Let's talk about breasts. Tits. Boobs. Knockers. My rack in particular. The pregnancy breasts are a curious thing. They're ever expanding. Not to mention that they're getting freaking itchy. Thankfully it's winter and I'm fully covered because I was a bit horrified to discover that ONE reason for horrendous itch was the fact my nipples are no longer contained in my brazier, they're directly under the lacy bit (although I do believe they grow throughout the course of the day). There is one thing being caught itching them in public, it would be another thing altogether to look down and see them out in the sunshine!
Not only is ill fitting underwear a problem, expanding titty skin also gets itchy. And expanding belly skin. And expanding pubic skin. My pubes are driving me mad. Is this the time I mention cervical mucous? Just kidding, there are some places a blog should never go:)
I'm at that awkward point of expansion where no one would call me on pregnancy, but you know everyone is debating the "Chubba vs Expecting" question. If I'm standing up I do look a lot more rounded and pregnant but the second I sit down I bulge in all directions over my trousers and it becomes frighteningly obvious that chubbaness cannot be ruled out. In fact it plays a definite part of the equation. And once chubbaness is determined, it is several months more before anyone would dare suggest, even to themselves, that a uterine goblin is in situ.
I wonder if I should get one of those t-shirts that informs everybody that I am, in fact, pregnant. I think they're designed for the less chatty and more defensive mothers amongst us who think pregnancy is private and find question asking offensive. I'm not one of them. I've never seen the point in getting upset with phatic communication, especially over babies. Sure, if a random lift stranger enquired as to the muckiness of my vaginal discharge I might be aghast, but "when are you due" seems easy to answer. Likewise "she's gorgeous, how old is she?" seems a lot friendlier and less invasive than "did you have an episiotomy?". But anyway, these t-shirts have been invented.
Embarrassingly, in my case my belly completely over exaggerates the 14 weeks of gestation past. I'm unlikely to be taken seriously if I admit my true due date, if someone were brave enough to ask. I'd be tempted to reply that I'm just a chubba but I wonder if the t-shirt would be more appropriate. I'm torn between having on the front "I'm Up the Duff NOT Fat" and "You B*tch" on the back; and "I'm Not the Only Chubba Here" on the front and "But At Least I'm Pregnant" on the back. Which brings me to my husband.
It would seem my beloved has proudly added to his announcement of our expected status, that he didn't have to have sex to do it. I'm sure there are ways to be clearer. I questioned his preference that everybody find out he took a syringe to the testicles but he charmingly pointed out that he'd rather everyone knew than think he'd had sex with me. He's kind of the opposite to most blokes. You know the kind who love walking proudly beside their pregnant Mrs. You can see it in the Cheshire grin "YES she's pregnant, Yes I put my Penis in her Vagina". Not mine. He'd rather everyone think that some random stuck it to me than admit that he may have sullied his member. Still, it does make him feel holy and pure.
So anyway. I'm 14 weeks and 1 day. This week I heard a tiny heart beat. It sounds terribly cute. I am still a bundle of nerves but I am expanding beautifully, or should I say prolifically, and my boobs are sore enough to let me know my hormones are screaming PREGNANT. And they're huge. I'm not as tired as I was, I'm still rather moody and my pubes are driving me batty. What else can I tell you about pregnancy? Other than in between the neurosis, I'm letting myself get EVER so excited!!!!!
Alora Forever, trapped in the world.................................................of a housewife!
14 June 2012
1 June 2012
Introducing....
The littlest miracle, due 12.12.12
I am delighted to announce that the 12 week scan was PERFECT, that the baby looks GORGEOUS, and we are VERY, VERY EXCITED!!!!
I am delighted to announce that the 12 week scan was PERFECT, that the baby looks GORGEOUS, and we are VERY, VERY EXCITED!!!!
14 May 2012
A Quick Updatey Thing
Just a couple of things. My husband would like to make it clear there was no 'suggestive cuddle' made in the early hours of last weekend. He simply wanted a cuddle because he had a bad dream. I love my husband. He has been an outstanding man about the house for the past week and did all the housework (mostly and sort of) on Saturday morning while I lazed about doing NOTHING. I had breakfast in bed, a lovely mothers day and have been very spoilt and waited on as I try and rest and relax and grow this baby.
The other thing: I have this morning been to an obstetrician and seen the baby one more time. It is growing perfectly, its heart is beating strongly and no abnormality with it or the sac around it or the immediate area around that. Adenomyosis, however, was still very clear on the ultrasound and may well be the cause of the bleeding. But all is looking ok! I am still an emotional wreck. But every day with the baby still on board is a good day.
The obstetrician and I also made a monumental decision between us. I may or may not have mentioned the disaster that was the Rabbit's entrance to the world, or the terror of having a stuck baby with barely a heartbeat and in significant distress, or the mess I was left in following her delivery. Or the fact I wasn't given pain relief when I was held down and had a baby ripped out of me with forceps after several attempts. Or the tear afterwards. Or the ripped hip joint. Or the crutches. Or the incontinence. Or the hip surgery afterwards. Having spoken to my midwife, and having sobbed through my meeting with the obstetrician, it has been decided that this baby is coming out the sunroof. As much as I would love a natural, empowering birth experience, my IVF, miracle, last chance before a hysterectomy baby is going to have a planned, calm birth without risk of an hysterical mother. Poor baby will get to see enough of that throughout his or her life...
So there we have it, in summary of the update: my husband DID NOT want to have sex with me. He was just scared. And one or both of us are full of it. The baby is looking perfect. It will be delivered by c-section. I am doing ok. My husband has cleaned the house.
The other thing: I have this morning been to an obstetrician and seen the baby one more time. It is growing perfectly, its heart is beating strongly and no abnormality with it or the sac around it or the immediate area around that. Adenomyosis, however, was still very clear on the ultrasound and may well be the cause of the bleeding. But all is looking ok! I am still an emotional wreck. But every day with the baby still on board is a good day.
The obstetrician and I also made a monumental decision between us. I may or may not have mentioned the disaster that was the Rabbit's entrance to the world, or the terror of having a stuck baby with barely a heartbeat and in significant distress, or the mess I was left in following her delivery. Or the fact I wasn't given pain relief when I was held down and had a baby ripped out of me with forceps after several attempts. Or the tear afterwards. Or the ripped hip joint. Or the crutches. Or the incontinence. Or the hip surgery afterwards. Having spoken to my midwife, and having sobbed through my meeting with the obstetrician, it has been decided that this baby is coming out the sunroof. As much as I would love a natural, empowering birth experience, my IVF, miracle, last chance before a hysterectomy baby is going to have a planned, calm birth without risk of an hysterical mother. Poor baby will get to see enough of that throughout his or her life...
So there we have it, in summary of the update: my husband DID NOT want to have sex with me. He was just scared. And one or both of us are full of it. The baby is looking perfect. It will be delivered by c-section. I am doing ok. My husband has cleaned the house.
11 May 2012
Handbags. Awful Things.
You know it may just be possible that I am the only woman in the world who doesn't like handbags. Can't stand them. Can't for the life of me see why people would spend thousands on them or how they could be designer items. When the vast majority of them are so very awkward to carry and quite frankly unattractive. Even the common garden variety ones aren't cheap. It's a pity they're so darned practical. It's an even bigger pity that really I need one.
Life used to be simple. I had a very slim wallet that contained a drivers licence and a cashflow card. It fitted in my pocket causing only slight increase to butt size, one cheek larger than the other. With car keys in front pocket I was sorted. But due to earthquakes a mobile phone has become an essential item in Christchurch, my key ring seems to have umpteen keys on it and despite still owning a slimline wallet it is BURSTING at the seams with blinkin cards that every shop, service provider and freaking Tom, Dick and Harry keep issuing to me. And they all think they're so important for doing so.
Everywhere I go people try to give me a card to carry, to represent my loyalty to them. I go to the gynocologist "here's your swipe card, for your privacy"; I enrol the Rabbit in swimming lessons "here is your access card, don't lose it or we'll charge you"; I go bra shopping "here's our loyalty card, each purchase earns you points". Farmers (a large department store) give me two cards to carry, the library gives me one and one for the Rabbit, the AA (Automobile Association) give me two, one of which I have NO IDEA how to use. I have a Fly Buys Card and two different supermarket discount cards. And that is to name a few. I have more. And seriously, all these cards are handed over like I'm being done a favour, like they're an indication of a unique and special service to me. When all they are is a pain in the arse. And what's more, increasingly, they're creating a need for me to own a handbag!
I'm what could only be described as 'the scruffy mum'. Hair pulled back, jeans, polo neck, almost never made up. I'm the casual kind of comfy-mum. It's hard to believe I used to trot into the office in a suit carrying a briefcasey, satchel thing. Handbags and I just don't fit together. But I'm beginning to find that I can't carry a bulging wallet, a bunch of keys and a cell phone without dropping them or worse, leaving one of them around the place. Recently I had to traipse through a shop looking for the wallet I had put down to have a closer look at something. And last week I received a phone call from the supermarket from my own mobile. It turned out I'd left it on the ice cream counter. Pregnancy hormones are interferring with my tracking ability. I hate to say it, I think I NEED a handbag.
Which brings me back to the point that they're just so ugly. And phenomenally expensive. And either stiff and awkward and designed to be trotted about with or large and floppy and kind of trashy. You know the ones I mean, all PVC and slutty. It's hard to find a casual bag, that isn't ridiculously big, that doesn't scream "I'm a handbag" and combines practical with casual, with simple, with style, with cheap. Quite a predicament huh? I looked at hand bags ON SALE on the nzsale site today. Seriously, no word of a lie, the prices ran from $220 to $3,000 for handbags and I cringed at every single one of them. And their prices. It's absurd! Well, apparently other women find it normal. It's so confusing!
So I think I'll see if I can last a wee bit longer without a handbag and keep an eye out for the elusive perfect, cheap bag. I may also need a wallet that fits all the millions of store cards I have (for my shopping pleasure) so that, instead of pulling all cards out at once in the search for the right one, I just get the right one. Even better, I could be able to identify them a little easier so that when I purchase petrol I don't hand the man my card which shows him where I buy my underwear and so that I stop handing the librarian my 'privacy' card for the freaking gynocologist. Privacy indeed! And I can imagine that as this pregnancy continues, I'm only going to get more clumsy, more forgetful and more prone to NEEDING a handbag. So I suspect the only solution is, I'm going to have to become a real woman!
Life used to be simple. I had a very slim wallet that contained a drivers licence and a cashflow card. It fitted in my pocket causing only slight increase to butt size, one cheek larger than the other. With car keys in front pocket I was sorted. But due to earthquakes a mobile phone has become an essential item in Christchurch, my key ring seems to have umpteen keys on it and despite still owning a slimline wallet it is BURSTING at the seams with blinkin cards that every shop, service provider and freaking Tom, Dick and Harry keep issuing to me. And they all think they're so important for doing so.
Everywhere I go people try to give me a card to carry, to represent my loyalty to them. I go to the gynocologist "here's your swipe card, for your privacy"; I enrol the Rabbit in swimming lessons "here is your access card, don't lose it or we'll charge you"; I go bra shopping "here's our loyalty card, each purchase earns you points". Farmers (a large department store) give me two cards to carry, the library gives me one and one for the Rabbit, the AA (Automobile Association) give me two, one of which I have NO IDEA how to use. I have a Fly Buys Card and two different supermarket discount cards. And that is to name a few. I have more. And seriously, all these cards are handed over like I'm being done a favour, like they're an indication of a unique and special service to me. When all they are is a pain in the arse. And what's more, increasingly, they're creating a need for me to own a handbag!
I'm what could only be described as 'the scruffy mum'. Hair pulled back, jeans, polo neck, almost never made up. I'm the casual kind of comfy-mum. It's hard to believe I used to trot into the office in a suit carrying a briefcasey, satchel thing. Handbags and I just don't fit together. But I'm beginning to find that I can't carry a bulging wallet, a bunch of keys and a cell phone without dropping them or worse, leaving one of them around the place. Recently I had to traipse through a shop looking for the wallet I had put down to have a closer look at something. And last week I received a phone call from the supermarket from my own mobile. It turned out I'd left it on the ice cream counter. Pregnancy hormones are interferring with my tracking ability. I hate to say it, I think I NEED a handbag.
Which brings me back to the point that they're just so ugly. And phenomenally expensive. And either stiff and awkward and designed to be trotted about with or large and floppy and kind of trashy. You know the ones I mean, all PVC and slutty. It's hard to find a casual bag, that isn't ridiculously big, that doesn't scream "I'm a handbag" and combines practical with casual, with simple, with style, with cheap. Quite a predicament huh? I looked at hand bags ON SALE on the nzsale site today. Seriously, no word of a lie, the prices ran from $220 to $3,000 for handbags and I cringed at every single one of them. And their prices. It's absurd! Well, apparently other women find it normal. It's so confusing!
So I think I'll see if I can last a wee bit longer without a handbag and keep an eye out for the elusive perfect, cheap bag. I may also need a wallet that fits all the millions of store cards I have (for my shopping pleasure) so that, instead of pulling all cards out at once in the search for the right one, I just get the right one. Even better, I could be able to identify them a little easier so that when I purchase petrol I don't hand the man my card which shows him where I buy my underwear and so that I stop handing the librarian my 'privacy' card for the freaking gynocologist. Privacy indeed! And I can imagine that as this pregnancy continues, I'm only going to get more clumsy, more forgetful and more prone to NEEDING a handbag. So I suspect the only solution is, I'm going to have to become a real woman!
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9 May 2012
9 Weeks and Praying
Today, I have to say, is hard, even though as time goes on with no cramps I guess all is well. So the good news is still that I am 9 weeks pregnant today. My midwife still says chances are everything is fine as my scan says so. But it is ever so hard to relax. I don't know if the bleeding has stopped as I refuse to look. I am acting like a blind person in the toilet. I figure if I can't stop what is happening, and it isn't getting worse, then I am better not to know about it! I'm hoping to have another scan tomorrow or Friday. I so desperately want this baby!
My Rabbit went back to school today. I dragged her there crying. She's always reluctant to return after a break and to make matters worse she spent a few hours with some tattoo pens yesterday and still has marked hands. She was terrified of being in trouble. It's a difficult position to be in, allowing schools to have rules but wanting to tell your child that if the teacher has a problem with a little bit of ink then she's a silly bitch. No, I didn't say that but I did promise to tell the teacher so that my five year old didn't have to. Or worse, get caught. Thankfully there was a relieving teacher who thought being in trouble for a few pink marks would be silly. I told her how upset the Rabbit was about the thought of being in trouble and I threatened to bash her if she picked on my kid. No I didn't. But I wanted to. She was terribly nice and said she'd make sure she knew it was ok and she'd look after her for me. I felt bad for wanting to bash her.
I've just been back down to the school to drop in some sushi for lunch. The Rabbit seemed as happy as larry. No doubt she'll spend part of the day drawing on her hands with felt and being a mischief but I felt a lot better knowing she was happy. That's twice I've left the house now since Monday night. I've been reluctant to move in case the baby falls out. We had nothing to make sandwiches out of for lunches, hence the sushi, and my carpet is screaming 'vaccuum me'. But I'm still thinking I don't want to do too much. Or move. Or find anything stressful. So I'm going to force some lunch down me and curl up on the couch with my book!
My Rabbit went back to school today. I dragged her there crying. She's always reluctant to return after a break and to make matters worse she spent a few hours with some tattoo pens yesterday and still has marked hands. She was terrified of being in trouble. It's a difficult position to be in, allowing schools to have rules but wanting to tell your child that if the teacher has a problem with a little bit of ink then she's a silly bitch. No, I didn't say that but I did promise to tell the teacher so that my five year old didn't have to. Or worse, get caught. Thankfully there was a relieving teacher who thought being in trouble for a few pink marks would be silly. I told her how upset the Rabbit was about the thought of being in trouble and I threatened to bash her if she picked on my kid. No I didn't. But I wanted to. She was terribly nice and said she'd make sure she knew it was ok and she'd look after her for me. I felt bad for wanting to bash her.
