One Year Old

One year – Ezekiel has mastered running. He has really been working on fine motor skills after getting all his gross motor skills completed. He is a little daredevil. He climbs up slides and goes head first down them. He has all the cuts, scratches, and bruises to prove his adventurous self. He can stack towers of blocks. He can be entertained for quite some time stacking up towers, playing with his pop up toys, or looking at books. He now has six teeth. He loves eating with blueberries being his favorite food. He still nurses 800 million times a day and I don’t foresee that stopping anytime soon. I love you still man. Happy birthday. 

It’s the quiet moments when it all hits. After the party, and the cake, and the presents, and the playing. When he sleeps. He doesn’t sleep much it feels like. Certainly not through the night. And one year has brought more sleep changes. But in the times when it’s quiet, I think about the amazing year of Ezekiel. 

I think of how many new things you’ve learned; how you are becoming your own person. How you are independent and opinionated. How you are learning to communicate what you want with us. How you love a challenge. How you love adventure. How you love books- oh how exciting it is for me to watch my busy little man stop and look at books for the longest time. I love how friendly and social you are. You love to play with your friends at daycare. And oh how it warms my heart when you are excited to see me pick you up and you run over with your arms stretched out for me. 

You have certainly been a wild ride. The adventure with you never stops. There are moments of tears and so many times filled with laughter and joy. You are such a happy guy. You love to smile. Your laugh is amazing. You love to copy us and make silly laughs. I wasn’t prepared for the life you would bring. But I certainly couldn’t have it any other way. 

To my little baby – as you end your first year – I have loved to watch you grow and cuddle, comfort, and nurtious you every second along the way. I have spent countless hours awake with you when I was use to sleeping. I have spent numerous mornings exhausted. And I have loved seeing you master each new step and milestone – rolling over, smiling, sitting up, crawling, pulling up, standing, climbing, walking, running, clapping, waving, signing, stacking blocks. You have  the best expressions as you have learned each thing and I watch the wheels turn in your mind as you learn. 

To my new emerging toddler – I can’t watch to continue to see you grow into the little boy you are becoming. You will have more sleepless nights and tears and cuts. And you will have much more laughter, smiles, happiness, and joy. 

This year was nothing like we could have anticipated. My social little guy got stuck at home with mom and dad while we tried to work. It was hard. But your smiles have brought me a lot of joy too. I am so lucky to be your mom. 

Happy birthday Ezekiel. 

Birth Story

This was written a year ago. I never competely finished it, so I had never posted it. It has been a year, but today I am reflecting on that day one year ago.

Birth, like pregnancy and like parenthood, includes a lot of unknowns. When will my baby decide it’s time to enter the world? Is this real labor? Is this the best time? Nevertheless, it’s a process that I was ready for. There was certainly some fear. Was I prepared? Did I have my coping skills ready for labor? Will I be a good mom to this little boy? Will he make it so that I can hold him in my arms?

It took a lot to get to this point with him. Two miscarriages, grief, stress, obsession, lifestyle changes, millions of doctors, supplements, progesterone, biweekly blood draws. Was it possible that I could lose him after all that? I certainly hoped not, but I was aware of that possibility.

My birth plan was written, my doula was on stand-by, my midwife team was supportive. Work was at a place where it would be okay if I left, but it was definitely something that was on my mind a lot. By Wednesday – August 28th – I had all by two of my clients transferred. I had reports waiting to be signed but finished, and I had a few more things I could have liked to do. By Thursday morning, I still had notes to finish from Tuesday and Wednesday. I figured I could do them Thursday morning because I only had one transfer session scheduled that day. I was 38 weeks. I figured I would probably have a couple more weeks to work on more for the team – the average mom goes past her due date. I had made many documents preparing the team for my leave.

Rewinding a couple weeks, I had been having pretty intense and nearly constant back pain. Nothing seems to relieve the pain. I just had to cope with it. But it made me tired. It was very painful. I felt unprepared for childbirth. On August 19th, my back was hurting again as was typical, but I told Bryan that there was some pain that would intensify and go away. It didn’t feel like a big deal because it wasn’t terrible. Up until this point, I had taken the approach of “If I can ignore it, it’s not active labor.” Bryan asked if I was timing it. It really didn’t even dawn on me that I would want to do that, but I also didn’t think it was necessary. We headed out to OSF for infant CPR. I would glance at the clock when I felt the pain become a little more intense. Huh, they were about ten minutes apart. This didn’t feel like anything concerning though. Prodromal labor. I texted my doula with the irony of how this was happening while I was at OSF.

