Green suede shoes

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As kids, the best Christmas was when Santa brought us Nintendo with Power Pad Olympics, which involved sprinting in place and leaping over on-screen hurdles. This meant my older sister would compete against various animals while I refreshed her water glass and acted as cheering squad until she finally beat Cheetah, bringing much honor to our household.

One year my dad insisted that Santa would like a peanut butter and jelly sandwich and I thought this a childish taste for a man capable of flying around the world in a single night. But I prepared the meal anyway, using the slices from the middle of the loaf and carefully setting out the finished product in the middle of the coffee table where he couldn’t miss it.

I believe I was about five years old when my aunt said to me one Christmas, “Would you like it if Snowball carried you around like that?” She was referring to the way I was holding our toy poodle on my hip like a purse. I was speechless and ashamed—it had not occurred to me that perhaps the dog, who I considered my best friend at the time, did not enjoy the position. This was a very good Christmas lesson.

No matter what, every Christmas I could count on one thing—our great Uncle Dick arriving with neon green suede shoes, proudly carrying a bag of apple pie slices from Burger King. When it was Present Time, he grinned, large warts poking out around his eyes and nose, and handed out wallets to all of the kids. Each wallet contained a five dollar bill and was purchased at what Uncle Dick always referred to as his “special store.” I liked how the “special store” never failed to give my new wallet a soft, worn in feel and a slight cigarette smell.

This Christmas Uncle Dick is in his nineties and us kids have grown and scattered, some with kids of our own. It’s funny how time passes and the holidays seem to make me more aware of this. Maybe that’s why the month of December sometimes makes my skin itch and feel like the rain is never going to end. But it does. And Johnny makes me laugh with a new dance wiggle and Dave kisses me.

Me and Johnny with his new Christmas toy—thanks papa mike!

Me and Johnny with his new Christmas toy—thanks papa mike!

For the Mayans

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I get stressed about the holidays over stupid stuff like the fact that most of the gifts I ordered online still haven’t arrived and maybe never will. “I wanted to call and tell you I love you in case the world ends tomorrow,” my sister said in a voice mail, referring to the Mayan prediction that cataclysmic or transformative events would occur on December 21st, 2012. It was a chilling message but very sweet and helped recenter me in a way, reminding me of what was really important about the holidays or the end of the world for that matter—saying I love you.

Johnny recently started grabbing onto me while saying “mamamama.” I get all choked up about it even though he says the same sound while reaching for our cat. I’m convinced he knows the difference. I got the same feeling the other day when we were on the playground swing together, his little head resting on my chest. It was the warmth and stillness that made it so amazing. The moment reminded me of how beautiful it all was and fleeting—our time together like this, his childhood. At ten months, he’s already almost too busy for his mama with cupboards to open, green beans to throw, lamps to wobble, computer cords to chase, books to rip apart, leaves to eat, and remote controls to chew on.  So I savor these moments. In case it is the end of the world or just the holidays making it feel like that.

So thank you for the message, Michelle. I love you too.

Here’s my sister and I as little ones. I love how serious I look and how she’s winking like “yeah we got this.”

Here’s my sister and I as little ones. I love how serious I look and how she’s winking like “yeah we got this.”

Leaf by leaf

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Johnny at the park

I recently took this picture of Johnny at the park where he has graduated from laying in my lap to sitting in my lap to standing in my lap to standing on the jungle gym to scooting through tunnels, crawling up steps, crawling down steps, and occasionally sliding on his belly down the slide. He also enjoys sitting in the grass and studying fallen leaves and when I say study I mean eat. I try to stop him from jamming all sorts of park debris in his mouth but boy is he sneaky and quick. There’s something about the crackle of the leaves in particular that get him going like me with Lays Potato Chips Barbeque Flavor. I just wish he was that determined and coordinated when it came to his actual food, our kitchen floor would be a whole lot cleaner.