I've just been back down to the school to drop in some sushi for lunch. The Rabbit seemed as happy as larry. No doubt she'll spend part of the day drawing on her hands with felt and being a mischief but I felt a lot better knowing she was happy. That's twice I've left the house now since Monday night. I've been reluctant to move in case the baby falls out. We had nothing to make sandwiches out of for lunches, hence the sushi, and my carpet is screaming 'vaccuum me'. But I'm still thinking I don't want to do too much. Or move. Or find anything stressful. So I'm going to force some lunch down me and curl up on the couch with my book!
8 May 2012
Something Exciting and Scary Takes a Scary Turn
Today is a very exciting day. My blog has been accepted on Top Mommy Blogs which makes me feel seriously cool and terribly important. You can even vote for my blog as your favourite if you click on the link at the top of my page. To be honest, I have yet to read about what it all means. Despite the fact blogging life just got exciting, my pregnancy just took a step towards 'so much more stressful than my nerves can necessarily deal with'.
The good news is, for the time being, baby's heart is still beating and no abnormalities can be seen. The baby has grown a millimetre more than expected and is now due on 11.12.12, although an ivf baby is one which doesn't need asking when it was conceived. Everyone knows. There were LOTS of people in the room. So of course I'm sticking to the due date of 12.12.12. Because it is cool. Because it is a desired due date. Because it is obviously so lucky. And I need lucky!
The bad news is that yesterday afternoon I started bleeding. Lots. Not red blood but brown blood but lots. It isn't spotting. So even though the scan says everything is ok, I need all the prayers and fingers crossed and beggings that everything will be ok that I can muster. It no longer seems quite so important what the baby is called, I just want there to be a baby.
So I am trying to stay calm, trying not to go to the toilet (I have kept my eyes closed today the two times I've been), I am feeling pretty desperate. My Rabbit is off school again today. She is getting over her cold and wanted to stay home. And I need the company. Mr G is at work and my mother is off to the hairdressers. So without my wee truant I don't think I could stay calm.
Even if today I'm not very funny!
The good news is, for the time being, baby's heart is still beating and no abnormalities can be seen. The baby has grown a millimetre more than expected and is now due on 11.12.12, although an ivf baby is one which doesn't need asking when it was conceived. Everyone knows. There were LOTS of people in the room. So of course I'm sticking to the due date of 12.12.12. Because it is cool. Because it is a desired due date. Because it is obviously so lucky. And I need lucky!
The bad news is that yesterday afternoon I started bleeding. Lots. Not red blood but brown blood but lots. It isn't spotting. So even though the scan says everything is ok, I need all the prayers and fingers crossed and beggings that everything will be ok that I can muster. It no longer seems quite so important what the baby is called, I just want there to be a baby.
So I am trying to stay calm, trying not to go to the toilet (I have kept my eyes closed today the two times I've been), I am feeling pretty desperate. My Rabbit is off school again today. She is getting over her cold and wanted to stay home. And I need the company. Mr G is at work and my mother is off to the hairdressers. So without my wee truant I don't think I could stay calm.
Even if today I'm not very funny!
7 May 2012
Pregnant Princess versus Caveman
There is nothing like pregnancy to bring out the fundamental differences between women and men. It's the overwhelming hormone surge which highlights the often polar opposites. It's unfair, really, on the bloke considering there is little they can do to avoid being on the end of an emotional outburst but it is fundamental that they try. When I say try I mean think, think, think before you open your mouths. Consider whether a hug, a "there, there" and a "yes Darling, you can do what ever you want" might be appropriate. Be reassured that "it will be alright, I promise" is always a better place to start than "what are you on about now?" and remember AT ALL TIMES that helpful tips on nutrition, baby growing and how to avoid weight gain should NEVER come out of your trap. Keep it shut. Or face the consequences.
I should mention it is not my husband that has offended. Yet. Although he has gone dangerously close. He has been commendably patient, especially considering the turmoil that is whirl winding about in my head. He has cooked many dinners, not once asked "what I have achieved today" like all I have been doing is lying about masturbating and watching sport all day whilst gorging on junk food while he has been working hard. He has accepted the house in a state of disarray on most days and in the weekends he has let me sleep in. We won't mention his suggestive snuggle far too early yesterday morning. I certainly didn't acknowledge it at the time. He has been for the most part kind and kept quiet. I think he is aware that I am craving, like I have never craved before, a wine to calm my nerves. And my moods. And my liver.
What he is not doing so well at is helping me avoid the startling differences between he and I. Namely he is a bloke and I am not. In particular there is one thing. He calls it an essential, life making entertainment. He watches it at every opportunity he can get. He seem indiscriminate about its type, make up or the quality. He calls it exciting. He calls it necessary. I call it all the same. I call it boring. I call it the reason I hate winter. We both call it sport. It's presence on the television at the frequency it is on is really fucking me off. I am pregnant. I can't control my emotions. He SHOULD be indulging me with romantic comedies and shoulder rubs night after night. And saying "there, there" and promising everything will be alright.
It is difficult for him, I appreciate this. I am walking about with a peanut sized baby in my belly that I forced him to help make (although technically some other bloke made it and a woman put it in there) and I am behaving like a worn out, tyrannical princess. To make it worse, when he gets enthusiastic and starts trying to NAME the baby I go into a state of panic. I've never done this part before. Reasons to have a baby by yourself begin with naming it yourself. Let's face it, naming babies highlights the very fundamental and most striking differences between men and women. You think I'm exaggerating? Let me explain.
The fundamental difference between men and women is this: when a man stranger and a woman stranger walk past one another a couldn't be more different thought pattern starts metastasising in their brains. It is something that highlights the basics of men and the stupidity of women. It starts maybe younger than puberty but until a woman has married and produced offspring it never dissipates. For men, marriage and children change nothing. And what the OTHER one is thinking is so far beyond what their opposite is thinking that quite seriously, each finds it hard to believe that the two are such incredibly different thought processes.
It goes like this: Nice looking man swaggers down the street, we'll call him Bloke A. He walks past a pretty looking broad with perky tits and a trotty little walk. We'll call her Chick A. She's a bit of alright. Quite seriously ladies, here's what Bloke A thinks. He thinks 'nice tits, nice arse, hmmm, I can picture her naked, I'd like to have sex with that.' He then imagines the act. No seriously. Fights break out in bars NOT because women or men need to do anything. But because boyfriends of nice looking chicks take offence to what other blokes are THINKING. It is true.
Let's take scenario two: Bloke A swaggers down the street past a rather unattractive sheila with a muffin break billowing over her too tight jeans that we shall call Chick B. Bloke A can't help himself. He thinks 'ew fat arse, ugly mug.' THEN he imagines what she looks like under her clothes and because he can't help himself imagines with complete and utter disdain what it would be like to have sex with her. You wouldn't believe it.
It's time we introduce Bloke B. The male equivalent of Chick B. Fat. Smelly. Ugly. And watches way too much sport. (OK, so I'm being fanciful). The above scenarios for Bloke B walking past Chick A and Chick B are pretty much the same. The only difference is their personal standards may differ a bit. The concept is simple. It is equally simple in reverse.
Chick A or Chick B, I kid you not, walking down the street past Bloke B, will probably not remotely register that Bloke B exists. At best, unless he is the only man on earth left, they'll think 'meh' and move on. That's it. The real difference is what thought processes occur next, when the Chicks walk past Bloke A. I promise you, not a thought of sex goes through their heads. Not one penis. Not one moment of undressing. No nudity imagined. No blokes, it's worse. Chick A and Chick B both have wedding bells playing, designer cutlery picked out and they start imagining their children.
Quite honestly it's true. Which brings me back to my original point. Not only have I NEVER walked past a bloke and imagined him naked. I have NEVER imagined myself having sex with a stranger or thinking "oooh, you look lovely I'd like your penis in my vagina". Not only that. If I have found out your name, I HAVE practised my name with your surname. I have picked out our wedding songs AND I HAVE ALREADY NAMED OUR CHILDREN.
I don't know how to be more clear. Although my husband is probably stuck on how I refused to take his name when we married (yep, it wasn't a good option), the hormonal, pregnant princess in me is struggling with the fact Mr G wants to help name our baby. Mainly because his suggestions are simply unacceptable. He calls mine "too old fashioned and snooty" but he fails to recognise that old fashioned and snooty are minimal requirements. He's searching though, of all things, sports teams to find suggestions while I basically check out death notices. Thankfully we have 7 months to go. Until he comes around to my way of thinking. Bless his cotton socks.
I should mention it is not my husband that has offended. Yet. Although he has gone dangerously close. He has been commendably patient, especially considering the turmoil that is whirl winding about in my head. He has cooked many dinners, not once asked "what I have achieved today" like all I have been doing is lying about masturbating and watching sport all day whilst gorging on junk food while he has been working hard. He has accepted the house in a state of disarray on most days and in the weekends he has let me sleep in. We won't mention his suggestive snuggle far too early yesterday morning. I certainly didn't acknowledge it at the time. He has been for the most part kind and kept quiet. I think he is aware that I am craving, like I have never craved before, a wine to calm my nerves. And my moods. And my liver.
What he is not doing so well at is helping me avoid the startling differences between he and I. Namely he is a bloke and I am not. In particular there is one thing. He calls it an essential, life making entertainment. He watches it at every opportunity he can get. He seem indiscriminate about its type, make up or the quality. He calls it exciting. He calls it necessary. I call it all the same. I call it boring. I call it the reason I hate winter. We both call it sport. It's presence on the television at the frequency it is on is really fucking me off. I am pregnant. I can't control my emotions. He SHOULD be indulging me with romantic comedies and shoulder rubs night after night. And saying "there, there" and promising everything will be alright.
It is difficult for him, I appreciate this. I am walking about with a peanut sized baby in my belly that I forced him to help make (although technically some other bloke made it and a woman put it in there) and I am behaving like a worn out, tyrannical princess. To make it worse, when he gets enthusiastic and starts trying to NAME the baby I go into a state of panic. I've never done this part before. Reasons to have a baby by yourself begin with naming it yourself. Let's face it, naming babies highlights the very fundamental and most striking differences between men and women. You think I'm exaggerating? Let me explain.
The fundamental difference between men and women is this: when a man stranger and a woman stranger walk past one another a couldn't be more different thought pattern starts metastasising in their brains. It is something that highlights the basics of men and the stupidity of women. It starts maybe younger than puberty but until a woman has married and produced offspring it never dissipates. For men, marriage and children change nothing. And what the OTHER one is thinking is so far beyond what their opposite is thinking that quite seriously, each finds it hard to believe that the two are such incredibly different thought processes.
It goes like this: Nice looking man swaggers down the street, we'll call him Bloke A. He walks past a pretty looking broad with perky tits and a trotty little walk. We'll call her Chick A. She's a bit of alright. Quite seriously ladies, here's what Bloke A thinks. He thinks 'nice tits, nice arse, hmmm, I can picture her naked, I'd like to have sex with that.' He then imagines the act. No seriously. Fights break out in bars NOT because women or men need to do anything. But because boyfriends of nice looking chicks take offence to what other blokes are THINKING. It is true.
Let's take scenario two: Bloke A swaggers down the street past a rather unattractive sheila with a muffin break billowing over her too tight jeans that we shall call Chick B. Bloke A can't help himself. He thinks 'ew fat arse, ugly mug.' THEN he imagines what she looks like under her clothes and because he can't help himself imagines with complete and utter disdain what it would be like to have sex with her. You wouldn't believe it.
It's time we introduce Bloke B. The male equivalent of Chick B. Fat. Smelly. Ugly. And watches way too much sport. (OK, so I'm being fanciful). The above scenarios for Bloke B walking past Chick A and Chick B are pretty much the same. The only difference is their personal standards may differ a bit. The concept is simple. It is equally simple in reverse.
Chick A or Chick B, I kid you not, walking down the street past Bloke B, will probably not remotely register that Bloke B exists. At best, unless he is the only man on earth left, they'll think 'meh' and move on. That's it. The real difference is what thought processes occur next, when the Chicks walk past Bloke A. I promise you, not a thought of sex goes through their heads. Not one penis. Not one moment of undressing. No nudity imagined. No blokes, it's worse. Chick A and Chick B both have wedding bells playing, designer cutlery picked out and they start imagining their children.
Quite honestly it's true. Which brings me back to my original point. Not only have I NEVER walked past a bloke and imagined him naked. I have NEVER imagined myself having sex with a stranger or thinking "oooh, you look lovely I'd like your penis in my vagina". Not only that. If I have found out your name, I HAVE practised my name with your surname. I have picked out our wedding songs AND I HAVE ALREADY NAMED OUR CHILDREN.
I don't know how to be more clear. Although my husband is probably stuck on how I refused to take his name when we married (yep, it wasn't a good option), the hormonal, pregnant princess in me is struggling with the fact Mr G wants to help name our baby. Mainly because his suggestions are simply unacceptable. He calls mine "too old fashioned and snooty" but he fails to recognise that old fashioned and snooty are minimal requirements. He's searching though, of all things, sports teams to find suggestions while I basically check out death notices. Thankfully we have 7 months to go. Until he comes around to my way of thinking. Bless his cotton socks.
5 May 2012
Old, Wrinkled and Moody
I have joined a "due December" baby group. Or should I say mother's group? It is a secret group, which in Facebook terms means only group members can view the conversation, and no one except group members can see the group exists. So while most of us are walking about with babies in our bellies that our friends are unaware of, we are still able to share the trials and tribulations of early pregnancy with others in the same position.
It's an interesting concept: strangers for support. For the most part it works well, we are all in the same boat and it is lovely to find normality in the hormonal affects of pregnancy. It is clear that most of us are in fact suffering the same. We are almost all anxious and fretful, suspicious of any missing symptoms and terrified of miscarriage. We are all, it would seem, admitting to diabolical moods. All of them grumpy. We are all desperate to be Mummies, either for the first time or again and we are all for the most part playing beautifully with each other. Which is amazing, because in our real lives we are all admitting to tyrannical behaviour and an out of control mix of hormones which is causing havoc in our lives.
I am the grandma of the group. Seriously. No one is as old as me. I'm quite certain none of them feel as old as me either. I am feeling ancient. I seriously am looking dreadful. My Rabbit looked at me yesterday with so much concern as she questioned my elderly hands and old wrinkly chest. She has yet to mention my pirate treasure eyes (sunken and black) but there is sadness in her eyes as she looks at me. I've told her that the baby is sucking out the goodness but when it's born I'll return to my youthful, beautiful self. I thought she'd bought it but she told me she knew of just the thing to make me beautiful again. Out of the mouths of 5 year olds!
It turns out she'd seen an ad for Garnier Ultra Lift Wrinkle Cream. She told me it began with a capital G, was in a red jar and would only take 28 days to sort me out. When the ad came on again, while she was watching tv with her Dadda, she begged him to buy some for her wrinkly, old Mummy. He, being charming and cynical told her it would be unlikely to work. Prick. The Rabbit was devastated. "Don't worry Mummy", she said "I'll love you anyway."
I haven't declared my corpse like state to my "Due Group", although they are being very nice about my age. They seem, to be honest, like a lovely bunch of women. It has been devastating to have a few pull out of the group as their scans have detected impending miscarriages. I have enjoyed their solidarity as they declare their irrational moodiness. I have been ever so relieved to know I am not the only one that panics when their boobs are a little less sore, they don't feel sick enough, they, today, don't feel pregnant. Because I am so anxious, so moody, and so panicky with any sign of normality. But I also so exhausted, fraught with under carriage stretching pains (yay for adenomyosis and endometriosis...not) and my sense of smell is driving me insane. It is so acute.
I have mentioned I live with a teenager who next to never washes. This week it was twice, both on her father's instruction. Her clothes have not been washed for months, except the small socks and underpant wash she did on Wednesday that remains wet and unhung. Her bed sheet (just the one) has been changed once since February, and it was replaced with one from her dirty washing pile. She sprays perfumed odour disguisers all over herself frequently and her hair is amass with hairspray. Unpregnant I can't stand the smell. Pregnant it hovers for hours longer than usual, it is ghastly. It is not only her smell though, over perfumed and talcumed ladies in shops, any hint of mal odour. My sister sent down my old maternity clothes but I can't get the smell of storage out of them. It's like being in an opshop. It's like I smell it in my throat. It is as close to morning sickness that I get. I can't stand it.
