Wednesday, August 31, 2011

ON SPORTS ~ Reinforcing The Soul...

Last night I got to enjoy three of my favorite things that have been largely absent from my life since I became pregnant last fall:


  • Beer
  • Hot Dogs
  • Baseball
  • Thanks to my Dad, I got to go to the Red Sox/Yankees game last night at Fenway Park. He purchased the tickets way back in the off-season and I have had the date circled on my calendar ever since. The game also coincided closely with Andy's birthday last week as well as my own in a few weeks.

    I think we all know that pregnant women are discouraged from drinking alcohol. Throughout the winter holidays, summer barbecues and countless fun events along the way I begrudgingly settled for fake beer. I nursed baby Sammy for the first month and was generally exhausted - beer was not in the forefront of my desires. I had gotten so used to it not being an option that it hardly crossed my mind anyway.

    You may not know that these days pregnant women are also discouraged from eating hot dogs, along with deli meat, sausage and bacon due to the higher risks of miscarriage that nitrates carry. This was most troublesome for me since it took away all of the lovely things I enjoyed eating on a frequent basis. Do you have any idea how challenging it is to eat something other than chicken when you can't have any of those items, in addition to many crumbly cheeses like Feta or Goat Cheese, many types of fish and lots of other tasty food items? Try being a food writer when you can't sample most of the items on the menu for 9 months! My biggest desire of the food I could not consume was bacon. The first food that I ate after childbirth was bacon. But I missed hot dogs almost as much. You may recall that they are a key ingredient in one of the few favorite comfort foods I have successfully made myself in the kitchen.

    Watching baseball, or anything for that matter that is televised in the evening hours, became difficult for me to stay in touch with. The iron pills I took during pregnancy did keep anemia at bay and boosted my energy, but staying up all night to find out the conclusion of the Sox game just wasn't something I could handle like I had before. I went to a live game earlier in the season because the seats were free and fabulous. I was exhausted waddling back to the car after its conclusion and turned down several offers to attend other games later - something that pained me to have to do.

    So....needless to say that I was in heaven last night. Our seats were way up in the tippy top of the bleachers and we couldn't see the details on the field very well. It was a really long walk up and down the stairs to get there. And the Sox lost. But it was a beautiful evening without a cloud in the sky. The park was buzzing with energy. I was in great company. And I wolfed down a Fenway Frank and washed it down with a few cold ones. We stayed through to the end and I didn't even fall asleep! I am exhausted today again and I'm sure I'll be long gone in dreamland on the couch before tonight's game has barely begun. But for one night I felt like a real person again - or at least the person I was before my darling baby boy captured my world. And I think it is important to revisit yourself every now and then - to reinforce the soul. For me, that means baseball, beer and a hot dog. Thanks Dad for the escape!

    Monday, August 29, 2011

    ON BOOKS ~ The Best Library Ever...


    I have fond memories of reading as a child. In fact, reading and being read to are some of my earliest memories. There is nothing I enjoy more than buying my nieces and nephews some of my favorite titles each year as presents. I believe every child should have more books than they have room for - an endless collection of stories to suit each mood and fancy. To delight, educate, inspire or just send them off into slumber with sweet dreams. This was my goal for my baby Bumble.

    Unbeknownst to me, for my baby shower, my sister-in-law asked that each guest include a favorite book in their gift and personalize it with an inscription. It could be a favorite book from their childhood or a book that was loved by their own children. Each contribution became a building block for our child's first library.

    Because there would be so many books, the women who hosted my shower knew that a bookcase would be needed to hold them all. So they purchased one together, painted it and stenciled it to match our nursery's theme. As the shower progressed, they set aside all of the books that I opened within the gifts, arranged them in the bookcase and then carried the filled bookcase out at the end of the shower to present it to me as a surprise.

    I was so touched by the thought, effort, time and personalization involved in the creation of this new library for our little one. My one-year old niece toddled out and quickly selected a book from the bookcase and sat in the small wooden rocking chair handed down to us from a very kind family member. What a seal of approval!

    We received many amazing gifts that day, many of which we registered for. The most treasured was the bookcase and the piles of books - some classics that I was familiar with and some new publications that I look forward to discovering with our son. You can register for and purchase all of the fancy inventions that the baby business says you need to have. But you will always remember the gifts that come from the heart, not a wish list. Because of some creative and special women who planned and attended my shower, baby Sammy now has the best library ever. The best way I know to thank them is to make sure he grows up to be a voracious reader - like his mom.

    Thursday, August 25, 2011

    ON FAMILY ~ A Baby Story Behind The Blog...


    So I bet you would like to know how we went from our normal On Blogging posts to suddenly throwing up a photo of a newborn announcing the birth of our little boy. Two things you should already know about us Bumbles - we like revealing happy surprises and we are private folks. So when we discovered we were expecting, I decided right away that the news would stay off the blog until our baby was born.

    A part of me was paranoid. As a first time mother to be, I was of course anxious about the pregnancy and all the pitfalls that the medical community scares you with on a regular basis with tests and evaluations. In addition, I was a geriatric mother to be since I was well beyond the ripe old age of 35. Which means that my risks for all of those pitfalls multiply by scary numbers. So if I was worried enough to hold my breath the first few months and keep the news a secret from all family and friends, I certainly wasn't about to post about it here right away.

    As things progressed and my pregnancy went smoother than silk, I was tempted to write about the experience here for posterity. But it was just as easy to document things privately with the same results. And so the secret remained.

