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Archive for Postpartum

Perspective, meet hormones

By Goddess in Progress · Comments (32)·   February 28th, 2011

All that stuff I wrote yesterday about perspective and optimism and the zen of being a second-timer?

It can kiss my ass today.

Eleanor is fine, but when it comes down to it, she’s acting like more of a preemie than her gestational age would suggest. Sleepy, not eating well. Not quite coordinated on the suck-swallow-breathe thing, such that her oxygen saturation drops when she eats.

She’s back on the nasal cannula with a touch of extra oxygen. She might end up with that little orange tube in her nose for some of her feedings if she doesn’t perk up overnight.

She is not coming home with me in the morning.

Those who prefer to avoid profanity should now avert their eyes.

Fuck perspective. Fuck optimism. Fuck them right in the ear.  This was not supposed to happen, dammit.  I was not supposed to go home by myself. AGAIN.

It’s like PTSD flashbacks, except that it’s ACTUALLY HAPPENING. All of the NICU bullshit of counting milliliters, thinking there’s actually a difference between 28ml and 35ml. The kind of crap no one ever looks at if your baby never landed in there in the first place – seriously, how many 3-day-old breastfed infants are taking in that much breastmilk at each feeding? Judging by my pump output, I’m going to go out on a limb and say hardly any.  But standards are different in the NICU. The standards for getting out of there are way higher than normal.

And that’s when, in my hormone-fueled disappointment and rage, I want to scream BULLSHIT. This is such crap. SUCH CRAP.  And I’m so, so mad that I have to deal with it again.

All of this disappointment and rage, to be honest, is about me. It’s selfish. I know my daughter will be fine. I know she will work through these late-preterm issues and will come home and will be healthy.  I’m upset because *I* didn’t want to go through this again. Because I wanted my turn to be discharged from the hospital with a carseat on my arm. Because I didn’t want to have to pump every 2 hours and always feel like I was coming up short.

But this morning, when I confirmed that a simultaneous Tuesday discharge was not in the cards, I barely made it back to my hospital room before releasing the big, ugly cry.  The kind of crying I couldn’t stop. The kind of crying I had to be careful with so the sobs didn’t hurt my incision.  I couldn’t relay the information to my husband without bursting into tears again. I couldn’t interact with any of the nurses or doctors without completely losing it. Could barely get a full sentence out of my mouth for most of the day.

Oh, progesterone. You’re a bitch when you show up in the first trimester, and you’re a bitch when you make your hasty post-partum exit.  Sure, I had things to be upset about. But damn, those hormonal changes can turn the whole thing up to 11.

After a little rest, some deep breathing, and a cold, wet towel on my eyes to bring down some of the swelling, I was able to keep it together for a visit from my big kids. Seeing them was surprisingly restorative.  Even better was an evening visit from two friends, who brought equal parts junk food and knowledgeable sympathy. Both do a body good.

I know she’s being taken care of. I know she’s in the right place. I know I don’t actually want to have her home until she’s 100% ready to be there.  The perspective I wrote about yesterday is still there, tucked away in the more logical part of my brain.

But in the meantime, I’m having a little pity party, and will likely go through an entire box of kleenex when I leave the hospital tomorrow.

It sucks. Period.

Comments (32)
Categories : Hospital, Newborns, Postpartum
Tags : NICU

Mayday, mayday

By Goddess in Progress · Comments (5)·   October 19th, 2007

My back went out.

Well, not all the way out, since I’m still able to move and sit upright. But I can tell I’m one false move from being flat on the floor.

I knew this day was coming. For one, I’ve always had a pretty bad back. I was amazed it didn’t present more problems during pregnancy than it did. But the last few days I could feel it brewing. I knew 2 months of lifting increasingly heavy babies (and their carseats), bending over to pick up, smooch, swaddle, or otherwise interact was going to catch up with me.

Crap.

So, a plea to you moms out there, especially those with two or those who have had a c-section… how on earth do you start getting your core strength back? I mean, I know I should be more careful about lifting with my legs and not my back, etc etc…. but how do I start getting some muscle tone back? Not that I ever approached six-pack abs (pony keg abs was more like it), but now I’m not sure I could manage a single sit-up.

So? Particular exercises I should start with? A DVD I should buy? I have a gym membership, but I don’t think I’m going to be getting there regularly for another couple of months. Help, help!

