Looking back at 2011

Photo by Sascha Grant (Flickr Creative Commons)

Like last year, I’ve decided to round up the past year, month by month, and see how 2011 went.

- In January, I decided to get my blogging mojo back by taking part in WordPress’s Post A Week 2011 challenge. Hmmm, it didn’t really go so well for me: by early April I had already skipped a week and then I was silent for the first two weeks in July, and the less about early September the better… One of my favourite posts that month was What’s your style, where I discussed the various different parenting books available.

- The following month, I admitted to being a grammar snob, documented some of Baby O’s teething troubles and embarked on a photography course online.

- Then on to March, in which I changed the design of my blog, tried to discover a strategy to stop Baby O’s new biting habit and got pushy and snagged a place for Baby O at preschool.

- In April, I got very excited about Apple products and POP clothes, and wondered whether Baby O would be walking properly before his first birthday.

- Baby O transitioned into Little O as he turned one in May, started walking and began to say some sounds that could be recognised as words, he learned to stop biting all and sundry and wanted to start feeding himself.

June was a busy month for us – Little O starting at preschool, learning to communicate more and more, me (secretly) going through the early stages of pregnancy, us spending a long weekend in Budapest, during which Little O had his worst illness yet – but a quiet one on the blog…

- In July, I had an evening of celeb spotting (two in one night!) and updated my blog post on what do to in Stockholm with a little one.

- In the following month, I revealed that I was pregnant, wrote up Little O’s birth story and had a bit of a rant.

- During September, I reached the halfway point in my pregnancy, shared our progress in the Relationship SOS challenge and laughed at some spam.

- The next month, we bought a new stroller and a potty for Little O to test out and I discovered Polyvore.

- In November, I started to feel a little down, with too many things getting on top of me, but then the Gallery challenge for 11.11.11 lifted my spirits, and I finished the month with some pearls of wisdom that I had learnt!

- And in the final month of the year, I got a bit concerned about Klout, realised it was time for Little O to have a haircut and, of course, celebrated Christmas.

So, there we go; that was 2011. And now let’s see what 2012 holds in store.

The Gallery – birth

Tara’s gallery prompt for this week has made me realise that I have not told my birth story on here. (I’m sorry to take the predictable route with the prompt, but I’m pregnant now; I need to conserve all the brain cells that I have!) Unfortunately, the pictures taken of us with Little O in the first minutes after he was born are terrible quality as the light in the room was low, we only had a little point-and-shoot with us (for reasons that will become clear as you read on) and as I had forgotten to switch the flash on.

Here he is at six hours old though:

Photo © English Mamma

The due date that I had been given was 2 May and even though I knew that the chances of our baby being born on or within a few days of the due date were slim, I still felt a little disheartened when that day came and went. The days dragged on and then it got to 6 May and what I hoped would be my last midwife appointment. She booked an appointment for Friday 14 May at which we would make the arrangements for me to be induced on the following Monday, something that I really, really did not want to happen.

The very next day – constant lower back pain, spasms down my back, shooting pains down my inner thighs, bags of energy and the appetite of a horse. It had to be the start of the something. But the next day, Saturday 8 May, I woke to nothing. All these symptoms had fled and I felt back to normal again (or as normal as you can feel at 41 weeks’ pregnant…).

Then on the Sunday, I woke with a feeling like my waters had broken but only ever so slightly. I had heard all the info at Lamaze class that women rarely have the typical “Hollywood style birth” of dramatic breaking of the waters, rushing into the hospital and the baby being born after a couple of pushes and a little bit of screaming and swearing (for good measure). However, something felt different, odd, not quite right. I called my hospital of choice and spoke to a midwife who said I should come in at 3pm if I still felt as if my waters had broken. I spent the day climbing a ski slope (yes, really – there’s a ski slope a ten-minute bus ride from the city and it’s all grassy and lovely in the summer months) in an attempt to encourage this baby out. At 3pm, I called again and they suggested that I head on in. So, I spent much of the evening being monitored and they were able to tell me that, no, my waters hadn’t broken but that I was having mild contractions and that the baby was likely to be born within the next few days. Hooray!

