Thursday, July 30, 2009
Tuesday, July 28, 2009
Don't Stop Me Now!
After the party on Sunday my friend and I had a talk about self esteem and how to get it. All very serious.
And then she gave me a lift on her way home. As soon as she turned the key, 'Don't Stop Me Now' came blasting out at high volume, and all of a sudden I was convulsed by the image of her driving around with motivational music blaring from her stereo.
I turned away and started laughing, and she got it immediately.
'It's the radio! The radio, I wasn't listening to it before. You bitch!'
It didn't help, I choked out my little image, lying against the window, helpless with laughter. She started trying to drive, but ended up pulling away onto the wrong side of the the road, and stopping there, weeping. She got it together to get on the right side of the road, but then had to stop there too, imagining men driving round listening to it - 'I'm a Tiger'. 'Raar!'*
Nice, I was still laughing the next day.
* Sadly, I can't find the Alan Partridge clip that illustrates this reference :(
And then she gave me a lift on her way home. As soon as she turned the key, 'Don't Stop Me Now' came blasting out at high volume, and all of a sudden I was convulsed by the image of her driving around with motivational music blaring from her stereo.
I turned away and started laughing, and she got it immediately.
'It's the radio! The radio, I wasn't listening to it before. You bitch!'
It didn't help, I choked out my little image, lying against the window, helpless with laughter. She started trying to drive, but ended up pulling away onto the wrong side of the the road, and stopping there, weeping. She got it together to get on the right side of the road, but then had to stop there too, imagining men driving round listening to it - 'I'm a Tiger'. 'Raar!'*
Nice, I was still laughing the next day.
* Sadly, I can't find the Alan Partridge clip that illustrates this reference :(
Friday, July 24, 2009
2!
My baby Bodhi was was two today. Two years old. It hit me as I closed the door to head for our day trip to the zoo, that I never wrote the birth story I'd intended for today.
You know what? I think I won't. Fuck it.
Here's what happened. My midwife never committed to me properly. She double booked me, twice, and didn't visit til I was 5 months pregnant. She had me more involved with Holles St than with her, due to fears about a court case concerning a still born baby she lost the previous year. I didn't know about that.
The day I was in labour, I talked to her the previous night at 2 am to tell her it was starting. I didn't talk to her the next day, til afternoon, when my contractions had slowed and the hospital had rung to call me in for an induction I hadn't cancelled as I thought I didn't need to worry about it. I rang her and instead of coming to check on me, she dismissively told me to go get scanned, not listening to me about where I was at, or acknowledging what that would mean for me. She dismissed my rational fears, brusquely waved away my tears and panic, and told me that even if I had to have an induction, in hospital, I could still have the birth I wanted.
I planned to take a remedy (too strong, on the advice of my homeopath, who didn't realise I'd a lower dose to hand), get some acupuncture, Axel called her back and she promised to meet us at home directly after that.
At 5.30 she wasn't there. We rang at six, as things were getting heavy and Axel had recognised the signs of transition from Olivia's birth, if I hadn't. He had to fill the pool, I laboured on my own, thinking fuck, if I was in hospital instead of leaning on my mother's chest of drawers, I don't think I could handle this.
She said she was an hour away. An hour?? Fear. Abandonment. Loneliness. Soon we rang back to say, how do we slow this down? She sounded panicked, said she'd be there in 15 mins. Head down, bum up. Huh? So why an hour the first time? And then, I thought, oh, here's where I embarrassingly soil myself. No, fuck, fuck, here's where the baby comes out and I can't hold on any more. Axel is sweating bullets beside me, I'm gasping for him not to be afraid, that people do it all the time, we'll be ok, ring the midwife, let her talk her through it. Instead, in his cold panic, he sees our paramedic neighbour's paramedic son outside his house. Axel asks me if he should get him. Yes. Jesus, yes.
He comes in, asking jocular questions in a loud voice about how many babies there are - I think he's trying to be funny, and tell him it's no time for jokes, just stop me tearing, stop me tearing. In hindsight, I think it was just his first birth, and he was nervous, god help him. He makes Axel go ring the ambulance, despite me saying no, despite the crowning baby. Axel goes downstairs and dithers, torn between fear of me and Stuart's protocol. He misses the birth. Stuart doesn't know about how to manage a crowning baby - Bodhi's head is almost out when he finally follows my pleas to just pull my skirt up. Bodhi's head whooshes out, and Stuart says, 'just one more push!' And when I tell him I'm trying not to push ( so I don't tear, so I can breathe the baby gently out on his own terms) he asks, bemused, 'Really?' And then after the next contraction, he pulls him up and out of me. No soft, guided delivery onto my stomach for Bodhi. His feet pulling away from my stresses, not ready flesh hurt.
Five minutes later, the midwife wanders in, bitches at Stuart, faffs about cutting the chord, hides her surprise at the fact Bodhi's here. Sees my tens machine discarded on the chest of drawers and says 'aw, you never got to use it'. I'd had it on since the night before.
And then.
The ambulance pulls up with a screech, lovely Peter, Stuart's father bursts from it, and runs in slow motion for the house, all hero, bless him. He arrives into my bedroom, where I sit, naked, holding Bodhi to my breast, placenta still in me, wracked with third stage contractions as bad as the labour. He looks everywhere but into my eyes and is bursting with pride for his son. Behind him are two other paramedics and Stuart's wife, shining eyed, who just wants to see a newborn. I ask for some privacy, a pause, half an hour, once, twice, and I'm ignored. I ask again, 'Please, Peter, just give me half an hour, please, please.'
He gestures to his daughter in law and says, 'It's ok, she's a doctor' and I say that I don't care what she is, I just need some time. And my midwife looks down at me and says, 'Jo! You can't talk like that. He's just being concerned.
No guardian of a sacred birth space her. No candles, and dim light, and soothing warm water. No arms around me. And a day later, a gratuitous three night stay in Crumlin hospital, after Bodhi's had cyanotic fits, with my midwife visiting and relentlessly blaming the remedy, trying to manipulate me - 'If that had been a first baby, it would have been a dead baby!' and insisting we ask to bring home an apnoea monitor in case he stops breathing in his sleep, despite the fact that that was never an issue.
Oh. Well. There it is after all. My last birth.
But I think I'll let go of this one now, or at least push it away. In the circumstances I did the best that I could'.
And I'd rather think about the adrenaline that came with the fast, easy, painless birth - no stretching, burning pushing, just whoosh, pop! It was a rush. Bodhi's fuzzy black hair, and calm eyes so deep blue they looked black too. The soft silk down on his ears and shoulders.His funny funny pixie chin. His long, long body and sweet temperament. How he looked floating in the pool when Olivia, he and I got in together. The one moment of rightness and how-it-was-meant-to-be.
He looked exactly like this

