Monday, 23 April 2012

birth day

On 3/3/12, Charlie was born at home, without intervention, drugs or drama. It was the birth I had hoped for and I feel truly blessed to have had it. It's easy to say now that it was a wonderful experience because the pain is that far away, but let me tell you, it was painful. It was so painful I definitely am finished having babies. But, then, at the age f 42, I was finished anyway.

My mother (whom I am eternally grateful to for cleaning my house and feeding us for three whole weeks) travelled to London from California a week before my due date. In retrospect this was probably a good move. She had some quality time with her grandson number 1 before the big event and the new life that changed the rest of ours forever. Shaun had several projects due in the week of Charlie's birth and so this time was extra stressful for him, and so having my mom here to "cover" for him was tremendously helpful. Oh, and Shaun was around too. 

We worried that Charlie who was due on the 29th February, would be late. I wasn't looking forward to being induced or having a hospital birth or without my mother here to be part of the experience. Thankfully, after a long walk to Rottingdean with my mom, Sebastian and  Mimi, my neighbour/ landlady around 4pm on Friday the 2nd March, I began having contractions at 6pm when Shaun arrived home from Uni for the weekend. Around 8pm we called a midwife and just wanted to get our name "on the board". Karrie came at 9pm to check my progress and told us that we weren't ready to have a baby, but that I should carry on relaxing at home and listening to my Hypnobirthing CD. 

In January, I had met a woman called Maya Zack, a Hypnobirthing and Sedona Method expert. We connected through a website called SkillSwap. I had hoped to trade yoga for a haircut, but ended up finding Maya. She was very key to my positive birth experience this time around. As the days got close to my mom & Charlie's arrival I had been feeling very anxious and quite frankly, scared. Maya not only gave me some great hypnobirthing techniques but she shared stories of ecstatic births and practiced the Sedona Method with me (a method of releasing... fear, anger - whatever ails you!) and helped restore some of the confidence I had lost when giving birth to Sebastian in 2009. (No one ever tells you how much confidence a woman loses when she becomes a mother for the first time.)

I continued having contractions at a steady rate for hours after Karrie left our house. My mom had pulled out the sofa bed and the plan was to put Seb to sleep there and then she would get in with him, so between 8-9pm (just before Karrie arrived) I was breast feeding Seb to sleep in the front room, while having contractions. 

Karrie was very calm and brought a peacefulness with her that made me feel very comfortable. I slightly worried that if she left (which she did) that another midwife would come back later, but no time for thinking - contractions were coming much faster and more intensely than before. My mom and Seb were sleeping. Shaun laid down next to me on the bed and promptly fell asleep. I timed my own contractions using an app on my iPhone. When there were 3 mins apart consistently, I woke Shaun and told him to call the midwife. He stumbled about until he found the house phone to call and made the call. Karrie arrived at 1am and checked me again. She said that I was only 4 centimeters dilated. The plan was that if my waters had not gone by 5.30 am, Karrie would offer to break them for me. I was just so relieved when she said that she would be staying with me and not going back to the hospital. She set up her equipment and paperwork, utilizing the spotlight Shaun had borrowed from Uni and Shaun went and made the teas. 

Around 3am when my labour was in full swing, my darling son Sebastian awoke in an unfamiliar bed with an unfamiliar mother that was not his! He screamed and screamed. Nana nor Daddy could calm my boy and so Seb joined me in bed with active labour. I held him and breastfed him while contracting and groaning. It was easier than listening to his screams, believe me. He eventually calmed down and went to read with Daddy and Karrie and Nana. 

