Tuesday, February 28, 2006

My first day "alone"

Today was supposed to be my first day at home alone with the boys. It turned out to be a joke, as Dada decided to hang out with me and the lads until Isaac went down for his nap. We first went on a family adventure to Starbucks, where Isaac and I scattered Carrot Walnut Muffin crumbs all over their floor and Jacob slept in his car seat:



Then we went to the Sears Outlet store nearby. Dada browsed with Jacob asleep on his shoulder and Isaac and I ran races along the corridors of expensive refrigerators until he was sufficiently tuckered out. A few unsuspecting customers were the recipients of his latest catch-phrase: "Look at me! Isaac!" We have no idea where he got this from, but lordy is it funny.

This afternoon Isaac showed his first real interest in touching Jacob, wanting to pet Jacob's hair. Dada convinced him to touch Jacob's hand and somehow time stood still long enough for me to capture it on camera:



I really don't know when I'll have to take care of the boys by myself. Tomorrow I'm having Isaac's sitter over in the morning; Thursday we have playgroup; Friday I might have the sitter over again. Sunday Grandma and Grandpa O'Neal are coming, so I get more help for all of next week. This must be as close to a "vacation" as a a stay-at-home mom gets.

Seriously outnumbered

While Grandpa Ross (aka Papaw) was here, there were one...two...three...FOUR boys in my house, with me as the sole estrogen source. It was a blast. I've never been much of a girlie-girl, so this whole boy-overload thing that I am now locked into suits me well. And my boys are all so cute and photogenic that it becomes even more fun. Here is Papaw lovin' him some Jacob:





And then again of Isaac in his I-will-be-sitting-in-that-chair-too mode, this time with Dada and Jacob:



...and one more time, with all boys watching TV! Something there is probably a leeeetle too much of right now.

Monday, February 27, 2006

After mommy-daddy TV time

Dada says, "So. He was strong enough to protect Frodo, but he couldn't save CTU."

One week later

It occurs to me that I should report how everyone is doing. First, Mr. Jacob. He is basically an angel. He sleeps all the time, but is spending an increasingly greater proportion of his days awake and aware. Because I am due a child who sleeps at night, he clusters all his awake-time during the day and wakes only momentarily to eat at night. Like his brother before him, Jacob is exclusively nursing and is a champion eater. His one-week appointment was today and he has already gained back all his birth weight. He fusses only when hungry or being undressed, and if you catch him early enough in the fuss-process you can keep him in what Dada and I have termed his "grumpy old man" persona, where he doesn't cry but instead harrumps "Meh. Meh!"

Isaac is handling this all better than I expected. He has not yet tried to whomp up on his little bro, but he clearly has some toddler angst. My big guy, for whom mellowness is a trademark, has thrown all kinds of tantrums this week. When he is upset, he bawls "boo-boo-boo" over and over again in the most pitiful way. We spent so long trying to figure out what this translates to from toddlerese; we learned yesterday that he got this from the "Little Red Caboose" book. There's a passage where the protagonist of said story feels particularly sad and sorry for himself, and when I read this I say "Boo-hoo-hoo" in the voice of the caboose. When voiced by Isaac, this becomes "boo-boo-boo". I almost cried upon realizing that he was trying to express sadness, but you have to be a little impressed that he voices his feelings in this rather tragic way. But I won't fool you into thinking this is his new 'tude all the time. He swings back and forth between trying to yank me off my duff when I'm nursing Jacob and calling Jacob "my baby," showing him toys and stuffed animals (and even sharing trains!) and helping me put him in his car seat. I think he'll be just fine, given a little more time to get used to the idea of sharing that holiest of holy possessions, his mom.

I am doing exceedingly well physically. People keep telling me "You look amazing!" These lame-os clearly are not looking at my still-substantial beer gut, and must instead be focusing on my new, gigantic rack. At first nursing Jacob was not so easy. Like his brother before him, he has a "powerful suck". At the hospital he was such an eager beaver that he cracked a nipple open and wouldn't nurse from it for awhile because I'd start dousing him with blood whenever he'd try to get a drink. With the help of Grandma, who ran to the store and got me boobie maxi-pads (to keep my boobs from sticking to my bra and peeling off a layer of skin each time Jacob had to nurse) and gelled vitamin E pills (to break open and rub on the anguished areas -- SO MUCH BETTER THAN LANSINOH), Jacob and I totally have it down now and are great nursing pals. It took Isaac and I about 6 weeks to figure out the nursing thing. Everyone told me that bouncing back from birthing my second would be easier, and they were correct in every way.

