Grieving uterus

Something had been bothering me since Breanna was born (almost four months ago, hard to believe!). I finally mentioned it to George a few weeks ago in the hopes that saying it out loud would make it go away, but it hasn’t so maybe “typing it out loud” will help.

I’m sad. Actually, that’s not really accurate. That makes it sound like I’m sad because I wanted a cookie and there are none left, or it might give the impression that I am depressed, and those aren’t true (though honestly, I wouldn’t mind a cookie if anyone has some to spare).

To be more accurate, I should say that my uterus is sad. And it’s a very strange thing.

When I was a kid I briefly thought it would be amusing to some day have triplets, all girls, and name them Faith, Hope, and Charity. Aside from the fact that naming my children like that would have guaranteed that they would kill me in my sleep, I started babysitting soon after coming up with this brilliant idea and quickly realized that triplets might be, you know, a lot of freakin’ work.

Aside from that temporary insanity, I only ever wanted two children. I didn’t care if they were girls or boys, though I did hope to have at least one girl. I just knew that I wanted more than one but that two would be enough. Right up until I had Hayley, I continued to state that I only wanted two children.

Now I have two and the family is complete. I have what I wanted and that makes me happy, especially when I know how many people wish they could have a child of their own. Having two beautiful girls is absolutely a blessing and I don’t take that for granted.

I know you think you know where this is going, but no. I haven’t changed my mind. I don’t suddenly want a third child. For one thing, I’m not the best pregnant person in the world. As much as I may be fascinated by the miraculous way my body can grow a baby, I hate a lot of the side effects and tend to be pretty damn grouchy about a lot of it. Also, I don’t know if I could be a good mother to three children. Sometimes I have so much trouble managing the two that I have now that I think a third could cause my brain (or the apartment) to completely implode. I already find myself needing to write notes to myself so I remember to feed the fish or fill up Hayley’s sippy cup for the next morning. I have four proper-sized diapers left because I didn’t write down that we were running out so I forgot to tell George, and so I have to use the next size up and hope we aren’t plagued by leaks until George can bring a new pack home. If I’m this scattered now, one more child might push my poor brain too far and I’ll have to walk around with a post-it note reminding me to breathe and pee.

I have my two kids and I love them fiercely and I’m very happy with my now-complete family. I do not actually want another one.

And yet.

Breanna is growing so quickly. Every week she outgrows something else and so I fold it for the last time and place it in a bag which will eventually be given to some charity. Two days ago I found a bag with a pair of pink sheep pajamas that Hayley had worn, pajamas that were my absolute favorite and when I finally found them I nearly cried because I’m almost sure that they won’t fit Breanna and she never even got to wear them. Each time she does something new, some milestone or just something awe-inspiring, I feel so proud and then I feel a little melancholy that I will never again see my own child do ___ for the very first time.

Hayley is three and a half and already practicing to be a teenager. I don’t know how or when she got so big but I look at her baby pictures and can barely grasp that they are the same person. I listen to her talk in long, rambling paragraphs about everything from dinosaurs to her television shows to what happened in her dreams last night and I wonder when she stopped saying “mamamamamamama”. How did my first baby become big enough to tell me knock-knock jokes?

It’s the finality that makes me sad. Although I don’t want more children, I’m sad that I’ll never have a newborn again, that I’ll never lie awake in a hospital bed watching a brand new baby’s eyelashes flutter against her cheeks as she sleeps. Although I don’t love pregnancy, I love birth. I wish I could rewind and re-live both births at will just to experience it once more.

It has nothing to do with numbers. I could have seven kids running around and I’d still feel this way. It’s not the number, it’s the never.

I mentioned it to a friend of ours and he said he had often felt the same way and that he made it stop by telling himself that instead of feeling sad that he’d never experience something again, that he should try to remember to be happy that he had experienced it at all. He’s right, and I’ve been trying, and often it does work. But sometimes it strikes out of nowhere: That onesie that doesn’t fit and doesn’t need to be packed away for the next one. Seeing Hayley get into her own bed in her own room and going to sleep all alone and realizing she’ll never get smaller, only bigger. Hearing Breanna have a fit of belly laughs over the screensaver on our television. It’s those times that make something primal deep inside my uterus not only ache, but scream. I guess it’s this screaming that helped humans to reproduce in the first place.

In the meantime I’ll just hang on to the memories of all the firsts we’ve gone through and be grateful for everything that I have. Then I’ll look forward to all the firsts that still lie ahead. And hopefully one day at least one of them will have children of their own and I can live vicariously through all their parental firsts too.

One step closer to freedom

Breanna just rolled from her back onto her tummy for the first time! I put her down for a diaper change, turned away to get a fresh diaper, and as I turned back, she was reaching for her book and flipped over. Yay!

Of course she may be five years old before she flips from tummy to back because she hates tummy time tremendously, but at least we have one direction going!

Pictures as content

In lieu of written content, what with the 4:40 am wake-up call and the fact that it’s now 11:10 pm, I give you pictures instead.

As mentioned the other day, playing ducks in the sink is fun.

Proof of Hayley’s awesome imagination. She had me help her in setting up this blue blanket and she got a wooden panel from her easel so that she could go “surfing in the ocean”.

We have tons of toys for various ages. Yet nothing pacifies like your average spatula. The look of awe cracks me up.

“Hi, I’m Breanna and I’m a HAPPY HAPPY baby!”

On Friday we moved Hayley’s bed into her toom. She was so ecstatic that she was back in her pajamas before supper and tried to go to bed at 6:15 that night. Note that Breanna the HAPPY HAPPY baby was less than happy to be dumped on the bed so that Mom could take a picture.

