Friday, February 28, 2014

It's time...



At around 7 months pregnant
Photo Credit: Stephanie Chung Photography
I absolutely loved being pregnant.  Everyone was so nice to me and I was able to eat whatever I wanted without having to worry about my gut.  But by my 3rd trimester and 40th pound, I was ready to get the baby out of me.  I wanted to see his face and hold him tight.  We had already installed the carseat a full month before my due date and longed to have him sitting back there every time we drove the car (I laugh at my pregnant self now by the way=).

To speed up the process, I googled “how to induce labor” and asked my friends for any advice/tips.  On the night of October 14th, I had Joe watch a YouTube video on how to induce labor through a foot massage, which was a perfectly good excuse to get a little TLC from the hubs =) 

A few hours later, I felt my first real contraction! It was sort of an exciting moment.  I was like…ohhh that kind of hurt… and wondered if another one would come.  By  6am on October 15, 2013, I was hunched over in our bathroom sink, unable to breathe through the contractions. But during the 3-5 minute breaks in between, you better believe I was airbrushing my foundation, applying eyeliner, mascara, and filling in my eyebrows!  

By 830am, I was in my own L&D room with awesome nurses and all you can eat cherry Popsicles.  At this point, I still hadn’t gotten an epidural.  The doctor said I could walk around to help things move along but I just sort of laid there to try to breathe through the pain.  I now realize that I really should have taken his advice because 12 hours passed and I had only progressed to 3cm despite the constant Pitocin drip. 

Somewhere along the way, I did finally get that epidural but stupidly passed on getting it until AFTER the doctor broke my water.  Having someone down there maneuvering their hands and a plastic hook to break your water is not something I ever wish to experience again.  It was surprising to me how much that part of it hurt and how much less of a big deal getting an epidural was.  I had always hated needles and dreaded the epidural processes the most during my pregnancy and it was a pleasant surprise to have that part be underwhelming. 

By 7pm and still no progress, I knew what the doctor was going to suggest…a c-section.  It was the one thing I wished to avoid but it didn’t seem like there was much else I could do.  

Our first family photo
The surgery itself was sort of a surreal experience.  I’ve never gone under the knife before.  In fact, I don’t remember ever being in the hospital for anything.  It wasn’t like grey’s anatomy where there’s ambient lighting and music playing in the background.  The room was bright, stark white, and very cold.  I was surrounded by several people wearing face masks who kept assuring me that shivering uncontrollably was perfectly normal.  To add to the surrealness of it all, I was awake and felt pulling and tugging in my belly as they tried to get Noah out.  I even felt a little relief on my left rib, which Noah constantly kicked, as they pulled him out of my belly.  None of it hurt at all…but it was odd to actually feel something.

At only 8 minutes after starting the procedure, I heard the sound that I had been waiting for the past 9 months…my son, screaming to announce that he’d arrived!  As much as I tried to hold back tears, it came pouring out at the realization that I have an actual living baby!  He was beautiful, pale, cone head, and a splitting image of his dad.  He was not a happy camper.  After all, who wants to leave a nice warm womb into a cold operating room?



First time holding Noah
After forty more minutes of being sewn back together, I was wheeled to the recovery room and was finally able to hold Noah in my arms.  I studied every detail of his face…his flattened nose that looks exactly like mine, my mom’s, and my grandma’s, his crazy brown hair, his rosy lips, and his cute curled earlobes.  I thought to myself,  “How could this beautiful little babe possibly be mine?”

                                                 

The only position he could fall
asleep at the hospital



I didn’t know what to do with him at first and asked the nurse for permission if I could start to breastfeed.  They looked at me puzzled like…yes, that’s your own baby and yes, please go ahead and try to feed him.  I asked them for permission if I could do skin to skin and again they looked at me kind of funny.  This continued on for the remainder of our stay at the hospital and it wasn’t until we finally went home when it clicked that I’m a parent now and there’s no one to look to for permission on how to raise my baby. 

When they asked if we wanted to stay another day in the hospital, Joe and I quickly agreed that yes, please, we’d like to stay! We’d like to not have to think about food and just have you deliver to us during meal times.  We’d like to have you take Noah into the nursery a couple of hours a day so we can get some extra sleep.  We’d like to have you help me into the bathroom so I can clean up and do my thing.  Nurses of the world, I have SO MUCH MORE RESPECT for you after this whole ordeal!


To this day, I can never put into words what it’s like to be pregnant for nine months then be a parent in an instant.  Nothing prepares you for parenthood despite all the resources out there.  Nothing prepares you for the roller coaster ride of a contraction building up and letting down and looking at your watch and thinking…”shit, my 3 minutes is up..here’s comes another!”.  Nothing prepares you for that moment when you finally meet your baby…and despite the fact that you were present during the delivery, you wonder, “Is that child really mine?”




