Showing posts with label life. Show all posts
Showing posts with label life. Show all posts

11 May 2014

the birth story of Aubrey Finn


I wrote his birth story in the weeks after he was born, but somehow wasn’t comfortable sharing it. Maybe it was too special, too private, too soon. I also wanted to honour the precious newborn days, keeping it close, not jumping straight back into computer-filled nights. I then rewrote it, with less detail. Three times. It's Mother's Day, and I am sentimental. So here it is.

First, some background. After going into spontaneous labour with Ellery at 31 weeks, we’d been worried this babe would arrive early. There was about a 15 percent increased risk of premature birth, but with additional worries early on in this pregnancy, including an impromptu hospital admission around 20 weeks (for what turned out to be a typo on a routine scan), our concerns were heightened. I’d been advised to decamp from the island to Brisbane from about 23 weeks. Ellery and I made the move a little earlier, thanks to that hospital admission and the fortuitous purchase of our first house. All of this meant I’d had to relinquish my desire for a water birth through our hospital’s Birth Centre. Keiran was working nine day shifts on the island and returning to us on his five-day weekends. With infrequent ferry services between the island and mainland, I was worried he’d miss the birth.

We crossed the psychological milestone of 31 weeks, and by 37 weeks, felt stupendous relief to be still cooking a full term baby – hurrah! The only question now was K’s presence for the birth.

Babe was due on 28 February – the last day of summer. K had a month’s leave locked in, and his ferry ticket to Brisbane booked. His shift finished on a Tuesday but the vehicle ferry didn’t leave until Wednesday afternoon. At the last minute, he had a feeling he just couldn’t wait that extra day. He pulled up stumps on the Monday and got the boat home that afternoon. Sweet relief, and the blessed end of four months of our little family living apart.

That night, I noticed some discomfort when I got up to pee. In the morning I noticed mild cramps in my lower belly, and lost what I supposed was the mucous plug. I stood in the kitchen telling K, and then noticed the cramps peaking and subsiding. I told him this might be the start of things, and went back to bed to rest.

I started timing ‘contractions’ (though they didn’t quite feel like that just yet) at 8am sharp. They were irregular. K asked if he had time to shower – instinctively I told him to hurry. I asked him to get my labour notes from my bag and to make four phone calls: to put our au pair and Nana on standby to take care of Ellery; let our doula know things had started; and call the hospital. In hindsight, we should have made the calls the other way around.

This is where my memory gets really blurry. Thankfully a contraction timer app has left a trail of breadcrumbs!

By 8.24am, contractions were a minute and a half apart and lasting around 40 seconds.  From here it all got regular. And loud. And wet.

By the time he was onto the fourth phone call – to the hospital – the midwife, who could hear me, suggested he call an ambulance. He deferred to me. I said yes. He did. 

My rational brain was long gone, and being the thick of peak hour, the ambulance was, in hindsight, an excellent decision.

The woman on ‘000’ kept him on the phone whilst an ambulance was despatched. There was talk of clean towels and ‘can you see the baby?’.

K was a bastion of calm throughout all this, coordinating all the things whilst letting me clamp onto him and roar in his ear.

The ambos arrived and were great – very calm. They decided to wait and see how things were progressing – in hindsight I realise they were wondering if I might have the baby there and then. After a few minutes, they made the call to get me into the truck and on the way to hospital.

I barked a few one-word instructions: ‘pillows’, ‘undies’, ‘bags’ and other things I wanted K to bring with us. It was the same headspace as with Ellery’s birth – my focus went within and I couldn’t even commander my eyes to look at anyone.

I somehow hobbled into a wheelchair and was lifted downstairs and onto the trolley-bed. I heard the main guy say ‘code one’ and K telling me we were going with lights and sirens. By this stage I was panting through the urge to push.

We went in through emergency and my crew insisted to the emergency peeps that we had time to get to Birth Suite. Not only did we have time to get to Birth Suite, we had time to take the scenic route, thanks to a bum steer up the wrong lift. Back down to the ground floor! Although I could barely gather my eyes to see, I could tell we were somehow now going through the main public part of the building, me writhing in full-blown contractions. Oh. My. God!! One of the ambos told the people waiting for a lift that we would be getting the next lift, thank you. There weren’t any objections. Our doula Jennie met us on the way in.

Finally we got to Birth Suite and were greeted by one midwife, Helen, who coincidentally happened to be who K had talked to on the phone. We got incredibly lucky; she was the perfect midwife for us. And whose name, I later found out, is Helen Kay. As in, my Mum’s name, with a minor spelling difference!

