In the Perkins family we believe that life is made up of the little everyday things. Things like enjoying a sensational cup of tea, Manny seeing his face in the mirror for the first time, or finding a bush turkey under the deck. Even though we delight in the little things it is often the big things that end up in letters and emails (Chris has a cold, I almost stepped on a snake - all the boring stuff).
These Joyful Jottings are going to change all of that. So we invite you, dear friends and loved ones, to share in some of our precious everyday moments as a family. Enjoy!

Sunday, 4 December 2011

An Update in Photos

Hello all!


I know, I know, it seems like I've tumbled off the face of the planet but no! I live still!

At the moment I find myself in a puddle of Christmas Cards and presents, tearing around after a nine month old who can both crawl and semi-walk (what's up with that?) and designing a site for an older Christian man who is very lovely and very computer illiterate! So if I've accidentally not been updating as much as I ought, or not emailing as much as I should... well, you try having a mini-Chris for a son - in one room with a terribly dangerous deck attached (try three metres off of the ground)! Lol! Gotta laugh or we'll cry, haha.

So anyway, here is a brief update in pictures. Yup. We are fancy today!


Item One: We have been busy running craft clubs, creches, and Sunday Schools. Well, I mostly watch Chris and Manny run them. My job is to stand by and smile sweetly and make milkshakes and cookies on command. Right about here Chris was asking, "So who was Jesus' father?". The kids all started hollering "God!" "Joseph!" Finally a little ragamuffin with curly hair all over his eyes screamed out excitedly, "It was Moses!" Haha! Gotta love it :-)


 
Item Two: We have been busy making Manny into a meat eater! Here he is trying his first ever savoury mince meal. He loved it! After I'd taken his portion out of the frying pan I added pasta sauce and voila! Food fit for a hubby into the bargain! Things are getting much easier now that Manny is old enough to eat the same food as us and new allergies aren't cropping up at every turn. Although it does mean that I get to eat considerably less food than is on my plate to start with... ;-) Overall our little fella is a good eater, so good that he's on to three full meals a day, two snacks, and still breastfeeding well.
 


Item Three: We have been busy chopping a fringe! One morning I looked in the mirror, brushed my long fringe over my eyes and thought, "I wonder what I'd look like without that hair there?" It must have been exhaustion thinking because at the time it seemed perfectly logical to get the craft scissors out and snip-snip. Only when I realised I hated it did I notice that the hair was no longer attached! Whoopsies! Note to self: don't ever try hairstyling again at 5:30am. However, after I woke up a little more (about 3pm the next day) I got out my fabulous-free-hairdressing kit (oh yeah - I scored an entire bag of hairdressing equipment while helping a friend clean out her rental property. Always do good deeds!) and had another little snip and feather and this is the final product. So although Chris still claims I "look like a bus kid who got the scissors and attacked their own hair cos it was in their eyes" I am happy with it. So there Christopher :-P


Saturday, 26 November 2011

Manny - The Little Bear!

Our Thanksgiving


Ahhh Thanksgiving with your turkeys and sweet pies! Ahem. And Thanksgiving of course ;-)

Somehow, somewhere along the way, I decided to have a small (tinsy tiny) Thanksgiving lunch and invite two other friends along. It had to be tinsy tiny because Chris was working (I wanted to throw a full blown dinner and invite a few more people but we had to go to a building job at 7:00pm), and we don't have a real dining area, and my oven is one of those little single tray things that can cook a maximum of six cookies at once. Thanksgiving morning I woke up at 6:30am and had the oven going right through until 12:30pm just to make sure the food all got cooked! I kept thinking, "What am I doing?" And then I remembered that verse, "She hath done what she could" and the story of feeding the five thousand. I figured I'd cook what little I could and God could do the multiplication ;-)



Of course, two guests or twenty, I wanted things to be yummy and pretty. We had roast turkey (ok fine, it wasn't a whole turkey. All I could fit in the oven was one of those Thigh things that come frozen in a box. It worked!), roasted baby potatoes, roast pumpkin, honey buttered beans, fried baby carrots, roast corn, cornbread, and sweet potato pie.

Sorry this photo's fallen over but Blogger keeps doing that to me and I'm too tired to fix it, lol!

My favourite part was dessert! I wanted to be a little american and have something that Chris and I would associate with that part of our Life's Journey. So we had smores! I wrapped up little packages containing sticks, biscuits, marshmellows and chocolate (I had to melt down a big block and reset to get it thin enough - no Hershey's around here? What's up with that?) and laid out my long candleabra for us to melt our marshmellows on. Plus of course we also had a fruit platter, ahem. Which a certain Little Indian enjoyed very much...


For favours, our guests got a brown paper bag with a fancy label that read, "Thankful for You!" (and of course I forgot to take photos) each with six of my now-famous-Toll-House-cookies inside. And they were certainly lucky to get that many. Chris is still roaming around the cupboards looking for more!

For our Family Thanksgiving Tradition we have a Scrapbook, with the meaning of Thanksgiving and a page each for Daddy, Mama, and Manasseh to fill up with pictures of things that they are thankful for...


...and we have a Thankful Chain...


I laid two links at each persons place and between the main and dessert we each wrote out our  Thankful Lists onto our links. Then we looped 'em up and made a decoration! Soon I will take it down, unstaple each link and put them in a pocket at the back of the scrapbook. Every year we will add to the chain and we will look back and remember all the Thanksgivings that the Lord has allowed us and the friends that have come and gone.

So that was our Thanksgiving. It was small but it was fun :-) Next year, Lord willing, I'll have a real oven and Chris will have the evening off work and you'll all be invited! Ha! We can but dream :-)

Disclaimers: The drink is sparkling grape juice, lol. Seriously.

