Pages

Showing posts with label mummy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mummy. Show all posts

Saturday, 30 August 2014

Catch up post

Hello!

Well, I haven't posted for a while - I knew it would be tricky with a new baby - I just didn't realise how hard doing anything would be. 

So far, life with a baby means:
  • everything takes more than twice as long to do
  • we are living in an utter mess most of the time 
  • having to do everything one-handed, including typing this
  • I have about six post in the draft section on here
  • my dyslexia has got super-duper worse
  • that I have unfortunately watched day-time TV (and it's bad, really, really bad) 
  • I have discovered Cbeebies, and we really, really like it - even though most of the theme tunes get stuck in my head
  • I'm becoming more passionate about lazy gender stereotypes and inappropriate images, marketing and... well, everything, with regard to children
  • I hear 'Aurora? After the Disney princess? ', at least twice a week
  • I use Facebook more than I did 
    My Facebook/day-time TV face
It's all worth it though, for the screechy little poo-poo monkey currently sleeping on me. 

I have loads of ideas for posts I want to create, including ones about the days out we've had recently, the vintage clothes and toys I've found for Aurora, items I've found for my Etsy, my dyslexia, and about bringing Aurora up in a society where she is deemed either as inferior or just an object, due to her gender. And loads of other stuff, too. So bit of a mixed bag really. 

I'll leave this post with a few photos I want to include in future posts,when if I get around to creating them!





 


 

Thursday, 26 June 2014

That old CHESTnut...

Here it is. My first proper post about how I'm parenting Aurora. For those on the ball, the title says it all; for those who will go 'oh yeeeah', it's about breastfeeding (BF). I know BF is one of those topics that has been done to death, in the media, on the internet and on loads of useful blogs, but I know many parents, including myself, who just didn't *get* it. So here's my experience so far, with some tips that might help people who struggle, like I did.

For as long as I can remember - before wanting children, before thinking I couldn't have children, before getting pregnant, before the antenatal classes and before the NHS pro-BF barrage of info - I *knew* I'd breastfeed, I just knew it. I knew I'd be able to, even though my mother and maternal grandmother couldn't. I knew I'd be in public whooping them out all over the place, just waiting for someone to make a negative comment so I could deliver a scathing comeback that would leave the nugget speechless while I'd walk away with my head held high (probably with my boob hanging out with a baby attached to it; yeah, right?!). I knew I wouldn't need the bottle-feeding starter kit we'd bought 'just in case', and obviously I was totally cool if we had to use formula. I knew it'd be easy because to breastfeed because, for goodness sake, it's the most sodding natural thing in the world!

What a tit I was.

Aurora being rude during breastfeeding. Charming.
From my GSCEs, to the biomedical science degree, as well as having a general love of science anyway, I have always been interested in subjects like BF and the biology involved. I am well aware of the health benefits to the baby, passive immunity, reducing infections in the baby; apparent reduction in cot death risk; preventing or lowering the risk of constipation; better mental development; as well as the benefits when the baby is older, such as reducing the risk of diabetes. And there are health benefits to the mum too; with studies showing that ovarian and breast cancer is reduced in mums who breastfeed. But we know all this. It's all in the thousand leaflets the midwives give us when we are pregnant.

What are also in the leaflets are lovely twee, hand-drawn images of babies latching on to the nipple. But, there are no pictures of bleeding cracked nipples. The bleeding cracked nipples of a mum with bags-for-life under her eyes, on her tear stained, red, blotchy face… not in the leaflet I got anyway. They don't have lovely pictures of newborn babies who have been crying, REALLY screaming, for so long they are red in the face, hungry and exhausted. With regard to BF leaflets, Tyler Durden says it best in Fight Club: calm as Hindu cows.

The first rule of Breastfeeding club is: you don't tell women how much it hurts...

When Aurora was first placed on my chest when she was popped out of me, I was encouraged to feed her. I had said I wanted to attempt the breast crawl: where the babies are placed on the mother's chest and they wiggle their own way into place. Like little kittens he or she finds the nipz through smell and touch alone. I told the midwives I wanted this. It didn't happen. I wasn't out of it after birth, but I was knackered, in pain and just thought, fine I'll do it at home myself, they have a lot on their minds; it's cool. I got Aurora latched on. I didn't check any diagrams, she just did it. The midwives checked a few times and were really impressed at how she was getting on. Sweet, this is piss-easy, I'm going to be great at this. Tit.

