Monday, July 27, 2009
7 months 1 week and change: Reminiscing
My new little human just 2 days old:
Thursday, July 23, 2009
7 months 5 days: New tricks
Sadly and excitedly, those days are over and we are on to bigger and better and louder things.
I present you with Audrey's new tricks:
1. Making the wah-wah-wah sound with her hand and mouth
2. Feeding herself puffs
3. All whilst chattering and telling some sort of story
She's obviously some sort of genius.
Monday, July 20, 2009
7 months 3 days: Has it really been that long?







Monday, February 23, 2009
41 Weeks: She Finally Arrived

She is fantastically adorable. Drooly grins and all.
Ok....let's get into it....her birth story.
So you are all well aware of the horrific "Failed Induction" by this point, and if not, it's an interesting read. I was pretty scared of going through that again but at least this time I knew a baby was coming home with me one way or another.
We left for the hospital on Tuesday, December 16th at 8am. I was sweaty and nervous. I knew what Pitocin felt like and I didn't want to go back. Me and pharmaceutical inductions are not friends. We got checked in...we were pros at this point. I got the good labor and delivery suite this time. Things are already looking better. Mother-in-law has already called the nurses station and been transferred to our room. We have been there all of 26 minutes. This is going to be a long day.
My wonderful, amazing midwife Janine is ready to get the show on the road....my cervix is not. Still holding out at a tight, hard 1 cm. Booooo cervix - YOU SUCK.
They start the Pitocin drip and we wait. This feels eerily like last time. Contractions all over the place. Monitors all wired up and not working right. I'm tired already and it's only noon. We have to instruct the nurses to not allow MIL's calls through anymore. She is stressing me out.
I'm not allowed to eat anything fun. I'm not allowed to walk around freely. I'm not allowed to do anything but lay uncomfortably on my side because the baby won't cooperate with the fetal monitor. I was not about to opt for an internal monitor (my baby doesn't need a screw in her head THANKS). I like our nurse. She ups my Pitocin because I tell her I can take it. I want progress. Janine says there is none.
Phase 2: A Foley balloon. Oh yes. A Foley balloon is a catheter with two balloons that are filled with saline solution on either side of the cervix. These balloons then smush the cervix and pressure her to give in and dilate. The Foley balloons are like the tough arm, brawn of this induction. My steadfast cervix does not cave to peer pressure. They tell me the balloon will "fall out" on it's own once I dilate to 4 cm. By 6 pm it still hasn't emerged. I already feel defeated. Janine comes in to check my progress. Things don't look promising.
Wait? What? I'm 7 cm dilated? The balloon was just chilling in there? Well duh, you won't let me move from this stationary position - of course it didn't "fall out." I feel a surge of energy - this is the real deal! Dan calls our parents to let them know it is eminent. Janine breaks my water (can't my body do ANY of this on it's own?) which is pretty anticlimactic according to Dan. Now the real fun starts. My contractions are huuuuuge and they HURT. It takes me another 3 hours to get to 8 cm. At this point, I've been laboring for 12 hours - half of which were probably considered active labor. This is hard. I'm tired. I'm not optimistic. I want drugs. Janine (the med-free, birthing center loving, crunchy granola midwife) looks right at me and says "I think now would be a good time for the epidural." I take this as a sign from God that I can cave now. THANK YOU GOD (and Janine)!
The anesthesiologist can't come fast enough. "Where is Dr. Shah? Is Dr. Shah close? Is she here yet?" My nurse says I'm the most polite laboring woman she's ever met. I love her. Dr. Shah preps me for the epi. I can't wait. I don't know how I'm going to make it through a contraction while staying painfully still. Somehow I manage to do it. Instant relief. I'm the happiest girl in the world! It's perfect. I can still feel contractions but no pain.
I'm finally at 10cm! ALL SYSTEMS GO! It's time to push. Or at least that's what the nurse tells me. I'm perfectly content. I "practice" push for 2 hours. Dan watches the baby's head emerge and then retreat. I hadn't prepared him for the "2 steps forward, 1 step back" phenomenon. He also wasn't aware that the small head he is seeing is actually just the cone that has formed from her stint in the birth canal, and her real head is MUCH larger.
The nurse says I'm a good pusher. I wouldn't know. Sweet, sweet epidural. I suddenly feel a strong urge to push. Before I was just taking direction - now I know I need to push. The nurse gets Janine. She has me stop pushing. WHAT? STOP? I CAN'T! Not even 15 minutes later, Janine asks for a "small" push...did I just give birth? The nurses are quiet and Dan is hysterical. I can't tell if it's good or bad. I freak out. Then Dan starts to cry, the nurses smile, and Audrey is on my chest crying. 3:15 am. This is incredible. She's so slimy and warm and cute. I am in love. Her cord was wrapped around her neck and had a full knot in it. Her acrobats in utero were not for nothing.
Dan cuts the cord and Audrey stares at me with bright, glossy eyes.
I don't feel like a failure for getting the epidural. Do I wish I could have gone without? Absolutely. Do I regret that I had more energy, was more relaxed and the baby was in less distress because of it? Not one bit.
Now for the stats:
Audrey was 6 lbs. 14.8 oz., 20 inches - no where near the 8-9 lbs. previously estimated. Janine had guessed 6.5 lbs about 3 weeks ago and Dan had said 7 even. Pretty dead on.
I had 2 small internal tears requiring a stitch each. Not too shabby. I proceeded to pop at least one stitch a couple days later. No biggie.
Audrey's blood sugar was perfect. Gestational diabetes be damned! My baby was small AND healthy - IN YOUR FACE!
Breastfeeding sucked from hour 1. That is best saved for it's own post. UGH.
We were both happy and healthy and on our way home less than 48 hours later.
Our family is complete (for now!)