I am also struggling with food. Pregnancy eating is SUCH a stressful way to grow a baby. The list of risk factors keeps growing and the need to eat healthily is so difficult when it seems nothing I want to eat is permitted. Yesterday my beautiful husband came home with dinner prepared: supermarket chicken, pre packaged coleslaw and ready made chicken ravioli. Great. Cheese and tomato rolls for me. I really did appreciate the effort but he washed his listeria chicken down with wine and I had my rolls with a glass of water. It had been a very long day!
It began when the Rabbit woke at 4.30am with quite a fever. By morning she was a very sick, fluey girl with a raging temperature despite a dose of paracetamol. I carried her into the doctors, where everything hurt and she began vomiting bile. She was diagnosed with influenza, a step from being admitted to hospital for observation and placed under "acute demand" care. The panic began to set in. Not only was my baby very sick, pregnancy and the flu do NOT go together. There is a very real risk of miscarriage. I was promptly jabbed with the flu innoculation and prescribed tamiflu. The risks of the precautions are well overtaken with the risks of influenza. I took my sick baby and my sore arm and my antiviral medication home.
Today the Rabbit has made a miraculous recovery, It would appear she had a different sort of virus as she no longer has a fever and is snotty rather than fluey. I am in a panic about the drugs I have now taken. It is fantastic that she has made such a recovery but I'm not sure what I should do. I think certainly I should stop the Tamiflu. And one of my Due Group has mentioned that a friend of hers miscarried twins the day after getting her flu innoculation. It is times like this when being in a group can cause more panic than support. If only I was the calm and relaxed kind. Typically it is the weekend so I really have no one to ask! I am tired, I am moody, and I am just that little bit more stressed. But at least my wee daughter is looking much better!
All I need is Garnier...
It's an interesting concept: strangers for support. For the most part it works well, we are all in the same boat and it is lovely to find normality in the hormonal affects of pregnancy. It is clear that most of us are in fact suffering the same. We are almost all anxious and fretful, suspicious of any missing symptoms and terrified of miscarriage. We are all, it would seem, admitting to diabolical moods. All of them grumpy. We are all desperate to be Mummies, either for the first time or again and we are all for the most part playing beautifully with each other. Which is amazing, because in our real lives we are all admitting to tyrannical behaviour and an out of control mix of hormones which is causing havoc in our lives.
I am the grandma of the group. Seriously. No one is as old as me. I'm quite certain none of them feel as old as me either. I am feeling ancient. I seriously am looking dreadful. My Rabbit looked at me yesterday with so much concern as she questioned my elderly hands and old wrinkly chest. She has yet to mention my pirate treasure eyes (sunken and black) but there is sadness in her eyes as she looks at me. I've told her that the baby is sucking out the goodness but when it's born I'll return to my youthful, beautiful self. I thought she'd bought it but she told me she knew of just the thing to make me beautiful again. Out of the mouths of 5 year olds!
It turns out she'd seen an ad for Garnier Ultra Lift Wrinkle Cream. She told me it began with a capital G, was in a red jar and would only take 28 days to sort me out. When the ad came on again, while she was watching tv with her Dadda, she begged him to buy some for her wrinkly, old Mummy. He, being charming and cynical told her it would be unlikely to work. Prick. The Rabbit was devastated. "Don't worry Mummy", she said "I'll love you anyway."
I haven't declared my corpse like state to my "Due Group", although they are being very nice about my age. They seem, to be honest, like a lovely bunch of women. It has been devastating to have a few pull out of the group as their scans have detected impending miscarriages. I have enjoyed their solidarity as they declare their irrational moodiness. I have been ever so relieved to know I am not the only one that panics when their boobs are a little less sore, they don't feel sick enough, they, today, don't feel pregnant. Because I am so anxious, so moody, and so panicky with any sign of normality. But I also so exhausted, fraught with under carriage stretching pains (yay for adenomyosis and endometriosis...not) and my sense of smell is driving me insane. It is so acute.
I have mentioned I live with a teenager who next to never washes. This week it was twice, both on her father's instruction. Her clothes have not been washed for months, except the small socks and underpant wash she did on Wednesday that remains wet and unhung. Her bed sheet (just the one) has been changed once since February, and it was replaced with one from her dirty washing pile. She sprays perfumed odour disguisers all over herself frequently and her hair is amass with hairspray. Unpregnant I can't stand the smell. Pregnant it hovers for hours longer than usual, it is ghastly. It is not only her smell though, over perfumed and talcumed ladies in shops, any hint of mal odour. My sister sent down my old maternity clothes but I can't get the smell of storage out of them. It's like being in an opshop. It's like I smell it in my throat. It is as close to morning sickness that I get. I can't stand it.
I am also struggling with food. Pregnancy eating is SUCH a stressful way to grow a baby. The list of risk factors keeps growing and the need to eat healthily is so difficult when it seems nothing I want to eat is permitted. Yesterday my beautiful husband came home with dinner prepared: supermarket chicken, pre packaged coleslaw and ready made chicken ravioli. Great. Cheese and tomato rolls for me. I really did appreciate the effort but he washed his listeria chicken down with wine and I had my rolls with a glass of water. It had been a very long day!
It began when the Rabbit woke at 4.30am with quite a fever. By morning she was a very sick, fluey girl with a raging temperature despite a dose of paracetamol. I carried her into the doctors, where everything hurt and she began vomiting bile. She was diagnosed with influenza, a step from being admitted to hospital for observation and placed under "acute demand" care. The panic began to set in. Not only was my baby very sick, pregnancy and the flu do NOT go together. There is a very real risk of miscarriage. I was promptly jabbed with the flu innoculation and prescribed tamiflu. The risks of the precautions are well overtaken with the risks of influenza. I took my sick baby and my sore arm and my antiviral medication home.
Today the Rabbit has made a miraculous recovery, It would appear she had a different sort of virus as she no longer has a fever and is snotty rather than fluey. I am in a panic about the drugs I have now taken. It is fantastic that she has made such a recovery but I'm not sure what I should do. I think certainly I should stop the Tamiflu. And one of my Due Group has mentioned that a friend of hers miscarried twins the day after getting her flu innoculation. It is times like this when being in a group can cause more panic than support. If only I was the calm and relaxed kind. Typically it is the weekend so I really have no one to ask! I am tired, I am moody, and I am just that little bit more stressed. But at least my wee daughter is looking much better!
All I need is Garnier...
1 May 2012
If only pregnancy was glamourous!
Ok so my arse is growing faster than my belly. It is sooooo depressing! I 'thickened' from my hips to my ribs really fast but now my bott is going out in support of a less than two cm baby way faster than could possibly be deemed necessary. I am also painfully pale and looking half dead. I'm certainly not bringing sexy back!
The good news is I am most definitely pregnant! The bad news is I am not one of those women that glows when a baby is on board. My eyes are sunken and blackened, I am what can only be described as morgue white, with that hint of blue and blotchy, and for someone who is 8 weeks pregnant tomorrow, it is a pregnancy that is not staying hidden! I have next to no nausea but the tiredness is overwhelming. I'm exhausted. I am feeling so ever middle aged despite being in my mid thirties. Well 37.
My scan on Friday went well. Despite the occasional, heart stopping spotting the baby is growing well. It looks like a caterpillar, the gestational sac is perfect in shape and the little heart beat is going 150 beats a minute. I saw it. And to make me cry. I heard it. There is nothing so incredible as hearing a heart only a couple of millimetres in size beating strongly. The man who made my baby in a petrie dish told me I have a 95% chance of a healthy baby by Christmas. It's amazing how far we have come.
My nerves have settled a lot. I am still anxious but 95% is a wonderful promise. And I look so weathered that clearly something is up. Our five year old is still ever so excited. The sixteen year old has calmed to the point the doors have stopped slamming, however her negative attention seeking behaviours have stepped back up a notch. She showered before school this morning, her first shower since at least Thursday last week. Today is Tuesday. I am feeling that bit ever so less able to cope. The Rabbit has been a bit difficult, because she's 5. And a half. But I am being intolerant. It's a house filled with female hormones. Poor Mr G.
I've just been shopping actually to see if I could tidy myself up. Since my behind is growing out of my trousers as fast as my belly I bought a pair of stretchy leggings and a few long tops. I had my hair cut and I've come home and changed and even put on makeup. I look like a tired chubba but a step away from a ghost. You know things aren't good when people in the mall give you a wide birth, especially when the mall I visited is filled with scruffy, unkempt hobos with varying numbers of snotty rugrats. For the moment anyway I no longer look like one of them. I'm going to have to make a daily effort.
I may not sound it, but I am ever so excited that I'm pregnant and it is just so very amazing. I just wish I could be tainted with a little glow...or at least have a little real life photo shopping!
The good news is I am most definitely pregnant! The bad news is I am not one of those women that glows when a baby is on board. My eyes are sunken and blackened, I am what can only be described as morgue white, with that hint of blue and blotchy, and for someone who is 8 weeks pregnant tomorrow, it is a pregnancy that is not staying hidden! I have next to no nausea but the tiredness is overwhelming. I'm exhausted. I am feeling so ever middle aged despite being in my mid thirties. Well 37.
My scan on Friday went well. Despite the occasional, heart stopping spotting the baby is growing well. It looks like a caterpillar, the gestational sac is perfect in shape and the little heart beat is going 150 beats a minute. I saw it. And to make me cry. I heard it. There is nothing so incredible as hearing a heart only a couple of millimetres in size beating strongly. The man who made my baby in a petrie dish told me I have a 95% chance of a healthy baby by Christmas. It's amazing how far we have come.
My nerves have settled a lot. I am still anxious but 95% is a wonderful promise. And I look so weathered that clearly something is up. Our five year old is still ever so excited. The sixteen year old has calmed to the point the doors have stopped slamming, however her negative attention seeking behaviours have stepped back up a notch. She showered before school this morning, her first shower since at least Thursday last week. Today is Tuesday. I am feeling that bit ever so less able to cope. The Rabbit has been a bit difficult, because she's 5. And a half. But I am being intolerant. It's a house filled with female hormones. Poor Mr G.
I've just been shopping actually to see if I could tidy myself up. Since my behind is growing out of my trousers as fast as my belly I bought a pair of stretchy leggings and a few long tops. I had my hair cut and I've come home and changed and even put on makeup. I look like a tired chubba but a step away from a ghost. You know things aren't good when people in the mall give you a wide birth, especially when the mall I visited is filled with scruffy, unkempt hobos with varying numbers of snotty rugrats. For the moment anyway I no longer look like one of them. I'm going to have to make a daily effort.
I may not sound it, but I am ever so excited that I'm pregnant and it is just so very amazing. I just wish I could be tainted with a little glow...or at least have a little real life photo shopping!
27 April 2012
Don't panic, I'm panicking
Well the last few days have been REALLY hard! All was going well until I had more spotting on Wednesday, Anzac day. My nerves are so frazzled. As it was a public holiday I had no option but to wait until Thursday to make a phone call. And I have to wait until lunchtime today for another scan. I have had A LOT of aching pains which although are probably stretching pains and expected, they make me nervous and we have one irate, door slamming, foully behaved, sulking teenager praying I'll have a miscarriage. I just want to cry.
Have I mentioned I am not the world's most calm person? Stressed is my middle name. Irrational would describe my inner thought process. Desperate would describe my state of mind. I forgot how angst ridden early pregnancy was. I'd told myself how much better I would be this time but I'm not doing a good job of convincing myself. It's that last chance raising it's head again. My mother tells me she'd like to start knitting but it's too early yet, I might lose it. Seriously? Thanks for that. Not once, but twice. Just what I need, someone else's stress. It seems no one can say the right thing to me, no conversation is safe. No I don't want to hear stories of people who were 7 weeks pregnant but lost the baby and can't have more. No I don't want to go to the toilet again in case I'm spotting again. No I don't want to be awake for the next 33 weeks. I want to be asleep and wake up to a healthy baby. Did someone mention that women get moody in pregnancy?
In good news, I have one VERY excited wee Rabbit. After the first scan Mr G told his parents of the impending delivery, which meant the Contessa was going to find out, which means the Rabbit needed to be told. It was becoming too difficult to hide from her. She has acute, Rabbit ears, she keeps reading over my shoulder when I'm on the computer and if I spelled p-r-e-g-n-a-n-t, she'd know what I'd spelt. Having a 5 year old with a very advanced reading age can be a difficulty. But as long as everything goes well, she's so positive and happy about getting a baby brother or sister than it is great that she knows. She can't wait!!! She's ever so cute.
I'm going to go and have a cup of tea and do my hair so I can head off for my scan. I just hope everything is ok so I can relax and settle into sore boobs and painful stretching without the frequent panic attacks...
Have I mentioned I am not the world's most calm person? Stressed is my middle name. Irrational would describe my inner thought process. Desperate would describe my state of mind. I forgot how angst ridden early pregnancy was. I'd told myself how much better I would be this time but I'm not doing a good job of convincing myself. It's that last chance raising it's head again. My mother tells me she'd like to start knitting but it's too early yet, I might lose it. Seriously? Thanks for that. Not once, but twice. Just what I need, someone else's stress. It seems no one can say the right thing to me, no conversation is safe. No I don't want to hear stories of people who were 7 weeks pregnant but lost the baby and can't have more. No I don't want to go to the toilet again in case I'm spotting again. No I don't want to be awake for the next 33 weeks. I want to be asleep and wake up to a healthy baby. Did someone mention that women get moody in pregnancy?
In good news, I have one VERY excited wee Rabbit. After the first scan Mr G told his parents of the impending delivery, which meant the Contessa was going to find out, which means the Rabbit needed to be told. It was becoming too difficult to hide from her. She has acute, Rabbit ears, she keeps reading over my shoulder when I'm on the computer and if I spelled p-r-e-g-n-a-n-t, she'd know what I'd spelt. Having a 5 year old with a very advanced reading age can be a difficulty. But as long as everything goes well, she's so positive and happy about getting a baby brother or sister than it is great that she knows. She can't wait!!! She's ever so cute.
I'm going to go and have a cup of tea and do my hair so I can head off for my scan. I just hope everything is ok so I can relax and settle into sore boobs and painful stretching without the frequent panic attacks...
23 April 2012
Everything is ok!
Ok it's official, I am the world's worst blogger. I have been neglectful and I am sorry. It's been school holidays, I was sick for more than the first week and then I got busy. And then my daughter turned into a demon child and then she got better and I had a little spotting scare and then I had a scan and the good news is baby looks good, has a little heart beat, and is due on 12.12.12. I am officially taking it easy.
I have a million things to update and things to write and the swing of things to get back into including the fact I am a nervous wreck, I look 5 months pregnant, no seriously, the Rabbit is extremely excited about being a big sister and the Contessa is murderous. Naming is showing signs of diabolical disaster. The inlaws are coping with the news of impending delivery and my boobs are sore. I bet you can't wait to hear all about it.
I PROMISE to book some time in at the computer over the next few days and get this blog back on the road. Thank you for all your messages, I'm sorry an update has been a while coming. I'll be back:)
I have a million things to update and things to write and the swing of things to get back into including the fact I am a nervous wreck, I look 5 months pregnant, no seriously, the Rabbit is extremely excited about being a big sister and the Contessa is murderous. Naming is showing signs of diabolical disaster. The inlaws are coping with the news of impending delivery and my boobs are sore. I bet you can't wait to hear all about it.
I PROMISE to book some time in at the computer over the next few days and get this blog back on the road. Thank you for all your messages, I'm sorry an update has been a while coming. I'll be back:)
10 April 2012
And still...
