very little kitchen and dining area.

We purchased the 'meat' art from an artist in San Francisco, and I framed it using off the shelf frames from Factory Frames (my go to for all framing). The prints are very quirky - a cow and pig all segmented into their cuts of meat. Perfect for a kitchen (unless you're a vegetarian). We kept it very simple, and went with wooden frames, as opposed to black or white, to compliment the other wood in the room.

It's a very small kitchen, as you can see... but we've made what we can of the space, and it's perfect for our little family. Although it made the kitchen even smaller, we relocated a bookcase to house cookbooks, glassware and storage jars.. and other junk that seems to accumulate there.

(oh what you could do if you owned this house....).



I printed some vintage French mushroom images from online last year and popped those into some frames I already had. 


Here's a view from the end of the dining room, through to the kitchen so you can see all of the various art on the walls. Nothing fancy, just things to make it feel a little less of a rental and more like a home. 
The coloured pictures are some old photos I had, already in those frames. I just put coloured scrapbook paper in the background to freshen them up and provide some colour to the room. 
Very cheap, quick and easy to change. 


It's far from being a house from a magazine, but it's functional and homely... which is really what it all boils down to... especially with a newborn baby in the house!


Sunday, September 2, 2012

3 weeks in....

We've passed the three week mark, and we're surviving! Little Arthur is changing every day and we are getting into more of a rhythm together, learning his little signals and learning ways (sort of) to respond to them all. It really is a full time job. Holy moly this kid is beautiful - I can't stop staring at his perfect little face.

I want to warn you, this is a long post. But I need to get this out there - It's brutally honest,  but often honesty is refreshing.  It may help to reassure some other new mum, provide entertainment (or fear) to childless readers, or help to prepare an expectant mother... It helps me as well, just to write it down and reflect on how far we have come.

For those who don't have a spare 10 minutes, or those who don't really fancy reading about feeding a baby, you can just check out these pictures and then close off. I won't judge.



Hey lady, stop taking photos. 




For those still reading... Get ready... It's a novel.

BREAST FEEDING. Holy sh** I had no idea what I was in for.

It's like an unspoken thing amongst mothers - the struggle with feeding. Everyone shares their labour horror stories quite freely, but I'd never been told the pain and challenges you can encounter in breast feeding. AND it's more common that you'd think... Of course there are some mothers who get off to a great start and never have to go through this - but it all boils down to the support you have, your anatomy and your baby. 

Would you believe me if I told you that feeding has been harder and more painful than labour? And that's a pretty much drug free natural labour for an 8 pound 7 baby...

There have been some massive ups and downs in these first few weeks. Many many tears of anger, frustration and pain. Visits to the doctor, visits to the A&E, lactation consultants and chiropractors... it's been busy.  Photos on a blog don't really show all of that. You just see pictures of an absolutely adorable baby sleeping (I can say that I'm his mother).

As soon as Art was born he was thrown onto my chest and remained there for two hours. He wriggled his way down my chest using his beautiful newborn instincts and found my left breast and latched on. The assisting midwife was also a lactation consultant and I remember her talking about the basics of a good latch and explaining things to Mr D while I sucked on the gas for dear life whilst being 'repaired' down below. Naturally I wasn't paying attention to what she was saying...

From there on, I was in a busy hospital, with a good, healthy baby and a limited number of staff on call. It's fair to say I was considered low priority. Every so often a midwife would pop in and give me feeding tips and say - Great Latch! Yes, perfect!... and I was feeling really good about it all.

That was until I woke up one morning with my nipples stuck to my nightgown. Too much information I know, but I'm trying to paint the picture. It was nasty. Someone had eaten my nipples. There were bits missing, there was blood, it was NOT pretty. That, on top of engorgement, was just the beginning of this painful journey.

For the first few days I wasn't feeding correctly and with the damage came pain, extreme pain, which made me hesitate when he was trying to latch on. This is not a good combo when you have a baby screaming with hunger. It was HORRIBLE. He'd get close... huffing and puffing with hunger, and at the last second I'd pull my boob away saying "I can't do this, I can't do this", so naturally he became frustrated and would work himself into a state.

We came home from Birthcare and I fed him through the tears and gritted teeth (my jaw actually ached), thinking - this can't be right! Why can't I do this? It's a natural thing between a mother and child and I can't do it! I'm hopeless, useless, broken and failing him...  I have to feed him. I'd get angry at Art crying and arching his back. We'd fight with each other. He'd strike out with his sharp little fingernails and grab my wounded boobs and I'd scream out (actually scream) in pain and quickly pass him over to his Dad while I sobbed and sobbed. Not pretty. It was relentless - this battle happened every 2- 3 hours, and with little sleep I wasn't well equipped to cope with it all.

Poor Mr D watched on hopelessly, wondering if this was it - this was what it would be like with Art and I, and started to question whether we should look for other solutions.

Cue my amazing friend. Hanna. Lifesaver. She said "get out the pump, start pumping, start healing and ring the obstetrician!"

I reluctantly hooked myself up to this horrible pump and started to relax as I saw milk flow into the bottle, knowing that Art could be fed, and we wouldn't need to fight for once. The obstetrician confirmed that I needed to start pumping and let my body heal and to stop worrying about 'nipple confusion' and just feed him while we worked out what was wrong. It wasn't easy - I felt again that I was failing him and craved the closeness of breast feeding. I cried again... I was becoming a pro at this crying thing.

