Christmas is coming!

Given my pregnancy history, I rather expected to be welcoming a new little one into the outside world in October or early November – and of spending the next month or so in the NICU, as we did with our other two.

All attention was focused on getting our house ready to certify for foster care before the baby came (we’re getting close to being ready, but we’re also getting close enough to baby coming that I don’t want to schedule to have the state come and visit us.) But, because of this, I’ve barely given thought to things like… Christmas.

But now we’re getting closer and closer to term and are still completely healthy (I had warning signs at least a month in advance of the other children’s deliveries), which means I’m coming to realize that I may well indeed be having a baby during advent. Which means that if I want to put on any sort of Christmas for my family, I’d better kick myself into gear *before* the baby comes.

So I’m busy planning and baking and buying and sewing, because Christmas is coming and so is this baby!

Last week, I bought all my baking supplies and made fruitcake. I worked up a pattern and a muslin of Tirzah Mae’s Christmas nightie. I found my pattern for size 12 month jammies for Louis. I purchased the kids’ Saint Nicholas Day stocking stuffers. I started putting in requests (on delay) for Christmas picture books from the library. I finished Louis’s stocking so the new baby can lay claim to the “baby” one. And I’ve prioritized the rest of my preparations so I can *try* to make sure the most important things are done before the baby comes.

Because with the way this pregnancy is going so far? It doesn’t look like I’m going to have time to prepare Christmas after baby comes. Because, dear reader, it looks like I might actually go to term!


A Most Extraordinarily Ordinary Day

I woke up this morning at 0545, when my bedside light turned on. I kissed my husband before he left for work and lazed just a while in bed, rejoicing in how autumn has encouraged my children to sleep just a little later in the mornings. But finally, I needed to start the day, so I sat up and took my blood pressure. It was 104/65.

When I was at this point in my pregnancy with Louis (34 weeks, 3 days), a nurse woke me up to take my blood pressure before she went off shift. It was greater than 160/110, just as it had been on the overnight check.

After breakfast and morning chores, I got the kids packed up and we headed out to library storytime, where we sang songs and listened to stories and played a little game. Afterward, we played in the children’s area while I chatted with a few other moms about breastfeeding while pregnant and whether tandem breastfeeding might increase the baby’s risk of allergies (conclusion? probably not).

At that time during my pregnancy with Louis? Our maternal-fetal specialist came into my room to tell me that we needed to have our baby sooner rather than later.

After a quick lunch on the go, the kids and I headed to ALDI to do our grocery shopping. The lady behind me in line commented on how brave I was to have three so close together. We packed up our groceries and headed home. We got stuck behind a train and I scrolled through Facebook while we waited.

At that time during my pregnancy with Louis? We did a external version, attempting to rotate Louis to head down so I could begin an induction for a hoped-for vaginal birth after cesarean. We got him head down, but his feet were down too – and as soon as our maternal-fetal specialist’s hands were off my abdomen, Louis popped back into the transverse position he’d been favoring for most of our pregnancy. We began preparations for a repeat c-section.

This afternoon, the kids and I finished our lunch at the dining room table before settling in for a “rest time”. I read a chapter of a novel, a chapter of a birthing book. I scrolled through Facebook some more. After Daniel got home from work, I sat on the couch with him and my children. We talked about our days, about what we’ve read. The baby kicked his sister and brother, who were crawling all over me.

At that time during my pregnancy with Louis? Extra nurses were called in to hook up extra IVs – most of my veins were already blown from my past four days in the hospital. Other technicians came by to hook up heart monitors. A catheter was inserted. My robe was cut up my back to allow the anesthesiologist access to my spine. I curled in a fetal position for a spinal. My abdomen was cut. The terse words “meconium staining” were spoken. My son was born silent. The awful sound of suctioning and, at last, a cry.

I rose from the couch to change Louis’s diaper. Washed my hands. Started cooking supper. Rejoicing all the way that I was officially more pregnant than I had ever been before.

Today was a most extraordinarily ordinary day.

Thank you, Lord.


Happy Birthday Crafting

Tirzah Mae has been on a major doll kick these past couple of months (which I almost took as a harbinger of baby’s coming – the last time she went on a kick like this was a week before Louis was born!) She’s been naming the dollies, getting out every rag in the house to use as dolly’s diapers, feeding dollies with the loose breastmilk storage bottles that seem to have only multiplied in captivity.