So I'm been on a road trip with the Rabbit, a friend and her four children. We had fun! It was an internet free few days. Sadly now that I am back I am riddled with lurgy - I'm croaky, fluey and miserable BUT I am still pregnant! Blood result today was very promising. I have been so nervous - pregnancy pain with my sick uterus is miserable, if only it wasn't so like endometriosis/adenomyosis pain so that I could distinguish it and feel excited by it instead of all "here we go again". In my next life I'm coming back with nerves of steel, these pansy, antsy ones are the pits. Although I wonder with the way they raise my heart beat it's basically like I do continuous exercise. I should be really fit!!!!! I'll be back blogging when I'm not a huge, too tired for walking, too croaky for talking virus. In the meantime, pregnant:)
4 April 2012
3 April 2012
One more sleep...
So tomorrow is the day of the blood test. I am nervous. I am spotty. I have one tender boob. My guess is pregnant. Far out I hope so. Please fingers crossed, toes crossed and for the truly hopeful, legs crossed. PLEASE let it be so. Test is first thing in the morning, the afternoon will have me waiting for a phone call, maybe all afternoon. It may be a looooooong day...
2 April 2012
The Seduction of Email
Every day I get seductive emails from women. Well apparently women. Women with names like Heather and Denise and Lisa. Women with names like Heather and Denise and Lisa who apparently want to fuck me. Seriously. Apparently I am a dirty, horny lesbian. Not a way I had previously looked at myself but if my inbox is to be believed, it is the way the world views me. There's no need for me to panic. Apparently most of them are married and come with no strings attached, although some of them would like to tie me up. While they fuck me. Some of them just want to chat.
Although this may come as a surprise to Lisas, Denises and Heathers, I don't find the emails even the slightest bit titillating. I don't get a bit curious. Except about the name commonalities. I think I'll certainly think twice before striking up a conversation about sex with anyone of the same name lest they throw their clothes off. I'm not sure why any of these ladies think that I am at all in to 'fucking', or committing adultery, but thankfully my inbox also provides me with ways to get a little more aroused. Specifically, ways to enlarge my penis.
Apparently, there are a number of places on the internet market that can provide me with means and ways to increase the size of my penis beyond my wildest dreams. My dreams clearly need to get a little wilder! Having been born without a penis and having only managed to acquire rights to one through marriage, I'm not entirely certain why 'discretion' is required. Presumably once my penis has doubled, tripled or quadrupled in size my husband would begin to notice. I'm not entirely certain he'd be thrilled to find his wife with a penis. Ironically, it may threaten his manliness. I think we'd both be afraid. Not nearly as afraid as I would be if all the Heathers, Lisas and Denises found out about it. Of course maybe I should find out what the fuss is about?
Clearly I'd have to have a fiddle. Apparently they get very itchy so I'd have to scratch it. A lot. Apparently they get very lonely so I'd have to hold it. A lot. And since I take my marital vows seriously, I think my husband should let me stick it in him so I get the idea of what is so incredibly amazing about penises, beyond the benefits they can provide for others. I wonder if I'll be satisfied with my penis or whether I'll be waiting for more emails to see how I can improve it. I do hope cosmetic surgery isn't too expensive. Although I don't need to worry about money anymore. Apparently I have a Nigerian uncle.
If ALL my emails were to be believed, I should really wear black permanently. It turns out I have a LOT of relatives who have recently died that I didn't know about. Great news is they haven't realised how many relatives I already have, so they think I'm the only one so I'm soon to inherit millions and I won't have to share. I've been trying to figure out how to get my bank to email the various lawyers and governments concerned confirming that I will pay all the legal fees to have all my inheritances cleared and free for my usage. Only problem is ALL the banks I can name are all mailing me to say there are problems with my accounts. They want my details again. And information about my first pets. That's nice.
I don't know how people got on without email, or where they bought their Rolex's from or how they could live with themselves and their penises. But I for one appreciate what it does for my self esteem. It's changed my life. Knowing that Heather, Lisa and Denise all want to fuck me with my new and improved penis while we roll in the monies left to me by all my late, Nigerian uncles makes life just seem so much more livable. I must go and let my bank manager know about Fluffy!
Although this may come as a surprise to Lisas, Denises and Heathers, I don't find the emails even the slightest bit titillating. I don't get a bit curious. Except about the name commonalities. I think I'll certainly think twice before striking up a conversation about sex with anyone of the same name lest they throw their clothes off. I'm not sure why any of these ladies think that I am at all in to 'fucking', or committing adultery, but thankfully my inbox also provides me with ways to get a little more aroused. Specifically, ways to enlarge my penis.
Apparently, there are a number of places on the internet market that can provide me with means and ways to increase the size of my penis beyond my wildest dreams. My dreams clearly need to get a little wilder! Having been born without a penis and having only managed to acquire rights to one through marriage, I'm not entirely certain why 'discretion' is required. Presumably once my penis has doubled, tripled or quadrupled in size my husband would begin to notice. I'm not entirely certain he'd be thrilled to find his wife with a penis. Ironically, it may threaten his manliness. I think we'd both be afraid. Not nearly as afraid as I would be if all the Heathers, Lisas and Denises found out about it. Of course maybe I should find out what the fuss is about?
Clearly I'd have to have a fiddle. Apparently they get very itchy so I'd have to scratch it. A lot. Apparently they get very lonely so I'd have to hold it. A lot. And since I take my marital vows seriously, I think my husband should let me stick it in him so I get the idea of what is so incredibly amazing about penises, beyond the benefits they can provide for others. I wonder if I'll be satisfied with my penis or whether I'll be waiting for more emails to see how I can improve it. I do hope cosmetic surgery isn't too expensive. Although I don't need to worry about money anymore. Apparently I have a Nigerian uncle.
If ALL my emails were to be believed, I should really wear black permanently. It turns out I have a LOT of relatives who have recently died that I didn't know about. Great news is they haven't realised how many relatives I already have, so they think I'm the only one so I'm soon to inherit millions and I won't have to share. I've been trying to figure out how to get my bank to email the various lawyers and governments concerned confirming that I will pay all the legal fees to have all my inheritances cleared and free for my usage. Only problem is ALL the banks I can name are all mailing me to say there are problems with my accounts. They want my details again. And information about my first pets. That's nice.
I don't know how people got on without email, or where they bought their Rolex's from or how they could live with themselves and their penises. But I for one appreciate what it does for my self esteem. It's changed my life. Knowing that Heather, Lisa and Denise all want to fuck me with my new and improved penis while we roll in the monies left to me by all my late, Nigerian uncles makes life just seem so much more livable. I must go and let my bank manager know about Fluffy!
April Ha Ha Fools...
One of the exciting and most rewarding things of mummyhood is watching your little blessing experience firsts: the first Christmas they look forward to and have genuine excitement for; their first Easter egg hunt; their first birthday that doesn't come as a pleasant surprise. A good mummy would be terribly excited about all of them, and generally I am, but yesterday was The Rabbit's most recent "first" that she was incredibly excited about but for the rest of the family it was somewhat less so. April Fools Day. A day which had previously been unheard of by my five year old. A day which is RIGHT up her little alley of quirky senses of humour!
It was her school teacher that told her. The Rabbit and her little friend So-and-So came out of class on Friday barely able to contain their excitement. They were planning their tricks. Their excitement was so overwhelming they couldn't keep any of them secret. I could tell it was going to be a long weekend! So-and-So was all about pretend spiders on backs. The Rabbit was less decisive and talking nonsense. As Sunday approached she still couldn't decide what she was going to do to prank everybody!
On Saturday night, still unable to decide and me without even the tiniest of clues of what to suggest, we consulted our good friend Google. Google wasn't that much help. It had few suggestions and even fewer I was willing to try: turning taps to spray in unsuspecting faces; gladwrap on the toilet bowl and foul tasting pretend coffee were repeat suggestions. Others were fake but real looking food. Things like that took planning. I was trying to get the child to bed not sit up all night making plasticine food with her. Like it would fool anyone.
We decided we would take Daddy an empty mug for his coffee in the morning and she would get Daddy to fill her cereal bowl with milk after I had hidden food colouring under the cereal. It was the best plan we could muster. There were almost tears when Daddy got up to make the coffees. The cereal plan didn't work brilliantly. I had to stir it all up before it worked. Daddy hadn't had a coffee so he didn't make too much effort to smile. I hadn't had a coffee so I didn't care. I went back to bed to read while The Rabbit schemed. I didn't get much reading done. She came in begging for a trick that would work. We screwed up some paper and wrapped it in an easter egg wrapper. She gave it to the Contessa. The Contessa clearly couldn't be bothered humouring a five year old. "Ha ha" she moaned sarcastically. The Rabbit stomped back in to my room.
Daddy came in with my coffee and asked us if we'd seen the frog on the back lawn. We've had frogs before. Big ones. I am scared of frogs. I discovered this the first time one appeared. I rang MAF. They laughed at me. I sent in a photo of the giant frog. They called it a "little" frog. It was as big as my fist plus legs! Apparently it wasn't an escaped foreign enemy. It was a local. The Rabbit looked out the window in excitement. I clicked as she did so. "April Fools" said Daddy. "Harrumph" said the Rabbit. She'd have found it a lot funnier if someone had fallen for one of her tricks.
It turned out that we had one more opportunity to trick the Dadda. He spilled his own coffee so we made him another one. With soy sauce. Because I'm a woman who doesn't believe something as important as a morning coffee should ever be interfered with I whispered bewares to my husband. I also shot "you'd better act a LOT better than you have done" looks. Thankfully he pretended to taste it, then went "oh yuck, what is that" and The Rabbit was happy. "Ha ha ha" she laughed maniacally."We tricked you, April Fools Day". It was a big relief to us all that she thought she'd been successful. The day proceeded quietly with the odd spider on our backs.
"I love April Fools Day" she said as I tucked her into bed. A friend had told me April Fools was great for fooling kids - "hey, let's go to the zoo....April Fools, hey chocolate cake for dinner....April Fools" It made me laugh but I couldn't muster the mean. I told her I had a trick for her to forewarn her little temperament "we can have pizza for breakfast I said". Her eyes widened in excitement then went "oh, April Fools' Day". "You know Mummy" she said "Mrs C said anyone who did an April Fools joke after lunch was the one who was the fool". "Fair enough" I said, not really believing that one. It is called April Fools' DAY not morning or hour or minute. I finally understand the limitation though - it's a long day if madness and mayhem and maniacal laughter is left to its own devices any longer than is absolutely necessary. In retrospect though, I did really enjoy my baby's latest "first".
It was her school teacher that told her. The Rabbit and her little friend So-and-So came out of class on Friday barely able to contain their excitement. They were planning their tricks. Their excitement was so overwhelming they couldn't keep any of them secret. I could tell it was going to be a long weekend! So-and-So was all about pretend spiders on backs. The Rabbit was less decisive and talking nonsense. As Sunday approached she still couldn't decide what she was going to do to prank everybody!
On Saturday night, still unable to decide and me without even the tiniest of clues of what to suggest, we consulted our good friend Google. Google wasn't that much help. It had few suggestions and even fewer I was willing to try: turning taps to spray in unsuspecting faces; gladwrap on the toilet bowl and foul tasting pretend coffee were repeat suggestions. Others were fake but real looking food. Things like that took planning. I was trying to get the child to bed not sit up all night making plasticine food with her. Like it would fool anyone.
We decided we would take Daddy an empty mug for his coffee in the morning and she would get Daddy to fill her cereal bowl with milk after I had hidden food colouring under the cereal. It was the best plan we could muster. There were almost tears when Daddy got up to make the coffees. The cereal plan didn't work brilliantly. I had to stir it all up before it worked. Daddy hadn't had a coffee so he didn't make too much effort to smile. I hadn't had a coffee so I didn't care. I went back to bed to read while The Rabbit schemed. I didn't get much reading done. She came in begging for a trick that would work. We screwed up some paper and wrapped it in an easter egg wrapper. She gave it to the Contessa. The Contessa clearly couldn't be bothered humouring a five year old. "Ha ha" she moaned sarcastically. The Rabbit stomped back in to my room.
Daddy came in with my coffee and asked us if we'd seen the frog on the back lawn. We've had frogs before. Big ones. I am scared of frogs. I discovered this the first time one appeared. I rang MAF. They laughed at me. I sent in a photo of the giant frog. They called it a "little" frog. It was as big as my fist plus legs! Apparently it wasn't an escaped foreign enemy. It was a local. The Rabbit looked out the window in excitement. I clicked as she did so. "April Fools" said Daddy. "Harrumph" said the Rabbit. She'd have found it a lot funnier if someone had fallen for one of her tricks.
It turned out that we had one more opportunity to trick the Dadda. He spilled his own coffee so we made him another one. With soy sauce. Because I'm a woman who doesn't believe something as important as a morning coffee should ever be interfered with I whispered bewares to my husband. I also shot "you'd better act a LOT better than you have done" looks. Thankfully he pretended to taste it, then went "oh yuck, what is that" and The Rabbit was happy. "Ha ha ha" she laughed maniacally."We tricked you, April Fools Day". It was a big relief to us all that she thought she'd been successful. The day proceeded quietly with the odd spider on our backs.
"I love April Fools Day" she said as I tucked her into bed. A friend had told me April Fools was great for fooling kids - "hey, let's go to the zoo....April Fools, hey chocolate cake for dinner....April Fools" It made me laugh but I couldn't muster the mean. I told her I had a trick for her to forewarn her little temperament "we can have pizza for breakfast I said". Her eyes widened in excitement then went "oh, April Fools' Day". "You know Mummy" she said "Mrs C said anyone who did an April Fools joke after lunch was the one who was the fool". "Fair enough" I said, not really believing that one. It is called April Fools' DAY not morning or hour or minute. I finally understand the limitation though - it's a long day if madness and mayhem and maniacal laughter is left to its own devices any longer than is absolutely necessary. In retrospect though, I did really enjoy my baby's latest "first".
1 April 2012
The crazies.
Well today I am an absolute bundle of nerves! I am still getting a lot of dragging pain...it's so frustrating that being premenstrual and being slightly pregnant have the same symptoms. I am a step away from complete panic attack. I am scared to go to the toilet in case I am bleeding and while I feel a bit sick, it is almost definitely nerves. I have slightly tender boobs, particularly the left...but then I am also still pessarising with progesterone and poking and prodding the poor things relentlessly hoping for sensitivity. I may well be causing it! I am definitely going crazy! Wednesday seems months away.
31 March 2012
Old Mother Hubbard...
So today came the letter from the Clinic which let me know about our frozen embryos. From the four left, none were suitable. 10 eggs, 9 fertilised, 8 embryos, 1 blastocyte. I have no more chances after this one. I keep crying. It was a lot easier to stay calm when I thought I had a few more chances in the freezer. I never thought we'd have none. So much for being the Octomum! So I have to hope like crazy the wee one I have on board is a miracle baby. PLEASE keep those fingers crossed for me!
30 March 2012
Walnuts and Waiting
Well I'm still a nervous wreck, anxiously waiting until Wednesday! I have A LOT of grotty, dragging period like pains which can mean one thing or the other: an attaching embryo OR the impending worst EVER period. I'm very much hoping it's the former! I went to acupuncture today and was told off for not coming each day this week - apparently the Acupuncturist's helper got it wrong when she told me when to make my next appointment. So either I'm going to wish like crazy I'd been or it won't matter. I'm going again tomorrow. He also has me eating tahini and walnuts. It's like you have to do everything suggested or you find yourself jinxed. It's tough being a little too superstitious and desperate. My skin is horrendous. I wish my boobs were sore. And enormous. Still, until Wednesday there's a baby in my tummy so I should just relax and enjoy it. My goodness I miss wine. All wine. Lovely wine.
28 March 2012
A Lack of Patience
So it turns out I am NOT a very patient person. I'm trying not to think about the Maybe Baby but I'm not doing too good a job! I am analysing every pain and bodily happening and I keep feeling myself up to see if my boobs are getting sore. I suspect they'll be bruised if I keep it up and people will start looking at me funny! Thank goodness I have a busy day tomorrow and a husband home for four days. I think I'll have to book in some coffee dates for Monday and Tuesday and might have to find supportive company on Wednesday until my blood test results come through. This is HARD!!!!! It is raining, my sewing machine which was keeping me occupied with a million things to do has broken and is at the repair shop, and I'm so preoccupied with wondering that I'm not getting much done. One week to go. I think it will be a long week - but then it is a week with hope!!!