At 5.15 am the pain was tremendous and I was begging or it all to be over. Karrie did another examination and as she did, my water came away naturally. She suggested I change position for delivery and so I turned from my side to my knees on my bed. I had prepared the bed with a plastic shower curtain from Asda (£1.98) laid beneath the sheets to protect the mattress. Karrie removed the duvet from the bed and asked Shaun to get the towels ready. Each contraction now was excruciating. I did not feel I could survive such intensity. I kept breathing and listening to the CD of positive affirmations in the background on a loop. I eventually had thoughts of strangling the soft lady voice delivering the message. I carried on breathing and riding the waves of pain that overtook my body. Sebastian and Shaun were sitting at the foot of my bed watching The Snowman. My mother was pacing back and forth between my room and the rest of the house. Karrie informed me that she could now see Charlie's head, that he was on his way, but that I needed to relax and wait for the next contraction. My groaning had turned to yelling. "Get him out!" as I rode the penultimate wave. A few moments later with a gush, out came my darling son, Charles. The umbilical cord was loosely double wrapped around his neck; Karrie carefully unwound them and wrapped Charlie in a towel and placed him on the pillow next to me. My body shook and shivered. I was relieved but also very untouchable. Karrie took a photo of me and my family. She then made a path out of spare shower curtains from the bed to the bath. I carefully tiptoed with bloody legs and feet to a tub of warm water. I let four full baths run away before I could see through the water. It was gory. When I left the bathroom, cleaned an warmly dressed, I saw my mom asleep in Seb's room, Seb asleep in my room and Shaun and Charlie asleep on the sofabed. 

It was a beautiful sunny day although we didn't leave the house. We stayed home for four days before introducing Charlie to the world. We were visited by excellent midwives daily and I later learned that our midwife Karrie was one of the top midwives at Royal County of Sussex - I was very lucky to have had her. The care and treatment I have received in Brighton has been nothing short of impressive: from health care and the wider community, we are so happy to be here!

Saturday, 28 January 2012

Due date is 1 month from now!

It's a whole month away - but checking my iPregnancy app for iPhone I see that I am 8 3/4 months along. So bun in the oven for 10 months, really... Such a long time. My friend Katherine said during her first pregnancy that one really needs 9 months to prepare. I think I agree with that.

My son, Seb, is going through a bit of a rough patch. His sleep at night has gone haywire. He definitely understands that mummy's tummy is big because Charlie is growing inside. He protests when I gently tell him that soon Charlie will share my bosom with him. He also offers up my breasts to his toys: Winnie, Mickey, baby, T Rex, various trucks and cars. I do wonder what's going on inside his mind sometimes. Seb hasn't gone to bed before 10pm since Xmas break. He wakes at 7.30 and is exhausted by 11. He goes to sleep for two or three hours, wakes up in a great mood and refuses to sleep from 7.30-10 or 11... Making our evenings very stressful. Seb also has been hitting me hard and a lot.

I wonder if he senses change coming or if there is something totally normal and developmental going on?

Tonight I had to leave the room and take several deep breaths before I could deal with upset over bedtime. We got there in the end, but it still 10pm and we had aimed for 8-8.30.

Monday, 21 November 2011

Daily life

Shaun and I have been working on a new schedule for the week. It's been two months since we moved to Brighton and we've been experiencing the transition as much as Seb has. When we first arrived, Shaun was still working out his last week in London. Seb was in a new house which he clearly loved, but daddy wasn't here which he seemed to not like so much going on his reaction when Shaun finally did finish work. Those first few nights when Shaun would leave Seb and I to sleep in his room at University were met with screaming and tears. We decided that we should perhaps make evenings (dinner/bath/bed) a priority. So the routine is that Shaun arrives about 5pm, stays until Seb goes to sleep or a bit later, usually leaving around 8pm. Then Shaun spends the entire weekend with us. But as Shaun's coursework becomes more intensive, and those return trips on the bus are a huge waste of time, we are looking at longer weekends and less home in the evening time. I think Seb will be OK with it. It's a hard balance, but as I said to a new friend, it's not that much different to a traditional couple who's daddy works long hours, sometimes returning home after bedtime. The only difference it the middle of the night wakings. Seb has a rotten cold at the moment, he wakes from coughing or not being able to breathe easily. So, he comes in to bed with me. If he wakes up too much, he starts wondering where daddy is. I say daddy is at school, but what does that mean when daddy is here sometimes and not others?