Disclaimer Number 2: Enjoying Thanksgiving in Australia means we can kick out the boring old oranges and browns. This year I picked a lavender purple and a lovely green :-D Then I got three bunches of pink roses for the table. Haha! Summer thanksgivings are the best!

Happy Thanksgiving!


Happy Thanksgiving Everyone!

As Kiwi as I am, I have celebrated Thanksgiving for five years now (except last year, when I was seven months pregnant in 45 degree filipino temperatures... all I could be thankful for that year was our tinsy tiny little aircon unit!). Now I know some of you are gagging over this but please hear me out. Thankgiving is not, or rather should not, be "An American Thing". It should be a "Christian" thing.

Have a little read of this:

-----------------------

...On January 1, 1795, our first United States President, George Washington, wrote his famed National Thanksgiving Proclamation, in which he says that it is…
"…our duty as a people, with devout reverence and affectionate gratitude, to acknowledge our many and great obligations to Almighty God, and to implore Him to continue is… our duty as a people, with devout reverence and affectionate gratitude, to acknowledge our many and great obligations to Almighty God, and to implore Him to continue and confirm the blessings we experienced…"

Thursday, the 19th day of February, 1795 was thus set aside by George Washington as a National Day of Thanksgiving.


Many years later, on October 3, 1863, Abraham Lincoln proclaimed, by Act of Congress, an annual National Day of Thanksgiving "on the last Thursday of November, as a day of Thanksgiving and Praise to our beneficent Father who dwelleth in the heavens." In this Thanksgiving proclamation, our 16th President says that it is…

"…announced in the Holy Scriptures and proven by all history, that those nations are blessed whose God is the Lord… But we have forgotten God. We have forgotten the gracious hand which preserved us in peace and multiplied and enriched and strengthened us, and we have vainly imagined, by the deceitfulness of our hearts, that all these blessings were produced by some superior wisdom and virtue of our own… It has seemed to me fit and proper that God should be solemnly, reverently and gratefully acknowledged, as with one heart and one voice, by the whole American people…"

So it is that on Thanksgiving Day each year, Americans give thanks to Almighty God for all His blessings and mercies toward us throughout the year.

--------------------------
Like it or not folks, America has been one of the world's superpowers for many years. It's a free nation where people can kneel down and pray on the street if they really want to. It's also the nation that helped us beat Hitler and tends to win wars. Lincoln raises a very good point, it's the nations whose God is Jehovah that are blessed. I have talked to many ladies who have recently converted from Islam and have now permanently left Iran. They talk of the religious bondage of their people, the wicked lies that they are told to create fear (one young girl grew up believing that if she questioned the Quaran demons would pull her hair and drag her down to Hell) and the unhappiness in their country. I have seen the gross poverty and hunger in the Philippines. Truly, we are blessed! And yet Christians do not take the time to prepare one short day a year and dedicate it to thanking the Lord for all that we have been blessed with.

You know, God never asks for very much. He says, "If my people [that's us folks - not Joe Smith down the road who drinks and doesn't know any better], which are called by my name, shall humble themselves, and pray, and seek my face, and turn from their wicked ways; then will I hear from heaven, and will forgive their sin, and will heal their land."

Our countries are floundering with gay marriage, later and later staged abortions, the removal of certain religious freedoms. God has already promised that if WE pray and realise that we need Him then He will heal our lands. A step in reaching this is acknowledging that every blessing is from Him and it is only because of our nation's Christian heritage that we are free to live such priviledged lives. Too often I think of this freedom as a right, but it's not. It really is just a priviledge, one that could disappear in the blink of an eye.

So now I've probably put you off with all my preaching ;-) But wouldn't it be wonderful if one day we could say to an Aussie or Kiwi friend, "Want to join us for Thanksgiving?" and they didn't screw their noses up and say, "What are you? American?" Instead, they could say, "Thanksgiving? What are you? Christian?"

Tuesday, 15 November 2011

Can You Guess How Many Photo's It Took To Get This Shot?

An Update

Hello all!

I know I've been remarkably pathetic with the posts lately so I thought I'd make up for it with a photo of our little Manny.


The latest news on our lad is that he crawls (except he can't quite figure out what to do with his right leg so he pulls it in frog-like and drags it around uselessly, lol!), he walks quite well so long as he has something to hold, he can stand still without holding anything, he eats for hours at a time (no kidding, he'll just sit there gulping down sandwhich after yoghurt after vege-mash), he imitates speech (so far he has said His First Word, which I am too embarassed to tell about, Dadda, Hello and Tracy. No Mama so far!) and in general he's just super cute! I enjoy taking him out, people quite literally stop me in the streets and tell me he is "so beautiful", "oh, he's just goooorgeous!", "what a lovely child!". One lady was smiling at him, so he folded his head down bashfully and she told him, "You're gonna hafta get used to the girls looking at ya, you're quite a looker!" Ahh, yes! Now I just have to teach him the things that his Uncle Jim used to say and we'll really be in trouble (When Jimmy was introduced to a lady when he was about four, he looked up at her in adoration and said, "Your hair is exquisite!" To this day we have no idea where he got it from, but from then on he just used his fancy speeches to charm ladies. He's nothing but trouble!).

Now, if you can't tell already from my rambling, I'm exhausted so I'm going to bed now.

Goodnight world!

P.S Thanksgiving is coming up on the fourth Thursday of the month. Many NZers snobbishly consider it "an american thing" but it's sooo not. It's a family day dedicated to thanking the Lord for religious freedom and for His provision. Not to mention that it's a great excuse to make cornbread and sweet potato pie (ok, so it can be a little american...). I've celebrated Thanksgiving for about five years now and I think you should too! After all, we got alot to be thankful for :-) More on that soon...