27 March 2012
Someone Else's Wendy and the Volcano Family
They call them "blended families" families like ours. Families where parents bring themselves together, with their already in existence children, and put themselves together in a big blending pot. Even when sometimes it's like mixing oil and water or jam and rocks. They should be called Volcano Families. Noone ever said it would be easy, but seriously, sometimes it's a fucking nightmare. Into our family I brought a two year old Rabbit. Mr G brought a twelve year old Contessa. My little Rabbit and Mr G fell in love, became Daddy and Daughter and blood became totally irrelevant. The Contessa is a whole different story. It seems sometimes the harder I try, the worse it becomes and not only is blood relevant, often it is boiling, and occasionally I wonder if it should be spilt as I slash my wrists. Time and time again I wonder 'what is the point?'
Years ago I used to have a flatmate, Wendy. She moved into a flat that I and the homeowner lived in. We lived happily, quietly and tidily. Wendy wasn't unhappy but she unsettled our settledness in quiet wee ways. Generally she was pleasant, always she was filthy. No matter how many hints we left or times we asked, Wendy left a trail where ever she went. While we cleaned as we went and did housework once a week as a team, Wendy cleaned up nothing and never helped out in the home. She never saw mess but she left it everywhere. Every morning she would have toast, but leave crumbs all over the bench and smearings of toast spreads. The bathroom I shared with her was COVERED in her dyed red hair. HUGE clumps of it on every surface. It made me feel like vomiting. She never cleaned it up or cleaned the bathroom. When she cooked she never wiped down the bench or stove, she never rinsed her dishes before she put them in the dishwasher. She never unloaded the dishwasher, or did anything to help out anyone but herself. She was bright and cheery but every morning she took a dump directly before I had a shower, even though there was a separate toilet downstairs.
Not only did I need to shower in Wendy's fecal stench, and clean up after her wherever she went, Wendy not only didn't clean up after herself, she didn't seem to shower or wash very often either. Her benchmark seemed to be every three or four days, when her hair would get scarily greasy, so she'd shower. Pretty much her hair seemed to be walking about on it's own on her head and she MIGHT decide it was time to wash it. Which meant she would need to shower. Which meant it was time to change her underpants. Sometimes her clean washing contained only a couple of pairs of knickers. She never washed her sheets. Eventually my flatmate suggested she move on. She left. We happily got on with our lives, cleanly and freshly never giving Wendy another thought. Until cue some years later and in walks Mr G into my life and in walks the Contessa, and back I am, living with a Wendy!
The worst thing about step parenting is no matter what you do, you have all the responsibility but no ability to change anything. You get to chew out your own kid. The Contessa is difficult, she is stroppy, she is complicated. She is smelly. Wherever she goes she leaves a trail. A trail that I, the housewife, get to clean up. And since she's not my kid and she does NOTHING that I ask, and does nothing for herself, I get to live with it and lump it. And it drives me INSANE. It drives me CRAZY. Sometimes I am murderous. It's the collection of little tiny things that all mixed together make me want to explode, even though explosion usually comes after trivial. It's just that while I am the housewife, she has nothing but contempt for me and a teenaged right of passage. If she eats, I get to clean up the mess. There is always mess. If I ask her to clean it up, she wipes it onto the floor. If she showers she leaves the mat in a heap on the floor so I get to pick it up. She drops hairclips everywhere for me to pick up. She leaves her chair out, any cupboard she opens open, any door she opens open, she leaves heaters on, lights on, you name it. There is a trail. And it all leads to her room, the Stench Pit.
The Stench Pit is something you only read about in horror movies. Mr G minimises it by saying "all teenagers are like that" but honestly, they're not. I was the Queen of the messy room and the unmade bed. I was terrible and lazy and unconcerned about mess. But the difference was my mess was clean mess. My clothes were clean, my sheets were clean, my room and I did not smell. If you walked in the house you wouldn't immediately know that my door had been left open. I did not have plates and cups and cutlery growing mould and fungus hiding in my drawers and under my washing piles. I didn't keep used sanitary products in my bedroom and I didn't sleep in a smell that brings bile to my throat. The Contessa is different. Nigel Latter may claim that the messy room is a sign that a teenager is finding her identity in the world. I fear the identity she is finding. She showers, at best, 2 to 3 times a week. Her bed is changed, under duress, maybe, MAYBE three times a year. Her clothes are washed, at best, once a month and even then it is only a small percentage of what is worn. It is always at someone else's insistence.
I did used to do her washing. Once every 8 to ten weeks she would throw a pile of clothes all over the garage floor near the washing machine. Some of them were the still neatly folded clothes I had washed last time which still remained unworn and un-put-away. The rest came with tissues in the pockets, sanitary pads attached, and I would be expected to collect them off the floor on demand and sort them. I didn't last long doing this. She turned 14, I went on strike and I went very close to walking out the door. Very close. I spent many days sitting on the garage floor crying and wondering what the hell I had got myself into. These days she hasn't changed overly, but I try to not make it my problem.
What made me think that I could try and help her change for the better, I will never know. I made the mistake, some weeks ago, of telling her that I would make her a new blind (to replace the one that she has broken and is mouldy), if only she would thoroughly clean and wash her room. I also told her if she got it all spotless and packed everything temporarily and tidily into the spare room, I would wash her carpet. I have tried being gentle, I have tried being encouraging. I have tried to suggest that if she was clean and cleaned her clothes and bedding and didn't hoard food scraps and used sanitary products then her room wouldn't stink. She responds with a 'yep' and then carries on the same way. She has made miniscule, piece meal attempts but she hasn't exactly bothered and she has never maintained what she's done and managed to get any further.
To carry out my end of the bargain I spent days hunting for fabric to make a new blind. I thought, since she was going to clean and the blind and carpet would be smell free, I would get her a new duvet cover and make some art work for her walls. I have spent hours making a blind, I have had nightmare after nightmare with staple guns trying to make the art work, I have bought cushions and a duvet cover, I have looked at sheets, I have encouraged my husband to buy me a carpet cleaner, I have explained to the teen exactly what I'd like her to do. I am sick of waiting for her to do it. Day after day she comes home and watches tele. She demands rides all over town from Mr G, never with manners and always at changing convenience only to herself. She showers only if her hair needs washing, even after dance classes. Last time she changed her bed she used dirty, hidden sheets and she has not, for as long as I can remember, changed her pyjamas. And while I am growing forever frustrated and disgusted, Mr G wants to know when I'll put her new blind up so that she doesn't burn the house down when the broken one covers the heater. I can't explain how exasperating it is when regardless of how much contempt she shows for me, she continues to remain my problem. Nothing I do is ever good enough.
I feel for the teenager. She's now 16. She doesn't fit in so well in our wee family but really she doesn't want to either. She wants to be the negative centre of attention. She wants to be waited upon. She wants me to fuck off and die. It hasn't been easy for her to gain a new step mother and a new, exceptionally cute, step sister. She loves the sister but she struggles with me. I get that. But I also think she needs to step up. I wonder at times if I am the only person in her life that has ever expected her to step up. Certainly Mr G, her mother and don't get me started on her grandmother, expect little from her and resign themselves to her behaviour. And she lives up to their expectations. She just doesn't live up to mine and certainly I don't live up to theirs. But I didn't create the problem, I just live with it. Even though I know that she is just a kid, she is stuck with me, just like I'm stuck with her, and she came as part of the bargain. Blended families can be like little, bubbling volcanoes. Life as a step mother can be soooo disempowering. So most of the time I get on with it, sometimes I do my nah-na over the tiniest but always cumulative things and pretty much always I count down the years until she becomes someone else's Wendy.
Years ago I used to have a flatmate, Wendy. She moved into a flat that I and the homeowner lived in. We lived happily, quietly and tidily. Wendy wasn't unhappy but she unsettled our settledness in quiet wee ways. Generally she was pleasant, always she was filthy. No matter how many hints we left or times we asked, Wendy left a trail where ever she went. While we cleaned as we went and did housework once a week as a team, Wendy cleaned up nothing and never helped out in the home. She never saw mess but she left it everywhere. Every morning she would have toast, but leave crumbs all over the bench and smearings of toast spreads. The bathroom I shared with her was COVERED in her dyed red hair. HUGE clumps of it on every surface. It made me feel like vomiting. She never cleaned it up or cleaned the bathroom. When she cooked she never wiped down the bench or stove, she never rinsed her dishes before she put them in the dishwasher. She never unloaded the dishwasher, or did anything to help out anyone but herself. She was bright and cheery but every morning she took a dump directly before I had a shower, even though there was a separate toilet downstairs.
Not only did I need to shower in Wendy's fecal stench, and clean up after her wherever she went, Wendy not only didn't clean up after herself, she didn't seem to shower or wash very often either. Her benchmark seemed to be every three or four days, when her hair would get scarily greasy, so she'd shower. Pretty much her hair seemed to be walking about on it's own on her head and she MIGHT decide it was time to wash it. Which meant she would need to shower. Which meant it was time to change her underpants. Sometimes her clean washing contained only a couple of pairs of knickers. She never washed her sheets. Eventually my flatmate suggested she move on. She left. We happily got on with our lives, cleanly and freshly never giving Wendy another thought. Until cue some years later and in walks Mr G into my life and in walks the Contessa, and back I am, living with a Wendy!
The worst thing about step parenting is no matter what you do, you have all the responsibility but no ability to change anything. You get to chew out your own kid. The Contessa is difficult, she is stroppy, she is complicated. She is smelly. Wherever she goes she leaves a trail. A trail that I, the housewife, get to clean up. And since she's not my kid and she does NOTHING that I ask, and does nothing for herself, I get to live with it and lump it. And it drives me INSANE. It drives me CRAZY. Sometimes I am murderous. It's the collection of little tiny things that all mixed together make me want to explode, even though explosion usually comes after trivial. It's just that while I am the housewife, she has nothing but contempt for me and a teenaged right of passage. If she eats, I get to clean up the mess. There is always mess. If I ask her to clean it up, she wipes it onto the floor. If she showers she leaves the mat in a heap on the floor so I get to pick it up. She drops hairclips everywhere for me to pick up. She leaves her chair out, any cupboard she opens open, any door she opens open, she leaves heaters on, lights on, you name it. There is a trail. And it all leads to her room, the Stench Pit.
The Stench Pit is something you only read about in horror movies. Mr G minimises it by saying "all teenagers are like that" but honestly, they're not. I was the Queen of the messy room and the unmade bed. I was terrible and lazy and unconcerned about mess. But the difference was my mess was clean mess. My clothes were clean, my sheets were clean, my room and I did not smell. If you walked in the house you wouldn't immediately know that my door had been left open. I did not have plates and cups and cutlery growing mould and fungus hiding in my drawers and under my washing piles. I didn't keep used sanitary products in my bedroom and I didn't sleep in a smell that brings bile to my throat. The Contessa is different. Nigel Latter may claim that the messy room is a sign that a teenager is finding her identity in the world. I fear the identity she is finding. She showers, at best, 2 to 3 times a week. Her bed is changed, under duress, maybe, MAYBE three times a year. Her clothes are washed, at best, once a month and even then it is only a small percentage of what is worn. It is always at someone else's insistence.
I did used to do her washing. Once every 8 to ten weeks she would throw a pile of clothes all over the garage floor near the washing machine. Some of them were the still neatly folded clothes I had washed last time which still remained unworn and un-put-away. The rest came with tissues in the pockets, sanitary pads attached, and I would be expected to collect them off the floor on demand and sort them. I didn't last long doing this. She turned 14, I went on strike and I went very close to walking out the door. Very close. I spent many days sitting on the garage floor crying and wondering what the hell I had got myself into. These days she hasn't changed overly, but I try to not make it my problem.
What made me think that I could try and help her change for the better, I will never know. I made the mistake, some weeks ago, of telling her that I would make her a new blind (to replace the one that she has broken and is mouldy), if only she would thoroughly clean and wash her room. I also told her if she got it all spotless and packed everything temporarily and tidily into the spare room, I would wash her carpet. I have tried being gentle, I have tried being encouraging. I have tried to suggest that if she was clean and cleaned her clothes and bedding and didn't hoard food scraps and used sanitary products then her room wouldn't stink. She responds with a 'yep' and then carries on the same way. She has made miniscule, piece meal attempts but she hasn't exactly bothered and she has never maintained what she's done and managed to get any further.
To carry out my end of the bargain I spent days hunting for fabric to make a new blind. I thought, since she was going to clean and the blind and carpet would be smell free, I would get her a new duvet cover and make some art work for her walls. I have spent hours making a blind, I have had nightmare after nightmare with staple guns trying to make the art work, I have bought cushions and a duvet cover, I have looked at sheets, I have encouraged my husband to buy me a carpet cleaner, I have explained to the teen exactly what I'd like her to do. I am sick of waiting for her to do it. Day after day she comes home and watches tele. She demands rides all over town from Mr G, never with manners and always at changing convenience only to herself. She showers only if her hair needs washing, even after dance classes. Last time she changed her bed she used dirty, hidden sheets and she has not, for as long as I can remember, changed her pyjamas. And while I am growing forever frustrated and disgusted, Mr G wants to know when I'll put her new blind up so that she doesn't burn the house down when the broken one covers the heater. I can't explain how exasperating it is when regardless of how much contempt she shows for me, she continues to remain my problem. Nothing I do is ever good enough.
I feel for the teenager. She's now 16. She doesn't fit in so well in our wee family but really she doesn't want to either. She wants to be the negative centre of attention. She wants to be waited upon. She wants me to fuck off and die. It hasn't been easy for her to gain a new step mother and a new, exceptionally cute, step sister. She loves the sister but she struggles with me. I get that. But I also think she needs to step up. I wonder at times if I am the only person in her life that has ever expected her to step up. Certainly Mr G, her mother and don't get me started on her grandmother, expect little from her and resign themselves to her behaviour. And she lives up to their expectations. She just doesn't live up to mine and certainly I don't live up to theirs. But I didn't create the problem, I just live with it. Even though I know that she is just a kid, she is stuck with me, just like I'm stuck with her, and she came as part of the bargain. Blended families can be like little, bubbling volcanoes. Life as a step mother can be soooo disempowering. So most of the time I get on with it, sometimes I do my nah-na over the tiniest but always cumulative things and pretty much always I count down the years until she becomes someone else's Wendy.
Headstanding!
It's a weird feeling, having a tiny embryo on board. It's the waiting that's difficult. I keep hoping whenever I go to the toilet that it doesn't fall out, even though it apparently can't. I can't help but wonder if I should be standing on my head. I keep wandering about the house (upright) and willing this tiny maybe baby to grow. Other times I forget. When asked, Mr G said he couldn't tell that I have a teeny, tiny embryo in my uterus. It's like a tiny wee secret. Well it would be a secret if I didn't blog to the world at large. In short, nothing feels different today than yesterday. My nerves are like teeny, tiny, embryo sized butterflies and I'm working hard at dismissing the "what if" thoughts. Grow little embryo, grow!
26 March 2012
Impregnated and Hopeful!
I would like to begin by saying thank you so much to everyone who has sent a message of support. I am overwhelmed! I would also like to say, excitedly and tentatively that for now, today, I am pregnant. When I say pregnant, I mean I have one little embryo on board. It looks very cute. I suspect it is a ginger. I so hope it makes it!
After the school run this morning I went back to my acupuncture man where I had needles in my head, tummy, elbows and shins. I was feeling so relaxed I almost leaped off the bed when a patient in another bed's phone rang INCREDIBLY loudly. Not only that but she took the phone call. It did sound like it was a wee bit important but I was a bit pissed off that my relaxation had been interrupted. I thought about calling her a bitch, but I decided on concentrating on making my uterus feel motherly. After an hour I was ready to journey to the Clinic to get myself up the duff.
The procedure was relatively quick. I once again needed to strip off and display my privates to even more stranger but I did get to see what is hopefully going to be our new wee sprog. I hope to post an image when they email it through. I was impregnated fairly quickly, having identified my name on the petrie dish (here's hoping there aren't any black couples with the same name) and up it went on a floppy skewer like thing. And that was it. It's a tiny little thing, not visible to the naked eye. Specifically, at this stage of development, the embryo is called a blastocyst. I hope it shall continue to go forth and multiply.
