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June 14, 2007 - Thursday 

Current mood:  annoyed

OAKLAND COUNTY JURY NAZIS

Oakland County sent me a notice that I was up for jury duty. With my 2x a week migraines that only respond to medication 50% of the time, I thought... nahhhhh, I don't think so!

So I wrote them and told them.  They sent a letter saying it was DENIED because they needed a doctor's note. Alrighty then. I called the doc, had them fax over a letter. All set. Right?

They sent ANOTHER letter: DENIED.  What!?  They said they needed MORE than one opinion!  Who do they think they are!?

They can come and arrest me if they want to... crazy jury nazis!

Currently watching:
Clash of the Titans
Release date: 01 June, 2004
June 12, 2007 - Tuesday 

Current mood:  cheerful

HOW TO EAT SPAGHETTI

We had spaghetti salad tonight with dinner.  

Dmitri was trying to figure out exactly how to eat it. I told him he had to use a fork. 

Note the head in a tilted back position as the spaghetti goes in…  

Think he's going to get all of it into his mouth!?  

He employs a combined bite-suck motion…

Hey, look at that! He made it!    

And a last little SLUUUUUUUURRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRPPP!  

Then it's time to dig in for more!

The head-tilting back maneuver is key here!  

And the final SLURRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRP! 

Now you know how to eat spaghetti… 

Like a 5 year old!    

Currently reading:
Lucky
By Alice Sebold
Release date: 06 June, 2003
June 11, 2007 - Monday 

Current mood:  annoyed

HE ATE MY BANANA!

GRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRR!!!

I was planning on making banana bread tonight.

Two bananas had gone decidedly overripe. They were all bruised and battered and blackened. I was all excited, thinking about yummy, warm banana bread....

 He comes home for dinner, goes into the kitchen, and before I can even get out there...

HE ATE MY BANANA!!

WAHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH!!!

No banana bread for me.

Seriously... should I have to say something!?Who would eat this!?!?

*shaking head*

SIGH

Currently reading:
Lucky
By Alice Sebold
Release date: 06 June, 2003
June 11, 2007 - Monday 

Current mood:  sad
Category: Religion and Philosophy

SERVICE AND PRAYER

I went to the "orientation" at Unity today, so I can start working with the kids. They have to do a background check, and I froze when I read the question: "Have you ever been convicted or accused of child abuse?" I can't believe I have to check "YES" to that question.   It makes me insane to think I'd be denied the chance to serve in this capacity because of a twelve year old's revenge fantasy. Like I'd be a "threat" or danger to little kids? Please!

Michael went to help Daren move. He's lost the house, even though workman's comp finally came through. I think they're going to have to amputate the leg--although he keeps saying he'd rather die before he let them take it.   I'm just sending lots of healing vibes and prayer his way. He's been dealing with this for two years, and no one can figure out why it's still infected and four times the size it should be!

Michael and he are such good friends. They remind me of me and Deanna... always there for each other, even if they haven't talked in months.

I miss her.  *sigh*

Currently watching:
The Shawshank Redemption (Two-Disc Special Edition)
Release date: 05 October, 2004
June 7, 2007 - Thursday 

Current mood:  surprised

LOOSE TOOTH!?

I'm just getting used to the idea that my littlest girl's turned six... and now she's got her first loose tooth!   It was just yesterday that her little baby teeth came in, wasn't it!?

Look!

Now I've really got to buckle down and get her to quit sucking her thumb. *sigh* I just can't believe she's losing her tooth... already!

They grow up WAY too fast!

Currently reading:
Wolverton Blood (Wolverton Shifter)
By Brenda Williamson
Release date: 21 November, 2006
June 5, 2007 - Tuesday 

Current mood:  scared
Category: Life

GODZILLA ATTACKS!

The doc just called, and apparently my thyroid was "very low" last time, but at the new labs it was "sky high"... which indicates Hashimoto's. Great, I've got some disease that sounds like it should be starring in a Godzilla movie...

But I guess this explains the weight gain, and the being tired all the time... even, possibly, the weird migraine symptoms... right?

I have to go back to repeat labs in a few weeks...

Kind of scared...

June 4, 2007 - Monday 

Current mood:  cheerful

NEW POOL!

June 3, 2007 - Sunday 

Current mood:  content

ZOE'S BIRTHDAY AT GRANDMA'S HOUSE

June 2, 2007 - Saturday 

Current mood:  mellow

ZOE'S 6TH BIRTHDAY - PICTURES

June 2, 2007 - Saturday 

Current mood:  nostalgic
Category: Life

HAPPY BIRTHDAY, DEAR ZOE...

