Felix at Three Months

Things About Felix at Three Months

He has chubby, chubby legs.
He reaches for us.
He likes to suck on his first knuckle and thumb.
Looks very serious when meeting new people.
Babbles like he's really talking.
Has been on his first road trip to Leavenworth.
Still has never worn pants.
Knows when people have left the room.
Hollers when he's bored.
Has GIANT first toes.
Has two speeds - happy/awake and asleep.
Gets to second base with everyone that holds him.
Has the longest eyelashes.
He can roll from stomach to back.
Likes to flirt with strangers.




Felix at Two Months

Things About Felix at Two Months

He sleeps 5-7 hours a night.
He will sleep through anything, including live Mariners games and 4th of July.
His ears jiggle in the stroller.
He laughs.
He still hasn't worn pants.
He stretches both arms up and both legs down at the same time.
He has ridiculously long eyelashes.
He can almost get his fingers in his mouth.
He likes his friend the monkey above the changing table.
He thinks fans and lights are just the best thing ever.
He has toes that grip.
He stores milk in his cheeks.
He weighed 11.2 lbs and was 22.5 inches long at his two month appointment.





Felix at One Month

Things About Felix at One Month Old



He gets the hiccups almost daily.
He heals like Wolverine.
He wiggles around pretty well.
His umbilical cord fell off, making him a real boy.
Umbilical cords smell.  Really bad.
He smiles.
He hates Dolly Parton.
He falls asleep to Ke$ha.
He has never worn pants.
He has sweet baby breath.
He screams before he sneezes.
All his toes are the same length.
He has rubbed all the hair off the top of his head.



Felix's Birth Story

May 8th - 3:30 PM - Group Health Medical Center

"And the baby is head down?" The midwife felt my very large stomach.
"Yes, has been since week twenty," I said.
"Hmm.  Let's get a quick ultrasound just to make sure."
"Ok..."
She picked up the in-room ultrasound wand and set it on my stomach, just below my left boob.  Two seconds later...  "Yep, I thought so.  There's his head."
"Shut up... You've GOT to be kidding me."

He was head down on Friday.  Between Friday and Tuesday he flipped himself right side up.  He was breech for three days.  THREE DAYS.

May 8th - 3:45 PM

The midwife led the on-call OB in.  By this time I was fighting tears.  The OB checked my amniotic fluid levels and informed me that they were too low to try a version (flipping the baby into position from the outside) and that she was concerned that the cord could crimp or wrap if they tried.

"You need to have a C-section and you need to have it today."

They kept saying "urgent".  "It's not an emergency, but it's urgent."  And "baby needs to come out".

We kept saying, "This kid is so grounded."

Cue tears.

Ben and I always said, "However Felix enters the world is exactly how he is supposed to enter the world."  Working to be flexible and trying to go with the flow.  That being said, we didn't plan for Felix to join us via C-section.

We had planned to welcome him after hours of labor, ice chips and focus objects, naturally and without drugs.  We didn't research c-sections or even think about them.  We were floored when the birth plan we were so ready to execute was thrown out the window.

We were sent home to get our hospital bag, take a shower and scheduled to return to the hospital at seven pm for our surgery at nine that night.  The drive home was a blur.  I just kept thinking, "I can't believe this is happening."

Ben was a lifesaver.  He kept reminding me of our previous mantra, told me to focus on the fact that, in a few hours, we would have our son.  Kept telling me that a c-section was the safest option now for Felix and me. Kept holding my hand.  I didn't know until days later that he was just as terrified as I was.

I put on my big girl panties and got on board with what was going to happen.  I braided my hair and put makeup on.  When Ben asked why I told him that it was incentive for me not to cry.  I was going to laugh through this unexpected experience or cry trying.

Our room!

When we checked in, they gave me a delightfully tasteful gown.
And Ben got a space suit, complete with hairnet.
While we waited for everything to get ready (good God there is a lot of paperwork when people want to cut your middle open), we did what any nervous parents would do. 

Took picture of the score as we went into surgery.

Played some Zelda.
Photo-bombed the nurses.
You know, the usual.

