Photo 366 challenge – week 6

Really, week 6 already? That must mean it’s February, right? My days are in such a muddle now but I am sure that I will start to remember what day of the week, week of the month and month of the year it is soon.

Day 37:

Photo © English Mamma

This is the second time in the past week or so that I’ve spotted this taxi in the city centre. How great is this? He seems to charge the same as most other taxis. The only disadvantage that I can see is that it might not be quite as warm as a modern taxi (he is wearing a woolen hat after all). I’ve always had a bit of a soft spot for the Citroen DS, so I was pretty excited when I saw this.

Day 38:

Photo © English Mamma

After a long day… although I really, really longed for something a lot little stronger at that point.

Day 39:

Photo © English Mamma

Back at Karolinska hospital for the fifth time in 18 days – this time back to Amningsmottagen – the breastfeeding clinic. I feel as if I know the place pretty well by now.

Day 40:

Photo © English Mamma

Every few days, after I collect Little O from preschool, we head to the Central Station and wave goodbye to the 15.17 train to Gothenburg. I found this train by accident but I like the fact that it has only four carriages: 1st class, 2nd class, a restaurant car and the one nearest to me when I took this photo, which, according to the symbols painted on the outside, is a cocktail and piano bar.

Day 41:

Photo © English Mamma

On Friday, we hit the 2-3 week growth spurt. I took this picture of Baby E finally (!) asleep after a feed. However, he had other ideas and woke up about four minutes after this was taken. Sleep was not the theme of the day…

Day 42:

Photo © English Mamma

Husband found a great new cafe not so far from us and so we decided to check it out on Saturday. Although it was small inside, we found that if we uncoupled the carrycot from the stroller and left the stroller outside, we could sit at the bar stools in the window with Little O on Husband’s lap and Baby E safely sleeping in the carrycot under the counter. The brunch was delicious – and I’m sure that Little O would agree!

Day 43:

Photo © English Mamma

Little O sometimes takes a very casual approach to drinking his bedtime drink!

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The Boy And Me has set up a great linky each week, so head on over there and check out some of the others’ pictures too:
TheBoyandMe's 366 Linky

Growth spurt alert

Ha, I should have known that that writing about it would jinx it… So, we went from going four hours between feeds to a night that started with just over three hours between, then two hours and ended in the early hours of the morning with feeding on the hour. Oh yes, it’s growth spurt time.

So far this morning, Baby E has been anywhere between three hours and an hour between feeds and he has now not really slept for about four hours. Ah, yes, the randomness of the growth spurt with all its sleeplessness and fussy behaviour.

The worst thing is that, looking at him, you can see just how tired Baby E is, but he just cannot seem to sleep more than a handful of minutes at a time before he wakes and starts fussing again. He slept for maybe 35 minutes this morning in the stroller while we went to preschool with Little O, so I am going to take him out in the stroller again in a little while an hope that that knocks him out for long enough for him to get some rest.

You can read more about growth spurts on a number of sites – these are ones that I have found most helpful: kellymom, What To Expect and Breastfeeding Problems.

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[I know that it might seem like I am being a bit of a Moaning Minnie at the moment but I have realised that the blog posts from when Little O was this age paint a much rosier picture than was actually the case. At that time, I know that I was tired, emotional and struggling to come to terms with the responsibility of becoming a mother to this fragile little creature but I don't know what happened between feeling this and actually writing my blog. Did I think that it would reveal my life to be less perfect than I wanted to portray it as? I don't know. What I do know this time around is that I want a record of how things really are, warts and all, so that I am not left wondering if I just breezed through these weeks and months without a care.]

Learned this week

This week, I learned that…

  • Little O really does love his new little brother
  • you can feel more tired even after you start getting more sleep (I learned this but I still don’t understand it…)
  • maybe I can start reintroducing some dairy products back into my diet – Baby E does not seem to have had a bad reaction again when I have accidentally eaten dairy
  • I am a stronger person than I believed I was
  • Little O is not ready to stop his daytime naps – he did not sleep at preschool today, fell asleep for 20 minutes on the way home in the stroller and was inconsolable for most of the rest of the evening.

The C-word

No, not that one; the one that newborn parents dread: colic.

In the early hours of Sunday morning, as Baby E screamed and I struggled to get him latched on, Husband and I had a row discussion about feeding and it ended up with us giving Baby E a bottle of formula. He gulped it down and promptly fell asleep.

That afternoon, Baby E started screaming and screaming and nothing we did could stop him for more than a minute or so. This went on until after 1am with us holding him and trying to soothe him, until he finally fell into an exhausted sleep.

The following afternoon the same happened and he became upset even when I tried to breast feed him, so we decided we’d try another bottle of formula and see if that helped. It did help, for about five minutes and then he screamed up a storm again and could not be settled down at all.

We called Vårdguiden, the health authority’s helpline for the Stockholm area, and asked their advice. They told us to take Baby E to Astrid Lindgren, the children’s department at Karolinska hospital.

This absolutely terrified me and all the way in the taxi there I was checking his breathing and having images of him plugged into various tubes and equipment. Of course, by the time we bundled him into his little snowsuit, strapped him into the car seat and got him in the taxi, he had again crashed out into an exhausted sleep.

We were seen with a nurse within 10 minutes of arrival at Astrid Lindgren and he believed that colic was the most likely cause of Baby E’s upset. As he was so little, we were told that we’d be given a room as soon as possible to minimise the risk of infection. We then spent the next two and half hours in that room with Baby E soundly and quietly asleep and Husband and I taking it in turns to try and sleep on the child-sized hospital bed provided.

The doctor who examined him in the early hours of the morning was able, thank god, to eliminate anything serious, which pretty much left just colic as the cause. She thought this unlikely as well as colic normally affects babies from about six weeks old and Baby E was only nine days old at this point. After consulting with a colleague though, she said that colic it probably was and that dairy in my diet could be the problem.

So we took our little snow-suited bundle back home and tried to get a few hours of sleep.

On reading up more about colic the next day, I discovered that there are a few different causes that are suspected:

  • An incorrect latch during breastfeeding
  • A developing nervous system
  • Intolerance to cow’s milk
  • Difficult birth

In Baby E’s case, we think the most likely cause is a cow’s milk intolerance and that the two doses of formula were the culprit, and possibly also a bad latch. Since mid-week, he has been getting much better in the evenings and although he requires a lot of burping, we have had little of the endless screaming of Sunday, Monday and Tuesday nights. In addition, I’ve also pretty much eliminated dairy from my diet and we’re also giving him probiotic drops once a day and lactase drops before every feed (to help him burp).

The nurse at the BVC (barnavårdscentralen) – the equivalent of a health visitor – has suggested that after two weeks I gradually reintroduce dairy into my diet. If the problem recurs, then we know it’s my diet that’s to blame and I can cut out dairy again and start taking calcium supplements. If not, then it was either a cow’s milk intolerance to the formula or a bad latch initially during breastfeeding.

So, the end result is that we’re getting there in eliminating the colic but I guess we might never know what the real cause was. But as long as it’s gone, that will keep me happy.