My First Square Foot Garden

As you may know, I have long aspired to maintaining a certain level of crunchiness in my life. I recycle, I walk or bike instead of drive whenever possible, and I really really want a hybrid. I’m practically Ed Begley Jr., for pete’s sake. (Does it make me less green if I actually typed Ed Begley Jr.’s name as Ed Helms first? I had to look it up because I was pretty sure it wasn’t right. Turns out they are not even remotely the same celebrity.)

Anyway, so as a good wannabe crunchster I have tried gardening in the past. I’ve even tried composting. But my half-A efforts never took, mainly because I am a very lazy and impatient gardener and I could never keep up with the weeds that grew from not preparing the soil properly. Some of the weeds even got to be six feet tall at the height of my backyard shame.

But, my friends, those days are gone. I am older now. I am more mature. And my skills at nagging have improved to such an astounding degree that Poor Kyle didn’t really stand a chance at *not* making me a square foot garden box.

And so it happened that last month I fulfilled one of my lifelong dreams: to plant a square foot garden. As a bonus, the box is even raised to about waist height, so the level of exertion I put into my daily gardening is about zero.

Raised Square Foot Garden BoxHere it is about three weeks after planting. The top row is, from left to right: sweet elite tomato (with basil in the box to hopefully ward off bugs), snow peas, green beans, orange pepper, cucumbers, and FS-100 tomato plus basil. Bottom row: marigolds (for pest-deterrents), beets, chives, cilantro, yellow pepper, and radishes.

We (and by we I mean Kyle, of course) used the plans illustrated here on Instructables (great website). It cost about $100 in materials and about $100 more to fill it with the special Mel’s Mix that is supposedly like crack for plants (but that mix will last forever in the box, so it was a one-time purchase). It wasn’t big enough to plant everything I wanted to grow, but my gardening history is so unpromising that we decided it would be better just to start small and then build more boxes next summer if we have any degree of success this year.

Plus I bought a bunch of cheap planters for the deck that I filled with leftover Mel’s Mix, and I’m hoping that will extend my harvest a little bit. I’m not sure if they’re big enough to get any real produce out of, but it was a fairly small investment so if it fails I’m not out too much money. (Emotional investment is another story: I tend to take it rather poorly when my plants die.)

Deck Planter PotsPlease excuse our deck that is in desperate need of refinishing and instead focus on the pots planted with lettuce, broccoli, basil, strawberries, onions, more cilantro, and more peppers. Not pictured: citronella plants (hoping they’ll help keep mosquitos away from the deck) and a potted mint that is seriously thriving. If you want to feel good about yourself as a gardener, plant some mint. It seems impossible to kill.

Also not pictured: the five raspberry starts that a friend donated to my cause. I probably won’t get berries off of them this year, but they are already sprouting little offshoots and looking very healthy, so hopefully I’ll get some next year.

In more aesthetic news, I also bit the bullet and spent another almost-$200 on flowers for the front yard. I feel like they look so pretty when I’m standing there, but in this picture they look a little sad. Oh well; they make me tremendously happy all the same.

Front Walkway Flowers

The purple falling-over potted plant in the bottom right corner is lavender. I thought I’d be all fancy having lavender on my front porch, but I realized I don’t actually know how to care for it or what to use it for. It seems happy but I need to figure out how to give it more support. Maybe I need to plant it in some actual dirt? Anyone know how to care for a lavender bush? Or what to do with it once you have some?

The highlight of my front yard flowers was buying two hydrangea bushes from Costco (pictured near the middle of the photo, just above the potted plants at the start of the walkway). I think hydrangeas are some of the most gorgeous flowers in the world, and I’m really having high hopes that I will get some blooms from these. I don’t know if I’ve given them enough space, but they’ve been there for about three weeks and are budding new leaves, so I’m guessing they’re happy enough. But no sign of any blossoms yet.

Anyway, that’s my gardening update. I once thought that since I was so bad at gardening I would probably be equally bad at parenting. Turns out that neither one is quite as hard as I’d assumed, especially with the help of the internet.

Then again, those sound like some pretty famous last words…here’s hoping that my plants and child live through the summer.

p.s. After much deliberation, Poor Kyle and I have decided to tear out the three giant poplar trees in our front yard. I have always loved their beauty and shade, but Kyle has always hated their sap pustules and leaves. A part of me feels like the worst hippie in the world for cutting down mature shade trees that really are very stunning, but from everything I’ve read they are kind of like the pinky toe of trees: weak and not good for much of anything (besides shade and photosynthesis, I guess). They really do make a huge mess every time we have a wind storm, which is weekly in Mayberry. I’m rationalizing this decision by vowing to plant something better in their place. 

But I’m still a little sad about it. 

Especially since the tree man said that I would probably lose most, if not all, of my flowers in the process. I guess they don’t stand up well to giant tree limbs falling on them. So that’s a bummer.

Posted in awesome., garden, Green Living | Tagged , , | 4 Comments

What I’m Reading: Month 5

NON-FICTION:

Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother by Amy Chua

Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother Cover by Amy Chua

Published back in 2011 when I was pushing through the last semester of my Bachelor’s degree, I vaguely recall hearing controversial discussions of this book on the radio. Something about how intense Chinese mothers are.

