Wednesday, December 31, 2003
The only thing I wanted to do today was a quick
grocery run. Paul worked 1/2 day and is napping so in a bit I'll wake him up so
we can go.
I've gotten so clumsy lately. My pinkie toe will never
heal if I keep stubbing it into things. And today I dropped a can on it while
sorting the pantry. Nrgh.
Tuesday, December 30, 2003
It
was a long wait (again) and the receptionist just cannot schedule my future appointments
properly. I don't know what the matter with her is. Grr.
But the
OB I met today, Dr. K. was very nice. She's 24 weeks along herself and to make
up for the long wait, she let me off having to go to triage for the NST for today
by doing a check with a quick ultrasound in her office instead.
Baby
was busy "practicing" her breathing so all is well. Heartbeat was 160 something.
I'm
up 4 lbs this week though instead of my usual 1/2 lb. It's the swelling. She told
me to try to drink more water to help flush it away, rest and put my feet up,
and that other than that there wasn't anything else she could suggest because
there is nothing wrong with me. Swelling is pretty normal at the end of pregnancy.
She'd asked if I was sleeping ok with baby squiggling around and
I said I was a bit tired so she asked if I wanted some kind of antihistamine to
make baby and I drowsy so I could sleep at night and I declined. If I don't really
need it, I really don't want to add another prescription to my pharmacopoeia.
No, I'm not happy when baby starts bopping around smack in the middle of the night
but I can catch shut-eye later on in the day when she chills out. Paul told me
the other night he could feel her whacking his back!
Came home to
find a pleasant surprise -- my sewing machine has shipped and is en route! Booyah!
:)
"This is day number 243 and you're 35 weeks pregnant!
You have 37 days or 5 weeks left, and are 86% of the way there. Baby's age since conception is 229 days or 33 weeks. You are due on 2/5/2004."
Nnnnrrrrrgh. 5 more weeks?! Nnnnnnrrrrgh. And today baby decides to be super wiggly and bouncy after a day or two of being reasonable. Of course.
Sunday, December 28, 2003
I spent most of today sleeping it off. My one productive thing? 3 bills, 9 personal correspondence, and then MAYBE 2 packages if I can find boxes in the closet later tonight. I may have wiped out my empty box stash... I'm just not sure.
Paul cleaned
up the turtles and did some stuff in the yard. He also slept a lot.
We're
both pooped from Xmas at my MIL's yesterday. It was fun seeing everyone but the
drive there and back takes it out of us.
Whit renewed our subscription
to Paul's hometown newspaper. Even though he no longer lives there he enjoys reading
it over the year. I find it amusing as well.
Paul got Scooby slippers
from his mom and a dinosaur toy. I got slipper socks and a yoga ball. From our
"Secret Santa" people, Paul got a 1 acre of lunar property deed from Jessica.
That was very clever of her -- Paul and his brother both like space stuff. I got
an "Expectant Angel" ornament from Miranda. It will be a nice memento of my first
pregnant Xmas. It was fun finding out who had drawn our names... I hope the people
we drew for names enjoyed their gifts too.
Baby got some surprise
gifts -- a dressy outfit from Angie's little family, and then a overalls/shirt
outfit from Greg's little family. Mom B. gave her a bunny toy that recites bedtime
prayers when you squish it.
Angie baked like crazy and gave everyone
dozens of delicious cookies like she does every year -- that's always something
to look forward to. But I have to hide these cookies in the freezer or else I
am going to RUIN my blood sugars for the next week!
The kids got
oodles of things from everyone and it was a blast watching them enjoy their presents.
I kind of enjoyed having a lower key Xmas with less stuff and more
family. I also enjoyed it being postponed a few days so we had a 2 day break between
one family and the other side. Paul's siblings agreed.
For New
Year I think we're going to stay home and watch movies.
Saturday, December 27, 2003
And
I ordered the same thing from Amazon.com. I still have to wait yonks (which is
what I was trying to avoid in the first place), but at least shipping is free.
Sigh.
Friday, December 26, 2003
Today we went
out to do piddly errands. Bank first. Then lunch out. (122 blood sugar, go me!
I think if I'd had milk rather than lemonade I would have squeaked it in under
120... but I'm getting better at this eating out thing.) Useless trip to Circuit
City -- we keep forgetting they never have home appliances like they used to ears
ago. Babies 'R Us to order the crib (will call me in 2 weeks for pick up when
it arrives) and check gliders (hate them all). Then JoAnn's for quilt fabric for
when my sewing machine arrives. Home Depot for screws, a saw, wood, and other
tidbits Paul needed. Then Sam's Club for new microwave and odds and ends. Then
home to call the sewing machine people and ask them why my guaranteed before Xmas
delivery is not here. Called my SIL who wants a baby photo of me for some baby
shower project. Called my mother to tell her about the crib/glider hunt and need
to borrow baby album for a bit. I have to go get the mail and then I'm going to
put my feet up, drink water, and read trashy novels. Whee.
What I did for Christmas?
I slept. A LOT. Then I watched cartoons with Paul and trimmed a blanket while
he added 3 more rows to his crochet afghan. I've got one more flannel receiving
blanket for myself that I had started in pink trim but then ran out of pink. So
I have to rip it all out and do it again in green instead. I took a shower. I
ate. I read a book. Slept some more.
I feel soooo much saner and
better rested.
Having 2 days between family Christmas celebrations
is sooo nice. Greg called last night to see if Paul wanted to go fishing today
but he declined because we're shopping today but from what I gather they enjoyed
having Christmas day alone to themselves. Greg put together the new trampoline
for the girls. I guess they figured since they obsess over ours every time they
are over here that they'd get them a "bouncybouncy" of their own.
Today
we're off to shop for many things -- microwave. glider. crib, screws, and a charger
thing for the cordless drill. I hope the sewing machine arrives today. Because
I'm also going to shop for cheap play fabric. Once it gets here I'm going to want
to mess with it and it will drive me crazy not to have anything to practice on.
Thursday, December 25, 2003
Fasting blood glucose today is 102. I'm supposed to be 90 or less.
After dinner at mom's it was 155. So I need more practice eating at other people's
houses and eating out. At least we're home for the next 2 days before I have to
tackle eating out at my MIL's house. Then New Year's, baby shower, and 2 birthdays
and I don't have to deal with any more holiday eating. Thank goodness!
Mom's
was very low key and casual -- we played another round of Pictionary and then
watched Chicken Run and Lilo
and Stitch since my parents hadn't seen those yet. Karen had asked me to lend
her a mess of movies so we grabbed a random assortment.