The other day Johnny discovered the laundry room in our apartment complex which is next to one of our playgrounds. One minute he was playing in the sand and the next he was on a crawl sprint towards the laundry room like he forgot he had a load waiting in there. I followed, curious to see what he found so curious. He stopped for a moment in the doorway and then set out like he was the maintenance man, checking on various parts of the room such as the floor drain and the vending machine. Then he parked his little butt right in front of a washer so he could have prime seating on the spinning, bubbly action. After a few minutes a woman came in to switch her laundry and he stared at her with a look on his face like he was watching her conduct brain surgery. Apparently this was all very exciting and I felt a mixture of pride and embarrassment to be seen with such a laundry-enthusiast/looky-loo.

But mostly I was proud. And that’s why I love this picture so much.  It reminds me of how much Johnny loves to explore the world and how much I love that about him.

Because nursing shouldn’t suck

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Apparently babies at Johnny’s age may smile when they pass gas but don’t experience “social smiles” until around week 8. So maybe it was a flatulent that caused the little guy to grace me with a grin just when I needed it the most. I thank the tummy gods for that.

Our first day at home with Johnny, which happened to be on Valentine’s Day, was a dream come true. Dave and I lay in bed with the little monkey between us, unable to take our eyes off of him. We lay as if in a trance—unaware of time or space—the only thing that existed was this unbelievable cocoon of life that had just entered our world. We spent hours tracing the folds of his magical skin, laughing each time he puffed out his tiny pink lips.

We remained in this state until I descended back to earth with the unfortunate reality that nursing was not going well. Each time the little munchkin latched on and settled in for a meal—every two to three hours—I was experiencing an increasing amount of pain. By day two, as I brought the little nugget to my chest, I looked into his gaping mouth and broke down into tears.

That’s when I decided to call Kitty Maxwell. Kitty, who we learned about from our midwives, is a lactation specialist who teaches classes at the YMCA and works on a volunteer basis to help women in the community with breast feeding. We called her on a Wednesday morning and within fifteen minutes she was at our doorstep with a kind introduction and a lifetime of knowledge.

“Tongue tied,” she said after two minutes of examining the little guy. She explained that his tongue was attached too close to the bottom of his mouth, which made sucking difficult for him and extremely painful for me. Later in life this could also lead to speech problems. “It’s fairly common,” she said. “Just take him to the doctor and he will take care of it. An extremely easy procedure.”

The next day, we took Johnny to the doctor who confirmed what Kitty had said. I held my breath as he clipped a little section underneath Johnny’s tongue. The little guy barely even flinched, perhaps knowing where this was going—a more comfortable mama and bigger mouthfuls of milk.

Since then, feeding time hasn’t been perfect, but things are definitely better. Kitty, who saved our lives that day, continues to check up on us. Thanks to her, we are now getting into the swing of things, and when the little guy comes at me with his guppy mouth, I am no longer afraid.

And the smile? It happened just minutes before we called Kitty, after an especially unsuccessful attempt at nursing. I was feeling like a failure, and so I lay down next to my baby and cried. With wet eyes, I stared into Johnny’s peaceful little face, which was looking right at me. And then he smiled. “It’s going to be alright, mama,” he seemed to say with that gassy little grin. And suddenly I knew he was right.

Bring it: giving birth to Johnny Michael Heeren

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“I think it’s finally happening!” I said to my husband, Dave, on a Thursday night, five days past my due date. I sat up in bed experiencing mild contractions about every ten minutes.

“Can I get you some water? What do you need? Some warm socks?” Dave asked as he buzzed around the bedroom looking for the acupressure manual that was suppose to help with contractions. As I clenched the side of the bed and took in a sudden deep breath, he lunged at my right ankle with a soft thumb—with an eye on page number five—determined to be of help.

“Beep! Beep! Beep!” went the kitchen timer which we were using to monitor the contractions. We had heard about false labor and wanted to be sure that this was the real thing before driving to the Santa Barbara Birth Center, where we planned for it all to go down. This meant waiting to see if the contractions were regular, occurring several minutes apart for at least an hour.

Half an hour went by and the contractions continued so we decided to call it good. Dave helped me down the stairs and I found a comfortable spot on the floor with my head slumped against the sofa while he packed up the car. As the minutes crept by, panic began to rise in my chest. It had been too long since my last contraction. When Dave walked back inside the house he knew something was wrong. The contractions had suddenly stopped.