“That sounds interesting,” I thought to myself, “maybe I’ll read it when I’m not so saturated.”

Three years later my friend Geneva recommended it to me and within minutes I had it downloaded to my phone. Two days later I emerged and immediately opened my laptop to write this post. I wanted to remember all my thoughts before I fell asleep.

This book was, and is, very controversial. Back when I first heard about it on the radio I must have misunderstood, thinking it was written from the perspective of a Chinese daughter about her fanatical mother. I was surprised to find it was actually the other way around: a fanatical mother’s recollections of raising her daughters the “Chinese” way. So be prepared for that.

First, the positive: I found it well-written and engaging, and I didn’t want to put it down. (Though I do believe that “can’t put it down” feeling was a bit of a tease, as the majority of the book built up to some sort of tragedy that never actually happened [although, playing devil’s advocate, I suppose some might argue that the ending was tragic for the author…but certainly not by any normal parent’s standards, i.e. death of a child or loss of a spouse.])

Another positive: it helped me weed out at least one style of parenting (the mean kind) I’d like to avoid while raising my child. Since having Hutch I find myself reading every article and book I come across on childrearing: handling temper tantrums, giving children what they need, unplugging, being present. I confess I’ve been feeling overwhelmed by it all: To spank or not to spank? Time outs or time ins or time aways (these are all different and each has the potential to ruin your child, it seems)? Allowance or chore charts or both? How to make sure he doesn’t get addicted to porn? The decisions seem endless and for once it’s refreshing to identify a style of parenting I absolutely do *not* want to consider using on my own child.

And now for the negatives:

• Chua foreshadows so freely and ominously throughout the chapters that I was certain the book would end in some sort of tragedy, presumably with the suicide or accidental death of her youngest daughter (the one she butted heads with to an astonishing degree), which would lead Chua to realize how silly her obsession (pushing her daughters to excel at music) had been all those years. SPOILER ALERT: That didn’t happen. The “tragedy” at the end was actually that the youngest daughter rebelled so violently that Chua finally agreed to let her quit violin in pursuit of…no, not drugs or the slave trade, like the tone would have you believe…but tennis. Tennis. An admirable pastime. How anticlimactic. Like I said above, I suppose from Chua’s perspective this was quite tragic, as she ended up allowing her daughter to quit just like all the “lazy American parents” she’d so viciously berated. But in the grand scheme of things tennis is not so bad.

• I was very annoyed to realize that Chua did not attend any of her daughter’s tennis matches until quite some time later, despite having dedicated hundreds of hours to carting that same daughter around to violin lessons two hours away, and sitting with her during practices daily. In my opinion a parent’s job is to support the child in that child’s (positive) pursuits, even if those pursuits aren’t necessarily the parent’s first choice. So your kid wants to quite violin to play tennis. So you’re mad about it. You’re still her parent. Go freaking represent.

• Throughout the book I kept thinking, “This is ridiculous. She is wasting so much time fighting with her daughters about practicing their music that she has no time left over to enjoy just being with them.” Again, I suppose it’s all about perspective. For Chua, the enjoyment comes when seeing her daughters perform flawlessly onstage. For me, I’d take a flawed performance and quality family time any day.

• Because I read the e-version of the book, I got to read an afterword written by Chua six months after the initial publication of the book. In it, she explains her surprise at the horrible outlash the book caused in the States, and goes on about how it was really meant to be funny and self deprecating. I was shocked. Throughout the entire book I never laughed a single time, and never picked up on even the remotest sense of self deprecation. The author seemed haughty, smug, and satisfied that her way of parenting was the best. Even at the end when she conceded to her younger daughter, she still attributed her daughter’s success with tennis largely to the way she’d been taught the violin. Perhaps on a second reading I might be able to find that sense of humour Chua insists was there, but it’s my firm opinion that if humour has to be searched for then it’s really not that funny. The fact that no one took the book as a joke (even the people who like it seem to approve of its accuracy and successful child-rearing techniques, not because of its witty satire) tells me that she probably needed a better editor if “satire” was her goal.

• The story she tells of refusing to let her daughters take off practicing their instruments for even one day to spend time with their grandmother, who was begging to see them, makes me want to curl up and cry. It’s just so sad.

Not necessarily  negative but noteworthy:

• The excerpts of media reviews on this book’s Amazon page are all notably lacking any real praise. When normally you might see “Amazing! An insightful work that brought tears to my eyes!” or “Chua’s voice is a revelation!” on the back of a book cover, instead the “praise” for the book read more like facts: “Brutally honest,” “thought-provoking,” and “resonant” are all there, but none of them actually say it’s a good read. So there’s that.

• I was reminded while reading that I was actually born in the Year of the Tiger myself, technically making me a Tiger mother, too. I hope that doesn’t bode ill for poor Hutchy.

Final Score: 6/10 (Not less because it actually was an interesting read and thought-provoking, but not more because it certainly wasn’t a life-changing or even remotely appealing lifestyle.)

•••••••

FICTION:

Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close by Jonathan Safran Foer

Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close Book Cover

This book was recommended to me by a co-student in my Creative Writing class, again back in my senior year of college. The guy who told me about it said that something I’d shared in class reminded him of this book, which immediately made me feel like I would one day be a great and published writer.