Dad is
stressing out because I have yet to back a bag for hospital. He doesn't seem to
understand that I have a limited amount of clothing that I can wear right now
and I have to be wearing it, not storing it in a bag.
Mom boiled
all the natural Chinese Prefolds for me and washed them twice. She said they looked
like gigantic wonton in the pot and she was right. But the wax came off and I'll
probably run them through 2 more washes here at home to be sure.
I
had a weird night. Even though visiting my parents for Xmas Eve was fun, I poop
out sooo easy these days. Somewhere around midnight Paul was trying to show me
new screensavers he'd designed but I kept fussing and went to lay down. He's been
trying to show them to me for days and I felt kind of bad about cutting him short
but I just felt so blah I couldn't deal with sitting up looking at wiggling things
on a screen. I went to bed and burst into tears because my feet were hurting and
I felt so moody. My feet were annoying me from having worn my sandals instead
of sneakers to mom's. The only shoes that don't make my feet hurt are my sneakers
but I wore a dress so couldn't wear sneakers with it. That's one article of maternity
wear I never could find -- dress shoes that were comfortable and supportive.
Then
I had this weird pressure start in my groin and lower back and it was weird enough
for me to call Paul.
He came over to where I was and for the next
hour he massaged me, talked to me, played guitar, and just tended to me while
I suffered weird cycles of... pressure. Oh, and the baby was moving around like
a crazy person. I can't say it was painful -- it was just a lot of pressure. My
bursting into tears earlier was from emotional duress rather than physical.
I
don't know if these were supposed to be a different kind of Braxton-Hicks, real
but light contractions, baby moving down closer to being engaged, or what. All
I know is that it felt weird, my lower back and tailbone would ache, the baby
quit squirming while it was happening, I'd get slight chills or shakes, then when
the chills were done I'd get a break for a while before starting the whole thing
all over again.
Paul asked me to describe it and I couldn't do it
very well. I told him it was a mix of something like feeling a lot of pressure
in my lower abdominal or baldder area like someone pushing on it, feeling pressure
like I wanted to poop, and feeling pressure like squeezing. It was different than
what I think were BH before -- those tend to start at the top of my uterus and
squeeze downwards and then go away. My belly gets all hard all over on those.
With these, sometimes my belly would get hard and sometimes it wouldn't.
I
made Paul check the list on the fridge and neither of us felt I was having anything
so major it warranted a trip to ER:
RETURN TO HOSPITAL TO BE EXMAINED IF:
A. Your water breaks or you think it is leaking
B. You bleed from the vagina (a small amount of pink, red, or brown discharge may be normal after an exam)
C. Over 37 Weeks: regualr, strong contractions (labor pains) every 5 min.)
D. Under 37 weeks: any regular contractions, regular pelvic pressure, persistent backache, persistant abdominal cramping, or notice any changes in vaginal discharge
E. You feel burning when you urinate or pass water
F. You have a fever greater than 100.4
G. Your feet, hands, or face swell
H. You don't feel well due to bad headaches, fainting spells, spots before your eyes, muscle twitching, or chills
I. You have extreme pain and/or rigidiity (hardness) of the abdomen
J. You do not feel the baby move. Kick count: if less than 10 fetal movements over 8 hours, call your doctor, come in for evaluation, or follow the fetal kick count per office instructions
Whatever these things were, they didn't come at any kind of regular interval and after an hour they tapered off and went away completely. Paul was feeling baby doing her wild little dance with his hand and stuck his head on my belly to listen and he reported more movements and squiggly noises like I was either hungry or digesting. Then baby gave him a really hard kick to the head which made him say, "Ooh!"
I didn't
feel esp. hungry but he went off and made me a small ham and cheese sandwich anyway
so I ate it (which is probably why my fasting is higher than normal -- eating
so late) and eventually got to sleep once baby quit bopping me.
Who
knows what today will bring.
Wednesday, December 24, 2003
Feel sooo much better after a shower. I
was so wiped out from yesterday that after I got dinner together I crashed out
and didn't want to take a bath with Paul or move or anything. I slept right through
the alarm to take my after dinner blood glucose. Didn't wake til 10 AM this morning.
Oops!
I was having a good time cruising through fabric.com
and then a quilt
gallery. So much eye candy! I'm a bit grumpy because I want to get on with
teaching myself to sew and even though they promised to ship my sewing machine
by Xmas, here it is Xmas Eve and nary a sight of it. Pooh! :P
So
instead of playing sewing machine like I'd hoped I'd be doing over Xmas, I did
two more letters of my "get it done before New Year's" stash of people to write.
I looove writing on new stationary. It's def. one of the perks of the holiday.
I can feel baby moving around inside me -- not as much on the kicking
and punching front -- maybe she's running out of space for that? But there's rolly,
stretchy, swimmy feelings.
Tuesday, December 23, 2003
[later]
Tired.
Feet stink. I did fine with my blood glucose other than restaurant eating so I
can keep on diet alone and no insulin. Yay! NST test also went fine.
[later
still]
Feel better after nap and snack. So my day...
The
OB appt. took a long while. This office is just so much more crowded than Dr.
G.'s office. I guess that's what happens when you go from a 2 person practice
to a huge one. I'm not really happy about their office being so packed, but the
staff I've met so far are nice so it's kind of a "live with it" thing for me.
The head of the office is also the head of my hospital's high risk team, so that's
why I'm there.
I am really happy not to be put on insulin -- I
plan to work extra hard to get my restaurant eating over the holidays in better
control. If that means I have to be carrying measuring cups to restaurants so
be it. I was telling Paul last night that I feel sorry for anyone coming to nutrition
juggling smack in the middle of the holiday season.
I've seen dietitians
before and because of the PCOS/IR I already had to be watching nutrition stats
and doing nutiriton math changing calories to grams and back again ages ago. Granted
all the values I've memorized are for a more lenient diet breakdown so I'm having
to readjsut my thinking to my new guidelines but it's not like I'm brand spanking
new at this. I had a week to prove I could handle it and skip meds I did.
But
I keep wondering if the ladies in my GD nutrition class did ok one week later
at their OB appts or if they've had to be put on meds? I can't imagine anything
more frustrating to have to do with baby's health hanging over your head like
that.
Anyway, I have to have NST's 2 times a week now just to see
how baby is. I had that done across the street at the hospital because they were
so crowded at the office. I got enough pillow wedges this time and it went fine.
I had my belly buzzed with a loud buzzing noise maker to make baby wake up and
kick around and she cooperated and then she was allowed to go back to sleep. That
was new. I got to keep the belts since I'll be coming in so much for NSTs.
