Showing posts with label babies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label babies. Show all posts

Friday, May 25, 2012

Birthday Bash - Happy Birthday Leaf

Today my baby girl turns one.

Smiley girl, you were not supposed to be born yet - and yet you were, and we are sorting it out day by day. Thanks to you, we have now spent every personal holiday (like our wedding anniversary) along with every major holiday (like Memorial Day) in the hospital - though, to be fair, we had your brother's help on that front.

May 25, 2011

May 17, 2012, Eating Dried Mangos

Happy birthday, little one!

In honor of Leaf's birthday today, and Acorn's birthday in a short 20 days, I'll be hosting three contests over the next three weeks, starting tomorrow - so be on the lookout for it!

Sunday, February 12, 2012

I Quit

...well, not quite yet, but I am quitting. Breastpumping, that is. I have been pumping for 261 days. I am taking meds to keep my supply where it is, and that's not enough to feed Leaf every day. I'm running out of meds, and it's taking progressively more to maintain that level of production. In that time, Leaf has breastfed maybe two dozen times. Most of them not terribly successfully. That's what happens with respiratory kids. I'm exhausted. I'm down to pumping 3-4 times a day, because there's just too much to be done. As it is, 2 of those sessions are when I get up and when I go to bed, and that's a whole extra hour of sleep I could get. I have exactly 6 1/2 ounces of my own milk in the freezer, and about 100 ounces of donated milk; My guess is that will last me less than two weeks at my current rate of pumping. While there's some hope of finding more donor milk, I have not yet found a reliable long-term donor, or even more than the one lump-sum donor. (This, by the way, is why I dislike most lactivists. I'd love to keep giving Leaf breastmilk, but I can't get enough. We couldn't get *any* for Acorn. But "get donor milk" which is the first suggestion after "pump and take meds" is just not that simple. It's only a viable solution if there's breastmilk to be had, and I see a lot of lactivists who are pretty adamant that anyone can get donor milk if they really try.) I'd rather save breastmilk for oral feedings and for resuming her g-tube feedings, and put formula in the continuous feed she's getting into her intestines right now. The formula will work better for a continuous drip, and the breastmilk will be better for her tummy as a starting point when we're working on feedings into her stomach. It's bittersweet, but I know I have done every possible thing in my power to provide milk for Leaf. I felt horrible when when I stopped pumping for Acorn, but I was pumping all day for a total of 2-3 ounces; we'd never really had a chance. It's a little different knowing that I'm providing half of her daily nutrition right now and I'm stopping anyway, but this has been so amazingly good for her - she's grown right up the curve and into the normal range for adjusted age, based on my milk alone, and that's an amazingly good feeling. Like the t-shirt says, I grow people. What's your super power? We're at 6 months adjusted age in just a couple of weeks. I won't feel bad at all about starting to work towards a blenderized diet for her g-tube at this point, and really, I think that would work better for the digestive issues we've seen anyway. I can blend up foods like spinach to try to get us out of supplementing her iron, for example, and bananas to make it so we don't have to give potassium. On the plus side, my old bras ought to fit again in a few weeks (I hope - I went from a 40D to 38I). And I can sell my hospital grade pump for about what I paid for it....which might pay for my blenderized diet grade blender...

Friday, December 16, 2011

On Birth and Privilege

I like the idea of various groups that are pushing for more natural childbirth options - more midwives, fewer hospitals, fewer c-sections.
I see something interesting happening though - while they stress that women should prepare for their births, prepare to go into battle if they have to deliver at a hospital, birth plan in hand.....they don't stress having a backup plan. And they're mostly militant that any other option besides what they're presenting is a bad idea.
Must be nice to have the education to know what the options are. And to have health care resources (like being in a state where midwives aren't outlawed). And to be healthy enough, and have a baby healthy enough, to remain relatively low risk (based on Acorn's birth, Leaf and I automatically risked out of any midwife practice - hospital or homebirth - in the area, and obviously that was a valid reason to be required to be followed by an OB). And it must be nice to have support people who support those choices. In some places it's also a matter of money - around here, a homebirth is about $3000, though some have sliding scales. If you're low income and on medicaid, at least here, they won't touch the midwife's bill, but they'll pay most of a hospital birth, so the system is flawed to begin with.