I am also really enjoying this new feeling of competency handling a baby. When Isaac was born I hadn't so much as ever changed a diaper and I spent my entire 3-month maternity leave convinced that I would find some way to accidentally kill him. Now that I have a near-23-month-old who is still kicking and threatening to bust out of his size-4 dipes, I feel like I actually might know something about taking care of little boys. Speaking of Isaac and his largeness, one thing that I didn't expect upon bringing Jacob home was seeing just how stinkin' big Isaac is in comparison. I still have trouble realizing that I need to recalibrate my arms between picking up one son and the other, since there is a 20-pound difference there. Will Jacob ever be that big? No way! Oh, wait. Didn't I say that about Isaac?

Oh, and you thought it went fast when there was just one of them. Here it is, a week (and small change) later and I am already without Grandma Ross, who flew home Sunday. Grandpa Ross got here in the wee hours of Saturday morning and is driving back tomorrow. Thus tomorrow is that fated day, the one where I get left alone for more than 45 minutes at a time (my current record) with my two boys. Um. Um. HELP!We'll see if I can keep it all together when I don't have grandmas and grandpas to help me go to the bathroom...

Sunday, February 26, 2006

Jacob's first Bjorning

Yesterday Grandma and I took Isaac and Jacob outside for a walk in the cold, if only to prove that it could be done. The answer: yes, but only with two agile adults and lots of "Isaac! Come back over here, hon!"

Jacob slept through the entire thing, even his very first bundling-up. We don't really have a coat for him, but our buds Sarah, Art, and Ella gave us this nice fleecy suit that worked well, and coordinated perfectly with the hat Connor's mommy knit for Jacob. Observe:

Friday, February 24, 2006

Pictures at home

*originally published on Isaac's Blog*

Grandma and Isaac brought Jacob and I home from the hospital Tuesday afternoon. Here we are in our first few moments at home, with me in the shirt I'd been wearing since the wee hours of Sunday morning:



There was a little drama the night before we were discharged because Jacob's bilirubin tested on the low side of him being jaundiced. They had to take a blood sample and send it to the hospital lab to get his exact bilirubin count, and then his pediatrician would make the decision about whether he should stay in the NICU for baby suntan therapy or if he would be sent home with a "bili-blanket" to treat his jaundice in a more comfortable setting. This all turned out to be a moot point because his blood test showed his bilirubin on the high side of normal and he passed his final inspection by the pediatrician with flying colors. Dr. Modi said his jaundice would get worse before it got better, and sure enough he looks a bit pumpkin-headed. This is what Jacob has to say about it all:



Isaac had fallen asleep on the ride home from the hospital, so Grandma got some unadulterated Jacob time. Here they are admiring each other:



We are already succumbing to the Second-Baby Photography Curse. For example: we have no good pictures of Dada and Jacob, including zero pictures of the two of them taken together at the hospital. Dada snapped a bunch of pictures right after Jacob was delivered and then left to pick up Isaac, taking my camera with him to distribute these pictures to the known universe. He never brought my camera back to the hospital, and Grandma forgot her camera in the car the two times she and Isaac visited us while we were there. I keep trying to encourage Daddy/Jacob-focused photography, but Dada has been working during the day, which means when we remember to take pictures it is way too dark in our living room to take cute portraits without them being blurry (like this one):


...or Dada is snacking and has not only Jacob but also crumbs on his shirt that we don't notice until we dump the picture onto the computer hours later:



We are also trying to capture the interactions of Big and Little Brothers O'Neal (more on that later), but because of the inherent limitations of photographing a moving toddler, we don't have too much to offer just yet. I will give you this one, featuring a popular living-room scenario where I have Jacob on my lap or attached to the boob and Isaac decides he needs to squeeze his big butt in the same chair, creating a massive snuggle-fest:

Thursday, February 23, 2006

Somebody had to get mommy's nose

*originally published on Isaac's Blog*



3-day-old Jacob looks at the lamp

Wednesday, February 22, 2006

How U.B. became Jacob

*originally published on Isaac's Blog*

To all those ladies out there waiting impatiently to go into labor, I have a suggestion: go to toddler music class. I went with Isaac on Saturday morning, where I ran in circles, jumped up and down, galloped like a horsey, physically restrained my son when it wasn't his turn to play the gigantic drum, etc etc insert other high-exertion activities that I probably shouldn't have engaged in (but did) here. The contractions started when we got back in the car; the bloody show was already there when we got home.

Since this is the first time I've actually gone into labor on my own, I really had no idea what to expect with the contractions. All "the books" say that they will get closer and closer together, and that you should go to the hospital when they get closer than 5 minutes apart and you can't carry on a conversation through them. My contractions went on throughout the day, and did get much closer together over a twelve hour period, from 15-20 minutes apart to start down to 6-15 minutes apart. They also got more painful, but really weren't all that bad. That they had lasted so long gave me an inkling that this might be the real thing, but I battened down that hatches and prayed to the God of Convenience in Labor that I could last through the night so Dada could get some sleep and, more importantly, so we wouldn't have to ditch Isaac at our friends' house in the middle of the night.

