Thursday, April 27, 2006

Pickled Beets and Cottage Cheese.

Tastes really, really, really good. And it's healthy to boot. Beats popcorn with extra butter, or salt and vinegar potato chips (my snack of choice three times yesterday). I'm not an "unhealthy" eater per say, I'm just a little mood driven when it comes to food, pregnant or not. It's a good thing I'm the head chef of this household.

A month ago I was struggling to think of any food I thought would be tasty. This month the second trimester is coming on and probably the bulk of my weight gain. Now, I have all I can do to think of a food I don't want to eat. I've been begging the Gods of Pregnant Ladies Appetites to spare me the 60 lbs. that I gained in the first pregnancy. I just don't think my body will be able to recouperate as nicely as it did when I was 24. Even then it took me a VERY long time to shed the last 20 lbs of weight. I know 30 isn't exactly nursing home age; I just hear a lot of women talk about their size and the maintaining of it after 30 and it's not always a positive conversation.

So yes, I'm afraid. More afraid of the weight gain than I am of the juggling that will occur after the birth, or the fear of uterine rupture should I choose to have a VBAC, or the fear of actually succeeding at a VBAC, or the fear of NOT succeeding at the VBAC. Ok, I lied. VBAC is pretty much a big scary acronym that I'm seeing in my nightmares regularly. I guess I'm just down right scared and there aren't many people, well there aren't ANY people in my life that want to listen to my obsession of any of the above topics. Not for another 7 months anyway. A conversation here and there, maybe. But certainly not the main topic for the duration of the gestation period.

I tend to be a one track mind until resolution kind of thinker. If something is bothering me, or worrying me, I have a very hard time thinking, or doing much else. That seems a little on the mentally sick side, but it's true. I really have a very hard time getting past something without lengthy discussions followed by irrational thinking reversals performed by the husband. He's gotten increasingly good at this over the years and never ceases to make me laugh at myself without feeling hurt by his comments. It's an art he's refined over the years that we've been together. Kinda like my ability to argue without raising my voice in the slightest just so I can say "hey, you don't have to yell". Makes me feel more grown up.

I think I'm going crazy. This post now has nothing to do with it's title. I need more therapy.

Tuesday, April 25, 2006

Nothing Special.

Kind of a blah place right now. Nothing much going on. I just got back from my visit home. Still boring, but still home. Doesn't matter where I'm at in the world, I've always missed that place. Whether it be the potato fields, the blinking light, the stars at night, and perhaps the people there, I have always had a sense of home there. Anyway, it was uneventful, outside of getting obnoxiously exhausted and mentally crazy. However, that isn't so far from the norm anyway. Funny how you travel 13 hours to get there and people that live 15 minutes away still feel the need to make youdrive to them so they can visit you.

NOW, the best thing about that trip was going home. I love my Mum, and I love my family, but damn if I don't feel like I just don't belong there anymore. I guess it's true that you can never go home again. I've been gone so long now it's hard to imagine what life would be like if I were living there, or worse, stayed there. Oh God. I can't even contimplate the disasterous future that would of been waiting for me. Some people get lucky there, and some don't. I just can't see myself getting that lucky.

OK, back to why it was so much fun to come home. I got to see my little baby yesterday. How amazing, how wonderful, how indesribable it is to see your creation floating in it's watery heaven, clueless of the outside world awaiting it. I'm just beside myself thinking about how special this will be for us all this time around. S. will play such an instrumental part in this little child's life. It will truly be a different experience from the beginning and change our lives forever. I'm so anxious. I am so excited about our new adventure. What a wonderful blessing that we've been given. I'm scared, sad, crazy, but obnoxiously giddy all at the same time. Pregnancy really fucks with a woman's sanity, eh?

Tuesday, April 11, 2006

Second Time Around.

Cancer. What an ugly disease. Cigarettes. What an ugly tool we use to induce such an ugly disease upon ourselves. I'm guilty of using that tool; not for cancerous cell growth, but for other reasons I have yet to figure out.

I started when I was 15 I think. I smoked for half my life. I just turned 30. I just quit smoking. Well, I say just. I quit last year right before my 29th birthday. I read books, I paced floors while chanting victorious verses, I reminded myself regularly why I was quitting. How proud I was. Until I allowed myself a puff here and there. One weekend I vividly remember being left alone to my own demise. The hubby and S. went to visit family. I stayed behind to get some me time. I drank beer, called a bunch of people and smoked cigs. Eventually, I would purchase a pack for Saturday night beer fests by the campfire in the back yard. I had to sneak because I couldn't disappoint the husband with my failed attempt that was so successful (5 months to be exact!!). Anyway, to make a long story short.....I ended up starting again. Why? I don't know, well I do know. It's an addiction. With the new baby on the way, I decided to give it a go again and now have 1 month smoke free and no desire to return.