So, off I went home again. And woke the next day to nothing again – no feelings of muscle spasms in my belly, very little back pain and a feeling that nothing was happening at all. I have to admit that at this point, I dragged the duvet from the bed and curled up underneath it on the sofa in a sulk. And I stayed there for the day, watching DVDs and television and generally feeling very sorry for myself.

When Husband come home from work that evening, he decided it was time for Operation Cheer English Mamma Up. He suggested that we opened a mini bottle of champagne that we’d received as part of a set for our engagement, saying that we should celebrate what was likely to be our last night as just too. Given my mood, I was pretty unconvinced but decided what the hell. I took just one sip of that champagne and immediately had such a strange feeling inside. I ran to bathroom and just made it in time – my waters broke. And this time it was clear that my waters had broken in true “Hollywood style”! This was around 7.30pm.

We jumped in a taxi after grabbing the essentials – handbag for me, wallet, mobile and keys for Husband – and headed to the hospital. As we got nearer the hospital I felt the contractions starting – unpleasant enough to make me grip the door handle but nothing too bad. Once at the hospital, the midwife and nurse took a look at me, stuck a heart monitor on my belly and then went off for 15 minutes while it monitored baby’s heart rate and my contractions. They were still reasonably low level. When they came back, the midwife suggested that we head back home as nothing looked likely to happen for a good few hours. She and the nurse unhooked me from the monitors and went off to find me some painkillers to take at home. A few minutes after they had gone, I knew I was going to be sick. I ran to the bathroom and vomited. And the moment that I stood back up, BAM – a major contraction, and nothing like those I had been feeling before. They came back in the room and I told them that I didn’t think I could go home. It was around 9pm by that time.

They suggested that I go into the shower and see how I felt. I have to say that it did nothing for me. I was wobbling around on a birth ball with a large sanitary pad on the top while Husband stood behind me and blasted my lower back with water as hot as we could get it. I don’t really have much idea how long I was in there but I know that the contractions were coming thick and fast with less than a minute between, which didn’t give me much time to adjust before the next one started. Just reading back through the notes from the hospital, I can see that they officially admitted me at 10pm but even at that point they have written “Waiting to see what happens.”

They decided that I should come out of the shower and I remember being very emotional and dramatic and asking for pain relief. The next three or four contractions were long and drawn out but I used gas and air for as long as I was able. And after that fourth one with the gas, the midwife patted me on the arm and said: “You’re 10cm dilated.” It was 11.30pm by this time. I was not going home that night!

We spent the next hour or so in a variety of different positions, trying to find what would work best and work with my pushing. We tried on the edge of the bed, on a the birthing stool, leaning forward over the bed, on the bed leaning forward over the headrest and finally, squatting on the bed and gripping onto the shoulders of the nurse on one side and Husband on the other. I don’t remember doing my Lamaze breathing but Husband told me afterwards that I was. I guess all the practice paid off and I went into auto-pilot with my breathing.

At about 12.45am, the midwife told me that we were nearly there – a few more pushes and we’d have a baby. I got a little carried away at this point and tried to push when I did not have a contraction but a few stern words from the midwife about what that could do and I soon stopped. Two more pushes – burning, burning, burning sensation – and at 12.50am our baby boy was born. He screamed immediately as well he might, having been introduced to the world so quickly.

Little O surprised us with the speed of his entry into the world and continues to surprise us each day.

The Gallery – My weekend

What perfect timing! The prompt for this week’s Gallery is My weekend, and we have just returned from a long weekend in Budapest. In some ways the weekend ended up feeling a little longer than it should have done since Little O came down with a fever on day two… Luckily, between his feverish periods, there were flashes of the real him, so we were able to enjoy ourselves, just at a slightly slower pace than he would normally have allowed for!

Budapest is a city that we love. We last visited in 2007, but we did take three trips there that year. It was great to return and especially to see that much work is being done on renovating some of the city’s beautiful buildings. Also, we discovered a number of very good parks across the city centre to keep Little O occupied. In that sense, it was a baby-friendly place. However, the transportation system is far from… If you are going and have a little one who can sit contentedly in a sling for some time (without breaking your back), I’d recommend that rather than a stroller.