Nothing
in my pee, blood pressure fine, no weight change since last week, which is fine.
We went to lunch and then we went to Dad's appointment at the VA
clinic. He liked his new doctor better than the old one but he's getting persnickety
about taking his meds appropriately and Mom is getting grumpy with him over it.
Dad's got a hospital/doctor/medication phobia so he's not the world's most cooperative
patient at times and he thinks he can skip meds.
Then to the pharmacy
and to get some groceries, then back home for me to await the UPS guy. I didn't
think it would come in time but my sister's gift just made it!
Paul
came home with his Xmas bonus so we're happy about that and he told me his coworker's
kid's liked the little gifts we gave them. He told me 3 yr old Evan was so excited
about the Cool
Cardboard Intruments book he was roaming the office dragging out empty boxes
all set to make one right then and there!
Paul's sister left a garbled
message on our machine and I just got a hold of my MIL. She's at the emergency
room -- Mawmaw is back in hospital. So she was only released for one day. Things
are not looking well. Her blood pressure is now too low, she's developed a urinary
tract infection, pneumonia, fluid in her lungs, and has not woken all day. They
are about to do a CAT scan on her head but to me it sounds like a coma if she's
been so unresponsive. I'm glad we went to see her on Sunday and we could talk
with her a bit even if she was disoriented but to be honest I will be really,
really surprised if she makes it to New Year's. :(
I told my MIL
to please call us if she wanted Paul to be there with her. She said that was ok
and he really ought to be with me and I told her that if she needed him to be
there to please not hesitate. I couldn't come down for obvious reasons but I'd
already spoken to my parents about Mawmaw so Paul would just drop me off there
on the way down. And I'd be there in thought. Paul's sister was flying out to
her in-laws tonight and I don't know if she went after all or not. If need be
Paul and his brother could be there pretty quickly and leave their respective
pregnant wives home.
So. December continues to be a pretty wacko
kind of month.
Monday, December 22, 2003
We took Mom out to dinner to chat and one of the many things we
talked about was Paul's teenage cousin being 6 weeks pregnant. Shocker for us
both esp. since after her older sister went through that whole teen pregnancy
thing you'd think it serve as warning enough to be sensible and not put herself
in the same situation.
OB appt. tomorrow and then I'm off for the
holidays. I still have cards and things to do but they can wait until New Year.
I'm pooped out.
Sunday, December 21, 2003
We
popped in at Walmart so I could get red crochet thread, then off to Sam's Club
to get Paul his spouse card and stock up on a few things. Then we went to my mom's
house where we played Pictionary, had dinner, and then watched A Christmas
Story. I got most of the red trim done on the cars and trucks baby blanket
and finished it up watchign South Park once we got home.
I'm trying
to get Paul up and about so we can shower, lunch, and then see about going to
visit Mawmaw in the hospital. I'd rather go early and come home early than go
late and be coming home late.
[later]
Ok, he's up and he's
going to call to get directions to the hospital Mawmaw is at. I'm glad we're going
to see her -- I hope it cheers her up.
What I'm not excited about
is grabbing a drive-thru crap lunch from Mcdonald's. I'd rather have something
else but it's the only thing we can have that's close to the on ramp to the interstate
and I know Paul doesn't want to go way out of the way. They're building a Subway
on the other street so I'll be glad once that is done. In the meanwhile, I'm stuck
with stinky McD's.
After checking their website, that actually has
nutrition
info AND diabetes
exchange suggestions (hear that Chili's?! Even crap McD's has this info posted!)
I'm having a quarter pounder no cheese, a side salad, and 1% milk. I've already
had 6 oz low-sodium V8 to make up my missing vegetable exchange and my prenatal
vitamin. It's going to break down to a total of 580 calories made up of 43% carbs,
23% protein, and 34% fat. I'm amazed I managed it so the fat wasn't a lot worse.
I
need to find a diabetes eating out chart thingie for popular restaurants. With
all these holiday gatherings and all the eating out we still are going to be doing,
it would be easier if I already knew what to order where ahead of time.
Saturday, December 20, 2003
Met
our doula at Chili's. We both liked her very much and we chatted about different
things. She gave us some example birth plans so we can start getting that together
so she knows what we want and how to support us re: advocacy.
Mawmaw
is out of surgery ok, but no details on the answering machine so maybe tomorrow.
Friday, December 19, 2003
Meanwhile I was crusing the Chili's
website. So annoying... I don't see why all restaurants don't just POST their
nutrition information online and make life easier. We KNOW eating out is loaded
with calories. We aren't stupid. And do they really think it would hurt sales
THAT badly to just make the info public? Jeez. Anyone who is worried about it
from a weight loss standpoint already knows, and people who don't care, still
won't care. All they do is make life hellish for the people who have to track
nutrition crap (high cholesterol people, diabetic people, allergy people, etc.)
I
had to call Chili's 1-800 number to get calories, fat, carbs, and protein for
their Old Timer burger. They won't give you anything else, but at least I got
that much. If you were wondering, It's about 793 cal. for the burger. Then 45
g fat, 52 g carb, and 45 g protein. I usually skip the fries and have a naked
corn on the cob instead.
I asked the guy to give the values for cheese so
I could substract it from the burger because I never get it with cheese.
At
least now I can plan my lunch to accomodate dinner out... blood glucose readings
for today are great so far so hopefully Chili's tonight to meet our doula won't
wreck it.
Today I have
to wait for the lojack guy to come and stick it into my car. Then I have to find
the old car's repair papers and stuff to give to my dad so he quits bugging me.
Sometimes I wonder if it wouldn't have been easier to just trade it in rather
than give it to Dad. Sigh.
Later today Mawmaw has her shoulder
surgery. My MIL will call around 3 or 4 PM to let us know how it went. And we
go meet our doula for dinner in the evening.
Last night I was watching
old South Park cartoons and finished two more baby blanket trims. I'm giving them
to Kimberly, my niece-to-be, for Xmas. My SIL Donna is about a trimester behind
me and since I was doing a bunch for myself, I thought it would be nice to do
two extras for their new baby.
Reader Amy asks how to punch the
fabric while doing crochet trim -- basically you use a fine thread crochet hook
(ex: a 10) and just stab it through the cloth. The finer the hook, the easier
it is to punch it into the cloth and the smaller the resulting hole. Once you
go around with a foundation row, you can change to a bigger size hook for the
decorative part. I go with a 7 for that. Sometimes you have to punch through a
tag or a particularly thick seam corner... for those I use a chunky upholstery
needle. It is not threaded -- I just poke the needle through the layers a few
times to get a prelimary hole going and then I try it with the #10 crochet hook.