I was told that of my 8 microbabies, 3 had already died. One was a blastocyst and four more are the stage before blastocyst. They need to be blastocysts before they are suitable to freeze and will be checked later this afternoon and again, if not ready, in the morning. I so hope they make it so that I have a back up plan. I am trying not to dwell on what happens if we're unsuccessful in our baby making. So far I've been amazingly positive and relaxed. I say amazing because I am not the world's most chilled out person. I am a stress kitten of evil proportions. I have a patient husband.
After implantation, although I still like to call it impregnation, I went back to the Acupuncture clinic. For another hour I lay, thinking fertile thoughts, with 5 needles in my head, one in my tummy, one in each of my shins and two very painful little bastards in my big toes. Still, my blood flow must hopefully be perfect and I guess we have to wait and see. I have to shove progesterone pessaries up my lady place three times a day until I have a pregnancy test in a few weeks and if positive, the pessary shoving shall continue for many more weeks to optimise safe harbouring of Little Ivy F. NOT that I am naming that baby until it is a baby.
In the meantime, on with life I go. I would kill for a wine, seriously, but hopefully I won't have a drink for many a month. Here's to the promise of a maybe baby!!!
A blastocyst (day 5). This is not my one, mine is much cuter!!!
After the school run this morning I went back to my acupuncture man where I had needles in my head, tummy, elbows and shins. I was feeling so relaxed I almost leaped off the bed when a patient in another bed's phone rang INCREDIBLY loudly. Not only that but she took the phone call. It did sound like it was a wee bit important but I was a bit pissed off that my relaxation had been interrupted. I thought about calling her a bitch, but I decided on concentrating on making my uterus feel motherly. After an hour I was ready to journey to the Clinic to get myself up the duff.
The procedure was relatively quick. I once again needed to strip off and display my privates to even more stranger but I did get to see what is hopefully going to be our new wee sprog. I hope to post an image when they email it through. I was impregnated fairly quickly, having identified my name on the petrie dish (here's hoping there aren't any black couples with the same name) and up it went on a floppy skewer like thing. And that was it. It's a tiny little thing, not visible to the naked eye. Specifically, at this stage of development, the embryo is called a blastocyst. I hope it shall continue to go forth and multiply.
I was told that of my 8 microbabies, 3 had already died. One was a blastocyst and four more are the stage before blastocyst. They need to be blastocysts before they are suitable to freeze and will be checked later this afternoon and again, if not ready, in the morning. I so hope they make it so that I have a back up plan. I am trying not to dwell on what happens if we're unsuccessful in our baby making. So far I've been amazingly positive and relaxed. I say amazing because I am not the world's most chilled out person. I am a stress kitten of evil proportions. I have a patient husband.
After implantation, although I still like to call it impregnation, I went back to the Acupuncture clinic. For another hour I lay, thinking fertile thoughts, with 5 needles in my head, one in my tummy, one in each of my shins and two very painful little bastards in my big toes. Still, my blood flow must hopefully be perfect and I guess we have to wait and see. I have to shove progesterone pessaries up my lady place three times a day until I have a pregnancy test in a few weeks and if positive, the pessary shoving shall continue for many more weeks to optimise safe harbouring of Little Ivy F. NOT that I am naming that baby until it is a baby.
In the meantime, on with life I go. I would kill for a wine, seriously, but hopefully I won't have a drink for many a month. Here's to the promise of a maybe baby!!!
A blastocyst (day 5). This is not my one, mine is much cuter!!!
Syringes, Collections and an Escape From the Masterbatorium
Wednesday was a BIG day for me and Mr G: it was the day I had all my eggs collected and Mr G got a syringe in the testicles. I think he was more nervous. Actually I was more nervous about the existence of the Secret Sperm than I was about the egg collection. I needn't have worried! I did make sure I had bright and sparkly pubes, for public viewing purposes and Mr G got to shave his testicles. I have to wonder if pubic clipperedness is something the doctor folk notice of, or if they've seen one bush, they've seen them all. I wonder if they make assumptions amongst themselves both pre and post peeking and whether they're ever surprised by the efforts some people go to.
We began the day by being up and organised very early so that I could be at the acupuncture clinic by 8am. I quite like the acupuncture man, although he makes me quite nervous. He's a Chinese professor. He smiles a lot and nods his head a lot and he is very difficult to understand. It's difficult sometimes not to just say "um yes" to everything he says, even though you have a 50% chance of it being the right answer. He tends to smile and nod back. He may be thinking to himself "ah, crazy bitch you no understand me" but I'm thinking maybe he also just hopes we understand each other.
If any acupuncture works, I have faith in this man. The reason is, is that I have seen him a number of times over the years and he manages to ease pain where everyone else has failed. I have a bad neck due to a car crash years ago where a taxi driver failed to stop at a red light, despite the fact he had to get through me and another car on his way through. My acupuncture man helped enormously. He has also been able to give me pain relief throughout the IVF stages, notably he seems to have removed the permanent knife up my unspeakables. I wish I'd been to see him last year when the pain was insufferable. Apparently the visit before egg collection was to ready my eggs for lifting. I had needles in my head, ears, tummy, elbows, shins and toes. Weird.
Mr G, having attended to child delivery services (The Rabbit to her Gran for a school trip), then collected me from Acupuncture and we arrived at the Clinic, nervously. I was nil by mouth. The fun and games weren't too bad. I got to take a pre-med tablet (medazelam) to help relax me. I've never trusted these things. It's the one that Bill Cosby on the Cosby Show took before surgery once and it would seem he lost his inhibitions. I have a friend who told all the operating theatre staff once that she couldn't believe they wore crocs, that they were terrible and disgusting people and they should be ashamed. Thankfully I kept my inhibitions intact. I then got a luer in my arm and we went through to the theatre. I was injected with something that made me quite woozy which was to help with pain relief. I also had some local anaesthetic. The doctor didn't mention my pubes.
The collection itself wasn't pleasant but it wasn't terrible. It was uncomfortable and there was some pain but overall it was better than I'd expected. Excitingly, they collected 10 eggs. It's always a subjective matter. They collect the eggs on the basis of follicles, but not all follicles contain eggs. 10 seemed like a good number. I was wheeled off into recovery for a bit of a snooze, although I came around pretty quickly and was able to read my book. While Mr G went off for his testes to be manhandled I had a nice cup of tea and a muffin. Apparently the specialist and the nurse both copped a feel and admired Mr G's manhood. They both expressed admiration of his appendages although he didn't let them take photos. His procedure was quick, they gave him local anaesthetic and syringed out some Secret Sperm. They then went back for some more from the same testicle. They thankfully didn't need to interfere with his other testicle.
He's lucky really. Most men have to pay not one but many visits to the Clinic Masterbatorium. It's the room where they get sent by women in nursing uniforms, also known as nurses, to jerk off on demand in a cup. Several samples are normally needed on an infertility and ivf journey. The nurses (ok, so probably one) wait outside (or nearby). Apparently 'materials' are provided. The nurses are not allowed to enter to assist but pornographic material of every kind is available to cater for a wide range of tastes. My brother in law described the bredth of material as fascinating, although he wished he'd snooped through the gay porn after he'd filled his cup, as the images meant he was unable to get it on with himself for quite some time.
It's a funny thing masterbation. I think I've realised the real reason it is frowned upon by the Catholic Church: not because it is unhealthy or in reality sinful, but because it gives priests an opportunity to talk dirty. I suspect this is the real reason why confession is taken in adjoining cubicles, and why the priest wears a dress. I can only imagine them requesting the details from innocent wee boys and worse, the priests taking confession from one another. "Go on, my son, tell me what you did next?" "Oh really, show me". But I digress in a matter not meant to cause offence to Catholics so I apologise. But I do wonder.
After a wee while, Mr G had a cup of coffee and a muffin, we went home. It was quite an uncomfortable day for me but Mr G felt much better that it was all over. He was relieved to get out of there with a working penis and get the scary part for him over and done with. He recovered. I took a good few days! My swollen abdomen stayed very uncomfortable until Saturday and it seemed to prop itself up under my ribcage. A day on codeine caused havoc with my bowels and I've wished ever since I wasn't allergic to kiwifruit. I suspect hormones also have something to do with my constipating problem.
Apart from feeling not so good, the news the following day was encouraging. From the ten eggs collected, 9 were able to be fertilised. Because we were using Secret Sperm and not Masterbatorium Mustered Ejaculates, each sperm needed to be injected into each egg. Apparently for the natural fertilisation to occur, 50,000 sperm are required to party in the petrie dish. Secret Sperm are a far more select group. By Saturday morning, 8 fertilised eggs had survived. It's amazing how maternal I suddenly felt. Basically I was the new Octomum, it's just that my babies were chilling in a petrie dish. Due to the successful fertilisation (a romantic joining of eggs and secret sperm) I was told Monday would be the day of implantation. Let the impregnantion begin!
We began the day by being up and organised very early so that I could be at the acupuncture clinic by 8am. I quite like the acupuncture man, although he makes me quite nervous. He's a Chinese professor. He smiles a lot and nods his head a lot and he is very difficult to understand. It's difficult sometimes not to just say "um yes" to everything he says, even though you have a 50% chance of it being the right answer. He tends to smile and nod back. He may be thinking to himself "ah, crazy bitch you no understand me" but I'm thinking maybe he also just hopes we understand each other.
If any acupuncture works, I have faith in this man. The reason is, is that I have seen him a number of times over the years and he manages to ease pain where everyone else has failed. I have a bad neck due to a car crash years ago where a taxi driver failed to stop at a red light, despite the fact he had to get through me and another car on his way through. My acupuncture man helped enormously. He has also been able to give me pain relief throughout the IVF stages, notably he seems to have removed the permanent knife up my unspeakables. I wish I'd been to see him last year when the pain was insufferable. Apparently the visit before egg collection was to ready my eggs for lifting. I had needles in my head, ears, tummy, elbows, shins and toes. Weird.
Mr G, having attended to child delivery services (The Rabbit to her Gran for a school trip), then collected me from Acupuncture and we arrived at the Clinic, nervously. I was nil by mouth. The fun and games weren't too bad. I got to take a pre-med tablet (medazelam) to help relax me. I've never trusted these things. It's the one that Bill Cosby on the Cosby Show took before surgery once and it would seem he lost his inhibitions. I have a friend who told all the operating theatre staff once that she couldn't believe they wore crocs, that they were terrible and disgusting people and they should be ashamed. Thankfully I kept my inhibitions intact. I then got a luer in my arm and we went through to the theatre. I was injected with something that made me quite woozy which was to help with pain relief. I also had some local anaesthetic. The doctor didn't mention my pubes.
The collection itself wasn't pleasant but it wasn't terrible. It was uncomfortable and there was some pain but overall it was better than I'd expected. Excitingly, they collected 10 eggs. It's always a subjective matter. They collect the eggs on the basis of follicles, but not all follicles contain eggs. 10 seemed like a good number. I was wheeled off into recovery for a bit of a snooze, although I came around pretty quickly and was able to read my book. While Mr G went off for his testes to be manhandled I had a nice cup of tea and a muffin. Apparently the specialist and the nurse both copped a feel and admired Mr G's manhood. They both expressed admiration of his appendages although he didn't let them take photos. His procedure was quick, they gave him local anaesthetic and syringed out some Secret Sperm. They then went back for some more from the same testicle. They thankfully didn't need to interfere with his other testicle.
He's lucky really. Most men have to pay not one but many visits to the Clinic Masterbatorium. It's the room where they get sent by women in nursing uniforms, also known as nurses, to jerk off on demand in a cup. Several samples are normally needed on an infertility and ivf journey. The nurses (ok, so probably one) wait outside (or nearby). Apparently 'materials' are provided. The nurses are not allowed to enter to assist but pornographic material of every kind is available to cater for a wide range of tastes. My brother in law described the bredth of material as fascinating, although he wished he'd snooped through the gay porn after he'd filled his cup, as the images meant he was unable to get it on with himself for quite some time.
It's a funny thing masterbation. I think I've realised the real reason it is frowned upon by the Catholic Church: not because it is unhealthy or in reality sinful, but because it gives priests an opportunity to talk dirty. I suspect this is the real reason why confession is taken in adjoining cubicles, and why the priest wears a dress. I can only imagine them requesting the details from innocent wee boys and worse, the priests taking confession from one another. "Go on, my son, tell me what you did next?" "Oh really, show me". But I digress in a matter not meant to cause offence to Catholics so I apologise. But I do wonder.
After a wee while, Mr G had a cup of coffee and a muffin, we went home. It was quite an uncomfortable day for me but Mr G felt much better that it was all over. He was relieved to get out of there with a working penis and get the scary part for him over and done with. He recovered. I took a good few days! My swollen abdomen stayed very uncomfortable until Saturday and it seemed to prop itself up under my ribcage. A day on codeine caused havoc with my bowels and I've wished ever since I wasn't allergic to kiwifruit. I suspect hormones also have something to do with my constipating problem.
Apart from feeling not so good, the news the following day was encouraging. From the ten eggs collected, 9 were able to be fertilised. Because we were using Secret Sperm and not Masterbatorium Mustered Ejaculates, each sperm needed to be injected into each egg. Apparently for the natural fertilisation to occur, 50,000 sperm are required to party in the petrie dish. Secret Sperm are a far more select group. By Saturday morning, 8 fertilised eggs had survived. It's amazing how maternal I suddenly felt. Basically I was the new Octomum, it's just that my babies were chilling in a petrie dish. Due to the successful fertilisation (a romantic joining of eggs and secret sperm) I was told Monday would be the day of implantation. Let the impregnantion begin!
22 March 2012
Another little update...
Another little update as I'm still feeling a bit battered and bruised...
From the 10 eggs I had collected, 9 were successfully fertilised and this morning there were still 8 going strong. Implantation of one lucky embryo is scheduled for Monday. I am hoping that there will still be 7 to freeze but of course anything may happen!
I am hoping that I'll feel much better in the morning and will be able to tell the tale of designer pubic hair, a druggy procedure and Mr G's escape from the masterbatorium but in the meantime I'm off to put my feet up.
I am feeling a wee bit excited!
From the 10 eggs I had collected, 9 were successfully fertilised and this morning there were still 8 going strong. Implantation of one lucky embryo is scheduled for Monday. I am hoping that there will still be 7 to freeze but of course anything may happen!
I am hoping that I'll feel much better in the morning and will be able to tell the tale of designer pubic hair, a druggy procedure and Mr G's escape from the masterbatorium but in the meantime I'm off to put my feet up.
I am feeling a wee bit excited!
21 March 2012
Quick Update
Right so I'm pretty tired and uncomfortable so thought I would sign in quickly. All went well this morning, I had 10 eggs collected (which is a great starting point) and Mr G did indeed have some secret sperm. This afternoon 10 lucky little fellas will hopefully be injected into the 10 magic eggs and we'll find out tomorrow how many, if any, embryos are formed. I'm feeling very hopeful and positive that ONE will become a baby!!!!
Thanks you for all your kind messages, I'll blog an update tomorrow!!!
Thanks you for all your kind messages, I'll blog an update tomorrow!!!
20 March 2012
Ovidrel Nipples
So I woke up this morning with very big nipples. Breast feeding nipples. I'm guessing it's the Ovidrel because it's been more than three years since I had a breastfeeder, NOT that she wouldn't start up again if given the choice. At 5.
I also have a bloated, bruised tummy, my skin is quite hideous and I am ever so emotional. I am so hoping that this is all worth going through and I get my baby. Our baby. An online friend I made in the Adenomyosis group, who was a month ahead of me in IVF treatment has been unsuccessful. I am so upset for her. She has been a strength for me and a great source of knowledge. I so hope she is successful when she and her husband try again in June. It's days like this when I remember how very lucky I am to have one baby!