Now, it's probably just my perspective, having twice been through a birth that wasn't what I had in mind, but if knowledge is power, then these groups are nearly as bad as OBs who start scheduling c-sections at 35 weeks. Nearly 1 in 8 babies is born early. Complications happen. And when you've planned the perfect birth and get something else through no fault of your own or the birthing staff you're working with, you're setting up a dramatic emotional upheaval - even moreso if you have no idea what the risks really are when interventions start.

I know women who have left midwives and doctors over something as simple as "we want you to have a backup plan, based on your previous deliveries." I know people who've had complications crop up in a third or fourth pregnancy after no issues in their previous ones who were completely lost when they ended up in the hospital, whose birth experience wasn't all that bad, but for whom the emotional strain of things gone wrong left them crushed, alone, and unable to bond with their child.

Does a c-section interfere with bonding? Well, you wouldn't know it to see Acorn, though I can see how it can make it harder. But what about telling women how to cope with that if it happens? Nipple confusion and breastfeeding issues? Most NICU babies here get both bottle and breast if mom wants, with apparently little or no confusion, and more effort to help women to breastfeed post c-section or while on meds like magnesium would go a long way to eliminating the problems caused by the less than optimal birth. And so on and so forth - I have yet to find *any* group that talks about these things, or provides information to moms who do have anything other than a natural birth.

Yes, we all need choices. Yes, fewer interventions are better. But it seems to me that preaching that no interventions is the only way to go hurts women and babies.

Sunday, October 30, 2011

Almost Poetic

I've heard it said
that attachment comes right after birth
that baby needs a mother's touch
that baby needs to be at breast
that interventions should wait
until that bond is formed
that any issue later on
must have been because that bond was broken.

I don't think we give babies enough credit.

If they're right
my kids are screwed
whisked away early
from an emergency surgical exit
with nearly every intervention known to man
not touched by me until days later,
not put to breast until months later.

I think they're wrong.

I'm looking into big hazel eyes
that are looking back at me
checking between catnaps
to make sure I'm still there.
Her smiles when I arrive,
when she hears my voice, are proof enough.
And even when she was tiny,
being in my arms meant fewer alarms.

I'm not saying it's ideal this way.
Just that some let medicine get in the way
of what our brain and heart know are true:
that babies are meant to be attached to their mothers
and we shouldn't let an imperfect start
be an excuse for every difficulty.

Thursday, February 17, 2011

Well, the secret is out, sort of.

I told my boss. He's happy for us, but sees how complicated this makes his whole situation (our group is short staffed right now; I'm doing my job plus trying to keep things rolling for one of the empty jobs that he needs to fill).

I gave up today and put on maternity pants. I'm down to 2 pairs of slacks that are sort of kind of comfortable, and it's just not worth it.

Tonight I'm doing our longest ever solo drive with Acorn - we have to pick my dad up from the airport, and my spouse has other commitments. I wasn't worried about it until I learned that last night's nurse couldn't get him situated with his cap on this morning - she switched to a speaking valve to give him a little bit easier time breathing. Because there's air still moving through his trach with a valve on, he still has to be suctioned pretty regularly, unlike the cap which means virtually no suctioning. We went in to the doctor on Monday, and after looking him over, the guy said, "well, he doesn't really seem sick...but clearly he's not at baseline."  Gee, thanks. I said that when we walked in, so why am I paying you to parrot my statements back to me?

Anyway. Pregnancy dreams have gotten disturbing - that can stop any time. So can the morning sickness, though it seems to be a bit less this week. Last week was horrible again though, so I don't want to pin my hopes on apparent improvement just yet.

And I need to write about our amazing appointment with the physical medicine & rehab doctor, but that's another story for another time...

Saturday, February 5, 2011

Goddess watching over us

We'd told people that we didn't care if our child was a boy or a girl (and, surprise, our "girl" was really a boy), just that our child was healthy.

Before Acorn was born, when things started to get rocky, I remembered reading that one of my matron Goddesses (who is not known for being the most motherly type) was frequently referred to in mythology as a goddess that people asked to watch over their children, in a "keep them safe or take them to you, so I at least know they're in good hands" kind of way. And without a second thought, I asked Her to bring us through this, with a healthy baby....or to take our baby and spare "her" all the suffering she might face otherwise.

It was a leap of faith that I'm not sure I could pull off today, but a realization reading other comments on a post on a special needs message board may have changed my mind on that front.

It's common for Christian folks to say that they've put the whole situation into God's hands - that He will do whatever he thinks is best. I think us Pagan folk have the benefit of having some ideas on how to manifest the things we need and want...and even as we attempt to do so, sometimes it turns out that we got what we needed, even if it wasn't quite the way we were expecting.