Sort of like a pilot hole when you are drilling wood.
I updated
all the craft blog pix just now to show more
trims and an afghan.
Thursday, December 18, 2003
On the bright side, all my
outstanding orders except the sewing machine have come in today so I got the last
of the gift wrapping done for the families. I have a few more cards to write and
I think I'm about done.
Tuesday, December 16, 2003
Later today I have to tackle the filing
and that's more groveling around on the floor. Ugh! :P
I spent a
nice morning wrapping holiday packages and getting things ready for the mail.
Tomorrow I'm going to look at more cars, and hopefully this weekend we'll buy
one.
This afternoon we go see the new OB so I'll write about that
when I get back home. Yesterday afternoon I had my GD class. It was with 3 other
pregnant women and taught by a dietitian and a diabetes educator. The first part
I could have missed -- it was passing out monitors and learning how to do the
finger pricks and so on. I already got that talk from Mary at Dr. H's. And I like
my Accu-Chek Advantage Kit over the Accu-Chek Compact Kits they handed out. I'm
not wild about the drum-style test strips or the shape of the meter. Mine is more
like a PDA and not so chunky.
We saw a movie thing explaining what
GD is and then the dietitian came along to teach us nutrition things like portion
sizes, label reading, diabetic exchanges, etc. Then we got our meal plans. Mine
is for 2600 calories and I felt that was sheer madness -- I asked her if she took
my hypothyroid into account. She said to give it a shot for a week or two and
if it gave me problems or if I was gaining too much, then to call her and she'd
adjust it.
I've got 3 meals and 3 snacks broken into exchanges
but thankfully on the side she has it in percentages too -- 43% carbs, 23% protein,
33% fat. I can't deal with exchanges. The math is sooo much saner to me in percentages.
So now I have to map out food for the rest of the week and go to
the grocery.
I'm still worried about Paul -- he's looking pretty
haggard and very tired. Mawmaw is still in hospital and things for her are not
looking good. Her blood pressure is still too high and she's got a broken shoulder.
Monday, December 15, 2003
Friday
I called Dad to see how he was and he told me to come along to get his medical
records from the hospital. So we did that, did a little shopping, went to lunch
and then went to test drive a Honda Accord. That night was Paul's company dinner.
It was at the Park Plaza Garden. I'd thought about having my wedding reception
there years ago but didn't because it was too big a space for my needs. The food
was great, and it was nice to visit with Paul's coworkers.
Saturday
we did nothing most of the day and then went to SuperTarget to finish the last
of the Xmas shopping. Now I have to finish writing my holiday cards and I can
do a mail run and get all the things that need mailing out.
Today
we were going to go see Mawmaw for her birthday but Paul's mom canceled her birthday
party because they had to go to the emergency room. Mawmaw had another high blood
pressure episode and took a fall because she got all faint or something. She's
stable.
It rained all day and when it let up we popped over to
my parents' house to visit and to give Dad his birthday present (Home Depot gift
card) and both parents anniversary gifts. (hair dryer for mom and bed tray for
Dad.) Dad was thrillllled with the tray. Mom had hinted that he'd always wanted
one and apparantly he did. Now he's trying to get us all to make him breakfast
in bed. I promised that if Karen or Mom didn't make him one soon, I'd make him
brunch. I can't make him breakfast -- he gets up too dang early for me!
Thursday, December 11, 2003
Wednesday, December 10, 2003
OB appt. this
morning for a non-stress test. I asked Paul if he wanted to go to hospital today
for pre-admission and he said we'll do after my OB appt next week. He'd forgotten
to tell people at work about this week's appt. so he doesn't want to be gone too
long and have them wondering what happened to him. That's fine. I just wanted
to know what is on my agenda for today.
With 8 weeks to go, I'm
looking at a very busy calendar. Apart from weekly OB appts?
This
weekend we do his company dinner friday and Mawmaw's b-day with his family. We
finish Xmas shopping the next day but I have to call my parents to wish them a
happy anniv. and Dad a happy birthday. Then GD class monday and meeting the doula
sometime during the week.
The next weekend over is when we will
celebrate the anniv/bday things so Karen will be home from college. We're going
to see an ice show. If I'm very lucky, I'll have finished test driving things
the week and I'll also be buying my car that weekend.
A few days
later, Xmas with my parents either on Xmas Eve or Xmas day. The other day we get
to our ourselves. Then on the weekend, Xmas with the in-laws since this year we're
going to wait a few days more so nephew is home from the military.
The
weekend after that is my baby shower with the family.
The weekend
after that is my sister's birthday and we go get our goodie bags from the Disney
marathon. Whether we pass our numbers along unofficially to friends or not is
up in the air but I do want to go watch and collect the goodies I've paid for.
(Registration does not get refunded if you cannot race.)
The weekend
after that, baby might come early. You know how they say any time 2 weeks ahead
or 2 weeks behind your due date? That's the 2 weeks ahead weekend!
So I'm
leaving everything from that point on open.
Some where in there
I have to fit another doula meeting, and then baby care class, breastfeeding class,
and parent's class if Paul wants to attend. These are supplemental classes included
in the whole Lamaze thing. We don't have to attend, but they are free if we do
since we completed Lamaze already. What I wanted to do was baby first aid and
a prenatal massage somewhere in there as well. The problem is when!?
In
a way I'm glad there's stuff going on to distract me. I'd be obsessing about the
final waiting otherwise.
[2:15 PM]
Finally
home. My appt with Dr. G. was at 9:45 and it was for a non-stress test.
He
wasn't happy with a "dip" he saw on the chart. I never got to see the chart
and
I asked if it was from my wriggling around during the test -- it was on a very
uncomfortable metal table. He kind of nodded and kept on talking and said
he'd prefer
I get and ultrasound to check on baby and since his u/s tech
wasn't coming til 11, to head
to triage at the hospital to have it done there.
He'd call ahead to let them know we were coming.
He also was going to turn
my case over to the high-risk pregnancy specialist. Then he stressed the importance
of me sticking to the GD diet.
This part irked me more than
him not answering me about whether me wriggling affects the
NST data or referring
my case on to a specialist.
Because when I first met him and told
him I had PCOS/IR I had asked if I should
just do the GD diet from the get
go even though at that point I hadn't been dx'd with GD.
Me thinking it could
hurt if I didn't have it and I'd be ahead of the game if I did.
He
had told me at the time that they'd check with GTT's later on and we'd deal with
it then
when it showed up. Fine. But now that it has showed up, just don't
be nagging me about a diet
when I don't even have diabetes class until next
Monday! I only just got my dx and Accucheck machine last week for pete's sake!