“It’s okay babe,” he said, kissing the top of my head, “a practice run.”

*

By Monday at 3am, I had been in false labor for two days. This meant I had spent the past forty-eight hours experiencing contractions that rumbled through my body every ten to fifteen minutes. For unknown reasons, I was not advancing into active labor (meaning the contractions were not increasing in duration or frequency). I had tried everything to get things going—went on long walks around the around the neighborhood, did some prenatal yoga, listened to music, and attempted to rest. I had done everything except sleep, which I found impossible because the contractions were still coming at a steady rate, always shocking my body with a long dull ache just as I was able to drift away.

During this period of false labor, Dave and I had had two more “practice runs.” The first occurred after we sat eating nachos and watching a Clippers game on TV. The second one happened after dinner at the Elephant Bar with my dad and step-mom. I had insisted we all go out to distract myself from the pain so I sat determined to finish my grilled salmon, while breathing deep and clenching the side of the booth every fifteen minutes. I wanted this baby out and could care less about the curious looks I was getting from our waitress and the tables around us. Towards the end of dinner, the contractions suddenly picked up and Dave and I got up a hurry. As we rushed out the door we thought, finally this is it! Unfortunately, in both cases, just as we were about to call the midwives, the contractions mysteriously slowed back down.

Now we were actually in the car driving over to the Birth Center! As we sped down the 101, I was relieved to feel the pain of each contraction—it was finally time! When we got to there, Nikole, one of our midwives helped me out of the car. She led us into our room where we found a king size bed and a birth tub for three. With the heater pumping and the LED candles softly sparkling, I felt like I had just arrived home. I looked at Dave and smiled.

Three hours later, my smile had faded, along with my contractions. Nikole checked my certvix and sure enough, I was only four centimeters dilated, the same as when we had arrived. Nikole sat down on the bed and said, “Nikki,” in a gentle voice, “there is something stopping you from having this baby. Tell me what you are afraid of.”

I burst into tears and felt my body relax as I released a small river onto my pillow. I told her I was scared because I wanted to have the baby here and not at the hospital. But what if the contractions never picked up? Would I have to be induced? On top of that, I felt haunted by a traumatic birth story I had unfortunately heard about with vivid details of horrible things going wrong.

“That is not your birth story,” Nikole said. “This is your birth story. There is a difference.” She had me repeat this out loud and I began to feel better. “What else are you afraid of?” She asked.

“The pain,” I said. That’s when she told me that I must dig deep inside myself and find a place where I could bring in the pain instead of fight it. Up until that moment, every time a contraction hit, I could not wait until it was over. I worked hard to distract myself with counting and mind games and asked Dave to massage my back right when the pain hit. As Nikole’s words sank in, I realized my approach needed to change.

“Have a conversation with your baby,” Nikole said. “Tell him not to worry about you because you can do this.” She left the room and Dave lay next to me in quiet support. I reached inward and the words began to tumble out.

Suddenly, the energy of the earth, the sun, the moon, and the stars awakened a side of me I had never met before—and my mantra began.

*

“I’m ready!” I growled, feeling a contraction coming on. “I’m strong…I’m brave…give it to me!” As the pain escalated I continued in a loud deep voice, “I want it…I want it deeper…I want it harder…I want to feel it…the sensation of my baby…the sensation of my baby’s life…taking over my body! I welcome it…I want it to stay longer…I invite it back!” With these words finally uncovered and shooting out from deep within me, I was not afraid anymore.

The next time Nikole checked my cervix, we were finally making progress. However, by 8am my water still had not broken. Nikole gave Dave a bottle of water and instructed him to take me out on a walk around the neighborhood. “Get her going as fast as she can walk,” she told him, “And don’t come back for an hour.”

