Monday, April 27, 2015

Mini project: Flower vase

Quick little project, inspired by the realization that the candy bottle looks like a little vase.

Candy Bottle Vase
One empty candy sprinkles bottle
Craft paint
Paper towel
Toothpicks

I removed the label (vegetable oil works great for this) and scrubbed the bottle well. Once it dried, I poured some craft paint inside it and rolled it around to evenly coat the interior. I then balanced it upside down on two toothpicks placed on a folded paper towel and set it aside for a couple of days to dry.

Anya was impatient to see the finished product, so I did not go through with the additional steps I had planned (coating the painted interior with a top coat, gluing a ribbon around the threads at the bottle's neck); I just popped the flowers in the painted jar and called it done. If we do another, I will finish it properly.

Wednesday, April 15, 2015

What my children have taught me about breastfeeding

When I was in college, my music appreciation professor asked us to write a paper comparing two works by a single musician. He meant two different styles of compositions, and was reluctant to let me write about Für Elise and Moonlight Sonata -- he thought I would run out of things to say. But I insisted, and he relented, and I ended up running a little over the page limit, so interesting did I find the comparison of these two pieces. I thought of that paper this morning as I nursed my newborn son. Because to compare my children is a bit like comparing a sonata to a symphony: It's just too easy to be interesting.

My daughter is a force of nature. In utero, she did not kick so much as play drum solos. After birth, she fought to sit, to roll over, to crawl, to walk -- never losing sight of her goal of independent movement, which she achieved well before her first birthday. Now she runs and dances and wrestles and tackle hugs and performs until she passes out from exhaustion (begrudgingly, after asking endless questions to ward off slumber).

Then there is my son. While there is a strong physical resemblance to his sister, they are unlike each other in nearly every other way -- disposition, sleep habits, musical taste, even their opinions of bathtime. (I thought at first that he shared his sister's newborn loathing of bathtime, but he objects only to being cold.) Comparing these kids is like comparing coffeehouse indie and hair metal.

What I do find interesting are the differences in their approaches to breastfeeding. I had assumed, incorrectly, that nursing was mostly instinctual behavior -- that aside from physical issues like tongue tie, nursing was pretty much the same from baby to baby. But if anything, I've found it highlights the differences in their temperaments.

Anya adored nursing. She looked positively beatific when I fed her, and would pause periodically to laugh from pure joy. But when we were faced with a (sadly not temporary) low milk supply, breastfeeding became a stressful experience for us both. She started each breastfeeding session by biting me -- I guess to kickstart my flow. When the milk was gone, she would pound on my chest with her tiny fists and howl with rage. Because of this tension, I often had to pass her to someone else to be burped or rocked to sleep (she got too worked up when I held her), and thus missed out on some key bonding opportunities.

Kai, on the other hand, approached my (temporary, reversible) drop in supply with gentleness. Rather than chomping on me, he finessed the nipple until the milk started flowing. I think his gentleness helped us nurse through the downturn, and the fact that he continues to use this technique means less pain for me. (Which is great, because some days all I do is feed him.) Once he's eaten his fill, he rests his head on my breast and hugs it with both arms. He isn't as overtly joyful as his sister was, but so long as I am holding him (or am at least within reach), he is content. Some babies have a security blanket; Kai has me.

I was worried I would not be able to nurse Kai, because of the troubles I had nursing Anya. Now I see those troubles were likely the result of a difficult c-section recovery -- nothing I did or did not do was going to change a thing, because everything I could control went perfectly. Whereas Kai and I have faced several obstacles, including being separated for a time during recovery, and are still successfully nursing.

My pregnancy with Anya was perfect, but being pregnant with Kai took a toll on me both physically and emotionally. I was in far better shape and had less morning sickness with Anya. Despite being in labor with Anya all day beforehand, the c-section for her went more smoothly than the planned one I had for Kai. If I were to guess, based on these facts alone, which baby I would have trouble breastfeeding, I would have said Kai.

I wish breastfeeding had worked out with Anya, but she is still a healthy, happy girl despite being formula fed. And while we may have missed out on that specific form of bonding, we are still very close.