The pain started that night when I was still in the hospital. I was checked on by a few different midwives, all of whom had their own advice on the best position for Aurora and me to be in when BF. One nurse said something about making sure I was getting it right because the nipple could shear off in certain circumstances... er, thanks. I gave birth on the Wednesday and had to stay in overnight so Aurora's blood sugar could be checked, as I developed gestational diabetes. On Thursday evening I was allowed home. This is where the fun began. I think. That time is all a bit of a blur now. All I remember for the first few days is my dad making me a fish-finger sandwich (which I don't think he's ever done in his life, he's just not a fish-finger sandwich type of man... it's weird). It was lovely, well it would have been if it was not stone cold by the time I got to it. The first of many cold meals, I'm used to it now. I remember the first midwife visit and her delight in how well I was breastfeeding, even though I told her it was really sore. It's normal. It will pass. Well done. By Saturday morning however, it was too much. they weren't just sore. They were excruciating. Bleeding. Cracked. Stressed. Crying (Aurora and me). Screaming. Exhaustion. Welcome to breastfeeding.

I'm not a wimp. I don't have a low pain threshold. I had told my husband and my mum (my birth partners) that at most I wanted gas and air during labour. No epidural or other pain relief. I barely touched the Entonox, and just had a local anaesthetic for the episiotomy: I can handle pain. I couldn't handle this. I didn't want to feed Aurora. I wasn't getting that super-duper special bond that is supposed to come with BF. Aurora was latching on fine, just not getting what she wanted. At 4 in the morning on Saturday, I cracked. My husband drove to a 24 hour supermarket and got some formula, while I checked how to sterilise and make up a bottle.

I gave Aurora 75 mL because I knew no better, and she guzzled it, burped and then went to sleep. When I told the next midwife on the second visit (the day after) she said that amount was too much to have given her. No, it wasn't. I think this is what's called mother's instinct. I wasn't gently encouraging her to 'clear the plate'. I wasn't forcing it down her throat: she had what she wanted, what she needed. The midwife did say leave it for 24 hours so I could heal a bit and try to BF again. I did. It didn't work. My milk came in and I was carrying around a couple of leaking boulders. Even though I was full to bursting, Aurora was still not satisfied. The midwife had noted her strong suck when checking her feeding, it just wasn't coming out fast enough for my greedy (read: hungry) little monkey. I persevered though. But not for long.

It gradually got worse and worse. A slight shooting pain every time Aurora latched on. I had noticed a tiny white lump on my right nipple, thought nothing of it. It must be normal, right? The slight shooting pain turned into an immense shooting pain, every time Aurora latched on. It went down my arm, up my neck, into my back; it KILLED me. But it only lasted moments and then it felt fine… until the soreness kicked in again. After a week or so I Googled it: it was a 'bleb', or a milk blister. No one had mentioned these in the breastfeeding session of the antenatal classes. The midwife hadn't mentioned them. I'd never heard of them. It was the thing that was now making me use the bottle more often to feed Aurora. Finally, I gave up. I reasoned that I had tried; she had taken the colostrum and a fair bit of milk. I'd done OK, hadn't I...?

For about a week and a half my husband and I were exclusively formula feeding. Which is nice, Nik had a chance to get involved, along with all the rellies and visitors... nice. Yeah! It was nice. No. It was easier, sure, but now the guilt and disappointment in myself for giving up so easily kicked in. I could blame it on the hormones still occupying the rational part of my head, but now I was crying over not breastfeeding at all. 

Everyone can get involved, even in erm... *whispers* Pizza Hut.
So, what to do? I had to sort the bleb out. I couldn't even consider attempting to start again with the pain it caused every time Aurora latched on: Dr Google to the rescue. I vaguely remember an episode of Doogie Howser M.D., where Doogie pierces his own ear. The advice to remove a bleb is similar to the technique Doogie used to pierce his ear (don't try this at home, kids). I followed the guidance, super carefully, and sorted the bleb out. I also looked into getting an electric breast-pump. After reading through many reviews, I opted for the Medela Swing, and my husband and I went halves. BEST. THING. EVER. 