From the moment we arrived at Birth Suite, everything happened seamlessly and in accordance with our wishes, without our written birth preferences – essentially for a natural, unmedicated labour with no time restrictions – even coming out of our bag. The lights were dimmed and voices hushed.

Helen quickly endeared herself. She mentioned that a doctor was asking to come into the room to get their birth attendances up, but that she would object on our behalf, if that was OK with us. She radiated calm, friendly, reassuring and clearly had control of what was happening in that room. I now know what it means in birth talk to ‘hold the space’.

After a short stint laying on my side, I was helped into an upright position over the head of the bed. Helen gave loads of encouragement and guidance on how to push. It wasn’t long before she called K to catch the baby. I heard Helen suggest to Jennie that she thought perhaps I was scared to really let go. I thought, ‘No, contractions aren’t lasting long enough for me to push past a certain point!’.  

I was willing this baby out with everything I had. I remembered my affirmations, and countered every thought of ‘it hurts’ and ‘I want this to be over’ with the knowledge that every contraction was another one done, and that we would soon meet our baby. 

K told me he could see the head – dark hair! I smiled. Some very intense pushing and burning – and his head was out! The relief! I will never forget the sensation of his head moving around.

I then felt Helen help to turn him. Another push – or two, I can’t recall – and he was born into his Daddy’s hands. K passed him under my legs and I took him up to my chest. I turned around and melted back into the bed with our baby in my arms!

After a few seconds, I asked ‘is it a boy?’ Despite having no intuition about this baby's gender during my pregnancy, a very primal part of me had known all along. I dreamed of this boy – of both our boys – when Ellery was a wee sprout in my belly.

We snuggled on the bed. Helen got us a warm blanket. He was perfect, though a little upset. He latched on within half an hour and settled down.

Helen told us the cord had stopped pulsing, and let us feel. I asked to wait ten minutes. She agreed, and helped K clamp and cut the cord. The placenta came out without a hitch, and Helen packed it up ready for us to take.

The next eight hours were interrupted only by food, a shower and eventually a weigh and measure. In the afternoon we had a visit from Ellery and Nana. There were lots of congratulations and a very happy vibe all round. Our doula and midwife hugged on parting. 

Helen left us with some beautiful words. She thanked us and said it had been a privilege to be at our birth. She told us that as a senior midwife, she didn’t usually get to attend normal, natural births anymore. It was the birth she needed, she said. She noticed in my file that I’d requested to birth in the Birth Centre, and urged me to really press for this, if we had another baby, as I was the ‘perfect candidate’. I was quietly chuffed. Lucky, otherwise I would have died from the irony.

We’d asked for an early discharge, and after some scurrying by K to procure a capsule, we left hospital around 8pm. On our way out we passed a doctor, who said, all agog, that I looked great. I wonder if he was the one who’d asked to attend our birth.

They say quick births can be a shock – and it was certainly surreal arriving home that night with a baby – but it was all pretty cruisy after Ellery’s birth.

This boy was born in under three hours, though in hindsight, was ready to be born in about an hour. And probably would have been under different circumstances. With the early concerns, I never asked K about a planned homebirth because I knew he would never have gone for it. And yet he was so calm about the prospect of nearly having an unplanned one.

I am eternally grateful for this experience. It was the natural birth I’d always wanted. Peaceful, and healing. I didn't get to hold my first baby for three days. I waited five weeks to bring him home. This boy spent his first night in the world at home, with us. 

And despite feeling not quite prepared, in the end I had all I needed. I mean, how lucky are we that I went into labour the morning after K came home! We did it!

Welcome to the world, sweet little Aubrey Finn. Your amazing journey starts here.

08 May 2014

taking stock


Because I have a thousand things I want to write about, yet write about none. Because I seem to only post photos of my kids these days. Because I like lists, and have a spare five minutes. (Actually that's not true, I'm procrastinating.) And well, just because. Here is Pip's list...