I am glad to at least be able to share this with Kai, though. Not only does nursing simplify feeding him, but it has provided us with some truly lovely bonding moments. Which is why, despite the soreness, the inability to be separated from him for more than an hour, the loss of sleep, and the ogling from strangers when I nurse in my car, I persist in breastfeeding. Those few drawbacks wither in comparison to the benefits.

So the main lesson they have taught me about breastfeeding is that it does not make me more or less a loving mother. There are pros and cons to both breastfeeding and formula feeding, but the bottom line is this: Loving mothers feed their babies.

Saturday, April 11, 2015

I need a break from the internet

I have spent a lot of time in bed this year. Between the scary early contractions and the c-section, I have been stranded with just my smartphone for entertainment for months. And it's starting to wear on me. The internet is about clicks, not originality -- if something works once, we must run it into the ground. Here are a few tricks I am sick of.

Fifty shades of shut up
Haven't read it. Don't want to read it. It's a grown woman's adolescent fantasies about another grown woman's adolescent fantasies. And her stupid title is being applied to everything from food to how-to articles to professional discussions. Not even *that* profession. In fact, I'd be more understanding if the title was being ripped off to indicate some tie between the topic and kinky sex or abusive relationships or poor writing. But it's not. It's an attention-getting device, and a lazy one at that. Quit riding the coat tails of a fad and come up with a real title.

Natural vs synthetic
Natural is good, right? And synthetic is bad? The why is smoking an e-cigarette supposedly so much better than smoking tobacco? (Yes, I know the preferred term is "vaping." It's still smoking...you just aren't lighting anything on fire.) I admit to tending to prefer natural and organic products to synthetic myself in many cases, but I think we take the dichotomy too far. Not everything that is natural is good for us, and not everything manmade is bad.

The Yellow Sub: Why Use One Title When You Can Have Two
I admit to falling for this trap in my master's thesis. And it made me feel hip and clever. But that was nearly 20 years ago. The pithy title/subtitle construction is tired. Get a new gimmick. (Please see point 1 first, though.)

You're doing everything wrong
No, I am not. Your way may be cooler, or more efficient, or how the thing was meant to be used, but my way works, too. Is the cupcake in my belly? Then I ate it properly. (Quite frankly, I don't really even like icing. Half the time, I scrape it off and give it to my kid.)

And it is not a hack, for Pete's sake. You are not a hacker. You have hacked nothing. Except those people who cut apart pants hangers to make chip clips, I guess.

Numbered lists as clickbait
I could have numbered this list, and put the number in the title. But the number of things in this list is irrelevant to the list itself, as it is irrelevant to most articles that use this hook. Do I fall for it? Sure. But when you see a full page of search results that differ only in the number of items in each list, the absurdity of this gimmick shines through. Is there a number that makes my list more or less authoritative? Or does it merely need a digit to gain credibility?

I know that eventually these tricks will fall out of fashion and be replaced (by equally irritating tricks, of course). Until then, I will just try to grit my teeth quietly.

Monday, April 6, 2015

Meet Kai

My stormy boy entered the world at 9:28 a.m. on March 18. He weighed 7 lbs, 7 oz, and was 20 inches long -- not as big as I anticipated, but no lightweight.


A photo posted by Nicole (@nmb1974) on

I had a little meltdown before the procedure (conscious surgery is unnerving), and had some hypothermia and iron level issues afterward, but otherwise the procedure was unremarkable. (Medically speaking, of course. Nothing that ends with a new life can really be called unremarkable.)


A photo posted by Nicole (@nmb1974) on


Kai had a little fluid in his lungs, and was very mildly jaundiced for about a day, but was otherwise completely healthy. He was back up to his birth weight by his 2-week checkup, and had grown nearly an inch. So while he may not be as stocky as his sister, he is thriving.


A photo posted by Nicole (@nmb1974) on

For the most part, so am I. I feel much better than I did after having Anya, and am far more mobile. (Too mobile, maybe; I rushed my return to exercise and triggered another bout of bleeding. It's tapering, though.)




The homecoming has also been fairly smooth. With the exception of his cluster feeds, he only wakes once or twice at night. He has some gassy episodes, but the probiotics seem to be helping. He wants to be held pretty much all the time, but I am fine with that.

A photo posted by Nicole (@nmb1974) on

So while there were bad moments, and I have zero desire to ever have another c-section, I am deliriously happy with how things have turned out. This little guy is pretty amazing.