I started using it straight away and was initially disappointed at the amount of milk I was producing (about 25 ml from both breasts), but then I hadn't been BF for a week or so, and it’s all about supply and demand. I also felt a little bit relieved that I had gone over to formula feeding, as the rate the milk came out was probably part of the reason Aurora was left unsatisfied after hours, and I mean hours, on the breast. I really don't think she was getting enough, as fast as she wanted, when I was BF. 

At the same time as using the breast-pump, I attempted to try and get Aurora back on the breast. I'd read about nipple confusion in babies who had gone over to the bottle, or had been bottle feed from birth, where they can't breastfeed because of the difference between teats and nipples. I had to think tactically: if I catch her when she's sleepy or not expecting it, would she latch on? I could only try. I gave it a go at night time, just before bed, in a calm and quite space, and it worked. She may have latched on fine when she was fully awake anyway, I don't know, but she was using me as a human dummy, I didn't care! Plus, it wasn't hurting. Removing the bleb had worked too! What I also did when getting Aurora to latch on was make encouraging sounds and praised her every time she managed it. It didn't hurt.


It's been about eight weeks since I started combination feeding, and I couldn't be happier. Aurora has formula bottles during the day and one at night, I am producing about 70ml a day through expressing, she is breastfeeding at least once or twice a day, and other people can get involved with her feeding - giving me a break sometimes. I have also successfully breastfeed in public, several times, had an argument about why BF in public is not 'indecent exposure', albeit on twitter, and posted a breastfeeding selfie. But reading back this long post, I might leave all that for another time. 







Wednesday, 28 May 2014

My Little Bird Obsession...

... is preeeetty bad.

I've been checking eBay daily, searching for bargains from the 70s retro-style range. I've been pretty lucky and I have won a dress for £2.50 (plus P+P), and a romper for £6.00 (plus P+P). I'll post pictures when they arrive.

This post however, is about how I bought some shoes from the range for when Aurora is a little older. We've been lucky that we received lots of baby-clothes as gifts when Aurora was born, so I persuaded my husband to let me buy some items for when she's a couple of years old, with the money we saved for her clothing during my pregnancy. He said yes, so went mad at Mothercare.

Well... not mad, I wish. I got a dress and cardigan, which I will post with the eBay items, as well as the shoes and trainers in this post

I have no idea how old Aurora will be when she can wear them, the sizing of children's shoes is alien to me. The shoes look like they'll fit a toddler and the trainers a four year old... maybe?! Anyway, she'll fit into them at some point.

I just love the retro, 1970s/1980s look of them, as they remind me of what I was dressed in as child. In fact: in the post about the items I got from eBay, I'll include a photo of me as a child in similar clothes.

Here are the shoes and trainers:







Although I want Aurora to stay a baby forever, I can't wait until they fit her. 


Tuesday, 27 May 2014

Day Out in Dedham

What to do on a rainy Bank Holiday Monday, with a 6 and a half week old baby - who has no idea of what's going on and just wants to eat, sleep and poo - that's cheap and fun? Get out into the countryside of course. Constable Country - situated on the Essex-Suffolk border - to be precise.

It's an area my parents took my brothers and me to when we were younger, we'd walk (or row) from Flatford to Dedham along the River Stour. I took my husband for his first time a few years ago, and we have since been back several times.

Row boat hire is available for either £5 for half an hour or £8 for an hour's hire, but we didn't think that was a suitable activity with a baby...

Usually we drive to Flatford and use the car park which cost £3.50 (free for National trust members), but this time we drove to Dedham and found a free parking space on the street.

After getting a Rossi ice cream from the Art and Craft Centre we took the 40 minute walk along the river, over the flat fields with awkward kissing gates and a herd of cows, to Flatford. The kissing gates were only awkward because we had the pushchair/travel system, or whatever they are called these days. We only had to lift if over 2 gates - we were able to get it through the other 2.

After a look around Flatford, which included Morris dancers, we took the walk back to Dedham and got some lunch. We could have taken a picnic but I'm not that organised at the moment - so we got a toastie and drink each, from Pandora's Box, before heading home.