Finally, it was time to go into the OR.  I was lucky in lots of ways.  I didn't have to go through hours and hours of labor before we had to have a c-section.  So, taking full advantage of that, I decided to skip to the OR.  Remember, we are laughing through this.  

Time for drugs!  Time for giant needles!  Time to (inadvertently) make the docs laugh.
I sat on the table and got the spinal.  Within seconds my legs felt heavy and tingly.  I think I was really super nervous because I said, "Guys, I can't feel my legs.  Seriously, I can't feel my legs!"  

The anesthesiologist thought that was great.  "Yes, that's the point.  Lay back."

Ben sat next to my head and held my hand.  Before they started, the nurse looked at me and said, "If you don't want to see anything do not, I repeat, DO NOT look at the lights."  They were mirrored and you could really see everything.  

Ben watched the entire operation.  They kept asking him if he was okay and he just said, "Dude, move.  I can't see."  He likened it all to being a chef and cutting up meat all the time.  Same feeling.
I didn't watch the first part.  I was terrified.  Kept my eyes closed and chatted up the anesthesiologist.  Asking him which medical shows on TV were the most real(He doesn't watch but doesn't like House).  I couldn't stop my arms and upper half from shaking.  Like fierce shaking.  They said it was due to the spinal.  It was weird.

About ten minutes after they (OB and a midwife as first assist and a slew of nurses) started, we heard "Here he is!"  and "definitely a boy!"  I guess he came out butt and balls first.  Ben said they kind of pushed him back in and grabbed a leg.  I couldn't feel anything.  Not a damn thing.  Weirdo that I am, I tried to move my leg just to see if I could.  I could not.  

I wait to see him. 

While they cleaned Felix off, I watched the surgery.  It is beyond surreal to see your own uterus, stomach muscles, blood and just general guts exposed.  Absolutely surreal.  I watched them suck the blood and fluid out.  I watched them sew my uterus back together.  I watched it all.  Just incredible.


Look at his giant fingers!

Ben said he was wide eyed and quiet.  They apologized to us for having to do it and made him cry.  Once Ben went to the bin they put Felix in and said, "Hi Felix" he was quiet again.  Just wide awake and watching.

I watched them staple my skin together and asked to see the staple gun.  They laughed when I saw it and was disappointed that it was so tiny.  I wanted a full on staple gun.  

Ben brought Felix to me.  Our first family photo.

I kept saying, "I can't believe he's here.  I can't believe he's here."  I still say that every day.  We got wheeled back to the recovery room and they put me under warming blankets to get me to stop shaking.  They put these things on my legs that squeezed them to keep the blood moving.  They checked all my vitals.  And then Ben handed me Felix.  

Oh God, that sweet face!

Tiny wrinkled hands.  His feet were so wrinkled too.  They told us it was because he was in water for ten months and duh.

They got a love thing.

 These are some of our nurses.  The one with the dark hair on the right was our favorite, Candace.  She was awesome and took such good care of us all.
For a c-section they have you stay in the hospital for two nights.  Since Felix was born so late at night they said we needed to stay for three nights.  I said, "buck that."  I was on a mission to go home.  I was walking the next day.  Off the catheter, IV out within hours of walking.  I wanted out.  The nurses thought I was a rockstar.  And that was awesome, I have to admit.  They wanted to walk me by other women and say, "this is how you're supposed to do it."   

Overlake has the best cheeseburgers.  I think I ate like five before we left.  Seriously.  The people at the room service laughed every time we called.  

We got to go home a day early because of our efforts, obnoxious and repetitive asking to go home and good behavior.  The pediatrician signed off on Felix and his healthy self.  And once they took the staples out of me, I was free too!

Look at the tiny staples!  Out!  Home!

I can't believe we get to take this sweet boy home!
 

It was scary and unexpected to have a c-section.  I think it all happened the way it was supposed to.  If I had known I was going to have a c-section for weeks and weeks I would have been terrified and nervous for all those weeks.  Only knowing for a few hours before it happened worked out great.  It was wham, bam.  I didn't have time to freak out.  I had a car ride to cry it out and then we just had to go.  He really came into the world the way he was supposed to.  I'm beyond grateful for the hospital, nurses, doctors and Ben for the support, humor and expertise they provided.