Comments (5)
Categories : Illness and Injury, Postpartum
Tags : back pain, exercise

Postpartum

By Goddess in Progress · Comments (1)·   September 15th, 2007

Yesterday was my six-week postpartum checkup at my OB’s office. Hard to believe six weeks have passed already. Everything checked out just fine. Blood pressure back to its normal low, incision healing reasonably well, uterus miraculously shrunk down to it’s original size. I’ve lost about 2/3 of the weight I gained (final total was somewhere in the 60-pound range, I’m down about 40 of that). When asked what form of birth control I wanted to consider, my response was “as many as possible.” Haha. I’m strongly considering the IUD, but if not that, then I’ll happily go back on the pill, which was always good to me.

It’s funny, this really feels like the coda on the end of my pregnancy. With this appointment done, it really is over. I may wax nostalgic about the anticipation that comes along with being pregnant, but I can say in no uncertain terms that I am thrilled to not be pregnant anymore. It really is something to have my body (mostly) back. For instance:

  • I can sleep in any old position I want! Of course, I still find myself sleeping on my side some of the time, but at least it’s a choice.
  • I don’t have to grunt and groan every time I stand up, sit down, roll over, or otherwise move my huge self.
  • Carpal tunnel is 90% gone, and I can feel my entire right hand save for a little numbness at the tip of one finger.
  • I no longer pee upwards of 15 times per day. Whew.
  • I can see my ankles
  • I have ankles.
  • I can walk further than 20 yards without pain, pressure, or contractions.
  • I drink less than a gallon of water per day. (Though, yes, I still drink a lot for the sake of my milk supply.)
  • I can’t yet wear my wedding rings again, but it’s getting closer.
  • The heartburn/reflux that had me taking extra-strength Zantac in addition to six or seven Tums per day disappeared immediately post-surgery.

In the end, I made it through my pregnancy relatively unscathed. Especially as twin pregnancies go, I had very few complications. No gestational diabetes, no pre-eclampsia (though I arguably had pregnancy-induced hypertension in those final weeks). Concerned though we were about Rebecca’s size all along, she has proven to be plenty healthy and feisty. I was blessedly never put on bedrest or really any restricted activity beyond what I limited on my own. And despite worrying about preterm labor, I made it all the way to 36 weeks. I was plenty uncomfortable, but I made it.

And now, it’s officially over. Whew.

Now, if you’ll excuse me, I have two beautiful, hungry babies to take care of.

Comments (1)
Categories : OB Appointments, Postpartum, Pregnancy, Reminiscing

Somebody smack me

By Goddess in Progress · Comments (0)·   September 1st, 2007

I was in Babies R Us this afternoon, picking up a swing and a second bouncy seat. Being a Saturday afternoon, there were plenty of pregnant women and couples shopping and setting up gift registries. I watched them in their cute maternity wear, debating carseats and cribs. And the following thought popped into my head:

Aww, I miss being pregnant.

NO! No, that’s just not true! Has the famed/dreaded hormonal amnesia hit me, too? I swore it never would. On balance, I hated being pregnant. I was uncomfortable, sleep-deprived (ha!), irritable, and anxious.

And, honestly, it’s not that I actually miss it. I don’t miss the physical reality of being pregnant, nor do I miss the stress that came along with it. It’s more a nostalgia with regard to the anticipation of being pregnant. The excitement, wondering what is to come. It’s the same way I get a little glazed over when talking to people who are graduating from college or planning their wedding. I wouldn’t really go back to that point, because getting to now is entirely what then was about. I’d never in a million years give back my beautiful (albeit fussy) babies to be pregnant again. But there’s certainly something exciting about being on the brink of a major life change. And once you get to that new place, it’s never easy or perfect, so it’s easier to romanticize what led up to it.

I’ll admit, though… I really did love maternity clothes. Hell, I’m still wearing some. But this, too, shall pass.

And you can be damn sure I’m going on at least one form of birth control at my six-week checkup. Irish twins/triplets/quads, my ass.

Comments (0)
Categories : Postpartum, Pregnancy, Reminiscing

All by myself

By Goddess in Progress · Comments (5)·   August 31st, 2007

Chalk up the lack of posts to the fact that today is day 5 of me being solo with the twins. Things are going well, but I’m obviously left with much less time to do things like blog… or shower.

Actually, things are going pretty well. I have indeed managed to shower nearly every day. I also make it a goal to take a walk with the babies every day, for my dog’s sake as much as my own, and I have accomplished said goal three out of four days already (and things are looking good for today). We’ve made trips to the doctor’s office, the store, and the Breastfeeding Moms Support Group at my hospital’s community health center.