Wednesday, 26 October 2011

Our Birth Story - The End!

When we arrived the midwives were so lovely – all except the one that took my initial information. She wanted to know how long we had been having consistent contractions and I told her that it started Tuesday night. She refused to believe me! She told me no, and that when she had talked to my husband he had said that we started at midnight. I said, no, they started to tail at midnight but they've been going since Tuesday. In the end I wrote her off as a stupid cow, told her to write whatever she wanted, and went back to labouring against a risen bed.

The next midwife who came in was the one who would deliver Manny. She was the only midwife I had actually met before (I had to see Doctor's for my prenatal visits because of my complications) and it was so good of the Lord to give me the one woman who would be a familiar face! She apologised and told me that she would like to do an internal if I didn't mind. I was actually excited to do one because I wanted to know how well I had done at home. I was preparing to lie down on the bed for her but she stopped me gently and said, “Honey, wait for a contraction to finish and then hop on so it doesn't hurt you to be on the bed.” Seriously, how many midwives would be that considerate? She was quick and although it was a little uncomfortable it wasn't too bad, but she looked genuinely upset that she had hurt me.
“You're at 6 centimetres,” she told me. “You've done very well!”
I was so disappointed. I wanted so much, after the length of time we'd been going, to have been right near the end. She looked in to see if my bath was run and was horrified to see that the first woman hadn't filled it for me. After all, that first woman thought I'd only been going since midnight so I couldn't be very far along. Like I said at the time, stupid cow. 

That bath was soooooo nice and soooooo deep and soooooo hot. The contractions felt like the first ones had, painful but no tail and no searing flame along my back. I settled in for the long haul and decided that this was a nice place to be settling! The midwife gave Chris bowls of ice and cloths and sat in for a few contractions to see how we were going.

Just after a peak, when I was squeezing iced water over my head to distract my mind from the pain, she asked “Have you been to one of Lorraine's classes?”
I shook my head and her eyebrows shot up.
“You are doing very well.”
Then she explained that she was going to leave and we could do whatever we wanted with whatever we wanted. If we needed more ice or a hot pack just ring the bell. She could come back if we needed her but we were doing excellently and could keep going as long as we liked without interferrence. Basically, she told us we had their facilities and their advice if we wanted it, other than that we were free to be alone. How lovely!

We kept going for some time and then a new deep pain started that I didn't cope well with. I tried to keep managing it and then thought I might like to try a little gas to help out. So in came the gas bottle and I put that nozzle in my mouth and all of a sudden it was the funniest day ever! I wish now that I hadn't taken it, I reckon I could have kept going but once I felt the tightening of my stomach and no accompanying pain I was addicted. And if I accidentally sucked too late the contraction hit me like a tonne of bricks – from zero pain right up to a twenty (on a scale to ten, lol). Anyway, I had a ball with it. I remember the midwife came in to check on me and I was leaning back, trying not to suck too much and trying my hardest not to burst out laughing! I'm sure I had an inane grin on my face but it my mind I was thinking, “I better be good or she might take my bottle away from me!” To my great relief she left and I was allowed to keep sucking!

And then the flirting started. Poor Chris spent the next few hours in stitches as I alternated between puffing and trying to kiss him!

At one point I leaned back, gas pipe between my teeth, and asked “Do you know why I have a towel on my head?”
“To... keep you hair out of the water?” He suggested. He was right.
“Nope!” Deep suck.
“Why then?”
Very coolly, I replied, “Because I am a muslim.” I started to giggle uncontrollably at my confession and waved my gas pipe in his face, “And you know what that means?”
“What does it mean Tracy?” (he was smirking. I remember)
“It means,” giggling again, “That I'm going to blow up all of Wanganui with a bomb. Except Castlecliff. I won't blow up that place with the buses. You know, those singing buses.”
Trying not to laugh, Chris asked, “And why not Castlecliff honey?”
“Because I'm a druggie. That's why I have the gas. I'm a druggy from Castlecliff.”



At one point Chris looked at me tenderly and told me I looked “so vulnerable”, and I informed him two minutes later that I knew what that meant, “I know about boys like you! You think I'm cute, doncha? That's your way of telling me I'm cute! You want to kith me, doncha? I know about boys like you! You think you can take advantage coth I'm vvvuuunrrrable. Well then, come kiss me!” I took a deep drag, went cross eyed, and leaned toward him for my kiss. Instead he cracked up laughing.

Later on, Chris started to get hungry. I already knew that I had made a mistake cancelling my support person (dumby, I thought I was being good to not inconvenience her. What an idiot!!!) but now I really knew I'd blown it. Chris had to eat. He hadn't left my side for two days already and he just needed some kind of sustenance. So he asked me if it was ok for him to run down to the car and get some food. Through-out the whole labour I had felt a deep strong love for him, so if he needed food I insisted that he had to get food. Besides, I had been doing very well. I was still chatting and flirting, so it was just fine for him to pop downstairs for five minutes. However, as soon as he was gone I was overcome by fear that I might have to deal with a contraction alone. Even though I had been using the gas I was still too late sometimes and I would have Chris pour ice on me and help to lift me through the peaks. So, I dealt with it the way any druggy would deal with it. Every breath I took I sucked from the gas bottle. I remember beginning to get hazy and feeling like I would pass out, so I had the brains to lean over the side of the bathtub in case I went unconscious. Why didn't we just ask my midwife to come sit in? To this day I have no clue. All I know is that Chris came in to find me barely responsive, gas pipe lodged in my mouth, draped over the bath. I remember seeing him crying and hearing him wail about how he should never have left me. I assured him dopily that it was wonderful to see him and did he like his lunch? And then as my eyes came into focus I growled at him for having a chocolate muffin, why wasn't he eating fruit 'for good health'?