And now, his humour, his cuteness, his new words and expressions, his strong, broad chest and his tender, firm hugs. The way he frowns, practicing it. The way he dances in Eddie Rockets, perfect rhythm. My sweet boy.
You know what? I think I won't. Fuck it.
Here's what happened. My midwife never committed to me properly. She double booked me, twice, and didn't visit til I was 5 months pregnant. She had me more involved with Holles St than with her, due to fears about a court case concerning a still born baby she lost the previous year. I didn't know about that.
The day I was in labour, I talked to her the previous night at 2 am to tell her it was starting. I didn't talk to her the next day, til afternoon, when my contractions had slowed and the hospital had rung to call me in for an induction I hadn't cancelled as I thought I didn't need to worry about it. I rang her and instead of coming to check on me, she dismissively told me to go get scanned, not listening to me about where I was at, or acknowledging what that would mean for me. She dismissed my rational fears, brusquely waved away my tears and panic, and told me that even if I had to have an induction, in hospital, I could still have the birth I wanted.
I planned to take a remedy (too strong, on the advice of my homeopath, who didn't realise I'd a lower dose to hand), get some acupuncture, Axel called her back and she promised to meet us at home directly after that.
At 5.30 she wasn't there. We rang at six, as things were getting heavy and Axel had recognised the signs of transition from Olivia's birth, if I hadn't. He had to fill the pool, I laboured on my own, thinking fuck, if I was in hospital instead of leaning on my mother's chest of drawers, I don't think I could handle this.
She said she was an hour away. An hour?? Fear. Abandonment. Loneliness. Soon we rang back to say, how do we slow this down? She sounded panicked, said she'd be there in 15 mins. Head down, bum up. Huh? So why an hour the first time? And then, I thought, oh, here's where I embarrassingly soil myself. No, fuck, fuck, here's where the baby comes out and I can't hold on any more. Axel is sweating bullets beside me, I'm gasping for him not to be afraid, that people do it all the time, we'll be ok, ring the midwife, let her talk her through it. Instead, in his cold panic, he sees our paramedic neighbour's paramedic son outside his house. Axel asks me if he should get him. Yes. Jesus, yes.
He comes in, asking jocular questions in a loud voice about how many babies there are - I think he's trying to be funny, and tell him it's no time for jokes, just stop me tearing, stop me tearing. In hindsight, I think it was just his first birth, and he was nervous, god help him. He makes Axel go ring the ambulance, despite me saying no, despite the crowning baby. Axel goes downstairs and dithers, torn between fear of me and Stuart's protocol. He misses the birth. Stuart doesn't know about how to manage a crowning baby - Bodhi's head is almost out when he finally follows my pleas to just pull my skirt up. Bodhi's head whooshes out, and Stuart says, 'just one more push!' And when I tell him I'm trying not to push ( so I don't tear, so I can breathe the baby gently out on his own terms) he asks, bemused, 'Really?' And then after the next contraction, he pulls him up and out of me. No soft, guided delivery onto my stomach for Bodhi. His feet pulling away from my stresses, not ready flesh hurt.
Five minutes later, the midwife wanders in, bitches at Stuart, faffs about cutting the chord, hides her surprise at the fact Bodhi's here. Sees my tens machine discarded on the chest of drawers and says 'aw, you never got to use it'. I'd had it on since the night before.
And then.
The ambulance pulls up with a screech, lovely Peter, Stuart's father bursts from it, and runs in slow motion for the house, all hero, bless him. He arrives into my bedroom, where I sit, naked, holding Bodhi to my breast, placenta still in me, wracked with third stage contractions as bad as the labour. He looks everywhere but into my eyes and is bursting with pride for his son. Behind him are two other paramedics and Stuart's wife, shining eyed, who just wants to see a newborn. I ask for some privacy, a pause, half an hour, once, twice, and I'm ignored. I ask again, 'Please, Peter, just give me half an hour, please, please.'
He gestures to his daughter in law and says, 'It's ok, she's a doctor' and I say that I don't care what she is, I just need some time. And my midwife looks down at me and says, 'Jo! You can't talk like that. He's just being concerned.
No guardian of a sacred birth space her. No candles, and dim light, and soothing warm water. No arms around me. And a day later, a gratuitous three night stay in Crumlin hospital, after Bodhi's had cyanotic fits, with my midwife visiting and relentlessly blaming the remedy, trying to manipulate me - 'If that had been a first baby, it would have been a dead baby!' and insisting we ask to bring home an apnoea monitor in case he stops breathing in his sleep, despite the fact that that was never an issue.
Oh. Well. There it is after all. My last birth.
But I think I'll let go of this one now, or at least push it away. In the circumstances I did the best that I could'.
And I'd rather think about the adrenaline that came with the fast, easy, painless birth - no stretching, burning pushing, just whoosh, pop! It was a rush. Bodhi's fuzzy black hair, and calm eyes so deep blue they looked black too. The soft silk down on his ears and shoulders.His funny funny pixie chin. His long, long body and sweet temperament. How he looked floating in the pool when Olivia, he and I got in together. The one moment of rightness and how-it-was-meant-to-be.
He looked exactly like this