I put it on my list of books to read, but finals overtook my life, followed by a trip to Europe that I never finished blogging about, followed by getting a job and feeling too tired to read ever again.

But now that I’m reading again I remembered it, and thank goodness. I really enjoyed it.

CONS:

• There were a couple of sex scenes; not too graphic, but graphic enough that it is slightly awkward for me to recommend this book to others. I don’t know why I have that hang-up—it’s not like I was the one writing sex scenes—but for some reason just knowing that someone is going to read a sex scene that they’ll know I read makes me feel weird. The annoying thing about sex scenes is that they are almost always irrelevant to the story, whether in book or film. Except for cases like Atonement, where the sex scene is literally the whole reason there is a conflict at all, I think they are just a distraction. It’s almost like authors include them because they feel it’s not great literature unless there’s sex. And of course because sex sells. It’s too bad, really. I hate sex.

• This is definitely an artsy book, another reason why I can’t necessarily recommend it to all my friends without hesitation. Me, I spent years pouring over just such works and analyzing them to pieces, so I’m both used to and fond of artsy literature. For people who prefer a more straightforward read, however, I can’t say to read it. It will probably drive you crazy.

PROS:

• I was a sophomore in high school (Grade 10, Canadians) during the September 11 attacks. I was so clueless. I remember feeling like, “Bummer,” about it, but my main concern was that we would end up going to war and all my high school guy friends would get drafted and probably die. Which was a valid concern, I suppose, but looking back it seems so very trite. I had no idea what so many Americans suffered—and still suffer—because of those four hijacked planes. Even years later, as I matured and understood a bit more what it was all about, I still never fully grasped the extent of that day. Reading this book changed that for me. The minute I finished it, I opened my laptop and researched it for hours. I had no clue, for example, that there are actually conspiracy theories that claim the attacks were promoted by the U.S. Government. I had no clue that the total casualty count was 3,000. I had no idea how truly horrifying those last moments must have been for the people trapped in the towers. I was just so clueless. In that way, I can say without doubt that reading this book changed my life. I am ashamed of how clueless I was for so long, and I am glad that I finally took it upon myself to learn about such a horrifying piece of my country’s—and my own—history. (Obviously, a less-clueless reader might not have quite such an eye-opening experience of this book, but I think you’ll find it’s a moving story all the same.)

• The ending was unsatisfying. But I realized that that’s exactly how so many Americans—even beyond Americans, as there were many people from other countries working and visiting the towers that day—feel about their lost loved ones, and somehow that makes it quite fitting and ultimately satisfying in its own way.

• I loved that the narrative was so fractured and out of order. For me, it reflected the chaos of those days and months, and I found myself thinking of some of the Modernist literature I studied in school. Modernism, both in art and in literature, came out of the post-war (World War 1) era, and some generally accepted themes of the time are chaos and fractured-ness. The jumbled paintings of Picasso reflect this especially, and in literature books like Generals Die in Bed, All Quiet on the Western Front, and A Farewell to Arms utilize this same kind of chaotic narrative. Many theorists attribute this style to the confusion and disillusionment so many felt in the wake of World War 1. The whole time I was reading Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close, all I could think about was how the fractured, confusing narrative was just as reflective of the times as Modernism was of 1915 on. In other words, reading this book made me feel smart. Double plus.

Final Score: 9/10 (Not less because of above life-changingness, and minus one point for unnecessary sex scenes.)

•••••••

As it turns out May was a big month for my literary intake! I also read:

The Selection by Kiera Cass
The Elite by Kiera Cass
The One by Kiera Cass
Is Everyone Hanging Out Without Me? by Mindy Kaling
All New Square Foot Gardening, Second Edition by Mel Bartholemew
The Ladies Auxiliary by Tova Mirvis

In the interest of time and not boring whatever few readers I might have left, I have decided to review only the books from the above list that anyone specifically asks me to review. I have lots to say about all of them, so don’t feel bad for making me work if you want to hear my reports. It’ll be good for me, probably.

 

 

 

Posted in Book Reports | 7 Comments

It’s A Boy

I wrote this post almost exactly one year ago and never published it. Today I feel like sharing it.

•••••••

As I write this I am five months pregnant with my first child, and throughout the excitement of sharing our news with friends and family, three conversations have weighed heavily on my mind…

First: Four months ago, back when we first told my grandma we were having a baby, she squealed with delight and said, “That’s so wonderful! I hope it’s a boy!

Second: A few weeks ago, after the ultrasound that revealed our baby’s sex, I called my grandmother to deliver the news and again she squealed, delighted. “Isn’t that wonderful?” she exclaimed. “It’s every man’s dream to have a boy first to carry on the family name!”

Third: Several days later, while discussing the little baby boy growing inside of me with a very dear friend and mother of four, she said, “It’s good you’re having a boy first. Those women with girls for the oldest always wish they’d had a boy first. You can be smug about that.” She was, herself, the oldest child.

With each encounter, I cringed.

The rebellious child in me was tempted to say something—anything—that would shock or disappoint these women. Perhaps that our babies would not be taking my husband’s last name, or perhaps that Poor Kyle had actually been hoping for a daughter first. But in fact neither statement was true, and my grandma, just diagnosed with cancer days before, did not need my snide remarks. And my good friend, despite this strange affinity for oldest-boys-first, was still my good friend, and I didn’t want to start an argument.