After four hours of memory making in the bath I had another internal done. I had been losing some blood and mucus so I thought I must have been doing quite well. The midwife timed her internal perfectly again and made sure I didn't have to get out of the water. Sadly, we were still at six centimetres! I began to lose confidence and she offered to break the waters to help move things along. Again, she did it while I was still in the water but found that there was meconium present, so I had to get out to be monitored. She never once gave me the 'it's best for your baby if you do what I say' talk. She just told me what was what and let me make the decisions. If I thought the first contraction out of the home bath was bad – phew! That was nothing compared to getting out of this bath. The first one hit and I started dragging on that gas bottle as fast as I could. Only problem was that it wasn't connected to anything. It had become dislodged when I was moved into the room.

The next few hours were agony. Sometimes I stood, sometimes I kneeled, sometimes I sat. It got really painful and I started to pass out during the peaks. I faded in and out of consciousness and each time I woke I saw something different. I thought all of the visions were a dream, but that there was one somewhere, if I could just find it, that was real life. I remember hearing Chris crying and I started fighting against everything to open my eyes and talk to him. I remember telling him over and over not to cry, that I was OK but I needed to know that he was alright. Then I fell out of consciousness again and woke to see him weeping again. I lifted my hand and wiped his tears away, and told him “I love you”. It was the most important thing to me to know that he was loved, in case I didn't make it through. I remember I had my back against the bed and I faded out of consciousness, then everything went bright white. I saw a man looking at me and knew it was Jesus.
“Can I come home now?” I asked Him.
“Not yet child,” He replied, His silhouette disappeared from the whiteness, and instead I saw Chris and a little boy standing next to him, as though they were the reasons why I couldn't go home yet. I felt very disappointed, but my confidence grew strong knowing that Jesus was there and He said I was to live.
I started to hear things again and it was the midwife telling me urgently to breathe. I lay there thinking, “What is that woman going on about now?”
Then I heard Chris saying, “She's not breathing, she's not breathing! She's stopped! Tracy, listen to me. Listen to me Tracy. I want you to breathe. Breathe with me on every count, OK? 1 – 2 – 3 - ...”
He sounded desperate but strong, and I had a overwhelming desire to please him. If Chris wanted me to breathe, by George, I would jolly well breathe! I joined in at about 7 or 8 and got all the way up to 15. I became fully conscious again and we continued.

Since the labour I have talked with a friend who is allergic to opiates and I'm pretty sure I am too, as I have abnormal reactions to gas and morphine. At the time, obviously, I wasn't aware of it.

By now Chris was a mess and I was groaning deeply/yelling with each peak. Chris asked what they could do to help and the midwife suggested that perhaps a little morphine might help my muscles to relax. He told her to give it to me but she said that she was sorry, she couldn't administer anything without my asking for it. It was against their policies to offer any sort of painkiller directly to the labouring mother. So Chris turned to me and said, “You want something to help don't you honey?” I nodded yes, of course I did! So the midwife moved around to the side of the bed and said softly, “Do you want to tell me anything sweetheart?” And I said, “NO! I don't want morphine it makes me sick and it's horrible and I don't want pethidine because it's related to morphine. And I don't want an epidural under any circumstances. NO PAINKILLERS!”
Teeheehee! What a brat :-D Poor Chris was beside himself. Then as soon as the midwife left the room I had a really painful contraction and started yelling about, “Why does it hurt so much? Are we not in a hospital? Can't they DOOOO something?!”
The next contraction I started hollering about how “I want an epidural!”
Gag. Yes, I know. I weakened. For what it's worth I don't think I would have let them actually jab me and to the midwifes credit I don't think she ever lodged the request. Because mysteriously enough the doctor couldn't be found for the whole of the remainder of the labour – until the end when I really needed the doc, then she was there within twenty seconds. Interesting...
Chris started balling and I overcame my self pity enough to listen to what was wrong. “Honey, you're in so much pain. Plleeease can you just tell the midwife that you want a little morphine? It will help you so much.”
“But honey I just can't because it makes me sick and I won't have any pethidine or an epidural so I just can't.”
“Tracy, you've been labouring for hours and nothing is happening. It will help you. Please take it”
Again, the overwhelming urge to please Chris rose to the fore and I told him to call the midwife back in. She asked me what I wanted and I said, “Do you think a little bit of morphine would help?” At the time I couldn't see anything and I can't remember why. “It would possibly help to relax your muscles a little bit and help your body to open up. It would only be a small amount.”

So I had the morphine and laboured about another two or three hours. At least, I think I had the morphine. This has since come into question as I have read my birth notes and questioned Chris. He doesn't actually remember them giving me anything and my birth notes say that I never received any painkillers? Anyway... I remember one last intensely painful contraction while I was standing leaning against the bed. It was pure agony. And then I wanted to push. Actually, let me rephrase that. My body started to push. The midwife told me to hold on as long as I could because she thought I wasn't fully dilated but I couldn't stop it, involuntarily my muscles were pushing. After that I clambered up onto the bed and sat in a semi-sitting semi-squatting position.
I remember hearing the midwife say, “Get rid of the gas. She can't have anymore gas.” At the time I panicked and I know those around me did too! But she knew exactly what I needed. As soon as the gas pipe left my mouth my eyes refocused and my will came back. She looked me right in the eyes and said, “Listen to me Tracy. I don't want you to make any noise through your mouth, none. Channel your energy into pushing.”
Suddenly I had a purpose, and I was overwhelmed with a desire to see my son's face. I was finally going to meet him!
I pushed as well as I could, arms wrapped around Chris' head and my mouth over his ear. Not the best place in the world for a mouth to be considering the situation! During one contraction I yelled loudly and the midwife called me up sternly. “Tracy, no noise. Channel your energy.”
I know there are some women who would have hated this but this lady sensed what I needed. I needed someone who could guide me and direct me and who wasn't afraid to let me know I had to suck it up and get the job done. She ran and got a giant mirror and told me to watch for my baby's head.
I was tiring quickly but with one contraction I saw the top of a little head covered in black silken hair. I'll never forget that moment. I am a mum. I'm giving birth. Birth to a baby. A real baby. A baby with hair. A BABY! It was all the inspiration that I needed to keep going. His head wasn't out yet but I reached my hand down and just inside I touched the softest, most delicate thing I have ever felt. It was a miracle for my fingertips to be in contact with someone that had been just a precious imagining for nine months.