So it made sense to me that Tirzah Mae’s birthday gift from us should have something to do with dollies. My original thought was to buy her a nice medium-sized dolly that would be easy to dress (we currently own a ginormous doll – as big as either Tirzah Mae and Louis were at three to six months – and a tiny doll, neither of which are particularly dressable for little hands.) So I’d buy her a nice doll and make her a bunch of outfits to go along with it. It’s the sort of gift my mom gave us as kids. But the uncertainty of the new baby coming made me wary of trying a big sewing project.

Mama putting on Tirzah Mae's new "pouch"

I handed the doll and outfits idea off to grandma and decided I’d do some accessories instead – accessories that I wouldn’t have to size perfectly.

A “pouch” fit the bill exactly. And so I whipped up a quick mei tei using this simple tutorial.

And when that seemed a bit skimpy as a gift (but the energy of making something complex seemed even more insurmountable), I threw together some strips of fabric into a foundation-pieced string quilt and made it into a self-binding dolly blanket (using this tutorial for instructions and this one when I got stumped at the corners.)

Tirzah Mae and her dolly with the new pouch

It isn’t the grand gift I’d imagined, but I think dolly’s new “pouch” and blankie will do just fine.


Sometimes you have to adjust

Sometimes you spend Sunday afternoon and evening preparing your list of goals for the upcoming month of November – and the corresponding list of tasks for the upcoming week.

Sometimes your children wake you up around 11 and keep you up until 4, meaning you sleep in until 8 and are exhausted through the day.

Sometimes said children are also exhausted and battling colds, meaning that every little thing is worth bawling about and the couch gets more pee on it than the potty does in it.

Sometimes you have to close out the day, with its list of unfinished tasks and just be thankful that you made it through the day mostly in one piece.

Sometimes you have to adjust your plans.


Daniel Does Something About It

After a few months of sleeping through the night, Louis has started waking up again. Only now, when we go to comfort him, we often find his sister fast asleep on his mattress beside him – with him hanging off the mattress (onto the floor 4 inches below) in various degrees. Sometimes it’s his legs, sometimes just a foot, sometimes his head. Sometimes all it takes to get him back to sleep is to position him so he’s fully on the mattress – and sometimes it takes hours of rocking and walking and reassurance. You just never know.

But when I was battling the stomach flu this last weekend and Daniel was therefore taking night duty, Daniel decided that enough was enough.

He arrived home from church and announced that he was going to build the kids that bunk bed we’d been putting off until after we got the house foster-care ready.

And so he did.

Tirzah Mae and Louis on their new bunk bed

Wednesday night was their inaugural night in their new bunk bed. Louis was kept inside the bed by the rails all around. Tirzah Mae was apprehensive enough about going down the ladder on her bed to join Louis in his. And both of them slept through the night (inasmuch as I could tell since I slept through the night. Well, except for that time when I had to pee, and when the baby kicked me awake, and…)

I’m not confident that it will continue to be successful at keeping Tirzah Mae in her own bed – but I do know that Louis’s new guard rails are sufficient enough to keep him from rolling onto the floor, and hopefully sufficient to help him stay asleep.


Time to Stop Stockpiling

For a while now, I’ve been doubling a recipe or two a week, stashing the second recipe in the freezer for when/if I or baby end up in the hospital.

Tonight, I doubled a beef enchilada recipe that was supposed to make a 9×13 pan – and ended up with three 9×9 pans and one 9×13 pan, and a little extra. How does that work?

So now my freezer contains…

  • a 9×13 pan of beef enchiladas
  • two 9×9 pans of beef enchiladas
  • a 9×9 pan of turkey enchiladas
  • a 9×9 pan of Aztec casserole
  • a 9×9 pan of my mom’s meatloaf
  • a 9×9 pan of Cajun meatloaf
  • a container of BBQ pulled pork
  • a recipe of Swedish meatballs
  • a recipe of Crockpot BBQ meatballs
  • a recipe of ricotta gnocchi
  • a recipe of turkey tortilla soup
  • a recipe of oven beef stew
  • a recipe of corn chowder with chilies
  • a recipe of chili
  • a recipe of potato corn chowder
  • a recipe of West Virginia soup
  • a recipe of Great Grams Spaghetti
  • a couple of pizza crusts
  • a few jars of pesto
  • a recipe of refried beans
  • a dozen or so bean and rice burritos

That’s what? 3 weeks or more of meals?

And we’re already at 33 weeks with no particular end in sight (Eeek! It’s so crazy to be HEALTHY this far into pregnancy!) Go much longer and we might not even need a NICU stay.