So today I'm focusing on miracles. I have one VERY cute IVF nephew, he makes his Mummy very, very happy. She wanted him for a long time! I have a friend who ten years after she was diagnosed as being in early menopause (she was 26) has twin boys. She carried them full term after IVF treatment with her husband and an amazing woman who donated eggs. They are so very much my friend's precious babies!!! I have another friend online who is pregnant despite huge endometriosis complications and fascinating anatomy ones. She has two uteruses (uteri?) amongst other difficulties but she has a second miracle on the way after years of trying for each. The world is filled with miracle babies.
Infertility sucks. It's a silent heartbreak where no one knows what to say. I used to think everyone who wanted one desperately should be blessed with one baby. I'm being greedy. Now I'm going for two. I also hope everyone going through IVF and looking at this blog are successful. Hang in there and have faith xxx
I also have a bloated, bruised tummy, my skin is quite hideous and I am ever so emotional. I am so hoping that this is all worth going through and I get my baby. Our baby. An online friend I made in the Adenomyosis group, who was a month ahead of me in IVF treatment has been unsuccessful. I am so upset for her. She has been a strength for me and a great source of knowledge. I so hope she is successful when she and her husband try again in June. It's days like this when I remember how very lucky I am to have one baby!
So today I'm focusing on miracles. I have one VERY cute IVF nephew, he makes his Mummy very, very happy. She wanted him for a long time! I have a friend who ten years after she was diagnosed as being in early menopause (she was 26) has twin boys. She carried them full term after IVF treatment with her husband and an amazing woman who donated eggs. They are so very much my friend's precious babies!!! I have another friend online who is pregnant despite huge endometriosis complications and fascinating anatomy ones. She has two uteruses (uteri?) amongst other difficulties but she has a second miracle on the way after years of trying for each. The world is filled with miracle babies.
Infertility sucks. It's a silent heartbreak where no one knows what to say. I used to think everyone who wanted one desperately should be blessed with one baby. I'm being greedy. Now I'm going for two. I also hope everyone going through IVF and looking at this blog are successful. Hang in there and have faith xxx
Talking Birds and Car Washes
I'll never forget the day my Dad came home, in his suit, dripping wet from head to toe. He tried not to mention it but it was impossible to miss. "You'll never guess what just happened to me" he said "I've never been so embarrassed in all my life". He was not a man who seemed to get embarrassed very often, although I can't say he hasn't been central to many embarrassing occasions.
There was one time when he struck up a conversation with a bird at the supermarket that remains in my mind as my greatest embarrassing moment. I don't mean a woman, I mean a bird. One of those birds in the cage where you put money in and an egg with a toy in it drops out. One of those birds that whistles at you as you walk past and says "ello". My Dad said "Hello" back. It was a bargain supermarket called Dollarwise which ran the bulk promotions that Dad couldn't pass on. We could have called in for something to cook for dinner and we'd leave with 18 cakes of soap and 10 frozen chickens but little else. Once he went in without his shirt on and a girl from school served us. He always used to arrive with music booming and park straight outside the door with all his windows down. He never really gave a care for what people thought but he always seemed to gain attention. He walks with a limp, tends to whistle as he walks, has always been just as likely to tell someone to get fucked as he is to ask them how their day is going. I've never been one to like people looking at me. But I went out with him often. On this occasion I'd wished I hadn't.
He didn't stop at "Hello", he was far too taken with the talking bird. The bird said "What's your name?". I wanted to die when my Dad said "Billy". He could have said "Bill" or even "William" but he didn't. He said "My name is Billy, what's yours?" I don't remember what the bird said, it could have asked him if he was having a nice day. He could have said his name was Polly. All I could hear was my Dad calling out "look darling, this bird can talk". "No it can't" I muttered under my breath. "It can, it can" he called out, loudly, "look, it's a talking bird". "It's not a real bird Dad" I said, wishing people weren't looking. "Yeah, it is, it's a talking bird, isn't it beautiful?" He may as well have had a megaphone. Everyone was staring. Customers, ALL the check-out chicks, I think even the food and trolleys were staring at him. And at me. "Dad" I said in my most teenaged "are you fucking kidding me" undertone, "Dad, it's not a real bird, it's a pretend bird, a plastic bird". He looked at me like I was the idiot. "No it is..." and then it dawned on him. He'd been talking to a plastic bird. In front of people. People who were staring. "Ha" he said, having the good grace to be at least partially as embarrassed as I was "I thought that bird was real" he announced to everyone "but it's not". People were too dumbfounded to speak, they laughed nervously as Billy and I made a quick getaway with our trolley full of frozen chickens.
I still remember that burning feeling or embarrassment. But I laugh. And I laugh about the time he came home wet, whereas he still gets embarrassed. I've mentioned he liked to drive with his windows down. He also had a sunroof he liked to have open. One day he went to the car wash. I suspect you think you know what happened? Think again. Apparently, so my dripping wet father said, the car wash makes him feel sea sick. Apparently he used to like to get out of the car before the washing cycle started and get back in at the end. I am very glad I wasn't there on this day. The day he had exited his car before the wash cycle started and then noticed he'd left his sunroof down. Apparently he made a mad dash to get back in the car to shut it when whoosh, the water started.
So the story goes, at the very moment my Dad found himself getting sprayed with water, outside his car, in the car wash, some people walked past. They weren't the sort of people not to point and stare, apparently they laughed their heads off, pointing at the idiot in the car wash. My dad was humiliated. He was also very, very wet. The people moved on, Dad got himself in the clear and the car got a good clean, on the inside and out. It was when the dryers on the car wash started that my very wet dad had a brilliant idea, he was dripping wet, the giant blowers were on, he would stand in front of them and get dry. Simple. He had this funny notion that he'd be able to carry on with his day and no one would be any the wiser. It's just that the people who had seen him caught in the car wash, the ones that had laughed and pointed and gone on their way obviously got a minute up the street and thought to themselves "I wonder what that idiot is doing now". The people came back to find that the man, who seemingly thought he was a car, was standing in the car wash still, getting dried. And they couldn't have found that more hilarious!
There are a million other stories I could tell about my Dad and often I do. He only has one leg, having been run over by a train when he was twenty. His ginger hair has been falling out for as long as I can remember and he's always been notoriously colourful. There was the time he was walking across the road from the pub when a policeman stopped him and asked for his keys. "What are you talking about?" my Dad asked. "Come on mate" said the cop "I've just seen you walk over the road and you're all over the show". "I've only got one leg you cunt" my Dad replied. "Oh come off it" the cop said. Some other people's fathers may have found another way to prove it. My Dad dropped his trousers. The policeman was nearly speechless and highly embarrassed. "I'm sorry mate" he said "I'll leave you to it". "So you fucking should" replied my Dad. And he got in his car and headed for home. Drunk.
It wasn't the only time he dropped his trousers. There was a meter maid who challenged his right to park in a wheel chair park. Speechless. It wasn't the only time he used colourful language. We grew up being allowed to say the words "bloody" and "shit" because he always said they weren't swearing. I learnt most of my swear words from him. There was the time when I was 9 and he was deconstructing the garage when he dropped the central beam on his big toe, his only big toe. I learnt a lot of words that day. And there was the day when I was twelve that I tried to ring home from the movies to get a lift home. There were new payphones that I didn't know how to use. You needed to push the "hash" key when the person answered but I didn't know that. I tried about three or four times and kept getting my younger sister. I could hear her but she couldn't hear me. I tried again. This time my Dad answered. He still couldn't hear me but his sentence started with "Now listen hear you..." and finished with a diatribe of words which I would still never dare to repeat. I went outside the phone box and found someone to show me how to use the phone. When he answered the next time I was able to squeak "um, Dad, that was me". He still gets quite embarrassed.
He is a Dad that has always been bigger than life. He is the funniest person I have ever met in my life. No one has ever made me laugh so much. He is the most gentle and sensitive man in the world and he is also rather volatile. He has always been difficult, strict and angry. He is a million different people rolled in one. He has always been my hero and always someone I have feared. He has always fiercely defended his children, always entertained us, always been involved in our lives, always dominated us. He has always been very complicated. I always adored him. For my mother he has been not the easiest husband but she loves him too. I haven't mentioned the million things he has done that make her a saint.
My Dad has severed the arteries in his arm as a child, been hit by a train as a young adult, lost a leg. He has had three heart attacks. Twenty one months ago, after his third heart attack, he had a major stroke. He now has epilepsy and struggles to balance his medication between being too sedated and dizzy or having grand mal fits. His neurologist thinks he has frequent petit mal seizures. He has had to learn to talk again, it is still extremely difficult for him. Initially he learnt to speak in numbers, his grandchildren were "3", "5" and "7", being their ages at the time. "1","2" and "3" were the heart attacks, "4" was the stroke. "1" and "2" were the nurses and doctors. "2" also meant headache. He then moved through the alphabet, needing a letter and sound to start a word before he could say it. Now he can talk pretty well, although he stutters and is slow.
The brain is an amazing thing as it tries to heal itself. While Dad has learnt to speak, mostly, sort of, he can read but he cannot spell. He cannot write. And he has lost his aliteral comprehension - colloquialisms confuse him as he now takes everything by it's literal meaning. Like we're speaking a foreign language. If you speak too fast he can't follow and he can't follow two people speaking at once. If two people are having a conversation next to him he has no idea what is being said. He gets angry and frustrated and upset.
Sometimes the hardest thing is the overwhelming grief in having someone who looks like my old Dad, and thinks he is my old Dad, just not being him any more. I want to scream at him that I don't want him, I want my Dad back. I want the Dad that I could talk to, the Dad who made me laugh, the Dad who understood me, back. And sometimes I want this stranger to not be here anymore. It is hard to reconcile the new, just as angry, just as volatile, just as difficult but far more vulnerable man with the man who was my Dad. He doesn't make me laugh anymore and I can't tell you how much I miss him. But he is still here. He's 63. Maybe he'll keep getting better or maybe he'll have another great big heart attack, we all wait in fear of him not being here anymore. Every time the phone rings my heart leaps. It's also so hard to comprehend that someone so much larger than life has found himself so small. And it's hard to remember that this man who we miss so much is a man who needs us more now. Even though he is so freaking difficult.
My Dad, I think, is the toughest man in the world. And I love him and I am incredibly proud of him. But I miss the man who thought that the plastic bird was real and the only man in the world who could get caught in a car wash. I miss him like crazy, even though there is a new man, who needs me, in his place.
There was one time when he struck up a conversation with a bird at the supermarket that remains in my mind as my greatest embarrassing moment. I don't mean a woman, I mean a bird. One of those birds in the cage where you put money in and an egg with a toy in it drops out. One of those birds that whistles at you as you walk past and says "ello". My Dad said "Hello" back. It was a bargain supermarket called Dollarwise which ran the bulk promotions that Dad couldn't pass on. We could have called in for something to cook for dinner and we'd leave with 18 cakes of soap and 10 frozen chickens but little else. Once he went in without his shirt on and a girl from school served us. He always used to arrive with music booming and park straight outside the door with all his windows down. He never really gave a care for what people thought but he always seemed to gain attention. He walks with a limp, tends to whistle as he walks, has always been just as likely to tell someone to get fucked as he is to ask them how their day is going. I've never been one to like people looking at me. But I went out with him often. On this occasion I'd wished I hadn't.
He didn't stop at "Hello", he was far too taken with the talking bird. The bird said "What's your name?". I wanted to die when my Dad said "Billy". He could have said "Bill" or even "William" but he didn't. He said "My name is Billy, what's yours?" I don't remember what the bird said, it could have asked him if he was having a nice day. He could have said his name was Polly. All I could hear was my Dad calling out "look darling, this bird can talk". "No it can't" I muttered under my breath. "It can, it can" he called out, loudly, "look, it's a talking bird". "It's not a real bird Dad" I said, wishing people weren't looking. "Yeah, it is, it's a talking bird, isn't it beautiful?" He may as well have had a megaphone. Everyone was staring. Customers, ALL the check-out chicks, I think even the food and trolleys were staring at him. And at me. "Dad" I said in my most teenaged "are you fucking kidding me" undertone, "Dad, it's not a real bird, it's a pretend bird, a plastic bird". He looked at me like I was the idiot. "No it is..." and then it dawned on him. He'd been talking to a plastic bird. In front of people. People who were staring. "Ha" he said, having the good grace to be at least partially as embarrassed as I was "I thought that bird was real" he announced to everyone "but it's not". People were too dumbfounded to speak, they laughed nervously as Billy and I made a quick getaway with our trolley full of frozen chickens.
I still remember that burning feeling or embarrassment. But I laugh. And I laugh about the time he came home wet, whereas he still gets embarrassed. I've mentioned he liked to drive with his windows down. He also had a sunroof he liked to have open. One day he went to the car wash. I suspect you think you know what happened? Think again. Apparently, so my dripping wet father said, the car wash makes him feel sea sick. Apparently he used to like to get out of the car before the washing cycle started and get back in at the end. I am very glad I wasn't there on this day. The day he had exited his car before the wash cycle started and then noticed he'd left his sunroof down. Apparently he made a mad dash to get back in the car to shut it when whoosh, the water started.
So the story goes, at the very moment my Dad found himself getting sprayed with water, outside his car, in the car wash, some people walked past. They weren't the sort of people not to point and stare, apparently they laughed their heads off, pointing at the idiot in the car wash. My dad was humiliated. He was also very, very wet. The people moved on, Dad got himself in the clear and the car got a good clean, on the inside and out. It was when the dryers on the car wash started that my very wet dad had a brilliant idea, he was dripping wet, the giant blowers were on, he would stand in front of them and get dry. Simple. He had this funny notion that he'd be able to carry on with his day and no one would be any the wiser. It's just that the people who had seen him caught in the car wash, the ones that had laughed and pointed and gone on their way obviously got a minute up the street and thought to themselves "I wonder what that idiot is doing now". The people came back to find that the man, who seemingly thought he was a car, was standing in the car wash still, getting dried. And they couldn't have found that more hilarious!
There are a million other stories I could tell about my Dad and often I do. He only has one leg, having been run over by a train when he was twenty. His ginger hair has been falling out for as long as I can remember and he's always been notoriously colourful. There was the time he was walking across the road from the pub when a policeman stopped him and asked for his keys. "What are you talking about?" my Dad asked. "Come on mate" said the cop "I've just seen you walk over the road and you're all over the show". "I've only got one leg you cunt" my Dad replied. "Oh come off it" the cop said. Some other people's fathers may have found another way to prove it. My Dad dropped his trousers. The policeman was nearly speechless and highly embarrassed. "I'm sorry mate" he said "I'll leave you to it". "So you fucking should" replied my Dad. And he got in his car and headed for home. Drunk.
It wasn't the only time he dropped his trousers. There was a meter maid who challenged his right to park in a wheel chair park. Speechless. It wasn't the only time he used colourful language. We grew up being allowed to say the words "bloody" and "shit" because he always said they weren't swearing. I learnt most of my swear words from him. There was the time when I was 9 and he was deconstructing the garage when he dropped the central beam on his big toe, his only big toe. I learnt a lot of words that day. And there was the day when I was twelve that I tried to ring home from the movies to get a lift home. There were new payphones that I didn't know how to use. You needed to push the "hash" key when the person answered but I didn't know that. I tried about three or four times and kept getting my younger sister. I could hear her but she couldn't hear me. I tried again. This time my Dad answered. He still couldn't hear me but his sentence started with "Now listen hear you..." and finished with a diatribe of words which I would still never dare to repeat. I went outside the phone box and found someone to show me how to use the phone. When he answered the next time I was able to squeak "um, Dad, that was me". He still gets quite embarrassed.
He is a Dad that has always been bigger than life. He is the funniest person I have ever met in my life. No one has ever made me laugh so much. He is the most gentle and sensitive man in the world and he is also rather volatile. He has always been difficult, strict and angry. He is a million different people rolled in one. He has always been my hero and always someone I have feared. He has always fiercely defended his children, always entertained us, always been involved in our lives, always dominated us. He has always been very complicated. I always adored him. For my mother he has been not the easiest husband but she loves him too. I haven't mentioned the million things he has done that make her a saint.