The pushing lasted much longer than it should have. At about the forty minute mark a midwife noticed that Manny's heart rate was dropping fast. My midwife looked me in the eye and said, “Honey, we have to get this baby out and we have to get him out fast. Push as hard as you can.”
I began to feel desperate. I had to get my son out. If he died because I couldn't push him out fast enough...
Finally, with a long hard contraction, his head popped out and stayed out! His shoulders were too wide to come out with me in the position I had but his heart rate had plummeted so there was no time for me to move. The doctor sliced me three times, I contracted and he was whipped out onto my belly.

There was no cry. There was no pink skin. There was nothing to indicate to anyone in the room that he was alive. Within a split second my midwife had yelled for the emergency switch to be hit and seven doctors were in the room within literally three seconds. I felt his warm softness on my belly and looked at him adoringly. And he blinked at me. Not one other person saw it but I distinctly remember seeing his eyes close and open again. Then his cord was cut and he was on the emergency cradle with four doctors working on him. I looked over to watch but I was completely calm, I knew he was going to be alright because God had shown me he was. I passed the plactenta, and I will always remember how shockingly easy it is after a birth. That thing may be huge but it really doesn't feel anything like giving birth. Then I noticed I could feel some warm liquid pouring over my body and looked down to see my midwife saying, “I've got blood here. A lot of blood.” She was calm but working so quickly, and the doctor was suddenly there trying to stop the bleeding and another lady was injecting me with long needles. Funnily enough I remember looking at a really long thick needle and thinking, “Hurry up and stab me. Please!” I was still contracting and I wanted the pain to come from a different area, just to distract. I remember feeling the stab and it being a relief, so mild was the sting. I knew I would never complain about a needle again!

I looked over at my baby again but his eyes were shut and the doctors kept blocking the view. I asked someone nearby if my baby was going to be ok and she said yes. I remember noticing in her eyes that she was not convinced but that didn't concern me, because I had seen him blink.

The bleeding kept going and the doctor started pulling huge blood clots from my uterus. Chris was holding me and wouldn't let me go. He later told me that he thought I was going to die and he didn't once turn around to look at our baby, he was so scared that I was going to go home.

After what seemed like a very long time, and was in fact over 1.5 litres of blood later, they stopped the bleeding and the stitching began. My baby was whisked away for further treatments and I wasn't able to get up. I trusted the doctors. If they could get us this far they knew what my son needed. I later found out that Manny had an Apgar score of 2 out of 10. The explanations varied and I've come to the conclusion that no-one really knew why. Some said the labour was too long, some said the pushing was too long, some said the pushing was too short, some said it was because of the morphine, others said the morphine couldn't have had an effect the baby... Whatever the reason, Manny ended up in the nursery under constant surveillance.

After the doctors were done stitching I tried to sit up but couldn't. I wanted to go see my baby but the blood loss had made me too dizzy to move. I was covered in blood and really needed to shower, so Chris carried me to the bathroom, the midwife brought in a stool and Chris sat me down so he could wash me. I couldn't even hold my head or shoulders up I was so weak. I remember feeling scared because my mind was still functioning perfectly well but my body couldn't function, and I thought that this must be what it's like to be old. I just sat hunched over like a rag doll, unable to even lift a hand. It was an awful feeling.

Although I was desperate to see Manasseh I had to rest. The midwife quickly cleaned up the bed as best she could and Chris laid me on. I fell into a deep sleep and awoke at 2am. I was still weak but I HAD to get to my baby. I called Chris awake and told him to check Manny and to find a way to get me to the nursery. A midwife returned with him and they helped me off the bed. I couldn't stand and almost fell, so she quickly ran to get a wheelchair. It was only then that I noticed the room. There was blood everywhere. It really looked like a scene from a horror movie. The midwife swore when she saw the floors and the bed. I hope I never see anything like that again but right then I didn't care, I was going to the nursery! I was going to see my first born son!

I was wheeled into the room and there he was, lying on his belly in a glass bassinet under a bright light. He was so perfect, so delicate, so mine. He looked like my uncle, the splitting image only smaller.

A lady once asked me while I was pregnant, “You think you love him, no?” I had replied that yes, I loved him so much already. “Ahhh, you think now you love him but you do not know what is love. When he is born you will know much greater love.”

She was right. My heart trebled in size with that first look and it was all from the love for my son. A beautiful motherly blonde midwife was watching him and asked me if I would like to feed. My eyes filled with tears as she handed him to me and I felt his warm little body against my chest. I had to be careful of the tubes that he had going into his hand and foot. He nuzzled around and latched on perfectly. My little miracle.

I will forever be greatful to that lovely midwife because she didn't feed Manny so much as a drop. She knew I would want to give him his first feed and she let him wait on the stores that he had from birth for as long as she could. Another hour, she told me, and he probably would have started to get peckish and she would have had to give him a bottle. God is so good!