My poor sister had flown over from Sydney to meet Art and walked into my lounge only to be confronted with me breastfeeding, whilst crying... followed by more tears after the feed, followed by her having to cancel her Friday night plans to drive me to A&E to show the 100th person that week my horrible nipple situation. I'm sure I shocked my poor sister. I had searing hot pain shooting through my breasts after each feed which just intensified to the point where I just lay down with my shirt open sobbing, and thinking this isnt' normal!!!! this isn't a beautiful breastfeeding experience you see on those stupid DVD's. Again I would sob and sob, dreading the next time Art would wake for feeding.

It really wore me down.

BUT this story has a happy ending. I did a few things which helped, and have maybe some tips for other expectant mums who are planning to breastfeed. I'm still an absolute amateur at all of this, and every baby and person is different, so take the advice with a grain of salt... it won't work for everyone. This is not Gospel. Just my own experience.

Ask the experts for help.
I went to a lactation consultant for a one hour session, which is free of charge at Birthcare. Within 10 minutes we had a perfect, pain free latch and a wonderful hour long feed on both sides. It showed me that we could do it. I'm not blessed with optimum breast feeding nipples, so she was able to help me understand how to get a better latch to counteract this. I can't believe I'm blogging about my boobs...
Also, when you're in the hospital, buzz a midwife to come and watch you while you latch. They don't mind doing this, in fact they tell you to. If it's not right, they will make you take it off and correct, so you don't start bad habits. I didn't do this enough... I'd just show them my latch after Art was on...

If you're not feeling right, go to the doctor
 I went to the GP after advice from the midwife and a swab revealed I had a staph infection, so I had some antibiotic ointment for that. Not everyone will have this, so it's not really a tip. But if things don't look good, it is advisable to get swabs done to check you don't have infections so you can get treatment to assist healing.

Make sure you and your baby don't have candida 
We diagnosed that both of us had Candida in our system which was causing some intense burning for me and a white coating on Art's tongue. We started treatment for that - huge relief!  The burning was so so bad, so fixing this made a huge difference for me, so in between feeds there was no pain anymore.

Remember, birth can be very traumatic for your baby
The biggest breakthrough of all! 
We went to the chiropractor/kinesiologist who quickly established that poor little Art had a sore shoulder, neck and collarbone, from the birth, meaning he only liked turning to one side. Hence why he wouldn't face my boob to latch on, and why he would cry every time I tried (quite forcefully) to get him into the correct position. Poor little guy! With some small, gentle adjustments he suddenly started to move his head freely from side to side and lift his left arm with more force. It was incredible!
This changed my baby completely. I came home with a different little guy in my arms, it blew me away. I would always suggest taking your newborn to someone you trust to check them over post birth and ensure everything is aligned and your baby has no pain. I got treated too which is important, because your body has been through so much. If anyone is interested in this here is the clinic I go to. I have been going to Carina for over ten years for everything health related. It's worth every cent. http://www.chiropractors.co.nz/

Invest in one of those overpriced breast feeding pillows 
I got a proper breastfeeding pillow last week, so I could get into position quickly to feed, rather than try to build a fortress with the sofa cushions each time I went to feed. I got this one  Milk Bar Feeding Pillow. Before the baby, I was like "come on... how can you justify paying that for that!"It's worth it... well I think so anyway.
I have seen others around, choose one that suits your body. I didn't like the ones that felt like wearing a floating ring pool toy around my waist. TAKE THE PILLOW TO HOSPITAL! start using it from your first feed.

Have a pump on hand if you're going to breastfeed
I hesitated because I thought the bottle would confuse Art and I was worried all of the pumping would make my engorgement worse. Good news.. it didn't! The pump still hurt a bit as I was really tender and sore, but I was able to pump a good amount of milk for Art to feed him every 3 hours. I just felt like a dairy cow and missed the cuddle that went with feeds. BUT it worked! he was fed, he slept, I started to heal and it just gave me a break from the pain. I had to pump a bit in the first day or so, so I was one feed ahead (to take the pressure off). This way, when Art woke hungry, I'd feed him the bottle I'd pumped earlier, and then start pumping myself, so I was still working off his demand.

TOLD YOU THIS WAS A NOVEL!!!

SO! Week 3... coming up to week 4. We are exclusively breastfeeding. No pump, no bottles and we are getting pain free latches with most feeds (still not perfect). We still struggle a little bit on the night feeds when I'm tired, he is tired and it's darker. The biggest break through is that I don't dread feeding him anymore. When he wakes I get excited about seeing his beautiful little face, and smiles!!!!I then get into position and quickly latch him on, easily and he happily sucks away. I can feed him in a room full of people, or when we're out and about. It seems like such a stupid thing to be happy about, but given the pain we went through, it truly is the nicest thing.

In reflection.. 
I am fortunate to have a beautiful thriving baby, and a good milk supply. I'm glad I persevered, and sought help for the issues I was having and was able to continue feeding Arthur. I know others aren't so fortunate, and it's important to remember this when I sometimes do get a less than perfect latch, or some discomfort from feeding. It's still early days too, and there will be other challenges ahead (like sleeping!), but I'm sure it will improve each week.

On a side note: 
I'd also like to make my own DVD about breastfeeding for new mums, rather than this beautiful, natural, stupid one that you see. I want one with a mum crying, kicking her feet and applying lanolin cream to cracked nipples, and wincing when putting on a bra. I'd then finish the DVD by showing a mum a few weeks later with established feeding, to provide hope to new mums.
THAT would have been more help to me. I'm embarrassed to tell you how often I watched you tube videos on 'latching" ...

That's enough honesty for one day. Time to feed this little guy.