But the memory of these three conversations have never left me. I turn them over in my mind when I can’t sleep, and I agonize over how I might have better dealt with them.

•••••••

It’s somewhat of a family legend that on the day my mother (the oldest in her family) was born, her father went not bounding down the hospital corridors announcing the arrival of his firstborn daughter, but instead to the Mesa city cemetery to mourn the arrival of his firstborn Not Son.

This story, humourous though at first it  might seem, has haunted me from the day I heard it and haunts me more incessantly now that I am pregnant with my own first-born child.

My mother will tell anyone who asks how it hurt her when she learned this story, how it made her feel unwanted and unloved because she’d been born a girl and not a boy. Because of it, I was determined to have absolutely no preference as to the sex of our baby. When asked, I could honestly say that I didn’t care either way. And it was because of this story that when my husband confessed he actually would like a little boy first, I felt a real and immediate sorrow for our unborn child, should she turn out to have the “wrong” number of chromosomes.

He backpedalled: “Of course I will still love her if she’s a girl!”

But that one word—still—caused me even more grief. Our daughter would still, despite all genetic odds, gain the favour of her father. To still be loved suggested some sort of shortcoming on her part, something that he might be able to overlook or forgive with enough time or means. Our unborn daughter: a failure before she was even born. There is a very real difference between being loved and being loved anyway. In spite of. Still.

Relief, then, the day we found out we were having a boy after all. Not relief because I wanted a boy or cared either way, but relief instead for all the pain he would escape by very nature of his sex.

Yet at the same time I could not deny a sense of loss: I’d lost a battle I didn’t even realize I’d been fighting for my unborn daughter. Together she and I were going to prove to the world that firstborn daughters were just as worthy of the world’s affection as firstborn sons.

And then there was that second, subtler sense of loss: the loss of the liberating power of not caring either way.

Because apparently I cared.

Which meant I could no longer haughtily tell myself and the rest of the world that I didn’t.

So in the end this child was doomed to disappoint at least one of his parents before he was ever even born, and my only hope now is that we can raise him to a higher level than all of us.

Poor kid.

Posted in failures, Married Life, motherhood | 2 Comments

What I’m Reading: Month 4

Once again I’m cutting it close with my monthly book reports, and once again I barely reached my quota. But I made it in the end, and that’s what counts. Unless you’re a synchronized swimmer.

FICTION:

Saving Madeline by Rachel Ann Nunes

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I just can’t seem to stay away from Sappy Mormon Romance Novels, despite my regular assessment of them as subpar. (Part of this is because I haven’t actually been to the bookstore or library since I started my 2014 reading quest, so my book selections come from what’s already on my bookshelf waiting to be read, and I have indeed collected a great deal of SMRNs since the last time I was a regular reader-for-leisure [about four years ago]. The other part is because you can take the girl out of Mesa but you can’t take the Mesa out of the girl; in other words, even though I’ve come a long way and read a lot of highbrow literature since then, I was raised on this genre and I actually kind of like it when  it’s not too poorly written. SMRNs are predictable, yes, but they’re not vulgar and they usually leave me with a smile on my face in the same way that a puppy does: I wouldn’t want to live with one daily but I can appreciate them for the cuteness they have to offer, however short-lived it might be.)

As far as SMRNs go, this one was decent. It was less predictable than most and had a likeable-enough main character. Plus it was actually written with a cause in mind (raising awareness for the child abuse and neglect that often occurs in homes with drugs), and left me feeling like I should try harder to do something good in the world.

Final Score: 6.5/10 (Not more because I just couldn’t fathom giving it a full 7, but not less because it didn’t make me angry or want to poke my eyes out.)

•••••••

NON-FICTION (loosely)

Bossypants by Tina Fey

Bossypants Cover Tina Fey

I requested the e-version of this book from my local library weeks ago, but apparently they can only lend it out to one person at a time (wha? what’s the point of creating an e-book then is what I want to know), and I was something like number ten in line. So when I got the email this week saying my turn had come it was a complete surprise.

I’m putting this under the non-fiction category because 1) it’s written in the first person and details real stories about Fey’s real life, and 2) it’s the only other book I read this month and I needed it to be non-fiction. But really, it’s more of a memoir or semi-autobiography. I don’t doubt that her stories are true, but I also don’t doubt that she took creative liberties with every single one.

Regardless, it was very funny—exactly as funny as everyone hailed it three years ago when it actually came out. (With reading, as with fashion, I am always just slightly behind most major trends. And that’s if I ever catch on at all.) I was hooked almost immediately with the story of how her mother informed her about getting her period (spoiler: it was almost exactly how my mother informed me of mine).

If you’re on the more conservative side you might not appreciate her colourful language, but as I’ve said before, that sort of thing doesn’t bother me much anymore, and in fact I often feel that the occasional f-bomb contributes quite nicely to a snarky book such as this.

My only real complaint about Bossypants is that it was kind of disjointed. She did tell her stories in chronological order, but thematically they were all over the place. She is a strong advocate of feminism and anti-sexism in the media, which I appreciate, but several times when I thought she’d finished talking about it and moved on to something else, it would suddenly pop up again quite unexpectedly. It felt a little like she was trying too hard to work that theme into stories that might have been more meaningful without it. Of course when it comes right down to it I still really liked the stories, so it didn’t bother me too much…but it was distracting at times.