I can't believe she's six years old. Where did the time go!? The tiniest little baby I'd ever seen, growing up so tall...

Zoe's Birth Story:

I had a prenatal appointment scheduled for June 1 at our new house, where all the midwives would practice getting here, and we would go over our last minute plans of how we wanted the birth to go.  On the morning of May 31, Michael said upon leaving the house, "Today would be a good day, it's Thursday, you know."  We'd been joking for a few weeks that she needed to be accommodating and be born on a Thursday (he has Fridays off) so that he could take the entire following week and not have to go back to work until the next week.  I laughed and said, "No way, she has to wait until June now, today is my sister's birthday, I don't want her to have to share!" 

Instead of sleeping in, I decided to get up and get started on the things on "the list" that needed to be done around the house.  Admittedly, it's an ever-shortening list, which is a relief, but after breakfast I started not feeling so well, having to run to the bathroom every half an hour or so.  After about the third time, it suddenly occurred to me that this was probably a good sign that labor was going to begin at some point, maybe not today, but soon.  Either that, or the thai food we'd eaten the night before hadn't agreed with me!  I hung around the house, kind of anxiously anticipating something, almost as if I could feel it in the air. 

Sure enough, contractions started that afternoon.  Nothing major, a little bigger and more intense than the Braxton-Hicks I'd been experiencing, in fact they were so far apart and weren't so bad that I wasn't sure they were "real" contractions at all.  The hardest part was not knowing for sure!  I picked the kids up in the afternoon from school, and noticed that I was having a hard time concentrating on what they were saying if I was having a contraction.  Hmm... that was a good sign.  Maybe these were "real" then!  I tidied up when I got home, got a few last minute things together for the birth (just in case I'm really in labor, I told myself!) and started preparing dinner. 

Contractions weren't really close together, anywhere from five minutes, to eight minutes, and sometimes fifteen minutes apart.  No real pattern.  Michael called at five, and I told him, "Well, you *may* be a daddy today."  Even though I told him not to, he canceled his last client and came right home.  I was afraid that it wasn't really labor, and I didn't want to disappoint him if it wasn't really it!  I had contractions through dinner, through clean-up, through kids' baths and bedtimes, but again, they were anywhere from five to eight minutes apart, and while they were uncomfortable, I *still* doubted if I was really in labor.

Finally, I called the midwife around 8:30 p.m., just to give them a heads up.  I didn't want to have to wake anyone up in the middle of the night if I didn't have to.  I gave her all the information, and she told me that she would call all of the other midwives, and told me to sleep if I could, and if they got worse or changed, to call her back.  Michael and I decided that distraction was a good idea, because both of us were too excited and anxious to sleep, so we played Yahtzee until 11:30 p.m. or so.  We went to bed, and I curled up with Michael and the contractions started spacing themselves out.  Ten minutes apart.  Then fifteen.  I was sleeping between them, but then I'd have a contraction and it would wake me up and I would grab Michael's hand, which would wake him up, and he'd breathe through the contraction with me until it was over and I fell asleep again.  It was a good system, and I think the sleep did me good.  It did us both good.

At 12:30 a.m., interestingly just as it was becoming June, my contractions started picking up.  They became stronger, and started waking me up every five minutes.  In fact, I wasn't so much sleeping between them as I was zoning out.  At 1:00 a.m., Michael gently suggested we call the midwives.  I hesitated.  I was *still* doubting that this was "it"!  Maybe they would space out again between, like they had before, how did I know?  At 1:15 a.m., Michael was suggesting it more strongly, and after my next contraction, when I sat up and had to arch my back to keep the pressure off my lower back through it, I decided that it might be a good idea. 

He called them while I was in the bathroom, and I when I came out he said they were on their way.  As soon as I knew that, I was somehow able to relax some more, which made the contractions seem a little more bearable.  Of course, that made me think that maybe this wasn't really "it" and they would slow down or stop when they showed up!  My fear was of being the little boy who cried wolf (or the woman who cried labor) but in the next forty-five minutes before they arrived, the contractions were coming regularly and were fairly intense, and I became pretty sure (finally!) that this baby was going to be born on June 1.

The midwives arrived at about 2:15 a.m, and of course wanted to check my progress, but I didn't want to move.  Things were starting to pick up and it was becoming uncomfortable.  I did anyway, of course, and she checked me both before a contraction (about 4 cm) and during a contraction (which hurt beyond belief, but I was 5-6 cm during) and after that, contractions seemed even closer together and were getting to an intensity I could barely remember from my other two births.  Michael was having a hard time getting me to focus, and both of the midwives were giving pretty good directions (keep my voice low, relax my forehead, breathe, etc) and I tried hard to listen and follow their instructions, but things were getting fuzzy.