Tuesday, 15 November 2011

Lemonade

It was three years ago today that I experienced one of the most devastating events a woman can: miscarriage. I was 39 years old and it was my first pregnancy. It was a miracle. I had lost hope that I was even able to get pregnant, and there it was - the words PREGNANT on a Clear Blue test. At 9 weeks - considered an early miscarriage - I had gone through two months of morning sickness and feeling awful. What an insult to suddenly find myself at St Thomas' ultrasound department with the sonographer saying that she couldn't find a heartbeat and that maybe it was too early - I should come back the next day. I went home discouraged and knew that it was over. I called my mom and she told me I was being negative. I told a few friends and they said, it might not be over, these things happen. No one wanted this to be the end. But, by Monday night I was doubled over in pain losing tons of blood. Shaun had been on the phone with the hospital and eventually an ambulance arrived. I was given gas and air to cope with the pain. Wheeled into an empty ward with a lovely midwife who made both Shaun and I feel very comfortable. The care that night was perfect. I was kept in overnight until I could be scanned to make sure everything was gone by the next day. The hospital was cold and felt even more so now that it was just me and Shaun. Our love had made a baby, and the baby died. My future had gone along with my hope. Shaun made a few phone calls throughout the day covering my classes and letting people know. He eventually left the hospital and went to tell his parents who had not known that I was pregnant at all. This was a whole other story! In the afternoon I was released and I traveled home alone by taxi. Shaun was at my flat when I arrived home. Nothing but sadness and emptiness for weeks that followed. The emotional nosedive was bigger than anything I had ever experienced. I cried and typed and cried and typed for days. It was a long process, and in retrospect, I don't think I fully recovered for a long long time after.

Today, however, the anniversary of that dark day, I am grateful for my son who was born just under a year later. I am grateful to Shaun for sticking by me and to my body for (so far!)  holding two pregnancies. I don't feel so sad anymore. If that little babe had been born on the 21st June 2009 as expected, I wouldn't know Sebastian or be anxiously awaiting the arrival of his brother Charlie.


Sunday, 13 November 2011

First post

I'm called dreamymummy because I used to have a little independent record label called Dreamy Records. I spent my early 20s devoted to indie music and eventually started my own company so I could release records I liked. The label lasted from 1998 - 2005. It was a labour of love and I became known in small indie circles as Dreamy Tracy.

After my years in the heartbreaking music industry, I made a smooth transition into teaching yoga. Dreamy Yoga never really worked.... The name I was given in India was a Sanskrit word meaning "the female aspect of om". A swami of Eupropean descent flippantly referred to me as Miss Universe. Well, that's cute and all, but the domain name was already registered, so I became just yogamiss. Ten years of teaching and nearly 15 years of personal practice later, I am mother to Sebastian and pregnant with another little boy.

I have a few email addresses. yogamiss, yogamum, dreamytracy. I am all of these. Ultimately, for now, I am dreamymummy. I had to be really. Yoga is the union of all things or the yoking of realities. Becoming a mother, although there is an element of illusion that mothers are all seeing all knowing all all all, my experience is that motherhood is total chaos. I am definintely not united in my mind body and spirit on a regular basis. It does happen occasionally. There are perfect moments when everything feels so right and I've managed to do my duty remaining calm and in flow, but its rare. I dream of becoming that mummy sometimes.

I've started a blog.

Who on earth would want to read about my crazy adventures?

Let me re-phrase that.

Who on earth would I want to share my personal point of view with?

I don't know.

I guess the idea that I might eventually write something vaguely worth reading is some inspiration. At the moment, I barely have time to paint my toenails once a month let alone write a blog. That's motherhood for you.