Also, it made me realize how very out-of-touch I am with pop culture, as there was at least one (sometimes twelve) reference in every chapter that I had to google to understand. But that’s not Tina Fey’s fault. And it’s not something I even necessarily want to change, because at the end of the day I’m okay not knowing every reference to media and celebrities from the 70’s to today. For Tina Fey, her livelihood depends on it. For me not so much. I did like her reference to David Foster Wallace though. It made me feel like part of the literati. (The lowlier part, to be sure, but part all the same.)

Final Score: 8/10 (Not more because it didn’t actually change my life in any way, but certainly not less because I laughed out loud at least once per chapter.)

Posted in Book Reports | Tagged , , | 3 Comments

On Flying With an 8 Month Old

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Hutch and I are in Mesa soaking up the sun and the familials. I flew here with him all by myself and I don’t think I can express in words the level of anxiety I felt in planning the journey down here.

Before I had a baby (and even while I was pregnant) I could fly all day long and be perfectly fine. In fact, I loved it. I loved the challenge of the airport, the joy in a nice set of luggage, the smug satisfaction I took in navigating the lines and crowds more efficiently than the frazzled looking lady in front of me, all of it.

But the moment that little ten-pound bundle of joy popped out of my hoo-ha travel became immensely more intimidating—terrifying even. When Kyle and I were visiting over Christmas my parents offered to fly us out to Texas to see my grandma there, and I literally turned them down because I was too afraid of packing for all three of us and hauling all our gear (car seat, stroller, pack n play, etc.) through the airport. Not to mention the baby himself: a living breathing ticking time bomb. A loose cannon. (Why are so many baby metaphors related to explosions? Asked no one ever.)

So when I agreed to bring Hutchy down to visit this month, and to do it all by myself, I knew I had a big feat ahead of me.

20140402-045303.jpg

As with almost all the crises I face, I dealt with this one the best way I know: by planning/worrying obsessively, expecting epic disaster, and praying to prove myself wrong. (My mother would describe this with the very self actualized mantra, “Plan for the worst, hope for the best, and take what comes.”)

Here are the challenges my angst-addled mind decided were most pressing, and how I dealt with them:

MAIN PROBLEM: Kyle would not be flying with me.

SOLUTION: Spend as much money as necessary to make my life as easy as possible. See below.

SUB-PROBLEM 1: The stroller I bought (after hours of research and years of pining, yes I said years—I had picked out the stroller I wanted long before I even wanted to have a baby) was too big to mess with through an airport and too fancy to trust with baggage handlers.

SOLUTION: Buy another stroller. Cheaper, smaller, and better suited for quick trips through security and easy delivery at the gate. I bought it off Craigslist and saved about $60.

SUB-PROBLEM 2: I wouldn’t be able to push the stroller and two suitcases at the same time. (In the Calgary airport when flying to the US, we have to go through Customs *with* all of our luggage, even the luggage we’re checking on, and *then* we get to drop it at a conveyer belt to be loaded onto the plane. It’s a silly system.)

SOLUTION: Buy a baby carrier. Put Hutch in carrier, put the luggage on a luggage cart, fold the stroller and put it on the trolley until I got rid of the baggage. Realise that this makes the purchase of second stroller silly because it’s only being used to transport infant from *after* security up to the gate. Squelch buyer’s remorse by reasoning that the smaller stroller is less expensive and therefore necessary to take the abuse from the baggage handlers. Also buy new suitcases that roll better (and let’s face it: make me look more beautiful). (I’ve always wanted to be a chic traveller.)

SUB-PROBLEM 3: Car seats are a hassle to fly with.

SOLUTION: Make my mom buy one for me in Arizona. (Although she ended up borrowing one so don’t worry. So far my neurosis has only affected myself and Poor Kyle.)

SUB-PROBLEM 4: We are flying stand-by since my dad works for an airline and has procured us a buddy pass. This is great because it’s cheap, but bad because we could be bumped off the first flight, and potentially the second flight too, and there are only two flights a day from Calgary to Phoenix on his airline. It also means that I need to plan for potentially days at the airport before actually arriving in Arizona, because Calgary airport is 3 hours away from Mayberry and Poor Kyle would be dropping me off there, essentially stranding me should anything go even slightly wrong.

SOLUTION: Pack more stuff in carry on.

SUB-PROBLEM 5: Plane might crash, leaving us (supposing we survive) with only the supplies packed in my single carry on bag.

SOLUTION: Pack even more stuff in carry on, including at least a three-day supply of food and diapers for Hutch. I can wear the same underwear and starve but my baby cannot. Consider packing one cloth diaper in carry on in case we get seriously stranded in the bush and I have to reuse it over and over. Take great mental strength to talk myself out of it.

SUB-PROBLEM 6: Already-big diaper bag not big enough to carry 72 hour kits for both myself and my child, plus passports, wallet, spare outfits, laptop, iphone, and chargers for both.

SOLUTION: Buy a bigger carry on. Spend hours researching exactly what kind of carry on this should be, and finally decide on a backpack from Lululemon, much to Poor Kyle’s extreme disgust and disappointment. (He hates Lululemon with a thousand passions.)

