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Everybody’s crabbin’ because I haven’t posted a lot of pictures up here yet.  Well, for most of the last week, Simon has either had tubes in his face/head or been Hulk-green from jaundice.  He’ll thank me for the lack of early pictures when he’s older.

But Zadie and Nana visited last night and they brought their cameras.  So here are a couple of snaps to satisfy you less literate visitors.

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I’ve learned three things about hospitals over the past few days:

  1. Hurry Up and Wait! Hospitals are some of the slowest places on earth. We arrived yesterday at about 11:30 after a phone conversation with the NICU that suggested Simon was ready to go. Four hours later we were still waiting.
  2. Information does not flow like it needs to. Especially between shifts. The nurses are friendly and extremely helpful, but they’re also very, very busy. Anytime they tell you that they will let the next shift know something that you have told them, that is your queue to communicate that piece of information to the next shift yourself. We gave permission for a certain procedure at least five times (two of which involved signing forms that were immediately lost).
  3. You will be given contradictory information. Jessica has already blogged about the contradictory information you can pick up in baby literature and on the web, but on more than one occasion I actually got contradictory information about Simon’s medical status or proscribed care. This is when you have to reaise your hand, yell “Stop!”, point out the conflict and demand that someone be produced who can provide an authoritative answer. (Or you can just say “Screw it!” and wait to talk to the pediatrician on Monday….)

The Bilirubin test is a perfect example. We get to the hospital at about 11:00 AM this morning, and are asked for the papers ordering his Bilirubin test. Don’t have ’em — nobody told me I was gonna need them, they just told me to bring Simon in. So then they tell us that they can have the NICU send down a copy. Instead of faxing it down, an aide decides to walk it down — probably ’cause he just wants to get the hell out of the NICU for a few minutes and stretch his legs, but whatever. He prings down what amounts to a screen shot of the same database entry that the admitting desk had pulled up on their PC. I’m dubious, but I take it and head down to the lab.

At the lab, they look at this paper and scoff. These papers aren’t orders, they’re screen shots! Yeah, no kidding. We spar for a few rounds with the lab people, and then they say that they will need to call our pediatrician. The pediatrician’s office is called, and after a short conversation with Jessica they agree to fax over an order for a Bilirubin test. Forty-five minutes later, no fax. Call back. “Oh, I think we got the fax number wrong….”

Typically this is where I would just give up, but that’s really not an option any more.

This post could alternately be titled Simon’s First Night With Absolutely Clueless Caregivers, but he’s alive and in pretty good shape this morning so I’m sticking with the title I’ve given it.

Simon was finally discharged yesterday at about 4:00PM, and with help from Grandma and Bubbie, managed his first hour at home reletively uneventfully. Then he started shrieking like mad for about two hours straight, Grandma and Bubbie beat a path to the door, and I tried to console him in every way I could think to while I kept thinking to myself, “I really don’t want to be the parent that freaks out the very first night.”

Eventually Simon chilled out and managed a three hour nap, during which he was visited by his very excited Zadie and Nana, and his Uncle Steve, who had no idea why I was having such a rough time of it earlier with such a peaceful little guy.

As soon as the witnesses left, Simon went back to the crying thing. The rest of the night was a flurry of crying, feeding and diaper changes that kept me awake almost the whole night. Thankfully, Jessica decided to give him another go at breastfeeding at around 7:00 AM, and Simon nailed it, latching on beautifully and chug-chug-chuggin’ away for the first time. This is gonna save us a ton of time in pumping and bottle prep.

We’re off to the hospital now to have his bilirubin numbers checked. Back soon!

Finally Home

Question: How do you know when Simon has finally come home?

Answer: Mom and Dad don’t have a free minute all day to blog about the coolest day of their lives.

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We have rented the Ameda Elite breast pump from our lactation consultant, and for the past several days 40 minutes out of every three hours (or so) has been spent running through the pumping ruitual:

  • Alarm clock goes off; I smack it and shuffle into the bathroom.
  • I rinse and dry the flanges, filters, collection cups and a couple other parts that I don’t know what to call.
  • I assemble each attachment, bring them into the bedroom, hook them up to the Ameda Elite and hand them to Jessica.
  • I crawl under the covers to try to catch a few minutes sleep with the lights on.
  • Jessica shakes me back to consciousness and tells me she’s done; we try to break the seal of the flange without spilling milk everywhere.
  • I carry the attachments back to the bathroom and pour the milk from the collection cups into storage tubes.
  • I break down each attachment and let it soak in warm water with a gentle detergent.
  • I take the milk tubes downstairs and put them in the fridge.
  • I shuffle back to bed and try to catch another 2 hours and 20 minutes sleep.
  • Repeat ad infinitum….

I can now assemble, clean and reassemble the Ameda Elite breast pump and its attachments much like a Marine can field strip an M-16. I am a breast pump god.

Simon’s Coming Home!

We just got back from the hospital, and the neonatologist told us that she has filled out the discharge paperwork for tomorrow afternoon. Simon is still remarkably jaundiced (he was practically green last night), but he spent all of today under the UV light and his numbers are going down. Everyone’s thrilled…except for Simon — he doesn’t really care one way or another right now, and we’ve yet to impress him with our superior parenting skills.

Labor and Delivery

Now that we’re home, I thought I’d write about the actual labor and delivery while I can still remember any of it.