That first feed was so special. I examined each little part of his body and enjoyed showing off the tiny limbs to Chris. I felt so close to my husband, and I wanted to tell him over and over, “Look what we made!”

My Pastor described that overwhelming feeling we get toward our young sometimes as a “love attack”. It's when we have to hold them and smother them in kisses and gaze at the wonder of their very existence in rapture. That night I had my first real love attack for my son, but rather than diminish I've noticed they just get stronger and stronger. Manasseh is my first born, my son, the baby that opened my womb. I pray that the Lord will allow me many more “Love Attacks” to come.

Monday, 19 September 2011

Our Birth Story - Part II

I know this is a long story but I've just got to write it all down. Besides, I know that some of you are birth junkies and just love all the details, lol. That and I would have loved to have read a full birth story online before our labour.

And so that was how Chris found out he was/could be/might be a dad. He woke up at midnight to the hysterical sobs of his crazy wife ranting about doctors and hospitals and not being pregnant but there was a baby and the pain, the pain! Could I be miscarrying? ... So much for the candlelit dinner huh?

The next day I woke painfree and decided that I was going to override my emotions and believe the Doctor. He must be right. I was not pregnant. That evening Chris' cousins invited me to go pig hunting. About 16 of the farm kids were going too and everyone was SUPER excited to be showing Miss Towngirl what country fun really was. I couldn't refuse to go just because I was a crazy lady who thought she might have a baby to protect. Ha! Delusional. So I climbed on the back of a ute and proceeded to go bumping around 300 acres screaming out whenever I saw something with tusks. And then my pocket started vibrating. Chris was busy pointing a spotlight at a pig about to get it's throat slashed as I answered the phone.
“Hello?” I yelled.
“ Congratulations.” An Iranian accent said. “You are pregnant.”

The next evening Chris got his candlelit dinner (only it turned out to be dessert) and a card with a poem I had written for him:

I know that you don't know me yet,
And you think I'm very far away,
But Mummy and I have been giggling,
When we cuddle you each day.

I like to feel your strong hand on me,
As God makes me in Mummy's womb,
Before you know it, He will be all done!
I can't wait to see you soon.

God has promised me that you will teach me
How to play and how to run,
But most importantly, He tells me,
You're going to teach me about His Son!

I think I make Mummy tired,
But I'm so glad that she has you!
She's already confided in me,
Without my loving Daddy she wouldn't know what to do.

So I want to tell you that I love you,
You're already the greatest a baby ever had!
I like it where it's warm and cozy,
But I just can't wait to snuggle my dad!

And yes, he cried ;-)

So now let's fast forward a few months -

During the pregnancy I was blessed beyond my happiest dreams to be able to spend time with a birth-nutter. Yes, Charlotte, I just publicly called you a birth-nutter. It – Was – Great! Out went all the fears of childbirth, that most taboo of all subjects. I think the changing point came when Charlotte let me watch Rachie's birth. I had honestly never seen anything so beautiful (tearing up again here!). And the very fact that she allowed me to watch something so sacred really moved me and taught me that birth is meant to be enjoyed and shared. I started watching birth films and realised that birth is normal. More than normal it is a priviledge and a right of passage and the only time in our lives when we ever get to assist God in the miracle of giving life. By the time labour started I was not even the slightest bit nervous.

I would have loved to have had a home birth but as we were not in our own home I knew that couldn't happen. Plus I have this thing where my body doesn't do things it's meant to so, you know, I end up seeing specialists. If I could have had a home birth with two midwives and a hospital next door I would have done it. Instead, I began looking around Sydney for a nice place to birth. Tania, my Pastor's wife, recommended Hornsby Hospital. If you are reading this and you are a Sydneysider I cannot recommend that place enough. When I looked them up on the internet I found news articles about how they are forerunners in midwifery, that they don't get the doctors in for a normal birth, that they have a very low C-Section rate and that they're just plain NZ like. God is so good, I got in. Apparently they are normally booked out months in advance but there was a space just for us. When we went for the tour I fell in love. The birth units were so deliciously comfortable that they could have passed for hotel suites. And the bathrooms! Delirious sigh! I was sure that if I could have water I would be fine and these bathrooms had deeeeeeep spa baths and three shower hoses and everything I could ever want. The thing that sealed that deal was when our tour guide (a midwife) said to our group, “Now this is the bed but DO NOT get on it. It's here so you can shove it against a wall and throw the mattress on the floor.” Yay! All the other hospitals were so precious over whether or not you could take a CD into the room that they would have died hearing about matresses being thrown around!

About a week before I was due I was getting some prep done for a Ladies Meeting. It was to be The Event Of The Year. It had to be perfect. And a part of the Plan of Perfection was to have a giant poster painted on fabric. As I was in my nesting stage I was keen for anything that involved fabric so it was my project. There were still a few weeks until the meeting but on Tuesday afternoon Chris walked in to see me on the floor painting.
“Honey, what are you doing?”
“I'm doing my painting.”
“You have heaps of time. You should just do it later and get some rest.”
“No, I don't know why hon but I have to do it now. Right now.”

About two hours after the last paint stroke, at 7pm, our labour started. The first contractions were quite mild but already five minutes apart, so it didn't take long for me to know that this was the real thing. I'd had a few false labours but they had started with intense contractions that petered out, this was like there was some kind of build up going on. By the third contraction the curtains were closed, an instrumental CD was put on, the lights were dimmed and I was surrounded by pillows and cool cloths. The husband that had refused to attend a birth class seemed to magically know all the tricks. When I looked up at him, most puzzled, and asked him how he knew what to do, he puffed up all masculine-like and said gruffly, “Pfft! From working with the sheep on the farm.” And huffed out to the kitchen to get the powerade. To this day I have no idea how he knew what he did about birthing. Personally, I think he read a few books behind my back. Sheep just don't need soft music playing in the barn.