My Dad has severed the arteries in his arm as a child, been hit by a train as a young adult, lost a leg. He has had three heart attacks. Twenty one months ago, after his third heart attack, he had a major stroke. He now has epilepsy and struggles to balance his medication between being too sedated and dizzy or having grand mal fits. His neurologist thinks he has frequent petit mal seizures. He has had to learn to talk again, it is still extremely difficult for him. Initially he learnt to speak in numbers, his grandchildren were "3", "5" and "7", being their ages at the time. "1","2" and "3" were the heart attacks, "4" was the stroke. "1" and "2" were the nurses and doctors. "2" also meant headache. He then moved through the alphabet, needing a letter and sound to start a word before he could say it. Now he can talk pretty well, although he stutters and is slow.
The brain is an amazing thing as it tries to heal itself. While Dad has learnt to speak, mostly, sort of, he can read but he cannot spell. He cannot write. And he has lost his aliteral comprehension - colloquialisms confuse him as he now takes everything by it's literal meaning. Like we're speaking a foreign language. If you speak too fast he can't follow and he can't follow two people speaking at once. If two people are having a conversation next to him he has no idea what is being said. He gets angry and frustrated and upset.
Sometimes the hardest thing is the overwhelming grief in having someone who looks like my old Dad, and thinks he is my old Dad, just not being him any more. I want to scream at him that I don't want him, I want my Dad back. I want the Dad that I could talk to, the Dad who made me laugh, the Dad who understood me, back. And sometimes I want this stranger to not be here anymore. It is hard to reconcile the new, just as angry, just as volatile, just as difficult but far more vulnerable man with the man who was my Dad. He doesn't make me laugh anymore and I can't tell you how much I miss him. But he is still here. He's 63. Maybe he'll keep getting better or maybe he'll have another great big heart attack, we all wait in fear of him not being here anymore. Every time the phone rings my heart leaps. It's also so hard to comprehend that someone so much larger than life has found himself so small. And it's hard to remember that this man who we miss so much is a man who needs us more now. Even though he is so freaking difficult.
My Dad, I think, is the toughest man in the world. And I love him and I am incredibly proud of him. But I miss the man who thought that the plastic bird was real and the only man in the world who could get caught in a car wash. I miss him like crazy, even though there is a new man, who needs me, in his place.
19 March 2012
Eggly Update
So the verdict is in, egg collection is scheduled for Wednesday! So excitingly I have only one more injection to give myself, Ovidrel, and it has to be given at EXACTLY 10.15 tonight. It must help ready the eggs for collection. I am a bit excited. I'll be going first and then Mr G will be getting a syringe in his testicles to extract the secret sperm. Clearly this means that even though I have been injecting and having internal scans and am going to be partially sedated and have eggs collected "upwards" from my ovaries way, way upwards and still have to have the embryo put back inwards, upwards, it is much, much worse for my husband. Clearly.
Thankfully I love him lots and he is doing this for me, reluctantly, so I forgive him. And it should be a wee lesson to him not to let a surgeon take a scalpel to his freaking testicles in the first place! Hopefully we have a nice baby so he won't hold it against me for the rest of our lives.
Thankfully I love him lots and he is doing this for me, reluctantly, so I forgive him. And it should be a wee lesson to him not to let a surgeon take a scalpel to his freaking testicles in the first place! Hopefully we have a nice baby so he won't hold it against me for the rest of our lives.
Me, the Baking Egg Souffle
I am now 11 injections down in the Maybe Baby crusade and despite the fact I have a week or so before I have an embryo, hopefully, inserted in me I feel about 8 months pregnant. All my insides feel swollen and banging into one another and it's not my favourite feeling. While I don't look pregnant I don't feel like there is much room left in there for a baby to fit...hopefully this changes.
Doped up on codeine and panadol I had my second scan today. Due to the ill effects of the last scan and the likelihood of slow growing eggs, I got to skip the usual monitoring scan on Saturday and go straight to today, Monday. Thankfully the doctor's estimates were right and a scan on Saturday would have been a lot of pain for no gain. As it was Wednesday's scan had me miserable until Saturday anyway. Today's was uncomfortable and unpleasant but, thanks to the pain relief on board, wasn't so brutal as the first. Things are certainly happening in my ovaries!
I now have 6 eggs on my right ovary maturing and 5 on my left. The perfect number I reckon. They are "borderline" in size apparently which means that they need to consult with the doctors and my blood test results to decide if egg collection will be on Wednesday or on Friday. I'm guessing they don't do Thursdays! Unfortunately they're not that teeny bit more ready as not only does the thought of paying for more Gonal F injections make my heart race, it also throws up the question of whether I need another Zolodex injection. It's a down to the day question. If Wednesday no, if Friday maybe. And I don't know what happens then because Zolodex lasts a month and implantation is supposed to take place 5 days after collection. So I'm not going to think about it and find out when I get a call this afternoon!
I did go to acupuncture on Friday as I was so sore still from the scan and my ovaries have the odd scream at me. Everything is uncomfortable. I honestly can't believe how much better it made me feel! I had needles sticking in my feet, legs, tummy, elbows and the top of my head (yep, seriously) and I lay, fairly unable to move, relaxing for over an hour. I walked out no longer feeling like I had been violated with a baseball bat and a lot calmer. I'm going to go back before egg collection and before and after implantation as I think I now actually believe it may be of some help. Before I was sceptical and anxious not to spend any more money than we are already having to. Surely we must win lotto soon!!!!!
The injection giving itself has been going well. They're pretty easy and almost painless to give and except for the nano second before they go in, I don't give them a seconds thought. They are turning me into a bit of a hormonal wreck on the rampage but then they also provide an excuse for me feeling crappy. I'm a little irrationally emotional and I want to cry at the tiniest of things. I'm like a baking egg souffle. I also want to kill my step daughter, but then maybe that's not an unusual state of affairs. I'm going to hibernate when the Rabbit is a teenager. And maybe the new maybe baby will be a boy? I don't like teenaged girls! It's even worse when they're not your own. It's where me and her mother have it back to front - she's all fault no responsibility. I get the poxy responsibility stage with no fault. I struggle to find a silver lining with the Contessa too. Maybe it will be grandchildren?
The Rabbit asked me yesterday morning if "I'd ever lain on Daddy or if Daddy had ever lain on me". I braced myself. I said that we had. I couldn't at the time be certain if she was talking about sex as she's usually A LOT more specific. She then asked me if I really loved Daddy. And I said I really, really did, which is why I married him. She got so excited and grinned from ear to ear. "That means I might get a baby sister or a baby brother and that is so exciting." she said. I wanted to say "talk to the petrie dish" but instead I said "maybe Darling, but remember Mummy has a very, very sick tummy so it might never happen." I let myself get a bit excited though!
So that's me: bloated, sore, moody, murderous (in respect to the teen) and excited, a bit. Scared a bit. EXHAUSTED and waiting for a phone call to let me know the plan! I'll let you know.
Doped up on codeine and panadol I had my second scan today. Due to the ill effects of the last scan and the likelihood of slow growing eggs, I got to skip the usual monitoring scan on Saturday and go straight to today, Monday. Thankfully the doctor's estimates were right and a scan on Saturday would have been a lot of pain for no gain. As it was Wednesday's scan had me miserable until Saturday anyway. Today's was uncomfortable and unpleasant but, thanks to the pain relief on board, wasn't so brutal as the first. Things are certainly happening in my ovaries!
I now have 6 eggs on my right ovary maturing and 5 on my left. The perfect number I reckon. They are "borderline" in size apparently which means that they need to consult with the doctors and my blood test results to decide if egg collection will be on Wednesday or on Friday. I'm guessing they don't do Thursdays! Unfortunately they're not that teeny bit more ready as not only does the thought of paying for more Gonal F injections make my heart race, it also throws up the question of whether I need another Zolodex injection. It's a down to the day question. If Wednesday no, if Friday maybe. And I don't know what happens then because Zolodex lasts a month and implantation is supposed to take place 5 days after collection. So I'm not going to think about it and find out when I get a call this afternoon!
I did go to acupuncture on Friday as I was so sore still from the scan and my ovaries have the odd scream at me. Everything is uncomfortable. I honestly can't believe how much better it made me feel! I had needles sticking in my feet, legs, tummy, elbows and the top of my head (yep, seriously) and I lay, fairly unable to move, relaxing for over an hour. I walked out no longer feeling like I had been violated with a baseball bat and a lot calmer. I'm going to go back before egg collection and before and after implantation as I think I now actually believe it may be of some help. Before I was sceptical and anxious not to spend any more money than we are already having to. Surely we must win lotto soon!!!!!
The injection giving itself has been going well. They're pretty easy and almost painless to give and except for the nano second before they go in, I don't give them a seconds thought. They are turning me into a bit of a hormonal wreck on the rampage but then they also provide an excuse for me feeling crappy. I'm a little irrationally emotional and I want to cry at the tiniest of things. I'm like a baking egg souffle. I also want to kill my step daughter, but then maybe that's not an unusual state of affairs. I'm going to hibernate when the Rabbit is a teenager. And maybe the new maybe baby will be a boy? I don't like teenaged girls! It's even worse when they're not your own. It's where me and her mother have it back to front - she's all fault no responsibility. I get the poxy responsibility stage with no fault. I struggle to find a silver lining with the Contessa too. Maybe it will be grandchildren?
The Rabbit asked me yesterday morning if "I'd ever lain on Daddy or if Daddy had ever lain on me". I braced myself. I said that we had. I couldn't at the time be certain if she was talking about sex as she's usually A LOT more specific. She then asked me if I really loved Daddy. And I said I really, really did, which is why I married him. She got so excited and grinned from ear to ear. "That means I might get a baby sister or a baby brother and that is so exciting." she said. I wanted to say "talk to the petrie dish" but instead I said "maybe Darling, but remember Mummy has a very, very sick tummy so it might never happen." I let myself get a bit excited though!
So that's me: bloated, sore, moody, murderous (in respect to the teen) and excited, a bit. Scared a bit. EXHAUSTED and waiting for a phone call to let me know the plan! I'll let you know.
16 March 2012
Theft and Pet Ownership
It has been a most exciting week in our household, we have two new family members. We have two new pets. My nieces also have a new pet. They have a new, bouncy puppy with floppy ears and a waggly tail and an awful lot of energy. We have caterpillars. Two caterpillars. Their names are Squiggles and Tayla. I stole them off my nieces when they weren't home. I am a terrible Aunty.
I've touched before on the problems of caterpillar ownership. Having planted swan plants a few weeks ago in spite of my apprehension, no butterflies have seen fit to lay eggs on our plants. The Rabbit's excitement was waning and the plants, ever since she got her rabbity little paws on them, have been struggling too. The swan plants at my sister's house, however, have been a hive of activity. For weeks they have had eggs, caterpillars and butterflies. We have had none.
The theft happened when the Rabbit and I called in to meet our new niece and cousin, the dog, and take her for a walk. The kids were away with their Dad and my sister was at work. The puppy is a handful, she exhausted us both, despite her cuteness. As we were about to leave the Rabbit noticed the caterpillars. There were four small ones and one dying larger one. As the Rabbit stamped her foot and said "but why don't we have caterpillars" I noticed the condition of the swan plants. All three plants were looking well and truly nibbled upon. The leaves were few, the caterpillars plenty. I decided to indulge my grizzly daughter and steal from my wee nieces. Of course I justified my decision.
Clearly I needed to save the lives of some caterpillars and save my sister some money. I knew the mental anguish that a caterpillar owner goes through in the mad hunting down of additional food sources for their pets to avoid the heartbreak of the children. I have before joined the queues of mothers grabbing swan plants at ever increasing prices to avoid the mass starvation of disastrous proportions. I knew my nieces and sister were preoccupied with the puppy dog. A puppydog that would probably savage the caterpillars. I knew my daughter wanted caterpillars. As only a terrible Aunty and an even worse mother would do, I picked a couple of caterpillars off their plants and I demonstrated stealing to the Rabbit.
Unsurprisingly my daughter embraced her new life of crime. She certainly didn't defend her cousins' property rights. Her excitement wiped out most of the guilt I had. "I've ALWAYS wanted to own caterpillars" she gushed "and now I do." "And they're so, so cute". And a lot less trouble than a puppy I thought to myself. Or are they?
The problem with five year olds and pets, particularly caterpillar pets, is that it is difficult to balance showing love and affection with squashing them to death. Keeping the Rabbit's enthusiasm for Squiggles and Tayla from ending in carnage is not so easy. It has taken many stern words for the game of moving them from plant to plant and dropping them to stop. "But I LOVE them" only excuses so much. Not only that, due to the precarious existence of our swan plants, it is of huge concern that the plants will not last long enough for Tayla and Squiggles to make it to butterflyhood. Not because of the caterpillar's appetites, but because of the Rabbit's involvement with the planting. The plants seem to be dying from the roots up. I am having to be very attentive in my watering. Pet ownership is riddled with anxiety.
I am hoping that Squiggles and Tayla survive long enough to be able to make a flapping escape from our home. And hopefully they stay clear of the vegetable garden of death (200 snails in less than three weeks have met a grizzly end). Hopefully my little daughter enjoys watching the cycle of life as much as she has always anticipated she would. And hopefully my nieces are way too busy with their puppy to notice that they have a most terrible, and despicable, bad example setting Aunt!
I've touched before on the problems of caterpillar ownership. Having planted swan plants a few weeks ago in spite of my apprehension, no butterflies have seen fit to lay eggs on our plants. The Rabbit's excitement was waning and the plants, ever since she got her rabbity little paws on them, have been struggling too. The swan plants at my sister's house, however, have been a hive of activity. For weeks they have had eggs, caterpillars and butterflies. We have had none.
The theft happened when the Rabbit and I called in to meet our new niece and cousin, the dog, and take her for a walk. The kids were away with their Dad and my sister was at work. The puppy is a handful, she exhausted us both, despite her cuteness. As we were about to leave the Rabbit noticed the caterpillars. There were four small ones and one dying larger one. As the Rabbit stamped her foot and said "but why don't we have caterpillars" I noticed the condition of the swan plants. All three plants were looking well and truly nibbled upon. The leaves were few, the caterpillars plenty. I decided to indulge my grizzly daughter and steal from my wee nieces. Of course I justified my decision.
Clearly I needed to save the lives of some caterpillars and save my sister some money. I knew the mental anguish that a caterpillar owner goes through in the mad hunting down of additional food sources for their pets to avoid the heartbreak of the children. I have before joined the queues of mothers grabbing swan plants at ever increasing prices to avoid the mass starvation of disastrous proportions. I knew my nieces and sister were preoccupied with the puppy dog. A puppydog that would probably savage the caterpillars. I knew my daughter wanted caterpillars. As only a terrible Aunty and an even worse mother would do, I picked a couple of caterpillars off their plants and I demonstrated stealing to the Rabbit.
Unsurprisingly my daughter embraced her new life of crime. She certainly didn't defend her cousins' property rights. Her excitement wiped out most of the guilt I had. "I've ALWAYS wanted to own caterpillars" she gushed "and now I do." "And they're so, so cute". And a lot less trouble than a puppy I thought to myself. Or are they?
The problem with five year olds and pets, particularly caterpillar pets, is that it is difficult to balance showing love and affection with squashing them to death. Keeping the Rabbit's enthusiasm for Squiggles and Tayla from ending in carnage is not so easy. It has taken many stern words for the game of moving them from plant to plant and dropping them to stop. "But I LOVE them" only excuses so much. Not only that, due to the precarious existence of our swan plants, it is of huge concern that the plants will not last long enough for Tayla and Squiggles to make it to butterflyhood. Not because of the caterpillar's appetites, but because of the Rabbit's involvement with the planting. The plants seem to be dying from the roots up. I am having to be very attentive in my watering. Pet ownership is riddled with anxiety.
I am hoping that Squiggles and Tayla survive long enough to be able to make a flapping escape from our home. And hopefully they stay clear of the vegetable garden of death (200 snails in less than three weeks have met a grizzly end). Hopefully my little daughter enjoys watching the cycle of life as much as she has always anticipated she would. And hopefully my nieces are way too busy with their puppy to notice that they have a most terrible, and despicable, bad example setting Aunt!
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