Speaking of breastfeeding… it is slowly improving. My pump did, in fact, come back to life after a short hiatus. But I’m also only pumping a couple of times a day at this point. Once I was alone, it was one of the first things to fall by the wayside. With the three-hour feeding rotation, I just couldn’t devote so much time to sitting at the pump. However, I am now pretty much breastfeeding one twin for each feeding. Sometimes they still take a little supplement when they’re done, but not always.

Itty bitty Rebecca nurses really well, her only problem being that she sometimes falls asleep. I frequently strip her down to her diaper before nursing, so she isn’t too warm and cozy. Her tiny body is starting to fill out, and her cheeks are already chubbier. She’s gaining an appropriate amount of weight, but still adds up to only 5lb9oz as of Tuesday. So despite being my stronger nurser, she is still alternating feeds with high-calorie formula. I won’t be sad to see that stuff go.

Rebecca is generally pretty calm, sleeps well, and makes awfully funny faces. Beware when she decides she’s unhappy, though. She’ll go from calm to screaming herself purple. Thankfully, those occasions are somewhat rare, and she tends to be easy to calm. She’s frequently quite red in the face, and much like her mom, reacts somewhat strongly to the warm temperatures. On the 85-90 degree days, she is often found in diaper only. She’s sweet as can be, and we often just call her “itty bitty.”

Daniel is finally catching on to this whole latching/nursing thing. He’s still quite frantic, shaking his head and smacking his tongue from the roof of his mouth. But eventually he figures out where he is, and sucks away. Speaking of sucking, he needs to have something in his mouth seemingly at least 12-15 hours per day. He screams bloody murder if he looses his pacifier, which he does approximately every 6 minutes. But he’s a stellar eater overall, and is currently tipping the scales at 7lb14oz. Yes, he outweighs his sister by about 2.5 pounds. He moved right on into size 1 diapers yesterday, while his sister still hangs out in the newborn size, and swims in newborn-sized clothes.

Due to the seemingly constant pacifier replacement issues, Daniel spends more total fussy time than his sister, earning him the nickname, Señor Fussy-Pants. (There are songs about it, too.) And yet, if he has his pacifier, very few things seem to bother him. Heat is no problem, nor is the carseat or a full, stinky diaper. He makes the sweetest sounds when he’s falling asleep.

As for me, I’m doing pretty well. My blood pressure is back to normal, and I can see my ankles again. I still have plenty of fat and flab (I got my first postpartum “when are the babies due?” last night… alas), but I do think it’s coming down. The batteries are dead in my scale, so I have no idea how much I may have lost. I’m morbidly curious, but not surprisingly, have not actually managed such a time-consuming task as putting batteries in the scale. My incision has run into a few minor complications, but nothing some antibiotics can’t fix.

Emotionally, I’m doing well. Very infrequent attacks of the weepies. As an example, within 10 minutes of my husband leaving on my first day solo, both babies were hungry and screaming, and the dog threw up. And you know what? I didn’t cry! I take that as an accomplishment. I’m not sleeping a lot, but it’s not like that’s front-page news. I think it’ll catch up to me soon, but for now, I’m functioning.

Both babies are now fed and in their carseats, so it’s time for our walk. And hey, this post only took me two hours to write! Well, OK, more like five days of thinking about posting and then two hours, but still… Hopefully I’ll manage to write more frequently, but for now, know that I’ve got my hands full!

Comments (5)
Categories : Newborns, Out and about, Postpartum, SAHM
Tags : Breastfeeding, pumping, walks

Mama needs a new pair of shoes

By Goddess in Progress · Comments (1)·   August 21st, 2007

My mom has been in town for the last several days, and it has been overall really nice. Sure, she can be a little pushy sometimes, but I can’t complain as she cleans, organizes, and makes us dinner, in addition to providing encouragement and an extra set of hands for the babies. Though she’s as happy to hold, chat with, and gaze adoringly at her first grandbabies as the next person, my mom is also a very practical person. She didn’t rush out from Chicago the moment they were born, because she knew that wasn’t the time she could be the most useful to us. No, she wanted to wait until they were home, so she could help us take care of the house (and ourselves) while we took care of the twins. She’s all about helping me get things in order and get my feet under me, so that I can hopefully handle things on my own when she leaves and my hubby goes back to work.