My doula is absolutely amazing and supportive. Her name is Kate. My experience would have been completely different if it wasn’t for her. She agreed that it sounded like prodromal labor. Prodromal labor is labor that starts and stops before active labor. The contractions are real, but they come and go and labor does not progress. I settled in working on comforts and coping skills and by the morning, the contractions were gone.

Prodromal labor continued most days over the next couple weeks. It would typically start as intense back pain that would stay constant, and by the evening, contractions would also start. The only thing that helped was falling asleep. Sleep was definitely more uncomfortable too. Sitting wasn’t comfortable and neither was laying. I would bounce on the ball or try different labor positions. In the end, I would continue this process for what felt like forever.

On Thursday, August 29, I woke up around 6:30am. I had just recently gotten up to go to the bathroom, but after lying back down, I felt something. I went to the bathroom again, and there was a lot of blood. I called for Bryan, and he shot awake. I also lost some kind of clump that was completely bloody. It almost seemed like a clot. I thought maybe it was my mucus plug or bloody show. But I thought I had already lost my mucus plug over a week again, and everything I had seen about blood show was streaked with blood, but this was an entire clump of blood. It was about 6:45 when I called Kate. She was at a client’s house for the night, and let me know she would call me back at 7 when she left. Bryan and I waited anxiously. Bryan was pretty nervous. He kept saying that Kate was taking too long. After talking to Kate, she recommended that I call my doctor’s office.

I called the after hours number shortly after 7. The nurse connected me to the midwife on call, Kristin. I remember being glad about that since she was one of the midwives that I liked. Kristin told me that she wanted me to be checked out, but that it could wait until the office opened. She instructed me to call the office when they opened in about an hour to schedule an appointment for an ultrasound and to meet with someone. I waited out the time by making breakfast and showering. I figured if we did need to go to the hospital, I would want to be well fed and ready. The office scheduled me for 9:00. I got my hospital bag ready and had Bryan put it in the car just in case.

The ultrasound went well. I was thankful that Ezekiel was okay. She said the fluid level looked good, the placenta looked good, and the baby was healthy. We waited until 9:30 to see Crystal, who I had never met with. She checked me and told me that I was 4 centimeters dilated. She checked again to be sure. This was the first time I had my cervix checked, so I didn’t know what it had been previously. Crystal wanted me to go to the hospital to be observed and be certain that my water had not broken since I still had some minor bleeding.

We called Kate to meet us at the hospital and headed over. Bryan dropped me off at the front before parking. I had some more food knowing that I probably wouldn’t be able to eat at the hospital. I remember thinking often how I really should have written those notes! We headed over to labor and delivery and got check into a triage room. Kate got there by the time I finished changing. The nurses were more concerned with asking a million questions to get my check updated. Kate explained that they still ask all these questions even if you come in having active labor, so it was helpful to get them out of the way now. I was having the intense back pain, but no contractions. After awhile, Mary Ann, a sweet triage nurse practitioner, came to check me and set up a plan. She said I was dilated to a 2. (Both said I was 90% effaced.) She got some samples to check if my water had broken. It didn’t. We waited forever to get another ultrasound to measure fluid levels, which were good. And we got to leave after about 4 hours.

I stayed home for the rest of the day, got my notes done, and sent out some emails just in case. I couldn’t decide if I should go to work the next day, and decided to wait to see how I was doing. I didn’t sleep much that night, but I fell asleep for at least an hour before I had another scheduled appointment on Friday morning. I was so tired, so I didn’t eat breakfast or shower so that I could sleep a little bit longer.

At the appointment, we met with Karen. She recommended a therapeutic rest. Kate had mentioned this as an option as well. Karen explained that the uterus may be so tired from the prodromal labor that allowing it to rest could either stop prodromal labor or kick start real labor. She prescribed me a medication with instructions to only take it if I had a minimum of five hours to sleep. I went to the chiropractor where she adjusted my pelvic bone as well explaining that it was shifted up. Based on Karen’s recommendation, I had some food, a lot to drink, took a bath, and then took the medicine. It was about noon when I took it.