Looking back....it pains me to say this, but looking back I was so mad at Her, after Acorn's birth, for not protecting my tiny little guy from various surgeries and procedures and IVs and needles and on and on. 

And yet here we are 2 1/2 year later, with a happy, healthy toddler (ok, yeah, he's still got a trach, but he's at least as healthy, or more healthy, than the kids of friends on the local natural parenting board, and at least as healthy as the kids at preschool). Most people meet him and think he's "normal" (whatever that means) until they realize he doesn't talk, which I know I couldn't say a year ago - or even 6 months ago.

And isn't that what I asked for? It's been a bit round about, and a bit touch-and-go, and a lot more complicated than we expected. But...we are coming through it all, healthy and whole.

So...maybe it's time to be a little more specific aboout what we want for Leaf, so we don't have to take such a meandering path to get to that point. A healthy full term pregnancy. A VBAC. A baby healthy enough to come home with me when I leave the hospital, without complications or additional follow-ups with specialists. A baby who breastfeeds easily. Milk that comes in quickly and a good milk supply with no fenugreek (I can't stand the smell of that stuff).

And I really wouldn't mind at all if it is a girl. :)

Thursday, January 20, 2011

Deja Vu all over again

This morning, I got myself together to head to the Fetal Imaging department for our 12 week screen. It got scheduled this week because my doctor moved my due date up 10 days last week, because he felt it was more accurate, being based on my last menstrual period. By that logic, had I gotten pregnant the cycle before (where I ovulated mid-October), I'd've been 4.5 months pregnant already, since early July was the LMP date for that cycle. *sigh*

Anyway. That's neither here nor there, though for what it's worth, baby measured right on schedule for *my* date, and a week behind his date, so they couldn't do the screen, because baby wasn't big enough.

This morning, driving to the hospital, there was a sense of Deja Vu. This is the route we drove every day for 9 1/2 months while Acorn was in the NICU. We'd driven this route for several scans and for 2 admissions to triage before that, and for several inpatient stays for him after, but it's always framed in my mind by looking at the NICU windows on our way in (other than his first 8 weeks or so, he had a window overlooking our drive in), hoping nothing had gone haywire in the last half hour that we hadn't heard about yet.

It's always the same - the parking garage, the glassed-in bridge from the parking lot into the building, passing the registration desk, and into the hallway with the big wall of TV screens advertising the Children's Surgery Center at the far end.

When Acorn was born, leaving the hospital without him wasn't the hardest thing for me - though many moms take it hard, I needed out of the hospital for my own sanity (it was the first time in 2 weeks I'd breathed real air). I needed away from the social workers who thought I was crazy (ok, not that I'm not somewhat off, and not that I don't have questionable brain chemistry, but it was like an intervention!), the food that I couldn't stand, the constant checking of my blood pressure. I knew that Acorn was in the best place he could be - it was crystal clear to me the morning he was born that him staying put in my womb was not an option for either of us, if I wanted us to have any chance at survival.

No, what was hardest was coming back the next morning. Into that garage for the first of many trips, walking across the bridge, surrounded by pregnant women going to Fetal Imaging, where I'd been every morning the week before Acorn's birth, and then past the birth center elevators, which I also had to pass to get to the NICU. I walked the whole way that morning, without any help, the furthest I'd walked in 2 weeks, and it was physically exhausting, but the emotional toll was so much greater.

How could those women be happy, when this possibility was out there? Why were they so lucky to have a "normal" pregnancy, but not me?

It's still a little surreal to walk that way and not continue on to the main elevators - 291 days makes for a pretty strong habit, and I can (and have) walked that walk half asleep, panicked, on autopilot, drugged to the point of nearly being non-functional....but also triumphantly, happily, and at peace with the world.

And for all of that....I'd really rather never make that walk again. If we have to, we will deal with it, but I really hope it's not another 291 days in a row.

Friday, January 14, 2011

body image, healthy eating, and morning sickness

It's taken me days to write this. Days and tears and honesty that I wasn't sure I had. And a homeopathic remedy that's worked well for my mood swings...

...that, and the promise of a chocolate milkshake on the way home as a reward, if I get through the last of it today.

*****

Food and I have a long history of failed attempts at a functional relationship.