I have no idea how much time passed, but the pain went from "Wow, this really hurts" to "Oh my god, I'm going to die" so quickly that I didn't even have a chance to breathe.  The midwives were still telling me to breathe through them, Michael was having me focus on his face, look into his eyes and breathe with him, and while everyone around me was saying how good I was doing, I felt like I was falling apart.  Not only was I in pain, but suddenly I was really afraid.  They had checked me at what felt like minutes ago, and I was only at 4, so these contractions couldn't possibly be as intense as they felt like they were, and I must just be acting like a baby.  My fear (and of course I was doing the labor math in my head:  this kind of intensity at 4 cm, times 1 cm per hour, that means at least 6 more hours like this?!) was that I couldn't possibly handle this much longer. 

Then my water broke.  I'd never felt that before.  With both of my other births, my membranes had been artificially ruptured.  I remembered the feeling, but this was different.  This was pressure that broke the bag, and I said, "You guys, I think my water just broke" and oh my god, I remember contractions getting more intense after that in my previous births, but this was beyond anything I'd ever experienced.  It felt as if the baby was coming, and not just coming, but coming *right now*! 

I saw the midwives' faces, and the first question out of my mouth was, "Is there meconium?"  She said, "Yes," and my heart sank.  "A lot?" I asked.  "A good amount," she said.  They were setting up suction equipment, and I thought, well this is the thing, then.  This is the thing that had to go wrong.  Then, I couldn't think anything anymore.  It all happened too fast.  She decided to see how far along I was then, and she said, "Oh, you're a stretchy 7."  Close to transition, then.  I felt like I was dying.  The baby's head was now *so* low in my pelvis, I was starting to have the urge to push, but knew if I said anything they would tell me to breathe through it.  I was afraid I couldn't do it anymore. 

Then they couldn't find heart tones.  They were using the Doppler, but no matter where they put it, they couldn't find her.  Finally, they heard something faintly, and thought that maybe the uterus was tipped too far back, so they wanted me on my hands and knees so that the uterus would tip forward and they could check it from underneath.  I was saying, "No, no" when she suggested it, but she was firm, and Michael helped flip me over I was amazed how good it felt to be on my hands and knees.  The baby was low, really really low, but I was in so much pain that all I could do was grunt and moan.  I had two contractions like that, while they were frantically checking for heart tones from underneath, and could feel myself starting to push through them, unable to stop.

The midwife had me flip back over and that's when I gasped and said, "The baby is *right there!*"  She said, "Ok, I believe you," reaching for a glove, and suddenly I felt the familiar stretch and burn of the baby crowning.  She was shocked and said, "There's a head!"  Both Michael and I reached down to feel her head, wet and full of hair.  They checked for a cord, and suctioned her there on the perineum because of the meconium.  As soon as her head was out, I was lucid again.  One more little push and she was up on my belly.  They suctioned her again, making sure to get any meconium out of her lungs.  She was pale at first, but began to cry and pink up.  She was born at 3:43 a.m.

I was shocked at how tiny she was!  She was the smallest baby I'd ever seen, aside from a preemie.  After the initial worry about her breathing (which was fine and clear from that point on), we slowly got to know her as I kept her warm on my belly and the midwives did what they needed to do, checking her, checking me, having me push to deliver the placenta (within about fifteen minutes after she was born).  Blake, whose room is right across the hall, woke up when she began to cry.  He came into our room, and I told him to go get Autumn.  I was sorry they missed it, but we all nearly missed it, it went so quickly at the end!  They were thrilled to see the baby, and crowded around to say hello to her.  She's a perfect little peanut, and looks just like Michael when he was a baby.  (I've included pictures I took, check them out!)

I cleaned up while Michael held her, and then we settled back into bed and napped and snuggled for a half an hour or so while the midwives cleaned up and made some calls.  They wanted her checked out by a doctor as soon as possible (which was standard practice for them anyway, but because of the meconium and because of her size, they were insistent that it be right away) so they made an appointment for us, and one of the midwives said she'd go with us.  Blake had gone back to bed, and Autumn was out helping the midwives prepare things.  She was the biggest help to them, and is an even bigger help to me now. 

