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Losing the bookMay 5, 2015

There is a rush in life to be on to the next stage, and this is no more acute than during childhood. Parenting sites bombard new mothers with life stages and goals, it can often seem like your child is miles ahead or lagging sorely behind.

One of the great lessons I’ve been reminded of recently is that sometimes we just need a little push to get to the finish line. Adam developed so much in the time we spent in England because he was pushed into a new environment. With his six month dawning I wanted to move him onto the high chair, but we had a problem, and that comes in the form of being short. His little arms kept getting stuck below the tray and we needed a little push up. Hence an old book was placed beneath his bum-bum, bonus – the old cover actually ended up having more grip than the plastic seat.

Adam has always been a strong baby and he’s been sitting up semi-supported for a LONG time. This week he’s starting to manage more and more time sitting without nosediving, enough to sit unsupported for short bursts. I think a big contributor to this has been getting him in a high chair more often. So we say goodbye to the book, he’s more stable and he’s grown a little, it’s no longer a needed.

As I slid it back onto the bookshelf I felt a sort of sadness, for battered and old as it was it marked both a beginning and an end. It made me stop and wonder how much we’ve placed back onto the bookshelves and forgotten over the years, what nudges, catalysts, and shoves we’ve shrugged off in the rush to get onto the ‘next stage’.

Grub grub – part 1 : breast milkMay 2, 2015

I wish I had known before I began, perhaps I wasn’t listening, or perhaps I really didn’t encounter, for nourishing has probably been my biggest worry over all these months.

It started out perfect, this gooey newborn fed like magic, took nourishment from my body as we marveled at his new face. It was just the once though, after that the battle began. If you are one of the many to have a jaundice baby you’ll know the first thing the hospital does is push formula, ‘flushing it out’ they say. Plus, it’s those micro starter bottles, handed out freely, accompanied by micro teats that require neither an open latch nor suckling. If I had known I would have decanted those bottles from the beginning. ‘Free’, did I mention? They are the most costly way to feed once you leave the confines of the hospital.

There is a lot of guilt placed by the constant push to nurse, the ‘best for baby’ mantra’s. The idea that it’s natural, that your body CAN do it, it’s just YOU failing. I remember sobbing uncontrollably when someone shared a photo of Adam being bottle fed, to know the world knew I’d failed. We got there eventually. For me nipple shields were my saviours, with them I could feed. Perhaps it was the silicon, but we had no trouble switching from bottle to breast and back. Nipple shields did sacrifice my modesty though, under the jumper feeding never was possible.

I wish I had known more, I wish I could go back and tell myself things. That it may take an hour at first and that was normal, comfort my tear stained face when I’d sat for over an hour and a half, known then, for sure, that I’d crossed the line. I could have told myself to buy more maternity clothes as they would get dribbled and sicked upon at every feed. I wish someone had explained baby lead and scheduled feeding and how to balance the two. I really wish someone would have warned me of the boredom – for however beautiful the cuddle is, once the child starts noticing it’s environment there is no accompaniment, no reading, surfing facebook, or even, on occasion, having a conversation. And there goes the guilt again, how could I even form the thought, but I did.

By 20 weeks he was down to bottles for all but his good morning feed. The guilt hit hard then. The nagging thought that I was really giving up. In hindsight it was madness, best for both of us to stop, and we’d given it a good blast… at least that’s what I kept repeating to myself. I’d try again, if God blesses us with another, but oh the things I’d change.

Mummy spaceApril 27, 2015

I think every home should have a nook, a cranny, a chair, a step, or just a time when you get to slide into a bubble of you. I’m one of those people who recharge from having a bit of ‘me’ time.

My mummy space is really just a corridor, it could have just been used for storing bags and hanging coats but I’ve carved an office out of it. I literally built my shelves using plastic bottles filled with water and one of my notice boards is just a sheet of polystyrene, still, it’s a space I adore. It’s the perfect space to work, you are connected to the house but separated from the activity.

But, the space was NOT child friendly. To be truthful the piles behind the plastic draws were a collapsing monster coming to attack me. Plus, beneath the desk, suffice to say that feet could not go there. It needed to be seriously streamlined.

There is some sadness in losing the ad-hoc stuff, the beauty of things you threw together and yet they worked. This is my new office space. It’s much less fun than the open shelves, but when Adam starts moving I’m sure we’ll appreciate it. officeoffice

The bright sunshine is spurring me to make the home into a place we’ll enjoy over the long summer and beyond. It’s all part of my big spring sort-out, this is not nesting as much as laying roots. This is not mission with an end game, this is mission in the smallest acts and the biggest sweeps of life, it’s organic and spectacular in it’s ordinariness. These are the daily watering can moments, and I’ll be thankful for each one, because in this clear space I’ll achieve so much more.