One of the things she has been pushing is getting me out for walks. It’s part c-section recovery, part practical dog care, part preparation for getting out of the house when it’s just me and the babies. Friday was my first real walk in months, as I had even stopped taking the poor dog around the block by early July. It was tiring, but felt good. I did realize that I needed to finally wear something other than my standard flip-flops, however. They had been my only option for several months as my feet swelled to frightening proportions, but the swelling has finally almost completely gone, so the time had come to wear socks and sneakers for the first time in about four months.

This is when I discovered that one of those many strange things about pregnancy has actually come true. My feet are bigger. I pulled out a pair of sneakers that hadn’t seen use since the weather in Boston broke 55 degrees and I started wearing sandals full-time. I shoved my feet in them, and found my toes noticeably jammed up against the inside of the shoes. I knew that larger feet were possible, but I also couldn’t quite remember if these were the slightly-snug pair of sneakers before I was pregnant.

Oh well, time for a trip to DSW for a new pair of walking shoes, since I was determined to make walks with the babies a regular part of my routine. I used to be a size 8.5 or 9, depending on the brand, so I grabbed a 9.5 to accommodate my new flippers. My toes were smooshed. But this was a brand I didn’t usually wear. Surely, they must run small. Better try some others. Four pair later, and there was no denying it. I was most comfortable in a size 10 shoe. Holy crap.

Even still, I’m not convinced they’re 100% comfortable. I’ve kept the receipt and will try to walk around the house in them. It’s probably just due to the fact that I haven’t worn real shoes in so long. It’s also possible my feet are a little swollen yet, and I just don’t notice because it’s such a dramatic improvement over what they were two weeks ago, so maybe I’m not really a size 10. Wishful thinking.

Comments (1)
Categories : Postpartum
Tags : swollen feet

Birth Story, Part 3: Postpartum

By Goddess in Progress · Comments (4)·   August 12th, 2007

Within one short minute early last Friday morning, I suddenly went from pregnant to not. It would seem like such a monumental change should take place over a longer period of time, but as my husband would say (quoting from an episode of West Wing), pregnancy is a binary state. You either are, or you aren’t. And now, I’m not. Whew.

So, after the c-section, I was groggy but happy for a while. Since I had felt some pain during the surgery, I had been given a little extra dose of happy juice while they put me back together. They also used something called duramorph. Instead of having a morphine pump for pain after the surgery, they injected a long-lasting dose/form of morphine with the spinal. For a solid 24 hours, I can honestly say I felt no pain, and I noticed no negative side effects. For that period of time, they also gave me pitocin to help contract my enormous uterus and IV fluids. I had inflatable cuffs around my calves, not unlike alternating blood pressure cuffs, to keep circulation going and avoid blood clots. It was a little odd at first, but not terribly uncomfortable.

At this point, I hadn’t slept in a good 24 hours. But as there were new babies and it had reached somewhat reasonable hour of the morning, there were phone calls to be made. Excited grandparents were weepy, aunts and uncles (real and honorary) were cheering us on. I was sleepy, but the adrenaline (and frequent checks by the nurses) would keep me up for a while.

The first day saw me confined to bed, but no shortage of visitors. My dad arrived directly from a business meeting several hundred miles away by 2pm. Our only local relatives (my aunt and my sister-in-law) came by as well. I smiled sleepily at them and assured them I was feeling no pain. They got to go with the new daddy to see the babies in the nursery. I was jealous.

By Saturday morning I was unhooked from my various tubes and wires and was able to slowly start moving around. I finally was able to go to the nursery to see the babies for myself. It was really the first time I’d seen Daniel at all. My first thought was how small he looked. I knew he was bigger than Rebecca, so I figured he’d be huge. But no, he was a little six-pound newborn. It’s only after spending time with or holding his sister that he suddenly looks like a linebacker.

Since I knew I wanted to breastfeed the twins, and they were not really in a position to be directly nursing, I was started on the pump. You can’t help but moo the first few times you get your boobs into the suction cups. Though I likely wouldn’t produce much of anything at first, I was instructed to pump for 15 minutes, every three hours, to help my milk come in. Fun times.

Sunday I was able to walk to the nursery on my own and not require a wheelchair or assistance from the nurse. I started going more frequently, realizing I was welcome there, and tried to make it to as many feedings as I could. I learned what it took to “stay on top of the pain.” Motrin and Percoset became good friends. The pain was quite manageable, but my elevated blood pressure and swollen extremities would not abate. I was instructed, yet again, to spend more time on my left side, and keep drinking plenty of water. And here I had been so excited to finally sleep on my back again. Ah well.