SUB-PROBLEM 7: Said Lululemon backpack was not available in store, but a different (smaller) version was.

SOLUTION: Buy first-choice backpack from website and pray it comes in time for flight. Also buy less-desirable backpack from store. Return whichever one didn’t make the cut.

On and on it went in this neurotic fashion until the money we were saving by flying on a buddy pass had been spent threefold on preparing for every possible catastrophe that might stem from said buddy pass.

In the end, even though I had way overpacked my carry on, I can’t say I would’ve done it any differently. Did I really need to take 12 disposable diapers for one three hour flight? No, but there was a *chance* I’d be stuck there for longer than a day. Did I need to bring enough formula for 8 bottles plus enough pouches of pureed food for 6 solid meals? No, but again: starving baby was not an option.

And for all my planning and insane overspending, it worked out perfectly. We got to the airport at 4:30 a.m., had a minor hiccup at check in, breezed through customs, had a major hiccup at security, shed a few angry tears at the ineptitude of TSA agents, got over major hiccup, purchased a couple of 1-litre water bottles after security, grabbed a quick smoothie and made it to the gate just as the first call for boarding was announced.

Hutch and I lucked out with an upgrade to First Class PLUS a vacant seat next to us (I know, you hate me; I hate me for you). I’d timed his bottle almost perfectly so he was hungry at take-off and his ears didn’t seem affected by the pressure change at all. He pooped his pants almost as soon as the seatbelt light went off, so that was a bummer, but nothing I couldn’t handle in the tiny cabin bathroom. He snoozed for about thirty minutes, and chewed on random crap in my carry on for the rest of the flight.

He didn’t cry a single time, and the only close call came when he pooped his pants *again* the minute we landed, and we were stuck waiting for our gate with the seatbelt light turned on for about ten minutes. By the time we were free his diaper had leaked and his poop was very obviously seeping through his outfit, and also kind of smelling bad. I opted to stick him in the baby carrier and book it to the nearest airport bathroom where I used almost an entire case of wipes cleaning him up. I was very glad I’d taken the advice of a million parenting blogs and had packed a spare outfit and a bag for dirty clothes; otherwise he would have been cruising through Sky Harbor in nothing but a diaper.

Hutch and Me 7 Months

I am eternally grateful the experience was so painless, and that Hutch was such an accommodating little travel buddy.

And yet despite this all, I’m still dreading the trip back. Because each trip is different. Every day is new, and all the catastrophes I planned for this time around could just as easily happen next time.

Does this paranoid worrying ever end?

Posted in hutchface, motherhood, Travel | 3 Comments

What I’m Reading: Month 3

Whoops, March is almost over and I barely made posting this in time.

My reading volume slowed down a bit this month with the increased demand on my time from a few little projects I’ve been working on, but I still managed to meet my quota of at least one fiction and one non-fiction book before the first half of the month was through. After that I dwindled, having got sucked back into Facebook toilet breaks. I really need to work on that.

FICTION:

The Anniversary Waltz by Darrel Nelson

Anniversary Waltz

I know I sort of suggested that I might swear off sappy Mormon romance novels in my last book review post, but hear me out: this was a gift from my father, who came with my mother to visit a few summers ago and bought this book for me from the author himself. It is signed and addressed to me and everything. I don’t know why it took me so long to get around to reading it. (Oh yes I do: I was in school and as soon as school was done I was in work and I never read anything for fun ever again, the end.)

Why is it signed by the author, you asked? Because the author is from right here in humble little Mayberry, and he went out and got his book published and for sale on Amazon and everything. He’s legit.

Anyway, it’s another book that has been sitting on my shelf for far too long, so I finally dusted it off and read it.

Verdict? It was pretty good. I won’t say it was life changing by any means, but it didn’t make me want to poke my eyeballs out. The story was believable, if not a little predictable, and it was sweet.

As with most sappy romance novels, it did make me wonder where I failed in life to end up marrying a man who never built me an entire gazebo with his bare hands and then decorate it with giant bouquets of flowers and twinkle lights and hire a personal jazz band to serenade us as we waltzed together in the moonlight and then propose on bended knee…but it’s not Poor Kyle’s fault. The sappy romance novel industry holds men to impossibly high romantic standards these days. I’d hate to be one. A man, I mean. (Actually I think I would make an awesome man but I was trying to be nice.)

Final Score: 5/10 (Not more because it wasn’t any great beacon of literature, but not less because it was a good, quick read. And no typos. And: published. Unlike my books.)

•••••••

Non-Fiction:

Skinny Bitch by Rory Freedman and Kim Barnouin

SkinnyBitch_coverThis book is apparently quite divisive. Check out the reviews of it on Amazon—there are nearly as many one-star reviews as there are five-stars.

I myself really liked it…until I read all those one-star reviews. Then I felt stupid for thinking it was so good. I’m really impressionable that way.