Making: papier mache moneyboxes, and a small boy beanie, and a blanket
Cooking: dahls and soups because Autumn is finally here, hooray!
Drinking: lots of herbal tea
Reading: blogs
Wanting: new ugg boots, one of these bespoke cardies (fat chance!), and an end to the chaos and clutter. 
Also, a new computer; I am done sharing! (And ashamed that 'wanting' is my longest answer.)
Looking: at my gorgeous smallest one sleeping
Playing: whatever imaginary game the big boy dreams up
Wasting: time on my phone
Sewing: thinking about how I'll sew knitted squares together to finish the small boy's baby blanket
Wishing: we weren't broke
Enjoying: the cooler weather
Waiting: for a cup of tea
Liking: the coffee buzz
Wondering: if I will ever fit into my pre-baby jeans
Loving: wearing the small boy in the Hugabub
Hoping: for an adult conversation with K
Marvelling: 
that my small boy sleeps! I know it won't always be this easy.
Needing: to get our big boy into swimming lessons. And more exercise for me.
Smelling: the fish stock in the slow cooker
Wearing: my grandpa cardie and leggings (oh no, I've become one of those people that wear leggings because my jeans don't fit!!)
Following: some inspiring Instagrammers
Noticing: how much we have aged since having kids!!
Knowing: that time is evaporating before my eyes
Thinking: about what we'll do on our holidays in August, and hoping it involves our first ever family holiday (that is, a getaway that is just for us)
Feeling: a little overwhelmed by all the things, especially the parenting things
Bookmarking: kid play ideas
Opening: Lightroom to edit photos
Giggling: at 
my big boy's funny sayings.

25 February 2014

introducing...








Aubrey Finn

Our beautiful new boy, who is oh so delicate and tiny.

Who came into the world a week ago today.

Born at 10.55am on 18 February 2014

3.09 kg (6lb 8oz)

48cm long

We are totally, utterly, in love.

♥♥♥

27 October 2011

we live here

Now I have that off my chest, to share the ridiculously amazing station we find ourselves in. It is nothing short of stupendous. This place, here... 





I've mentioned it before here, and here. Thanks to an amazing stroke of luck/karma/patience/brilliance, and after battling for nearly a year to find work to complement his solo web design, K landed a ranger posting. On Moreton Island. It is so perfectly him. I've never seen a job fit anyone as well as this fits him. It's as though some godly hand reached down from the sky and granted him his lifetime's wish - though I'm sure he remembers the interview somewhat differently.

And it was all so perfectly timed. Fast forward a month from the job offer. We had a baby. Needed family-sized lodgings. And now, find ourselves in the assistant lighthouse keeper's cottage ('cottage' reflecting the heritage value of our lodgings, not the size). 

And the location? So perfectly us (though only in our wildest dreams). Living on a windswept sunny Cape, a prime whale-watching spot. On the world's third-largest sand island, all but a whisker of it national park. Remote, salty, thick with coastal heath. We'd wondered aloud before, how one goes about finding a posting at a lighthouse. In the end, it found us.

It's like I blinked and life changed. Baby. Lighthouse. I know not what, next. And it sort of doesn't matter. Life is grand :)

24 August 2011

our little earlybird

That last photo of me at 30 weeks was the last one taken of me pregnant. A week later, we had the shock of our lives. I'm not sure that I've actually pieced it all together until now. Anyway, it happened like this...

On the weekend I caved in to my nesting energy and cleaned and scrubbed the floors. As in, on my knees. And then walked to the video store. And back. Up a stupidly big hill. So on Monday, I attributed the mounting back and pelvic pain I was feeling to over exertion. On Tuesday it got worse and I left work early feeling headachey and 'off'. That night I could not get comfortable on the couch and as soon as I went to bed noticed the pain was actually coming and going. Harbouring terrible suspicions, I googled 'early onset labour' and spent a mostly sleepless night in considerable discomfort and denial, thinking 'it can't be, this is too soon'. I got myself a hot water bottle and practised the positions I learnt in yoga. K, home from the Island two days early for training (thank god), got some (but not much) sleep.

Soon as the sun came up I called my midwife and reached one of the other midwives in my group - my midwife was on annual leave. I explained the pain I was having. Maria told me to meet her at the pregnancy assessment and observation unit at hospital at 9am. Her lack of concern relaxed me a bit. Our hospital is just round the corner so we ate breakfast and got ready. I remember thinking in the shower that I would really take to the bath when it came time to actually give birth, as the hot water was great for easing the pain. Denial still intact. We packed a bag of snacks and I threw in my hypno-birthing book and K threw in his board shorts (for the bath/shower)... just in case.