    At one point, when certain hurdles had passed, I did share the news privately with a few bloggers I have ongoing relationships with through collaborations or friendships or both. All were sworn to secrecy in order to protect our privacy. These folks kept things under wrap and even sent along generous gifts and words of wisdom to highly inexperienced Bumbles awaiting their baby. A perfect example of how the blogosphere can be a wonderful place to build relationships and find support.

    Having a child was always something we welcomed but not something we went out of our way to accomplish. If it happened, it happened - so to speak. When we learned that at the age of 40, that baby we'd wondered about had finally decided to arrive, we were pleasantly surprised. It wasn't unexpected, but the particular timing did catch us off guard. Having always been a master procrastinator, I should have known.

    When you are an old lady like myself carrying a child, there are moments when you do math in your head and worry that your procrastination may have been selfish when your child is going to grow up with parents who won't be around as long as most kids'. And then you remember that life is fragile for everyone and none of us know how long our time here will be. So who is to say that us old fogies will die off sooner than later?

    Morbid thoughts, but they are hard to avoid when you are reminded of your age whenever you go in for a check-up. However, the perk of being an old pregnant lady is that you get to see lots and lots of images of your baby to be. I must have had a gazillion ultrasounds over the months. I have stacks of ultrasound photos - most of which look like sketchy weather radar maps instead of clear images of a nose or toes. But I did receive one of those fancy 3-D ultrasounds at one visit that showed me a photo of our child. With my nose - clear as day. There it was. Blew me away. This wasn't just a fuzzy grey blob in there - it was someone with features from me and from Andy. His big feet, my big nose. Poor kid.

    I wanted to know the sex, in order to make the name selection an easier process. You would think that with 40 years to think it over, we would have had favorite names already in place. But no. Over the years I had favorite names come and go. And then of course since every person we know had a child at some point, a lot of the good names were already taken. Since Andy preferred to have the baby's sex be a surprise, we therefore needed to come up with two names. Andy referred to Baby Bumble as Stanley (be it a boy or a girl) throughout the pregnancy in honor of the Bruins' quest for the Stanley Cup which they eventually won. Instead of a diaper cake at my baby shower, I received a replica Stanley Cup made from diapers. In order to select official names Andy made lists. I made lists. We compared lists. I nixed all of his names. He nixed most of mine. In the end, for a boy, Samuel stood out. It has a sentimental family connection on my side and was a name we both liked - in all incarnations of Sam, Sammy or Samuel.

    My pregnancy was pretty perfect. I never had a moment of morning sickness. No bizarre food cravings. My weight gain was gradual and within the healthy range. I continued to work out into my 9th month which kept me from having back pain or swelling. There were never any questionable test results. No scary pains or spotting. Nothing troublesome at all. My chart said I was a high risk patient but my physical being said otherwise. Being the worrier that I am, I kept waiting for the shoe to drop.

    Perfection went out the window when my due date came and went. Even though things were healthy and normal, my old age kept hanging over everything. And my health insurance was changing within the week, creating a new deductible with it. Then there was the fact that this baby was projected to be a biggy - around 9 pounds most likely. Get that kid out, they said. Inducement here we come. Two days of trying to coax this baby out was not painful or worrisome - just two days spent back and forth in the hospital watching bad TV and playing cards. When my body and the baby's finally decided to get their act together and kick start the labor process, things progressed right quickly. So quickly that I hadn't finished hearing the explanation of the epidural process and pros and cons before that first contraction hit like a ton of bricks. My anesthesiologist was speedy and got me numbed up in no time.

    Somewhere along the way I contracted a fever and the baby's heart rate spiked for a prolonged period of time. Since all the pushing in the world wasn't bringing that baby out quickly, I ended up in the O.R. with a c-section - a process that made Andy a bit queasy and stressed out. It was bizarre to be laying on a table removed completely from the action - without feeling anything or seeing beyond that blue tarp separating me from the rest of the room. Then suddenly this little messy head popped up over the top of that screen and looked down at me - my son. Baby Sammy. Off Andy went on the other side of the screen with Sammy and the doctors to cut the cord, clean him up and check him out (weighing less than 8 pounds contrary to projections). It seemed like forever before they came back to my side and brought him with them. I got to hold him while they wheeled me to recovery - my first private moments with him. And then he went up to Special Care to make sure my fever hadn't given him an infection - which it had not.

    We spent most of a week in the hospital from the inducement and labor to c-section recovery time (discharged the day before our insurance changed - woo-hoo!). We likely met every nurse in the department. They taught us how to nurse, bathe and soothe our little Bumble. And then I hobbled home and struggled through some additional post-surgery developments while family and close friends pitched in to help us out for the first two weeks.

    Andy went back to work and I sat here face to face with a screaming newborn. How strange motherhood can be. Another private moment - just he and I. He's giving me the old one-eye right now, waking from a nap whose quiet time is as luxurious to me as it is beneficial for him. But the alert time is even better - crying included. He was with me for 9 months - our own little dance between his kicks and my body that I knew so well. And now he is here face to face. Telling me what he thinks in a language I don't speak. But I'm figuring it out. Behind the blog.

    Monday, August 1, 2011

    ON FAMILY ~ Sam, I Am...


    Samuel Morgan G. aka Baby Bumble
    Born 07/27/11 @ 12:52AM
    7 lbs. 6 ozs. & 21 Inches

    Although our blogosphere lives have become non-existent while we sit and stare at our new wonder, he will likely provide plenty of fodder for future posts. Stay tuned!...