I have a history of eating in ways that weren't healthy in order to attempt to be thin. I have a history of vague attempts at dieting (and then gaining more weight back than I'd lost to begin with). I have a history of living in a household where food was controlled to the Nth degree (my best guess is that a trained evaluator would diagnose my dad as having Aspergers and sensory processing disorder; his food preferences are very narrow, and anyone who doesn't agree is just. plain. wrong.). I have a history of alternately not eating for days, or binging on everything in sight when I'm depressed.

Add in the very disfunctional way our society approaches body image for girls and women, and you've got quite a mess.

For me, any "diet" that requires counting sets off a very bad sort of loop - and it doesn't matter if that counting is calories, carbs, proteins, or points. It's a way of imposing control, and control and I, too, have a very disfunctional relationship, except under very specific circumstances (and even then, I still worry that the very existence of that exception to the rule, by its very nature, is disfunctional in some big ways).

It's only been the last few years that I've really come to terms with this history, and come to see that there are other ways of approaching body image and food - ways that celebrate food without putting down the body I have, ways that celebrate the body I have without making me miserable about the body that some folks think I ought to have. Ways of eating that focus on nutrition, on giving my body what it needs to be its best (whatever that best is). Ways of exercising that focus on moving because it feels good, not because it's some magic ticket to some idealized body.

The last few years are probably the most functional my relationship with food has ever been - and that's not to say there aren't days where this fragile bridge of friendship has broken down under the weight of all that history. I eat until I'm satisfied, but not past that point. We mostly eat at home, and we eat things made from real foods - things I can identify, things that aren't in cans or boxes. I eat more fruits and vegetables on a regular basis than I ate in a week as a kid; I try new things, I use spices (we had onion and garlic and cinnamon and salt and pepper when I was a kid). I cook with cream and butter when a recipe calls for it, without agonizing over the fat or calories - I find I tend to eat less when I eat things made this way, because my body is satisfied more quickly.

If I'm gonna have dessert, it's usually going to be something fabulous, because I deserve it - why waste good calories on bad food?

*****

Pregnancy has a funny way of interfering with all this progress.  I had issues when I was pregnant with Acorn - morning sickness really threw things off, and my relationship with food was very tentative then. I tried hard to stay in a zone of peace about it, but regularly failed. There were points where I couldn't finish a hamburger because it was too much food. And the list of foods I couldn't stand to eat because of food aversions was a mile long.

This pregnancy, the morning sickness has been far worse. There've been days where I know I didn't consume 1000 calories, and I know I didn't keep all of it down (and you see that number there? there's a number because that's how paranoid I've become). I've been told protein is the key to preventing pre-eclampsia, but how do you even begin to count protein grams when you're vomiting six times a day?

And then I got medication for the morning sickness, but I still don't feel like eating. I know it's not good - it's been very clear the last couple of weeks that the less I eat, the more anxiety I feel, but we're already at a point where I'm paranoid about eating the wrong things, and fearful that the meds will stop working, and the resulting waves of anxiety means there are times I just don't eat anything, because it's easier....which just makes the anxiety worse.

On top of that are the cravings. This time is not so bad as it was with Acorn (largely because the whole idea of food is right out much of the time right now). And the more rational part of me knows that following a craving is not a bad thing - my body is smart and it knows what it needs, especially if I'm otherwise eating well. But I'm rarely that rational right now, and I'm not eating that well to begin with. Part of me worries that the craving foods are displacing protein, or vegetables, or any number of more healthy things that my body and my baby need. Part of me just doesn't want to eat at all, because it's easier than possibly being sick, or arguing with myself about whether it's the "right" thing to eat. Part of me worries that I'm not eating enough - and clearly, when I'm not eating at all that's true, it's just hard to know what constitutes enough when you have no appetite and are likely to vomit if you eat too much, even with meds.

*****

I'd say that it's more important to me not to pass all this angst on to Acorn than to actually fix it....but really, that's a sign of the stress inherent in the current situation. Our needs are equally important.

Acorn has always been a kid with feeding issues. A combination of sensory issues, bad experiences, a trach, and a lack of experience has meant that oral feedings have been a challenge. We are only recently not feeding him via feeding tube, and most days, he still doesn't eat like most other kids his age. He eats more foods than my dad, which says a lot.

It's taken a ton of work to get to this point....but here we are, maintaining weight and growing without the tube, completely normal for his age in terms of weight and height.  It's been a struggle for me too - I hate peas, but he eats them happily; even though the smell of eggs right  now makes me nauseous, I've made him eggs in the last week.

There's a lot of work that goes into putting on a good face for him - into encouraging him to try everything (even things I can't stand, even when I'm not pregnant), into encouraging him to eat a little of everything, in encouraging him to ask for food when he's hungry. In short, into helping him build a good relationship with food from the beginning.