I woke up about an hour later. I couldn’t go back to sleep. I laid in bed for about another hour before getting too uncomfortable and getting up. Contractions started to pick up and become more intense by 3:30. They felt more intense and were lasting about a minute but were still ten minutes apart. By 4:15 they were significantly more intense, were coming about every nine minutes, and required a lot more concentration.

By that point, I was no longer able to text Kate updates and Bryan took over at some point. The contractions got way more intense and I had to do a lot to move through them. By 5:00 or so, Bryan was trying to get the car packed and wasn’t sure if we should go to the hospital yet. During an intense contraction, I was able to get out that I felt like I was having trouble getting enough air. He finished packing up the car, and I made my way to the car.

I didn’t want to leave Bryan and he didn’t want to do valet parking, so I walked from where he parked with him to the front where we got a wheelchair. It was about 6:30pm at this point. As he wheeled me in, I asked if Kate was here yet.

“Uh.. I didn’t tell her to come yet.”

“Tell her to come now.”

I was definitely frustrated. This was real labor. This wasn’t like yesterday. We got up to labor and delivery and they rushed us into a random room because the triage rooms were full. I got changed into a gown, got into the bed, and immediately threw up red. Bryan and I were both a little freaked out. He called the nurse who calmly came in asking if I had anything red to eat.

Watermelon! Mystery solved. I wasn’t throwing up blood. Kate got there shortly after, but I don’t remember must about that point and didn’t realize she had gotten there. Bryan asked the nurse if I could have water. They said that wouldn’t help and would get an IV in. I remember the nurse checking me and saying I was 5 centimeters. I remember them asking me what I wanted for pain management.

Nothing.

I don’t really remember, but they tried desperately to get an IV in as I continued to throw up. Apparently I was super dehydrated at this point and the nurse blew every vein. I ended up with a huge bruise on that arm and she was never successful. As they wheeled my bed to a labor and delivery room, the nurse was shoving hot packs around my arm trying to get a vein to pop. I must have had my eyes closed, but I heard the nurse on the phone saying that she had a girl in active labor who didn’t want an epidural.

Things became more clear as I got into that room. The time was pretty blurred though. I focused on each contraction. I moved a ton in different ways that seemed helpful. I took direction from Kate and the nurse about different positions. The contractions were intense. Apparently they would frequently go off the chart. They were different than typical contractions. Rather than peaking once over the course of a minute, they would shoot you and stay high the entire time.

I remember Kate massaging my back a lot. My mom came too. Bryan was a great support but maybe overwhelmed by the process.

Karen was the midwife on call until the next day. She was pleased with how I was progressing.

Needed continual monitoring with one heart rate decrease from baby

Got to hospital 6:30ish 5cm
Water broke 9:30 at a 7
Heart rate dropped had to do continual monitoring at 11:30
12:30 – 8cm
12:45 talked about pitocin
2:45 agreed to epidural
Epidural 3:30
6:00am 9cm
12:30pm 10cm totally effaced
Pushing around 2:30
Born 5:26

Karen told me that we needed to have labor continue and it had been several hours where I had not progressed at all from 8cm. She waited as long as possible. She said she wanted to do this to give me an opportunity to still have a vaginal birth. She needed to start pitocin and wanted an epidural to give my body a chance to rest. She said my uterus was too tired to continue. They used a monitor in my uterus to measure contractions and get a better picture of how much potocin to use. They ended up needing to crank the pitocin up all the way and my contractions never got as high as they were before. But I did continue to progress. Pushing was productive. Ashley stayed nearly the entire time for pushing. It lasted three hours. I could feel when I pooped. After that I thought I could still feel poop stuck there but Kate explained that I was feeling the head. Pushing was very calm. After I got the hang of it, there was no counting or coaching. I pushed when I felt a contraction coming on. I closed by eyes and counted in my head for the count of three or four pushes. In between I completely relaxed and took a break. My eyes were closed for most of that too. At the beginning of pushing Ashley pointed out that my eye brows were wrinkled so I could completely relax. After that Bryan would rub my eye brow telling me how good I was doing.

At the end, I felt the intensity of the need to push and just kept pushing without breaks. I opened by eyes enough to see a nurse coming around and shortly after Ezekiel was on my chest. Bryan described how crazy the process was. The two nurses came around and Kate stepped out of the way without saying anything. The nurses pushed my legs back. Another nurse pushed on my stomach hard. Then Ezekiel came out.