I think it’s time to stop stockpiling.


Take heart

“What’s this song about?”

It’s a question Tirzah Mae asks me a half dozen times a day.

It’s a question I love to answer because it forces me to listen to the music that’s on, forces me to articulate the message in simple terms.

But this time, the question discomposed me. We were in the car listening to a random “Christian” CD we’d borrowed from the library. A “Christian” CD that was basically the prosperity gospel set to music.

I blustered a bit. “Well, this song has bad theology. It’s saying that if we trust in Jesus, we won’t have any problems.”

And as the song promised believers would be “on top of the world” and as the singer ad libbed what sorts of things believers would be “on top” in (money, physical health, possessions, families, fame, more money, more possessions…) As the song pushed on with its false promises, I was reminded of – and told my daughter of – a true promise Jesus made:

“In this world you will have trouble. But take heart! I have overcome the world.”
~John 16:33 (NIV)

I told my daughter that God promised that we would have hard times, but that those who believe in Jesus have Jesus to walk with them during the hard times on this earth – and that those who believe in Jesus have the promise that God will set everything right in the end.

And then I had to stop lest the tears obstruct my ability to drive.

But I kept thinking on the promise of God for a good long while. I was moved to worship the God who has overcome this world – even though all has not yet been put to right. And I was moved to pray for those pitiful souls who are clinging to a false promise of ease in this life and do not know the joy of trusting Christ for what HE has promised (and will surely bring to pass).

“If in Christ we have hope in this life only, we are of all people most to be pitied.”
~1 Corinthians 5:19 (ESV)

Tirzah Mae’s question was a simple one – and one I didn’t really know how to answer – but the process of attempting to answer it turned what had been background noise (and theologically incorrect background noise at that!) into an opportunity to worship God and pray for the lost.

Take heart, dear believers, who feel on the bottom of the world – whether because of a job you hate, an income that doesn’t seem to make ends meet, relationships that are broken, health problems that seem insurmountable, or any other thing. Take heart, Christ has overcome the world.

And, if you have been placing your hope in this world – in the pursuit of fame and fortune and comfort and family or in any other thing – know this, those things will never satisfy. All the hope this world offers is hollow. Place your trust in Christ – he has overcome this world.


Countdown

Reading the mommy blogs and the Facebook posts from pregnant women, you can get the impression that there’s a certain universality of experience for all mothers. Sure, there are often-bitter differences: medicated or unmedicated childbirth, vaginal or cesarean, breastfeeding or formula feeding, cloth diapers or disposable, cosleeping or cry-it-out. The list goes on and on. But all mothers can agree: the time will come when you feel SO PREGNANT you just CAN’T WAIT for this baby to be BORN ALREADY!

And surely this is a common experience for many mothers. Pregnancy can be uncomfortable, as can other people’s comments on your pregnancy. The restrictions (warranted or unwarranted) on pregnant women can feel stifling. Many women are eager to sleep on their stomachs, to reach their toes, to eat yummy soft cheeses, and to experience relief from the ubiquitous lower-back-ache.

But some of us, we mothers of preemies who persist in getting pregnant, have a different experience.

I think I can understand how normal women feel, how impatient they become with the waiting, the comments, the ungainliness of a heavily pregnant frame. But I can’t imagine ever feeling so pregnant, so eager for my pregnancy to end.

Instead, I tease about inducing at 44 weeks, about making up for lost womb-time.

I have two countdowns on my telephone: the one, a preset in the “pregnancy mode” for my period tracker, tells me how many days there are until my EDD (expected due date); the other, of my own creation, tells me how many days I have until I’m more pregnant than I’ve ever been before.

34 weeks and 3 days.

That’s the most of pregnancy I’ve experienced. And I’ve always spent the last few weeks of pregnancy in bed or severely limited, willing just one more week, one more day, sometimes even one more hour before the doctor comes in to tell me that it’s time.

It’s not time, my heart screams, even as my head nods and my voice tells him I’m ready to start the induction (or, in Louis’s case, to try to turn him so we can start an induction instead of another section).

As my due date tells me I’m nearing the last third of my pregnancy, my personal countdown reminds me that any day now my blood pressure could start rising, I could start putting on water weight in earnest, I could start spilling protein in my urine. Any day now, I could go on bed rest.

