Nights and Days of New Motherhood

Little Bear, three days

Today is my twenty-third day of parenthood. The little guy in the photo is bigger and blonder and sleeping next to me as I type. The morning is cool and peaceful, not least of all because he (and consequently I) slept at least five hours for three nights straight now.

So far, nights have been a source of some dread for me. This started in the hospital, when we were frequently interrupted by nurses blithely knocking and entering, voices at daytime levels. I couldn’t really fault them, since they had regular tests and tasks to perform. It did make me wonder how anyone considers the hospital stay the most restful part of early parenthood. At least at home, the only one interrupting our nights is Little Bear.

And interrupt them he does. The first two weeks, our lives were so out of the ordinary that it didn’t jar us so much as stupefy us as exhaustion took over. The real problem, for me, started once M returned to work. I was desperate to keep him as rested as possible, as I have a horror of him getting in a car accident during his commute. What this meant with a newborn, however, was jumping out of bed and rushing LB from the room the second he whimpered. Falling asleep on the sofa nursing LB and waking horrified that I’d risked dropping him. One night dozing on the sofa with LB in his basket on the floor next to me, hoping like hell that M was getting a good night’s sleep. And, finally, M waking up and discovering me weeping on the side of the bed, clutching Bear and despairingly waiting to simply keel over in exhaustion.

Since that dark night, things are improving. There are, of course, still moments when the crying/dirty diapers/only-one-hand-free seem eternal, and then I’m inclined to get a bit teary. These moments occur most often at night, of course. Sleep deprivation is one reason. Another is caused by LB only insofar as it is a byproduct of pregnancy. I refer to the insidious PUPPP rash. I hope you never have to find out what it is. If you are so unfortunate, I hope you at least avoid my situation, where the rash started to resolve before delivery, as it is supposed to, then returned a few days after to ensure that sleep would elude me even when it has captured LB. It makes me feel unattractive and crazed with itching. I hope like hell it goes away on its own, as soon as possible, because none of the suggested remedies have worked.

A third reason nights go badly is really my own fault. Googling is one of my worst anxious habits. Cyberchondria is definitely a thing, and I easily fall prey to it. Now that Bear is here, most of my googling takes the form of queries like “newborn belly button healing?” But at 3:30 in the morning, when I’ve been trying to soothe LB for two hours, I start to search for help with “newborn cries unless nursing” and “newborn only sleeps in my arms”. And what I find is frustrating.

There are plenty of answers that are sort of helpful, such as “use a sling to have your hands free”, or at least sympathetic (“it gets better”). The answers I despise are those which state that I should be cherishing every moment that my infant insists on being in my arms. Even more infuriating are those which imply that I am not properly parenting, or at least not properly enjoying it, if I don’t want to hold Little Bear twenty-four hours a day. Never mind that I cannot sleep while holding him, and I must sleep to effectively care for him. Never mind that I really do need to occasionally take a shower, run a load of the endless laundry, and even (gasp!) just take a minute alone to clear my mind and recenter. I don’t know who these mothers are that look back on this period and truly only feel fondness. Our sweet little LB is the light of our life and brings us an indescribable joy. But that doesn’t mean I don’t want to scream into my pillow when he cries for a third nursing overnight. I could go on, as I am increasingly irritated by some of the strong attachment parenting messages I see, but this article sums it up better than I ever could. I’ve especially taken to her notion of chronos versus kairos. The worst of the chronos moments are balanced if I take care to notice the kairos.

There are plenty of magical moments to experience. It’s funny to note that, despite having roughly nine months to prepare, parenthood still blindsides you. Suddenly, your life is not the same, and it never will be again. Having a logical awareness and even acceptance of this fact does not prevent you from needing some time to come to terms with it. M and I have both noticed a certain mourning set in. This sense of loss is somewhat neutral in the day, when we nap as LB naps, without thinking much of everything else we could be doing. It’s a bit more depressing in the middle of the night, when he’s protesting his third dirty diaper in two hours, and I’m crying along with him as I change him. But sometimes, sometimes, it is that bittersweet sense that even as we’re losing, we’re gaining.

We marvel at this little creature. Even when he’s wailing, we laugh at our good fortune and his adorable chubby cheeks. He has M’s ears and chin and sleeping habits. He has my nose and my tendency to red eyes when tired. He has dimpled thighs and arms and already holds his head up like a champ. He dislikes sponge baths and wants to feed more than can possibly be healthy. He likes car rides and has been taught to grab M’s beard (a lesson I suspect M will come to regret). He is mercurial with visitors, but his occasional tendency to sleep through most of a night makes some mornings absolutely blissful.

Little Bear is bringing out the best in both M and me. As I’ve recovered, M has taken care of me, LB, and our home. You would never know that he hadn’t held a baby before being handed Bear in the hospital. He calms our boy in no time, as easily as he calms me. Despite being nearly as fond of sleep as he is of us, he gamely takes midnight shifts holding LB when I am so tired my eyes are crossed. Introducing a newborn to our family, though it keeps us busy enough for me to sometimes miss M even while we’re together, has really enhanced our already strong partnership. We’ve discovered that we’re more than capable parents, and that self-confidence helps across the board.

So we go on, day by day, adjusting to our new reality, learning to get by on less sleep, seeking the kairos. We’re waiting, mostly patiently, for our sweet Bear to smile at us, laugh, know us by name. And maybe sleep through the night. Everybody needs a dream, right?

21st Century Clutter

I think I’m going to leave Facebook.