Although I was running on zero sleep, I felt energized by my awakening and the scrambled eggs and toast I had just wolfed downed. “I can do this,” I said as we started down the small driveway towards the street. We walked fast, stopping every ten minutes as a contraction hit, ignoring curious eyes picking up the morning paper and minivans leaving for work. During each contraction, I clutched Dave like we were at a middle school dance and said my mantra into his neck as the power of my baby’s life shot through my body. “I welcome it…I want it…the power of life…taking control of my body…”

After an hour, we rounded the corner and I felt a wave of relief upon seeing the Birth Center. We did it, I smiled. Suddenly, my bladder felt extremely full and as soon as I got to the bathroom my water broke.

*

It was 3:00pm and I had been in active labor for nine hours, continuing my mantra with every contraction. Nikole, Alyssa (a birth assistant) and Alice (a second midwife who had arrived) were taking good care of me and my baby. They were continuously monitoring our heart beats and pulse and making me drink lots of water while instructing me into different positions to keep things going—in hands and knees, squats, lunges against the tub, and lying in side position to rest. In between contractions I kept telling myself, “I’ve trained for this moment—every day, every walk, every prenatal yoga class!”

When Dave decided to take a quick shower, Nikole told me to jump on in. “Give him a few kisses in there,” Nikole smiled, “it will get your hormones going.” I was exhausted but determined so I followed him in there. Dave grinned and we stood underneath the hot water kissing in between my contractions.

Soon after our shower, the midwives checked my cervix. “She’s almost completely dilated,” I heard them say, “but the baby needs to turn.” In calm voices they explained to me that we needed to get the baby to tuck in his chin and shift his body so that his back was in line with the top of my stomach. Right now he was in more of a side position and this was the only thing stopping him from coming out. I couldn’t believe it—we were so close yet still so far! “I can do this…we can do this…Bring it!” I said, diving straight into my mantra.

The midwives called an acupuncturist and meanwhile worked their magic. First they had me stand up with my back leaning against Dave while I held onto a pair of ropes dangling from the ceiling. Nikole took a long piece of long fabric and placed it behind my back. On the count of three, she shimmied it against the left side of my body where the baby needed to move from. After several minutes of this, they had me go into the tub. They instructed me onto hands and knees with my tummy in the water and an ice pack on my back, with the idea was that the baby would migrate away from the cold and towards the warmth.

Holding myself up on hands and knees took all of my energy so I asked Dave to say my mantra. He had heard it for the past nine hours so he had it down. “You welcome it…the sensation of our baby’s life…you invite it to stay,” he said as the midwives brought me water and wiped my forehead with a cool cloth.

The contractions intensified into lightning bolts and with steam rising up from the bathtub, I suddenly felt like I was in an alternate reality. It was as if I was watching the scene in slow motion from somewhere else. During the next contraction, a wild sensation of needing to push shot threw my body. I told the midwives and they helped me out of the tub and over to the bed.

Alice checked the baby and said, “He’s turned!” Everyone cheered and a wave of relief washed over me. “Watch Nikole,” Alice said, “and she will instruct you on how to push.”

*

I gave it everything I could—all of the intensity that had built up after three and a half days of labor, nine months of anticipation, and a lifetime of dreaming about becoming a mama. Each push was pain but it was also ecstasy.

I heard a squeal and the midwives reached out my hand so I could feel my baby’s head. Dave jumped back and forth between me and the emerging baby while laughing and crying. I will never forget the look on his face during this moment—shining with all of the love and joy and excitement of the universe.

After a few more pushes, the midwives plopped a squirming, wet, squealing baby onto my chest.  I had never felt so strong, proud, at peace and in love as we lay there—chest to chest, heart to heart, his skin melting into mine.

Johnny Michael Heeren, 8 lbs 21 inches, born February 13th, 2012 at the Santa Barbara Birth Center.

My first day of false labor, at home in bed with my yoga ball.

Getting into my groove at the Birth Center.

Working it in active labor.

In between pushes, thinking about my baby’s life shooting through my body.

A mama and baby are born!

Daddy and Johnny falling in love!

The little trickster! Johnny's unique way of entering the world has already taught me so much. I look forward to conquering our next challenge together.

Ladies and gentlemen, the final rose!