I got a few photos, but what with pushing the buggy or holding Aurora, I didn't actually get photos of Flatford or the river!


We started off in lovely Dedham

Rossi ice cream - Southend's finest.

A rather pointless kissing gate - an easy one to get through

Nettles...

Ah...




The gate to get to Flatford was on the other side of the herd

 

Sunday, 25 May 2014

Den of Vintiquity's change of direction

Having a baby is obviously a life changing event, so it's probably no surprise that when and what I post on Twitter has changed.

I was quite sick during my pregnancy and tweeting about the vintage items I loved/wanted/had for sale became less of a priority and not possible at some points. What certainly became more of a priority was saving money and saving up for our little bundle of chubby cheekiness: so I took the decision to stop selling the vintage, retro, antique and craft-made items at What the Butler Saw.

We still have a lot of items stashed away and want to keep selling in the future; whether we return to What the Butler Saw in Leigh on Sea, or sell in one of Norwich's great vintage shops, is still undecided.

We did have a stall booked at Gresham's Antiques and Collectors fair in July, but sadly it has been cancelled by the organisers. However, they run fairs at Newmarket Racecourse in Suffolk, and we will hopefully be securing a stall there for August.

What this post is really about is to announce how I will probably be changing the direction of how I use Twitter (the @denofvintiquity account). Although I will still tweet about vintage, it will be more baby/parenting and introducing Aurora to my love of vintage and craft.

I also want to become more interactive on Twitter (and on the blog, although I need to learn how to do that), as I feel I just chuck tweets/posts out at followers at the moment.

Thanks for reading this and hopefully I'll still see you on Twitter!


Thursday, 8 May 2014

Aurora's vintage wardrobe

As a lover of all things vintage, it is only natural that I force encourage Aurora to enjoy it also. Whilst she still has no say about how she's dressed, she'll be in carefully selected retro and vintage outfits, when she's not slobbing-out in sleepsuits anyway. 

When I found out I was pregnant I started looking for vintage baby items straight away. I started with the usual suspects - eBay and Google. I really have no patience for waiting days for lots to end, or for bidding wars, so generally go for (reasonably priced) 'buy now' items on eBay. And there are many online shops selling vintage baby items now if you're able to use Google.

I sell vintage and antique items (until recently in a shop in Leigh on Sea, but at fairs now) so I have been fortunate enough to come across some amazing items through meeting other vintage sellers and hunting around vintage, second-hand and charity shops. My parents found these gems in Norfolk when hunting for items to sell.   

As well as getting items online, at fairs and those old-fashioned things called shops, we've been really lucky that people have given us (lots) of clothes as gifts, and some have been vintage.


Here are some of Aurora's vintage clothes -  she already has a better wardrobe than her parents...


 
From top left to right:
  1. Adams' dress from the 90s bought from Rowdy Roddy Vintage* (RRV) - £14
  2. 70s dress, also from RRV - £18
  3. Vintage knitted cardigan from RRV - £8
  4. Vintage romper from RRV - £8
  5. 1960s romper - a gift from family
  6. The flipping excellent design on the 60s romper
  7. One of the 50s/60s dresses from Norfolk - part of a bundle of items 
  8. Another vintage item from RRV** - £9

*No vested interest here, I just love the shop!
**I've honestly not been given/promised anything to promote RRV!

Vintage baby

Here it is; my first post for this blog: one month and one day after giving birth to my first child.

Aurora arrived in March after I was induced early, due to having developed gestational diabetes. A much wanted baby, who my husband and I didn't think we'd be able to have.

Well, Aurora's here. And life's got flipped-turned upside down - but in the best way ever. The nine months I spent feeling awful and the labour are all forgotten... erm, naaaht. But it was all worth it.

So now it's all about getting on with caring for, nurturing, teaching, encouraging and discipling Aurora in the manner I (and my husband) think is best. I have not read any parenting books and don't plan to either. I will accept advice from healthcare professionals, family, friends and even strangers, and I'll Google things if I am concerned at all, but mainly I will be going on what feels right or... natural?

Anyway, welcome to my blog which I aim to be about Aurora, vintage and anything and everything. Watch this space!

Dawn x