I’ve been thinking about this for awhile, and though I’ve gone slowly to avoid rash action, I continue to feel compelled to shut down my account. It’s just in the way these days. I don’t interact with my closest friends on Facebook. I barely remember some of the people in my friends list. Sure, it’s the most efficient way to reach family and friends with news or event invitations. But how often do I need to issue blanket announcements? Isn’t it just as easy to send a blast email in those rare instances?

I still use Twitter. And Pinterest. And LinkedIn. And I’ve been trying a smaller social network called Path. But Facebook seems increasingly frustrating. I’m tired of seeing that an acquaintance I met twice just posted eighty-four pictures of their New Year’s Eve party, full of people I don’t know and never will. I’ve been slowly unfriending people on a case-by-case basis, but somehow there are still 371 people I apparently might want to see in my news feed. This seems implausible.

Perhaps it’s the spirit of the New Year: fresh start, clean slate, and all that. I can’t help feeling that I’ve let myself get overwhelmed with the digital life I was so desperate to live. I’ve signed up for too many services, had my email sold by too many unscrupulous retailers. I’ve followed Twitter feeds on a whim, “liked” pages I really don’t care that much about, and posted so many frivolous pictures taken on the spur of the moment, it’s almost embarrassing. I think I want a break, and the symbol of that break has become Facebook.

I feel a sense of relief when I think about it. Little by little, that relief is eroding the irrational panic I initially felt when I considered leaving a network I’d belonged to for nearly a decade. Before, I resigned myself to the fact that I could never go without that connection. But my relatives have email. Many friends use Twitter. We even occasionally talk on the phone! Surely I can find a middle ground between technologically inundated and total Luddite.

Am I alone in this? Are any other Millennials feeling overwhelmed by the ever-present social networking Goliath? I have to believe so. I can’t be the only one.

I’m nearly ready. I have to get my contacts in order, make sure I do know how to reach people outside of that blue-bordered site. But then, oh, I will leap. And how joyful that day will be…

Wow. When I put it like that, it sounds kind of pathetic.

UPDATE: Wait, no, it’s not pathetic. And I’m not alone. This article articulates my feelings perfectly.

UPDATE, 25 August 2013: So it turns out that the easiest way to share updates of our newborn is FB. Guess I won’t leave for awhile after all.

Notes on a Honeymoon

Scotland on my mind

The Finnish lapphund is a gorgeous dog.

Londoners are quite stylish.

Scotland remains spectacular.

I could eat pies, sweet or savory, for every meal.

Europe, where the history comes from.

Nobody does pomp and ceremony like the British.

When trains work well, they are possibly the best mode of transport ever invented.

The United Kingdom takes cider seriously, and it is fantastic.

I love British television.

Taking an actual vacation to a beautiful place with a person you love is a perfect use of time.

M and me after arrival at Paddington

Gamer Girl

I have never made a secret of the fact that I am a geek. I love sci fi, fantasy, tech, and anything that requires imagination. I started on Star Trek early, watching episodes with my father. I made my way through Tolkien, going so far as to dabble in Sindarin and writing in tengwar. If it had anything to do with created worlds, possible futures, or swords, I was pretty much into it. It comes as a surprise even to me, then, that I did not touch video games until college. We didn’t even have cable growing up, so there was no Nintendo in the house. College was my first real exposure to console games (or most computer games, for that matter). I was terrible at them. Mario Kart could bring me to tears of frustration.

I am happy to report that I will be marrying a gamer in a few months, and my tide has finally turned. After several rage-inducing attempts at Little Big Planet, and plenty of marveling at my fiancé’s work with Assassin’s Creed, Bioshock, and Skyrim, I have finally purchased and played—to conclusion!—my first video game. I’m not even ashamed to admit that it was LEGO Pirates of the Caribbean. It was partly frustrating but totally gratifying. I am 28 years old, and my proudest accomplishment of 2012 has been playing a video game to 100%.

And I am very okay with that.

I guess I run now…

Running and I have always had a complicated relationship. As a child, it was fun and mindless. I didn’t time it or count laps. I also didn’t do it a lot. My lungs are my weakest part, and wheezing often cut things short. As I got older and more involved in sports, I simultaneously felt silly with relief that I opted not to do track or cross-country, yet increasingly certain that running was a necessity for peak health. With several relatives who are suffering the consequences of a younger running habit, I know this is not the case. Running can be bad in several ways. And yet I’ve never shaken my indistinct sense that I should probably make a serious attempt to run a bit.

That brings us to lately. M saw a friend of ours posting on Twitter about a new running app she was trying, he downloaded it, and he mentioned it to me. I thought, good for you, love, but had zero intention of trying it myself. As I said, I don’t really run.

But when I came home out of sorts and irritated by a crowded commute last night, there was only one thing I wanted to do. And much to his surprise, M found himself with running shoes on, apps synchronized, heading for the reservoir. And we did a whole hour of the couch-to-10k workout. It may only be six total minutes of running, but that’s six minutes more than I’ve done in years. And you know what? It felt good.

We have a running date for Wednesday.

This is the way I begin again.

My academic career draws to a close, for now. As I readjust to professional life, I find myself restless to write. Will that lead me to actually tend my blog properly for once? We shall see.

I am optimistic about most things at the moment. The weather is cool and drizzly. I have Ben and Jerry’s S’mores ice cream to hand. The fiancé is playing Oblivion, and my Sims 3 is reinstalled and ready to go. Really, what more could one want?

Also, I made soda bread this morning, and it is delicious. Life is good.