The road map is impressed on my mind: If things progressed like they did with Tirzah Mae… If things progressed like they did with Louis… But the differences between my pregnancies with Tirzah Mae and Louis also remind me that progressing differently doesn’t mean IT isn’t going to happen. I still could be preeclamptic.

Now, as the numbers on my countdowns slip lower and lower, I whisper my wishes to the Father who knows all things and who ordains all things for his glory: Lord, if it’s your will… let this pregnancy go to term.

-7 days

-14 days

-21 days

-28 days

-35 days

-40 days

I don’t want this pregnancy to end.


Catching breath

What can be more instinctive, more natural than breathing?

The deep inhale, the cleansing exhale. Oxygen to our lungs, carbon dioxide released. In and out. Over and over.

Automatic, unlabored breath.

We don’t think of it until something goes wrong, until we’re laboring to climb stairs or in a sprint to catch a youngster who insists on running out into the street. Don’t notice it until allergies plug the nostrils that usually carry the life-giving air in, the poisonous carbon dioxide out.

But then, all we can think is of our need to catch our breath.

This is how I feel about my routines, the air I breathe day in and day out.

I am a creature of habit, a lover of the routine. I delight in days that flow effortlessly from habit to habit, like breath flowing effortlessly through my airway to my lungs and back.

But when the exhaustion of first trimester met the exhaustion of a mother who hasn’t slept through the night for nine months and then a bout of food poisoning (for myself and the not-yet-sleeping infant) took me out, I was left heaving like a woman who’s just run up twenty flights of stairs with a panda on her back.

I desperately needed to catch my breath.

But no matter how hard I tried, it seemed impossible. I couldn’t figure out how to establish a reasonable morning routine, much less a full day one.

I’d set my standards low. I wasn’t worrying about exercise or ambitious projects. I just wanted to see the living room floor once a day, do the dishes after meals, and not have three loads of clean laundry waiting to be folded at any given time.

I knew from past experience that morning was the best time to get things done – before I’d lost my energy and motivation.

But no sooner did I have the dishes cleared from the breakfast table and already the children were clamoring, the mess was driving me nuts, and I was already ready to snap someone’s head off (usually my daughter’s, hers being the nearest.)

I needed to catch my breath.

In desperation, I turned to Google, searching “preschool routines” or “toddler rhythms” or something of the like. And more often than not, I ended up with a suggested morning schedule for a preschool classroom. Those were not particularly helpful, given that I was trying to get my OWN tasks done. What I wanted was something to tell me how to set up my own rhythms around life with a toddler.

And then I stumbled upon Rudolf Steiner’s Waldorf method and the novel idea of routines as an interplay of breathing in (internally focused activity) and breathing out (external activity).

I was intrigued, especially by the idea that the teacher (in a Waldorf school) should aim to be accessible and attentive for breathing-in activities and should be present and busy at her own work for breathing-out activities. I decided to give it a try. I reorganized my morning routines to alternate between breathing-in activities, in which I focused on the children, and breathing-out activities, in which I focused on the home or on my own pursuits.

And, just like that, our household slipped into automatic, unlabored breath. So many of the frustrations and irritations I’d been struggling with in the mornings? They were gone. The children could play peacefully among themselves while I cleaned up from breakfast and did just a few quick cleaning tasks because they had just been breathing in my conscious presence at breakfast (rather than vying for the attention I was giving my phone). They let me exercise in peace because I’d first filled their lungs with presence while we did our action songs and finger rhymes together.

Is it perfect? No. I still have plenty of times where I’m struggling to catch my breath, when the frustration and the irritation sets in. But now, instead of attempting to sprint all day long and only catch my breath in the evening, I’ve established rhythms that allow me to breathe throughout the day.

And what a difference it has made, catching breath.


Priceless

Tirzah Mae peeled the barcode off her new water bottle and affixed it to her shirt.

I noticed it on our way out of the grocery store and began to tease her.

“We need to find a scanner so we can see how much you cost.”

“Are you a bargain or are you pricey?”

I contemplated adding the numbers I knew, the ones I’ve quoted to others.

Half a million dollars.

That was the sticker price for her first twenty-nine days outside the womb. (Neither we nor our insurance company paid the sticker price.)

I thought back to my question: “Are you a bargain or are you pricey?” Yes.

I didn’t quote that number to my daughter, couldn’t quote that number.

Instead my daughter listened and watched, a bit baffled as her mother choked out the words: “You’re neither. You’re priceless. Because you’re made in the image of God.”

So she is. And so are you.

Am overwhelming truth.