And even without benefit of a class, I'm keeping my sugars reasonably within range.
So thpppt! :P
Off we go to triage...
I think Paul
was a bit more anxious than me. Unless somebody tells me it is time to freak out,
I refuse to freak out. He told me in the elevator he had visions of me delivering
right then and there. Poor guy. He's getting upset over whether something is seriously
wrong and I'm getting annoyed because my breakfast is wearing off and can't eat
anything.
Peed, blood pressured, temperatured, filled forms, and
then a nurse hooks me up to another NST machine. And again I try to ask about
whether or not my wriggling around affects the results and while I don't think
she really absorbed my question well either at least I got more pillow wedges
than the 1st time with it. I even got a blanket.
I wasn't on it
for very long when they took it off again because the on-call doc came with her
student docs. I got asked a bunch of questions while the student doc did an ultrasound.
Baby measures fine,
everything looks fine. Cervix checked -- everything
closed and happy.
Since they took off all the NST belts so they
could do the belly u/s I had to get hooked up again to the NST so they could get
a nice long strip. The third time I insisted somebody go get me a wedge
for my side, belly, AND back because they wanted me to sit still for 30 min. And
guess what? Now that I was comfortable and didn't have to keep shifting to keep
bits of me from hurting or falling asleep, my results were a lot more stable.
Duh!
When the doc came back to tell us my chart was beautiful and baby
was great, Paul asked her if maternal movement could
affect a chart and
she looked surprised and said yes.
So I got sent home and I see
the new OB next week.
I'm not mad, and I think Dr. G. did the right
thing in sending me to triage to get checked out more carefully
if he thought
something was wrong with my NST chart. He also did the right thing in referring
my case to a high-risk speciliast
if he was starting to feel that my case
was getting beyond his scope. I still like him very much.
But it
drives me crazy when I want something answered and it takes me forever to get
a response!
I told Paul if the new OB wants me to do another NST
test I'm not going to let the attending person leave me until I have
enough
pillows to lay comfortably on. While I'm glad in the end there was nothing wrong,
if someone had just
took the extra minute or two to make sure I was comfortable
the first time we could have saved ourselves several hours of running around.
How can you expect a very pregnant person to be happy laying on a metal table
or gurney with no cushioning?! Sheesh. I've got 5 pillows on my bed!
On
the bright side, we got the preadmission stuff done today while we were there...
one less thing be doing now. And we got to see the hospital and meet some staff
-- we're still happy with our hospital choice.
Tuesday, December 09, 2003
That hat is too cute! I'm trying it now in a varigated rainbow. How would you make it larger for a toddler?? I'm not sure it is working for me. :)
Are we talking about this hat? My 3 and 5 yr old nieces can wear it and I believe I did it with an H hook, sc's through the front loops only, and with Red Heart baby sport yarn. The directions say to do it in F. It's a pretty stretchy hat.
I was reading "Exercise:
An Alternative Therapy for Gestational Diabetes" and thought it gave some
good advice re: exercise.
We
got a surprise box from our niece today and guess what was in it? A huge pile
of baby clothes her daughter has outgrown from 0-12 mos! I was so thrilled! It
was really a sweet gesture. Baby def. does not need any more clothing for a long
while to come... I updated my baby shower wishlist so clothes were at the BOTTOM
of the list and only in sizes bigger than 12 mos. There are other things we need
more than clothes at this point.
Monday, December 08, 2003
Granted,
Sunday Lamaze was better because we actually got some SLEEP on Saturday night
and it was 12-4 rather than 9-5.
First we watched the medical intervention
part of the movie and then Teacher did show and tell again only this time related
to that segment of the movie. She'd explain the item and then pass it around the
class. So we saw a bulb aspirator, ID tags, umbilical cord clamps, forceps, a
vacuum extractor, catheter thing that goes in the epidural needle, internal fetal
monitor, extrenal monitor belts, pitocin tubes, etc. A bit of a talk about breech
babies and turning them and then the other section of the movie about ceasarean
sections. Then a longer talk about medical interventions like Stadol shots or
different epidurals and what stage it is appropriate to give them in. In the movie
they had sterile water
injections which I hadn't heard of and thought were interested but my hopsital
doesn't do those. I plan on asking Terri or Dr G. about it because perhaps if
enough people start asking they'll start doing it. It interests me because it
sounds like something I can tolerate a lot better than some of the other options.
Paul was pretty grossed out over the epidural part of the movie and after all
the risks were listed he later told me he could def. see why the whole idea of
one turns me off and why I'd leave it as a last resort and avoid it if possible.
A break, then we reviewed the breathing patterns from yesterday
and learned a new one. We practiced that for a while and then on to learning to
push. Practiced that on the floor. But I forgot to ask WHY they want you to hold
your breath during pushing when everything I've ever read about physical effort
says to exhale with the effort and NEVER to hold your breath. I'll have to ask
Dr G. or Terri that also on Wednesday.
Then how to squat with your
partner sitting in a chair helping you. More homework over the next few weeks
for building up to squatting for 15 min out of every hour and leanring to focus
on the breathing despite distractions and coordinationg hand signals with your
partner. (This is starting to feel like trainign for the Diseny marathon to me.)
Finally
the relaxation/guided imagery exercise where we lay on the floor in the dark.
That was ancie way to end the day. Then we got our completion certificates and
went to visit Dad at the hospital.
Told Dad about class today and
he alternated looking grossed out with looking very interested.
Dad's got
a pretty old-fashioned idea of childbirth and he still gets queasy over the idea
of watching people give birth on video even if it's for childbirth educations
classes. My describing the ceasarean bit had him scrunching up his face in dismay.
Baby woke up and I tried to get Dad to catch a feel but she wasn't feeling
cooperative. Maybe he'll get a feel later today. Then home for sleep.
Paul
told me on the way to the hopsital parking garage that Dad's face when I stood
up and walked over to the bed to get his hand was funny. First he was looking
at his hand like, "What does she want with my hand?" then he was staring at my
belly like some kind of scary thing was going to happen.
"He looked
like a mixture of 'oh my god, this is weird! Help!' and 'Oooh, maybe I get to
feel the baby... neat!'" Paul explained.
Amusing because my mother
tells me to shut up and bends over to press her head against my belly to see what
she can hear without warning. I think if she could run off with my belly to go
cuddle it she would. LOL.