Turns out that Ezekiel’s shoulder was stuck. He had mild shoulder dystocia. They were able to get him out with only the first two interventions. We also found out why labor was so difficult. Ezekiel’s head was slightly off center. Therefore, his cone head was off centered too. He also had a subdural hematoma – blood had pooled in the back of his head from labor. He also had a true knot in his umbilical cord. Apparently these often cause fetal distress and seem to result in death frequently as well. Ezekiel was very lucky.

After holding him for a short while, the nurses were rubbing him down on my chest, and a doctor or nurse came up and told me that because of the shoulder dystocia, they needed to take him to the nursery and she asked if I was ready. I say no. I thought it was almost humorous looking back because of course I wasn’t ready, and I thought it was silly that she asked it that way. I also had no clue at that point that anything had gone wrong or that he even had shoulder dystocia. She agreed to do some of his shots on my chest but then said that she had to take him. Bryan went with him.

In the nursery they made sure that he did not have any broken bones and was breathing okay from the shoulder dystocia. He was good. They put marker on my head to measure the blood pooling and cone head making sure it went back. They measured several times throughout our stay.

When they brought him back to me, he was swaddled and could only stay a short time before going back to the nursery for more testing. He came back when I moved to the postpartum room.

After Birth – working through old notes

9/22/2019

I thought I’d keep up with this better, but pregnancy was tiring! Then I wanted to write the birth story first, but that’s been overwhelming to work through. So I’ll start from today. 

Ezekiel is here! And he is already three weeks old. Time is so weird with a newborn. It moves slowly, but it’s also a blur. Ezekiel has struggled with nursing and sleeping, so we have been terribly exhausted. In his short life, he has visited the nursery several times for shoulder dystocia, a subdural hematoma, and jaundice risk. We left the hospital for home. We went back to the hospital for extremely high jaundice levels and stayed overnight with phototherapy. He has also had a lip and tongue tie revision. Now at three weeks old with all that extra help, he is gaining weight better – he gained 19 ounces in a week, nursing faster – he was eating almost constantly all day previously, and sleeps a tiny bit better – he was barely sleeping at all before because he was eating so much. 

Each day is getting a little smoother. But it’s been really hard! 

Today he enjoys the activity mat and still loves being active. He can roll over from tummy to back and gets pretty close to rolling over from his back. He loves to be close to Bryan and I and would rather be held all day. He sleeps in our arms most often. For now, I’ll keep giving him everything he needs and soaking up the cuddles. 

When Ezekiel was born, I didn’t have a ton of expectations. I knew it would be hard. But those first two weeks were incredibly difficult. I couldn’t figure out how people did it. Bryan regretted having him a bit. I didn’t regret it, but I couldn’t believe how hard it was.  

11/5/2019

Today motherhood is…

  • listening to my child scream bloody murder because I put him down to go to the bathroom.
  • taking an extra trip in the car so that my child will sleep, only to have him wake up crying and not be close to home.
  • singing nursery rhymes for the millionth time with sign language trying to calm him and teach him.
  • getting spit up all down my shirt and right next to the burp cloth for the second time.
  • using my child’s arm to prop up my plate so that I can eat while he nurses.
  • nursing my child through yoga because he’s hungry after eating only about an hour previously.
  • knowing that it’s normal to nurse my baby whenever he wants – even if that’s all day long.
  • starting my day before 6 am to pump because my baby finally slept a little longer and nursed shorter. 
  • putting my two month old baby in six month clothes because he is growing so fast!
  • not having a head-over-heels love feeling for my baby, but knowing that’s normal and okay because I still care deeply for him and love him.
  • talking with some amazing women about how challenging babies are, and how that is normal and okay!
  • staring into his eyes and knowing that I’ll do anything to help him.
  • cuddling him while he sleeps in my arms because he won’t keep sleeping if I put him down.
  • being grateful for my village of support.
  • being thankful that I know how to continue self-care and how much my calm will support his wellbeing.
  • knowing I’m doing an amazing job.

Nine Ten Eleven

5/6/2020

Ezekiel has been learning so much. He has quickly gone from crawling to being able to pull himself up on things and stand. Everyday he gets better at pulling himself up, balancing, and standing. He is also getting a lot better at using his hands for balance and to catch himself. He can take a few steps if I help him with his walker. When he isn’t standing, he likes to practice by getting up to his feet and walking on hands and feet. He learned yesterday how to put a block in his toy and has continued working on that skill. He now is doing high fives. He is learning a much over just a few days. It is exciting to watch him learn and grow and change so rapidly right now. Two days ago, we noticed the first start of a tooth bud starting to break through. Now it seems like there might be another tooth bud on the bottom. They are slowly breaking their way through. He has also been very vocal. 