But the pressure on me, from me, is huge, and right now I'm not sure I can keep it up.

Last night he and I had mozzerella sticks and peanut butter toast for dinner - he wasn't thrilled with the toast, but he ate the cheese, and we had a nice dinner together that we both enjoyed. That counts for something, right?

Monday, January 10, 2011

in the closet, or out?

I wrote some posts ahead, to be scheduled after I figure out when I'm telling people about our upcoming addition to the family. The first part of this was written at 5 weeks and 4 days pregnant by my count (and I know when I ovulated, so I'm pretty sure I'm spot on). The second part, at 8 weeks 6 days.

*****

When I was pregnant with Acorn, I put off buying maternity clothes. First, because I couldn't believe I was finally pregnant, and second because I was so stinkin' sick with morning sickness I couldn't imagine shopping...besides, I was embarrassed to be shopping for maternity clothes when clearly, I didn't look pregnant, I was *obviously* just fat.

A big part of that was the 2 sizes I lost while vomiting. Seriously, I know my doctors and my insurance company all believe I should lose weight; I don't really think this was what they meant. Belts were a problem at 13 weeks, I started rotating outfits in at 15 weeks (with those belly bands over my regular pants, or over my maternity pants to help hold them up) and I finally put away the last of my normal clothes around 20 weeks.

I bought some things I regretted, because even as a size 14/16/18 (depending on the brand) there aren't a lot of choices, maternity wise. Most maternity stores have limited selection at the mall to begin with, and then only have one little 3 foot section of wall for "plus sizes" which is funny, given that fully half of the female population of the US wears size 14 or larger.

Anyway. When I came home from my 2 week stay in the hospital, my mom packed up all my maternity things while I was napping. I was kind of glad she'd done it - I just wasn't ready to deal with it yet, but seeing it in the closet wasn't going to help either.

On the opposite end of the spectrum....this weekend I unpacked that same bag of clothing. I want - need - time to process.

And I want time to go looking for items to replace the ones I hate. I can go resale hunting over the holiday break, I have plenty of time. Because if I have anything to say about it, this is going to be a healthy full term pregnancy, and I'm going to wear this stuff longer than the 6-8 weeks of use it got last time.

*****

I'm still contemplating what to do about clothing. I have no desire to out myself at work just yet. But in the evenings when I get home, I long for the comfort of yoga pants. My belly hasn't grown - the morning sickness this time around has required drugs, in fact, and I lost 6 pounds between week 6 and week 8. Part of it, I'm sure, is constipation caused by the medication. But anything tight is just....too tight.

I did go buy some things on sale. And maybe I'll buy a few more in a month or so - I still have to figure out telling the people I see every day (work, and Acorn's staff), much less the family. But by then I'll probably be wearing maternity clothes anyway

This is the part I dread, actually - telling people. It's different telling friends. Friends are all glad for you - even the ones who hate kids, and the ones  who are jealous. Actually, sometimes especially the ones who are jealous, the ones who've had their own fertility struggles. They know how much it means.

Co-workers are funny about this sort of thing. They know you'll be out; they know they'll be expected to carry some of the load. I worry about their reaction, given Acorn's history and early arrival.

I'm still happy, don't get me wrong - but today the anxiety is getting to me.

Thursday, January 6, 2011

Mixed Emotions

Have I mentioned yet that being pregnant terrifies me?

First, there's the fact that my body actually did what it was supposed to, all by itself. That's completely unprecidented, and it  makes me wonder a bit if I was abducted by aliens.

Second, there's the timing. Seriously. Acorn will be getting his trach out in the spring, and if all goes well this little one - who I've decided to call Leaf here on my blog - will be born mid-to-late summer.

If all doesn't go well, Leaf will be making his or her arrival about the same time Acorn gets his trach out, and we'll be jumping right back into this whole crazy mess.

Third....there's a baby. In my belly. That will need food and clothing and some sort of child care and we've been terribly spoiled the last couple of years with good child care for Acorn that has been paid by our insurance, and we'll be picking up the tab for Acorn's care too.

Fourth, the morning sickness has been awful, and though I'm now taking medication for it, I worry about side effects and I worry that the horrific morning sickness means there's more to worry about.


On the plus side....

There's a baby.
In my belly.
And I don't think anything could make me happier

Tuesday, January 4, 2011

NICU memories

One big thing that's come full circle with this pregnancy is our NICU experience.