The short version is that it was great–easier and shorter than I expected and a positive and empowering experience. As Matt wrote earlier, I delicately woke him at around 5:20 a.m. Monday with the declaration that my water had broken. It felt and sounded like a water balloon popping, and I knew immediately that I was going to become a mom that day.

I was slightly disappointed at this turn of events, though, as I also knew that I’d have to go directly to the hospital and would not be allowed to labor at home as I had planned. I also knew that it was common for there to be a long delay between water breaking and the beginning of contractions. If that time stretches too long, you are likely to go on a pitocin drip, a labor intervention I was fervently hoping to avoid.

Sure enough, when Matt called my OBGYN’s office with the news, they instructed us to go to the hospital right away. But before I could get too upset, my contractions began. And to my surprise, they started off at 5-6 minute intervals, each lasting about a minute. By the time Matt and I made it out the door to go to the hospital, my contractions were about 4 minutes apart and lasted 60-80 seconds each. Things were moving!

At triage, I was assessed at 3 cm. dialated. Active labor is usually reckoned at 4-7 cm, transition runs from 7-10, and pushing begins once you hit the 10 cm. mark. Based on those numbers, I assumed it was early days yet when I hit the labor and delivery room with Matt and Brenda (my doula).

Wrong again! By 10:00 a.m. the contractions were getting stronger and closer together, and Brenda kept having to remind me to look at something other than the clock. Having my membranes broken meant that I had to stay in my room, preferably in bed. These restrictions cut down on my mobility greatly, but it turned out that I was less interested in moving than I expected. For the most part, I just wanted to sit on the edge of the bed, lean forward, and squeeze Matt’s hand to get through a contraction.

By 11:45 or so the contractions had gotten long and painful, many had dual peaks, and sometimes one began before the previous one had completely stopped. I knew I could handle the pain if I had to, but I had decided that I didn’t want to. There were many aspects of having an epidural that I found unappealing, but at 11:45 the prospect of pain cessation trumped them all. My only fear was being told that I wasn’t far enough along to get one yet.

Turns out I was nearly 8 cm. dialated–halfway through transition and quickly nearing the pushing and delivery phase. I could get an epidural if I wanted one, but it would be around 30-40 minutes before the procedure was complete and would therefore probably only buy me an extra 20 minutes or so of pain relief before it was time to push. And for those 20 minutes, I’d have to contend with having a catheter, having my blood pressure drop, losing some control over pushing, further restrictions on moving, having tape all over my back, and–oh yeah–having a needle in my spine.

For me, this tradeoff wasn’t worth it. So much to my surprise, I realized at around noon that I was going to deliver my baby medication free.

I’ll be honest that the next hour was rough. The contractions hurt a lot, and before too long I felt an urge to push but wasn’t allowed to. The way around this is to take in a deep breath and blow it out in short, hard puffs. On a good contraction I did this well and was praised for my control. On a bad one I pushed a tiny bit, squeezed Matt’s hand like a vice, and yelled loudly. According to Brenda, the yelling was wasting my energy and was not productive. I knew she was right, but I couldn’t always stop myself.

This was the time Brenda was worth her weight in gold. Somehow, she knew that reassurances would do nothing for me and instead took charge and gave me orders. She forced me to look at her, she modeled the correct breathing pattern for me, and she was firm with me when I got off course and started to yell. In short, it was like having your mom yell at you if she knew an awful lot about labor. Perfect.

By 1:00 p.m. or so it was time to push, by far the most satisfactory part of labor for me. First of all, the pressure of the baby interrupted nerve signals and prevented me from feeling any significant pain. Secondly, after fighting the urge for so long, it was a huge relief to give in to my body’s urges. Last but not least, it was immensely more satisfying to do something with each contraction rather than passively experience it; I relished the chance to exert myself and actively participate in birthing my baby.

That’s nearly the whole story. With my small cheerleading squad urging me on, I pushed as hard as I could for 30-40 minutes. At around 1:48, p.m., the baby’s heart tones dropped slightly, Gigi (the OBGYN on call) cut a small episiotomy (for which she apologized profusely), I pushed one final time, and then looked up to see the doctor holding my baby and announcing I had a son.

It was an amazing experience. And while I’ve heard other women say they’ve never experienced pain like childbirth before, for me that was simply not the case. I’ve had mystery stomach ailments that hurt as much. I’ve had food poisoning that hurt as much. I’ve had menstrual cramps that hurt nearly as much. And I had a bout of muscle pain in my second trimester that hurt as much. The difference? None of those other pains were for anything good, whereas after 8 relatively short hours, this one gave me my son and a new respect for my body’s strength and engineering.

All Clear!

Jessica and I were discharged from the hospital earlier this evening. It wasn’t easy leaving Simon behind, but we weren’t really too worried about him and we knew he was in good hands in the NICU.

After a trip to the 24-hour pharmacy to fill a Percocet prescription and a quick bite to eat, we got home, fed the cats, set up the breast pump and then called the hospital to get the results of Simon’s blood culture. Negative! Still don’t know when they’re gonna let him leave the NICU, but there’s no infection and really no reason to keep him in the hospital anymore. We’re gonna head back over sometime tomorrow morning and see what the pediatrician has to say.

Nap Time

I just sang Simon to sleep with a croaky version of “I’m So Tired”. Seemed appropriate for both of us.

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El Crasho Grande

We both got about two hours sleep last night, so we’re trying to crash as much as we can before they throw us out later tonight.

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