But I DID make an effort to step back and really decide for myself, and in the end I concluded I liked it more than I disliked it. The majority of the one-star reviewers complained that 1) the book’s tone was insulting to its readers, 2) that it didn’t have enough proof to back up its claims, and 3) that it was really a promotion for veganism in disguise. However, when I read it I 1) didn’t feel insulted by the straightforward (and yes, sometimes vulgar) language; I am smart enough not to feel insulted by words of people who have never met me. What would you expect from a book called Skinny Bitch? And 2) even though the authors didn’t have volumes of proof for their claims, they cited their references thoroughly enough for me. I don’t need or want to hunt down every single resource they mentioned. Who has the time? As for 3), this part is true. The book’s description mentions NOTHING about veganism, but by the time I got a few chapters in I realized that’s exactly what it was promoting. Rather than incensing me, however, I felt excited. It was a surprise. I didn’t feel tricked; I felt excited.

So, was this a good book? By my standards of a good book being one that is life-changing, I would have to say yes. This book changed my life.

How?

It encouraged me to try being vegan, stop drinking pop, and cut out sugar and white flour/rice/pasta for 30 days. Which I did (my 30 days just ended yesterday, in fact). It was hard. I kind of hated it. But I lost 9 pounds in the process.

I have a lot more to report on that experiment but this post is already long so I’ll defer that conversation for another day. For now I will just say that, although this book will not be for everyone, I still recommend it. If nothing else, it should at least help you *consider* the *possibility* of *maybe* not eating meat or using animal products anymore. And if a book can even slightly improve the way you’ve always lived your life, even the tiniest little bit…

…isn’t that worthwhile?

I think so.

Final Score: 8/10 (Not more because even though it didn’t offend my hard-boiled disposition, they really didn’t need to be so crude; and not less because I lost 9 pounds.)

Posted in Book Reports | Tagged , | 3 Comments

On Nursing

After failing to quit drinking Diet Coke throughout my pregnancy I was already fairly well-acquainted with Motherguilt, but now that I’m formula feeding my baby as opposed to nursing, I’m pretty much an expert on it.

Logically I know it’s not my fault (though here I realise even the word “fault” implies that there is something wrong with not nursing, and I fully believe that women should be allowed to choose to nurse or *not* to nurse without feeling guilty; but I also believe that breastfeeding is scientifically, medically healthier for babies and I personally wanted to make it happen for our baby [once again stressing that I don’t profess to judge women who choose otherwise]). I tried to nurse. My body didn’t make enough milk to sustain my baby.

When Hutch was four days old he stopped having wet diapers and became very lethargic and difficult to wake, and I panicked. I called the health hotline (available 24 hours a day here in Alberta) and the nurse on the other end of the line recommended we take him to see a doctor.

Hutch One Week

We took him. The doctor here in Mayberry recommended we feed him formula—just a tiny bit until my milk came in—and referred me to a lactation doctor in the bigger city about 30 minutes away from us. My appointment with her was a week later.

Kyle and I rushed to the pharmacy here in Mayberry to buy a small supply of formula. We decided to splurge on the pre-mixed liquid kind because we wouldn’t be using very much for very long, and we felt entitled to all the convenience we could get during those early days. Every three hours I nursed Hutch for 15 minutes—timed!—per side and followed up with a one-ounce bottle of formula. I felt the tension melt away when he started peeing again.

I kept waiting for the horrible breast engorgement I’d read about, but it never happened. My breasts sometimes felt a little fuller or heavier than normal, but never even remotely swollen or hard.

The lactation doctor recommended we clip his frenulum, which might be preventing him from latching successfully and getting enough milk. She gave me extremely helpful pointers on positioning (the best tips I got out of probably seven or eight doctors and nurses I’d seen since the moment Hutch was born). She wrote me a prescription for Motilium, a drug that’s not even legal in the US. She got me started on the maximum dosage for Fenugreek and Blessed Thistle supplements (16 of each per day…you read that right: 32 total herbal supplement pills per DAY). Start eating more oatmeal, she said, which I did for every breakfast for three months [and I hate oatmeal]. She recommended I rent or buy a breast pump and begin pumping after every.single.feeding. I had to trick my body into thinking it was making milk for twins. She gave me a recipe for lactation cookies and told me to quadruple my water intake. When my nipples got dry and cracked she wrote me a prescription for the end-all of nipple creams, the kind you can’t get over the counter. She suggested I buy this (ridiculously expensive) bottle to trick him into thinking he was breastfeeding when he was actually taking formula, which would supposedly help him to keep taking the breast. Make sure to eat a balanced diet, she said. Try raspberry leaf tea, too. Then I got thrush, but because I was already taking Motilium I could not take the other drug to treat thrush (at least not without an EKG from the hospital to verify that my heart could handle it—scary!), so I had to go the old-fashioned way and treat it with gentian violet. Also had to buy probiotics both for Hutch and for me, but no, not the cheap kind you can get at any pharmacy, they had to be the $60/bottle kind that only came refrigerated at the hippie health food store.

Aftermath of our gentian violet treatment. If you think this is bad you shoulda seen my nipps.
Aftermath of our gentian violet treatment. If you think this is bad you shoulda seen my nipps.

I did it all. I did it all without questioning.

Week after week I dragged my postpartum self out of bed and into the bigger city for our appointments. We weighed Hutch naked without a diaper and then we weighed him with one. Then I nursed him and we weighed him again. Week after week I sat there praying that *this* time he’d gotten enough to subsist on without having to supplement with formula.

One ounce here. Two there. But it was never enough.