And now, his humour, his cuteness, his new words and expressions, his strong, broad chest and his tender, firm hugs. The way he frowns, practicing it. The way he dances in Eddie Rockets, perfect rhythm. My sweet boy.
Tuesday, July 14, 2009
each peach pear plum

I bite into the plum, hoping for juice, taste, bursts of flavour. It's soft, but pulpy and tastes vaguely of the suggestion of plum, in a watery halfhearted way. I sigh, and bin it.
I get hit with longing to be somewhere where I can reach up above me into the warm air, and pluck a piece of ripe fruit from the tree. Something decadent, a pear, a nectarine, a plum even, warmed by the sun and yielding so its skin slides beneath my teeth and there's no way to eat it without getting sticky and losing my dignity a tiny bit.
Not Tesco fruit, hard and flavourless and forced, that's turned to mush before it ever really ripens.
Perfectly ripe fruit that tastes of sweetness and sun, completely of the unadulterated essence of itself.
Wednesday, July 8, 2009
whinge
Ce n'est pas un post.
I'm fighting the urge to write about recycling, but I feel I may succumb, sooner rather than later.
I need to separate my children wa glass screen wherever they go, such is the hitting (Bodhi) and shouting (Olivia).
I am in sore need of activities. Anyone?
I'm fighting the urge to write about recycling, but I feel I may succumb, sooner rather than later.
I need to separate my children wa glass screen wherever they go, such is the hitting (Bodhi) and shouting (Olivia).
I am in sore need of activities. Anyone?
Sunday, July 5, 2009
hiding

I plan in my head to do things. Clean, go visit my granny. Then I find excuses not to. I thought it was Saturday - I'd got Axel awake for a few minutes with the kids before work, was going to bring them to their granny and borrow her hoover. Call my granny and plan to visit her tomorrow. But then he told me it was sunday already. Ah. And it turns out my granny is going visiting today anyway.
So relief washes over me, I don't have to go anywhere. I'll go another day. I'm a hermit. A lonely hermit sometimes, but one who likes to stay in her jammies.
Thursday, July 2, 2009
flattered and slighlty guilty

The sweet mammydiaries just passed this little award on to me, just as I was sitting there feeling a bit guilty for not posting and having nothing inspired to say.
Soon, soon, no doubt.
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