Nine Months 5/30/2020

Ezekiel has continued to be as active as ever. Now at nine months, he can walk with assistance or while holding something. He can clap, wave, and sign some. He has two teeth. He has perfected “dada” and has been working on other sounds as he gets closer to “mama.” He enjoys eating. He still loves water and will grab at falling water or stick his hands underneath. He also loves to splash around. One thing I was not prepared for this month was that he also learned to climb. He can climb onto low chairs and then stands on them! He wants to climb on anything he can. Everyday is a process of realizing something more he can reach and needing to change or add things to baby proof better. 

We celebrated Andrew’s second due date anniversary this month as well. I wish he was old enough to understand. 

I can’t be silent anymore about the topics in America right now. I wish the world we lived in was so different for Zeke. To start that change, we have to at minimum call it out. Last week, George Floyd was murdered while in police custody by a police officer kneeled on his neck until he died. Now over the last week, protests across the country have begun and violence has continued. The amount of people that do not understand the pain experienced by black people in America is appalling but not surprising since we are still facing these same problems. Yesterday, Bryan attended a peaceful protest in Peoria for Black Lives Matter. I really hope change can happen so that the world does not have to look this way at Zeke gets older. I added several books to his library list to help him appreciate black lives and the history before him. 

Ten Months 6/30/2020

Ezekiel is ten months old today! He has four teeth now. He got his fourth tooth in (the second on the top) on 6/13/2020. He loves eating food and is getting better at chewing and biting. He has four teeth. He has transitioned from a bottle and now takes almost all of his milk at daycare from a sippy cup. He is more stable on his feet and is excited to walk anywhere while holding something. He has been waving a ton. He has not said anymore words. We have moved his crib down to the bottom level now because he likes to bounce. He has done well learning how to slide down from the couch even though he would rather fall off. He can signal that he wants down or up. He loves music and dancing. He went back to daycare this month and he has enjoyed it. He gets excited to leave to go in the morning. For those of you keeping track at home, he does not sleep though the night and I don’t envision that happening for quite some time. We have all found our groove with it though. This month he also has his first trip to Wildlife Prairie Park. He is still our curious, interested, energetic little guy. 

7/18/2020

No one told me how hard it would be to be your mom. No one told me that you wouldn’t be a sleepy newborn. No one told me that I’d be sharing my bed with you. No one told me how happy you would be. No one told me that you would be so adventurous. 

Being your mom has been hard. But being your mom was exactly what you needed. You needed someone would would be willing to pick you up every time you woke up at night. You needed someone who wouldn’t be mad when you explored every inch of the house. You needed someone who could be patient and consistent every time you got into things you weren’t suppose to be in. You needed someone who would smile and laugh and play with you. You needed someone who would let you be independent while helping you trust while staying close. 

Your personality amazing me. You love to adventure and explore and figure out new things. You enjoy doing everything by yourself. Yet you love having mommy and daddy close. You need our cuddles often. You are still not a fan of sleep, but who has time for that?

You are amazing to watch as you practice taking steps. I love that I got to help you take those first few steps on your own. 

You are such a happy baby. You love to smile and laugh. Oh your laugh! It’s the best for sure. 

You are the best. 

We are everything you need. And you are the perfect way to complete our family. 

Loving you all hours of the day and night. 

11 months 7/31/2020

Zeke is such a big kid now. He is walking all over the place all on his own. He barely crawls anymore. He can get up without the assistance of holding onto anything when he falls while walking. He took his first steps on 7/17 and just ten days later had perfected walking and even a slight run. He says dada, mama, baba, and babbles other syllables. He signs more, all done, and eat. He had not signed milk in a while. His favorite book is “My Lucky Little Dragon.” He enjoys getting his books off the shelf and reading as well as getting all his toys out to play with. He has gotten much better at stacking his buckets and other tower toys. He waves goodbye and hello. He can point to his head when asked where it is. He loves being at daycare still and frequently plays games of chase with his friends. He is close to getting more teeth in, but they have not yet broken through. He is also better at mimicking noises and sounds we make. He can crawl in and out of laps and small chairs.