After so many months of waiting and hoping and wondering what he would look like and who he would be, I can't believe he's here.  He's so cute - like to the point of barfing, and has his own personality and looks just like his dad.  I am one blessed mama.

A happy little family.

Pregnancy


I cannot feel my fingers.
I cannot see my toes.
You would not believe the many hues
Of snot from up my nose.

The belly, it is big and lined.
Like a tiger, it has stripes.
So much peeing, round the clock,
Results in sleepless nights.

I used to sport thin ankles,
And had comfy shoes that tied.
My skin is like a popcorn ceiling.
They said I’d glow.  They lied.
  
Disney is out.  Country songs, too.
I cry at the drop of a hat.
Running upstairs is hilarious.
Christ, I am so very fat.

What a whirlwind ride it is,
This “growing a human” thing.
But I press on, because I know
Of all the joy it will bring.

One Year

It has been one year since I had surgery.  It's kind of amazing what a year can change.  A year can show you the best and worst parts of yourself and people around you.  It can show you that those parts aren't things to be "fixed", they're just pieces of a whole.  The angry, crazy, ungrateful parts are just as crucial to who you are as the good words we all want to be.

I've learned (over and over) that it's okay to be angry.  Anger is an incredible motivator.  It gets shit done.  It gets you off your ass and head first into projects, rants, exercise, or whatever needs doing.  I'd much rather be angry than afraid.  I'll take the rage over the tears any day.

Many visits to the shrink have helped me learn it's okay to be crazy.  Really. Granted, there are different levels of crazy but most of the everyday levels are surprisingly normal, common even.  

Like the Cheshire Cat says, "We're all mad here."  I'm not alone in my neurosis, I'm not special in my fear.  Everyone is afraid of something(s).  It's just harder to pinpoint how to battle it when you're afraid of the unknown.  People who are afraid of heights can (safely) jump from them.  People afraid of spiders can hold (see: kill) them.  Being afraid of the unknown or of what could happen... I suppose all you can do is keep on keeping on.

It's how you deal with the crazy that matters.  For me, having a plan of attack when the fleeting crazy comes on is key.  Having a list of things that make me happy, and then doing them even if I don't want to is part of my attack plan.  Using the plan to battle or,  more often than not, wait out the crazy is how I best deal.  All things I didn't know a year ago.

A year, especially a year like this, can help you realize that, no matter what, there is always something to be grateful for.  Yes, cancer, surgery, recovery, fear, pain, depression.  These are all very real and very unavoidable things.  But noting that there is sun instead of rain, or the grocery store has the best flavor of corn nuts, while insignificant in the grand scheme of things, reminds me that there is always SOMETHING to be grateful for.

Life is scary.  It's going to throw things at you that suck beyond belief.  And it's not going to stop.  It's a battle some, if not most, days.  If you're very, very  lucky, you have the tools to fight the hard days.  You have the army of friends, family, experts and super cute boots to fight with you.  

And, if you're me,  you have an adorable dog to lay next to you, looking proper and British.

And this amazing husband, Ben 
(who, ahem, by the way can finish the scramble at The Kettle in one sitting) 
to hold your hand and make you laugh and give you worlds of happiness even in the hardest of times.

It's been a hell of a year.  And tonite I get to celebrate at my favorite place with my favorite man.  Arby's and Ben.  How much more of a celebration could it be!?

Scar - One Year Later




How to Love Pumpkins

I love pumpkins.  I assume the rest of the world does, too.  Here is a detailed set of instructions on how best to love pumpkins the Bacon way.


First, select the best specimen.

Second, get a love thing going.

Introduce the pumpkin to your family.
Good dog.  Good pumpkin.

Now, we get an idea.

And, find a knife.

Hack open pumpkin.  Carefully.  Very carefully.
See, pumpkin opens and we still have all our fingers.

Look!  Guts!

Separate guts from seeds like so.
Spreading on cookie sheet with a bit of salt.

Cook until seeds pop up.
Nice and toasty.  Good job, team.

Congratulations.  You have successfully loved pumpkins the Bacon way.  Enjoy fruits of your labor.

What to do with the now seedless halves of pumpkin?  Why, I'm glad you asked.