At hospital I was shown to a recliner but couldn't sit down. Finally someone came and took us into a room for tests. I had to lay on the bed on my back which was so uncomfortable. We both relaxed a bit more when we heard the Bunyip's heartbeat. I was given antibiotics for a suspected urinary tract infection. And panadeine, suggested when a very annoying doctor said I looked like I was in a lot of pain. The final assessment was an internal ultrasound. The operator mucked around for a few minutes, then looked disbelieving and uttered the words "fully effaced". I then proceeded to have one of those strangely calm 'this is not happening' moments. I'd always skipped over the 'premature babies' section in Up the Duff. Why would I need to read that?

Maria put on her best faux-calm face and said "right, this baby is coming, we need to prepare for birth suite" and relayed the excellent outcomes for babies born at 31 weeks. K and I looked at each other (more faux-calm) and said stuff like "we'll be fine". I got a jab of steroids in the leg to help ready Bunyip's under-developed lungs. Maria said I'd done really well to complete the first stage of labour without much pain, to which I replied, "actually it WAS a lot of pain", and to K, "I told you it hurt". He'd been worried my pain threshold was really low because I tend to yelp - through surprise more than pain - at minor stuff. Scoff.
 
Let me just say, we feel so incredibly lucky to have a gorgeous healthy baby, delivered without any cutting or instruments. But because it happened nine weeks early, everything else was the complete opposite of the birth I had hoped for and visualised. The next eleven hours went something like this... wheelchair, hospital gown, continuous electronic fetal monitoring. Which meant laying on my back - or at a pinch, on my side, since my entire labour was IN MY BACK (Bunyip was posterior, like me as I later found out). During this time, no food, limited fluid intake (I verged on dehydration), no toilet, a procession of doctors, student doctors and internal exams. Once in birth suite, Maria told me I could start pushing, which I did for a while. A subsequent internal exam by one of the doctors showed I was in fact only about 7cm dilated, so I now had to supress the urge to push - which was a bit like trying to stop going to the toilet once you've started after you've been hanging on forever, plus BUCKETLOADS of pain. Contractions were short but intense and coming one on top of the other. The only thing I could remember from yoga was the breathing - not strange considering I could not use any of the movements in my prostate position. (I discovered K has some degree of post-traumatic stress the other day when I breathed out with 'horsey' lips, which I am now forbidden to do, ever again). I remember vowing to never clean the floors again. For the record, it was a urinary tract infection - not the floor-cleaning - that brought labour on early.

After possibly an hour or several (time blur) of trying to breathe through contractions and eventually becoming unconvinced that I was not pushing, I told Maria it was getting increasingly difficult. In hindsight, I am not convinced that she or the doctors could really tell how my labour was progressing - at one point I got the severe shakes and thought I was going to vomit and recognised this as transition, however it was ages before anyone gave me the all-clear to push.

Anyway, the doctors told us Bunyip's water bag was bulging and they were worried about cord prolapse - serious but more readily managed than placental abruption which was also on the cards and the reason for various interventions which were suggested to us. Poor K, I realised about a week afterwards, was quietly falling apart on his quick 'breaks' (read difficult phone updates to parents) outside the birth suite, worried he was going to lose one of us. I was too focused on managing the pain to register how he was doing or really think much about the possibility of anything other than a healthy baby... I was so focused I couldn't even look at K or at doctors when they came and spoke to us, though listened intently and kept my talking to a bare minimum as even that required energy I could not spare.

Despite my focus, I was aware of tensions between Maria and some of the doctors - apparently she copped a serve for letting me start pushing early. As unsettling and distracting as this was, I was glad I'd read about the medical and midwifery approaches to labour in The Birth Wars, and the potential for these tensions to affect outcomes.

Knowing that any intervention was likely to kick off a cascade of same, I eventually agreed to an epidural (the upside being it was our decision, made after much deliberation and out of concern for Bunyip's wellbeing), to having my waters broken with one of those needle things (again for Bunyip's wellbeing), and after little progress (probably because I was laying down), Syntocinin (to speed things up for little Bunyip). And some other injection (whatever) to expel the placenta (due to concerns of excessive bleeding). All these had been definitely off the cards up until the moment we conceded their necessity for our tiny babe.

On one of his 'breaks', K told me a swarm of neonatal resus people had converged on the little antechamber next to the birth suite. Which was reassuring but at the same time quite worrying. After what seemed like forever, it was declared I could now push, which was much easier than managing contractions - though perhaps this is the epidural talking? I pushed for a while for what seemed like little progress. Unfortunately the epidural meant it was hard to tell where the baby was, until he was ready to be born and I felt the sting. It was the most amazing thing to watch his head emerge! My hopes that K would catch the baby were now all but lost in the thick of events.