Sunday, December 07, 2003
Today was class #1 for Weekend Lamaze. It went from
9-5 with some 10 min breaks and a 60 min lunch break at noon. It was a lot of
review for me until the end but it wasn't bad to review. We covered 4 weeks of
material. For Paul a lot of it was first time stuff because he doesn't read quite
so much on his own and relies on me to keep him updated with anything interesting
happening in my pregnancy instead. He seemed to enjoy it and so did I. Neither
one of us wants to be doing this every weekend, but it was a good class.
We both could have used more sleep, but the teacher seemed nice and kept us interested.
It's the first time Paul and I have ever taken any kind of class together so there
was some giggly business, poking, sly comments, note passing and so on. Felt very
high school boyfriend-y.
There were 3 other spouse type couples,
and 1 mom-daughter couple. So just 10 of us in class. The first thing we had to
do was go around the room introducing ourselves. The preggo had to say her name,
her doctor, her due date, the gender of the baby, what the worst thing was about
pregnancy (nausea and puking!) and what concerns she wanted to address in class
(eating with GD). The coach had to say his/her name, what weekend activities the
couple usually did, the name of the baby-to-be, what the best part of pregnancy
was, why they were in class, and what concerns they wanted to address.
The
first chunk of class was a lot of show-and-tell with props. The first was a model
pelvis and explaining all the parts. The second was a baby doll and explaining
baby skull bones, demonstrating how baby might be sitting in the womb, how baby
travels through the pelvis and twists his way down, explaining different stations
as baby moves on down, how long it takes for babies to pink up, what Agpar scores
measure, etc. Another baby doll came out for comparison to the first baby doll
since one had a regular shaped head and the other had a molded, cone-shaped head.
Teacher had a whole bag full of props and she went digging for a bulb aspirator
thing to show how baby would have his nose and mouth sucked out when just the
head was born and a prop infant monitor that attaches to the babies head. This
made Paul snicker because she was flinging other baby dolls out of her bag left
and right onto the table.
During this part of class I discovered
I knew things already without knowing I knew. Like how vaginal birth babies have
all the amniotic fluid squeezed out of their lungs as they pass through and how
it might dribble out of their mouth and nose during birth hence the bulb to help
suck all this gunk out and how ceasarean babies don't get that lung squeeze business
and it usually takes them longer to pink up as a result because they have to work
more stuff out first.
The next prop was my favorite -- the placenta
pillow with a mesh bag attached around it representing the amniotic sac and the
umblilical cord dangling down from the center. I don't know why but it looked
really cool to me. Paul liked it too because during her lecture Teacher
kept popping the cord on and off the baby doll and this amused him. The doll had
velcro hands to help hold him in fetal position while she popinted at parts and
he had a button for a belly button so she could snap the cord on. All these props
could fit together -- baby snapped to cord and into the mesh bag/amniotic sac
with the drawstring closed, the whole placenta/bag thing into the uterus model
bag, then the whole uterus bag into the pelvis model. So we go through how all
these things work and fit together, what it means when your bag of waters breaks
and gushes or trickles, and what your placenta/cord choices are at the hospital.
You can have it just tossed out, or you can request to take it home with
you, or if you want to look at it all before it's tossed they'll give you gloves
and let you handle it and examine it for a while. Paul groaned when he heard that
one because he knows I'm going to want to look at it and handle it. I don't necessarily
want to bring it home to bury in the yard, but I do want the chance to check it
out. It just looks so cool! Esp. that 2 cell-thick amniotic sac part. If we ask
our OBs we can arrange to donate cord blood/stem cells so I have to remember to
mention that at my Wed. appt. We're probably not going to store it, but there's
no point in just tossing it either if it can help someone else. It doesn't cost
me anything other than sigining permission slips and possibly a few more blood
tests or something to see if I'm a healthy donor but the stab me all the time
anyway so why not?
Break time, and then we were back to discuss
the uterus model, names of its parts, and what things like "dilation" or "effacement"
mean, what a mucus plug does and how it can be lost, etc. I remember Paul murmuring
to himself, "Oh, that's where fundal height comes from. Fundus. Ok...." and I
must have glanced at him oddly because he whispered "Well, I've seen people measuring
your fundal height at appointments and I knew it had to do with how the uterus
is growing taller inside with baby in it but I didn't know it's because the top
part of the uterus is called a fundus."
Next came stages
of labor, how to recognize them, how long each stage typically lasts in first
time moms, what baby is doing at each stage, what mom can expect to be feeling,
how coach can help, what contractions are trying to do and how to work with them,
etc. Then some rules like... when in doubt, check it out...if you have a rupture
of memebranes you either call the doc or go to hospital... How many contractions
and how far apart before going to hospital if there's been no rupture yet.
We
broke up for lunch after that and when we got back, we saw part I of the movie.
It was 3 births that were pretty straight forward.
One was a woman
with a midwife and no medical interventions. She had her spouse, the midwife,
and a doula or nursey person for support. (Later we both commented to each other
how even though it looked intense, she seemed to be having the most satisfying
birth.) The couple went to a movie through part of early labor and hung out at
home for a while doing things like hot showers or massage or walking or whatever.
So the first woman saw it coming and had time to try different things. She also
tried more positions for labor.
(Paul told me later when we were
at lunch that he had a hard time watching her segment not because it was gross
or bugging him... but because all these noises she kept making and all these various
positions she kept trying reminded him too much of the noises and positions I
want during sex. So instead of paying attention to the movie he kept thinking
about sex. What a weirdo!)
The second woman was in a hospital to
be induced by her OB because of high blood pressure or something, and she had
a narcotic to take the edge off pain and that was about it. She had brought her
spouse, a doula, and her mom for support. She didn't try as many positions but
she did walk the hospital halls and rock in the rocker a lot.
The
third woman was caught a bit unawares at her OB appt. when it turned out she was
3 cm dilated and was sent on to hospital. She didn't have time to gather her support
people how she wanted, her contractions never came in a regular pattern, she didn't
want to try different positions because she hated to be touched or moved, and
she eventually wanted an epidural for pain, but the baby was born fine in the
end.
Tomorrow we see part II for the complicated births.
After
movie time we did the hospital tour in class with maps and things because since
9/11 they do not allow classes to go across the street to tour in person. I'm
ok with that -- we'll see part of it when we go in for pre-admission papers and
I've already seen quite a bit on the website video clips.
There
was an explanation for baby security so people know which baby goes with which
parents and the system for getting people moved around. There's the first waiting
area with 10 beds for early labor, then there's the birthing rooms for later labor
and actual births, then after a while recovering in there you go to your private
room. If it's a normal vaginal birth they like to move parents and babies along
as a unit but if there's a c-sect or some emergency thing and people have to be
separated there's a lot of checking of bands. Baby gets a transponder as well
that sets off alarms and locks doors if he's moved beyond the floor limits. This
made Paul laugh because it was those department store tag things.