I pumped like a dairy farmer, and the dejection after each measly bottle made me feel worse each time. Why couldn’t I just make enough to feed my baby?

We’d long since run out of those first few cans of formula. I started thinking it might be better to buy the cheaper powder kind, since this formula supplementing nonsense might take a little longer than I expected. We still bought the name brand stuff though. Surely it was worth it since it would only be a while longer.

At the peak of my milk production I got 80 mL (2.7 ounces) into my baby. That was at a time when he needed at least 110 mL per feeding.

Everybody touts how cheap it is to breast feed as opposed to formula feed. Here is how much it cost me to try (unsuccessfully) to breast feed:

$450 breast pump
$192 herbal supplements ($12/bottle of Blessed Thistle and Fenugreek, 4 bottles/month for 4 months)
$120 probiotics
$80 eight different refills of Motilium prescriptions (after insurance)
$50 random ingredients for over 8 batches of lactation cookies
$50 fancy “breastfeeding” nipples for formula supplementing
$35 More Milk Plus liquid supplement
$30 three different refills for prescriptions of Newman’s Nipple Cream (after insurance)
$20 extra pump shields to see if a different size might increase production
$20 raspberry leaf tea
$15 nursing pillow (used from Craigslist)
$10 gentian violet
_____________
$1,072 estimated total

And that’s not counting all the formula we had to buy on *top* of this because none of the above allowed me to produce enough to keep him alive on breast milk alone. I don’t even want to estimate that cost. It makes me too sad. (But because I’m a masochist I looked it up: the average formula-fed baby costs between $1,138 and $1,188 to feed for the first year according to this website).

Despite all this, I kept trying. I was encouraged by an article I read on Kellymom that basically said “If you simply can’t produce a drop, that’s one thing, but there’s no such thing as underproduction. If you can produce milk at all, you should be able to produce enough for your baby by following XYZ tips.” I followed them. Still not enough.

I read somewhere else that having thyroid problems might affect milk supply. Hypothyroidism runs in my family and though I’d already been tested for it, I went to get re-tested just in case. The blood work came back negative.

One week I even felt that Hutch seemed quite satisfied after each breastfeeding session so I cut out his formula supplements altogether for a few days, reasoning that even if it was a few millilitres shy, my body would supply more if I didn’t hinder the demand by giving him formula. I genuinely believed that at last I was producing enough. At my next lactation doctor’s appointment his weekly weight gain was so low that my doctor immediately asked me what I’d done differently and reprimanded me (gently) for making that choice. I felt horrible for semi-starving my baby.

When Hutch started refusing the breast almost completely at around 4 months old something snapped in me. I couldn’t keep riding this milk supply roller coaster. I started feeding Hutch full bottles of formula. Instead of considering the formula a supplement to my breast milk, I changed my mentality; formula was now the main food source and breast milk was supplementary. I still believed that whatever little bit of breast milk I could get into him was beneficial, but stressing about it anymore was simply not worth my time or energy. I had done everything I could. I had given it my all. I was a first time mother of a happy healthy baby and I needed all the energy I could muster to keep him—and me—that way. I was done wasting my time in lactation’s pit of despair.

That was when I started buying generic formula. In bulk.

But even though it’s been three months since I essentially gave up on breast feeding (I still nurse before every bottle possible but it’s only about five minutes total before the ol’ milk bags run dry, and there’s only one position he will nurse in [laying down next to me in bed, which isn’t exactly feasible when we’re out and about]), I still wonder what I could have done differently.

Of all the books, blogs and articles I read before giving birth, it never occurred to me to research breastfeeding. I was so consumed with how I would get him here I never thought to research how I would keep him alive once he was born. Despite hearing how painful it might be, and despite how badly the thought of nursing creeped me out, I assumed I would breast feed mainly because I was cheap and didn’t want to have to buy a bunch of formula. But I never considered that I wouldn’t succeed at nursing. So I never read about it.

And now that I have, I feel angry at myself for dropping that ball. What if we hadn’t given Hutch a pacifier his first night in the hospital? (Now that I’ve researched it I know we should have waited until at least a month to introduce it [although I did ask my ob-gyn when she came to check up on us in the recovery room and she said she always used pacifiers right from the start and never had problems, so at least I tried to be a little educated.]) What if I hadn’t let him sleep for seven hours that one night? What if I’d walked around topless for a week and let him latch on every single time he squawked? What if I drank 8 litres of water a day instead of 4? What if I pumped triple the recommended amount? What if I just stayed hooked up to the pump all day and all night? What if what if what if?

But I didn’t, and no amount of money we threw at the problem could buy me a better milk supply.

I have a feeling this will be just the first of a long history of parenting lessons for me, the moral of which will probably be: You Can’t Control Everything. You Can’t Even Control A Little Bit of Things. Not Your Body. Not Your Baby. Not Anything With Even the Remotest Mind of Its Own, Like the Weather or Your WiFi Connection. And the Sooner You Accept This Fact the Sooner You Can Move on With Your Life and Attempt to Find Some Semblance of Peace With the Way Things Are.

Because at the end of the day that’s all anyone can do.

So Motherguilt, be damned.

Posted in failures, hutchface, introspection, kid stuffs, motherhood, parenthood | Tagged , , | 3 Comments