In the meantime, we had scrapped our original plans of hubby spending nights with me in the hospital. Since the babies weren’t rooming in, we decided we’d both have a better shot at a good night’s sleep if he went home and took care of the dog and kept his snoring to himself. I’d not only be able to sleep instead of yelling at him to roll over every 10 minutes, but he’d be able to rest up instead of being on an uncomfortable cot, waking up every time the nurses came in. We both liked this plan.

Sunday night, as he got ready to go home, I got my first case of what I refer to as “the weepies.” Hormones combined with a huge emotional life change are a really special cocktail. I assured my husband I was just fine and insisted he get home and get some rest, and then proceeded to cry for 30 minutes. No particular reason. Just the weepies.

By the time Monday came around, I was feeling a lot more human again. I was more comfortably mobile, able to shower and wear something other than the hospital gown and a robe. As much as I missed being home, I was also getting anxious about being discharged. Not that I was concerned for my health, but rather because I wanted to keep being down the hall from the babies. Not across town lines. I was additionally stressed because the pumping was coming to absolutely nothing. Three solid days of dutifully pumping every three hours, and I had nada to show for it. I don’t mean “not much.” I mean nothing. Every time I went in to feed the babies, someone asked if I wanted to put one to breast, or if I had any pumped milk I wanted to feed them. I tried one of them at breast at least once a day, just for the sake of practice, but there was nothing for them to get.

Monday night, the weepies came on with a vengeance. I cried at the thought of leaving the babies at the hospital. I cried out of the guilt of having someone else take care of them, even if it wasn’t a matter of choice. I cried at the feeling of not being able to take care of them myself. I literally woke up three times during the night, bawling. Tuesday morning was no better. I had finally gotten a hold of myself when the nurse came in to take my blood pressure. Unsatisfied with the results, she told me to lay down and rest and she’d recheck me in half an hour. I once again burst into uncontrollable tears. I wanted to get to the nursery to be with my kids, and I had to lie down again for my stupid blood pressure. I was a wreck.

Just before I left for home that afternoon, I finally got my first measurable amount of breastmilk from the pump. I kid you not, it was two milliliters. Total. Both breasts combined. And I brought it right over to the nursery so someone could eat it. The nurses were great, and proudly combined it with formula so the babies could have it. We came back to the hospital a few hours after leaving to feed the babies, but I was running on empty. I couldn’t stop crying, no matter what. The kind SCN nurse insisted that it would be a good idea for me to just go home and rest, and I could come back in the morning.

It was nice to be home, but again, very mixed. After being unsure how “connected” I would feel to them since they were in the nursery all the time, the prospect of being further separated positively broke my heart. I ached from missing them. I couldn’t even look at the polaroid of the three of us from two days earlier without sobbing.

Wednesday and Thursday, however, were improvements. We were at the hospital for four feedings a day, and all the pumping was FINALLY starting to produce something. The first time I got a full ounce, I nearly jumped for joy. It wasn’t enough, but it was finally progress. The babies were doing well, and it looked like they would come home. I was having minimal pain from my incision, and was able to keep it at bay with only ibuprofen, maybe a single percoset at night.

And here I am, the end of day two with babies at home. My in-laws were here the last two days and were more helpful than I worried they’d be. It was good to have the extra set of hands. I still burst into tears with minimal provocation, but it’s getting better. My belly is a big, stretch-marked bowl of jelly and my feet and legs are still determinedly retaining lots of fluid, but I’m trying not to worry about it. The pumping is yielding 1.5-2.5 ounces at a time, which is enough to keep up with their current needs (doctor sent them home alternating breastmilk with high-calorie formula to help gain weight).

I’m pretty tired, and I haven’t got the foggiest idea what I’ll do when my husband goes back to work in a couple of weeks, but I can’t possibly think that far ahead. Tomorrow is our first full day by ourselves, so we’ll see how that goes. I think we’ll make it.

So, that’s the story. This is now, officially, a “mom of twins” blog. Hard to believe, but it’s really true. I have two babies. Yipes!

Comments (4)
Categories : Feeding, Hospital, Postpartum
Tags : blood pressure, Breastfeeding, c-section, emotional, Formula, NICU, pumping

Birth Story, Part 2: Special Care

By Goddess in Progress · Comments (5)·   August 10th, 2007

After being born, Daniel was whisked directly off to the hospital’s Special Care Nursery. It’s technically a “level II” unit, which means they can care for all but the sickest and/or most premature infants. It’s got 16 beds, and is staffed ’round the clock by a neonatologist and 4-6 nurses.