Nobody
gets keys -- a nurse has to buzz you in and out of places and I wanted to know
what doors are closed at night and what happens if there's a fire. Teacher looked
a bit startled when I asked that but even as much as I'm grateful for the extra
security measures the idea of being locked up in all these layers during some
kind of crisis weirds me out. Teacher explained their evacuation proceedures.
This also made Paul grin when she got to the part where the nurses have huge emergency
baby aprons they have to wear with all these pouches all around them. Then they
can put babies into the pockets and leave the building with them all and once
everyone is out sort out the babies by their bands. I felt better after that.
Another break and then on to comfort measures at home, example
focus objects, example massage tools, strategies for dealing with relatives, getting
to hospital, tips for coaches, etc. Then we learned 2 breathing patterns and masaae
techniques for moom and coach to do. We practiced those for a while and then the
arm thing was the last bit for the day.
In that exercise Paul sat
behind me and had to provide a simulated contraction/pain stimulus. This was his
slowly building up to a peak squueze of my arm and then tapering the squeeze off.
Teacher would time it and point to parts of a bell curve to show the coaches how
hard to be squeezing when. Meanwhile I was supposed to me doing a one-handed belly
massage and doing the medium breathing pattern throughout the time interval.
So
Teacher calls time, Paul starts applying pressure to my upper left arm and I'm
sitting there having a hard time coordinating belly rubbing with my breath count.
I'm the only one in the class with asthma so while Teacher will count aloud for
everyone else's pattern, I have to count in my head and ignore her counts because
my asthma pattern is slightly faster. This was hard to do and in the back of my
head I kept thinking things like "Boy, I hope this interval ends soon because
he's squeezing my arm kind of hard... is this breathing business really going
to help any? Damn, lost count... ok... 2...3..."
Then to illustrate
how breathing patterns and such help manage pain by distancing you away from it
she made us all do it again only the preggos had to just sit -- no rubbing/breathing
stuff. The whole class suddenly started yelling things like "Hey!" or "Ow!" at
thier coaches.
Paul told me the first time he was worried about
hurting me and decided that when I started fussing that would be as strong as
he'd squeeze for the peak part of the simulated contraction but since I never
said anything he just kept on going until he was squeezing with ALL his strength
and having a hard time keeping it at that level for the whole 60 seconds. (No
wonder I have red finger marks on my left arm!) Then the second time when I was
just sitting and he had to do the same squeeze he didn't even get the chance to
get to peak squeeze because before he even got out of the first 10 sec taper-up
bit I pulled away and hit him because it hurt so bad.
We were both
pretty amazed at the difference in my tolerance during the two examples.
We
got homework assignment (practice the 2 patterns) and homework assignments to
practice on for the next few weeks with increasing pain stimulus to help us learn
to concentrate. (1 arm squeezed, 2 arms squeezed, 1 arm squeezed and one ice cube
in the other hand, ice cubes in both hands but no arm squeezing, etc.)
THEN
we went to the hospital to visit with Dad for two hours -- told him all about
class and we talked about car shopping some more. It excites him that I'm getting
a new car and he's thinking of getting a new van so we're trying to see if we
both like something form the same dealership if we can get a bit of a price break
since we'd be purchasing 2 vehicles rather than 1. So chatting about when we'll
go looking and test driving and stuff. We walked the ward with him for a bit,
kept him company through his dinner, had him tell us about this vistors that day
(mom and his friend and the friend's spouse), what his doctor said and what he
is supposed to be over the next few weeks recovery period, etc.
So.
Another very long and involved day. One more tomorrow, and then Monday I'm taking
off. No errands, no visiting, no cleaning, no nothing. I just want to have a sleepathon!
Saturday, December 06, 2003
So last night at the hospital... Mom told me over
the phone that at first Dad wanted only Mom and Paul to come because he thought
I'd get agitated and that would be bad for me because I was pregnant. I told her
not to be silly -- I don't get upset easily and besides, by that point we already
knew Dad was in decent shape and not in dire circumstances. So after she hung
up she saw Dad off in the helicopter from the one hospital and then came by to
get us in the van and made Paul drive the rest of the way to the other hospital.
By the time we got to the hospital they transferred him to, everything
that needed to be done had been done. He got checked out, they located the block,
put a stent in, and he was recovering. He didn't have any other blocks or thinning
passages. We got to see pictures of his block -- it was 100% closed! Now it's
open and hopefully the stent will work out. They are going to keep him for 3 days
for observation to be on the safe side but his attendant and doctor told us that
because they caught it well within the 6 hr window he doesn't think that any of
Dad's heart tissue died and at most there may be some slight scarring. He got
a 98-99% chance of recovering from this episode without further complications
so we were all glad.
Mom's going to spend the day with him and
we'll pop in after Lamaze later today. We talked to him for a while and he seemed
to be groggy, in decent spirits, but annoyed with how dry his mouth felt. He didn't
want any of his water and smack in the middle of a conversation he stuck his tongue
out at us and started feeling it with his hands like he was trying to stretch
it out so he could look at it. He looked so weird trying to look at his own tongue
we all busted up laughing.
As we were leaving Dad called Paul back
and when he came out I asked him what was all about. Paul started to laugh and
told me Dad called him back to tell him to make sure to wear a hat because it
was cold outside.
People in recovery get so weird as they come
out of it and start to come back into themselves. Paul never let's me forget how
I told my nurse I could see her brains through her nostrils when she leaned over
to check on me post-endoscopy a few years ago.
Friday, December 05, 2003
Paul
came home early from work because he felt sick and collected me at Mom's around
4:30. I was taking a nap at home when Mom calls at 7 to tell me Dad's fainted
and has been taken off by 911 and she's going to follow them in their car. She's
called several times as she gets more news and it turns out Dad had a heart attack
and they are taking him by helicopter to a different hospital that has more heart/cardiology
stuff. She says he's doing fine and is very calm and she sounds fine but we're
going to go with her to see Dad get settled for the night. They are keeping him
for observation.
Thursday, December 04, 2003
We're sort of back.. at least on one of the home machines. Paul's working on getting the rest of our little network happy behind the firewall and cooperating with our new DSL line. So a longer update...
Thanksgiving and Paul's birthday were nice.