Here are a handful of my favourite photos from “My weekend”.

Fishermen's Bastion (photo © English Mamma)

Exploring the cannons outside the Army Museum (photo © English Mamma)

New York Palace Hotel (photo © English Mamma)

Sculpture (photo © English Mamma)

Now, pop over to Tara’s and check out how the others spent their weekends…

Grabbing a few minutes

Well, just checking in quickly here while Baby O (how much longer can I call him that, now he’s 13 months old?) plays with his talking dog.

We completed the “schooling in” process at preschool the week before last and, with the execption of one day when I had to collect him an hour early, he’s been attending from 9am until 3pm each day. The plan for this week was to take it up a notch to 8.30am to 3pm, but that has fallen by the wayside.

Last Thursday, we went to Budapest for a long weekend but on Friday afternoon, he came down with a fever that has lasted (peaking and troughing) until this morning. So no preschool for us at the moment as the doc says he is contagious as long as the fever lasts. Crossing my fingers that the fever holds off all day today and that he can return tomorrow.

Also, on the preschool front, we discovered that we are not as close to getting a place at a state-run preschool as we had thought. We’re still in the queue for August, but it looks as if we’ll have to reapply and cross our fingers that we can get in for October instead.

So, what have I missed while I’ve been AWOL?

Silent Sunday

Photo © English Mamma

 
Silent Sunday

Still here!

So, I’ve not been posting much recently and even when I have, it has really only been photos for The Gallery and Silent Sunday. But I am still here! Real life has just been taking over recently.

This week is the one that I have both been dreading and looking forward to, and now it is here and there is an added complication. (Yes, of course, nothing could be better than a little bit of drama to spice things up…)

Baby O is due to start preschool (or förskola, as it is called in Sweden) on Wednesday. On the one hand, I am looking forward to this on his behalf as he seems so keen to play with other littlies when we’re out and about at the park and with friends. But on the other, he still seems so very little (he turns 13 months on Saturday). But then again, he’s now walking, trying to feed himself (somewhat messily) with a spoon and is beginning to communicate so much more – for example, pointing at what he wants.

And the complication? Well, on Wednesday, he’ll start what they call “inskolning” here, so the first day we’ll both be at the preschool for two hours, then four hours together there on Thursday, then five hours on Friday with some time away from me. The following week he’ll have shorter days again but I’ll be leaving him (although I’ll be “on call” in the neighbourhood, should they need me to come back). I love this approach that they take to settling them in at preschool. However, when we applied for this (private) preschool, we stayed in the queue for our five choices of state-run preschools (although there really is no difference in price between them; you pay the same regardless – very hard for me to get my head around). And now we are only a few queue spots away from a place at one of our top three choices of state-run preschools, starting from August. The biggest advantage of these three is that they are on the route between home and the office, whereas the private preschool is a 25-minute walk out of our way and then a 15-minute bus journey to the office.

I feel quite guilty that we will probably only complete part of the “inskolning” process now in June at the private preschool and then swap to a state-run preschool and restart the process in August. However, I don’t want to turn down the private preschool just yet in case we don’t actually get that place at one of the state-run preschools, as then we would really be in trouble. I am sure that this happens all the time. Everyone I know here who has accepted a place at a private pre-school has remained on the state-run queue “just in case”, but I still feel guilty. And then there is guilt that I feel for potentially putting Baby O through this process twice.

I just hope we find out whether we have a place or not soon!

Taming the teeth

Following up on a previous post that I wrote about Baby O and his biting habit. I looked at a number of ways in which we could halt this and, on the whole, we have managed to bring the biting down to only a few times a week from a few times an hour.

In the end, we combined a couple of the methods that I had read about and every time that he has bitten us, we’ve placed him in a corner and told him a firm “No”. Then we’ve left him there (but not left the room) and we’ve tried to focus on the bite that he’s given. Then, when he has crawled out of the corner, we give him a hug and say “We hug, we don’t bite.”

I am not sure how much of this has helped to break the habit and how much was just him getting through the biting phase, but I’d like to think that some of what we did has helped him to stop.

Silent Sunday

Photo © English Mamma

Silent Sunday