Ours was both better and worse than some. But we've agreed that should things go that route, we want to be in the same hospital.

Why?

Because part of the way most NICUs work appears to be based more on politics than on patient or parent needs.

Because we already know the system there - who is willing to be flexible, who isn't, which nurses to trust and which to avoid, how to get things done, what rules to push and what rules to follow to the letter, what things are in our control and which aren't (no matter how much the staff makes it out that they're God in this little world of theirs).

Because we already know the head of neonatology has issues with strong women (and I'm no push-over).

Because it seems to me that most people go into the NICU terrified, and come out just as terrified, having been through what appears to be a capricious system ruled by who's on duty this shift, never learning how to get what they need, and never really learning how to get their children home - it just happens by magic.

Because we don't want to have to learn the system all over again at a different hospital, with less family-friendly visiting rules, farther from home.

Monday, January 3, 2011

A Bit of Happy News

So, the long and short of it is, I'm pregnant!!!

I've spent weeks trying to figure out when to say it, how to say it. But I'm just so amazingly happy about it that I figured it was better to share, so I could actually say something about it, because I'm ready to burst. I'd hoped to wait until next week, when we have an ultrasound scheduled to check for a heartbeat and such.

And then last night I outed myself on twitter hoping for help with the severe morning sickness I've been dealing with, because I reached a breaking point, having thrown up every single time I ate yesterday, except one (right before bed).

This little one was conceived without the use of fertility drugs - something we did not think was possible for us, so all I can assume is divine intervention. There are a couple of Goddesses who will have chocolate and other goodies when it is next appropriate to do so. We had been sure that this fall was the right time to try again, until some family things for next summer came up that meant putting it off for better timing...but if an opportunity to try without drugs was going to present itself, at the time we originally felt was right, who am I to argue?

While I'm already hating morning sickness (see above), and there were a lot of things about my pregnancy with Acorn that I wish had gone differently, I really enjoyed being pregnant, and I am finding little moments of joy in this pregnancy.

I love being able to sit here quietly, soaking in this feeling. The heavy feeling in my belly, even though baby is not nearly big enough to make anything feel like anything. The warm glow that nearly crackles across my skin at times - that same energy that makes people comment on how pregnant women just glow. The very spiritual and yet grounding realization that there is a person inside me, just waiting to come out and let us meet him or her.

I don't know that we'll be finding out the sex of this baby before its birth - we supposedly knew Acorn's, about as sure as we could be, and they were wrong. Not finding out would be less drama inducing, I think.
Mostly, though, I am praying. Praying a lot, daily - for a healthy baby, and a healthy full term pregnancy without complications. If you all wouldn't mind, I think we could use all the help we can get on that front.

Friday, September 24, 2010

Baby Fever

Have I mentioned that I want another baby?

I know, it sounds crazy. We have all this stuff going on, and there is the liklihood that another pregnancy would be equally high risk...adding another child to this would be crazy, right?

That's why it's called Baby Fever.

*****

I'm back to trolling adoption sites, falling in love with children I haven't met. I'm charting temperatures (and approaching 3 months without ovulating). Fertility drugs and their accompanying mood swings were not fun...but I'll do it again, if that's what it takes (which it will....up to the point we are willing to go, which is to say, we're not doing IUI or IVF, but there are personal reasons for that that I don't want to get into here).

It's not as painful as before Acorn, but it's approaching the same intensity. It's not as sharp; it doesn't bring tears to my eyes to see pregnant women and newborns...but instead, a deep sense of longing.

*****

The other morning, I dreamed about being pregnant. About finding out I was pregnant. It was one of those amazingly detailed dreams that seem so real, it's hard to tell what reality is when you wake up. It was a dream involving finding out away from home, and having to tell other friends suffering infertility about it - something I didn't really have to do last time, because back then, all my friends who wanted babies already had them.

I used to trust dreams like this, but...I'd had so many dreams that my first child would be a girl, and instead I have a boy. So many dreams about 5 kids (always five) and yet I only have one....and his existance was "just barely." So many dreams about our business being wildly successful, and we've shut it down. So many dreams.....all wrong.

*****

And yet, I know that right now is not the right time. There are family plans in the works for early summer, and getting pregnant now would almost certainly mean missing out. And since it's not like it'll just happen, these things have to be planned, and if you're going to plan out the next year and a half of your life, you might as well try to make it convenient.

And who ever thought kids and convenience belonged in the same thought?