So, there went Daniel, who was grunting quite a bit, indicating he was working somewhat hard to clear his lungs and breathe freely. Rebecca, though smaller, was breathing well and came back to recovery with us. On the way over to my postpartum room, they wheeled me in to see Daniel, though all I could really see were his feet. He was lying in a warming bed attached to monitors and an IV, but they were letting him try to work out his breathing issues on his own. No extra oxygen, no CPAP, just letting him work it out. And by later in the afternoon, he had.

Daniel with IV

Around lunchtime, Rebecca and I were hanging out in my room (as I managed to spill jello on both of us), when my nurse noticed her feet and hands were looking a little too blue. It’s not unusual for newborns to have poor circulation to their extremities, but hers were looking a little too dark. They took her off to the well-baby nursery to get watched, and a little while later they moved her to a warmer in Special Care so that someone would be able to keep a closer eye on her.

Rebecca in warmer

By Saturday morning I was unhooked from my various wires and tubes, and was wheeled over to see the babies. They were in separate warmers, but both looked good. Rebecca was taking some food by mouth and some through a tube in her nose, and Daniel would start doing the same shortly. I was even allowed to hold them for a few minutes. By Sunday morning, Rebecca’s tube was out as she proved to be a voracious eater. We even tried putting her to breast a few times, and for such a teeny thing, she has a pretty decent latch. Daniel would take about half of his feed and get tired. The rest would be pumped down the tube so he could get the calories without having to work too hard.

Sunday evening, Daniel was fussy in his warmer and they decided he didn’t need it anymore. He was off of the IV, as he was able to take his feeds and infection had been ruled out, so antibiotics were stopped. They swaddled him up and put him in an open crib, and he happily settled down. At the next feed, Rebecca joined him in the crib.

DSC_0002

Monday was spent improving on feeds, which were formula since all of my pumping was coming to naught. Tuesday was my discharge day, and a difficult one for me. Rebecca’s bilirubin levels were slightly elevated, so she had to leave the crib for an incubator with lights. Daniel was still not taking his feeds as well as we wanted. And I had to leave the hospital.

By Wednesday, though, things started to turn back around. Rebecca came off the lights and back to the crib, and Daniel pulled out his own feeding tube in protest and started taking his feeds better by mouth. They even had us bring in a carseat so they could do their carseat test that night (must be able to spend 90 min. in the carseat without respiratory or cardiac troubles).

DSC_0004_2

All tests came back good on Thursday, and they started to really seem confident that Friday would be discharge day. We were going to the hospital to do four of their feeds every day, and though the hospital is less than 10 minutes from home, the back and forth was really getting tiring. We learned how to give them a quick sponge bath, and got a lot of safety tips and instructions from the nurse. I didn’t want to get my hopes up too high, in case anything happened overnight, but Friday seemed like it would really be the day.

Indeed, all was well when we went for the 8AM feed this morning. No one had any feeding, breathing, or circulation trouble overnight, weights were good, bilirubin levels were down. We got some brief instruction in Infant CPR, and the nurse told us we could go disconnect them from the monitors and get them dressed to go home, one week exactly since they arrived.

Excuse me?

DSC_0006_2

That’s when we got a little nervous. You mean, there will be no screen we can look at to make sure they’re still breathing? No 24-hour RN keeping a watchful eye over us? Are you sure this is wise?

But we made it. We got them dressed and safely buckled into their carseats and secured into the van. We drove a little more cautiously than usual on the way home, but it didn’t take the 30 minutes we predicted to go the three miles to the house.

There was a small part of me that was even a little sad to leave the SCN. It was tiring to go back and forth, hard to grasp the reality of having babies when someone else is taking care of them and you only visit and do what they say. But the nurses and doctors were nothing short of wonderful. They were not just skilled and efficient, but also caring toward the whole family, happy to help the new parents take on additional tasks when possible. They were very supportive of efforts to breastfeed, and would be the first to call in the Lactation Consultant to come help. They were funny and personable. I’m looking forward to my first of the annual SCN reunions around Labor Day.

But nothing beats sitting at my computer and looking over at my two babies, sleeping snugly in the Pack n Play in our den. This is the best.

Comments (5)
Categories : Feeding, Hospital, Newborns, Postpartum
Tags : Breastfeeding, Formula, NICU, pumping
   

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