The first night was kind of ok. I walked around during the little breaks but found that the pain was huge if I was caught standing during a contraction (which is weird because later on I would stand through them, odd. Maybe my body was still adjusting) so I would literally race back to my comfy chair and kneel with my head on the back of the headrest until the peak was over. I had a great time chatting with Chris and would interuppt him randomly with, “Just a sec hon!” while I buried my face in the pillow and paced my breathing.

At about 10pm I was getting exhausted and asked the Lord if I could please have a rest. He gave me two hours, and I remember occassionally waking up just enough to feel the pain and my body squirming but not enough to open my eyes. At 11:40ish I woke up with a really painful contraction (“It's just a muscle working, it's just a muscle working...”) and rolled over onto all fours. I have a note in my book that says, “11:50 – third of the painful contractions”. From there my chart shows that on average they were about five minutes apart again, and by 12:07am there is a note that some were tailing. I remember the breaks getting shorter and shorter and finally I had to wake Chris. I didn't want to because I was still thinking that the birth would be some time soonish and that he would need his sleep. When the contractions were between 3-5 minutes apart Chris called the Birth Unit and told the midwife what was going on. She said that was fine and just to let them know when I was down to consistent 3 minutes apart. She also told me not to eat, except lollies and powerade. She spoke to me on the phone briefly and I had two contractions during our converation, during which I bit down on my lip, clamped my eyes shut and moved the mouth piece away so she wouldn't hear me groan. At the end of our conversation she said, “well we've been talking for about seven minutes and you seem fine so there can't be much happening.” I remember looking at the phone in stunned disbelief. Had she never heard of willpower? Bah humbug to her anyway.

And so it continued for all the rest of that night and into the next morning. Wednesday I can barely remember, although I know that I did a whole lot of sewing of the little favour bags for The Perfect Ladies Meeting. And a friend dropped by and wanted to stay for the excitement but my body REALLY didn't like the idea and shut down for half an hour. I remember thinking that that was a nice half hour. I walked up and down the long rock staircase outside for a bit too. I didn't like being outside, it felt wrong and alien. The sounds of the cars and the world moving threw me off. If I had been in NZ I think I would have enjoyed being outside in a favourite spot but here it was too different and impersonal.

That evening things went up another notch and I barely slept, I just remember trying to doze upright on mountains of pillows and waking up every few minutes to pain, and then dropping back into dozing again. I didn't want to sleep because I felt like I was getting caught off guard with the contractions but my body needed the rest. At about 3am we called the midwives again because the contractions were steadily 3-4 minutes apart and tailing. They recommended that I take a warm bath and keep going.

So we ran the bath, which was no where near deep enough. I would try to kneel during the contractions but my belly would come up out of the water so it defeated the purpose. But the heat was looooovely. At about this time some kinda hormone thing kicked in and I felt so lovey-dovey towards my poor hubby :-D He had scrubbed the bath and massaged me and got me everything I needed and was just such a knight-in-shining-armor. It was the best thing in the world to have him as my team-mate. It really bonded us in a special way and I earnt a lot of respect over those two days. I feel for women whose husbands do not get to watch, in awe, the way that a woman handles having her body broken to give life.

I thought I would never want to get out of the water but eventually I knew that I needed to be more upright, so I got out. Let me tell you, the first contraction out of the water almost killed me! God gave us water with it's anti-gravitational purposes for a reason and I propose that that reason was childbirth. Ha! I think I need to speak at the next TED convention for this discovery!

Chris went back to bed and I tried to nap on the pillows again. It didn't last long but I wanted Chris to sleep so I headed to the shower. Once I had the hot hot water on me I felt a million times better, but there was still pain coming that I wasn't prepared for and I knew I had to do something to hold it together. So the Lord told me to sing. I sung in the shower for about three hours that morning and it was my favourite part of the labour. I started with Amazing Grace. The strength that my body was using for the labour overflowed into my throat and made my voice stronger and more beautiful than ever before. I enjoyed singing songs that I have always loved but couldn't quite reach the high notes, now I was hitting every single one. Pitch perfect. There was no need to remember to sing from my diaphram because that was all my body could sing from. To start with I would suck in my breath when the peaks came and wait for it to pass while I knelt on all fours, but soon I realised that they hurt less if I held my note through the whole contraction. After I had sung every hymn in my repertoire I started again, sometimes finding a song with notes that helped me focus, so I would sing the chorus over and over. While I was in the shower I felt stretching inside of me. I don't know what exactly it was but to me it sure felt like my body was opening. It encouraged me to keep going, and it felt weird to feel sensations inside my body, in places that I never even knew I had nerves. Chris came into the bathroom part way through “Buelah Land” and told me emotionally that he had been listening to me from our room and that I sounded very very beautiful, and that he was proud of me. Then he left again to arrange for our pastor's wife, Tanya, to drop in more lollies and a hymn book (I needed more songs to sing!).

Eventually I got out of the shower and I knew I needed to do something else relaxing and enjoyable. Without even having to think about it I found myself in the kitchen getting out bags of flour and sachets of yeast. Yes, I started baking bread. Bread has long been my way of relaxing and being happy, kneading that warm, alive dough and daydreaming. I used to make bread as a teenager when I needed time alone (none of my siblings ever followed me to the kitchen – too much risk of getting asked to do the dishes) and I would look out the window at the trees and think of all the pretty and lovely things that came to mind. So it was only natural that breadmaking should be a part of our labour!

The massage ball is tucked into my back for quick use. 
Kneading that bread was relaxing and gave me a connection to my absent family.