Though things didn't go as we'd expected, there were some good bits. The choices sucked, but they were still our choices. Maria was awesome. She met me at hospital at 9am and wheeled me to my room just shy of midnight, and in between was a staunch advocate. We had a great doctor for Bunyip's birth (not the annoying one), the only OB I'd seen (once) during my pregnancy. He was on my wavelength. I was chuffed that I managed the pain without letting it dominate me, though admittedly the epidural I was never going to have was a godsend, even if at the business end it was only working on my left side.

And the truly great bits... K stuck with me like glue and kept me positive and calm throughout. We helped keep each other together, I think. We watched our baby being born. And discovered he was a boy! When he plopped out, he gazed slowly at us and let out a cry before being rushed to the resus room next door. Our little boy was fine - a lot of bruising to his poor little noggin after sitting so low inside me, and on oxygen for 16 hours - but otherwise great. He has wispery beach blonde hair and the cutest little lamb's bleat that makes my heart melt.

So many nurses in the neonatal intensive care unit have said he's a great size for his age. I was so chuffed when one commended me for feeding him so well. I know I did, but it was so lovely to have someone who wasn't there, and doesn't know me, recognise it. Especially because I feel like I didn't finish growing him. And am now was struggling to feed him.

The saddest part has been the separation. Not getting to hold him until day two (or three? I can't remember now). This is our first cuddle... can you tell we've been teary? I held him and all I could think was how small he was and that I wanted to put him back inside.

It was also hard being plonked in a room on the maternity ward after the birth, with a woman and her bub, born two hours after mine. Spending that night on my own without K, in that room, in utter disbelief and sadness. No baby in my belly, no baby in my arms. And every day thereafter, leaving him at hospital every night, though it has got a lot easier. I need to constantly remind myself how lucky we are to have him, healthy and growing and coming home to us soon. I am crying writing this, nearly three weeks later. I sometimes get flushes of jealousy when I see very pregnant women - and there are many where I spend my days at the Mater Mothers Hospital. I missed almost the entire third trimester... we didn't even get to our antenatal classes (so thankful I did active birth yoga really early).

It's a strange sadness, mixed with elation. There is a video of me touching Ellery in his humidicrib, at two or three days old. I'm smiling, but it's a smile I've never seen on my face before. Like I've been pummelled by love, bloated with pride, and strung out with weariness.

And now, four weeks after his birth, the days are becoming more joyous as we bond and learn to breastfeed. He'll be in neonatal care until we have breastfeeding down solid. Yesterday the nurses started talking about it being only a matter of a week or two before we can bring him home. And we still have no clothes that fit him (he swims in four '0's), no nappies, no change mat, pram, anything really. We were so unprepared. But in another sense, so ready for this, the completely unexpected. 

The past four weeks have been the ultimate surrender. 

Welcome to the world, gorgeous little boy.


Ellery Sage Lusk, born 9.06pm, 27 July 2011 at 31 weeks and one day, weighing 1922 grams (about 4 ounces).

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Life After Desk begins again...

03 April 2011

a campfire kiss

I love this photo. I love it to bits. K took it. We're at Woody Head, Bundjalung National Park, just starting out on our first camping holiday last winter. It might've even been his birthday. We spent the day trekking across windy beaches and headlands to Iluka, where we had a late pub lunch in the sun. And headed back to a campfire where we ate a simple meal, and goosed around with a couple of torches and some time lapse photography. 


Time disappears. And you weave through ups and downs. And try to bottle happiness. Or at least catch it on film. Thank goodness he did.


Love one another and you will be happy. It's as simple and difficult as that. Leunig

22 June 2009

dear universe

I barely know where to start. The past few weeks have been chockers. A three-week intravenous hit of culture and people I love. Between mud-camping at Woodford for the Dreaming Festival, Melbourne to see friends whilst dosing on food, Dali, design and high-street-retail love, and Binginwarri to gather wild mushrooms, chase wombats and get trounced by the relics in the Winter 2009 Pictionary Play Offs, I’ve barely been home.

Or alone.

And now that I am both, I’m feeling kinda sad.

I’ve been given a fair bit of prodding in recent months to think about the shortness of life. Today another good soul passed away. I am sending warm thoughts to his family and friends. And acknowledging life, the precarious privilege.


Dear universe, I am paying attention.