People think I’m nuts when I mention that my not-quite-four-month-old daughter is teething. To the naysayers, I can point out that: a) Although six months may indeed be the average age to get teeth, the very fact that it’s AVERAGE means that some babies must therefore get some teeth earlier and some get them later. b) People had the same reaction when I said that about Hayley but her first tooth popped out at four months, c) Breanna will chew angrily on my finger for long periods of time in an effort to find relief, and d) although this was taken immediately post-bath, I assure you that’s NOT water all over her face. I’m thinking of switching her nickname from Puffin to Drippy.

American Idol – Stevie Wonder week

And so it begins, the real American Idol. I love the auditions, the eliminations from Hollywood onward are good, but it’s when you get to the real performances that I start really getting into the show. So here we go, with Stevie Wonder week. Randy is right, Stevie IS hard to sing and it showed.

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Ticklish

All babies seem to have a ticklish spot somewhere. I think being ticklish (or not) is something you grow into. I know when Hayley was a baby, you could get an occasional snicker, but now just the mere threat of being tickled, finger wiggling a few inches away will have her laughing and shrieking hysterically.

The other day I finally found the one spot on Breanna’s body that tickles her and which will bring about giggles and belly laughs 95% of the time. Right under the floating ribs on her left side is the target. Tickling her with a finger sometimes works but kissing her loudly on that precise area is what works best.

All I have to do is kiss her two or three times and she’s laughing. If I stop and look her in the eye, she’ll start saying, “Ahh, ehhhhhhhh” with a big smile while wiggling around in the hopes that I’ll do it again.

I’m pretty ticklish myself and don’t particularly enjoy it, so I have to have my fun now while I have two girls who are still young enough to think being tickled is hilarious. On a dreary overcast and damp day like today, peals of shrieking laughter are just what I need to hear.

Seriously?

Last night’s “Grey’s Anatomy” in point form:

  • I think my new saying should be “but I got the instructions off the Internet!” I felt really sorry for the guy, but come on! Cutting off your finger based on instructions off the ‘net and being shocked that it didn’t work out? Please.
  • I understand that George is upset and he has a right to be, but I hope he forgives Meredith soon.
  • The writers of this show are so amazing because I never would have thought I would feel sorry for Addison, but I do.
  • George and Preston dancing around while playing the trumpet and clarinet while Christina stared in horror was priceless.
  • I was SO sure that when Derek got contemplative after telling the patient not to settle meant that he wasn’t going to settle for just being Meredith’s friend. Phooey. Waiting for those two to get back together takes me back to Ross and Rachel on Friends.
  • Izzy is gearing up for some major pain when heart guy dies. Alex may be an arrogant ass but he’s right about crossing a line.

    I love this show so much more than I should admit. Seriously.

  • Easy fun

    Sometimes I get Hayley set up with something and it’s such a big hit that I wonder why I never thought to do it before. In the bathroom earlier, I was doing laundry, and Hayley decided to put her bath ducks in the sink and turned the water on (Breanna was in her bouncy seat, sucking her fingers, for the record). She thought it was really fun, but we don’t have a plug for that sink.

    Instead, I told her to bring her bath toys and her stool to the kitchen. I put the plug in, filled it 3/4 full with warm water, put a t-shirt on her, and I swear it’s been about an hour now. I hung out with her for awhile, and now I’m in here feeding Breanna, and all I can hear is Hayley giggling and making her ducks talk to each other.

    I know the floor will get wet, but I figure it’s just water after all. I asked her to just try not to get too carried away and to avoid purposely dumping it on the floor. I figure that when she’s done, I’ll mop it all up and get a clean floor as a bonus.

    Sometimes it’s so easy to make her happy.

    Dammit

    The other rat, Mozart is dead now too. I had a feeling earlier but only checked after Hayley was passed out in bed, because I wanted to avoid a sleepless night. I’m not going to enjoy telling her that her other rat’s gone now too, especially without George here for back-up.

    I never did mention what happened after we told her Nicodemus had died. She was upset at first; she had seen that episode of Caillou where they found the dead bird, so she had some idea of what I meant. She wanted to know why so I told her that rats get old much faster than people and that Nic was really very old for a rat. I avoided saying the words “sick” (especially since she herself was sick with a cold) or that good old “he went to sleep” – you don’t want to make connections between death and sleep with a child, especially one who already has sleep issues.

    She got pretty teary-eyed and wanted to know if he would come back and I said no. She cried a bit but the worst part was that she kept worrying that Mozart was all alone and would miss his friend. That was heart-breaking. George said that she woke up that night and was talking about it, but overall she handled it as well as you can expect at that age, and better than I had hoped.

    Also, two days later I cheered her up by suggesting we make a “buddy” for Mozart. We took an old mateless baby sock, stuffed it with fabric, and I sewed it up. We attached a yarn tail, a pom-pom nose, and drew two little eyes on him. Mozart actually did curl up with it from time to time so that made her happy.

    I have no idea how she’ll react to this news but I have to tell her first thing tomorrow since she’ll notice he’s gone when she goes to get her clothes (the tank is on her dresser).

    In all honesty, I’m sad but relieved. I don’t think he was doing that well. I think he was blind in one eye, he looked like he was developing a tumor on his leg, and he was a bit wobbly and lethargic when he walked. I don’t believe he was suffering but I’m glad for his sake that he went before that became an issue. Again, he lived to a very old age for rats. But he’ll be missed.

    And so, again, I post the same image, this time drawing attention to the beige Mozart on the right. Rest in peace, little buddy who loved table scraps as much as any dog.