...and surprisingly...nothing prepares you for this very moment when you’re typing up your labor story 4 months later…and all of the sudden you think, “Wow, I really WOULD do that all over again.”   








Friday, January 24, 2014

Random Note for Noah 1

Dear Noah,

While you were enjoying a relaxing bath last night, you got scared and freaked out when I turned on the tub faucet. It was the  first time I've seen you get scared over something.  It was also the cutest thing ever : )....until the next cute thing happens.

Love,
Mom


Tuesday, January 14, 2014

Here comes the baby....posts

I've been meaning to start blogging again about having a baby so that I could look back later on and remember what happened, how I felt, and the baby's small milestones.  But now three months later I'm just getting started!  Oh where to begin...


I guess we'll start the moment I met Mr. Noah Han Shin...the little alien that grew inside my belly for 9 months...the little version of my Joe...the tiny love of my life.  From that moment on, as cliche as this sounds, nothing was ever the same.  How did I know this?  First, I cried...and when does that ever happen?  Second, I realized that I was actually gave birth to a baby....and how long had I been saying that I would never give birth? Third, our family went from two to three.  It's been just Joe and I for eight years.  We've grown accustomed to our ways...dining out, sleeping in, frying up bacon at one in the morning. Goodbye old life.  Hello parenthood!

Despite the overwhelming joy I felt the instant I laid eyes on him, the next 7 weeks was an uphill battle from breastfeeding issues, the baby blues, and sleep deprivation.  And despite all the advice, baby books, and classes, there was nothing that could have prepared me for being a mom.

The biggest challenge from that first month was breastfeeding.  Having read what an ideal breastfeeding scenarios were online, I figured that it was such a natural thing that it would just happen.  But nothing happened as planned and I soon realized how unprepared I was to breastfeed.  I ended up having a c-section (homie's head was too big =), which delayed my milk from "coming in".  Even though Noah latched on fairly easily, he wasn't getting any milk and lost 10% of his weight while we were still at the hospital.  He was given formula at the hospital while I desperately tried to keep him latched.  At one point, he sucked so hard from hunger that flesh from inside my left nipped came out (sorry if that was tmi!).  Luckily, I was still on pain meds from my c-section so I didn't feel anything but I imagine it would have been really painful. 

A week passed and he was still formula fed.  At this point, he refused to latch even after my milk finally did come in.  Every time he was fed with a bottle, I felt like a failure from not being able to breastfeed my own child.  Although friends reassured me that there's absolutely nothing wrong with formula fed babies, I still felt down about it and cried often.  After a very hard day of trying to breastfeed and finally throwing in the towel with a bottle of formula, I found myself breaking down and crying uncontrollably.  How could being a mother be so damn depressing?  But a magical thing happened.  I looked down at Noah and saw a huge smile...the first smile I saw from him.  It was as if he was telling me that everything is going to be A-ok.


Thankfully, I had a strong support system from my husband, friends, and especially my mom who cheered me on and encouraged me to not give up. My mom would squirt milk with a syringe into Noah's mouth as I tried to get him to latch on again to trick him into thinking that he was getting alot of milk from me.  After a few days of this, Noah finally started latching without being tricked and we were able to reduce his formula intake to just 2 ounces per day.  Hooray!

But my celebration was short lived.  Once he re-learned how to nurse and once I stopped needing pain medication, all the pains and soreness from breastfeeding kicked in.  Noah's dependency to my nipple to soothe him from everything also started.  He couldn't sleep without nursing and used my nipple as a pacifier...and I found myself wishing that I just kept formula feeding.  I also asked myself why I wanted to breastfeed so badly.  It hurt so much and I hadn't yet felt that connection that I had read about from breastfeeding moms.  The baby blues intensified especially during growth spurts when Noah wanted to eat every hour.  I often questioned my abilities about being a good mom and at times even found myself resenting my own baby.  How horrible is that?  

After lots of "googling", posting on online forums, countless pep talks with family and friends, and meeting with a lactation consultant, Noah and I finally got into a nice of groove of things.  My nipples started to toughen up and I no longer dreaded the next feeding time.  By week 6, I felt that magical connection that others had described about nursing your baby.  I couldn't get enough of cuddling and playing with my little bub and felt so much joy from knowing that I caused that milk wasted look of satisfaction from his face. 

Moral of this post - It truly does take a village to raise a child.  I couldn't have gotten through this breastfeeding hurdle without our village of love from friends and family...and because I had such a great support system, I promised myself that I would try to do the same to anyone that needed help with it later on.  So feel free to ask if you have any questions!  I'm no expert but I do know that it helps to talk about these things with someone that can relate.   



Next up....Noah's milestones!  Or maybe a labor story? Who knows =)