Getting to my point. Second time around. My bio Mom was diagnosed 1 1/2 years ago with cancer of the larynx. She smoked for at least 30 years. At least. She was lucky that her cancer was located in the one area. She had radiation for 6 weeks after surgery to remove the cancerous tumor. What an ordeal. Negative thirty pounds, a huge burn on her entire neck that has left a permanent scar later and she was thought to be in the clear. She went to her monthly appointments to ensure that she was in fact, cancer free. The thrity pounds quickly returned and doubled due to a new thyroid problem due to the radiation. Her voice still hasn't returned to it's natural state even though she quit smoking over a year ago. This past February, they found cancer again, in the same spot. Believed to have survived the radiation therapy.

Lucky for her, she has what is called a slow moving cancer. She has a great prognosis and hopefully will walk away with minimal damages. Today she is on her way to Halifax (she lives in Canada) and will talk to a new Dr. for the second time. Tomorrow she is sceduled for laser surgery, that hopefully, will remove this cancer for good. They have done this 50 times successfully and his word was this will finish it for her. She will not have cancer there again. There. The thing with cancer is this, once you have it one place, you are more succeptable to having it in other areas. The fact that she smoked for so long makes it more likely that she could develop cancer in other areas of her body. The location that worries me the most. Her lungs. She can survive without a larynx. Would it suck? Yeah, but will she survive? More likely than not. Lungs, we need those.

Anyway. That is what I'm thinking about today. I had a dream last night that she died. This is the first dream I've ever had about her dying. It scared me, a lot. My sisters need her, my brother needs her, our children need her and lately, I've finally begun to believe that I need her.

SO.......I say a little prayer that she is safe, her surgery goes as expected, and we get to keep our Mother/Grammy for a long, long time to come.

Thursday, April 06, 2006

I Can't Wait.

I know I have to, I know there really is no speeding the process of growing a human, but I can't help it. I just want to fast forward to November and meet this baby so much it hurts.

In my first pregnancy I was excited, but confused, young and niave about parenthood. I knew that I was having a baby with the absolute love of my life, but I was torn. We had all of two months to spend any time as a married couple before we were pregnant. The first year we were husband and wife he was on the other side of the globe. I missed him terribly and counted the months, days, minutes til' his return. I was rudely awakened when I noticed how different the two of us had become in just 12 months time. So re-aquainting ourselves with one another would take some time. This baby we were UN-expecting really threw a wrench in our plans to re-enlist and try the mid west out for a spell, travel, share our lives together the way we dreamed about the entire first year of our marriage.

I was happy to be carrying our first baby and we talked about this many times before, but as mentioned above, we just weren't prepared. We had no idea how our lives would change. For the better, but some definite changes were in immediate order. I hadn't the awareness of how wonderfully awesome creating life really is. What a miracle we had just been given.

NOW, I know this miracle. I have secretly longed for another baby for quite some time. We just didn't know how we were going to do it. Financially, it just has never been the right time.

It still isn't the right time financially, but who cares. We'll be fine and the joy that comes with new little babies will abound and our family will feel all the more complete for it.

I just don't want to wait is all. I'm so freaking excited to smell my baby's head. I can hardly even think about tiny fingers grasping mine without getting giddy and ridiculously happy. I'm going to be so selfish with my bonding time. I'm going to enjoy so much more of the "moments" than I did the first time around. I'm not so confident to say that I won't totally lose my composure and feel overwhelmed, but I will get through it, just as I did the first time around.

OMG, baby, hurry up. I can't even deal with how cute you're going to be.

I love you.

Wednesday, April 05, 2006

Tears from the heart.

As long as I can remember I've worried about my Mother dying. Not just your average fear of an accident or life threatening illness happening, but true fear. The knowing that I will lose her at a young age has afflicted my thoughts for longer than I can remember them not.

To explain why these feelings have been part of my life is simple. My Mother had me at a young age; therefore my Grandmother raised me. My Mother had three children at the time of my birth and wasn't properly equipped to raise 4 children; she was afterall, only 19, and my Father was leaving her for another woman. He would die three years later anway (a whole other story). It was intended that I'd live with my Grandmother until my Mother was back on her feet. When the time came for me to reunite with my birth family my Grandmother had already decided that she would raise me. My Mother didn't/couldn't protest because my Grandmother can be so damn overbearing. So from this point forward my Grandmother will be known as my Mother; she is the woman I have the bond with.

My Mother was stricken with rheumatoid arthritis at a young age. By the time I came along it was part of her life; her pain and suffering was something I'd view and deal with throughout my entire childhood. In fact, I've never known my Mom to be a healthy, happy and thriving adult. She wasn't like the other parents who took their kids on vacations or to parks. And she certainly wasn't like the other Moms that took their daughters shopping and splurged on ice cream afterward. She was home trying different homeopathic remedies and popping pills for pain, cartiledge restoration, and praying for a miracle from God.