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I’m officially full-term, meaning the baby could arrive safely any day now! This means I’ve got my suitcase packed for the birth center and a playlist ready with songs like I will survive by Gloria Gaynor and Wide Open Spaces by the Dixie Chicks. It also means that it’s nearly impossible to think about anything else, even during Bachelor night, my favorite night of the week.

For several seasons now, we’ve been gathering with friends to bask in the drama of these epic journeys of love. Because we’re such a sensitive crowd, we’ve turned each episode into a drinking game—take a sip of beer (or tea in my case) each time a contestant says our agreed upon phrases like “open my heart” and “here for the right reasons.” It’s all we can do to stop from tearing up as one lingerie model after another describes her failed attempts at love.

This week I was having an especially hard time focusing, even during the group date where the women were asked to act out various animals in front of a group of fourth graders. As I sat trying to concentrate, Tofurkey was clearly enjoying himself, showing off for the “V.I.P Cocktail Waitress” with his best karate kicks.  I pictured his legs flailing away while his little head remained steady, tucked deep down in perfect position according to our midwives. He hadn’t “dropped” yet but he was certainly getting ready.

By the end of the episode my imagination was running wild. We had had our first birth class the weekend before where we learned things like the hands-and-knees-position is helpful for back pain and that shit happens (literally for most women in labor). After class, the midwives had sent us home feeling more confident and with new knowledge of things like “elevator Keigels” and “mucus plug.”

The idea that I would be giving birth soon was so electrifying that tonight, even as I watched the Bachelor, I couldn’t get my mind off of it. So during the rose ceremony, as Ben the Bachelor stepped forward, I felt a special rush of excitement. Then my head started spinning with so much anticipation, I nearly lost it and blurted out, “My water just broke!”

But it hadn’t and probably wouldn’t for several more weeks. So I contained myself. And instead of sending out a false alarm, I cheered for Ben—a little louder than usual—and wondered What if it started right now, during this ultimate moment of love and suspense? It would certainly be an episode of the Bachelor that I would never, ever forget!

Me at 37 weeks excited for Bachelor night…and my baby!

Ring it in!

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At almost nine months pregnant, it was a strange New Year’s Eve. The monumental changing of the date has never actually been my favorite holiday, except when I was a ten-year-old and overjoyed to celebrate with a slumber party, Martinelli’s, and a viewing of the ball drop on TV. Then as I got older I began to worry about things like who I was going to kiss at midnight and the vodka to orange juice ratio of my next drink.

Obviously I had different concerns this year. Don’t get me wrong, I could not be more thrilled than to be ringing in the New Year with Tofurkey on the way. In fact, lately I have been experiencing a type of euphoria I’ve never known before. It’s a delightful feeling that makes me smile like a loon all of the time—whether while I’m doing dishes or putting my socks on. It makes me want to kiss Dave, root for the Clippers, and listen to him explain why Carl Pelini is no longer the defensive coordinator for the Nebraska Cornhuskers. It makes my eyes mist over at the sight of Tofurkey’s new toy shelf, with its cheerful monkey and frog faces winking in my direction.

But something about New Year’s Eve threw me off. I’m not sure what it was. I was excited to be spending the night in pajamas and on the couch, just the two and a half of us (lately this has been my ideal activity). But as the evening wore on I felt grumpy and tired—tired of my heavy body, tired of being home, and tired of waiting. As I fixed my fourth cup of tea, tears began to slide down my cheeks. Dave asked what was wrong and I didn’t know. So we went upstairs to lay down and I fell asleep, ready for the night to be over.

The good news is that the next morning I was up before eight and my loony grin was back. It didn’t matter that the year had changed—all was still the same—I sat eating my scrambled egg and Tofurkey hiccupped. I felt my joy grow with every little bounce he made inside my body. I reminded myself that today we were one day closer to meeting! And the sun was out, which meant it would be a good day for a walk. I looked over at our twinkling toy shelf and knew that, even with the occasional tears in my tea, it was going to be a great year.

35 weeks pregnant, posing with Tofurkey and his new toy shelf!