After the doctor checked her out and gave her a clean bill of health, I think we all relaxed a little bit.  She weighed in at all of 5 pounds 3 ounces, which is slightly smaller than the minimum average (which is about 5 and a half pounds) and was 18 and a half inches long.  Her head circumference was 12 and 3/4, which is on the small side and is probably why I had no second stage of labor.  I didn't have to push her out, she just kind of slid right down the birth canal and into the world!  Her size is a mystery.  The doctor said it could have been my blood pressure, which was borderline at the end, that may have effected placental function, and she may have been meant to be a small baby regardless.  The good news is that she's healthy, and is nursing like a pro and hasn't left my arms (or someone's who loves her) since she was born.I shudder to think what may have happened if we had delivered in a hospital.  The meconium alone would have had her in the nursery for "observation" for 12 hours or so.  Her size would have probably had her in the NICU, just as a precaution.  It certainly could have been warranted.  There are a lot of babies who are small who have a hard time holding their temperatures, who have hard times breathing.  I was so grateful to be at home, with people who knew what to look for, who were willing to watch her and wait.  She passed every test, and handled it all on her own, and they were satisfied with that and so was I.  It was a relief and a blessing.

I can't tell you what a healing experience it was to have a baby in my own bed.  In spite of the pain (which was much more intense, not only than I remember, but than I'd experienced before) and my fears of falling apart, which I would have had in or out of a hospital I imagine, I was able to have a positive birth experience, when I'm nearly 100% sure that it would have been a snowball of interventions in a medical setting that probably would have traumatized me, the baby, and my husband.  I felt confident that although there were things we had to take seriously and pay attention to, the midwives would respect the normal process, and trust in my body and the baby's, and they did.  It was a gift, a blessing, and a truly amazing experience for all of us.

May 31, 2007 - Thursday 

Current mood:  sleepy
Category: Writing and Poetry

In the jaws
of a crocodile
doing death rolls,

everything knotted low
in my belly,
like whorling snakes.

There are razor blades
just to feel something,
the image of a car
sailing off a bridge,
a cliff,
into an embankment wall
on the expressway.

I want to die.
Strip me bare.
Hang me from a hook.
Let this body rot
and fall away.

I am becoming.
Dying into something.

I don't need
your hands on me.
I don't want
your righteous sword.

You don't need
to save me
from myself.

Just sit here.
Breathe with me
in the darkness
and wail
at the wall.

Currently listening:
Nevermind
By Nirvana
Release date: 24 September, 1991
May 29, 2007 - Tuesday 

Current mood:  grateful
Category: Life

DID I SAY I LIKED DOING DISHES?

Did I? That damned law of attraction. The dishwasher is leaking. For the second time in four months! ACK! And of course, we just replaced the washing machine... and the modem... and the engine in the car... what's next!?

Nevermind... let's pretend I didn't ask that!

Currently listening:
Hits
By Joni Mitchell
Release date: 29 October, 1996
May 29, 2007 - Tuesday 

Current mood:  amused
Category: Life

NEW PET: PHOENIX

It looks as if we've adopted a new pet. *sigh*

Michael and the kids found him, and Zoe named him "Phoenix."

(Michael did the research and found out that it is, apparently, the masculine version of a stag beetle... at least, that's been the extent of our bug identification so far... that may be subject to change!)

The kids are having tons of fun learning about it... while I watch from afar, all creeped out. *shudder* At least it's not a spider, right? GULP

They apparently live a full year, and people in Japan actually keep and raise stag beetles.

Currently watching:
Buffy The Vampire Slayer - Collector's Set (40 discs)
Release date: 01 August, 2006
May 28, 2007 - Monday 

Current mood:  sick
Category: Life

SICKIES

The kids and I have a cold. Michael, of course, just has a sniffle.  The rest of us can't breathe, can't taste anything... blech. I hate summer colds. No one should be drinking tea and cuddling under a blanket when it's 80 degrees outside!

*cough*

*sneeze*

*sniffle*

I should buy stock in Kleenex.

Currently watching:
Volumes 6 & 7 Mystery Science Theater 3000 Bundle DVD Set
May 24, 2007 - Thursday 

Current mood:  okay
Category: Movies, TV, Celebrities

IDOL WINNER

It wasn't Blake. Which I think we all expected... but all I can say is that I'm SO HAPPY it wasn't the fakey Melinda!

And Jordin can certainly sing, and she's sweetly genuine, and since she's only seventeen, has only upwards to go.

Blake will find his niche, I'm sure.

I have a feeling Melinda will go back to being a backup singer, though...

oh, darn...

Currently reading:
The Betrayal (Abrams Daughters)
By Beverly Lewis
Release date: 01 September, 2003
Dawn



Last Updated: 5/21/2009

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Gender: Female
Status: Married
Age: 39
Sign: Aquarius

Country: US
Signup Date: 10/15/2005

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