I vividly remember this green, putrid grass drink she tried for a spell. How dilligent she was at finding new and innovative ways to fight the disease. A disease that stiffened her body to the core each and every night as she slept. Every morning it was the same routine, the same pill popping, the same aches and pains that took hours to subside enough to allow her a jaunt to the bathroom for her morning bout with diarrhea. Gross, I know, but the truth. A side effect of all the medication I imagine.

There was this one time that she was bed ridden with the shingles. I remember this so well because she just couldn't get out of bed. Not no way, not no how. I believe I may have been 8 or 9 at the time. I took care of her before and after school; rubbing calamine lotion on her back and under her breasts. I cooked for us every evening and the only thing I really knew how to make came from a can. Mom remembers me cooking stewed tomatoes for days. Every single night I heated them in a little pot on the stove. They tasted better if you added a dab of butter and a splash of salt and pepper.

I'm a very active dreamer and would often wake up with my hands outstretched as if I was holding a palmful of pills and glass of water. That was another responsibility of mine. I kept track of her meds and helped her keep them all straight. If she couldn't get up; I was able to get her medicine and bring them to her. Sometimes she would need two or three pain meds just to hoist her tired body out of bed. I was her little helper. I went to dr.'s with her regularly and had experienced more dr's offices than I had cared to at such a young age. I would say, "Mom, do you have your medicaid card?". She would smile and say, "Yes dear, I have my medicaid card." Such a little grown up, so much to worry about already.

So yes, I've always feared my Mother's death. I've always felt that she was going to leave me, I was going to lose her and I had no one else after that. My Mother was part of my life, but she wasn't my Mother. I always had a famelial relationship with her but never the bond that Mother and Daughter have. I had that with my Grandmother. I've cried a lot over the years contimplating her death, anticipating how many more winters she would squeak through. I have run the gammit of emotions surrounding the circumstances of her even being my Mother, but have always come to the same conclusion. She is my MOTHER, nothing and no one could replace her. When she is gone; my Mother will be dead.

After I kissed my little girl goodnight on her delicate forehead and settled back on the couch to hear the last two singers on American Idol; I heard a little voice whimpering "Mommy". I went into her room to see what was the matter, like I do everytime I hear her sweet voice calling my name, and found a sobbing, six year old mess. The thought had just "popped in her head" she said. My daughter, for the first time, contimplated her own healthy, vibrant, thirty year old Mother's death and was crying her little eyes out all over her tiny hands. My heart broke at that moment to even think that some day I will die and leave her. Of course I didn't tell her that; I wrapped my arms around her vulnerable little body and hugged her like there was no tomorrow. I comforted her because I don't want her to feel the way I felt as a child; EVER. I comforted her while I comforted myself. I felt relieved at the thought that she would not live the childhood I lived. I am a Mom like the rest of the Moms. I take her on special dates; just the two of us. I stop for ice cream just because I have an extra $5 floating in my wallet that is totally yelling to me, aching to be spent on a candy shop sundae at Friendly's.

I wiped her tears and held onto her for a while. Exchanged more "I love you a lots" than I could count. I was living in the moment, reflecting on my past, and looking forward to my future all at the same time. Sweet dreams my dear daughter. May you never have to dream of medicaid cards and pain meds.

Monday, April 03, 2006

EVIL DOG

Reading my entry about my sweet little puppy made me feel guilty because there were far too many expletives and she really isn't so evil. Well, she is evil but she's not all the names I called her because of her evil disposition. So, I'm editing and changing a few words to clean up the language a little. It's just when your couch's stuffing is all over the floor instead of inside the couch, it tends to get a little frustrating is all. I'm sorry Sadie, for being so unforgiving of your flaws as a puppy. I, too, have flaws as a human being and lately, I've been thinking of all of the flaws I've given in to over the years and just now noticing what a horrible person some may have thought me to be. :-(

EVIL DOG IS DRIVING ME NUTS. WHAT A CUTE LITTLE *PUPPY* YOU ARE IN THAT WINDOW AND FOR THE LOW, LOW PRICE OF $400 *WELL SPENT* DOLLARS, YOU TOO, CAN HAVE THIS CUTE LITTLE TERROR OF *LOVE*.

Don't get me wrong Miss Sadie. I love you so very much and if anything were to happen to you I would be devastated. I just don't understand why, if you love me so much, do you have to act like such a *WONDERFUL PUPPY* and destroy all my worldy possessions. I don't rip your stuff to shreds. Give me a break, you're never alone, well hardly ever alone, you're loved by the ENTIRE family and doted on like some priceless diamond we happened upon on a family walk one day in the woods. WHY, OH WHY ARE YOU ACTING LIKE SUCH A LITTLE *PUPPY*!!!!!

Okay.....that's enough. I'm just *MILDLY UPSET * at you right now. Please stop being so EVIL!!!!