I kneaded much more than I needed to and Chris was surprised to come into the kitchen to find me moaning deeply and pounding the dough during contractions. The back pain had been going for a while by now so Chris got the big ball and ran it across the small of my back during the peaks. This helped a lot as it was the back pain that was starting to bother me. After I had rolled out the dough and made little pinwheels I sprinkled them with herbs so pungent I still remember the smell. There was nothing particularly pungent about them really, it was just that my senses were all kicked up a notch. I quite enjoyed that sense of feeling the world around me and being acutely aware of every little detail. I felt in control and full of purpose. And hungry. I hadn't eaten anything but lollies for the whole two days – thanks to the midwife – and to be honest I really didn't want to, you know, do anything, during the pushing so it seemed safe not to eat. But then that herby bread came out of the oven and just begged to be covered with a hot, salty poached egg. So I did what I thought I could get away with – half a pinwheel and a n egg. Someone had told me that the less I ate the better because once labour is in swing the stomach shuts down and lends all it's energy to the uterus, which makes perfect sense to me. That was the first and only time I've ever made a batch of bread and only eaten half of a piece.

Now I went downstairs to my room and leaned against a bench and groaned. I felt so connected to the world, so earthed, so magnificent. With each low sound I thought of the culture that I come from and the things that are built into me no matter where I go. In my minds eye I saw generations and generations of women before me who had taken this rite of passage and learnt of the gift that God gave us exclusively. I never once felt alone. I knew God was very close and that all the saints of heaven were watching breathlessly for the arrival of this precious new creation.

When Tania arrived I heard some voices and the rustle of lollies being exchanged. Then Chris invited her to peak in and I happened to look up and see her teary, joyful face. She was positively glowing. She asked quietly if she could sit with me for a little while and it was nice to have a bit of a distraction. She had brought her youngest daughter, Lydia, who was four at the time and I was worried that I might alarm her with my noises. Lydia is a little darling of a girl and was always so excited when I visited during the pregnancy. She wanted to feel the baby move and know how he got there and used to talk to him through my belly. Quite often he would be asleep but when she bounced into the room he would turn somersults at the sound of her voice, so it felt strangely normal for her to see a part of the labour. I got about five minutes of rest because of the distraction and I was ready to invite Tania to camp out in my room for the rest of my life to halt the pain! But I relaxed too quickly and the contractions started back stronger than ever. Chris needed to use the bathroom so he handed Tania his complex formula and stopwatch and said to time everything. Neither she nor I could make head nor tale of his elaborate columns and subtractions so she just wrote times and hoped for the best. I started to sway during the peaks, and Chris was putting boiling hot cloths on my back (he tried warm and I had to tell him – HOT. My hot, not your hot!). During a part when I started to weary a little I looked around at Tania and she was weeping. “It's just so beautiful.” She sniffed. “It really is so beautiful to see you there. You look lovely.”

It was about this time, in the middle of a particularly deep groan, a poor man happened to walk in on us. Chris was doing something upstairs and his friend wanted to ask a question but didn't know where to find him. He's a little hard of hearing so he knew people were around, the door was open, may as well just poke his head in and ask the question. He told me later that it was the worst, most awkward situation in his life. Apparently he couldn't take his eyes off me because he had never seen a person in so much pain before, and he just stood in the door staring.
“Do you need something?” Tania asked sharply.
“Um, I, I um...” Mind blank. Great timing. Finally he stammered “I – I need Chris.”
“He's upstairs.”
Poor guy ran with his tail between his legs. Haha! Can you imagine, he doesn't have a wife let alone a kid, and here he walks in on his mates wife while she's preparing to give birth! I still laugh everytime I think about it. At the time all I knew was that he was present but I was past being bothered by other people.

Tania crept out when Chris came back and soon we realised that we were down to three minutes apart for the contractions, or less. I wanted to keep going a little longer so I tried a hot shower again but the back pain was pure agony. The contractions were not the problem anymore, in fact they were nothing compared to the shots searing across my back. I wanted to get into the big tub at the hospital so I asked Chris to call and let them know that I was coming and to fill the bath.

To be continued...

Friday, 16 September 2011

I found a huge op-shop!


So I've heard tales of a beautiful big op-shop (from a man, would you believe. He's one of my husbands friends but I'm not going to name him. I'll just say he's tall, drives an Evo, and likes pizza - alot). It's less than ten minutes away so I figured it could feature as our afternoon drive. I turned onto the road it was meant to be on and drove and drove and couldn't find it. Funnily enough we ended up out in the country instead (we're on the outskirts) so I just kept driving. We had the windows down and the air was summery warm and smelt like blossoms. Suddenly I turned a bend and realised that we were on a hill overlooking the most breathtaking forest I've seen in Australia. There was a farm in between our road and the dip to the forest, and a beautiful lake sparkled in the sunshine. And I got reaaaaallllly homesick. My chest started constricting so I started the car up again and pulled back onto the road. On the way back into suburbia I happened to glance at a farm garden of flowers and shady trees and burst into tears! I haven't really felt homesick since our first few months here and it really suprised me. Who'd a thought you could get homesick in Australia - pah!

Anyway, enough of that! We found the op shop in a cluster of apartment building thingies - I know, seriously. Only in Sydney. And it was huge. And the ladies were lovely! And the baby clothes are all $1 to fill a bag! And they're cute with Winnie the Pooh and Peter Rabbit and Paddington Bear on 'em! What a great day!

And I found the gorgeous fabrics that are in the photo. I was so excited to get them :-) And I only paid $3.50 for the lot.There are three lace doilies, two vintage napkins, and a pillowcase. Can you guess what I'm going to make with them? :-D Hehe! You should know by tomorrow...
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