We went with my parents to my MIL's and got to see the family for a bit. Mom B.
was worried I was upset with her or something later but I explained I wasn't upset
-- I'm just tired and very pregnant. Baby has become even more active (how could
that be possible?!) and I'm feeling it. Donna was also feeling uber-pregnant and
we probably looked funny flopped on the sofa together. I'd gotten used to the
crazy kicking and then baby goes and surprises me again. It's really weird to
be sitting down, minding my own business and have my boob flop up because baby
has kicked my stomach THAT hard. Sometimes I watch my stomach and see body parts
stretching my skin out with punches. Very cool.
Mawmaw is back from
hospital after going in for observation beause she had super high blood pressure
over Thanksgiving. They think it was a reaction to her meds so they've changed
it, and she's doing better. My own grandmother is thinking of coming down to visit
and meet the new baby so Mom is trying to get a room ready for her mom. Paul has
never met any of my mother's realtives so meeting Popo will be interesting for
him.
I get my car back tomorrow so that ought to help some -- doing
some errands during the week rather than piling it all on at once on the weekends
when Paul is home and can help or going with my parents to do things. My parents
have been very good about taking me to my doc appts and helping out -- it's just
that Dad drives a bit too jerky for me right now and riding around with him when
he takes sharp corners makes me want to puke. He's trying to remember I'm pregnant
and can't take the motion like that. And now I can car shop in earnest since I
can drive over to car dealerships and check out new models at my own speed.
Anyway...
a lot of endoc appts (4) and OB appts (2) over the last two weeks. I can't even
remember the first OB appt... it was routine.
Dr. H (endoc) got
the last A1C's from Dr. G. (OB) and wasn't happy with them being high normal,
but my thyroid is doing fine. So he made me come back for another GTT but promised
I could eat food instead of drinking more foul glucola.
So I went
back again and did a 3 hr test were they took 4 blood draws. Basically just like
the previous 3 HR GTT only I got to eat Nature Valley Banana Nut bars and I didn't
throw them up. Hooray! I did get a little faint near the end and they let me lay
down and brought my mother to me to keep me company. To come in fasting and get
nothing but 2 granolas and then wait for 3 hours more before having lunch -- ugh.
I was getting quite grumpy, hungry, and light-headed.
They called
me that afternoon to tell me my results were over and that I had to come in again
Monday to see Mary, the diabetic educator to pick up an Accucheck machine and
learn to use it. So I go over there again for the third time, get taught to use
the little machine and make another appt. for Thursday to see Dr. J. and show
her how my blood sugars are. Stabbing my fingers with a lancet pen thingie 4 times
a day isn't my idea of thrills but it's not too bad.
Wed. I saw
Terri, the midwife, for my 2nd OB appt. My iron is 11.6 (last time was 11.7) so
I'm escaping extra iron supplements so far. My weight gain was fine, my blood
pressure stable. Baby's heartbeat was 147 bpm and really LOUD on the doppler.
Even Terri commented and how strong it sounded.
She took down copies
of my blood sugar chart, gave me a gestational diabetes diet, and gave me the
number for diabetes nutrition class. She was happy with the numbers since they're
all under 140. And the OB moved me to once-a-week visits a bit early and I get
a non-stress test next week and an extra ultrasound the week after that. Like
the endoc. they've decided it's better to just play it on the safe side and watch
me more closely.
Today I saw Dr. J. (other endoc. since Dr. H. was
booked up) and she took copies of my blood sugar chart, and she wants my numbers
under 120. Apparantly they go with a different standard. She thinks between diet
and exercise it should be under control because I'm not sooo far over 120.
My
fastings are 70-80 where they want under 100. For my post-meal numbers I'm 100-138.
The 138 came from too much juice in one sitting -- I'm starting to figure out
how much of what I can have. But it is going to feel really stupid to put back
a whole bottle of juice when there is only 3 or 4 oz left in it.
I
have to call her in 2 weeks and report my numbers again and if they are not stable
looking she's going to send me to a dietitian. She explained that my test results
AFTER eating were ok but my fasting that day was off so they're just going to
be safe and monitor me anyway for the last 2 mos of this pregnancy. I asked her
to find out if Glucophage affects breastfeeding or not. Because I think I'd feel
best going back on it when I'm allowed to. (PCOS/IR -- I don't think you ever
get "cured" -- you just learn to deal with it. But neither do I want type II diabetes
later.)
I got a call from the hospital regarding the diabetes nutrition
class and if my insurance does not cover it, it will be $300 for the 1 day class.
Personally, I'd rather go see Karen, my old dietitian, and fork over the $45 it
costs me to see her instead. Who wouldn't prefer one-on-one to a group setting?
Speaking of class...
This weekend is our Lamaze class -- it will
be an interesting experience with Paul. The midwife told us to take lots of notes
over things we had questions about and as the weeks go on we can start talking
about how I want to birth the baby and how the hospital does things vs. how their
practice does things. I measured 31 inches at 31 weeks pregnant for fundal height
so nobody is getting excited about baby being too big or anything. I've been gaining
1 lb a week or so in third trimester so that looks fine too. So hopefully all
this extra attention will wind up being just that -- extra attention but nothing
distressing coming out of it.
I called my doula so we can hopefully
meet some time soon now that Thanksgiving is over.
I got the out
of town kids Xmas shopping done, so now I have to finish with my out of towners
and mail things off.
Paul told me his brother e-mailed that it looks
like they are having another little girl by their ultrasound. Not 100% sure, but
it's looking like a girl.
I washed all the 0-3 mos clothes and
stuck them in the dresser. I'll deal with the 3-6 mos. later. Even though cotton
does shrink a bit when first washed, all my favorite little clothes are 100% cotton
because they are sooo soft.
Paul brought home a little dress and
socks that his boss gave him. Larry had gotten it from Chad, a co-worker who left
ages ago, for his then newborn daughter and stuck it in his desk and forgot about
it. It's not til now that they've moved to the new building and are changing all
the furniture that he found it again. Of course, his baby has gotten too big to
wear 3-6 mos -- she's over a year and a half old now. Deborah is having a boy
so she told Larry to put it on Paul's desk and Paul told me it was weird to walk
in to work and find a little pink dress on his keyboard.
Paul put
all the things together that needed to be put together -- rocker, co-sleeper,
swing, stroller, etc. The living room has exploded into a baby circus.
I've
been playing with thread crochet lately to relax. So far I've edged 2 flannel
receiving blankets and I'm almost done with the third. I think they look prettier
than leaving the edges as plain seams. My mother made two for baby that way and
when I was sorting baby things to wash I realized I should just go ahead and trim
some myself. Mom told me coming back from the endoc. this morning that now that
she knows "Cletus" is a girl, she's going to watch for fabric sales in cute prints
and start doing little outfits and dress-up clothes.
So things
here are a whirlwind of various activities!