Isaac, in rare form, slept through the night. I did not, having been awakened twice by some seriously killer contractions that strangely went away if I got up and farted around on the computer for an hour. When Isaac finally did wake up at 6:30, I started timing again and they were still a lousy 6-8 minutes apart, but I had to come up with some Claire-improvised labor breathing to make it through them (being the labor class flunkie that I am). I went to fix Isaac some breakfast, passing by Dada who was asleep on the couch. "GET UP!" says I, "HOSPITAL! DRUGS! NOW!" Being the sympathetic wife that I am and having no clue that these contraction-things could actually get worse, I agreed that Dada could take a shower first and that we should stop for Starbucks on the way to the hospital. We dumped off Isaac at our friends' house, where he spent the day playing with Sarah, Ella, and Ella's Grandma and Grandpa. I don't know how, but they even got him to take a nap.

Before you can be admitted to the hospital, you must first pass through triage so they can decide whether or not you are a faker with your labor; namely, the only test you have to pass is to have a doctor examine your baby-chute and decide that your cervix has done enough work that the rest of the job won't take too long. For the uninitiated, I have heard the rule of thumb is that once you're 3 or 4 cm dilated (of the requisite 10 cm), you're in. Of course I had no idea how dilated I was, but I was in some crazy-pain, now every 5-7 minutes. The triage nurse clucked her tongue at me in doubt, suggesting that my contractions weren't close enough together for me to be THAT dilated. On that reliable hunch, these turds made me wait for an HOUR AND A HALF before I was finally checked out by a doctor. This doctor hadn't been in the room for more than 5 minutes before she exclaimed in near-horror, "Oh my God, you are staying. How dilated do you think you are? Guess!" I wasn't exactly in the guessing mood, but a suggested, maybe, 5 cm? "You are a GOOD 7 cm. We need to get you upstairs right now."

This actually posed a huge problem, because at my first prenatal visit I tested positive for Group B Strep. While I as a carrier was asymptomatic, I can pass these bacteria on to the baby during delivery unless I am treated with a solid four-hour course of IV antibiotics. If I delivered the baby before the four hours was up, he could come down with some terrible form of bacterial sepsis, such as meningitis. We arrived at the hospital at 7; we were admitted at 8:30; I didn't get my IV antibiotics started until just before 9. I was given the task of crossing my legs and laying down to keep from having a baby until 1. My delightful labor nurse, Pam, said there was no way, with me being that dilated and a second-timer, that I would make it.

My first suggestion to help stop me from having a baby was to get an epidural, which came at around 10:00. The anesthesiologist was gave me the most perfect epidural in the history of the world. I could feel most of the contractions, but there was no pain or even discomfort with them. Even more importantly, the epidural blocked nothing when it came to the pushing stage...

I labored in relative peace and quiet until about 12:40, when I started feeling this unearthly urge to push. Unlike the epidural I had while laboring with Isaac, where I could feel absolutely nothing and had to be told when to push (which probably factors in to why it took me an excruciating three whole hours for the pushing phase alone), this again perfect epidural hid nothing from me about when I was supposed to do some work and hold up my end of the bargain. It was extremely weird and painful, but I did my best to breathe in my flunkie and distracting fashion to hold out another twenty minutes. At 12:55 they broke my water. Instead of screaming at them to let me push, suddenly rationality took over and I patiently (and breathlessly) waited another 8 minutes, at which time I asked the three doctors, nurse, and husband in the room for double confirmation that it was indeed after 1, that my antibiotics had run their course, and that my baby was given the all-clear to go. They all said yes.

It took me exactly 4 minutes to push Jacob out. Everyone keeps commenting on how lovely I look holding newborn Jacob; how I am "glowing". This is because I busted every capillary in my cheeks, chin, and shoulders from pushing, grunting, and screaming like an Amazon warrior. Dada said they hadn't even had time to wheel their equipment cart over before he was crowning (and I was screaming in pain and hyperventilating). He suggested I title this post "Claire's Baby Cannon," and takes great personal delight in telling his coworkers, much to the horror of my mom, how proud he is that my birth canal could be used to calibrate missile-ballistics.

Back to the L&D room... Suddenly somebody told me to look down and there he was, upside down at the end of the table, my gigantic baby boy, huge and purple and perfect, with this full head of brown curly hair. They laid him on me, all cheesed up. To my infinite surprise, after all the doubts and misgivings I had about my ability to mentally handle the concept of a second baby... the first thing I thought when they handed him to me was "This is going to be so cool." And I have been the happiest girl in the world ever since.

Tuesday, February 21, 2006

A Uterus Barnacle no more

*originally published on Isaac's Blog*

Introducing...

Jacob Michael O'Neal


born February 19, 2006 at 1:07 p.m.

8 lbs 10 oz
21 inches long

10-minute-old Jacob with Mommy


5-minute-old Jacob holds Daddy's hand

Everybody is doing great and chilling at home now. Birth story to come soon!